Bernhard opened his mouth and found there was hardly anything left to inhale. He concentrated his energistic power around
himself, making his body strong, fighting the sharp tingling sensation sweeping over his skin. His heart was yammering loudly
in his chest.
He punched the pressure door, making a tiny dint in the surface rim. Another punch. The first dint straightened out amid a
shimmer of red light.
“Help me!” he shrilled. The puff of air was ripped from his throat, but the cry had been directed at the infinity of souls
surrounding him. Tell Capone, he implored them silently. It’s Kiera!
He was having trouble focusing on the stubborn pressure door. He punched it again. The metal was smeared with red. It was
a fluid this time, not the backspill from energistic power warping physical reality. Bernhard dropped to his knees, fingers
scraping down the metal, desperate for a grip. The souls all around him were becoming a lot clearer.
______
“What’s that?” Jed asked. He hadn’t spoken to Gerald since they walked down the
Mindori
’s stairs, and even then it had only been to tell him the direction they were to take. They’d walked along together ever since,
trudging past the feeding hellhawks. Now they were on a section of ledge unused by either Kiera or Capone. No man’s land.
The purple physiology icons projected against his visor told their usual sorry tale: his heart-rate was too high, and his
body was hotter than it should be. This time he’d steered clear of snorting an infusion to calm his jabbering thoughts. So
far.
“Is there a problem?” Rocio asked.
“You tell me, mate.” Jed pointed at the cliff wall, fifty metres ahead. A horizontal fountain of white vapour was gushing
out of an open airlock hatch. “Looks like some kind of blow out.”
“Marie,” Gerald wheezed. “Is she there? Is she in danger?”
“No, Gerald,” Rocio said, an edge of exasperation in his voice. “She’s nowhere near you. She’s at Capone’s party, drinking
and making merry.”
“That’s a lot of air escaping,” Jed said. “The chamber must have breached. Rocio, can you see what’s going on in there?”
“I can’t access any of the sensors in the corridor behind the airlock. That section of the net has been isolated. There isn’t
even a pressure drop alert getting out to the asteroid’s environmental control centre. The corridor has been sealed. Someone’s
gone to a lot of trouble concealing whatever the hell they’re up to.”
Jed watched the spurt of gas die away. “Shall we keep going?”
“Absolutely,” Rocio said. “Don’t get involved. Don’t draw attention to yourselves.”
Jed glanced along the line of blank windows above the open airlock. They were all dim, unlit. “Sure thing.”
“Why?” Gerald asked. “What’s in there? Why don’t you want us to see? It’s Marie, isn’t it? My baby’s in there.”
“No, Gerald.”
Gerald took a few paces towards the open airlock.
“Gerald?” Beth’s voice was high, strained and excitable. “Listen to me, Gerald, she’s not in there. Okay? Marie’s not there.
I can see her, mate, there are cameras in the big hotel lobby. I’m looking at her right now. I swear it, mate. She’s in a
black and pink dress. I couldn’t make that up, now could I?”
“No!” Gerald started to run, a laboured half-bouncing motion. “You’re lying to me.”
Jed stared after him in mounting dismay. Short of letting off a flare, there was nothing more he could do to attract attention
to them.
“Jed,” Rocio said. “I’m using your private suit band, Gerald can’t hear this. You have to stop him. Whoever opened that airlock
isn’t going to want him blundering in. And they have to be a major faction player. This could ruin our whole scheme.”
“Stop him how? He’ll either shoot me or blow both of us into the bloody beyond.”
“If Gerald triggers an alarm, none of us will ever get off this rock.”
“Oh
Jeeze
.” He shook his fist helplessly at Gerald’s crazy lurching run. The loon was fifteen metres from the open airlock.
“Take a hit,” Beth said. “Chill down before you go after him.”
“Fuck off.” Jed started to run after Gerald, convinced the whole world was now watching. And worse, laughing.
Gerald reached the open airlock, and ducked inside. By the time Jed arrived half a minute later, he was nowhere to be seen.
The chamber was standard, like the one Jed had come though last time he’d gone inside this bloody awful maggot nest of rock.
He moved along it cautiously. “Gerald?”
The inner door was open. Which was deeply wrong. Jed knew all about asteroid airlocks, and one thing you could positively
not ever do was open an internal corridor to the vacuum. Not by accident. He glanced at the rectangular hatch as he passed,
seeing how the swing rods had been sheered, the melted cables around the rim seal interlock control.
“Gerald?”
“I’m losing your signal.” Rocio said. “I still can’t access the net around you. Whoever did it is still there.”
Gerald was slumped against the corridor wall, legs splayed wide in front of him. Not moving. Jed approached him cautiously.
“Gerald?”
The suit band transmitted a shallow, frightened whimper.
“Gerald, come on. We’ve got to get out of here. And no more of this crazy shit. I can’t take it any more, okay. I mean really
can’t. You’re cracking my head apart.”
One of Gerald’s gauntleted hands waved limply. Jed stared past him, down to the end of the corridor. A dangerous geyser of
vomit threatened to surge up his throat.
Bernhard Allsop’s stolen body had ruptured in a spectacular fashion as the energistic power reinforcing his flesh had vanished.
Lungs, the softest and most vulnerable tissue, had burst immediately, sending litres of blood pouring out of his mouth. Thousands
of heavily pressurized capillaries just beneath his skin had split, weeping beads of blood into the fabric of his clothes.
It looked as though his double breasted suit was made from brilliant scarlet cloth—cloth that seethed as if alive. The fluid
was boiling away into the vacuum, surrounding him with a hazy pink mist.
Jed attacked his suit wrist pad as if it was burning him. Dry air scented with peppermint and pine blew into his face. He
clamped his jaw shut against the rising vomit, turning bands of muscle to hot steel as he forced himself not to throw up.
This spacesuit wasn’t sophisticated enough to cope with him spewing.
Something loosened inside him. He coughed and spluttered, sending disgustingly tacky white bile spraying over the inside of
his visor. But his nausea was subsiding. “Oh God, oh Jeeze, he’s just pulped.”
The pine scent was strong now, thick in his helmet, draining feeling away from his limbs. His arms moved sluggishly, yet they
were as light as hydrogen. Good sensation.
Jed let out a snicker. “Guess the guy couldn’t hold it together, you know?”
“That’s not Marie.”
The processor governing Jed’s spacesuit cancelled the emergency medical suppresser infusion. The dosage had exceeded CAB limits
by a considerable margin. It automatically administered the antidote. Winter fell across Jed, chilling him so badly he held
a gauntlet up to his visor, expecting to see frost glittering on the rubbery fabric. The coloured lights flashing annoyingly
into his eyes gradually resolved into icons and digits. Someone kept chanting: “Marie, Marie, Marie.”
Jed looked at the corpse again. It was pretty hideous but it didn’t make him feel sick this time. The infusion seemed to have
switched off his internal organs. It also implanted a strong sensation of confidence, he could tackle the rest of the mission
without any trouble now.
He shook Gerald’s shoulder, which at least put an end to the dreary chanting. Gerald squirmed from the touch. “Come on, mate,
we’re leaving,” Jed said. “Got a job to do.”
A motion caught Jed’s attention. There was a face pressed up against the port in the pressure door. As he watched, the blood
smearing the little circle of glass began to flow apart. The man on the other side stared straight at Jed.
“Oh bloody hell,” Jed choked. The balmy feeling imparted by the infusion was gusting away fast. He turned frantically to see
the airlock’s inner hatch starting to close.
“That’s it, mate, we’re outta here.” He pulled Gerald up, propping him against the wall. Their visors pressed together, allowing
Jed to look into the old loon’s helmet past the winking icons. Gerald was oblivious to anything, lost in a dream-state trance.
The laser pistol slid from lifeless fingers to fall onto the floor. Jed glanced longingly at it, but decided against. If it
came to a shootout with the possessed, he wasn’t going to win. And it would only piss them off. Not a good idea.
The face at the port had vanished. “Come on.” He tugged at Gerald, forcing him to take some steps along the corridor. Thin
jets of grey gas started to shoot out of the conditioning vents overhead. Green and yellow icons appeared on his visor, reporting
oxygen and nitrogen thickening around him. One thing Jed clung to was that the possessed were no good in a vacuum; suits didn’t
work, and their power couldn’t protect them. As soon as he got back out on the ledge he was safe. Relatively.
They reached the airlock hatch, and Jed slapped the cycle control. The control panel remained dark. Digits were flickering
fast across his visor; the pressure was already twenty-five per cent standard. Jed let go of Gerald and pulled the manual
lever out. It seemed to move effortlessly as he spun it round and round. Then it jarred his arms. He frowned at it, cross
that something as simple as a lock should try to hurt him. But at least the hatch swung open when he pulled on it.
Gerald stumbled into the chamber, as obedient as a mechanoid. Jed laughed and cheered as he pulled the hatch shut behind him.
“Are you all right?” Rocio asked. “What happened?”
“Jed?” Beth cried. “Jed, can you hear me?”
“No sweat, doll. The bad guys haven’t got what it takes to spin me.”
“He’s still high,” Rocio said. “But he’s coming down. Jed, why did you use the infuser?”
“Just quit bugging me, man. Jeeze, I came through for you, didn’t I?” He pressed the outer hatch’s cycle control. Amazingly,
a line of green lights on the panel turned amber. “You’d have snorted a megawatt floater too if you saw what I did.”
“What was that?” Rocio’s voice had softened down to the kind of tone Mrs Yandell used when she talked to the day-club juniors.
“What did you see, Jed?”
“Body.” His irritation at the insulting tone was lost under a memory of wriggling scarlet cloth. “Some bloke got caught in
the vacuum.”
“Do you know who he was?”
“No!” Now he was sobering up, Jed desperately wanted to avoid thinking about it. He checked the control panel, relieved to
see the atmosphere cycle was proceeding normally. The electronics at this end of the airlock were undamaged. Not sabotaged,
he corrected himself.
“Jed, I’m getting some strange readings from Gerald’s suit telemetry,” Rocio said. “Is he okay?”
Jed felt like saying: was he ever? “I think the body upset him. Once he realized it wasn’t Marie, he just shut up.” And who’s
complaining about that?
The control panel lights turned red, and the hatch swung open.
“You’d better get out of there,” Rocio said. “There’s no alert in the net yet, but someone will discover the murder eventually.”
“Sure.” He took Gerald’s hand in his and pulled gently. Gerald followed obediently.
Rocio told them to stop outside a series of horseshoe-shaped garage bays at the base of the rock cliff, a hundred metres from
the entrance they were supposed to use to get into the asteroid. Three trucks were parked in the bays, simple four wheel drive
vehicles with seating for six and a flatbed rear.
“Check their systems,” Rocio said. “You’ll need one to drive the components back to me.”
Jed went along them, activating their management processors and initiating basic diagnostic routines. The first one was suffering
from some kind of power cell drop out, but the second was clean and fully charged. He sat Gerald in one of the passenger seats,
and drove it round to the airlock.
When the chamber’s inner hatch swung open, Jed checked his sensor reading before he cracked his visor up. A lifetime of emergency
procedure drills back on Koblat made him perpetually cautious about his environment.
“There’s nobody even close to you,” Rocio said. “Go get them.”
Jed hurried along the corridor, took a right turn, and saw the broad door to the maintenance shop, three down on the right.
It opened for him as he touched the lock panel. The lights sprang up to full intensity, revealing a basic rectangular room
with pale-blue wall panelling. Cybernetic tool modules stood in a row down the centre, encased in crystal cylinders to protect
their delicate waldos. A grid of shelving covered the rear wall, intended to hold a stock of spares used regularly by the
shop. Now there were just a few cartons and packages left scattered around—apart from the large pile in the middle which the
mechanoid had delivered.
“Oh Jeeze, Rocio,” Jed complained. “There’s got to be a hundred here. I’m never going to muscle that lot out, it’ll take forever.”
The components were all packed in plastic boxes.
“I’m getting a sense of dÉjÀ vu here,” Rocio said smoothly. “Just pile them onto the freight trolley and dump them in the
airlock chamber. It’ll be three trips at the most. Ten minutes.”
“Oh brother.” Jed grabbed a trolley and shoved it over to the shelving. He started to throw the boxes on. “Why didn’t you
get the mechanoids to dump them at the airlock for me?”
“It’s not a designated storage area. I would have had to re-program the management routines. Not difficult, but it might have
been detected. This method reduces the risk.”
“For some,” Jed muttered.
Gerald walked in. Jed had almost forgotten him. “Gerald, you can take your helmet off, mate.” There was no response.
Jed went up to him and flipped the helmet seals. Gerald blinked as the visor was raised.
“Can’t stay in that spacesuit here, mate, you’ll get noticed. And you’ll suffocate eventually.”