‘Yes, I saw the light.’
‘I can’t get you out of that suit, or cut the suit away from the hull. I can’t cut away a section of the hull, either. Not in thirty minutes.’
‘Thirty minutes?’
‘I’m afraid I have orders to destroy this ship. I am sorry that you have been made to suffer, Captain. I can promise you that
‘Nukes?’
‘It’ll be fast. You have my word on that.’
‘That is kind of you, Prefect. And no, I didn’t seriously think there was any possibility of rescue. When Ultras do something…’ He left the remark hanging, unfinished.
Dreyfus nodded, for there was no need to complete the sentence.
‘But you talk of justice,’ Dravidian continued, when he had recovered either breath or clarity of mind. ‘I assume that means you have a fixed opinion as to my guilt?’
‘A terrible crime took place, Captain. The evidence in my possession leaves little room for doubt that your ship was involved.’
‘I ran,’ Dravidian said. ‘I ran for the shelter of the Parking Swarm, thinking I would be safe there, that my argument would fall on sympathetic ears. I should never have run. I should have trusted your justice over that of my people.’
‘I’d have listened to whatever you had to say,’ replied Dreyfus.
‘What happened… was not what it appeared.’
‘Your drive did destroy that habitat.’
‘Yes, I concede that much.’
‘You left it in a state of anger, having been cheated out of a lucrative deal.’
‘I was sorry that the family did not choose to close negotiations. But that doesn’t mean I planned to kill them all.’
‘It wasn’t an accident, Dravidian. No one’s going to buy that.’
‘I never said it was. It was a deliberate act of murder against an innocent habitat. But I had no hand in it.’ With sudden intensity, he added: ‘Nor did my crew.’
‘Either it happened or it didn’t.’
‘Someone
‘You mean someone got aboard the ship and worked out how to turn the engines on and off at just the right moment to kill the Bubble?’
‘Yes,’ Dravidian said resignedly, as if all his hopes of being believed had just evaporated. ‘Exactly that.’
‘I wish I could take you at your word.’
‘Prefect, ask yourself this: what could I possibly stand to gain from lying now? My crew has been slaughtered, burnt alive aboard their own ship. They let me hear their screams, their pleas for mercy. My vessel has been ripped apart like a rabid animal tossed to the wolves. I have been tortured and welded to the hull. Very shortly I am going to die.’
‘I still—’ Dreyfus began.
‘I don’t know why anyone wanted this to happen, Prefect. It’s not my job to answer that question, it’s yours. But I swear no crime was committed by my crew.’
‘We need to start thinking about getting off this thing,’ Sparver said quietly.
Dreyfus held up a silencing hand. To Dravidian he said: ‘But surely someone in your crew had to have been responsible.’
‘No one that I trusted. No one that I really considered crew. But someone else… maybe.’
‘Who?’
‘We took on new recruits after we arrived around Yellowstone. Some crew left to join other ships; others came aboard. It’s possible that one of those recruits…’
‘Captain?’
Dravidian’s tone changed, as if something new had just occurred to him. ‘Something odd happened. Our shuttle developed a fault. That was why we had to move the entire ship close to Ruskin-Sartorious, rather than just shuttle over to it from the Swarm. There wasn’t time to worry about the cause of the fault, not when we had a deal to close. But now that I look back on it… now that I don’t have any other distractions… the more I’m convinced that the shuttle’s malfunction could only have been sabotage.’
‘I don’t understand.’
‘Someone put the shuttle out of action, Prefect. Someone wanted an excuse to bring the
‘Not just murder, but murder in cold blood?’
‘I can only tell you what happened.’
‘These recruits… can you tell me anything about them?’
‘Six or seven of them. The usual mix. Hardcore types who’ve already crewed on other ships. Green-behind- the-ears newcomers who don’t know one end of a hull from the other. I didn’t meet any of them in person, just delivered the usual blood-and-thunder speech when they came aboard.’
‘No names, nothing?’
‘I’m sorry, Prefect. If I had more to give you, you’d be hearing it.’
Dreyfus nodded. There was no earthly reason for Dravidian to withhold evidence now, if he truly believed in his own innocence. ‘What I don’t understand is why anyone would want to destroy the Bubble, if it wasn’t revenge for a deal that went sour?’
‘You’re the investigator, Prefect. You tell me.’
‘You’re going to die,’ Dreyfus said softly. ‘Nothing I say or do can change that now.’
‘But you believe I may be telling the truth.’
‘I believe that the investigation has yet to run its course. If the facts confirm your innocence, I’ll make sure that they’re heard.’
‘I hope you’re good at your job.’
‘That’s not for me to say.’
‘Whoever did this was prepared to kill nearly a thousand people. More now that my crew have paid with their lives. They won’t take kindly to a prefect snooping around trying to undermine their good work.’
‘They don’t pay us to be popular.’
‘You strike me as a decent man, Prefect Dreyfus. I can hear it in your voice. We Ultras aren’t such bad judges of character. My crew were decent people, too. Even if you can’t exonerate me, I beg of you this much: do what you can to lift this shame from their heads. They didn’t deserve to die like this. The
Dreyfus glanced at Sparver. Sparver tapped his sleeve, as if there was a wristwatch there.
‘Twenty minutes, Boss.’
Dreyfus looked along the prow, in the direction of the dead ship’s flight. He was also looking straight at Yellowstone and the Glitter Band. The planet was still lit up on its dayside. It was not his imagination that the arc of the Band appeared wider than when he had last seen it. He felt as if he could make out the twinkling granularity of individual habitats. With time and patience, and his ingrained knowledge of their orbits, he was sure he could even have begun to pick out the largest structures by eye. There, for instance: wasn’t that silvery glint near the planet’s westward limb Carousel New Venice, moving in the congested real estate of the central orbits? And a little to the right: wasn’t that string of ruby-red sparks the signature of the eight habitats of the Remortal Concatenation? If so, then that blue-tinged glint to the east had to be House Sammartini, or perhaps the Sylveste Institute for Shrouder