reports Fuchs received were always weeks out of date, sometimes months. But it was his only link to the rest of the human race, and Fuchs was grateful to Big George for taking the trouble and the risk to do it.
Now, though, as he glowered at George’s unhappy countenance, Fuchs felt considerably less than grateful.
“That’s what his fookin’ party was for,” George was saying, morosely. “He got up on the fookin’ piano bench to tell all those people that he was gonna be a father. Pleased as a fat snake, he looked.”
Fuchs wiped George’s image off the screen and got up from his chair. His compartment was only three strides across, and he paced from one side of it to the other twice, three times, four …
It was inevitable, he told himself. She’s been married to him for eight years. She’s been in his bed every night for all that time. What did you expect?
Yet a fury boiled within him like raging molten lava. This is Humphries’s way of taunting me. Humiliating me. He’s showing the whole world, the whole solar system, that he’s the master. He’s taken my wife and made her pregnant with his son. The bastard! The crowing, gloating, boasting filthy swine of a bastard! I’ve been fighting him for all these years and he fights back by stealing my wife and making her bear his son. The coward! The gutless shit-hearted spineless slimy coward.
His hands balled into fists, Fuchs advanced to the blanked screen, the image of George’s shaggy-maned face still burning in his eyes. He had to hit something, anything, had to release this fury somehow,
“Contact,” sang Nodon’s voice over the intercom. “We have radar contact with a vessel.”
Fuchs’s head jerked to the speaker built into the bulkhead.
“It appears to be a logistics ship,” Nodon added.
Fuchs’s lips curled into a humorless smile. “I’m coming up to the bridge,” he said.
By the time he got to the compact, equipment-crammed bridge, Nodon had the approaching logistics ship on the main screen. Amarjagal was in the pilot’s seat, silent and dour as usual. Fuchs stood behind her and focused his attention on the ship.
“What’s a logistics ship doing this deep in the Belt?” he wondered aloud.
Nodon shifted his big, liquid eyes from the screen to Fuchs, then back again. “Perhaps it is off course,” he suggested.
“Or a decoy,” Fuchs snapped. “Any other ships in sight?”
“Nosir. The nearest object is a minor asteroid, less than a hundred meters across.”
“Distance?”
“Four hundred kilometers. Four thirty-two, to be precise.”
“Could it be another ship, disguised?”
Amarjagal spoke up. “There could be a ship behind it. Or even sitting on it.”
The communications receiver’s light began blinking amber.
“They’re trying to speak to us,” Nodon said, pointing to the light.
“Listen, but don’t reply,” Fuchs commanded.
“This is the
“We have a full cargo of supplies for you. Be willing to accept credit if you don’t have hard goods to trade.”
“Is
His fingers flicked across the keyboard set into the control panel. “Nosir. It is registered as an independent.”
“Are the lasers ready?”
Pointing to the green lights of the weapons board, Nodon replied, “Yessir. The crews are all in place.”
In
“Don’t open the hatches until I give the word,” their captain said from his post on the catwalk that ran around the interior of the spacious bay. “I don’t want to give Fuchs any hint that we’re ready to fry his ass.”
Fuchs rubbed his broad, stubbled chin as he stared at the image of the logistics vessel on the bridge’s main screen.
“Why would an independent logistics ship be this deep in the Belt?” he repeated. “There aren’t any miners or prospectors out here.”
“Except us,” agreed Amarjagal.
“Fire number one at their cargo bay,” Fuchs snapped.
Nodon hesitated for a fraction of a moment.
“Fire it!” Fuchs roared.
The first laser blast did little more damage than puncturing the thin skin of
In the cockpit Abrams felt cold sweat break out all over his body. “He’s shooting at us!”
Wanmanigee tensed, too. “We should get into our space suits! Quickly!”
Those were her last words.
His eyes glued to the main screen, Fuchs saw
“They’re firing back,” reported Amarjagal, her voice flat and calm.
“All weapons fire,” Fuchs said. “Tear her to shreds.”
It was a totally unequal battle.
“Cease firing,” he said.
Jabbing a finger at the image of the space-suited people floating helplessly, Nodon asked, “Shall we pick them up?”
Fuchs sneered at him. “Do you want to share your rations with them?” Nodon hesitated, obviously torn.
“And if we take them aboard, what do we do with them? How do we get rid of them? Do you think we can cruise back to Ceres and land them there?”
Nodon shook his head. Still, he turned back to watch the helpless figures floating amidst the wreckage of what had been a vessel only a few moments earlier. His finger hovered over the communications keyboard.
“Don’t tap into their frequency,” Fuchs commanded. “I don’t want to hear them begging.”
For several moments Fuchs and his bridge crew watched the figures slowly, silently drifting. They must be screaming for help, Nodon thought. Beseeching us for mercy. Yet we will not hear them.
At last Fuchs broke the silence. “One-third g acceleration,” he ordered. “Back on our original course. Let’s find a real logistics ship and fill up our supplies.”
“But…”
“They’re mercenaries,” Fuchs snapped. “Hired killers. They came out here to kill us. Now they’ll be dead. It’s no great loss.”
Nodon’s face still showed his desolation. “But they’ll die. They’ll float out there … forever.”
“Think of it this way,” Fuchs said, his voice iron-hard. “We’ve added a few more minor asteroids to the Belt.”
SELENE: ASTRO CORPORATION HEADQUARTERS
“Sabotaged.” Pancho knew it was true, even though she did not want to believe it.
Doug Stavenger looked grim. He sat tensely before Pancho’s desk, wearing light tan slacks and a micromesh pullover. Only the slight sparkling in the air around him betrayed the fact that his image was a hologram;