Showing posts with label CTK. Show all posts
Showing posts with label CTK. Show all posts

Thursday, 5 March 2009

Commanding The Kingfisher (Final Part)

22nd March

Jessa was jolted roughly awake as the ship changed its course. Why aren’t the dampers on? she thought groggily. Christ, I hope it isn’t Thursday. Wait. What the Hell am I talking about? Angrily she shook her leaden head, trying to knock loose some sense.
Instantly she regretted the move. Her head hurt far too much, and the recollections that flooded in almost made her wish she hadn’t woken at all. Keigh, the navbots, Harlan, the R’Dokken: how much pummelling could the human mind take before it just lay down and surrendered? And shouldn’t she be dead already?
Apparently the universe wasn’t quite finished with her yet. There was nothing to be done but to open her eyes and work out how life would be screwing her this time.
At first glance it was immediately obvious that she was no longer on the Kingfisher. The bulkheads were the wrong colour, a filth-streaked maroon rather than matt grey; and they angled strangely, not perpendicular, and shifting at various points that confused the eye.
Jessa herself was strapped down to a crude acceleration couch; the hair floating on either side of her confirmed she was still in zero-g. She tried snapping her wrists back to free her from the couch’s restraints, but the straps remained defiantly tight. She was a prisoner. The R’Dokken wanted her alive. It was a realisation that brought her no comfort whatsoever.
Twisting her torso as much as her bonds allowed, she craned her neck to study her surroundings. She could see another couch opposite her; recognised the pale, unconscious face of its occupant as Gallagher. His severed calf was capped with some kind of plastic medical seal. Next to him was a third couch, on which lay a blonde woman Jessa didn’t recognise; although her bloodied jumpsuit claimed she was an engineer. The woman was missing both arms and a section of her lower jaw; all of which had likewise been sealed with blue plastic. Jessa could make out a fourth couch next to hers, but the strange jutting of the bulkhead made it impossible to see the occupant’s face. The faintest scents of disinfectant and blood circled her nostrils.
“I was wondering when you were going to wake up,” said a voice Jessa recognised.
Harlan.
Rage grabbed her immediately. Not the hot explosion of a lover’s anger, but the freezing stranglehold of pure, focused hatred. She didn’t want him flinching at her indignation; she wanted him dead.
“Get me out of these restraints,” she said, every word sharpened and frozen.
Harlan floated into view from somewhere to the left. He was soaking wet, and a breather mask hung from around his neck. Obviously he had just been visiting his new friends. His severed arm had been replaced with a rudimentary artificial limb of dark red metal; studded with spines.
“Why would I want to do that?” he asked, his eyebrows raised quizzically.
“Because then I’ll be able to connect your urethra to your saliva glands, you treacherous son of a bitch.”
“Ouch,” Harlan said, his face slashed with an arrogantly superior grin.
Now she did feel begin her fury beginning to heat up.
“You bastard,” she snapped. “How can you stand there and look me in the eye? You sold out your fucking species, Harlan, not to mention me; you should be choking on your own shame right now.”
Harlan’s smirk vanished.
“Contrary to what you’ve always believed, darling, the simple fact that you are angry with me does not necessarily mean you require an explanation. Or an apology.”
“Don’t twist this into some kind of domestic!” she shouted, “People are dead, you two-faced bastard. What did they offer you, huh?”
“Well, they gave me this shiny new arm,” he said. The appendage whirred as he waved it at her. “I tried explaining to them that the spikes would be hell on a night, but, you know. When world’s collide.”
“You’re still joking?” she spat in disbelief. “You can’t even take this seriously, can you? You’ve killed God knows how many people; our friends, and you-”
“I will NOT have you judging me, Jessa!” he bellowed suddenly. Despite her anger, Jessa found herself jolted with surprise.
“You think I’m doing this for a pat on the head?” he said angrily. “Look around you, honey. This galaxy isn’t big enough for us and the R’Dokken. The bastards are everywhere. XI have no idea; no-one does, but those bastards have been colonising for centuries more than we have. If war breaks out; we lose; end of conversation. And the only thing that’s stopping them is that they’re not sure that . They’d much rather avoid outright combat, as long as their convinced they’re winning the cold war.”
“And that’s where I come in. I’ve been doing it for months; feeding them just enough scraps to keep them satisfied, and just enough misinformation to keep them worried that we might be stronger than we look.”
He looked at her straight in the eyes.
“So, you tell me, Jessa. What would you prefer? The odd ship going missing here and there, or the end of our entire civilisation?”
“Is that it?” she asked, dumbfounded. “Is that the best you can manage? Even if I bought this crap about buying peace with the R’Dokken; it doesn’t justify what you’re doing. For Christ’s sake, look at you, Harlan. Listen to yourself. You’re enjoying this. Our friends are dead, that or crippled; and you’re strutting around like you’re some kind of secret agent? I’d have more respect for you if you’d at least admit you’d been bought.”
Harlan sighed, and pushed himself off the deck to glide toward her.
“You stay the fuck away from me!” she warned him.
“Please, Jessa; I only want to show you something.” He reached under her couch. There was a pair of clicks, and then her uncomfortable slab was floating. Harlan grabbed the couch, and pulled it effortlessly toward a cargo entrance ramp that formed the right bulkhead. She felt the couch tilt until it was perpendicular to the deck, allowing Jessa to see out of the small porthole in the ramp.
There, a few thousand kilometres away, lay the Kingfisher. It had been mauled almost beyond recognition, barely a square metre of its hull was not blackened or buckled or missing entirely.
“Take a good look,” Harlan said softly, moving to stand beside her. “I’m not responsible for the nature of her demise. Only the location. You can thank Gabe for everything else. You’re a doctor, Jessa; how many more R’Dokken would our captain have to have killed before you’d have accepted the Kingfisher as a reasonable price for having it all done with?”
“So now you’re arguing it was a humanitarian effort?” she said, although with a fraction less rancour than she had managed before.
Harlan shrugged. “That gas you inhaled knocked you out for over six hours. It took me almost exactly that long to persuade the ‘pedes who run the mining op out here to let you go. Fifteen cargo ships like this one, each of them carrying eight or so survivors.”
“So one hundred and twenty of us got out,” Jessa said coolly, “Out of two hundred and fifty hands.”
“Do you even know how many people the captain had executed?” Harlan asked her. “I lost count after the first dozen. And a lot of the crew died in the battle. The message I sent on that spacewalk requested casualties be kept to a minimum; but no-one told that to security. Maybe if the captain surrendered, but…” With a final shrug, Harlan dismissed the subject.
As Jessa watched the vessel that had been her home for the last four years shrink into the void; she was suddenly struck by how small it was, how insignificant against the backdrop of a hostile universe.
As if to make the point, a pair of torpedoes, fired from somewhere to port, raced into sight; their bright burn trails scorching her peripheral vision. She blinked, and when her eyes sprang back open, the Kingfisher was gone, swallowed by an expanding explosion of billowing plasma.
“Strange as it may sound, I think I’m going to miss her,” Harlan said to himself.
“It’s your fault she’s dead,” Jessa pointed out, her gaze still fixed on the conflagration outside.
“Who said I was talking about the Kingfisher?” he said, kicking off against the bulkhead. “I’ll be back in a while to strap your couch back down; but right now I think my two former women need a moment together.”
“And what happens then?” she asked.
“We dock with a R’Dokken void-runner, then we rendezvous with the Hammerhead at Quosium.” Harlan voice replied. “We’ll exchange you and the rest of the crew in exchange for some juicy compensation for Gabriel’s… indiscretions.”
“What about Gabriel?” Jessa asked. “Is he still alive?”
“As much as he was last time you saw him. Keigh too.”
“So where are they now?” she continued. “It’s hard to imagine the R’Dokken just handing him over after what he’s been up to.”
She couldn’t see her husband of course, but she knew him well enough to be able to hear it when he smiled.
“Like I said, sometimes you have to make the aliens feel like they’re winning.”

***

Gabriel’s mind re-booted before his eyes did. He wasn’t sure why, but he had been expecting a headache. Certainly there hade been a great many in the recent past, or so he seemed to recall. Things had apparently improved since then, his brain felt surrounded by mist, rather than fire.
More had gone than the pain. The earlier cramped imprisonment of his thoughts had lifted as well, leaving Gabe feeling finally, luxuriantly free. It he could have stretched with his mind, he would have done; it felt like he had been asleep for days.
As the feeling of elated freedom subsided, Gabe began to realise more had changed than he had realised at first. His mind seemed almost crystalline somehow, thoughts did not so much rise and submerge as freeze and shatter. Suddenly the expanse surrounding his consciousness seemed less like liberation, and more like isolation; an endless plain of windswept ice that had swallowed him whole.
And all around him he could feel someone, something, breathing down the back of his mind. Something watching. Something hungry.
“Is the procedure complete?” he heard someone say. Gabe didn’t recognise the voice, or even the accent. Something about it was-
“It is,” came another voice.
“Then you may reactivate your sight,” the first speaker responded.
Without wishing it, Gabe found himself obeying.
Gradually his vision swam back into focus as his eyes adjusted to the green tinged light which surrounded him. The image that greeted him was wrong somehow, fractured. It was if he was staring through broken glass, except that the breaks were not the chaotic web of a shattered pane, but in regular tessellation.
But he was still fully capable of seeing the two armoured R’Dokken that stood studying from across the small, bare room.
Automatically he tried to leap to his feet, but his body would not respond. In fact, he couldn’t feel his body at all! He was left helpless and numb before his foes.
“Are you in there, Captain?” one of the creatures asked him.
His confusion at the question was ripped aside as his thoughts froze with horrified understanding.
The R’Dokken wasn’t using a translator.
That could only mean-
A child’s scream made Gabe glance to his right, although he felt no control over his neck. There, held in the thick tendrils of a third alien, lay his daughter; kicking and screaming as she was lifted from a barbaric-looking capsule, all black curves and illuminated probes.
“Keigh!” he shouted, thick with desperation and compassion, but no sound came. The presence inside his mind radiated amusement. Still trying to watch his helpless child escape the clutches of the R’Dokken, Gabe felt his gaze wrenched down to his own body.
It was no longer there. Instead, a seemingly endless line of armoured ridges greeted his horrified eyes. Thin, sharp legs rippled as they registered the cruel mockery of their owner.
“He is here. I feel his fear,” said his voice, in response to the earlier question.
God, what had let happen here? He had driven himself and his daughter into the clutches of the enemy.
Keigh, I’m sorry, was the only thought he could form.
“Excellent,” said the first alien. “Get the human spawn to the shuttles; we have no further need of her.”
“Daddy?” Keigh cried through her tears; then she was swept from the room.
“I now address you; Captain Merriman,” the alien continued. “I am sure by now you are aware that there is no way for you to respond. You are however required to listen.”
What else could he do? Desperately he tried to galvanise the alien’s muscles into action, control its body as he had done Keigh’s.
Oh, God. Keigh. How could he face what he had done to her? What she had been forced to endure.
With crippling certainty, Gabe knew whatever was to follow, he deserved it utterly.
The alien continued.
“Know also that your current… host can hear your thoughts. We have questions. Questions which you will answer. The most specific regard our companions who stepped aboard your vessel at Kellarealm Starport; but we have a great many more general questions for later. Defence codes, fleet movements, and other topics of a similar nature.”
Without the translator mangling the creature’s speech it was all too easy to make out its harsh glee.
“And you will tell us, Captain Merriman. Ordinarily I would provide descriptions of the torture methods available to us. However, it is our experience that humans rarely respond to the threat of pain, only its application.”
“Perhaps we should, as your people say, “cut to the chase”?”
There was the sudden roar as pipes above began to blast out saltwater. Each R’Dokken shed its suit, and Gabe felt feeling returning to his, no, its body. Above the sounds of the rising water, he could make out another noise, a loud vicious buzzing. His captor glanced up to show him the source of the sound; an ugly-looking buzz-saw heading inexorably towards their shared midriff.
Davis’ words floated into his thoughts “The R’Dokken sense of self-preservation is markedly less pronounced than our own”.
The saw bit into flesh just as the salt water reached the wound. As the brine flowed into the ever deepening gash, and Gabe was shredded by agony beyond description, he found he was denied even the capacity to scream.

Epilogue

Somewhere in the darkness, the artifact screamed. It had been screaming for as long as it could remember; ever since the silver creatures had wrenched it from its home in the rock. He had bellowed with rage at the shining monsters, but they had not heard, or else had chosen to ignore it. They had clutched him in their ridiculous thin appendages and stolen him away to their metal lair. There they had become pink rather than silver, and ridiculously soft and ugly. It had hated them even more then; hated them so much it had sung with the screaming. Soon enough, they had come to answer his song, and the fleshlings had died in agony and terror. The artifact was pleased.
But after a little while the long creatures made of steel had arrived, and it had found itself stolen once again. Once more it began the song, but this time there was nothing to hear. He was left with nothing but his cries, and the many-legged creatures were as deaf to them as the pink things had been.
He spent some time underwater, and saw his new captors change; grow smaller and more delicate, but no less hateful. Then the pinks had him again. And all the while he called out to the void for rescue, for deliverance. Nothing ever came.
And now here it sat, again at the mercy of the hideous coiling creatures. Once more alone and submerged, where its screams sounded strange and hollow.
But although it had almost given up hope, it refused to give up its call. One day, one day soon, it knew that it would be answered.
And then the long creatures would die. The pink things too. Every single one of them. And when that time came, he could finally stop screaming, and instead, he could begin to laugh.

The End

Thursday, 26 February 2009

Commanding The Kingfisher (Part 7)

21st March

There was a sudden slap of acceleration and the familiar churning of internal machinery as the Kingfisher ripped its way back into reality. Infinite swirling gas clouds of luminous blue and green gave way to the familiar blackness of normal space. The surrounding stars were gone, eclipsed totally by the light of the gas giant ahead; all streaks of muddy cream and barren browns. After a moment, the view started to rotate, as the Kingfisher began spinning along its axis, providing the crew with false gravity.
The planet was Martingale VI, according to the Terran star charts, but this was not Terran space. Out there, the R’Dokken lurked, swimming in their filthy oceans, swimming and fucking and plotting.
Soon, all they would be doing was bleeding.
“Hop complete,” Mopsy announced pointlessly. Nobody responded.
Keigh chewed on her bottom lip, and pressed her fingertips together.
“Scan for traffic,” she said absently in the direction of comms, not even bothering to check who currently occupied the console.
This was an extermination mission. Somewhere in high orbit of the planet below tumbled a stricken R’Dokken mining vessel. The Kingfisher had picked up its distress call, the idiot creatures hadn’t even bothered to scramble it. Perhaps they thought themselves far enough into their own space to be safe. Or perhaps they wanted help so badly they would even accept it from the humans.
Keigh smiled grimly. The prey was not even aware it was being hunted.
“I’ve got something,” said the woman at comms. In a flash Keigh remembered her name; Carline White.
“What is it?” the captain asked, her smile growing in anticipation.
“It’s definitely the R’Dokken ship, sir. Her calls have got a little less panicked, I guess they’ve managed to stabilise themselves, but from the chatter they still can’t get themselves moving.”
“Has anyone responded to their mayday?” Hennis asked from beside Keigh. Keigh didn’t like Hennis, he looked like a rat, and smelt strange. He was also dangerously ambitious.
“I can’t tell for sure, sir,” White said guardedly. “If someone has, it can’t have been with a promise to help; otherwise there’d be no reason to keep broadcasting.”
“Keep checking,” Keigh said. There was no reason to suspect an ambush; no-one knew the Kingfisher was in R’Dokken space at all, let alone here. Still, the hideous creatures were not without their low cunning, it was best to be on your guard.
Without warning a wave of pain engulfed her head. She gasped in shock, felt herself tumbling from her chair. Her knee hit the deck; hard, but the jolt was just a droplet in the ocean of agony swallowing her mind.
“Get her up here!” she heard Hennis yelling from very far away. It was the last thing she heard. Then her sight fled as well, and all she had left was white noise, black light, and red pain.

***

Jessa lay awake on the bed, staring at the ailing strip light on the ceiling. Harlan dozed fitfully beside her. The powerful sedatives and terrible memories mixing in his head made him murmur, and occasionally spasm. The medical machines above him purred and hummed and whispered, monitoring his condition, assuring her that everything was fine.
She didn’t trust a single one of them; not with him. And so she had laid there for two days, watching her husband slowly recover. Or stabilise, anyway; Jessa doubted he would ever really recover. Every now and again he would wake, for longer periods each time; and they would have brief, semi-lucid conversations. He never mentioned what had happened, and she chose not to press it.
The only times she permitted herself to leave his side, other than to answer the call of nature, was to answer the call of her.
She smiled harshly to herself. Either one shit, or the other.
As if on cue, the comm chimed.
“Doctor Lambert, we need you up here.” It was White. “The captain’s collapsed again.”
Jessa lay there for a few seconds in silence, weighing up her options. Eventually one of Keigh’s episodes might prove fatal. How much better for everyone if she waited here?
“Doctor?” White’s voice came again, thick with urgency.
Jessa sighed, and carefully stood. Without bothering to acknowledge the summons, she took one last look at her husband, and stepped from the sickbay.
Geiss was waiting for her outside. His face held its usual expression of casual disregard, but it was a little flushed, and his chest was heaving slightly. He had run to find her.
“Not another house call?” he asked, grinning.
“I was about to say the same to you,” she replied curtly. In the last two days Geiss had been a near-constant unwanted companion, following her around like an infuriatingly arrogant puppy. He kept proclaiming that it was in an effort to ensure her safety. Perhaps he even believed it himself, but Jessa was very much aware that her well-being was nowhere to be found in the equation.
“Hardly very charitable, Doctor,” Geiss said, feigning indignation, “Here I am, busting a gut to take you under my wing; and all you can do is turn round and bite my head off.””Quite the pair of contortionists, aren’t we?”
“You don’t seem to realise how vulnerable you are right now. And who knows how long our resident fascist’s little junta will last.”
Jessa hadn’t told him of Harlan’s success. She hadn’t dared to, for fear of tipping off Keigh. Plus, she really couldn’t care less if she kept Geiss in the dark. Let him sweat. He was bound to survive all this, his trademark smirk still firmly in place. Screw him.
“We best be off, shouldn’t we?” Geiss prompted.
Jessa rolled her eyes. “Shouldn’t you be in engineering?”
Geiss’ grin widened. “I’ve left Deveraux in charge. Decent little engineer, especially for a frog. Plus, you should see the way she waggles her arse when she’s cleaning the coolant tubes.” He raised his eyebrows and whistled appreciatively.
Jessa’s impatience grew. She didn’t have time for this idiotic exchange.
“Fine then. Just stay out of the way.”
She span on her heels and strode down the corridor, Geiss in tow; off to heal her dictator.

***

Harlan opened his eyes. His wife was gone, but the bed beside him was still warm, and ruffled from her weight. He had felt his servos whirring to keep him safe as they dropped from hyperspace.
They had arrived at their destination. And, if all went to plan, help would be waiting out there.
He could just wait here, and allow his system to yield to the drugs that were flowing through it, whispering soothing suggestions of sleep. He could lie here a few minutes longer, let himself be rescued. Just a few more minutes…
No. Shaking his head violently in an effort to clear it, Harlan sat upright. The effort sent waves of unpleasant sensation through what remained of his arm, but the drugs rendered the sensation uncomfortable rather than agonising. He would not wait here to be saved like some fairytale princess in an ivory tower. If there was going to be a rescue, he was going to be part of it.
And he knew exactly how.
Standing slowly from the bed, he began to extricate himself from the web of sensors and drip-feeds attached to the stump of his severed limb. An alarm began to sound, but a quick stab with his remaining index finger silenced it. Once he was free he began gradually walking from the room. Step followed step followed step. His knees shook, his vision swam in and out of focus. If Jessa could see him now he would be in so much shit. He could imagine her indignation at his folly. Hero complex, she would call it. She always did have more love than sense.
His legs buckled, and he fell forward, only just managing to grab the door frame and pull himself back up.
Truth be told, in this condition he didn’t think it at all likely that he could go through with what he had in mind.
But his friends were counting on him. Time to prove he could be relied on. Wincing with every step, Harlan staggered out into the corridor.

***

Keigh had apparently recovered by the time Jessa reached the bridge. Flanked by her navbots, she was leaning forward in her chair, head resting on interlocked fingers, attention absorbed by the viewscreen. Jessa followed the girl’s gaze down the long bridge. There, surrounded by lazily tumbling asteroids, she saw Keigh’s target; a drifting R’Dokken ore-hauler. In shape it was not dissimilar to the trading junk whose crew they had butchered a week earlier; a long, flattened tube of dark red, tapering from bow to stern. The vessel’s front was a snub-nosed cone, marred towards its bottom by a loading bay exposed to space. It was an ugly gash of a mouth that gave the ship the appearance of some endless hungry organism, forever travelling the void in search of prey. The illusion was reinforced by the ebony support struts which split up the vessel’s smooth hull like ribs; rising to meet a thick black spine which ran along the ship’s length, curving over the indescribably complex shape of its hop drive as it did so.
Keigh stared fixedly at the vessel as if the sheer force of her will and her hatred could burn it out of space. A thin line of crusted blood ran from her left nostril. Jessa thought she could see the slightest tremor in the girl’s limbs. She made no move to help. Until she was ordered, she couldn’t bring herself to restore her captain to his callous, murderous glory. It was dangerously close to breaking her Hippocratic oath, but God only knew how many sentient lives would be lost on the defenceless alien vessel if the captain wasn’t dealt with.
Finally, Keigh turned towards her.
“It hurts,” she said quietly, and suddenly the insane, brutal captain was sheared away, and there was simply a child in pain.
“OK,” Jessa said softly, “It’s OK.”
She walked over to her patient’s chair, and knelt down. From there the tremors were more obvious, Keigh was shaking, as if she was cold, or had just finished crying. Indeed, she was sniffling quietly, puffy eyes cast down at the floor. Jessa took an antiseptic wipe from her medical bag, used it to clean off the blood trail above Keigh’s lip, and left the child with it to use as a makeshift hankie. The shuddering died down at Jessa’s touch, so she kept her right hand on Keigh’s arm as she worked.
“What’s the problem?” Hennis asked curtly from the seat beside Keigh’s, craning his head to watch as though he could possibly understand what Jessa had to do.
Jessa ignored him. Turning around, she pulled a scanner from her bag, flicked it on, and placed it against Keigh’s temple. The device began chirruping happily as it considered.
“I asked you what the problem was,” Hennis said, with a hint of threat.
Jessa glanced at him contemptuously before returning her attention to her scanner.
“I’m not really a fan of flash diagnoses,” she said, “But most likely it’s probably acute hippocampus fatigue; or maybe adrenal gland overload; the whole glucocorticoid thing.”
She looked back up at Hennis, grinning harshly at his blank face.
“Oh, you didn’t follow? Then why don’t you shut the hell up and let me work?”
Hennis snorted, but made no reply.
The scanner beeped smugly as it finally decided on a diagnosis. Jessa frowned at the green diagram that congealed on the mechanism’s screen. Sucking thoughtfully at her teeth, she considered the verdict. It wasn’t good. Bright dots peppered the curve of Keigh’s cortex; points of neurone fatigue where her mind had crumbled under the constant see-sawing between two sets of memories. There were more of them since the last time, and they were larger as well. Jessa could almost see them growing, fractionally but relentlessly chipping away at the surrounding tissue. It was little wonder Gabe had apparently withdrawn, allowing a scarred, terrified Keigh to break the surface. His every thought must be agonising, an inferno of pain accompanying every action he forced his daughter to take.
But even with his self-imposed exile, the two of them had days at the most, and their condition was far beyond anything Jessa knew how to treat.
“Sir?” came White’s voice from Comms, “I’m picking something up.”
The pinpricks of light on the scanner display flared briefly.
“What is it, White?” Keigh asked; the scared child’s sniffling replaced by a madman’s precision. Gabe had returned. Absently, he picked the scanner from his temple, and dropped it.
Catching it before it hit the floor, Jessa cursed Gabe silently for his abrupt return. Dammit, didn’t he realise what he was doing to his own daughter?
“It’s a signal from the ore-hauler,” White said, answering Gabe’s question. “Clear channel, and in English. They’re demanding that we assist them.”
Hennis snorted loudly.
“Typical fucking ‘pedes,” he sneered. “’We demand you save our lives, feeble Earthmen!’”
“How did they see us?” Geiss asked under his breath, from the back of the bridge.
“The same way we can see them, I’d imagine, if that’s not too complicated for you,” Hennis responded, not turning from the view-screen.
Geiss ignored him. “Hey, Vance,” he called. Vance was the current helmsman, nervously making endless tiny course corrections to evade the surrounding rock. “What magnification we on right now?”
“Er,” Vance glanced momentarily downward, “Twenty.”
Geiss smirked. “So I ask again, Mr Hennis. How did they see us?”
“Fair point,” Hennis responded acidly, “No reason to suspect a space-faring race might have developed binoculars.”
Geiss gave a sigh of exaggerated patience. “Let’s go through this step by step, shall we. Number one, their scanners or up, or they wouldn’t have seen us coming. Number two, they have comms, or they couldn’t have called for help.”
Jessa saw where this was going.
“And their thrusters must be working, otherwise they wouldn’t have lasted long in this rock field.”
“So they have scanners, comms, and manoeuvres,” Geiss concluded. “And it just happens that they’ve lost their engines and hopper?”
He paused for effect.
“This is a set-up.”
“Ridiculous,” the captain spat. “How could an insect lay an ambush?.”
The look on Hennis’ face made it clear he too thought the idea ludicrous. But he must have decided it was worth considering.
“Vinga, scan that vessel again; full spectrum. Then I want increased radius sweeps. If those fuckers are so much flipping is off through the portholes, I want to know about it.”
“Full spectrum sweep, aye,” Vinga said, hunched over her console, her face lit oddly by its flashing, spinning displays. “Well, that ships covered in power spikes like Christmas lights, but it’s all back up systems, like we figured. And the drives show nothing, same for the hoppers, so-“
She froze; a rabbit in the headlights of the scanning console.
“Sir” she gasped urgently, “That thing hasn’t got a hop drive!”
“What the hell, Vinga?” Hennis replied, “I can see the damn thing from here.”
“It’s a fake!” Vinga said, the strain in her voice raising its pitch. “There’s no power! None! Even with it off – shit, even with it wrecked, there’d be- Jesus, captain, it’s a trap!”
As if on cue, the green glow bathing the Scanning Officer’s face ran crimson.
“She’s powering her main drive!” Vinga exclaimed. On the view-screen, Jessa watched the R’Dokken vessel swing ponderously away, its now glowing stern turning to face them.
Hennis leapt to his feet.
“Vance” he bellowed, “I want delta off, now!” He reached down and toggled a switch on his chair arm. “This is Lieutenant Commander Hennis. All crew to battle stations. Gunners; I want that ore-hauler in pieces. And prepare for zero gravity.”
No sooner had the words left his mouth than Jessa felt her stomach lurch in protest as the Kingfisher stopped rotating. The magnetic plates in her ship boots automatically kicked in to keep her anchored, but the contents of her medical bag began slowly floating away.
Keigh, of course, had not been wearing boots, but the white-knuckled, furious grip of her father kept her in her chair.
“I want these monster’s dead!” she screamed, in a tone that might have sounded petulant were it not so chilling.
“We got them, Captain,” Hennis assured her. “Whatever that ship has planned, we can handle it.”
“For Christ’s sake, you prick!” exclaimed Geiss. “If that ship has no hopper; that means she’s intra-system! Which means somewhere out there is-“
“Contact!” Vinga called out. “Two vessels; R’Dokken signatures. Shit; they’re behind us!”
“What?” Hennis coughed, “On screen!”
The image on the view-screen split in two, the right side still showing the fleeing ore-hauler, the left now showing a pair of R’Dokken gunboats, squat, ugly vessels with heads like termite nozzles; bristling with weapons. They span and weaved as they raced from their hiding places amongst the asteroids.
“Why the fuck didn’t you see those two before?” Hennis spat, rounding on Vinga.
“They must have been powered down, and shielded by the rocks,” she said.
“How did you not see this coming?” Hennis responded angrily.
“Does it matter?” Jessa said. “We have warships inbound! We can point fingers later.”
“Assuming we have any left,” Geiss pointed out. “They’ll need me in engineering”. He turned and retreated from the bridge as fast as his footwear would allow.
“Why aren’t we attacking?!” Keigh whined. No-one answered.
“I should be in sickbay,” Jessa said, trying to keep an eye on the rapidly closing gunboats whilst she collected together her fleeing medical supplies.
“You stay where you are,” Hennis told her, “I won’t have the captain relapsing.”
“I’m not going to stand by while-”
“I’M NOT GIVING YOU AN OPTION!” Hennis screamed, panic and terror clear in his eyes and face. “Mopsy, she seeks to abandon your captain. Don’t let her leave!”
Mopsy rolled obediently forward, stopping between Jessa and the bridge hatch.
“What are we going to about those gunboats?” Vance asked, “Right now I’m just chasing this ore-hauler.”
The Kingfisher began to shudder slightly as its main batteries started firing. Jessa watched occasional burst of blue plasma appear to streak toward the gunboats. But most of the batteries were firing on the ore-hauler. Following orders, but not common sense; the approaching gunboats were a much bigger problem than a retreating mining vessel.
The two warships made the point by opening fire. The muzzles of their guns began to strobe as thousands of tiny scarlet projectiles raced across the view-screen, obscuring the pattering of fire from the Kingfisher.
A moment later, the bridge began to shake; the booms of impact hits ringing out in time with the lurches.
“We’re taking hits!” someone announced unnecessarily.
“Shit,” Hennis hissed. He flicked his comm-switch again.
“Gunners; leave the ore-hauler, concentrate all fire on those gunboats.” He left the channel open. “Vance; give me combat manoeuvres.”
“I’ll try,” Vance said, “But anything too violent and the asteroids will get us before the ‘pedes do.”
The violent shivers of the incoming fire slackened slightly as Vance sent the Kingfisher into an unpredictable corkscrew, constantly changing its direction and radius. The gunboats were approaching less quickly now, as they were forced to start evading the incoming fire. Jessa watched with satisfaction as one of them was hit; knocked sideways by a blue explosion; its hull glowing white with heat and venting water. The stricken vessel regained itself, and rejoined its wingman, but its torrent of fire had become a trickle. The staccato drumbeat of explosions against the hull had become the occasional thump, and the gunboats were maintaining a more respectful distance, where their manoeuvrability and faster fire rate might outstrip the Kingfisher’s ponderous cannons.
“Why aren’t they dead yet?” Keigh complained, her voice reedy and loud. “I want the monsters dead right now!”
“We’re doing our best,” Hennis said, trying to be soothing, although he sounded nothing of the sort.
“Now!” Keigh repeated, letting go of her seat to thump her fists against its arms. “Now now NOW!” The force of her blows sent her floating upwards, but she ignored it, still screaming, faster and faster, “Nownownownownownownownow-“
Suddenly her whole body splayed outwards, blood bursting from her lips to fly in crimson teardrops across the bridge. Spasms wracked her small frame; her limbs began to flail wildly.
For a moment the crew watched, stunned, totally unable to process what was happening.
Jessa recovered first, leaping onto the captain’s chair, hooking her legs under its arms, and grabbing the thrashing Keigh by her left ankle. She kept a firm enough grip to stop Keigh wrenching herself free, but she held her wrist loose, providing a cushion against the spasms rather than a barrier.
Hennis jerked into action, reached to help.”No!” Jessa said. “You grab her too, and she’ll just do herself more damage. This way I can stop her colliding against anything.””And how long does she stay up there?” Hennis demanded. The three navbots drove themselves into a tight triangle around the captain’s chair, but Jessa did her best to ignore them.
“Until I’m convinced I can pull her down without her breaking her limbs against the bulkheads,” she replied, refusing to be intimidated.
Captain, the ore-hauler’s getting away,” Vance said, “I can’t keep up with her while I’m dodging all this incoming.””Let it go,” Hennis said, “We can hunt it down once we’ve fucked the gunboats.”
Vance nodded, and began furiously hammering at his console. The image of the ore-hauler shrank from the screen, engulfed by the two gunboats. Jessa watched as the damaged alien vessel pitched sharply downwards to avoid scraping one of its three radial tail fins on an asteroid. In the process it ran straight into a burst of plasma from the Kingfisher. The screen was filled with a silent white explosion, which faded to reveal an expanding cloud of metal and water vapour where the gunboat had been.
The bridge crew cheered; it had been a long time since they had anything to celebrate.
“Gunners; finish off that other gunboat,” Hennis said. “I don’t want any more scratches on the hull.”
“Sir!” Vinga said suddenly, “The ore-hauler has changed vector; zero-six-five-slash-zero-four-niner.”
What?” Hennis said. “Get her back on screen; right now.”Jessa felt Keigh’s struggling beginning to die down. Soft moans and whimpers escaped her lips.
The view-screen split again, the fleeing ore-hauler once more appearing on the right-hand side, silhouetted against a gigantic asteroid spinning half-heartedly in the middle distance. It had indeed changed its heading, now it was moving upward and to the far right of the screen.
“Where the hell is it going?” Vance asked.
Things finally fell into place.
“It isn’t going anywhere,” Jessa exclaimed, “It’s clearing a flight path!”
The huge asteroid in the background of the view-screen seemed to fractionally increase the speed of its rotation. As it spun, it revealed something upon its surface. A R’Dokken space station. It was huge, spread out across the rock like a twisted spider-web of thick red metal. Flak cannons and missile silos studded the station; clouds of defence drones wheeled overhead like ovoid flies.
The crew had only seconds to recognise the structure for what it was before two dozen R’Dokken fighters launched from the jaws of its docking bay, insect-like ships with two snub-nosed cones at the bow attached to a trio of stabiliser fins. They were followed by four gunboats, and a pair of assault transports, likely crammed with alien warriors.
For a moment, no-one on the bridge spoke, each crewmember attempting to process their situation. Then the view-screen burst into action as the space station opened fire, thousands of glowing red projectiles silently streaking towards them.
“Mr Vance; get us the hell out of here!” Hennis ordered. “Turn about; one gunboat is a better bet than half the fucking R’Dokken navy. Gunners, concentrate on the original gunboat and the fighters; we’ll try to outrun everything else. Cottontail; I want a hop calc now.”
“Such a manoeuvre is impossible within this asteroid field,” Cottontail informed him dispassionately.
The Kingfisher lurched violently; the first impact from the station’s flak.
“Then find the closest point outside the field and calculate the hop from there!” Hennis shouted desperately.
“To what destination?””Fuck; any destination! Vance; make sure we get there.”
“Do my best.”
The station began to recede as the crew attempted their escape, but the fighters kept growing as they raced toward their target.
“Here they come!” Vinga called. Jessa watched the lead fighter explode in blue fire and red metal, but those that followed began to spit white hot plasma. She tore her eyes from the battle, ignored the shaking as the vessel was hit again and again, tried to focus on her patient.
Keigh had stopped struggling; stopped doing anything, other than whimpering softly, the occasional perfect globe of saltwater escaping her cheeks. Gently, Jessa pulled her down, and held her to the floor.
“Keigh?” she whispered softly. “Keigh, can you hear me?”
“Yes, doctor,” the girl sniffled. “It hurts.”
“I know,” Jessa breathed. “Would you like something to make it better?”
“Yes please,” Keigh said quietly.
Jessa began to rummage around in her bag’s remaining contents, hoping what she was searching for was still there, and not floating somewhere above their heads. Eventually her fingers closed on a syringe, which she pulled out and placed between her teeth. Another few seconds of searching, and she found a small phial of sedative. Using her knee to hold down Keigh by her dress, Jessa pierced the phial cap with the syringe, drew out the liquid, and reached for Keigh’s arm. She was worried the navbots would object, but the robots remained still as she slowly slid the metal needle into Keigh’s arm. A moment’s pressure; and Keigh went limp against the deck. This was their one chance; with Keigh asleep, and their demented former captain with her, the crew might finally be able to regain control of the ship.
If only she had the faintest idea how.
Jessa was thrown sideways from another impact, more violent than the others; she only just managed to keep hold of Keigh. Sparks began to fill the air; she heard someone swear in pain from across the bridge. She couldn’t stay like this, she needed her hands free. Reluctantly, she handed the sleeping Keigh over to Flopsy.
“Defend your captain,” she said softly.
“For fuck’s sake, people!” Hennis shouted, running forward to hover over Vance’s shoulder as though it might somehow speed up the vessels escape, “Take out that forward gunboat; before she zeroes in on the bridge!”
A moment later a storm of plasma was launched towards the R’Dokken gunboat, which began wheeling through the incoming ordnance, firing seemingly at random.
“What the hell is she doing?” Vinga asked.
“Running interference,” replied Geiss, striding back onto the bridge; “She’s firing at the asteroids.”
“What are you doing back up here?” Hennis demanded, looking back at the engineer.
Geiss shrugged dismissively. “There’s damage all over the ship; lifts are out, corridor’s blocked. Devereaux will have to cope; I can’t get to her.”
The deck rocked from another strike a moment later, not the sharp slap of an energy impact, but the jarring shudder of metal scraped by stone. The gunship kept firing, each blast sending shards of rock spinning in all directions; smashing into other asteroids in a chain reaction, or slamming against the battered, buckling hull of the Kingfisher.
Klaxons screamed across the bridge.
“Hull breach!” said an ensign Jessa didn’t know. “Deck 4; asteroid impact. Nanos are responding.”
“I can’t dodge all this rock,” Vance said, staring at the screen as though his gaze could sweep the stone aside, “Can’t we use the cannons to clear a path?”
“And make it worse?” Hennis snapped.
“Captain, the fighters have us surrounded!” Vinga said.
“We’ve lost engine three!” came another voice.
“Captain, we need some orders down here,” said a gunner over the comm., “Who are we supposed to FUBAR first?”
“OK, I want…,” Hennis hesitated a moment, “Captain?””She’s out,” Jessa said over her shoulder.
“It’s your moment to shine, rat-boy,” Geiss grinned.
“Shut up!” shouted Hennis. “Vance, keep going. Gunners, I want you to target the, erm…”
“Hennis!” Vinga gasped, “Two fighters on collision course!”
“Open fire!” Hennis shouted in panic.
Someone switched the view-screen to display two fighters racing towards them, side by side. The leftmost disintegrated in a hail of plasma from the Kingfisher. The second ship was hit too; one stabiliser fin was shorn clear off, sending the ship into a careening spin. For a heartbeat, Jessa thought the fighter would tumble away to join the asteroids.
Instead, the spinning vessel grew to fill the screen.
“Oh, shit!”
There was a deafening explosion as the fighter cannoned into the Kingfisher amidships; the scream of tortured metal mixed with the cries of terror and pain, and the roar of escaping atmosphere. Despite their boots people were knocked from their feet. Crewmen began to cartwheel past Jessa’s face; not all of them were still alive. Globes of blood, some horribly large, began to collide with the bulkheads, or the deck, or with Jessa. Out of the corner of her eye she saw an ensign she had once had lunch with. He was stood bolt upright as though at attention, his head above the nose shorn clean away. Zero-g and his boots kept him standings, whilst tendrils of artery and brain unfolded from his open skull like sea anemones.
Instantly Jessa’s medical reflexes kicked in, the smell and sight of blood and bone cutting off her fear and flooding her with determination. But the sheer scale of the suffering around her baffled her ability to respond.
How could she possibly choose who to help first?The decision was made for her when Vance’s console exploded spectacularly, flinging him backwards from his seat. He burbled a scream as he careened into Jessa, hitting with something more akin to squelch than slap. His arms wrapped round her automatically, she had to allow her knees to buckle to avoid injury. As her spine reached horizontal, her feet still safely in her boots, she stared into the ruined eyes of the man on top of her.
Only the name on his shipsuit would have allowed her to identify him as Vance. His face was a welter of blood and bone. Breached veins spat red bubbles, his ruptured eyes leaked yellow liquid, and he screamed mad agony into her face. She had to fight the urge to vomit. Instead she rolled him aside, allowed his boots to find purchase again, and grabbed for her bag.
Even as she reached for the e-stitch she knew she was too late. Vance’s clothes were awash with red stains, which were expanding every second. He began spewing blood and bile through his screams. Jessa grabbed his head fiercely, feeling him struggle against her grip, and forced it to the side. She rammed her fingers inside his mouth, holding his jaws open with her other hand, and began furiously working to keep his airway clear of vomit. “Get me a medical team!” she bellowed to anyone who would listen. Again and again he flailed his arms against her, trying to free himself, as if she were the cause of his pain. Her own suit was now heavy with blood.
As she fought hopelessly to save Vance’s life, Geiss ran to the ruined conn. He thrust himself underneath, and busied himself with the smoking mass of wires beneath.
“What the hell are you doing?” Hennis asked him.
“Hot-wiring the conn,” the engineer replied. “Give me two minutes.”
“We haven’t got two minutes!” Hennis whined.
“Then fucking FIND THEM!” Geiss shouted. “You wanted to fuck over everyone between you and the captain’s chair; you sort this sodding mess out.”
Finally something shook loose from Hennis’ skull.
“Vinga?” he said, his fear seemingly gone, “Report.””Nine fighters are out of it,” she replied, “The others are providing a screen for the gunboats and transports.”
“We still have forward momentum,” Geiss put in, “If we can get past that other ship-“”All gunners, hit that forward gunboat,” Hennis ordered. “And the nearby asteroids if you have to; let’s give this arsehole a taste of his own medicine.”
After a moment he added: “And put it on-screen. I want to watch this fucker fry.”
The view-screen obediently showed the gunboat, still was backing away and blazing fire into the rock around the Kingfisher.
Suddenly there were explosions and plasma traces everywhere. The gunboat pilot had only seconds to recognize his danger; he was still turning into his first evasive wheel when his prow detonated. Smaller explosions ran down the ship for a moment before the whole craft blew apart.
“Good shooting!” Hennis crowed. “Geiss, how we doing?”
“It’ll be faster if I’m not interrupted.”
“What about the hull; I thought I heard a breach in here.”
“That was over the comm,” Gallagher said, “Guess lost a gun-deck in the collision.”
“Vinga, what about the enemy?””We’re well out of range of the station, sir; and the other vessels can’t break to attack without leaving those transports open. We might get out of this yet.”
All of this might as well have been background static to Jessa. All she could focus on was the man dying in her arms. Furiously she worked, sealing opened arteries, stitching the gashes from debris that covered his frame.
It made no difference. The internal damage was phenomenal, he was haemorrhaging everywhere.
“Where the fuck is that team?” she shouted.
The only person to respond was Vance. With one last cry of hopeless agony, he twisted in Jessa’s grip, and died.
Jessa did the only thing she could. She let the cadver float away, and began searching for her next patient.
Geiss whooped loudly.
“I got it!” he shouted, “Where to?””We’re already headed the right way,” Hennis told him, “Just give some evasive manoeuvres.”
“Can do.”
Jessa looked up briefly, over a crewman’s dislocated shoulder that she was shoving back into joint. The enemy vessels were accelerating hard, after them, but surely they were nearly outside the field. And with a hop already calculated…
Then the lights went out.
“What the fuck?” Hennis gasped. “Report!”
“We’ve lost main power!” someone responded; Jessa couldn’t tell who. “Back-up’s not responding either, all we’ve got left’s the EBG.”
Pale blue lights flickered into life around them. Everywhere Jessa could see faces darkened by shadow and defeat.
“Reports coming in from all gun-decks,” a crewman said, “They’re trying to jerry-rig some generators for the plasma cannons, but right now we have no weapons.”
“Or engines,” Geiss said, his voice muffled from beneath the conn. “I still got thrusters, but even if I can ride our inertia out of this field, we can’t hop. We’re dead in the water.””Sitting ducks,” Vinga snarled. Then she returned her attention to her console.
“Hennis, the enemy vessels are closing.”
“How?” Hennis said, his voice clogged with angry confusion, “How could they possibly hit main and emergency power?””They couldn’t,” Geiss insisted, still working under the conn, “The systems are deliberately kept separate for exactly that reason.”
“Unless it was sabotage,” Jessa said coldly. Grimly she strode over to the conn, grabbed Geiss by the leg, and pulled him roughly out from underneath the console.
“Hey!” he exclaimed. Without gravity to add friction, she yanked him out harder than she had intended. As the came clear of the conn his forehead collided with the console.
“Ow! Shit, Jessa, what the hell?”
“What the fuck is wrong with you?” Hennis demanded.
“Oh come on,” she replied, “This was obviously a set-up. How else did the R’Dokken know we were coming?””Well it sure as fuck wasn’t me!” Geiss protested, “Why the hell-“
“Hennis!” Vinga cut the engineer off, “Those assault boats are closing to dock. Starboard ‘lock D-4.”
“Get security down there,” Hennis said, before turning back to Jessa.
“Now what the fuck is this about?”
“Geiss has been screwing us all along. He alerted the R’Dokken, and sabotaged-“
“Fuck off!”
“-And sabotaged the engines. Couldn’t get to engineering? I should’ve smelled your bullshit from the start. What did you do, Geiss? Plant a bomb? Is Deveraux dead? And how many along with her?”
“You crazy bitch!” Geiss shouted, rounding on her, “I’ve spent weeks trying to keep you safe! I just crawled under a sodding burning console to try and get this tin can out of trouble, and this is what I have to show for it? Fuck you.”
He made to leave.
“Navbots?” Hennis said icily. “This man stands charged with treason. Defend your captain.”
Obediently the machines rolled forward to block Geiss’ path.
“The R’Dokken are through on D deck!” Gallagher said, “Security’s getting the crap kicked out of them!”
“Get some more men down there!” Hennis said, “Security, engineers; anyone you can scrape together. And set up barricades along all routes to the bridge.”
He turned to face Geiss. In the wan light his leering grin seemed positively demonic.
“At least we have time for one more execution,” he said.
“Fuck you!” Geiss said again, his desperation obvious in his voice. “Even I’d wanted to, how the hell could I have tipped the ‘pedes off?”
Hennis glanced at Jessa, eyebrows raised.
“A good question. Doctor, you seem to be council for the prosecution. I’m sure we’d all love to hear an explanation.”
“D Deck no longer transmitting!” Gallagher put in. “Remaining security guards are re-organising on B Deck.”
“Shit, that’s us,” Hennis said, “I want anyone in here whose armed to guard the door.”No-one moved.
“Now!”
Reluctantly, half a dozen crewmen sloped to the hatch. Three walked through, and the others took what cover they could, training their guns at the hatchway; awaiting the end.
“I still want to know what’s going on,” Hennis said.
“It’s very simple,” Jessa said, glaring at Geiss with contempt. “After you found that transmitter on Harlan; he told me he’d managed to get a signal out; call for help. Geiss was the one who slapped it together, he must have set it to a R’Dokken frequency; it let them set this whole scenario up.”
For a moment Geiss didn’t respond to the accusation. Then, suddenly, he doubled up with laughter. He seemed to be trying to say something, but he couldn’t get it out, his entire body was shaking with mirth.
Hennis was furious. “Stop fucking laughing!” he shouted. “Did you do this or not. I swear to God, Geiss, I’m not going to need the navvies for this one; I’ll rip out your spine myself.”
Geiss kept giggling. After a few moments he calmed down a little. He reached out and leant against Cottontail for support, sucking in air in long, loud breaths.
“I’m –hah!- I’m sorry,” he said, grinning from ear to ear, “It’s just so funny; you are so fucking well and truly fucking fucked.”
He looked straight at Jessa, his eyes glistening.
“Just how stupid do you think I am? The transmitter I gave your hubby had a tiny explosive device inside, just powerful to gut its workings. I couldn’t take the risk it would be traced back to me; so I had to make sure I activated it as soon as the call for help went off. I was monitoring the transmitter that whole time.”
His smile grew grim.
“In the end I had to blow the device as Harlan was being dragged aboard by security. You get me, Jessa? Harlan never used my transmitter!”
Jessa stomach heaved.
“You’re saying-?””I’m saying that if Hennis and his Nazis found a transmitter on Harlan when it came aboard; it wasn’t mine.”
Finally some lingering thread of compassion switched off his smile.
“I didn’t call the R’Dokken,” he said, almost gently, “Your husband did.”
At that moment the intercom chimed on.
“This is Second Officer Summers to all crew,” came Harlan’s voice. Each word stabbed Jessa like a knife through her windpipe. “Our guests are about to reach the bridge. I suggest everybody surrenders immediately; we all know how the R’Dokken feel about taking prisoners. I guarantee no-one will be hurt.”
The intercom clicked off.
No-one spoke for a moment. Jessa felt sick. The world around her seemed to be twisting slowly in and out; she had to squeeze her eyes shut to avoid collapsing. It felt as though gravity had returned, that she was falling, and would be falling forever.
But she didn’t have the luxury of self-pity. From outside the bridge a barrage of fire broke out; the characteristic crack of the crew’s Gorgons, and the strange high pitched whine of R’Dokken weaponry.
The enemy had arrived.
“So,” Geiss said conversationally, “What do we do now?”
“I don’t know about you,” Hennis snarled, drawing his pistol and checking the chamber, “But I’m going to blow so many holes in those fuckers they have to swim home in their own blood.”
“Sounds like a plan,” Geiss said, grabbing a jagged-ended metal tube as it spiralled slowly past. He looked at it appreciatively. “Better than harsh language, anyway.”
He glanced at Jessa.
“What about you, Doctor. You joining us for operation Get Eaten Alive?”
Jessa couldn’t meet his gaze. “Geiss, I want to… er, I need to say-“
“Forget it,” he said, grinning. “If I was dumb enough to marry an alien spy, I wouldn’t be able to grasp simple logic either.”
Jessa felt her anger surge at Geiss’ insensitivity. But then, he was right, wasn’t he? She needed her anger; hell, she deserved her anger.
But she had a better target than Geiss.
Without a word, she pulled a small, jet black cylinder from her bag.
“Hah!” Geiss barked. “I thought this pipe was shit; but you’re going after the ‘pedes with lipstick?”
Instead of replying, she flicked the switch at the tubes base. The opposite end suddenly erupted into a crackling red haze.
“This is a VFE-scalpel,” she told him, “If you tried to use it as lipstick, you’d slice your face off. I’ll take it over your penis-compensator any day.”
The gunfight outside ended with an abrupt scream. A moment later, a beam of fierce yellow power punched through the door. It travelled slowly downward, leaving a trail of molten, sparking metal.
“Plasma cutter,” Geiss said. “Company’s coming.”
He looked around the bridge. Jessa did the same. The few crewmembers still able to stand had, like them, scavenged whatever debris they could use as weapons. Their terror was obvious even in the blue half-light.
“Is this it?” Geiss asked doubtfully.
“Not exactly,” Hennis said. “Navbots; defend your captain.”
There was a whine of servos as Mopsy and Cottontail rumbled toward the increasingly damaged door, stopping just out of range of the plasma cutter’s beam. Flopsy set Keigh gently down under the captain’s chair, and swivelled to face the hatch, its huge hands opening and closing in preparation.
“Everyone ready?” Hennis asked, staring along the barrel of his pistol.
Geiss was the only one to reply. “'Tis some visitor,’ I muttered, ‘tapping at my chamber door’” was all he said.
“Is there any chance you’re going to shut up?” Hennis snapped.
“Not the best last words I’ve come across,” Geiss replied. “How about you, Jessa, what are we putting on your tombstone?”
“If Harlan shows, no-one touches him,” she said coldly, tightening the red haze of her scalpel into a long, thin blade of energy. “He’s mine.”
At that moment, the door exploded inward, and the enemy were upon them.
Four streaks of plasma flew simultaneously; and Jessa had only the faintest glimpse of a R’Dokken’s ugly helmet before it detonated, spraying yellow blood across the bridge. For a moment it seemed that the recoiling corpse might block the door, but the next alien through simply snaked itself around the first, its legs pushing it forward with horrible speed, its strange weapon firing in all directions. Jessa watched as a crewman was caught in one of the invisible blasts; screaming with agony as his body first twisted, then somehow imploded. She saw Flopsy and Mopsy grab the intruder and rip it noisily in half, showering themselves with ichors.
Then the aliens were everywhere, and there was no time to watch, or even think. Jessa’s world became an endless tunnel of hacking and stabbing, of screams and blood and gunfire. A R’Dokken reared up in front of her, and she thrust her improvised weapon deep into its armoured face. There was a blood-curdling screech of hate and pain, and the alien was gone.
Her legs became tangled in someone’s severed arm, and she lurched forward, feet scrambling furiously until the magnets in her boots regained their purchase. By the time she was steady again another alien was upon her. Its tentacles rippled toward her, each one tipped with dozens of variously sized blades, rotating or vibrating or sawing the air. She tried to turn and run, but the creature grabbed her with two of its forelegs, pinning her arms to her torso. Screaming in terror, she struggled desperately to escape, but she could not break free, could not use her scalpel.
The blades reached for her face. Jessa stared with terrified loathing into the green, expressionless eye of her killer’s helmet.
Suddenly its eye burst open in a cloud of blood and viscera. The alien let her go as it thrashed in its death throes, the metal fist of Cottontail still protruding from the helmet’s ruined eye-socket.
“Thanks,” she murmured, inspecting her rescuer as it removed its hand from its victim’s body.
The robot was in bad shape; its chassis was badly buckled, its face barely recognisable as the rough human sketch it had once been. One track was all but gone, and its wide panelled chest was a mess of melted metal and sparking components.
With the immediate danger passed she risked a glance around her at the raging melee.
It was obvious that the battle was already lost. Mopsy was almost impossible to see under a swirling layer of R’Dokken, endlessly stabbing and ripping with their blades, two more leaping onto the machine with every one it swatted clumsily away.
Flopsy stood immobile in the centre of the bridge, its head melted clean away, its hands yellow with R’Dokken blood, the child it had died to protect cradled still unconscious between its treads.
The sound of Gorgon fire was gone, now only the weird screech of the alien weapons rent the air. And there was something else, just discernable above the clamour of battle; a low incessant hissing. It wasn’t until the scent was already in her nostrils that she recognised her danger. Gas! Jessa knew she should panic, but it was already too late, the gas was winding its way around her brain, crushing it in velvet. Her limbs grew heavy, and her head seemed to be inflating. Woozily she watched a R’Dokken, clinging to the deck above, push off with its front half to lash out at Hennis; puncturing him with a half dozen armoured legs before dragging him screaming to the ceiling, and its waiting knives. Another alien used the gun it carried in two tentacles to blast one man from his feet, whilst using the third to slice Gallagher’s leg off at the knee.
Then her vision fled her. Dropping her scalpel to the floor, she closed her now useless eyes, and drifted happily away.

Thursday, 19 February 2009

Commanding The Kingfisher (Part 6)

18th March

The trial was to be at dawn. Not that there was a dawn out here. Not in the endless chasm between stars, where the Kingfisher currently lay whilst Keigh’s loyalists sorted out the mess Geiss had made of the hull plating.
Technically, then, the trial wouldn’t start at dawn, just at 5 am.
It didn’t make any difference to Jessa. She’d be just as dead either way.
She had spent the night in the brig, pacing up and down in her filthy jumpsuit. Harlan was in here somewhere, but she had denied them any contact. A field of shimmering amber light enveloped her cramped cell, cutting out all light and sound.
There was nothing to do but wait, try to block out the knowledge of what was to follow, and hope that somehow a workable plan of action would stumble into her thoughts. All three had gone pretty badly. Jessa had never felt so scared; the R’Dokken attack a fortnight ago had been nothing compared to waiting for your own execution. She had watched in horror as Jaime had been murdered, the memory of his screams as Flopsy pulled him in two kept bludgeoning its way into her thoughts. As a doctor, she could explain in great detail exactly which of his body parts had stretched and snapped and fallen out, and in what order. There were definite disadvantages to understanding the human body.
At least Harlan wouldn’t die alone, she thought.
It was cold comfort.
Oh God, she suddenly thought. What if they kill him first?
How much longer would she have to suffer this? The guards that had gently, guiltily led her to her cell had taken her watch from her, so she had no way to gauge time. It seemed like she had been waiting forever when the cut-off field dispersed, to revealing two guards standing outside her cell.
Her heart leaped when she recognised Vaber and Kittrich.
“Morning Doctor,” Vaber said flatly, “We are to escort you to the bridge now. The captain,” he almost spat the word, “Would like to begin proceedings.”
“Already?” Jessa said, determined not to show how close she was to collapsing under the pressure, “How time flies in sealed prison cages.” She looked around at the surrounding cells; all were empty. Harlan must already be on his way to the bridge.
Both guards smiled humorlessly.
“Yeah, I can’t imagine it was much of a fucking picnic,” Kittrich said. “Those fields really put out some heat, don’t they?” She wiped her brow with the back of her hand, and unzipped the front of her jumpsuit. “Sometimes when we’re off duty we come down here and use them to toast marshmallows.”
“Anyway, you ready? Or we could weight a few minutes, let you, you know, screw up your courage?”
As Kittrich spoke she stripped off her jumpsuit to the waist. On the grimy white t-shirt beneath she had written the words “Do u want us 2 break u out?” in black marker.
Jessa was amazed.. Kittrich and Vaber were running a huge risk giving her that message, the brig was studded with cameras. And if she was to take them up on their offer, and their plan went wrong, then hers would not be the only body that would lie on the deck of the bridge by the end of the day. She was a little touched by their bravery on her behalf. But there was no way she could justify risking their lives for her. Her role was to save people, not endanger them. And if she was going to find some way, somehow, to get out of this with skin intact, it wouldn’t be by exchanging her imperilment for somebody else’s.
“No, thank you, Ms Kittrich. I think it’s time I faced this thing.”
There was a long pause as the guards considered this. Their faces flashed with disappointment and relief in equal measure.
Eventually, Kittrich shrugged and pulled her jumpsuit back on. Vaber stepped forward, pressed his palm against the lock to Jessa’s cell, and stood back as the door swung open.
“If you’d care to accompany us, Doctor Lambert?”
She did. Forwards through the labyrinth of corridors that made up the Kingfisher’s innards, up in faintly malodorous lifts; all the time screwing down a barrier over her churning thoughts, and trying to her ignore her equally turbulent stomach.
All too soon, the hatch to the bridge arrived to meet her. Taking the deepest breath of her life, and smiling grimly at her two companions, she stepped in to face her fate.
The bridge had been laid out just as it had been for Jaime’s kangaroo court.
A rickety wooden frame stood in the middle of the room, a few metres in front of the currently vacant captain’s chair. The few crew members unlucky enough to be on duty right now were doing their best to ignore it, but on either side stood Flopsy and Mopsy, each facing its only current occupant.
“Harlan!” she called.
“Jessa!” he replied, looking towards her, and flashing her a confident grin. It was obviously fake, but it was still good to see. She fired back a smile of her own; not entirely counterfeit, and hurried over to join him.
“Silence, prisoners,” Flopsy warned. They both ignored it. Upon reaching her husband, Jessa sprang forward, throwing her arms around him and almost bowling him over. Shem tightened her grip around him, and pressed her hair against his temple
“Not so bad,” he said, “Although the way things are going it’s looking like you wasted your time fixing my leg.”
“Silence!” Flopsy repeated. “I am authorised to exercise punishment if you fail to comply.”
By mutual consent they stopped talking, but they continued to hold each other. Jessa felt his breath on her neck, her brown hair swaying slightly each time he exhaled. For her part, she simply held on as tightly as her strength would allow.
Suddenly Mopsy broke the moment.
“All rise for her honour, Judge Cottontail.”
The bedraggled bridge crew stood to a ragged attention. It was only then that Jessa noticed Hennis as he rose from Jaime’s chair. It was brutally unsubtle message. Once you two are dead, I’ll be First Officer. Hennis activated a knowing, rodent-like grin. Jessa turned from him in disgust.
Moments later the door beside the viewscreen opened, and Judge Cottontail rumbled from her chambers. Keigh followed close behind, wearing a pale summer dress, and clumsily plaits that had presumably been ham-fistedly built up by a navbot.
At first glance the child captain seemed in good spirits, she always seemed to enjoy her trials. Beneath the young grin and short, skipping steps, however, Jessa could tell something was wrong. Once again Keigh was terrified, either of what she was about to do, or the consequences of refusing to do it. None of this was the kid’s fault, Jessa reminded herself, she was just a little girl horribly out of her depth.
It bothered her that that argument did not inspire an ounce of sympathy from her.
Keigh clambered up into her father’s chair.
“You can all sit down now,” she told the crew, who did so.
“The court is now in session,” Cottontail announced. “The defendants are charged with mutiny and conspiracy to commit mutiny. The penalty for these charges is death. How do the defendants plead?”
There was a moment’s silence.
“Shouldn’t we have a defence council?” Jessa whispered.
“We did,” Harlan replied, “Hails. I told her not to waste her time.”
Jessa raised her eyebrows in surprise. “Do you think that’s wise?” she hissed.”Silence!” the judge boomed. “Silence or you shall be held in contempt of court, for which the penalty is death.”
Harlan looked coldly at the judge.
“I didn’t want Hails defending us because I wanted to represent myself. That makes me my own council, and my wife’s council. So how can I not be allowed to speak to my client?”
Another pause.
“You have no need for conversation,” Keigh said eventually, her tone betraying the fact that she couldn’t understand what she was saying, “Since it is obvious that you are utterly guilty of the charges brought against you.”
“Objection!” Harlan called out.
“Overruled,” responded Cottontail.
“You can’t just-“
“Overruled!” Cottontail repeated, louder this time. “There will be no more interruptions from the defendants. Any further objections, and you will be held in contempt of court.”
This is going well, Jessa thought.
“Prosecution?” Cottontail asked, swivelling on its tracks to face Flopsy.
Flopsy rolled slightly forward.
“I call my first witness: Lieutenant-Commander Hennis.”
Hennis stood and, smoothing his jumpsuit with his hands, stepped in front of the defendant’s stand.
“Do you swear to tell the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth, so help you God?” Flopsy asked.
“I do,” Hennis replied with mock seriousness.
Where was Keigh getting this crap from, Jessa wondered distantly? Was this how she thought trials were supposed to be run, or was she being fed it by her father? It was probably a mixture of both. Part of her just wanted this over and done with, whatever the verdict.
“Please explain to the court what you witnessed yesterday.”
Jessa felt Harlan stiffen with that, but he kept his mouth closed.
Hennis directed his reply to the captain’s chair.
“Whilst on what we believed at the time to be a routine maintenance EVA, I watched Flopsy float right off the hull of the ship. Took us three hours to recover it. I mean her,” he said, smiling at Keigh.
“And what caused this to occur?”
“Her logs showed she received a request for a jump calculation. Ordinarily, that wouldn’t matter, but with her safety routines shut down, she had no reason not to devote her full processing power to the calculation. She had nothing left to keep herself on the hull.”
“Who ordered the jump calculation?” the prosecution asked.
Hennis turned round to face the accused.”Doctor Lambert.”
“You treacherous shit!” Harlan shouted.
“Shut up!” Keigh screamed, her face contorted by a fury beyond anything a five-year old should be able to express. Her eyes bulged from their sockets, and her breathing came in harsh gasps. Her knuckles shone white as she squeezed at the arms of her chair.
Abruptly she seemed to calm down. A look of exhaustion flashed across her face.
Mood swings on top of everything, Jessa’s instincts flashed up. Keigh’s mind was slipping. Or breaking up. Either way, Gabe was pushing harder and harder against his prison walls inside his daughter’s brain. It was only a matter of time before he took full control, breaking Keigh’s consciousness in two in the process. And given his obvious insanity, that was going to be disastrous for the Kingfisher.
That just might be their way out.
“If you continue to interrupt, Mr Summers,” she said icily, “I will decide it isn’t worth waiting for the end of the trial to have you executed.”
“Prosecutor, please continue.”
There was a faint whine as Flopsy’s mechanical eyes refocused.
“I call my second witness, Lieutenant Gallagher.”
Gallagher shuffled over from comms. His face was crestfallen, and he took great pains to avoid eye contact.
You’d think he was the one about to die, Jessa thought uncharitably.
“Lieutenant Gallagher,” Flopsy said once the unwilling officer reached his destination, “Could you explain why Lieutenant-Commander Summers is also on trial today?”
“Mr Hennis searched Harlan when he got back on board,” Gallagher said. “He said they found a device on him.”
“What kind of device?”
There was a long pause. Gallagher glanced round at Harlan, who stared back without sympathy.
“Mr Gallagher?” Keigh prompted, a hint of a threat in her voice.
“We couldn’t be sure, but it seemed to be a transmitter,” Gallagher eventually offered. “I checked recent traffic, and I managed to sniff out a signal, broadcast from the Kingfisher at the exact same time Flopsy lost her grip.”
“Your honour?” said Flopsy, turning to face its fellow, “The prosecution rests.”
“Thank you,” replied Cottontail. “The jury will now pronounce sentence.”
“What?” Harlan murmured, “Don’t I get to ride this kangaroo?”
Justice was rapidly served.
“We find the defendants guilty” Mopsy pronounced.
“You have been found guilty of mutiny and conspiracy to commit mutiny,” Keigh said, rising from her chair. “The sentence is death. Mopsy, Flopsy?”
The two robots started forward.
“Just a second!” Jessa exclaimed.
The navbots ignored her.
“Hey; bitch!” Jessica bellowed, “Listen the fuck up!”
The executioners paused.
“How dare you?” Keigh spat, her small face contorted by rage.
“You can’t kill me,” Jessa said desperately, trying not to look at the deadly robots on either side of her, “I was the one you roped into performing your mind-dump. If you kill me, and then something goes wrong, what are you going to do about it?”
Keigh paused for a second to consider.”Doctor Mtenga can aid me just as well as you.” The captain turned back to her robots.
“Are you sure, Keigh? Really, absolutely sure? If anything happens to you, who’s going to finish off this little jihad of yours?”
The young captain said nothing for a moment, her father’s desire for bloodshed fighting against his fear of death. Or perhaps it was her own instinct for self-preservation. If indeed there was still any point in making a distinction between them.
Finally, the decision was made.
“Very well, Doctor. We will spare you for now. Flopsy, Mopsy; just kill Summers.”
“Shit!” Harlan leaped from the stand, retreating from the advancing killers.
“You kill him, Keigh, and we’re finished. Doctor or not, I won’t help you. I’ll sit back and smile as I watch you rot.”
Keigh ignored her. Harlan backed against the viewscreen. The starfield framed his terrified face as the robots bore down on him.
Desperately, Jessa kept trying.
“You can feel it, can’t you, captain? The pressure building in your skull. The headaches. The mind-dump is disintegrating. And I’m the only one who can glues it back together.” There was a cry from behind her as the robots grabbed their prey. Jessa could not bear to turn round, could not bear to see her husband killed. She closed her eyes and waited for the scream.
It never came.
Opening her eyes again, Jessa turned. The robots held Harlan by the arms, and clearly he was still terrified, but he was still alive; the navbots stood unmoving.
She returned her gaze to Keigh.
“Agreed, Doctor. You and your husband will be spared, in exchange for ensuring my condition does not deteriorate.”
Jessa breathed out. It had all been a bluff, for all she knew the headaches were a perfectly natural side-effect of the procedure, but apparently it had saved them.
With her head swimming, she stood down from her wooden cage.
“However,” Keigh continued, “I would hardly be fit to be called captain if I let mutiny go entirely unpunished.”
“Mopsy? Tear off his arm.”
“What?” Jessa exclaimed in disbelief.
Harlan screamed behind her. She span round. Blood spattered her face, got in her eyes; but she could still see Harlan on the floor, blood pouring from the ruined stump of his left upper arm. Mopsy stood beside him, flecked with red, its massive fists wrapped around her husband’s severed limb. Casually it let the arm drop onto its former owner.
Harlan should have passed out; but something kept him awake. His face was white from shock, but he kept trying to get to his feet, using his remaining arm in an attempt to push himself up.
Jessa ran to her stricken spouse.
“Stay down,” she told him urgently; “I’ll try to stop the bleeding.” She looked over her shoulder. “Gallagher, get Mtenga up here with a trauma team.”
“It’s…OK,” Harlan replied through gritted teeth. “Geiss’ toy worked like…like a charm. I got the message off. Help’s on the way.”
Jessa tore away the sleeve of her jumpsuit, began tying round the stump, hoping to staunch the endless flow of blood. The liquid made her grip sticky, her hands warm.
“Where the hell is my trauma team?” she shouted.
“On its way,” Gallagher assured her.
“Christ, its cold,” Harlan murmured, abandoning his attempts to stand, and relaxing against the floor.
“Just hold on, baby, you’re gonna be fine,” she assured him.
Harlan responded by lapsing into unconsciousness. The pool of blood beneath him continued to grow, more slowly perhaps, but it was still growing.
Jessa wiped blood and saltwater from her face with the back of her fist. The blood already on her hands and the new influx of tears made the motion pointless. Her work on her tourniquet done, she lay beside her husband, holding him. He hadn’t been wrong, he was quite terrifyingly cold.
Help was on the way, but how could it possibly arrive in time?

Thursday, 12 February 2009

Commanding The Kingfisher (Part 5)

5th March

Harlan had followed a lot of weird orders aboard the Kingfisher, these were strange times; but “Convert the mess hall into a secure conference room for potentially hostile giant centipedes” had to rank right up at the top of his “WTF?” scale.
An irksome task was made all the more frustrating for having Davis buzzing around him, offering hints and suggestions which ranged from the obvious to the impossible to the utterly ludicrous.
“We might impress our R’Dokken visitors if we laid out some sea-food, like a finger buffet, perhaps,” Davis said, his voice becoming more pompous the more effort Harlan put into tuning him out. The XCO grinned wolfishly. “Or should that be-”
“If you say “Should that be a tentacle buffet?” I’m going to rip out your eyeballs, dust them in sugar, and use them as our hors d’ouvres; clear?”
Davis lapsed into a sulky silence, which suited Harlan just fine. Sod food, he thought; they’ll just have to bring a packed lunch.
Having dragged another of the functional metal tables into place, he stood back to admire his handiwork.
The only thing Harlan really knew for sure about a conference room was that it would have a big table. Clutching to this one flake of knowledge like a drowning man to driftwood, he had constructed the largest such furnishing his materials and common sense would allow. Six tables, each large enough to fit a dozen people around them, had been pushed together in the middle of the room. He had set three chairs on one side, one each for himself, Captain Merriman, and Davis. After some thought he had left the opposite side clear. It wasn’t as if the R’Dokken would be able to use chairs, and although in theory he could give each one a long snake of cushions to lounge upon, Davis had claimed it might “offend their warrior honour.” Harlan hadn’t argued, since it saved him some work. Why the hell couldn’t Jaime do this? Harlan could run the bridge, and Jaime could worry about offending aliens with putting a soup spoon where the fish knife should go.
Sighing at his misfortune, he activated his communicator.
“Summers to Captain Merriman. We’re ready here, sir.”
“Nick of time, Lieutenant-Commander. We’ll be there in a moment.”
Severing the link, Harlan turned to find Davis slumped sulkily in his chair, head in his hands. Harlan sat down, and began drumming his fingers on the table.
“Could you not do that, please,” said Davis through his fingers.
“Where would the fun be in that?” Harlan replied.
It was then that the door slid open. Harlan and Davis leapt to attention.
Captain Merriman was the first through, saluting the security guard Harlan had assigned outside the door as he did so. Immediately, he stood to one side, allowing the first “ambassador” to enter.
Harlan had met R’Dokken before, of course, probably more than most humans, but it still made him catch his breath and sweat a little each time he repeated the experience.
The oddly graceful sea creature was gone, and in its place stood an armoured monstrosity. Endless pairs of thick black segmented legs supported a dark-red body, divided into dozens of sections studded irregularly with lethal-looking spines. The helmet looked almost insectoid; its centre was taken up by a huge compound eye (actually a complex grouping of pressure and sonic sensors, according to XI), around which three thin strips of pale yellow had been painted. The massive feeder tentacles were currently coiled like a butterfly’s tongue.
Once the first alien finally cleared the door frame, it scuttled to the table, and coiled itself up like a snake; holding to the table with its feeder tentacles. A few moments later its companion entered the room and followed suit, taking up position a few feet from the first. It was smaller than its partner, and it lacked the yellow stripes on its helmet. Perhaps they were an expression of rank
The last to enter was another security guard, his face studiously neutral, who stopped beside and then closed the door.
“At ease, gentlemen,” Gabe said, as he strode to his seat. “Let’s get down to business, shall we?”
The humans settled down, and faced their alien guests. Translating their body language was almost impossible, but Harlan sensed something odd about the creatures’ mood, something he hadn’t seen before. They seemed to be gripping the table more tightly than was necessary, and their tentacles kept twitching where they met the helmet.
What the Hell was going on?
“I hope you don’t mind if we skip the pleasantries,” Gabe said levelly; “I’m no diplomat, and I’d rather we just get to the point.”
“Of course, Captain,” came a flat voice from a small grille beneath the first alien’s helmet. “You must understand, however, that this is not an easy process for us. Neither one of us have ever met a human outside the waters of battle.”
The Captain’s mouth twitched in distaste. “I appreciate your position, Mr Ambassador, and your… candour. I’ll make this quick and easy. Where is the prospecting team you kidnapped in the Edelweiss system?”
A wave of motion ran down the ambassador’s legs.
““Abducted”, Captain? Your prospectors were attempting to mine an asteroid within R’Dokken territory; we were well within our rights to detain them.”
“Edelweiss is disputed territory,” Harlan pointed out, “So let’s not start flinging our “rights” about, Mr Ambassador”.
Both aliens let go of the table, and reared up on their coils. Harlan could translate that, at least.
“We will not be accused in our own territory,” the ambassador said, the lifeless tones of the translator betraying no sign of its obvious anger. “This meeting is an obvious mistake.”
“Honoured guests, please,” Davis said calmly. “Our fellow has no intention of accusation. Through accuracy is truth obtained, is this not so?”A pause.
“It is so,” the ambassador agreed at last.
“None at this table wish to contest your claims to the Edelweiss system, but I am sure you agree that our treaty stipulates the return of any interlopers to human space for trial.”
The xenocs settled themselves again.
“It is so.”
Harlan raised an eyebrow. Loathe as he was to admit it, he was more than a little impressed. Obviously Davis’ infuriating personality didn’t translate across the species divide.
“So?” asked the captain. “How are we going to do this? A rendezvous here, or are you wanting us to head on down to the port?”
Another pause. The tremors in the alien’s tentacles seemed to grow slightly.
“Your fellows are dead.”
The captain frowned.
“Careful, Ambassador. Callum and I have been friends a long time. If this is some kind of R’Dokken joke, then-”
“This is not our humour, Captain. Through accuracy is truth obtained.”
There was a long moment while Gabe stared hard at the alien.
“Well, if it isn’t a joke, then it’s an act of war,” he said at last, each word slow and precise, ensuring there could be no misunderstanding. “In accordance with our treaty, I shall declare you under a flag of truce, and allow you to leave, after which-”
The aliens raised themselves up once more.
“You accuse us again?”
“What?” Gabe spat.
“You didn’t kill them?” asked Harlan, just as confused.
For a moment, the aliens begin to twist their bodies, like cobras in a basket. It was as impossible to read as their earlier gestures; but Davis’ face had completely drained of blood.
Then, abruptly, the aliens seemed to calm down.
“We found your fellows dead upon the asteroid they had infested,” the ambassador told them.
“Then why tell drag us all the way out here?” asked the captain, clearly confused. “Just what the Hell are you up to?”
Rather than reply, the ambassador made a chopping motion with the end of one feeder tentacle.
In response, its companion reared up, and brought itself down on the table.
Automatically the three men jumped to their feet. The Security Guard by the door drew his pistol.
“Stand down!” Gabe shouted.
The R’Dokken on the table began to spasm violently, once; twice. On the third twist, its suit disgorged a device quite unlike anything Harlan had ever seen before. In shape it bore some resemblance to a sea-urchin, a foot in diameter. Rather than spines, however, it was studded with twisted hexagonal prisms, predominantly black but fading to creamy white at the tips. Every few seconds, the prisms would twist themselves into a new configuration. The effect was more than a little unsettling.
For a moment, no-one spoke, as their brains tried to comprehend what they were seeing.
Then:”I’m sorry to be the one asking the obvious question,” Harlan said at last, “But what in the name of God is that?”
“Your fellows unearthed this artifact on the asteroid,” was the response. “It is for this reason that your presence here was desired. Have you seen such a device before?”
The captain shook his head. Then, perhaps realising the aliens would have no idea what the gesture meant, he said:”No. And I’m in absolutely no mood for a R’Dokken puzzle box. For aliens who find prolonged human contact so difficult, you seem to be having a great deal of trouble getting to the point.”
“We believe that the entity or entities responsible for your fellows’ deaths was or were attempting to acquire or perhaps reacquire this object. We do not know what makes this artifact so important, nor in fact what it is. We have never encountered such a device before. We had hoped that perhaps you had.”
“You seem awfully interested in how a few dozen humans died,” Harlan pointed out acidly. “I find that surprising, when you consider how many people your kind has murdered over the last decade.”
The R’Dokken rippled its legs, but in a very different manner to its expression earlier. It was hard to keep up with all these strange physical signals.
“Your speech betrays limited vision, human. Had our labourers been the one to find this object on the asteroid, it would have been they who lost their lives.”
Davis wrenched a notebook from his pocket, and began scribbling furiously.
The captain nodded, finally understanding.
“And for all you know, this could happen again.”
The R’Dokken stopped moving its appendages.
“Precisely.”
Davis finished writing, and thrust the pad under the captain’s nose. Harlan craned his neck to read what was on it.
HOW BAD MUST IT HAVE BEEN OUT THERE IF THE KELLAREALM XENOCS ARE WORRIED ABOUT IT?
The captain nodded. Harlan wasn’t sure whether the gesture was aimed at the R’Dokken, or at Davis.
“Right; I’m convinced. Mr Summers, go grab a portable terminal, and we’ll see if we can’t find something in the ‘base about our little friend here.”
“Yes sir,” Harlan said, making a great show of eyeing the aliens with suspicion before leaving the room.
The nearest terminal couldn’t be more than two minutes away; he’d be back in five.
What could happen in five minutes?

***

Klaxons sounded the length of the ship, screaming at Jessa to respond.
She felt sweat running down her face, fatigue worming through her legs. She had only been running for a few minutes, but her ponderous, claustrophobic bio-hazard suit choked her with its heat and exhausted with its heaviness. It would be better to slow down, she knew, risk arriving at the trauma scene a few moments later, rather than too worn out to perform her job.
Except that it was her husband down there.
Reaching the blast door that separated her from Harlan, she swore loudly. There was no way she could get inside until she sealed off this section of corridor, and she couldn’t do that until the rest of the medical team arrived.
It only took a few moments for them to rejoin her, but each second that dragged by increased the pressure inside her chest.
Eventually Doctor Mtenga and the nurse whose name Jessa could never remember ambled into view.
The moment both had were close enough, Jessa sent the blast doors crashing down, cutting them off from the rest of the ship.
“Hey!” shouted the nurse; the door had clashed against the deck less than three feet from her foot.
Jessa shrugged dispassionately, an expression more or less lost through the suit. She took a deep breath of stale, recycled air.
“Let’s go to work.”
She turned to the door in front of her, and punched her override code into its keypad. The door swung upward, finally revealing the canteen corridor.
Even after what happened later, Jessa was never able to clear the image of what she saw from her mind, or from her nightmares
Desperate though she was to get to her husband, it was the body of the R’Dokken that caught her eye first. It lay sprawled across the metal floor, part of its length still inside the canteen through a jagged hole in the door. Thick yellow blood surrounded the creature, and Jessa could make out several vicious holes in its flank. The creature twitched periodically, but it was clearly dead.
Harlan lay a few metres further down the corridor. Jessa gasped inside her helmet when she saw him. Clearly unconscious, her husband lay against the corridor’s wall. His right leg bore a crude bandage and tourniquet, fashioned from someone’s uniform and a large sliver of metal from the ruin of the canteen’s door, but even so his wound was horribly obvious. The limb was awash with dark red blood; Jessa could almost see the stain on his bandage growing.
Fixed to his face was an emergency breather. A security guard crouched over him, her left jumpsuit arm torn away, her face similarly enclosed. She was watching Harlan’s face intently through the breather’s window.
Jessa sprinted over to her patient as quickly as her suit would allow, Mtenga and the nurse following.
“What happened here?” she asked breathlessly through the speaker on her suit, kneeling beside Harlan. He hadn’t been sick in his breather, thank God he appeared to be breathing normally. With that checked, she began to inspect his leg.
“Fucking ‘pede smashed right through the door,” the guard growled through her own speaker. The name on her breast read Kittrich. “Knocked me against the wall with one of those huge fuck-off tentacles. Took me a few moments to come round. Saw Summers chuck a terminal at the ‘pede; hit the fucker, too. Damn thing just reared up and landed on right top of him. Summers got stabbed by one of its legs. I heard the sound as it pulled out of him; it was fucking horrible. So I pulled out my Gorgon and started shooting. Kept going ‘til it fell over.”
“This work yours?” Jessa asked, nodding at the tourniquet. It was inexpertly applied, but still, it had likely saved Harlan’s life, or at least his leg. “Nurse; slapseal please.”
The guard nodded at her missing sleeve.
“First aid 101 to the rescue. I heard the bio-hazard alarm, so I grabbed some breathers for me and him. After that, I sorted out his leg, best I could anyway.”
Jessa carefully removed the impromptu dressing, prompting a fresh bout of bleeding which she staunched with the slapseal handed her by the nurse.
“What about the captain and Davis?” she asked.
Kittrich shrugged.
“They’re still in the canteen. Another guard, too; Svensson. But I can’t shift that fucking ‘pede to get in there.”
“Then that’s our next job. Doctor, nurse? Let’s move that thing and get to the captain.”
None of the medical personnel was particularly strong, but Kittrich took most of the strain, and they managed to pull the R’Dokken through the door with reasonable speed.
The clock on her suit display told Jessa that by the time they finally entered the canteen, six minutes and forty seconds had elapsed since the beginning of the crisis.
In the intervening time, the canteen had transformed into a scene from a nightmare.
Just beside the now ruined door laid the remains of the guard Svensson. He had been torn almost in half from groin to chin; he lay in the centre of a nauseating spray pattern of blood and viscera. Various internal organs dotted the deck in front of his body.
The second dead body in the room was that of the smaller R’Dokken. At least, Jessa assumed it was dead. Aside from its motionlessness, the evil-looking environment suit gave no clue as to the condition of its wearer.
All of this Jessa took within the first second of entering the room. After that, her full attention was fixated on the survivors.
The captain and Davis were on the floor beyond a half dozen pushed-together tables. Each was convulsing violently, slamming their limbs so hard against the floor and tables that Jessa was terrified they would seriously injure themselves. The deck around them was already slick with bile.
“Over here!” Jessa shouted, and they rushed over to the stricken crewmen.
It didn’t take a doctor to see they were in dire straights. The captain’s face was almost white; his nostrils flecked with blood. When she pulled open his eyes to gauge the response of his pupils she noticed webs of broken capillaries across his eyes, turning them a disturbing red-pink colour.
She was trying to simultaneously keep the captain still and check his pulse (a process that had to be done by machine when in a suit) when he vomited spectacularly all over her; chunks of food and stomach and gobbets of blood. Suddenly she was very glad for her protective clothing.
Mtenga was busy examining Davis. The nurse was busy helping him hold his patient down. It was not a simple task; too gentle and Mtenga would never succeed in his diagnosis; too hard and Davis would dislocate something trying to wrench himself free.
“How’s he doing?” Jessa asked.
“Pulse-rate’s shallow; and his pupil’s won’t respond,” he replied in his thick Zimbabwe accent.
“Same here. We’re going to have to move them.”
Davis suddenly broke free of the nurse’s grip; his flailing arm knocked the scanner from Mtenga’s hand, sending it clattering across the floor.
“You’re sure that’s wise?” the doctor asked.
“We haven’t a sodding clue what’s happening to them,” Jessa said, her voice harsh from pressure and fear, “We need to –Christ, stop struggling-, we need to scan them in the med bay.”
Years of medical training took over her turbulent thoughts.
“Nurse, get these two breathers; it’s probably too late, but we I don’t want anything else getting to them. Lambert to med bay; three stretchers to the canteen. Full quarantine.” She shut off the link before there was time for med bay to respond.
“You there,” this was directed at Kittrich, who was hovering by the door, weapon trained on the apparently lifeless alien a few feet away, “I want you to stay by the blast doors. The instant we’re all clear, I want the atmosphere in here flushed; Security Code Med-258 Alpha.” She could always change her codes after this crisis.
The guard nodded and left the room.
“Mtenga, let Davis go, and we’ll move the tables away; try to minimise the damage they do themselves.”
All three of them stood upright. For the moment, there was nothing more they could do.
Once again Jessa felt time creeping away, felt a jolt at each red-etched second as it arrived and departed from her suit’s clock.
Just how far was this going to go?