'They did
He held Egervary's eyes with his own, and the security head seemed to settle down a bit.
A very
'Then they must've picked up one of the locals with some of the new guns right after we left,' he said. 'They busted him, and he sang like a bird.
'And just how do you figure that?
Egervary was still glaring at him, but he gave his head a choppy shake, and Duan shrugged.
'Well, if you didn't, and if I didn't, I'm damned sure Annette didn't. So how do you think
'What about the port agent?' Egervary demanded. '
'He couldn't tell them what he didn't know,' Duan riposted. 'This operation was tightly compartmentalized, Zeno. Our Kornati agent knew we were coming and made the arrangements for us, including assembling our cover cargo, and he could have spilled that part of it. But he didn't know where we were going next. The flight plan we filed with him had us heading for Tillerman as our next port of call, and that's also the destination for the cargo we took on there. We didn't say a word about stopping off at Montana. So the only place he could have sent them is straight ahead to Tillerman.'
Egervary frowned, obviously trying to find a hole in Duan's logic. The captain folded his arms, leaning one hip against the tactical console and waited.
One advantage of
'Then what do
'I don't have the least idea. The only thing I'm pretty damned confident of is that there's no way they could have predicted that
'Whether they could predict it or not, they're here now,' De Chabrol pointed out tartly, and Duan nodded.
'Yes, they are. '
'So what do we do?' his executive officer demanded, and he frowned.
If Egervary had spotted the Manty sooner, his options might have been a lot better. Unfortunately, even
Part of the Jessyk Combine officer wanted to avoid the planet altogether. Despite his soothing words to Egervary, he, too, felt his hackles rising as he looked at that silent icon. What
Unfortunately he didn't have much choice. His ship was two hours and three minutes out of Montana orbit. If she suddenly changed course away from the planet, she'd make System Flight Control mildly curious, to say the least. Nor could she magically stop where she was and escape back across the hyper limit. Unless she altered acceleration radically, it was still going to take her two hours to decelerate to rest relative to the system primary, whatever she did. That meant she was committed to at least a flyby of the planet, and not stopping as she went by was certain to arouse the Manty skipper's suspicions.
And if the Manty got suspicious, there was no way
'We'll have to continue on profile,' he said finally. Egervary looked as if he wanted to protest, and De Chabrol and Iakovos Sandkaran, the communications officer, didn't look much happier. 'We're already committed to making planetfall,' he pointed out. 'If we try anything else, they're bound to figure we're up to something shady.'
'But we're not supposed to be here,' De Chabrol pointed out.
'And nobody in the system knows we're not,' Duan countered. 'Unless you want to suggest the Manty pulled our flight plan from the Split traffic control people?' He snorted. 'That wouldn't make any more sense than the notion that they'd somehow run on ahead of us to lurk in ambush, now would it?'
'Maybe not, but what if they recognize us?' Egervary asked.
He looked more than a little pinched around the nostrils, and Duan remembered that Egervary-only his name hadn't been 'Egervary' then-had been a 'guest' of the Royal Manticoran Navy once before. Fortunately, he'd been acting as the tactical officer aboard a pirate cruiser in Silesia at the time, rather than serving aboard a slaver. Since he hadn't been in the database of the battlecruiser which had taken his ship and he'd been 'only' a pirate, he'd been turned over to the local Silesian system governor rather than simply executed by the Manties. Getting him back from a Silly system governor had been trivially easy for Jessyk, but it seemed to have permanently affected Egervary's nerve where Manticoran warships were concerned.
'There's not any reason they should recognize us,' he said, looking Egervary in the eye. 'If they didn't spot us doing anything we shouldn't have been doing in Split, there's no reason for them to have done anything except check our transponder code. Why waste time taking a close look at one more rusty tramp-especially one that heads out of the system within less than nine hours of your own arrival? Right?'
Egervary looked at him for a moment, then gave a jerky nod.
'All right, then.' Duan turned to Sandkaran. 'Have we contacted Flight Control yet, Iakovos?'
'No,' Sandkaran said, shaking his head.
'And we haven't started squawking our transponder code yet, right?' Another headshake. 'Good. Let's crank up a new -transponder-the
'What should I give them for purpose of visit?'
'Good question.' Duan thought for a moment, then snorted. 'Whatever this guy's doing here, I don't propose to do anything that could make him suspicious of us. The customers waiting on this planet don't know exactly when we're supposed to arrive, anyway. They won't think anything one way or the other if we don't contact them with the right ID code. So I think this time our hatches will just stay sealed nice and tight. If the Combine had a shipping agent on the planet, I'd try telling them we were just dropping off a company message on our way through. Unfortunately, we don't have an agent here. So I think our best bet is to haul out that busted oxygen
