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“We would,” I agreed, “if we were anywhere near your coordinates. But we’re not.”

Her eyes narrowed. “Explain.”

“Your coordinates didn’t take into account the time-delay for the light,” I explained. “Or the fact that the Freedom’s Peace is no longer on a Sol-direct vector. You try a straight backtrack and you’ll miss Angorki by about sixty A.U. That’s about twice the distance from Earth to Neptune, in case you need help with the numbers.”

For a long moment she studied my face. Then, her lips tilted in a slight smile. “And of course you’re the only one who knows how to plot a course back, right?”

“Right,” I said, folding my arms across my chest. “And I’m not going to.”

“I suggest you reconsider,” she said. “There’s a little matter of two hundred thousand neumarks you owe the TransShipMint corporation.”

The bottom seemed to fall out of my stomach. “How do you know about that?”

She snorted. “Oh, come now—you didn’t really think I pulled your name out of a lotto ball, did you? You were one of a dozen transports I knew I could bring enough pressure on to get what I wanted. You just happened to be in the right place and the right time when the data finally came through.”

I shrugged as casually as I could. “So fine. Renege on the seventy thousand if you want. What do I care—Peter says we’re staying here anyway.”

“Wrong,” Kulasawa bit out. “One way or another, we’re getting back.” She arched her eyebrows. “And when we do, you’re going to prison… because you don’t owe just seventy thousand any more. You owe the full two hundred.”

I stared at her. “What are you talking about?”

“I’m talking about the hundred thirty thousand you thought you had stashed away in the Star Meridian Bank,” she said, openly gloating now. “The hundred thirty thousand that isn’t there any more.

“You’re bluffing,” Rhonda said sharply. “How could you possibly get that kind of access to Jake’s account?”

“For the same reason these people can’t keep me here for long.” Kulasawa straightened up slightly and looked around—

And as she did so, her face and posture and entire demeanor abruptly changed. Suddenly the upper-class scholar was gone; and in its place was someone or something that seemed far more regal even than the king seated at the end of the couch. “My name isn’t Andrula Kulasawa,” she said her voice rich and commanding. “It’s Andrula Chen.”

She turned hard, arrogant eyes on me. “Second cousin of the Chen-Mel-lis family.”

I stared at her, my blood seeming to freeze in my heart. “Oh, my God,” I whispered.

“Captain Smith?” Peter asked, his voice low. “What does she mean?” With an effort, I turned away from her gaze. “Chen-Mellis is one of the Ten Families,” I said, the words coming out with difficulty. “The people who effectively rule Earth and most of the Expansion.”

“I prefer to think of it as one of the Six Families, actually,” Kulasawa—Chen, rather—put in. “The other four survive solely at our pleasure.”

“You told us there were other groups looking for the Freedom’s Peace,” Rhonda said, her voice low. “The other families?”

“You don’t think I would have picked the Sergei Rock to hide from some bumbling academics, do you?” Chen retorted. “Members of the Hauptmann and Gates-Verazzano families have been sniffing along my trail for the past two months.”

She gave Peter a brittle smile. “They want your engines, too,” she added. “And I can assure you that Chen-Mellis will cut you a better deal than they will.”

Peter shook his head. “We will deal with none of you.”

“I’d love to see you try to persuade the Hauptmann family of that.” Chen looked back at me. “Well, Smith? Cooperation and a share of the profits, or lofty ideals and a few years of your life in prison?”

“So now it’s a share of the profits, too?” Suzenne murmured.

“Shut up, or I’ll add your lives on the downside of the ledger,” Chen snarled. “Well, Smith, what’s it to be? Shall we say your freedom and, say, five million neumarks?”

I should have been tempted. After five years of scrimping every pfennig I got to put toward my debt, I should really have been tempted. But to my own amazement, I discovered that I wasn’t. Maybe it was the condescension inherent in the offer, the casual assumption that I had my price just like everyone else she’d ever met. Or maybe it was the presence of Jimmy, sitting on Rhonda’s other side now, who’d already resisted the pressure and made the right decision.

Or maybe it was the fact that I’d suddenly had an idea of how we might be able to get out of this. If I played my cards right…

I looked Chen straight in the eye. “Forget it,” I told her. “And if you’re thinking about pipping the ante, save your breath. You’re on your own here, lady. None of us are going to help you.”

Her face had frosted over again at my refusal. Now, though., the ice cracked into a small but malicious smile. “Perhaps none of you three will,” she said. “But you’re not the only one who knows how to get us back to civilization. And I suspect First Officer Hobson will be more easily convinced of the realities of this situation.”

Keeping her eyes on us, she began backing toward the throne and King Peter’s public address system. Mentally, I crossed my fingers…

And then, abruptly, she stopped. “No,” she said. “No, I see your game, Smith. You’re hoping that anyone using the PA system except His Royal Highness will make the local secret police suspicious.” She waved the gun toward the throne. “On the other hand, you’re his captain, aren’t you? What could be more natural than for you to call him to the Palace?”

I didn’t move. “And how much were you planning to offer me for this service?”

“I wouldn’t dream of insulting you that way again,” she assured me, her voice not quite covering up the soft click as she shifted her gun to its three-needle setting. “So let’s make it simple. You call Hobson, and Blankenship gets to live.”

I felt my throat tighten. “You wouldn’t dare.”

“I’ve already said I don’t need either her or Ms. Enderly,” Chen reminded me. “In a pinch, I could probably do without the king, too.”

I took a deep breath, exhaled it noisily, and got to my feet. “Don’t do it, Jake,” Rhonda pleaded. “She’s bluffing—even the Chen-Mellis family couldn’t get her off a murder charge.”

“The Chen-Mellis family can do anything when the rewards are big enough,” Chen said shortly.

“It’s not worth the risk,” I told Rhonda, reaching down to briefly squeeze her hand. “Besides, even if I don’t, Bilko will be here eventually anyway.”

The throne was more comfortable than it looked, with silky-soft cushions fitted to the stone. The controls on the left armrest were simple and straightforward: one basic on/off switch, one that determined whether or not the audio was accompanied by a visual, and five switches determining which section or sections of the colony would receive the broadcast. I set the latter group for full coverage, set the mode for audio only—this at Chen’s insistence—and we were ready. “No tricks,” she warned, stepping back well out of range of any desperate flying leaps I might have been contemplating. “Bear in mind this gun has a clip of just over two hundred fifty needles, and that I don’t mind spending a few of them if I have to.”

I cleared my throat and touched the “on” switch. “Attention; attention,” I called. “First Officer Will Hobson of the Sergei Rock, this is your captain speaking. We’re having a little party over here at the Palace you seem to have forgotten about. Greet the other cardsharps for me and hustle it over here, all right? Thank you; that is all.”