Hunter came in and reported. “The crime scene team has arrived and the access tunnel has been secured.” He took in the container’s contents and for the first time ever I saw him at a loss. “There is…considerable wealth here.”
“Almost certainly counterfeit.”
“Of course.” He was back in control that quickly. “Shall I inform the UNF authorities that they can recover their pharmaceuticals as soon as the team has finished their sweep?”
“I’ll do it; you take over here.” His practicality reminded me that there was plenty of work to be done. The bay was secure and the sweepers would give me a report. I had to start coordinating the authorities whose jurisdictions were on Merral’s destination list. It was a big criminal organization. Not everyone would get warned in time. A lot of crooks were about to get caught.
Johansen came in with First Tracker in tow. I took some time to fill them in on the findings and set them to tracing our runner. The sweepers were already at work in the bay by the time I left. I tubed back to the office and got the paperwork under way. I’d only been at my desk half an hour when the screen chimed. I punched the call through. It was Suze.
“Hi, am I interrupting anything?”
I smiled. “Big exciting things, but I’m glad you called anyway.”
“Why don’t you knock off early and tell me about them?” Her smile was rich in promises.
“I really shouldn’t…” I looked at my long list of to-do’s “…but what the hell.” Any excuse to dodge paperwork. A twelve-hour delay wouldn’t make much difference in the course of the investigation. I was just sending preliminary reports anyway. Most of the information I needed wouldn’t be back from the field lab until tomorrow.
“Great, your apt, thirty minutes. I’ll order dinner.”
“Sold.” She punched off and I stored my work in progress.
Suze was waiting at the door when I got to my apt. I thumbed the plate and kissed her. We went in and I unslung my patrol pack and hung it on a hook by the door. She looked at it with curiosity.
“You carry a gun?”
“It’s just a stunner.”
“Does that have anything to do with your big exciting happenings?”
“Not a whole lot as it turns out. We closed down an Isolationist smuggling operation in an abandoned container bay today. And we know who killed Miranda.”
“Who?”
“The Isolationists.” I paused, then shut up. I’d been about to tell her about their organlegging operation, but there was no need to upset her.
She didn’t notice my hesitation. “Catch anyone?”
“Not yet, but we will. We got a big pile of stolen drugs and about a billion in counterfeit krona as well.”
She whistled. “That is big and exciting.”
I grinned, still very pleased with the success. “I have to convince the management that I’m earning my pay.”
“You won’t get fired this week anyway.” She reached past me and took my pack off the wall. “What else do you carry?”
“Just what you’d expect. Comm unit, binders, medkit, beltcomp, shockrod, that sort of thing.”
She opened the pouch and examined the medkit. It was ARM issue on Earth, more advanced than what was given out here. “You’re ready for anything, aren’t you?”
“As much as I can be.”
She took out the binders, simple double circlets of stainless steel—very low tech. She locked one cuff to her right wrist.
“Anything at all?”
She held out her arms towards me, wrists together. Her eyes were high voltage arcs. She wore a look of invitation and defiance—“I dare you.”
I walked over and gently took her hands. Her gaze didn’t waver. Without breaking eye contact, I lifted the other cuff and closed it around her left wrist. The lock is usually inaudible. This time the click sounded like a gunshot.
She parted her lips. I pulled her arms over her head and kissed her fervently, pulling her pliant body hard against mine. Eventually, I picked her up and carried her to the bedroom. My apt is on the .8G level and she was as light as a feather in my arms.
The screen chimed, though I had it set for privacy, dragging me out of a deep sleep. Priority call. I punched it through and got the Goldskin dispatcher. Emergency. Johansen had arrested a suspect and shots had been fired. She was hit—no word on her condition yet—and the suspect was fleeing. The Goldskins were in pursuit but weren’t pressing their quarry. He had a strakakker and was moving along a pedestrian promenade. They didn’t want to provoke a firefight.
I didn’t blame them. I punched the dispatcher into audio only and patched in security surveillance. They’d be following him on the monitors. The screen showed a crowded arcade from halfway up one wall. A surging disturbance in the throng marked the escaper. He was a dark-haired Wunderlander, running awkwardly in the low G, brandishing his weapon and screaming. People were desperately scrambling out of his way. As I watched, a startled kzin leapt straight up and grabbed a light fixture on the ceiling fifty feet overhead. The fugitive jerked his gun up to cover the sudden motion but didn’t fire. Between his panic and lack of coordination, it was a miracle he hadn’t already emptied the strakakker into the crowd. One hint of pursuit and he’d do just that. The Goldskins had made the right choice. Let him run, exhaust himself and then hole up somewhere. Even if he took hostages and wound up killing them all it would be no worse than a shootout down on that floor. Hopefully, it would turn out much better.
Hopefully.
Suze came up behind me, rubbing sleep from her eyes and looking very fetching with her hair tousled into a fiery halo and wearing an oversized jump-shirt from my wardrobe.
“What’s going on?”
I spoke quickly. “We’ve got a runner. Tammy tagged a suspect from the container bay bust and got shot.”
The dispatcher was still waiting for instructions. I split the screen and punched up Control’s map. I got a floating 3D planview of the arcade and the levels around it. The fugitive was a tiny red ball on the .3G level, heading down-axis. Gold spheres marked the cops positioned around his route, moving to get ahead of him but staying out of the way. As long as he didn’t open fire they’d stay there. Clusters of blue-marked med teams held in readiness. Control had sealed the pressure doors behind him but not ahead. Any route he chose was fine with them as long as it was off that arcade. I zoomed the map out and punched up a history trace. A red line showed his path. He was panicked but he wasn’t running blindly. He was going straight down-axis, moving in every time he had a chance. He was heading for the low-G industrial zone near Tigertown.
Heading for the down-axis hub.
I told the dispatcher as much and blanked the screen. Suze was looking over my shoulder and I nearly knocked her over as I got up to grab my clothes. I threw them on in record time and grabbed my patrol pack. At the door I paused long enough to kiss her good-bye.
“Back soon.”
She grabbed me with surprising strength, kissed me hard and whispered fiercely in my ear. “Don’t let him live.”
“What?” I said, taken aback, not understanding.
“Don’t let him live. If he’s caught, there’ll be a trial. He’s an Isolationist, they can buy the court or blackmail it or break him out. He’ll get away. It’s not right, after what they did to that girl.” Her gaze was intense, burning blue. “If he’s shot while escaping…” She let her voice trail off.
She didn’t need to say more. I kissed her fiercely and left.
Control had a tube car ready and held on standby. I jumped in, thumbed the plate and the door slid shut. The route panel was already set for the down-axis hub. The dispatcher obligingly shunted everyone else out of my way and I made the thirty-kilometer trip in record time. On the way, I thought about Suze’s plea. An armed and dangerous fugitive killed while fleeing arrest. There would be no questions if I ordered shoot to kill. We’d lose the chance to interrogate him of course, but he wouldn’t evade justice—and it woul
d be justice. Even if he wasn’t an Isolationist with blood on his hands, he’d proved murderous intent by shooting Johansen.
Frontier justice. It wasn’t the way the ARM did business on Earth, but this wasn’t Earth. Maybe I should issue shoot to kill orders anyway. It was a reasonable response given the situation. I had to think of the danger to my troops as well. Stunners don’t have a lot of range and if the runner got off a burst before going down it would be messy, even if we fired first. Pulse rifles would more than even the odds.
I decided to wait and see. Any risk of a firefight, I’d give the order, but not until. I’d played by the rules since I’d arrived and I wasn’t going to go back now.
In the end it didn’t matter. It was all over when I got there. The runner went straight for the down-axis hub. Control evacuated the accessways and when he got inside an empty corridor they sealed him in. His strakakker was loaded with armor-piercing explosive ammunition and he emptied it trying to blow open the plasteel pressure doors. When they failed to yield sufficiently, he reloaded and blew his head off instead.
Armor-piercing explosive. I felt sick as I remembered Johansen. I called the medical section and asked how she was, dreading the answer I knew I would get. Tammy took five rounds point-blank from her left hip to her right shoulder. Her body armor was blasted to ribbons absorbing the detonations. She might as well have been naked, she was dead on the scene. First Tracker took rounds in the thigh, belly and chest but his heavier kzin armor and built-for-battle physique saved his life—hopefully. The doctors would rebuild his devastated abdominal cavity and autoclone replacements for damaged organs and limbs, if he made it through the night.
He’d called in the shooting and the suspect, tourniqued his femoral artery and was giving CPR to Johansen when the crash team arrived. I’d pin his medal on myself.
If he made it through the night.
I screened Tam’s journal for information. She’d done a search on the transit system logs for anyone who boarded a tube car in the access corridor to J2 up to five minutes after Hunter and I had chased our quarry from the container bay. One of the names on that list was a drive technician—HJ3U659A Wurzmann. Peter K. Wurzmann was suspected of smuggling but never charged through lack of evidence. Wurzmann took the tube to his apt, then another to the down-axis hub where he’d boarded the mining ship Voidtrekker. Johansen was on to him by then, but the police tag went on his ident seven seconds after he’d passed customs. Voidtrekker cleared docking control ten minutes after that and left on a prospecting trajectory that was bound to be a total fabrication. A comm check showed Wurzmann made four calls—Voidtrekker’s captain, a co-worker, a Wunderland tourist, and a Wunderland doctor named Joachim Weiss. The last call was marked NO ANSWER. Comm checks on the recipients expanded the list to sixteen names. Fifteen people had taken off with Voidtrekker—everyone on the comm list except Weiss. Weiss was the one with the strakakker.
So we’d flushed our quarry and they’d fled. I guessed the Wunderlanders were Isolationists and the Belters were contract smugglers. They were probably the entire control cell for 19J2—and they were all out of reach.
I screened Hunter and got him to take a search unit down to Weiss’s apt. His lips were twitching back to expose his fangs, his speech laden with snarls and heavy with threats. He was barely under control. He took Johansen’s death and Tracker’s wounding as personal insults. After that, I called up the navy and asked them about intercepting Voidtrekker. A competent-looking commander told me the odds of an intercept were a little less than one in ten. Voidtrekker was polarizer driven, which meant she could put a lot of distance between herself and Tiamat in a very short time. A smuggler ship would have shielded monopoles in her drive, making tracking impossible. Once she cleared Tiamat’s control sphere she’d be very difficult to pick up.
“Will the navy try anyway?” I asked.
“There’s no question involved.” The officer checked something off-screen for a second. “We’ll have three ships boosting in the next two hours.”
I gave my thanks and rang off.
After that, I went over Dr. Weiss’s file again. The Provos had him tagged as Isolationist leaning—that was nothing, most Wunderlanders were. Everything else told me he was Miranda’s killer. When the Goldskins had printed him for ID they’d gotten two files back. His retinas said he was Joachim Weiss, his fingertips said he was a bio-engineer named Cas Wentsel. Wentsel was on the Inferno’s customer list for the night Miranda was killed and his movements for that night took him past the accessway to container bay J2. Weiss arrived on Tiamat just one day after Miranda, on the next available flight from Wunderland. He fit the physical description from the Inferno, such as it was. He was qualified to perform Class 3 surgery. I pulled up his library list. It was hopelessly technical but I gleaned all I needed to know from the titles—fifty-year-obsolete manuals about tissue preservation and rejection control. They amounted to a primer for organleggers.
Tamara was avenged. Miranda was avenged. I tagged her case file CLOSED.
I didn’t feel the usual satisfaction I get when I close a case. Miranda and Tammy were still gone, Weiss’s death wouldn’t bring them back. His cohorts had escaped. The elation I’d felt when we’d shut down J2 was overshadowed by helpless frustration. On a hunch I pulled up his client files. Miranda Holtzman had been his patient since she was six. That was how he knew she was a universal donor, that was why she’d left the bounce-box with him. I felt ill.
It was late. In the morning I’d open a new case file on the flight of the Voidtrekker. I switched off the system and went home.
When I got back, Suze had gone out. I didn’t blame her, but I did miss her. The events of the night and Johansen’s death had left me totally drained. I fell into an exhausted slumber. Sometime later I felt her slip into bed and snuggle against me, warm and soft. She gently kissed the back of my neck and I went back to sleep, feeling better.
The next morning Hunter was waiting for me.
“You are late. We have had developments.”
“Why didn’t you call me?”
He twitched his ears genially. “Your recreation had already been disturbed once.”
I avoided the subject. “What happened?”
“There was an explosion in the down-axis docking hub.”
“Serious?”
“Yes. The initiating explosive appears to have been thermite but the main blast and fire were caused by a volatile aerosol inside a tranship container. Damage was extensive.”
I envisioned the havoc that a two-thousand-cubic-meter sealed vapor bomb would wreak and marvelled at the kzin’s capacity for understatement. We were lucky the whole down-axis hub hadn’t been blown into space.
“What action have you taken?”
“The area has been sealed and the crime scene team is going over it.”
“Findings?”
“A human corpse has been found that appears to have been inside the transport container. The container itself was modified to support life.”
“Support life? What do you mean?”
“We have found the remains of an oxygen recycler, food supplies and other items that indicate the container was designed to carry sentients in vacuum for extended periods.”
I swore. The Isolationists had been moving people back and forth to Wunderland with perfect impunity, right under our noses. Finagle only knew how many. We’d missed a trick. Reception parties would be waiting for the thirty-six containers on Jocelyn Merral’s list when they arrived at their destinations but I hadn’t thought about intercepting them in transit. It hadn’t even occurred to me that some might still be within my grasp on Tiamat.
“What about the guards and the security monitors. How come they didn’t pick this up in progress?”
“The Port was running its normal night shift. The monitors didn’t pick up anything out of the ordinary.”
“So the perpetrator must have had access.”
“Hrrrrr…Either that or a tampered id
ent.”
“Granted. So once again we have someone operating in the down-axis hub. Someone who didn’t flee on the Voidtrekker.”
He raised a massive paw. “It would be foolish to assume that only one Isolationist cell was operating on Tiamat. I would presume we have flushed only those with a direct connection to 19J2.”
“What other information do we have?”
“Little enough. Damage was extensive. We can assume that they were willing to kill this individual rather than risk his capture.”
“Have they ID’d the body?”
“The coroner’s report has not yet been released.”
If I never spoke to Dr. Morrow again it would be too soon. I was tired of sifting through the details of dead lives. I screened his office and asked him what the delay was. He was having trouble determining if the body had been dead before the explosion or not. I told him to make the ID priority one. He asked me to wait and I watched his pleasant pastel hold patterns. Hunter grew impatient and left to pursue his own work. Fifteen minutes later Morrow was back on with the results.
I thanked him and screened the file. K8DH3N37—Klein, Maximillian H. Graphic designer, unmarried, thirty-four standard years old, fifth generation Swarm Belter. No previous arrests. He’d lived his whole life on Tiamat and worked for Canexco, a large shipping company. A bell rang in the back of my head. Miranda Holtzman’s fatal cargo container had been shipped down to Wunderland aboard the Canexco Wayfarer. Perhaps there was a connection? I called up Max’s employee file. He worked in corporate communications—nothing to do with the handling of tranship boxes but his company ident did include access to both hubs.
But what was a graphic designer doing in the container bays of the down-axis hub, with or without access? Was he involved or just caught in the wrong place at the wrong time? On a hunch I screened the composite holo created from Machine Technician’s description. It was a rough match, not good but not bad considering the sketchiness of the source. Was he the one who’d sold Miranda’s skin? Insufficient data. What was a graphic designer anyway? Presumably some sort of visual artist.