Part 40 (2/2)

”Great. And then don't come back around here.”

”I won't.”

”We won't,” Amos said. ”You mean we won't. Not you and not your tribe.”

”We won't.”

”Perfect. No problems, then. And give Butch your stuff, all right? Drop gun too.”

”Yes, sir.”

Amos walked back toward the hangar. Sure enough, Peaches was standing in the doorway, her arms crossed. He wiped his hand. His knuckles were bleeding.

”See, that's what civilization is,” he said. ”Bunch of stories. That's all.”

”So what if it is?” Peaches said. ”We're really good at telling stories. Everything just turned to s.h.i.+t, and we're already finding ways to put it back together. Stokes and the other servants were ready to fight us or get killed, but then I knew his name and he remembered me, and now there's a story where he wants to help us. You go out there and you send a message about how those guys should leave us alone. All of us. More than just six or seven. And, side note here, you know the Pinkwater guys are going to come back and try to kill you for that, right?”

”Just need 'em to take a long time gearing up,” Amos said. ”Figure we'll be off the ground by then.”

Stokes leaned in from behind Peaches, his expression apologetic. ”About that? There is a small problem.”

The hangar was as tall as a cathedral, and the Zhang Guo stood in the middle of it like a piece of gargantuan art. The surface of the s.h.i.+p was worked to look like gold-and-silver filigree over a body of lapis. The drive cones had golden ideograms written on them in something that looked like gold but apparently didn't melt at high temperature. He could tell from looking it didn't have an Epstein drive. Twice as big as the Rocinante and maybe maybe a quarter as functional, it was as much an orbital shuttle as it was a confession of decadence.

And, more to the point, it didn't run.

”The house power supplies are exhausted,” Stokes explained. ”Without power, there's no water recyclers. No heat. No network connections.”

”So,” Amos said. ”You figured the smart move was to get a bunch of people who've never seen a working fusion drive to just fire one up so you could top off the batteries? That's the kind of suicidal optimism you just don't see every day.”

Stokes shrugged. ”The s.h.i.+p was here only because it needed repair. We were never able to make it run.”

Amos clapped the man on the shoulder. ”You just go get me all the tools you were using. This is something I know how to do.”

Stokes trotted away, shouting to the others from his group. Erich's people seemed to be equally divided between setting up a defensive perimeter and looking for the most expensive things that would fit in their pockets. Erich and Peaches came to stand beside him.

”How f.u.c.ked are we?” Erich said.

”Don't know,” Amos said. ”First guess, there's something hinky with the power supply. Too much noise. A bad coupler. Something that's triggering the safety shutdown. But I've got to get between her hulls and take a peek.”

”I'll help you ring the circuits,” Peaches said. Erich looked over at her, confused. ”I spent a few months as an electrochemical technician,” she said.

”Well of f.u.c.king course you did,” Erich said.

”You bring a deck?” Amos asked.

”Sure,” Erich said. ”Why?”

Amos pointed at the drive cone with his chin. ”You can get the diagnostics running, and I can tell you what the output means.”

Erich frowned and scratched his neck thoughtfully with his tiny arm. ”Sure. Figure I can do that.”

Peaches coughed once, then chuckled. ”Erich? Did you ever, you know, kill anyone?”

”I run a drug empire in Baltimore,” Erich said. ”Of course I've killed someone. Why?”

”Nothing,” she said. ”It's just here we are, three murderers, and what's going to save our a.s.ses if anything does is that we happen to have the skill set to repair a fusion drive.”

Erich smiled. ”We are kind of well suited to this, aren't we?”

”Well, we'd better set up some lookouts while we do it, though,” Amos said. ”My plan to get out of here before trouble comes back may not work out.”

”I can have Stokes help with that too,” Peaches said. ”They can't fight, but they can watch. And I can get a few of the savvy ones to help us put the s.h.i.+p together if you want.”

”More the merrier,” Amos said. ”Long as they don't touch anything unless we tell them.”

”When we go, are we taking them with us?” Peaches asked.

”Yup,” Amos said.

She smirked. ”Because they're tribe?”

”s.h.i.+t no. My tribe is the crew on the Roci, maybe you two, and a dead woman. I don't actually give a s.h.i.+t if every d.a.m.ned one of 'em dies.”

”So why take them?”

One of Erich's people called out. Another one laughed, and one of the servants tentatively joined in. Amos rubbed the raw spots on his knuckles and shrugged. ”Seems like the sort of thing Holden'd do.”

Chapter Forty-one: Naomi.

Naomi lifted the handles of the resistance machine over her head then let them slowly down. Sarta sat on the box of resistance gel and watched her like someone a little bit bored at a zoo. Naomi didn't care. They didn't talk. For every purpose but the ones that mattered most, Naomi was alone.

The trick, she'd decided, was not to remove just one EVA suit, but all of them. Corrupt the data, and no one would know whether she'd taken something or not. But if she only broke the inventory for the suits, that would be telling too. She lifted the handles. The muscles in her arms and shoulders ached. She let the handles down, savoring the pain. If she could get one of the scanners she'd used before, she might be able to feed false data into the system. Fill it with a few thousand phantoms. A million EVA suits filling every square centimeter of the s.h.i.+p. Then even if she couldn't erase the data, she could render it useless. The problem was - The warning Klaxon sounded. Naomi's heart sank into her belly. They were preparing to go to free fall. She was out of time. She wasn't ready. Outside the s.h.i.+p right now, the umbilical was still in place. As soon as it was hauled in, the Pella and the Chetzemoka would peel apart, and all her fragile hopes would die. She let the handles drop. The cable pulled them back into place, ready for the next person.

She wasn't ready. She wasn't going to be ready. It didn't mean she wouldn't try.

She walked the few steps to the resistance gel and nodded at the guard. ”Going to the head.”

”Just been, you.”

”Going again,” she said, turning away.

”h.e.l.l you are. Hey!” Naomi pretended to ignore the woman, listening as she scrambled down to come after her. She'd been a model prisoner up to now, and the defiance took Sarta by surprise. Well, it was meant to. The warning sounded again, and the count. Zero g in three. Two. Naomi put both hands on the doorframe. One. Up and down vanished, and she pulled her body into a tight curl and exploded out toward Sarta. Both her feet hit the guard in the belly, sending her back through the wide empty air of the room. She grabbed Naomi's left shoe, prying it off as she spun away. It would take her seconds to reach the other side of the room and something to push against. That was her head start. Sarta was already shouting.

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