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“Ah—Captain Serrano?” That was another of the investigating militia. She turned to him. “Urgent message from your ship. Shall I put it on the local tapline?”

She hoped that meant they’d gotten Sirkin back to the ship safely. She nodded, and stepped over to the little communications booth set up for the investigators. The headset they gave her hissed a bit—no doubt from the offtake tape spool—but Petris’s voice was clear enough.

“Captain? Hate to bother you, but we’ve got a problem here.”

“Ah, yes, Mr. Petris.” That should warn him. “I’m dealing with one here, too. It seems Yrilan has been killed by thugs, and the investigating officers have found no sign of Sirkin.”

“Right. I’m at the Royal Security office, at the access. The officer in charge prefers your personal authorization before passing some of our crew members who . . . have had an accident. The scanners picked up bloodstains.”

“How many?” Heris asked, mentally crossing her fingers.

“Mr. Vissisuan, Ms. Meharry, and Ms. Sirkin,” Petris said. “With injuries.” Such formality could only mean trouble. No one had called Oblo “Mr. Vissisuan” since his second tour. At least Sirkin was alive.

“Would it help if I spoke to Royal Security?”

“Maybe,” Petris said cautiously. “Here’s Major Defrit.”

Major Defrit sounded as frosty and formal as Heris would have in his place. She explained that she was on the site of a murder, with the station militia.

“Your crew seems to have a talent for trouble,” Major Defrit said.

“I hardly think that justified,” Heris said, in the same tone. Actually Oblo had more than a talent for it—genius, more like—but it wasn’t something to brag about. “Are any of my crew injured?”

“Ms. Sirkin seems to have some injuries, but I would judge them not serious. She is conscious and her vital signs appear within normal limits.” He sounded entirely too certain; Heris trusted the worry in Petris’s voice.

“I’d prefer to have Sirkin evaluated by medical personnel. You are not, I gather, a physician?”

“Well no, but—”

“Since one of my crew died from a murderous assault, and Sirkin is injured, it would be prudent to have her examined, don’t you think?”

“But that would mean admitting her to this Sector—unless you want her sent to the central clinic—” His resolution wavered; she could hear it in his voice, a faint whine.

“Major, Sirkin has a valid Royal Docks pass, as have my other crew members. You have no real reason to exclude them. I can understand that you might want to escort them to medical care—”

“But—”

“I will be there as soon as possible,” Heris interrupted. “And I expect to find my crew members receiving adequate medical treatment.” Watching her, the militia communications tech raised his eyebrows; Heris winked, and they went up another notch. “Let me speak to my second in command.”

Petris came back on the line. “Yes, Captain?”

“I believe the major understands the need for Sirkin to receive immediate medical evaluation and treatment. I’d like you to stay with her. If Mr. Vissisuan is not injured, I’d like him to meet me at the access area on my return. Ms. Meharry can return to the ship if she needs no medical care, and I’ll speak to her there. Clear?”

“Clear, Captain.”

Heris came out of the little booth shaking her head. “Well, my other crew member has shown up, wounded apparently, at the Royal Docks access station. I don’t know if she was trying to get help or what. I know you’ll need to talk to her, but I think her medical care should come first.”

“I’ll come with you,” Cannibar said. “Want to leave now? What about the disposition of your crew member’s remains after autopsy?”

“I’m not sure—I’ll have to check my files aboard.” She would have to ask Sirkin, most likely. Anything but token cremation would be impossibly expensive; most who died aboard went into the carbon-cycle tanks. But it was always possible that Yrilan had taken out a burial insurance policy that would pay for shipping her body to a planet for “real” burial. Heris felt guilty that she had not known even this about the girl.

At the Royal Docks Access, Oblo and the Royal Security major waited in unamiable silence. Oblo had a ripening bruise on his forehead and his hands bore the marks of a good fight. But his expression was that of a large predatory mammal fully fed and satisfied. Heris spared him only a glance, then met the major’s angry gaze. Before he could say anything she introduced the Station militia captain.

“—investigating the death of Amalie Yrilan, a temporary-contract crew member.”

“I suppose you’ll want in to interview the others,” the major said sourly, transferring his glare to the militia captain.

“As a matter of fact, yes.” Heris had warmed to the captain already, and she liked his tone now. Not a trace of arrogance or obsequiousness either: he simply stated the obvious in a voice that meant to be obeyed. The major shrugged, and handed over a clip-on pass.

“Very well. This is a forty-eight-hour pass; if you need an extension, just give us a call.”

“How’s Sirkin?” Heris asked Oblo. He looked less smug.

“She caught part of a sonic blast, and a couple of knife slashes. I think she’s got some broken ribs, but this officer thinks it’s just bruising. Some heavy people landed on her, and she got some hard kicks I know of, one in the head.”

“Unconsciousness?”

“Yes, for a bit, but the one that landed on her weighed enough it could have been that.”

Heris thought of all she’d like to ask him, but not in front of Royal Security and Station militia officers. Why had he waited so long to come into the fight? Why had he brought Sirkin back here rather than the nearest militia station? Why had he been on the scene in the first place?

“Could I talk to you now?” said the militia captain. It wasn’t really a question.

“Sure, sir,” said Oblo, rubbing his hands over his head and trying to look innocent. It didn’t work. He had the face and hands of the experienced brawler, and the bruise was like a rose on a rosebush—a fitting decoration.

“I’m going to see Sirkin,” Heris said. “Oblo—when you’ve finished here, I’ll see you aboard.”

Sirkin had been through the diagnostics when Heris got to the clinic. She lay in a bed, in a bright-patterned gown Heris thought had been chosen to disguise bloodstains and other marks. Her face looked lopsided—she had swollen bruises down one side, and the other was discolored with the sunburn flush of the sonic pulser that had burst small blood vessels. That eye, too, was bloodshot. If Heris hadn’t seen the medical report, she’d have worried, but the eye had escaped real damage. She looked drowsy and said nothing when Heris came into the room. That would be the concussion the scans had shown.

Petris rose from a chair at the bedside. “Captain. Meharry’s gone back to the ship, as you asked. Oblo?”

“He’s talking to the militia captain in charge of the investigation. I still haven’t heard what happened. Have you?”

“Sirkin and Yrilan were out for a night, and took a shortcut through that park; they were jumped by a gang. Oblo and Meharry were following them, but trying to be discreet. They tried to deal quietly with someone who tried to keep them from entering the park—maybe part of the gang—and that took enough time that the row had started when they caught up. Yrilan was down, probably dead or dying, and Sirkin was fighting. They both think the gang was trying to capture Sirkin at that point—someone had cuffs out.”

“And they brought her out of the park because they weren’t sure if more trouble would arrive, or who it was—I can understand that,” Heris said. “But they should have called the ship, at least.”

“No time, Oblo said. But you know him—he hates to call for help.”