The Last Flight of the Argus (14 page)

BOOK: The Last Flight of the Argus
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Did you take out Goodwin?” B’taav asked her.


I thought he died in a traffic accident,” she replied.


What about Police Commissioner Herbert?”


Tomorrow’s another day.”


Thank you for your work,” Merrick told Latitia. “You’re excused.”

Latitia approached B'taav.


You shouldn’t take things so hard,” she said to him. “This business is just a game, after all.”

With that she walked to the door leading out of the office. Merrick’s secretary, who remained silently in the back of the room, opened the large doors to let her out. When she was gone, Merrick motioned for the secretary to leave as well. Without saying a word, she too departed. The large door closed, leaving Merrick and B’taav alone.


You shouldn’t have brought her in,” B’taav said. “This could have been resolved without further bloodshed.”


Sometimes the solution to your problems is the most drastic one,” Merrick replied. “As it was, I did hold back. I only sent the
one
Independent in after you.”


She’s untrustworthy.”


This new generation of Independents isn’t to your liking?”

B’taav did not reply. Merrick let out a chuckle.


You’ve been an Independent far longer than everyone else in the business. Most of them, like Latitia, are lucky if they make it five years before either stopping a bullet or venturing out to greener pastures. Not you.”

Merrick smoothed the ruffles on the front of his suit.


There’s no way you can enjoy your work
that
much, B'taav. All these betrayals and death and blood…they'll rot your soul. After a while, you won’t feel anything at all.”


Maybe I should take a vacation.”


Might do you some good.”


Goodwin said you were firing him. Why did you order Latitia to kill Goodwin if he was gone anyway?”


A message needed to be sent. When I ordered Latitia to get rid of Goodwin, she told me to ask
you
if it was OK. Since you were the primary Independent on the job, she wanted to defer to your judgment in that matter. Never mind that I was the one paying for this whole fucking thing.”


She has some redemptive qualities after all.”


Perhaps. You did well, B’taav.”


All I figured out was that Goodwin, Herbert, and Shepherd were part of some larger organization and were intent on deceiving, and ultimately killing, me,” B’taav said. “Gail Griffen and the Lewitt Catering boys were nothing more than a group of young fools that trio paraded before me. If I’m closer to the pirates, that distance can be measured in centimeters.”


Maybe. But if their plans worked out, those three clowns would still be in place, rotting my company from the inside out. The people behind Goodwin, Herbert, and Shepherd will be taking some hard looks over their shoulders for the next couple of years.”

Merrick pressed a button on his desk and the blackened window behind him returned to its previous clarity. Salvation once again shone like a jewel below them.


I’ll give the boys down there a few more hours to run around and tidy things up before arriving. Once I’m there, I'll raise holy hell. When I’m done, the place will run like new.”


I assume you have replacements ready to take Goodwin and Herbert’s jobs?”


Of course. Latitia wasn't too far off, you know. It is a game, and that’s the way the game goes.”


You’re satisfied?”


As much as I can be. My only worry is that the pirates have some backup plan, an alternative target somewhere else.”


You can count on that.”


And away we’ll go again,” Merrick said and smiled. “B’taav, our contract is at its end. Are you still interested in that extension?”


That depends on what you’re offering.”

Merrick opened a drawer and pulled out a gold credit chip. He laid it before B’taav. B’taav picked the chip up and stared at its surface display.


That’s…that’s most generous.”


Consider it not only a bonus for a job well done, but an advance for the job you’re about to do.”


I’m listening.”


So am I. In my field you talk as little as possible and hear everything going on around you. You never know what you’ll learn.” Merrick again reached into his desk and produced a micro disk. He offered it to B’taav. “Give the disk a look. I’d like you to take on this job.”


Only on one condition.”


Yes?”


No more babysitters.”

Merrick thought about that and nodded.


Fair enough.”

CHAPTER ELEVEN

 

 

SALVAGE CRAFT SANDSTORM –
on the border of Erebus

 

Kelly
Lang slept well for the first time in a very long time. When he awoke, he felt like a new man. When he double-checked the balance in his bank account, he knew yesterday wasn’t simply a beautiful dream.

Today, on this bright brand new day, it was Lang’s intention to make the most of his new life. He showered, made a quick breakfast, and dressed for travel.

After checking all the systems on his ship, he settled into the navigator’s chair and activated the communicator. He directed a transmission to the
Titus
space station’s flight control.


This is the
Sandstorm
. Requesting clearance for departure. Destination is the Displacer.”

There was a crackle of static followed by a lady’s voice.


Departure clearance granted. Please maintain a path along coordinates 523 by 099. Use minimal speed until advised otherwise.”


Yes ma’am.”

In minutes Lang’s ship uncoupled from the space station. After a very short burst of thrust, she drifted away from
Titus
and slowly turned until Lang had her pointed in the direction of the Erebus Displacer.


Erebus Displacer, this is
Sandstorm
,” he said. “Request transit passage.”


Acknowledged. Please provide destination point.”

Lang was silent for several seconds. In his eagerness to leave this place, he hadn’t fully considered where he wanted to go, and with all that money, he had the freedom to choose.


Sandstorm
?”


The Castillo system,” Lang blurted. It was where he first met his wife. It was where he spent his youth. It was where he longed to return.


That will be fifty credits.”

Lang pressed a series of buttons on his console. The fifty credits were transferred from his account and to that of the Erebus Displacer.


Fee has been received,” the Displacer Operator said. “Please allow thirty five minutes for incoming traffic.”


Will do,” Lang said. He slowed his ship to a stop a few miles for the enormous entrance of the Displacer. Freedom from his lowly salvage job lay so tantalizingly close.

Lang checked his sensors to see if any other ships were approaching. Though it didn’t happen often, once in a while a free rider would try to enter the Displacer alongside the legitimate traveler. Doing so was incredibly dangerous, as the only way this could be done and not be detected by the Displacer's Security was by traveling very close to the paying space craft. That type of proximity could lead to a collision, and no private pilot needed that kind of trouble.

His sensors detected no ships in the immediate vicinity.

Lang relaxed. He locked his ship down and exited his chair. He still had time to double-check his equipment and make some last minute preparations.

The scavenger stowed away all remaining loose gear and made sure his cargo containers were properly locked down. When he reached the decompression chamber he noted the reddish dust that still filled the area. It was all that remained of the
Argus
probe.

Lang looked at his watch. There were still ten minutes left before he could travel. Lang pressed a button on the wall and opened the compartment where he stored his cleaning gear. He grabbed a slender vacuum tube and ran it across the floor, sucking up most of the asteroid dust. Once done, Lang folded the tube back into the storage compartment.

As he did, he noticed a small black box sitting in the corner of the compartment and behind a pair of disinfectant containers.


What the hell?” Lang muttered.

The scavenger bent down and picked up the strange box. It was light and measured no more than a square foot. Lang saw no seams or latches on its surface. When he turned it over, he found a single blinking white light at the box’s center.


What the hell?” he repeated.

The blinking became faster, and faster...

 

The
Sandstorm
noiselessly exploded into tiny jagged pieces.

Only a few people in the upper lounge area of the
Titus
space station noticed the explosion, but they thought they were witnessing a meteorite collision or the peculiar twinkling of a distant star.

An hour later a group of fellow scavengers within the station pressed their faces against the lounge area’s tinsel glass walls and watched the police ships pick up fragments of the
Sandstorm
before they drifted away. When most of the pieces of the ship were collected and the police ships were gone, they lowered their heads and mourned for their fallen comrade.

CHAPTER TWELVE

 

The
investigation into the
Sandstorm’s
destruction started strong, with promises to the public that the cause of this terrible accident, as it was originally labeled, would be quickly found.

Less than a week later, public interest in the
Sandstorm
waned.

Lang’s ship, like most used by local scavengers, was an older craft, and many assumed it experienced some kind of terminal malfunction. Those in charge of investigating the craft’s destruction focused more and more on what damage, if any, the
Sandstorm’s
debris might have caused the Erebus Displacer.

That device was, after all, the only means to get back into the Epsillon Empire.

 

In
the control room of the Erebus Displacer, the day moved slowly. Interstellar traffic was low and the high tourist season was still a month away. Jeb Smitheen manned the communications station but his attention was on the latest transmissions from Segaru IV. His view screen displayed the forty-fifth World Cup Leatherball match, and Jeb couldn’t think of a better way to spend this quiet afternoon than losing himself in this game.

Halfway into the match, the lights over his display flashed on. Jeb scowled.


What now?” he muttered.

He shut his monitor off and activated the communicator.


Erebus Displacer, this is Aloida One. Please respond.”


Aloida One, this is Erebus. How can I help you?”


Craft incoming. Activate receptacles.”


Incoming? We didn’t have anything schedu—”


Code 53.”

The corners of Jeb’s mouth tightened.


Code 53?”


Yes, Erebus Displacer. Code 53.”

Incoming military craft.
A chill ran down Jeb’s spine.
What did we do to deserve a military visit?

Jeb Smitheen pressed a series of buttons. In seconds the screens before him flashed acknowledgement of all his requests.


Aloida One, Erebus Displacer is active.”

He received no reply.

 

The
Erebus Displacer’s hollow core came alive in a wall of shimmering energy. The gulf between millions of light years was negated as an artificial fold in space was activated. A large, sinister black mass appeared in the center of this gap. In moments it stepped from Aloida One, one hundred light years away, and into Erebus space.

Even those unfamiliar with Epsillon military attack crafts would recognize the
Wake
as one of the more modern ships of the fleet. Visible along the length of her body was an array of fearsome short and long range weaponry.

The craft moved out of the Erebus Displacer and into the ample space between the Displacer and the
Titus
space station. It turned starboard ever so slightly, until its nose was pointed at the station.


Erebus Displacer, this is the
Wake
.”

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