thousand of their kind from the Thalaassan world where VoidCorp was attempting to quietly exterminate them. Gabriel had insisted that there had been nothing single-handed about it. Enda had been in the thick of things with him, and he had merely been well positioned to intimidate some people whom he loathed. The sesheyans were not interested in his excuses, and they insisted on crediting
Then had come the question of what to do with the money. Their first indulgence had been a shower for
'All right,' she said. 'I concede that installation may as well be done on Grith. But the general risk still gives me pause in comparison with, say, mining.' She reached out to pour another glass of kalwine. 'A cargo of ore does not go stale, nor does it have value until one delivers it to the processor. This kind of cargo is more sensitive and needs to be better protected.' Helm looked up at that. 'The weapons allocations,' he said. 'We need more guns,' Gabriel said, 'or upgrades on the old ones.' Helm grinned.
Gabriel brought up another page of price lists, and Helm commented at length on the virtues and vices of the weaponry available in this part of the Verge.
'I have my own preferences,' he said, 'and you don't have to go all the way to Austrin-Ontis for decent weapons any more. You should think about upgrading that rail cannon, at the very least. It would be even better to get rid of it. What I'd
'Delde Sota,' Gabriel and Enda said in chorus. Enda chuckled. 'Helm, is there
'You want good machinery,' Helm said, 'go to a mechalus. Who would know it better? The good doctor collects favors from everyone she fixes up. She put me onto somebody who's done fairly well by me. Any more figures?'
Gabriel looked over at Enda and said, 'I don't think this is a decision I should make by myself, no matter how you insist that the things I did got us the awards that would make this possible.' Enda merely produced one of those demure little fraal smiles.
'You were a marine too long,' Helm said to Gabriel. 'You were good at taking orders, but now you have other problems— staying alive, mostly. That means making decisions, not taking orders.' 'What made it hard,' Gabriel said, 'was the prospect of moving too far from where my trouble happened.'
'You haven't had much luck with tracing the ones responsible, have you?' Helm said. 'Not much. The trail leading back to 'Jacob Ricel,' or whatever his name was before he boarded
'Whereas if you were hauling data,' Helm said, 'you would have periodic access to the drivesat relays from which you were hauling. .
Gabriel nodded. He had no desire to spend time closer to Concord space than he had to. There were bounty hunters who would be willing to turn Gabriel in for the reward. Yet outside of Concord space there was no resolution of his problem. Sooner or later, Gabriel would have to go back with what evidence he was able to garner and take his chances with Concord justice. 'As regards 'riding shotgun' for us,' Enda said, 'would you be available?'
When Helm looked up from pouring another splash of Bols, there was an odd expression in his eyes. Gabriel thought it looked like gratitude, but it sealed over quickly into the old no-nonsense humor. 'Been waiting for you to make up your mind. My schedule's wide open. When do we leave?' 'About a week,' Gabriel said. 'Getting the data tanks installed will take most of the time.' 'And arranging to see what kind of first load we can acquire,' Enda said. 'I will see to that.' 'I'll talk to the doctor in the morning,' Helm said. 'Meanwhile, I could use a nap, and I have to clean up after myself. Cooking!' He stood, looming over Enda, huge and amused. 'I did it with an autolaser. In a pot.'
'You do most things with an autolaser,' Enda said mildly. 'The pot was doubtless added in a moment of inspiration.'
Helm laughed, picked up his bottle and put it on the table for them, and went off down toward the airlock. 'Call me in the morning,' he said to Gabriel, 'when you get your schedule sorted out.'
'I will.'
The airlock cycled shut behind Helm, and Gabriel got up to help Enda clean up after their meal. It was something they were both punctilious about — a ship in which some parties are tidy and some are sloppy soon turns into a little hell. Once the table was uncovered and folded away and the plates and utensils were washed and stowed, Gabriel folded a chair down and just sat there looking at the screen, which had defaulted to that view of the green field under some alien sun, the long grass rippling silkily as water in the wind that stroked it.
Down in her cubicle, Gabriel could hear Enda moving around, putting her bed in order for the night. A year ago he had known nothing of her, known no fraal at all and precious few aliens of any kind. Now he could hardly imagine a world without her — a world circumscribed by these scrubbed gray walls and floors— the fire of starrises and starfalls, some new primary burning golden or blue-white or green through the front viewports, the tierce sky- blue of Enda's huge eyes.
Once the world had been different, not gray-walled but white-walled, the color of marine country in a Star Force ship. Life had been simple, explicable, neatly circumscribed. You went where you were ordered — or were taken there. You fought who you were told to, and you cleaned up afterwards.
Then Enda had turned up. There were aspects of their first meeting and their subsequent dealings that Gabriel still did not understand. But he was certain that it was a better world with her in it, and that he owed her most of what he had now. He was partner in a ship, half of a business, and had come through some difficult times getting used to it. He had survived, but there was always the question of how long he could keep on doing it.
'You are thinking harder than usual,' Enda said. Gabriel glanced up. 'Does it show?' 'I heard you. You are still unsure. .'
Gabriel chuckled. 'Mindwalkers. I can't even brood without being overheard any more.' She pulled down the chair opposite him. 'I have had much less training in the art than most. However, if you think loudly, I cannot help it. You also must not think I desire to pressure you in any direction. If I have been doing so, you must tell me so.'
Gabriel shook his head. 'You misheard me. You can be pretty forceful, but not that way. In fact, it's hard to get you to tell me what to do even about little things.'
'Perhaps I refuse to be lured into a role that you would accept too easily,' Enda said. 'Gabriel, is your choice firm?'
'Yup. Let's get out of here.'
Enda tilted her head to one side, one of the fraal versions of the human nod.
'We had not discussed how we will leave. Do we make starfall to Terivine by ourselves, or hitch a ride with some larger vessel?'
'Maybe not on the first leg,' Gabriel said. 'If you set out on your own, sometimes people assume you're going to keep going that way. If we picked up a hitch