Authors: James S.A. Corey
Tags: #Space warfare, #Space Opera, #Interplanetary voyages, #General, #Science Fiction, #Adventure, #Fiction
“Shit,” Amos said.
“Okay,” Holden said. “Nobody touches anything. Period. Nothing.” It was the most sensible thing Miller had heard the man say.
“Someone put up a bitch of a fight,” Amos muttered.
“No,” Miller said. It had been vandalism, maybe. It hadn’t been a struggle. He pulled a thin-film evidence bag out of his pocket and turned it inside out over his hand like a glove before picking up the terminal, flipping the plastic over it, and setting off the sealing charge.
“Is that… blood?” Naomi asked, pointing to the cheap foam mattress. Wet streaks pooled on the sheet and pillow, not more than a fingers’ width, but dark. Too dark even for blood.
“No,” Miller said, shoving the terminal into his pocket.
The fluid marked a thin path toward the bathroom. Miller raised a hand, pushing the others back as he crept toward the half-open door. Inside the bathroom, the nasty background smell was much stronger. Something deep, organic, and intimate. Manure in a hothouse, or the aftermath of sex, or a slaughterhouse. All of them. The toilet was brushed steel, the same model they used in prisons. The sink matched. The LED above it and the one in the ceiling had both been destroyed. In the light of his terminal, like the glow of a single candle, black tendrils reached from the shower stall toward the ruined lights, bent and branching like skeletal leaves.
In the shower stall, Juliette Andromeda Mao lay dead.
Her eyes were closed, and that was a mercy. She’d cut her hair differently since she’d taken the pictures Miller had seen, and it changed the shape of her face, but she was unmistakable. She was
nude, and barely human. Coils of complex growth spilled from her mouth, ears, and vulva. Her ribs and spine had grown spurs like knives that stretched pale skin, ready to cut themselves free of her. Tubes stretched from her back and throat, crawling up the walls behind her. A deep brown slush had leaked from her, filling the shower pan almost three centimeters high. He sat silently, willing the thing before him not to be true, trying to force himself awake.
What did they do to you?
he thought.
Oh, kid. What did they do?
“Ohmygod,” Naomi said behind him.
“Don’t touch anything,” he said. “Get out of the room. Into the hall. Do it now.”
The light in the next room faded as the hand terminals retreated. The twisting shadows momentarily gave her body the illusion of movement. Miller waited, but no breath lifted the bent rib cage. No flicker touched her eyelids. There was nothing. He rose, carefully checking his cuffs and shoes, and walked out to the corridor.
They’d all seen it. He could tell from the expressions, they’d all seen. And they didn’t know any better than he did what it was. Gently, he pulled the splintered door closed and waited for Sematimba. It wasn’t long.
Five men in police riot armor with shotguns made their way down the hall. Miller walked forward to meet them, his posture better than a badge. He could see them relax. Sematimba came up behind them.
“Miller?” he said. “The hell is this? I thought you said you were staying put.”
“I didn’t leave,” he said. “Those are the civilians back there. The dead guys downstairs jumped them in the lobby.”
“Why?” Sematimba demanded.
“Who knows?” Miller said. “Roll them for spare change. That’s not the problem.”
Sematimba’s eyebrows rose. “I’ve got four corpses down there, and they’re not the problem.”
Miller nodded down the corridor.
“Fifth one’s up here,” he said. “It’s the girl I was looking for.”
Sematimba’s expression softened. “I’m sorry,” he said.
“Nah,” Miller said. He couldn’t accept sympathy. He couldn’t accept comfort. A gentle touch would shatter him, so he stayed hard instead. “But you’re going to want the coroner on this one.”
“It’s bad, then?”
“You’ve got no idea,” Miller said. “Listen, Semi. I’m in over my head here. Seriously. Those boys down there with the guns? If they weren’t hooked in with your security force, there would have been alarms as soon as the first shot was fired. You know this was a setup. They were waiting for these four. And the squat fella with the dark hair? That’s James Holden. He’s not even supposed to be alive.”
“Holden that started the war?” Sematimba said.
“That’s the one,” Miller said. “This is deep. Drowning deep. And you know what they say about going in after a drowning man, right?”
Sematimba looked down the corridor. He nodded.
“Let me help you,” Sematimba said, but Miller shook his head.
“I’m too far gone. Forget me. What happened was you got a call. You found the place. You don’t know me, you don’t know them, you’ve got no clue what happened. Or you come along and drown with me. Your pick.”
“You don’t leave the station without telling me?”
“Okay,” Miller said.
“I can live with that,” Sematimba said. Then, a moment later: “That’s really Holden?”
“Call the coroner,” Miller said. “Trust me.”
M
iller gestured at Holden and headed for the elevator without waiting to see if he was following. The presumption irritated him, but he went anyway.
“So,” Holden said, “we were just in a gunfight where we killed at least three people, and now we’re just leaving? No getting questioned or giving a statement? How exactly does that happen?” Holden asked.
“Professional courtesy,” Miller said, and Holden couldn’t tell if he was joking.
The elevator door opened with a muffled ding, and Holden and the others followed Miller inside. Naomi was closest to the panel, so she reached out to press the lobby button, but her hand was shaking so badly that she had to stop and clench it into a fist. After a deep breath, she reached out a now steady finger and pressed the button.
“This is bullshit. Being an ex-cop doesn’t give you a license to get in gunfights,” Holden said to Miller’s back.
Miller didn’t move, but he seemed to shrink a little bit. His sigh was heavy and unforced. His skin seemed grayer than before.
“Sematimba knows the score. Half the job is knowing when to look the other way. Besides, I promised we wouldn’t leave the station without letting him know.”
“Fuck that,” Amos said. “You don’t make promises for us, pal.”
The elevator came to a stop and opened onto the bloody scene of the gunfight. A dozen cops were in the room. Miller nodded at them and they nodded back. He led the crew out of the lobby to the corridor, then turned around.
“We can work that out later,” Miller said. “Right now, let’s get someplace we can talk.”
Holden agreed with a shrug. “Okay, but you’re paying.”
Miller headed off down the corridor toward the tube station.
As they followed, Naomi put a hand on Holden’s arm and slowed him down a bit so that Miller could get ahead. When he was far enough away, she said, “He knew her.”
“Who knew who?”
“He,” Naomi said, nodding at Miller, “knew her.” She jerked her head back toward the crime scene behind them.
“How do you know?” Holden said.
“He wasn’t expecting to find her there, but he knew who she was. Seeing her like that was a shock.”
“Huh, I didn’t get that at all. He’s seemed like Mr. Cool all through this.”
“No, they were friends or something. He’s having trouble dealing with it, so maybe don’t push him too hard,” she said. “We might need him.”
The hotel room Miller got was only slightly better than the one they’d found the body in. Alex immediately headed for the
bathroom and locked the door. The sound of water running in the sink wasn’t quite loud enough to cover the pilot’s retching.
Holden plopped down on the small bed’s dingy comforter, forcing Miller to take the room’s one uncomfortable-looking chair. Naomi sat next to Holden on the bed, but Amos stayed on his feet, prowling around the room like a nervous animal.
“So, talk,” Holden said to Miller.
“Let’s wait for the rest of the gang to finish up,” Miller replied with a nod toward the bathroom.
Alex came out a few moments later, his face still white, but now freshly washed.
“Are you all right, Alex?” Naomi asked in a soft voice.
“Five by five, XO,” Alex said, then sat down on the floor and put his head in his hands.
Holden stared at Miller and waited. The older man sat and played with his hat for a minute, then tossed it onto the cheap plastic desk that cantilevered out from the wall.
“You knew Julie was in that room. How?” Miller said.
“We didn’t even know her name was Julie,” Holden replied. “We just knew that it was someone from the
Scopuli.
”
“You should tell me how you knew that,” Miller said, a frightening intensity in his eyes.
Holden paused a moment. Miller had killed someone who had been trying to kill them, and that certainly helped make the case that he was a friend, but Holden wasn’t about to sell out Fred and his group on a hunch. He hesitated, then went halfway.
“The fictional owner of the
Scopuli
had checked into that flophouse,” he said. “It made sense that it was a member of the crew raising a flag.”
Miller nodded. “Who told you?” he said.
“I’m not comfortable telling you that. We believed the information was accurate,” Holden replied. “The
Scopuli
was the bait that someone used to kill the
Canterbury.
We thought someone from the
Scopuli
might know why everyone keeps trying to kill us.”
Miller said, “Shit,” and then leaned back in his chair and stared at the ceiling.
“You’ve been looking for Julie. You’d hoped we were looking for her too. That we knew something,” Naomi said, not making it a question.
“Yeah,” Miller said.
It was Holden’s turn to ask why.
“Parents sent a contract to Ceres looking for her to be sent home. It was my case,” Miller said.
“So you work for Ceres security?”
“Not anymore.”
“So what are you doing here?” Holden asked.
“Her family was connected to something,” Miller replied. “I just naturally hate a mystery.”
“And how did you know it was bigger than just a missing girl?”
Talking to Miller felt like digging through granite with a rubber chisel. Miller grinned humorlessly.
“They fired me for looking too hard.”
Holden consciously decided not to be annoyed by Miller’s non-answer. “So let’s talk about the death squad in the hotel.”
“Yeah, seriously, what the fuck?” Amos said, finally pausing in his pacing. Alex took his head out of his hands and looked up with interest for the first time. Even Naomi leaned forward on the edge of the bed.
“No idea,” Miller replied. “But someone knew you were coming.”
“Yeah, thanks for the brilliant police work,” Amos said with a snort. “No way we woulda figured that out on our own.”
Holden ignored him. “But they didn’t know why, or they would have already gone up to Julie’s room and gotten whatever they wanted.”
“Does that mean Fred’s been compromised?” Naomi said.
“Fred?” Miller asked.
“Or maybe someone figured out the Polanski thing too, but didn’t have a room number,” Holden said.
“But why come out guns blazing like that?” Amos said. “Doesn’t make any sense to shoot us.”
“
That
was a mistake,” Miller said. “I saw it happen. Amos here drew his gun. Somebody overreacted. They were yelling cease-fire right up until you folks started shooting back.”
Holden began ticking off points on his fingers.
“So someone finds out we’re headed to Eros, and that it is related to the
Scopuli.
They even know the hotel, but not the room.”
“They don’t know it’s Lionel Polanski either,” Naomi said. “They could have looked it up at the desk, just like we did.”
“Right. So they wait for us to show, and have a squad of gunmen ready to take us in. But that goes to shit and it turns into a gunfight in the lobby. They absolutely
don’t
see you coming, Detective, so they aren’t omniscient.”