Radko smiled, grim and satisfied in the dark, and lonely, too, for she missed her ship. She missed her job. She missed her linesman.
“It shows the state of the whole ship, Chaudry. Human and line. Sure, you need a linesman to fix lines, but as for the rest, that’s only partially right. That’s what the cartel teaches you, and the cartels are wrong.”
“Wrong?”
He was a linesman. He couldn’t hide the hope in his voice. Linesmen, especially single-level linesmen, always wanted to believe there was something more.
Radko smiled again. “No line is superior to any other. We have learned so much about the lines in the last six months. Think about what you want for the future, Chaudry. At the end of this assignment, I’ll ask again. If you want to work with the lines, or in medicine, or both, we’ll do everything in our power to make it happen. We need people like you.”
She turned and led the way inside.
CHAPTER NINETEEN: DOMINIQUE RADKO
Van Heel hacked into MES’s system, put the security cameras onto a loop, and routed the alarm back to Radko.
Once that was done, Radko took fifteen seconds to break into the sweet shop.
They passed through a storeroom with prepared sweets, then the kitchen, and finally a second storeroom containing raw materials. Bags of sugar and nuts, some form of syrup, and other items Radko couldn’t identify. Even better, the wall out here was painted, not plastered, so the outline of each prefab block was clear.
Radko tamped the explosive down around the blocks. It went off with a soft whumph. They kicked the blocks out.
The net protecting TwoPaths Engineering wasn’t alarmed, at least not that Radko could see. She pressed the OFF button.
It whined to a halt. The loudest thing so far.
Radko indicated to Han and Chaudry to stand on one side of the door, van Heel and herself on the other.
They waited.
No one came.
She broke the lock, and they piled inside.
They found themselves in a storeroom, with shelving and cupboards around the walls. The packaging was from a mix of worlds. There were boxes from the Worlds of the Lesser Gods, some from Redmond, and even one from Lancia, with HAEMOGLOBIN TESTER on the side.
Chaudry stopped at a box of tubing in clear plastic bags. “Intravenous sets.” He stopped at another box. Meters of some sort. “These are medical supplies.”
“We have to find their control center,” Radko said. They could speculate later why an engineering company required medical supplies. Their first job was to neutralize any security in the building before someone called for backup.
One minute.
They passed through three more storerooms, one with huge, glass-door refrigerators full of frozen, prepackaged meals.
“This is starting to get creepy,” Han muttered.
“Shh.” But Radko agreed. This setup was more like a hospital than an engineering lab.
Two minutes.
She heard a sound outside the room they were in and stopped. She motioned for the others to do the same.
If they stayed here, they were sitting ducks. “Chaudry, find us some cloth to cover our faces.” She beckoned to Han. “Cover me. Blaster on stun. I’ll drop as the door opens. Spray anything higher than me but keep out of the line of fire.”
How many security people would you have on night duty at a lab? Three, maybe four? It depended how important the lab was.
Chaudry arrived back, carrying blankets. “It’s all I could find in a hurry.”
“They’ll be good.” Radko looked at van Heel and Chaudry. “Stay out of the line of fire.”
She heard muttered information being passed through a comms. Someone knew they were there. If it was security outside—which was a logical assumption—they’d have help on the way. There was no time to waste.
She dropped to the ground, pressed the button to open the door, dragged a fast-acting gas grenade off her belt, armed it, and rolled it out.
Something swished above her head and thudded into the wall at the back even as the door closed again.
At least two people outside the door started coughing and choking.
“Blankets on.” Radko wrapped one around her own face. “And don’t breathe as you run through the gas.” She checked what had come through the door. A tranquilizer dart.
“They’re using tranqs, people, so beware.” She opened the door again and fired through the choking smoke. A long sweep around. At least two thuds.
She kept firing as she exited. Another thud.
Van Heel tripped over one of the fallen guards. Chaudry grabbed her and kept running.
One door at the front of the building was open, light streaming out. Logically, it would be the control room. Radko entered at a run, and fired at the sole occupant, who was still rising to pull out his weapon.
“Close the door,” she ordered Chaudry.
She found the alarm, turned it off. Only then did she allow herself to take a deep breath.
“What now?” Han asked.
Radko turned to the wall of screens. “We find the labs.”
Except there weren’t any labs. There were three operating theatres down here on the ground floor, plus some examining rooms. Upstairs were glass-walled rooms around a central office. Ten of them were occupied and nearly all the occupants wore Sandhurst uniforms. Linesmen.
“It’s not a lab,” Chaudry said. “It’s a hospital.”
The patients showed signs of distress. One huddled in a corner, crying. Another lay on her bed, strapped down. Her face was badly scratched, and the tips of her fingers were bandaged. Another kicked the glass of the walls. The glass didn’t break. It bounced, like Plexiglas.
Linesmen. Line experiments.
And they expected to have access to a twelve soon. Never.
In two of the examining rooms, Radko saw alien artifacts. She stepped closer to the screen to be sure. Artifacts that could only have come from one of the alien line ships.
Someone was supplying Redmond with items from the line ships.
Someone from the New Alliance.
Someone with access to alien artifacts would have access to Ean.
Radko swung around. “Van Heel, find the patient records. Copy them. Everything you can. Han, stay here with van Heel and watch the screens. Chaudry, collect the artifacts from the examining rooms.” She tapped the ones she saw, to show him what she meant. “All of them. If you see something you don’t recognize, especially anything that talks to you, anything that makes a noise, anything that reminds you of space, grab it as well.”
Chaudry blinked at that but nodded.
He’d need something to carry them in. Radko looked around for a box, couldn’t find one. “Use your blanket to wrap them in. There’ll be an orderly around somewhere, so be alert.” It was a hospital. They must have someone watching the patients.
“I’ll check the office upstairs.” If the report was anywhere, it would be there. “Open comms. All of us. Let’s go.”
She left Chaudry filling his blanket and ran up the stairs.
Three walls of the office were Plexiglass from waist height and looked out onto the linesmen’s rooms. The back wall was stone; the same heavy stone they’d seen earlier when viewing the palace walls. There was a door in the wall. If Radko had her directions right, the lab led directly into the palace.
Radko looked around for a safe. There wasn’t one. There were two desks, both with drawers. She tried the drawers.
The first one held sweets from the shop next door, and something that looked like dried fruit. The second was locked.
Han said, low and urgent, “Whatever you did stirred up a nest of people. They’re all running for you.”