"You're thinking of hiring them?" Whitey was incredulous. "But they're pirates!"
"Egor to Tambu. Do you read me?"
"Go ahead Egor."
"I've got confirmation for you. The Mongoose's captain is on her way over."
Tambu's eyes jumped to the viewscreen. The shuttle-craft was clearly in sight, steering a straight course for the Scorpion. Then something that Egor had said registered in his mind.
"Egor! Did you say 'her way'?"
"That's right, my friend. It seems your counterpart is female. Young, too, from the sound of her voice. Her name's Ramona. Have fun with your interview."
Tambu grimaced at the leer in Egor's voice, but nonetheless paused to check his appearance in a mirror before heading for the docking hangar.
The captain of the Mongoose was not beautiful, but neither was she repulsive-or even homely. She was small, barely five feet in height, and stocky without really being overweight. A shock of long auburn hair was pulled back into a pony-tail which descended past her waist, combining with her round face to give her an almost schoolgirl appearance.
"Have a seat, Ramona," Tambu said. "We have a lot to talk about."
The girl sank loosely into a chair, casually dangling one leg over its arm.
"You'll forgive my appearance. I was planning to inspect a cargo, not meeting and impressing new people."
She was wearing a form-fitting T-shirt, dark green with a unicorn on it. Her pants were black denim with button-flap pockets on the thighs, and her boots were ankle-high and soft-soled. She was indeed more appropriately dressed for a work crew than for receiving visitors.
"Your appearance does not concern me," Tambu said. "Nor do I find it unpleasant. I do, however, have several questions for you."
"First, I have a question for you," the girl countered. "What do you intend to do with me and my crew?"
"What is usually done with pirates caught in the very act of committing their crimes?" Tambu asked blandly.
"Usually they are turned over to the authorities on the nearest inhabited planet where they are hanged or shot, with or without trial. Occasionally, they are put to death by the ship which captures them." Ramona's eyes met Tambu's squarely. "I might also add that if your plans for us follow those expected patterns, I see no reason why we should answer your questions or cooperate with you in any way."
"And if our plans were to let you go?"
The girl's posture straightened as her air of studied indifference fell away.
"You'd do that? You'd let us take our ship and go?"
"In exchange for information, we'll let you and the crew go. But not the ship. You'll be dropped planetside with no reference to the authorities as to the nature of your business."
"How do I know you aren't lying?" Ramona scowled.
"What's to keep you from getting the information you want, then turning us in anyway?"
"You have no guarantees. You'll just have to trust me. I might point out, however, that if I were lying, I could afford to be a lot more generous with my promises. I could promise you your crew and your ship. Instead, I'm being honest. The deal is for your lives-not your ship."
"I guess that makes a certain amount of sense."
"You aren't really in much of a bargaining position," Tambu reminded her.
"Let me ask just one more question. If you give me an honest answer to this one, I'll cooperate."
"What's the question?"
Ramona leaned forward, her expression suddenly fierce. "Who double-crossed us?" she demanded. "Was it someone in my crew?"
"No one double-crossed you. At least, to the best of my knowledge."
"Don't give me that." the girl snapped. "I know the Infidel didn't get a distress call out. That means someone had to tip you about when and where we were going to make our intercept. Otherwise, how did you find us?"
"Blind luck. We had no inside information. In fact, we had no information at all other than the news reports of heavy pirate activity in this region."
"But if you weren't specifically looking for us, how did you know we were pirates?" Ramona challenged.
"We didn't." Tambu smiled. "We had our suspicions as we approached the ships, but that was all. We fired in self-defense when the Mongoose turned her guns on us. It wasn't until the surviving crewman confessed that we knew for sure, and even that was uncertain until you confirmed it with your attitude during our interview here."
Ramona was wide-eyed now.
"But-if that's true-" she stammered.
"... You could have bluffed your way out." Tambu finished the thought for her. "It's a little late for that now, don't you think?"
The girl stared wordlessly for a few moments, then threw back her head and laughed.
"Ramona, the crafty pirate," she declared, shaking her head. "Trapped by blind luck and her own big mouth. Forgive me, but if I don't laugh, I might start crying."
Tambu smiled at her. "Now that you're fully aware of the situation, perhaps you will realize why I'm willing to bargain the way I have. Our aim is to be pirate hunters-sort of a cross between bounty hunters and a police force. It's obvious to me now that we can't simply rely on luck to find our prey. We need to know how pirates think... how they operate. That's where you come in. For example, you've implied that you knew in advance where to intercept the Infidel. How did you get that information?"
Ramona blinked, then grimaced slightly.
"You really listen close, don't you? Well, on this particular venture, our information came from inside sources."
"Inside sources?" Tambu frowned.
"That's right. I'll tell you my honest opinion. If you're planning to make a living at this, you've got your work cut out for you. The name of the game is information, and it can take years to build up an effective network. How you're going to get informants who will inform on other informants is beyond me."
"Back up a little," Tambu said thoughtfully. "Who are these informants that make up a network?"
"Almost anyone who has information about shipments and an eye for easy money. When I say 'inside sources,' I'm talking about people within the corporate structure of the outfit shipping the cargo out. It could be a shipping clerk, an accountant, or a secretary. Sometimes the information comes directly from upper management when they want to cash in on a little insurance money."
"So you get your information from the shippers themselves?" Tambu asked.
"Some of it," Ramona corrected. "Sometimes it comes from corporations out to sabotage a rival's shipments. People working at the spaceports themselves are good sources. We even get tips from receiving merchants and corporations who don't want to pay the full price of a shipment."
"I see," Tambu said, pursing his lips. "It sounds as if you have a lot more information than I imagined."
"And you aren't about to let us go until you've pumped it all out of me. Right?" Ramona scowled.
"Actually, I was thinking along different lines. How would you like to come to work for me?"
She held his gaze for a moment, then turned away.
"If you insist," she said flatly. "But you drive a hard bargain. It's extortion, but I don't really have much of a choice, do I?"
"Of course you have a choice!" Tambu thundered, slapping his hand down on the desk hard enough to make it jump with the impact.
Ramona started, taken aback at this sudden display of temper, but Tambu recovered his composure quickly. He rose and began to pace about the room.
"Forgive me," he muttered. "I suppose you have every right to think the way you are. It serves me right for trying to be so cagey instead of laying my cards on the table from the first."
He stopped pacing and perched on the edge of his desk facing her.
"Look," he said carefully, "it's been my intent all along to offer you and your crew positions in my force. I need experienced people-particularly people with experience in space combat-to man my ships. What I don't need are a bunch of sullen animals who think they were blackmailed into serving and who will jump ship or turn on me at the first opportunity. That's why I was saying I'd let you go instead of turning you over to the authorities. If you or any of your crew want to sign on, fine. If not, we'll let them go. Now do we understand each other?"