As the panel came free, Joseph reached out to support Joat's hand and they lifted it slightly, but held it in place, not quite touching the frame it had once joined.
They listened tensely for sounds of voices or people walking by and were rewarded by silence.
Cautiously they lifted the panel outward and stepped into the deserted corridor. Then they fitted it back into place, reset their lasers and proceeded to the Brig.
Chapter Nineteen
The woman behind the Brig's reception desk was a heavy-worlder, no question. Her bones had been genetically altered for thickness and her height was somewhat below human norm. But her expression was curious, and relatively friendly.
"Yeah?" she asked. "Help you?"
"We're here to see a Mr. Bros Sperin," Joat purred.
Beside her Joseph stood impassively, eyes front, hands clutched behind his back in an automatic parade rest. Just so much muscle, ready to spring into action.
"Yeah? What for?"
Joat raised one brow.
"We have a specialty," she said smiling slightly.
"Oh?"
"Conversation. People can't seem to resist talking to us."
The woman chuckled evilly.
"Oh, yeah, I heard about that. I been expecting somebody like you. The Big Black Baddies tried with one of their creepy little medics and got nowhere. You'll have to leave your guns, though," she said.
Joat pursed her lips. "I don't mind leaving mine here, but I'd rather my companion kept his. Sperin is reputed to be an… educated man. I'd like to know he has a weapon pointed at him."
The woman was shaking her head and her expression was a lot less friendly.
"Or perhaps," Joat continued, "he could surrender it to the guard on Sperin's door." She arched a brow. "I assume there is a guard on his door?"
"Unh hunh. Let me see your ID."
A little hole appeared in the center of the woman's forehead and intelligence ran out of her eyes as though escaping through it in a narrow wisp of steam.
Joseph shook his hand, scorched by the backrush of burning gases where the laser had burned its way through the holster. A scorched smell insinuated itself through the sour chemical stink of Kolnar-normal atmosphere.
"I did not want to do that," he said ruefully.
Joat frowned. She didn't like killing, didn't like the waste. And like Joseph she hadn't wanted to see this almost-friendly hired killer die.
"It couldn't be helped," she said grimly. "We don't have ID."
When at last they'd taken the deliriously happy Kraig out of his suit, they'd checked his ID thoroughly. It was entirely too complex to duplicate with the equipment they had. And as time was a factor, they'd decided to go without.
They arranged the mercenary's body so that it was turned slightly away from the entryway, hiding the hole in its… her head. Even the single second gained by the small deception might count.
"Let me get to work."
Joat went down on one knee behind the control console. Ah… dedicated system, just like Kraig said. That was safer, in a warship subject to viral attack; a worm program could be stopped by a series of specialized interfaces, and it also made damage control in combat easier. The down side was that none of the subsystems was as capable as one big one, and data transfer was slower.
"This will take a second."
She eased one of her tools out from behind the belt of her mercenary uniform and set to work, whistling silently between her teeth. Ah, not too unusual. The Kolnar had been savages before the High Clan left their planet-although it was a peculiar type of savagery, you could mine raw metallic plutonium there with picks and shovels, they'd had nuclear-powered steamboats. The basic technology of the space-going Kolnari clans was copied from Central Worlds-derived models.
"Here." She snipped a fiber-optic line and spliced it into a converter, then plugged a datahedron into the optico-magnetic device. The screen before the dead woman cleared and began to show an uneventful corridor.
"There. That ought to keep the surveillance systems out of our hair, until someone notices the repeating pattern."
The main doors to the prison recognized them, routing though the intercept she'd placed on the computer. They proceeded through them as calmly as possible. The computer had indicated which of the cells was Sperin's and they moved confidently down the corridors.
There was a Kolnari standing guard outside the cell and Joat could feel Joseph going into high gear.
The guard showed no sign at all that he was aware of their approach. His posture had the relaxed alertness of a hunting beast.
Arrogant jerk! Joat thought. Probably thinks there's no need to get excited about two scumvermin mercs. Oh baby, are you in for a surprise.
"We are here to question the prisoner," she said, crisply, but with deference.
The Kolnari stared at the opposite wall, as though thinking deep thoughts that couldn't be disturbed.
After a full minute had elapsed Joseph said quietly, "We are here at the Great Lord's orders."
That got a reaction. The body remained rigidly in place, but a brass-yellow eye glanced in their direction. After a brief pause the guard spoke.
"I have received no orders that the prisoner is to be allowed visitors."
Then he returned to deep thought mode.
"Obviously the Great Lord has been detained," Joat observed, looking at Joseph.
"We will wait," he said grimly.
Joseph and the Kolnari stood like statues in contrasting colors, but after a few moments Joat began to pace.
She walked back and forth, spinning on her heel every four paces. Then she began to whistle through her teeth while clapping her hands before her and then behind her back.
Her fidgeting annoyed the guard. A very small wrinkle appeared between his brows. The equivalent of a full blown tantrum in any other people; he turned towards her, lips peeling back from his teeth.
Joseph's laser took him in the back of the skull, and the Kolnari collapsed, falling stiffly, like a giant tree.
Joe caught him before he hit the floor and Joat snatched the key from his utility belt. She aimed it at the door and it slid open obediently. Then she grabbed the Kolnari's feet and helped Joseph pull him into the cell.
Bros stood with his feet braced, swaying. He watched them enter with no reaction whatsoever, like a man viewing a holoshow.
Joat couldn't suppress an exclamation at her first good look at him. He was covered with burns. Some no more than reddened patches, but large areas were blistered and bleeding plasma. His face was slack with exhaustion, shadowed by his beard, his reddened eyes sunken in deep blue circles. He smelled awful; of infection and stale sweat and charred flesh.
Joseph's hand came over her shoulder, offering the shirt he'd just taken off and she jumped.
"Yeah," she said, as if Joseph had spoken. "Bros, you've got to put this on," she said clearly and calmly.
She took hold of one hand and slid the sleeve of the black shirt over it, ignoring the oozing wounds. He made a sudden sound of agony and began to struggle. Coaxing him to cooperate, she slid the other sleeve up and over his shoulder. Awareness flickered back into his eyes.
"Joat," Bros said, his voice hoarse, his breathing harsh. "I've been having this dream that you'd come for me since yesterday. But this is the first time you've worn something so sexy. Does it mean something?" he leered.
Good grief! Joat thought. There's resilience for you.
"I think it means your subconscious really, really wants you to get out of here. So why don't you just relax and go along with it?"
Fortunately the trousers were quite loose and slid over his boots with little trouble. Bros lost his balance at one point and started to fall, but Joe caught him. Blisters broke under Joseph's big hands and Bros gasped and cursed, but the pain seemed to make him more aware.