The Outback Stars

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The Outback Stars Page 24

by Sandra McDonald


  “He’s not responding,” Hosaka said. “I can’t raise him!”

  “Ensign Ysten, get into an EV suit and go get him,” Jodenny ordered.

  “Me?” Ysten squeaked out. “I haven’t been in a suit since the academy.”

  Hosaka cut in. “I’ve got Emergency Services on the line, Lieutenant. They’ll be here in three minutes.”

  Emergency Services had their own tram system for getting around the ship, with private cars running on separate lines. The team responding would most likely be coming from Mainship, but neither she nor Myell had time for her to flag them down to hitch a ride. Cursing, she jabbed her gib and said, “Captain Umbundo, this is Lieutenant Scott. This is an actual emergency, this is not a drill, please respond.”

  A few seconds passed before she got a response. “Commander Larrean here. What’s your emergency, Lieutenant?”

  “I have a critically injured crewman in T6,” she said. “I’m on D-Deck, platform two. Car 731’s right in front of me. Can you activate it?”

  “Standby,” Larrean said. Several more precious seconds passed. Jodenny spliced into the command module cameras and saw Ishikawa climbing down the railings of the shaft with only an oxygen mask strapped over her face.

  Umbundo’s voice came over her channel. “This is the captain. You’re authorized for voice command on car 731.”

  The tram doors slid open and Jodenny jumped onboard. “Full speed to T6,” she ordered, and nearly lost her balance as the car lurched forward and sped up to its top velocity. Jodenny hung tight to a pole and stared at her gib while Ishikawa disappeared into the slots on level forty-eight. She spliced into the stream from his EV suit and saw that he didn’t have a pulse.

  Thirty seconds. One minute. Ishikawa didn’t have thrusters to move through the slots. Every meter had to be navigated using handholds. The General Quarters alarm abruptly silenced, leaving Jodenny with a ache in her ears.

  Hosaka said, “Lieutenant, Emergency Services is here.”

  Ishikawa emerged from level forty-eight, towing Myell behind her. The inside of his helmet was bloody and his limbs were lax. The zero-gravity allowed Ishikawa to make quick progress, but even if Myell was still alive, brain-death might already be setting in. The man who woke up—if he woke up—might not be the man she knew at all.

  Ishikawa reached the command module just as Jodenny’s tram slid into the first station. The Rocks were deserted, all the stores left open. Secbots patrolled overhead to prevent looting. Jodenny ran for the access ring, her right leg twinging in pain. Myell wasn’t brain-dead, damn it, not with that family who loved him so dearly back on Mary River, not at the age of twenty-eight, not while working in the stupid slots. When she reached the module he was flat on the deck, with two medics working on him and a medbot hovering overhead. The medics had inserted an airway and were pumping oxygen into him.

  “Pulse is coming back,” one said.

  “He’s got internal bleeding,” said the other.

  Beneath the blood, Myell was shockingly pale. His fingers were curled up and his lips tinged blue. Ishikawa sat nearby, shivering violently. Hosaka was on the comm with Mainship and Ysten was staring at everyone, utterly useless.

  “Yes, Master Chief,” Hosaka said. “Lieutenant Scott’s here now.”

  The medics quickly stabilized Myell, then loaded him onto a stretcher. Jodenny remembered him playing baseball on his brother’s farm, running the bases with his head down and fists loose. She hadn’t realized how grim he usually looked, how clenched and unhappy, until she’d seen him surrounded by people who loved him.

  Hosaka said, “Lieutenant. The SUPPO wants to talk to you.”

  “Get Ishikawa a blanket,” Jodenny said to Ysten. She forced herself to the comm. While she briefed Al-Banna on what little she knew, Hosaka showed Ysten where the thermal blankets were kept. They shook one out and wrapped it around Ishikawa. When the lift came back up it was full of representatives from Security and Safety.

  Chief Bishop from Security said, “Who can tell me what happened?”

  “I can,” Hosaka said. “One of the dingoes stopped responding in the slots. Sergeant Myell went down to retrieve it. The GQ went off, and a minute later Circe smacked right into him. AT Ishikawa pulled him out.”

  “Anyone would have done it,” Ishikawa said, rather shyly.

  Ysten hadn’t done it. Jodenny said, “You saved his life. You were extremely brave.”

  Ishikawa’s cheeks turned pink. “Sergeant Myell’s a good guy.”

  Was that a note of admiration she heard in the AT’s voice? A hint of infatuation? The idea almost made Jodenny smile, but the blood on the deck made her guts churn. She said, “I’m going to Sick Berth.”

  She didn’t remember much of the trip over. Gallivan and Timrin were already in the waiting room when she arrived.

  “He’s in surgery,” Gallivan said.

  “How does a dingo run into someone?” Timrin demanded. “Wasn’t the tower locked down?”

  “We don’t know exactly what happened.” No longer sure she could stand straight, Jodenny sank down in the nearest chair. Gallivan pressed his cup of coffee into her hands.

  “You probably need this more than I do,” he said.

  What she needed was some way to erase the image of Myell lying white-faced and bleeding on the deck. Timrin sat down across from her and bowed his head. Gallivan came and went, preferring to pace outside. The wallvids provided background noise with ship’s news and announcements. After several loops of the same information Timrin got up and shut it off. Master Chief DiSola came by to check, as did LCDR Zarkesh, Chief Roush, Ensign Hultz, and Sergeant VanAmsal. More representatives from Security and Safety showed up, all to take statements. Hosaka arrived, having changed out of her bloodstained jumpsuit.

  “The level was locked, Lieutenant,” she said. “I swear it.”

  Jodenny squeezed Hosaka’s arm. “It’s not your fault.”

  Lunch had long come and gone before Wildstein arrived with Commander Picariello at her side. They took Jodenny into a small side lounge where no one else could overhear. “How did this happen?” Wildstein asked.

  “He’s still in surgery,” Jodenny said, not caring how peevish she sounded. “Thank you for your concern, ma’am.”

  Wildstein grimaced. “I know he’s still in surgery, Lieutenant. I’ve been listening to the reports. What happened?”

  Jodenny went through the story again. She expected Wildstein to reprimand her for calling Larrean and circumventing the chain of command, but instead Wildstein turned to Picariello and asked, “Commander?”

  “Lieutenant Scott, do you think this was an accident?” he asked.

  She blinked in surprise. “Could it be anything else?”

  “Sergeant Myell stood a security watch the night before last, and he and his partner broke up a fight between some sailors in the E-Deck gym. Sergeant Spallone, RT Engel, and AT Olsson were involved.”

  Chiba’s men. Jodenny said, “Sergeant Myell didn’t mention a fight to me. But I don’t see how this kind of accident could have been engineered.”

  “I understand there’s some long-standing animosity between Myell and Spallone,” Picariello said. “If Myell dies, if this wasn’t an accident—it could be murder.”

  Wildstein and Picariello stayed for a short time, but departed when it became apparent Myell wasn’t coming out of surgery anytime soon. Jodenny blinked at the clock, her eyesight so bleary that she could barely make out the digits. She’d been awake well over twenty-four hours. Just as she was thinking of finding more coffee, Dr. Lee emerged in surgical scrubs.

  Dr. Lee asked, “Are you Sergeant Myell’s division officer?”

  “Yes.” Jodenny indicated Timrin. “This is his roommate. How is he?”

  “He had a dislocated shoulder, two broken ribs, a punctured lung, and a sprained hip. I’ve already started healing the fractures and they’ll be fine. He was without oxygen for a period of time, but I don’t see any indicat
ion of severe brain damage.”

  “Severe?” Timrin asked.

  “He might evidence the usual symptoms of a concussion—confusion, irritation, mood swings. He doesn’t remember anything since breakfast, so there’s retrograde amnesia as well.”

  Jodenny knew too much about amnesia. Sometimes the disaster on the Yangtze seemed like it was just inches away, able to be grasped if she simply reached out. At others it was a blank white wall, featureless and smooth. She asked, “What’s the good news?”

  “That is the good news.” Lee rubbed the side of her head and stifled a yawn. “He’s alive and should be back to limited duty in a week or so. He can have visitors now. One at a time.”

  Timrin went in to see Myell first. Jodenny went to the head and washed her face with cold water. She didn’t imagine the incident would fade away even though Myell was expected to recover. The safety investigation would take days if not weeks to complete. Someone or something would need to be blamed. Ishikawa deserved an award. When Myell returned to duty he would need to do something a little less strenuous than being run over by DNGOs, and someone would have to take care of the jobs he’d been performing.

  She had no intention of letting anyone in the slots until Circe’s erratic and potentially fatal behavior could be explained, accident or not.

  Vu came looking for her. “I heard the good news. Come on, I’ll buy you dinner.”

  “It’s not dinnertime,” Jodenny said.

  “It’s almost eighteen hundred hours.”

  Anger made her fists clench. Most of Underway Stores had been off work for at least an hour. None of them felt any responsibility to at least drop by Sick Berth on their way to more important activities? Even Nitta hadn’t bothered to put in an appearance.

  “I’m not hungry,” she said.

  Vu wasn’t persuaded. “Sure you are. You just don’t know it.”

  Timrin came out of the recovery room. “Terry would like to see you, ma’am.”

  Jodenny went inside. Myell didn’t look half bad. Still pale and groggy, but not bleeding. His hair stuck up in all directions. A sheet demurely covered him to the neck, and she could see the outline of healing casts underneath it.

  “Kay,” Myell murmured.

  No use correcting him when he was obviously under the influence of drugs. “Sergeant. You gave us a scare.”

  The fingers of his right hand twitched. She hesitated, then slid her hand into his grasp. His skin was cool and dry. She told herself she would have held Ishikawa’s hand if it had been the young AT on the bed. Strayborn, too. Even Nitta.

  “Sorry,” he said.

  “Everything’s fine,” she assured him. “Rest up. You’ve earned it.”

  Myell murmured something she didn’t quite catch. His eyes slid closed. For a moment she thought he’d up and died on her, but a quick look at the monitors dissipated that particular fear. Jodenny studied his face, watching tension ease away into drugged sleep. She bent and kissed his cool lips and yes, there it was, she was doomed for her feelings. She pulled her hand from his lax grip and backed away to the waiting room.

  “Let’s go get dinner,” she said to Vu, but the food was tasteless and all she could think about was Terry.

  CHAPTER TWENTY-TWO

  He didn’t remember much about the accident itself—pain, yes, but only an echo of the agony; voices that hadn’t made much sense; the feeling of falling, though certainly the shaft had never initialized gravity. Afterward there had been only a great red desert under a burnt-toast sky, and the Wirrinun dragging out designs in the dirt with the tip of his spear.

  “Your path will fork,” the Wirrinun said. “Uluru is your future.”

  “Uluru?” In this dream he was as naked as the Wirrinun, but he felt curiously unembarrassed. Myell craned his neck, trying to make sense of the Wirrinun’s designs, but the lines wavered and shimmered and refused to hold still. The landscape around them both was without distinctive features of any kind. “Am I dead? Is that what you’re trying to tell me?”

  “You will have to choose.” The Wirrinun slammed his staff against the ground and the Rainbow Serpent spiraled out of the dirt, carrying Myell up toward the sky. “Choose, choose, choose,” the snake echoed, its voice oily and coy, and Myell slipped from its neck and fell toward a long line of shattered Mother Spheres. Just as he hit the broken stonework of the nearest one, it transformed into the soft mattress of a hospital bed. A dark silhouette moved above him, a woman with perfume that almost smelled like strawberries.

  “Kay?” he asked.

  “No, it’s Chaplain Mow.” She touched his forehead with warm, soft fingers. “There was an accident yesterday. Do you remember?”

  “I was dreaming,” he said, groggy from sleep and sedatives. “A snake. The Spheres.”

  Chaplain Mow moved to the bedside table. “Here. Drink this.”

  A straw in his mouth, blessed coolness: never before had water tasted so good. After a moment the chaplain took the glass away and he grasped her arm. “Did you tell them about our trip?” he asked, sure she was Jodenny. “Do they know about the other planets?”

  “I don’t think they know,” she replied. “But if you’d like, you could tell me.”

  * * *

  The General Quarters that nearly killed Myell also resulted, indirectly, in the destruction of Lieutenant Francesco’s career.

  Jodenny didn’t hear about the scandal until the day after the accident. She had gone to bed and slept ten hours straight, without a single dream to disturb her. The morning had been spent going through logs and procedures with the Safety Department representatives. She was sure that Myell hadn’t done anything wrong during his trip to the slots, and the data sensors confirmed it. His EV suit had been properly operating, the DNGOs had all been locked down, and every safety code had been strictly adhered to. But Circe, who’d been located and removed by a special team, showed no record of colliding with Myell. As far as the robot was concerned, there hadn’t even been an accident.

  “Something must be wrong with her programming,” Jodenny said.

  Al-Banna, who had sat in for part of the meeting, took her aside afterward. “You’re sure your people did nothing wrong? Sergeant Myell didn’t bring this on himself in some way?”

  The implication made her temper rise. “No, sir. In no possible way did he bring this on himself.”

  “Sometimes people do,” Al-Banna said, but he didn’t press her on it.

  Later that afternoon she was in her office when Holland asked, “Lieutenant, would you care to be informed of a development in the officers’ wardroom?”

  “What development?” Jodenny asked.

  “Lieutenant Francesco has been relieved of duty pending an official investigation into charges of fraternization with Chief Vostic.”

  Hultz had all the gossip, and was glad to share it over the gib. “When the GQ went off one of their RTs walked in on them—it wasn’t pretty, from what I heard.”

  Jodenny didn’t know which was worse—Francesco falling for his own chief, or them fooling around in his office. She remembered kissing Myell in Sick Berth, and chided herself for her hypocrisy.

  “She’s still at work but he’s been relieved,” Hultz said. “Quenger’s taking over for A. J. for the time being. Poor guy.”

  Jodenny called Francesco but he didn’t answer. She decided a visit to Sick Berth could wait. She continued to be upset with her division, though. She snapped at Amador for daring to ask who would take Myell’s place. She caught Mauro leaving his issue room fifteen minutes early for lunch and put him on report. When she found Lange in IR3 watching the East Enfield vs. Suffolk game on his gib, she snatched it from his hands.

  “Where did you get that?” Jodenny demanded.

  “It’s mine, Lieutenant!”

  “Yours is in Chief Nitta’s desk. This must be stolen.”

  “Chief Nitta gave it back to me,” Lange said sourly. “You were supposed to have Strayborn sit down with me but you never
did. Chief said I’d been punished long enough.”

  Jodenny had in fact forgotten about her promise. Jaunting through the universe via the Mother Sphere and Myell’s near-death had left her slightly preoccupied. She let Lange keep the gib but issued him five demerits for watching soccer on duty and then went back to her office, intent on berating Nitta for going behind her back.

  “No one’s here but me, ma’am,” Dicensu said when she stormed in. “Mrs. Mullaly has a doctor’s appointment. Chief and RT Caldicot went for coffee. Oh, and Commander Picariello’s in your office.”

  Picariello was sitting in front of her desk, his long legs stretched in front of him. “What do you know about the animosity between Chief Chiba and Sergeant Myell?”

  Jodenny closed the hatch. “You think Chiba tried to kill him?”

  “It’s worth a look-see. Wasn’t there an incident between them on the mess deck not long ago?”

  “The day before we dropped into Mary River’s system.”

  “And then, a fight between Underway Stores and Maintenance.”

  Jodenny sat down. “Chief Chiba used to be in Underway Stores. He didn’t like Myell then. Then there was the rape allegation, which you know about.”

  “Yes. And I know about what happened while Myell was in custody.”

  She remembered Strayborn saying he’d been put in the brig. “What was that, sir?”

  Picariello hesitated. “You didn’t hear? Some of the men who worked for Chiba got into Myell’s cell.”

  Jodenny leaned forward. “He was in Security’s custody and he got assaulted?”

  Picariello’s blue and brown eyes hardened. “There were no injuries. Sergeant Myell wouldn’t press charges.”

  “Was Lieutenant Commander Senga involved, sir?” Jodenny asked. “He seemed a bit hostile toward Myell when I first talked to him.”

 

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