Authors: C. J. Cherryh
CJ Cherryh - [Union-Alliance] Rimrunners
RIMRUNNERS
Caroline J. Cherryh
A Union - Alliance novel
EBook Design Group digital back-up edition v1 HTML
November 27, 2002
Contents
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THE POST-WAR PERIOD
CHAPTER 1
CHAPTER 2
CHAPTER 3
CHAPTER 4
CHAPTER 5
CHAPTER 6
CHAPTER 7
CHAPTER 8
CHAPTER 9
CHAPTER 10
CHAPTER 11
CHAPTER 12
CHAPTER 13
CHAPTER 14
CHAPTER 15
CHAPTER 16
CHAPTER 17
CHAPTER 18
CHAPTER 19
CHAPTER 20
CHAPTER 21
CHAPTER 22
CHAPTER 23
CHAPTER 24
CHAPTER 25
CHAPTER 26
CHAPTER 27
CHAPTER 28
CHAPTER 29
CHAPTER 3O
POPULAR LIBRARY EDITION
Copyright © 1989 by C.J. Cherryh
All rights reserved.
Cover illustration by Don Maitz
Cover design by Don Puckey
This book was originally published in hardcover by Warner Books.
First Printed in Paperback: February, 1990
THE POST-WAR PERIOD
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From: The Company Wars by Judith Nye
2534: University of Cyteen Press, Novgorod, U.T.
Bureau of Information ref. # 9795 89 8759
In 2353, when the Earth Company Fleet fled Pell under the command of Conrad
Mazian, the overriding fear of both Union and Alliance was that Mazian would
retreat to Earth and draw on its vast material and human resources. So the
immediate strategic consideration was to deny the Fleet that refuge.
It was rapidly clear that the Sol Station megacorporations which had built the
Fleet did not support Mazian in his bringing the War to Sol system; and the
arrival of Union warships before the Mazianni could so much as effect repairs
drove Mazian into a second retreat.
Alliance ships, dropping into Sol system close behind the Union fleet, entered
into immediate negotiations to enlist Earth in the Alliance. Union ships,
returning from the battle, offered similar terms. The governments of Earth saw
in this rivalry a situation which did not demand their capitulation to either
side; and in effect, while it may have been Earth's fragmented politics that led
to the Company Wars in the first place, it was that long Terran experience in
diplomacy which enabled a reasonable peace and assured the survival of the
Alliance.
In fact it can be argued that without Earth's independence, the Alliance could
not have maintained itself as a political entity, and without the Alliance,
Earth could never have remained independent. Alliance, consisting at the time
only of one star-system, Pell, immediately laid claim to the abandoned Hinder
Stars—a bridge of close-lying points of mass which, linking Pell to Earth,
promised economic growth for the newborn Alliance.
Union, which had come through the war with its industry intact, laid claim to
the war-ravaged nearer star-stations of Mariner and Pan-paris, simply because it
was the only government capable of the huge cost of rebuilding. Further, it
offered repatriation, free transportation and a full station-share to certain
refugees from those stations who had been evacuated to Pell—specifically to
refugees who could demonstrate technical skill and who had no record of the kind
of criminal profiteering that had arisen in Pell's quarantine zone. This program
of repatriation, the work of Union Chairman Bogdanovitch and Defense Councillor
Azov, drew a large number of skilled and educated refugees back into Union and,
according to some speculations, purposely left the Alliance a troublesome
remnant of those whom Union considered undesirables.
Nor was Pell Station able to absorb such a number of unskilled and destitute.
The Alliance solution was to offer similar station-shares and free transport to
the seven mothballed stations it had claimed in the Hinder stars.
Meanwhile the allies had hoped that the Company Fleet had exhausted itself with
no possibility of return from deep space; but Mazian's escape from Sol had
evidently been toward some secret supply dump, at precisely what point of mass
still remains a mystery. The Mazianni made a sudden return to Sol, but, thanks
to the allied forces who had remained on guard there, they were driven a second
time into deep space.
After this skirmish Union strategy was to deprive the Mazianni of supply by
driving them into deep space on the far side of Sol. Union viewed the re-opening
of the Hinder Stars and the resumption of trade with Earth as extending a
potential supply line to Mazian, who had regularly provisioned his ships by
raiding commercial shipping throughout the latter stages of the War; but the
newborn Alliance, with only the Hinder Stars and its proximity to Earth as
assets, determined to take the risk over Union's protests.
It was a strangely assorted group of volunteers who went out to re-open those
abandoned stations, some adventurers, some survivors of the riot-wracked
quarantine zone at Pell, and some few certainly with dreams of a new Great
Circle trade…
Alliance offered inducements to small, marginal freighters to take those
dangerous routes, an opportunity which promised survival for such ships in a
burgeoning post-war trade; but it reckoned without the discovery of a point of
mass off Bryant's Star that bypassed four of the newly reopened stations, and
most of all it reckoned without the competition of Union-built super-freighters
like Dublin Again which soon moved in off Union's long-jump routes—ships which
could, via tiny Gaia Point, hitherto unreachable by any freighter, bypass the
Hinder Stars altogether…
CHAPTER 1
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Every day she came into the Registry, and he began to watch her—tall, thin
woman, unremarkable among others who came looking for jobs, men and women
beached at Thule, men and women at the end of the line and hoping for a new
beginning somewhere, on some further station or aboard some ship that came to
dock and trade in the days of Thule's second fading.
The jumpsuit had grown threadbare, once a definite blue, no longer crisp lately,
but still clean. Her fair hair was haggled up the back and sides, a ragged mop
of straight hair on top, crackling with fresh-washed static. Each day she walked
into the Registry and signed the application sheet: Elizabeth Yeager, spacer,
machinist, temp; and sat down, hands folded, at a table at the back.. Mostly she
sat alone, turned talk away, stared right through any hardy soul who tried her
company. At 1700 each mainday the Registry closed and she would go away until
the next sign-in, at mainday 0800.
Day after day. She went out to interviews and sometimes she took a temp job and
dropped out for a day or two, but she always came back again, regular as Thule's
course around its dim, trade-barren star, and she took her seat and she waited,
with no expression on her face. The rest of the clients came and went, to jobs,
to working berths or paid-passage on the rare ships that called here. But not
Elizabeth Yeager.
So the jumpsuit—it looked like the same one day after day—lost its brightness,
hung loose on her body; and she walked more slowly than she had, still straight,
but lately with a feebleness in her step. She took the same seat at the same
table, sat as she had always sat, and these last few days Don Ely had begun to
look at her, and truly to add up how long she had been coming here, between her
spates of temp and fill-in employment.
He watched her leave one mainday evening; he watched her come in and sign the
next morning, one of forty-seven other applicants. It was week-end, there was
nothing in dock, little trade on the dockside, nothing in Thule's dying economy
this week to offer even a temporary employment. There was a perpetual sense of
despair all around Thule in these last months, of diminishing hopes, an
approaching long night, longer than her first, when the advent of FTL technology
had shut her down once: there was talk now of another imminent shut-down, maybe
putting Thule Station into a trajectory sunward, to vaporize even her metal,
because it was uneconomical to push it on for salvage, and because the most that
anybody hoped for Thule now was that she would not suffer a third rebirth as a
Mazianni base.
Nothing in port, no jobs on station except the ones station would allot for
minimum maintenance.
And he watched the woman go to her accustomed table, her accustomed seat, with a
view of the news monitor, the clock, and the counter.
He went to the vacant workstation behind the counter, sat down and keyed up the
record: Yeager, Elizabeth A., Machinist, freighter. 20 yrs.
More? comp asked. He keyed for it.
Born to a hired-spacer on the freighter Candide, citizenship Alliance, age 37,
education level 10, no relatives, previous employment: various ships, insystemer
maintenance, Pell.
He recalled other applicants in the same category, as the records of hires
floated across his desk. They were either employed at Thule on the
insystemers—keeping Thule's few skimmers running took constant maintenance—and
stacking up respectable credit; or they had shipped out to Pell or on to
Venture. But Yeager got sweep-up jobs, subbed in for this and that unskilled
labor when somebody got sick. Waiting all this time, evidently, for something to
turn up. And nothing did, lately.
He watched her sit there till afternoon, when the Registry closed, watched her
get up and walk to the door, wandering in her balance. Drunk, he would have
thought, if he did not know that she had hardly stirred from that chair all day.
It was that kind of stiff-backed stagger. On drugs, maybe. But he had never
noticed her look spaced before.
He leaned on the counter. "Yeager," he said.
She stopped in the doorway and turned. Her face, against the general dim
lighting of the docks outside, was haggard, tired, older than the thirty-seven
the record showed.
"Yeager, I want to talk to you."
She came walking back, less stagger, but with that kind of nowhere look that
said she was expecting nothing but trouble. Close up, across the counter, she
had scars—two, star-shaped, above her left eye; a long one on the right side,
one on the chin. And eyes—
He'd had a notion of a woman in trouble; and found the trouble on his own side,
having gotten this close. Eyes like bruises. Eyes without any trust or hope in
them. "I want to talk with you," he said. She looked him over twice and nodded
listlessly; and he led her back into the inner, glass-walled hall, toward his
office. He put the lights back on.
She might think about her safety. He certainly thought about his, the danger to
his career, such as it was, bringing her back here after hours. He punched the
com on his desk, waved Yeager to a chair as he sat down behind its defending
breadth, hoping the other Registrar had not gotten out the front door yet. "Nan,
Nan, you still out there?"
"Yes."
That was a relief. "I need two cups of coca, Nan, heavy on the sugar.
Favor-points for this. You mind?"
A delay. "In both?"
He always drank his unsweetened. "Just bring it. Got any wafers, Nan?"
Another pause. A dry, put-upon: "I'll look."
"Thanks." He leaned back in his chair, looked at Yeager's grim face. "Where are
you from?"
"This about a job?"
Hoarse. She smelled strongly of soap, of restroom disinfectant soap, a scent he
had to think awhile to place. Under the overhead lighting her cheeks showed
hollow and sweat glistened unhealthily on her upper lip.
"What was your last berth?" he asked.
"Machinist. On the freighter Ernestine."
"Why'd you leave her?"
"I worked my passage. Hard times. They couldn't keep me."
"They dumped you?" At Thule, that was a damned rough thing for a ship's crew to
do to a hire-on, or she had deserved it by things she had done, one or the