“Eventually, someone’ll figure out the big picture. This kind of thing requires secrecy to function, so exposing all the secrets hurts them in the end. It’s the only way this really, permanently stops.”
Miller sighed, nodded to himself, took off his hat, and scratched his scalp.
“I was just going to put ’em out an airlock,” Miller said.
BA834024112 wasn’t much of an asteroid. Barely thirty meters across, it had long ago been surveyed and found completely devoid of useful or valuable minerals. It existed in the registry only to warn ships not to run into it. Julie had left it tethered to wealth measured in the billions when she flew her small shuttle to Eros.
Up close, the ship that had killed the
“Motherfucker,” Amos said under his breath as the crew clustered in the cockpit of the
“The
“Like Becca saw just before the
“Her shuttle’s been launched, so I’m guessin’ this is the right stealth ship someone left tied to a rock,” Alex added. “Case there’s more than one.”
Holden tapped his fingers on the back of Alex’s chair for a moment as he floated over the pilot’s head.
“It’s probably full of vomit zombies,” Holden finally said.
“Want to go see?” said Miller.
“Oh yeah,” Holden said.
Chapter Thirty-Four: Miller
The environment suit was better than Miller was used to. He’d only done a couple walks outside during his years on Ceres, and the Star Helix equipment had been old back then: thick corrugated joints, separable air-supply unit, gloves that left his hands thirty degrees colder than the rest of his body. The
It didn’t feel like enough.
“All right, Alex,” Holden said. “We’re in place. Have the
A deep, rumbling vibration shook them. Naomi put a hand against the airlock’s curved wall to steady herself. Amos shifted forward to take point, a reactionless automatic rifle in his hands. When he bent his neck, Miller could hear the vertebrae cracking through his radio. It was the only way he could have heard it; they were already in vacuum.
“Okay, Captain,” Alex said. “I’ve got a seal. The standard security override isn’t working, so give me a second… to…”
“Problem?” Holden said.
“Got it. I’ve got it. We have a connection,” Alex said. Then, a moment later: “Ah. It doesn’t look like there’s much to breathe over there.”
“Anything?” Holden asked.
“Nope. Hard vacuum,” Alex said. “Both her lock doors are open.”
“All right, folks,” Holden said, “keep an eye on your air supply. Let’s go.”
Miller took a long breath. The external airlock went from soft red to soft green. Holden slid it open, and Amos launched forward, the captain just behind him. Miller gestured to Naomi with a nod.
The connecting gantry was reinforced, ready to deflect enemy lasers or slow down slugs. Amos landed on the other ship as the hatch to the
“You all right?” Naomi asked.
Miller nodded, and Amos passed into the other ship’s hatch. One by one, they went in.
The ship was dead. The lights coming off their environment suits played over the soft, almost streamlined curves of the bulkheads, the cushioned walls, the gray suit lockers. One locker was bent out of shape, like someone or something had forced its way out from within. Amos pushed off slow. Under normal circumstances, hard vacuum would have been assurance enough that nothing was about to jump out at them. Right now, Miller figured it was only even money.
“Whole place is shut down,” Holden said.
“Might be backups in the engine room,” Amos said.
“So the ass end of the ship from here,” Holden said.
“Pretty much.”
“Let’s be careful,” Holden said.
“I’m heading up to ops,” Naomi said. “If there’s anything running off battery, I can—”
“No, you aren’t,” Holden said. “We aren’t splitting up the group until we know what we’re looking at. Stay together.”
Amos moved down, sinking into the darkness. Holden pushed off after him. Miller followed. He couldn’t tell from Naomi’s body language whether she was annoyed or relieved.