087: ACCOMPLICE

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Sunset’s eyes widen, and I regret my words immediately. They’re correct, but the immediate aftermath of a murder in a confined space probably isn’t the time to be reminding people not to trust their neighbours. If anyone in Habitation Ring 1 is involved, the truth will come out when we prove that Adin – or someone else, if it was someone else – actually held the knife. There’s no sense in creating further chaos in the meantime.

Ah well. Most people would’ve figured this out already anyway, and it would’ve occurred to Sunset soon enough.

I guess we’re not the only ones having trouble sleeping, as all of Habitation Ring 1 is up really early for breakfast. Celi, eyes bloodshot with fatigue, reports yesterday’s findings as we all eat toast and argue about whose job it should be to make bread while Adin’s locked up.

“First things first,” Celi says, forcing us to table the bread discussion for the moment, “our living Public Universal Friend looks like it will recover just fine. This nerve problem seems to have caused some minor inflammation in the brain, but we seem to have caught it before any permanent damage. I’ve got it under sedation right now and on a drug cocktail that seems to be working. I expect it to make a full recovery, but I guess we’ll have to find out.”

“Do we know what caused this problem?” Captain Sands asks.

“There are a couple of possibilities. I ran bloodwork, and it might be an infection.”

“Contagious? Dangerous?”

“Unknown. Nothing’s showing up in any of the common assays, so if it’s a pathogen, it’s a really rare one. Much more likely, however, is that our Friend has developed an autoimmune disorder.”

“Is that better or worse than a pathogen?” I ask.

Celi shrugs. “Better for the crew, since it wouldn’t be contagious. Worse for our Friend, since it’s much harder to treat. I ran a breath screen and I can confirm that if it is a pathogen, it’s not airborne, so we should be fine if we avoid fluid exchange with our infected Friend. In fact I’d recommend avoiding fluid exchange in general, since without knowing what this is I can’t estimate an incubation time or the chances that anyone else might already be an asymptomatic carrier.”

“Well,” Captain Sands says, “we’re already supposed to be avoiding fluid exchange due to the genetically engineering immune systems some of the crew have, so everyone… keep doing that. And report to the medbay immediately if you start experiencing any of the Friend’s symptoms. What about the other health screens you ran yesterday? Anything to report?”

“A few pertinent things, yes. First, Adin Klees did indeed have neurostimulators in his bloodstream.”

“Had he taken them recently enough to have the enhanced strength at the time of the murder?”

“That… depends on his individual metabolism. I have no way of knowing how quickly he metabolises neurostimulators, so I can’t draw a dosage and side effect timeline. I’ve looked up the Friend’s previous dosage schedule for him and tried to estimate but a lot of it also depends on how much he chose to give himself after stealing them. I’d say, based on what I found in his blood, that it would be fairly unlikely for him to have had enhanced strength at the time, but it’s not impossible. However, it’s worth noting that Adin’s arms and hands are completely free of any sign of fractures, pulled muscles, bruising, or the like.”

“None at all?”

“Completely clear.”

“Is that important?” Sam asks.

“It means he probably didn’t use superstrength to stab someone in the heart,” I explain. “Neurostimulators temporarily increase strength in the same way that they increase speed and acuity; one of their effects is to make the body unable to feel the normal signals that slow it down or moderate force. Someone on fresh neurostims might be able to lift three times their own weight, but they’ll tear muscles and crack bones doing it.”

“It’s still possible for Adin to have committed the murders,” Sands points out. “He’d just have to be pretty lucky not to hurt himself doing it.”

“Lina Chisolm, meanwhile,” Celi continues, “has two broken bones in her right hand, significant bruising on her right arm, and deep scratches on her head, hidden by her hair.”

We all stare.

“Lina?” Heli asks. “Really?”

Celi shrugs. “She claims that she fell over last night and didn’t notice the broken bones because she was extremely drunk. And she was, indeed, extremely drunk when I took her blood.”

“Drunk before or after the murders?” Captain Sands asks. “had she been drinking all night, or did she kill two people and then drink a lot right after?”

“Impossible to tell. Interviewing the others might answer that question, if you can trust them to tell the truth.”

“Or to remember,” I point out. “They were all somewhat drunk except Tal, who wasn’t there most of the night.”

“Celi, do the blood tests confirm that impression?” Captain Sands asks.

“Well, yeah. They all had varying amounts of alcohol in their system, including Tal. And including our two victims, of course – I ran a screen on the wine found at the scene and discovered that both glasses contained antidrenamate.”

“DNA tests confirm that the two victims drank from the two glasses as well,” Heli adds. “If anyone was wondering.”

“Fingerprints?” Captain Sands asks. “Did our murderer touch the glasses or the bottle?”

Heli shrugs. “It’s surprisingly hard to get good fingerprints from a glass that’s been handled a lot. We didn’t find any prints that couldn’t have been from the two victims, though.”

“Interesting to note,” Celi adds, “the wine in the glasses was poisoned. The wine in the bottle was not.”

“Wait,” I say, “the killer poisoned the glasses directly? Not the bottle? Why? And how? Slipping them a poisoned bottle, I can see, but there’d have to be wine already in the glasses to slip the poison in, so how…?” I stop talking, realising the answer before I even finish the question. Why poison two glasses and not the bottle? If someone you didn’t want to poison was drinking from the bottle. Perhaps there had been a third, unpoisoned glass; it was the only explanation. How would you poison the glasses and not the bottle? If you were there with them, while they were drinking. Drinking from a third glass.

And so far as we knew, one person had been present shortly before the murder.

“You said Tal had a little alcohol in kes system?” Sam asks, reluctantly.

“Tal wouldn’t do that,” Sunset says immediately.

“There’s no way it could be anyone else,” Heli says.

“Tal’s not very observant when ke’s concentrating on something,” I point out. “Ke said that ke didn’t see Renn and the Friend, just heard them. If a third person wasn’t talking much, or if they left while Tal was still absorbed in kes work…” but I can’t make myself believe it. It’s too complicated, too chancy. The best way to convince someone to drink is to drink with them, so if you wanted to be absolutely sure you could drug them in time for the killer to show up…

“Did Tal show any suspicious injuries?” Captain Sands asks.

“No.”

That’s not surprising – ke doesn’t have to have wielded the knife in order to drug them. Although if Tal is guilty, then Adin probably isn’t – the pair were too eager to dob each other in to be working together. Throwing your co-conspirator under the bus like that is a great way to get caught. If Tal did the drugging, then either Denish or Lina probably wielded the knife. But where did Tal get the drugs if Adin had been the one breaking into the medical supplies? Maybe Adin hadn’t been breaking in. I’d assumed he’d illegitimately acquired his neurostims, but I wouldn’t put it past our medical Friend to have simply kept supplying him against the captain’s orders. Once it wakes up, it can clear that up for us.

“Any other pertinent information?” Captain Sands asks.

Celi shakes kes head. “I’ll get you the full reports for everyone, captain, but nothing else I saw seemed relevant.”

“Thank you,” Captain Sands says. “Anyone else have anything pertinent to report?”

Nobody does. The meeting concludes quickly, and I eat my remaining toast way too quickly and get out of there.

Because something’s just occurred to me. Why poison the glasses, and not the bottle? Well, if you’re Tal, then sure, you might do that to share the wine with your targets without poisoning yourself, but I don’t think Tal’s a good enough liar to be guilty. Maybe it was another person in there drinking with them, that Tal didn’t notice. Or maybe there was no third drinker; maybe the glasses were somehow poisoned by someone for a different reason.

Another reason that you might poison the glasses instead of the bottle is to control the dosage. If you were trying to sedate two people and you didn’t know how much they were each likely to drink, you couldn’t just deliver a drugged bottle; one might drug themselves into unconsciousness while the other was still very alert. You’d have to drug them separately; thus, the glasses. Would Tal miss a third drinker being present the whole time? Probably not. But would ke miss someone slipping in with some alcohol for the two researchers, filling some glasses for them and leaving them the bottle? Maybe.

But that raises another question – or really, brings an existing question into sharp relief. If you’re going to drug two people and stab them, why not just drug them to death and save yourself the stabbing? Anyone poisoning the individual glasses to be careful about dosage would have to be someone who knew enough about medicine to know the correct dosage (Lina, probably). So why not just overdose them? Why would Lina drug them, let it work, and then come back to kill them with a kitchen knife?

What are our options here? Adin, Lina, or Denish were most likely to have wielded the knife. Either Tal drugged the pair, kept an eye on them until the drugs started to take effect and went to get the killer, or somebody else slipped them the glasses of drugged wine while Tal didn’t notice. That ‘someone else’ could’ve been anyone except Tinera (whose presence would definitely be questioned by Renn and the Friend) or our living Friend (who had clearly been unaware of the drugs during its false confession), but… probably wasn’t Lina, come to think of it, because Lina wouldn’t have had to break a lock to get the antidrenomate. Oh, and while either Tal or Adin could be involved, they were very unlikely to be working together, or they wouldn’t have dobbed each other in so quickly when we first started questioning them. If I can get one certain thing, one solid bit of evidence that isn’t possibly just luck or possibly unrelated, one solid fact that pins someone to this, I’m sure I can unravel the rest. I bite my lip, and try not to think about wiping the fingerprints off the murder weapon.

There must be something else, though, besides the weapon. Knowing who took the antidrenomate would be a solid start. Unfortunately, there’s unlikely to be any physical evidence to that crime any more, and we don’t even know specifically when it happened, and it’s not like I can just look back in time and –

Wait a minute.

Wait a minute.

I head for NAER 1 and settle down at a terminal. Poking through my own computer history, I’m able to locate the feed to a camera I previously accessed. Come on, come on… yes! It still works! It’s still on! I open it up and have a view of the medbay where Celi’s liver transplant took place. It seems that the captain forgot to take the spy camera back down.

It’s not a good view of the medbay, just the corner that the operation had taken place in. But it does show the very edge of the medicine cabinet that had been broken into. Now, the big question; can I get the AI to show me past footage? It’s always a bit evasive with old information, but we’ve had no problem accessing footage from space suit cameras and such. I think it’s just its own native systems that it thinks to protect, so this little spycam is probably easy.

It is! The AI gives me access to old footage without a fight. Now, I just need to check the footage between the time that Renn made his stupid opinion about Lyson projects known, and the time that Celi told me of the broken lock.

Problem: I don’t remember when specifically either of those things happened.

I do remember that the broken lock conversation had happened right before Tinera had been confined to Habitation Ring 2, so I ask a few people until I get that date, then come back. Then it’s just a matter of very monotonously skipping back through the footage in search of something suspicious. Most of the time, the camera shows just empty space, although I do occasionally have to skip past someone’s medical exam that I really don’t have the right to be spying on.

I have to go back a surprisingly long way. Shortly after the whole genetically-engineered-crewmates discovery, I see one of my crewmates enter the view of the camera without a doctor. They look around, pull a small piece of metal from their pocket, then lean out of view over the cabinet. After about fifteen seconds, they withdraw with a large medicine bottle in hand, and hurry out of frame.

It’s Heli Graf.

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23 thoughts on “087: ACCOMPLICE

  1. Surprisingly long back. . . it doesn’t feel like the Lyson convo was that far back. Will it turn out that Heli was stealing neurostimulants for Adin after they started dating?

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    1. I can see this, obviously you want the person you’re with to be comfortable, so I can see this.

      We still don’t know why Lina attacked though, as both parties were being quiet about it… So many questions…

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  2. Huh I remember Aspen suspecting Heli back when they heard about the broken lock and Tiny and her had their fight.

    Though when they said “one of my crewmates” I didn’t expect it to be one of the new crew lol

    Also I wouldn’t pout it past the Friend to keep up with Aiden’s dosing schedule despite orders. I’m honestly surprised Sands didn’t think of that, especially because he’s so suspicious of the lot of them.

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  3. Everyone on this very normal and functional spaceship is doing SOMETHING they shouldn’t and at this point I’m starting to think the Friend just fell on a knife and it’s not even related. Trust no one, including dead people!

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  4. > If you’re going to drug two people and stab them, why not just drug them to death and save yourself the stabbing?

    My leading theory is that the purpose of the knife is to frame Adin.

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    1. I was actually wondering about how upon seeing the scene Heli immediately sugfested that it’s obvious that the warpig did it. The more worrying thing however, would be the fact that it was Heli working on all the mystery stuff concerning the AI stealing brains.
      Which in turn, makes me believe that she is in the conspiracy. And instead of discovering what the Antarctic(?) scientists done with the AI she jyst spent some time doing random stuff(or killing people).

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  5. There’s so many factors to consider here…..I wonder if the murderees aren’t somehow responsible….im concerned about the dead universal friend and the lyson’s advocate hanging out together. Wondering if the universal friend didn’t see the Lysons procedures as a threat to all of the people on board who are wired with kill switches and cant meaningfully consent to the procedure. Theres a lot of things wrong with that theory obviously but I’m having trouble believing any of the old crew killed in anything other than self defense, just for the extremity of the act and the inevitable blame that would fall on the convicts.

    I think our doctor universal friend is going to be the key to this mystery. It clearly knows something both relevant and important.

    Though Lisa…..how she’s involved it’s hard to say yet.

    Heli though!! Wonder if shes getting medicine for Adin or something more sinister…..i cant say i trust her very much, but I do thing her involvement may be a red herring that will clear up some of the evidence.

    Good lord though Sands is bad at group cohesion. Man has given motive and opportunity to everyone for keeping as many secrets as possible. He’s a judgemental asshole and inclined to use his power and control in destructive and bigoted ways. He’s under a lot of stress but he’s made a huge mess of this situation and has continued to reduce transparency and trust between crew members. His character is super interesting and he seems to be exhibiting some growth but like he seems either unaware or uncaring of the faults hes opening up between his crew.

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  6. It’s got to be 2 separate crimes. Someone poisoned the two, and did not mean to kill them. The killing was not part of the poisoner’s plan.

    What would someone stand to gain from poisoning them? I don’t think it’s Lyson-related. Renn and PUF expressed support for it, but I don’t think anyone’s afraid of them taking any action to carry it out on the ship. My guess is that someone wanted access to something on the terminal, that only Renn had authority to see. They drugged the two, hoping they would pass out at the terminal, and then they’d be able to access whatever it was.

    It would explain Renn’s arm in the terminal. He destroyed it to hide whatever they were looking at. (Not Kinoshita’s notes then, since those were still open on his original terminal.)

    Is Renn part of the AI project? Maybe PUF found out, and Renn killed PUF to hide it, but was himself fatally injured in the process. That doesn’t seem right though – it doesn’t explain the antidrenomate. Renn is Tarandran, and from the leadership group, so he may have the same instructions as Sands (undercover anti-sabotage mission).

    I don’t think it was Lina or anyone who was drinking. I don’t think the killer would want to be interrogated while drunk.

    Come to think of it, I’m starting to wonder why no one’s done an autopsy on Lea’s body to find out what killed the 15 members of the second crew.

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  7. aaand I’ve run out of chapters to binge. And in the middle of the murder mystery too!

    Our doctor friend is lucky it didn’t die along with the others who have less than absolute disgust towards Lyson projects…if that really is the common thread. I’d say that maybe it falsely confessed to cover for whoever on the old crew did it, but it has impaired social bonding abilities so I doubt that that’s its motive. On the other hand, this brings up the idea of the two (awake) Friends disagreeing on what, exactly, the common welfare requires or even is, or what actions would cross a moral line even in pursuit of the greater good. There’s also the whole “Angel of Death” thing attached to the doctor Friend we still don’t have an explanation for, even if it isn’t super relevant to the current situation.

    Wait a minute–Heli tried to claim that Tinera must have done the murders almost immediately after they were discovered! Which doesn’t tell us too much–it could easily be bias from their earlier fight. And Heli being in a relationship with Adin could mean that she was stealing only neurostims for Adin and not the anesthetic, *or* it could mean that she and Adin were working together to do the murders, or…god, Aspen’s right, we just don’t have enough information. I’m eagerly awaiting the next chapter!

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  8. auhh i have been reading this almost nonstop since i found the story 2 days ago!!!
    the suspense is killing me. why poison them just to stab them? unless you want to frame someone with the stabbing, but surely whoever did the poisoning would realize the rest of the crew is smart enough to discover the poison. OR! maybe the poison would have been fatal, had the victims actually finished their drinks…

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  9. I’VE BEEN SAYING HELI WAS SUSPICIOUS FOR AGES (more detailed comments on earlier chapters)

    i screamed out loud when we saw heli stealing the medicine, my family may have been confused XD

    however there still are loose ends like others have pointed out- i think the theory that separate people drugged and killed them makes sense, but who?

    unless someone drugged them to interrogate them or something while drowsy? And then killed them? But getting to the computer terminal seems more likely

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  10. Heli! Okay, but was that the neurostims or the other drug? I rather agree that Dr. PUF was more likely to just ignore the captain’s orders and thus would make any need to steal the stimulants go away. But why would Heli want to kill those two? And frame Adin, no less.

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  11. I suspect the “poisoning” wasn’t a poisoning,. it was a mood enhancer. The stabbing was the only part of the murder, Heli stole the stimms for Adin, but someone else stole the anesthetic as a party favour.

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  12. “I’ve got it under sedation right now”
    not even anesthesia. sedation, so the Friend can’t reveal the murderer!!

    “Had he taken them recently enough to have the enhanced strength at the time of the murder?”
    I love that Sands asked. Thank you for this one, Sands

    “”Lina Chisolm, meanwhile,” Celi continues, “has two broken bones in her right hand””
    Oh shit! I guess I suspected the wrong doctor!

    “It seems that the captain forgot to take the spy camera back down.”
    Oh ho ho ho!

    Heli!!!!! I knew it! (No, I didn’t. I don’t know it even now.)

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