THE hardboiled school of detective fictioneers gets ample representation in today's story, this time off-planet, as murder stalks . . .
"Ophir Chasma."
By Kacey Ezell (born 1977; the ISFDb HERE; the SFE HERE; Goodreads HERE; and her Homepage HERE). First appearance: Down These Mean Streets, 2024.
Reprints page (ISFDb HERE). Novelette (17 pages as a PDF).
Online at Baen Books (HERE). (Parental caution: Language and violence.)
"Of course, I also wasn’t sure why someone would want to bury the murder of a Joygirl."
THERE'S a serial killer loose on Mars who seems determined to follow in Jack the Ripper's bloody footsteps, but the authorities are strangely uninterested. Why? A detective with a little more empathy for the victims than might be healthy decides to find out . . .
Main characters:
~ Jane Doe ("Approximately ten local years old, or just under twenty by Terran reckoning"), Deselle ("what can I say, I’m a detective. Being nosy is my job"), Brinz ("was a good guy, if a bit more garrulous than I’d like"), Dr. Kabeya ("I told you what you wanted to know. Now please get the hell out of my morgue and let me get on with my job"), Timea Vang ("This guy is really great, Deselle"), Dane ("I’m not a baby!"), Vomero ("a good detective, if a little short on people skills"), Rubilard ("Deselle. I am your boss. I am telling you to drop it"), the receptionist ("Do I need to call Security?"), the custodian ("The refugees had made it out here to Melas, it seemed. Or at least this one had"), and Dr. Abunto ("even showed me the datalogs that confirmed one hundred percent biometric login to the school’s virtual library").
References:
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The scene of the crime. |
(Note: A year on Mars equals 1.88 years on Earth.)
- "a monomolecular blade that would cut through just about anything, given enough time" (HERE). - "the Valles Marineris complex" (HERE). - "So she was shorter and denser than most of us natives" (HERE). - "over in Melas" (HERE). - "Arean-enclosed cities" (HERE). - "Organ harvester?" (HERE) - "the advanced nanite diagnostic imagers" (HERE and HERE).
Unless otherwise noted, all bibliographical data are derived from The FictionMags Index created by William G. Contento & edited by Phil Stephensen-Payne. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~