Cuckoo’s Egg by C.J. Cherryh

Sagot took his face between her hands and he was so lost he let her. She pulled his face down to her level and washed his eyes with her tongue, which made him feel strange and loved, even as old as Sagot was. “Is that what I’m supposed to see?” She let him go. “Go home. I’ll call Ogot.” “What am I supposed to see? Is it over? Am I through with that?”

“I don’t know. Go home.”

* * *

* * *

XII

Ellud paced the floor and flung his arms out: “I can’t cover this!”

“You don’t have to.” Duun stayed seated. “I’m taking him this afternoon. I’ll want the copter on the roof, I’ll want the plane at Trusa, no slip-ups; take one off the line. I’ll take it myself.”

“Gods, your license is expired. I won’t have it. You don’t fly these damn things nowadays, the damn computers do. I’ll get you a pilot.” Ellud threw that out and lost his case.

“Do that. One hour. I’m headed out.” Duun went for the door.

“They’ll have my post, they’ll move the minute you’re clear of the roof, I’ll have councillors at this door.”

“Watch Shbit, that’s all. I’ll get him back for you.”

“The Guild won’t take him!”

“Is that hope they will or hope they won’t?”

Ellud stood there with his mouth open. Duun left.

Thorn hurried; he had a bundle under his arm that was a change of clothes, his and Duun’s and Duun’s gray cloak, wrapped around things they needed from the bath and tied with a cord; he had new winter-clothes on, quilted coat, baggy trousers, quilted boots: so did Duun, striding along beside him to the elevator.

“Where are we going, Duun?” Half protest and half question, third time posed. (Have I broken some rule, have I made Duun mad?) But he could not read Duun now, except that there were secrets and Duun was in a great hurry to get him out-(Outside?) He had not worn pants and coat since Sheon, in the coldest weather. Had never worn boots. It was only the beginning of fall.)

(He knows what I told Sagot. I’ve done something wrong! We’re running again, like we ran from Sheon-men with guns, people are hunting us- But that’s crazy. They wouldn’t. I haven’t talked to anyone I shouldn’t, I haven’t done anything-)

(Have I?)

The elevator door opened. Duun went through last and used a card to operate it. The elevator shot up and up, past all the floors between them and the roof.

The door whisked open in the cupola. Beyond the windows was true sky, gray cloud, a copter with its blades turning. Guards were waiting there to open the door for them and the wind skirled in with bitter chill. “Head down!” Duun yelled at him and ran, ducking low when he got near the copter. Thorn remembered that, ran, with the wind of the blades burning his face. He kept low until he reached the copter, and clambered in like Duun did, as fast as he could, flung himself into the seat and started fastening straps. (Like the simulator. But this isn’t. This is real.) The copter upped power and surged upward with a vengeance. The tops of Dsonan’s tall buildings spun dizzily into view, the deep chasms of rail-courses and maintenance-ways, the distant port with the gray light shining off the water beneath a smear of clouds.

“We’re going to the airport,” Duun told him, shouting in his ear. “We’ve got a plane waiting for us.”

Thorn looked at Duun with question available to be read. Pleading.

“We’re going up to Avenen,” Duun shouted at him. “The Guild headquarters. You’d better settle your mind on this trip, minnow. As many hatani as they can muster are going to be coming in there and you’re going to have to do it this time or not at all. There won’t be a second chance.”

“For what?”

“To get you Guild protection, that’s what.”

They ran from the copter to a building and shed their quilted winter gear for suits that hugged the body. Attendants impersonal as the meds worked at fastenings, jerking at them, two at a time, rough in their frantic haste: masks next, that dangled about their necks, and helmets with a microphone inside. “Run,” Duun said then, bending to snatch up the baggage, and they ran, out the door attendants held open for them, into a thunderous noisy building open at either end, where a plane sat with its fans at idle, a dip-nosed machine with stubby backswept wings. “This thing uses a runway,” Duun yelled over the noise. “We’re going to roll out from here-go round behind the wing, there’s a ladder.”

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