“Everyone thinks electromuscle segments are the same,” Mark said. “They’re not. Two identical lengths nearly always have different traction ratings. It’s down to minor instabilities in the manufacturing processes. Some batches come out weak, some strong, so the producers always build in a five percent traction overcapacity. That means they have to be balanced, especially in cases like this when you’ve got a missile being gripped by seven different arms. There, see? When they latched on to the missile in the magazine at different strengths they were actually tilting it.”
“Uh huh,” Ozzie said weakly.
“No wonder it wouldn’t slide into the launch tube, it was at a hell of a slant. There we go, that fix should recalibrate and equalize the traction. I wrote it years ago to balance the hoist arms on a friend’s tow truck.”
Ozzie’s virtual vision showed the quantumbuster missile slide into the launch tube amid a flood of green symbols. “Son of a bitch.” A patch for a tow truck! “It works.”
Mark gave him a slightly apologetic grin. “It’s what I do.”
The timer in Ozzie’s virtual vision had counted off forty-two seconds since Mark took command of the weapons. Two days smashing my head against a rock and I got nowhere; and I’m supposed to be a fucking genius. “Mark, thank you, man. You do realize we’ll have to go through with the flight into the Dark Fortress now?”
“Yeah, I know. But my survival chances haven’t been terribly high for a while now, have they?”
“I guess not. Uh, is there any of that lunch box left?”
“No. But there’s all the meals in the emergency survival lockers. They taste quite good, actually.”
Ozzie smiled. It was a good way of preventing the stressed whimper rushing out of his throat.
***
Oscar came out of the memory implant the way he shook off his nightly bad dream. Head rocking from side to side, trying to rise up off the couch, not quite certain where he was and what was real. He was sure his hand was still closed around a joystick while long flexible white wings curved up on either side of him as the wind raged outside. He blinked against the strong light, making out blurred figures standing at the end of the couch. Faces came into focus.
Something wrong.
Jamas and Kieran looked both scared and angry, never a good combination especially as they had their ion carbines jabbed into Wilson and Anna. Wilson’s emotions were under complete control, allowing him to put out just the right amount of tolerant dismay. Anna was quietly furious, her OCtattoos flexing in and out of visibility like a carnivore’s fangs in the prelude to a kill. If Kieran’s carbine muzzle ever slipped away from her ribs he’d probably wind up very dead very fast. By the look of him, he knew that, too.
“What’s happened?” Oscar asked. The feeling of flying was smoothing out, leaving him with a bad headache.
“Adam’s dead,” Wilson said flatly.
“And one of you Starflyer fucks killed him,” Kieran shouted; the carbine was shoved harder into Anna’s side.
The falling sensation returned to Oscar’s limbs with a rush. He gave Wilson a dumbfounded stare. “No.”
“You were here in the hangar with him,” Jamas said.
Bring the joystick back carefully, allow the wings time to respond as you plummet down helplessly in a microburst. Airflow around the fuselage changes as the plyplastic adjusts in long twists. “Where is he?” Oscar demanded hoarsely.
Jamas jerked his head toward the door into the hangar office. “You saying you didn’t hear it?”
“It was a knife,” Wilson said in undisguised contempt. “There was nothing to hear.”
“I couldn’t hear a thing,” Oscar said. “I was having the memory implant.”
“Yeah, right,” Kieran sneered.
Oscar ignored him and swung his legs around off the couch. He was unsteady on his feet.
“Where do you think you’re going?” Jamas asked.
“To see him.”
“You’re not going anywhere.”
Oscar straightened, one hand holding the side of the couch. Lights throbbed in time with his headache.
“Careful,” Anna said. “Memory implants affect neuron function for several minutes afterward.”
“I have to see him.” Because I don’t believe you. Not Adam. It can’t be.
Jamas and Kieran exchanged a glance, then Kieran nodded. “Okay, Rosamund will be here in a minute.”
With the others following, Oscar walked through into the office, then out into the hangar. It wasn’t just the effects of the implant that made his movements unsteady. He could see a pair of legs sticking out from behind one of the gliders, and slowed, not wanting to see.
Adam lay on the dark composite floor, legs and arms akimbo, the handle of a harmonic blade sticking out from the nape of his neck. A small puddle of blood had pooled around his head.
Oscar’s legs very nearly gave way. He clung to the fuselage to support himself. All he could think of was the look on Adam’s face when they saw the Abadan crash. The ghosts will be happy tonight.
“You okay?” Anna asked. She’d come up beside him.
“This can’t be right,” he said in a hushed croak. “Not here. Not like that. It’s not right. It can’t happen like this.”
“Well, it did fucking happen,” Jamas spat. “And one of you traitors did it.”
“Just kill them all,” Kieran said. He moved back from Anna to stand beside Jamas, his carbine covering Oscar and Anna. “That way we’ll be sure we got the bastard.”
“Where were you when it happened?” Anna asked.
“Shut the fuck up, bitch.”
“I mean it,” she said, her eyes alight with cold wrath. Her gaze flicked over to Jamas. “Was he with you?”
Jamas shifted uncomfortably. “No.”
“Jamas!” Kieran protested.
“That means neither of you can vouch for the other,” Wilson said. He walked over to stand with Anna and Oscar.
“We were only apart for a couple of minutes, that’s all,” Jamas said.
Wilson gazed down at Adam’s corpse. “And how long did that take?”
“Are you saying we did it?” Kieran asked.
“Can you prove you didn’t?”
Kieran snarled at him, shifting the muzzle of his ion carbine around. Jamas’s hand slowly pushed the weapon down. “He’s right.”
“What? You can’t be serious!”
Jamas looked even more unhappy.
Rosamund barged in through the hangar door, dragging Paula Myo along. The Investigator was still wearing Adam’s cherry-red woolen sweater, her face was beaded with perspiration, while her lips had turned almost black. Oscar and Wilson automatically went to help carry her. Paula groaned as they took her weight; she was barely conscious. They lowered her to the floor with her back resting against the hyperglider’s cradle. She shuddered violently, her head lolling about. Then she saw Adam’s body and gasped. Her hands came up to rub at her eyes; she was blinking almost continuously. “Is he dead?” she asked.
“It pretty much fucking looks like it to me,” Kieran shouted.
“Shut up,” Wilson snapped. He was kneeling beside Paula, hand feeling her forehead. “Paula, can you understand me? Do you know where we are?”
Her eyes closed for a long blink as she switched her attention from Adam to Wilson. “Far Away, we’re on Far Away.”
“Do you remember the sabotaged crates?”
“Yes.”
“We need your help. Whoever did that has now killed Adam.”
“What if it’s her?” Kieran asked.
“Well?” Wilson asked Rosamund, who was staring down at Adam’s corpse.
The Guardian woman stirred herself. “We were in the Volvo the whole time.”
“So you say,” Oscar barked. He knew he shouldn’t have said it, they were already drowning in hostility, but he still couldn’t believe it was either Wilson or Anna, and that sounded way too much like a convenient alibi for comfort.