Rob Boffard's Outer Earth series thrilled readers with its no-holds-barred action and adrenaline, as it follows the story of Riley Hale's attempts to save both humanity's last refuge -- and humanity itself. Yet Riley has friends helping her in her efforts, and their backstories are every bit as messy and intricate as her own. This new collection, comprising four action-packed short stories, reveals the secret histories of Riley's closest friends and allies, as they try to make their way in the dangerous, vibrant world of Outer Earth.
Release date:
November 15, 2016
Publisher:
Orbit
Print pages:
69
* BingeBooks earns revenue from qualifying purchases as an Amazon Associate as well as from other retail partners.
We’re standing on either side of the door to the hab. The whole way over here, he’s been bullshitting about some book he got in the market last night. “This guy didn’t even know what it was,” he’s saying now. “He gave it up for, like, six tomatoes and a butane lighter.”
“Uh-huh,” I say, raising my hand to knock. I’m only vaguely aware of my other hand, resting lightly on the holster of my stinger.
“Illiterate fucks,” he says as I knock on the door. “I’m telling you, Royo, it’s better off with me.”
“James Carmine, this is Station Protection,” I say loudly. “Open the door please.”
“Condition’s pretty good, too. Not mint, sure, not even close, but it’s only missing a couple end pages, you know? Where the glue came away from the spine. You see that sometimes.”
“We’ve had reports of a domestic disturbance. Respond now.”
I look over my shoulder quickly, more on instinct than anything else. People are peering out of their habs or standing around in the corridor, feigning disinterest. One of them is staring right at me: a neatly turned out kid of about twenty with a black jacket zipped to his neck.
I’ve got a special Look for these kind of situations. I take a second to return the stare, and the boy drops his head. Underneath me, a piece of metal creaks: Outer Earth’s hull, slowly warping, twisted by thousands of orbits around the planet. One of these days, it’ll warp too far, snap in two, spill everybody into space. The big metal ring that a million people call home will become just another piece of space debris, orbiting a destroyed Earth.
I hammer on the door again, harder. The lock clicks and it creaks open. Just a little.
“The hell?” the rook says, and before I can do anything he’s pushing open the door, his stinger out. “Station Protection! Get on the ground, now.”
“Rook, don’t. . .” I say, but then we get a look at what’s in the room, and he turns and upchucks all over the floor.
The kid’s been dead for a while.
I mean kid literally. He can’t be more than nine or ten. He’s still wearing a blue T-shirt, rucked up under his arms, but otherwise he hasn’t got a stitch on him. He’s facing the door, sprawled across a dirty mattress at the back of the room. The only light comes from the single working bar in the ceiling. There’s nothing else in the room. No furniture, no pictures on the wall. Nothing but the kid and a mattress.
This isn’t a shitty mom or dad, drugged up to the eyeballs and forgetting that they ever had a child. This isn’t an exile brat, starved to death in a hidey-hole somewhere. This one’s different. I can tell from the marks on the inside of his legs, the expression on his face.
And then, of course, there’s the stab wounds on the chest, ringed with congealed blood.
Some of the neighbours are creeping closer, wanting to find out why the rookie is leaning against the far wall, shivering. I have to bark at them to back off. It’s good that I do. It means I don’t have to look at the room any more.
The rook is on his feet again, wiping his mouth. I don’t waste time consoling him. “Call Big 6. Tell ’em we got a bad one. I want forensics, and a coroner crew.”
The rookie nods, takes two steps, then throws up again, bathing the wall of the corridor in a thin gruel.
Without thinking, I look back into the hab. I can see the kid’s legs, his tiny feet. It seems important not to look away this time.
The rookie returns with forensics and the coroner, and he’s got some of his colour back. He’s even swaggering a little—my guess is he’s been telling ’em that he was first on the scene, that it’s his case, that he’s going to get the son of a bitch. I watch him approach, feet booming on the metal floor, growling at the onlookers to stay back.
He points to the hab. “Nobody’s been in there but us, so I want the place swept clean. Blood work, fingerprints, all of it.”
The forensic techs all wear masks over their mouths and noses, but one has a pierced eyebrow: a big ring, gleaming in the lights. Jaz. The rookie doesn’t see the look she gives him. But to her credit, she goes right in, telling her two deputies to start walking the grid. They’ll go over the room piece by piece, dividing it into squares, checking it for the tiniest bit of evidence.
She pauses for a moment, looking at the kid. “Gods, Sam.”
“I know.”
“This is. . .”
“I know.”
She takes a deep breath and follows her deputies.
The rook isn’t done. He’s standing, hands on hips, facing the growing crowd. “I said, get back,” he spits at them. Before they can respond, he flashes me a wide grin. “What you think, Royo? Orphan?”
I grunt, keeping an eye on the crowd.
“Yeah, I’m guessing orphan. Carmine must’ve picked him up in the market. Usually goes that way. I tell you, man, if only the kid’s parents had stuck around, this kind of shit wouldn’t happen, you know what I mean? It makes me sick when people don’t take care of their kids.”
I try to tune him out. I’m already thinking of what I need to do next. Identify the kid, talk to the neighbours, find the parents. See if anyone in the other sectors caught one like this. They might have done some legwork for us already. We can put the pieces together, figure out where to go next.
“Because if I find this guy, I’m gonna kill him. I swear to Shiva, Royo, I’m gonna end him before he even gets near a trial.”
I keep thinking of those tiny feet, the toes curled inward. I screw my eyes shut, giving myself a second to let it pass. It doesn’t.
“Kid should’ve been more careful. All I’m saying. You go with strangers, you find yourself in a room with some asshole coming down on—well, coming down on your asshole, know what I’m saying?”
I don’t. . .
We hope you are enjoying the book so far. To continue reading...