to remain here on Tycho when you go."
Holden stood up, shaking his head.
"I like you, Fred, but I'm not handing that stuff over to anyone who might see it as a bargaining chip."
"I don't think you have a lot of - " Fred started, but Holden held up a finger and cut him off. While Fred stared at him in surprise, he grabbed his terminal and opened the crew channel.
"Alex, Amos, either of you on the ship?"
"I'm here," Amos said a second later. "Finishing up some - "
"Lock it down," Holden said over him. "Right now. Seal it up. If I don't call you in an hour, or if anyone other than me tries to board, leave the dock and fly away from Tycho at best possible speed. Direction is your choice. Shoot your way free if you have to. Read me?"
"Loud and clear, Cap," Amos said. If Holden had asked him to get a cup of coffee, Amos would have sounded exactly the same.
Fred was still staring at him incredulously.
"Don't force this issue, Fred," Holden said.
"If you think you can threaten me, you're mistaken," Fred said, his voice flat and frightening.
Miller laughed.
"Something funny?" Fred said.
"That wasn't a threat," Miller replied.
"No? What would you call it?"
"An accurate report of the world," Miller said. He stretched slowly as he talked. "If it was Alex on board, he might think the captain was trying to intimidate someone, maybe back down at the last minute. Amos, though? Amos will absolutely shoot his way free, even if it means he goes down with the ship."
Fred scowled, and Miller shook his head.
"It's not a bluff," Miller said. "Don't call it."
Fred's eyes narrowed, and Holden wondered if he'd finally gone too far with the man. He certainly wouldn't be the first person Fred Johnson had ordered shot. And he had Miller standing right next to him. The unbalanced detective would probably shoot him at the first hint someone thought it was a good idea. It shook Holden's confidence in Fred that Miller was even here.
Which made it a little more surprising when Miller saved him.
"Look," the detective said. "Fact is, Holden is the best person to carry that shit around until you decide what to do with it."
"Talk me into it," Fred said, his voice still tight with anger.
"Once Eros goes up, he and the Roci are going to have their asses hanging in the breeze. Someone might be angry enough to nuke him just on general principles."
"And how does that make the sample safer with him?" Fred asked, but Holden had understood Miller's point.
"They might be less inclined to blow me up if I let them know that I've got the sample and all the Protogen notes," he said.
"Won't make the sample safer," Miller said. "But it makes the mission more likely to work. And that's the point, right? Also, he's an idealist," Miller continued. "Offer Holden his weight in gold and he'll just be offended you tried to bribe him."
Naomi laughed. Miller glanced at her, a small shared smile at the corner of his mouth, then turned back to Fred.
"Are you saying he can be trusted and I can't?" Fred said.
"I was thinking more about the crew," Miller said. "Holden's got a small bunch, and they do what he says. They think he's righteous, so they are too."
"My people follow me," Fred said.
Miller's grin was weary and unassailable.
"There's a lot of people in the OPA," he said.
"The stakes are too high," Fred said.
"You're kind of in the wrong career for safe," Miller said. "I'm not saying it's a great plan. Just you won't get a better one."
Fred's slitted eyes glittered with equal parts frustration and rage. His jaw worked silently for a moment before he spoke.
"Captain Holden? I'm disappointed with your lack of trust after all I've done for you and yours."
"If the human race still exists a month from now, I'll apologize," Holden said.
"Get your crew out to Eros before I change my mind."
Holden rose, nodded to Fred, and left. Naomi walked at his side.
"Wow, that was close," she said under her breath.
Once they'd left the office, Holden said, "I think Fred was half a second from ordering Miller to shoot me."
"Miller's on our side. Haven't you figured that out yet?"
Chapter Forty-Six: Miller
Miller had known when he'd taken Holden's side against his new boss that there were going to be consequences. His position with Fred and the OPA was tenuous to start with, and pointing out that Holden and his crew were not