"Good evening, Sav Rid," he said politely in the Liaden High Tongue.
"You!" the other snarled.
"Well, of course, me. I couldn't very well be anyone else, could I? Has this little inconvenience put you out of temper? I'm sure we'll be shut of it in a moment. The magistrate seems very amiable, don't you think? As I just said to him—but I've forgotten, you don't speak Terran, do you? A sad pity, since so many other people do, but no doubt you have your reasons."
"I do, and they are not yours to inquire into." Trader Olanek waved his hand in their direction, though his eyes did not leave the captain. "You might wish to turn your limited understanding to the matter at hand. It may be that you have undervalued the inconvenience."
"Yes?" The silver eyes swept the three of them vaguely. "Well, I must say, your crew member—I assume she is yours—looks as if she's taken rather a tumble. In her cups, perhaps. But you're too experienced a Trader to allow a little drunken sport among the crew to spoil your whole evening."
"Gentles?" Magistrate Kelbar said in firm Trade. "If we may get on with the hearing? I am certain we would all rather be elsewhere." He resumed his seat with another flourish and waved the prisoners forward. "Will you two gentlemen please identify these persons?"
Trader Olanek pointed. "That is Dagmar Collier, second mate on
Daxflan."
"And, as her superior officer, you are willing to speak for her?"
After a slight hesitation, the Trader said, "Yes."
"And the two remaining," the captain said cheerily, "are mine, sir. The young gentleman is Gordon Arbuthnot, cabin boy on the
Dutiful Passage
and my kinsman—"
"You mean to say you acknowledge that connection?" The Trader's High Liaden carried outrage. "It's full Terran! Have you no sense of the honor due your Clan?"
"Well, we're
half
Terran, after all," the captain said mildly. "You knew that, didn't you, when you propositioned my sister? And he's a good lad."
"You cannot be serious."
"He is under Korval's wing." The captain's inflection shifted subtly, his voice nearly cold. "Do not mistake me."
"Pah! Korval's wing unfurls too far for health. Does the same apply to the bitch beside him?"
She stiffened, outrage erupting—
"Priscilla!" the captain snapped, and she stilled, cheeks flaming.
"You keep it on a short leash," the Trader commented. "How much do you pay it? Or does it serve for the pleasure of looking at your beautiful face?"
The captain shook his head. "On Priscilla Mendoza's home world, Sav Rid, you would have just now uttered an insult demanding your death for Balance. It's fortunate, isn't it, that her knowledge of our tongue is a scholar's? But I am forgetting my manners again! You are acquainted!" The light eyes were on her. "Have you no greeting for the honored Trader?"
She stared at him. Did he really expect her—And then she smiled, recalling another of Fin Ton's lessons. Loosing Gordy's hand, she bowed low.
"Forgive me the situation, Master Trader," she said in her careful High Liaden, "and believe me all joy to see you."
"What!" Sav Rid cried, visibly shaken. "How is it possible that—"
"Gentles," the magistrate said. "I must insist that we keep to the matter at hand."
"Of course, sir." The captain was contrite. "Do forgive us. My colleague is an avid student of lineage and sought enlightenment regarding Gordon's place in the family tree. To continue, indeed. The lady with the torn shirt is Priscilla Delacroix y Mendoza. She is under personal contract to the captain of the
Dutiful Passage,
serving as librarian, pilot, and apprentice second mate." He smiled. "I'm quite happy to speak for both of them."
What was this? Pilot? Second mate in training? Priscilla tried to recall the precise phrasing of her contract, but the magistrate's voice defeated the effort.
"As all three have someone in authority to speak for them, the hearing now commences. What we know is this: Yonder knife is the property of Dagmar Collier. We have taken imprint readings and find it to be so. She does not deny it.
"It is important to note that two other sets of prints are found on the hilt, besides those of the arresting officer: those of Gordon Arbuthnot, and a faint, very blurred set which we believe to be those of Priscilla Mendoza." The magistrate paused to clear his throat importantly.
"We will hear from the arresting officer."
The cop's statement was brief and to the point. He had been hailed by Gordon Arbuthnot, who cried that there was a fight in Halvington Street. Arriving on the scene, he had found "those two persons there" in close embrace, the larger apparently engaged in squeezing the smaller breathless. The arresting officer was of the opinion that this project was near completion and so had administered a judicial stunner blast to the larger person, hand-ironed both combatants, and turned to find Gordon Arbuthnot with "that knife, there, sir," in his hand. So, in the interest of fair play, Gordy had been ironed as well, and all three brought in. The officer paused, scratched his head, and added that he had also taken from Gordon Arbuthnot a small rectangular object with a belt clip—very likely a portable comm and no harm to it. But at the time he had seen no reason to take unnecessary chances.
"Quite right," the captain said approvingly, and the cop grinned shyly.
The magistrate motioned him back. "We will now hear from Dagmar Collier."
Dagmar came forward slowly and darted a glance at Trader Olanek. He did not meet her eyes.
She made a woeful attempt to square her shoulders. Her voice when she spoke was hoarse, the words mushy. I hope I broke every tooth in her mouth, Priscilla thought.
"Prissy and me are old friends," Dagmar was telling the magistrate. "Used to serve on
Daxflan
together. It was just natural for me to go over and say 'hey' when I saw her walkin' down the street." She shrugged. "Must've been drunk, I guess, Your Honor, 'cause she just hauled off and hit me."
There was a short pause before the magistrate asked dryly, "Is that your statement of the affair?"
Dagmar blinked. "Yessir."
"I see. We are willing to hear you again, should something else occur to you after Priscilla Mendoza speaks."
Priscilla stood forward. "Ms. Collier and I were never friends," she began hotly. "She has stolen from me and sold my things to a—a
thrift shop
on Parkton—"
The magistrate raised his hand. "That is not the issue at trial here. Please limit your remarks to the incident in Halvington Street."
Priscilla bit her lip. "I saw Ms. Collier in Halvington Street," she began again, "as I was on my way back to the port. She spoke to me. I returned the greeting and tried to pass on. Ms. Collier blocked my way and grabbed me—I
believe
she intended rape, but that may be unjust. At the time it seemed exactly what she meant, and I—" she broke off, her eyes seeking the captain's. "I lost my temper," she said wryly. He nodded, and she turned back to the magistrate.
"I tried to defend myself against what I thought was an attack. Ms. Collier continued to block my way and at some point pulled a knife. I
did
disarm her, but she grabbed me. Which is how I came to be in the absurd situation from which the officer rescued me." She sighed. "That is my statement, sir."
"Very clear, Ms. Mendoza. Thank you."
"I would like to point out," Sav Rid Olanek said abruptly, "that the animosity between these two individuals seems of long standing—"
"Exactly," the captain interrupted. "in which case, Magistrate, I venture to say that each has had ample opportunity to vent her spleen. A fine, of course, is in order, for breaking the peace. But, since it is highly unlikely that they will meet again soon . . ."
Magistrate Kelbar beamed at him. "I am sure you can be trusted to control the members of your crew during the rest of your time in port, sirs. My trust in your discretion prompts me not to demand that both individuals be rendered ship-bound for that period. They will, of course, be confined to the port proper. And, there
is
a fine." He coughed gently. "For engaging in fisticuffs in a public thoroughfare: one hundred bits each. Drawing a deadly weapon: two hundred fifty bits. Possession of said weapon without Arsdred certificate of permission: six hundred bits. Resisting arrest—" He looked up and smiled, first at Gordy, then at the captain. "I think we might dispense with that. Transport fee: fifty bits each.
"So then, owed from Dagmar Collier, through her superior, Sav Rid Olanek: one thousand bits. Owed from Priscilla Mendoza, through her superior, Shan yos'Galan: one hundred fifty bits. Owed from Gordon Arbuthnot from his superior, Shan yos'Galan: fifty bits. You may pay cash at the teller's cage as you leave, gentles." He arose and sailed from the room, the arresting officer in his wake.
Shan considered Olanek's set face. "One thousand bits," he murmured in sympathetic Trade. "Will it put you out of pocket, Sav Rid? I can extend a loan, if you like."
"Thank you, I think not!" the other snapped, jerking his head at his crew member.
Shan sighed. "So short-tempered, Sav Rid! Not sleeping well? I do hope you're not ill. At least we know you don't have a guilty conscience, don't we? By the way, Ms. Mendoza seems to have lost a very special pair of earrings. Do you know Calintak, on Medusa? Wonderful fellow, very good-tempered. And the things he can fit in just a
little
bit of space: built-in sensors, trackers—that sort of thing. If you're ever in the market for something, since you wear so
much
jewelry . . ."
Dagmar Collier was hovering close, eyes riveted. "Sensors?" she asked with a kind of fascinated dread. "How small a space?"
"Oh, are you interested? He's quite dear, you know—but hardly any space at all. An unexceptional earring, for instance, is all the room he needs to work in. An artist—"
"Oh, have done!" Sav Rid snarled, turning on his heel. "Pay him no mind, he's a fool. Now, come!" He was gone, Dagmar following.
Shan shook his head and held out a hand to Gordy, who came and slid his own into it. "Well now, children—Ms. Mendoza?"
She was at the exhibit table, picking up the shards of crystal, one by careful one, and settling them in her palm.
"Crelm!" Gordy muttered, and went to her side. "Priscilla, what're you doing? It's busted."
She did not look away from her task. "It's all I own, anywhere, and I'm taking it with me." Her tone was perfectly flat, with an absence of emotion that raised the hairs on Shan's neck. He stepped forward quickly, pulled a square of silk from his sleeve, and dropped it in front of her.
"You'll cut yourself, Priscilla. Use this."
"Thank you." Her voice was still flat, though he fancied he detected a quiver of
something . . . .
Hand in hand, he and Gordy waited until she had finished and tied the silk into a knot. Gordy took her hand, and, so linked, they went out to pay the cashier.
"You will do me the favor,
won't you, Gordy," the captain murmured, "of neglecting to inform your mother that you've been arrested?"
"Was I?" the boy asked hazily. "I mean, I wasn't
really.
They didn't do anything to me."
The man laughed. "Arrested, I assure you. The details may vary by world, but the larger outlines remain constant: irons, hearings, magistrates, fines—not at all the kind of thing mothers enjoy hearing of, even when it's carefully explained that you were completely without blame. Which reminds me—how did your imprints come to be on that thing?"
"Priscilla was losing," Gordy explained. "And the knife was just lying there. I was trying to figure out how it worked . . . ."
"Yes? To what end, please?"
"Well, I thought if I cut Dagmar's arm, she'd let go."
"It's a theory," the captain admitted. "Report to Pallin Kornad after breakfast, please. I see it's time you learned how to protect yourself."
"Yes, Cap'n." He paused. "Shan?"
"Yes,
acushla
?"
"Is it—can I tell Grandad I was arrested? I didn't do anything
wrong . . . ."
This last was spoken, it seemed to Priscilla, with considerable doubt.
A boot heel scraped on the pavement as the man went down on one knee, eyes level with Gordy's.
"You will
absolutely
tell your grandfather," he said firmly, his big hands on the boy's round shoulders. "He will be proud of you. You acted with forethought and with honor, coming to the aid of a shipmate and a friend." He cupped a soft cheek. "You did very well, Gordy. Thank you."
"Yes." Priscilla heard her own voice from far away. "Thank you, Gordy. You saved my life."
He blinked at her over his cousin's shoulder. "I
did?"
She nodded, not sure what her face was doing. "She really was winning. I couldn't breathe. You did exactly right."
She should, she thought vaguely, find something more to say, but it was unnecessary; doubt had vanished from the young face. He grinned. "I'm a hero."
"You're an impossible monkey." The captain stood and held out his hand. "And you're well behind your time to return to the ship. Come along."
They walked a little way in silence. The drug was gaining the upper hand again, and Priscilla stumbled; she caught herself and asked over Gordy's head, "What was that about your sister?"
"Sav Rid's little joke," the captain said easily. "It amused him to propose marriage to the eldest of my sisters."
"What!" Gordy was outraged. "That—person? To
Cousin Nova?"
"Indeed, yes. Exactly Cousin Nova. Why? Do you think Anthora might suit him better? I admit it's a thought. He so fair and she so dark . . . . But he was more enamored of fair with fair. You can't really blame him, Gordy; it's merely a matter of taste."
"What did you do?" Gordy demanded awfully, ignoring this flow of nonsense.
The man looked down at him. "What could I do? I was from home. Besides, Nova is well able to take care of herself. Simply told the fellow she'd rather mate with a Gehatian slimegrubber and sent him about his business." He sighed. "I'm afraid he didn't take it in very good part. Well, how was she to know he had a horror of the creatures? I'm sure she would have thought of something else just as revolting to compare him with, if she'd had the least idea. Very resourceful person, Cousin Nova. The more I think on it, the more certain I am that you're right, Gordy! Anthora would certainly suit him far better! A pity he didn't see it that way and allowed himself to be enraptured by a mere pretty face. Perhaps we should suggest—"