Cherryh, CJ – Merchanters Luck

someone else. And this time—this time, because his life depended on it…he aimed

for more than a free drink or a meal on some other combine’s credit. He needed a

crewman, someone, anyone with the right touch of minor larceny who could be

conned and cozened aboard and trusted not to talk in the wrong quarters. This

was flatly dangerous. Merchanter ships were family, all of the same Name, born

on a ship to die on that ship. Beached merchanters were beached only for a

single run, like the old man he had gotten from hospital; or if they were

beached permanently, it was because their own ships’ families had thrown them

out, or because they had voluntarily quit their families, unable to live with

them. Some of the latter were quarrelsome and some were criminal; he was one man

and he had to sleep sometimes… which was why he had to have help on the ship at

all. He scanned the comers of the bars he traveled on the long green-zone dock

of Viking, trying not to see the soldiers and the police who were more frequent

everywhere than usual, and looking constantly for someone else as hungry as he

was, knowing that they would be disguising their plight as he disguised it, and

knowing that if he picked the wrong one, with a shade too much larceny in mind,

that partner would simply cut his throat some watch in some lonely part of the

between, and take Lucy over for whatever purposes he had in mind.

It was the first day of this hunt on the docks, playing the part of honest

merchanter captain and nursing a handful of chits he had gotten on that faked

combine account, that he first saw Allison Reilly.

The story was there to be read: the shamrock and stars on her silver coveralls

sleeve, the patches of worlds visited, that compassed all known space, the lithe

tall body with its back to him at the bar and a flood of hair like a puff of

space-itself in the dim neon light.

In his alcohol-fumed eyes that sweep of hip and long, leaning limbs put him

poignantly in mind of sleepovers and that other scanted need of his existence—a

scam much harder than visa forging and far more dangerous. In fact, his life had

been womanless, except for one very drunk insystem merchanter one night on

Mariner when he was living high and secure, which was how Mariner knew his name

and laid in wait for him. And another insystemer before that, who he had hoped

would partner him for good: she had lost him Esperance when it went bad. He was

solitary, because the only women for merchanters were other merchanters, who

inevitably had relatives; and merchanters in general were a danger to his

existence far more serious than stations posed. Stations sat fixed about their

stars and rarely shared records on petty crime for the same reasons the big

combines rarely bothered with distant and minor accounts. But get on the bad

side of some merchanter family for any cause, and they would spread the word and

hunt him from star to star, spread warnings about him to every station and every

world humans touched, so that he would die; or so that some station would catch

him finally and bend his mind, which was the same to him. There were no more

women; he had sworn off such approaches.

But he dreamed, being twenty-seven and alone for almost all his days, in the

long, long night. And at that silver-coveralled vision in front of him, he

forgot the tatter-elbowed old man he had been trying to stalk, him with the

vacant spot in the patches on his sleeve, and forgot the short-hauler kid who

was another and safer prospect. He stared at that sleek back, and saw that fall

of hair like a night in which stars could burn—and saw at the same time that arm

resting on the bar, patched with the Reilly shamrock, which burned green in the

green neon glare from the over-the-bar lighting, advising him that among

merchanters this was one of the foremost rank, a princess, a Name and a patch

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