The left branch led to Bays One and Two, the right to Three and Four. Ten yards along the left corridor, Hoop saw the blood.
“Oh, shit,” Welford said.
The wet splash on the wall spur beside the blast door was the size of a dinner plate. The blood had run, forming spidery lines toward the floor. It glistened, still wet.
“Let’s check,” Hoop said, but he was already quite certain what they would find. The door sensors had been damaged, but a quick look through the spy hole confirmed his suspicions. Beyond the door was vacuum. Wall paneling and systems ducting had been stripped away by the storm of air being sucked out. If the person who had left that blood spatter had been able to hang on until the blast doors automatically slammed shut…
But they were out there now, beyond the
“One and Two definitely out of action,” Hoop said. “Blast doors seem to be holding well. Powell, don’t budge from that panel, and make sure all the doors behind us are locked up tight.”
“You’re sure?” Powell said in their headsets. “You’ll be trapped down there.”
“If compartments are still failing, it could fuck the whole ship,” Hoop said. “Yeah, I’m sure.”
He turned to the others. Sneddon was looking past him at the blood spatter, her eyes wide behind the suit glass.
“Hey,” Hoop said.
“Yeah.” She looked at him. Glanced away again. “I’m sorry, Hoop.”
“We’ve all lost friends. Let’s make sure we don’t lose any more.” They headed back along the opposite corridor, toward Bays Three and Four.
“On automatic?”
“Affirmative.” Most docking procedures were performed automatically, but Hoop knew that Vic Jones occasionally liked to fly manually. Not this time.
“Any contact?”
“Nothing. But I think I just saw a flicker on the screen. I’m working to get visual back, if nothing else.”
“Keep me posted. We need to know what’s going on inside that ship.” Hoop led the way. The blast door leading to Bays One and Two was still open, and they moved quickly through toward the undamaged docking areas.
Another vibration rumbled through the ship, transmitted up through the floor. Hoop pressed his gloved hand hard against the wall, leaning in, trying to feel the echoes of the mysterious impact. But they had already faded.
“Lachance, any idea what’s causing those impacts?”
“Negative. The ship seems steady.”
“Compartments failing, you think?”
“I don’t think so. If that was happening we’d be venting air to space, and that would act as thrust. I’d see movement in the
“Okay. Something else, then. Something loose.”
“Take care down there,” Lachance said. He wasn’t usually one to offer platitudes.
They passed through two more bulkhead doors, checking the sensors both times to ensure that the compartments on the other side were still pressurized. As they neared bays Three and Four, Hoop knew they’d have a visual on the damage.
The docking bays were contained in two projections from the underside of the
“Oh, hell,” Hoop muttered. He was the first to see, and he heard shocked gasps from Sneddon and Welford.
The front third of the port projection, including the docking arms and parts of the airlock structures, had been swept away as if by a giant hand. Bay One was completely gone, torn aside to leave a ragged wound behind. Parts of Bay Two were still intact, including one long shred of the docking arm which was the source of the intermittent impacts—snagged on the end of the loose reach of torn metal and sparking cables was a chunk of the
Each strike gave it the momentum to return. It moved slowly, but such was its weight that the impact when it came was still enough to send vibrations through the entire belly of the ship.
The
“That’s a person out there,” Welford said quietly, pointing. Hoop saw the shape pressed against the remains of Bay Two, impaled on some of the torn metal superstructure. He couldn’t tell the sex. The body was badly mutilated, naked, and most of its head was missing.
“I hope they all died quickly,” Sneddon said.