Torin concentrated on walking and taking the slate off her belt at the same time. After three tries to input the codes, she finally managed to access the Promise's data storage. Requested as evidence by the Wardens, the ship had been tethered to a buoy just off station.
"What are you doing?"
Actual Federate syntax out of Presit's mouth sounded wrong. "I'm copying everything from the last three tendays to my slate."
"What are you going to be doing with Craig Ryder's ship?"
"Nothing. It'll be here, waiting, when I get him back."
"You are being sure about that?"
"Given the speed the Wardens work at? Yes." If she couldn't free Craig any faster, if wouldn't matter what she did with the ship; he'd never be returning to it.
"He are not going to be happy about the hole," Presit said thoughtfully.
Torin would kill to hear Craig be unhappy about the hole. Literally.
Presit's pilot was also Katrien, his fur paler than both Presit and Ceelin, the markings around his eyes extending down into his ruff. He was sitting outside the air lock chewing a stim stick when they arrived.
"Merik a Tar konDelasinskin are being at your service." He tapped his index fingers together, a gesture Torin had never seen before. "I are being a big fan. I are watching your vids a hundred, no, two hundred times."
"It are being my vids," Presit snarled, pushing past him and into the air lock. "She are just being on them!"
The ship had been configured for Katrien. Torin couldn't stand erect in any of the three compartments. Fine with her. Sitting was also good. Torin had nothing against floors.
"Hey!" Presit's eyes were level with hers, the light levels low enough she'd removed her glasses. Had they not been narrowed so dramatically, Torin could have still seen her reflection in the gleaming black. "Where to now? The pirates who are having Craig Ryder could be being anywhere. Space are big."
"No." She decided against shaking her head when she felt her brain wobble. "They have treasure. They've gone to ground."
"Again, could be being anywhere."
"True. So we do this one step at a time. The salvage operators are taking the damage. They'll have the most information. We need to go to Salvage Station 24; the coordinates are on my slate." She couldn't get her slate off her belt. "Fuk."
"Ceelin!"
Small fingers snapped it free and pushed it into her hands. Torin frowned at the screen.
"If you are not able to find the equation, I are taking you back to the doctor who are no doubt going to be unbearably smug."
Torin refused to rise to the challenge in Presit's voice. "I don't need to find it." Activating the DNA reader by pressing her thumb twice in the lower right corner, she unlocked the memory. When she held the slate toward Presit, the reporter actually took a step back.
"You are being sure? This are giving me access to… everything."
"I don't have time to be unsure. Get us to the station. They'll give us the pirates. I'm…" Katrien feet-the same matte black as their hands-had long, prehensile toes. They didn't look as dexterous as Krai feet, but they were close. Presit's toenails were also metallic blue.
"Hey!" A small finger poked her shoulder. Hard. "Torin?"
She couldn't remember her eyelids ever being so heavy. The doctor had been right about her needing to rest. "Just get us there," she murmured, watching the light show on the inside of her lids. "I'm sleeping now."
Twelve hours and thirty-seven minutes later, Torin woke up enough to crawl to the head-easier than standing given the ceiling height. Easy was good given the complex maneuvers needed to urinate in a Katrien toilet. After crawling back to the control room, she sat cross-legged, braced against the wall, and worked both thumbs over the screen of her slate.
"You are listing what you are doing to the pirates when you are catching them?"
"Fuk, Merik!" The pilot was nearly the same shade as the pilot's chair. The low lighting made him remarkably hard to see. Torin had thought she was alone and that thought was a good indication of just how fried she still was. In the Corps, that kind of oversight could be fatal. "No, I'm not listing what I'm going to do to the pirates because that would be a very short list."
Find them.
Destroy them.
"I'm calling in reinforcements," she continued, saved the file, and crawled over to the board. "I need to hook in so the packets go as soon as we emerge."
"Presit are going to want approval," Merik pointed out as the comm screens lit up. "But Presit aren't being here. Be laying your slate down there and I are hooking you in."
"Because Presit shouldn't always get what she wants?"
He smiled, pointed white teeth gleaming. "That is what I are thinking, yes. Are there being anything else I can do for you?"
Torin's stomach growled as she placed her slate on the control panel. "I could eat." "I thought the point of the exercise was to get Ryder to join us," Cho pointed out. "Why the fuk would the crew take a vote about him joining if he's already agreed?"
Doc shrugged, eyes locked on the monitor. "If he thinks we don't want him, he'll want us more."
"But we do want him!" Cho snapped. He glanced down at the screen. Beyond the labored rise and fall of his chest, their captive hadn't moved in the last ten minutes.
"No, we don't. We want his codes and, like you said, we can get those from anyone."
"But we have him. And we have an armory we can't get into. And I've waited long enough." He'd waited long enough eight years ago when those fukking Marines had taken their own sweet time hooking their packets up to the ship. He'd been the one taking the crap when they weren't ready on the captain's schedule, so he'd had every right to hit the all clear. It hadn't been his Goddamned fault their seals weren't locked.
"Don't think of it as waiting, think of it as amusing yourself by fukking with his head. Ryder can't start on the armory until we're back to Vrijheid," Doc pointed out calmly. "Not unless you want to give him a chance to kill us all."
"You said no one chooses to die."
"He'd be choosing to kill. There's a difference."
"Between dying and killing? No shit." Still, Cho had to admit getting the armory the hell off his ship before Nadayki began his hack had a certain appeal. Except… "If that thing blows, we'd need to be in the next system."
Doc shrugged again. "Big Bill said he had an explosives locker. That should contain most of the blast."
When he said nothing else, Cho shook his head, muttered, "Should. Most. That's very reassuring."
Craig had no idea how long they'd left him alone, but his erection had gone down and the ache to get off had eased by the time the hatch opened again, so they must've been waiting for the air scrubbers to clear out the Taykan pheromones. Made sense. He'd never met anyone who'd actually enjoyed wearing a filter. Then again, he'd never met anyone who tortured people to death before, so what did he know.
Same guy who'd made him the offer came back in and stood by the hatch. Craig tested his restraints. Still no give and the bruising under and around the straps hurt like hell. Seemed like the guy was just being careful.
"Have you thought about my proposal?"
This was a way to stay alive until Torin came for him, but Craig knew he couldn't seem too eager. He swallowed, trying to get a little moisture down to the abraded tissue of his throat. The screaming had done some damage. "Your proposal to join up and become a murdering, thieving pimple on the ass of known space? So fukking tempting, how could I think of anything else?"
Dark brows drew down. "I don't remember phrasing it exactly that way, but yes, that proposal. Join." He held out his left hand, palm up, and then his right. "Or die."