“That. We’re not doing that.”
“Sir?” Reeve said.
“The thing where we start sniping at each other. We don’t do that here.”
Wei and Reeve looked at each other.
“I’m sorry, sir,” Wei said. “I was out of line.”
“Not a problem, because it’s not going to happen again,” Murtry said. “What action have we seen from the Barbapiccola?”
“Nothing,” Wei said. “The Belters sent condolences and offers of aid, as if there was a damn thing they could do.”
“Are they warming up the engines?”
“Not that I can tell,” Wei said.
“We’re keeping an eye on that,” Murtry said. It was a statement and a question.
“We could take custody of the ship,” Wei said. “It was Mao-Kwikowski before they got broken up. Its salvage status is very murky. Call it illegal, put a few people on her, and we could shut her down.”
“Noted,” Murtry said. “How is the crew, Havelock?”
“Shocked, sir. Scared. Angry. They’re scientists. They looked on the squatters as an annoyance and a threat to their data. For most of them, this is outside their experience.”
Murtry stroked his chin with the back of his hand. “What are they going to do about it?”
“So far? Get drunk. Yell at each other or at us. Design theoretical judicial systems. Most of them seem to want the whole thing to just go away so they can get on with their research.”
Murtry chuckled. “God bless the eggheads. All right.”
“We still have the two light atmospheric shuttles,” Havelock went on. “I can get pilots for them, and we can evacuate the people we have on the ground.”
“No evac. The squatters don’t get to win this,” Murtry said. “No one that goes down there comes back up. We put more people down there to support them. Whatever their research is, we make damned sure it’s moving forward and everyone down there sees it’s moving forward.”
“Yes, sir,” Havelock said, feeling vaguely embarrassed.
“Reeve, you’re going down. Deal with the locals. Find out what you can. Keep our people safe. We want a show of force.”
“But nothing strong enough they can use it for sympathy on the newsfeeds back home,” Reeve said as if he were agreeing.
“Wei, I want your eyes on the enemy ship. If it starts warming up its drive, I want to know.”
“Permission to put my comm laser upgrade into effect?”
The Edward Israel didn’t have torpedo tubes or gauss guns. The closest they had to a weapon was an ancient comm laser that could be hacked to cutting strength. The ship had been designed when the dangers of space were all about radiation and air supply, not intentional violence. It was almost quaint.
“No,” Murtry said. “Just monitor what they’re doing, listen to the chatter, and bring it back to me. If someone needs to make the call, that’s me. No initiative. Understood?”
“Yes, sir.”
“Havelock, you’re going to be up here coordinating with the team on the ground. Use the shuttles however they need to be used to get personnel and materials down to the surface. We’re here to establish a base. We’ll start establishing it.”
“And if there’s another attack, sir?” Wei asked.
“Then that’s a decision the squatters will have made, and we’ll respect their choice,” Murtry said.
“I’m not sure what you mean, sir,” she said.
Murtry’s smile didn’t reach his eyes. “There’s a dignity in consequences.”
Havelock’s quarters were only slightly larger than the cells in the brig, but much more comfortable. He was webbed into his crash couch at the end of his shift when a soft knock came at the door and Murtry pulled himself in. The security chief was scowling, but no more so than usual.
“Anything up, chief?” Havelock asked.
“You’ve worked with Belters,” Murtry said. “What do you think of ’em?”
“They’re people,” Havelock said. “Some are better than others. I still have friends on Ceres.”
“Fine. But what do you think of Belters?”
Havelock shifted, the motion setting him drifting up against his restraints as he thought. “They’re insular. Tribal, almost. I think what they have most in common is that they don’t like inner planet types. A Martian can sometimes pass, though. They have the whole low-g physiology thing.”
“So mostly they hate Earthers,” Murtry said.
“That’s what pulls them together. That thing where they’re oppressed by Earth is just about the one thing they have in common. So they cultivate it. Hating people like us is what makes them them.”
Murtry nodded. “You know there are people that would call you prejudiced for saying that.”
“It’s only prejudice when you haven’t been there,” Havelock said. “I was on Ceres Station just before it broke for the OPA. For me, it’s all lived experience.”
“Well, I think you’re right,” Murtry said. “That’s why I wanted to talk to you. Off the record. Most of the people we’ve got on the ship are Earthers or at least Martian. But there are a few Belt types. Like that mechanical tech. What’s his name?”
“Bischen?”
“Him. Just keep an eye on those ones.”
“Is there something going on?”
“Just that the squatters are mostly Belt and outer planets, and the RCE is an Earth company. I don’t want anyone getting their loyalties confused.”
“Yes, sir,” Havelock said. And then, more tentatively, “Is something happening, sir?”
“Not right away. But… well, you might as well know. I’ve had word from the home office. My request for latitude was respectfully declined. Apparently there’s some politicking about how this gets handled. The OPA and the UN are talking about what they want to have happen. Want to make sure the squatters are treated well.”
Murtry’s anger was understated but profound, and Havelock found himself resonating with it.
“But we have the charter. We have a right to be here.”
“We do.”
“And we aren’t the ones who started killing people.”
“We’re not.”
“So what are we supposed to do? Sit on our hands while the Belters kill us and take our things?”
“The sale of the lithium from their illegal mining operations has been frozen,” Murtry said. “And we are instructed not to do anything to incite further conflict.”
“That’s bullshit. How are we supposed to do our work if we’re being all careful not to offend the bastards who are shooting at us?”
Murtry’s shrug was an agreement. When he spoke, his calm, laconic tone barely covered his contempt.
“Apparently they’re sending us a mediator.”
Interlude: The Investigator
—it reaches out it reaches out it reaches out it reaches out—
One hundred and thirteen times a second, nothing answers and it reaches out. It is not conscious, though parts of it are. There are structures within it that were once separate organisms; aboriginal, evolved, and complex. It is designed to improvise, to use what is there and then move on. Good enough is good enough, and so the artifacts are ignored or adapted. The conscious parts try to make sense of the reaching out. Try to interpret it.
One imagines an insect’s leg twitching twitching twitching. One hears a spark closing a gap, the ticking so fast it becomes a drone. Another, oblivious, reexperiences her flesh falling from her bones, the nausea and fear, and begs for death as she has for years now. Her name is Maria. It does not let her die. It does not comfort her. It is unaware of her because it is unaware.