Выбрать главу

Thalia knew she was rubbernecking, that even this tower would have been considered unimpressive by Chasm City standards, but the locals looked happy that she was impressed.

“It’s an ugly big bastard all right,” Parnasse said, which was presumably his way of showing a fragment of civic pride.

“We go up?” Thalia asked.

Paula Thory nodded.

“We go up. The elevator should already be waiting for us.”

“Good,” Thalia said.

“Then let’s get this done so we can all go home.”

Not for the first time in his life, Sparver found himself cursing the inadequacy of his hands. It was not because there was anything wrong with them from a hyperpig’s point of view, but because he had to live in a world made for dextrous baseline humans, with long fingers and thumbs and an absurd volume of sensorimotor cortex dedicated to using them. The stubby, gauntleted fingers of his trotter-like hands kept pushing two keys at once, forcing him to backtrack and initiate the command sequence all over again. At last he succeeded, and heard a chirp in his helmet signifying that he was in contact with Panoply, albeit on a channel not normally used for field communications.

“Internal Prefect Muang,” a voice announced.

“You have reached Panoply. How may I be of assistance?”

Sparver knew and liked Muang. A small, stocky man himself, with looks that were at best unconventional, he had no conspicuous problem with hyperpigs.

“This is Sparver. Can you hear me?”

“Loud and clear. Is something wrong?”

“You could say that. Prefect Dreyfus and I were investigating a free-floating rock owned by Nerval-Lermontov, as part of a case we’re working. As we were making our final approach the rock opened fire on our corvette and took out our long-range communications.”

“The rock attacked you?”

“There were heavy anti-ship weapons concealed under its surface. They popped out and started shooting at us.”

“My God.”

“I know. Don’t you just hate it when that happens? Thing is, we could use some assistance out here.”

“Where are you now?”

“I’m patching in via a transmitter inside the rock itself, but I don’t know how long this link is going to hold up.”

“Copy, Sparver. With luck we can rustle up a deep-system vehicle. Do you need a medical team? Are either of you injured?”

“We’re separated from each other, but otherwise both okay. If I could put Dreyfus through, I would, but it’s all I can do to rig this connection from my own suit.”

“Is your ship flightworthy?”

“We could limp home if we had to, but it would be better if Panoply sent out a couple of heavy ships to pick over this place.”

“Do you have orbital data for this rock?”

“Aboard the ship. But all you have to do is check the assets of the Nerval-Lermontov family. We’re sitting on a two-kilometre-wide lump of unprocessed rock in the middle orbits. You should be able to image our corvette, even if you can’t pick out the debris cloud from the attack.”

“Should narrow it down. Sit tight and I’ll get the wheels moving.”

“Tell those ships to come in cautiously. And make sure they know Dreyfus and I are sitting inside this thing, in case anyone gets trigger-happy.”

“I’ll get the message through immediately. You shouldn’t have to wait more than an hour.”

“I’m not going anywhere,” Sparver said. He closed the link and re-established contact with Dreyfus, glad when he heard his laboured breathing coming through nice and regularly, as if Dreyfus was pulling himself along a docking connector.

“I got through, Boss. Cavalry’s coming.”

“Good.”

“So now might be the time to rethink that plan of yours to board the ship.”

“I’m nearly there. Might as well go all the way, after coming this far.” Dreyfus took deep breaths between sentences.

“There’s no telling what mechanisms might kick in to destroy evidence if the rock senses our intrusion.”

“Or which might kick in to destroy us. That’s also a possibility.”

“I’m still going in. I suggest you return to the corvette and await the back-up.” That sounded like an excellent idea to Sparver as well, but he had no intention of abandoning Dreyfus inside the rock. Besides, what his boss had just said was equally applicable to the data stored in the rock’s router log. It did not take very long, now that he knew his way around the architecture. But when the list of outgoing message addresses spilled across his face-patch, he assumed there must be some mistake. He’d been expecting hundreds, even thousands, of entries in the last hundred days. But there were only a few dozen. Whoever was controlling the Nerval-Lermontov rock had been very sparing with their usage.

Looking down the list, he recognised the address of the Ruskin-Sartorious sphere, with a timetag corresponding to just before the attack by the Accompaniment of Shadows. That was the message that had prompted Delphine to break off negotiations with Dravidian. Yet as pleasing as it was to see that in the log—confirmation that they’d been following the right leads—it was dismaying to see some of the other entries.

There were about a dozen different addresses Sparver didn’t recognise off the top of his head. But there were another dozen entries that were shockingly familiar. They consisted of two different addresses, interspersed randomly. Apart from the last three digits, one was identical to the format he’d just used to contact Muang.

Someone had been using the Nerval-Lermontov rock to call Panoply. But if anything it was the second of the two addresses that unnerved Sparver the most. He recognised it instantly, for it was still fresh in his mind from his most recent investigation. But it had no business being any part of this one. It was the address of House Perigal.

“This doesn’t make sense,” he said, mouthing the words in something more than a whisper.

“There’s no connection. The cases don’t belong together.” But there was no mistake. The numbers weren’t going away.

“You still there, Boss?”

“I’m nearly at the airlock. What’s up?”

“I don’t know. I’ve just discovered something that doesn’t make any sense.”

“Tell me.”

“Someone used this rock to contact House Perigal.”

“You mean Ruskin-Sartorious,” Dreyfus said testily.

“No, I mean exactly what I just said. There’ve only been a handful of outgoing messages, but they include transmissions to both Panoply and House Perigal, in addition to Ruskin-Sartorious. That means there’s a connection between the two cases, and a Panoply connection.”

“There can’t be,” Dreyfus said.

“The evidence is staring right back at me. There’s a link.”

“But Perigal was an open-and-shut case of polling fraud. It has no bearing on the murder of Ruskin-Sartorious.”

“Boss, we may not be able to understand the link, but I’m telling you it exists. We already know this case is bigger than a simple incident of revenge or assassination—we’d figured that much out before you went and found a Conjoiner ship buried inside this rock.” Sparver paused: he could feel something behind his eyes trying to come into clarity, but not quite succeeding.

“We went after Perigal because of voting fraud,” he said.

“We nailed her, too, and all along it felt too easy.”

“Too much like a debt being settled,” Dreyfus said, echoing Sparver’s tone.

“Maybe what we should be focusing on is the consequence of that case. Not the fact that Perigal’s under lockdown, but the security hole it drew our attention to.” He heard a silence on the end of the line. Then: “We’re closing that hole, Sparv. That’s what Thalia’s doing.”