"We can rule out pirates," Jena said as she reviewed the list of cargo the casualty collection team had scanned during their search of the cargo bay. Once the atmosphere was determined to be untainted, the boarding team had removed their cumbersome helmets, Jena's floated next to her. "There're no cut-ins on the hull and all the cargo is accounted for, unless it was an inside job. One guy signs onto a ship and then sets his shipmates up for a pirate attack."
She and Batty worked around the bodies filling the Mordicai's small medical compartment- one collecting personal effects, the other cataloging causes of death, and all had died in brutal fashions; strangled, heads crushed with blunt instruments, throats cut. Some had been mutilated after death. Gouged eyeballs or severed fingers were found floating around the bodies they'd been removed from, as if the killer had not been satisfied with merely taking life.
"Not in the way these people went," Batty said, waving a hand at the bodybags floating around her. "It doesn't make sense to mutilate the dead in the middle of a running battle. My money is on one sicko."
"Ok, so what happened to the sicko?" Jena asked and felt a chill race up her spine. She checked over her shoulder on impulse, suddenly half-expecting to see a maniac pulling himself out of an unzipped bodybag.
"DSA manifests in a lot of ways," Batty said and sighed as she jotted the description of a corpse. "Sometimes it makes you kill other people, sometimes it makes you kill yourself, sometimes it does both."
"How many bodies do we have?" Jena said as she drifted to the med-bay terminal desk against the bulkhead and arrested herself, then dropped and belted herself into the chair mounted beside it. A few quick keystrokes entered an emergency override command and she was given access to most of the ship's systems. She brought up the crew roster and the ship's log.
Batty looked around for a quick visual count. "Twenty-eight."
Jena brought the boom-mike connected to her ear-piece closer to her lips, "Kelly, where are you now?"
"We've cleared the cargo areas and are moving into engineering," Kelly radioed back after several moments. "There's a secondary airlock on the bottom of the hull that's been vented but the pressure door is holding. The control panel beside it was broken in and there was some blood floating around. We think a fight happened there."
Twenty-nine, Jena thought and said, "Keep on your guard. There's still one or two unaccounted for. Stay away from the airlocks if you can help it."
"Don't worry about that, ma'am," Kelly replied. "This ship is giving me the creeps as it is. What's the operating plan if we find a survivor?"
"Help them out if they need it," Jena said and accessed the ship's log first. "Just remember that they might not be mentally stable- safety first. If they go for you, take them down, my call."
"You're call, ma'am. Roger that."
Jena paged down the log entries until she found the most recent one: dated 48 hours previous. "And another thing, stick together. I don't want you two getting separated."
A laugh came over the radio, breaking the tension she could feel building, then Kelly said, "No worries, ma'am. Moralez is practically glued to the back of my vacc-suit."
Jena left the last transmission unacknowledged as the last log entry began to play. The captain of the Mordicai appeared on the display. He had been a handsome, 50-something man with a salt-and-pepper beard and a baritone, no-nonsense voice.
"We've come out of transit without incident. The ship's manifest was sent off to Tau beacon who confirmed reception. We've realigned the primary dish and have been picking up signals from Mars, and to a lesser extent, Earth. It's good to be back. The crew have fully woken from cold sleep and are operating at near peak efficiency, except for a few newbies who still have the chills. Nelson, Butler, and Veronica have been removed from the watch schedule and sent to the med-bay for treatment of same. Doc tells me that they're expected to recover soon. We have half a load of fuel and are angling for Mars capture. We should begin orbiting Mars in approximately seventy-two hours."
The view on the display faded as the log entry ended. Jena sat back in the chair and realized that Batty had been reading over her shoulder.
"What do you think?" Jena said. Batty shrugged.
"If this was from seventy-two hours ago, then the killing would already have started," Batty said and turned away. "And unless I overlooked something, and I haven't, the man who made that log entry is neither tagged nor bagged, so if I had to make a guess about who it was that did this, I'd say it was him. Unless it was one of the ones without a head."
"Let's not jump to any conclusions," Jena said and cleared her throat. "Mordicai boarding team calling Charlie November, come in, over."
"We read you Mordicai, over." The Constellation called back.
"This is Mitchell. We count two-seven KIA over here. There's no sign of a perpetrator but we found an airlock that'd been blown. We think maybe he got flushed out into space. We have people making their way back to engineering right now to finish sweeping the ship. I expect we'll have to replace some circuit boards before we can get the engines lit again, over."
"Mitchell, this is the Captain," Crites' voice came through the tiny speaker mounted to her vacc-suit. "We're sending a repair team over with parts and some addition command crew. Get that ship together and take it to our Mars base. I want everything you find documented thoroughly. There'll be an investigation and I don't want any slip-ups, do you read me? Over."
"That's a roger," Mitchell said and supressed a snicker as Batty rolled her eyes. "What's the ETA on the repair team, over?"
"They just launched, so figure they'll reach you in ten mikes. You'll be the ranking officer on board, Mitchell, organize the repair party and get underway. Constellation is burning for the Virginis jump point. I'm sorry, Lieutenant, but we've got to catch up with the rest of the fleet, over."
Jena felt a lump rise in her throat. She and her boarding party were being left behind. "Sir, once we get to Mars we'll be unable to reach you before you make the jump, over."
"That's affirmative, Mitchell. Command has been notified of your situation. You'll be put on the next ship heading outbound as soon as available space can be found. We'll rendezvous with you and the rest of your salvage crew on the frontier. Charlie November out."
"Smleck." Jena said and slouched back in the chair.
"Look on the bright side," Batty said as Jena gave her a skeptical shrug. "At least we don't have to deal with Crites again for quite a while."
Jena frowned. "Small compensation."
***