Bull Morgan waited for the echo to fade, then said grimly, “I’ve ordered a total lockdown of this station, including cancellation of Primary passes, so he can’t slip out with panic-stricken tourists the way he crashed the Britannia. I want everyone on a search team to stay in radio contact. Work in teams of at least three and never lose sight of your teammates. If your team doesn’t have a radio, see Mike Benson. That’s it people, move out and comb this station like it’s never been combed before.”
The nearest I.T.C.H. agent collared Bull. “What do you intend to do with Lachley when you find him?”
“Since you ask, I hope to God he can be killed, because I have no intention of taking Jack the Ripper alive and then ending up stuck with him for the rest of his natural life. Up-time law says we can’t ship him home and we can’t send him to an up-time prison, either, because that same law prevents us from sending any down-timer through Primary. And frankly, there’s not a cage I could build on this station that a psychopath couldn’t eventually break out of. We’re not equipped to hold a thing like that in a cell for the next forty or fifty years.”
“What happened to trial by jury?” the I.T.C.H. agent demanded, her glare icy.
Bull Morgan chewed his cigar to shreds. “I’ll tell you what, lady. You answer me this. What happened to four gutted women? And a man with a broken neck, who was unfortunate enough to simply be in Lachley’s way? We have a station cram full of potential victims, here, and it’s my job to see they don’t become statistics. And just in case you’ve forgotten, down-timers don’t have any legal rights, the honest and decent ones any more than some psychopathic butcher. And I didn’t write those laws, either. I’m just stuck enforcing ’em. I’m not real happy about it, but, by God, I will protect innocents. This ain’t New York, lady, and it ain’t the Hague, and you’re not in charge. You don’t like it, get the hell off my station.”