Head directly for Ceres and the habitat
The security chief’s morose face disappeared from Harbin’s screen, leaving him alone in his compartment.
Let him worry about Vesta, Harbin thought sourly. And what do I do about supplies? Where do I get fuel and food for my crew? How do I get all the way over to Ceres on what’s left in my propellant tanks? I’ve stripped this ship’s armor, too. What if I run into an Astro attack vessel? Grigor can give orders, but carrying them out is up to me.
Doug Stavenger was also feeling frustrated about the long time lag between Selene and the Belt. Edith, aboard
“… so it turns out that if you’d stayed here,” he was saying to her, “you’d have had a big story at your doorstep. Humphries isn’t letting any news media into his home, not even inside his garden, or what’s left of it. But from what the safety inspectors tell me the house is a burned-out shell and that big, beautiful garden of his is almost completely destroyed.”
He hesitated, leaned back in his recliner and tried to group his thoughts coherently. It was difficult speaking to a blank screen. It was like talking to yourself.
“Edie, this war’s gone far enough. I’ve got to do something to stop it. They’re fighting here in Selene now and I can’t permit that. If that fire had spread beyond Humphries’s garden it could have killed a lot of people here. Everyone, maybe, if we couldn’t get it under control. I can’t let them pose that kind of a threat to us. I’ve got to stop them.”
Yes, Stavenger told himself. You’ve got to stop them. But how? How can you stop two of the most powerful corporations in the solar system from turning Selene into a battleground?
When his message arrived at
But in her mind a voice was exulting, Fuchs is heading here! He has to be. He has friends among the rock rats. One way or another he’s going to sneak back to Ceres, at least long enough to refuel and restock his ship. And I’ll be there to interview him!
She was so excited that she hopped up from the chair she’d been sitting in to view her husband’s message and left her cabin, heading up the narrow passageway toward the bridge. I’ve got to find out exactly when we dock at
Lars Fuchs was indeed heading for Ceres, running silently, all beacons and telemetry turned off. Hands clasped behind his back, mouth turned down in a sullen scowl, he paced back and forth across the bridge of the
The ship was running smoothly enough, for its first flight in deep space. Its systems were automated enough so that the four of them could run it as a skeleton crew. Nodon’s shoulder was healing, and Sanja had assured Fuchs that there were more crewmen waiting for them at
Fuchs was officially exiled from the rock rats’ habitat, and had been for nearly ten years. But they’ll let me take up a parking orbit, he thought. Just for a day or so. Just long enough to take on more crew and supplies.
Then what? he asked himself. I have
Until he kills me, Fuchs realized. This war between us can end in only one way. I’m a dead man. He told me that years ago.
He caught a glimpse of himself reflected in one of the blank screens on the bridge. A bitter, angry face with a thin slash of sneering lips and deepset eyes that burned like hot coals.
All right, he said to his image. He’ll kill me. But it will cost him plenty. I won’t go easily. Or cheaply.
Big George Ambrose was fidgeting uncomfortably at the conference table. His chair was just a tad too small for his bulk, its arms just high enough to force him to hunch his shoulders slightly. After a couple of hours it got painful.
And this meeting had been going on for more than a couple of hours. The governing board of
George thought the pub was a good idea. Maybe we should have our fookin’ meetings there, he said to himself. Get them all half blind and then take a vote.
But this was a serious issue, he knew. It had to be faced squarely. And soberly.
Pancho had warned George that Lars Fuchs was in a spacecraft heading for the Belt. It didn’t take a genius to realize that he’d have to get supplies from somewhere, and Ceres was the only somewhere there was.
“He might not come here at all,” said one of the board members, an edgy-looking woman in a high-mode pullover that sported more cutouts than material. “He might just hijack a ship or two and steal the supplies he needs. He
“That’s why we exiled him in the first place,” said the bland-looking warehouse operator sitting next to her.
“That’s not entirely true,” George pointed out.
“But we did exile him,” the warehouseman retorted. “So we don’t have to allow him to dock here.”
“That all happened ten years ago,” said one of the older board members, a former miner who had started a new career as an armaments repairman.
“But he was exiled for life, wasn’t he?”
“Right,” George admitted.
“So there.”
The woman sitting directly across from George, a plumpish redhead with startling violet eyes, said, “Listen. Half the HSS ships in the Belt are going to be looking for Fuchs. If he puts in here they’ll grab him.”
“This is neutral territory,” George said. “Everybody knows that. We’ve established it with HSS and Astro. We service any ship that comes to us, and they don’t do any fighting within a thousand klicks of our habitat.”
“That doesn’t mean we have to service Fuchs. He’s an exile, remember.”
“There’s something else involved,” George added. “We have a news media star heading here. She’ll arrive tomorrow. Edith Elgin.”
“I’ve watched her shows from Selene!”
“Isn’t she married to Douglas Stavenger?”
“What’s she coming here for?”
“To do a documentary about the war,” George explained.
“Do we want to have a documentary about the war? I mean, won’t that be bad publicity for us?”
“She’ll want to interview Fuchs, I bet.”
“That’d be a great way to get everybody’s attention: an interview with the notorious pirate.”
“It’ll make us look like a den of thieves.” “Can we stop her?”
All eight of them looked to George.
Surprised at this turn, George said, “We’d have a helluva time shooing her away. She’s got a right to report the news.”
“That doesn’t mean we have to help her. Let her interview Fuchs somewhere else.”
But George was thinking, Humphries’s people are smart enough to watch her and wait for Fuchs to show up. Wherever she interviews Fuchs, it’s going to be fookin’ dangerous for both of them.