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BALANCE OF TRADE
A Liaden Universe® Novel
Sharon Lee and Steve Miller
This is a work of fiction. All the characters and events portrayed in this novel are fiction or are used fictitiously. That means the author made it all up.
BALANCE OF TRADE
Copyright © 2003 by Sharon Lee and Steve Miller.
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, without permission in writing from the author. Please remember that distributing an author's work without permission or payment is theft; and that the authors whose works sell best are those most likely to let us publish more of their works. Portions of this novel were first published in Absolute Magnitude, issue 11 Summer 1999), as the novella "Balance of Trade," by Sharon Lee and Steve Miller
ISBN 1-58787-216-1
Baen Publishing Enterprises
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First Baen Ebook Published March 2007
Shield of Korval by Angela Gradillas.
Cast of Characters
Gobelyn's Market out of New Carpathia
Arin Gobelyn, Iza's deceased spouse, Jethri's father
Cris Gobelyn, first mate, Iza's eldest child
Dyk Gobelyn, cook
Grig Tomas, back-up everything, Arin's cousin
Iza Gobelyn, captain-owner
Jethri Gobelyn
Khatelane Gobelyn, pilot
Mel Gobelyn
Paitor Gobelyn, trader, Iza's brother
Seeli Gobelyn, admin, Iza's second child
Zam Gobelyn
Elthoria out of Solcintra
Kor Ith yo'Lanna, captain
Norn ven'Deelin, master trader
Pen Rel sig'Kethra, arms master
Gar Sad per'Etla, cargo master
Gaenor tel'Dorbit, first mate
Ray Jon tel'Ondor, protocol master
Vil Tor, ship's librarian
Kilara pin'Ebit, technician
Rantel ver'Borith, technician
Tarnia's Clanhouse
Stafeli Maarilex, Delm Tarnia
Ren Lar Maarilex, Master of the Vine
Pet Ric Maarilex, his son
Pen Dir, a cousin, off at school
Meicha Maarilex, a daughter of the house
Miandra Maarilex, a daughter of the house
Flinx, a cat
Mr. pel'Saba, the butler
Mrs. tor'Beli, the cook
Anecha, a driver
Graem, Ren Lar's second in the cellars
Sun Eli pen'Jerad, tailor
Zer Min pel'Oban, dancing master
Liaden Currency
12 dex to a tor
12 tor to a kais
12 kais (144 tor) to a cantra
1 cantra = 35,000 Terran bits
Standard Year
8 Standard Days in One Standard Week
32 Standard Days in One Standard Month
384 Standard Days in One Standard Year
Liaden Year
96 Standard Days in One Relumma
12 Standard Months in One Standard Year
One Relumma is equal to 8 twelve-day weeks
Four Relumma equal One Standard Year
Day 29
Standard Year 1118
Gobelyn's Market
Opposite Shift
There are secrets in all families—
George Farquhar,
1678-1707
"DOWN ALL THAT LONG, weary shift, they kept after Byl," Khat's voice was low and eerie in the dimness of the common room. The knuckles of Jethri's left hand ached with the grip he had on his cup while his right thumb and forefinger whirled ellipses on the endlessly cool surface of his lucky fractin. Beside him, he could hear Dyk breathing, fast and harsh.
"Once—twice—three times!—he broke for the outring, his ship, and his mates. Three times, the Liadens turned him back, pushing him toward the center core, where no space-going man has right nor reason to be.
"They pushed him, those Liadens, moving through the night-levels as swift and sure as if it were bright world-day. Byl ran, as fast as long legs and terror could speed him, but they were always ahead of him, the canny Liadens. They were always ahead—'round every corner, past every turning in the hall."
Mel, on Jethri's left, moaned softly. Jethri bit his lip.
* * *
"BUT THEN!" Khat's voice glittered in the gloom. "Then, all at once, the luck changed. Or, say, the gods of spacers smiled. He reached a corridor that was empty, turned a corner where no Liaden crouched, gun aiming for his heart. He paused then, ears craned to the rear, but heard no stealthy movement, nor boot heels sounding quick along the steel floor.
"He ran then, light of heart and all but laughing, and the way stood clear before him, from downring admin all the way to the outring, where his ship was berthed; where his mates, and his love, lay awaiting his return.
"He came to the bay door—Bay Eight, that was where. Came to the bay door, used his card and slipped through as soon as the gap was wide enough to fit him. Grinning, he pushed off in the lighter grav, taking long bounds toward Dock Three. He took the curve like he'd grown wings, singing now, so glad to be near, so glad to be home. . .
"That was when he saw the crowd, and the flashing lights that meant ring cops—and the others, that meant worse.
"He shouted and ran, waving his arms as if it all made a difference. Which it didn't. Those lifelines had been cut good hours ago, while he had been harried, hounded and kept away—and there was eight zipped bags laid out neat on the dockside, which was all that was left of his mates and his love."
Silence, Jethri's jaw was so tight he thought teeth might shatter. Mel gasped and Dyk groaned.
"So," said Khat, her voice shockingly matter-of-fact. "Now you see what comes to someone who cheats a Liaden on cargo."
"Except," Jethri managed, his voice breathless with tension, though he knew far better than what had been told—Khat on a story was that good. "Excepting, they'd never done it that way—the Liadens. Might be they'd've rigged something with the docking fees—more like, they'd've set the word around, so five ports later Byl finds himself at a stand—full cans and no buyers, see? But they wouldn't kill for cargo—that's not how their Balancing works."
"So speaks the senior 'prentice!" Dyk intoned, pitching his voice so deep it rumbled inside the steel walls like a bad encounter with a grabber-hook.
"C'mon, Jeth," Mel put in. "You was scared, too!"
"Khat tells a good story," he muttered, and Dyk produced a laugh.
"She does that—and who's to say she's wrong? Sure, you been studying the tapes, but Khat's been studying portside news since before you was allowed inside ship's core!"
"Not that long," Khat protested mildly, over the rustle and scrape that was her moving along the bench 'til she had her hand on the controls. Light flooded the cubby, showing four startlingly similar faces: broad across the cheekbones and square about the jaw. Khat's eyes, and Jethri's, were brown; Dyk and Mel had blue—hers paler than his. All four favored the spacer buzz, which left their scant hair looking like dark velvet caps snugged close 'gainst their skulls. Mel was nearest to Jethri in age—nineteen Standards to his seventeen. Khat and Dyk were born close enough to argue minutes when questions of elder's precedence rose—twenty Standard Years, both, and holding adult shares.
Their surname was Gobelyn. Their ship was Gobelyn's Market, out of New Carpathia, which homeworld none of them had ever seen nor missed.
"Yah, well maybe Jethri could tell us a story," said Dyk, on the approach of mischief, "since he knows so many."
Jethri fel
t his ears heat, and looked down into his cup. Koka, it had been—meant to warm his way to slumber. It was cold, now, and Khat's story was enough to keep a body awake through half his sleep-shift.
Even if he did know better.
"Let him be, Dyk," Khat said, surprisingly. "Jethri's doing good with his study—Uncle's pleased. Says it shows well, us having a Liaden speaker 'mong us."
Dyk started to laugh, caught something in her face and shrugged instead. Jethri wisely did not mention that his "Liaden speaking" was barely more than pidgin.
Instead, he drank off the dregs of his cold koka, managing without much of a shudder, then got himself up and across the room, right hand still fingering the ancient tile in search of comfort. He put the cup in the washer, and nodded to his cousins before he left to find his bunk.
"Good shift," he murmured.
"Good shift, Jethri," Khat said warmly. "Wide dreaming."
"Sleep tight, kid," Dyk added and Mel fluttered her fingers, smiling. "Be good, Jeth."
He slipped out of the cubby and paused, weighing the likelihood of sleep against the lure of a history search on the fate of Byl—and the length of Uncle Paitor's lecture, if he was found reading through his sleep shift again.
That was the clincher, his uncle being a man who warmed to a scolding. Sighing, Jethri turned to the right. Behind him, in the cubby, he heard Dyk say, "So tell us a scary one, Khat; now that the kid's away."
* * *
HAVING FOUND SLEEP late, it was only natural that Jethri overslept the bell, meaning hard biscuit and the dregs of the pot for breakfast. Chewing, he flipped through the duty roster and discovered himself on Stinks.
"Mud!" he muttered, gulping bitter coffee. It wasn't that he begrudged his cousins their own round of duty—which they had, right enough; he wasn't callin' slackers—just, he wished that he might progress somewhat above the messy labor and make-work that fell his lot all too often. He had his studies, which was work, of its kind; emergency drill with Cris; and engine lore with Khat. 'Course, him being youngest, with none on the ladder 'neath him—that did go into the equation. Somebody had to do the scutwork, and if not juniormost, then who?
Cramming the last of the biscuit into his mouth, he scanned down to dinner duty—and nearly cussed again. Dyk was on cook, which meant the meal would be something tasty, complicated and needful of mucho cleanup. Jethri himself being on clean up.
"That kind of shift," he consoled himself, pouring the dregs of the dregs into the chute and setting the cup into the washer. "Next shift can only be better."
Being as they were coming into Ynsolt'i Port next shift, barring the unexpected, that at least was a given. Which realization did lighten his mood a fraction, so he was able to bring up a thin, tuneless whistle to stand him company on his way down to the utility lockers.
* * *
HE WORKED HIS way up from quarters, stripping the sweet-sheets off sleeping pallets, rolling up the limp, sweat-flavored mats and stuffing them into the portable recycler. Zam, Seeli, and Grig were on Opposite; the doors to their quarters sealed, blue privacy lights lit. Jethri left new sheets rolled up and strapped outside their doors and moved on, not in any particular scramble, but not dallying, either. He had it from experience that doing Stinks consumed considerably less time than was contained inside a duty-shift. Even doing Stinks thoroughly and well—which he had better or the captain'd be down his throat with her spacesuit on—he'd have shift left at the end of his work. He was allowed to use leftover duty time for study. What had to be measured with a fine rule was how much time he could claim before either Uncle Paitor or the captain called slacker and pulled him down to the core on discipline.
Stinks being a duty short on brain work, the brain kept itself busy. Mostly, Jethri used the time to review his latest studies, or daydream about the future, when he would be a trader in his own right, free to cut deals and commit the ship, without having to submit everything to Uncle Paitor, and getting his numbers second-guessed and his research questioned.
Today, the brain having started on a grump, it continued, embroidering on the theme of scutwork. Replacing the sheets in his own cubby, he tried to interject some happy-think into what was threatening to become a major mood, and found himself on the losing side of an argument with himself.
He was juniormost, no disputing that—youngest of Captain Iza Gobelyn's three children—unintended, and scheduled for abort until his father's golden tongue changed her mind.
Despite unwelcome beginnings, though, he was of value to the ship. Uncle Paitor was teaching him the trade, and had even said that Jethri's researches into the Liaden markets had the potential to be profitable for the ship. Well, Uncle Paitor had even backed a major buy Jethri had suggested, last port, and if that didn't show a growing faith in the juniormost's skill, then nothing did.
That's all right, the half of himself determined to set into a mood countered. Uncle Paitor might allow you value to the ship, but can you say the same for your mother?
Which was hardly a fair question. Of course, he couldn't say the same for his mother, who had put him into Seeli's care as a babe and hadn't much use for him as a kid. When his father died—and only owning the truth—captain'd had a lot of changes to go through, one of them being she'd lost the lover and listening post she'd had since her second voyage out of her homeship, Grenadine. She taken three days of wild-time to try to recover some balance—come back drunk and black and blue, proclaiming herself cured. But after that, any stock Jethri'd held with his mother had vanished along with everything that had anything to do with his father, from photocubes to study certificates to his and Jethri's joint collection of antique fractins. It was almost as if she blamed him for Arin's death, which was plain senseless, though Seeli did her best to explain that the human heart wasn't notoriously sensible.
Quarters finished, and in a fair way to seeing that mood set in plate steel, Jethri went down to Ops.
The door whined in its track when it opened and Jethri winced, sending a quick glance inside to see if his entrance had disturbed anybody at their calcs.
Khat was sitting at the big board, the captain shadowing her from second. Cris, on data, glanced over his shoulder and gave Jethri a quick jerk of the chin. Khat didn't turn, but she did look up and smile into the screen for him. The captain never stirred.
Dragging the recycler to the wall, he moored it, then went back to the door, fingering the greaser pen from his kit belt. He pulled open the panel and switched the automatic off. Kneeling, he carefully penned a beaded line of grease along the outer track. The door whined again—slightly softer—when he pushed it open, and he applied a second row of grease beads to the inner track.
He tucked the pen away and stood, pushing the door back and forth until it ran silent in its tracks, nodded, and switched on the automatics again.
That minor chore taken care of, he moved along the stations, backmost first, working quick and quiet, replacing the used sweet-sheets with new, strapping fresh sheets to the board at each occupied station.
"Thanks, Jeth," Cris said in his slow, easy voice. "'preciate the door, too. I shoud've got it myself, three shifts back."
Thanks from Cris was coin worth having. Jethri ducked his head, feeling his ears heat.
"'welcome," he murmured, putting the new mat down at second and reaching for the strap.
The captain stood. "You can replace that," she said, her cool brown eyes barely grazing Jethri before she turned to Khat. "Keep course, Pilot."
"Aye, Cap'n."
She nodded, crossed the room in two long strides and was gone, the door opening silently before her. Jethri bit his lip, spun the chair and stripped off the used sheet. Glancing up, he saw his cousins pass a glance between the two of them, but didn't catch its meaning, being short of the code. He smoothed the new mat into place, stowed the old one with all the rest, unmoored the recycler and left.
Neither Khat nor Cris looked 'round to see him go.
* * *
STINKS WAS A play in two parts. Between them, Jethri took a break for a mug of 'mite, which was thick and yellow and smelled like yeast—and if anyone beyond a spacer born and bred could stomach the stuff, the fact had yet to be noted.
One mug of 'mite delivered a cargo can load of vitamins and power nutrients. In the old days, when star travel was a new and risky undertaking, crews had lived on 'mite and not much else, launch to planetfall. Nowadays, when space was safe and a ship the size of Gobelyn's Market carried enough foodstuffs to supply a body's needed nutrients without sacrificing taste and variety, 'mite lingered on as a comfort drink, and emergency ration.
Jethri dunked a couple whole grain crackers in his mug, chomped and swallowed them, then drank off what was left. Thus fortified, he ambled down to the utility lockers, signed the camera out, slotted the empties and a tray of new filters into the sled and headed out to the bounceway.
* * *
OPS RAN MARKET'S grav in a helix, which was standard for a ship of its size and age. Smaller vessels ran whole-ship light-, or even no-grav, and weight work was a part of every crew member's daily duty roster. Market was big enough to generate the necessary power for a field. Admin core was damn' near one gee, as was Ops itself. Sleeping quarters was lighter; you slept strapped in and anchored your possessions to the wall. The outer edges of the ship, where the cans hooked in, that was lighter still—as near to no grav as mattered. On the outermost edge of E Deck, there was the bounceway, a rectangular space marked out for rec, where crew might swoop, fly, bounce off the walls, play free-fall tag, and—just coincidentally—sharpen their reaction times and grav-free moves.