C.J. Cherryh. Chanur’s Venture

look too, where hani had appeared among the emergency vehicles, some

black-trousered, several blue, the first sight of which lifted her hope and the

second dashed it.

“Ayhar,” she spat, and hurled herself to her feet. “Ehrran!” — for Rhif Ehrran

was in that group, and she headed for them in mingled wrath and hope, dodged

round a stretcher crew and a fire-control team headed into the wreckage. Hani

faces turned her way, Banny Ayhar and Rhif Ehrran chiefest of them.

“Chanur!” Ehrran shouted, headed her way, “By the gods, Chanur, you’ve really

fouled it up, haven’t you?”

She slowed to a walk, with long, long strides. A hand caught her arm and she

jerked free.

“Captain,” Tirun begged her. “Don’t.

She stopped. Stood there. And Ehrran had the sense to stop out of her reach.

Tirun was on one side of her, Khym on the other.

“Where are they?” she asked Ehrran.

“Gods if I know,” Ehrran said, hand on that pistol at her side. The whites

showed at the edges of her eyes. “Gods rot it, Chanur–”

“Be some use. We need searchers. They may have taken cover somewhere, anywhere

along the docks.”

Ehrran flicked her ears nervously, turned and lifted a hand in signal to her

own. “Fan out. Watch yourselves.”

“Move,” Pyanfar said to her own, and they did.

Hilfy moved a finger, a hand, discovered consciousness and remembered kif, with

the kif-stink all about her. She tried the whole arm, both arms, a deep panicked

breath, and opened her eyes on a gray ceiling and bare steel and lights, with

the memory of a jolt she had not fully heard, with her arms tangled in

something, her legs pinned — the wreck — o gods —

She turned her head, a dizzy haze of lights, a bright spot of light with kif

clustered round something pale on a table, something pale and human-sized.

She heaved, met restraints that held her to a surface. Blankets wrapped her arms

about, and they had her fastened about that. She heard another clank of

machinery, shieldings in retraction, all the familiar sounds, watched the kit

cast an anxious look up and go back to their work — Clank! Thump!

Ship sounds. It was the grapple-disengage. The kif stayed at work, clinging to

the table on which Tully lay when the G stress shifted. There were hisses, the

click of kifish speech. She shut her eyes and opened them again and the

nightmare remained true.

Pyanfar stopped and looked about her, swung the rifle about as she heard someone

coming in this zone of wreckage and shot-out lights. Hani silhouette against the

lighted zone.

“Captain,” Haral cried, and the echoes went up. “Captain–” Her first officer

gasped for breath and stopped, leaning on a gantry leg. “Harukk just left dock.

Mahendo’sat just sent word. . . .”

She said nothing. Nothing seemed adequate. She only slung the rifle to her

shoulder and started running for the center of the search, for what help there

was to find.

* * *

They had left. “Tully,” Hilfy said. The G stress was considerable, and it was

hard to breathe; the kif had beat that out the door, gone somewhere for

protection, but they had left Tully lying there on the table, no blanket,

nothing against the cold. “Tully–”

But he did not move. She gave over trying to rouse him. They had patched the

worst, she reckoned. They were headed for long acceleration, for jump, and they

wanted their prisoner to stay alive that long.

She, she reckoned, was quite another matter. Against Chanur, quite a number of

kif had a score to settle.

“Going where? She built the map in her head. Kefk, likeliest. Kefk, inside kif

territory. They could do that in one jump.

The whole ship jolted. Hit, she thought with one wild hope that someone,

somehow, had moved to stop it; but the G grew worse then, incredibly worse. The

ship had dumped cargo, no, not even cargo: she remembered Harukk, the sleek

wicked lines of her docked at Meet-point. It was the false pods that had just

blown, and stripped Harukk down to the hunter-ship she was.

Nothing could catch her now.

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