Part XXXIX: Adrift

Everything felt much lighter, despite the gloom. Freedom felt so close, but the ship’s hull and seat harnesses maintained restraint. At least for now. Jyra could no easier explain her sense of euphoria than determine why her body ached. She wanted to scream and had no idea what she might feel by screaming. Delight? Misery?

Jyra knew she had to open her eyes. She remembered as a child when her mother shook her awake in the mornings. The chill from the evening air always crept into the house, back when temperatures shifted between hot and cold on Tyrorken. Jyra would use her feet and hands to pin the blanket over her when her mother tried to pull it free. Even if her muscles were fully awake, it was a battle Jyra could never win.

The gathering cold might have triggered the memory and it restored Jyra to reality. She couldn’t ignore it any longer. She opened her eyes and saw nothing but a blur of black and white. Then a large disc, distorted by poor vision, passed before her face, a fine chain slipping through a hole near its edge. She had never looked at her mother’s locket so closely before as it drifted to her right, no longer obscuring her view of the stars. She seized it and reflexively tucked it into her collar.

Mastranada rotated in a constant lateral spin; it seemed as though the entire galaxy revolved around the ship. Small, wall-mounted emergency lights lit up on the walls, casting their subdued crimson glow across the bridge.

Jyra glanced toward her lap and saw only a blur of flashing colors. Her mouth tasted like she had been sucking on tin cans. One of her hands flopped against her forehead. She felt the harness wrapped around her, but didn’t feel the seat beneath or behind. She dragged her knuckles through the gathered sweat on her face. Two fingers found a lock of hair and, without thinking, Jyra searched for the split ends. Her hand traveled upward, far beyond her scalp.

The confusion and bleariness yielded to understanding. Jyra’s hair drifted above her as though she were submerged in a pool. She rubbed her eyes and stared straight ahead, trying to confirm her orientation on the bridge. Hadn’t Berk mentioned something about a gravity drive report? Jyra thought.

The gravity drive recorded atmospheric conditions whenever the ship landed on a new planet. The drive then mimicked those conditions on board when traveling in space. The crew could access backlogs of atmospheres if they pleased. Keeping the atmospheric settings after leaving a planet helped mitigate some of the strain of traversing between planets. Though it served many functions, Jyra was, at the moment, most concerned with the gravity drive maintaining the difference between up and down.

Among the slew of warning lights, she found the one that confirmed the gravity drive was offline. Jyra’s eyes widened, her vision no longer impaired, as she saw the scope of the damage to Mastranada indicated by the desperate beacons that demanded her attention. Main ship power, radar, weapons systems, engines, and cameras were all down. But the last warning Jyra saw sent her into a panic as she glanced at her unconscious crew, drifting in their harnesses. Mastranada suffered multiple hull breaches and the air inside the ship was venting into space. 

While waiting for her computer to boot up, Jyra visualized how she would glide through the corridors. It couldn’t be as easy as she imagined. She was far more aware of the weightlessness of her arms as she stretched them toward the keyboard. Her stomach and mind churned while the rest of her relaxed, spared the constant tug toward the floor. The breach warnings filled the monitor and Jyra pulled up the hull schematic. Every thud of her heart measured the unchecked flow of nitrox out of the ship.

For a moment, Jyra wondered if she should seal the supply tank. Once the cabin nitrox level plunged far enough, the main valve would automatically close and preserve what remained in the tank. If Jyra manually shut it, she might not be able to repair the breaches without suffocating. 

We have spacesuits on board, too, Jyra remembered as she leaned toward the schematic, double-checking to make sure she located every breach. She didn’t have time to fuss with the nitrox or suits.

Bullets had penetrated the hull at eight separate points. Nearly all of the breaches were in the cargo bay. The other tore directly into a plenum wall between the bay and the upper hall. Jyra located the nearest air return vent to the breaches on the schematic; it would offer the quickest access to make a repair. The remaining seven should all be exposed in the cargo bay and, without the constraint of gravity, relatively easy to access.

Jyra unclipped from her harness and kept one hand clenched around a strap as she gently pushed a foot against the floor. She glided upward (maybe downward?), the strap tightened, and Jyra bounced toward her seat. A wave of hair tumbled over her face and she swept it aside in time to grab the top of the seat back. Navigating the gravity-free corridors was going to take even more effort than she imagined. Jyra glanced over her shoulder at the door. She brought her knees onto the seat back and, maintaining a grip on the chair, turned around to face the door. As she repositioned into a crouch, Jyra jerked her head, trying to shake a surge of dizziness. The freedom of weightlessness suddenly became a burden as her mind sought to establish a sense of direction.

The ceiling should be above and the floor below. Now the floor was right in front of Jyra and she was about to jump off the back of her chair. She knew she would glide directly through the door, but instinct fought conviction.

Jyra pushed off. She refused to blink, watching the walls slipping by beside her. She passed through the bridge door with ease, but Jyra suddenly realized she put too much force into her launch. She felt like a missile closing on one of the bulkheads in the hallway. She threw her arms in front of her and crumpled against the steel.

Jyra obtained a secure hold on the bulkhead with her left hand and felt something pop in her wrist. She summoned her wits, knowing she had to keep moving. She peered at the ceiling, trying to identify details through the crimson gloom. Several conduits strapped near the wall caught her eye; they ran the length of the hall and offered a more controlled means of mobility. Jyra pushed gently against the floor, reached one of the dust-covered pipes, and began crawling hand-over-hand toward the ladder that led to the lower corridor. Once she arrived at the ladder well, Jyra had to jump to the rungs and climb upside down to reach the main passage between her quarters and the engine room.

She shoved off from the ladder and crossed the hall. She placed a boot against the opposite wall and kicked herself aft. The emergency lighting hardly lit more than the floor, but Jyra swore she saw traces of boot prints on the walls and, judging by the size, could only have been made by one person on board. Jyra managed to arrest herself against a door frame and sighed, knowing she had stopped at the right place. She fumbled for the handle, opened the nearby hatch, and retrieved the breach seal kit.

Jyra was certain she could feel air rushing through the cargo bay door before she opened it. When she did, it was as though a dam had broken, as the nitrox in the rest of the ship tried to equalize pressure in the depleted cargo bay. The chill beyond the hull gripped the room. Jyra, wishing she had thought to grab a jacket, shut the door and glided to the nearest stack of crates that, thankfully, were secured to the wall. Jyra opened the kit on top of one of the crate lids. All the contents were strapped in place, prepped for a gravity-free environment. The case itself was the size of a large briefcase and several lights in the lid flashed to life. Jyra pulled out one of the headlamps in the kit, strapped it to her head, and switched it on. Next, she pulled on a pair of thick gloves. Carefully, she released the binding on a stack of sealing pads and, knowing her life depended on them, tucked them in a large trouser pocket that she snapped shut.

Jyra kicked toward the ceiling, the light of her headlamp reflecting off the exposed beams. She soared past Berk’s pod, which drifted lazily on its support cables.

Jyra landed on the ceiling, seized a conduit, and felt her hair shift on her scalp. Her light fell on a ragged hole, about the diameter of her thumb, in the hull plate. Jyra unsnapped her pocket, and with some difficulty on account of the gloves, pulled one of the sealing pads free. She had to tuck her arm between the conduit and the ceiling to remain in place as she tore the protective film off the pad and held it below the puncture. As she brought it closer to the ceiling, the pad leapt off her palm and several sparks blew from its edges as it fused with the steel.

And so Jyra continued the work. She knew from the schematic that of the seven bullets that penetrated the cargo bay, the first struck aft on the port side and the seventh hit fore to starboard. After sealing the fourth breach, Jyra paused to take several breaths and realized her teeth were chattering. Her heart thudded against her ribs. Then she heard a muted snap from the engine room; she convulsed, shivering and struggling to keep her mind and body on task.

The sound indicated the solenoid shut the main valve to preserve the remaining air in the tank, but it also meant Jyra had a critically finite amount of nitrox left and she had only sealed half the breaches. She reached for her pocket, her gloved fingers slipping as she snapped the flap closed. Jyra pulled herself along the conduit, wondering if the muscle stimulant or hypoxia caused her tremors. She remembered seeing her fingers shaking when the Hospital warship initiated its pursuit. Even then, Jyra was certain something besides fear triggered the quaking in her hands. It was more fundamentally integrated with her mind than an emotion; it was a part of her.

Each grip of her hand-over-hand progress toward the next breach seemed to require more strength, more effort, more air. Jyra tried to take deep breaths. She reached one of the light fixtures and could tell that although the chains supporting it were straight as usual, they carried no weight. A conduit ran parallel in the peak of the ceiling and Jyra used it to crawl to the next row of lights, certain she could see the fifth breach. It turned out to be far enough from the pipe that Jyra had to hook her ankle between the conduit and a beam. She stretched out, floating a foot below the ceiling and the pad leapt into place while Jyra pushed away from the sparks. 

The sixth breach required a similar anchoring maneuver with her foot and Jyra managed to seal it with ease. She was relieved to be climbing closer to the floor, though fearful she might succumb to the fight between her gravity-conscious instinct and her mind that knew better. In addition to the threats of thinning nitrox and paralyzing cold, Jyra felt nauseated and her head throbbed, protesting every movement as she pushed on. The last breach in the cargo bay was simple to access and Jyra peeled the film off the sealing pad. She lifted it toward the hole, and convulsed again. She couldn’t push through the shivering fit this time. The sealing pad flew off her hand and spun lazily toward the opposite wall. 

Jyra clung to the conduit, trying to keep the pad in sight as she fought to stop her teeth from shattering against each other. She grimaced, wondering if she had doomed the ship. The activated side of the pad would soon find a metallic surface and bind to it. During the process, the pad detected the circumference of the puncture and sent a jet of molten sealing compound into the breach to maximize the thickness of the patch in the hull. Without the smallest fissure to fill, the compound had nowhere to go and the pad would explode.

Jyra gritted her teeth and tried to lock her quivering muscles. She pushed off the ceiling, thankful the breach seal kit was still open beneath her, spilling light into the room. She grabbed another sealing pad and rebounded off the floor. Fighting the tremors in her extremities, she activated the pad, guided it into place, and returned to the breach seal kit. Jyra snapped it closed and kicked against the crate, aiming for the exit.

Just then, the rogue patch bound to the firewall between the cargo bay and the engine room. Jyra watched it glow bright white and averted her gaze when a loud bang echoed off the walls. Molten shrapnel scattered through the cargo bay. Jyra reached the door and, as she waited for it to open, felt a searing sensation on her shoulder. She instinctively reached up and tore at the source; a glowing mass from the ruined sealing pad had burned into her skin just above her shoulder blade. Jyra winced as she pulled herself through the door, punching the button to shut it as she fell forward. Of course, she didn’t hit the floor, but drifted into the hall in a partially slumped position. She let go of the breach seal kit and laid her forehead against the cold wall.

Jyra might have crumpled with exhaustion if it hadn’t been for her burning shoulder. The pain struck repeatedly as though each heartbeat refreshed the screaming alarm from her nerves. She smelled the sickly stench of burned flesh. She frantically patted herself with gloved hands, fearing more shrapnel might be sinking into her skin as if the shock from the first projectile dulled any further sensation. Another breath. And another. It felt like her nose was full of icicles and her throat as dry as the sand wastes of Tyrorken.

Jyra glanced toward the engine room and back at the ladder. She still had to seal the last breach. It terrified her to manually open the valve to the tank, because the automatic shutoff wouldn’t activate again if something happened to Jyra; everything in the tank could escape through the last breach. Berk and Leonick would suffocate while unconscious. Not the worst way to go, Jyra thought. She set the breach seal kit on the floor, ensured it wouldn’t drift away, and dragged herself down the hall.

The engine room smelled like ozone and burned wiring. Jyra glided into the room and kicked off the left wall, but her foot slipped. She aimed too high and soared right over her target. Jyra glanced around in desperation, the headlamp beam flashing across steel and machinery. The opposite wall loomed out of the darkness. Her faulty launch also sent her into a corkscrew spin. When she hit the wall, her injured shoulder made first contact.

Jyra felt nothing for a moment, though she sensed the incoming rush of pain. It fell upon her, seizing her body and being. She wasn’t aware of the scream of agony escaping her lips, except for a faint tremble in her throat. Tears gathered in her eyes, unable to fall without the pull of gravity. The engine room dissolved into a blurry of light and shadow. Jyra realized her limbs quaked with unbidden convulsions. Her shoulder felt as if a hot coal were pressed deep into her flesh, scorching her scapula, lighting up her nerves as skin and muscle burned. She lost track of time and forgot about the critical shortage of nitrox. She glimpsed crisscrossing ducts and conduits through watery vision and the flailing headlamp beam, a consequence of her jerking muscles.

Her forehead smacked against the ceiling. Jyra shook her head, trying to reclaim her senses. She threw her hand over her shoulder to press on the wound. The pain retreated, but by the time she was able to take several shallow breaths, she had already drifted away from the ceiling, heading slowly for the firewall. Jyra gritted her teeth, aware of each passing second while she closed in on the wall at a pitiful pace. At last, Jyra was able to grab a steel column to crawl toward the tank.

The gauge showed the nitrox level at thirty percent. Jyra gripped the valve handle, hesitating and wondering if she could trust herself. The future of her and her crew would be decided by the twist of her wrist. She recalled Serana’s command by way of excusing Jyra to embark on this mission: “Do your job, Captain.”

With another shallow breath, Jyra opened the valve and made her way along the wall to the exit, racing the air to the last breach. The kit was right where she left it in the corridor. Jyra found it harder to maneuver with the large case, but she forced it ahead through the ladder well and emerged in the upper hall. Jyra tried to ignore her ragged gasps. It felt like she was breathing sand into her lungs, aspirating a dust storm.

Jyra fumbled with the vent cover clips. The opening was large enough that Berk might be able to squeeze into it. The large vent triggered Jyra’s instincts for a moment as she wondered how to keep it from crashing to the floor when she released the last clip. Of course, once she shook it loose from its frame, the vent cover hung in place. Patches of dust filled the air, crossing through the headlamp beam. Jyra retrieved another sealing pad and closed the kit, leaving it hovering in the hall. She entered the plenum shaft and could already hear the subtle hiss from the breach. Slowly, she worked her way toward the sound, each time she touched a wall to adjust her progress, a cloud of dust swarmed her face.

At the top of the shaft, Jyra found the puncture, right in a corner. She carefully folded the sealing pad to fit and removed the protective film. It snapped into place and Jyra retreated, keen to stay clear if something went wrong with the binding process. Dust filled her throat and nostrils, and Jyra kicked herself free of the shaft wall, coughing and wheezing. She glided into the dim hallway and forgot she was floating, forgot about her shoulder, forgot about the ship and her crew. She spat mud from her mouth as her lungs begged for air. Jyra’s vision grew blurry and the last thing she saw was her headlamp beam glancing off the ceiling before everything went dark.

*

Jyra felt her knees crash into the sand. She fell forward, grabbing fistfuls of the ground as the wind lifted Tyrorken around her. She should have left the garage sooner. Jed mentioned reports of an incoming storm, but it wasn’t supposed to strike until tomorrow. Dust twisters, once predictable, now struck without warning.

The largest one ever recorded hit a month ago, tearing up an entire drilling field, leveling rig towers and warping well shafts. Nightfall put the storm to bed; it lost momentum eight miles from Mereda. The heralding winds had managed to rip several roofs in town loose. A fleet of TF patrol ships suffered minor damage as well.

Tides of dirt washed over her boots. Jyra felt the sand gathering against her, another obstacle in the storm’s way. She seized her goggles, tried to shake the earth out of them, and crammed them on her face. The mask dangled around her neck, useless as the first waves of sand had clogged the filter cartridges. Her parents’ paychecks were still two days out, which meant new filters had to wait.

Jyra stumbled through the desert, one hand near her face, the other out in front, reaching for the trees. She felt the compacted path beneath her feet. The wind blew against the back of her head, pushed her hair aside, and sandblasted her neck. 

Her fingers swiped the rough bark of the first juniper tree in a line of several at the boundary of her neighborhood. Jyra was almost back, but as she leaned against the trunk, she inhaled too much dirt and the coughing started. It brought her back to the ground and she crawled, coughing and spitting, desperate to get inside. 

It felt like her head was about to float free of her hunched shoulders. The wind howled and sand crept higher inside her goggles. She took a timid breath, and choked again on the relentless earth. She bowed her head and scurried onward, but knew another coughing fit was about to strike. Her house appeared through the swirling clouds and Jyra collapsed at the foot of the porch, gasping for air through each cracking cough.

*

“She is waking up.”

“Are you sure?”

“Her arm is moving.”

“She’s been twitching every now and then. Doesn’t mean anything.”

“It does this time.”

Jyra felt restrained and, as she opened her eyes, realized she was back on the bridge harnessed in her own seat.

“The nitrox?” she asked.

“Doing just fine with your help, Captain,” Berk said. “The tank level’s a bit lower than I’d like.”

He and Leonick hung in midair between the two consoles, both appearing quite comfortable in the gravity-free ship.

“How long have you two been awake?” Jyra asked. “Are Hospital forces still after us? Why am I strapped in?”

“I woke up about an hour ago, checked on Berk, found you and guided you into your seat to make sure you did not pull a muscle when you woke up floating,” Leonick said. “It can be disorienting. Berk came around about half an hour ago.”

“I’m sure the Hospitals will continue the pursuit, but they aren’t right now,” Berk said. “I reviewed the last of the footage before our cameras went offline. The missile we guided into the intercepting ship did the trick. Silanpre reclaimed most of the remains. A number of crisis capsules launched into space. We suspect the warship switched to recovery operations rather than chase after us.”

“How’s our ship?” Jyra asked.

“Better following your patch work,” Leonick said. “But radar, engines, weapons, and cameras are down.”

“What about the lights?” Jyra asked, her eyes falling on one of the crimson emergency fixtures.

“They work,” Berk said.

“So can we turn them on?”

“We could but I would advise against it , Captain,” Leonick said. “We do not know how long we will be out here and it would be prudent to conserve our batteries while we have no means to recharge them.”

Jyra leaned back and her wounded shoulder touched the back of her seat. She jerked forward.

“What’s wrong?” Berk asked. 

“I just got hit by a bad sealing patch,” Jyra said.

“Just?” Leonick’s voice uncharacteristically revealed both concern and skepticism. Berk seemed equally alarmed.

“Those pads can shoot sealing compound right through a person,” Berk said. “Where did it get you?”

“Where were you when it happened?” Leonick asked.

“Shoulder and cargo bay,” Jyra answered. “A molten remnant from a failed latch got me.”

“How many other remnants were there, Captain?” Leonick pushed off Berk’s console and grabbed the back of Jyra’s seat, locking eyes with her.

“A few, I don’t know,” Jyra said. Of all the things to command their attention right now, that particular crisis didn’t seem like a priority. “I was trying to get the nitrox going again.”

“I will check the crates,” Leonick said, and without another word, he tugged against the seat back, glided past Jyra, and soared off the bridge.

Jyra met Berk’s wide eyes, no easy feat since his usually bushy hair became even more unruly without gravity containing it.

“As Captain, I command you tell me what’s happening,” Jyra said.

“The weapons,” Berk said. “We should have told you about them the moment you came aboard. Most of the arsenal we stole from our last mission under Craig are stored in the crates. You understand the consequences if a piece of molten metal burned into one of them.”

“I see,” Jyra said. “Leave it to me to add one more way for us to die out here.”

“We’re not finished yet,” Berk grunted. He placed his hands behind his head and stretched his legs out, as though settling into an invisible deck chair.

“Those boots of yours match a footprint I saw on a wall in the lower hallway,” Jyra said. “You and Leonick have shut off the gravity drive before.”

“It made some things easier,” Berk said.

“Such as?”

“How do you think we suspended my pod on those cables?” Berk said. “I could have held it in hover mode, but how would Leonick attach the cables? Run around with a twenty-foot stepladder? It made arranging crates easier, too. How did you leave your quarters arranged?”

“What do you mean?”

“Well, if the gravity drive failed while the ship lurched a couple times before settling into our current trajectory, it would shake all your clothes loose from open drawers, your bedding might be touring the ceiling. I speak from personal experience.”

Jyra hadn’t thought about her quarters or anything in them from the moment she stepped out after a night’s sleep. 

“I guess we’re lucky you two secured as much as you did,” she said. “Most crews would likely be swimming through their possessions if their gravity drives failed.”

“We try to keep a tight ship, Captain,” Berk said.

“I can’t be that mad at you if you continue surprising me like this,” Jyra said. “But keep it up and I will be mad. I’ll be your captain, but without a crew I can trust I’m nothing.”

“Leonick has already got a diagnostic program running to identify the scope of the damage,” Berk said. “It should finish in the next few minutes.”

“What did Leonick mean about having no way to recharge the batteries? Did something happen to the energy cores?” Jyra asked.

“I expect he’s checking those out right now,” Berk said. “Nothing seemed amiss when you were in the engine room?”

“It smelled terrible, but it’s not like the cores were visibly damaged.”

“Energy cores are remarkable, but for all their benefits, they are finicky to maintain,” Berk said. “As long as they’re intact, Leonick will fix them. The way I see it, the Hospital warship decides how much time we have to make repairs.”

“If they can even detect us now,” Jyra said.

“That’s the spirit,” Berk said.

“Do we have any maneuverability at all without engines?” Jyra asked.

Berk nodded.

“Comes at a cost, but it can be done.” Berk ran a hand over his whiskers and turned his eyes to the floor.

“What’s the cost?” Jyra asked.

“We got lucky,” Leonick said, reappearing on the bridge. “I found a fragment of the sealing pad on the floor two feet from a crate of chaos mines.”

“That’s on me,” Jyra said.

“It’s all right, Captain,” Berk said. “By mine or loss of air, we would have been dead without you.”

Leonick grabbed Berk’s console and redirected his course, flying toward his own workstation.

“How are the cores?” Berk asked, staring at the floor beyond his boots.

“I just went to check the cargo bay,” Leonick said.

“You were gone too long for just that.” Berk glanced sideways and his eyes met Leonick’s. Jyra wished she could interpret their silent exchange. Leonick appeared pinned, caught in a lie and held in place by Berk’s glare. But for all the intensity in his gaze, the rest of Berk’s face appeared strained, concerned, even desperate. His mouth drooped and his cheeks quivered.

“You are correct,” Leonick said, glancing at his monitor. “Several pickup wires snapped. Probably from when I reversed the engines to dampen the momentum from the shockwave.”

“You reversed the engines?” Jyra asked.

“You two are the pilots, but were both incapacitated,” Leonick said. “I have the navigation controls here but only use them if there is no other way to maneuver the ship. We had already pushed the equipment beyond tolerance. That which cannot flex will break.”

“Like us,” Jyra said. “Our bodies. I plugged some air leaks but the blast from that shockwave could have kicked us so fast, our blood could have frozen in our veins.”

“Wish I had done something to save us all,” Berk said.

“There’s still time,” Jyra said. She appreciated Berk’s levity, but dread tugged on her shoulders, weighing her down in the absence of gravity. They were adrift in space, very much alone, and had no way to contact the bunker on Silanpre. Unless…

“Neither of you left an earpiece with anyone at the base, did you?” Jyra asked.

“Not without your permission,” Leonick said.

“Just a thought,” Jyra said.

“We might be able to rig a channel,” Berk said. “But first we need the—”

“Diagnostic report,” Leonick finished his sentence. “Just came through.”

Jyra forgot she was strapped in and reached to unfasten herself and felt pain shoot across her shoulder.

“I’ll help,” Berk said. He hooked his toe under his console and pulled himself forward to unclip her straps.

“Thanks,” Jyra said, suddenly aware she had no idea how the wound looked.

“Is it bad?” She leaned forward, closing her eyes and taking a deep breath. She felt Berk shifting behind her.

“Well?” she asked after too much time passed.

“I think your shirt is ruined,” Berk said. “Picture a two-inch-diameter sphere and that half of that sphere burned into the back of your shoulder. You’ve got your own black hole, and it’s cauterized.”

“I appreciate your honesty,” Jyra said, pushing free of her seat. “As much as I can.” 

“You asked, Captain,” Berk said. “Are you all right?”

“No, it hurts, but nothing’s going to get better if we can’t heal the ship,” Jyra said. “I need to see what we’re dealing with.”

Berk helped Jyra navigate to Leonick’s side. They all stared silently at the monitor as information came in, filling spreadsheet columns pertaining to onboard systems.

“Reentry is no longer advised,” Leonick said. “The hull punctures combined with accelerated heat stress on all the exterior plating cannot withstand the temperatures. Landing on an asteroid is about the best we could hope for.”

“Engines appear to just be overheated,” Jyra said. “They should cool down soon enough.”

“Without the cores, they won’t fire,” Berk said.

“I will fix the cores,” Leonick said, an edge to his voice.

“Anything about radar yet?” Jyra asked. “Weapons, cameras?”

“Cameras are all ruined,” Berk muttered. “By the shockwave, or heat, or bullets. Hard to say.”

“Exterior weapon guidance gear suffered similar damage,” Leonick said. “We can still aim and fire manually, but with compromised accuracy.”

Jyra pulled herself closer to the monitor.

“Any specifics on the radar damage?” she said.

“Range booster is unresponsive,” Leonick said. “The entire radar system has defaulted to safety mode.”

“Bring it online,” Jyra said.

“It will take time,” Leonick said. “Two hours at least to initiate.”

“I suggest we get the engines going,” Berk said. “Or try to fabricate a weapon guidance system. We have no control over our movements nor can we defend the ship. Those should take precedence over radar.”

“Do you not trust your captain?” Jyra asked, meeting Berk’s eyes. “Perhaps we can merge the weapons guidance system with the radar?”

“Once it is online, I will see what I can do about that,” Leonick said.

“What about the engines?” Berk said. “We’re stuck on a ballistic trajectory.”

“You already have a solution,” Jyra said. “What will it cost us?” Berk paused, except for his fingers that kneaded the back of Leonick’s seat.

“A missile, one of the incendiary mounts, maybe our lives.”

“Good thing this ship has a spare mount for the rest of the arsenal,” Jyra said. “You both recall why we are out here? There’s a freighter we need to find.”

“You want to prioritize locating the ghost ship?” Berk said.

“That is our mission,” Jyra said. “We’ll have some cover once we land there. I’m trying to buy us some time. The Hospitals may not be after us now, but they’ll resume their pursuit and we all know it.”

“So we will hide from the Hospitals in a ship they have likely commandeered?” Leonick asked.

“Yes,” Jyra said. “I would like to, but we might pass it soon, especially two hours from now. We need to map the coordinates you found.”

“I will go work on the cores before we resort to more experimental solutions,” Leonick said, his voice still distorted by the dagger-blade tone. He executed another airborne exit from the bridge. Jyra attempted to exchange a bewildered glance with Berk, but he was shaking his head.

“Did he just disobey a direct order?” she said, feigning incredulity.

“My fault,” he said. “I need a drink.”

“What’s your fault?” Jyra asked. 

“I criticized the cores a few weeks ago. It seemed like he was always cleaning them,” Berk said. “Since then, he’s been rather defensive about the topic and I keep slighting them. It’s idiotic.”

“You two spent a lot of time together,” Jyra said.

“Too much,” Berk said. “We spent too much time together. It’s different when someone else is around. Helps diffuse the tension. Not enough, apparently.”

“You know I need you two,” Jyra said. 

“I’ll be here,” Berk said. “After all we’ve got so much in common.” He gave Jyra’s console a pointed glance. Even in the dim lighting, Jyra could see where her fingers crumpled the front edge of the console.

“They didn’t mark your wrist,” Berk said. “Noticed when we were strapping you in.”

“No, they just got my hand,” Jyra said, showing Berk the scar Matala carved into her skin.

She told Berk the story of landing on Silanpre and how she fell immediately into another fight. It wasn’t easy discussing being captured because that part of the story involved Tony, when she met him, back when he was already thought killed. Jyra tried to distract herself from the misery by focusing on the details of MS-231.

“It’s strange because I can’t always access the strength,” she said.

“I know they were just beginning to work on those stimulants when they ran tests on me,” Berk said. “I think it was designed vulnerability, a way for them to maintain some form of control.”

“But what if I just master the feelings that trigger it?”

“They saved me the trouble because that power is always in my fingertips,” Berk said. “But you’re correct to assume that you could discover ways to access the strength at will. I don’t mean to worry you, but it’s possible your body may start reacting and experimenting with the stimulant to take advantage of it.”

“What do you mean?” Jyra said.

“Again, I make no claims to know anything specific about your condition,” Berk said. “For me, though, it feels like my arteries and veins expanded, like my body wanted to move more of the stimulant through me.”

“I have been getting some minor tremors in my arms recently,” Jyra said.

“Never had that,” Berk said. “I can’t deny that whatever they tested on me has helped me out a few times, but sometimes I don’t feel like myself and I wonder if it’s their chemistry interfering; dividing my mind from my body. There’s always a cost. Drinking calms me down, but also gives me the illusion of control. I split my being apart before the stimulant can.”

“But that’s not really what’s happening,” Jyra said.

“Of course not,” Berk said. “Maybe it’s happened a couple times, where alcohol actually interrupts the stimulant, but more often than not, I’m just drinking myself into drudgery. Not even the Hospitals can use me when I’m drunk.”

“Neither can you,” Jyra said. “Leonick once told me he drank a lot in order to dull the inner chatter of his mind.”

“I don’t know what to tell you about that,” Berk said. “He’s the smartest person I’ve ever met. If you know him, that reasoning is sound, but was it him or his whiskey talking?”

“Don’t know,” Jyra said. “At some point they become the same, don’t they? My father drank a lot but I never saw him lose his temper or do anything extreme.

“The night following my brother’s funeral, I remember dad drinking when I got home. He was already sad when I arrived, but I expect he was doing what you and Leonick do with alcohol: self-numbing. He was trying to hide from the consequences of his son’s death.”

“Maybe he was,” Berk said. “Maybe he was trying to forget how TF ruined his family. Look, I know what I’m doing when I drink. It’s stupid. I’ve considered stopping but it feels like one of the last tests I can give myself. Once I’m strong enough to quit drinking, what am I supposed to do next?”

“We could destroy TF and the Allied Hospitals,” Jyra said.

“Not alone we can’t,” Berk said. “And based on our current predicament, it’s going to be a long time before we’ll have the chance.”

He and Jyra started as something cracked against the glass over the bridge.

“I won’t tell Leonick you jumped if you don’t tell him I did,” Berk said.

“What was that?” Jyra said, gliding forward and grabbing the back of Berk’s seat to stop herself.

A second projectile struck the glass, or perhaps Mastranada dealt the strike. Jyra only caught a gray glimpse before the object disappeared toward the stern. Berk stalled by her side.

“See it?”

Jyra shook her head. Another tap, another missed opportunity to identify the mystery in the ship’s path. They both gently maneuvered toward the glass, floating just beneath it and peering into the looming darkness.

“There’s another one,” Berk said. Jyra saw it, too. The gray object seemed no larger than her finger. As it hit the glass, Jyra noticed one end appeared twisted and jagged. 

“That was a rivet shaft,” she said. 

“Are you sure?” Berk said.

“Positive.”

“Must be a star lighting our way,” Berk said. “Besides the one keeping Silanpre warm. How else could we see this stuff?”

“Until we saw it, we didn’t know it was possible,” Jyra said. “But I did say debris could lead us in the right direction.”

“Not that it counts for anything, but the last time we approached a ship like the one we’re after, we had trash landing on top of us, too,” Berk said. “Maybe we won’t need radar after all.”

“It would help,” Jyra said. “We might have already passed our target.”

Mastranada suffered several additional strikes to her bow. 

“If that stabilizer made it to the planet, who knows what other parts are floating out here?” Berk said.

“We are far enough from the trash ring, correct?” Jyra asked. “This isn’t stuff from that?”

“No” Berk said. “The explosion definitely launched us out of Silanpre’s orbit. Which makes me wonder what got that stabilizer into Silanpre’s orbit.”

“I want to know for sure,” Jyra said. “What can we do to get minimal radar back online?”

“Until we get the engines running, we have to conserve the batteries,” Berk said.

“So what radar function uses the least amount of power?” Jyra asked.

“A higher frequency of the signal and the optical rendering require more energy for the standard radar system,” Berk said, pushing off to fly back to his seat, his voice punctuated by a note of excitement.

“If we can render the signal as a sound rather than an image, most of the power will go toward aiming and firing the waves where we want them.”

“All right,” Jyra said. “Let’s do that.”

“I need to make sure I can,” Berk said. He scrolled through index after index, scanning the text on his monitor. Jyra drifted away from the glass and seized the back of Berk’s chair.

“Looking for radar subjects?”

“Yeah,” Berk muttered. “Feedback or report rendering. I need audio output options.”

Another piece of debris glanced off the glass. Jyra peered around the monitor, staring at the infinite tapestry of stars strung before her.

“Checking to make sure we don’t hit the freighter?” Berk asked.

“Proximity alarms would warn us, right?” Jyra said.

“Hard to say” Berk said. “Based on the damage scan, I wouldn’t rely on anything working. Just because systems aren’t flagged in the scan doesn’t mean they’re working.”

“Well, judging by the stars, I don’t see a massive silhouette ahead,” Jyra said.

“Maybe I should get that missile loaded into the mount,” Berk said. “If we need it, we’ll want to use it right away.”

“How’s your search?” Jyra asked.

“Fine,” Berk said. “Just thinking if we encounter a large piece of debris, we’ll want to navigate around it.”

“I can give you that much,” Leonick said, soaring onto the bridge. He clung to one of the girders over Jyra’s console. “The cores are still quite overheated but a momentary kick should not overwhelm them. Did you say something about debris?”

“Trace amounts,” Jyra said. “At least one rivet shaft.”

“Any other system reports or updates?” Leonick asked.

“Not really,” Berk said. “I’m trying to reinstate a basic radar sweep with audio rather than visual rendering.”

“Give me a moment,” Leonick said. He kicked off the beam, landed at his chair, and did his best to sit in it naturally as his fingers attacked the keyboard.

“It’s not going to run out our batteries, right?” Jyra asked.

“No,” Leonick said. “I will get to work on the cores soon. I should be able to fire the engines once I finish that work, but it will take time.”

He sat back, smacked a final key, and launched free of his chair.

“Let me know when you find something,” Leonick said, tapping his ear as he disappeared aft again.

“He is acting…differently,” Jyra said.

“To be expected. And our rudimentary radar is ready,” Berk said. “Bringing it online now.”

The screen went dark and all they heard was a low, steady hum emanating from one of the console speakers. The rumbling caused Jyra to wonder, for a moment,  if Leonick had already repaired the energy cores and restarted the engines.

Another higher tone, resembling a deep hiss, settled upon the first and grew louder. Another tap on the glass made them jump again and the higher tone faded.

“Well that’s the reading we get for something on the small side,” Berk said. “We’ll have more warning when something larger is out there.”

The incessant hum of the radar threatened to lull them to sleep as Mastranada drifted unchecked, falling further from Silanpre, chasing endless darkness. The sound of the hiss rose and fell. Jyra returned to her seat and clipped into her harness. If she fell asleep, she wanted to be secure.

Whether she lost consciousness she wasn’t sure, but she couldn’t have been out for long. Jyra swore she even heard the hissing change. One sound became two, and the volume continued to climb, a variety of hisses gathering into a cacophony. Debris battered the glass overhead. Mastranada shuddered from multiple impacts. Jyra saw Berk’s eyes bulge beneath his hair as they waited, unable to escape the barrage. Then a sudden and harsh silence gripped the ship.

Berk leaned forward, frantically stabbing his keyboard. Nothing he tried restored the radar. He leaned back and rubbed his forehead, grimacing.

“I think that was our last glimpse for a while,” he said. 

“Did it cut out before we were through the debris or after?” Jyra asked.

“It may have cut out after,” Berk said, after considering for a moment. “It was close.”

“If it held on until after, that means it was detecting something farther beyond.”

Jyra shed her harness and crawled along the wall to the very nose of the ship, where the sloping glass met the floor. She peered out, scanning left and right for some sign they were on the right path. Berk chuckled behind her.

“What?”

“Look up,” Berk said.

Jyra glanced at him and saw his face still directed upward from when he sat back, defeated, from his monitor. She followed his gaze and finally saw the shadow against the plethora of stars. It was only about the size of Jyra’s pinky at this distance, but quite distinct.

Under normal operating circumstances, Mastranada could reach the shadow in a couple of minutes. Unfortunately, they were traveling on a course perpendicular to the one they desired with no easy way to alter their trajectory.

Berk carefully opened a drawer and fumbled inside, doing his best to keep the drifting contents contained. Several bottle corks escaped despite his efforts, but he finally extracted one of the earpieces and stuffed it into his ear.

“Leonick, do we have any maneuverability?” he asked. “We have our target in sight.”

“Barely,” Leonick replied curtly. “A couple quick jolts is all I can give. Let me know when you are ready.”

“Standby,” Berk said. “Ready when you are, Captain,” he added to Jyra.

“Take us to that ship,” she ordered.

Stay tuned for Part XL!

Part XXXVIII: Hunted

Jyra wasn’t sure how long she sat at her console, locked in a silent struggle. The fogginess of grief summoned memories of the attack on the Hospital complex. She heard the roar of gunfire and cries of pain as if her wounded comrades were on the bridge, begging for help. Jyra felt her chin resting on her hands and sensed a tingling sensation spreading through them.

She leaned back and examined her fingers and wrists, certain they were shaking, but they remained steady. She caught a glimpse of herself in one of her dark console screens. Locks of dark hair hung around her puffy eyes and her lips curled in a defeated frown.

I may still be here, she thought, revisiting the familiar phrase stuck in her mind, but what’s going to be left of me? What am I becoming?

Jyra forced herself back to the memories, reflecting on the strike against the Intelligence Complex and the return to the ruins that led to Tony’s death. Her eyes burned again, though this time it was because she stared unblinking at her reflection. Jyra couldn’t recall ever being paralyzed by her thoughts before.

She heard Berk’s seat creak as he leaned forward.

“You all right?” he asked. His voice banished the snare of the past.

“Getting there,” she said. She pulled her hair back and re-tied her ponytail.

“We’re turning toward Silanpre,” Berk said. “I haven’t straightened us out yet.”

Jyra heard the unasked question. Berk was looking for orders and Jyra realized neither he nor Leonick knew the full extent of their mission. Jyra took a final moment to recover herself as Berk glanced at one of his monitors.

“Something wrong?” Jyra asked.

“Looks like a routine gravity drive report,” Berk said. Jyra nodded and took a deep breath.

“I should probably tell you why we’re out here,” she said. Both Berk and Leonick swiveled their seats to face her; their earnest expressions made it seem like they were about to take notes.

“We’re looking for a TF freighter similar to Valiant Conductor II,” she continued. “The stabilizer that landed outside the bunker came from a ship like it.”

“So the vessel is likely damaged,” Berk said.

“But there is no way to tell where it might be,” Leonick said.

“I know,” Jyra said. “I hope that if we conduct a large sweep around Silanpre at this distance we might locate such a ship. If it’s damaged, maybe we’ll find debris that leads us to it.”

Berk leaned back and glanced at Leonick.

“I know this won’t be easy,” Jyra said. “It’s all up to chance.”

“Let me check the radar log,” Leonick said. “Our approach to Silanpre is recent enough that the log will still have the preserved readings. We would have picked up an object of that size even if it was far away.”

“If it’s intact,” Berk said.

During a brief silence, Leonick began typing on his keyboard again. He repeated a series of keystrokes and sighed.

“Problem?” Berk said.

“I cannot access the log while radar is running,” he said. “We are far enough from trouble, right?”

“Not if you have to ask,” Berk said.

“Nothing there now, though?” Leonick said.

“Scope is clear,” Jyra said as she disconnected radar surveillance. “Work fast.”

The radar screen on her console went dark. All Jyra heard was Leonick’s rapid typing as he dug into the radar log history. Jyra glanced at Berk absorbed in an extended swallow from his bottle. She raised her eyebrows and, as if on cue, he dropped the depleted vessel into the nearby receptacle.

“Can other ships tell our radar is offline?” Jyra asked, aware of the anxiety in her voice. The moment she cut the radar scope, she felt blind, vulnerable. Outside the glass covering of the bridge, she saw nothing but a plethora of stars.

“Depends on their tech,” Berk said. The bottle had been out of his hands for twenty seconds and Jyra noticed him fidgeting. He jerked a thumb over his shoulder. “He won’t be long.”

The words faded into the tense silence. Jyra and Berk listened as Leonick tapped away on his keyboard. He struck a key twice and sat back.

“Radar is yours again,” he called.

“Anything come up?” Jyra asked.

“I have to review the data,” Leonick said.

As the radar screen flickered back to life, a cascade of crimson warning lights lit up Jyra’s console.

“What’s on your scope?” Berk hollered, hastily averting his gaze as he added: “captain?”

“Prep the launchers,” Jyra ordered. “A ship just came through the ring, likely an Allied Hospital aggressor. Leonick, do we have any weapons besides missiles?”

Berk and Leonick exchanged a glance.

“We can release some of our chaos mines,” Leonick said.

Jyra ignored her surprise that they had chaos mines aboard and focused on attacking the pursuing enemy.

“We can’t just drop mines,” she said. “They’ll follow our current course. We need them to go the opposite direction.”

“We can aim them with the incendiary mount,” Berk said.

“We might even be able to launch them,” Leonick said. “Not as fast as a missile, but we could distribute them to form a barricade and direct them counter to our course.”

“Won’t the enemy just shoot the mines the moment they detect them?” Jyra asked.

“Possibly,” Leonick said with a shrug. “If we launch two in succession and keep the second at a safe following distance, it will not be destroyed when they shoot down the leader. By the time they see the second following, it might be too late.”

“Do it,” Jyra commanded.

“Right away,” Leonick said, as he hunched over his console.

“How many mines did you get?” Jyra asked Berk.

“Not sure,” he said.

“Do you recognize the enemy vessel?” Jyra asked.

Berk checked his screen. The radar revealed a narrow ship with two pairs of missile launchers (themselves longer than Mastranada) located at the bow. Extra plating on the hull indicated a vessel built for war. Four large engines pushed the ship toward full pursuit speed as it broke from the pull of Silanpre.

“The Hospitals seem to have upgraded their defenses,” Berk said. “They’re closing fast. I thought we were further away. The tugs must have tipped them off.” Jyra heard his tone more than his words.

“Hold up, Leonick,” she said. “None of those mines will do any good.”

“That ship will see anything we throw at it,” Berk said. “We need to move fast. Leonick, do you have the coordinates yet?”

“Going back to that review,” Leonick said.

“Can we at least head in the general direction?” Jyra said.

“Yeah, but it will bring us toward the warship,” Berk said.

“Swing wide. We’re further from Silanpre so it won’t add too much time,” Jyra said.

“They can still cut us off.”

“Once we get the coordinates, we’ll have them and we can return later,” Jyra pointed out.

“I have a general location,” Leonick announced. “Other side of the planet, but there is no guarantee the ship is at the coordinates now or will be if we seek it later.”

“Your call, captain,” Berk said. “I’ve got us moving with Silanpre’s orbit.”

A proximity alarm blared. Leonick switched it off.

“They have already moved to intercept our course,” he said.

“I’ll set a new one to get us out of missile range,” Berk said.

Jyra listened as he typed and stared at her radar screen. The warship began to deviate from its course. Berk gave a final tap and sat back in his chair.

“All set,” he said. “We’ll take a longer route and hopefully they’ll lose interest in us once we pass beyond Silanpre’s celestial boundary.”

“Still on to intercept,” Leonick said.

“What do you mean?” Berk said. “I just changed course.”

“They knew our radar was offline,” Jyra said, tearing her eyes from the screen. “Shut down everything except engines and vital systems. Fly manual.”

“What?” Berk said.

“That’s an order. That ship must have the tech you mentioned,” Jyra said. “They could tell when our radar was down. They maintained intercept course with us before you even logged the new trajectory. They are monitoring our computers in real time so shut them off. They’re anticipating our navigation; no one does that unless they’re trying to capture prey.”

“I’ve got the coordinates,” Leonick said. “Not where I expected to find them, but they are identified.”

“Don’t enter them into the navigation system,” Jyra said. “Let’s keep the information confined to our ship. Are we ready?”

“Our network is offline,” Berk said. “Unless they’ve got something beyond fancy, they can’t access our computers anymore.”

“We need to map those coordinates and find the best route to them,” Jyra said. “While we do that, maintain present course.”

As Leonick sought the best path, Jyra returned to her seat and glanced at Berk.

“Based on the last radar read, how long until they can target us?” she asked.

Berk stared at his screen, checking the data.

“Maybe twenty minutes,” he said. “Assuming they didn’t speed up when we went dark.”

Jyra couldn’t help thinking of Orastenand Kip’s brother. Now she faced a similar confrontation, except this time she was one of the victims. The warship might not ever bother with capture and blow Mastranada into metallic dust. Her eyes darted to her left hand resting on a lever and she was certain she caught her fingers shaking.

“I planned a route,” Leonick announced. “I have got my computer locked now. We should activate the radar to check the progress of the warship.”

“Nice work,” Jyra said, trying to muster enthusiasm, but the prospect of imminent annihilation turned her voice into a raspy croak. “Turn it on,” she whispered to Berk.

“Four minutes until we’re in their missile range,” he said. “The ship is moving much faster.”

“We can run,” Leonick said. “That ship will have to refuel sometime. Ours does not.”

“Can we outrun it?” Jyra asked.

“Hard to say,” Berk said. “They’re really moving right now.”

Jyra stepped beyond her console, right up to where the glass over the bridge curved down toward the nose of the ship. She looked into the distance and saw Silanpre, about the size of her pinky nail, a blue world sinking forever into an inky void. Though she couldn’t see it yet, the warship was moving between her and the planet. From her perspective, the shortest path to the far side of Silanpre would be to fly directly at it and cut as close as they could around the left edge. Our course suggests as much, Jyra thought. What if we head for the right side?

She walked back to Berk’s console and stared at the radar.

“Do we have time to cut back this way?” Jyra asked, tracing with her finger. “We can at least turn faster than them.”

Berk sat back and rubbed a hand across both his beard and wry smile.

“We could try,” he said. “At this point they’ll probably get a couple missiles launched at us anyway.”

“If it doesn’t work, we can always pull away and run,” Jyra said.

“Unless we get hit by a missile,” Berk said, switching off the radar. “Take a seat.”

He pushed a pair of levers forward and Jyra felt Mastranada rotating around her.

“We won’t see missiles coming without radar,” Jyra said.

“I’ll get it back on once I finish the turn,” Berk said. “No need to spoil the surprise any sooner. I hope your cores hold together,” he added over his shoulder.

“They will,” Leonick said. Jyra heard the engines roar as Mastranada launched back the way it had come.

“Radar coming back,” Berk announced. The warning beacons lit up with the screen.

“Inbound missiles!” Jyra said.

“Moving fast,” Berk added. Jyra heard his suppressed tone and felt her arms slump upon her console; the incendiaries were obviously approaching faster than anticipated.

“Mines,” Berk said. Jyra couldn’t tell if it was a question or a reminder.

“Bringing the mount controls online,” Leonick said. “Standby.”

“Can’t standby for long”

“Fire the third engine,” Jyra said. “That buys something, right?”

“Let’s see,” Berk said. His hands danced across his console. Jyra thought he couldn’t find the engine controls.

“There we go,” he said, seizing a pair of levers to his far left. “Hang on.”

Jyra glared at Berk, aware that he had in fact been wasting time searching for controls that shouldn’t require any time to activate. She could always identify her altered father, usually after he had three or four shots of whiskey. It always amazed her the amount Berk drank, though he hadn’t kept the reason from her for long. As Mastranada lurched forward with boosted speed, it reminded Jyra they were fleeing the very corporation that had experimented on Berk and his family. As far as Berk knew, he was the only survivor from such experiments. He claimed drinking kept his erratic behavior in check. It struck Jyra that she hadn’t yet explained much of anything that happened to her on Silanpre, not even that the Hospitals had subjected her to a treatment or two.

“The incendiary mount is ready,” Leonick said. “I have the missiles locked. Still two pairs coming at us.”

“The warship is still trying to redirect for pursuit,” Jyra said, checking her radar screen.

“Any guess how likely the mines are to make contact?” Berk said.

“No idea,” Leonick replied. “The missiles might be advanced enough to see the threat and navigate around it.”

“Good confidence,” Berk said.

“You asked,” Leonick replied. “I could try launching two mines in quick succession to set one behind the other. The first might miss, but maybe the missile will correct right into the second one if it goes undetected.”

“How long until the first pair reach us?” Jyra asked, cutting across the bickering.

“We’re still speeding up,” Berk said. “The missiles are still projected to overtake us. Maybe five minutes.”

“We should hit the missiles when they are still a minute away at minimum,” Leonick advised.

“Try one mine right now,” Jyra suggested, feeling her flesh prickle. “Test missile evasion.”

“Targeting,” Leonick said. Both Jyra and Berk reflexively turned to watch Leonick as he aimed and launched a chaos mine.

“How long until impact?” Jyra asked.

“Running a calculation on that now,” Leonick said. “It should be accurate to within a few seconds either way.”

Jyra wanted to watch the mine’s performance, but everything was still too far away for even the exterior cameras to witness. Only the incoming strike appeared on the radar screens.

“How’s our course?” Jyra asked. She saw Silanpre growing larger; its light began blocking distant stars.

“Looking good so far,” Berk said. “It’d be better if we didn’t have death following us.”

“Death is always following us,” Leonick said, his eyes remaining on his work. Jyra and Berk exchanged grim smiles as they registered the bleak truth.

“If all missiles are still present after thirty seconds, it means our mine missed,” Leonick said, rubbing his temples.

As the missiles closed in, Jyra fought the urge to blink. One of the missiles in the leading pair suddenly veered off course and then corrected. Jyra felt a rush of helplessness, similar to when she woke up bound in a bed inside one of the Allied Hospitals. The feeling added to her confusion as Berk and Leonick cheered. She looked back at the radar screen and drew a steadying breath. The abnormal movement of the missile indicated it had dodged the mine. Jyra now saw only three missiles on the screen. The explosion of the mine and one leading missile knocked its fellow off course, but only for a moment.

“Well done!” Jyra exclaimed.

“Working on the rest,” Leonick said, returning to his seat, his eyes round and cheeks flushed.

“The warship is coming after us,” Berk said. “I’m sure that’s what our sonar is detecting. It will be on radar soon.”

“It can’t catch us, though,” Jyra said.

“I’m not sure what that ship’s capable of,” Berk said. “But any enemy vessel could summon reinforcements from the planet. We’re flying right past it.”

“Got a read on the leader,” Leonick said.

“Take the shot,” Jyra commanded.

Once again, tension surged on the bridge and everyone fell silent. Leonick didn’t mention a calculated collision time. Jyra assumed by the time he finished, they would already know. She realized how much closer the last three missiles were gaining on them as she watched the screen.

The lead missile wavered momentarily and the trailing pair remained on course. Leonick’s sigh was all Jyra needed to hear in the silence. Berk stroked his beard and swiveled in his chair.

“Try the other mount,” he said. “The chaos shrapnel mine.”

“It needs to hit something to detonate,” Leonick said.

“It will,” Berk said. “We’ll shoot it with one of our missiles.”

He saw Jyra glaring and realized he’d cut his captain out of the conversation again.

“We only have a couple,” he said. “It’s a chaos mine filled with metal debris. The missiles are getting close enough now that just their exploding nearby could harm us. We need to launch the mine and a missile to set it off in the middle of the enemy missiles.”

“Do it,” Jyra said. “If we survive, I want a full list of the armaments aboard as soon as we have time to compile it.”

“Calculating now,” Leonick said. He was bent over his keyboard, unable to type at his previous speed, as he guarded against any mistake. They had no time left for error.

Jyra returned to the front of the bridge to get a better view of Silanpre. White clouds spun over an ocean that curled out of sight around the curvature of the planet. Jyra suspected the capsule that brought her to Silanpre lay somewhere beneath the rolling waves below. No evidence existed of the trash ring; similar to her arrival, Jyra again witnessed the planet without the presence of the landfill that orbited Silanpre in a nearly unbroken circle.

Berk inhaled sharply and Jyra broke her gaze from the planet.

“What now?” she asked.

“I wish being right meant we got a free pass out of this,” Berk said. “Another ship is about to enter space on an intercept course.”

“So we run,” Jyra said.

“We don’t have the same head start on missiles from the emerging ship,” Berk said. “I know we haven’t done a complete inventory of our weapons supply, but I can tell you we don’t have the means to destroy all the incendiaries they’ll throw at us.”

“Leonick,” Jyra said, feeling as though she had swallowed a mouthful of sand, “status?”

“Got it plotted,” he said, the tapping of the keyboard terminated as he spoke.

“Fire,” Jyra said.

“There is a—,” Leonick began, but Jyra cut him off.

“Fire now!” she ordered.

“Mine away,” Leonick said, his tone unchanged. Silence fell on the bridge until Leonick added: “missile launched.”

Jyra felt the sweat on her forehead as she made her way to her console.

“I advise everyone strap in fast,” Leonick said. “Detonation in fifteen seconds.”

“How far behind us?” Berk demanded, fumbling with his harness.

“Closer than I would like,” Leonick said. “Hang on.”

Jyra didn’t have time to lean forward to check the radar screen after she clipped her fasteners. She grasped the console with both hands and bowed her head, expecting to hear some noise from the explosion.

Such a sound never arrived. Instead, Jyra felt a deep, thrumming pulse in her gut. She swore she heard the glass panels over the bridge rattle against their seals.

“Lean back!” Berk yelled. Jyra obeyed, pushing herself into her backrest. It felt as though a massive hammer swung into the rear of Mastranada. Jyra never experienced anything like it; she didn’t understand how her seat could remain attached to the floor. She felt her flesh press into every available crease in the worn cushions. Her eyes sank into her head and her vision grew cloudy. She could not yell or even draw breath; her chest could not push against the crushing force as Mastranada surfed the punishing shockwave from the explosion.

Jyra saw only a blur of color in front of her as warning lights flared again. Her heard pounded and she vaguely understood that she might lose consciousness, but something stirred in her stalled blood flow. She raised a finger, then two, from her armrest. Jyra felt her forehead contorting from the effort, but sweat couldn’t emerge from her skin. She forced one hand to the console and seized the edge of it. Slowly, she pulled herself toward the engine controls.

Jyra managed to bring her right arm over the console while holding position with her left. She initiated the reversing sequence and throttled the engines to a minimum, aware even that could overload them. A deep groan reverberated through the ship as Jyra fell back into her seat. She thought she heard the whine of the engines. Within a few moments, Jyra took a short, painful gasp of air. Silanpre remained portside of the ship. Mastranada resumed a steady course, skirting the planet.

Jyra took another breath and turned in her seat to check on her shipmates. Both of them stirred and moaned. Berk coughed a fine spray of blood over his console. Before the explosion, Leonick had rotated his entire seat in order to face forward, which saved his life. He dragged his arm under his nose, wiping away the gathering blood. Jyra tasted iron in the back of her throat.

“That’s why I didn’t want the missiles to get too close,” Berk said thickly, slumping over the controls. “Are we slowing down?”

“I reversed the engines,” Jyra said. “Are you two okay?”

“What do you mean you reversed the engines?” Berk said, his hands clumsily reaching for his restraints.

Jyra pointed at her controls and Berk took several heavy steps to stare at them.

“Restore forward thrust,” he said and belatedly added: “captain. We probably still have at least one missile after us.”

Jyra hastily adjusted the engine controls. Leonick coughed behind her and managed to gasp: “radar is down.”

“Anything else damaged?” Jyra said.

“Everything will be if we don’t get our eyes back,” Berk said. He made to return to his seat, but paused. He brushed a loose lock of hair out of his face and fell to one knee, almost landing in Jyra’s lap.

“Are you all right?” Jyra asked, throwing one arm around Berk’s massive shoulder and placing her other hand against his chest to keep him upright. He stared toward the controls then raised his right hand, took Jyra’s off his shoulder, and placed it against the steel trim of her console. She felt her fingers fall into the notches they had made earlier when she seized the front of the console in a crushing grip.

“Seems there’s a story there,” Berk said. “Hope we live through this to hear it.”

“Are you all right?” she repeated.

“Dizzy, but fine,” he said retreating to his console. “I’ll be better once we can see what’s out there.”

“Almost got it,” Leonick reported. “Just finishing the bypass sequence.”

“I assume we lost rear radar calibration,” Jyra said, swiveling in her seat to face Leonick, who nodded. The explosion didn’t destroy their radar but it reduced its accuracy. Jyra wondered what else suffered damage.

“Radar is back,” Leonick said.

The screens on the pilot consoles lit up again. Jyra ignored the warning lights and waited to see if the missiles were still after them. Their wake appeared empty. The pursuing warship was nowhere to be seen on the monitor, nor the intercepting ship about to break into space from Silanpre.

“Two missiles missing from radar,” Berk muttered. Jyra confirmed his observation.

“One missile remaining,” she warned.

“Where?” Berk said.

Jyra glanced back at her screen and saw no enemy ships or shots in sight, not even the missile she just witnessed. She opened her mouth to speak, just as the missile far off to the port side flickered back into view.

“There!” she cried. “Portside!”

She saw Berk register the signature before it fell off radar again. He sat back.

“Missiles don’t drift in and out of radar, right?” he called back toward Leonick.

“Not by damage on our end,” Leonick said. “But planet atmospheres have a way of fooling radar.”

“If it’s messing with our tracking, it could be doing the same to the incoming ship,” Jyra said.

She turned to gaze beyond the bridge and saw a pinprick of white light shining against the luminescent curve of Silanpre.

“You mean that ship?” Berk said.

“Precisely,” Jyra said. “Redirect course to fly across its nose.”

“Captain?” Berk said and Jyra heard the same doubt in his voice that came from her own lips.

“You heard me,” she said. “Make for that emerging ship, before their radar calibrates to space.”

“But the missile,” Leonick said.

“It was blown off course,” Jyra said. “It will come toward us, but we can offer it a better target.”

Berk and Leonick exchanged a glance.

“If we aren’t here to die, what are we here for?” Berk said, opening another beer.

“We’re here to live,” Jyra answered. “I hope for that at least.” She leaned over, grabbed the bottle before she lost her nerve, and took a long gulp. If they couldn’t outrun the intercepting ship, they were already in jeopardy.

“Can we go any faster?” Jyra asked.

“We could blow up another mine behind us,” Berk suggested.

“Had enough of that already,” Jyra said. “What about the booster engine?”

She glanced at Leonick and immediately saw his defeated posture; shoulders slumped and head bowed.

“What’s the matter?” Jyra asked.

“The booster engine is not responding,” Leonick said. “I suspect the explosion disabled it.”

Jyra checked the missile’s progress. It was flying nearly parallel with Mastranada and drifting closer. Jyra hoped the explosion damaged some of the weapon’s guiding systems.

“If we get much closer to the planet, the gravity will slow us down,” Berk said.

“Maybe that’s what’s holding the missile back. Maintain present distance then,” Jyra said. “But we need to be ready to fall on the second ship the moment we see it.

“Getting a possible reading now,” Leonick said.

“I saw it first on the long-range read,” Berk said. “Not possible now with damaged radar, but—”he checked his screen again and gave a firm nod —“I’m sure that’s it.”

“How long?” Jyra asked.

“I can override the regulators on the cores,” Leonick said.

“Do it,” Jyra said. “We have to get to them before they see us.”

“I recommend harnessing up,” Leonick said.

Berk steered Mastranada toward Silanpre and Jyra felt the ship shudder as it accelerated, diving straight at the planet’s surface, hundreds of miles below. She placed a hand around her mother’s locket.

“Keep an eye on that missile!” Berk said, hastily guzzling his beer as the vibrations grew stronger.

“It will be right on us once we cross its path,” Jyra said.

“As long as we can cross it,” Berk said.

The missile still held its course, resembling a stray from the trash ring, except it was moving in the wrong direction.

“Two minutes,” Berk said. “Maybe. Approximation is all we have now.”

“The missile is turning toward us,” Jyra said. “And we’re between it and Silanpre now. And it noticed.”

The missile’s target falling through its sights renewed the weapon’s tracking. It accelerated after Mastranada. Jyra glanced out of her starboard porthole and, in the distance, saw the glow of the intercepting ship pushing toward Silanpre’s thermosphere.

“We need to fly parallel to the ground!” Jyra yelled. The vibrations worsened as Silanpre made every effort to pull Mastranada down into the ocean. “Bring the missile right across the enemy ship. I can see it.”

“We’ll be initiating reentry,” Berk said. Jyra shared his hesitation. After sustaining obvious damage, it would be best to at least inspect their ship before subjecting it to such severe conditions.

“We don’t have a choice,” Jyra said. “We’ve got a missile behind and an enemy target ahead. If we don’t destroy that ship, it will launch a volley of missiles that we can’t outrun or neutralize.”

“As long as we don’t self-destruct either,” Berk said. “Ready to terminate the dive?”

“Slowly,” Jyra said. “Maintain as much momentum as possible to help cool the ship.”

“As it’s trying to light itself on fire,” Berk muttered.

Berk threw the levers and Jyra felt her body slam against her harness as Mastranada’s nose turned toward the planet’s Northern pole.

“Starboard now!” Berk bellowed, as the throbbing vibrations created a howling roar inside the ship.

Jyra reached for the controls and sent Mastranada into a gentle curve, while Berk continued easing the ship out of the dive. Leonick did his best to manually regulate the energy cores, but this was hardly the environment for such tedious work. Damage from the explosion had weakened parts of Mastranada’s skeleton and stresses from both speed and quick maneuvering were overtaxing the ship.

Jyra gritted her teeth and struggled to maintain consciousness. She felt the sweat that materialized on her skin and the orange glow encroaching on the glass around her. The consequences of reentry crashed upon the ship. Jyra struggled to pull out of the curve. When she managed it, she stared through the air rippling with heat, gazing beyond the bridge and she saw the enemy ship.

Jyra sat up straighter in her seat, unaware of when she had started slouching in it. One hand still clutched her mother’s locket. Certainly she hadn’t been holding it this whole time? She cast a wary eye toward Berk. He hung forward against his harness, but seemed to be prodding the controls.

“What are you doing?” Jyra muttered. She felt like she had drank a full flask of Kip’s whiskey.

“Need to evade,” Berk said. He sounded even more exhausted, but he gestured ahead of them.

Jyra looked again and realized the intercepting ship was rotating, its bow turning toward her. The sight provoked some urgency but Jyra only managed to lean forward like Berk. She checked the radar screen and saw the missile still traveling in their wake.

“I can give us one more push,” Leonick said. “It will be brief. Couple seconds. Cores will burnout completely.”

“We need to get closer,” Jyra said.

“What’s the plan?” Berk said.

“Fly right at them then hop the ship,” Jyra said. “Hope the missile doesn’t make the jump.”

Mastranada wobbled and Jyra wiped her brow. She couldn’t tell if it was getting hotter. Far sooner than she expected, they were upon the enemy. Berk and Jyra both sat ready, but still exhausted.

This new threat was certainly smaller than the warship and built more for speed. Sweeping, angular stabilizers merged seamlessly with the sleek, jet-black hull. The nose finished in a point so fine, it seemed touching it might draw blood. Jyra noticed the pivoted guns on either side of the cockpit. As if sensing her gaze, each gun suddenly fired, spraying bullets toward the incoming target.

“Leonick now!” Berk said. “Need the push!”

Mastranada leapt toward the incoming fire. Jyra glanced at the radar and saw the missile falling behind. The bullets flew beneath them, but with the greater gap, it seemed likely the missile would navigate around the enemy. Mastranada began to rise, about to soar over the other vessel, but Jyra changed her mind.

“Dive!” she ordered. Berk didn’t say a word as they turned Mastranada toward Silanpre as the guns fired fresh rounds. Jyra heard the bullets tear through the hull amidships as they fell beneath the enemy vessel.

“Get back on the ship’s lateral plane!” Jyra said.

“Understood,” Berk muttered. He sounded calm, his delivery unusually soft and breathless.

As they pulled up, fighting against Silanpre’s relentless drag, a bright flash that had nothing to do with reentry flared above the bridge. Jyra barely had time to witness it. A second missile explosion pounded Mastranada. Though not as strong as the first, Jyra watched Silanpre flicker in and out of sight as the world grew smaller with each glimpse. Her vision blurred. She felt blood throbbing beneath her skin. The force of the explosion blew Mastranada away from the planet, spinning like a top as it went.

Jyra fumbled for the controls, hoping to reverse the engines again or somehow counter the erratic trajectory. Such hope disappeared with the ship’s power, cloaking the bridge in darkness. Jyra felt her heavy eyelids and the sensation of spinning, both in her body and head. She slumped against her harness, lapsing into unconscious, her mind as empty as the surrounding void.

 

Part XXXVII: Release

Jyra woke the next morning, unaware of where she was until she glimpsed the distant ceiling in the dim light. Waking up in the captain’s quarters was so surreal, she wasn’t sure she would ever get used to it. The unfamiliarity coupled with the demanding day ahead gave Jyra no time to further explore her new room. She dressed in a hurry and headed for the cargo bay.

As she moved down the passage, she noticed all the occupied crew quarters from the previous night were empty. Even Meriax was gone, as were the sterile sheet barriers to the makeshift operating area.

Only when Jyra turned into the cargo bay did Jyra finally see another person. Sunlight spilled through the large open door and Jyra approached Leonick, who was working on the door control panel.

“Good morning, captain,” he said.

“You don’t need to call me that,” Jyra said. “And good morning to you.”

“I thought you would appreciate being able to bypass the autolock during our space transit,” Leonick said, preempting Jyra’s inquiry about his work.

“Turning the whole cargo bay into an airlock?”

Leonick nodded.

“As long as you do not mind,” Leonick said. “Serana mentioned something about a mission today while patients were moved off the ship.”

“That’s fine,” Jyra said, amazed that Serana was awake before her. “We discussed as much last night.”

“She requested a favor,” Leonick said and he gestured to the open panel. “I thought this might be a useful modification regardless of your decision.”

“What did she want?”

“Captain on deck!” Berk called, startling them both.

“Do that again and you can find yourself another ship,” Jyra said, hoping Leonick had jumped more than she had; unlikely since he continued methodically turning a terminal screwdriver.

“Flexing the muscle of your command already,” Berk said, striding toward her. “How’d you sleep, captain?”

“None of your business,” Jyra said. “And keep the title to yourself.”

“Noted,” Berk said.

“Where is everyone?” Jyra asked.

“Mostly moved into the bunker,” Berk said. “Where else would they go?”

“Maybe another ship,” Jyra said.

“Serana wants to know if you are willing to bring the dead with us and release them beyond the trash ring,” Leonick said.

Jyra was taken aback by both the message and Leonick’s matter-of-fact delivery. Her mind snapped to watching Macnelia’s body, surrendered to the stars in the same fashion. She immediately tried to weigh the emotional and practical significance and, nearly in the same breath, questioned her fitness to be captain. But she was already nodding.

“Of course we will,” she said.

“They are already on board,” Leonick continued. “We will have help moving them here from the engine room before takeoff.”

Jyra nodded still more vigorously.

“The inner doors to the cargo bay aren’t airlock-rated,” she said, trying to ground herself with practicality. “We won’t damage the ship opening the main door in space?”

“Open the door and take a hard turn should do the job,” Berk said, leaning against the wall and staring out into the courtyard. “Duct dampers ought to seal relatively well so we won’t vent all of our air.”

Jyra glanced around the cargo bay, noting the secured crates, certain they would stay put. Her eyes flicked to the ceiling and, amazed she hadn’t noticed it sooner, saw Berk’s pod suspended from the beam hoist. Several guy cables stretched to the walls to keep the small vehicle from swinging during flight.

“What’s that doing up there?” Jyra asked.

“We needed more room,” Berk said shortly.

“For what?” Jyra asked.

“Permission to delay that discussion until we’re airborne?” Berk said.

“We’ll see,” Jyra said. “Any estimate when that will be?”

“An hour or two,” Berk said. “However long it takes to move the bodies and any other business you need to settle before we go.”

Kip happened to step out of shuttle in the courtyard at that moment. Jyra assumed he’d been helping move more valuable ships into the forest.

“I do need to check in with Serana,” Jyra said, hoping the others hadn’t noticed her watching Kip.

“We can’t leave without you,” Berk said. “Seriously, we don’t know where we’re going.”

“I’ve been thinking about that,” Jyra said. “We’ll need to come up with a complete strategy once we’re in space.”

Jyra found Serana in the mess hall. It felt like a basement more than other rooms in the bunker due to the sizable area of the floor, but the ceiling was just as high as everywhere else in the compound. Similar sterile sheets that hung in Mastranada cordoned off a corner of the room, though some patients were sitting on benches at the long tables. One woman stared straight ahead, her head and left arm wrapped in bandages. A man slumped over on a table, apparently asleep. Jyra thought he was snoring but it was just the sound of his ragged breathing.

Serana emerged from behind the sterile barrier, wiping her brow. She looked exhausted, but she smiled when she saw Jyra and made her way over.

“How are you?” she said.

“Nervous,” Jyra said. She almost reciprocated the question, but the answer seemed obvious.

“Yoke is finishing up with the last patient,” Serana said after an extended silence.

“I didn’t realize operations were being moved off the ship,” Jyra said. “Sorry I slept through it.”

“Don’t worry about it,” Serana said. “Just make sure you make it back.”

“I don’t want to leave you or them,” Jyra whispered, indicating the patients at the table.

“You don’t have to,” Serana said. “Did Leonick pass along my request?”

“He did and we’ll do it,” Jyra said, suddenly finding it difficult to speak.

“I’ll get some people to assist,” Serana said. “Will you be ready in ten minutes?”

Jyra nodded. Serana reached out and took her hand.

“See you after your mission,” she said. Jyra couldn’t help feel boosted by Serana’s iron confidence.

“See then,” Jyra said. “Heal fast.”

She turned before Serana could see her gathering tears and made her way back to Mastranada.

She didn’t get far. Meriax was stretched out on a table near the door and wall. Unless Jyra had looked to her right as she entered, she wouldn’t have seen her. Meriax was fast asleep, her hair tumbled off the edge of the table. It seemed odd for an ex-spy to lower all defenses in such an exposed location, but Serana spoke over Jyra’s shoulder.

“I’ve spread the word about her declaring for us,” she said.

“Thank you.” Jyra wasn’t sure how she managed the words and she wasted no time leaving the mess hall.

“That didn’t take long,” Berk said when Jyra reappeared in the cargo bay.

“We’ll have help in a few minutes,” she said. The significance of fulfilling Serana’s favor struck her and she fell silent. Jyra twisted her fingers together and walked toward the rear corridor. She heard Berk’s footsteps, unusually soft, following.

Jyra reached the door. She glanced down the passage to the engine room entrance and discovered she couldn’t proceed.

Jyra had witnessed more death than the average person in the galaxy. She watched family, friends, and enemies die and her brother was the worst loss. Too much time passed between the news of his death and the funeral. Jyra never forgot catching a glimpse of his ragged body disappearing beneath the lid of the coffin.

The idea of the dead waiting to be released locked Jyra in place. She hadn’t gone into the engine room since it was repurposed as a morgue. That realization reminded Jyra of the night she and Berk stole this ship, which they managed by killing a guard in the engine room. She had no idea how the bodies were arranged or organized. Had they even been identified?

“You all right?” Berk asked from behind Jyra, who shook her head. She wasn’t sure what to ask, but willed herself to say something.

“How are the bodies?” she said.

“Each one is in a bag,” Berk said. “Folks came through to identify them all. Serana’s got a list. She mentioned the names read out last night match the list of those accounted for.”

Jyra nodded as a Berk fell silent.

“You don’t have to help with this,” Berk said.

“I must,” Jyra said, nodding toward the engine room. “Because they helped me.”

Serana’s team arrived just as Leonick replaced the door panel cover. Jyra and Berk led the way to the engine room.

One of the volunteers passed out masks before Jyra opened the door and switched on the lights. The astringent smell of the dead along with disinfectants and other treating agents Yoke employed stopped her. She couldn’t detect the odor of hot steel or grease under the suffocating horror that infiltrated the mask and filled her nose and lungs. She felt the group behind her shudder as the stench enveloped them.

A pair each seized a bag and carried it to the cargo bay. They stacked the bags near the open door. Jyra tried to maintain her attention to the dead, to honor the bodies she transported, but she couldn’t ignore her desperation to escape the smell.

The shrouded bodies resembled a wall of sandbags by the time they finished. The wrinkles in the black plastic gleamed, reflecting the lights overhead. Jyra managed to croak a hasty thanks at the retreating volunteers. The trio ran to the back passage and on toward the bow of the ship, closing every door behind them.

The bridge seemed unchanged from the last time Jyra saw it. Two main consoles sat on either side of the room. Six panels of reinforced glass stretched over Jyra’s head and curved down to terminate on the nose of the ship. The gray beams framing the glass were attached to the open steel studs, which had auxiliary equipment and control panels crammed between them.

Jyra pulled her mask free, staggered across the steel floor, and grabbed the edge of the starboard console. Leonick’s eyes were wide with uncharacteristic distress and most of the color disappeared from beneath Berk’s whiskers. Leonick shook his head, took a seat at a new set of controls behind Berk, and began strapping himself into his seat. Jyra automatically sat down, making a deliberate effort to not throw up; she could still taste the smell.

“Taking off?” she gasped. She was too distracted to bother inquiring about the function of Leonick’s new console. ‘

“I mean no disrespect by saying this,” Berk said, “I want to get those bodies into space as soon as we can.”

“Do not forget to close the cargo door, then,” Leonick said. “The ship will not do it for you now.”

Jyra thought of Kip and failing to say goodbye to him, but it couldn’t be remedied. They were set to depart and further delay offered no advantage.

“Let’s go,” Jyra said, throwing the switches to power the launch thrusters.

“Cargo bay is sealed,” Berk said. “Ready for thrust.”

Jyra felt the ship shudder around here and the distant trees lurched from sight as the launch thrusters boosted Mastranada off the ground.

Jyra squinted at the harsh blue sky before her as the ship shot upward, sweeping away from the planet. Within seconds, the blue yielded and the booster engine kicked in, jerking Mastranada closer to space. The nose of the ship glowed a brilliant orange and Jyra felt the gusts of heat penetrating into the cockpit. Then the silence settled as they transitioned to space. The sea of stars materialized, floating in endless darkness. But there was something else. Though it formed an incomplete loop around the planet, Jyra’s emergency escape vessel had been lucky to miss the trash ring during the approach. Ships five times the size of Mastranada could be destroyed or crippled by the larger pieces of refuse lazily orbiting Silanpre.

Jyra stiffened in her seat as she saw running lights moving through the revolving landfill.

“Another tug,” Berk grunted.

“You said you took a couple of them out,” Jyra recalled. “This ship doesn’t have projectile weapons.”

“She does now,” Berk said.

“After we pass the ring, you guys get to tell your story first.”

“Whatever you say, captain,” Berk said.

“Will they come after us?” Jyra said.

“We aren’t on their scopes yet,” Berk said.

“We can see them which means they can see us,” Jyra said.

“Yeah, but they have no idea what we are,” Berk said. “They have limited radar and tracking. Tugs don’t monitor traffic, just keep the trash contained or remove suspicious debris. They won’t be interested in us.”

“Even though this ship destroyed two of theirs?”

“If that one comes at us, we can destroy it,” Berk said, popping a cork out of a bottle that, as far as Jyra could tell, just appeared in his hand. As an afterthought, he added, “with the captain’s approval.”

Jyra hoped the tug maintained its current course. Several sharp taps on the glass overhead made her start.

“What was that?” she said.

“Small debris on its way back to the planet,” Leonick said. “We are passing through a field of smaller refuse. We need to plot a course through or around the main ring.”

“Working on it,” Berk said. “Almost a straight shot from here.”

“Radar warning!” Jyra said. “We’ve got another ship closing fast.”

“Leonick, lock onto them!” Berk shouted.

Jyra glanced over her shoulder and watched Leonick swivel in his chair to face a tiny targeting screen, the purpose of the new console no longer a mystery.

“Maybe the tugs remember you after all,” Jyra said to Berk, who took another long pull from the bottle.

“They won’t for long. And it’s not a tug.”

“They’re summoning by radio,” Jyra said, as the signal light blinked before her.

“Ignore them,” Berk said.

Jyra leaned forward to block the transmission request and remembered her place on the ship. She pressed the button and seized the broadcast mouthpiece.

“Captain of the Mastranada here.”

Berk and Leonick both stared at her in utter disbelief.

“Intriguing,” a deep voice replied. “Calling yourself captain of my ship. It’s time you returned it to its rightful owner.”

Jyra glanced at Leonick, keeping her line silent.

“You recognize his voice?”

“No,” Leonick said. “I just wanted people to buy my engines. Buyers could install them wherever and whenever they pleased.”

“I know you have no weapons so affirm your surrender or I will destroy that ship of mine and whoever happens to be aboard,” the voice threatened.

“Got a lock?” Berk said over his shoulder.

“Just about,” Leonick said. “They are almost in range.”

“How long?” Jyra said.

“Twenty seconds,” Leonick answered.

Jyra made eye contact with her shipmates as she sent another transmission.

“I think you’re mistaken,” she said.

“There’s no mistake,” the voice said. “That’s my ship. Do you surrender?”

Leonick gave a thumbs up and leaned toward his screen.

“You are wrong to suggest we have no weapons,” Jyra said.

“Ready to fire on your command,” Leonick called, loud enough to be heard through the transmission.

Jyra listened to the mechanical thumps and grinding of missile launchers targeting the enemy. The transmission light clicked off.

“Fire,” Jyra muttered. She felt Mastranada shudder from the launcher recoil.

A pair of missiles streaked toward the ring and, against the backdrop of twisted steel structures and industrial refuse, Jyra saw a ship maneuvering. The explosives faded into the distance. The target ship negotiated an evasive turn and everyone aboard Mastranada watched the glowing exhaust ports.

“If they get into the ring, the missiles could hit something else,” Jyra said.

“They won’t make it,” Berk said.

“Direct hit,” Leonick reported.

The distant exhaust ports flickered and then two drifted away from each other. Stuttering flames shot into space as the enemy ship broke apart. The debris spun toward the ring, briefly lit by fires that flashed into existence before suffocating without oxygen.

“Course is set,” Berk said. “Let’s go.”

Mastranada glided toward a tangled mass of steel beams. Jyra fixated on them, trying to figure out what purpose they might have served. Most details hid in the gloom; only a few edges of the beams caught the reflected light from Silanpre with enough sequenced timing to discern shapes.

As they neared the orbiting waste, Jyra heard Leonick’s chair squeak and she turned to see him staring at his screen.

“What’ve you got?”

“I am not sure,” Leonick said. “Some abnormal heat readings from the ring.”

“Probably just the wreckage,” Berk said.

“He recognized the ship,” Leonick said.

“Whoever he was, he’s dead,” Berk said.

“The weapons dealer,” Leonick said.

“What?” Berk and Jyra said together.

“He tracked us here,” Leonick said. “And it is possible this was his ship you two stole from Drometica. That is where we went for the goods.”

“What are you talking about?” Jyra asked.

“That ship must have chaos mines on board,” Leonick said. “Proceed with caution.”

“Chaos mines?” Jyra said, annoyed that her questions went unanswered. Berk heard the irritation in her words.

“Warship crews scatter them on the outside of their ship’s hulls,” he said. “Should such a ship suffer damage, resulting explosions arm the mines and they drift through space, wrecking or ravaging whatever they happen to strike. We’re going to wait here for a moment.”

“You’re saying we could have mines coming at us right now?” Jyra said. “Can we track them?”

“We can with the new tech,” Berk said.

“You two definitely have to explain what you’ve been up to before you hear my story,” Jyra said. “Captain’s orders.”

Berk chuckled as he took another pull from his bottle.

“The power’s already going to your head,” he said, dropping the empty container into a bin next to his chair.

“Leonick, you’ve got eyes out there?” Berk said.

“I will detect anything harmful in time to avoid it,” Leonick replied, his fingers tapping across his keyboard.

“Do you mind if I tell the story?” Berk asked.

“You have the eloquence and voice for it,” Leonick said as he raised the sensitivity ratings on their scopes.

“After Leonick blasted you into space, we didn’t last much longer under Craig’s leadership,” Berk said.

Jyra felt the name of her former friend strike her in the gut. She never thought of him once she adjusted to life on Silanpre. Even with Berk and Leonick’s return, she only considered him in the context of the TF resistance. But Craig had become the leader of that movement following Macnelia’s death and he locked her in her quarters. When she thought of him, all she saw was his black hair and equally dark sneer.

“Getting rid of you was his first extreme act and more followed faster than I would have thought,” Berk continued.

“Not me,” Leonick said. “That is why I got you out. He and Shandra were both shaken by the loss of Macnelia. We all were. But the two of them created a toxic loop of vengeful logic and action.”

“What do you mean?” Jyra said.

“Craig was convinced the Nilcyn attack on the TF fleet was far more effective than our assault on their headquarters,” Berk said.

“The Nilcyn strike took out shipments and gave us cover, but we eradicated documents and offices. We attacked the heart of TF. Archives of programs, drilling data, all kinds of information blown out of existence. He even pressed the button to drop the bomb.”

“I agree with you obviously,” Berk said. “TF probably is still suffering from repercussions of what we did to them. The Nilcyn attack is likely while we’re even alive discussing this. The problem is the optics. Craig came away believing the ship-to-ship battles made for a greater spectacle of superiority.”

“The resistance is about taking out TF entirely, not who wins a battle,” Jyra said.

“So we all thought,” Berk said. “Craig had different ideas. The Nilcyn attack made an impression on him.”

“What did he do, join them?” Jyra said, hoping her sarcasm wouldn’t be met with a grave nod.

“He may as well have,” Berk said.

“What?”

“He decided to create his own militia,” Leonick said.

“He figured a captured TF freighter could rally people to his cause,” Berk said. “We headed for Drometica and he offered to get the planet out from under TF’s expanding control. Horbson had just been hit by Nilcyns. He sold a number of Drometica inhabitants on his vision, building a militia almost identical to the Nilcyns. Somewhere in the middle of his endeavor, Leonick and I decided to leave.”

“That is not accurate,” Leonick said. Berk sighed.

“Craig sent us on a mission to retrieve weapons from a station adjacent to Drometica,” he said. “We took Mastranada, got the weapons, and never made it back to Craig. That’s why the pod is tied up. We had a full cargo bay.”

“We have incoming,” Leonick said. Jyra couldn’t understand the lack of alarm in his voice.

“Gun the starboard engine and they will miss us.”

Berk responded immediately and Jyra peered through the nearest porthole, wondering if she imagined the dark spheres looming out of the darkness. Mastranada lurched ahead and Jyra heard Leonick give a sigh of relief.

Just as they dodged the chaos mines, some of their fellows drifted into the trash ring. Jyra looked away as an orange-white glare spread before Mastranada. Mines detonated as they struck the space-bound refuse and the explosions compounded.

“Good thing we didn’t get any closer,” Berk said, squinting at the destruction.

“We need to move,” Leonick said. “Get out of the way. The trash ring was mostly contained, but now we are dealing with a cloud of sporadic fragments. Any piece could be big enough to hurt the ship.”

Within seconds of his warning, debris began tapping the cockpit glass as it sailed by.

Berk seized the controls and brought Mastranada to port, running parallel to the repeated explosions, lighting up the trash ring. As they burst out of the debris field, Jyra saw the running lights of at least four tugs. They were all parked near the ring and obviously keeping their distance.

“Any way through?” Berk asked Leonick.

“Potentially,” Leonick said. “The trash will thin out soon and you can fly under the ring. Give it another minute.”

“I don’t want those tugs to notice us,” Berk said.

“If you can see them, they can see us,” Leonick said.

“They might be distracted by their burning garbage,” Berk said.

“Slow down, then,” Leonick advised. “The opening is coming to us.”

The tugs remained in their position, even as the ring rotated nearby. Berk eased Mastranada closer to the arch of garbage and slid beneath it.

“We’ll head further into space and get our bearings,” Berk said.

“Because of the tugs?” Jyra said. “They don’t have weapons, do they?”

“No,” Berk said. “But I prefer they don’t summon something that does.”

“When you said you took a couple of them out, I assumed you rammed them or incapacitated them somehow. I didn’t realize you actually shot them down.”

“One of the benefits of having an armed ship,” Berk said.

“Did you get any other weapons during your rogue mission?” Jyra asked.

“We did, but none them will be of immediate use,” Berk said.

“More to say on that?”

Berk shook his head. Jyra decided to come back to that question later and let her curiosity guide the conversation.

“Where did you go after Drometica?” she said, glancing at the radar scope to make sure no one followed them as they pushed further into space.

“Mostly where we didn’t expect Craig would find us,” Berk said. “We knew we had to lay low for a while so we went to Jiranthem.”

“Macnelia’s home planet,” Jyra said.

“Leonick knew of a couple places there where we could hide out,” Berk said. “Eventually we started hearing reports of Craig and his new militia. They call themselves Kytes, no doubt inspired by the bomb that we used on TF headquarters on Tyrorken. They have a logo and everything.”

“I wonder why they haven’t visited Silanpre?” Jyra said. “I never heard of them.” She was delighted to at last catch up with Berk and Leonick. The shock of learning what became of Craig and the others, tempered the joy. Berk was already answering her last question and she had to make a conscious effort to listen.

“The Allied Hospitals are known for their medical prowess in the galaxy. Their militant security is just as famous. A small group like the Kytes, even the Nilcyns, would think twice before attacking Silanpre. It’s lucky we were close enough to it when you escaped so that you wound up on a planet Craig was most unlikely to visit.”

“What happened to the others?” Jyra said.

“We assume Shandra is with Craig,” Leonick said. “Neeka and Derek defected, too. I hacked into a public docking log on Jiranthem and saw their names from a day or so earlier. We just missed them.”

“How do you know they’ve quit?” Jyra asked. “Maybe they were after you and Berk.”

“We had a few brief chats before Berk and I left for our mission,” Leonick said. “Neither she nor Derek were pleased with where Craig was taking the resistance. Seeing their names in the log indicates they got out alive.”

“What sort of reports did you hear about the Kytes?” Jyra said.

“Nothing flattering,” Berk said. “Sounds like they’re a bunch of petty criminals. They plunder small towns, board ships in space, and steal whatever they can.”

“To be fair, we did all of those things when I was part of the resistance,” Jyra said.

“Yeah, we took what we needed and I have misgivings about boarding Orasten for obvious reasons,” Berk said. “But the Kytes are more extreme. They capture people. They seize far more resources than necessary just to spread misery. Despite all that, their fleet and membership are both growing.”

“So how do we turn the Nilcyns and the Kytes against each other?” Jyra said, placing her boots on the console and leaning back in her seat. “That sounds like an excellent way to neutralize both threats.”

“It’s tempting,” Berk said. He drained the bottle and dumped it into a bin on the far side of his seat.

“Is that a cold box?” Jyra asked, peering past Berk’s faded boots.

“I don’t drink warm beer,” Berk said, producing a bottle from the black cube near his console. He opened it and took a mouthful.

“We added weapons and a cold box to the ship,” he said. “That’s all I’m aware of, but Leonick likes to keep his secrets.”

“I like your priorities,” Jyra said, rolling her eyes. “You said it’s tempting to turn the Nilcyns and Kytes against each other, but that doesn’t press the attack on TF.”

“Unless the Nilcyns and TF are working together,” Berk said. “All I want to know now is, are you ready to go after TF?”

Jyra didn’t answer. The decision seemed impossible to resolve and even as she thought of how the Allied Hospitals and TF might be connected, it was likely the path led away from Silanpre. The more she thought about it, the less likely she could see Serana abandoning her planet. At least she had one to fight for.

Berk saw Jyra’s furrowed brow and didn’t pressure her for an answer. He drained his bottle and it clanked against the other as he dropped it in the waste bucket.

“We have traveled beyond the pull of Silanpre,” Leonick announced.

Jyra heard the request in the tone.

“Right.”

Jyra got to her feet, realizing she didn’t have anywhere to go, but it seemed important to stand.

“Ready to open the cargo bay?” Jyra asked Berk.

“Ready when you are,” he said. “Prepared to make the turn.”

“Is there a…camera or a way to see?” Jyra said, aware of her hollow voice. Berk nodded. Jyra took a deep breath and placed a hand on the edge of the console for support.

“Open the door,” she commanded.

Thuds in the distance indicated the duct dampers swung shut.

“How is our air holding?” Leonick asked.

“Well enough,” Berk replied.

Jyra’s eyes pivoted to her screens. One showed the inside of the cargo bay. The bodies were no longer stacked on the floor. As Berk guided Mastranada to the right, the dead floated through the door and into space. The second screen on Jyra’s console showed footage from a camera mounted near the bow facing the stern. She watched as the dark bags, catching the light from the bay, drifted into the endless frontier.

“Peace to the fallen,” Jyra murmured, feeling the corners of her eyes sting.

“Ready to close the door,” Berk said, his voice barely above a whisper. Jyra nodded and she watched it glide shut. Leonick kept his head bowed toward his keyboard but his hands remained in his lap. Berk kept an elbow on his armrest and lowered his gaze.

“Thanks for making this possible,” Jyra said. She directed her attention to Leonick who glanced over his shoulder and gave a resolute nod. “Thanks for coming back,” she added to Berk. He leaned forward to open another bottle.

“We knew we wanted to, we just had to make it happen,” Berk said. “It was an honor to lay those folks to rest. They fought well against the first tyrannical business I’ve known.”

He raised his beer and took a long swig. Jyra returned to her seat, marveling how Berk’s carefree delivery almost made the statement disingenuous, but she knew he meant every word. Her crew worked quietly while Jyra leaned on her console. Her tears fell in the silence of the bridge and she made no sound as she watched the trail of bodies disappear from her screen.

I’m still here, she thought. It wasn’t the first time she found small comfort in those words and she suspected it wouldn’t be the last.

Part XXXVI: Voices of the Dead

Gray dirt swirled in the lukewarm water pouring into the shower drain. Jyra pushed her face into the gentle spray, feeling the grit sliding over her cheeks and lips. She scrubbed her hair and watched the water around her toes turn black.

Steam filled the room as she stepped onto the floor mat and retrieved a towel. Jyra stared at the vapor. It reminded her of the mist she had seen over the Silanpre valleys, vast blankets of fog obscuring the land beneath them. It had been months and Jyra still spotted significant differences from Tyrorken. On her home planet, she never saw windows or mirrors masked by condensation; the arid climate absorbed all spare moisture. In the washroom, Jyra faced the sink. She glimpsed herself in the mirror before showering. Dust from the demolished Allied Hospital intelligence complex had settled in her hair and crept into every layer of clothing. The outfit from the mission lay crumpled on the floor, looking as though it had been dyed gray.

Jyra returned her attention to the mirror and wiped the fogged glass with a corner of her towel. She saw her face, framed by wet hair, staring back at her. The last time she looked in a mirror with such intention had been in her bedroom on Tyrorken.

Dario had just died, Jyra thought. Now Dania lost her brother. Grief subsided during the shower, but Jyra bowed her head as the unbidden memory returned. She felt the jolt of dread while watching Tony’s fallen form. His death was doubly difficult to accept since Jyra couldn’t help feeling responsible.

She initially wanted him to join the mission because he had circled the complex during the first strike and would be familiar with the surroundings. The moment she saw him approaching the transport across the courtyard and registered his distress, she wished she had turned him away. I even knew we were all fatigued, too tired to launch another mission,Jyra thought. His sister’s life was on the line.

Despite the awful loss, the mission had technically been a success. Revo managed to fly free of the combat zone, leaving the Allied Hospital security crafts behind. He landed the transport next to Mastranada and helped Kip lug the crate to Yoke. Serana met Jyra at the base of the ship ramp and immediately noticed Tony’s absence.

“We couldn’t save him,” Jyra said, unable to meet her friend’s eyes. “We couldn’t have escaped without him.”

“Then he died for a noble cause,” Serana said. “He helped save more lives.”

“We don’t know that,” Jyra said, feeling despair taking over.

Serana laid a hand on her friend’s shoulder and Jyra forced herself to make eye contact.

“I told you I was alive because of you and Kip, but Yoke deserves some credit, too,” Serana said. “He’s been doing great work under pressure. If anyone will capitalize on Tony’s last act, it’s him.”

Serana’s gaze seemed to penetrate beyond her eyes and grip Jyra’s mind. Jyra returned the encouraging expression and then an oppressive wave of questions broke on her tongue. She felt dizzy and Serana took her arm.

“Why don’t you take a shower?” she suggested. “I’ll take you to the washroom. Berk stowed your duffel aboard Mastranada. He’ll want”— Serana broke off abruptly.

“What?” Jyra asked.

“Nothing,” Serana said. “I collected some clothes from your duffel and took them into the washroom already. A good shower will help.”

They entered the bunker and Jyra shuffled after Serana, succumbing to the questions bombarding her mind. What was Serana about to say about Berk? How were Yoke’s patients? Had the crate mission actually mattered? Where was Kip?

Beneath it all, Jyra sensed the stirring curiosity within as she glanced over her shoulder before rounding the corner in the bunker passage. She caught a glimpse of the jutting stabilizer. How had TF crashed back into her life—wreckage from a company freighter, the return of members of the TF Resistance, the Hospital ship meeting the TF shuttle, and Terrence Biggs, a TF employee and a donor to the Resistance on Silanpre—with such synchronicity?

Jyra scrutinized her expression, her fingertips brushing her puffy eyelids and guiding wet strands of hair behind her ears. She craved sleep, but her mind was far too alert. She tugged on the pair of clean, faded trousers and slid her arms into the sleeves of a button-up shirt. She held her own gaze in the mirror as she secured the buttons in their respective holes.

TF seized her attention again as she collected the dusty clothes from the floor. Jyra had placed the pistol next to the sink, but she nearly forgot about her brother’s dagger in the pocket of the dirty trousers. She would never forget stabbing Terrence Biggs. Carefully, she ran the blade under the tap, scrubbing free what blood remained. Once it was clean, Jyra placed the dagger in her pocket. She wiped the dust off the holster and pistol as best she could and secured the belt around her hips. The odor of powder from the firearm filled her nose and she pushed the renewed grief aside.

Jyra left the room and dropped the soiled clothes in a nearby washing unit. She had an urgent need to find Kip, but had no idea where to find him or what to say. She wanted to apologize and defend her point of view. It seemed impossible to manage either with sincerity in a single conversation. Jyra didn’t know all the sources of Kip’s anger, which only added to her anxiety. She suspected he was upset that she trusted Meriax. Maybe that’s why he chose to mention how many Resistance members were killed during the raid on the complex.

Jyra stopped several steps into the courtyard. She hadn’t considered Meriax at all since she returned. She had been injured, but nothing life-threatening. Even so, Jyra had discovered some information on the last mission and she wanted to see what Meriax thought of it.

The stabilizer captured Jyra’s attention again. It was hard to ignore its presence, especially since it reminded her of the curious meeting she witnessed between TF and Hospital leadership. Hardly an hour had passed since her return to the bunker and Jyra already wanted to leave. Her leg twitched and she wished to fly away, take off and keep going up, leaving the ruined courtyard behind. The momentary fantasy provided a means to answer a real question concerning the stabilizer. Where did it come from? She knew the class of ship it belonged to and if part of it was here, the rest had to be nearby.

Jyra discouraged the inner strategizing immediately. This was no time to launch another mission. Conversation demanded priority over action. Tony must be properly honored, along with the rest of the dead and wounded. The damage to the fleet in the courtyard had to be assessed. On top of it all, Jyra longed to speak to Kip and Serana, though not at the same time. Unfortunately she couldn’t look for them now, because a gruff voice called her name and she saw Berk coming toward her, hair wafting behind him with each stride. He took a long pull from a bottle as he approached. He tugged the glass neck free from his lips and whiskers when he stopped before her.

“Tell me next time your going into a combat zone,” Berk said. The gruff rasp was gone, replaced with a pleading tone that didn’t suit him at all.

“It was short notice,” Jyra said, taken aback by the delivery. “I wished you had been there.”

“Just say the word,” Berk said. “There’s always time for that.”

“I will,” Jyra said, hearing an edge in her words. Something wasn’t quite right. Berk nodded and turned to leave.

“I will if I think it’s necessary,” Jyra amended. Berk stopped and glanced at her.

“Sounded necessary this time,” Berk said. “I heard someone died.”

“It could have been you,” Jyra said.

“As long as it wasn’t you.”

“You think you need to protect me?”

“You wouldn’t be here if Leonick and I hadn’t got you out of that building.”

“I wouldn’t be on this planet if it weren’t for you two,” Jyra said.

“You were lucky to get out,” Berk said.

“I’m sure,” Jyra replied, unable to hide the sarcasm. Berk held her in a steady stare and she saw his eyebrows nearly unite above his nose. The moment of anguish was as uncharacteristic as his bizarre tone. “I’m glad you came,” she said. She took several steps to Berk’s side, laid a hand on his massive forearm, and returned his gaze. “And you’re right. We would have failed without your assistance. I’m trying to keep this resistance alive along with the people in it. I’m trying to lead. We lost one comrade on this last mission and we need to pay our respects to him and the others. His sacrifice may have saved ten other lives. When I need your help, I’ll ask for it.”

“Understood,” Berk said. “You’re in the cockpit and I’m no mutineer, at least not against you.”

“This isn’t all me,” Jyra said, sensing an ease in the tension. “I’m the newcomer here.”

“Well, you’ve done good work from what I can tell,” Berk said. “Keep leading.”

“What happened to your flasks?” Jyra asked, nodding at the bottle.

“Crushed most of them,” Berk said. “Still got the one you gave me, though. Going got a little tougher recently and most of the flasks became undersized in the tenser moments.” He made a crushing gesture with his fist.

They both smiled and Jyra pushed off his arm, suddenly aware that Berk’s concern for her safety might have been mitigated had he known the gift she received from the Hospital. Now didn’t feel like the right moment to explain it.

“Let’s go to the ship,” Jyra said. “I need to check on Yoke. Also, Serana started to say you wanted something from me. What’s that about?”

“I’ve said my piece,” Berk grunted as they climbed into the cargo bay. “Also letting you know about moving your duffel. Thought it’d be safer in here. It’s in one of the forward cabins. You’re welcome to stay in there if you want.”

“Thanks,” Jyra said.

Berk nodded and veered toward the wall to check on several crates of supplies.

Barlen met Jyra inside Mastranadaat the entrance to the recovery area.

“I thought you might be along,” he said. Jyra was relieved to see his nausea had subsided.

“Yoke said to thank you for the crate,” he continued. “He’s already putting it to use.”

“How are the patients?” Jyra asked.

“Yoke said the crate has given the ten a fighting chance.”

Jyra nodded, wishing her relief could supersede the guilt and sadness of losing Tony. Almost as if he read her thoughts, Barlen leaned forward.

“Tribute to the fallen is set for tonight in the courtyard,” he said. “Serana is spreading the word.”

“Thanks for saying” she said, regretting her wooden tone. “How is Meriax?”

“You’re welcome to see,” Barlen said.

Jyra followed Barlen into a room that had once been hers. The sleek, dull gray walls were bare and two sconce fixtures threw a dim glow upon the floor. Meriax relaxed with her back against the wall with her legs stretched out on the small bed. Her right shoulder and thigh were both bandaged and dried blood lingered in the ends of her blond hair.

“How did your mission go?” Meriax asked.

“That can wait,” Jyra said, relieved to see Meriax alert and sitting up. “How are you?”

“Fine except for the obvious,” Meriax said. “I’ve got a couple shrapnel wounds and I’m still recovering from the meds.”

She paused and gazed at Jyra as though struggling to recognize her.

“Why are you looking after me?” Meriax asked.

Serana’s words emerged from the past.

“Those you bring in, you look after,” Jyra said. “Of course, you found your own way into the base, but I dragged you into this particular campaign.”

Meriax turned her large eyes onto her injured leg and picked at the bandage.

“I guess we’re both to blame,” she said. Her voice became stronger and Jyra sensed the feeling in the room shift. She barely finished considering how the statement referred to Meriax’s wounds before she saw an opening.

“You’re right,” she said, crossing the room and running a finger along the opposite wall, letting the chill on her fingertip ground her.

“We’re both to blame for our mutual game,” she said.

Meriax glanced at Jyra but continued to watch her finger on the wall.

“You knew the files were hard copies,” Jyra said.

“I was curious how one hacks into a database of physical files,” Meriax said.

“Is there a digital equivalent somewhere?” Jyra asked.

“You’re not going after it now, are you?” Meriax said.

“I won’t go after something unless I know it exists,” Jyra said.

“You didn’t even know the format of the files you just stole,” Meriax said. “Didn’t stop you.”

“Does a digital database exist?” Jyra said and Meriax shrugged.

“I don’t know,” she replied. “This was the only one I knew about.”

“What was on the sixth floor?” Jyra said.

Meriax averted her gaze too quickly. She picked at the bandage harder than before.

“Swallow whatever you’re about to say,” Jyra said, rolling her eyes. “I know it’s a lie. Try again.”

“It was a detention black site,” she said. “I never knew for certain, but everything indicated it was.”

“What was it used for?”

“Detaining people.”

“What sort of people?”

“Important ones, I guess.”

“You guess?”

“I was a spy not a prison warden,” Meriax said. “My best guess is an operation like the Allied Hospitals has to rely on political and judicial insiders, local and interplanetary, in order to survive. Using that power against adversaries means the defeated have to be put somewhere, likely black sites.”

Jyra considered the hypothesis and felt her hand moving toward the pistol on her hip. Meriax seemed incapable of attacking, but continued to appear unnerved. Even her guess lacked something, an omission of an important detail. The delivery had to be part of Meriax’s spy training.

“Anything else I can help you with?” she said, looking up from her leg.

“Assuming the hospital operates black sites, why would you guess they are only used for imprisoning adversaries?” Jyra asked.

Meriax sat up straighter against the wall and her large eyes narrowed with sudden concentration.

“What are you getting at? That they use them for protective custody?”

“Black sites can’t operate on their own,” Jyra said, charging ahead with her idea. “They need a transportation network to shuttle prisoners. I’m suggesting that not everyone at a black site is treated as a hostile.”

Meriax fell silent and relaxed against the wall. Jyra suddenly heard the blood thudding inside her ears. Almost without thinking, she extracted her pistol and aimed it at Meriax.

“What are you doing?” Meriax said, stiffening.

“If Kip is right about you, I should pull the trigger right now,” Jyra said. She looked beyond her firearm at Meriax whose eyes widened with fear while her fingers dug into the mattress. Jyra suddenly remembered how Serana had advocated for her to be part of the resistance out of admitted self-interest.

“It’s an easy trap,” Jyra said aloud.

“What is?” Meriax said.

“Convincing yourself that someone is something they’re not,” Jyra said.

“Can you…lower the gun?” Meriax said, raising her hands. “That will hurt more than punching me in the face. I can’t make any fast moves.”

Jyra returned the pistol to the holster as casually as she had drawn it, but she kept her hand on the grip.

“Is Kip right about you?” Jyra asked. “Are you just a spy waiting to turn on us all? You need to start giving me plain answers.”

“I wouldn’t have come this far if I didn’t support the cause,” Meriax said.

“What cause?”

“That of the resistance,” Meriax said.

“Why do you care?” Jyra said. “The Allied Hospitals loom large here, but I’m sure you had many paths to choose from besides spying for them. Back in the base, you said you just wanted to survive.”

“I want to live,” Meriax said. “There’s a difference. And there weren’t many options for me. My parents died when I was young and I was out on the street for as long as I can remember.”

“How did they die?” Jyra asked.

“I suspect the Hospitals had something to do with it,” Meriax said. “And once I had enough money to afford a new identity, I volunteered to be a spy. I wanted to take down the Allied Hospitals from within. It’s easy to dream it and nearly impossible to do it.”

“Why haven’t you declared your support for the resistance then?” Jyra asked. “Why are you still equivocating?”

“I’ve never been sure which side I was on, I’ve been a spy most of my life after all,” Meriax said. “At their cores, the Allied Hospitals and the resistance oppose each other. The manufactured crossover of spies tells a different story. At some level, there’s cooperation between the two. This resistance, isolated from the main resistance, is easier to trust. It’s smaller, more focused. We’re all united to bring down the Allied Hospitals.”

“Did you just defect?” Jyra said.

“As long as I’m no longer accountable for past actions,” Meriax said. “I’d be honored to join. You know how useful I can be.”

Jyra thought of Kip and Serana and wished one or both of them were present to witness Meriax’s request. It seemed risky to forgive some transgressions Jyra knew nothing about. What if Meriax had a part in organizing Fritz to sabotage the Emarand Liberationmission? Berk told Jyra to keep leading. She couldn’t ignore the injuries on the woman before her, injuries sustained serving a resistance mission.

“All right,” Jyra said, dropping her hand from her weapon. “Leave the past behind and start fresh as a member of the resistance.”

“Thank you,” Meriax said, her eyes lighting up.

“Just because you’re forgiven doesn’t mean you can forget,” Jyra said, trying to keep her delivery even. “Do you have any information right now that we can use for offensive or defensive purposes?”

“When they brought me in here, I caught a glimpse of the courtyard,” Meriax said. “What happened to the ships?”

Jyra quickly explained the arrival of the stabilizer.

“Perfect,” Meriax said. “That makes an excellent cover. To better conceal activity at the bunker, select a few of the best ships and park them elsewhere in the forest. Maybe set off some explosives in the courtyard to really work it over. The Hospitals hit this place before. They’ll patrol it again. The crashed stabilizer was part of a crisis spread across miles. Its appearance shouldn’t attract unwanted attention.”

“I’ll get a team working on it,” Jyra said. “Good idea.”

She took a deep breath, preparing to ask if any resistance donors served as spies, but a knock on the door interrupted the opportunity.

“Come in,” Jyra said, as Meriax lay back on the bed.

The door opened and Kip stepped into the room. He looked as dour as he had lugging the crate off the transport with Revo. Like Jyra, he had found a shower and now wore a baggy, long-sleeve shirt and a loose pair of trousers. His laced boots still bore the gray dust from the fallen complex.

“Can we talk?” Kip asked. He and Jyra stared at each other for a moment. Kip finally glanced at Meriax, who gave him a sarcastic smile and a two-fingered salute with her uninjured arm.

“We’ll talk later,” Jyra found herself muttering as she shuffled toward the door. “Feel better.”

“I already do,” Meriax said.

Kip led Jyra out into the courtyard, both of them walking in silence. Kip finally sat down on a crushed ship engine in the shadow of the stabilizer.

“How are you doing?” Kip asked.

“I’d feel better if we all made it back,” Jyra said.

“Me too,” Kip said. He pushed his bangs off his forehead and looked sideways, clasping his hands before him. Jyra joined him on the engine.

“It’s more than losing Tony,” she said.

A constricted half-laugh escaped Kip’s mouth and he nodded.

“You’re right,” he said. “I hate that your friends are here, I hate that you’re standing by the spy, I hate the number of casualties we’ve suffered, and I hate that this all feels like some colossal mistake.”

“Meriax just swore to serve the resistance,” Jyra said gently.

“After this spy debacle, I don’t think I could ever trust any of them.”

“It’s why we got the files,” Jyra said. “We can identify them.”

“And do what?” Kip said. “The base is full of hostile forces now. How could we target identified spies or even get inside to do it?”

“I don’t know yet.”

“My problem is bigger than the current spies,” Kip muttered. “Like I said, it’s an issue of trust. I spent months working on Graze’s salvage team. He trained me, I looked up to him. Do you have any idea what it was like to discover he was an enemy the whole time? I still have nightmares from doing that salvage work, but when I’m awake and remember those days, all I can think of is that traitor.”

“I found out my parents arranged to sell me into service for Tyrorken Fuels,” Jyra said. “Not quite the same as how you see your old boss, but it gave me a turn.”

“While we’re discussing family,” Kip said, “Berk mentioned something about Orastenbounty.” Jyra felt her stomach twist. How long had she had been waiting for this moment? Why had she waited and not faced it sooner? The timing couldn’t be worse. Why did she have to address it now?

“I’m sorry,” Jyra said. “I didn’t know.”

“What are you sorry for?” Kip asked.

“Captain Lyle Deleanor was your brother, wasn’t he?” Jyra said. “We attacked his ship as it fled Tyrorken after a skirmish with Nilcyns.”

“Who did it?” Kip asked.

Jyra fell silent as the circumstances surfaced in her memory. Macnelia had been shot during the siege of Orasten. Neeka, aboard Valiant Conductor II,saw her stricken friend and leader via a body camera and went for the laser cannons. Craig volunteered to stop her, but Jyra discovered the two of them each at a cannon having jointly fired on Orasten.

“The leader of my former resistance,” Jyra said. “The one who locked me in my quarters. Leonick helped me escape the ship. That’s how I got here.”

Kip stood up, taking a deep breath again. He rubbed the back of his head before turning to face Jyra.

He paused to take a deep breath and released it slowly.

“I need some space,” he muttered, casting his eyes to the ground.

“I’m sorry for what happened,” Jyra said, aware that she was already backing away. “I wish I had been able to stop it.”

Reconciliation faced another delay. If he spoke to her again, Kip was going to ask why she hadn’t volunteered the information sooner and Jyra couldn’t think of an answer. Perhaps Kip’s request for space did them both a favor; each needed to consider the consequences of Orasten’sdestruction.

Jyra paused to survey the courtyard on her way to Mastranada. Meriax’s idea of relocating the viable ships to the forest seemed prudent and practical. Jyra thought of returning to see the former spy, but once on board, she decided to visit her own quarters instead. Night was approaching and she needed to prepare for the tribute for the fallen.

Jyra entered the corridor, trying to ignore the lamps blazing behind hanging sheets that formed a sterile barrier. She passed Meriax’s room and knocked on other doors as she moved toward the bow. Rooms were either empty or occupied by convalescing soldiers. When she finally opened a door after no one reacted to her knocking, she saw her duffel and knelt beside it, not even noticing the room around her. It was twice the size of the other crew quarters. A large bed filled an alcove opposite the door. A metal desk sat against the wall to the left and a dresser and wardrobe claimed most of the wall to the right. Jyra examined the furniture, aware it was all well-used but perfectly functional. She heard footsteps and immediately crossed to the door in time to see Berk plugging the passage.

“Serana gave me your duffel to put on board and Leonick and I agreed you deserve this room,” he said. “So that’s where I left it.”

“This is more than I need,” Jyra said.

“You’re welcome, Captain,” Berk said and Jyra felt the feeling drain from her face. “No pressure,” Berk added. “We wanted to let you know that even if you remain on Silanpre, this room will wait for you. People are starting to gather for the ceremony, by the way.”

Berk departed without another word. Jyra leaned against the door for support, her mind buzzing. She knelt by her duffel again and dug through the contents until she found the covered tin of charcoal. Jyra considered it and shook her head.

She pivoted on the floor to the nearby dresser and glanced back at her duffel. She placed a hand on one of the drawer pulls. She felt the cool metal on her fingers and drew them back. This wasn’t the time to make the decision.

Jyra took off her blue shirt and selected a darker one from her duffel. It seemed more appropriate for the ceremony.

Not that the dead care, Jyra thought. She shook her head, registering disbelief at the callous notion. Then she froze.

My mind is mine and I’ve got plenty to fight without attacking myself, Jyra thought.No more useless self-criticism. She left her quarters and noted the darkness behind the suspended sheets stretched across the medical area. Jyra entered the cargo bay and saw the dull glow of dusk settling beyond the open door.

The gathering clustered around a boulder near the bunker. Jyra recognized the towering rock as the one she, Kip, and Meriax had used to explain the purpose of the file heist mission to the soldiers and field teams. Two large portable lamps illuminated the boulder and the light reflected over the whole crowd. It was easy to see the toll of casualties, obvious by their absence. Jyra felt every step upon the rough earth bring her closer and she paused several paces from the edge of the gathering, attempting to steady her ragged breathing.

Her fingers found her mother’s locket. As she wrapped it in her palm, she felt her heart thumping. Serana ascended the boulder using a ladder and Jyra retreated toward the darkness. Only now did she understand her present duty to acknowledge the loss of those who were so palpably missing. As if that wasn’t enough of a challenge, such acknowledgement confirmed the deaths, legitimized them and made them true. Any lingering abstraction of the loss evaporated, leaving Jyra nauseated and short of breath.

Serana gazed down at the gathering with a somber expression, though she nodded and smiled at a few members of the crowd. She glanced toward the bottom of the ladder at one point, and Jyra suspected she was looking for her. Jyra spotted Berk with ease and guessed Leonick stood next to him at the back of the gathering. She recalled Berk’s advice to keep leading, and, fixating on the thought, she started toward the base of the boulder. She had no idea what she should say. She thought of Tony and things she might share, but the ceremony wasn’t just for him. As she circled the crowd to get to the ladder, Jyra suddenly realized she wasn’t aware of Dania’s status or the other nine wounded. She hadn’t met most of the soldiers or field team members before they marched to their deaths. If she had to give a speech, she would have to avoid specifics.

Jyra reached the ladder just as the lights dimmed. Darkness obscured even the faces of those near the front. Serana stared straight ahead and the prerecorded names of each fallen member of the resistance, read by the owner, echoed into the courtyard. A bell tolled between each name. Jyra listened, unaware that she still clutched her mother’s locket. The first time she heard the ritual in the main cavern of the base, the ceremony lasted about two minutes. Jyra made an effort on that occasion to memorize the list, but that wasn’t possible now given the vast number of the dead. Amid the unknown voices, a familiar name rumbled from the speakers. When Serana’s father spoke, his voice was quite unlike the one Jyra remembered. The forcefulness of the delivery hinted at a man both driven and energetic. He spoke his name boldly, unaware that it would be damaged along with the rest of his body in the coming years. Jyra chanced a glance at Serana, but she only inclined her head for a moment to honor her father.

Jyra felt as if something thrashed inside her stomach as the end of the names approached. When she heard his voice, Jyra inhaled; she had been unconsciously holding her breath. For the second time, the recording of Tony announced his death, but now it was true. Jyra leaned against the boulder as she encountered both grief and relief. Dania remained absent from the list, a small comfort after such a confirmation of loss.

Utter silence presided over the courtyard. Most lowered their heads, but Serana kept her unblinking gaze to the south. A breeze tugged on the surrounding conifers, rustling needles and bending limbs. The wind carried the smell of the forest into the courtyard. Clusters of clouds drifted in front of the stars. Jyra looked skyward and saw a planet about the size of her thumbnail. It commanded her attention before a trail of clouds marched in front of it. She couldn’t tell how much time had passed before Serana spoke.

“Thank you everyone. Peace to the fallen.”

She descended the ladder while most of the crowd made for the bunker. Jyra noticed Kip, his hair glowing in the starlight, walking fartherinto the courtyard. When Serana reached the ground, she and Jyra embraced.

“Shall we sit?” Serana asked as they separated. Jyra nodded, aware that her friend looked miserable for the first time that evening. They sat together on a tumbled stone arch.

“Are you a captain now?” Serana asked.

“Berk and Leonick seem to think so,” Jyra said.

“What do you think?” Serana said. She turned to look at Jyra, who found it hard to speak under her friend’s iron gaze.

“I don’t know,” Jyra said. “They moved me into the captain’s quarters on the ship and they want me to take command. I just found out about it half an hour ago. How did you know?”

“When I dropped your duffel off,” Serana said. “You’re considering the offer, though?”

Jyra paused, but any delay made matters worse.

“I’m considering running a recon mission to figure out where that stabilizer came from,” she said.

“After that, which resistance will you return to?” Serana asked.

“I don’t know,” Jyra repeated. “They might be one and the same.”

“What are you talking about?” Serana said.

“During the last mission, Kip and I both saw a Tyrorken Fuels ship land near the fallen complex. TF agents met with Hospital leadership. TF was trying to get one of their employees named Terrence Biggs from Hospital custody. He’d been held on the top floor of the complex in detention.”

“How do you know this?”

“Because we landed right next to a medical ship treating him.”

“But if he was in detention, it seems like TF and the Hospitals are more adversaries than friends.”

“Hard to say,” Jyra said. “Biggs worked in the Employee Compensation office at TF. He also had a wife and daughter on Silanpre. Donors working in the resistance. Crina and Charis.”

Jyra suddenly stood up, the memory of her disastrous meeting with the donors off the main cavern of the base taking over her mind.

“When Crina introduced herself, she mentioned her husband was held by the Hospitals,” Jyra said. “The donors used the mission that retrieved Kip, me, and Tony—” she paused, forced to reflect on the extra time they provided Tony by rescuing him. Serana gestured for her to sit and she draped an arm across Jyra’s shoulders.—“The donors used it as an excuse to complain about captured family members. Some grievances might have been legitimate, but Biggs had connections. I’m sure the files we got will incriminate his wife and daughter as the same sort of filth that infiltrated the resistance.”

Serana shook her head, staring at the dull ground before her.

“Were you there long enough to see if Biggs escaped back to TF?” she asked.

“No,” Jyra said, averting her gaze. “But all they got was his corpse.”

“You killed him?”

Jyra nodded.

“I can’t prove it, but he might have played a part in my brother’s death. The letter I saw that bound me to employment at TF was signed by Biggs.”

“I wish I could see the traffic directive logs,” Serana said. “The botched mission to retrieve you from the Hospitals, the bombing of this bunker, even the Emarand Liberationmission could have been sabotaged by traffic control.”

“We’ll have to dig into the files we have,” Jyra sighed.

“Or forget all of it,” Serana spat bitterly. Jyra glanced at her, unable to tell if she was serious, but her face was set.

“We don’t have the numbers to storm the base and it’s possible not every spy has a file,” Serana said. “All we can do is hope those sympathetic to our cause escape the base on their own. It’s fair to assume the base has been compromised. Attempting to reclaim it threatens the future of the resistance.”

Even as she did all but admit defeat, Jyra saw nothing of her friend’s fierce expression diminish.

“Your dad thought I was fit to fill your post because of my determination,” Jyra said. “Or at least the determination he saw in me. You set the bar high.”

The trace of a smile flickered on Serana’s stoic lips and was gone as soon as it appeared.

As though sensing Jyra’s curiosity, she suddenly spoke.

“Dad converted the first Hospital spies that entered the base. No matter who they threw at us, dad brought them around. The resistance was much smaller then and it was easy to spot newcomers. The first spy that got in and got out provided intel that led to an aggressive bombing campaign that nearly ended the resistance. I think it shook dad’s confidence and showed him he couldn’t win over anyone the Hospitals sent our way.

“Instead, the resistance began screening new members and if they suspected a spy, they kept them isolated. It became easier in the larger base. It kept spies apart and if they escaped, they only had fragmented knowledge.”

“Killing spies would have given away the position of the base?” Jyra asked.

“We were never sure if the Hospital gave spies such tracking,” Serana said.

“I could ask Meriax,” Jyra said.

“If you want,” Serana said. “If she has a tracker, though, the Hospitals would have already bombed us. But we occasionally hacked transmissions from the more idiotic spies and gained useful intelligence.”

“Meriax told me when she first got in, there were as many as fifteen spies in the base.”

“That’s way more than we could control,” Serana said. “I take responsibility for the oversight, but a lot of the attitude comes from the early days when the resistance was smaller than the number we have here.” She gestured at the dark bunker behind her.

“The greater size of the resistance definitely undermined dad’s handling of the spies. I made an effort to pick up the slack, but I was always distracted, trying to make a bigger difference.”

“You don’t have to apologize to me,” Jyra said. “You did the best with what you had.”

“I could have been more vigilant.”

“Speaking of that, how did you know I wasn’t a spy?” Jyra asked.

“You were Eldred’s prisoner,” Serana said. “We knew enough about her to know she was up to no good.”

“How did you find me?” Jyra asked, thinking back to the dense forest. Serana had emerged from the underbrush undetected and shot Eldred twice.

“We picked up your pod on our scanners and since it couldn’t be identified, we were sure the Hospitals had spotted you, too.”

“Thanks for picking me up,” Jyra said.

“One of the best decisions I’ve made,” Serana said. “Go make me proud.”

“What do you mean?” Jyra said.

“I’ve got a lot of recovery ahead of me,” Serana said. “File sorting and healing are all I’ve got in my future. Go find where the stabilizer came from. I’ve been worried about you leaving to rejoin your former resistance and you’ve felt guilty about it. Put it all aside. As you say, our causes could be united. Find out if it’s true.”

“You sure?”

“Don’t make me repeat myself,” Serana said. “Do your job, Captain.”

Jyra stood up and Serana rose with her, but noticeably slower.

“Meriax has sworn to the cause of the resistance,” Jyra said. “I witnessed it. We get a few more spies converted and the fight will be over. She had some ideas about how to conceal our activities here.”

“Dad was right about your determination,” Serana said. “We’ll move the last patients off your ship into the bunker tomorrow. Then you go find some answers.”

Part XXXV: The crate

Jyra felt her grip on the doorjamb tighten as she watched the incoming object growing larger as it plunged toward both her and the ground. She wanted to run, but she couldn’t abandon Serana. Comrades near Mastranada pointed and shouted warnings. Several saw Jyra in the transport. They gestured for her to flee, but she ignored them. Her eyes swiveled back to the incoming threat. It looked like nothing more than a long, narrow rectangle. Smoke billowed from its trailing edges.

Jyra was sure it was going to cut across the courtyard, sweeping transports aside, like a hand dusting crumbs off a countertop. But the object rotated and it came down upon the parked ships leading with a short side. Jyra lost sight of it behind her ship, but she felt it strike; the earth shuddered from the impact. Horrendous screeches and thuds followed as the object cut through the small resistance transports. The noise jolted Jyra and she leapt to the ground and ran to the stern of the transport. Beyond it she saw the object, its leading edge buried and still pushing through the dirt. Most of it remained exposed, holding a slanted position about twenty degrees to the ground. Its progress through the courtyard disrupted most of the small transports. The earth finally sapped the momentum of flight and with a metallic groan the object came to rest. Jyra estimated it left a fifty-foot trench through the courtyard. She wanted to investigate the damage but she had to check on Serana first.

Jyra made for the medical room as several comrades came running from Mastranada.

“Relax,” Jyra said, as the runners reached her. “It wrecked ships, but claimed no lives.”

“Are you all right?” one of them asked. He looked like the only soldier in the group. Jyra nodded.

“I’m fine,” she said. “Search the bunker for any cannon or other artillery that might knock something else like it to the ground.”

Jyra climbed into the transport and returned to the medical room. Serana had propped herself onto her elbows, her eyes wide and her hands fastened to the bedrails.

“I forgot to mention large debris from the trash ring is coming back to land,” Jyra said. “Something from there just took out a number of ships. No one was hurt.”

“The Hospitals usually keep a close eye on the ring,” Serana said. “Have other pieces fallen as well?”

“A few hit the complex,” Jyra said. “The blows definitely weakened the building.”

“Well, the building coming down makes more sense knowing that,” Serana said.

Jyra had deliberately omitted it from her telling of the attack, but Serana was a question or two away from the truth; Jyra couldn’t lie outright to her friend. She had to admit what her other friends did.

“Berk and Leonick disabled a couple trash tugs to distract Hospital forces during our raid,” Jyra said. “They couldn’t have predicted this.”

“No they couldn’t,” Serana said, easing onto her pillow. “It was reckless, but they only had the one ship. We’ll find out how many transports we lost shortly, but we could have lost much more. Nearly everyone at this bunker is alive thanks to your friends.”

“Nearly?”

“I’m alive because of you and Kip,” Serana said. “I didn’t run into a hostile building like an idiot.”

Jyra smiled but the mention of Kip tempered the joy.

Serana sat up and unwrapped the bandage on her right forearm. A ragged, curved gash, held shut with stitches, crossed the top of her arm just below the elbow.

“That stings,” Serana breathed, as the air greeted the wound.

“You’re lucky you’ve still got that arm,” Jyra said. Serana lifted her right hand and held the tip of her forefinger near the end of her thumb.

“This close to following dad,” she said.

“I’m sorry we couldn’t save him,” Jyra said.

“He was on borrowed time,” Serana said. “Of course, I wish he were still alive, but I wouldn’t have wanted anyone to die for him, especially trying to free him from the base.”

Jyra didn’t know what to say. She thought of Jarrow crashing to the ground after Hospital forces shot him down. It reminded her of the debris that just landed beside them. The anxiety must have showed on her face, but Serana clapped her hands.

“Enough,” she said. “Grieving needs to wait for the benefit of the wounded. We never forget those who matter to us, right?”

Jyra nodded.

“Nearly two weeks in a coma and I’m right back where it all started,” Serana said.

“Two weeks?” Jyra said, suddenly aware that Serana hadn’t asked her how long she had been sleeping, nor had Jyra offered the information.

“It’s on the screen,” Serana said, motioning to the monitor. “Sounds like I missed plenty. You said you’d emptied my bunker locker. Maybe you can bring me a better outfit.”

“Of course,” Jyra said. She got off the small chair and Serana swung her legs over the edge of the bed.

Jyra paused before she went through the door.

“What?” Serana asked.

“I’m just glad to see you standing again,” Jyra said.

Presently, the two of them stepped out of the transport, Serana moving slowly and trying to keep her back straight.

“I couldn’t see how bad the stomach wounds were,” she said. “Just a lot of blood.”

The women looked at Mastranada across the courtyard. Several soldiers positioned an old laser cannon next to it, aiming the barrel upward. The stars overhead faded as dawn approached. A chilly breeze swept over them. Serana wore one of the flight suits recovered from her locker.

Jyra was keen to assist aboard Mastranada, but she also wanted to investigate the debris behind her. Serana suggested they do both.

“We should salvage as many medical kits off the damaged ships as we can,” she said. “After that, you can take a quick look at whatever fell into our midst.”

They waded into the wreckage. The breeze carried the smells of tilled earth and burned metal. The women followed the trench, walking toward the point of first impact. A ship, cloven in two, marked the beginning of the destruction. The object cut through the transport, like shrapnel through flesh. Jyra walked around the end of the trench and searched the crumpled stern for medical supplies, while Serana checked the bow section. They each found a kit and moved on to the next wreck, located entirely on the far side of the trench.

“Too bad there aren’t any reputable hospitals nearby,” Serana said. “Save us the trouble.”

Jyra smiled but her eyes were on the object, one end jutting toward the sky. She couldn’t help feeling like she had seen the shape before. She took a couple steps toward the object, leaning to check the long edges on either side. Jyra placed her foot on a scorched fragment of cowling, and it rotated under her; she had to hop aside to keep her balance.

“Need to watch out,” Serana said. “None of this stuff is stable.”

Her last word opened a pathway in Jyra’s mind. She suddenly remembered the escape into space aboard Mastranada after bombing TF headquarters. A small stabilizer, likely from a destroyed vessel, jammed against the ship. Disabled by enemy fire, Mastranada carried Jyra and the rest of the resistance into a TF freighter cargo bay. The foreign stabilizer was pulled free and smashed the hangar door control on its way back into space, sealing the resistance in a hostile ship.

Jyra realized, with help from Serana’s word choice, this object was a stabilizer. Not the sort that hit Mastranada months ago, but one of many mounted on the stern of the TF freighter. Jyra remembered seeing them as they drifted toward the yawning cargo bay.

“Are you all right?” Serana asked, drawing level with Jyra. “You look pale.”

“I’m fine,” Jyra said. “I’ve seen all I need to for now. Let’s get these kits to the ship. I’m sure they need them.”

Jyra was right. She helped Serana into Mastranada’s cargo bay. Kip had returned to sorting the files. He got to his feet the moment he saw Serana and smiled.

“Good to see you again,” he said. He stepped over several stacks of files and gave her a single-arm hug around the shoulders. He took several kits from her hands.

“And you,” Serana said. “Thanks for looking out for me when I couldn’t.”

Kip nodded and glanced back at the files, uncertain how to accept the praise.

“Hard at work,” Serana said, indicating the stacks.

“Trying to get them reorganized,” Kip said. “More important work going on back there.”

He made for the corridor, carrying the medical kits with him. Jyra and Serana followed. They reached the opening, and the smell of disinfectant and blood stopped them as effectively as any door.

Barlen and Yoke appeared out of the gloom and pushed through the trio into the cargo bay. Yoke was running a rag over his red hands. Barlen kept swallowing hard and his eyes watered.

“Additional kits,” Yoke said. His voice had become higher but still quite earnest. “Excellent. Barlen, can you take those to the treatment area?”

Were he in any condition to protest, Jyra was sure Barlen would have made a case, but it appeared he couldn’t open his mouth. He seized the kits from the others and disappeared. Jyra would have offered to help, but she had the sense Yoke wanted to speak to them alone.

“Sorry for the delay in welcoming you back,” he said with a nod to Serana. “How do you feel?”

“A little tired, but well enough, thanks to you,” she replied.

“Good,” Yoke said, seeming to ignore the compliment. His voice became low once more, but it included a strained edge.

“We’ve got a situation,” he continued. “Those kits will help most of the folks. A few people with the field teams have basic medical skills and are working to stabilize and comfort the wounded. The problem is we have ten comrades with severe injuries—internal bleeding, damaged arteries, head trauma—and I can’t help them with small medical kits.”

“What do you need?” Serana asked.

“Hospital medical transports carry response crates that should contain everything I require as long as they’re sealed,” Yoke said.

“No chance of those being in our fleet?” Jyra asked, gesturing toward the courtyard.

“No,” Kip said. He seemed taken aback by his own derisive tone. “I mean those crates would have been stripped long before we got the ships.”

“If I understand you correctly,” Serana said to Yoke, “we need to find one of these crates and find it fast. Ten lives are on the line and on the clock?”

Yoke nodded.

“Time is the enemy,” he said. The crate is a three-foot white cube. The top should be sealed with red and white striped tape.”

“Are we just supposed to capture the nearest medical transport?” Serana said.

“And what if they follow us back here?” Kip said.

Yoke glanced toward the front of Mastranada and Jyra understood.

“We need a team, five or six at the most, and one of our smaller transports that can still fly,” she said. “We have to go back to the complex as soon as possible.”

“By now, that place will be crawling with Hospital agents,” Kip said, incredulous.

“Exactly,” Jyra said. “They’ll have investigators and engineers on site, but they’ll have medical transports as well. They’ve come to us. It’s our chance to hit them to take what we need.”

“And risk more lives,” Kip said. Jyra sensed anger behind the statement unrelated to the words themselves.

“In order to save more that are in jeopardy,” Jyra said. “Are you in?”

“I’ll get my things and find a suitable transport. Might see who else I can recruit,” Kip said and he crossed the cargo bay and jumped out of sight.

“Thanks for the quick work,” Yoke said. “Come get me once you’re back.”

“Of course,” Jyra said as Yoke turned to leave. “One more thing.”

“Yes?”

“Have you seen Tony Verral?”

Yoke’s expression, boosted by the hopeful conversation, deteriorated.

“He’s back here with his sister,” he said.

“Dania?” Jyra said. “What happened?”

“She got hit by the caving ceiling,” Yoke said. “Apparently, she was in the ship and saw a few files dropped in the building. She leapt back through the window, got the files to Barlen, and then a chunk of concrete got her in the head. Barlen and others managed to retrieve her. She’s one of the ten.”

Jyra was stunned into silence. She immediately thought of Tony, Barlen tending his wounds, as Mastranada pulled away from the complex. A moment earlier, inches separated him from life or death. He seemed almost nonchalant as Barlen began wrapping his arms. He asked no questions about his sister. Jyra remembered seeing Dania for a moment as she came up to the hall with the rest of the perimeter guard. Now, she slipped closer to death with each moment.

“If he’s willing,” Jyra blurted, before Yoke turned out of sight in the doorway, “tell Tony I want him on this mission.”

Yoke gave a quick nod and disappeared. He’d been kept from his work long enough. Jyra felt a pang accompanied by a rush of fear. What if Dania died without her brother at her side? What if she tore them away from the last moments they would spend together? But she had to lead. As the commander of the perimeter guard, Tony would know the lay of the land around the ruined complex.

We’re all coming back, Jyra thought. We won’t lose any more lives. She and Serana caught each other’s eye. Jyra stared into her friend’s fierce gaze; her very being radiated strength and courage.  But Jyra couldn’t ignore reality. She recalled glimpsing the deep blue lacerations on Serana’s stomach as she pulled on her flight suit; the staples over the wounds were holding both entrails and skin in place.

“I know what you want,” Jyra said.

“If you want me to go, I’m ready,” Serana said. “If not, I’ll be ready for the next one.”

“I hope you understand,” Jyra said.

“Be the leader you are,” Serana said. Her voice grew stronger, but not out of anger. “Tell me.”

“You’ll be on the next mission, maybe,” Jyra said, after a brief pause. “Not this one.”

“That’s all I needed to know,” Serana said. “You need anything to eat before you go?” She made a casual assessment of Jyra’s appearance. “Change of clothes?”

“I suspect the bunker still has Hospital garb stocked we can use,” Jyra said. “Now that I think of it, being covered in dust from the complex might be a useful disguise. Need to make sure the others on the team are outfitted as such.”

“This will be fast,” Serana said, heading for the door. “Follow me. I’ll get you some food to go and a proper side arm.”

“I have one,” Jyra said, revealing the dagger in her pocket.

“All right you’ll have two, one that can stab and one that can shoot.”

The bunker contained a number of corridors bored deep into the hill. They were similar to the old passages in the base, but the walls in the bunker were filled with lockers and storerooms. Many were empty, but Serana eventually discovered a stocked pantry and a small arms cabinet.

Her pockets bulging with packaged meals and a pistol holstered at her hip, Jyra made her way back to the courtyard with Serana.

“The damage doesn’t seem bad in here at all,” Jyra said.

“The bunker served its purpose,” Serana said. “Took losses out front and a couple passages caved in. Heaviest hits were at the other end. We barely got out of the courtyard before Hospital ships attacked.”

“Since we don’t have a base to go back to, maybe we process the files here,” Jyra said. “There’s space for that to be done and enough provisions, right?”

“I expect so,” Serana said. “But you’ve got to get going.”

Jyra wished she could have told Berk or Leonick about the mission, but she emerged into the courtyard and saw a small field team transport gliding over the massive stabilizer. Kip was in the cockpit with a pilot she hadn’t seen before.

Serana came back to Jyra’s side with a stack of Hospital agent uniforms.

“Want these?” she asked over the whine of the engine. Jyra looked at the gritty powder covering her and squinted at the pilot through the cockpit glass.

“I think the dust will help us blend in,” she said.

“As long as no one sees you get out of the ship pre-dusted,” Serana said. “Good luck!”

She gave Jyra a brief one-armed hug and disappeared into the bunker. Jyra hesitated for a moment, wishing this were an arrival rather than a departure.

She jogged toward the transport as it landed. The cargo bay door swung down to make a loading ramp at the ship’s stern beneath the engine.

“Wait up!”

Jyra looked over her shoulder and saw Tony leap out of Mastranada. He still wore the same outfit, complete with the cut shirtsleeves and bandages on his arms. Even from a distance, Jyra could tell his eyes were puffy. He clutched a machine gun and had a revolver strapped to his belt. He walked right past Jyra, breathing hard and fast.

“Let’s go,” he said. “She doesn’t have time!”

Jyra silently agreed and jogged after Tony. She hadn’t much of a moment to worry about her brother’s death. The news of Dario’s fate came in an instant. Tony, on the other hand, had to sit by his sister, unable to do anything as her life faded away. This mission gave him the chance to act, and as Jyra mentally reviewed her reasons for bringing him aboard, she began to doubt the decision.

We’re all tired and too vulnerable to be doing this, she thought. Though after a much smaller and fully understood target this time, this mission had ten lives at stake. Jyra tried to ignore such details and she climbed the ramp and hollered forward to Kip.

“Ready to go!”

The ship lifted and Kip appeared on the steps leading to the cockpit.

“This transport looks passable for active duty, right?” Jyra asked, partly because she had noticed the faded exterior, but mostly to keep conversation focused on the mission.

“It’s why I picked it,” Kip said. “We’ll see.”

Tony had taken a seat on a short bench fastened to the wall. The floor contained wheel locks for gurneys. Jyra suspected this transport would have served as an airborne ambulance. The shelves on the walls and ceiling might have contained medicine and other supplies. A white crate like the one they sought might have even sat in a corner.

“I’m sorry to hear about Dania,” Kip said, standing near Tony. Jyra silently chastised herself for not mentioning it at all.

Tony mumbled an inaudible reply. She waited for enough time to pass before approaching the two men. She offered the packaged sandwiches and they each accepted one.

“Where are we landing?” she asked Kip.

“Go up and take a look,” Kip said. “You and Revo decide on a spot. They’ve likely set up a med area. We want to land close to the medic ships, but not too close.”

“All right,” Jyra said, heading for the cockpit, eager to leave Kip’s company.

“You Revo?” she said. The top of the steps ended in the cockpit; she stood right next to his broad shoulder. His hair and eyes were dark and his jaw square and set. His appearance reminded Jyra of Berk, but Revo was of average build and maintained his short hair and whiskers.

“You got it and you must be Jyra,” he said. “Where do you think we should land?”

For a moment, Jyra didn’t recognize where they were. Smoke rose in several locations between the ground and sky. When she realized the fires must be from fallen trash, she gazed further toward the east and suddenly saw the forest they hiked through last night. But the bunker was east of the complex.

“You took us around so we could approach from another direction,” Jyra said, understanding replacing confusion.

“Our bunker is close enough to them already,” Revo said.

“Take us lower and we can fly in from the north,” Jyra said. “If we see an established medical area, try to land near it. Sandwich?”

The ship tipped forward as Revo maneuvered toward the earth and nodded as he took the wrapped meal from Jyra. He accelerated to a reasonable emergency transport speed. A plume of black smoke stretched toward the sky. The fierce heat beneath it held the dark cloud together as it coiled upward. A hundred feet off the ground, the column separated, spreading out like a vast shadow, shielding the rising sun.

Jyra realized the smoke originated from the battery Mastranada bombed. The fires had grown, feeding off munitions lockers that compounded the size of the flames. She turned her attention forward to where a gray pile of rubble replaced the complex. Slabs of concrete, three times the size of their transport, stood upright as though they had dropped straight down from an upper floor. Seen from above, it seemed the center of the complex was the most concave part of the ruins. The shattered perimeter walls were the highest part of the building now, which made the complex look like an arena or coliseum. Two large excavators hovered just above the wreckage in the bottom of the pit, turning over broken sheets of concrete like pebbles.

As Jyra surveyed the damage, details emerged in the wreckage: a smashed wooden desk, a twisted elevator door, and even a door of bars. It reminded Jyra of one that used to contain Meriax in the Resistance base.

“Medical site,” Revo said with a nod. Jyra tore her eyes from the heaped remains and saw he was right. Several medical transports were grouped near the complex landing pad. By the time he saw them, Revo had to turn around in order to land within minimal proximity of the other ships. The one hundred and eighty degree turn directed the engine exhaust at the rubble, blowing a mass of gray dust into the air. As Revo placed the transport on the ground, the cloud billowed past the cockpit.

“Open the door now!” Jyra shouted into the hold. She heard the whine of hydraulic pumps lowering the ramp, followed by heavy coughing. She and Revo made their way to the others.

The acrid odor of cracked concrete filled Jyra’s nose.

“That stuff is foul,” Kip said, burying his face under his collar. As the door opened wider, thick clouds of dust swirled into the hold, settling on every surface and coating the newcomers.

“It’s not good to breathe, but it should help us all escape here breathing,” Jyra said. “We at least look like we belong. Leave your weapons. We’ll check the medical transports next to us first for the crate. If we don’t find a sealed one, meet back here. Let’s move before someone tries to greet us.”

Tony slid his machine gun under a bench but quickly untucked his shirt to let it conceal his revolver. Kip relinquished his short rifle and patted a pocket near his hip. Revo opened a storage compartment and pulled out two metallic cylinders. He slid them into his rear pockets and Jyra placed her pistol and holster with the other firearms.

“What did you grab?” Kip asked.

“Flash grenades,” Revo said. “Not going to kill enemies, but we won’t have time for anything grand like that, will we?”

“We’ll see,” Tony muttered.

“Revo’s right,” Jyra said, as they moved toward the exit. “You hear gunfire, get back here immediately. If you’re close enough to help one of us who’s attacking or being attacked, do it, but otherwise we need to get out fast. No point losing anyone on this mission.”

Their feet found familiar ground. The ruins of the complex towered to the left, the medical transports waited to the right. Moans and anguished cries mixed with the roar of small security crafts soaring overhead.

“That black ship,” Tony whispered, nodding at a small angular transport landing near what had been the main entrance of the complex. “That’s someone from Hospital leadership.”

They turned their backs on the new arrival and ducked behind the first medical transport.

“Revo and I will take this one,” Jyra said in a low voice. “You two move onto the next.”

For a moment, Jyra wished she had taken a couple earpieces from Berk, but it didn’t matter now. Any delay could cost lives. She and Revo approached the open cargo bay door. Jyra motioned for Revo to hang back as she had a sudden idea. She swallowed hard and stepped into view.

“Any sealed response crates on board?” she asked. Six individuals, all clad in tight white garments looked up and stared at her. Jyra realized there were three each working at one of two operating tables in the ship.

“Who are you?” one of the surgeons demanded from behind a mask. Jyra froze as the surgeons moved toward her. However much she assumed the dust would disguise her, it hadn’t worked. Revo suddenly grabbed her arm and pulled her to the ground. Jyra heard something clatter on the deck of the cargo bay.

“Attack now,” he said. Jyra barely moved to push herself up before a white glare blazed out of the cargo bay. The flash grenade hissed as it detonated, but the shrieks and shouts of surprise were loud enough. Jyra drew her dagger and leapt into the transport, stabbing the stunned surgeons as quickly as she could.

“Help me find the crate!” she shouted. The screams that filled the small operating area were sure to draw attention.

Revo began searching the perimeter of the cargo bay, but if the crate was as large as Yoke described, it wasn’t here. Jyra drew the dagger across the throat of the last struggling surgeon, reminding herself they were enemies. Revo swung a large cabinet door open as Jyra let the body fall from her grasp.

“Got it,” he said. He extracted a white crate that matched Yoke’s description. He stood back as Jyra moved to inspect it herself.

“Looks like the tape’s intact,” Jyra said. “Let’s go.”

Revo, however, was looking at the body on the operating table.

“What is it?” Jyra asked, still crouching by the crate.

“I remember this man from the base,” Revo said, his small eyes narrowing. “I saw him many times.”

Jyra hadn’t even glanced at either body undergoing surgery. She, too, stood up and looked at the man. His eyes were closed, but his head kept twitching to one side and then moving back. A mask with a tube attached sat askew on his face. He had multiple scratches and bruises on his chest and abdomen. Several incisions near his stomach had been recently stitched shut.

His round body and head reposed under a thinning crop of golden hair. Jyra glanced at a screen behind her on the wall and saw the patient name in a corner. Her knees gave way and she had to grab the table to stay upright as two revelations struck her simultaneously.

“Terrence Biggs,” she gasped. His daughter, Charis, had the exact same hair, though not as thin. This was a Resistance donor. It was the second memory, a memory so profound, it felt as though the past reached out and pulled her back to the moment she read the letter that said she was to be forced to work for Tyrorken Fuels. Terrence Biggs had signed that letter.

“He doesn’t have long,” a weak voice stuttered from the floor.

Jyra held her dagger before her and knelt next to the surgeon. She lay on her side, her breaths coming in quick gasps. Jyra had stabbed her in the chest. The surgeon was middle-aged and thin with unfocused gray eyes. Her mask had slipped off her face and dangled around her neck.

“Where was he found?” Jyra asked.

“The holding area of the complex,” the surgeon said. She coughed and a trickle of blood leaked from the corner of her mouth.

“The holding area on the sixth floor?” Jyra suggested and the surgeon nodded.

“Not sure how he survived the fall,” she said.

Jyra took a deep breath and felt the scar on the back of her dagger hand. A woman with a similar job as the one in front of her had made the cut with both cruelty and intention.

Terrence groaned and mumbled.

“We need to leave,” Revo said and Jyra heard him dragging the crate.

“You say he’s dying?” Jyra asked. The surgeon nodded again.

“Heavy internal bleeding.”

“Looks like you’ve worked on him,” Jyra said, nodding at the stitches. “I’ll save you some time. Maybe you can save yourself.”

She stood up and took her brother’s dagger, holding it above one of his old superiors, someone who, as far as Jyra was concerned, was responsible for his death. She drove the blade into Terrence’s chest and his eyes flew open, but he could only muster a soft grunt.

“This dagger belonged to my brother who died working for TF,” Jyra said through gritted teeth, staring into the wide, terrified eyes. “You don’t deserve such a merciful end. If I see them, I’ll pass the news of your death to your wife and daughter.”

The surgeon lowered her face. Jyra saw her disappointment as she pulled the dagger free and nodded at Revo. They lifted the crate out of the cargo hold and carried it as fast as they could to their transport. No one else was waiting for them in the hold.

“Fire it up,” Jyra told Revo. “I’ll look for the others.”

“Are you all right?” Revo said, his eyebrows elevated with skepticism. “What was that all about?”

“Everything I said was true,” Jyra replied. “If we make it out of here alive maybe I’ll tell you the whole story. Hurry.”

Jyra glanced toward the leadership craft as she descended the ramp and noticed the gathering of security crafts hovering above the rubble. They borrowed the design of the angular leadership transport; a sharp, pointed bow, long sweeping stabilizers at the stern, and bedecked in shiny black livery. The body of the craft itself seemed squat and bulky compared to the jutting extremities. Jyra paused, surveying the security fleet.

How were they supposed to get back to the bunker? Mere liftoff would attract hostile attention. For a moment, Jyra considered returning on foot, lugging the crate, but the forest was too far away. They would be spotted for sure.

Jyra glanced behind the other medical transports and still saw no sign of Kip or Tony. She returned to the cargo hold and retrieved her pistol.

“Hold off,” she called to Revo.

“What do you mean?” he replied from the cockpit.

“We can’t leave,” Jyra said. She joined him up front and pointed out the problem. “Look at all the security. They’ll lock onto us if we try to run.”

“What do we do?” Revo said.

“Stay here and guard the crate,” Jyra said. “I need to find the others and then we can come up with a plan.”

Jyra left the transport again, but this time she clutched her gun to her side. She checked the ship she and Revo robbed. The surgeons, including the one Jyra spoke to, were all motionless on the floor. Jyra saw one of Terrence’s hands hanging off the edge of the table. A thrill of rage rushed through her and she wanted nothing more than to be next to the dead man, emptying her pistol into him. The circumstances kept Jyra in place and she gripped the threshold of the ship.

She gave Terrence’s hand one last glare and moved on. She had to find the others, but the search was brief. She didn’t even make it to the second transport when Kip and Tony appeared behind it, heading toward their ship.

“No good,” Kip said.

“It’s fine, we got a crate,” Jyra said.

“Perfect,” Tony said, his glum expression vanishing at once.

“But if you notice what’s above us, you’ll see we can’t just fly out of here,” Jyra said.

The men glanced upward and Jyra saw a gulp travel down Kip’s throat.

“We need to go now,” Tony said, urgency reclaiming him instantly.

“Back to the ship,” Kip said. “We’ll figure something out.”

Jyra followed the others and observed another ship appear in the sky, dropping toward the rubble.

She hadn’t seen the body style before, a small shuttle, but she recognized the logo on the side of it immediately. Jyra would never forget the pair of oilrig towers that graced all TF property and paperwork.

“What are they doing here?” she muttered, pausing on the ramp. She felt Kip stop beside her.

“Tyrorken Fuels,” he read the name aloud on the side of the shuttle. “The first resistance you were in before fought against them, right?”

“I’m surprised you remember,” Jyra said. “Looks like they’re in league with the Hospitals.”

“Maybe we’ve been fighting a common enemy all along,” Kip said. He proceeded into the transport without another word.

Jyra knew she had to move. They had what they needed to save comrades at the bunker, but her boots were fused to the ramp. She watched the shuttle land next to the Hospital leadership transport. The distance made it hard to judge which parties belonged to TF and the Allied Hospitals, but Jyra witnessed plenty of handshaking and, to her outrage, the customary Tyrorken gesture of mourning.

She resisted the urge to sneak closer to the distant ship and instead walked to the top of the ramp. The three men were circled around a floor hatch, discussing methods to escape.

“We need a chaotic event,” Revo said. “Something to distract them.”

Berk and Leonick were able to sabotage tugs and make debris rain from space, Jyra thought. The trash ring seemed to be under control again, which meant they had to find other options to create a distraction.

“No ship-mounted guns on this?” Jyra said, knowing the answer, but hoping Revo would contradict her. He shook his head. Jyra leaned against the doorjamb, hand on her pistol, thinking hard. A faint crackle of static drew her attention and she ran to the medical transport she and Revo attacked.

“We are ready to transfer Biggs,” a voice said through a radio. “Please acknowledge and verify him prepped for release.”

Jyra scrambled into the cargo bay and grabbed the radio mic.

“He’s ready,” she said tersely, trying to mask her panic.

“Very good. On our way up now,” the unknown speaker replied.

Jyra crawled out of the transport, knees from shaking. She had invited a whole host of hostiles right on top of her grounded ship. She tried to reassure herself, certain that preserving radio silence would have brought the entire security contingent down upon them. They should have a smaller crowd coming their way at least.

Jyra returned to her transport, hoping to walk into an established plan. She made sure to close the door behind her. She wished the artillery at the battery still worked, but Berk and Leonick successfully decommissioned the site. Smoke rose in the distance and Jyra cast a glance at the rubble before the door closed.

“Everything all right?” Kip asked.

“Got a plan?” Jyra said.

Tony shook his head, staring at the floor, his eyes wide and forehead shining with sweat.

“Then it’s not all right,” Jyra said. “Revo mentioned chaos. That sounds like a good place to start.”

She joined the others in the circle, expecting a solution.

“Any of those security ships will catch up to us,” Kip said. “They’re already airborne.”

“So we need to ground them, right?” Jyra said, glancing at Revo.

“Of course,” he said. “If they land, we can outrun them, but how do you intend to manage that without heavy artillery?”

Jyra thought of the canon set up next to Mastranada. Was it even worth considering the idea?

“What are you thinking?” Kip said.

“We only retrieved bodies and files from the complex before it fell,” Jyra said. “I didn’t see anyone grab weapons.”

“You’re suggesting we search through two collapsed floors to get to artillery that may or may not work?” Kip said. “They may have been crushed or jammed with dust.”

“We have to get out of here,” Jyra said, trying to keep her voice level, but she heard the volume rising. “We have what Yoke needs, but we can’t lead the security fleet back to the bunker. No enemy follows us.”

“Why is the door closed?” Tony asked, as though he’d just noticed the oppressive darkness.

“I heard a radio transmission when I just checked on the transport next to us,” Jyra said, picking her words carefully. “The leadership is coming to collect one of the patients. I figured a small barrier between us and them would be useful.”

“The patient must be an agent for Tyrorken Fuels,” Kip said. “The Hospitals are trading the agent for something else.”

“We don’t know that. Even if we did, it doesn’t help us escape!” Jyra said. She was already lying to the others. She could feel Revo’s gaze. He knew Jyra omitted information about killing Terrence.

“We can leave through the belly,” Tony said, looking at the hatch at his feet. “Make a quick search of the rubble and return. It’s probably best we aren’t here if leadership is so close. High profile guards with them shoot to kill.”

Kip shrugged and shook his head.

“I don’t like it but there’s no other way.”

They did their best to conceal their weapons once they crawled from beneath the ship. Kip and Tony strapped the large guns to their backs. They crossed the barren patch of dirt between their transport and the rubble. Just as they began stepping over and around chunks of concrete, five security ships overhead roared to life. They swooped toward them and Jyra nearly pulled her pistol, an ineffective weapon against security craft, but enough of a provocation to encourage a fiery rebuke.

“Just keep walking!” Jyra shouted, recovering herself. “If they thought we were enemies, we’d already be dead!”

The security ships landed near the field team transport. Their engines blew another wave of dust off the rubble that enveloped the resistance team. Jyra coughed as the cloud penetrated her mouth and nostrils, seeming to soak up all the moisture in her lungs. She stumbled and fell, but her arms caught her against a great slab. They reached the edge of the fallen complex. Jyra realized the security ships were likely responding to the slaughtered surgeons and felt her fear ease.

Under the cover of the swirling dust cloud they scurried upward, hands and feet slipping on loose blocks of concrete. Though most were pinned in place by others in the pile, some slabs were loose and they slid or rocked, threatening to crush or trap those who climbed upon them.

Despite the hazards, Jyra made it to the top of the rubble along with the rest of the company. They moved toward the concave center, keeping an eye on the security crafts above them. Allied Hospital agents were already digging through the rubble below them with the excavators at their side.

“Fifty or sixty workers at least,” Tony muttered as they picked their way over the uneven ground, trying to dodge twisted rebar and tangled wire. “They’re spread out, but the smaller units are still impossible to pick off.”

“We’ll either have to surprise them, or act like we’re part of their crew,” Jyra said.

“Surprise won’t work,” Tony said. “We can’t stay hidden for long.”

Jyra knew he was right, which meant she was going to have to engage. She only hoped the dust covering her outfit made a sufficient disguise.

“Look,” Kip said, pointing. “Two square shafts. Those were the stairwells at either end of the hallway.”

Though shattered and collapsed with the rest of the building, the square hollow columns for stairs between floors were easy to see amid the sea of gray and white debris.

“Head for them, then,” Jyra said. “Weapons will be near there.”

One of the excavators, accompanied by a ground crew, also happened to be in the same area. As they got closer, Jyra realized they were likely working right over the hallway of bloodshed. It was hard to know just by looking at the debris which floor the crew was currently excavating. Kip pointed to the far stairwell and Jyra saw the black scorch marks.

“Laser cannon,” she said and Kip nodded.

At that moment, a member of the ground team spotted the new arrivals, or at least decided to hail them and began hopping from slab to slab, coming their way.

“Who are we?” Revo whispered quickly.

“We were sent here to help with rescue and recovery or in any way we can,” Jyra replied. “No need to overcomplicate this.”

“More hands?” the worker asked. The hope in his voice seemed incongruous with his weary expression and bent, defeated posture.

“Indeed,” Jyra said. “We’re here to help.”

“Excellent,” the man said. “You can call me Stries. Sensors indicate we’re about to uncover some bodies buried in the collapse. No idea if any of them are alive, but until we find them, we won’t know. Follow me.”

They had no choice but to fall in step behind Stries as he led them toward the thrumming excavators. He was a head taller than Jyra, but it was hard to discern much more of his appearance. Gray dust covered him from his battered work boots to his flimsy brimmed hat.

Once they were right up next to the excavator, it was hard to talk over the deep hum of the engine. Shafts of light penetrated the rubble near the machine and, with a jolt of excitement, Jyra saw a familiar hallway through the gaps in the tumbled debris. She thought she could see bodies below, but she tried to focus instead on any shapes that might be a laser canon.

“This is what we’ve got!” Stries hollered, pointing at a slab that lay flat across two others leaning toward each other. “We’re going to lift the top piece and hope the two below it stay put. If they do, we’ll have a way into the corridor below and can start recovering bodies. Stand back.”

He gestured to the excavator operator and the boom swung over the target slab.

“Kip,” Jyra hissed, struggling to be heard and discrete at the same time. He nodded without looking at her.

“There’s an opening to the right of my feet,” Jyra said. “I’ll go down there and if I find the weapon, I’ll pass it up to you through that hole. Keep an eye out.”

Kip nodded again.

The excavator claw seized the slab and lifted. The slabs beneath began to cave, but the far upper corners of each collided before the nearer ones met, leaving a narrow opening.

“Not ideal,” Stries said.

The excavator soared to another potential rescue site nearby. Stries waved his team forward.

“Anyone want to slip through there?” Stries asked. Jyra saw trepidation on every face of the team, so she took the opportunity.

“I’ll go first,” she said.

“Careful,” Stries said.

Jyra stepped cautiously to the edge of the access point. She felt the vibration beneath her feet; the slabs were still settling.

“Let me get a rope,” Stries said after glancing at the distance of the drop to the floor.

“It’s all right,” Jyra said.

Stries gave her a searching stare. Normally, Jyra would have held onto the edge of the opening and lowered herself down, but the perilous nature of the slabs combined with the scrutinizing gaze of an enemy forced her to step forward and tuck her elbows against her sides. She dropped and landed in a crouch.

Dust swirled in the rays of sunlight, teased by sporadic breezes that penetrated the rubble. Despite the occasional break of illumination, darkness dominated the hallway. Jyra moved carefully in the gloom. The bodies, like everything here, were covered in dust. Jyra kicked her boots through the debris, but time after time, they hit only concrete or splintered wood.

Another kick, and she heard a metallic thud. She plunged her hand into the dust, heart pounding, and recovered a laser canon. She smiled in the dark, knowing they still had obstacles between them and the bunker, but now they had a chance to clear such barriers.

She moved under the opening she mentioned to Kip and grasped the end of the weapon, about to extend the butt into view, but she paused at the sound of Stries’ voice.

“You’ve got your badges, right?” he asked. “Almost forgot to check.”

Jyra swore she could hear the gritty dust grind under Kip’s feet with a nervous pivot. She peered upward and wished she hadn’t seen Kip patting his vest and the pockets of his trousers.

“I…I think we left them behind,” Kip muttered.

“All of you?” Stries said. “No identification?”

Jyra couldn’t see his face, but she felt the weight of his skepticism. It was as though he cocked a gun before the others. Jyra also realized Stries could seal her in a tomb of shattered concrete with a single command.

She froze, unable to tell if adrenaline or panic spread through her. She strode back to the entry point, knowing she only had one option. She picked a target and aimed, certain there was no other way.

As long as the ship gets clear passage back to the bunker, Jyra thought as she shouldered the laser canon. The sight light flashed green and she pulled the trigger, bracing for the recoil. She didn’t wait to see what happened, but leapt toward daylight, desperate to escape the ruined hallway. She cleared the slabs a familiar sensation coursing beneath her skin. An explosion overhead brought everyone’s attention skyward. Shrieks of grinding metal and the remains of a security craft plunged around them.

“Run!” Jyra shouted. “Get back to the transport!”

Stries pulled a handgun from under his jacket, but Kip grabbed him around the neck. Tony and Revo seized their weapons and fired on the assembled Hospital team as they fumbled to defend themselves.

“Run now!” Jyra shouted, lunging back they way they came. The detritus of the ruined security craft rained upon the rubble, battering an excavator to the ground. Most of Stries’ team disappeared under a sheet of loose engine cowl. Kip pushed Stries away and shot him before fleeing.

The tight assembly of the security ships proved useful; the explosion of the craft Jyra hit crippled three others. They plummeted into the rubble sending up clouds of dust large enough to remind Jyra of the sandstorms on Tyrorken.

They ran, but Jyra lagged behind as she kept an eye overhead. Any one of the security ships could open fire. If she kept all the threats in sight, she could attack before they could. Three-quarters of the way back, the barrage began. Streams of bullets sprayed around them and everyone took shelter in the rubble. The ship-mounted machine guns were powerful, but the ammo couldn’t penetrate the thick concrete.

“Hold position!” Jyra said. She aimed at the attacking ships, which dropped below the rest of the hovering craft and glided toward her. Before she pulled the trigger, she noticed the other security forces idling above and targeted one of them instead. The laser canon tore a hole in the stern and the craft spun into one of its neighbors. Both ships fell, one almost landing on top of Jyra but she was already running.

“Go, go!” she yelled.

Tony and Revo led the way across the ruins. They heard the whine of enemy craft engines and fell behind a slab for cover. The five security ships that landed around their transport rose into view, firing round after round. Revo jerked sideways as a bullet grazed his arm.

Jyra listened to the thunder of guns and heard as one stopped and then another. She checked behind her; the pursuing ships hadn’t made it through the dust yet. The attacking ships sat before her, defenseless as they reloaded. Jyra fired three times and two crafts fell immediately.

“Nearly there!” she shouted. “Keep going!”

The fallen ships sent up another cloud of dust on impact, creating more cover as the Resistance retreated from the advancing regiment. Jyra reached the edge of the rubble and started climbing down as fast as she could, clutching the laser canon. They all reached the ground and ran behind one of the fallen security crafts. Flames fed on the remains of the engine and kept Jyra and the others at a distance from their shelter.

Only two hundred feet away separated them from their transport, but two ground security teams moved in, trapping them where they stood. The guards wore black armor, matching the aesthetic of their crafts. Patches of dust rose under each foot as they advanced.

One team came from behind the medical ships and another crept along the edge of the rubble. The chatter from the radios sounded chaotic, but Jyra heard one phrase repeated in a screeching tone.

“Land all security ships now!”

The whine of multiple engines overhead filled the air as the order took effect. Three ships landed to the right of Jyra. The security team marching next to the rubble came from her left.

“Take cover and cover me,” Jyra said.

“What do you mean?” Kip said.

“Cover me from the team by our ship,” Jyra said. They were running out of time. She ran into the open near the bow of their burning shield. Out of the corner of her eye, she saw the security team near the medical area aim at her, but she focused on the approaching enemy next to the rubble. She wrapped her arms around the laser cannon again and heard gunfire from her comrades. Jyra pulled the trigger and allowed the recoil to knock her to the ground. The laser struck a slab above the security team. Chunks of concrete both bigger than Jyra and smaller than her thumbnail blew in all directions. A large one struck the burning craft, causing it to lurch sideways and nearly pin Kip under its scorching carcass. An avalanche of other slabs buried the nearby team before they could raise a weapon.

The concrete shrapnel even hit the members of the other security team.

“Go!” Jyra shouted, struggling to get back to her feet. “Revo, grenade to me!” she added.

He tossed the explosive to her as he sprinted toward the remaining team with the others, firing their guns. Jyra felt the strength prickling in her muscles as she caught the weapon. She bit the pin, pulled the grenade free, and heaved it toward the security team. She drew the pistol out of her holster and opened fire as she ran for the transport. Three new security teams appeared from the crafts that landed nearby.

Tony reached the transport first as the grenade detonated in the middle of the nearby security team. He pushed his back against the hull, firing repeatedly as the guards screamed following the flash of the grenade. Tony gestured at Revo to get under the ship as he approached and the pilot disappeared. Jyra fired defensively and saw Kip behind Tony, beckoning her onward. He shot two security members targeting Jyra. She reached them and Kip ducked out of sight. Jyra felt the ship vibrating; it must be ready to fly.

“Time to go!” Jyra shouted.

“Get under there then!” Tony said, emptying his gun into the advancing team. Jyra dropped to the ground and crawled forward. She threw her weapons through the hatch and looked back before pulling herself inside. She paused, suddenly aware of the bullets striking the ship.

“Come on!” Kip shouted. She glanced above her and saw him kneeling down and seizing her arms. She ducked quickly and saw the silhouette of a body lying next to the ship, bullets ripping through the flesh and clothing. The bandaged arms and the sleeveless shirt could belong to no one else.

“Where’s Tony?” Kip asked. Jyra could only shake her head as she watched, unable to speak or act.

“Go!” Kip shouted at the cockpit.

Jyra felt him and the transport lift her up. She collapsed on the floor and saw the laser canon. Kip made to close the hatch.

“Wait,” Jyra said. As wind howled through the opening and bullets peppered the belly of the ship, Jyra slid to the hatch and released a final shot from the laser canon. The onslaught of bullets ceased as the security team disappeared in a cloud of dust and fire. The advancing teams retreated. Jyra lay back on the floor, sliding the canon away from her as Kip sealed the hatch. The roar of wind vanished.

“Where do I go?” Revo called from the cockpit. “None of the security ships are in the air, but they will be soon.”

Jyra stood up and followed Kip up front, struggling to keep her mind on task. They were still far from safety.

“Go back the way we came,” Jyra said, hoping she only sounded exhausted. “The long route you took. I guess we’ll see if anyone follows.”

Revo rotated the ship to point north, rubbing the bleeding cut on his arm.

“They’ll have to be quick,” he said. “Hang on.”

The pitch of the whining engine increased behind them. Revo leaned back in his seat and Jyra moved to the bulkhead, grabbing the edge of the door and flattened her back against the wall.

Revo squeezed an interlock button and pulled a lever toward him. The engine screamed and the ship jerked with immediate forward thrust. The ground below turned into a blur. They flew through the smoke rising from the ruined battery, but Jyra only saw it for a moment.

The rapid flight ended almost as soon as it began. The ship slowed over a distant forest. Revo dropped quickly toward the trees and flew as close as he dared to the canopy. He glanced back at his passengers.

“Didn’t know this had a slingshot drive? Standard on field team vessels,” he grinned through the gray dust, but the smile fell in seconds. “Where’s Tony?”

“He didn’t make it,” Kip said.

“What, how?” Revo said. “He was the first one to get back.”

“And he covered us,” Jyra said. “They got him.” She had to pause as her throat tightened around the words. “I’m sure they hit him as he was about to crawl for the hatch. I saw the bullets.” She paused again and returned to the hold, eyeing the white crate in the corner.

“We’ll be back soon,” Revo said in a hollow voice. “Hope the crate has everything Yoke needs.”

Part XXXIV: Reawaken

Thousands of questions clogged Jyra’s mind, but none reached her lips. A combination of relief and anxiety paralyzed her. Eyes wide and mouth slack with disbelief, Jyra emerged from the trance and approached the window. Barlen tipped his helmet like a cap.
“What happened here?” he asked.
His inquiry reinstated the fraught reality around Jyra faster than trash plunging to the ground outside.
“I’m so happy to see you,” she croaked, speaking past Barlen directly to Berk.
“Wish I could say the same,” Berk scoffed, his eyebrows disappearing into his long hair that billowed across his face in the breeze. “I’d say you’re filthy, but I hate to state the obvious.”
He prepared to squeeze through the window, but the lighthearted moment disappeared with a shout.
“Don’t move!”
Jyra turned and saw Kip edging into the room, rifle aimed at Berk. Kip was covered in white dust; clouds of it shook loose with every step.
“Hold on!” Jyra said, raising an arm. “It’s fine. He’s a friend. Barlen is with him.”
Kip fixed her with a suspicious glare. Jyra immediately recognized the disconnect. From the back of the room, Kip saw only the black windows of the complex. He couldn’t tell the difference between the shadowed hull of Mastranada from the darkness of night. That meant, from his perspective, an enormous man was struggling to pull himself through a shattered fourth-floor window toward Jyra while holding a shotgun.
“Step back for a moment,” Jyra told Berk.
“Why?” Berk asked. “His friend is right here!”
Thankfully, Berk gestured behind him and the white light of the cargo bay spilled into the room and spoiled the troubling illusion. Barlen slipped past Berk and crawled into the room. Kip had shielded his eyes against the light and now saw what was before him. He lowered his rifle.
“Sorry,” he grunted. “Why aren’t you back at the ship?” he asked Barlen.
Barlen seemed taken aback by the snappy tone, but he understood Kip had been given quite a turn.
“Two fellows came knocking on the ship door,” Barlen said. “They wanted to know where Jyra was.”
A sharp cry of pain came from the hallway. Jyra suddenly remembered the wounded, the dying, the mission.
“We have to move,” Jyra said. “We’re still vulnerable. Injuries need to be addressed.”
“And we have files to deal with,” Kip added.
“Who is with you?” Jyra asked, turning to Berk, hope filling her voice.
“Leonick and I ran with Mastranada,” Berk said. “A story for later, I think. What needs to be done to get out of here?”
“Get all the wounded back to where you met Barlen,” Jyra said. “Once we do that, there’s a room full of files we need to take.”
“Show me,” Berk grunted.
Kip gave Jyra such a glare she had to say something to reassure him as she led Berk toward the hall.
“Berk is from another resistance I served,” Jyra said. “Berk this is Kip, leader of this mission.”
“Well enough,” Berk said, glancing down at Kip. “Better introductions when we’re in better circumstances.”
Kip gave a stiff nod in reply and made to follow Berk toward the office door.
“The wounded are on the other side of the wall?” Berk asked.
“Yes,” Jyra said. “The door’s over here.”
“Hold on,” Berk said.
Jyra stepped back and Kip jumped as Berk shoved his fists into the drywall, the sharp crack filling the subdued surroundings. He pulled hard, snapping two studs free that trailed broken bits of the finished wall. Berk tossed the mess aside, opening a direct path between the hall and the ship.
The lights from Mastranada’s cargo bay revealed the dust sinking from the cracks in the ceiling. Members of the platoon stirred from the sound of Berk ripping open the wall and the burst of illumination. Jyra proceeded into the hall. Kip followed behind. Berk and Barlen checked the other end of the hall.
“Who’s hurt?” Jyra asked gently. “Who can hear me? There’s a ship to get us out of here. It’s just outside the window.”
Hands, gloved or bare, dusted or bloodied reached toward her. Kip checked on those who managed to stand, relying on walls for support.
Jyra waded though the carnage, stepping with care around stationary bodies. The office with the files was on her right, which meant she was nearly to the front. The fallen laser canon rested in the middle of the corridor. The soldier who fired it lay facedown, his head ringed in a patch of blood. Jyra paused, willing herself to speak, but the words wouldn’t come.
The bodies here were still. Bullet shells littered the floor along with dust and concrete chippings.
“Anyone?” Jyra managed to whisper. The acrid stench of smoke and powder blended with the overwhelming scent of blood, burned clothing, and flesh. Jyra had to turn away to draw breath. This place was no longer for the living.
An arm rose against the wall. The dust hid the usual gleam of her hair, but Jyra suddenly recognized Meriax.
“Need some help,” she said.
Jyra knelt quickly, trying to keep her priorities in check. Meriax needed her assistance above all else.
“Where?” Jyra asked.
“Leg and shoulder,” Meriax grunted. In the shadows, Jyra saw the blood beneath the curled ends of her friend’s hair near her clavicle. Meriax clutched her thigh.
“We’ll get you out of here,” Jyra said. She looked down the hallway, trying to ignore a severed arm by her knee.
She heard Berk’s gruff voice as he said something to Kip in passing while he carried two bodies toward Mastranada. Jyra couldn’t see their expressions, but it didn’t matter right now.
“Can I help you stand?” she asked.
“Let’s see,” Meriax replied, holding out her free hand. Jyra caught a glimpse of smeared blood on the floor as a flashlight pivoted behind her. She extended her arm and grabbed hold of Meriax. Their eyes met and they both stood at once. Meriax staggered forward and they proceeded down the passage.
“The light?” Meriax asked.
“A ship,” Jyra said. “Some old friends of mine. I don’t know how they found me.”
“Good friends,” Meriax said, gritting her teeth as the wound in her leg spasmed.
They reached Berk’s hole in the wall and Jyra guided them toward the waiting cargo bay. As they came to the window, Berk appeared inside the ship and helped lift Meriax to safety. Jyra glanced past him. The bay was empty.
“Where is everyone?” she asked.
“Quarters and corridors,” Berk answered, supporting Meriax as though she were a length of rope. “The engine room’s the morgue.”
Jyra gave a stiff nod. Berk glanced at the floor, uncharacteristically considering what he was about to say.
“I suspect we’ll have room for those files,” he growled before escorting Meriax toward the corridor beyond the cargo bay.
For a moment, Jyra wanted only to gather the living and fallen into Mastranada and fly away. But the dead had given their lives for the files. Jyra raced back to the hall. Kip continued to rouse soldiers and field team members. More than seemed conceivable remained motionless on the floor.
Suddenly, the door behind Kip fell open. No one in the hall had time for defensive action, but they had no need to seek cover. Tony and several perimeter guards stepped out of the stairwell, still filled with smoke from Kip’s grenade.
“A ship!” he said, recognizing Kip at once.
“It’s fine,” Kip said, but Jyra didn’t miss the chill in his voice. “They’re helping. How’s the ground?”
“All clear,” Tony said. “The security forces below all came to you it seems.”
His face fell as he surveyed the carnage before him.
“We need to hurry,” Tony gasped, tearing his eyes form the floor. “More trash is coming down and large cracks have opened in the building.”
“Hurry is right,” Jyra said. “Get the remainder of the perimeter guard up here. We need to load the files into the ship and leave as soon as we can.”
She caught Tony’s quizzical look when she mentioned loading files, but he recovered before she did.
“The rest are positioned below,” he said. “I’ll retrieve them. The rest of you—” he added to his team—“get the wounded on that ship.”
With the perimeter guard joining the cause, the work of loading the dead and injured onto Mastranada took only three or four trips. Berk was right. After everyone was aboard, the cargo bay remained available for the files. Jyra, Kip, Berk, Tony, his team, and the few sound soldiers seized armloads of files at a time. Shelf after shelf emptied with each trip.
As Tony and Kip dug into the files of the last shelf, Jyra saw Berk pause in the doorway. His eyes narrowed as though in deep thought.
He strode forward and looked at Jyra. By that time, the shelf was half empty.
“Leonick says bits of the building are falling on the cockpit,” he said. “Time to call it.”
Jyra grabbed as many files as she could wrap her arms around.
“Leave none,” she commanded.
Berk crushed as many together between his hands as possible.
Kip and Tony reappeared in the doorway.
“Get them!” Jyra roared. “All the files, the building’s about to come down!”
The two men rushed forward as Berk and Jyra moved toward the door, clutching their burdens.
Kip and Tony gathered the last of the files. They all sprinted toward the dark hallway. The patter of the falling ceiling grew louder as the fines grew larger, bouncing off the floor like grenades. Jyra turned toward the light, dodging a chunk of plunging concrete the size of her head. The men behind her all bowed forward as they ran, certain they would collide with the building buckling around them.
Jyra leapt, gliding through the window. The familiar floor appeared below her and she automatically released the files from her grasp. Her shoulder struck first and she kicked her legs to redirect her weight, hoping to soften the impact as she skidded to a halt. Jyra scrambled toward the cargo bay door. Berk sailed past her, Kip clinging to his leg, barely pinning his load of files against his chest. Jyra only saw Tony, bits of the shattered ceiling raining around him.
“Throw them!”Jyra bellowed.
A white mass soared through the window. The stack of files held together until they hit the floor of the cargo bay. Jyra seized the edge of the door with one hand and threw herself toward Tony who dived at her. The tumbling debris pummeled him and Jyra heard Berk yelling behind her. First, she felt a palm on hers and locked her fingers around Tony’s. Then she realized the floor beneath her shifted. Mastranada tilted away from the complex. Berk appeared next to Jyra and, seeming to exert the effort of lifting a pillow, pulled Tony inside. She caught sight of Kip shoving the scattered files away from the yawning door. Almost out of habit, she slid sideways and slammed her fist on the button. They watched the sixth floor collapse onto the fifth floor as the closing door obscured the final demise of the complex. For a moment, all Jyra heard was her own breath.
Kip remained on the floor, surrounded by the white files. Berk began gathering them as best he could. Tony remained sitting next to the wall near the cargo door. Jyra knelt beside him. Blood oozed from several cuts on his scalp and forehead. His sleeves were torn and Jyra saw wounds on his arms.
“Weren’t much to look at anyway,” Tony grunted.
“We’ll get you patched up,” Jyra said.
As she spoke, Barlen appeared with a small medical kit. He knelt down and began cutting back Tony’s sleeves, exposing the wounds and the copious shiny burns on his arms.
“This is going to sting,” Barlen said, and began spraying the cuts with disinfectant.
“You’ve got him?” Jyra asked and Barlen nodded. He began unrolling a strip of medical tape, while tearing open gauze pads.
“Thanks for your part,” Jyra added to Tony. “You outdid yourself.”
“Had to complete the mission,” Tony said. “What ship is this? Not one of ours.”
“No,” Jyra said. How had Berk and Leonick located her? What happened to Craig and the rest of the TF resistance?
Jyra wanted the answers, but as she watched Barlen help Tony, she thought of the unknown number of fallen comrades. She got to her feet, preparing to ask Berk how many dead bodies he put on board, but he spoke before her.
“We’re all here,” he said. “Head back to the ships.”
Jyra felt Mastranada shift around her and accelerate. Berk looked over his shoulder and saw Jyra watching him.
“Where are these headed?” Berk asked. “I don’t think we have any crates on board. Maybe just stack them for now?”
Jyra couldn’t help admiring Berk’s commitment to the mission he joined twenty minutes ago. Simultaneously, the weight of the dead threatened to overwhelm her and she let her curiosity steer the conversation away from misery.
“How did you find me?” she asked.
Berk pulled back his hair and revealed a familiar earpiece. The TF resistance used them during the mission to rescue Derek.
“These put out quite a strong signal,” Berk said. “I’m guessing you haven’t spent any of your share of the Orasten bounty.”
Kip had taken over trying to organize the files on the floor and he glanced at Berk for a moment, then shrugged and returned to his work.
“Leonick put an earpiece in the box with the cash,” Jyra said.
“You weren’t on Silanpre long before we lost track of it, though,” Berk said.
“It’s the mist around the base,” Jyra said. “It interferes with most transmitting signals.”
“Too much to tell right now, but when we departed from Craig and company, we parked in the trash belt, waiting to see the earpiece cast again,” Berk said. “When it showed up tonight we took out a couple of the trash tugs.”
“That was you?” Jyra interrupted. Berk shot her a skeptical look.
“Who do you think we are?” he said. “I don’t need an excuse to harm the Allied Hospitals. We were coming for you and we figured chaos would be our ally. So we made it rain steel.”
Mastranada rotated again and began to descend.
“Seems we’re back,” Berk said. “To be continued.”
He walked back to the cargo door and pressed the button. By the time it slid fully ajar, the bunker courtyard stretched before them and they settled with a thud onto the stones.
“I should relieve Yoke,” Jyra said. “No doubt he’s needed here.”
“I’ll go with you,” Kip said quickly.
“Sure,” Jyra said, but she paused.
“Berk, can you call Leonick?” she asked. He nodded.
“Nice flying. Come down to the cargo bay to say hello to an old friend. Watch your step in the corridor.”
Soldiers and members of field teams staggered into the cargo bay, making for the door. Part of Jyra wanted to turn away from their faces, those who limped or bore obvious injuries, but she forced herself to acknowledge them, holding what she hoped was a steady, reassuring gaze.
She helped the wounded out of the ship. Mastranada’s landing lights swamped the courtyard; it was easily the biggest ship there.
Leonick appeared in the doorway and Jyra walked toward him. His dark blond hair and copper skin gleamed under the lights of the cargo bay. She pulled him into a brief hug and broke away, unable to stop smiling.
“Thanks for the help,” Jyra said. “It’s so good to see you.”
“You are welcome,” Leonick said in his usual soft voice. “It seems we arrived at an advantageous time.”
“The entire mission would have failed without you,” Jyra said. “And who knows where I would be without you in the first place?”
Leonick only smiled and directed his attention to his toes, gently shaking his head.
“I could not say,” he said. “You are here and so am I.”
“Fair enough,” Jyra said. “We’ll talk more soon,” she added, noticing Kip waiting by the door. He seemed quite keen to leave.
They jumped free of Mastranada together and strode toward their ship. Kip said nothing and kept his eyes forward.
“What’s wrong?” Jyra said. Kip gave no indication he heard her. Jyra realized how desperate she was to check on Serana, especially when she planted her feet. Her pause at least made Kip turn around.
“What’s wrong?” she repeated. He shrugged.
“Where to start?” Kip said. His voice sounded hollow and strangled.
Jyra suppressed the urge to yell “so start!” but she held her stare.
Kip gripped his rifle and glanced at the ground. His hair lit up as stars appeared between the clouds. When he raised his face, Jyra saw a pained smile.
“I didn’t think we would lose so many,” he said.
“But we got the files,” Jyra said. “Their loss was not in vain. We achieved the goal of the mission.”
A grimace still twisted Kip’s face.
“It’s my old friends,” she suggested. Kip hesitated before he spoke.
“They saved us,” he said. The strain and delay of his delivery told Jyra all she needed to know.
“They did,” Jyra said. “I want to know why you’re taking that so hard, but I need to see Serana right now. Congratulations on the successful mission.”
“I thought we were leading this together,” Kip cut across her.
“What?”
“You introduced me as leader of the mission,” Kip said. “You led it, too. You finished it.”
Jyra couldn’t wait any longer.
“Tell me that isn’t your chief problem right now,” she said, stalking past him. Kip remained where he was as Jyra climbed into the transport.
She was about to knock on the door to the medical room, but she caught sight of her duffel. Jyra lowered her fist, then her body, and unzipped the bag.
The box wasn’t hard to find; it always sank through the clothes. Jyra hastily pulled it out and dug through the crisp bundles of cash. She had to pull some stacks free to make enough room. Eventually her fingers found the bottom of the box and then the small earpiece. She extracted it and slipped it into her pocket. She reloaded the box and replaced it in her duffel. Then she knocked.
“It’s me, Jyra,” she said.
Yoke opened the door and breathed a sigh of relief.
“That…large man says you know him?” he said.
“I do,” Jyra said, squeezing past Yoke into the cramped room. “I hope Berk introduced himself.”
“I think he thought you were her,” Yoke said. “He saw Serana and his eyes bulged.”
“He’s quite harmless, unless you cross him,” Jyra said.
“Fair warning,” Yoke said.
“How’s she doing?” Jyra asked.
“She’s opened her eyes a couple times,” Yoke said. “No sign of true consciousness yet. Cog readout suggests she might wake up within in the hour.”
“Thank you for looking after her,” Jyra said. Yoke nodded. Jyra turned to leave, but saw Yoke giving her a beseeching stare. Her vacant expression prompted him to ask.
“What happened? Good mission? Anyone hurt?”
Shame fell in an instant. The moment Yoke said Serana was all right, she should have acted.
“We got the files, all of them,” Jyra said. “If Serana is stable enough, I’m sure you can be of use in my friends’ ship.”
Jyra faltered, unsure of what to say. She didn’t know how many were dead or wounded.
“You can stay here with her,” Yoke said. “Should just be a matter of time, like I said.”
Yoke grabbed several medical kits and stowed them under his arm as he slipped toward the door.
“How many?” he asked.
“I don’t know,” Jyra said. “We took heavy losses.”
“You know where to find me,” Yoke said, nodding toward Serana.
He left the room and Jyra sat on the short stool next to the bed. She gazed at Serana, willing her eyes to open.
“Did you know about the spies in the base?” Jyra whispered. “Did you know how harmful they became?”
Serana stirred, shifting her shoulders and letting a small sigh escape her lips. But her eyes remained closed.
Once again, Jyra privately chastised herself. Common decency and sensitivity seemed to have abandoned her, along with the ability to prioritize. Failing to get Yoke to Mastranada immediately and now pressing an unconscious woman for answers.
Scenes of the mission paraded across her mind, like turning pages in a book. She saw the debris falling from space. Knowing that Leonick and Berk had precipitated the downpour, Jyra suddenly connected the next memory to them, too. Mastranada had bombed the battery. The ship had never had a proper cannon aboard, just a couple incendiary mounts on its belly; it could only attack from above.
She thought of Meriax, hoping she was receiving the care she needed. Serana sighed again and Jyra felt torn between the two women, wishing she could hold both of them close. For now, her thoughts were her only company. Jyra tried again to think if she had ever said something, anything, to Meriax that would indicate she assumed they were after digital files. Even now, Jyra felt the unexpected, visceral tug, like a vast hook catching her hips midstride, the shock of seeing the shelves of files.
If she wasn’t certain Meriax was on their side, Jyra saw how a hostile captive could have set such a trap. Had that been the case, the entire mission would likely have been swallowed in the collapsing building.
Next, Jyra recalled her first morning on Silanpre when she threw a pebble and watched it soar in the fractionally more forgiving gravity. She saw Tony leap toward her, surrounded by the disintegrating complex. If they had been on Tyrorken or Drometica, the stronger gravity would have captured him far from Jyra’s outstretched hand.
Jyra shuddered and pushed the thought away. She took a deep breath, but became only more irritated as her mind returned to Kip. He wasn’t himself and trying to guess why was as tantalizing as it was frustrating.
His surprise about the mission casualties bore truth; Jyra felt the same. She wasn’t sure what to expect hiking toward the complex, but the absence of significant obstacles outside the building boosted her confidence. The surprise attack from the security team was all it took to decimate their forces.
We didn’t need that many people, Jyra thought suddenly. She wondered if Meriax knew and before she realized it, she stood up, suspecting Meriax meant to destroy as much of the resistance as possible.
She caught sight of her arm, stretched for the door handle. The scar on the back of her hand leapt into focus, brilliant white in the bright light.
“Careful,” she muttered aloud, addressing both her thoughts and the scar. She sat down again, deciding she and Kip could use some space from each other.
She looked at Serana and Serana looked back.
“What’s happened? Happening?” she asked vaguely.
“I’m glad to see you. How do you feel?” Jyra said, struck by the number of those killed on the mission Serana must know. Her throat constricted and refused to relax.
“What’s the matter?” Serana said, ignoring Jyra’s question. Her voice was already regaining strength. “You’re covered in dust.”
“Nothing,” Jyra said, hastily standing to adjust the pillow to hide her slipping composure.
“I’m comfy,” Serana interjected. “My mom used to fuss with my bedding when she was upset, too. Why are we in a transport?”
“The donors went on a rampage,” Jyra said.
“Dad?” Serana said into the silence. Jyra couldn’t speak, which answered the question.
“They got Hayes, too,” she finally managed to gulp, leaning forward in the chair pushing her hair back from her forehead. “I’m sorry.”
Serana gave a stiff nod, staring resolutely at the ceiling.
“Thanks for getting me out of there,” Serana croaked after a long silence. “Where are we now?”
Even in times of crisis and sadness, basic questions of fact were easy to ask and to answer.
“The bunker where you were injured.”
“Pleasant memories,” Serana said with a pained smile.
“We got everything out of your locker,” Jyra said. “It’s all on board.”
“Why are we at the bunker?”
Jyra explained what happened in the base, how they escaped, and recruited the field teams to their cause.
“You were going to hack a database of hospital spies in the resistance base?” Serana said.
“We were,” Jyra said. “Turns out the database was physical files, but we got them.”
“How did you discover the database?”
“A guess at first and then Meriax confirmed it,” Jyra said, wishing she could downplay Meriax’s involvement.
“You trusted the spy we arrested?” Serana said, pushing herself up on her elbows.
“That was an exercise,” Jyra said.
“She was an active hostile,” Serana said.
“Allowed to work in the base like the other spies,” Jyra said. “How long have you known about them? Why were they allowed to subvert the resistance?”
Serana sank against her pillow, the effort of contemplating the questions seemed to deflate her.
In the silence, shouts rose from outside.
“What’s that?” Serana asked.
“Stay here,” Jyra said. She opened the door and ran out of the cargo bay. Soldiers in front of the bunker pointed toward the sky. A large flat object was spinning out of the darkness, glowing with heat from reentry, and gliding directly toward the ships parked in the courtyard.