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Authors: R. M. Meluch

The Ninth Circle (21 page)

BOOK: The Ninth Circle
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“And they think there’s honor among thieves?” Philippe said. The others cackled like cartoon villains.
This was just plain unbelievable.
“Any warrants posted on the open channels?” Maurice asked.
“No,” said Crow. “But the Xerxes is winking at us.”
A light blinked on the starboard side of the Xerxes. Not flashing a code any of them knew. But the outer hatch to the air lock on the starboard side was open, as if inviting them to dock.
“What do you want to do, Cap’n?” Crow asked.
Maurice’s whole face crinkled up, merrily grinning. “Dock.”
“I don’t like it.”
“Change your diaper, Philippe.”
“Let me out,” said Philippe.
Etienne already had the weapons locker open. He tossed personal fields and sidearms to his mates. He motioned to throw gear to Philippe, but Philippe made no move to catch.
“No. I am serious,” said Philippe. “I am leaving. Give me a moment to launch my skiff. You can keep my cut. Let me be—gah!” Philippe cried, holding his bleeding forearm. “What was that for?”
Maurice closed his butterfly knife. “That is your cut.”
“Maniac!”
“You do not want in?” said Maurice. “You are out.”
Maurice menacingly opened the hatch to the nearest air lock.
Philippe looked annoyed, pained. “Don’t play stupid games.”
Maurice seized Philippe, collar and waistband, and heaved him bodily into the air lock. Slammed the hatch and locked it.
Gaston turned uneasily to Maurice. “You are
not
—?”
Shooting Philippe out the air lock
, Gaston meant to ask. Couldn’t say it.
“I want him where he can’t get in the way,” said Maurice. “He may run away to mama
after
we have the bounty in our own vault.”
“Well, that’s all right then,” said Gaston.
Crow maneuvered
Villa Grande
up against the Xerxes to achieve hard dock with the open lock. Crow remotely opened
Villa Grande
’s outer hatch and pressurized the joined air locks between the ships.
Maurice, Gaston, Etienne, Crow, and Raul armed themselves with everything in their arsenal that wouldn’t pierce a ship’s hull or engine compartment.
At Maurice’s nod, Gaston opened the hatch on their side of the dock. He did not step through.
The short span across two air locks to the Xerxes’ inner hatch was looking like a kill jar.
From the far side, no one was opening the Xerxes’ inner hatch to welcome them aboard.
“She’s all come hither, no put out,” said Maurice.
“Are we going in?” Gaston asked.
“You are,” said Maurice.
“I’m not going in there,” said Gaston.
“Then you can have a piece of Philippe’s cut,” said Maurice.
Gaston snarled. He grimaced and stepped into
Villa Grande
’s air lock. He paused at the join, then stepped through the double hatchways into the Xerxes’ air lock.
A soft feminine machine voice spoke an intruder warning. Commanded Gaston to exit within five seconds.
“What do I do?”
“Give her six seconds,” said Maurice.
Beam fire flashed off Gaston’s personal field. He fell to the deck kicking, howling.
It took Gaston a moment to realize that he wasn’t damaged.
Gaston lay back, laughing himself to tears. “There it is!” he cried. The booby trap they’d been so afraid of. “It’s a dud!”
Maurice chuckled. He offered a hand down to Gaston and hauled him up into a bear hug. “Good man.”
Gaston growled unkind words.
The voice from the air lock repeated its warning for Maurice before it fired its impotent beams at his protective personal field.
Maurice tapped the inner hatch of the Xerxes with his forefinger, scolding. “Ah, you always say no, but you never mean it, do you.” He gave the lever a tug.
He’d expected to find the inner hatch locked, but the lever turned. The seal relaxed.
Maurice pulled his gas mask down over his face. He looked back to his mates. Nodded at them to do the same.
He nudged the hatch open a grenade’s width. He tossed in a gas canister and a stinger and yanked the hatch back shut. Wrenched the lever to lock it.
And waited.
No sounds of scrambling or pain carried from the opposite side. Just the hissing of the gas canister and the clatter of splinters peppering the chamber.
As the smugglers waited for the gas to degrade, they drew lots to see who took point next.
Crow got the short end.
Crow eased the Xerxes’ inner hatch open a sliver.
“Hello?” Crow called into the complete darkness.
Heard nothing.

Hello?
” said Maurice behind him. “I give them a smoker and a stinger and you say hello?”
“Well,” said Crow. A knee in his back sent him stumbling forward through the hatchway.
Maurice followed Crow aboard. He turned on his headlamp. Saw no one else. No bodies. He called up to the ship, “Hey bitch! Some lights?”
The Xerxes did not recognize the command.
Headlamps would have to do.
Maurice was not sure what kind of chamber this was, but
that
was a definitely a Persian carpet underfoot. There were flash burns on it. Yellow threads glinted bright under their lamplight.
“Is that gold?” Crow asked, still on hands and knees.
“Get it appraised later,” said Maurice. “Pay attention. Don’t get flanked. And don’t tell Philippe, but there is a bit of wrong here.”
They moved deeper into the ship, trying to find the control room. Maurice kept telling them to spread out, but they kept drawing back into a clutch.
Something sounded behind them. They looked around, headlamps moving like searchlights.
“Etienne?”
“I’m right here,” said Etienne.
“Raul?”
“I’m here.”
“Who is watching the hatch?”
Maurice was aware of sounds—the faintest rustling. He’d thought it was his own crew, but the sounds were on all sides.
“Shoot! Shoot! Shoot!”
“Where!”

Shoot
!”
They fired all directions. Needn’t worry about hitting each other. Knew their personal fields would protect them from all short beams and splinters. They were bulletproof.
So were their attackers.
It took a slow blade to get through a personal field. And Maurice reached for his butterfly too late.
13
 
“Y
OU WERE NOISY, NOX,” Orissus said.
Nox had stabbed his man up through the diaphragm into the heart. His victim had got off a scream and some nauseating gurgles. The brothers had done quieter jobs on their victims, but just as bloody.
Immediately after slaying the smugglers, Nox, Pallas, Nicanor, and Orissus boarded the smugglers’ ship
Villa Grande
. They searched all the compartments and holds for anyone left behind. There was a personal skiff stowed in internal dock, but no one in it.
They pronounced the ship clear.
Still vibrating from the slaughter, his victim’s blood growing cold and sticky on his hands, Nox was not sure if Orissus was really that callous or if he was trying to show an attitude.
You were noisy
.
All the brothers had simulated hand-to-hand combat training. Real killing and actual dead bodies here unsettled most of them. They concentrated on their assigned tasks.
Leo secured the
Villa Grande
’s control room. Faunus was watching the air lock that joined the ships.
Orissus, Pallas, Nox, and Nicanor collected the smugglers’ bodies from
Bagheera’
s deck to carry back to the
Villa Grande
.
“They really messed over the
Bagh
,” said Orissus, passing through the antechamber. Flash burns scorched the Xerxes entryway. Shrapnel dents pocked the walls, the deck, the overhead. The smell of gas residue clung to the Persian carpet. “They didn’t have to do this.”
“Actually, well, they did,” Nox said. “We made them dead.”
“Then why did we let them board?” said Orissus. “Why didn’t we just board them?”
“No surprises on our home field,” said Nicanor. “We controlled the situation.”
Nox added, “‘Very few mongooses, however wise and old they may be, care to follow a cobra into its hole.’”
They came to the joined air locks where
Bagheera
docked to
Villa Grande
.
Faunus, guarding the hatch, asked for a password. Orissus and Nox gave him lots of words.
Orissus, Nox, Pallas, and Nicanor carried the dead smugglers through the air locks and dropped them on their own deck.
Nox saw Pallas move apart, looking fragile. Nox suggested, “Why don’t you go back and order
Bagheera
to get himself cleaned off?”
Pallas’ abdomen moved. He swallowed hard. “Aye,” he said thickly, and returned to the Xerxes. Gave Faunus the impudent digit in passing.
Nox wiped his sticky hands on
Villa Grande
’s walls. The smuggler ship was grimy. “Stinks in here.”
Then the thumping started. Muffled shouts.
Orissus, Nicanor, and Nox froze in place.
Nox felt a prickling chill. “I thought we were clear.”
They listened.
Faunus called through the air lock. “Is that you?”
“No!” Nox called back. “Hold your position.”
“Someone’s still in here,” said Nicanor. The noise carried through the
Villa Grande
’s decks and bulks. They felt it. Heard it. The definite sound of hammering fists and stomping feet—one set—of someone trying to get out of a confined space.
“Air locks!” Orissus thundered.
“We cleared them,” said Nox.
“Not all of them,” said Orissus charging forward toward the noise.
Leo reported over the com from
Villa Grande
’s control room, “We have an unident in the forward starboard side air lock!”
Nox, Orissus, Nicanor, Leo, and Galeo gathered at the thumping hatch. Someone shouted on the other side.
Most ships were equipped with visual air lock monitors, so crew could see what was inside the lock before opening the hatch.
The monitor showed a screaming, thrashing man inside the starboard air lock. He had no visible weapons in there with him. He seemed dizzy, wanting air.
“The smugglers forgot to put out their trash,” said Orissus.
Leo said, “The enemy of my enemy is—” he paused, leaving a blank to be filled in. “My what?”
“Not my friend,” said Nicanor. “I would space him.”
“No,” said Nox.
“We’re not going to keep him,” said Nicanor. “And we’re not letting him go.”
“No,” Nox agreed.
“What do we do with him?”
“Is this thing recording?” Nox tapped at the air lock monitor.
“Could be,” said Orissus. He clicked it on. “It’s recording now.”
Nox opened the hatch wide enough to toss in a miniature daisycutter, slammed the hatch shut, and locked it. Turned away from the monitor and tried not to listen.
Heard a wet sound like a heavy gust of hard sleet slapping against the hatch.
“Shit!”
said Orissus, eyes round.

Deus!
” said Nicanor.
Leo made a noise of disgust.
When Nox opened his eyes, there was more space between him and his brothers than normal. They were afraid of him.
Nox removed the recording slip from the monitor. Held it in his fist. His voice came out low and vibrating. “This is not a home movie. It is a warning to anyone who thinks to collect us.”
His brothers drifted back in. A hand landed on his shoulder. It felt like approval. Orissus said, “Let me do the next one.”
Nox nodded. “I only have one of those in me, O Best Beloved.”
Nicanor briskly moved past the grisly horror. He shouted like a commanding officer, “All right, men. Are we quite sure
now
that we have secured all the hostiles!”
The brothers conducted a swift but thorough second search. Nicanor had the right idea. Stay in motion.
Pretend we’re not horrified.
BOOK: The Ninth Circle
4.91Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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