Preface The spaceItime coordinate system they used has no relationship to Earth, our sun, the Milky Way, or any other point of reference we could use to find our way around, and in any coordinate system we use, they're so far off the edge of the chart that nobody has ever contemplated going there, even with the proton drive. So let's just say that they were somewhere between the far side of nowhere and the near side of here when their time and space ran out, and what started as a pleasure cruise ship turned into a death chamber. They are like us in many ways besides appearance. They didn't want to die if they could possibly avoid it; if they couldn't live, then at least they wanted to die with dignity and peace instead of in a Khievii torture cell; and they would happily have thrown away life, dignity and everything else to save their youngling, who didn't even know what was about to happen to them. And they had time to talk; what amounted to several hours by our reckoning, while the Khievii ship closed in on the little cruiser that had run out of places to flee to. "We could offer to surrender if they'd spare her," she said, looking at the net where their youngling curled asleep. It was a mercy that she slept so well; she talked well enough that they'd have had trouble disguising their meaning from her if she were awake. "They make no terms," he said. "They never have." "Why do they hate us so?" "I don't know that they do hate," he said. "Nobody knows what they feel. They are not like us, and we can't ascribe our emotions to them. All we know? is what they do." And they both fell silent for a while, unwilling to speak of what the Khievii did to prisoners of other races. No one had ever survived capture by the Khievii, but the images of what happened after capture were broadcast by the Khievii, in full three-D reproduction, with sound and color. Was it a calculated ploy to terrorize, or simply a display of triumph, as members of a more humanoid race might display the enemy's flag or captured ships? No one knew, because the same things had happened to the diplomat-linguists who went under sign of peace to make a treaty with the Khievii. "Cruel ..." she breathed after a long while •watching their sleeping child. "Their only mercy," he said, "is that they have already let us know to expect no mercy. It won't happen to us, because we won't be alive when they reach here." Since the third broadcast of Khievii prisoner torture, shortly after the beginning of -what history might know as the Khievii Invasion, no ship of their people had gone anywhere without certain necessary supplies. The only prisoners taken were those caught away from a ship or without time to use those supplies. The others were always far beyond the reach of pain when the Khievii caught up with their bodies. "But I don't like to go without striking even one blow," he said, "so I have made certain modifications to our engines. There are some privileges to being director of Weapons Development; this system is so recently designed that even the Fleet has not yet been fitted with it." His hands were not quite as flexible as ours, but the fingers worked well enough to key in the commands that would activate those modifications; commands too dangerous to be activated by the usual voice-control system. "When anything of a mass equal to or greater than ours approaches within this radius," he told her, pointing at the glowing sphere that now surrounded their ship in the display field, "the dimensional space around us both will warp, change, decompose until all the matter within this sphere is compressed to a single point. They will never know what happened to us or to their own boarding craft." His lips tightened. "We've learned that they don't fear death; perhaps a mystery will frighten them somewhat more." "What happens to the space around us when the compression effect is triggered?" "No one knows. It's not something you'd want to test planet side or from a close observation point. All we know is that whatever exists within the sphere is destroyed as if it had never been." She said nothing, but looked at the baby. The pupils of her eyes narrowed to vertical slits. "It won't hurt her," he said gently, seeing and understanding her grief. "We'll take the abaanye now, and give her some in her bottle. I'll have to wake her to feed her, but she'll go to sleep afterwards and so will -we. That's all it is, you know: going to sleep." "I don't mind for us," she said, •which was a lie, but a loving one. "But she is just beginning to live. Isn't there some way "we could give her a chance? If we cast her out in a survival pod - " "If we did it now, they'd see and intercept it," he said. "Do you want to think about -what would happen then?" "Then do it when the ship explodes!" she cried. "Do it when we're all dying! Can't you rig those controls to eject the pod just before they reach the radius, so that they won't have a chance to change course and take her?" "For what? So that she can spend her last hours alone and scared in a survival pod? Better to let her go to sleep here in your arms and never wake up." "Give her enough to make her sleep, yes," she said. She could almost feel her wits becoming sharper in these last moments. "Make her sleep for more hours than the pod has air. If only she -were old enough to ... well, she isn't and that's that. If the air runs out, she'll die without waking. But some of our people might find her first. They might have heard our last distress signals. They might be looking. Give her that chance!" She held the baby and fed her the bitter abaanye mixed with sweetened milk to make it palatable, and rocked her in her arms, and kissed her face and hands and soft tummy and little kicking feet until the kicking slowly stopped, and the baby gurgled once and breathed deeply in and out, and then lay quite limp and barely breathing in her mother s arms. "Do you have to put her in the pod now?" she cried when he stooped over them. "Let me hold her a little longer-just a little longer." "I won't take the abaanye until I see her safely stowed," he said. "I've programmed the ship to launch the pod as close to the time of detonation as I dare." Too close, he thought, really; the pod -would almost certainly be within the radius when the Khievii approached, to be destroyed with them in the explosive transformation of local space. But there was no need to tell her that. He would let her drink the abaanye and go to sleep believing that their baby had that one chance of living. She willed her pupils to widen into an expression of calm content while he was closing the pod and arming it to eject on command. "Is all complete?" she asked when he finished.`````` Yes. She managed a smile, and handed him a tube of sparkling red liquid. "I've mixed a very special drink for us," she said. "Most of it is the same vintage as the -wine we drank on our vows-day." He loved her more in that moment, it seemed to him, than ever he had in the days when they thought they had long years of life together before them. "Then let us renew our vows," he said. At first Gill assumed it was just another bit of space debris, wink• ing as it turned around its own axis and sending bright flashes of reflected light down where they were placing the cable around AS-6-4-B1.3. But something about it seemed wrong to him, and he raised the question when they were back inside the Khedive. "It is too bright to have been in space very long," Rafik pointed out. His slender brown fingers danced over the console before him; he read half a dozen screens at once and translated their glowing, multicolored lines into voice commands to the external sensor system. "What d'you mean, too bright?" Gill demanded. "Star,) are bright, and most of them have been around a good while." Rafik's black brows lifted and he nodded at Calum. "But the sensors tell us this is metal, and too smooth," Calum said. "As usual, you're thinking with the Viking-ancestor part of what we laughingly refer to as your brain, Declan Giloglie the Third. Would it not be pitted from minor collisions if it had been in this asteroid belt more than a matter of hours? And if it has not been in this part of space for more than a few hours, where did it come from?" "Conundrums, is it? I'll leave the solving of them to you," Gill said with good humor. "I am but a simple metallurgic engineer, a horny-handed son of the soil." "More like a son of the asteroidal regolith," Rafik suggested. "Not that this particular asteroid offers much; we're going to have to break up the surface with the auger before there's any point in lowering the magnetic rake . . . Ah! Got a fix on it." An oval shape, regularly indented along one edge, appeared on the central screen. "Now what can the sensors tell us about this little mystery? " "It looks like a pea pod," Gill said. "It does that," Calum agreed. "The question is, what sort of peas, and do we want to harvest them, or send them gently on their way? There ve not been any recent diplomatic disagreements in this sector, have there?" "None that would inspire the placing of mines," Gill said, "and that's not like any space mine I ever saw. Besides, only an idiot would send a space mine floating into an asteroid belt where there's no telling what might set it off and whose side might be worst injured." "High intelligence," Rafik murmured, "is not inevitably an attribute of those who pursue diplomacy by other means . . . close reading," he commanded the console. "All bandwidths . . . well, well. Interesting." "What?" "Unless I'm mistaken . . ." Rafik paused. "Names of the Three Prophets! I mu^t be mistaken. It's not large enough . . . and there's no scheduled traffic through this sector . . . Calum, what do you make of these sensor readings?" Calum leaned over the panel. His sandy lashes blinked several times, rapidly, as he absorbed and interpreted the changing colors of the display. "You're not mistaken," he said. "Would you two kindly share the great insight?" Gill demanded. Calum straightened and looked up at Gill. "Your peas," he said, "are alive. And given the size of the pod-too small for any recycling lifesupport system-the signal it's broadcasting can only be a distress call, though it's like no code I've ever heard before." "Can we capture it?" "We'll have to, shan't we? Let's hope-ah, good. I don't recognize the alloy, but it's definitely ferrous. The magnetic attractors should be able to latch on-easy, now," Rafik admonished the machinery he was setting in action, "we don't want to jostle it, do we? Contents fragile. Handle with care, and all that. . . . Very nice," he murmured as the pod came to rest in an empty cargo bay. "Complimenting your own delicate hands?" Calum asked caustically. "The ship, my friend, the Khedive. She's done a fine gentle job of harvesting our pea pod; now to bring it in and open it." There were no identification markings that any of them could read on the "pea pod," but a series of long scrolling lines might, Calum surmised, have been some sort of alien script. "Alien, of course," Raflk murmured. "All the generations of the Expansion, all these stars mapped and planets settled, and we're to be the first to discover a sapient alien race ... I <)on't think. It's decoration, or it's a script none of us happens to know, which is just barely possible, I think you'll agree?" "Barely," Calum agreed, with no echo of Rafik s irony in his voice. "But it's not Cyrillic or Neo-Grek or Romaic or TriLat or anything else I can name ... so what id it?" "Perhaps," Rafik suggested, "the peas will tell us." He ran delicate fingers over the incised carvings and the scalloped edges of the pod. Hermetically sealed, of a size to hold one adult human body, it might have been a coffin rather than a life-support module . . . but the ship's sensors had picked up that distress signal, and the signs of life within the pod. And the means of opening, when he found it, was as simple and elegant as the rest of the design; simply a matter of matching the first three fingers of each hand with the pair of triple oval depressions in the center of the pod. "Hold it," Calum said. "Better suit up and open it in the air lock. We've no idea what sort of atmosphere this thing breathes." Gill frowned. "We could kill it by opening it. Isn't there some way to test what's in there?" "Not without opening it," Calum said brightly. "Look, Gill, whatever is in there may not be alive anyway-and if it is, surely it won't last forever in a hermetically sealed environment. It'll have to take its chances." The men looked at each other, shrugged, and donned their working gear before moving themselves and the pod into the airlock. "Well, Calum," Rafik said in an oddly strangled voice, seconds after the lid swung open, "you were half right, it seems. Not an aduit human, at any rate." Calum and Gill bent over the pod to inspect the sleeping youngling revealed when it opened. "What species is it?" Gill asked "Sweet little thing, isn't she?" Gill said in such a soppy tone that both Rafik and Calum gave him an odd look. "How'd you arrive at the sex of it?" Rafik wanted to know. "She looks feminine!" They all admitted to that impression of the little creature which lay on her side, one hand curled into a fist and thrust against her mouth in a fairly common gesture of solace. A fluff of silvery hair curled down onto her forehead and coiled down to the shoulder blades, half obscuring the pale, delicate face. Even as they watched, she stirred, opened her eyes and groggily tried to sit up. "Avvvi," she wailed. "Avwi!" "We're scaring the poor little thing," Gill said. 'Okay, obviously she's an oxygen breather like us, let's get out of the suits and take her into the ship so she can see we're not metal monsters." Transferring the pod and its contents back into the ship -was an awkward business. The "poor little thing" wailed piteously each time she was tilted in the pod. "Poor bairn!" Gill exclaimed when they set her down again. The movement of the pod had dislodged the silvery curls over her forehead, showing a lump over an inch in diameter in the center of her forehead, halfway between the hairline and the silver brows. "How did that happen? This thing's cushioned well enough, and Rafik drew it into the bay as gently as a basket of eggs and not one of them cracked." "I think it's congenital," Rafik said. "It's not the only deformity. Get a good look at her hands and feet." Now that he called their attention to them, the other two saw that the fingers of the hands were stiff, lacking one of the joints that gave their own hands such flexibility. And the little bare feet ended in double toes, larger and thicker than normal toes, and pointed at an odd angle. "Avvvi, avvvi!" the youngling demanded, louder. Her eyes looked strange-almost changing shape -but she didn't cry. "Maybe it's not a deformity at all," Calum suggested. "Still looking for your intelligent aliens?" Rafik teased. "Why not? She's physically different from us, we don't recognize the writing on the pod, and can either of you tell me what an 'avwi' is?" Gill stooped and lifted the youngling out of the life-support pod. She looked like a fragile doll between his big hands, and she shrieked in terror as he swung her up to shoulder height, then grabbed at his curly red beard and clung for dear life. "Perfectly obvious," he said, rubbing the child's back -with one large hand. "There, there, acushia, you're safe here, I'll not let you go. . . . Whatever the language," he said, "'awi' has to be her word for 'Mama.'" His blue eyes traveled from the pod to Rafik and Calum. "And in the absence of 'awi,' gentlemen," he said, "it seems that we're elected." Once she had found that Gill's beard was soft and tickled her face and that his big hands were gentle, she calmed down in his arms. Figuring she might be at least thirsty from being in the pod for who knew how long, they experimented by offering her water. She had teeth. The cup would forever bear the mark of them on its rim. She made a grimace, at least that's what Gill said it was, at the first taste of the water, but she was too dehydrated not to accept it. Meat she spat out instantly and she was unenthusiastic about crackers and bread. Alarmed that what was basic to their diet was not acceptable, Calum rushed down into the 'ponies section of the life-support module and gathered up a variety of leafy greens. She grabbed the lettuce and crammed it into her mouth, reaching for the chard, which she nibbled more delicately before going on to the carrot and the radish. When she had had enough to eat, she wiggled out of Gill's arms and toddled off-right to the nearest interesting instrument panel and set a danger sensor blaring before Gill swooped her out of harm's way and Calum corrected her alteration. She looked frightened, the pupils in her silvery eyes slitted to nothing and her little body rigid. She babbled something incomprehensible to them. "No, sweetie pie, no," Gill said, holding up a warning Finger to her. "Understand me? Don't touch." And he reached out, almost touching the panel and pulling his hand back, miming hurt and putting his fingers into his mouth, then blowing on them. The slits in her eyes widened and she said something with a questioning inflection. "No!" Gill repeated, and she nodded, putting both hands behind her back. "Ah, it's a grand intelligent wee bairn, so she is," Calum said approvingly, smiling as he stroked her feathery-soft hair. "Should we show her the head, d'you suppose?" Rafik asked, regarding her nether regions, which were covered with a light fur. "She doesn't have the equipment to use our head," Gill said, "unless she's a he and he's hiding what he uses." Gill began fingering his beard, "which meant he was thinking. "She eats greens like a grazing animal. ..." "She's not an animal!" Calum was outraged by the suggestion. "But she does eat greens. Maybe -we should show her the 'ponies section. We've got that bed we use for the radishes ..." "And you just gave her the last of the radishes...." Rafik's tone was semi-accusatoiy. "She's not feline or canine," Gill went on. "In fact, sweet-looking kid as she is there's something almost. . . equine about her." Rafik and Calum hotly contested that category •while she became quite restless, looking all around her. "Looks to me that she's as close to crossing her legs as a young thing can get," Gill went on. "We gottatry dirt." They did and she bent forward slightly and relieved herself, neatly shifting loose dirt over the spot with her odd feet. Then she looked around at all the green and growing things. "Maybe we should have brought the dirt to her," Gill said. "Let's get her out of here then," Rafik said. "We've fed and drained her and maybe she'll go to sleep so we can all get back to the work -we should be doing." Indeed, she was quite content to be led back to the open pod and crawled up into it, curling herself up and closing her eyes. Her breathing slowed to a sleeping rhythm. And they tiptoed back to their workstations. The debate about her future disposition, however, went on through an afternoon of sporadic work, intermittently adjusting the great tethering cable around the body of the asteroid and placing the augering tool in a new location. AS-6-4-B1.3 might be rich in platinum-group metals, but it was making them pay for its riches with a higher crushing coefficient than they'd anticipated. The afternoon was punctuated by one or another miner taking his turn to suit up for EVA in order to search out a slightly better location for the auger, to replace a drill bit, or to clear the dust that clogged even the best-sealed tool from time to time. "Let's call this asteroid Ass," Calum suggested after one such trip. "Please, Calum," Gill reproved him. "Not in front of the infant!" "Very well then, you name it." They were in the habit of giving temporary names to each asteroid they mined, something a little more personal and memorable than the numbers assigned by Survey-if any such numbers were assigned. Many of their targets were tiny chondrites only a few meters across, too insignificant to have been located and named in any flyby mission, but easy enough for the Khedive to ingest, crush, and process. But AS-64-B1.3 was a large asteroid, almost too large for their longest tether to hold, and in such cases they liked to pick a name that used the initial letters of the Survey designation. "Hazelnut," Gill threw out. Their unexpected guest was awake again and he was feeding her another leaf of chard with carrots for afters. "Wrong initial letters." "We'll be Cockney about it. 'Azelnut. And you can allow me a ze for an ess, can't you?" "If there were any point to it. Why are you so set on Hazelnut?" "Because she's a hard nut to crack!" Gill cackled and Calum smiled rather sourly. The smallest of the three men, he -was the only one who could get inside the workings of the drill while wearing full EVA gear, and the dust ofAS-64-B1.3 had sent him outside on this shift rather too often for him to find much amusement in it. "I like that," Rafik said. "'Azelnut she is. And while you're enjoying your way with words. Gill, what shall we name this little one? We can't just keep calling her 'the child.'" "Not our problem," Calum said. "We'll be turning her over to Base soon enough, -won't we?" He looked at the suddenly stony faces of his colleagues. "Well, we can hardly keep her here. What will we do with a kid on a mining ship?" "Have you considered," Rafik said gently, "the probable cost of abandoning operations on 'Azelnut and returning to Base at high delta-V?" "At the moment," Calum snapped, "I should be only too happy to leave 'Azelnut for some other fool to crack." "And to bring back the KheSive with less than half a payload? " Calum s pale lashes flickered as he calculated what they would make-or lose-on the trip in that event. Then he shrugged in resignation. "All right. We're stuck with her until we make our payload. Just don't assume that because I'm smaller than you, you Viking giant, that I'm naturally suited to play nanny." "Ah, now," said Gill with great good humor, "the creature's walking and toilet trained already, and she'll soon pick up our language-children learn easily. How much trouble can one toddler be?" "Add that to your list of famous last words, will ya?" Calum remarked at his most caustic when they found the youngling had uprooted a good half of the 'ponies vegetation, including the allimportant squashes and rhubarb, whose large leaves provided much of the air purification. Rafik ran tests to see how much damage had actually been done to air quality. She'd gone to sleep again and had awakened so quietly that none of them had been aware of her movement until she wandered back in, flourishing cabbage leaves. Calum and Gill replanted, watered, and tied up the pulled plants in an effort to save as many as possible. The infant had evidently sampled everything, pulling up those she particularly liked instead of leaving her mouth-sized bite in leaf or stalk: she had eaten all the half-ripe legume pods, staples of Rafik's preferred diet. These subsequently caused a diarrhea which upset her almost more than it upset them. They spent a good hour arguing over a dose sufficient to bind her back to normal. Body weight was the critical factor and Rafik used the mineral scales to weigh her and then the powder. She spat out the first dose. And the second, all over Gill. The third dose they got down her by covering her rather prominent nostrils so that she had to open her mouth to breathe-and thus swallow the medication. Once again, she didn't cry, but her silverish eyes reproached them far more effectively than tears could. "We can't have her doing this again," Calum told Gill when they had finished replanting the garden. Then Rafik came over, showing them the readout on the atmosphere gauge. "It should be down, but it's up," he said, scratching his head and then tapping the gauge to see if the needle moved. "Not so much as a stink of excess COg in our air and we were about due for a good backwash." "I remember me mum putting a cage around me," Gill said, "when I would get into her garden." They made one out of netting in a corner of the Khedive's, dayroom, but she was out of that as soon as they turned their backs on her. So they netted the 'ponies instead. They tried to find toys to amuse her with, but pots and pot lids to bang together and an array of boxes to nest and bright colored cups and bowls did not divert her long. She had to be attached to someone, somehow, which generally made doing their separate tasks difficult, if not impossible. "Dependence transference," Rafik suggested pompously. "This is not in my job description," Gill said in a soft voice when she had finally fallen asleep, small arms limp around his neck. Rafik and Calum helped to remove her as gently as possible. They all held their breaths as they managed to lay her in the open pod, which remained her nocturnal cradle. "And that's another thing," Gill said, still whispering, "she's growing by the hour. She's not going to fit in that much longer. What the hell species is she?" "Born more mature than human babies are," Rafik said. "But I can't find out a damned thing in the Concordance or the Encycio, not even in the alien or the vet entries." "Look, guys, I know we'll waste time and fuel, and we haven't got enough of a payload to resupply if we go back to Base, but do we have the right to keep her out here with us when someone might be looking for her? And Base might be able to take care other better?" Rafik sighed and Calum looked away from Gill, everywhere else but at the sleeping youngling. "First," Rafik said, since he usually did this sort of logical setting out of facts, "if anybody's looking for her, they'd be looking in this sector of space, not at Base. Second, since we've agreed she is of an unknown alien species, what possible expertise can Base supply? There aren't any books on how to look after her, and we're the only ones with hands-on experience. And finally, we Bon't have enough of a payload to refuel. We do have what looks like a real find here, and I'm not about to let any hijackers take it away from us. We did catch that ion trail last week, and it could very well be Amalgamated spies, just checking up on us." Gill growled and Calum sniffed his poor opinion of the competition. "Well, we'll just have to include her in the duty roster. An hour on, two hours off. That gives us two crew working ..." "And one going off his nut..." Gill said, and then volunteered to take the first duty. "Ahahaha," Rafik waggled a slim finger at his crewmate, "we all work while she sleeps." Somehow or other the scheme worked a lot better than any of them had any reason to expect. In the first place, she learned to talk, which kept her, and her current minder, occupied. She learned also to respect "no" and brighten at "yes" and, when she was bored with sitting still, would "yes" and "no" every object in the dayroom. She never again touched a "no." The third day, it was Rafik who brought out the markers and "dead" computer printouts. He showed her how to hold the implement and, while she could not manage her digits as he did, she was very shortly drawing lines and squiggles and looking for approval at each new design. "You know," said Calum, when called upon to admire her handiwork, "looks a lot like the stuff on her egg. How mature was she born, d'you think?" That sent all three comparing her efforts with the egg inscription, but they finally decided that it was pure chance and how would a youngling know script at such an early age. So they taught her to print in Basic, using the now-standard figures. She outdid them shortly by repeating the computer printout programming language. "Well, she prints what she sees a lot of." The big discovery, and the treat could take up to an hour, was bathing her. "You gotta bathe all kids regularly. Hygiene," Rafik said, pausing to grin at her as she splashed the water in the big galley sink. She still fit in it at that point. "I know that much." "Yeah? With water on board for three and she makes four and drinks a lot, we'll be in deep kimchee on water quality soon," Gill said sourly. "All sink water's recycled," Calum reminded them just as the youngling dipped her face in the bathwater and blew bubbles. And then drank the bubbles. "No, sweetie, don't drink the bathwater. Dirty." "Actually it isn't," Rafik remarked, looking at the clear liquid in which their charge sat. "Has to be. I soaped her good." Calum peered in and the metal bottom was clearly visible. "That's impossible. There should be lather and she'd got her kneecaps dirty crawling on the floor and she got her fingers messed up drawing before that. They're all clean now, too." "Just a jiff," Rafik said, and went off for one of his many diagnostic tools. He inserted it in the bathwater and gawked at the reading. "This stuff is one hundred percent pure unadulterated H^O. In fact it's a lot purer than what I used to make coffee this morning." "But you saw me soap her," Calum said in a defensive tone. "I washed her because she was dirty." "Which neither she nor the water is now." Rafik immersed the diagnostic tool again. "I dunno." Calum got a crafty expression on his face. "Done a reading on our air lately?" Rafik grimaced. "In fact I did, like I'm supposed to this time of day." "Well?" Gill's voice rose in a prompt when Rafik delayed an answer -while scratching his head. "Not a sign of excess carbon dioxide, and with four of us breathing air, there should be some traces of it by now. Especially as we don't have quite as many broad-leafed plants in 'ponies because she," he pointed at her, "likes them better than anything else." The three men regarded their small charge, who was bubbling her crystal clear bathwater, greatly enjoying this innocent occupation. "Then there's that sort of horn thing in the middle of her forehead," Gill remarked. "Unicorns were supposed to purify water." "Water maybe," Calum agreed as he had been brought up with some of the same fairy tales as Gill, "but air?" "Wa-ter?" the youngling said, dropping her jaw in what they now recognized as her smile. "Air?" she added, though it came out in two syllables, "ayir." "That's right, baby, water and air. The two things both our species can't live without," Rafik said, sighing at the puzzle of her. "Let's call her Una," Gill suggested suddenly into the silence. "I don't like it," Rafik said, shaking his head. "We're in the As, you know, not the Us." "Acorna?" Calum. "Sure beats 'baby' and youngling' and 'sweetums.'" He glanced sideways at Gill, whom he had overheard addressing his charge with what Calum thought a nauseating euphemism. "Acorna?" Rafik considered. "Better than Una." He picked up a cup, dipped it in the clear bathwater, and as he made to pour it over her head. Gill grabbed it out of his hand. "You ain't even Christian," he said-and, pouring the water over her head, "I dub thee Acorna." "No, no, you twit," Calum said, taking the cup from his hand and dipping it in. "I baptize thee Acorna. I'll stand as godfather." "You -will not. I will." "Where does that leave me?" Rafik demanded. Acorna stood up in the sink, and only his quick movement kept her from falling out of the improvised bath. "Holding the baby," Gill and Calum said in unison. Calum handed him the towel. They had learned to dry off as much moisture as possible because, once set on her feet again, Acorna tended to shake herself and there was too much equipment about that did not need daily sprinklings. The Khedive had cracked and digested 'Azelnut and was on her way to DF-4-H3.1, a small LLchondrite that should have a high enough concentration of valuable metals to make up the payload for this trip, when the first announcements from Base reached them. "Summary of proposed adjustments to shareholder status ..." Gill scowled at the reader. "Why are they sending us this garbage? We're miners, not pixel-pushers or bean-counters!" "Let me see that." Rafik snapped his fingers at the console. "Hardcopy, triple!" "Wasting paper," Calum commented. Acorna needs more scratch paper to mark on," Gill said. "And if this is what I think it is," Rafik added, you two will be wanting to read it for yourselves, not to wait for me." "Whatever it is," Gill said in disgust after peering at his printout, "it's wrapped up in enough bureaucratic double-talk that we'll have to wait for you to interpret anyway, Rafik." "Not all of it," Calum said slowly. "This paragraph-" he tapped his own hardcopy-"says that our shares in Mercantile Mining and Exploration are now worth approximately three times what they were when we left Base." Gill whistled. "For news like that, they can wrap it up any way they please!" "And thLt paragraph," Calum went on, "says that they have become nonvoting shares." "Is that legal? Oh, well, for three times the money, who cares? We didn't have enough shares between us to make a difference anyway." Calum was blinking furiously as he translated the announcement into numbers without bothering to consult the voice calculator. "The net worth of our shares has increased by a factor of threepoint-two-five, actually. But if -we had ever voted our shares in a block, our interest in MME would have been sufficient to influence a close-run policy decision." "I believe," Rafik said in an oddly strangled voice, "that if you two will stop jingling your pocket change and look at the last page, you will observe the important part of this announcement. It seems MME has been acquired. By Amalgamated." Gill flipped through his hardcopy. "Says here it's a merger, not an acquisition." Rafik shrugged. "When the tiger executes a merger with the goat, which one walks away?" "Ah, it's nothing for us to be concerned about," Gill said. "We hadn't enough shares to be worth the voting anyway, Calum, and besides, we were never around for their AGMs when we could vote. And it says right here that nothing is going to change in the way the company is run." Rafik shrugged again. "They always say that. It's a sure sign that heads are about to roll." "Back on Base? Sure. But that won't affect us." "Not immediately, no." "Oh, quit spouting doom and gloom, Rafik. Since when do you know so much more about the ways of big business than the rest of us? Like I said, we're miners, not pixel-pushers." "My uncle Hafiz," Rafik said demurely, "is a merchant. He has explained some of these matters to me. The next announcement should follow within twenty-four to thirty-six hours Standard. That will be the company's change of name. The restructuring and the first revised organizational chart will occur somewhat later, but still well before we reach Base-especially if you still intend mining Daffodil before our return." "I'm beginning to think we should rename DF-4-H3.1 Daffy, in your honor, Rafik," Gill said. "You can't possibly predict all that." "Wait and see," Rafik suggested. "Or to make it more amusing, how about a small wager? I'll give you odds of-umm-three to two that you'll not recognize the old MME by the time we bring the Khedive, in again." Calum grinned. "Not very good odds, Rafik, for someone who claims to be as certain as you are of the outcome!" Rafik's brown lashes swept down across his face as demurely as any dancing girl in his ancestors' harems could have looked. "My uncle Hafiz," he murmured, "also kept racing horses. He instructed me never to bet on longer odds than I had to." "And even if they do reorganize," Gill went on, "we're independent contractors, not staff employees. It won't affect us." "Remembering some of your other famous last •words, Gill," Calum said unhappily, "I rather wish you hadn't said that." The Khedive stayed out much longer than their original prospecting plan filed -with MME. A case of finding Daffodil nearly as lucrative as 'Azelnut and covering a wider area. Since their water remained pure and their air remarkably clear of CO2, they really were not at all pushed. Acorna also supplied diversion enough to keep all three men from feeling any need to seek fresher companions. Though their arguments about her upbringing slowly verged on the "•what'11 we teach her today" rather than physical concerns, the debates usually occurred while she was sleeping. She did require a good deal of sleep, growing out of nap times to at least ten hours in the hammock they devised as her sleeping accommodation. Once asleep, she was impervious to noise - except for the one time a thruster misfired and set off the hooter and she was wide awake in an instant and standing by her assigned escape pod. (Rafik had put her original pod in it, "just in case" he'd said, and the others had concurred. As there were only three pods on the Khedive, and Calum was the smallest of the miners, he would share hers.) So they would discuss her lessons quite freely and sometimes at the top of their lungs. Such EVA work as was needed was generally accomplished when she was asleep, or so involved with her "studying" she didn't notice that one of them was gone. "We're going to have to train her out of such dependence, you know," Rafik said one night. "I mean, when we get back to Base, we'll each have duties that will separate us, and she's got to learn that having just one of us around is okay, too." "How do we do that?" Calum wanted to know. "Start doing short EVAs while she's awake, so she sees us going and coming back. I think once she realizes that we f)o come back, she'll settle down more," Rafik said, shaking his head and casting a sorrowful glance to where she swayed slightly in her hammock. "Poor tyke. Losing her family to who knows what. Small wonder she needs to see all of us all the time." They'd been giving her lessons in Basic, naming everything in the KheSive for her. At first she had reciprocated-at least they thought that -was what she was doing-with sounds in her own language. But since her words sounded like nothing they'd ever heard before and their efforts to repeat them were dead failures, she soon began accepting and using their vocabulary. "Just as well," said Gill. "A pity for her to lose her original language," Calum said, "but she's so young, I doubt she had that much command of it anyway." "Well, she sure knew how to say ..." and Gill spelled the word out rather than upset Acorna by hearing it spoken. "Awi?" she said aloud in response. The look of expectancy in Acorna s eyes as she looked toward the airlock of the KheSive nearly had the tenderhearted Gill in tears. "She can spell?" Rafik exclaimed, grasping the important facet of that incident. "Hey, there, Acorna baby, what does R-A-F-I-K spell?" Diverted, she pointed her whole hand, the digits closed as was her habit, at Rafik and said his name. "And G-I-L-L?" "Gill." She made the odd noise through her nostrils which the men had identified as her laugh. "C-A-L-U-M?" demanded the last of her parent figures. "Calum!" Now she drummed her closed hands on the table and her feet on the floor, her expression of high happiness. A good bit of that day's segment went into a spelling lesson. That evening produced the knowledge that she had assimilated the alphabet, and with only a little help from her friends, she began to print what she spelled. "In a ten-point type, gentlemen, if you will examine the evidence," Calum said, holding up one of the sheets she had covered with her delicately wrought script. "What's so amazing about that?" Rafik asked, turning the sheet to the other side where the printout words were also in ten point type. "How much has she absorbed?" "Damn," Acorna said very clearly as the writing implement she was using ran dry. "I'd say more than enough, mates," Gill said, "and he who uses foul language will pay one half credit to the box for every foul-mouthed syllable uttered from this point onward." He picked up an empty disk box, started to write FOUL MOUTH on it when Acorna, reading it, repeated the legend. He erased it hastily and wrote FINE instead. "What is 'fine'?" Acorna asked. That's when they showed her how to access the Khedive's, reference programs. She had a bit of trouble getting her oddly shaped fingers to hit just the keys she wanted until Rafik made up a keyboard with spacings appropriate to her manual dexterity. If improving this new skill kept her occupied so that they could get on with their professional work and more beneficiated ore was sacked and stored in the drone carrier pods that festooned the exterior of the Khedive, she totally confounded them three days later. "Cargo pods are nearly two-thirds full. What. . . when they are three-thirds full?" "Say what?" Rafik asked, blinking at her. "I think she's trying to ask what we'll do then. We take the three-thirds full pods back to Base, get paid for them, resupply the ship, and come back for more," Calum replied, trying to speak in a nonchalant tone. "But Daffodil is more than three-thirds cargo pods." "Well, you know, we send the iron and nickel back by the mag drive. The ship's own payload is merely the metals too valuable to send that way," Calum explained, as if he really expected Acorna to understand him. "Platinum is val-uble." "That's right." "Then palladium and rhodium and ruthenium is val-uble." "Are," Calum corrected absently. Rafik had straightened. "Did you hear that? She knows the platinum-group metals!" "And why not?" Gill retorted. "Doesn't she hear us talking about them all the time?" Acorna stamped her foot to get back their attention. "Osmium is val-uble. Iridium is val-uble. Rhenium is not val-uble." "Rhenium isn't one of the platinum group," Calum corrected her, "but at the moment, thanks to the boom in proton accelerometers, it is very valuable indeed." Acorna frowned. "Not mining rhenium." "We would if there was any on Daff, I assure you, honey." "Rhenium is. Deep." "No, love. Daffodil's regolith is rich in platinum-group metals, but low in iron and the minor metals, including rhenium. We could tell that from spectroscopic analysis and . . . um, other instruments," said Gill, who left the technical task of deciding which asteroids were likely candidates to Calum whenever he could. "That's why we're miners, hon. This is our job. And we are very lucky to have found Daffodil. 'Azelnut was good, but the Daff's been better for us." "Deep!" Acorna insisted. "Use auger. Drill. Find rhenium, go back soon. Then go somewhere new?" "To find your folks?" Acorna's eyes narrowed and she looked down an elegant but definitely equine nose at her closed hands. "Honey, one of the reasons we've stayed out so long is to make enough money to do a real good galactic search for your folks. Your Awi. Was Awi the only one in your ship?" "No. Lalli there, too." "Your mother and father?" Gill asked, hoping that now her comprehension of Basic was so good, she might be able to make the leap to translating her mother tongue. "No, Awi and Lalli." "Nice try. Gill," Rafik said, laying a sympathetic hand on his arm. "By the way, hon, three-thirds full is all full. Three-thirds make one," Calum said, seeking to distract her from her sad contemplation of her hands. "Thirds are fractions." "Fractions?" Her head came up. "Parts of a whole. There're all kinds of fractions, halves and quarters and fifths and sixths and lots and lots, and when you have two halves, you have a -whole. When you have four quarters, you have a whole." "And five fives is a whole, too?" Her eyes were wide again as she grasped the concept. "What is the smallest? One and one?" "We also got us a mathematical genius," Rafik said, throwing up his slim fingered hands in humorous awe. One mathematical concept led to another, and it wasn't long before Acorna was accessing algebraic equations. Calum, muttering something about leaving no regolithic grain unturned, bullied the others into using the tether and auger to go beneath the fine, friable rubble of Daffodil's outer layers. "Why not teach her something useful? Like how to watch the catalytic converter gauges and switch over at the right temps?" Rafik asked. "Then I'd get to go out with you guys on EVAs and she'd have less of this dependency thing." "I think," Calum said in awed tones, "she was born knowing more useful things than we can imagine." He was inspecting the latest drilling samples by remote control. "Look at this analysis, will you?" "Rhenium and hafnium," Rafik said slowly, bending over the screens. "High concentrations, too. If the drill keeps bringing up this quality of ore, we can make our payload and be back at Base sooner than if we keep working the surface regolith for platinum. And the load will be richer by~" "Forty-two point six five percent," Calum said, blinking absently. "She dalS) there was rhenium down deep, you know." "Daffodil shows as an undifferentiated asteroid. There've been no atmospheric processes to move deposits. Logically, the deep rock should be the same metals, in the same concentration, as the surface regolith . . . just harder to get at." "Logically," Gill retorted, "looking at this analysis, it isn't. There just may be a few things the cosmologists don't know yet. But I'd give a pretty penny to know how you knew, Acorna acushla. I think we'd better teach her the rest of the metals, gentlemen, so she knows what to tell us about from now on. And as for dependency ..." Gill snorted. "Once you made her her own keyboard, she undepended herself, or hadn't you two noticed?" "Some are born to be hackers, and some ain't," Rafik said. "Well, it won't hurt to try, now •will it?" was Gill's retort, but he was as proud of Acorna as they all were. "We're not doing so bad as parents, are we. "How mature was she born?" Calum asked, almost plaintively. "She's only been aboard for ..." He had to access the log for the date she'd been recovered. "Hey, twelve months and fifteen days!" "A year?" Rafik repeated astonished. "A year!" Gill cried. "Hell, we forgot her birthday!" The other two, tight-lipped with anger, pointed to the FINE jar, which hadn't actually been fed for some time. Purely superficial changes," Gill said as the Khedive arrived •within visual range of the old MME Base. "You'll not claim your winnings on the basis of a few cosmetic details, will you now, Rafik?" "I should be delighted," Rafik said, "not to claim them at all." No announcement of any reorganization had reached them, but the MME logo that had once decorated both sides of each docking gate had been replaced by a much larger sign reading, AMALGAMATED MANUFACTURING. Instead of Johnny Greene's cheerful greeting, they had been read into position by something with a dry mechanical voice that refused to give its name and complained about their failure to introduce themselves with "the Amalgamated protocol," whatever that might be. The docking bay itself was much the same, but immediately within the double airlock doors leading to the interior of Base they were met by the owner of the dry voice, still complaining about their failure to use the Amalgamated protocol. "Look, mate," Gill said, "like the pilot here told you-" he nodded toward Calum "-we're the Khedive, on contract to MME, and we didn't get word of any new approach and docking protocol. If you chaps wanted us to use something new, why didn't you send us the rules?" "Violation of regulations to send classified company protocols via unsecured space transmissions." "The ancient Americans had a phrase for it," Rafik said, smiling slightly. "Something about a twenty-two catch, I believe." "And where's Johnny Greene?" "Redundant." "And just what is that supposed to mean?" Gill's voice had grown loud enough to echo down the corridors. A young woman in a pale blue coverall, her fair hair drawn back into a bun, hurried forward with one hand raised. "Eva Glatt," she introduced herself, holding out one small hand, "TT&A-that's Testing, Therapy, and Adjustment Department. The consolidation of MME with Amalgamated has resulted in a number of organizational changes for efficiency, Mr.-Giloglie, is it? I've come to take charge of the child." "She is in our charge," Gill said. "Oh, but surely you won't want to be bothered with her while you're filling out the docking protocol forms and reregistering the KheSive as an Amalgamated ship. I've prepared everything, though your message did not give us much time to make ready." Raflk and Calum had convinced Gill that it would be tactful to tell Base something about the enigma they were bringing back from this latest expedition, but they had all waited until they were on the way back from Daffodil, just in case Base had any ideas about issuing an immediate recall. "And Dr. Forelle himself wishes to inspect the pod in 'which she was found and your tapes of the initial contact," Eva went on. "I'll just have that material brought off the ship and taken to him while you're reregistering yourselves, shall I? And you can come with me, you poor baby." She knelt and held out her hand to Acorna, who put both hands behind her own back and stepped back a pace, narrowing her pupils to vertical slits. "Not," she said with emphasis. "Complete sentences, Acorna acushia," Gill said with a sigh. "Now, dear," Eva Glatt said brightly, "you'll be very bored staying here with your nice uncles while they do all that tedious paperwork. Wouldn't you like to come along to the creche and play some nice games?" Acorna glanced at Rafik. He gave a small nod and she relaxed her guarded pose slightly. "Will go," she said. "Short!" "There, you see," Eva Glatt said, straightening, "it's just a matter of elementary psychology. I'm sure she'll be quite docile and trainable." "That woman," said Gill as Eva led Acorna off, "is an idiot." "She said something about a creche," said Rafik. "Acorna might enjoy being with some other children for a change. And I do have a presentiment that the next hour or so will be boring in the extreme." While Gill, Raflk, and Calum worked their way through questionnaires demanding everything from grandmother's middle name to preferences in basic food groups. Dr. Alton Forelle skimmed through the ship's log of Acorna's first utterances half a dozen times. "Again!" he snapped, and his assistant, Judit Kendoro, obediently replayed the first segments of that haunting cry. "Idiots," Forelle said cheerfully. "Why couldn't they have recorded everything she said? Why did they have to interfere by an attempt to overlay Basic Universal speech patterns? There's not nearly enough data here to analyze." "There's enough to tell that she was just a lost baby crying for somebody she knew," said Judit softly. She thought she might be reduced to-tears herself if she had to listen to that wail of "Awi, awi!" any longer. Forelle shut off the player. "You're anthropomorphizing, Judit," he said. "How can we presume to interpret an alien speech merely from inflection and situation? We shall have to make a thorough syntactic and semantic analysis before any conclusions at all are valid." "And just how are we going to do that," Judit said, "when she's been with these people for over a year, exposed to Basic Universal and forgetting her own speech patterns?" "We'll regress her to the time when she was found, of course," Forelle replied, as if that should have been assumed. "The technique is simple enough, and with the right drugs, no one resists a regression. From the number and sequence of sounds she was making when they found her, she must have had some mastery of her native language at that time. The information is still there, simply overlaid by recent experiences. We have only to strip off the overlay." Judit made a small, involuntary gesture. Even adults who had volunteered for the process found a full regression terrifying. What would it be like for this child? "You'll halt the process, of course, if she appears traumatized?" "Of course," Forelle assured her. "But you mustn't be so tender. We must have as much evidence as possible to back up this discovery. If she is a sapient alien, speaking a language totally unrelated to any human tongue, whatever we can learn of that language will be of inestimable scientific value. We can't let individual concerns stand in the way of Science." "And publication," Judit said dryly. "Oh, don't worry about that," Forelle said. "If you help me with the child, I shall certainly list you as one of the coauthors. And you must bear the other possibility in mind, too. If she's just a deformed mutant gabbling some known tongue in a way we didn't recognize from the log, what fools we should look, announcing the discovery of the first true alien language! We can't risk that, can we?" He smiled into space and went on, more to himself than to Judit, "Its high time linguistics came into its own as a scientific discipline. We've been ridiculously hobbled all these years by a squeamish reluctance to experiment on human beings. Why, the entire critical-period theory of language learning could have been settled generations ago if someone had just had the fortitude to isolate a few dozen babies from human speech for ten or twenty years. It would be a beautifully controlled experiment, you see-take a child out every six months and expose it to language, and when they stop responding, you know the critical period has passed. Of course, one wouldn't want to contaminate the test subjects by returning the exposed children, and one has to allow for sickness, and the need to duplicate results, so rather a large initial test group would be required. I'm sure that's why my request for funding was turned down. Governments are so shortsighted about pure research. But this time I won't need to wait for a grant. I've got the subject right here, at least I you test her intelligence at all?" "Did you ask her to write a simple program for carbonyl reduction?" "Or to calculate the concentration of platinumgroup metals in the regolith of an E-type chondrite?" "Don't be ridiculous!" Eva snapped. "Even if the child could perform such tasks, she must have learned them by rote. Doing such extremely age-inappropriate things is another sign of the social maladjustment -we will cure after her deformities have been corrected. If she is to develop into an adaptively competent personality, her upbringing must be entrusted to experts who will understand how to help her compensate for her disabilities without requiring excessive achievement from her." "And exactly -what did you have in mind?" Rafik inquired politely. "Well, I-she must be tested more thoroughly first, of course-but I see no reason why she should not be trainable to hold a minimumresponsibility position in a sheltered workspace." "Stacking trays in the company cafeteria," Gill said. "Or folding linen," Calum suggested. Eva flushed. "I'm not a miracle worker," she snapped. "You've brought me a deformed, retarded child who has already suffered the effects of nearly two years in a socially maladaptive environment." "I would not, myself, be so quick to be assuming the child is retarded," said Calum. "Once you take your eyes away from the psychological tests long enough to observe that she is not human which any competent biologist could verify for you-perhaps you will begin to understand that differences are not the same as defects. And yes, she has some problems with language and with manipulating equipment designed for humans. So? In any other field. Dr. Glatt, the expert is the one who knows how to solve problems, not the one who wails that they're unsolvable." A gleam of triumph appeared in Eva Glatt's eyes. "As a matter of fact," she said sweetly, "I am already preparing to solve some ot the child's problems. There's no known surgical correction for the hand problem, but that disfiguring excrescence in the middle of her forehead can easily be removed." "That-you mean you want to cut off her horn?" Gill exploded. "Woman, have you lost your wits? That's not a deformity; it's an integral part of her." "Amalgamated's on-site med team is quite capable of administering a local anesthetic and tying off any blood vessels that have infiltrated the deformity," Kva said primly. "I think you do not understand." Rafik leaned over Eva's desk, his dark eyes flashing with intensity. "Acorna is ... not . . . human. Differences are not deformities. And her race Uife^ that horn. We've already learned that she can use it to purify air and water, and we suspect it's integral to her metal-sensing abilities." Eva sighed. "I think you three have been Isolated too long. You're beginning to hallucinate. What you suggest is not scientifically possible." "We speak from our own experience," Calum said. Eva fapped at her desk console. "In my capacity as head of TT&A, I shall recommend extended leave and a course of psychological adjustment for all of you before you are allowed to take out company property such as the KheSlve again. My evaluation shows that you are not only socially maladaptive but seriously delusional." Gill began to hiss through his clenched teeth again, but Rafik stopped him. "Never mind the minor insults, Gill. The first priority is to stop this nonsense of surgery on Acorna. The horn is an integral part of her. Without it she would be crippled ... or worse. We will absolutely not, under any circumstances, give permission for an operation." "I think you don't understand. Acorna is no longer your problem. After surgery and remedial training, she is to be transferred to an orphanage pending identification of the parents who abandoned her." "The devil she is!" Gill roared. "We're taking her back. Now. Are you going to send for her, or do we go and get her?" "She was scheduled to go into surgery at 133C hours," Eva Glatt said. She glanced at her wrisi unit. "It's too late for you to make a fuss now." "Relax, Gill," Calum said after checking his own unit. "It's only 1345 now. They'll still be fiddling around with the anesthesia." He perched on the corner of Eva Glatt's desk, one arm casually draped over her console. "But I do think you had better tell us how to get to Surgery. Now!" A young woman with a wrist-thick braid of dark hair hanging over one shoulder stepped into the office. "I believe I can help you gentlemen with that," she said. Her chest rose and fell as though she had just been running, but her manner was calm enough. "I'm going that way myself, as it happens." "That," said Gill, "would be very helpful. We're in rather a hurry, though. ..." He steered the girl out into the hall, blocking her view of Eva Glatt's desk, while Calum slipped behind the desk and stopped Eva from reaching for one of the recessed buttons in the desk console. "Rafik, go on ahead. I'll bring this one-keep her under my eye so that she doesn't get any ideas about calling Security." He hauled Eva Glatt to her feet and clamped his free hand over her mouth. "Calum," Rafik interjected, "we do not have time to drag a captive •with us. And we do not wish to alarm our guard." Eva Glatt's eyes rolled up in her head as he approached and she sagged limply against Calum's arm. "Well, that's solved," said Calum with relief. "She's fainted." "No," Rafik said, "just weak with fear. I apologize for this," he told Eva, who was now feebly struggling again, "but we do not have access to your more scientific methods of quieting people." His fist tapped her forehead, so quickly she could hardly have seen the blow coming, and this time she fell back in the complete relaxation of true unconsciousness. Gill and the girl who'd offered to guide them were some distance ahead when they came out of the office, walking at a pace just short of a jog through the long curving corridor to the left. Rafik and Calum ran and caught up with them at an intersection where they had paused for a moment. "Running," the girl said severely, "is likely to draw attention. Just -walk as quickly as you can manage. I gather you three are the men who brought the alien foundling in, is that right?" "At least somebody around here understands she's not of our kind," Rafik said as they racewalked down the hall. "Yes. Acorna is ours. Or we are hers. Depending on how you look at it. And she must not be put through this surgery." "Yes. My boss-Dr. Forelle-wants it stopped, too. He was to have called ahead, to make sure they delay until I get there with the orders to release her to our department." "Just a minute!" Gill grabbed the girl by the upper arm. "She's to be released to UJ, not to another department of this blasted company." "You," said the girl without slackening pace, "can't get Eva Glatt's orders for immediate surgery rescinded. I can." "And who might you be?" Rafik asked. "Judit Kendoro, Psycholinguistics. I work for Dr. Alton Forelle." "Saints defend us," Gill exclaimed, "is there nobody works for Amalgamated but headshrinkers?" "Amalgamated decided to use the old MME base as headquarters for the research and personnel departments," Judit explained. "They're phasing out the independent mining operations; yours is one of the last contract groups to come in. Deliveries will be handled by drone and routed to other stations from now on." Despite the speed they were making, she wasn't even breathing hard. "Forelle," Rafik said. "The man who wanted our logs of the first interaction?" "Yes. He believes-or hopes-she is a sapient alien." "Then he's on our side?" "I wouldn't say that exactly." Judit skidded to a halt just before a three-way intersection with corridors painted in different patterns of yellow and green stripes. "He doesn't want her put through surgery before he has a chance to study her. What do you want with her?" "To take care other," Gill said. Judit looked him up and down for a long moment, then turned to Rafik. "I believe you mean that." "Believe it," said Rafik. "Then - " She glanced back the way they had come. Calum followed. Judit dropped her voice. "Don't let Dr. Forelle get her. He'll mine her brain for memories of language without caring what he does to the rest of her. It could be worse than the surgery." "Then what can we do?" "Is your ship ready to take off?" "We've just docked, we'd fuel and air to spare, no repairs scheduled ..." "Then this," Judit said, "is what we do next." She outlined her idea. "You trust us easily," Rafik commented when she had finished. "One must trust domebcxhi," Judit said, "and . . . I had been listening for a few minutes outside the door before I interrupted you in Dr. Glatt's office. Incidentally, dare I hope that you gagged her?" "No time," Calum said, catching up with them. "Knocked her out." "Good." "If you were, then you know something of us. But what do we know of you? Why should you take this risk for us?" Gill demanded. Judit threw him a scornful glance. "Have you ever heard of Kezdet? " Gill shook his head. "My Uncle Hafiz," Rafik said, "recommended it as a place to be avoided." "Your uncle was right. I got myself and my sister out of Kezdet," Judit said, "and pretty soon I'm going to get my kid brother out. Besides . . . but that doesn't concern you. Let's just say I have seen enough children suffering. If I can save this one, maybe . . . maybe it'll make up for what I ignored in order to get myself out." A few minutes later, Judit Kendoro walked through the swinging doors of Surgery and presented her Amalgamated badge to the desk clerk. "Here to collect Child, Anonymous, recent arrival on the KheVive," she said in a bored monotone. "Dr. Forelle will have transmitted the orders." The clerk nodded and pressed a button. The doors behind her slid open and a tall woman in sterile scrubs came out. "I wuh you people would make up your minds," she said. "We had to give her a global anesthetic, the local didn't work. I could go ahead and get all the restorative work done right now if Forelle would just wait a day." Judit shrugged. "It doesn't matter to me, I'm just the courier. You want her back when we're done?" "If the order for surgery hasn't been canceled by some other department," the •woman snapped. "For now, take her with my compliments. I have enough real patients without getting caught in some power struggle between the psych departments." She nodded toward the room she had come from and a green-gowned aide wheeled out a gurney on which Acorna lay limp and unconscious. The tangle of silvery curls had already been shaved in a wide naked semicircle around her horn. "I'll take her on the gurney," Judit said in a bored tone, "no need for your people to waste time with the transfer." As soon as Judit had control of the gurney, Rafik sprang forward and grabbed her from behind. A plasknife slid out of his sleeve and gleamed across Judit's throat. "Thanks for showing us the way, dummy," he growled in his best threatening tones. "We'll take the kid back now." "You can't do this! You tricked me!" Judit was a terrible actress; the words came out as woodenly as someone reading a Basic literacy test. "Raise the alarm," Rafik threatened the desk clerk and surgeon, "and the girl gets it. Keep quiet, and we'll let her go when we're safely away. Understand?" Gill reached down to the gurney and swept Acorna up in one arm, and Calum held the doors while he and Rafik and Judit made their exit. "Is she all right?" As soon as the doors swung shut behind them, Rafik dropped the pretense of holding Judit at knife point. Now he was at Gill's side, feeling for a pulse in Acorna's wrist. "Breathing," Gill said. "We'll see about the rest when the anesthetic wears off. Judit, is there anything we should know about that?" She shook her head. "Standard anesthesia. She'll be out an hour, maybe two, depending on how long ago it was administered. Just as well, really. Gives you time to get her back on shipboard without a fuss. ... I'd better go with you, though. Keep the knife out, Rafik, and hold my arm. You may need a hostage again." "Which way from here to the docking bay?" Gill asked. "We can take the service tunnels. Less chance of running into people." Judit pressed a panel in the wall and a narrow inner tunnel opened before them, barely wide enough to admit Gill with the burden of a sleeping Acorna. They reached the docking bay without incident. The bored, mechanical clerk who'd replaced Johnny Greene hardly lifted his head •when they came to his desk. "Warn personnel out of the bay and prepare the outer doors for opening," Calum said. "KheDlve departing immediately." "Not cleared," the clerk mumbled without looking up from his console. "Please," Judit said in a shaky voice, "do what they say. He-he's got a knife." This got the clerk's attention. His head snapped up, he gave a startled look at the plasknife in Calum's hand, and he dove under his desk. "Do -what you want, just leave me out of it!" "Well, well," said Gill softly, "and here I thought the wee man might make trouble by trying to be a hero. Calum, d'you know the docking system well enough to clear us for departure?" "If Amalgamated hasn't changed it too much," Calum said. "Here, hold this." He handed the plasknife to Judit, who quickly handed it on to Gill. "I'm a hwtage, you idiots," she hissed. Gill laughed quietly and accepted the task of holding Judit "hostage." Calum, having swiveled the desk console to face him, was oblivious to the byplay. He brought up a series of screens in quick succession, nodding in satisfaction. "Hmm," he said at the sight of the fifth screen. "Hmm . . . Uh-huh. Okay, next, okay, uh-huh." He zipped through the rest of the status screens and tapped in a command. "Okay, that clears us. But there are a couple of little problems." "Anything that would keep us on the base?" "No, but. . ." "Right. We'll discuss them later. Come on! And Judit, act normal. The bay may be cleared, but unless Amalgamated's remodeled, the loading staff can watch us from the top gallery. We don't want any of the staff to notice you're being a hostage." "So I'm not-a-hostage trying to act like a hostage trying to act not-a-hostage," Judit muttered as they passed through the series of doors that protected the interior of Base when the docking bay was open to space. "It's as bad as singing Cherubino, having to be a girl pretending to be a boy pretending to dress up as a girl." "You like ancient opera?" Gill asked in surprise. Judit shrugged. "I was in a couple of amateur productions at school. My voice isn't good enough to go professional. But one year we got Kirilatova to coach us in Figure. She did Susanna, of course." "Kirilatova? But she's got to be about a hundred and ten by now!" "Not quite. She was seventy then," Judit said, "and when she sang Susanna, if you had your eyes closed, she was a girl of twenty about to be married to her beloved. It was an incredible performance. I wish I'd been born early enough to hear her at her peak." "I have cubes," Gill said. "Early performances, originally preserved on DCVCD, then transferred to tri-D when the new format came out." "Are you going to invite the girl up to listen to your opera cubes. Gill? How about lifting Acorna up first?" There was an edge of sarcasm in Calum's voice. They had crossed the open bay without incident while Gill and Judit talked about dead singers. "I might at that," Gill said thoughtfully. He took Judit's hand. "You could come with us. You don't belong with the psych-toads at Amalgamated, you know. As the customer said to the Vassar girl in the brothel, •what's a nice girl like you doing in a place like this?" Judit shook her head. "As the Vassar girl said to the customer, 'Just lucky, I guess.' I know nothing of mining; I'd be useless cargo to you." Calum, who'd been on the verge of making that point, opened his mouth and shut it again with an audible snap. "You'd better knock me out, too, before you go. The hostage act may not have been totally convincing." "After all the help you've been? I couldn't bear to, acushla." "It will lend verisimilitude to an otherwise bald and unconvincing narrative," Judit said. "Look, I need this job. I can earn enough here to see Pal through technical school. Anyway, I ... I have my reasons for staying with Amalgamated. Now will you get on with it?" "Can't," Rafik said. "You've no protection. If you're in this docking bay when we open the doors, and not on the ship, you're dead. You "will have to walk back through the inner doors. As soon as you're safe, -we'll take off. They won't have time to cancel the clearing sequence." Unexpectedly, Judit laughed. "That fat little toad of a receiving clerk is probably still under his desk, and nobody else knows anything's wrong . . . yet. But I look too unharmed to have been the hostage of you brutal roughnecks. Give me the knife. Gill." With rapid efficiency she sliced through her outer coverall at the point •where Gill had been pretending to hold the knife point against her side, then pulled half the hair out of her braid and let it fall in a dark cloud over the side of her face. "Do I look enough of a mess yet?" "You look most beautiful," Gill said, "and I shall carry your memory with me through the cold of space." "Get on with it, you two!" Calum snapped. "We've got Acorna webbed in. The longer you spend chatting the girl up, the more chance of somebody noticing something's wrong." "That's a brave girl," Gill said as he climbed on board the Khedive and strapped himself in for takeoff. He watched Judit's halting progress across the floor of the docking bay. "I hope that limp is part of the acting. ..." "She was moving just fine on the way to Surgery," Calum pointed out. "Rafik! Systems ready? I want us in action the minute she's through the first doors." "Second doors," Gill said firmly. "She's too valuable to risk." "And Acorna? Not to mention us? And the KheSive?" "We'll make it," Gill said -with confidence. And they did. "Now what?" Calum said when they were well away from Base. Gill shrugged. "Long term or short term? Long term, we've still got our skills and our ship, and there are other companies to contract with or -we can go independent. Short term . . . you said something about problems when you -were humming over the console back there. What's our status?" "Refueling only partially complete, but that's no problem; -we've enough to make it back into the asteroid belt, and once there, we can mine a carbonaceous chondrite to supply hydrogen for the fuel converter." "A C-type chondrite will replenish our water and oxygen, too, if necessary," Rafik pointed out. "So what's the problem?" "Food's low. We're about to be temporary vegetarians." "At least one of us won't mind that," Gill said with a tender look at the net where Acorna lay, moving just enough in her drugged sleep to reassure them all that she would wake soon enough. "And we didn't get the replacement auger bits," Calum said. "'Azienut cracked most of them and Daffy just about finished the rest of the box off. Our tether cables are •worn, too. We were due for a good deal of refitting at Base." There were more immediate complications than shortage of spare parts, as they learned when they activated the com units. "Just receiving," Rafik advised them. "Transmitting would give away our position." "Ah, they're not going to follow us out of sector for one little girl nobody had claimed anyway." "'Why step on me?' the ant asked the elephant. 'Because I can, and because you have annoyed me,'" Rafik answered obliquely. "It is not wise to annoy the elephant." "I've got the. Base frequency," Calum announced. "You two might want to listen in." They listened in tight-lipped anger to the repeated announcement being broadcast to all Amalgamated bases and ships. "They're claiming the KheSive is stolen property!" Gill exploded. "They can't do that! She's our ship, free and clear!" "That ghastly female said something about the Khedive being theirs," Calum said thoughtfully. "Rafik, is there some legal mumbo-jumbo in the reorganization that could possibly make it look like we had been leasing the ship from them?" "They can claim whatever they want to," Rafik pointed out. "And if they catch up with us, and we have to argue it out in the courts, who'll be taking care of Acorna?" He smiled benignly at his colleagues. "We might be well advised to take on a new identity." "We can call ourselves whatever we "want," Gill grumbled, "but the ship's registered and known. ..." Rafik's smile was seraphic. "I might know someone who can take care of that little matter for us. For a fee, of course." "What have we got to pay your someone with? I have a strong suspicion Amalgamated's accountants are not going to credit us for all the iron and nickel we've been sending back by drone," Calum said dourly. "And the platinum and titanium are sitting in the Amalgamated shipping bay--wrapped up in our only container nets!" "We have," Rafik said gently, "a large block of extremely valuable, if nonvoting, shares of Amalgamated stock. I think Uncle Hafiz -will be •willing to convert it into local currency for us." There was a moment's pause, then Gill laughed and slapped his knee. "So Amalgamated pays for the refit, after all! Good enough." "We'll be broke afterward," Calum grumbled. "We'll have our ship, our tools, and our skills," Gill said in high good humor. "And Acorna! Never worry, man. There are asteroids out there richer than anything we ever mined on contract. I can feel it in my bones." "So, onward to Uncle Hafiz?" Rafik asked, settling himself at the navigational board and posing his fingers over the keys. "Yeah. Where is your famous Uncle Hafiz?" "The planet is called Laboue; the location is a family secret I'm not allowed to divulge," Rafik said, already plotting in a course. He had completed it and cleared the screen before either Gill or Calum could see what he had entered. "Naughty, naughty!" "Nauuughtie?" a feeble little voice queried. "Acorna, sweetie," and Gill, being nearest, strode to her hammock. "Sorry, hon, sorry. We had no idea at all what those idiots were going to do to our little Acorna." Her pupils widened and the fear drained from her features, her hands and feet opening in relief at finding herself back on board the Khedive and with them. "That stupid woman! Glad I decked her," Calum said. "Very stupid woman," Acorna agreed, nodding her head vigorously and then moaning. "Oh, my head!" "It'll wear off, acushia," he said, and then added to Gill. "Get webbed. We're about to go into the wild black yonder!" Acorna was very nervous for the next few days, so they all made a big effort to divert her and promise, on their honors, that she'd never be left alone with stupid strangers again. One of the fewunessential tasks that Calum had had time to do, before they went to collect Acorna, was to pick up some seed from the chandler. He was offered flowers, too. "There are quite a few decorative broad-leafed types, flowering, too, which do give you some diversity in your 'ponies. Also some botanical oddities that do quite well on nutrient solutions," he'd been told. "Quick growing." While he had been more interested in vegetables and edible legumes and some of the new bean types, he also picked up alfalfa, timothy, and lucernes seeds, remarking that he would be making a planetfall and was doing a favor for a friend. Setting out the seeds and using the Galactic Botanical from the ship's library program to figure out how to speed up their growth helped pass the time and increase the variety of their meals. Acorna had read just as much as Calum and Gill had of the GB and she very shortly told them she had the matter well in hand and they were to please do something else. "You don't suppose she remembers stuff . . . racial memory?" Calum asked. Gill shrugged. "Who's to know? I did manage to check that blood sample we took when she scraped her knee. She's not of a known genotype. Shit!" And he obediently put a half credit in the FINE box. It joined its fellows with a clink. "Hey, man, how much have we got in there?" Calum asked and Gill opened the container, spilling out a good fifty half-credits. "Won't buy much, but it's a start." "Uncle Hafiz will set us up, lads," Rafik assured them from the pilots seat. Then he leaned forward. "Gill, d'you remember that dead ship we found rammed halfway through an asteroid?" "What about it?" "Wasn't it the same class as this one?" "Year or two older." "But same class. Are you getting at what I think you're getting at?" Gill asked, brightening. "Indeed I am, dear lad," Rafik said, grinning from ear to ear. "And that asteroid belt is also on our present heading . . . well, with a slight detour." "We change identities with it?" Calum asked. "Can we So that?" "With a little extra help from Uncle Hafiz, that should be no problemo," Rafik said. "Shall we?" Gill and Calum made eye contact. "Well, it's -worth the effort, I think, especially if Uncle Hafiz can fiddle some updates about where that ship has been while she was missing." "He's a whiz at that sort of thing," Rafik said and began to whistle off-key. "Sure get Amalgamated off our tail if they should bother to come looking for us," Calum said, looking anxiously in the direction of the 'ponies, where Acorna was working. "It would at that," Gill said, after fingercombing his beard. He held up a portion of the belt-long hirsute appendage. "Well, I wanted to have a good trim, but I'll bet Amalgamated axed the barber shop, too." "I'll give you a trim," Calum suggested suavely. "No way, mate," Gill said, wrapping his beard up and stuffing it down the front of his tunic. "Uncle Hafiz has an excellent barber," Rafik said soothingly. "I can't wait to meet this Uncle Hafiz," Gill said. "He will amaze you," Rafik said with smug pride. He then added, in a much less confident tone, "Only one thing. He isn't to know about Acorna." "Why not?" Gill and Calum asked in unison. "He's a collector." "Of what?" "Of -whatever's going, and I'm bloody sure he's never seen anything like Acorna." "Won't that complicate matters a trifle?" Rafik cocked his head to one side, then the other, and shrugged. "I am not my uncle's nephew for nothing. We will contrive. We can not lose Acorna." The physical exchange of their beacon with that of the wreck took, in the end, three days of sweaty labor. The first problem was that mining tools were ill adapted to the task of cutting and welding ship parts, and their mechanical repair tools were not designed to function in the vacuum, dust, and temperature extremes of the asteroid surface. "Without Acorna to purify the air," Calum commented at the end of their first shift, "this cabin would be stinking like the locker rooms at the TriCentennial Games by now." "Water, too," Gill agreed. With constant recycling, ship's air and water usually developed a stale tang that nothing could get rid of. "Acorna, you're good fortune to us." Acorna shook her head, sadness filling her dark eyes as the centers narrowed to slits. "You are that," Calum insisted. "What's the matter?" "You run away. We hide. I ..." Acorna visibly struggled to put the words together. "If I go back, you do not have to hide. My fault!" The men's eyes met over her head. "We've been talking too freely," Rafik said softly. "She speaks so little," Calum agreed, "I forget how much she understands." "Never mind that now," Gill said more loudly. "The important thing is to explain that she's got it all •wrong, don't you think?" He picked Acorna up and hugged her. "Not your fault, sweetie-pie. Remember the stupid woman Uncle Calum decked? Not your fault she was such a twit, was it now?" Acorna put the fingers of one hand into her mouth. Her eyes were dark disbelieving pools. "Listen, Acorna," Rafik said. "We did not like those people at Base. We did not want to work for them. If we had never . . . met . . . you, we would still not work for Amalgamated. Would we, fellows?" Calum's and Gill's emphatic "No!" seemed to halfway convince Acorna; at least, the silvery pupils of her eyes slowly returned to normal and she consented to munch thoughtfully on the spinach stalks Rafik offered her. By the end of the shift, she was sufficiently recovered to pester them about why they stayed on an asteroid that she could tell held no interesting concentration of metals. "This is a carbonaceous chondrite, Acorna," Calum explained. "Simplify it, will you? The kid doesn't know those big words!" "Just because basic astronomical chemistry is beyond you, Gill," Calum retorted, "don't assume Acorna is as thick as you are. She knows the words we teach her, and we might as well teach her the right ones for the Job." He went on explaining that the hydrogen and oxygen they could extract from this asteroid would provide them with extra air and water, as well as with the fuel they would need to reach their next stop. "I clean air," Acorna said, stamping a hooflike foot. "So you do," Calum agreed easily, "but we don't know your tolerances yet, see, and we don't want to have you doing more than you can handle at this body weight. Besides, we need fuel. . . ." Every few sentences he had to stop and draw diagrams of molecular structures and conversion routines. Acorna was fascinated, and Calum drew the teaching session out until she fell asleep in his arms. "Whew!" Calum fastened the sleeping child in her net and stood up, stretching his back. "Okay, fellows, a few ground rules. We'd better discuss certain things only when Acorna is asleep. She's too clever by half; if she knows everything, she'll carry a load of guilt she doesn't need. That goes for the beacon switch, too. If she doesn't know? about it, she won't ask inconvenient questions about it later. As far as she's concerned, we're just here to refuel, right?" "Just as well we never got around to picking a suit small enough for her out of Stores," Gill commented. Rafik nodded. "Soon she must be allowed to go outside with us. She can be inestimably useful in locating and assessing mineral deposits, and irrespective of the benefit to us, Acorna needs to feel useful. But for now, yes, it is as well to keep her in ignorance of our real reason for stopping here." After that it took even longer to exchange the beacons, because they had to do the work only when Acorna was asleep, officially confining their activities when she was awake to the extraction of hydrogen and oxygen. Once the onerous task was completed, Rafik reprogrammed the navigation computer for the destination he still refused to reveal, and all three men slept as much as possible on the way to planetfall. "Are we to stay on the ship the whole time we're here?" Gill demanded. "Rafik's probably afraid you'll be able to identify this planet's star if we set foot outside the port area," Calum said. "You can stop worrying, Rafik. There was really no point in those little games you played with the navigational computer. I know exactly where we are." "How?" Rafik demanded. "Fuel consumption," Calum said smugly. "Triangulation on known stars. Time. Course corrections. I plotted the course in my head and checked the numbers on my wrist unit. We're on the fourth planet from - " "Don't say it," Rafik interrupted. "At least let me swear to Uncle Hafiz that the name and location of his hideaway have never been spoken on board this ship." "Why?" Calum asked. "What's the big deal? Anybody could compute - " "No, Calum, they couldn't!" Rafik rolled his eyes heavenward. "I could write a book on the hazards of shipping with a mathematical genius 'who hasn't an ounce of street sense to balance the other side of his head. There are all sorts and conditions of people here, Calum, and the one thing they all have in common is a strong desire for anonymity. A desire," he added pointedly, "which we share with them, or have you forgotten already? Now, lets keep this simple. You stay right here. I visit Uncle Hafiz and see what sort of a cut he'll want from the profit on our shares in return for converting them to galactic credits and fixing the registration of the new beacon." "He's not going to do it from family feeling, huh?" Gill asked. Rafik rolled his eyes again and sighed heavily. "Just . . . stay . . . here. I'll be back as soon as I can, okay?" "If you people are that big on secrecy, why couldn't we do it all by tight-beam transmission from low orbit? Why make a personal visit?" Rafik looked shocked. "All this time working together, and you two have yet to learn decent manners. You infidels can cut deals electronically if you wish, but Children of the Three Prophets meet face to face. It's the honorable way to settle an agreement. Besides," he added more prosaically, "no transmission is so tight that it can't be intercepted." He was back sooner than they expected, tightlipped and burdened down with a quantity of squashy parcels wrapped in opaque clingfilm. "You do not look entirely happy. What's the matter, does Uncle Hafiz want an extortionate cut of the shares?" Calum asked. "And how come you stopped off to go shopping?" Gill added. "Uncle Hafiz," Rafik said, still tight-lipped, "is more traditionally minded than I am. He -wishes to meet the other parties to the agreement face to face before -we begin serious discussions." "NotAcorna!" "Port authorities reported four crew members. He wants to see all four. It'll be all right," Rafik soothed Gill, "he won't actually Jee Acorna. I've thought of a way around it. It's a gooi) idea, too; one we might want to use from now on." "And it involves yards and yards of white polysilk," said Calum, investigating the contents of one of the packages. "Umm, Rafik, don't take offense, but I've had previous experience with some of your 'good ideas.' If this is going to be like the time we tried to slip into Kezdet space to collect that titanium that was just sitting there begging to be mined and refined ..." "That was a good idea, too!" Rafik said indignantly. "How was I to know that the Kezdet Guardians of the Peace had just hired a new hand who would recognize our beacon from old days at MME?" "All I'm wondering," Calum murmured, "is what crucial factor don't you know this time?" "It's nothing like that," Rafik said. "Just a minor costume change. Look, we don't want anybody noticing Acorna, right? So -we're going to be more traditional even than Uncle Hafiz. I told him I'd been studying the Three Books-that made him happy. Then I explained that I had been inspired by the First Book to study further, and that I had been accepted into the NeoHadithians." "All of which means precisely what?" Gill asked. "The theological ramifications are probably beyond you," Rafik said. "The important point is that my -wives -wear hijab, which will be the perfect disguise for Acorna." He took a length of white polysilk from Calum and held it up with both hands so that they could see the shape of the garment: a many-layered hood atop a billowing gown of even more layers, each individual layer light and seemingly transparent, but collectively a cloud of iridescent reflective white. "As an enlightened Child of the Three Prophets, naturally I know better than to adhere to the ancient superstitions about the veiling of -women. There is actually nothing in the First Book--what you unbelievers call the Koran-that requires -women to be veiled and secluded. And the Second Prophet absolutely repudiated that and other barbaric practices, such as the prohibition against fermented liquors. But the Neo-Hadithians claim that the Hadith, the traditional tales of the life of the First Prophet, are as sacred as the words of the Books. They want to go back to the worst of the bad old ways. Including the veil. Uncle Hafiz is disgusted -with me, but he says he -will respect my religious prejudices -while •waiting for me to outgrow them. He -will not actually look upon the faces of my wives, but they must be present during the agreement." "Wives?" Calum repeated. Rafik's eyes sparkled. "That is the really brilliant part of the idea. I told Uncle Hafiz that I was accompanied by my partner, an unbeliever, and by my two "wives. You see, that neatly accounts for the four people reported on this ship. And anybody looking for three miners and a little girl will probably not think to investigate a neo-Hadithian, his two wives, and his partner." "Sounds risky to me," said Calum. "You mean one of us stays on the ship and you pick up some local girl to play your second wife? How can you be sure she won't talk?" "That-er-was not quite what I had in mind," Rafik said. He shook out the second length of white polysilk and held it up against Calum. "Yes. I estimated your height quite well. Now, do remember to take small steps and keep your eyes down like a proper Neo-Hadithian wife, will you?" "I don't believe it," Dr. Anton Forelle said explosively when he read the reports on the KheSive. "I - don't - believe - it." "I didn't want to believe it either," said Judit, "but the reports are quite clear." She had been crying. "It's so sad. Those nice men, and the little girl..." "If it were true," Forelle said, "it would be a tragedy. The end of my chance for the research coup of the decade-of the century! But it's not true. Amalgamated hires fools; I should know, I'm in charge of inventing the language of the lies they feed their fools, making up nice-sounding words for inhumane policy directives." He shot a shrewd glance at Judit. "You don't like the sound of that, do you, girl? Don't like me to say straight out what our department's about. But you're not as stupid as the rest of them. You must have noticed. Well, I had my reasons for taking the jobdeplorable, the lack of support for pure research these days, and no matter what my ex-colleagues at the university say, I could have completed a respectable thesis if I'd been able to get funding for my research. And I suppose you have your reasons for putting up with Amalgamated, too." "They pay well," Judit said. "I've a younger brother on Kezdet. He's not quite through school yet." "And when he is," Forelle said, "no doubt you'll find some other excuse to make to yourself for taking their money. They buy a few good minds and corrupt us, and use us to buy as many fools as they want. Including the idiots who think the Khedive crashed on an asteroid!" "The beacon signal-" Judit began uncertainly. "Faked. I don't know how, I'm no engineer, but it was faked." "Too hard. There'd be registration numbers on the ship body and engines." "Ha! Nobody went out and actually looked, did they? They just trusted the computer records." Judit was silent. Forelle's idea was insane . . . but it was true, nobody had physically checked the crash site. "I'll wager you that ship is not the Khedive. Yes, that's it. The beacon signal is faked, and they're in some different sector of space by now, laughing at us all. And Amalgamated "will let the matter drop, because they know that no matter what legal juggling they indulged in, no sensible court would uphold their claim to the ship - so rather than pursue it, they'd just as soon write off the ship as a wreck and the dissidents as dead. But I'm not going to let it drop!" Forelle glared at Judit as if she'd dared to think of contradicting him. "Thatthat unicorn girl is too conspicuous to disappear without a trace. Amalgamated has plants and bases galaxy-wide. I shall put out a standing order for any mention of a child with those particular deformities to be routed to my console with top priority. Sooner or later, they'll slip up. I'll find her, and we'll get our paper, Judit. And then I'll be able to leave these fools and take up the university position I deserve. They'll probably endow a chair for me. Well, get on with it. Compose the order, and I'll edit it so that they know? it's urgent and won't question why, and won't forget it either. Finally applied psychohnguistics will be good for something besides keeping Amalgamated's workforce happy." Judit thought he was deluding himself, but it was a delusion she would have liked to share. However, if the child had by some miracle lived, she had no desire to see Forelle get hold of her for his experiments. So she put her best psycholinguistic training into composing a memo that would look urgent enough to satisfy Dr. Forelle, while actually encouraging anybody who skimmed it to mentally dismiss the whole matter as "just another one ofAnton's crazy ideas." The skimmer that Rafik rented to take them from the port area to Uncle Hafiz's residence passed over a trackless expanse of tropical vegetation, brilliant green sprinkled with blazes of red and yellow flowers. To the east, an indigo-blue sea gave off glints of silver in the sunlight; to the west, they could just see the long blue line of an escarpment that must have discouraged any building of roads into the interior of the continent. "The Mali Bazaar," Rafik said as they passed over a collection of buildings with flat roofs inlaid in jewel-toned mosaics. Gill pressed his nose to the window of the skimmer to get a better view of the pictures delineated by thousands of glazed ceramic tiles. "Anywhere else," he said reverently, "that would be a major tourist attraction. Why do they put it on the roof where nobody can see it? " "Most travel here is by skimmer," Rafik said, "and it's a kind of advertisement for their services. Everybody knows where the Mali Bazaar is. That's where I bought your hijab, by the way." "Isn't it a nuisance not having roads to the port?" Gill asked. "How do you transport heavy goods and machinery? " "By sea, of course," Rafik said. "There are, if you think about it, many advantages in dispensing with a road network. Most of the residents of Laboue have a strong preference for personal privacy; traveling by skimmer reduces the chances of meeting other travelers who might be curious about one's errands. It certainly works in our favor, wouldn't you agree? Then, too, roads require a degree of cooperation which is difficult for the strong individualists -who make their homes here. There's no central government, no taxation, no centrally supported infrastructure." "Expensive," Gill murmured. "Inefficient." Rafik gave him a bright-eyed glance of amusement. "Can any system really compete with the massive inefficiencies of a well-entrenched bureaucracy? As for expense . . . one entrepreneur did attempt a network of toll roads, but he couldn't afford the cost of guarding them." "You have problems with bandits?" "Let's say there are residents who find it difficult to put aside their traditional ways of life," Rafik said, banking the skimmer into a smooth turn that brought them down in a paved square surrounded by high bougainvillea-covered walls. He handed Acorna and Calum out of the skimmer with the care a Neo-Hadithian would be expected to take of his delicate and precious wives. "Remember," he whispered to Calum, "Son't talk! As long as you're wearing that veil, convention dictates that you are not really here." The long, multilayered Neo-Hadithian robes of white polysilk concealed Calum and Acorna marvelously; in the brilliant sunlight they looked like two moving clouds of white iridescence, shapeless and indistinguishable save that one was somewhat taller than the other. As Gill made his exit from the skimmer, a section of bougainvillea-covered wall swung away from the rest, revealing a dark man of medium height in whom Rafik's elegant features were sharpened to a look of dangerous wariness. "You and your family and guests are welcome to this humble abode," he said to Rafik, with a quick gesture of his right hand from forehead to lips to chest. Rafik repeated the gesture before embracing him. "Uncle Hafiz! You are gracious indeed to receive us. You are well?" he asked as though they had not been conversing only a few hours before. "I am, thanks be to the Three Prophets. And you, my nephew? You are well?" "Blessed be the Hadith and the revelations of Moulay Suheil," Rafik said, "I am, and my wives also." A faint shadow of distaste crossed Uncle Hafiz s features at the mention of the Hadith, but he controlled himself and gave properly courteous answers as Rafik went on to inquire about the health of innumerable cousins, nephews, and distant connections. Finally, the initial greetings finished, Uncle Hafiz stepped back and invited them, with a wave of his hand, to precede him into the garden revealed beyond the walls around the skimmer landing area. A path of deep blue stepping-stones wound among flowering shrubs. As Gill stepped on the first stone, a clear pure middle C sounded in the air. The next two steps produced an E and a G; the sounds lingered on the air and blended in a perfect chord. "You like my walkway?" Hafiz asked with a satisfied smile. "Perhaps you have not before encountered the singing stones of Skarrness." "But I thought they were-" Gill choked down the rest of the sentence. The once-famous singing stones of Skarrness were virtually gone now, having fallen prey to unscrupulous collectors, who removed so many of the stones that the remaining ones could not maintain their population. But Rafik had said Hafiz was a collector of rarities and had implied that he was not overburdened with scruples. It would probably not be tactful to complete his thought. "Quite rare, yes," Hafiz said. "It was my great good fortune to obtain a perfectly tuned set in C major, and an even rarer set in the Lydian mode. Very few complete sets, alas, are available now." Thanki) to jerk^ like you, Gill thought, but he managed to keep his thought to himself and his face composed. The walk-way led them musically to a high wall of dark stone which Hafiz identified casually as Farinese marble. A double gate of lacy, handwrought metal work opened into a second garden, this one surrounded on three sides by a roofed gallery with columns of the same Farinese marble. Through the columns Gill could glimpse openings into a shadowy interior of polished floors, carved wooden screens, and silk hangings. Hafiz clapped his hands and several robed servants appeared, two carrying cushions of jewelcolored silk, another with a tall crystal pitcher, and a fourth behind him -with a crystal bowl and a stack of towels so richly embroidered in gold thread that only a small silken square was visible in the center of each. "We have, of course, completely modern facilities within," Hafiz said apologetically, "but it delights me to keep to the old customs of offering guests water with my own hands, and food and drink in my own garden, as soon as they have arrived." He took the pitcher and poured a thin stream of cold water over Rafik's outstretched hands. Gill copied Rafik's motions and took one of the embroidered towels to dry his hands. Hafiz handed the pitcher to Rafik with a bow. "Perhaps you would prefer to offer water to your wives yourself. I should not like to insult your new beliefs." Rafik bowed acknowledgment and held out the pitcher for Calum and Acorna to wash their hands, casually moving as he did so that his body blocked any view Hafiz might have had of Acorna's oddly shaped digits and Calum's masculine fingers. Hafiz indicated that they should all seat themselves on the silken cushions, mentioned casually that the pitcher and bowl had each been carved from a single piece of Merastikama crystal, and told the servants to take back the washing implements and bring refreshment for his guests. The placement of brass trays on three-legged wooden stands, the handing round of minute glasses full of fiery liquor and delicate bowls of fruit-flavored sorbet, took what seemed to Gill an inordinately long time while Hafiz and Rafik chatted of trivialities. Rafik made a show of refusing the liquor, in keeping with his pretense of conversion to the strict NeoHadithian sect, which had revived all the prohibitions of the First Prophet and then some. Gill at first felt glad to be an official unbeliever and free to enjoy the drinks; then, after one burning swallow, he began considering the possibility of announcing an instant conversion to Rafik's tenets. He was relieved to see that Acorna managed to take a dish of sorbet under her veil; he'd been afraid that eating and drinking would tax her disguise too much. But it seemed the Neo-Hadithians had designed their women's costumes so that the veils need not be removed for anything. Gill wondered sourly whether they removed them in bed. Finally, as a casual afterthought to a lengthy discussion of the problems of interstellar trade, Rafik mentioned that he and his partner had encountered a small technical difficulty with which Uncle Hafiz might be able to help them out-for a consideration, of course. "Ah, these minor technicalities." Hafiz sighed sympathetically. "How they plague us, these petty bureaucrats with their accounting details! What seems to be the difficulty, son of my best beloved sister?" Rafik gave Hafiz a severely edited account of their difficulties with Amalgamated, leaving out any mention of Acorna and stressing the basic illegality of Amalgamated's claim to own the Khedive. "If their claim is entirely without foundation," Hafiz asked, as though motivated by idle curiosity, "why do you not take your case to the courts of the Federation?" "It is written in the Book of the Second Prophet," said Rafik, "'Trust kin before countrymen, countrymen before outlanders, and all before unbelievers.'" "And yet your partner is an unbeliever," Hafiz pointed out. "Our partnership is of long standing," Rafik said. "Besides, there is a minor complication in the matter of money advanced by MME-the company with which we had previously contractedfor mining equipment and supplies. The dogs of unbelievers at Amalgamated claim our ship as security against the advance, though if they had credited us with the metals sent back by drone over the last three years, the debt would have been paid three times over. However, we left the Amalgamated base in some haste and the matter was not resolved." "It is also written," said Hafiz, '"Be not in such haste to collect the silver that ye let the gold fall by the wayside.'" "A most excellent precept, 0 Revered Uncle," said Rafik politely, "but one which I found myself unable to honor under the circumstances." He lowered his voice as if to make sure that the veiled figures on the other side of the brass tray should not hear. "It was a matter of a woman-you understand?" Hafiz smiled broadly. "I begin to see why you have joined the Neo-Hadithians, my son! It is their revival of polygamy which appeals to you. So, two •wives -were not enough. You had to get yourself in trouble with some unbeliever on the Amalgamated base?" "In confidence," Rafik said, "the taller of my two wives is so ugly one might imagine her a man, and I have no use for her as a woman; while the smaller one is too young yet to be taken to my bed. Both marriages were made to strengthen my claims to kinship -within the Neo-Hadithians and not for carnal desire." Calum choked under his veil. Gill reached under the table and pinched some part of his anatomy through the billowing white layers of polysilk, hard enough to distract Calum from whatever he might have been tempted to say. Hafiz laughed merrily at Rafik s account of his marital troubles, and seemed more disposed to help them out if he could get the satisfaction of teasing his nephew for the bad bargain he had made in joining the Neo-Hadithian sect. Transferring registration of their new beacon into their name, he warned, was a complicated task and would require facilitation payments to a number of individuals, not all of them so liberal in their thinking as he was. He would, however, be happy to arrange the entire matter, if Rafik could see his way to putting sufficient credit at his disposal. "That brings up another minor point," said Rafik, and showed Hafiz the share certificates from Amalgamated. "These can, of course, be converted into Federation credits," Hafiz said, thumbing rapidly through the certificates, "although at a substantial discount." "The discount on shares from such a galactically recognized company, all but certain to rise in value, should be only nominal," Rafik protested. Hafiz smiled. "Is it not written in the Book of the Third Prophet, "Count not the light from a distant star among your assets, for that star may have been long dead by the time its light reaches thine eyes'?" He glanced at Acorna, who had begun wriggling under her veils in a way that was causing Calum and Gill grave anxiety. "But your younger wife is restless. Perhaps your wives would care to retire to the rooms which have been made ready for them while we settle the minor matter of the discount on these shares and the payments necessary to facilitate reregistration of the new beacon? Or would they like to stroll in the outer garden? I can call one of my women to attend them." "That will not be necessary," said Gill, rising to his feet. "I should be honored to escort the ladies." Rafik smiled seraphically. "I repose complete trust in my partner," he assured Hafiz. "As he trusts me to complete the negotiations, so can I trust him with my honor and that of my women." "Particularly," Hafiz needled him as the others left, "since one is, by your own account, too ugly to bed and the other too young." "Just so," said Rafik cheerfully. "Now, about this discount. . ." As soon as they were concealed among the flowering shrubs of the outer garden, Calum shoved back his multilayered veil and took a deep breath. "I am going to kill Rafik," he said. Gill snickered. "Remember to take tiny little ladylike steps," he teased. "And better keep the veil down. Even with Rafik's warning that you're as ugly as a man, Hafiz might get suspicious if he saw that you need a shave." "I just hope they finish dickering so we can get back to the ship," Calum said sourly, but he flipped the veiling back over his face. "I'm tired of fancy dress." Acorna tugged at Gill's sleeve and pointed at the grass that grew around each of the blue singing stones. "What? Oh, sure, sweetie, go ahead and nibble if you like. You've been a good girl. Just remember to cover your head if we hear anybody coming. The singing stones ought to give us plenty of warning," Gill said rather defensively to Calum. "You didn't let me unveil." "Modesty, modesty." Gill chuckled. "You don't need a snack. Acorna's metabolism needs more than the occasional dish of sorbet, you know. And if Hafiz expects us to stay for a meal, it'll probably be mostly meat dishes and she can't eat those." Acorna, ignoring the argument, had quietly knelt down within her billowing veils and pushed the face veils back so that she could see to pluck the tender tops of the sweet grasses. "Good girl, good," Gill encouraged her. "Don't make any divots, now." "Is rude to make holes in grass," Acorna said. tlv Is a no. " "A very big no, in somebody else's garden," Gill agreed. "But the stuff has to be mowed, I assume, so it'll do no harm if you take an inch or two off the top." Five notes in a -wailing pentatonic scale sounded in quick succession. Acorna tried to jump up, but the swathes of filmy fabric impeded her movements and she would have fallen if Gill hadn't grabbed her hand and pulled her upright by main force. She was still fumbling for her veil when Hafiz and Rafik came into view. Hafiz's eyebrows shot up and he came forward rapidly. "By the earlocks of the Third Prophet!" he exclaimed. "A rarity indeed! Rafik, beloved nephew, I do believe we can come to a mutually agreeable arrangement at a considerably less discount than I had anticipated." "Uncle," Rafik said in reproving tones, "I beg of you, do not insult the modesty of my wives and the honor of my family." But he was too late; Hafiz was already stroking the short horn that protruded from Acorna's forehead. She stood quite still, only the narrowing of her pupils showing her distress and confusion. "You were complaining that this one was too young to be of any use," Hafiz said without looking away from Acorna. "How fortunate that your new religious friends hold to the old traditions in the matter of divorce as well as of polygamy and hijab. Nothing could be easier than a quiet family divorce, at once freeing you of an undesired entanglement and allowing me the acquisition of a new rarity." "Unthinkable," Rafik protested. "Her family have entrusted her to me; she is my sacred responsibility. " "Then they will no doubt be delighted to hear that she will henceforth grace the home of such a distinguished and benevolent collector as myself," Hafiz said happily. "I am willing to undertake to respect all the religious prohibitions of your sect. She can have the rooms which I had set aside for you and your wives tonight; I will establish them as secluded women's quarters for her and her servants alone, so that the Neo-Hadithian scruples need not be outraged. You will be able to tell her family that she is kept in every possible luxury." "I am sorry," Rafik said firmly. "I do not sell my women. Uncle Hafiz, this touches on my honor!" Hafiz waved the objections away with an airy hand. "Ah, you young people are so impetuous! I would not be doing my duty as your uncle, my boy, if I permitted you to refuse in haste what will upon reflection appear to you as a most advantageous solution to all your difficulties. No, family feeling dictates that I make sure you have time to reflect upon the situation at leisure. You will remain as my guests until you have had sufficient time to perceive the wisdom of this course." "We cannot impose upon you," Rafik said. "We will return to our ship tonight and there discuss the matter among ourselves." "No, no, dear boy, I could not hear of it! My household would be dishonored forever should I fail to offer you appropriate hospitality. You will be my guests tonight. I simply insist," Hafiz said, raising his voice slightly. There was a rustle among the bushes, and suddenly two robed and silent servants stood behind each one of them. "The singing stones, although a great curiosity, are sometimes inconvenient," Hafiz said cheerfully. "There are other ways through the garden for those who serve me." Rafik caught Gill's eye and gave a slight despairing shrug. "We shall be delighted to accept your hospitality tonight. Uncle. You are too generous. Hafiz *s generosity extended to the provision of separate quarters for them, one set of rooms for Rafik and his "wives," and another room, on the far side of the sprawling mansion, for Gill. "You would naturally wish your women to be housed in seclusion and far from any man's sleeping place," he explained smoothly. "And that makes it even harder to get away," Calum growled as soon as Hafiz had left them on their own. "How are we going to find Gill and get to our skimmer?" "Peace," said Rafik absently. "You're not thinking of giving in to him!" "I played in this house as a boy," Rafik said. "I know every inch of the grounds, perhaps better than my uncle; it has been some years since he had the figure to wriggle along the low paths under the shrubbery, or to swing from cornice to pipe along the upper stories. But we will temporize for a day or two, Calum." "Why?" "We do," said Rafik sweetly, "want to give Uncle Hafiz time to fix the registration of our new ship's beacon, don't we? Let him think -we're cooperating until that is done; then it will be time enough to get away." "And how do you think you're going to get him to switch the registration and launder our shares without handing over Acorna?" "Don't worry about a thing," Rafik said. "I'm a master negotiator. I learned from an expert." "I know," said Calum. "We're negotiating with the expert in question, remember?" coma woke to the dawn-chirping of birds in the sweet-scented flowering vines outside the window. The night had been still and hot and she had pushed all the covers off her bed; now it was cool, almost chilly. She wrapped the clinging layers of white polysilk around herself. The robes were enough to keep her warm, but she was unable to recreate the drapery of hood and robe and face veils that Rafik had arranged about her the previous day. She looked doubtfully at the sleeping Rafik and Calum. Would it be a big "no" to leave the room like this, -without the veils over her head? She hated the veils anyway; they clung to her mouth and nose and chafed her forehead -where the growing horn was still tender. It -would probably be an even bigger "no" to wake Calum and Rafik and ask them to dress her, -wouldn't it? The pressure in her bladder settled the question. Tiptoeing so as not to -wake the miners, Acorna quietly slid the carved •wooden door open just enough to let her squeeze out. She remembered the -washing-place they had been shown last night, a -wonderland of blue tiles and jets of hot and cold -water and minty steam rising up through •wooden slats. But this morning there -was no one to make the hot water come out for her, and after relieving herself she abandoned the washing-place and tiptoed down two flights of stairs to -where she could see the garden through an open archway. The blue stones sang when she stepped on them, just as they had last night. Entranced by the sweet pure tones, Acorna dropped her clinging draperies and danced back and forth, improvising a tune by leaping from one stone to another and accompanying the music of the stones -with her own singing. She did not realize how loud she •was getting until a discordant note interrupted her melody. She -whirled and saw Uncle Hafiz standing at the beginning of the blue stone path. Acorna's song broke off and the sudden stillness of the garden shocked her into realizing how boisterous she had been. "Too loud?" she asked, penitent. "If I make too much noise, that is a big no?" "Not in the least, my dear child," Uncle Hafiz said. "Your singing was a delightful interruption to a boring task. No, no-" he forestalled her as she belatedly tried to -wind the robes around herself again, "there's no need to trouble yourself with those things, not among family." "I must be covered. Rafik said." "On the streets, perhaps," Uncle Hafiz agreed, "but among your own relatives it is different." Acorna thought this over. "You are rel-tive?" "And I hope soon to be a very close relation indeed." "You are rel-tive to me?" "Yes." "And I am rel-tive to Rafik and Gill and Calum. So you are rel-tive to Gill?" Uncle Hafiz was so dismayed at the thought of claiming kinship with the red-bearded unbeliever that he didn't even think of asking who Calum might be. "Ah-it doesn't -work quite like that," he said hastily. "How many percent rel-tive to Gill are you?" "Zero percent," Hafiz said, then blinked. "Aren't you a little young to be learning fractions and percentages? " "I know fraction, percent, decimal, octal, hexadecimal, and modulo," Acorna said cheerfully. "I like numbers. You like numbers?" "Only," said Hafiz, "when the odds are in my favor." Acorna frowned. "Odd is not-even. Even is not-odd. Odds is not-evens?" "No, no, sweetheart," Hafiz said. "The boys have neglected an important part of your education. Come along inside. I can't explain without drawing pictures." When Rafik came pounding down the stairs an hour later, sure that Acorna had been kidnapped while he and Calum slept, the first thing he heard from Hafiz s study was a familiar piping voice asking a question. "That's right!" Uncle Hafiz sounded more relaxed than Rafik had ever heard him, almost jovial. "Now, suppose you're making book on a race where the favorite is running at three to two, so you offer slightly better odds-like, say, six to five - " "Six to five is much better," Rafik heard Acorna object. "Should not give more than seven to four." "Look, it's )ust an example, okay? Suppose you offer seven to four, then. What happens?" "Many people place bets with you." "And what do you do to make sure you don't lose your money?" "Lay off the bets with another bookmaker?" "Or," Uncle Hafiz said cheerfully, "make very, very sure the favorite doesn't win." That was the point at which Rafik interrupted them and brought Acorna back to their rooms for the excellent breakfast Hafiz had ordered sent up to them. He and Calum •wrangled over the sliced mangoes and pointed skewers full of grilled lamb like weapons at one another while Acorna quietly worked her way through the bowl of leafy greens Hafiz had ordered especially for her. "How could you be so careless and irresponsible?" Calum demanded. "You were sleeping in this room, too," Rafik pointed out acidly. "I happen to know that you slept very well last night. You snore!" "You should have told her not to go out without one of us!" "Look," Rafik said, "no harm's been done, okay? He didn't hurt her." "From your own account," Calum retorted, "he was teaching her to gamble! That's not the sort of education I want for my ward." "She's mine, too," Rafik said, "and there is nothing inherently criminal about the profession of being a turf accountant." Acorna chose that moment, having finished all the sweet greens and the sliced carrots, to speak up. "Nobble the favorite," she said clearly, and smiled with pleasure at her new word. "I rest my case," said Calum, arms folded. "And what's more, you are not getting me back into those ridiculous garments. If Acorna can run around unveiled, so can I." "You will not," Rafik said with quiet intensity, "do anything to destroy my cover as a Neo-Hadithian. And that includes raising your voice. We're just lucky that Uncle Hafiz respects my religious beliefs enough to order the servants to keep away from these rooms, or we'd be blown already." "I think we are blown," Calum said. "Blown clear out of the water. Now that he's seen Acorna, what's the point of wrapping ourselves up like white tents?" "My conversion to Neo-Hadithian tenets," Rafik said, "is an essential part of my negotiating strategy. And it's not such a bad thing that Acorna has charmed Uncle Hafiz, either. He'll be all the more inclined to complete the transaction and speed us on our way." Calum stared. "You sound as if you actually mean to give him Acorna!" Acorna's eyes narrowed until the silver pupils •were all but obliterated. She leaned across the table to grab Calum by one hand and Rafik by the other. "It's okay, sweetie," Calum soothed her, "we're not going anywhere without you. Are we, Raflk?" "Want Gill," Acorna said firmly. "All together." "We will be together, darling, in just a little while," Rafik promised. "Want Gill here now!" Acorna's voice rose. Calum's and Rafik's eyes met over her head. "I thought you said she was over the dependency," Rafik mouthed. "Being auctioned off as a curiosity makes a girl insecure," Calum whispered back. "Gill!" Acorna wailed on an even higher note. "Just so you understand," Calum said some time later, "I'm only doing this for Acorna." "Darling, I would never ask you to put on hijab for my sake," Rafik said sweetly. "White isn't your color." They were strolling in the garden, Calum and Acorna decently veiled so that Gill could join them without outraging Rafik's supposed NeoHadithian sense of propriety. "Explain to me again," Calum said while Acorna skipped ahead, holding Gill's hand, "exactly how wrapping me up in a bolt of polysilk is an integral part of your negotiating strategy. Am) Son't giggle!" he added sharply, almost tripping over some of the lower layers of robes. "Don't hike your skirt up, it's not decent," Rafik said. "If you'd take small steps, like a lady, you wouldn't trip all the time. Ah, Uncle Hafiz! The benevolence of your smile lights the garden more brightly than the summer sun." "What joy can be sweeter than the company of beloved relatives," Hafiz replied, "beloved relatives and, er, um ..." He looked at Gill's flaming red beard and freckled skin. "... relatives and friend," he finished with an audible gulp. "I trust you have had time and privacy sufficient to confer with your family and your partner, dear nephew?" "We accept your offer," Rafik said. "Transfer the registration of the ship's beacon and sell the shares for us, and ..." He nodded at Acorna, who was happily chattering to Gill about the new kinds of fractions she had learned, such as three-to-two and six-to-four. "Excellent!" Now Uncle Hafiz was truly beaming. "I knew you'd be reasonable, dear boy. We're two of a kind, you and I. If only your cousin Tapha could do as well!" Rafik looked slightly queasy at being compared to his cousin, his uncle s heir. "Where is Tapha, by the way?" Hafiz's smile vanished. "I sent him to take over the southern half of the continent. Yukata Batsu has been running it long enough." "And?" "I don't know where the rest of him is," Hafiz said. "All Yukata Batsu sent back were his ears." He sighed. "Tapha never had what it takes. I should have known when I abducted his mother that she didn't have the brains to give me a •worthy successor. Yammer, yammer, yammer, all the time complaining at me that she could have had a career dancing topless at the Orbital Grill and Rendezvous Parlor. Her and her perky breasts. Yasmin, I told her, all the girls have perky breasts in zero-g, you were nothing special, you're lucky a good man took you away from all that. But would that woman listen?" Hafiz sighed and brightened up. "However, I'm not too old to try again. Now that I've found a woman with intelligence to match my own..." His eyes strayed to Acorna. "Don't you mind her holding hands with that dog of an unbeliever?" "She's only a little girl," Rafik said stiffly. "Not for much longer," Hafiz said. "They grow up faster than you think." A sputtering sound escaped from behind Calum's layers of white veiling. Hafiz looked startled. "Your senior wife? She is unwell?" "She suffers from nervous fits," Rafik said, grasping Calum's wrist and hauling him away from Hafiz. "A sad affliction," Hafiz said. "Meet me within the house when you have calmed your women, Rafik, and we will pledge faith to our agreement over the Three Books." He turned away, muttering, "Ugly, prone to fits, big feet, and what a hairy wrist! No wonder he is reluctant to give up the other one . . . but with his ship and his credits, he can easily buy another wife." "And just what were you snickering about?" Rafik demanded in a whisper when Hafiz had passed back into the house. "'They grow up faster than you think,'" Calum quoted. "If he only knew how fast! Would he believe Acorna was a toddler when we found her less than two years ago?" "Let's don't tell him," Rafik suggested. "This whole deal depends on mutual trust, and he'd be sure I was a thumping liar if I tried to tell him how fast Acorna grows. Besides, she's not going to be here long enough for him to find out." "But its the truth!" Calum said. "Truth," Rafik said, "has very little to do with verisimilitude." Gill kept Acorna amused in the garden while Rafik and Calum went into the study to meet Hafiz. He was seated behind a gleaming, crescentshaped desk with the usual consoles and controls, plus a few that Calum did not recognize, inlaid flush with the surface so as not to spoil the smooth lines of the desk. Incongruously stacked atop the modern equipment were two antique books, the kind with hard covers enclosing a stack of paper sheets, and an old-fashioned databox with only six sides. "You admire my desk?" Uncle Hafiz said pleasantly to Calum. "Carved from a single piece of purpleheart . . . one of the last of the great stand of purpleheart trees on Tanqque III." "My wife prefers not to talk to other men," Rafik said sharply. He'd rumbled lu, Calum thought in despair. He know,) I'm not a woman. Rafik and hid damn <>dly gam&f! "Dear boy," Hafiz said, "surely within a family as close as ours, and soon to be united even more closely by the exchange of wives, even you NeoHadithians can drop some of these ridiculous . . . oh, all right, all right, I didn't mean to insult your . . . religion." He pronounced the last word with the faint distaste of someone directing the servants to remove whatever it was the cat had dragged in and failed to finish eating. Rafik bridled, scowled, and gave what Calum thought an excellent imitation of a man on the verge of taking mortal insult. "Your ship," Uncle Hafiz said, "is now registered as the Uhuru, originally of Kezdet." "Why Kezdet?" "That -was the original registration of the beacon you appropriated. It would have been extremely expensive to delete all traces of the beacon's history. I think it suffices that We can now show an electronic trail of three transfers of ownership. Appropriate insignia have been applied to the body of the ship, along with some . . . ah . . . cosmetic changes." Calum choked. "Every rascal in the galaxy registers under Kezdet," Rafik protested. "They're a known cover for all sorts of thieves, desperadoes, con men, and cheats." Uncle Hafiz's brows rose. "Dear boy! My own modest personal fleet has Kezdet registration." "Exactly," muttered Calum, too low for Hafiz to hear him. He jabbed Rafik in the side with one veiled elbow, hoping to remind him of the other problem with using Kezdet as their port of registration. "And," Rafik said, "as it happens, I have had an ... unfortunate encounter with Kezdet patrols. One of those pesky matters of trespassing that can occur with the best of •will on both sides, but I am afraid they took it in a poor spirit." There was no way of knowing for sure, but it seemed a safe bet that the Guardians of the Peace were still unhappy about the patrol cruiser he, Calum, and Gill had crippled and marooned before taking off with that load of titanium. "Then," Uncle Hafiz said smoothly, "you will have an excellent excuse for not returning to your port of registration, will you not? Now, your shares have been converted to ..." He named a sum in Federation credits that made Calum gasp through his veils. Rafik actually managed to look disappointed. "Ah, well," he said sadly, "that would be after your discount, of course?" "By no means," said Uncle Hafiz, "but I propose to take no more than twenty percent of the gross, which I assure you will barely cover my expenses in arranging . . . facilitation payments . . . to all the bureaucracies concerned." "It was seventeen percent yesterday." "Delay," said Uncle Hafiz, "increases the expense. How fortunate that you have come to a wise decision! It only remains to complete the transaction. If you will swear on the Three Books to honor our agreement, then call Acorna in and divorce her, I shall marry her immediately and you will be free to depart." Rafik looked mournful. "If only it were that easy!" he said. "But I must warn you that the Hadith require a -waiting period of at least one sunset and dawn between a woman's divorce and remarriage." "That is not in my understanding of the Hadith," Uncle Hafiz said sharply. "It is a new revelation ofMoulay Suheil," Rafik countered. "He had a dream in which the First Prophet, blessed be His Name, appeared and expressed his concern lest women, being weak in understanding and easily led, might be drawn into error by too much haste in the matter of divorces and remarrying. A divorced "woman must spend one night in prayer, seeking the will of the First Prophet, before she may enter into any new alliance." "Hmmph," muttered Uncle Haflz. "I would scarcely describe the young rarity out there as being weak in understanding. I've never seen anyone catch on so fast to the idea of keeping a double set of accounts, one for the Federation and one for private purposes." Calum choked and Rafik trod on his foot. This was no time to resume the argument about whether Hafiz was teaching Acorna suitable things! "However," Rafik said, "to allay your anxieties, I will do better than swearing on the Three Books. I will swear on this copy of the Holy Hadith themselves, authenticated by Moulay Suheil, and most sacred to me and to all true believers." He drew a datahedron from his pocket and kissed it reverently before extending it in his cupped hands. Uncle Hafiz recoiled as if from a snake. "You swear on your Hadith," he said, "and I will make my oath on the Books of the Three Prophets. Thus each of us will be bound by that which one holds most sacred." "An excellent idea," said Rafik. Calum's attention wavered during the lengthy oath-taking which followed, most of -which was not performed in Basic Interlingua but in the language of Hafiz and Rafik's culture of origin. It sounded to him like a group of birds choking on something unpleasant, but it seemed to make sense. At one point they called for Acorna to be brought into the room; she stood quite still under her veils while more of the unfamiliar language spouted over her head. At the end Hafiz kissed the topmost of his Three Books, and Rafik pressed his lips to the datahedron again, and both men smiled as if in the satisfaction of a bargain concluded. "With your permission. Uncle, I will now escort my former wife to the place set apart for her, that she may begin her vigil of prayer. I know you will not wish to delay the final ceremony," Rafik said. "Since I myself am not a Neo-Hadithian," Hafiz said, "I see no need at all for this delay." "I must report to her family that all has been handled decently and in good order," said Rafik. "It is a matter touching my honor. Uncle." Hafiz muttered and grumbled but finally let them go, after receiving Rafik's assurances that Acorna's prescribed time of prayer need not interfere with her attending the wedding feast that night. "Only family," he promised. "Only ourselves and your partner." Rafik looked surprised. "You will break bread with an unbeliever?" "You consider him as family and entrust him with your honor in the persons of your wives," said Hafiz, looking as though he had just swallowed something very unpleasant. "In loving respect to you, my dear nephew, I can do no less." "What," Calum demanded as soon as they were safely in the secluded rooms upstairs, "was all that about?" "Well, you didn't want me to hand Acorna over to him then and there, did you? I had to come up with some reason to delay. Now that the credits and registration are in order and he's told me the passwords to access them, we can sneak out tonight. Have to wait until after this blasted feast, though." Rafik frowned. "I wish I knew why he insists on having Gill there. He obviously didn't like the idea above half." "Makes it convenient for us," Calum pointed out. "That," said Rafik, "is what worries me." Out of consideration for Rafik's supposedly strict religious views on the seclusion of women, Hafiz arranged that no servants should be present at the celebration feast that night. "You see, dear boy," he said, gesturing at the spacious dining hall with its carved lattice-work screens and colorful silk-covered divans, "all is prepared. The table is, after all, adequately furnished with heating and chilling chambers to keep food at the proper temperature. What could be pleasanter than a simple dinner en famlile? The employment of dozens of servants to carry trays and pour drinks is merely an outmoded tradition of conspicuous consumption, something which the Third Prophet enjoined us to abjure at all times. Do you not agree?" Gill was glad that he, as an unbeliever, and Calum, as Rafik's senior wife, were not expected to reply to this statement. All he had to do was keep a straight face as Rafik praised the modesty and simplicity of Hafiz s arrangements . . . and try to keep his eyes from wandering over the incredibly lavish display before them. A long, low table stretched between two rows of divans covered in emerald and crimson silk. Dishes covered the table from one end to the other: bowls of pilau, silver trays of sizzling-hot pastries, sliced fruits arranged as an elaborate still life on a specially inset chilling tray, skewers of grilled lamb, dishes of yogurt with chopped mint, Kilumbemba shellfish fried in batter, crystallized rose petals and sugared goldenhearts. . . . Between the dishes stood tall tumblers frosted with ice, and a pitcher of some sparkling fruit drink rested in another cooling tray beside Hafiz's divan at the head of the table. The far wall of the dining hall appeared to be a cliff of moss-covered rock with a veil of water running down its surface and splashing into a recirculating stream at the bottom of the miniature cliff. From behind the carved lattices, a recording of Kitheran harp music provided a softly tinkling counterpoint to the sound of the falling -water. "We shall even pour our own drinks," Hafiz said, gesturing toward the pitcher. "I have seen that as a good Neo-Hadithian you follow the First Prophet's words and abjure wine, rather than accepting the dispensations of the Second and Third Prophets. I myself usually enjoy a Kilumbemba beer with my dinner, but for tonight I -will share the iced madigadi juice prepared for my guests." Rafik nodded, rather sadly. Actually, as both Calum and Gill well knew, he would have liked a mug of cold Kilumbemba beer, the other specialty of that planet, to wash down the fried shellfish. "Don't even think about it," Calum muttered in his ear. "If I can wrap myself up like a white balloon to substantiate your conversion, you can drink fruit juice for one evening and like it." "Your senior write is disturbed?" Hafiz inquired. "Not another fit, I trust? " Rafik tried to step on Calum's foot, but only succeeded in trampling the hem of his robe. "She is in excellent health, thank you, Uncle," he replied, "only inclined to chatter about trifles after the manner of women." "Women who are not kept veiled and secluded," Hafiz pointed out rather acidly, "have more of a chance to develop Interesting topics of conversation-oh, all right, all right! I won't say another word against the revelations of Moulay Suheil." "We are returning to the pure traditions of our original faith," Rafik said stiffly. "Then let us enjoy another tradition tonight," Hafiz said, "and drink from the same pitcher in token of perfect trust within the family." He made a show of pouring the iced madigadi juice into each of their cups, finishing with his own and taking a deep draught from it as proof of the drink's harmlessness. Rafik raised his own cup, but a sudden commotion outside the room surprised him into setting it down again. There was a babble of excited voices, then the high-pitched wail of a woman: an old, quavering voice. "Aminah!" Hafiz sighed and stood up. "Tapha's old nurse. She treats each bit of news from the south as another installment in a vid-drama. I had best calm her. Forgive the interruption. Please, go on with your meal; I may be some time." He strode out of the room quickly, a frown between his brows. Gill took a handful of the batter-fried shellfish and crunched them with enjoyment. "Well, he did say to go on," he said when Rafik raised an eyebrow, "and even if the table does keep these things hot, it can't keep them crisp indefinitely." He took a deep breath and reached for his own cup. "Must say, I've never had them served quite so hot and spicy before." "Any decent food tastes overspiced to you barbarians," Rafik said. "Acorna, what are you doing?" She kept pushing and pawing at her veils until they were a tangled mess around her face. "Here, honey, let me fix that for you," Gill said. "Any reason why she shouldn't put her veils back for dinner, Rafik? It's not as if Hafiz is gonna see anything he hasn't seen before." "Only that he may wonder why I do not permit my other wife to unveil," Rafik said with resignation. "I suppose I shall have to explain that she is so ugly, I fear the sight would put him off his food." Calum kicked him under the table. "That's odd," Gill said, feeling Acorna's forehead. "Do you think she has a fever?" "Her skin is cool enough. But look at her horn!" Great drops of clear liquid were forming on the fluted sides of Acorna's horn. She mopped at them ineffectually with the end of her veil. "Have a cool drink, sweetie, it'll make you feel better," Gill suggested, holding her cup for her. Acorna stared at it blankly for a moment, then took the cup from Gill and, instead of putting it to her mouth, dipped her horn into it. "What the deuce?" "She does that with the dirty bathwater, too. Acorna, sweetie-pie, do you think the juice is dirty? It's okay, that stuff floating in it is just madigadi pulp." "Is not dirty," Acorna said firmly. "Well, that's good-" "Is baS." She dipped her head again, this time plunging her horn into Gill's cup. "Now is one hundred percent good," she informed him. The three men looked at one another. "He made a great show of pouring all our drinks out of the same pitcher," Gill said. "Why would he want to poison us? He thinks-I mean," Calum said, choosing his words carefully in case of unseen listeners, "we have agreed to all his wishes." "Oh, it's just a foolish fancy of the kid's," Rafik said easily, but he rose to his feet as he did so and offered Acorna his cup and Calum's. "Nothing to worry about. Let's go on with the meal!" At the same time a subtle head shake warned both the other men not to take his words literally. Acorna's horn broke out in drops of sweat again as she brought her face close to Rafik's cup. She dipped her horn into the juice for a moment, then smiled in satisfaction. "Ah-just a minute," Rafik said as she moved to repeat the treatment on Calum's cup. He put that one back on the table and offered Acorna the cup Hafiz had been drinking out of. Her horn showed no reaction. "How did he do it?" Gill mouthed soundlessly. "The drug must have been in the cups, not in the pitcher," Rafik replied in the merest thread of a whisper. Quickly he exchanged Calum's cup with Hafiz's, then sat and served himself a plate of rice and pilau. "Come on, wives," he said loudly and heartily, "let us feast and rejoice!" He piled Acorna's plate high with fruit and greens just as Hafiz rejoined them. "I trust the news from the south is not bad, Uncle?" Rafik inquired. Hafiz's thin lips twisted in an unpleasant gri-mace. "It could be •worse," he said. "It could be better. Yukata Batsu has sent back the rest of Tapha. Alive," he added, almost as an afterthought. "Aminah cannot decide •whether to bewail the loss of his ears or celebrate the return other nursling." "Felicitations on your son's safe return," said Gill. "And-er-I'm sorry about his ears." Hafiz shrugged. "My surgeon can replace the ears. No great loss; the original ones stuck out too far anyway. As for Tapha himself..." Hafiz sighed. "No surgeon can fix -what should have been between the ears. He, too, expected me to congratulate him on his return, as if he did not realize that Batsu freed him as a gesture of contempt, to show how little he fears Tapha's attempts against him. He is as foolish as his mother was." He twirled a ball of sticky rice on two fingers, dipped it into the pilau, and downed the combination in a single gulp. "Eat, eat, my friends. I apologize for allowing this minor contretemps to interrupt our pleasant family dinner. Do try the madigadi juice before it loses its chill; as it warms, the subtleties of the flavor are lost to the air." He took another lengthy pull from the cup beside him. "Indeed," said Rafik, following his uncle's example, "this particular juice has some subtle, lingering aftertaste that is unfamiliar to me." "Almost bitter," Gill commented. "Good, though," he added, quickly taking a deep drink before Hafiz could become too alarmed. Since none of them had any idea what drug Hafiz had put in the cups or how quickly it was supposed to act, they watched him for cues. Within fifteen minutes Hafiz had all but stopped eating, as if he had forgotten the food on his plate. His speech wandered and he began forgetting what he had said and repeating himself. "Ever hear te' one about the two racehorses, the Sufi dervish and the jinn?" He launched into a long complicated story which Gill suspected would have been extremely obscene if Hafiz had not kept losing the thread of his own narrative. Rafik and Gill ignored their own food, leaned forward over the table and laughed as loudly as Hafiz did. Calum leaned back against the wall, an anonymous white bundle of veiling, and produced a rattling snore. Acorna's eyes went from one man to the next, the pupils narrowing to slits until Gill surreptitiously squeezed her hand. "Don't worry, sweets," he whispered under cover of Hafiz's raucous laughter, "it's just a game." Finally Hafiz abandoned the Sufi dervish in midsentence and slumped forward into his rice. The other three waited tensely until his snores convinced them that he had lost consciousness. "Okay, let's get out of here," Gill whispered, standing and swinging Acorna to his shoulder. Calum followed suit, but Rafik bent over his uncle s form for a moment, fumbling in his stained silk robes. "Come on, Rafik!" Finally Rafik, too, stood, showing them a holographic card that flashed a complex threedimensional image of interlaced knots. "Uncle's skimmer key and port pass," he said happily. "Or -were you planning to walk to the port?" Hey, Smirnoff?" Ed Minkus called to his office mate in the Kezdet Security office. "What?" Des Smirnoff replied without real interest, for he was scrolling through some routine ID checks as fast as he could and had to keep his eye on the screen, just in case something interesting turned up in the latest haul of dockside indigents. "Gotta match on an ooooold friend." "Who?" Smirnoff was still not dividing his attention. "Sauvignon," and he immediately had Smirnoff's complete attention. "I told you then," and Smirnoff savagely stabbed the hold key, "that perp wasn't dead. He may have had to lie low a while. . . . Send the item over here." He drummed his fingers for the few seconds it took for Ed to transfer the file to his screen. "Registered as the Uhuru now? Couldn't change the origin, could he? So the ship's still Kezdetian." "I can't imagine a clever perp like Sauvignon ever returning ..." "Voluntarily, at least," Ed interjected with a sly grin. ". . . into our own dear jurisdiction. But you ..." "Never know, do you?" Ed had a habit of finishing Smirnoff's sentences for him. "I can," and Smirnoff's thick fingers stabbed each key as he typed in a command, "make sure that we, and our dearest nearest neighbors in space, are aware that the Uhuru is of great interest to us here in Kezdet." He gave the final number of the code sequence such an extra pound that Ed flinched. Keyboards suffered frequent malfunctions at Smirnoff's station, to the point where both Supply and Accounting now required explanations. They always got the same one: "Get a new supplier, these boards are made of inferior materials or they'd stand up under normal usage." Since most of such equipment was made in the sweat-levels (and quite possibly out of inferior grade plastics), the ones who suffered were the unfortunates who eked out a bare living anyhow. Who cared how many got fired and replaced? There were always enough eager youngsters with nimble fingers to take over. Having instituted a program that would apprise the office of Lieutenant Des Smirnoff the instant the beacon was scanned in any of the nearby systems which cooperated, however unwillingly, with Kezdet Guardians of the Peace (a piece of this and a piece of that was what the neighbors said), the proximity of the Uhuru would now send off bells, whistles, and sirens. "So the report of Sauvignon s death is greatly exaggerated," Des said, grinning with evil anticipation of future revenge. "How delightful." "Sauvignon may be dead," Ed suggested. "The new reg lists three names, and none of them are Sauvignon's." "Whose are they?" "Rafik Nadezda, Declan Giloglie, and Calum Baird," Ed replied. " What?" Smirnoff erupted from his chair like a cork from a bottle of fizzy. "Say again?" Ed obeyed, and suddenly the names rang the same bell in his head. "Them?" Smirnoff punched one big fist into the palm of his other hand, jumping about the office in what had to be some sort of a victory gig, waving his arms and hollering in pure, undiluted, spiteful joy. "Is everything all right?" and their junior assistant, a female they had to employ to keep the Sexist Faction satisfied, though Mercy Kendoro's role in their table of organization began and ended with taking their messages and supplying them with quik-sober. On seeing Smirnoff's unusual antics she had hoped that one, he'd been poisoned, or two, was having a fatal heart attack or convulsion. Sometimes, not even getting out of the barrios of Kezdet made up for the humiliation she suffered at their hands. "I got 'em. I got all of 'em," Smirnoff was chanting as he bounced from one large boot to the other. " Clo^e the Soar!" he roared when he saw Mercy's head peering in at them. Her reflexes were excellent and he missed her when his big boot slammed the door shut. "Weren't Nadezda, Giloglie, and Baird those miners who marooned us on an asteroid before they made off with a fortune in titanium?" "They were, they are, and they will be ours," Des Smirnoff said, rubbing his hands together. The expression of great gleeful anticipation intensified on his face. His thick upper lip curled: a sight that made many timorous souls tremble in fear. He was not a man to cross and he had sworn vengeance on these three by all that he held sacred. Instead of prayers, Smirnoff had a nightly litany of those who had crossed his path and on whom he was sworn to take revenge. This not only kept the names alive, but topped up his capacity for vengeance, certain in his own little mind that he would one day cross paths with every one of those in his bad books. This mining crew would pay dearly for the indignity and suffering he had endured at their hands. He was still paying off his share of the repairs to the patrol cruiser. Kezdet Guardians of the Peace were not a forgiving authority and you ponied up out of your own credits for any damage above normal wear and tear. And for rescue and salvage. In point of fact, he hadn't actually paid out of his own private account, but out of the public one into which he had dribbled the credits required for the monthly payments from his little side business of protection monies. But he had other plans for that credit and meant to take it out of the miners' hides if he ever had the chance. "So Sauvignons off the hook?" "Nonsense." Des Smirnoff swiped the racks of data cubes off their rack. "They've got the ship, they've got the fines accrued against it." The thought had him settling at his keyboard again while he accessed those fines and chuckled at the amount of interest that had accrued since Sauvignon's disappearance. "You'll own the ship, too, at that rate," Ed said, sniffing enviously. He tried not to show it, but he did really, honestly, deeply, sincerely feel that Des kept more than his fair share of the covert rewards of their partnership. He was waiting for the day when he found some little inconsistency in Smirnoff's duties that he could use as a handle to bargain for a larger percentage. "What'd I do with a crappy old tub like Sauvignon cruised? It was all but falling apart as it was. Amazing he survived. I was sure we'd penetrated the life-support system with that last bolt we fired at him." "Yeah," and Ed scratched his head, "sure looked like a direct hit, if I remember correctly." "You better remember my aim is always accurate." "Odd though that the ship survived, isn't it?" Des Smirnoff held up one hand, his big, bloodshot brown eyes -widening. "Wait a nano ..." "It didn't survive," Ed said. "Those miners have switched beacons." "Do we have their IDs?" But he didn't wait for an answer, his big fingers slamming down the keys as he completed his own search. Then he flipped the offending keyboard up, pulling it out of the desk socket and spinning it across the room, where it crashed and split against the far wall. "We don't. We should. They were MME, weren't they?" "MME's been absorbed by Amalgamated, I heard," Ed replied, disguising his sigh as he opened the corn unit to Mercy Kendoro. "Bring in a replacement keyboard. Now." When Mercy entered, she handed the keyboard to Ed rather than approach Smirnoff, who had his hands tucked up under his arms and was clearly seething over whatever had caused him to break the latest keyboard. "Rack up those cubes, too, while you're in here. This office must be kept neat and up to standard at all times," Des said and smiled anew as he saw the trembling assistant bend to her task. Later that day. Mercy Kendoro took her midday meal break at a workers' canteen near the docks, where the balding owner teased her affectionately about moving into the tech classes and forgetting her origins. "That's right, Ghopal," Mercy replied as always, "if I'd remembered how terrible your stew is, there's no way I'd be eating here! What did you put in it this morning, dead rats? At least three of them, I'd guess; I've never seen this much meat in it before." Ghopal took the teasing in good part and personally cleared away Mercy's bowl when she had finished eating. Later, when the midday rush had petered out, he put in a call to Aaaxterminators, Inc. "We've found three dead rats in various spots too near the kitchens for my liking. If you'll send out a man I'll give him a list of the specific locations so he can find where the vermin are hiding and clear them out. And-as usual, no need to trouble the Public Health office with the matter. Eh? After all, I'm dealing with it promptly, like a good citizen." Ed Minkus came across that transcript when reviewing the day's tapes of private calls from citizens in whom Security took an interest. "Hey, Des," he called, "Time to pay a little semi-official visit to Ghopal. He's having problems with vermin again, and he'd probably be grateful not to have the matter called to the attention of Public Health. About fifteen percent grateful, I estimate." "Small-time," Des grunted. "If I catch those miners-and I will-we won't need to bother shaking down dockside bistros any more." But by then the representative of Aaaxterminators, Inc. had called at the back door of Ghopal's kitchen and had gone away with the note Ghopal handed him, promising to take care of the rat problem. On his way back to the office, the Exterminators man stopped at a kiosk and bought a cluster of happy-sticks, paying in real paper credits from an impressive wad he kept in his inner coverall pocket. He flirted outrageously with the girl who sold him the happy-sticks, which might have explained why she seemed a bit flustered and took longer than usual to give him his change. That evening, as always, Delszaki Li's personal assistant went out to the same kiosk to buy a flimsy of the racing form sheets for the next day. He and the kiosk girl laughed over the old man's refusal to subscribe to the racing news via personal data terminal and agreed, as they always did, that if a nice old man was embarrassed by his fascination with this form of gambling and thought that buying flimsies with hard credits would preserve his anonymity, there was no need to disturb his illusions. The folded flimsy sheet Pal Kendoro took back to the Li mansion was thicker than usual. After he had unfolded it and read the contents of the inner page, he dissolved that page in water, poured the water down the drain, and requested an immediate interview with his employer. "Sauvignons ship has been reported in transit, sir," he said, standing as straight as a military attache before the old man in the specially equipped hover-chair. A wasting neuromuscular disease had rendered Delszaki Li's legs and right arm all but useless, but the intelligence in those piercing black eyes was as keen as ever, and with one hand and voice commands he had remained in charge of the Li financial empire for fifteen years sir, after enemies had predicted his speedy demise. Pal Kendoro was proud to serve as Li's arms, legs, and eyes outside the mansion. "And Sauvignon?" "I don't know. There is still a party of three aboard the ship, but the names are not those of our people. It is now registered to Baird, Giloglie, and Nadezda," Pal recited from memory. "Would have been most unwise for Sauvignon and party to retain same names," Li pointed out. "Do you think they attempt to make contact with us again?" "Unlikely. This information came from a Guardians' office." Delszaki Li's black eyes snapped fire. "Then is most urgent to find them before Guardians do. Must be you who goes. Pal. Wish I could keep you here, but who else would be believed as doing errand for me and at same time reestablish contact with Sauvignon?" Pal nodded agreement. Most of the members of the league were from the underclass, with no visible means of going off-planet, no obvious reason to go, and no off-planet passes. The few, such as Pal, who had risen through the tech schools, were the only ones who could travel freely without inconvenient questions being asked. But he didn't like leaving Delszaki Li with only his regular servants, at least half of whom were secretly in the pay of Kezdet Guardians of the Peace-and secure in the belief that their second source of income was a secret. "If I might make a suggestion, sir, you will need a personal assistant while I'm gone. My sister might be able to oblige." "Mercy?" "No! She's too useful where she is. My older sister, Judit; I don't think you've ever met her. She's brilliant. Finished Kezdet tech schools at sixteen and scored highly enough on the final exams to win a scholarship to study off-planet. She's working in the psych section at Amalgamated's space base." "Would be willing to leave this fine job?" "Like a shot, sir. She hates the place, was only working there for the money to put Mercy and me through school so we, too, could escape the barrios. It should be safe enough for her to return to Kezdet. Due to leaving so early, she's never been . . . active," Pal said delicately. "And therefore is unknown to the Guardians' offices, except as sister to girl who works as their assistant." Li nodded his satisfaction. "Could hardly have a better guarantor." Li chuckled quietly. "Is good, Kendoro. Send word to sister, but do not wait for her arrival. I shall manage well enough for few days, and Sauvignon may need help." "If it is Sauvignon," Pal said under his breath, but the old man heard. "And if is not Sauvignon, then maybe ship in hands of those who kill our friends. In which case ..." "Terrorism is against the principles of the league, sir. Despite -what they say about us in the newscasts." "Is extermination of rats," Li snapped. "Is not terrorism." So the chain of information from the Guardians' office to the Li mansion ended as it had begun, with a discussion of dead rats. "I want that boy," Hafiz told his trusted lieutenant, Samaddin. "With respect, patron, I thought it was a girl." "What? Oh-the curiosity. Yes, well, of course I want her, too. But I want young Rafik more. The son of a camel and a whore outsmarted me!" "With all respect, patron!" Samaddin bowed even lower. "Forgive me, but the patron would not wish, later, to recall that he had spoken of his sister in such terms." "Family!" Hafiz said in disgust. "When they double-cross you, you can't even curse them properly. Get me that sheep-buggering boy, Samaddin." "Consider it done," Samaddin promised. "Eryou want him with his balls or without them?" "You idiot! You misbegotten son of a jinn's meeting with a jackass, may the grave of your maternal grandmother be defiled by the dung of ten thousand syphilitic she-camels!" Hafiz indulged the bad temper resulting from a major drug hangover and the loss of his prized unicorn by abusing Samaddin for several minutes, while his lieutenant's expressionless face grew steadily closer to purple than its normal creamy tan. Finally Hafiz calmed down enough to explain that he wanted Rafik back alive and unharmed, and especially with his generative capacities intact. "He'll pay for what he did to me, never fear. But after he works off his debt, I've got plans for the boy. Do you know how long it's been since anybody double-crossed me, rather than the other way round, Samaddin? He's got the brains and the guts to take over after me, and I want him to have the balls to sire more sons, too. I'm going to adopt him and name him my heir. Well? What are you staring at? Perfectly normal practice-good families, no son to carry on, bring in a young relative." "The patron has a son," Samaddin murmured. "Not," said Hafiz grimly, "for long. Not after the way he screwed up the southern operation. Soon as his new ears are fixed, I'm sending him back to do the job right this time." "Patron! This time Yukata Batsu will kill him!" "Sink or swim," Hafiz said with a benign smile, "sink or swim." He considered for a moment. "Better not send him until you've got Rafik safely back here, though. The family is short of young males at the moment. Tapha is, I suppose, better than nothing." "Waste not, want not," Samaddin said helpfully. In the curtained room where Tapha lay with his head wrapped in bandages, old Aminah whispered with the servant girl she'd sent to dust the latticework outside Hafiz's office. She raised her hands and eyes to heaven in horror when she heard Hafiz's plans for his own son. "What shall we do?" she wailed. "If he goes back to the south, that fiend Yukata Batsu will surely kill him. And if he stays here, that other fiend, his father, will kill him. We must smuggle him away as soon as he has healed from surgery. There must be some place where he can hide." Aminah's wailing awakened Tapha, and he struggled to sit up in his bed. "No, Aminah. I will not hide." "Tapha, nursling! You heard me?" Aminah fluttered to his side. "Yukata Batsu took my outer ears, not the brain which hears and understands," Tapha said sourly, "and a deaf beggar would have been awakened by thy wailing, old woman. Now tell me all that you know?." When Aminah had poured out her story, Tapha lay back on his pillows and considered. His face was somewhat paler than it had been, but that might have been from the exhaustion of sitting up. "I will not hide," he declared again. "It is unbefitting a man of my lineage. Besides, there is no place where my beloved father, may dogs defile his name and grave, could not find me if he wished. There is only one thing to do." He smiled sweetly at Aminah. "You will tell my beloved father that I am not recovering from the restorative surgery, that it is feared I will lose my life to an infectious fever brought back from the southern marshes." "But, my little love, you grow stronger with every hour! You have no fever; I, -who have always nursed you, should know." "Try not to be more stupid than you were made, Ammah," Tapha said. "Since when is it necessary to declare to my father the exact truth of what passes in these rooms? Or will you no longer protect me as you did when I was your nursling in truth, and you lied to deflect the wrath of my father over minor escapades?" Aminah sighed. She had lied for Tapha too many times to stop now. "But the deception must soon be discovered, my darling," she pointed out. "You cannot pretend to lie abed with the marsh fever forever." "No. But while my father is staying well away from these rooms for fear of the infection, I can get off-planet. I do not think he will kill you when he discovers the deception," Tapha added after a moment's thought. "He may not even beat you very badly, for you are old and weak, and it is shame to harm one's servants." "Dear Tapha," Aminah said, "don't worry about me. My life is as nothing compared to a single hair of your head." Tapha had no quarrel with this assessment. "And so you will hide after all?" "By no means." Tapha smiled. "By no means. Running away and hiding offers only a temporary safety. There is only one way to make sure that my position as my father's heir remains unchallenged, and that he treasures my life as a loving father ought. I shall simply have to find my cousin Rafik," he said, "before Samaddin does." The Uhuru was unloading a collection of miscellaneous minerals on Theloi when Calum was approached by a courteous stranger. "I could not help overhearing your discussions with Kyrie Pasantonopolous," he said. "Allow me to introduce myself- loannis Georghios, local representative for ... a number of businesses. I had the impression that your dealings with the Pasantonopolous family had been less than satisfactory? Perhaps you would allow me to inspect your cargo. I might be able to make you a better offer." "I doubt it," Calum said sourly. "It's the mineral resources around Theloi that were unsatisfactory. We had to go all the way out to the fourth asteroid belt to find anything worth mining, and then all we recovered from the ferrous regolith was gold and platinum. Hardly worth the cost of the journey-" He stopped abruptly as Rafik stepped on his foot and interrupted him. "But, of course, the value of anything depends on how much the buyer desires it and how little the seller cares for it," he continued smoothly. "Perhaps one of the businesses you represent, Kyrie Georghios, would find some slight use for our trivial and insignificant cargo. Don't run down our payload in front of a purchaser," he added to Calum out of the corner of his mouth as Georghios followed Gill to inspect the samples they had shown the Pasantonopolous concern. "And just "what -were you doing?" Calum demanded indignantly. "Being polite," Rafik said. "It's a different thing altogether. I think your bargaining instincts have been dulled by too many safe years under contract to MME. You'd better let me do the talking from now on." "He wants to take samples for his own office to test, and we're invited to dine with him tonight to discuss an asteroid he wants us to explore," Gill said, joining them. "He hinted it might be a good source of rhenium. I suppose you think my bargaining instincts are atrophied, too, Rafik? " "My dear Gill," Rafik said amiably, "you never had any talent for bargaining in the first place. We would do better to hand over the dealing to Acorna, who, at least, has a flair for numbers." "Better if she's not seen too much," Calum said. "She'll have to stay on board the Uhuru tonight." The other two agreed. Acorna had grown so fast that she could now pass for a short man, and in miners' coveralls and with a bulky cap concealing her silver hair and nascent horn, she could just get away with passing through the bazaars of Theloi •without attracting too much attention. But they doubted her ability to pass for human through a prolonged evening of bargaining and formal dining. "Better," Rafik said, "if all three of you stay on board. Then you can't put your foot in your mouth again, Calum." "Calum stays with Acorna, I go with you," Gill decided after a moment's consideration. "We don't know this Georghios, and I don't think any of us should be going off alone with strangers at present. We've annoyed too many people recently." "He may not be willing to tell a loudmouth like you about the rhenium asteroid," Rafik warned. "No," said Gill cheerfully, "but he won't bop me over the head in a dark alley, either." "You're paranoid," said Rafik, but in the end it was he who recognized the trap Georghios had laid for them. "He wants all four of us to dine with him," he reported after a telecom conversation with Georghios. "Says he prefers to know that all partners are in agreement before committing to a possibly hazardous venture like this ... it seems the rhenium asteroid is closer to Theloi's sun than we usually work, and we'll need extra radiation shielding as well as protection from solar flares." "Partners? Well, that lets Acorna out, anyway." "He specifically requested all of us," Rafik said, frowning. "Hinted that if we didn't all show up, there'd be no deal. Now who does that remind you of?" "Sounds like Hafiz," Gill said, nodding. "In which case we'd better take Acorna along to check for poison." "No," Rafik said slowly, "in which case we'd better leave now. I'll accept his invitation-that will give us the afternoon to unload our payload, get what we can out of the Pasantonopolous family, and take off for Kezdet." "We don't dare go to Kezdet," Calum pointed out. Rafik smiled. "All your survival instincts have atrophied. I knew it. Kezdet makes as good an official flight plan as any, don't you think? We haven't decided where to go next, and I wouldn't •want to accidentally file a plan for someplace near where we're actually going." What they were able to get from the Pasantonopolous concern for their gold and platinum barely paid their expenses. They had to stop at the first system with any mineral resources at all. That was Greifen, where the planetary government was building a series of orbiting space stations for zero-g manufacturing and could use all the pure iron the Uhuru could refine and send back into low planetary orbit by drone. The profit per load was not much, since Greifen was only willing to buy space-mined iron as long as the cost was less than that of lifting their own planetary iron into orbit. But it was steady work, and while the mag drive shipped buckets of iron back, they slowly accumulated a payload of more valuable metals. They were almost ready to look for a buyer on Greifen when Calum, who had been amusing himself during long refining processes by breaking the security codes on bureaucratic messages from Greifen, raised the alarm. "I don't think we'd better try to sell this stuff on Greifen," he told Rafik when the other two miners checked the status of the latest processes. "In fact, I think we'd better leave-now-and sell it someplace far, far away." "Why? Getting bored? Another hundred tons of iron and we should have accumulated enough rhodium and titanium to make the trip seriously profitable." "Listen to this." Calum flicked a switch and the corn unit replayed the results of his last few hours' eavesdropping on official Greifen business. "Somebody has landed with a claim against the Uhuru for debts and damages incurred on Theloi." "We didn't ()o any damage on Theloi," Gill said indignantly. "We didn't have time!" "Would you like to explain that to a court that's been thoroughly bribed by Rafik's Uncle Hafiz?" Calum asked. "He must be really mad at us. I didn't think he'd follow us out of Theloi." "He didn't," said Rafik, examining the flimsy of the transmissions Calum had decoded. "At least . . . this does not have the flavor of my uncle's work. He prefers to avoid the courts. And look at the name of the supposed creditor. That's not a Theloian name." "Farkas Hamisen," Gill read over Rafik's shoulder. "Farkas," Rafik said, "means 'wolf in the Kezdet dialect. ... I think maybe it was not such a bright idea after all, to file a flight plan for Kezdet. That must be how they caught on to us." "They'd have no reason to go after this ship," Gill protested. "Officially we're not the Khedive anymore. We're the Uhuru. We've even got the beacon to prove it." Rafik shrugged. "Do you really want to stick around and find out what they've got against us?" "No way," Calum and Gill said in unison. They agreed to forget about their credits from Greifen for the last drone loads of iron. As for the payload, as Rafik pointed out, any number of systems would be happy to get supplies of titanium. Nered, for instance, was a high-tech and highly militarized planet suffering from a severe shortage of mineral resoinces. . . . "The trouble with selling to Nered," Gill pointed out gloomily after they had reached that planet and concluded their transaction, "is that there's nothing in this system for us to mine. We've got an empty ship ..." "And a great many Federation credits," Rafik said. "They really wanted that titanium." "Yeah, but these people are military mad. I bet there's nothing to buy here except paramilitary gear and espionage gadgets." "We'll spend it elsewhere," Rafik said. "Most of it. Tonight, let's celebrate solvency by taking Acorna out to dinner in the best restaurant on Nered." "Oh, boy," Calum said, "I can hardly wait to check out Nered haute cuisine. What's the main course, bandoleers in hot pepper sauce? With gingered grenades for afters?" "She can't go dressed like that," Gill announced, gesturing in her direction. Over the course of the past year, Acorna had shot up in height until even Gill's coveralls were short on her. Inside the ship she preferred to relax •without the binding, too-small clothing. Calum and Rafik turned and stared now at Acorna, where she rested in a net, happily perusing a vid on carbonyl reduction techniques for nonferrous metals. Her silvery curls had grown into a long mane that tumbled fetchingly over her forehead and tapered down her spine. Her lower parts -were covered in fine white fur. She was taller than Gill and as flat-chested as a child, with nothing of an incipient mammary development visible. "I wonder how old she is?" Calum speculated in a low voice, so as not to attract Acorna's attention. "Chronologically," Rafik said, "probably about three. It's been two years since we found her. Physiologically, I'd guess around sixteen. Evidently her species matures quickly, but I don't think she's come to her full growth yet; look at the size of her wrist and ankle bones relative to her height." "Six feet six and counting," Calum muttered. And that would shortly pose a serious problem. The Khedive had been designed for three small-toaverage-size miners. Gill's broad shoulders and excess height had put a strain on the system; sharing the quarters with a fourth passenger had necessitated some fancy reshuffling of the interior arrangements; fitting a seven-foot-tall unicorn into the small confines of the mining ship was virtually impossible. Acorna looked up from her vid. "Calum," she said, "could you explain, please, how this sodium hydroxide reduction process forms liquid TiCI^?" "Umm, that's a late stage," Calum said. He bent to draw a quick diagram on the vid screen next to the explanatory text and pictures. "See, you have to pump dilute HC1 into the electrolysis cell ..." "They should have said so explicitly," Acorna complained. Her language use had asymptotically approached standard Basic in the last year; only a slight formality in her speech, and a faintly nasal inflection, gave any suggestion that she -was not a native speaker of the galactic interlingua. "And developmentally," Rafik murmured, watching Calum and Acorna threshing out the details of electrolytic metals separation, "she's four going on twenty-four." "Yeah," Gill agreed. "She knows almost as much as we do about mining, metallurgy, and navigation of small spacecraft, but she doesn't know anything about, well, you know ..." "No, I don't know," Rafik said, watching Gill's face turn as red as his beard. "You know. Girl stuff." "You think it's time for one of us to sit her down and have a little talk about the human reproductive system? Frankly, I don't see the point," said Rafik, fighting his own embarrassment at the idea. "For all we know, her race may reproduce by-by pollinating flowers with their horns." "That fur doesn't cover everything," Gill said, "and anyway, I bathed her as often as you did last year. Anatomically, she's feminine." He looked doubtfully at Acorna's long, slender body. "A flatchested female, but female," he amended. "And she can't go on lounging around in nothing but her long hair and white fur." "Why not? Maybe her race doesn't have a nudity taboo." "Well, mine does," Gill shouted, "and I'm not having a half-naked teenage girl parading around this ship!" Acorna looked up. "Where?" She never found out why all three men exploded in laughter. They still had the yards of white polysilk that Rafik had bought at the Mali Bazaar to clothe his "wives" in approved Neo-Hadithian style. Gill hacked off a length of fabric, Calum came up with some clip fasteners, and together they wrapped the material around Acorna's waist and threw a fold of it over her shoulders. A second length of fabric provided a loosely wrapped turban which disguised her horn , . . well, sort of. "This is not comfortable," she complained. "Honey, we're not dressmakers. You can't go out to a nice restaurant in my old coveralls. You'd better buy her some clothes while we're here," Gill said to Rafik. "You buy the clothes, you're the one who cares," Rafik retorted, "and you'11 be lucky to find anything but army fatigues on this planet." Rafik had maligned the shopping resources of Nered unfairly. Both men and women at the Evening Star restaurant were dressed like peacocks: the men elegant in formal gray-and-silver evening wear, the -women a colorful garden of fashions and styles from across the galaxy, all interpreted in brilliant jewel-toned silks and stiff rustling retro-satins. In such a gaudy gathering the miners hoped that they would escape notice. Their own formal wear was respectable, but not comparable to the silver-flashed suits currently in vogue on Nered, and Acorna, with neither jewels nor colorful silks to adorn her, should have looked quite dowdy next to the fashionable upper class of Nered. Instead her appearance had quite the opposite effect. Her height and slenderness, the tumble of silvery curls falling down from her improvised turban, and the simplicity of her white polysilk sari made her stand out in the crowd like a lily in a bed of peonies. Heads turned as they were shown to their table, and Rafik could tell from the swift calculation in the mai'tre d'hotel's eyes that they were being given a far more prominent table than the one originally intended for four working miners from off-planet. Bad luck, that, but there was no sense in making a fuss over it now; that would only draw more attention their way. They would simply have to make it through dinner as best they could, and he would watch like a hawk to make sure Acorna's turban didn't fall off. He also looked around to see if any one else was wearing a turban, or was as slender as Acorna. You never knew in an interstellar area what sort of oddities you'd encounter. Returning Acorna to her own people would solve a great many problems! He was so intent on shielding Acorna from notice that the real danger, when it did come, took him completely by surprise. A tense young man in dark brown military fatigues thrust his way into the restaurant, knocked down a waiter carrying a tray of soup bowls, and took advantage of the confusion to level three bursts of laser fire at Rafik before making his escape. Gill knocked over his own chair in his haste to get to Rafik, but Acorna was faster, kneeling over an ominously still figure. The shock of the attack sent isolated nightmare images flitting through Gill's brain. Rafik wasn't moving; he should have been screaming in pain-half his face was burned. Acorna fumbled at her turban. Shouldn't let her do that. She had to stay covered. Doctor! They needed a doctor! Some idiot was babbling about catching the assassin. Who cared about that? Rafik was all that mattered. Acorna bent over Rafik, her horn exposed now, her eyes dark pools -with the pupils narrowed to virtually invisible silver slits. She-nuzzled-at him with her horn. It was heart-breaking to watch; a child mourning a parent. Gill thought numbly that he should take her away. Let her grieve in private. Hide her before too many people noticed the horn. But moving to Rafik's side felt like swimming through heavy water, as though time itself had slowed around them, and when he reached Acorna and Rafik, Calum gripped his shoulder and held him back. "Wait," he said. "She can purify -water and air, and detect poison. Maybe she can heal laser wounds." Even as they watched, the charred flesh on Rafik's face was replaced by smooth new skin wherever Acorna's horn brushed it. She lingered for a moment -with her horn just over his heart, as though urging his shocked system to continue breathing and circulating. Then he stirred and opened his eyes and said irritably: "What in the name of ten thousand syphilitic she-devils happened?" Calum and Gill tried to tell him at once. Then those at the tables nearest them came over, now that it seemed safe to approach, to add their impression of the assassination attack. Those further away, of course, were demanding to know what had happened. When they saw no visible damage but overturned chairs and food spilled on the floor, they turned back to their own tables to resume their interrupted meal. Calum managed to put the turban on the back of Acorna's head, and Rafik pulled it over her horn. Then both he and Gill had to explain to those nearest that no, Rafik had not been hit. No, the laser hadn't even touched him. Eventually all agreed that an assassin had fired at Rafik and that the young lady had fortunately reacted quickly enough to save him by knocking him out of his chair, so that he was not even singed by a near miss. A small vociferous group wanted to discuss their idea that the would-be assassin had looked remarkably like Rafik. Gill and Calum let the story of the miraculous near miss stand and discouraged plans to hunt down Rafik's attacker who had eluded his pursuer; all they wanted was to get back to the Uhuru at once. They had attracted far too much attention this evening! Delszaki Li and Judit Kendoro were finishing their evening meal when the dining room corn unit beeped in the rising arpeggio that meant a scrambled message had been received. "That will be Pal," Li said. He depressed a button on the left arm of his hover-chair and the sequence of jagged, screeching noises that constituted the scrambled message became audible. After a moment of silence, the corn unit's decoding module whirred busily and the original message was heard, Pal's voice somewhat distorted and metallic due to the limitations of the coding process. "There are four crew, not three, presently using the Uhuru. None of them is Sauvignon. They have enemies; one of the crew was the target of an assassination attempt this evening in a fashionable restaurant. The consensus of opinion is that the assassin missed his target, but I was sitting close by in an attempt to listen in on their conversation and I believe what actually happened was quite different-and very interesting. The miner Rafik was actually struck by three bolts of laser fire; I saw the burns myself. I also saw them healed with astonishing speed by the fourth crew member. This person appears to be a very tall young •woman with slightly deformed fingers and a small ..." Pal's voice paused for a moment and only the faint background noise introduced by scrambling and decoding was audible. "Sir, you're not going to believe this, but she seems to have a small horn in the middle of her forehead. And when she nuzzled the man Rafik with this horn, his burns healed and he was conscious within seconds. Sir, I saw this with my own eyes; I'm not making it up or repeating gossip." There was another pause. "These people have no discernible connection with our friends. But they are very interesting. I have decided to maintain contact with them until you send further instructions." "A ki-lin!" Delszaki exclaimed as the message ended. He turned exultantly to Judit, who had been sitting as still as stone ever since Pal had mentioned the horn. "My dear, we have been granted a portent of inestimable value. This strange girl may be solution to Kezdets tragedy ... or she may only portend coming of solution. We must bring her here!" "Acorna," Judit said. "They called her Acorna. ... I thought they had all died; their ship's beacon was found transmitting from a crash site. I cried for them then, those three nice men and the little girl. Acorna." There were tears standing in her eyes now. "You knew of a ki-lin and did not tell me?" "Mr. Li, I don't even know what a ki-lin is! And I thought she was dead. And it was my fault, because I helped them get away. . . . They wanted to cut off her horn, you see ..." "You must tell me all this story," Delszaki Li said. "But first, you must understand the importance of the ki-lin and why I need her here." "Ki-lin ... is that Chinese for 'unicorn'?" Li nodded. "But our beliefs are somewhat different from your Western tales about the unicorn. Your people have stories of trapping and killing unicorns. No Chinese -would ever kill a ki-lin, or even hunt one. The ki-lin belongs to Buddha; she eats no animal flesh and will not even tread upon an insect. We would not dream of trapping the kilin as a gift to a ruler; rather, the wise and beneficent ruler hopes that his rule may be blessed by the arrival of a ki-lin, who, if she comes to his court, is received as one sovereign visiting another. The appearance of a ki-lin among humans is an omen of a great change for the better or of the birth of a great ruler." "And you yourself believe this?" Delszaki Li cackled at the expression on Judit's face. "Let us say I do not ^ubelieve it. How could I? I am scientist first, man of business only from necessity. No ki-lin has ever appeared in recorded history, so there is no evidence to prove or disprove the legends. But I am also man, not only scientist, and so I hope. I hope that this ki-iin will presage the change which Kezdet-and Kezdet's children-so desperately need. And so I shall instruct Pal to make these miners an offer they cannot refuse. They will, in fact, be quite useful for one of my other projects. And while we wait for their arrival, you shall tell me what you know of this Acorna and her friends, and we shall search the Net for more information about them. Never go into a bargaining session unprepared, Judit-even if you are bargaining -with a ki-Un!" It was Acorna -who suggested they measure her to know how long the legs of pants and sleeves of shirts should be, though why she needed to cover herself, when her fur kept her quite comfortable, she couldn't understand. "Didn't you like what the women were wearing in the restaurant last night?" Rafik asked. "I saw you looking around like your eyes would pop." "Her eyes don't pop," Gill said loyally, and then added, "but your pupils were out to the edges of your eyeballs." A sort of dreamy expression crossed Acorna's face briefly and she gave a resigned sigh. "None of those things would last a minute crawling down a conduit or in an EVA suit." "That's another thing we have to get for you," Calum said, for he had -worried about that lack. She could do with some hands-on mining experience to round out her education in asteroid extraction techniques. "You would need to measure me for that," she said. From somewhere they unearthed a flexible tape in an old mechanic's kit. They made most measurements using the instrumentation on board because most of what they needed to measure was out in space and their EVA suits were equipped with gauges. So they dutifully took down what they felt they needed to buy in appropriate sizes. Then they argued over who was to go: Gill would definitely be useless in a dress shop, or even a straight women's-apparel outfitter. Calum's taste, according to Rafik, reposed only in his mouth. Rafik would have to go. "Not when there's an assassin out there somewhere waiting to snuff you out and this time we can't take Acorna with us for emergency first aid." "You all go," Acorna said reasonably and before the decision-making turned into one of the interminable arguments the men all seemed to enjoy so much. "I am safe in here and will not answer any summonses." That was debated, too, but it was finally decided that with Gill bulking along behind Rafik and Calum at his side, he would be less of a target and he would at least not be able to complain when either of the others came back with what he felt to be unsuitable raiment. They got the EVA suit first, since those could be custom-made and produced within an hour. They'd collect it on their way back. Despite Gill's snide comments about the militaristic bias of Nered, it was still a •wealthy planet •with the usual supply of flea markets, bazaars, and good used-apparel shops. With proper measurements, they could also find the right sizes of work clothing for their growing charge. Rafik even found attractive upper-body wraps, made of an elasticized material that was guaranteed "to fit any female form comfortably." "She'll like that," Rafik announced, and got three plain colored ones in blue, green, and a deep purple that he felt would look -well with her silvery hair, and two figured ones: one with flowers that might never have bloomed on any planet in the galaxy, and another with daisies. At least that's what he told the other two they were. After looking in several used-apparel shops, he also found some skirts with elasticized waistbands, also guaranteed to fit any form comfortably. "It doesn't say 'female'," Gill said, about to discard a splendidly patterned one. "Mostly females wear skirts," Rafik said, and took the skirt from his hand. He found another that was filmy but opaque, in a misty blue that he thought Acorna would like for the flow of it-a saleslady modeled the item-the texture of the material, and the color. It was the saleslady, having discerned that the three attractive miners -were buying for a female they all knew, decided to inveigle them to buy accessories, such as "lingerie." "You men are all alike. Concentrate on the outer wear," she said teasingly because the big, bearded redhead blushed to the color of his hair at the first mention of underclothes, "and forget there has to be something underneath." Rafik beamed at her. "My niece has just reached puberty, and I don't know what girls do wear underneath ..." and he wiggled his fingers in helpless innocence. "Her parents were killed in an accident and I'm her only living relative, so we've sort of inherited her." "Very good to do so, too, if I may say so, Captain," Salitana said with more than usual fervor, losing her suave salesperson persona. "When you think of the traffic in orphaned children in this curve of the Milky Way, it's nice to know some will take on responsibility for blood relations instead of selling them out of hand to who-knowswhat miserable existence." "Like Kezdet?" Gill asked, having glanced around first to be sure they were not overheard. "Out-system visitors call us paranoid," Salitana said, "but if your planet were this close to Kezdet, you'd have a major defense budget, too." The two locked eyes, but Salitana immediately smiled her salesperson smile and turned to her keyboard, accessing the stock for the sizes the niece needed: she had the measurements before her. Rather than embarrass the men any further, she ordered up what she felt would appeal to a young girl-what would have appealed to her had she had any options in what she could wear in puberty. While those were on their way to her station, she frowned down at the chest measurement. Poor child was absolutely flat-chested. Well, maybe a training or an exercise bra would suffice. She ordered several of those and the merchandise arrived, already wrapped. "You'll find these suitable, I assure you," she said, handing them over. The redhead looked most grateful as the covered items slipped into the carisak he held open. "You have been shopping. What about shoes, now? I can show you - " "No, that's fine. We got footwear in the bazaar," Rafik said, and hastily proffered the plastic card used on Nered for purchases. He didn't like using a card because it could lead back to the Uhuru more quickly than credits would, but credits caused delays, since the shop had to check that these credits were legal and backed by a respectable credit authority. "We should get her some shoes somewhere," Gill said when they were out on the mall walkway again. "The skirts measured long enough to cover her feet, and you know how she hates constriction," Rafik said. He was tired-probably a remnant of having been dead yesterday for a few minutesand he was eager to show her what they'd managed to find for her pleasure and adornment. "Let's get a hovercraft back to the dock." "I thought you looked tired," Gill said solicitously, and waved his long arm to attract a hire vehicle from the rank at the end of the mall. One zoomed in to the head of the rank and blinked its HIRED sign to show it would take them, but they had to wait until it could get in the traffic pattern above the busy area. It was just turning at the far end when the saleswoman rushed out to them. "Don't take that one," she cried, and frantically pulled them back into the store. "You've been followed. Your charges were monitored. Come with me." The urgency with which she spoke and Rafik's so recent problem -with an assassin impelled them to obey without question. Within the store again, she led them through the crowd of shoppers in a circuitous route to the rear, down two flights of steps, which had Rafik panting from exertion, and into a clearly marked STORE PERSONNEL ONLY room, which she had keyed to open. "I'm sorry to act so presumptuously," she said, her face pale and eyes dark with worry, "but for the Sake of your niece, I had to intervene. Anything to save her if she has been orphaned in this quadrant of space. I don't know? who's tracing you, but I do know it isn't Neredian-generated, so it has to be illegal and you are in danger." She held up both hands defensively. "Don't tell me anything, but if you'll trust me just a little longer, I contacted a friend - " "From Kezdet?" Gill asked gently. "How did you know?" she said in a soundless gasp, one hand to her throat, her eyes wider than Acorna's last night. "Let's just say, we know a bit about what happens on Kezdet from . . . other friends ..." Rafik said, "and we appreciate your help very much. Someone is after me and I do not know why. Is there another way out of here?" "There •will be shortly," she said, glancing at the chrono on the -wall. "I cannot linger, or my absence •will be noted. The . . . party . . . will tap like this." She demonstrated -with a long index finger nail on the door. "The . . . party . . . knows the access code," and she gave a helpless little shrug. "You need it to get in or out. But the party is absolutely trustworthy." "A child labor graduate?" Calum asked. She nodded. "I must go. Your niece is so lucky to have you! She has the right to have you in good health and one piece." She was out the door again so fast they hadn't time to see what digits she had pressed. "So, who's after us? Or you, in particular?" Calum asked Rafik, leaning back against a table. "She was a nice woman," Gill remarked, regarding the closed door with a bemused expression on his face. "Not as nice as Judit..." "Judit?" Rafik and Calum said in unison, staring at him. "She came from Kezdet." "And has a brother still stuck there . . . but one begins to "wonder about the main occupation of those lucky enough to leave it," Rafik said, then shook his head. "Nah, it's more likely to be Hafiz who's after me . . . but Uncle's style would be more along the lines of kidnapping me to take the place of that idiot son who lost his ears. "So long as the idiot son didn't lose what's between them," and Calum inadvertently paraphrased the subject of his sentence, "maybe it's him who found out and is going to put an end to Uncle's future plans for you." "Or it could be our erstwhile friends from Amalgamated. They're still after us for our ship," Gill said. "Or maybe it's that spurious claim of the Theloi?" Rafik said, rubbing his chin thoughtfully. "So who's this Farkas Hamisen who hates your guts and registered the claim?" Gill asked. "Possibly my earless cousin," Rafik said, nodding his head, as that fit the parameters of such a relative. "Or it could be the Greifen, after the ore ..." Calum suggested. "Well, the ore's gone." Rafik dismissed that option. "Could it have anything to do with our new beacon? And here Uncle Hafiz was so certain he was doing us a real favor. ... I -wonder. ..." "What?" Calum and Gill said in chorus. "Who died in the wreck?" Gill's eyes popped and his mouth dropped. "You mean," and Calum recovered more quickly, "we got people we haven't even annoyed after us, too?" The tap startled them in the silence that followed this observation. The door opened and a slender youth, with dark eyes that were wiser than his countenance, gestured imperiously for them to follow him. Though they did, Rafik hissed a bombardment of questions at the boy's back as they had to jog to keep up with him. "Shush," he said, holding up one hand, which Gill then noticed pointed at a spy-eye in the corner of the corridor. They shushed and he hunched over the pad of a heavily plated metal door at the end of the corridor. It opened slowly, because it was ten centimeters thick at least, Rafik estimated as he slipped through when the space was wide enough. They had to wait a few seconds longer for Gill to squeeze through. Their guide had judged it finely enough-he'd already tapped in the close sequence, hauling Gill's leg out of the way. The door closed a lot faster than it opened. The youth then gestured to a goods van, thumbed open its back doors, and pushed the three inside. They could feel it rising on its vertical pads and then it moved forward. Very shortly they were all aware that they were in a traffic pattern of some kind, for the van was not soundproof. What it had originally carried was moot since there was nothing in it but three sweating miners. Rafik slid down one wall and onto his rump and mopped his forehead. "Dying takes more out of you than I ever realized," he said. "I'm bushed." "Are we all-bushed, I want to know?" Calum asked, hunkering down on his heels. Gill sat, too, as his head was brushing the ceiling of the van. "No, you would have been," a new tenor voice said softly. "Salitana said you have taken a niece from Kezdet..." "No, that's not correct," Rafik said. "She has been our charge for nearly four years. She needs new clothes." "Ah! But you know of Kezdet?" "Yes," Gill answered, "we met someone who got out of there. Still trying to get her brother off that damned planet, too." "Really?" Surprise more than a prompting to continue colored that one word. "Now, we are out of the mall. Where do I take you that you may safely descend?" "The docks," Rafik said. "We should pick up Acorna's EVA suit first," Gill said, and cowered at the dirty looks the other two gave him for mentioning her name. "At which chandlers?" the youth asked in such a natural tone of voice that some of their fury at his indiscretion was dispelled. "The one on Pier 48B," Rafik answered, still glaring at Gill. "Can do." And they all felt the van make a lefthand turn. That was right, Rafik thought and sneezed. Gill and Calum did, too. In fact they all were in such a paroxysm of sneezing that they inhaled a more than sufficient quantity of the sleep gas that circulated through the rear of the van. Some very astringent substance was being held under his nose and Rafik roused to avoid it. To his utter surprise, a slim hand was held out to him. "I am Pal Kendoro and it is my sister Judit who was working at Amalgamated who had paid for an education that would lift me out of the barrios of Kezdet. Are my bona fides sufficient to restore me to your good graces?" Rafik glanced over at the still unconscious forms of his two friends. "All of you -would overpower me. One I can handle," Pal Kendoro said, tilting his head-evidently a family trait; Rafik saw the resemblance to his sister in that pose. "I apologize for ..." and he waved his hand toward the front of the cab, ". . . the necessity, but I was seeking another whom I thought might be you." Rafik straightened up. He'd a crick in his neck from lying in an uncomfortable position, but the back door of the van was open and, while the air it let in smelt of fish and oil and other unpleasant odors, the last of the gas was dissipating. "And -who might that be?" Rafik asked in a droll tone. "There's a waiting list." Pal grinned. "So I have discovered." "How long were -we out?" and Rafik rubbed at his neck. "Oh migod ..." "She will not worry," Pal said, reaching out a hand to steady Rafik when he tried to leap to his feet. "I sent a message to your ship. . . . She believes you have stopped to eat." "How the devil did you access our security codes . . . ? Oh." He groaned. "I think I know. You're looking for the legal owners of the beacon •we borrowed. Believe me, the ship was split like a nut when we found it wedged in an asteroid. Nothing could have lived." "Would you at least remember where you found the derelict?" Pal asked, his dark eyes intent. "Sure can, but I don't know what good that'll do." "We ... I ... would be obliged." "We ... I ... owe you one," and Rafik left off rubbing his neck. Pal Kendoro got off his haunches now and went to wave his restorative under Calum's nose before he handed the bottle to Rafik to tend to Gill. Rafik chuckled at Kendoro's innate caution. Gill did indeed come out of his inadvertent nap ready to do mischief to whoever did that to him. A few brief explanations and harmony was restored, thanks for their escape offered and dismissed. "Can we get back to - " "Our ship," Rafik hurriedly interjected. "Yes, and with one stop at the chandlers on Pier •48 B," Pal said, exiting the van and adding as he closed the sides, "this time I let you see where I am driving you." He was as good as his word, for the opaque panel between the goods section and the driver's turned transparent. "I have had fresh words with Salitana," he told them as he eased the van out of the side road and into a busy traffic pattern, "and there was considerable interest in you which she was unable, of course, to answer, since you were strangers buying clothing for female friends and she, naturally, wanted no part of the offers you made her." "She wouldn't have imparted to you a description of the interested parties, -would she?" Rafik asked -with a -weary smile. Pal Kendoro slid three quik-prints through a small slot in the panel. "She is efficient." "Hey, that looks like ..." and Gill closed his mouth on "the assassin." "No, but there's a resemblance to the uncle," Calum said, "and if I'm not mistaken this shot shows quite new ears on him." Rafik had also noticed that. "He is registered at the port as Farkas Hamisen," Pal Kendoro said over his shoulder. "She's not the only efficient one," Calum murmured. "Okay, why have you involved yourself with the cause of utter strangers, and don't tell me because we have succored a minor female?" Rafik said. He was getting very tired of being chased and helped and then chased again. "I have also had a word with my sister, Judit, who is currently assisting my employer during my absence on the mission to discover who caused the death of our friends who owned the ship whose beacon you have appropriated for use in yours." Rafik was not the only listener who blinked at the long and involved and grammatically correct sentence. "And ..." Rafik prompted when Pal seemed to take a long time to make up his next sentence. "Would your niece be a young female of unknown origin with a curious protuberance on her forehead?" Rafik exchanged glances with his mates. Gill nodded solemn approval, but Calum looked wary. "I think this lad is in an ... efficient . . . position to help us on a number of vexing matters," Rafik murmured. "Yes, that is our niece, and Judit has already helped us save her. She isn't still with Amalgamated, is she?" "No, and one of the reasons is your ward." Rafik raised his eyebrow over that term, but it was more accurate than "niece" had ever been, technically speaking. "Here's the EVA shop," Gill said, pointing to the right. "So it is," Rafik said and started to move. "Oh, no you don't," Calum said, pushing him back down. "I'll get it. No one's been killing me." "You are both wrong," Pal said, twisting around. "You will undoubtedly have a chit that indicates the merchandise has been paid for." He paused to don a cap that said clearly NERED MESSENGERS GMBH, INC & LTD on the peak. He held his hand at the slot and Rafik slid the receipt through. Pal got out whistling and entered the shop while the three miners watched . . . and watched all corners for anyone watching Pal's activities. But by then he was out of the shop, still whistling, the EVA suit in its protective covering thrown over his shoulder in a careless fashion. He threw it through a barely adequate opening at the back of the van, winking as he did so, and slammed the door shut before resuming his position as driver. His forward motion could scarcely be called either furtive or fast. Clearly he was a messenger determined to increase the time of his errand for a larger fee. Clearly he -was also very adept at inconspicuous trips because, although the three miners observed the twists and turns he made, they almost did not recognize the Uhuru -when the van stopped at its closed hatch. Then a lot of things happened all at once: Pal Kendoro grabbed the EVA suit, jerked them out of the van -when they didn't appear to move quickly enough to suit him, and said that -whoever had the command to open the Uhuru's, hatch had better activate it right now because "they" -were here and •waiting for them. Rafik activated it and the hatch opened just enough for them all to get inside, even Pal, though he had to be pulled through with the suit encumbering him. Acorna was at the pilot's controls. "We have cleared for take-off, just as you asked. Uncle Rafik," she said as he slid into the second seat. "I did?" "You did!" At the sound of his own voice so cleverly imitated, Rafik turned around to see Pal behind him. "And I advise the most speedy departure this ship can make and an even quicker )ump to these coordinates." He laid a flimsy beside Acorna. "Well, go ahead, Acorna," Rafik said, waving his hand in submission. "Where?" "To a place of absolute safety," Pal said, trying very hard not to stare at the slender figure with the mane of silver hair who was in control of the ship. "I trust him," Rafik said, uttering what would soon be added to the list Calum kept of his Famous Last Words. "He's Judit Kendoro's brother." Acorna had no more than finished keying in the course than Rafik began to sneeze again. So did Calum, Gill-who tried to reach out to Pal, who held a mask over his face-and Acorna. Seven In the end, it was Judit who conveyed Delszaki Li's invitation to the Uhuru -when the ship reached Kezdet "Pal can negotiate with the miners," she'd pointed out, "but if you want Acorna to come and stay with you - " "She must," Li insisted. "I may not know? how or why yet, but this I do believe: the ki-Un is vital to our goals!" "I have met these men," Judit said. "They have been betrayed before; they will not entrust Acorna to strangers again. To me, perhaps, but not-forgive me-to an unknown businessman on a planet that has not treated them well." "Name of Li is scarcely unknown in "world of business and finance," her employer remarked dryly. "They would probably trust your financial expertise," Judit agreed, "but will they trust you to care for ayoung girl?" She was not entirely sure, herself, that she trusted Delszaki Li to recognize that Acorna was a little girl as well as a kl-lin. Pal had described her as a young woman . . . but that was ridiculous; after all, Judit had seen the child herself, only a year ago. And, with the image of that drugged child in her mind, she was taken aback at first by the tall, slender young woman in a sophisticated deep purple body wrap and misty blue flowing skirt who greeted her when at last she received permission to board the Uhuru. For a moment she wondered wildly if there could be two Acornas, if this could be the mother or older sister of the child she remembered. On her part, Acorna stared at Judit as soon as she spoke, and her silvery pupils narrowed to vertical slits. "I think ... I know you," she said in confusion. "But how?" "She saved you from surgery at Amalgamated's space base," Gill said. His big hand briefly enveloped Judit's; she felt a wave of warmth and security emanating from his touch. "But you were unconscious at the time, drugged for the operation. You can't remember." "I remember the voice," Acorna said. She looked thoughtfully at Judit. "You were very much afraid . . . and very sad. You are not so sad now, I think." "Then it i) you!" Judit exclaimed. "But you were so tiny..." "It seems my people mature more rapidly than do yours," Acorna said. "Not, of course, that we know anything about my people. . . ." Her pupils narrowed to slits again, then widened as she turned her silvery gaze on Judit and dismissed that subject. "So you are Judit. Gill and Rafik and Calum have told me often of your heroism." "Then they have exaggerated wildly," Judit said. "I didn't do anything, really." "You will allow us to differ about that," Gill put in, still holding Judit's hand clasped inside his. "And you were not harmed afterwards?" Judit smiled. "Oh, no. They bought the hostage story ... I think Dr. Forelle had some doubts, but nobody else could quite believe that a barrio girl, even one who'd made it through university, would have the brains or independence to go against so many rules. And to keep them from thinking it, I made sure to act very stupid for some time thereafter. I think they were glad to get rid of me when Mr. Li offered me a position as his assistant." "Ah, yes," Rafik said. "Your famous Mr. Li. Pal has been telling us all about him, and his fortune, and his great plans - " Judit felt the blood draining from her face. "Pal, how could you?" How could Pal have trusted these men with such dangerous secrets! Oh, Gill, she would trust, but these other two ... no doubt they were good men, but Pal didn't have the right to risk the lives of children on his intuitive judgment of them. "-plans to establish lunar mining bases on Kezdet's moons," Rafik went on, and Judit breathed again. "He seems very eager to give us a contract to oversee the establishment and development of the work ... a remarkably lucrative contract to offer three independent asteroid miners." "As I've explained to you," Pal cut in, "Kezdet is a technologically underdeveloped planet. We have planetside mines, of course, but they are of the crudest sort, dependent on manual labor for nearly everything. And there is no local expertise in low-g mining. Kezdet's moons are far richer in valuable metals than the planet itself, but up to now we have lacked the capital and the technology to exploit the mines. Mr. Li proposes to provide the capital, but he needs men like you to consult on all the problems of mining in space-protection from solar flares, high-friction coefficients, lack of the usual reagents for extraction, and so forth." "You seem tolerably well informed on the problems, anyway," Calum remarked. Pal flushed. "I've studied a few vid-cubes. That doesn't make me a space mining expert. That's where you come in." "I should perhaps point out," Rafik said softly, "that hijacking our ship and taking us, unconscious, to a planet we have every reason to avoid is not the most persuasive of bargaining maneuvers." "Pal," Judit said sorrowfully, "you coulf) have tried explaining to them!" Pals flush deepened and he rounded on his sister, palms out. "A minute ago you thought I ha<) explained to them, and I was in deep kimchee for that, too. Can't I do anything right? " "Not with a big sister, kid." Gill chuckled. "Rafik, Pal, both of you calm down. Whatever the rights and wrongs of it, we're here now, and it won't hurt us to listen to Mr. Li's offer . . . and personally, I'm dying to hear the explanations." "I think Mr. Li would prefer to present his case to you personally," Pal said, "and he very seldom leaves his mansion. Will you trust me so far as to accompany me there, where we can discuss the matter in greater comfort?" Gill glanced at the others, smiled wryly and shrugged. "What the heck . . . we're already on Kezdet, how much worse can it get? Just lay off the sleep gas this time." "Kezdet," Pal said somberly, "can get much, much worse than any of you can imagine." Just before dawn there was a subtle change in the quality of the darkness of the sleep shed. Unrelieved blackness faded slightly, revealing the slumped outlines of what looked like piles of rags on the earthen floor. After three years •working Below, Jana could sleep through the twentyfour-hour rumble and thump of the slagger, but the faint light in the shed woke her, most mornings, before the call. That was the good thing about being on day shift. Night shift, you didn't have that bit of warning. It worked today; she was on her feet, rubbing the sleep out of her eyes, when Siri Teku came through the shed with his bucket of icy water, splashing it on the heaps of rags until the children underneath stirred. He grinned at Jana and aimed the last of the bucketful at her, but she dodged so that he only got her bare feet. "Thanks," she said, "I was meanin' to wash my feet today anyway." She dived into the corner and caught little Chiura by the arm, hauling her upright and clapping one hand across her mouth before the kid could wail and earn a slash from the long, flexible rod Siri Teku held in his other hand. The other kids knew better than to cry about a little thing like cold water, or to take too long scrambling to their feet, but Chiura was new, the only new one their gang had got from last week's intake. The others had grumbled when Siri Teku shoved her into their shed. "How we gone keep up our allotment with babies on the soojin' gang?" Khetala demanded. Khetala, two years older than Jana, broadshouldered and black-browed, was the unofficial leader of their gang. She kept the rest of the kids in line with pinches, slaps, and threats to tell Siri Teku on them. But she also kept their ore carts full and the draggers moving so that they weighed in with a full allotment most shifts. That meant supper. Gangs that didn't earn supper didn't last long; the kids got tired too easily, then they couldn't keep up their allotment, they started getting sick, pretty soon the sick ones disappeared and the ones that were just puny got sold off to other gangs. Or worse, Kheti said darkly, but Jana wasn't sure what could be worse than being a dragger on a gang. "She's too little to go Below," Jana said. Chiura's bare legs -were dimpled with baby fat; her round, full face was tilted upward to Jana and Khetala as if she expected them to pick her up or something. She'd learn soon enough that there wasn't any time at Anyag for playing with babies. "No backtalk!" Siri Teku's rod whistled against the backs of Jana's legs. She didn't jump, so he lashed her a couple more times until tears stood in her eyes. "She's not going Below. Not yet, anyway. She can help Ganga and Laxmi sort." Jana and Khetala looked at each other. They needed another sorter. Siri Teku had taken Najeem away right after wake-up a couple of days ago, when he noticed Najeem's morning cough. But how were they going to teach a baby who couldn't be more than four, maybe only three, to sort ore? "She wants to eat, she'll learn," Siri Teku said. "You'll teach her." He left the shed to fetch their scanty morning meal. Now Jana knelt beside Chiura, dipped a corner of her own kameez in the water bucket and wiped the kid's face clean. She'd been crying again in the night, there -were dried tears and snot caked around her upper lip. A bruise was starting to show on her cheek. "Who hit you, Chiura? " Chiura didn't answer, but she glanced toward Laxmi and back, a quick, darting, furtive glance that she'd learned in this first week at Anyag. Jana glowered at Laxmi. "The brat kept me awake with her snuffling," Laxmi said. "We all cried at first," Jana said. "You hit her again, Laxmi, and I'll break your arm. See how long Siri Teku keeps you on the gang when you can't work!" She wiped Chiura's face as gently as she could and ran her fingers through the curly dark hair, trying to work a few tangles out of the matted ringlets. "You're wasting your time," Laxmi said. "She'll hafta get clipped like the rest of us, or she'll get lice. I donno why Siri Teku hasn't done it yet." "You mean there's something you don't know?" Jana jeered. "An' here I thought you -was the Divine Fountain of Wisdom come down to Anyag to instruct and save us all." Sin Teku kicked the door open and set down a round platter of bean paste )ust inside the shed. Beside it he dropped a stack of patts, letting them fall on the dirt so the bottom ones would be all gritty. He said it trained the kids to grab their food fast and not waste time, but Jana figured it was just meanness. She'd never seen anybody who wasn't hungry enough to bolt their patts and bean paste so fast they hardly chewed. The first day, Chiura had wrinkled up her face and spat out the gritty patt and bean paste Jana rolled for her. She was hungrier now; she would've dived right under the trampling feet of the older kids if Jana hadn't held her back. "It's okay," she told Chiura. "Kheti sees to it, there's fair shares for everyone." "More," Chiura wailed when the rush had slowed and they got their patts and beans, one apiece. "Fair shares," Jana said firmly, but she tore her rolled patt in half and slipped it to Chiura when nobody -was looking. And while the rest of the gang shuffled off to the shaft, she lingered to ask Laxmi how the baby was doing. "Plays too much, less'n I clout her," Laxmi said. "Doesn't know good rock from bad. She's bringin* down our count." "Don't hit her," Jana said. "She won't learn if she's scared. Let her watch what you're doing. She'll learn." She knelt by Chiura and hugged her. "You'll watch Laxmi, won't you, sweetcake? Watch and learn how to tell good ore from rocks. Watch for Mama Jana." "Sweetcake?" Chiura repeated. "Mama?" "Aah, she's too dumb to know what you're saying," Laxmi whined. "Only way to teach her . . ." She doubled over in a silent cough. Her thin face turned dark with the effort to hush the convulsions that shook her body. "You don't hit her," Jana said, "and I don't tell Siri Teku you got Najeem's cough. Deal?" Laxmi nodded in between convulsions, and Siri Teku's rod came down across the backs of Jana's legs. This time Jana yelled good and loud, to give Laxmi a chance to let some of the coughing out. And Siri Teku was so busy telling her off for lingering behind the rest of the gang, he didn't even notice the way Laxmi wheezed for breath. She hoped. Going Below was the part Jana hated worst, the sickening drop in the cage full of scared kids. It was usually all right, if the minder was awake and paying attention to his engine. If he let it run a few seconds too long, the cage would slam into the pit floor like a dropped basket of eggs. Coming back up was just as dangerous; an inattentive minder could drag the cage and all into the engine to be chewed up like a lump of ore in the slagger, but you didn't think about that so much-by the end of shift, all you could think of was getting Above again. Above belonged to light and flowers and Sita Ram, whom Jana imagined like a mother who smiled and hugged you close and wanted to keep you forever. Below belonged to Old Black and the Piper, and if you prayed to Sita Ram or even thought about Her, they'd maybe get angry and send one of Their messengers for you: a rock falling from the tunnel roof, a flood of water when the hewers broke through into old workings, or the stinking air that made your chest forget how to breathe. The cage rattled to a stop, thudding on the pit floor but not falling, and the gang moved off to their places under Siri Teku's direction. "Buddhe, Faiz, you boys are dragging for Face Three today. Watch how Gulab Rao handles the compressor, Buddhe. You're getting too big for a dragger and I just might put you to work on the face pretty soon if you show me you can get a load of ore without spraying the gallery with rock splinters. Israr, you trap for Face Three. You girls go to Five. Khetala and Jana drag, Lata trap." Buddhe and Faiz set off at a run down the opening that slanted down to the tunnel to Three, but Kheti called them back and made them strap on their knee and arm pads. "Girl stuff," Buddhe said scornfully, flexing his skinny ten-year-old arm •while Kheti tried to tie on the pads she'd made out of old rags. "When I'm a hewer, I -won't fool with stupid girl stuff like padding myself." "Wear the pads, maybe you don't get so many cuts, maybe you live long enough to make hewer," Khetala snapped. Jana didn't argue about putting her own pads on. They were another of Kheti's good ideas. Other gangs, when they got new kameezes, sold the ragged bits of their old ones to a picker for a cornet of curried peas or some other luxury. Kheti made them save the old cloths to make these pads that protected their knees and elbows from the sharp rock floors of the tunnels. While the pads lasted, their gang didn't come down with half as many scrapes and cuts and infections as the other gangs. The only trouble was, they never could get enough cloth. Kheti said she was going to talk to Siri Teku some day when he wasn't drunk or angry and point out how much the pads saved them, try and talk him into giving them some extra cloth. But it could be a long time waiting until Siri Teku was in a mood to be approached. The hewers had been working at Five since well before first light; they went on shift and off shift earlier than the draggers, so that the kids could find full corves of ore -waiting -when they started work and could finish off the hewers' last production of the day before they went off shift. This morning there were three full corves -waiting for them. You couldn't hear anything over the •whine of the compressors, but one of the hewers Ram Dal, it was--wasn't -wearing his face mask, and Jana could guess from his scowl what he -was saying to them. If the draggers got behind, then he wouldn't have an empty corf to pile his ore into, his production -would go down and the gang wouldn't meet their allotment. It -wasn't her and Khetala's fault that Face Five had turned into an easy vein that the hewers could strip faster than Siri Teku had expected, but they'd be the ones to get the stick if Ram Dal told Siri Teku that they were holding up the line. Jana buckled the belt about her -waist, straddled the chain attached to the first corf, and set off back up the long slope of the tunnel without a -word or a nod to Khetala. Halfway up the tunnel, Lata pulled the ventilation fan back so that they could drag the corves through. "Come back soon," she begged. "It's dark here. I'm scared the Piper -will get me." "Don't worry about the Piper," Jana said as she passed. "I left an offering for Him at the face. And -we'll be back in a minute." It -was always dark in the tunnel, and they always came back as fast as they could. Lata really •was simple; you could see it in her face, the funny tilted eyes and the moon-round cheeks. She could never remember anything from one trip to the next. But being so simple, she didn't get bored and fall asleep, either. Jana liked having Lata as trapper and didn't mind saying, every trip, that she would come back in a minute. "Liar," Kheti -whispered -when they were past Lata and the hum of the fan blocked out their •words. "You never. Piper's gonna get you." "Huh. Piper won't -want me, I'm too skinny. Piper's gonna take you, Kheti-your chest getting big now." The first trip wasn't so bad, except for being in a hurry because the hewers were getting ahead this morning. Jana figured about the third trip was the -worst; by that time everything was bugging you. Your thighs ached from the pull of the loaded corf, you had scrapes on the places your pads didn't protect, the chain between your legs chafed and sweat dropped down into the chafed places and made them sting worse than ever. In some ways Jana reckoned it was better later on in the shift, when you were too tared to care, almost too tired to remember that there'd ever been anything but pulling loaded corves, tipping them into the cage basket, and drawing the empty boxes back. Finally the hewers quit for the day, and then they knew end of shift was almost there and all they had to do was clear the last loaded corves. Then there was the creaking cage again, this time taking up draggers and trappers instead of baskets of ore, and cool clean air and the first stars of evening, and shivering because your kameez was soaked with sweat and you weren't used to the coolness. Jana helped Khetala to herd the other kids of their gang over to the pump that spewed out water from the lowest mine workings, nagged them all to pull off their kameezes and wash. The littlest ones, Lata and Israr, were so tired they were about to fall asleep, even though they had been sitting still all day instead of hauling corves. They gasped and crowed indignantly at the shock of the tepid water. That helped; Buddhe and Faiz wanted to show? they "were tougher than the little kids, so they splashed rowdily under the pipe. Jana and Khetala took the last wash. Faiz tried to pinch Khetala's chest and she splashed water into his eyes and everybody had a good laugh. "I wish we had spare kameezes, and spare pads, too," Kheti said as they trudged back to the shed. "Then we could wash our clothes and pads and leave them to dry next day." "Yeah? Long as you're wishing, why don't you wish for the moon to hang in our shed and a cloud to fly through the tunnels on?" "The better we keep clean," Kheti said firmly, "the less we fall sick." Jana didn't see the connection herself. Everybody knew that sickness was caused by annoying Old Black and the Piper so that they laid a cough in your chest. She'd been at the mines five years now, since she was only a little bigger than Chiura. Kheti was all the time setting herself up as some kind of know-it-all because she'd only come to the mines two years ago, when she was eleven already, and she claimed to know all sorts of things about the -world away from the mines. But she did know a lot of good stories to tell at night, and it was true that since she'd joined them they had only lost two kids from the gang to illness. Besides, if you argued, she hit and slapped, and Jana had taken enough blows that day from Siri Teku and Ram Dal-she didn't need a fight with Kheti to finish the day off. The sorters had come in when it got dark. They -were supposed to light a fire and heat -water to cook the evening beans and meal porridge, but half the time the sleep shed was dark and cold when the rest of the gang got there. This evening -was one of those times. Laxmi and Ganga were bickering about -whose turn it was to fetch sticks for kindling. Khetala waded in and sorted the argument with a couple of brisk slaps, sending Laxmi for kindling and Ganga to fill the bucket. "What about her7" Laxmi jerked her head at the pallet where Chiura lay, chubby arms and legs flung out in exhausted sleep. "She don't sort her share, she don't help fix the fire ..." "She's little," Jana said. "She'll learn. Give her a chance." "I say, if she doesn't work, she doesn't eat!" "That's dumb," Jana said. "If she doesn't eat, she'll just get sick. I'll help you get the dinner ready if you'll give her a share." Her legs ached all over from hauling corves of ore all day, but walking and carrying kindling was a different kind of work anyway. It probably did her some good to stand upright for a while. Some of the older hewers hobbled around half bent, unable to straighten up after years of lying on their sides in wet tunnels to hack out the last ore in a narrow vein. When they got the fire going and the water began to bubble, Khetala made Laxmi stir, even though Buddhe and Faiz complained that she would cough all over their food. "Never mind them," Kheti told Laxmi. "Steam's good for the breath-sickness. You stir every night for a while, and lean over the bucket while you stir, hear? Breathe in that steam." "Why? " Laxmi whined. "Easy," Jana said before Khetala could lose her temper and slap Laxmi, which was how she usually settled disagreements. "Steam goes up, right? Sita Ram is Above, Old Black and the Piper are Below. Chest cough comes from Old Black and the Piper. Steam carries it up to Sita Ram." Khetala rolled her eyes but didn't argue. "Just do it, Laxmi. Breathe the steam, and hope Siri Teku keeps you on sorting for a while and doesn't make you drag a corf." "Right," Jana agreed. "She goes Below, it'll just give Old Black and the Piper another chance to lay a curse on her." Jana took Chiura to sleep beside her that night. She wouldn't mind if Chiura cried, and she wouldn't hit the kid the way Laxmi did. Anyway Chiura didn't cry much; she snuggled in between Jana's arm and body and burrowed her head into Jana's armpit like a kitten butting its mother for milk. There'd been a litter of kittens once, all soft and fuzzy . . . but that was before the mines. . . . Jana blinked away tears. It didn't do no good to think about before. That was the first lesson anybody learned. You were bonded to your gangmaster, Siri Teku or whoever, and he took the cost of food and clothes out of your wages and kept the rest to pay off the advance your family had gotten for bonding you, and "when you were paid off, you could go home or you could stay at "work and send the money back to your family. It took a long time to get paid off, though. But it must happen for some kids. Sometimes kids just disappeared, and they weren't sickly or anything, and you never saw them around the mine again, not working the other shift or working in another gang or whatever. Like Surya. She'd been a year older than Khetala, but she wasn't on the gang anymore. So she must have earned out her bond and been sent home. Jana wasn't sure what she would do when she earned out. She didn't know how to find her family. She'd been too little when they bonded her-she only knew it was a long way off. They maybe wouldn't want her back anyway; there were too many kids and not enough to eat. Maybe she'd go to the city and find some easier work. Anything had to be easier than dragging corves. . . . She fell into an uneasy dream of dragging bigger and bigger corves up a worse slope than any in the mine, with the Piper behind her dark and faceless and threatening, and her legs jerked and twitched all night as the overstrained muscles tried to remember how to rest. But whenever she woke up there was Chiura's little body warm against her, and that was some comfort; almost as good as having a kitten of her very own. The miners were tense as they followed Pal into the Li mansion, unsure what to expect. The house was darkened against the heat of the Kezdet sun, with cool, scented currents of air fanning though high-ceilinged rooms. They were still blinking with the sudden change from brilliance to shadows when the soft whir of a hover-chair heralded Delszaki Li's arrival. While Pal and Judit made introductions, Calum hung back, studying the man whose power and influence had brought them here. A wasted body was largely concealed under stiff, brocaded robes; all that he could see was the man's wrinkled face, with sharp, intelligent eyes. Those eyes lit up when Acorna was introduced, and Calum tensed. She's what he wants, he thought. The r&ft is just an excuse. But his suspicions were lulled by the long, intense discussion that followed the introductions and ritual offering of food and drink. Li had evidently studied and anticipated all their tastes; there was Kilumbemba beer for Gill, chilled fruit juice for Acorna, and a variety of cold and refreshing drinks for Calum and Rafik. But the man was obviously eager to be done with social niceties and get on with his business; the clawlike fingers of one hand trembled over the hover-chair buttons while they made polite conversation. He seemed relieved when Gill downed his beer and said bluntly, "Now, Mr. Li, we have been promised some explanations. Exactly what made you so eager to bring us here, and -why are you so sure we will accept your offer?" "Require your assistance," Li said, "to destroy illegal but well defended system of child slavery on this planet." "There are unpleasant rumors about the fate of unprotected children on Kezdet," Rafik agreed. "The reality," Judit said, "is •worse than the rumors." Gill put one arm around her shoulders. "And exactly how will the establishment of lunar mining bases help to eradicate the current system?" Calum demanded. "And why UJ?" "Second question is more easily answered than first," Li replied. "I have chosen you because of personal reports from Judit Kendoro, also substantiated by reading of classified files of Amalgamated. Men who will break contract and incur wrath of intergalactic company to defend one child might be willing to take some further risks to save many children." Calum had the feeling that Li was not revealing all his thoughts, but then, the head of a multibillion-credit financial and industrial empire seldom did reveal everything he was thinking. "For answer to first question," Li went on, "small introduction to current system is necessary." He paused for a moment, his bright black eyes darting around the table until he was sure that he had everyone's attention. "Kezdet, like Saturn, eats its children. Small population of highly paid technical workers, bureaucrats, and merchants rests at top of a pyramid of underpaid and exploited human labor. And at bottom of pyramid are children-those of Kezdet, and the unwanted children of many other planets. Kezdet labor contractors visit an overpopulated, impoverished world where planetary government is already struggling to provide basic social services. They make promises of employment and education for homeless children, training in basic job skills, and the chance for a better life. Reality is sadly different. Training? Yes-employers claim child is 'in training' for long years during which no wages at all are paid. Employment? Yes-as much as twenty hours a day in some cases. And education?" Li smiled sadly. "All most of these children learn is that if they do not work, they will not eat. And they learn that lesson very well. Illiterate, half-starved, separated from their families if they ever had any, they are utterly dependent on their employer's good will. Enslaved children are backbone of Kezdet economy." "Child labor and slavery are both violations of Federation law," Rafik said. "Surely the law applies on Kezdet as elsewhere?" Li's smile was infinitely sad. "Inspections are always announced in advance, to give factory owners time to hide children or pretend they are only working in allowed roles such as carrying water and snacks to adult workers. Kezdet Guardians of the Peace are paid, what you say, under the console?" "Under the table," Rafik supplied. "Sometimes Child Labor League makes public some company's violation of law. But judges are also paid off. Small fine, company continues business as usual." "It doesn't make sense," Calum protested. "Adult workers are stronger and do more. I'm sure conditions are terrible for the few children who have to work, but you make it sound as though they are the entire workforce." "Kezdet has specialized in industries where children are especially useful," said Li. "In primitive mines, their small size is convenient. In glass factories, they can run faster than adults and calculate a path more intelligently than 'bots, bringing molten glass to blowers. Small nimble fingers are useful in match factories, where sulfur poisons them, and in carpet factories where children are crippled from hours of sitting in a cramped position and half-blinded from working in the dark. Adults," Li said dryly, "might protest such conditions. Children provide cheap, uncomplaining labor. And Kezdet industrialists too tight-fisted and short-sighted for kind of capital investment it would take to modernize industries and improve appalling conditions. Children do here what machines do in more civilized places-and is always cheaper to buy another batch of children from a labor contractor than would be to automate a factory. System perpetuates itself. And children themselves are kept in perpetual slavery by system of financial juggling. Most bonded child laborers incapable of calculating 'debt' they owe for transportation to Kezdet and fee of contractor who brought them here. As legal fiction," he explained, "debt is owed by adult head of child's family, if such exists. Everyone knows debt is to be paid only by child-but cannot prosecute on basis of what 'everyone knows,' especially on Kezdet, where entire legal and peace-keeping system is corruptly in pay of factory owners. Meanwhile, employers cheat children in every possible way, charging food and clothing at ridiculous sums against their wages, docking for breakages, keeping high rate of interest on original debt. All bond laborers hope someday will work off bond. Very few ever achieve that." "I was lucky," said Pal. "I had a sister who won her freedom with a scholarship, then spent years working hardship posts on space stations and sending back every penny of her salary until Mercy and I were bought free as well." "Success of Judit required brilliance, tenacity, and luck," Delszaki Li said. "First element of luck was that she was not sent to Kezdet until she was fourteen, when she and Pal and Mercy were orphaned by a war that left their home planet burdened with thousands of displaced children. She fell into barrios of Kezdet later than most, with good health, a basic scientific education, and-most important of all-knowledge that a better way of life was possible. But none of that would have saved her if she had not been an exceptionally brave and intelligent young woman." "You don't need to tell me that," Gill rumbled. "Remind me to tell you sometime about the first time I met this girl." "But for every Judit who escapes the Kezdet system are hundreds of children who do not escape. Too poor, too weak, too ignorant to fight..." "But what happens when they grow up?" Rafik demanded. "Mostly," Pal said, "we don't. Grow up. What do you expect, with poor food, hellish conditions, no medical care? The healthiest and best-looking children are regularly bought from the labor contractors for city brothels, and even they don't last long there. The rest work until they get sick, and then they die. And the few who survive to adulthood are too weak to do much besides breed more children whom they can sell to the labor contractors for a pittance." Calum looked about him at the luxurious furnishings of the room where they sat: windows of high-tech Kyllian solar glass, walls draped in sound-absorbing Theloi silk, an entire -wall covered with shelves of expensive antique flatbooks. Delszaki Li intercepted and interpreted his glance. "No, this is not paid for by labor of children," he said, "although you would be hard put to find another such house in all of Kezdet." He sighed. "This humble person was young and idealistic when inherited family holdings on Kezdet. Swore never to employ child labor or any bonded laborers. Have devoted a lifetime to demonstrating that is possible for businesses to flourish-even on Kezdet--without exploiting children. Experiment has gained me many enemies, but has had no other effect. In recent years have turned to more direct action. Child Labor League achieved some successes at first, but now has been made illegal by order of Kezdet government, which has accused members of terrorist action." Li smiled. "This means, among other things, that contributions to the league not tax deductible." "It also means that his house is watched, his assistants questioned, and his projects ruined wherever the corrupt Guardians of the Peace can find out what he is doing," Pal put in. "If this room is bugged," Rafik pointed out, "this entire conversation is extremely indiscreet." "Is indiscreet anyway," Li said calmly, "but I have made decision to trust you. As for other listeners, I believe my off-planet technology is still better than their off-planet technology. Guardians of the Peace are just as cheap as any other group on Kezdet; they buy second-rate espionage equipment and have it copied in barrio factories where workers do not know what they are supposed to be doing and hence make many mistakes. . . . Actually, it is remarkable how many mistakes they make on contracts for Guardians of the Peace; suspicious man might think someone were alerting them and suggesting subtle ways to sabotage equipment." "I like the way this man thinks," Rafik announced. "You would," Calum said, "he's almost as twisty as your Uncle Hafiz." He glanced at Li. "No offense intended, sir." "If you are referring to Hafiz Harakamian," Li said, "no offense taken. He is brilliant man with admirably subtle mind. Your people sometimes find subtlety morally suspicious; mine do not." "About the mines?" Gill prompted. "Peaceful demonstration has failed," Li said. "Education efforts on Kezdet have been hampered by Guardians of the Peace, who destroy corn systems belonging to Child Labor League and break up schools established to teach bonded children how to read and calculate, so that they may know how much their employers are cheating them. Now I try third approach: direct action. Remove children from Kezdet. Only two problems: how to find children who have been well trained to hide from strangers, and what to do with them when found." "Just two little problems, huh?" Rafik drawled. "You will solve second problem. Li consortium owns mineral rights to all three of Kezdet's moons, sold to me personally by stupid government officials who thought moons too expensive to mine. Not willing to make capital investment, train modern workers. Li consortium has plenty of capital. You three men have expertise. You will establish first lunar base city on primary satellite, Maganos. You three will train freed children to operate equipment. Judit will be head of school system and medical services. Children will work, but will also learn." Gill blinked at the scale of the project presented in these few clipped words. "Mr. Li, I think you don't realize how many trained personnel it takes to run an efficient lunar mining base. We're contract miners, independents. We know how to strip an asteroid and ship the separated metals where we'll get the most money for them. What you're proposing is a much bigger operation." "I know that," Li replied. "You do not realize how many children are enslaved on Kezdet. I will supply personnel. You will train them." "It's going to be extremely expensive," Calum warned. "Setting up shielded living quarters, importing equipment from other systems ... it could be years before you see any return on your investment." Li waved his one working hand disdainfully. "Li consortium has capital. Initial return on investment will be lives saved. In fifty, maybe hundred years, will be fully working concern. Li descendants will be rich and happy. I will be dead, but will be one happy ancestor." Rafik asked Li for the chance to sleep on the proposition and Li smiled, murmuring something erudite about prudent men. Pal was designated as guide for the men while Judit took charge of Acorna. As the three miners watched their ward make her graceful way up the anachronistic flight of stairs to the second level of this amazing house, they each experienced a sense of moment. "She's grown up ... all of a sudden," Calum said plaintively. "She belongs in a place like this," Rafik remarked, beaming with pride at the look of her, courteously inclining her body to the shorter Judit and smiling at something said. "She's grown out of us, that's for sure," Gill said with a sad sigh, and then focused his attention on Judit. She ^o cried when she thought we were ail oeao ana gone. Who've thought it? They'd met so very briefly. He hoped Rafik and Calum would be willing to go along with Li's scheme. He'd have a lot more chance to be with Judit and he found he wanted that, suddenly, at his time of life. Well, he wasn't that old, after all was said and done. Time he gave a thought to settling down. Mining was a grand life when you were young, but it was isolating and he'd had enough of the females available for shortterm liaisons. Would Judit mind that he'd played around a lot? He'd been careful: always insisted on seeing an up-to-date cert before he did anything. "You're right on that count," Rafik said with a wistful expression on his face. Ah, well, they were due for a change. Calum had entirely different thoughts, though they were centered on Acorna. They had managed to bring her to her species' maturity, or close to it. But they hadn't done -what they ought to have done a long time ago: found out who and •where her people were. Caring for her was one thing. He couldn't fault any of them on that, but they really should now, especially with the resources available to them if they picked up on what Li was suggesting, be able to employ the experts they needed-discreetly, of course-to find her home system. They owed her family that. They owed her that. She was female and shouldn't be deprived of a mate because a proper member of her own species wasn't immediately available. Pal showed them into a suite of rooms, three bedchambers off a spacious, beautifully furnished lounge, and each bedroom had its own bath facility. "Boy! Have we come up in the world!" Calum said, pivoting on one heel with his arms wide open, taking in the luxurious appointments. Pal smiled at such an ingenuous remark. "You are very welcome guests. I do hope that you can find it in your hearts and minds to forgive my actions, but perhaps you see why such cautions had to be taken." "If Li's up against an entire planet, I suppose he's got to be doubly, triply careful," Rafik said as he settled himself into a wide chair that immediately conformed itself to him. "Hey, I can get to like this!" Pal stepped to the nearest wall, pressed an ornate button, and a panel slid back to reveal not only a well-stocked bar but other supplies. "In case you require sustenance or refreshment before the morning. In the meantime, I will wish you a comfortable night's rest. And if you have any requirements, speak into this grill and the house of Li will supply whatever you lack." "I believe it could," Rafik said with a grin. Pal left and closed the door quietly behind him. "I think -we ought to ..." "This is the chance of a lifetime ..." "Be our own bosses ..." They had spoken all at once and broke off, laughing. Gill and Calum found chairs, which they pulled closer to Rafik's semithrone so they could have a good natter about their amazing newprospects. "First," Rafik said, taking charge and ticking off the points he wanted to make, "I think we'd be stupid not to take Li up on the offer because we're not getting any younger and mining asteroids for huge corporations like Amalgamated is no longer the -wide-open, friendly game it used to be." The others nodded. "Exploiting the riches of a moon . . . and nonexploiting our employees at the same time . . . much less not having to -worry about what'11 happen at our next port of call ... I wonder ..." Rafik paused, "... if Li can find out who else is after us and why." "Whaddaya wanna bet that's already being handled?" Calum said. "But, look, fellas-" "Look, there must be hundreds of techies and experienced men who're as cheesed off with Amalgamated as we are. We take our pick of gooS men to start this project up: builders, engineers, environmentalists, medics ..." Gill's eyes gleamed with such rosy prospects. "We could hold out for the best there is." "Not to mention the fair Judit." Rafik shot a sideways look at Gill, -who blushed to the beard and beneath. "Now..." "Ease off. Gill," Calum said, holding up his hands between them. "Before we get our heads all warped with plans, there's one other thing we have to do." "What?" They both turned on him in surprise. "Find out where Acorna comes from. We ought to have done something about that a long time ago." "Yeah, when we've had so much free time," Rafik began, and then stopped. "That kind of search could take a lifetime." "Not if Li will let us hire a metallurgic specialist and get us the spectroanalyses of primaries." "All of them?" Even Rafik goggled at that. "Naw, we can narrow it down," Calum said. "She hadn't been in that pod very long-the oxygen supply wasn't down by as much as half- " "But she could have kept it clean," Gill put in. "It took a few weeks to do ours, remember," Calum said. "Any way, we go back to the old 'Azelnut group and use the evaluation of primaries in that area, -widening the search. She can't have been from that far away. Besides -which, I'll bet anything that some of her people visited Earth, or that sort of a legend wouldn't have grown." Gill frowned at him and -waved his hand in dismissal of the idea. "Now, -wait a minute, Gill," Rafik said, holding up one finger. "A lot of those old legends did have bases in fact -when modern science took a look at them. There's no reason Acorna's people didn't start that one. Just remember how beautifully that escape pod ... a mere escape pod . . . was designed. They've been in space a lot longer than we have." Gill stroked his beard. "Yeah, I guess it's possible." "That would be a real coup," Rafik said. "Furthermore," and he settled back into his chair, locking his hands behind his head as he stretched out, "I think Li -would really go for the research." "At least he's respectful of Acorna," Gill said. "Not like others I could name," and he shot a glance at Rafik. "Or that awful surgeon -who was going to remove the 'disfigurement,'" said Calum, who had never forgotten his outrage over that and by what a slim margin they had saved her. If they'd been just a fraction of a moment later ... he shook himself. "So we broach that tomorrow, too?" Rafik asked. "Look, let's get an idea of what we're going to need," Gill said, "draw up a plan of attack-" "A visit to the moon?" Rafik put in, grinning. "Among other things." Gill was opening cupboards to find out where the computer terminal was hidden. Rafik removed one hand from behind his head and laid it on the edge of the table beside him. It lifted and exposed a state-of-the-art system that made him sit up and whistle. He rolled the chair around the corner of the table, toggled it on, and raised his hands over the keypads. "Okay, what's first?" When they had revised their order of the priorities half a dozen times and finally reached one they could all agree (mostly) on, which did include a visit to the moons, which headhunter to contact for the most essential personnel, and what Calum would require for his search, they did "sleep" on it. Wake up, Jana!" Somebody was shaking her, dragging Jana out of the lovely second sleep she'd fallen into after she woke at dawn and Siri Teku didn't come. The sleep shed door was locked and nobody brought them food, so Jana went back to sleep so she wouldn't think about how hungry she •was. Kheti's face was gray with fear. Jana'd never seen her like that, not even that real bad time when Siri Teku got so drunk he was seeing demons here Above and started whipping all the kids, screaming that he would drive Old Black and the Piper out of them. Kheti'd kept her head then, helping the little kids to scramble into hiding places, making Buddhe and Faiz throw rocks to distract Siri Teku until they all got out of reach, keeping them safe until the gangmaster threw up and fell down on the ground to sleep it off. She'd taken a lash across the face that would mark her for life, but she hadn't been frozen by fear the -way she was now. "I got to get out of sight," she whispered. "I'm too big now, she'll take me for sure." She tugged her ragged kameez up, trying to bunch it up over her chest where she was bumpy now, but there wasn't enough fabric to cover her top and bottom, too. Buddhe snickered and pinched her on the butt, and Faiz yelled that he could see some hair that wasn't on her head. "Who'll take you?" Jana demanded. "Didn't you hear the whispers? Didi Badini's coming." DQi meant big sister. "Your family?" But why wouldn't Khetala want to go with her sister? Nobody's family ever came for a kid. Only the real little ones, like Chiura, even thought it would happen. Khetala tried to laugh. It came out like a grinding fall of rocks. "Oh, Didi Badini's everybody's big sister, didn't you know? Piper sends her at night to take the pretty little kids, boys and girls both, and the girls that're getting too big to be draggers, like Surya . . . didn't you ever wonder what happened to Surya?" "She worked out her bond," Jana said slowly. "She went home. Didn't she?" Khetala laughed again. "Don't you know anything? Nobody ever works out their bond. Does Siri Teku ever show you how much you owe, how much you're earning, how much he takes out for your keep?" Jana hung her head. "I don't know my numbers so good." "Well, I do," Khetala said, "and the first time I asked to see my records, he knocked me across the shed." The color was coming back to her face now, her eyes were sparkling; she loved to instruct people. "The second time, he said I'd have to come to his room, he kept the datacubes there. Huh! He didn't even have a reader. Had somethm' else he wanted to show me, though. So I know all about what Didi Badini's coming for." "You said she comes at night. It's not night." "I can't help that. Dunno why she's coming in the daytime this time, but I heard the whispers. Besides, why else would Siri Teku keep us locked in here? Missing a half day's shift "work, we are." Khetala's fear was infecting Jana, but she didn't want to show it. She yawned and turned over on her side. "So what? Me, I get a chance to sleep, I'll take it. ... Besides, whatever Didi Badini wants kids for, can't be worse than this place." "Can't it? She works for the Piper, dummy." "Piper's a story to scare kids down Below." Or maybe not. But they were Above now, even if they had been locked in the sleep shed since before dawn. They were in Sita Ram's realm of sky and sun. Piper couldn't have power here. "Piper's real, and he takes kids to the bonkshops in the city. You catch worse things than chest-cough that way, too. You get the burnies, and the scale, and if they don't kill you by doing it to you too much, then your nose falls off and your crotch rots and they throw you out on the street to beg." "How do you know all that? " "I know what Siri Teku did to me in his room," Khetala said, "and I got away from Ram Dal a couple of times when he wanted to do the same. And I been in the city, too, before my mum died and her boyfriend sold me here. You can see the beggars all over the place . . . and pictures of kids outside the bonk-shops. Why do you think she takes the prettiest kids? And Siri Teku and the other gangmasters, when a girl gets too tall to drag, they practic'ly give her to Didi Badini . . . and I'm going to be tall. You'll be okay for a while, Jana, you've been living on parts and bean paste since you were a baby, you'll always be a little shrimp. Me, I had eleven years of good food and standing up straight before I came here. I've got big bones. I won't be able to drag much longer. You know that." Jana nodded slowly. Sometimes Kheti got stuck in the narrowest tunnels, the ones leading to Face Three. That was one reason she usually worked Five now. And if she grew much more, she -wouldn't be able to get through the low pitch on the tunnel from Five. "You're not pretty, though," she said slowly. "Not since ..." Kheti rubbed the pink weal that crossed her right cheek. "I know. But I'm big. That's bad enough. If I thought gettin' my face messed up would keep Didi Badini from takin' me, I'd go stand by the compressor and let the flying chips cut me to pieces. But that won't make me small again." A new fear struck Jana. "Chiura!" Her face was burning up, but her hands felt icy cold. "She wouldn't take ..." "I reckon that's why Siri Teku didn't clip her curls," Khetala said. "He never figured to train her for a sorter. She's a little sweetcake of a kid, specially the way you been keeping her washed and her hair combed so good. He figured it was worth feeding her for a few weeks, then sell her to Didi Badini. He'll make lots of creds off that one. He won't get much for me though. Maybe if I can keep out of sight..." Jana didn't hear the rest. She darted to where Chiura was playing with a pile of cast-off rocks and snatched her up, ignoring the baby's wails of protest. "Come on, sweetcake. We got to get you fixed up good for the visitors. Faiz, give me your knife." Faiz rolled his eyes. "Who me? Got no knife, got nothing." "I seen you stroppin' that bit of steel," Jana said. "Give it here. You can have it back when I'm through." "You going crazy," Faiz said. "Old Black eating your brain." But he fumbled in his pallet and came up with a thin band of metal, gleaming sharp along one edge and rusty dull on the other. Chiura cried when Jana pulled her hair to hack off the curls, and she'd only got one side of the kid's head when they heard steps outside. "Sita Ram, help me!" Jana rubbed her hands in the dirt and smeared it over Chiura's face. The tears and snot mixed with the dirt until Chiura's round little face looked truly revolting. Jana rubbed some more dirt into the long ringlets she hadn't had time to cut, spat on the dusty hair and patted it into muddy strings that hung down over the side of Chiura's face. That was good-she looked almost ugly now, probably worse than if Jana'd had time to finish cutting her hair. She tossed the knife back toward Faiz and pushed Chiura into a corner. "You sit there and don 't make a. noiiel" she hissed at Chiura. The little girl pulled her knees up and sat rocking back and forth, eyes wide- She was probably scared to death that "Mama Jana" had been so rough with her. All the better, if it would keep her quiet. "I'll give you a honey sweet when they're gone," Jana whispered, though she had no idea where she'd get one. "Just keep quiet now, Chiura, sweetcake, you don't want them to notice you." She squatted in front of Chiura, shielding her with her body. There was a clanking noise -that would be Siri Teku unlocking the door. Then light flooded in. It was full day. Jana felt a cold sweat of fear over her body. She didn't want to believe in Kheti's panic, but Siri Teku had to have some good reason for wasting all this work time. Time was credits, he always said, and here he'd lost a lot of time keeping them in the shed-how much she hadn't realized until the door opened and she saw all that light. The golden rectangle of the open doorway hurt her eyes; she had been working day shift so long she couldn't remember when she'd last seen so much sunlight. It had to be something big to make it worth his losing all those hours at work. Just for a moment she believed all Kheti's horror tales about Didi Badini, and more, too. The man and woman who followed Siri Teku into the shed didn't look evil, though. The man was a pinch-faced little gray fellow, no fangs or nothing, so Jana reckoned he couldn't be the Piper. And she didn't have much attention to spare for him after she caught sight of the woman. She was the most beautiful thing Jana had seen since she'd been brought to Anyag as a bondchild. To begin with she was clean, with no dust dulling the sheen of her smooth brown skin. And instead of being skinny and bony, she was plump and solid. And her clothes! The kameez was all pink and gold, and it was made of something so light and gauzy that it seemed to float over her body and caress her full curves like a cloud of butterflies; below the gold-embroidered hem of the kameez Jana could see the cuffs of deep pink shalwar, half hidden under gold anklets. Without meaning to, Jana made a small sound of longing and reached out, then snatched her hand back. She wanted to feel the fine stuff of the kameez, but she'd get it dirty. She was just a dirty little girl of the mines and Siri Teku would beat her if she messed up this fine lady. Maybe d he'll take me, Jana thought, and I'll wear silk. shalwar unSer my kameez and eat every day and... Didi Badinl's eyes met Jana's for a moment. The eyes were not beautiful like the rest of her; they -were cold and dark and hard, as if Old Black had sneaked up Above to look through the beautiful lady's face. And when she saw the eyes, Jana remembered seeing Didi Badini before. Only she'd thought it -was a dream. She'd come at night last time, inspecting the children by lamplight. Jana had rolled over and buried her head in her pallet, too tired to care about the dream-people talking and moving the lamp; in the morning Surya had been gone. "Too skinny, too plain," Didi Badini said now to Siri Teku. "If that's your best, you're wasting my time." "I've a big girl here, getting too big to drag the tunnels. Where's Khetala?" Siri Teku demanded of the children. Jana hadn't noticed where Khetala had gone, she'd been too busy with Chiura. But Israr's eyes flicked toward the corner farthest from the door, where several pallets of rags seemed to have been heaped up together, and simple Lata said, "She's playing hidey, but I saw her." Siri Teku kicked the pallets with all his force. Something gasped. He reached into the heap of rags, fumbled for a moment, and pulled out Khetala by one arm. "She won't want me," Khetala sobbed. "I'm too ugly. Look!" She stood in the sun and turned her face up so that the pink weal crossing one cheek showed. "Mmm," said Didi Badini. "Stand still, girl." She ran one hand over Khetala's chest, felt her buttocks, and reached in between her legs. "Marked and used," she said "And no more use here, as you said yourself. I'll take her as a favor." "She still owes on her bond," Siri Teku said. Didi Badini looked amused. "Don't they all?" She and Siri Teku haggled for a moment and agreed on a sum in credits that left Jana gasping. "No! I won't go!" Siri Teku had let go of Khetala to wave both his hands during the bargaining; now she ducked between the adults and made for the door. Didi Badini's fat brown arm flashed out, quick as a snake, and caught the fat braid of dark hair that hung down Kheti's back. Kheti hit the floor on her knees, only the hand on her braid holding her upright. "Please," she sobbed. "I'm ugly, see, you don't want me." Didi Badini's smile was full of Old Black. "Some of my clients like them that way," she told Kheti. "You'll have more marks soon enough." She nodded at Siri Teku. "Put the fight out of her. I'm not wrestling a screaming cat all the way back to Celtalan." Siri Teku casually punched Kheti on the side of the head. Her head bobbed limply from the braid that Didi Badini still held. He hit her again and her whole body hung limp. Didi Badini let go the braid and Kheti fell onto the mud floor. Siri Teku slung her over his shoulder and carried her out the door. "That is not what I came here to see," the gray man said in a voice like dry leaves blowing in the •winter -wind. "Your mister told me there was something worth coming here for," Oidi Badini said to the rest of the children. "Where is it? A pretty child, he said, something really special, and too young to be worth training for -work." Jana looked at the floor. Maybe if she didn't look up, if she didn't see Old Black peeping out of Didi Badini's eyes, maybe the woman wouldn't see her and -wouldn't question the way she was crouched awkwardly in front of the corner where Chiura sat. "Was it you he meant?" Didi Badini tipped up Faiz's head with one finger under his chin. "Sweet brown eyes, but the teeth are hopeless and you look old enough to be a good worker. Not you." She moved on to Lata, who looked up with a vacant smile and tried to focus her one good eye on Didi Badini. "If he meant this one, he's wasting my time." Her chubby brown feet moved on with a tinkling of the little gold bells that were attached to her golden sandal straps, until she stood in front of Jana. "Look at me, child 1" The sweet cloud of perfume that wafted from the folds of Didi Badini's kameez almost choked Jana, it was too much, too sweet. "Nice," said a little voice behind her. "Pretty." "Ahhh," Didi Badini breathed on a long satisfied sigh. She bent and took Jana by the nape of the neck. Her fingers were surprisingly hard and strong; she threw Jana onto her side without even breathing hard. "So this is the prize." "Pretty lady," Chiura said, looking up. She grasped Didi Badini's kameez with muddy fingers. "A lovely child, indeed, if she were clean." "No," Jana gasped, coming up to her knees and pushing Chiura back. "No, lady, you don't want her, she's simple, and sick already, she's got a bad sickness, she'll make you sick, too." If only Kheti were there, Kheti who knew so many words and knew all about the city! She'd be able to think of a good story. But Kheti was gone, head lolling against Siri Teku's back, sold to the pretty lady with Old Black in her eyes and her smile. "Don't talk nonsense, girl." Didi Badini slapped Jana aside with a backhanded blow. Her hands were covered with rings; the ornate settings cut Jana's cheek. "I suppose you're the one who tried to make her ugly? A right mess you've made of her, too, half cutting her hair and all that mud. But I can still tell she'll clean up fine. You come with Didi Badini, little one," she crooned to Chiura. "Come and live in the city, sleep on silk and have sorbet to drink every day." Chiura lifted her muddy arms to Didi Badini, then looked over her shoulder. "Mama Jana? " "Your mister will take care of Mama Jana," Didi Badini said. "She's not coming with us. Not this time." The cold black eyes flicked a scornful glance over Jana, sitting on the mud with blood running down her grimy face. "Maybe the mister will give her away when she gets too big for a dragger." "No. Don't take her. Ple