plate, and waited
for the panel to turn green, silently praying that the Norway would recognize their authority. He didnât want to manually force the hatch, he didnât want to cut his way in. He wanted this operation to run smoothly. By the book. The panel went green and Korie whispered soft thanks to the unseen crew on the other side. âThatâs a good sign,â he said.
âYeah, theyâre only paranoid, not crazy,â agreed Hodel.
âItâs wartime. Everybodyâs crazy. The only question is whether weâre crazy enough . All right, here we go. Bach, Easton, Shibanoââ The security officers pulled themselves into position just behind Korie. They unshouldered their weapons. They raised blast-shields into position.
Korie punched the OPEN panel with his gloved knuckle. The panel flashed red and showed the word TESTINGâand then the hatch popped open in front of them and they were staring into the empty airlock of the Norway .
They waited a moment, to see if anything would happen. Nothing did. âItâs still a go,â came the captainâs voice.
The chamber ahead was dark and featurelessâexcept for the lack of light, it was identical to the lock they had just exited. Korie released his grip and allowed the repulsor field to push him forward into the silent ship. The security team followed. They oriented themselves vertical to the Norway , moved through the airlock hatch and dropped to the deck.
When the last crewmember had entered the airlockâit was Helen Bachâthey sealed the hatch and waited while the Norway ran its own air pressure checks. The throb of the repulsors faded behind them.
âLooks like the autonomic system is still up and running,â Korie noted, as much for his team as for the listeners still aboard the Star Wolf : Parsons, Tor, Brik, Williger ...
âThatâs good news,â said Hodel. âMakes all our jobs easier.â
âMission Team, we copy that.â Torâs voice came through their suit-phones.
The last panel flashed green. âAll right, letâs go.â Korie popped the final hatch. The interior of the Norway lay before them ...
It was not a reassuring sight. The Airlock Reception Bay was dark. There were two starsuits still hanging on the racks and one fallen to the deck. A scattered assortment of equipment lay aboutâas if someone had tried to dress in haste, without regard for procedures. Without regard for anything except escape.
âHodel?â asked Korie.
âAlready scanning.â Hodel was studying the readouts on his suit arm. âNothing yet.â
Korie switched on his external speaker. âAhoy the Norway ! Is anyone here! Weâre here from the Star Wolf . Weâre here to help you! Ahoy the Norway !â He held up a hand for silence. The mission team held still. Listening to the silence.
âAhoy! Anyone ...?â
No one.
Korie gestured and the team moved forwardâfrom the Airlock Reception Bay into the keel. It was bad news. Too many lights were out. The keel was shadowed and gloomy.
âSir?â Hodel pointed. Korie followed the direction of his gesture.
Something in the darkness. Something that flickered insubstantially. And was gone. And then flickered again in another place. Like fairy dust or very faint fireworks.
âWhat is it?â Hodel asked. âWhat does it mean?â
âIt means ... I guessed wrong.â There was a cold hollow feeling growing in Korieâs gut. âWe should have come in the other end.â To Hodelâs look, he said, âI expected them to be thinking logically. Sorry, Mike. The job just got harder.â I made a mistake .
âMission Team, report,â said Tor dispassionately. âWhat are you seeing?â
âSome kind of ... itâs hard to describe. Fireflies? Iâm not sure. Adjust your display. Itâs very faint.â
âOkay, weâve got it
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