The March/April 2025 issue of Analog had a number of mystery stories.
The novella “Murder on the Eris Express” by Beth Goder was a somewhat gruesome murder mystery with incredible comic relief by a couple of bots. The captain turns off his ship’s AI, then is found dead a few hours later. The AI, named Mo, is upset at the death and its own lack of memory. The grooves around the captain’s neck will be the key to solving the murder. Meanwhile, Cleaning Bot 444 is disgusted at all the blood and other human debris in the captain’s quarters. He vacuums it all up and disposes of it.
“Mr. Palomar goes to Space” is a funny short story by Hayden Trenholm. Mr. Palomar likes to fill out surveys. Then he is whisked off to Cape Canaveral. He is disappointed to find out he was chosen to go to space as an experiment, because he is very average. At one point he is taped to the wall of a space station to make sure he does not interfere with the professionals.
Kate MacLeod’s novelette “Heat Death” is a vividly written mystery. Although the murder victim is from Mars, this is not really science fiction. He could simply have been from a distant place on Earth.
The most immersive novella is “The Return of Tom Dillon” by
Harry Lang. A colony on Mars has entire cities under pressurized domes. The
body of a woman is found frozen and buried from the waist down outside the
domes. Detective Hector Kovack has his own stressors, since his brother
murdered their mother, and Kovack had to kill him in a shootout. He drinks too
much. But he is a dogged investigator, asking questions others don’t, and
discarding false leads. He ends up acting more like a private investigator,
disregarding rules in his search for the truth.
It's easy to blame a small terrorist group that has been operating on Mars, but Kovack points out the MO doesn’t match the terrorists. Despite the terrorists, Mars has had a low murder rate. A funny moment in this grim story is when a detective from Earth named McGill asks if this could be a copycat killing. The Mars detectives haven’t heard that term before. After the Earth detective explains, Kovack thinks, “What kind of asylum did McGill come from?”
So overall, if you like mysteries, either buy this on a newsstand or find it in a library.
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