C.J. Cherryh. Chanur’s Venture

blood-crazed roar. A volley of smoke-bounced shots came back from kif near the

wreckage and Pyanfar dived aside, remembered Khym behind her with one

heart-stopping fright and rolled to cover his blind rush.

But he came skidding in beside her, gasping, with the pistol quickly braced up

hunting targets as Tirun reached their cover. Geran and Haral had tucked in with

the mahendo’sat next a stack of cans: shots spattered the plastic and those

three ducked.

Then a flurry opened up from the other side, and for a moment the pop of

projectile fire rang everywhere off the overhead: mahen voices yowled distant

satisfaction and she put her head out, sprawled back again because shots were

wild and going a dozen ways about the wreckage and up the dock to their

position.

Geran got off three quick shots from her side, Haral another burst. “That’s

mahen fire!” Haral yelled, seeing something from her vantage; and Pyanfar

ventured another look, saw fire going the other way and pelted out of cover the

last long sprint for the wreckage, from which cover a steady spatter of fire

went out aimed the other way.

Mahe braced in among the tangle started at their arrival, and hani among them

turned about with backlaid ears. Ehrran.

Pyanfar slid in among them, grabbed an Ehrran shoulder and shook it as Geran

arrived, and the rest of the crew. “Where’s Chanur?” Pyanfar shouted into the

Ehrran crewwoman’s baeklaid ears. “Where, gods rot you!”

The Ehrran pointed mutely to a hani lying on the deck and Pyanfar’s heart

lurched over as Geran scrambled that way, to her sister’s side. “Where’s the

rest?” Pyanfar yelled, and a larger hani arm appeared from behind her and seized

a fistful of Ehrran beard. “Where are they?” Khym shouted, and the Ehrran waved

a frantic hand toward the dock at large.

“–Ran — they ran — Somewhere out there–” Pyanfar let go her grip with a

shove and abandoned the Ehrran to get to Chur.

Chur was alive. They had propped her head off the deck and the wound that had

spread blood all about was hard-sealed and glistening with plasm that stopped

further bleeding. Geran bent over her, just holding her hand, looking more than

scared.

“How is she?” Pyanfar asked.

“She hurts,” Chur said for herself, past scarcely moving jaws. Her eyes were

slitted. “Where’s Hilfy-Tully?”

“We don’t know. Where’d you lose them?”

A weak move of Chur’s head. A try at pointing. “Got out,” she said. The pointing

was nowhere in particular. “Don’t know.”

Pyanfar looked round at the others who hovered near. “That packet. Tully had it

in his hands. Hunt the wreck.”

“Got,” Chur said thickly, reached feebly behind her head, delirious, Pyanfar

thought, until she recognized the thing Chur’s head was lying on. Chur tried to

pull it. Tully’s plastic sack.

“Gods,” Pyanfar said with feeling. “Geran. Stay with her. You hang onto that.

They’ll get an ambulance in here real soon.”

“Not Kshshti,” Chur said. “Pride.”

For a moment Pyanfar failed to understand her, then gripped her arm. “No way we

leave you here. Got that?”

“Got,” Chur said, and let her eyes close.

“Stay with her,” Pyanfar said to Geran. “We’ll find them.” She stood up, keeping

low, for there were still shots flying, drew Tirun and Khym and Haral off to the

mahen position. She seized one by the arm and pulled him about. “Hani. Seen

hani?”

“No got,” he said.

“Alien?”

“No got.”

She edged back again, cast about amid the confusion of arriving emergency

vehicles, the thunder of PA above sirens, each confounding the other. Evacuate,

she made out. Evacuate, evacuate — unsafe–

–getting the non-involved clear. She hoped. Possibly the whole sector of the

station had gone unstable in the explosions. In the mahen-language shouting and

the noise of the sirens there was no knowing. She put her head up, for firing

had stopped, ducked down again as her own crew pulled her down, but there were

still no shots.

“Think they’re through out there,” she said, and seized Haral by the arm. “Get

Chur into an ambulance. Geran’s not to leave her. Whatever.”

“Right,” Haral said; he turned to leave and froze, so that Pyanfar turned to

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