The Darwin Elevator (32 page)

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Authors: Jason Hough

Tags: #Fiction

BOOK: The Darwin Elevator
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Roddy stood abruptly. “Evening, Commander Weck. Is something wrong?”

Commander Weck was a short man. Bald and soft, with a scowl saying he wanted to prove otherwise. “Who owns that boat in bay four?”

Roddy looked past the man, to a table in the far corner. Neil saw the last smuggler sitting there, the engineer named Takai. The poor fellow looked white as a ghost. The other chair at his table was empty. Skyler must have occupied it.

Roddy answered, “He’s right over … Well, he was over there. I …”

“Yes,” Commander Weck said, eyes darting toward the bar, the drinks. “Amazing that he escaped under your vigilant watch.”

Samantha came into frame, on her feet now. She dwarfed the watch commander. “Is there a problem, Bonaparte?”

“Who the hell are you?” Weck asked.

“Sam. I crew on that ‘boat,’ and my captain probably just stepped out to take a shit in your precious station. He might even do it in a toilet.”

The camera tracked Roddy’s frantic gaze from her to the young pilot. Angus winced at the woman’s slurred words.

“Ah,” Weck said, “you’re familiar with such a device?”

Samantha smiled. “Your face reminded me.”

On reflex, he put a hand on his slung weapon.

“Know how to use that thing, Hightower?” Samantha asked.

“Take it easy, Sam,” Angus said.

Roddy moved between them. “Commander, relax. They’re just waiting until the repairs are done.”

“Bollocks,” Weck said. “There’s nothing wrong with their ship. Someone sabotaged it. And now their captain is missing. Coincidence?”

Angus spoke up. “Impossible. I’m the pilot, and that latch—”

“Someone ask you a question?” Weck said.

Angus snapped his mouth shut.

Watching, Neil felt his mouth go dry, and he swallowed.

“Enforcer Nichols,” Weck said over his shoulder.

Another guard behind him stepped forward. “Sir.”

“Take them to the brig, have their ship searched, and find—”

Samantha kicked the commander square in the chest. He tumbled into a nearby table.

“Bloody hell,” Neil whispered to himself.

She wasted no time, picking up the weapon Roddy foolishly left on the counter. She fired the toxic prongs into the guard called Nichols. Within seconds, he was convulsing violently.

“Sam, what the hell?!” Angus shouted.

She dove forward, landing on the third guard as he fumbled with his rifle. Her fist flew into his jaw with a deep thud.

Roddy watched all this without moving. He saw Takai, the engineer, crouched low, moving along the wall toward the door. He probably intended to leave and find Skyler, or run for their ship.

The melee raged in the center of the tavern. Guards dove on top of Samantha. Workers scrambled out of their seats, pressing themselves against the walls.

Roddy turned to look at Angus, perhaps thinking he should finally perform his duty as a guard. But Angus had moved already. He crouched down over Weck, who lay limp on the floor, and wrestled the man’s rifle away.

“He’s armed!” Roddy shouted.

Guards leaned in from either side of the entrance, raising their weapons.

Angus tried the trigger, but the weapon didn’t cooperate. He frantically fumbled for the safety.

“Drop it, now!” yelled a guard from the door.

Angus found the button and pressed it. He raised the gun and pulled the trigger. But Commander Weck, who’d come around, kicked wildly at the pilot’s ankles. Angus lost balance just as the gun chattered, spraying bullets wildly along the ceiling.

Panic erupted.

Most of the workers still in the bar dove under their tables. A few ran for the door, escaping an instant before the guards there began to return fire.

Roddy crouched behind his bar stool. He watched as Angus jumped behind the only solid cover in the place, the bar itself. The guards sprayed bullets in short bursts toward him. In a panic Roddy threw his arms over his face. Neil heard the sound of bullets hammering into the walls, the crash of the mirror behind the bar as it shattered.

As his comrades scuffled on the floor with Samantha, Roddy began to crawl for the end of the bar. He took frustratingly few glances at the melee unfolding all around him.

The sound, however, told Neil enough. This was no simple fistfight, and no simple denial would satisfy Alex. Investigations and endless council meetings would result, and Neil couldn’t afford that kind of nonsense right now.

Roddy stopped at the end of the bar. Only a few seconds had passed since the combat erupted. The last immune, the engineer Takai, could be seen at the door now. The little engineer threw a punch at the guard closest to him, a weak blow that glanced off. Neil watched, helpless, as the guard jabbed the butt of his gun into Takai’s face, sending him sprawling.

Angus must have sensed the opening. Neil could hear gunfire, much closer. Roddy jerked in reaction to the loud noise, his gaze still on the action at the door. Bullets tore through the guard who had hit Takai. Red splotches appeared under the torn fabric across his chest.

Angus released another burst toward the other side of the opening, but the guard there had already ducked away, the special bullets shattering as they hit the wall.

“Sam, get back here!” the pilot shouted.

Roddy glanced at her. In the footage, Neil could see the tall woman on all fours, her face contorted in pain, blood on her shirt. A combat knife lay on the ground in front of her.

Beyond her, Neil saw Takai try to stand, one hand covering his bloodied face. Angus shouted a warning.

A burst of gunfire from the hall outside ripped through Takai’s shoulder and chest. He fell, life gone from his body.

From behind the bar, Angus shouted with primal rage. He let loose a hail of bullets toward the door. The guards there disappeared behind the wall again.

The guard Roddy finally overcame his cowardice, or shock—both, Neil guessed—and started to round the bar. He came out of his crouch and tried to wrestle the gun from Angus. The pilot, in the grip of bloodlust, kicked Roddy back and turned his weapon on the guard.

Neil almost looked away as the salvo flew. Roddy staggered back, the camera swinging up to the ceiling and then over to the side as the poor guard fell. He landed on the floor, one limp arm covering half the camera’s view. The picture, now tilted ninety degrees, showed the center of the tavern.

Samantha picked up the knife in front of her. Screaming through clenched teeth, she buried the blade in the already dead body of the guard under her.

Angus came into view. He grabbed her by the shoulder and tried to pull her toward the bar. She brushed him off, picking up a gun from the floor.

“Get back here, dammit!”

She ignored him and limped toward the door, her rifle coughing bullets.

The barrel of a gun appeared around the wall of the entrance: a guard, firing blind.

“Get down!” Angus yelled. Then he stopped, almost frozen in place. He looked around, confused, then down at himself. He had his back to the camera, but Neil knew.

Angus dropped to his knees, then toppled to one side.

Samantha hadn’t even noticed; her sights were on the door. She tried to fire again, but the rifle only clicked. Visibly defeated, she tossed it aside as guards stormed in from the door and tackled her.

The image on the screen vanished, replaced by an exclamation point and the words “stream not found.”

“The fuck is this?” Alex said.

Neil hoped his brief smile went unnoticed. He knew immediately what had happened.

Alex Warthen fiddled with the device, frustration growing by the second. The guard who provided the gadget tried to help, but Alex waved him off. “Go find another one,” he barked.

“I still don’t see what this has to do with me,” Neil said. He struggled to hide the shock in his voice.

“We’ve reason to believe a murderer is being harbored here,” Alex said. He gave the device a smack with the flat of his hand. “Dammit,” he said through clenched teeth.

“Nonsense,” Neil said. “Who?”

“Kelly Adelaide.”

“Haven’t seen her in months, since I fired her.”

“Lie all you want,” Alex said. “We’ll see what the footage has to say, once we’ve gathered it all.”

“Sir,” the guard said, “this one has the same problem.”

“Try another feed,” Alex said.

“I can’t access any of them,” the man replied.

Neil watched as comprehension washed over Alex’s face. “Son of a bitch. She’s erasing the archive.”

“Sounds like a tight operation you’re running here,” Neil said.

Alex ignored the jibe. He turned away and began to blurt orders into his handheld. Something about wanting a team at the data center right away. Neil smirked, despite himself. Kelly would be long gone by the time they arrived. She knew the maze of maintenance tunnels and ventilation ducts aboard Gateway better than anyone.

The security chief whirled on him. “This is a serious offense, Platz. If I find out you gave the order—”

Neil dismissed the tirade with a casual wave of his hand. “Looks like an unfortunate barroom brawl to me, combined with inept data management. You can leave now.”

Alex Warthen seethed. A response came to his lips, only to be interrupted by the return of the men he’d sent inside to search the office.

“No one here by her description, sir,” said one of the enforcers.

Alex held Neil’s intense stare. “Keep the station on full lockdown,” he said to the guard, “until we’ve sorted this out. Perhaps the scavenger in my infirmary will shed some light, if she lives.”

“Yes, sir.”

“Make yourself comfortable, Platz. I still have witnesses to interview, and backup data to restore.”

Neil stood firm, and offered Alex nothing else to go on. He knew he’d won.

Neil sat with his staff in the office lobby, eating a simple meal of hummus spread between slices of a stiff potato bread, when one of Alex Warthen’s underlings came by to tell them the lockdown had been removed.

“They caught her?” Neil asked, too quickly.

“Can’t find her.”

“What of the pilot? The scavenger pilot.”

“He escaped on his ship,” the guard replied. “I’d better not say anything else.”

Neil nodded, dismissing the man. He’d heard nothing from Kelly since she ran from the office to follow Skyler. And while he doubted now that she’d escaped aboard the scavenger’s ship, he felt he could not stay around to wait for her. Gateway Station had become unfriendly territory. Best, he thought, to vacate in favor of Platz Station, farther up the cord. He didn’t want to be around when Alex Warthen finally produced evidence linking the scavengers, or Kelly, back to him. Evidence he should have, by all rights. The endeavor had come off in sloppy fashion. Loss of life, and the scavenger captain forced to flee without his crew of immunes.

No, let Alex try to yank me from my own home. I can dig in with the best of them.

“Let’s get the hell out of here,” he said to his employees. During the lockdown, Neil had instructed them to pack anything important and be prepared to leave, and so they had.

To the receptionist he said, “Shut everything off; lock the doors behind us.”

“When should I reopen?”

“I’ll let you know. In the meantime, you have a new job: wanderer. I expect you to spend a lot of time roaming around the station. Send me daily reports on what you hear, and who you hear it from.”

“Of course.”

“Things will get
tense
around here. Anything out of the ordinary, you let me know immediately,” Neil added.

The man nodded, a serious expression on his face.

“The rest of you, with me.”

Neil carried a stuffed briefcase in one hand and a portable comm in the other. He led the group at a brisk pace through the hallways. The corridors were empty save for Warthen’s guards, who made themselves far more visible than normal. Two were stationed at almost every junction.

To Neil’s surprise and relief, the guards simply watched them go. He couldn’t blame the anger on their faces. Some of their own had died today. Murdered, Alex said. By Kelly. Violence, even bloodshed, in orbit was almost unheard of. Anyone guilty of such a crime would be pushed out the nearest airlock, or sent back to Darwin. There was no room for extended jailing in orbit, and no tolerance for people who couldn’t contribute.

He came to the docking bay on the “top side” of the station. Inside, he ushered everyone into his personal climber, instructing them to pack tightly. He had no desire to make two trips. Within minutes, the vehicle jutted out from Gateway Station, using the thread of the Elevator as a guide wire.

As the modest craft drifted away from Gateway, Neil considered the situation. He knew he needed to stay a move ahead of Alex if his plans were to succeed. Action must be taken or he’d be at the mercy of Warthen’s guards.

He excused himself from the main cabin and entered a small room, alone. He activated the comm and dialed Platz Station.

“Put Karl Stromm on,” Neil said to the woman who answered.

It took five minutes to find him.

“This is Karl.”

“Neil Platz here. Kelly tells me you’re someone I can trust, someone who can get things done.”

“I do my best,” he said.

“No time for modesty.”

“Kelly’s a smart woman,” he offered.

“Good enough,” Neil said. “Consider yourself promoted. Self-defense training time is over.”

“All right,” he said. “What happened?”

Neil quickly recounted the events aboard Gateway. “Keep quiet about this. Kelly is incommunicado, so I’m calling you directly. First, contact every station where we have representatives. Tell them to be vigilant. Take care who they talk to, or where they talk. Warthen all but admitted he has spies all over. Not to mention his damned guards.”

“No problem. I’ll get the word out.”

“Everywhere but Anchor,” Neil said. “I want you to handle that personally.”

“How so?”

“Pick a few of your best pupils and prepare to travel there. You’ll need a cover … a replacement janitorial crew, maybe. Talk to Mr. Brill in personnel; he can be trusted to an extent. I’ll send him a note authorizing it.”

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