tion. You should rejoice that they"re now paying attention and you"ve had a demonstration of how they can move."
"Right. Sorry. But the yacht ..."
The Thek had absorbed all the yacht"s considerable inertia, flicking Tim and his shuttle off as a housewife might flick an ant off a plate. When he hailed them, Arly could hear astonished relief in his voice.
"Permission to land shuttle?"
Should she bring him in, or send him back to FedCentral? A glance at the readouts told her the shuttle wouldn"t make it back safely.
"Permission granted. Bring "er aboard, Ensign."
And he did, without any hotdog flourishes.
Ar!y looked around the bridge, and wondered if she looked as disshelved as the others. Far more ragged than Sa.s.sinak had ever looked, she thought. Well have to get this place cleaned up before she sees it and everyone rested. But we still have to get back down there, just in case.
Convincing the Dockmaster at the FedCentral Station that the Zaid-Dayan was not an agent of doom required the rough side of Arly"s tongue.
"We saved your tails from a "catenated Seti fleet. And you"re going to gripe at me because I left without your fardling permission?"
"It was highly irregular."
"So it was, and so were the Seti. So were the traitors in your system that wanted to let "em in. It"s not my feult you wouldn"t believe the truth. Now you can let us dock or watch us sit out here using your station for target practice."
"That"s a threat!" he said.
"Right. Going to take us up on it?"
"Ill file a complaint." Then his face sagged as he realized to whom that complaint would go: Sa.s.sinak, now in command of the loyal Federation forces onplanet, Acting Governor. "It"s all very irregular ..." His voice trailed away into a sigh. "All right. Bays twelve through twenty, orange arm."
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"Thank you," said Arly, careful to keep her voice neutral. Never push your luck, Sa.s.sinak always said, and she felt her luck had been working overtime lately. "If you have any fresh forage for Bronthin, we have an individual in bad shape who"s been a Seti prisoner."
This the Dockmaster could handle. "Of course. With so much diplomatic traffic, we pride ourselves on keeping full supplies for every race in the FSP. Any other requirements?"
"A Ryxi which is suffering from "feather pit," whatever that is, and a pair of Lethi who seem all right, although our medical team isn"t familiar with Lethi."
"Only two Lethi? That"s very bad. Lethi need to cl.u.s.ter in larger numbers."
"Plus a larval Ssli," Arly said. "It"s complained that its tank needs recharging."
"No problem with any of that," said the Dockmaster, suddenly cordial. "If you"ll send the allied races to bay sixteen, that"ll be the quickest access for our specialty medical services."
"Will do." Arly shook her head as she looked around the bridge, "Can you believe that? He was willing to stand us off as if we were pirates, but he"s got specialty medical teams for our aliens."
Arly had been in communication with Sa.s.sinak for the past several hours. The situation onplanet had stabilized with the loyalists firmly in control, and only scattered pockets of resistance.
"And I think most of that"s confusion," Sa.s.sinak had said. "We"re finding that many of the Parchandri/Paraden supporters had been blackmailed into it. Others just didn"t know any better. Right now the Thek are calling for a formal trial."
"Not another one!"
"Not like that one, no. A Thek trial." Sa.s.sinak had looked exhausted. Arly wondered if she"d had any rest at all since her disappearance. "Another Thek cathedral is all I need! But considering what they"ve done, we really can"t argue. They want those prisoners you rescued from the Seti, especially the Bronthin, Ssli, Weft, and Dupaynil."
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So now, docked at the Station, Arly saw these turned over to special medical teams. Soon they"d be on their way to the Thek trial. She wondered about the crew and pa.s.sengers of the yacht Tim had trapped. But she wasn"t going to ask any questions. Two experiences with fast-moving Thek were quite enough.
It was impossible to overestimate the civilizing influence of cleanliness, rest, and good cooking, Sa.s.sinak thought. Back on the Zaid-Dayan, back in a clean uniform, with a stomach full of the best her favorite cook could do, with a full shift"s sleep, she was ready to forgive almost anyone. Particularly since the Thek, in their unyielding fashion, had satisfied any remaining desire for vengeance.
For a moment, she felt again the pressure of those most alien minds. And marveled that she had survived two terms in a Thek cathedral. Never again, she hoped. The judgment process might be exhausting but it served its purpose admirably.
The guilty Seti were to be confined to one interdicted planet, guarded by installations whose crews were former pirate prisoners. Paraden family lost all its possessions, from shipping lines to private moonlets. Paradens and Parchandris alike were given basic survival and tool supplies, the same they had sold to many a colony starting up, and deposited on a barely habitable planet.
With the single exception of Ford"s Auntie Q. She lost nothing for the Thek considered her a victim, not a Paraden, despite her name.
And, thanks to Lunzie"s partisanship and fierce arguments, heavyworlders were also considered victims. After all, they had been cheated by the wealthy lightweights who then blackmailed them into service. So the Thek required only that those conspirators in the governments of heavyworlder planets be expelled. The others, informed of the complex plot, were given shares in the liquidation of Paraden a.s.sets. They could use that to ease their lives.
In addition, FSP regulations changed to allow heavy- .
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worlder migration to any world open to humans. But that did not include Ireta: the Thek would not change their earlier decision. Aygar had been consoled, finally, by the knowledge that he would have a chance to see many equally fascinating worlds. And enough money to enjoy them.
Now the original team relaxed in Sa.s.sinak"s office, with most of the tales untold and a long night ahead for telling them. Restored by a couple of sessions in the tank to heal his b.u.ms, Ford crunched another of the crispy fries. Sa.s.sinak met his eyes and felt indecently smug. They had private plans when the party broke up. He had told her just enough about Auntie Q and the Ryxi tailfeathers to whet her appet.i.te.
Dupaynil, though, had lost some of his polish. Specldessly clean, as usual, perfectly groomed, he still had a hangdog tentative quality that she found almost as irritating as his former blithe certainty.
Lunzie, always tactful, had put aside her grief for Coromell to try to cheer Dupaynil up, but so tar it hadn"t worked. Timran, on the other hand, was indecently gleeful. He had taken the mild commendation she"d given him as if he"d been awarded the Federation"s highest honor in front of the Grand Council. Now he sat stiffly in the corner of her office as if he would burst if he moved. She"d better rescue the lad.
"Ensign, there"s an errand ... a fairly special one ..."
"Yes, ma"am"
"We"re having guests; I"d like you to escort a lady from the Flight Deck in here."
If anyone could settle a young man like Tim, it would be Fleur. He"d enjoy Aygar"s student friend, too, and Erdra. Sa.s.sinak grinned wickedly at the thought of Erdra coming face to face with the reality behind her daydreams. She was no Carin Coldae and the sooner she quit playing games and went back to finish that advanced degree in a.n.a.lytical systems, the better. The riot had cured her of any thought that violence and glamor coexisted, and a visit to a working warship ought to clear out the rest of her nonsense.
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Lunzie would want to meet her relative-of-sorts, from the Chinese family. It had been extravagant, in several ways, to send her own shuttle down for them, but she felt it important to build respect for Fleet. No more restrictions on the movement of Fleet personnel, and no civilian weapons monitors, either. The Zaid-Dayan was, as it always should be, ready for action. Now, while Tim was gone, she could try to penetrate DupayniTs gloom again.
"I wanted to apologize to you," she began, "for pulling that trick ..."
"It was a trick, then, with the orders?" He brightened a moment. "I was sure of it. You used the Ssli, right?"
"Right. But it was flat stupid of me not to know more about the ship I tossed you onto. I had no idea ..."
"I know." He looked glum again.
"You said something about charges?"
"Well, the Exec of the escort and I had to overpower the crew, put "em in custody ..."
"On an escort? Where?"
"In the escape pod in coldsleep. They were going to s.p.a.ce me."
Sa.s.sinak stared at him. He said it in a tone of flat misery entirely out of character for someone who had run a successful mutiny.
"I"m sure we can get the charges dropped. If anyone"s dared filed them," she said. "Especially now. I"ve had contact with Admiral Vannoy, back at Sector, and he"s rooting out the traitors around Fleet."
But that didn"t cheer him up as it should have. Clearly impending charges weren"t the burden he carried. Lunzie caught her eye and made a significant glance at Ford, at Dupaynil, then at Aygar. Sa.s.sinak let one eyelid droop in a near-wink.
"Ford, if you don"t mind, I think I"d like a grownup to supervise that reception. Aygar, you might want to be there to greet your friends."
Aygar leaped up while Ford stood more slowly, grinning at Sa.s.sinak in a way that almost made her blush.
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"You ladies take care," he said, with his own significant glance at Dupaynil. "No squabbling."
Then he left, shepherding Aygar ahead of him.
"Now, then," said Sa.s.sinak. "You"ve been brooding about as if you were about to be stuck in Administration forever. So, what"s the problem?" She thought for a long moment he would not answer, then it burst out of him.
"It"s ridiculous, and I don"t want to talk about it."
Lunzie and Sa.s.sinak waited, saying nothing. Dupaynil looked up and met Sa.s.sinak"s eyes squarely.
"I was so jurious with you for pulling that trick. For getting atvay with that trick. I dreamed of outfoxing you again, coming back with what you needed, but making you pay for it. Then I had to escape those . . . those pirates on Claw, and realized that 1 didn"t know one tbing about actually running a ship. Panis had to train me as if I were a raw recruit. But I still thought, with what I"d found, that I"d have a chance of returning in triumph. A good story to tell, all that. But then the Seti . . ."He stopped, shaking his head, and Sa.s.sinak and Lunzie stared at each other over his bent head.
"What did they do?" asked Lunzie.
Sa.s.sinak was thinking that it was a good thing they"d died before she"d had the opportunity to skin their scaly hide off their live bodies.
"Arly didn"t tell you?"
"She said you looked pretty dilapidated when you came aboard, but you wouldn"t go to Medical-" Her skin crawled as she thought of reasons why he might not, which could explain his present mood. "Dupaynil! They didn"t!"
This time he laughed, a genuine if shaky laugh. "No. No, they didn"t actually do anything. It was just . . . Have you ever seen a Seti shower?"
What did that have to do with anything? "No," Sa.s.sinak said cautiously.
"It sprays you with hot air, grit, and more hot air," Dupaynil said with more energy than she"d heard from him yet. Bitter, but alive. "I"m sure it"s what keeps their scales so shiny. Probably takes care of itchy little parasites on a Seti. But for a human, day after day . . .
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And then I had to stay in that blasted pressure suit for days." His expression brought a chuckle to Sa.s.sinak; she couldn"t help it. "I"d planned on strolling in, cool and suave, to hand you what you needed. Instead, I was stuck in a stinking pressure suit in a crowded compartment full of terrified aliens where I could do not one d.a.m.n thing, and had to be rescued like any silly princess in a fairy tale."
"But you did," said Sa.s.sinak.
"Did what?"
"Did do something. Kipling"s corns, Dupaynil, you got the warning to us. You had evidence the Thek used."
"They could have got it straight from those slime-buckets* minds."
"Well, if the Thek hadn"t been there, we"d have needed it. After all, they asked for you at the trial. They needed your evidence, too. I don"t know what more you could want. You escaped one death-trap after another, you got vital information, you saved the world. Did you really think anyone could do that without getting dirty?" She thought of herself in the tunnels, even before Fleur"s disguise.
"I wanted to impress you," he said softly, looking at his linked hands.
"Well, you did." Sa.s.sinak c.o.c.ked her head at him. "Impress me? Was that all?"
"No." She would never have suspected that Dupaynil could blush, but what else were those red patched on his cheeks. "When I was on Claw, when I realized what you"d done, and I was so mad ... I also realized I wanted ..."
It was clear enough, though he couldn"t say it.
"I"m sorry." That was genuine. He had earned it. She couldn"t offer more. Her joyful reunion with Ford had revealed too much to both of them.
"Sorry!" Lunzie fairly exploded, her eyes sparkling. "You nearly get the man killed, he has to take over a whole ship, and then he saves us all from a Seti invasion, and you"re just sorry!" She looked at Dupaynil.
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"She may be my descendant, but that doesn"t mean we agree. I think she ought to give you a medal."
"Lunzie!"
"You wouldn"t think so if you"d seen me getting off that shuttle." Dupaynil said. "Ask Arly."
"I don"t have to ask Arly. I can see for myself." That came out in a sensuous purr. Under Lunzie"s bright gaze, Dupaynil"s grin began to revive.
Sa.s.sinak regarded her great-great-great with affectionate disdain. "Lunzie, I know where I inherited some of my propensities." If Lunzie stayed interested, she gave Dupaynil only a few more hours of freedom.
"Meow!" Lunzie stuck out her tongue, then leaned closer to Dupaynil.
Whatever else she might have said was interrupted by the arrival of the others: Fleur, who had worn one of her own creations in lavender and silver, Aygar and Timran in die midst of the students. Erdra, Sa.s.sinak noticed, wore the same land of colorful shirt and leggings as the others. Perhaps she had grown out of her wishful thinking already.