GENERATION WARRIOHS
137
With a solid chunk, the hatch closed and Panis followed Dupaynil’s instructions in securing it. Then he met Dupaynil’s eyes, with only the barest glance at the needier still in Dupaynil’s hand.
“Well, Commander, either you’re honest and I’m safe, or you’re about to plug me and make up your own story about what happened. Or you still have doubts about me.”
Dupaynil laughed. “Not after seeing the captain ready to kill you, I don’t. But I’m sure you have questions of your own and will be a lot more comfortable when I’m not holding a weapon on you. Here.” He handed over the needier, butt first.
Panis took it, thumbed off the power, and stuck it through one of the loops of his pressure suit.
“Thanks.” Panis ran one bruised hand over his battered face. “This is not ... quite . . . like anything they taught us.” He took another long breath, with a pause in the middle as if his ribs hurt. “I suppose I’d better get to the bridge and log all this.” His gaze dropped to the motionless crumpled shape of Ollery on the deck. “Is he?”
“He’d better be,” said Dupaynil, kneeling to feel Ollery’s neck for a pulse. Nothing, now. That solved the problem of what to do if he’d been alive but critically injured. “Dead,” he went on.
“You ... uh ...”
“Strangled him, yes. Not a gentlemanly thing to do, but I had no other weapon and he was about to kill you.”
“I’m not complaining.” Panis looked steadier now and met Dupaynil’s eyes. “Well. If I’m in command? And you’re right, I’m supposed to be, I’d best log this. Then we’ll come back and put his body ...” he finished lamely, “somewhere.”