Chanur's Legacy
have to take care, Tully said to her. He had never gotten that good at hani speech, that she knew of. But that was years ago.
    I always take care, she said.
    You trust this deal you’re in.
    Let’s not talk about business. She knew what she wanted to do. Exactly what her aunt frowned on her doing. But Tully was evasive. He walked away from her, with his back turned.
    And the lights dimmed, and there were bars about— ammonia, and sodium light.
    She took alarm. “Tully?” she said, and he looked at her, scared as she was. She didn’t want to be here again. She didn’t want this part.
    He came and held on to her. He had then. He did until the kif came and then he went with them because they threatened her. The whole thing passed in a kind of haze, the way the hours had in mat kifish cage. There were sounds to hear. She chose not to hear them. She could govern the dream now—she had learned to do that, and she kept saying, over and over again, Tully, come back. Tully, listen to me. I don’t want to remember that. What do you go there for? I don’t want to see that-Come back and talk to me.
    “Tully!”
    He came back then, just a shadow. And wouldn’t talk to her.
    “He knows better,” Pyanfar said, out of nowhere and uninvited. “He had his choice, go or stay. He understood. You wouldn’t. You still won’t.”
    She did. That was the trouble. She loved him, enough to make them both miserable. Go have babies, Py had said. Thank the gods that had failed. And maybe Korin had never had a chance, maybe he’d sensed that, male-wise, sullen, quarrelsome, and unwisely set on running domestic affairs. Maybe that had set up the situation from the first day he moved in. Maybe—
    Maybe in some remote way that had set up everything else, because she had come home with violence, with anger, with the habit of war and the indelible memory of a kifish cage. Korin couldn’t have imagined that place. He’d made assumptions, he’d made assertions, he’d struck out to make her hear him—
    And she couldn’t have cared less ... what he thought, what he wanted, who he was. The only thing she’d wanted— was kif in her gunsights. Korin dead. AndTully, on her terms.
    “He’s not your answer,” aunt Pyanfar said, in that brutal, blunt way Py had when she was right.
    “Look past your gods-cursed selfish notions, niece, and ask him what’s right to ask of him, and don’t tell me it’s helping you outgrow him.”
    That day she’d swung on Py. Not many people had done that and gotten away unmarked. But Py had just ducked, and faced her, the way Py did now, hand against The Pride’s main boards.
    “Meanwhile,” aunt Py said. “Meanwhile. You have a ship to run.”
    That wasn’t what Py had said. Maybe it was her own mind organizing things. The brain did strange things in jump. It dreamed. It worked on problems. At times it argued with itself, or with notions it couldn’t admit wide awake.
    Most people forgot what they dreamed. It was her curse to remember. Mostly, she thought, she remembered because she wanted to be there. She wanted to be back on The Pride, before the kif, before anything had happened.
    “Time to come back,” Pyanfar said.
    Alarm was sounding. Wake, wake, wake.
    They were in Urtur space, with the alarm complaining and the yellow caution flashing. The computers saw dust ahead.
    “You there?” she asked. “Tiar?”
    “I’m on it. We’re close in. Going for secondary dump.”
    You can be a gods-be fool, aunt Py was hanging about to say. Because there’s no way you’re not being followed.
    “Ship out there,” Tarras said, on scan.
    ‘ ‘Ha’domaren ?”
    “Sure the right size and vector.”
    She reached after the nutrients pack, bit a hole in it and drank down the awful stuff. They were, as their bodies kept time, days away from Meetpoint. On Meetpoint docks, on Urtur station, it was more than a month. As light traveled, it was years. And the body complained of such abuses. You shed hair, you

Similar Books

The Pendulum

Tarah Scott

Hope for Her (Hope #1)

Sydney Aaliyah Michelle

Diary of a Dieter

Marie Coulson

Fade

Lisa McMann

Nocturnal Emissions

Jeffrey Thomas