Strata
him a fortune.’
‘Please explain about “old”,’ said Silver insistently.
Kin told the shand about the Terminus probe. When she finished she was aware that the giant was looking at her oddly.
‘You humans must have been mad for space,’ she said.
They turned as Marco strode silently into the room, trembling with rage.
‘What is this ship?’ he bawled. ‘There’s enough weaponry in the hold to blow a hole through a planet.’
‘And small-arms,’ murmured Kin. Marco stared at her, while she felt her mind beginning to think very fast indeed.
‘Precisely. But how did you guess?’
‘No guess, I think I’ve seen enough. Silver, was there a message from Jalo when you got here?’
‘The kung in the ferry said I was to wait. Why?’
Kin shook her head urgently. ‘Marco, there must be spacesuits around. If we got into them, could you evacuate the ship?’
‘Down here? It’d implode. I’d have to take her up, and that—’
‘This is a .0003 Clipe automatic. If you all leapt at me the chances are I would not get you all, but who could I shoot first?’
Jalo was standing by the door, the pistol dangling nonchalantly from one hand. Kin thought about what a stream of Clipe needles could do, and decided to stand very still. She glanced at Silver.
The shand wasn’t looking at Jalo. She was staring at Marco.
He had dropped into a curious bowlegged stance, arms held out from his body like an ancient gunfighter, and he was hissing softly.
‘Tell it if it attacks, I will shoot,’ said Jalo. ‘Tell it!’
‘You know he can understand you,’ said Kin coldly. She heard Silver say in shandi: ‘In a minute there’s going to be an almighty fight, Kin. No one threatens a kung and lives.’
‘Marco is legally human,’ said Kin in allspeak.
‘Yes, that fooled me,’ said Jalo. ‘I should have known better. I told that agency computer on Real Earth to pick three people that fitted my specifications, and it gave me three names. The damn thing never bothered to say two of them were BEMs.’
Only Silver, student of history, understood the term. She growled.
‘It surely mentioned planets of origin,’ said Kin.
‘The big frog was born on Earth, though, and the bear born in a ship orbiting Shand,’ said Jalo. ‘Doesn’t anyone ever mention species these days? Legally human! Ye gods! Do not move. ’
‘I was wondering where you were,’ said Kin. ‘I should have been looking for a patch of fuzzy air – looter .’
He grinned lopsidedly. ‘The word is, uh, nasty but true. Just like the Company looted strata machines and the Line monomolecular technique.’
‘Not true. The Company administers them for the general good.’
‘Fine, so on this trip the profits will be for my general good. I figure I’m owed something. I knew LeVine and the rest. I trained with them. I’m taking my reward now. I’ve got the jackpot.’
Something small and black hopped around the curve of the corridor behind him. Kin recalled that Marco, determinedly human, had been trying to make a pet of the raven. It was feeding time.
‘I shall need assistance,’ Jalo said.
‘You’ve got the self-filling purse,’ said Kin. ‘That sounds like a jackpot to me.’
‘Nah. With what’s here we can start our own Company where we’re going.’ He reached into a sidepocket and pulled out a navigation reel. ‘It’s all here.’
‘I would prefer to talk further without the piftol threatening uf,’ said Silver painfully. ‘It if not kind.’
The raven flew up onto Jalo’s shoulder and screamed in his ear—
—a stream of Clipe needles zonked into the ceiling—
—Marco moved so fast that his passage across the space separating him from Jalo could only be deduced from the fact that he was suddenly astride the fallen figure, the Clipe held in one hand and the other three raised to smash a skull—
—he blinked, and looked around as if waking from a dream.
He stared at Jalo, and then leaned forward.
‘He’s dead,’ he said helplessly. ‘I

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