by Eric Flint
"I don't see why you don't have your own policing," she said directly.
The mayor scratched his bald head. A rat poked its long nose out from under his beard and whiffled its nostrils at her. "Well, it's difficult, you know,” said the mayor. “Ain't easy to get anyone to take orders from another rock-rat. And the problems that we don't sort out for ourselves tend to come from when the Marines and locals clash. So we figured it might be best if we got you to take the blame, and do the work."
It was pleasant to meet with honesty at least, but...
"There is a rat peeping out of your beard," she said.
"Oh. That's just Firkin." The mayor reached under the giant beard and producing a sharp-nosed rat in an outfit that included fountaining flounces of lace. Or rather, flounces that included a little outfit. "My partner in prospecting. She's not on the council but she's kind of hard to keep out of the meetings. Firkin, meet Captain Wuollet."
The rat bowed. "Nice uniform. You could use more lace, though." She sat down on the table, produced a bottle of amber fluid from a sleeve and drank with lip-smacking appreciation.
Several councilors eyed the bottle with naked lust, even if they showed no suicidal desire to attempt to snatch it, or even the folly of trying to cadge a drink. Rats had a certain reputation. The tall, cadaverous one shook his head and said admiringly: “And she never seems to get any drunker than she is now.”
“Methinks I have a harder head than you,” said Firkin. “Which is not hard to imagine, Slim.”
The rest of council plainly could imagine it too, by the grins.
"Anyways we'd take it kindly if you'd find the marine behind these killings and string him up, before we do. There was talk last night of lynching the whole boiling lot of you," said the tall skinny Slim, obviously keen to move the subject away from his tolerance of liquor. He was sitting next to a little man in a skull cap with long locks of hair next to each ear.
With a shock, Rebecca realized that she recognized the man. Well, she'd seen his picture, anyway. Without the side locks or the skull-cap, but definitely the same face. She never forgot a face. This one she had reason to remember—along with the entire board of Intersolar Mining and Minerals, arrayed behind him and his father.
"But we did stop it,” he said with a quiet smile. “Even though Slim here said it was undemocratic to put it to the vote."
"But you only survived by a narrow margin," said the bat. "And next time I might not vote with the entrenched exploiters." She glared at the young man under the skull-cap. "And I am in charge of the portfolio for security and social upliftment."
"Services. Social services, Zed," corrected the mayor.
She stared down her nose at him, which is easy to do if you’re hanging upside down from the roof. “How many times do I have to say Ms? Ms. Davitta Ze...”
"I reckon putting 'em down would be lot better than upliftment," interrupted Slim, combatively. "Especially you lot." This was addressed at the blue-furred Jampad swinging placidly from a roof-chain at the foot of the rock-table.
There was a grumble of agreement from one or two of the other council members, and a hiss of outrage from the bat.
The mayor slapped his hand down on the table. "Now you all hush up. Ain't no one here who fought better than Meredeth and his friends in the fall-back on the Rock. Like with the marines, we might have come off second if they hadn't taken a hand."
“They were fighting for their own survival,” said the jowl-faced bull-dog of a woman at the end of the table.
“And so were we,” said the little man in the skull-cap. “Except for those who were running and hiding.”
“I was fetching more ammunition!” said Slim.
“In the Last Chance. Looking for Laggy’s bolt-hole, which you didn’t find,” said the bull-dog woman, with a derisive smile.
The mayor slapped both of his palms down on the stone table. “Now, you two. I’ll throw you both out, like last time. Captain, I reckon you’d better leave us to our work. Maybe you want to take Ms. Zed with you and talk to her. She knew one of the victims.”
“I had had a note from one of the victims. I did not know her,” said the bat.
“Anyway, methinks the place will be more tranquil without her,” said the flouncy rat snippily.
The bat grimaced at her, and shook a clenched foot. “Sellout,” she said, fluttering from her perch. “Let’s go, you imperialist lackeys,” she said to the two marines. “It’ll be to drinking and fighting they’ll fall without me, so I need to get back to it.” Her tone suggested she might just enjoy at least one of the activities, and felt that she was missing out.
In a chamber far enough away that they could only hear the occasional bull-like bellows of the mayor, they paused. The bat found a piece of roof to cling to and turned her gargoyle-like black face to them. “I really cannot stay away long. Firkin and Abe will do their best but they need my voice too. You have to find this killer, and find him fast,” she said seriously. “It’s little enough success I have had with Laggy’s exploited women. They’ll not even dare speak to me, normally. But right now they’re frightened to death. I was to be meeting Ms. Candy, the night that she was killed. And I had a message that the next woman killed needed to see me, urgently. They’re frightened indeed if they are prepared to risk Laggy’s wrath.”
“Laguna?” asked Rebecca sitting on one of the empty boxes that littered this part of the ‘Civic center’. “This is the ‘Laggy’ that you’re talking about? The little man at the Last Chance?”
“Indade,” said the bat, in the traditional fake Irish accent. She scowled. “He’d be my prime suspect.”
“Look, the guy is a cess-pit, but he’s too small to threaten anyone. I know that to you bats we humans all look large...”
“Ach bah,” the bat spat. “It’s not his strength they fear. He holds them in chemical bondage, Captain. He’ll withhold their drug supply if they dare to cross him.”
“Oho. So he’s the supplier, is he?” asked Rebecca, like a terrier scenting rats. She’d get him for something, at least. And solve another of her problems in the process.
The bat wrinkled her face, folding it even more than it was folded already. “Say rather that he supplies the women he holds in bondage. There are several purveyors of these things,” she admitted with reluctant honesty.
“It’s something else I’m supposed to investigate and put a stop to,” said Rebecca.
The bat shook her head. “You need to find the murderer first. The miners are indade close to a lynching. A marine badge was found at the last killing.”
“That we can follow up. Why wasn’t I told?”
The bat shrugged her wings. “It is all a little muddled, yet. Slim told us of it.”
“Both of these women wanted to see you,” said Holmes, taking the initiative and calmly treading it underfoot. “Why?”
The bat shrugged her wings. “I do not know...”
Rebecca’s communicator bleeped insistently. “Captain Wuollet,” she said, pressing the send button.
“Alpha 3 patrol here, Captain. We’ve found a dead body. A woman. It looks like she’s been raped and murdered.”
“Hell’s teeth. Where are you?”
“Punching the co-ords through to you, Captain,” said the Marine, his voice full of relief at the idea that would soon be someone else’s problem.
“We’ll be right there. Don’t move her or touch anything.”
“And so will I,” said the bat. “Someone needs to report on the brutality of th’ polis,” she said self-righteously. “Polis I name you, and not a Garda of our own.”
They tramped through the rock-hewn corridors, away from the more settled level, where many rockrats had taken up residence in some of the larger galleries. “The very least that they should give me for this job is a groundcar,” grumbled Rebecca. “Who ever heard of a police-chief walking to the scene of the crime?” There were vehicle tracks in the dust.
“Indade, there are a bare
handful of such vehicles,” said the bat. “And those belong to the entrenched exploiters that had already settled on this den of vice. They have to repair them themselves, as no facilities are to be found here for doing that.
“Nasty smelly things,” she said with a lofty sniff. “The rock-rats scattered across the system had no need for wheels, or space for anything but ore-cargo. Besides, the price of importing such a thing was too expensive for any but the obscenely wealthy.”
“So we walk, except for those who can fly,” said Holmes, hunching to avoid hitting his head on the tunnel roof. “Why did they have to make these tunnels so low?”
The bat found this amusing. “There are many which are much lower. The ones the first two bodies were found in were narrower. And they were not built for human convenience.”
“Why the hell does anyone go into them then?” asked Rebecca, ducking.
“They often widen out into what were plainly ore-chambers,” explained the bat. “They make good rooms. You know, the prospectors had just found a similar rock, but without airlocks, in the second belt when the Korozhet attacked. It’s the way the Korozhet mined. They were not worried by their slaves’ comfort.”
They’d at least worried about their slaves air and had an amazing system of airlocks, reflected Rebecca. The asteroid siege would have been a short conquest, without those miles of corridors filled with air that contained too much oxygen and enough helium to alter the pitches of their voices. Inside the rock that air got scrubbed... in some place in the maze of internal passages as yet unmapped. The colonel had been doing some interesting swearing about that. They didn’t even know if they had all the airlocks located. There were enough of them. And the Marines’ supply of heavy weapons to defend those they’d found was very limited. How they’d hold off a major landing, heaven alone knew. But with strange gel-curtain airlocks every hundred yards or so, landing and capture would be two very different things. The miners didn’t have much in the way of missiles, but they did have a personal arsenal each, and a number of heavy-duty tripod-mounted mining lasers. The attacks—so far—had been on the main landing bay, now crowded with little minerships, and Marine landing craft. Quite a few of the miner-ships had had some external weapons. This had plainly been a rough neighborhood.
“We need to go down here, ” said the bat, pointing to a shaft. There were metal staples in the wall. Not very big staples and too close together for human climbers to have set them there.
“How do you know?“ asked Sergeant Holmes, blinking, looking at the position co-ords on his palm-comm.
“I can hear the voices of several people, arguing. The word murder has been used.” The bat flew up into the hole. That was down—if you took the core of the asteroid as “down.” Centrifugal force provided an alternative to gravity here.
Bats did have hyper-keen hearing. Or she might just have known, concluded Captain Wuollet. Something about the black-faced bat activist smelled. Not necessarily of murder, but the bat knew more than she was telling. Rebecca reached up and began to climb. Better get there fast.
***
That was a good decision, it turned out, even if Holmes was not designed to run down a corridor this high or wide, complete with pipes to trip over. The scene was angry and heading to the point of shooting.
“The captain,” said a voice, uncertain and plainly tense, “is coming to look at the crime scene...”
“Screw your captain,” interrupted someone. “You just step aside and let us take the poor dead girl back to the Last Chance, and you don’t get hurt, see.”
Rebecca poked the burly speaker hard in the kidneys. Hard enough for him to turn and crack his head... and see the tunnel entirely full of Holmes behind her. “Your chances of screwing me are slightly lower than your chances of surviving beyond the next ten seconds. And those chances are not good, if you’re still here by the time I count to ten. One.”
“Now see here, Captain,” said an angry voice, from elbow height.
“And that means you too, Mr.. Laguna,” she said icily. “We’ll return the body to the Last Chance when we’ve finished inspecting the crime scene. Two.”
“But...”
“Three.” One of the advantages of Holmes being outsize, besides sheer intimidation, was that it was impossible to see if there was a whole squad... or no-one, behind him in the narrow tunnel.
Grumbling, Laguna and his mini-mob retreated down the far passage. “You haven’t heard the last of this!” shouted someone.
“Alas, ‘tis probably true,” said the bat. “They’ll be back at the Last Chance drinking more courage. You’ll have trouble presently.”
The marine who had called her grinned. “Good thing you got here fast, Captain. And good thing Larry was here with me.” He put a hand on the shoulder of the stocky miner who had gone on patrol with him. It was not same marine who had left their base cave an hour before, looking like he’d been inflicted with a boil or a toothache for company. “That lot said I’d done it, and they were all for lynching me. Larry talked them out of it.” He looked at the tunnel. “If I was going to do that I’d choose somewhere where I could at least stand up.”
Rebecca was on her knees examining the corpse. It was at times like this it paid to be a combat vet. It still wasn’t a pretty sight. Someone had hit the victim very hard with a piece of rock. Hard enough to smash her skull. There wasn’t much blood. Odd for head wound, that. She pulled the victim’s skirt down. The dead woman had little enough dignity left to her, and Rebecca could do nothing much about the ripped filmy blouse. There wasn’t a lot of spare material “What were you two doing in here anyway?”
“It’s a short-cut across to where they’re setting up the ag caves,” explained the miner. “The roof is a bit low, but if you follow the pipes it’ll save you ten minutes walk.”
It made a sort of sense, except that it did mean that this was not the quiet private spot the attacker must have assumed. That in itself suggested that the attacker was a marine. “I suppose there is nothing much else for us to see. Let’s get her out of here.”
“Captain,” said Holmes from his knees back in the tunnel. He was far too tall to stand there. “I need to show you this first.” He pointed to a hose-clamp on one of the pipes. A gossamer shred of material clung to it. A piece of blouse. “She got dragged in here.”
Rebecca looked intently at it. “So,” she said after some thought. “He must knocked her down, dragged her in here, and then killed her with that rock. See if you can see any other signs of dragging.”
“I’ll have to go out backwards, Captain. There is not enough space for me to turn around.”
“Look as you crawl, Sergeant.”
The passage, however, was relatively dust-free. The rock-floor was not particularly even, but there were no other pieces of material snagged there - which, considering the filmy flimsy nature of the clothing was surprising. Even more surprising was the arrival of yet another visitor. In flounces. “I had to stop and eat, and follow you by scent,” said Firkin crossly. “You humans run too slowly and for far too long.”
Rats had speed, but not stamina.
The rat pushed past the sergeant. “This is your new method of advancing? Methinks you are showing your best features to the enemy.”
The rat looked at the corpse. “Cindy-Jane. A lot of miners will be mightily upset, and the Last Chance will lose a fair bit of turn-over. She was almost rattish in her appetites. Made up for the price with volume.”
Rats were not known for their sensitivity, thought Rebecca. It at least made them accidentally honest. “Well, let’s get her out of here. She was dragged in. I suppose we can drag her out.”
She took an arm, deciding by the look on the miner and young Marine’s faces, that it was a good time to lead by example. She was grateful that all her years in the service had at least taught her how to control squeamishness. As she pulled the body it rolled slightly, to reveal a brown billfold. She twitched it out from under the corpse with the other
hand and opened it.
It revealed two things. The first was an Marine ID card. The second was even more puzzling.
Money.
Tucked inside the inner flap were three hundred C notes. Not a fortune, but surely enough to pay for a cheap tart.
“I want Private Samson, 4655573490.”
“Plooks?” said the Marine who’d called her to the scene. “He’s out on patrol, Captain.”
“He’s one of mine?” she asked, already knowing the answer. Wouldn’t this do the credibility of her fledgling force the world of good, she thought sourly.
The Marine looked uncomfortable. “It was you or staying in the brig, Captain.”
“He should have stayed in the brig,” she said coldly. She called her ops room, and told them to call Samson in, and place him under arrest.
As she put the comm device back in its pouch, she stood up and banged her head. She ground her teeth in irritation, feeling the bump. “Now can we get the body out of here,” she said, reaching down to take an arm again.
“Captain, I think you’d better come and have a look here,” called Sergeant Holmes. “I had a look in the next passage, while I was waiting for you to come out.”
“Inborn investigative urge overwhelming you, Sergeant?” she said, covering the fact that she’d banged her head yet again with sarcasm.
“Needed a leak, Captain,” said Holmes with innate honesty. “There is more of that blouse material back there. That’s where it happened, I reckon. The body has been moved.”
“Hell’s teeth!” said Rebecca when she look into the dark passage that Holmes pointed out to her. “Why did he move her? They’d not have found her in there until she started to smell.”
“Indade,” said Ms. Zed, wrapping her wings around her and shivering “Unless, as I’d be thinking, someone wanted her found.”
Captain Wuollet looked at the single electric bulb tacked into the cable at the intersection. She thought of those blissful days when she’d been a mere boot and only had to deal with grueling Marine drill, instead of coping with this mess. She was going to need a lot of things that she didn’t have, to handle this, like an elementary knowledge of forensic practice for a start. All she knew about was shaped charges and detonators, not catching murderers. “Better search the other corridors too, she said resignedly. “Next thing we know we’ll find more bodies.”