"Corruption is acceptable on Haven. Scandal is not."
Those words had been thrown at now former Councilor Agav by three different criminal defense attorneys who all categorically refused to represent her. Even her own personal lawyer had dropped her and had used those very words as justification. The only defense lawyer who would even see her was so far down on the hierarchy of barristers that Agav wasn't sure if he had even finished law school. The lawyer in question was young and had only started a practice on Haven within the last six months. He was a human of average height with shaggy black hair and what could only be described as a "baby face."
Agav, coming from an oviparous species, thought he was barely a hatchling. Not that it mattered what his age was. He was the last lawyer on the planet who would talk to her. She towered over this human. On average, Maylogi stood seven to eight feet tall, and could weigh half a ton. She had armadillo-like armor plating covering most of her body; only her face, with its quartet of wide set eyes and twin nasal slits, was visible. She was trying to use her stature to intimidate this guy. It wasn't working.
Agav didn't like humans. In truth, she didn't like any species that wasn't her own, but humans, Muldaxians, and Birrans were the most loathed by her right now, since representatives of those three species were responsible for her sitting in this damned detention center. She again cursed the names of James Barret, Endira Vas, and especially Larik'Ni.
The man, Justin Thorpe , was glancing at a holographic display of the evidence against Agav. He shook his head and let out a sigh. "There isn't much I can do for you, Councilor," he said. "The evidence is pretty damning."
"I don't care if it's damning or not," Agav snarled. "I'm paying you to get me out of this."
"Actually, since your assets have been frozen, Councilor, you're not paying me at all. I'm only here for a consultation." He gave Agav a wry grin. "You see, I love a challenge. That's why I flew all the way out to the ass end of the sector, just to see how lawless this place really was. So far, I haven't been disappointed.
"That having been said," he added, "I'm not stupid enough to think I can get you acquitted. The best I can do is make sure that you don't spend the rest of your life locked up in some penal colony."
All four of Agav's eyes went wide. "Penal colony?"
"You, of all people, should know that, for capital crimes, you get shipped off to a penal colony. You can't stay here. How can you not know this? This has been the law here for over seventy years, and you've been here for over eighty."
Agav closed her eyes. "You need to get the evidence thrown out!" she finally said. "Tell the adjudicator that the footage from the
Arrowhead's
internal cameras was fabricated."
"Can't," Thorpe said. "It's already been authenticated by three separate agencies. It's all ironclad, as is the evidence surrounding the virus that infected the
Arrowhead's
onboard computer, and the fact that you practically confessed when confronted by Haven Security."
"Then why are you here, human?" Agav demanded.
"I'm the only lawyer on this whole planet willing to give you the time of day," Thorpe said. "And I know that you've spent the better part of eight decades here."
"I used to own this planet," she hissed.
"No, the Golipt Mining Consortium owned this planet," Thorpe said. "You were one of a number of people who owned that company. When it went under, all assets, including Haven, were liquidated. The people living here at the time pooled their resources and bought the planet. You have no claim on Haven. At all. However, I know you're determined to stay here. That's the best I can do for you, Councilor. Take it or leave it."
"Then why are you doing this?"
"Because everyone deserves representation. Even the guilty."
----
The call from space traffic control was one she had and hadn't expected. It was supposed to take eleven months for a message to reach Thelst, and over four months for a ship to arrive. It had been just over a standard month since the coup was attempted, and there was already a ship from the homeworld at the Tref system's gravitational boundary.
Governor Larik'Ni stood in the vast control room. Until fairly recently, she spent the majority of her time there; before she was governor, Larik'Ni was a senior flight controller.
The control room was cavernous, housing multiple terminals to handle incoming and outgoing vessels. The far wall was an enormous monitor screen which showed the system, and the paths of the space traffic.
Larik'Ni looked down at the control terminal in front of her. The holo-controls were familiar, and she could feel her fingers starting to twitch, waiting to work the icons. Then she looked at the monitor wall, which currently displayed the system.
The Tref system consisted of a pulsar and two planets. Haven was the second of those worlds. With so few bodies in the system, the gravitational boundary was closer to Haven than was comfortable for Larik'Ni.
"They dropped out of FTL and went to full breaking thrust as soon as they entered the system," the controller, a dark-haired human woman said. She looked up at Larik'Ni. "No communications. We only know who they are because of the transponder."
Larik'Ni kept her yellow eyes on the hologram. "The
Uditch,"
Larik'Ni said. "The flagship of the Triumvirate." She glanced at the flight controller and saw her confused look.
"The ruling body of my home planet. Thelst has three dominant species; the Birrans, the Hillot, and the Nitzhal. It is the Nitzhal who basically rule our planet."
"It would be like the Martian prime minister coming to pay me a visit," the controller said.
"Miss Kwon," Larik'Ni said, "I did not know you were from Mars."
Nari Kwon only chuckled. "Not all humans are from Earth, Governor. For that matter, not all humans are from the Sol system. One of my fathers is from Demeter. It's a planet orbiting Proxima Centauri."
"And your other father?"
"New Busan on Venus," Nari said. "Well, not on Venus, per se. The cities are all basically ships that skirt the cloud tops. The surface is too hot, and the pressure would crush you in short order."
She turned back to her terminal. "They'll be here in less than two hours. Fortunately for us, we'll be in the path of the particle jets when they get here, and when we come out, we'll be on the opposite side of the pulsar from them."
"And with the way Tref rotates, they cannot go above or below the pulsar to reach us faster," Larik'Ni said. "Thanks to the particle streams, I have a day and a half until they can dock, and I must deal with them. Unless, that is, they continue to go radio silent."
Nari smiled. "According to interstellar law, a ship can be turned away from any port of call if they don't announce themselves when entering a star system."
"Exactly," Larik'Ni said.
"They should know better," Nari said. "Then again, I didn't know about that law until you taught me about it when I started working here. You were a good teacher."