“Not done losing it yet,” she said, and turned the mic back to live. “Sir.
There was a moment of stunned silence on the radio, then a roar of incoherent rage that resolved into phrases like
The
“Want to fire, bossmang?” Busch asked.
“Not yet,” Michio said. “Watch that drive. If they try to burn out of here? Then.”
“They try to burn on that busted cone, we can save the ammunition,” Busch said, derision in her voice.
“There’s people counting on that cargo.”
“Savvy me,” Busch said. Then, a moment later, “They’re still cold.”
The radio clicked, spat. On the other ship, someone was shouting, but not at her. Then there was another voice, then several, each trying to cut above the others. The report of a gun rang out, the sound of the attack pressed thin and nonthreatening by the radio.
A new voice came.
“
“Still here,” Michio said. “To whom am I speaking, please?”
“Name’s Sergio Plant,” the voice said. “Acting captain of the
Evans grinned their triumph and relief.
“Besse to hear from you, Captain Plant,” Michio said. “I accept your terms. Please prepare for boarding.”
She killed the connection.
History, Michio believed, was a long series of surprises that seemed inevitable in retrospect. And what was true of nations and planets and vast corporate-state complexes also applied to the smaller fates of men and women. As above, so below. As the OPA and Earth and the Martian Congressional Republic, so with Oksana Busch and Evans Garner-Choi and Michio Pa. For that matter, so with all the other souls who lived and worked on the
For her, the first surprise in the many that had brought her here was becoming part of the military arm of the Belt at all. As a young woman, she’d expected to be a systems engineer or an administrator on one of the big stations. If she’d loved mathematics more than she did, it might have happened. She’d put herself through upper university because she thought she was supposed to, and failed because it had been a horrible fit. When the counselors sent her the message that she was being disenrolled, it had been a shock. Looking back, it was obvious. The clarifying lens of history.
She’d fit better with the OPA, or at least the arm of it she’d joined. Within the first month, it became clear that the Outer Planets Alliance was less the unified bureaucracy of the revolution than a kind of franchise title adopted by the people of the Belt who thought that something like it should exist. The Voltaire Collective considered itself OPA, but so did Fred Johnson’s group based on Tycho Station. Anderson Dawes acted as governor of Ceres under the split circle, and Zig Ochoa opposed him under the same symbol.