“No! I won’t let you do it! You’re crazy! I don’t want to die!”
The two of them spun together into the web of grab cables. Kicking and punching, Dos Santos shouted, “Drop-off window’s closing, Goto! Go!”
Elfrida floated in the airlock chamber, transfixed.
“Well, Goto?” Dos Santos flashed her a challenging grin, her face jammed between Kliko’s side and his bicep. “Are they training you kids properly these days?”
★
Elfrida drifted out of the Cheap Trick’s airlock, into a serene silence.
Petruzzelli had finessed the ship’s delta-V to less than 1% of max, working against the combat program. The Cheap Trick was still moving at several thousand meters a second, but Elfrida had inherited that velocity and was moving at the same speed, for now. The ship seemed to float stationary above her like a giant refrigerator wearing a tutu of radiator fins.
The Star Force logo frowned at the sun:
“What are you waiting for?” Petruzzelli shouted in her ears, shattering the peace. “Get out of the way!”
“I’m going, I’m going!” Elfrida shrieked, with a horrible sense of déjà vu.
Petruzzelli waited until Elfrida had fired up her mobility pack and buzzed away from the ship. Then she re-engaged the main drive. The refrigerator farted out an infernally glowing cloud of waste gas, illuminated for safety purposes, and shot away so fast that Elfrida lost sight of it almost immediately.
She puttered towards 11073 Galapagos, trying not to think about what she was doing.
In the far distance, a spot of light streaked across the black.
“Are you OK?” she screamed.
“Fine,” Petruzzelli grunted. “Just switched into plasma exhaust mode.”
“Is dos Santos all right?”
“Yeah. Kliko isn’t. She’s thumping his ass. I need to concentrate.” Petruzzelli cut the connection.
Elfrida swallowed, which made a loud clicking noise in her ears. She checked her HUD and the backup display on her forearm, just to make sure they both said the same thing. This suit was a spare one belonging to the Marines, and as such it was well-equipped. She had enough oxygen for a week. She had emergency rations. She had a smart diaper strapped between her legs. She had plenty of battery power. Her mobility pack, which resembled a small backpack strapped onto her suit, utilized electrically powered control moment gyroscopes; it was not as powerful as Yumiko’s integrated thrusters. 11073 Galapagos approached slowly.
She had plenty of time to take in the damage that the PLAN had done.
The large end of the asteroid was gone. Vaporized, as if a cleaver had whacked the octopus in half. The sun-tube hung out of the open end like a broken spine, still shining.
Since the Cheap Trick had matched the asteroid’s velocity before dropping Elfrida off, landing would be a snap. Her suit pinged, registering low-velocity impacts from particles dispersed by the explosion.
Out of nowhere, a bus-sized fragment plummetted at her. She instinctively threw her weight to the side. The suit picked up on her intent and carried her out of the way, just in time. The fragment hurtled past her and lost itself in space. It looked to have been a piece of the 11073 Galapagos schoolhouse, decorated with children’s murals of the saints.
“Oh God,” Elfrida whimpered, not even realizing that she was saying God rather than the correct inversion. “I don’t want to die.”
Unconsciously echoing Lieutenant Kliko, she dived towards the asteroid. She just wanted to get into shelter, out of this volume that—she now realized—was lethally riddled with debris.
The shell of the asteroid, ranging from 50 to 100 meters thick, had been shot through with passages and mini-voids, all sealed with splart. A few of these still had containment. Buzzing into the open end of the asteroid, Elfrida glimpsed private homes and verdant grottoes, each nestled in its own bubble—an affluent dimension of Galapajin society that Yonezawa had not seen fit to include in his guided tour. People pressed their hands against the epoxy, signalling desperately for her attention. So there were some survivors. “I can’t do anything for you right now,” she muttered, knowing they could not hear her. “I’ll come back, I promise!”
The sun-tube had come loose from its moorings and crashed into the city. It would have started a conflagration, if there had been any oxygen left in the habitat. Elfrida threaded her way between floating trees, dead birds, and pieces of houses. Slowly, the wreckage was drifting into clumps. The asteroid would soon be a rubble pile again. But this time the rubble would be made of people’s lives.
Of course, she was no stranger to wrecked asteroid habitats. As a veteran of numerous evacuation jobs, she had presided over the deliberate razing of houses, gardens, factories, mosques, castles, farms, and so on and so on. The main difference here was an order of magnitude. And of course, there were no robots scrambling around to salvage the recyclables.
Also, this particular calamity wasn’t UNVRP’s fault.
Was it?
Her thoughts were interrupted, as she neared the cathedral end of the habitat, by corpses floating in her path. They drifted in stiff poses with open eyes. There were dozens of them. Hundreds. Parents still holding children, couples embracing, all flash-frozen like a harvest of fruit plucked from some apocalyptic orchard.
Elfrida wept in horror. She kept experiencing the same psychological short-circuit she’d felt in the lifeboat on Botticelli Station. Want to log out → can’t log out → this is real → want to log out … Her breath rasped in her ears. Her suit told her she was hyperventilating.
“Give me something,” she gasped. “You’re military-issue, you must have stuff you can give me!”
“Based on your telemetry,” the suit said, “I’d recommend an injection of Nicozan. That’s a mild tranquilizer combined with a harmless stimulant to boost your alertness and energy.”
Elfrida giggled wildly. The suit’s serene male voice reminded her of her hair stylist in Rome. I’d recommend some subtle bronze highlights … “OK, hit me up.”
“It’s just the injectable version of what the Marines call ‘morale juice,’” the suit confided, as it poked a needle into her thigh.
“What? Ulp! I hate that stuff!”
Too late. As before, a feeling of calm potency pervaded her. She straight-armed a corpse out of the way and arrowed towards the cathedral airlock.
It was only then that she remembered she was supposed to be looking for Yumiko.
Well, she wouldn’t have been vaporized, or blown into space. No, she’d be in the cathedral, hoping to escape by blending in. If it was dark in there, and / or she wore a spacesuit, she might manage it.
A drift of frozen corpses hid the airlock. In the last terrible moments, as the air rushed out of the asteroid, they must have grabbed onto anything they could hold, including each other. Shuddering, Elfrida picked them up and flung them away into the vacuum.
Soon the airlock was exposed. It was the old-fashioned hatch type. She flung it open and buzzed into the chamber. She watched her HUD, waiting for the chamber to be pressurized.
★
“Starting launch countdown,” Jun said into a microphone that would carry his voice to the people crammed into the cathedral. “Ten. Nine. Eight. Seven.”
“There’s someone in the airlock!” Father Hirayanagi interrupted him.
The old priest’s hands hovered immobile over the pilot’s console. He pointed at a grainy black-and-white image of a person standing in the chamber of the airlock that led to the habitat.
“Launch countdown suspended,” Jun said, and threw the microphone onto its cradle. “Is it Emily-Francis?”
“I can’t tell. Was she wearing a spacesuit?”
“No. Yes!” Jun clicked on his radio. “Emily-Francis! Do you copy?” Nothing. “Emmy! Emmy! Do you copy?” He raised his head. “Of course her radio’s not working. She was out there when the nuke hit.”
He zoomed out of the bridge.
The interior
of the cathedral was, literally, no longer visible. All he could see was people. He ducked and dove through them, pushing off from their bodies to gain momentum. There was a bad smell. He dodged not a few wobbling globes of suspect-looking liquid. Their evacuation plan did not address the minor problem of lavatories for thirty thousand people. It wouldn’t matter, as long as they survived.
Not everyone had made it into the airlock in time. It would be a while before they knew exactly how many, and who, they’d lost. But Jun knew of one. Emily-Francis. Unreasonable hope tore at him.
He pressurized the airlock by hand and cranked it open.
Out jumped, not Emily-Francis, but a Marine in a formfitting spacesuit with a personal mobility pack. The Star Force logo glowed on her helmet. He didn’t see a weapon, but no doubt she had some kind of bad-ass firearm stowed in one of her cargo pockets
People stared and whispered. Jun shoved the Marine back into the airlock.
“Do not,” he gritted into her faceplate, “show yourself to my people unless you’ve come to help. Have you?”
The Marine fumbled with the catch of her helmet. She seemed to have trouble working it. Perhaps she was overcome by the horrors she’d seen. Perhaps there were some good people in the UN, after all.
“I mean, welcome and all,” Jun said. Words which pliers could not formerly have torn from his lips now came easily. “You’re the best thing I’ve seen all day. Where’s your ship? Is it big enough for all of us? It won’t be,” he answered himself. “But if you can give us some consumables, we’ll manage. That’s all we really need. Hell, you shot down those PLAN ships. You saved our lives! Thanks.”
The Marine finally got her helmet off. She did not look much like the Marines in the vids. Long, dark brown hair floated in the vacuum. Her face was round, and might have been sweet if she weren’t grimacing in embarrassment. “I’m not a Marine. I just borrowed this suit.”
“Uh … great.”
“You must be Jun Yonezawa. Nice to meet you, I guess.”
“How do you know my name?”
“Long story. Oh dog, this is going to be tough to explain. I’m Elfrida, by the way. And I have come to help. We will get you all out of here alive. But before we can do that, I have to find that bleeping phavatar.”
xxv.
Elfrida had glimpsed the crowd inside the cathedral before Yonezawa pushed her back into the airlock. It was a vision of hell. How would she ever find Yumiko in that confusion?
But Yonezawa, floating in the airlock chamber in a puffy, fluorescent-yellow spacesuit, said, “She’s not here. She went down-rock before the nuke hit.”
“Where to?”
“I don’t know.”
“Well, I’m going to look for her.”
“I’m coming with you.” Holding his helmet up to his jaw, Yonezawa spoke rapidly in Japanese. Elfrida couldn’t catch everything he said, but she caught the words “initiate launch.”
“Are you telling them to hold off?”
“I’m telling them to launch if I don’t come back in thirty minutes. There’s a lot of debris in orbit. It keeps whacking into the cathedral. I’m worried about our structural integrity.”
And I’m worried about that last PLAN ship, Elfrida thought. But there was nothing she could do except send supportive thoughts to Petruzzelli and the Star Force combat program.
They emerged into a sluggish cyclone of frozen corpses. Elfrida wished she had splarted them down instead of slinging them aside like so much detritus. Yonezawa started praying aloud. “We have to go,” Elfrida said edgily.
“We’ve been attacked before,” Yonezawa said. His voice shook. “Twice by pirates. Once by a splinter group of Russian Orthodox antinomians.”
“Uh, what did they do? Pray at you?”
“You better hope you never meet an Orthodox antinomian who bears a grudge over the filioque. But this is different. This is different.”
Elfrida initiated an infrared scan. It was no use. Even if Yumiko were generating significant heat, the sun-tube generated a Pollock-esque map of hot spots, any one of which could have been the phavatar or not. A radio scan similarly revealed nothing. If Yumiko was out there, she was keeping quiet. But Elfrida had an idea where she might be, one that made more sense the more she thought about it.
They progressed through the habitat slowly. This was mostly Yonezawa’s fault. Darting through freefall with spaceborn agility, he had no problem keeping up with Elfrida’s mobility pack, but he kept veering off to look at corpses. Elfrida held her tongue. After all, these were his friends and neighbors.
“Yonezawa!” she shouted in panic, realizing she couldn’t see him. “Where are you?”
“Over here! Have you got a weapon?”
“Have I …? No.”
“Who the hell,” he queried, “borrows a Marine’s spacesuit but doesn’t bother to borrow a weapon?”
“I wouldn’t know how to fire it if I had one,” Elfrida said. But he might have a point, she realized. If they found Yumiko, she might not be eager to come with them.
She triangulated on Yonezawa’s last signal and buzzed up (down, sideways) to the region of the habitat where the sun-tube had fallen. It bathed the still-intact houses in light angled like a sunset, but as bright as noon. She flew through shadows with edges that looked sharp enough to draw blood. There was movement everywhere: a mini-storm of frozen rice, an old woman’s corpse curtseying in a doorway like a cuckoo clock figurine. The flickers at the edges of her faceplate kept her on edge. The ubiquitous salad vines, which had combined Co2-sink functionality with in-a-pinch edibility, swayed in the vacuum, frozen brittle. They broke off when she kicked through them.
She dived over a wall into a spacious compound, and recognized it as somewhere she’d been before. This was the home and workshop of 11073 Galapagos’s swordsmith. Yonezawa emerged from the main house, waving two sheathed katanas. He threw one at her.
“Are you kidding? A sword?”
“I left my gun in the cathedral. If you don’t want it, leave it here, but I’m taking this one.”
Elfrida tethered the sword to her hip. In a Proustian moment, she remembered her grandfather showing her the family sword, explaining that his father had brought it back from World War II … No. That hadn’t really happened. The truth, as her father later confessed, was that a Goto had served as an officer in WWII, but had had his sword confiscated by the authorities after the war when strict weapons control regulations were enacted. So it had never passed down to his descendants. Anyway, Fuji had made a clean sweep of all Japanese family heirlooms …
She followed Yonezawa out of the compound, through a haze of real memories, false memories, and apprehension.
“This is what it must have been like after Fuji,” Yonezawa said, articulating the analogy that had occurred to her, too. The sun-tube burnt at the end of the street like a static river of magma.
“Except with less water,” Elfrida said. “It was the tsunamis that did most of the damage. That’s how my family was killed.”
“Are you Japanese?” His surprise was evident.
“Only half. Not really.”
“And you’re not a Catholic.”
“N—” She remembered the ceremony in the chapel at St. Peter’s. “Actually, I guess I am.” She had a sinking feeling, weirdly bordering on panic. “You baptized me.”
“Huh? We baptized your assistant, Shimada Yumiko.”
“It wasn’t her. It was me. I mean, there is no such person as Yumiko Shimada,” she further attempted to explain, wishing she hadn’t gotten into this. But she owed him the truth at this point. “When we say assistant, we don’t actually mean a person. We mean the machine intelligence that operates the android when no one is logged in. So it’s sometimes been her, and sometimes me, and for one short period it was my boss. So …”
“So all this time we’ve been dealing with an AI,” Yonezawa said in a dangerously calm tone.
“A weak, inhibited AI. That’s why we call them
machine intelligences, not artificial intelligences. There’s a legal and practical difference. She has to obey orders.” Elfrida tried to make it sound better, while knowing that this was part of the problem, because not all of Yumiko’s orders had come from UNVRP.
“Semantics.”
A tree floated between them. It was one of the sakura from the grounds of St. Peter’s, still in its planter, no longer anchored by spin gravity. Yonezawa dodged its branches, while Elfrida got tangled up in them.
“We could sue you,” cried Yonezawa, a yellow flicker against the blackness of space.
“You certainly have that recourse,” Elfrida grunted, fighting her way out of the tree, “under Section II(c) of the Asteroid Purchase Enablement Act. You should be aware, however, that court battles can be costly, and plaintiffs rarely win compensation orders without overwhelming evidence that the purchase decision was based on incomplete or biased assessment data.”
And this, in fact, was one of the outcomes that she was trying to avoid by retrieving Yumiko and her memory crystals. But Yonezawa didn’t know that. She felt worse than ever about deluding him. She realized that she had involved him in a mission to diddle the Galapajin out of what might otherwise be a fortune in compensation. (And now she understood dos Santos’s motives better, she thought.)
A long piece of photovoltaic mesh had caught on the steeple of St. Peter’s. It undulated in the vacuum like a flag.
“Why do you think she’s in there?”
“Because she is. I know it.”
“It’s not a church anymore. She desecrated it. It has to be reconsecrated. It’s filthy now.”
“Which is exactly why she would come here. She’s got a—a thing about Christianity. You and your friends filled her head with ideas, and I think she’s reacting to them. She—”
“Goto,” her radio interrupted. “Goto, this is Petruzzelli, do you copy?”
“I copy! What’s going on? Did you catch that toilet roll?”
The Galapagos Incident: A Science Fiction Thriller (The Solarian War Saga Book 1) Page 21