The catwalk shook, a rattling jar. The panting figure raising the stunner in both hands did not pause to cry warning, but simply fired. She seemed to have dropped out of the sky. The shock of the stunner nimbus scarcely made any difference in Ethan's inventory of discomfort. But Okita was caught square on, and followed the momentum of his aimed blow over the railing. His legs, picking up speed, tilted up and slid past Ethan's nose, like a ship sinking bow-first.

'Aw, shit,' yelled Commander Quinn, and bounded forward. The stunner clattered across the catwalk and spun over the side to whistle through the air and burst to sizzling shards far below. Her clutching swipe was just too late to connect with Okita's trouser leg. Blood winked from her torn fingernail. Okita followed the stunner, headfirst.

Ethan slithered bonelessly down to crouch on the mesh. Her boots, at his eye level, arched to tiptoe as she peered down over the side. 'Cee, I feel really bad about that,' she remarked, licking her bleeding finger. 'I've never killed a man by accident before. Unprofessional.'

'You again,' Ethan croaked.

She gave him a cat's grin. 'What a coincidence.'

The body splayed on the deck below stopped twitching. Ethan stared down whitely. 'I'm a doctor. Shouldn't we go down there and, um…'

'Too late, I think,' said Commander Quinn. 'But I wouldn't get too misty-eyed over that creep. Quite aside from what he almost did to you just now, he helped kill eleven people on Jackson's Whole, five months ago, just to cover up the secret I'm trying to find out.'

His syrup-slow logic spoke. 'If it's a secret people are killed just for knowing, wouldn't it make a lot more sense to try to avoid finding it out?' He clutched his shredded acuity. 'Who are you really, anyway? Why are you following me?'

'Technically, I'm not following you at all. I'm following Ghem-colonel Luyst Millisor, and the so-charming Captain Rau, and their two goons—ah, one goon. Millisor is interested in you, therefore I am too. Q. E. D.—Quinn Excites Dismay.'

'Why?' he whimpered wearily.

She sighed. 'If I had arrived at Jackson's Whole two days ahead of them instead of two days behind them, I could tell you. As for the rest—I really am a commander in the Dendarii Mercenaries, and everything I've told you is true, except that I'm not on home leave. I'm on assignment. Think of me as a rent-a-spy. Admiral Naismith is diversifying our services.'

She squatted beside him, checked his pulse, eyes and eyelids, battered reflexes. 'You look like death warmed over, Doctor.'

'Thanks to you. They found your tracer. Decided I was a spy. Questioned me…' He found he was shivering uncontrollably.

Her lips made a brief grim line. 'I know. Sorry. I did save your life just now, I hope you noticed. Temporarily.'

'Temporarily?'

She nodded toward the deck below. 'Colonel Millisor is going to be quite excited about you, after this.'

'I'll go to the authorities—'

'Ah—hm. I hope you'll think better of that. In the first place, I don't think the authorities would be able to protect you quite well enough. Secondly, it would blow my cover. Until now I don't think Millisor suspected I existed. Since I have an awful lot of friends and relatives around here, I'd just as soon keep it that way, Millisor and Rau being—what they are. You see my point?'

He felt he ought to argue with her. But he was sick and weak—and, it also occurred to him, still very high in the air. Green vertigo plucked at him. If she decided to send him after Okita… 'Yeah,' he mumbled. 'Uh, what— what are you going to do with me?'

She planted her hands on her hips and frowned thoughtfully down upon him. 'Not sure yet. Don't know if you're an ace or a joker. I think I'll keep you up my sleeve for a while, until I can figure out how best to play you. With your permission,' she added in palpable afterthought.

'Stalking-goat,' he muttered darkly.

She quirked an eyebrow at him. 'Perhaps. If you can think of a better idea, trot it out.'

He shook his head, which made shooting pains ricochet around inside his skull and yellow pinwheels counter-rotate before his eyes. At least she didn't seem to be on the same side as his recent captors. The enemy of my enemy—my ally… ?

She hoisted him to his feet and pulled his arm across her shoulders to thread their way down stairs and ladders to the docking bay floor. He noticed for the first time that she was several centimeters shorter than himself. But he had no inclination to spot her points in a free-for-all.

When she released him he sank to the deck in a dizzy stupor. She poked around Okita's body, checking pulse points and damages. Her lips thinned ironically. 'Huh. Broken neck.' She sighed, and stood regarding the corpse and Ethan with much the same narrow calculation.

'We could just leave him here,' she said. 'But I rather fancy giving Colonel Millisor a mystery of his own to solve. I'm tired of being on the damn defensive, lying low, always one move behind. Have you ever given thought to the difficulty of getting rid of a body on a space station? I'll bet Millisor has. Bodies don't bother you, do they? What with your being a doctor and all, I mean.'

Okita's fixed stare was exactly like that of a dead fish, glassily reproachful. Ethan swallowed. 'I actually never cared much for that end of the life-cycle,' he explained. 'Pathology and anatomy and so forth. That's why I went for Rep work, I guess. It was more, um… hopeful.' He paused a while. His intellect began to crunch on in spite of himself. 'Is it hard to get rid of a body on a space station? Can't you just shove it out the nearest airlock, or down an unused lift tube, or something?'

Her eyes were bright with stimulation. 'The airlocks are all monitored. Taking anything out, even an anonymous bundle, leaves a record in the computers. And it would last forever out there. Same objection applies to chopping it up and putting it down an organics disposer. Eighty or so kilos of high-grade protein leaves too big a blip in the records. Besides, it's been tried. Very famous murder case, a few years back. The lady's still in therapy, I believe. It would definitely be noticed.'

She flopped down beside him to sit with her chin on her knees, arms wrapped around her boots and flexing, not rest but nervous energy contained. 'As for stashing it whole anywhere inside the Station—well, the safety patrols are nothing compared to the ecology cops. There isn't a cubic centimeter of the Station that doesn't get checked on a regular schedule. You could keep moving it around, but…

'I think I have a better idea. Yes. Why not? As long as I'm going to commit a crime, let it be a perfect one. Anything worth doing is worth doing well, as Admiral Naismith would say…'

She rose to make a wandering circuit of the docking bay, selecting bits of equipment with the faintly distracted air of a housekeeper choosing vegetables at the market.

Ethan lay on the floor in misery, envying Okita, whose troubles were over. He had been on Kline Station, he estimated, just about a day, and had yet to have his first meal. Beaten up, kidnapped, drugged, nearly murdered, and now rapidly becoming accessory-after-the-fact to a crime which if not exactly a murder was surely the next best thing. Galactic life was every bit as bad as anything he had imagined. And he had fallen into the hands of a madwoman, to boot. The Founding Fathers had been right….. 'I want to go home,' he moaned.

'Now, now,' Commander Quinn chided, plunking down a float pallet next to Okita's body and rolling a squat cylindrical shipping canister off it. 'That's no way to be, just when my case is showing signs of cracking open at last. You just need a good meal,' she glanced at him, 'and about a week in a hospital bed. Afraid I shan't be able to supply that, but as soon as I finish cleaning up here I will take you to a place you can rest a bit while I get the next phase started. All right?'

She unlatched the shipping canister and, with some difficulty, folded Okita's body into it. 'There. That doesn't look too coffin-like, does it?' She made a rapid but thorough pass over the impact area with a sonic scrubber, emptied its receptacle bag in with Okita, hopped the canister back onto the pallet with a hand-tractor, and replaced everything else where she had found it. Lastly, and somewhat mournfully, she collected all the pieces of her stunner.

'So. That gives the project its first deadline. Pallet and drum must be returned here within eight hours,

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