The silent war by Ben Bova. Part seven

But what good will it do? I can’t get the word to him in time to straighten him out.

Tashkajian got up from her little wheeled chair as he approached her desk.

“You saw the report from Cromwell?” Wanamaker asked.

“Yes, sir.”

“And?”

She hesitated a moment. “It’s probably all right. The missiles are small and Vesta’s radars will still be jammed by the radiation.”

“But he said the cloud was breaking up.”

“Our reports from the IAA monitors—”

A whoop from one of the consoles interrupted them. “They found her!” a male technician hollered, his face beaming. “They found Pancho! She’s alive!”

The first that Pancho realized she’d passed out was when the excruciating pain woke her up. She blinked her gummy eyes and saw that somebody in a bulbous hard-shell space suit was lifting her off her back, broken ankle and all.

“Jesus Christ on a Harley!” she moaned. “Take it easy, for chrissakes.”

“Sorry,” the space-suited figure said. Pancho heard his words in her helmet earphones.

“That leg’s broken,” she said. Nearly sobbed, actually, it hurt so badly.

“Easy does it,” the guy in the space suit said. Through a haze of agony Pancho realized there were three of them. One holding her shoulders, another her legs, and the third hovering at her side as they carried her away from the wreck of the hopper.

“I’ll immobilize the ankle as soon as we get you to our hopper,” the guy said. “I’m a medic, Ms. Lane.”

“I can tell,” she groused. “Total indifference to pain. Other people’s pain.”

“We didn’t know your ankle was broken, ma’am. You were unconscious when we reached you. Almost out of air, too.”

Screw you, Pancho thought. But she kept silent. I oughtta be pretty damn grateful to these turkeys for coming out and finding me. Each step they took, though, shot a fresh lance of pain through her leg.

“We had to land more than a kilometer from your crash site,” the medic said. “Not many places around here to put down a hopper safely.”

“Tell me about it.”

“We’ll be there in ten-fifteen minutes. Then I can set your ankle properly.”

“Just don’t drop me,” Pancho growled.

“The ground is very stony, very uneven. We’re doing the best we can.”

“Just don’t drop me,” she repeated.

They only dropped her once.

When the Selene emergency team brought Fuchs, his three crew, and the Humphries security people to the hospital, Fuchs had the presence of mind to give his name as Karl Manstein. Medical personnel put each survivor of the fire onto a gurney and wheeled them to beds separated by plastic curtains.

Fuchs knew he had to get out of the hospital as quickly as possible, with his crew. He lay on the crisp white sheets staring at the cream-colored ceiling, wondering how far away from him the others were. Nodon’s wounded, he remembered. That’s going to make an escape more difficult.

It’s only a matter of time before they realize Manstein is an alias, a fiction. Then what?

But a new thought struck him and suddenly he smiled up at the ceiling, alone in his curtained cubicle.

When he and the Humphries security chief finally staggered through the hatch and the temporary airlock that the Selene emergency crew had erected, the head of the emergency team had asked them, “Anybody else in there?”

The security chief had shaken his head gravely. “Nobody alive,” he had said.

Humphries is dead! Fuchs exulted. Lying on his hospital bed, his eyes still stinging and his lungs raw from the smoke, he wanted to laugh with glee. I did it! I killed the murdering swine! Martin Humphries is dead.

Martin Humphries was quite alive, but gnawingly hungry. He had never in his life known hunger before, but as he paced, or sat, or stretched out on the thick carpeting of his closet hideaway, his empty stomach growled at him. It hurt, this hollow feeling in his belly. It stretched the minutes and hours and drove his mind into an endless need for food. Even when he tried to sleep his dreams were filled with steaming banquets that he somehow could not reach.

Thirst was even worse. His throat grew dry, his tongue seemed to get thicker in his mouth, his eyes felt gritty.

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