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At least now he knew why Jan and Sirin had died trying to keep their salvage from the pirates. This could shift power in the whole sector, maybe far enough that other sectors could fall. Craig didn't have Torin's eye for ex-military, but of the members of the crew he'd met-where met included having the shit beat out of him by-he'd bet both Captain Cho and Doc had served. From a violent life to a violent life; no great stretch to assume more pirates would be ex-military than not.

There went any hope that a high proportion of the people who'd end up with these weapons wouldn't know how to use them.

Torin had to find him fast; it was no longer just his life on the line.

And fuk but the universe had a sick sense of humor. What kind of sick joke was it that pirates would happen on this particular cargo in the minimal amount of time between the sealing of it and sending the packet to register salvaged weapons with the military. It hadn't been registered, that was for damned sure, or he wouldn't be here because the Navy would. Torin'd call that kind of a fukked-up coincidence a reason to call in air support…

Torin wouldn't believe in that kind of a fukked-up coincidence.

"You intercepted the registration packet."

Almon glanced up from the controls of the eye and smiled unpleasantly. "We did."

"That's not possible."

"Surprise." The di'Taykan moved closer. Craig gritted his teeth and ignored his body's reaction. Even with Almon's masker up to full, he'd taken such a hit of pheromone he'd be feeling the effects for days. Hopefully only days. "My thytrin," Almon continued, voice dropping into a near growl, pale yellow eyes darkening as more light receptors opened, "the one you nearly killed, he can make a comm unit beg."

"Kinky. That why you're here? Because your thytrin is more into machines than meat?" Craig blocked Almon's blow. "I'm crew now. You don't get to touch me."

"You don't get it, do you, Ryder?" He was standing close enough now that the ends of his hair stroked Craig's cheek. "You don't get to touch me."

"Enough." Cho's voiced backed Almon all the way to the screen. "I need him able to think with something other than his dick." The captain stopped just behind Craig's left shoulder. "Can you crack it?"

Craig had little doubt that if he said no he'd be out the air lock-probably in the kind of condition that would make a fast death in vacuum a gift. He rubbed at the small patch of stubble on the edge of his jaw. "My codes will get me into the guts of the seal. After that, it's grunt work." Sentient species were incapable of being completely random, a pattern always emerged. Find the pattern, work the code. Open the lock.

"Once you're in, we can hook up a slate and…"

"No." Craig wanted to smile but doubted smug satisfaction would go over well. "Hook in anything the seal reads as a random number generator, and you'll fuse it. Usually, that'd mean hacking the seal off the salvage physically and ringing every bell in the yard when you tried to sell it. You… we," he amended, "don't have to worry about sales. We have another problem." He tapped the screen. "Fusing the CSO seal will melt it into the Corps' seal. The Corps' seal will read that as an attempted forced entry and self-destruct."

"So when you say grunt work?" the captain growled.

"We can use a slate to input, but what we input will have to be worked out the old-fashioned way."

"So why do we need him again?" Almon sneered.

The captain raised an eyebrow that asked the same thing.

"Without my codes, you'll fuse the seal trying to get in." Craig spread his hands. "Boom. And I have a better chance of recognizing the locking pattern than someone with no background in the way salvage operators do things. It'll save some time."

"How much time?"





"No idea. Faster with me than without me, that's all I know."

Cho stared at him for a long moment. Craig tried to look like a man who didn't want to be thrown out an air lock. Finally, the captain nodded. "Your slate stays with me. I'll supply a scrubbed slate and you'll be working with Nadayki…"

"Captain!"

"And you can shut the fuk up about it." Cho moved up into Almon's space. "Ryder didn't lure the kid into a dark alley and stick him for his beer money. Ryder fought back. Nadayki didn't haul ass out of the way fast enough. End of discussion."

Almon looked like he wanted to argue, but to Craig's surprise, he kept his mouth shut.

Maybe by the time a person decided to be a pirate, there was nowhere else to go. Get thrown out of the crew, and survival became unlikely. Life at rock bottom explained how a shitkicker like Cho could maintain command. And who'd be stupid enough to challenge him with Doc at his side?

"You…" Pivoting on a heel, Cho turned his attention back to Craig. "Once we've got the locker secured on the station, you'll provide the raw data and Nadayki'll make it dance. Nat."

"Right here, Cap."

It was more than a little creepy how Nat was right there whenever the captain called her.

"Take Ryder back to his quarters and secure him." The smile he shot at Craig was nearly as unpleasant as Almon's had been. "I don't want our new crewmember ru

"I'll stay out of the way."

"I'll make sure of it," Nat muttered, taking Craig's arm. "Come on, gorgeous. If you're lucky, I'll tuck you in."

Still aching from the effect of Almon's pheromones, Craig gave it half a thought. If he wore her out, he could make a run for it. Except that any station welcoming this particular ship onto its docking arm and offering a secure location for the illegal entry into a Marine weapons locker made the oldEarth observation about frying pans and fires depressingly relevant. "… but by far the greatest benefit to processing the ore here in orbit is that we have greatly reduced airborne pollutants in our planetary atmosphere."

"I are seeing how that are being a benefit, but you are having to admit that an orbital facility are adding distinct dangers to the job and that…" Presit reached out, and Ceelin, who continued walking backward without breaking stride, slid a slate into her hand. "… station logs are reporting you are having eight injuries in the last ten tendays and one of them are being fatal."

Although Torin could only see the top of his head, she knew Rergis, the facility's manager, had slammed his nose ridges shut. His whole posture screamed overdone, righteous indignation. "There were extenuating circumstances…"

"And here are being one of them," Presit said brightly as they drew even with what was clearly the station's roughest drinking establishment. Halfway between the docking arm and the processing plant, against the outer skin of the station, it was perfectly situated for easy access. Easy to get to, after work. Easy to get away from, should the need arise.

Rergis pulled himself up to his full height, barely reaching the middle of Torin's chest and towering over Presit by a full six centimeters. "Are you insinuating that these accidents might have been the result of stimulant abuse?"

"I are not suggesting anything of the sort. I are merely observing that stimulants are often considered extenuating circumstances and…" she glanced down at the slate and back up again while Rergis stared at his reflection in her glasses, "… are being cited in two of these reports. So let's be taking a look." Her gesture sent Ceelin in through the hatch, leaving Rergis no choice but to follow the camera or allow Presit to wander unsupervised. He'd been with her for less than ten minutes, and Torin could see he'd already discovered that was a bad idea.

The ore processors ran 28/10 and few, if any, incoming ships would have matched their clocks to the station's, so it was no surprise the bar was fairly crowded although station time was officially midafternoon. Most of the clientele were Krai though there were a few Niln. The bartender was Human. So were two of the people sitting at the bar. Nearly everyone had at least part of their attention on the three Silsviss sitting at a table in the corner.