Under Shadows. Jason LaPier
said. Dava watched the other woman as she drifted around Roy and gently tugged the pulse rifle from his hands.
“Whoa, whoa, whoa,” he said, his hands reflexively going palms out. “I’m on your side. It’s me, Basil Roy. The uh, the hacker.”
“I thought you preferred solutions architect,” Dava said.
“Right, that’s what I prefer.” His eyes rotated to meet hers. “You’re Capo Dava, right?”
“What’s the story, Roy?” she said. “Got left behind?”
“No. I mean, yes. Rando – I mean, Underboss Jansen – he wanted me to stay behind and um.” His right hand twisted through the air. “To collect up the BatCaps. You know, the Battle Capture camera drones.”
“We know what BatCaps are,” Lucky said.
Dava withdrew the blade. It was a good story, and she thought she might play along. He wouldn’t be going anywhere. “So you’ve seen the recordings?”
“What? Um, no. No, I haven’t, uh.” He seemed uncertain as to what to do with his hands with the knife no longer at his throat. If there’d been gravity, he might have let that take over and lower them for him, but instead they drifted in front of him limply. “I was supposed to play dead. Just sit in the ship with the systems powered down until it was all clear, then I could go grab the BatCaps.”
“Play dead,” Dava said. A new level of discomfort crossed Roy’s face as his brain struggled to determine whether that’d been a question, statement, or command.
“They left you in a dropship, by yourself?” Thompson said. “To collect up BatCaps?”
“Well, it was the only ship on the Longhorn that has a Xarp drive. And I need to get back home after …” He trailed off, then attempted to puff out his chest a little. “After my mission.”
Dava turned her head. If she had to look him in the face while he spouted lies any longer, she would cut his throat too soon.
Thompson picked up the conversation. “Basil, do you have any idea what kind of clusterfuck happened here?”
“Well, I don’t – I’m just a computer guy, here,” he said. “I mean, I know we lost the fight. But what else would I know about it?”
“Lost the fight?” Thompson said. “We got slaughtered out there!”
“I’m just a computer guy,” he repeated, his voice going small and weak. Then it turned curious. “Hey, how did you all get this OrbitBurner?”
Dava turned back to him. “No. No questions from you.”
“What? I,” he started, then swallowed as he looked at her eyes. “Dava – Capo – we’re on the same team. We’re all Space Waste here.”
At this she closed her eyes. She buried deep the rant about what Space Waste was, and why someone like Basil Roy would never be a part of it. She pushed it down and out of the way, because there was no time to explain these things to a dead man floating. Her family was scattered, and she and two companions were stuck in the wrong fucking system. She needed to push forward.
“Basil, I know the detector was a fake,” she said quietly, opening her eyes.
“What?” Lucky said. “What the fuck does that mean, Dava?”
“Shut the fuck up, Lucky,” Thompson said. Then she leaned in close to Dava. “What does that mean, Capo?”
Roy’s mouth went open and closed a few times before any words came out. “Why would you think that?”
“I don’t think it, I know it.”
His hands went palms up again. “Why, though? Why would anyone fake the detector? And why would you think that? We found the ModPol trans—”
“Because we found the ModPol transport,” she said evenly. “We found it so easily, we didn’t need a goddamn detector. We found the transport and walked right into an ambush.”
This statement stunned the room into silence. She brought the knife back up, not pointing it at Roy, just bringing it to her eye-line so that she could inspect the edge. She’d been sharpening it to pass the time while they drifted about the battlefield in the OrbitBurner. When she sharpened a blade long enough, she wondered how thin that edge could get. Was it possible to get it down to a single layer of molecules? Would that make it so that the blade could cut through anything, any material in the universe?
“It was Jansen!” Roy blurted. “It was his plan, it wasn’t mine. I had nothing to do with any of this! I was a tool, a pawn – don’t you see that? I’m nobody!”
“So Jansen knew about the ambush,” she said.
“I don’t know,” he said. “Honestly, I really didn’t know what was going to happen. All he told me was to make it look like the detector was working.”
“And he gave you the location of the ship?” Lucky said. “The ModPol transport?”
“Yes! Exactly. He told me where it was going to come out of Xarp. All I had to do was make it look like the detector software saw it there. Right place, right time.”
“You’re not really out here collecting BatCaps,” Thompson said.
Roy swallowed. “No. I’m sorry I lied about that. I didn’t – I don’t know who to trust. But I did my job for him. And now I want out.”
“For Jansen,” Thompson said.
He hesitated a moment. “Yeah. For Jansen,” he said. Then he added quietly, “Now I just want out.”
“What a clusterfuck,” Thompson said with a sigh.
“People are dead,” Dava said. “Because of some fucking game that these pricks are playing. People are dead. And people are locked up.”
“I’m sorry,” Roy said. “I really – I didn’t know. I just did what he rRRRKK—”
The blade went swiftly across, slicing clean through his throat. The momentum caused him to spin slowly, the blood streaming like a fan in the lack of gravity.
“People are dead,” she repeated quietly.
*
“We need to get Moses back,” Dava said. “And the rest. We need to get them back.”
Thompson was trying to wrap some kind of plastic cloth around the oozing neck of Basil Roy. “I know, Dava. We will.”
Dava shook her head and reached out to steady the stiffening body so that Thompson could accomplish her task. “And we need to get Jansen. I never trusted that guy.”
“Yeah, but you don’t trust anyone.”
Dava tried to aim a scowl at Thompson, but her soldier was focused on tying the plastic tight. “I trust people,” she muttered.
Lucky Jerk floated past them carrying a box. “Well, you were right about this guy anyway. He was lying about that stupid detector.”
“And if he was lying,” Thompson said with a huff as she tugged on the corpse, “then that means Jansen was lying.”
Dava drifted silently for a moment, watching them work. Thompson was stuffing the body of Basil Roy into the perishable cold-storage freezer and Lucky was transporting anything of strategic value from the OrbitBurner to the dropship.
She’d been too quick. Too quick to kill. She should have slowly bled him dry, bled as much information out of him as she could’ve. Jansen, that snake. She wanted to paint him as the ultimate villain in her mind, but she didn’t know what the hell he was up to. And she’d slit the throat of the only man who might’ve had a clue.
She tried to process the situation. ModPol had taken a bunch of Wasters into custody. What