Quip bounced away. Nedri was looking hard at Chai.
"Is that one of Seri's?"
"No," said Kettrick. "Why?"
"I remember he had a pair of them, that's all."
"How is Seri?"
Nedri shrugged. "Haven't seen him to speak to for almost two years. He fired me, not long after you left." He added cheerfully, "I've managed to live without him."
"Seri Otku?" said Clutha. "Hell, he was here just a few days ago, in the Market. Had to put his ship in repair and decided to sell off his cargo."
"I'd like to see him," Kettrick said. "Do you know where he's staying?"
Clutha grunted. "He didn't exactly tell me, Johnny. I'd met him a few times at Ree Darva, you remember, when Boker was with you, so I said hello, and he like to froze me in my tracks. Seemed he just didn't want to be bothered with old acquaintances."
"Not only Seri," the Darvan said. "The whole damn crew. The engineer in Starbird used to be with me. Used to be a nice guy. I went over to say hello too, after they went into repair. Thought we could have a few drinks together, a night on the town, like old times. He wasn't interested. Definitely." Nedri shook his head. "It all changed after you left, Johnny. I'd have quit anyhow. Seri began bringing in new people, people I didn't like, and then he took to shipping out himself and leaving the main office to somebody else to run, and I didn't like those people either."
"Well, the hell with Seri," said the long-faced man, whose name was Enago. "I never met him and he doesn't sound like much. Let's talk about Johnny."
"Wait," said Kettrick. "Just a minute." He took a bit swallow of bourbon and the hot shock of it hitting his stomach seemed to trigger off something in his mind. A thought that had lain dormant there banged suddenly into the open. "Nedri, what else beside Starbird was in the repair dock?"
Nedri frowned. "Oh, this and that. A couple of traders, the usual thing. Starbird was kind of off by herself, sitting one-two with a yacht, as though she was too snooty to associate with her own kind." Nedri grinned and held up his glass. "Excuse me for getting cute. This stuff always hits me on a hot day."
"A yacht?" said Kettrick.
"Yes." Nedri gave him an odd look. "Is this important?"
They were all looking at him now. Quip chose that moment to come with the food, bustling, chattering, so full of unaffected good nature that Kettrick could have strangled him. Finally he went away.
Kettrick said, "Let's get back to that yacht. Did you happen to notice…"
"I always notice a beautiful ship, Johnny. Fact, I walked around her to admire her from all sides. She was the Silverwing. Belongs to the curodai of Achern, what's his name…?"
"Ssessorn," said Clutha, imitating the soft sibilants of Achernan speech. "What's the matter, Johnny? You look kind of green."
"Nothing," said Kettrick. "Not a thing." He ate mechanically, because in spite of everything he was hungry as a wolf.The curodai of Achern. Not the head of the local government, but close to it, and about fourth in the government of Kirnanoc. Sssessorn, a powerful and important man, whose private space yacht happened to be in the repair dock at the same time as Starbird, and side by side.
"Hey," said Enago, "this party's gone sour. I think our Johnny has got troubles."
"Well, I knew that from the beginning," said Clutha, "I've just been waiting for him to open up."
They sat, letting him take his own time, drinking quietly.
Kettrick washed the last of his dinner down with some of the bourbon. He felt better now, well able to march to his execution.
"We landed Grellah this afternoon. Boker, Hurth, Glevan…and us, not listed. The spaceport guards arrested Boker, Hurth, and Glevan."
Clutha leaned forward. "Why?"
"Because Boker asked about Starbird" Kettrick rose abruptly. "I've got to call the I–C."
"But Johnny…"
"Later." He went to the opposite side of the room, where the plastic bubble of the communicator booth shone dimly at the end of the bar. "The curodai of Achern," he thought. "That tears it. They won't dare touch the damned yacht because if they're wrong…"
Oh yes they would, because what would happen if they were wrong was nothing at all compared to what would happen if they were right.
The one who would really suffer was Johnny Kettrick, if he had guessed wrong.
But if he were wrong, and Silverwing did not carry the Doomstar, then it wouldn't matter, because then certainly the Doomstar would shine, and nothing would matter any more. Nothing, at least, as small as the affairs of one man.
He opened the plastic bubble and was about to step inside when Chai grunted behind him and he turned around and saw five Achernans in wrinkled cloaks and damp tunics come in the front door, accompanied by three more Achernans in the black-and-gold tunics and polished helmets of the police.
18
They saw Kettrick. One of the five pointed, there was a soft hissing explosion in the Achernan language, and one of the police called out to Kettrick to stand where he was. They advanced toward him, cutting off any escape route to the rear of the tavern.
At the same time the men who had been sitting with Kettrick jumped up from the table and headed for the Achernans. Behind them all, outside, Kettrick was aware of a large muttering tumult that seemed to be coming closer. Quip stood poised beside the bar, a tray of drinks forgotten in his hand.
Nedri, looking as haughty and contemptuous as any Achernan, said, "What seems to be the trouble?"
The policeman who had spoken before said with icy politeness, "We have a complaint against this man. Please to stand back."
Under the rim of his helmet his black eyes were shifting here and there as the other men in the tavern began to get up by twos and threes to slouch over and join Nedri and the others. They were not at all interested in Johnny Kettrick and his problems, but Johnny Kettrick was human and the Market was a human enclave, and they disliked the Achernans coming into it to arrest one of them. They disliked the Achernans, period.
"Perhaps," said Nedri, "it would be better to discuss this?"
"That is impossible. We have a complaint. Please to…"
The muttering from outside had grown louder. Now it spilled in through the door. It looked to Kettrick as though half the men in the Market were there and the rest coming.
Abruptly Quip set down the tray and pointed to the back of the room. "Go quick, Johnny. Out the left-hand door."
He plunged forward into the knot of men, pushing one of them so that he lurched forward and pushed somebody else and the whole group swayed a little into the forefront of the Achernan group. They gave back a step. More and more men poured in the door, around the Achernans, who were talking among themselves now and beginning to look ugly.
Kettrick called to Chai and ran, toward the left-hand door at the back.
He had almost reached it when there was a sudden flurry around the front door and a man's voice shouted, "Johnny!"
Kettrick stopped as though something had hit him.
"Just stand still, Johnny," the voice said. "Quite still."
Kettrick stood, but he turned around enough that he could see.
Sekma was there, with three or four others in the green I–C uniform. They had their shockers drawn, and pointed chiefly in Kettrick's direction. Sekma was talking now to the crowd.
"Let's hold it quiet, boys. There won't be any trouble. Suppose you all step back a little and give the gentlemen room."
The crowd began to move doubtfully back from the Achernans. Sekma nodded to a couple of the I–C men, who walked quickly toward Kettrick.