The Mastranada
launch thrusters blew snow off the ledge outside the resistance cave as the
ship touched down. Jyra and Berk made their way to the cargo bay where they
discovered the pod had skidded into the door. A rope, one end still lashed around a
steel wall stud, lay tangled on the floor.
“Glad I didn’t have to climb back up,” Berk said, nodding at
his wound. He untied the rope, coiled it properly, and threw it into a battered
supply crate that was bolted in place. Jyra headed for the cargo door controls.
“Wait, we need to move the pod,” Berk said. “It might knock
the door off its track if we try to open it now.”
“This one slides?” Jyra said, impressed again by their luck
of finding such a well-equipped transport.
“Like a puck,” Berk said. “Give me a hand.”
They both leaned against the pod and it moved easily away
from the door.
“If I had more time, I’d have tied it down,” Berk said. “Go
ahead.” He nodded at the controls.
Jyra flipped the dusty hatch cover open and pressed the
button. The motors behind the wall whined and the door shuddered as it slid
back on squeaking bearings.
Berk stood in the doorway and gestured for Jyra to come to
his side. The ledge appeared before them as the door glided out of sight. The
cliffs of the mountain jutted toward the clear sky of early morning. Jyra
stared at the icy granite and noticed Macnelia and Craig, clad in fur coats,
walking down to greet them. She remembered picking her face out of the snow
when she arrived on Drometica to see the cave for the first time. Jyra jumped
onto the ledge, remembering she had only been on the planet for two nights; it
seemed much longer than that.
Craig gave her hug and she felt the sweat on his cheek.
“Looks like you’ve been busy,” Jyra said.
“Packing,” Craig said, stepping aside and pushing his hair
off his forehead.
“Welcome back,” Macnelia said. “Excellent find.” She gazed
at the ship before Berk approached and threw an arm around Macnelia, almost
knocking her over.
“Berk’s wounded,” Jyra said.
“Makes two of us,” Macnelia said, prying away from Berk and
rubbing her ribs. “Doesn’t seem too bad,” she added, looking at Berk’s bloody
sleeve.
“Nick from a bullet,” Berk said, while he pulled out his
flask. As he sipped the contents, Jyra saw his eyes flick back at the ship as
though something had just occurred to him. “I’ll get a bandage on it. Got a
quick bit of business to attend to.” He climbed back into the ship.
The others headed toward the cave. Though the breeze was
gentle, it pushed Jyra’s cold trousers against her skin and she led the group
into the mountain.
The fire pit was empty except for cold ash and a few charred
logs. The surrounding cavern was no longer vacant. Boxes and crates took up
most of the floor and some stacks of supplies stretched to the ceiling.
“We’re still working in the main cavern,” Craig told Jyra,
laying his fur coat across a crate. “Taking the consoles apart is slow work.”
“Took a while to install, too,” Macnelia said.
“Where’d they come from?” Jyra asked.
“The ship Derek brought here,” Macnelia said. “Wasn’t much
left after it landed, but we were able to use quite a lot of it. Let’s stack
some of these crates to make a better path between the exit and the passage.”
By the time,
they widened the path through the cavern, Berk came in, blowing on his hands
and wiping them on his jacket. They all started down the passage to the main
cavern. Macnelia tapped one of the buttresses as she passed it.
“Berk made these from the ship’s frame,” she said.
Jyra looked over her shoulder at Berk who lumbered behind
the group, his heavy coat and wild hair brushing the sides of the passage.
“You two should go have some breakfast and then lend a
hand,” Macnelia said.
“Another ship fell out of the sky,” Jyra said. “The remains
had a jagged ‘N’ on the side. We flew over it.”
Macnelia remained silent until they reached the main cavern.
“We’ll be out of the Nilcyn’s reach soon I expect,” she
said. “It’s unlikely they know we’re here anyway. Thanks for the report.”
Macnelia picked up a wrench and set to work dismantling the remainder of the
central console. Neeka, Shandra, and Leonick were untwisting cables that led to
the radar controls.
Craig followed Jyra and Berk to the kitchen area.
“Didn’t you eat yet?” Jyra said. Craig shook his head.
“I’ve been loading cables into crates and carefully
unhooking the generator. We’re running on a couple battery banks that we’ll
blow up once we leave.”
“This whole place is getting destroyed?” Jyra said. Berk,
who was already cracking eggs into the skillet at the stove, nodded.
“Cover our tracks,” he said, tossing the shells aside and
tearing a package of sausages open with his teeth.
“You were gone a long time,” Craig said. “How’d Berk get
shot?”
“With a gun,” Berk said.
“Will you clean and bandage your arm?” Jyra said. Berk
shrugged his jacket off and pulled his overshirt over his head and set it on
his jacket. Blood surrounded the bullet tear in the sleeve. Even though he wore
his undershirt, Jyra couldn’t help but gape at the definition of his muscles.
They were so developed, it didn’t seem the undershirt could possibly contain
them.
Berk opened a cabinet and pulled out a sanitizing pad and a
bandage. Jyra got up to help and saw the bare wound on his arm for the first
time. She stared as Berk dragged the sanitizer wipe across it.
“Something the matter?” he asked.
“No,” Jyra said slowly. “Did that guard shoot you with a
BB?”
“What?”
“That’s a small wound even for a graze isn’t it?” Jyra said.
She grabbed the overshirt off the back of the chair and looked at the tear in
the fabric. “I mean, the cut in the sleeve is twice the size of the one on your
skin.”
Berk put the bandage in place and took his overshirt out of
Jyra’s hands and pulled it over his head. He swung his coat back on and
continued making breakfast.
The explanation came to Jyra and she saw her fleeting
curiosity reflected in Craig’s expression. I’ll
tell you later, she mouthed.
“So a guard shot you,” Craig said, continuing his inquiry.
“Just as we were leaving,” Berk said over the noise of the
skillet.
Jyra told Craig about the further destruction she witnessed
in the city and the long search in the shipyard for a decent transport. Craig
smiled when Jyra got to the part about scaling the supply ship to get a better
look and how that led to the discovery of Mastranada.
She explained to the point when she and Berk were about to enter the engine
room before she remembered the guard. The body must still be in the engine
room, dead at the bottom of the ladder. She paused.
“Breakfast’s ready,” Berk announced. He sat down with a full
plate and began shoveling eggs into his mouth with a fork.
Jyra ate as fast as she could and started toward Macnelia as
soon as she stood up. Berk followed for a few paces, called her back, and spoke
so Craig couldn’t hear.
“I’ve already taken care of the body, it’s what I went back
in for.”
“Where did you put it?” Jyra whispered.
“Over the cliff.” He ignored Jyra’s revolted expression.
“I’ll tell Macnelia and the others about it. Go ahead and get to work. Shall I
tell him the rest of the story?”
Jyra nodded, partly relieved she didn’t need to describe her
role in killing the guard, but thinking about the incident made her sick,
especially right after breakfast.
She wondered why killing the old man in the market didn’t
bother her as much. He’d had Craig at gunpoint, but the guard had been shooting
at her. Perhaps it was because the old man was already injured and appeared to
be dying anyway. He made a choice to threaten Craig. Maybe the guard fired
automatically to scare off intruders. He was only doing his job. The last thought
stuck. Jyra felt her shoulders fall under the weight of the guilt. The old man
didn’t need to harass them and pull out a gun. The guard didn’t have to die.
“Can you give me a hand?” Jyra had to open her eyes, unaware
they were closed, and saw Macnelia watching her from the central console.
“Sure,” she said, glad for the distraction.
*
Hours passed before the consoles were completely broken
down. They began loading empty crates Berk brought up from the lower passage.
After a quick lunch, Jyra prepared to head out to assist with a more thorough
internal inspection of Mastranada,
but Macnelia called her back.
“I’m sorry about the tea and that I haven’t been as direct
with you about this operation,” Macnelia said, motioning for Jyra to follow her
out of the cavern. “Old habit I can’t quite get rid of.”
Jyra nodded to show she understood. In fact, she already
assumed odd habits were at the root of Macnelia’s mysterious behavior. They
stopped in the passage and entered another room that turned out to be Macnelia’s.
The most obvious feature in the room occupied the middle of the floor. It was
shaped like a diamond that had been stretched—two longer sides finished in a
point that faced the door. The two shorter sides also came to a point, giving
the device a kite shape. It wasn’t flat; it had another kite shape, with equal
dimensions, but turned ninety degrees to the horizontal plane of the first
kite. If a laser cut through the widest part of device, the cross-section would
be a perfect square. It looked to Jyra like an enormous model of an ancient
arrowhead.
“Something you’ve been working on in your spare time?” Jyra
said, feeling the black metal plating.
“I’ve been doing everything else in my spare time,” Macnelia
said. “I’ve been building this bomb for about four months with some help from
Leonick. I scavenged parts from the old ship and stole everything else from
Horbson. It should destroy the main TF complex.”
“It’s not armed is it?”
Macnelia pointed to a pair of half spheres made of the same
metal near the wide part of the bomb.
“I need to slide those open and pull two pins from each one
to arm it,” Macnelia said. She went to her cluttered desk and held up what Jyra
quickly identified as the bomb detonator. The function of the large red button
on it was self-explanatory.
“Will it fit out the door?” Jyra said, stepping back to
compare the width of the bomb and the doorframe.
“It should,” Macnelia said, returning the detonator to the
desk as she took a seat on her bed. “Showing you this is one reason I brought
you to my room, but I also want to tell you what I know about the resistance
and how I came to be here.”
She extended a hand to indicate the empty chair at the desk.
Jyra crossed to it and sat down.
“Neeka and I joined TF together a few years ago. Things weren’t
going well on Jiranthem and we were both desperate to find work so we were
easily talked into the TF job. Derek was working in the career department at
the time and he was there with the hiring team. He and Neeka started talking
about open jobs, but their conversation didn’t stop there. They were together
by the end of the three-day visit. Needless to say, we were both hired as
programmers and taken to Tyrorken.
“It took only a few weeks after we arrived to discover TF
wasn’t what it seemed. Upper management officials isolated themselves from the
rest of the company. Communication had been cut off and the absence of facts
led to rumors. Derek did his best to not draw attention to himself. He figured
it was best to stay with TF to operate from the inside. His diligence paid off
and he was promoted to lead scouting missions to find fuel deposits on other
planets.
“A few weeks passed after his promotion when Neeka and I
learned the entire career office had been dissolved. TF had deprived Tyrorken’s
people economic opportunity to the point that most had to come and beg for a
job at TF.”
“How did you find out the career program was gone?” Jyra
said.
“Neeka and I engaged in some light hacking,” Macnelia said,
entwining her thin fingers. “We regularly monitored the department database,
just in case management set up new ones that might provide clues about what
they were up to. One day, the career department was missing from the list and
we knew. Neeka told me most of Derek’s concerns. He didn’t see as many familiar
faces. Even as a scouting leader, there were soon entire parts of TF
headquarters he wasn’t permitted to enter. The crackdown got worse. Derek
thought of quitting when he was told he needed to manage a miner team in
addition to scouting. When he showed up the first day for that, he saw people
that had worked above him on his team.
“Again, Derek’s keen management to his behavior fooled the
higher-ups. Many other employees had been fired or demoted all around him and
he knew it, but he hadn’t said anything. Neeka and I didn’t find out much by
hacking the TF system. Soon we were both moved to work on the rig platforms. It
was there I met your brother.”
“You met him?” Jyra said and felt her stomach clench with
surprise.
“About two years ago,” Macnelia said. “We trained together
and he asked if I wanted to get a drink at the end of our first shift. We’ve
been together since then.”
“That’s why he came home so late that first day,” Jyra said.
The feelings came and went inside so quickly she couldn’t focus on them. It
hurt that Dario never mentioned Macnelia and even though she was his sister,
Jyra felt threatened by the love he shared with someone else. At the same time,
she was happy Dario had found Macnelia.
“We spent as much time together as possible, but TF duties
interfered,” Macnelia said. She had been talking in soft voice that sounded
almost indifferent, but Jyra caught the sudden bitter tone. “Another mission to
Drometica had been ordered and Derek, Neeka, Dario, and I were supposed to go.
Derek knew of some promising deposits and the rest of us were some of the best
rig workers TF had. Dario mentioned something about his parents wanting to keep
him at home and, sure enough, he was taken off the mission.
“We worked in these mountains for a few months,” Macnelia
said. “We weren’t alone, of course, and so we didn’t talk about resistance
efforts much in case other workers heard. In fact, Derek was summoned back to
the planet so often, I began to doubt his loyalty. Maybe something about the
Drometica mine work fiddled with our minds because working here seemed to
attack the relationships we’d built. To trust was to risk it all. Eventually,
that’s what I had to do.
“Derek found this place and rigged up some explosives at the
TF worksite. After faking my death and Neeka’s, he brought us here. Of course,
he had to go back to Tyrorken, report the accident, and return with supplies
and other workers. Not only that, he was able to tell Dario what was going on,
namely that I wasn’t dead and that we’d started a resistance to overthrow TF.”
“Dario never told me a word,” Jyra said.
“That was part of the deal,” Macnelia said. “Even though
Derek and Neeka were together and we all knew each other, it took a long time
to build mutual trust. Once I heard Dario knew of the resistance, I stayed
awake most nights, worrying he might tell.”
“You didn’t really know him, then,” Jyra said, stiffening in
the chair.
“People disappeared for far more trivial reasons than for
planning to destroy TF,” Macnelia said. “I loved Dario and my base instincts
always won over the anxiety and worry my mind made up. Once I learned to
control the hypothetical, I became more dynamic and I started seeking out
others to swell our ranks. Neeka and I spent some time in Horbson. We met Berk
and Leonick in a bar if you can imagine that.”
“I can.”
“Neeka and I were a few drinks in and the guys sat down at
our table,” Macnelia continued. “I told them we couldn’t talk to them because
we had nothing but secrets to tell. Berk thought that was fine and went ahead
and told us his story, which I gather he’s told you. After hearing that and
drinking a little more, Neeka and I realized Berk might be willing to get
behind our resistance, be part of something he wished he’d started on his own
planet. So we told them what we were up to. An hour later, Neeka was on my lap
in the pod as Berk flew us back to here. Then he went back for Leonick.
“We had some equipment here to expand the passages and to
keep us warm. Derek periodically brought us supplies and food. Once we had the
pod, it was easy for us to get to town and obtain what we needed. TF officials
might have suspected Derek of some odd behavior, but he always assuaged them in
the end. Then he crashed the ship he flew
in from Tyrorken to take the crew and drill equipment home. TF sent another
transport and kept Derek confined to Tyrorken after that. He’d been back there
a few weeks when he met Craig through Dario. The three of them began planning a
strike on TF. Derek suspected TF was monitoring their activities so they didn’t
meet often.
“But you know what comes next,” Macnelia said. She made an
effort to swallow. “Derek sent me a message about what happened to Dario. I
didn’t want to believe it. I wondered if Derek’s com had been hacked and maybe
TF knew I was alive. Then, on the same frequency, he told me he was going to
deliver a letter to you and tell his team they didn’t have to work that day out
of respect for Dario’s memory. I tried to convince him otherwise, but he
wouldn’t go back on it. I thought it would be too obvious and he was putting
himself and Dario’s family in danger, as well as the lives of his team.”
Macnelia wiped her eyes and directed her gaze to the faded
Mourning Mark on Jyra’s forehead.
“It’s a Tyrorken custom,” Jyra said, touching the Mark and
checking the smudge on her fingertip. “It’s about the only tradition TF hasn’t
sullied.”
“Derek told me about the funeral scam. It’s sick.”
“Did he tell you it was my mom’s idea?” Jyra said. Macnelia
inhaled sharply and frowned. “I always thought my family was normal enough,”
Jyra said. “I couldn’t complain about my parents that much and Dario…I mean he
was the brother any sister could hope for. Part of me still can’t believe I’m
here. I never thought I’d walk out on my parents, let alone run away from my
planet.”
“I didn’t think of myself as an extreme person either,”
Macnelia said. “I never thought I’d become someone I’d hear about on the news.
But I believe in stopping TF before its murders go global.”
“What do you mean?” Jyra said.
“You lived there, you should know,” Macnelia said, shaking
her head. “TF has turned Tyrorken into a wasteland. The heat and pollution are
going to overwhelm the planet. I don’t care how advanced the air processors
are; they still need to take in some oxygen to function. If we don’t act soon,
TF is going to destroy Tyrorken and everyone on it. Why do you think they’re
scouting for deposits on other planets?”
“Destroy it?” Jyra repeated and raised her eyebrows.
“Near enough. You won’t be able to set foot on it without a
climate suit. Derek heard a rumor that some TF managers already have survival
gear stockpiled in case things go wrong before they can escape. Are they going
to provide everyone on the planet with a suit or let the air kill half the
people first?”
“Those people are their workers!” Jyra said, appalled at the
idea of TF allowing the air quality to degrade further. She thought of her
parents.
“Not for much longer,” Macnelia said, placing a hand on the
detonator. “There won’t be any place to work soon.”
Jyra imagined the bomb plunging into the TF complex,
shattering the glass domes and tearing through floors into the heart of the
building. She saw people scrambling for the exits before the harsh white light
of the explosion erased the vision. Jyra watched Macnelia handling the detonator,
rotating it between her hands. Jyra realized those hands had worked along with
Dario’s on the oil platforms. Why hadn’t he ever mentioned Macnelia? It didn’t
seem appropriate to ask Macnelia such a question, but Jyra remembered another.
“Was Derek
trying to recruit others besides Craig and me?”
“What’s that?” Macnelia said, tearing her eyes from the
detonator.
“This mission that got Craig and me here,” Jyra said. “Were
others supposed to come too?”
“Derek wanted to see if anyone on his rig team wanted to
join,” Macnelia said. “That’s all I know, though. Obviously, it didn’t work out or he was captured before he could carry out
those plans.”
Someone knocked on the door. Macnelia stood up, opened it,
and stepped back to let Leonick pass. He smiled at Jyra and knelt next to the
bomb.
“How’re you doing?” she asked. Leonick didn’t look at her as
he pulled out a screwdriver. He started to remove a plate on the underside of
the explosive then paused.
“I don’t know how
I’m doing,” he said, slowly. “I know I’m doing. I’m always doing something just
like everyone else. Right now, I’m removing one screw of four that secure a
cover plate over the guide system relays.”
By the time he finished speaking, the smell of alcohol
filled Macnelia’s room and Jyra resisted the urge to bury her nose in her
sleeve. Leonick finished with the screws and he set the hatch aside. Despite
the smell, Jyra walked toward the door and stood behind him to watch him work.
His hands slid into the compartment. His fingers fluttered
over exposed wiring, finding their own way as if Leonick were blind. Jyra
glanced at her own hands. Even as an apprentice with Craig at the garage, she
had injured herself on the job; a large scar crossed the back of her right hand
from when her palm slipped off a wrench and her skin hit a sharp seam on a fuel
tank. Despite his obvious mastery and involvement with machining and creating
the explosive, Leonick’s hands were unmarked and moved with a grace Jyra didn’t
expect. She noticed Macnelia watching her.
“Aces,” Leonick
said. “The bomb can be directed within five feet of its target.”
“Thank you,” Macnelia said. She came to Jyra’s side.
They both watched Leonick replace the cover plate and spin
the screws back in place.
“What project are you working on next?” Macnelia asked.
“Packing the things in my room that I’m taking with me,”
Leonick said. He gave a small smile and walked back into the hallway, twirling
the screwdriver between his fingers.
“Berk says he knows how to work on energy cores,” Jyra said.
“I believe it,” Macnelia said. “I wouldn’t call Leonick
normal, but he certainly has a way with, well, just about anything he puts his
mind to.”
“Is he an alcoholic?”
“Probably. He claims whiskey clears the chatter in his brain
and makes it easier to focus. I suspect it’s why he and Berk became friends in
the first place. Alcohol brings some sort of order to their worlds.”
“What are we working on next?” Jyra said.
“If the new ship’s passed the test, I think we’ll begin
loading it.”
*
As they entered the cavern full of supplies waiting to be
loaded, Jyra noticed an open crate full of rags. She grabbed a couple along
with some aerosol cleaner. Macnelia, who was pulling two of the heavy coats off
a stack of boxes, narrowed her eyes at Jyra.
“The ship’s pretty dusty inside,” Jyra said, accepting one
of the coats.
They shuffled out of the passage and discovered the sky was
no longer clear; gray clouds had collected above the mountains and snowflakes
tumbled around them. Jyra followed Macnelia to the ship. They discovered Berk
and Shandra in the cargo bay wearing identical coats. Jyra wasn’t sure why she
expected the ship to be warmer, especially with the large door open to the
elements. She couldn’t contain her surprise when she saw the clouds of her
breath after climbing aboard.
“It’ll be pretty chilly in here until we fire up the engines
and get out of here,” Berk said.
“How’s it look?” Macnelia said, walking in a small circle
while taking in the size of the cargo bay.
“It’ll do,” Shandra said. “We’ve only done a quick check,
but I saw no obvious deal-breakers.”
“I still think Leonick should check the cores and have Neeka
run a full diagnostic of the systems,” Berk said.
“What about the hull?” Macnelia said.
“What about it?” Shandra said. Jyra thought she saw
Macnelia’s expression soften toward Shandra before she addressed her next
question to Berk.
“Is it sound?”
“It’s not in the best shape,” Berk said. “But it should hold
for our journey.”
“I’d like to do the most thorough visual check possible of
the entire hull before we leave,” Macnelia said. “That ruptured hull on the TF
wreck he flew here nearly killed him.”
Jyra realized that must have been the ship Derek crashed.
She wondered if TF had given him that transport on purpose. How easy it would
be to make him disappear by providing compromised equipment that would lead to
almost certain death. Even as she thought of that, her hand closed on the
aerosol can in her pocket and she moved toward the passage out of the cargo
bay.
“Where’re you headed?” Macnelia asked, cutting across Berk
who was explaining the challenges of a visual hull inspection.
“Just a quick spot clean,” Jyra said. “Won’t be long.” She
departed hastily before Macnelia could call her back. Jyra made her way down
the corridor and headed toward the engine room. She pushed the door open and
saw the marks of the bullets in the floor plating. The smell of grease filled
her nose. The dim glow of the lights overhead filtered through the catwalks
above.
Jyra pulled the rag and cleaner from her pocket with a
clammy hand. The rag and can still felt cold and, despite the coat, she did,
too. The wall-mounted ladder was just ahead. Even from here, Jyra could see the
bloodstained floor. She caught herself feeling both repulsed and intrigued by
the idea that the red smear before her had pounded in the guard’s ears like it
did in Jyra’s.
She shook the can and sprayed the solution over the blood.
The fumes burned her nostrils. Jyra dropped the rag to the floor and began
wiping, staining the cloth a gritty red. It didn’t take long finish the job.
Jyra tried to steady her shaking hands as she straightened and proceeded to
leave. Her eyes caught the energy cores. She pushed the can of cleaner into her
pocket and approached the cylinders. Except knowing they produced enough power
for the entire ship, the energy cores were a complete mystery to Jyra. After
seeing what people had to go through to manufacture liquid, oil-based fuel for
transports, it seemed odd that energy core technology wasn’t used more often.
Jyra stared into each cylinder again, mesmerized by their
unknown qualities. If she could stand his strong whiskey odor, Jyra found
herself wanting to work alongside Leonick when he evaluated the energy cores.
She turned to leave and faced the plated wall of the engine room. Even from
where she stood, Jyra noticed a couple fissures between the plates. Gaps that
size on the exterior hull plates could threaten the whole ship. Jyra had seen a
few cases of transports she’d worked on with compromised hull plates. If the
breaches became too severe, the stress of passing through the atmosphere of a
planet could destroy a ship.
Jyra left the engine room and traveled back to the cargo
bay, determined not to look at the rag in her hand. The others had left the
bay. Jyra jumped onto the gathering pack of snow and walked toward the stern. Mastranada took up almost the entire
width of the ledge. She managed to duck around one of the massive engines and
when she stood next to the second engine on the other side of the ship, Jyra
threw the rag into the air. It fell from the ledge amid the snowflakes and the
wind carried it toward the center of the valley.
*
“Where’ve you been?” Craig said. He yanked the last of the
cables from the generator, which sat in a large alcove of the main cavern.
“Talking with Macnelia and doing a little work on the ship,”
Jyra said.
“How’s the ship?” Craig asked.
“Should do well as long as the hull plates are sound.”
“They’d better be.”
Jyra turned to check that the cavern was empty. Neeka had
left to look over the computers on the ship.
“Did you know Macnelia and Dario were a couple?” Jyra said.
Craig’s hand slipped on the ratchet he was using to unbolt the generator from
the wall.
“They were?” he said. “I had no idea.”
“He never mentioned her,” Jyra said.
“You think Macnelia’s lying?” Craig said, twisting the ratchet.
Jyra shook her head. She had just talked to Macnelia at length and it made no
sense that she would have made anything up.
“It’s hard, I guess,” Jyra said, processing the information
slowly. “I can’t help wondering what else Dario knew that he didn’t share with
me. Derek met you through Dario, right? Derek was organizing the resistance and
neither you nor Dario mentioned anything to me.”
Jyra fixed Craig with a cold stare that he noticed once he
turned around.
“What’s the matter?” he said.
“Why didn’t you tell me about the resistance sooner?”
Craig stared at the finger he ran around the edge of the
socket for a moment. Jyra took a few steps closer. Craig met her gaze with an
apologetic expression.
“Derek wouldn’t allow it. He already suspected TF was watching
him,” Craig said. “It was too dangerous.”
“And that’s why Dario didn’t tell me either?” Jyra said,
feeling the heat rise in her face.
“He agreed to keep silent,” Craig said. “I’m sorry, but
that’s how we had to operate for our safety.”
“I know,” Jyra said. “It’s just somehow Dario isn’t who I
thought he was. That’s why I’m upset.”
Craig set the ratchet on top of the generator and faced
Jyra. She didn’t want to look at him, so she stared into the alcove.
“Dario was the same person you knew him to be,” Craig said.
“Don’t use his involvement in this resistance to tarnish his memory. It’s hard
to get off that ship once you’re on it.”
“How do you know?” Jyra said, still avoiding eye contact and
biting her lip.
“I know because that old man we met in the stockroom was
right,” Craig said. “The tough decisions in my life stay with me. Whatever
choices I made, I second-guess them. I tried to talk Dario out of the oil work.
For the sake of the resistance, we already had Derek as our inside man. We
didn’t need another, but Dario refused to leave. I let him off the hook too
easily. I know I could have convinced him otherwise. Now it’s too late.”
Jyra met Craig’s gaze briefly and nodded before turning
away. She strode out of the cavern and back to her room. Her duffel remained
open on the floor and she could see the book Dario gave her. Jyra sat on the
cot and retied her hair, pulling it back harder than intended. She wrapped her
arms around her knees and dropped her head onto her wrist. She couldn’t stop
thinking about Dario and that he’d kept such significant parts of his life
secret.
Someone walked by in the passage and Jyra lifted her head.
The Mourning Mark had smudged her wrist. Craig’s warning filled her mind. She
wished Dario could have remained perfect in her memory.
“It doesn’t matter,” Jyra told herself through gritted
teeth. She closed her eyes, hoping to open them to see the dusty street from
the porch where she and Dario had spent their time reading as children.
Jyra leaned forward and lifted “Ships of the Kaosaam System”
from her duffel. She looked at Dario’s signature on the title page, remembering
how he always dotted the “i” before writing the last letter in his name. She
wondered what Craig had said to discourage her brother from working on the
platforms. It hadn’t been right to be upset with Craig. He wasn’t the only one
who held back information. Jyra noticed the parallel between Derek and Dario.
Each had a friend who had tried to interfere with their actions to protect them.
Craig had told Dario to abandon the rig work and Macnelia had begged Derek to
avoid any rash action after Dario’s death.
As a wave of sadness broke inside her chest, Jyra stood up
and tossed the book back into her duffel. She cursed herself for wasting time.
The secrets were no more and she was part of the resistance that needed to
first rescue Derek and then destroy the evil that had hurt her. Jyra threw her
dirty clothes into her duffel, zipped it shut, and hauled it out of the room.
She took it up the passage to the supply cavern and saw Shandra working amid
the crates.
Jyra realized she hadn’t heard how Shandra came to join the
resistance. Except that he’d been with Berk, she didn’t know much of Leonick’s
story either. She reminded herself not to ask any more questions unless they
were related to departing.
“What can I do to help?” she asked.
“Berk went down to the main cavern a moment ago to bring up
the generator,” Shandra said. “He just rigged a convenient way to get our
supplies to the ship. You can go assist Berk and Craig.”
Jyra had been wondering how they were going to move the
multiple crates over the icy rocks and snowdrifts to the cargo bay on Mastranada. In addition to the smaller
items, they also had to get the generator and bomb onto the ship. She walked
down the passage and found Craig and Berk tipping the generator onto a small
dolly.
“We could use a hand pushing,” Berk said.
“That’s why I’m here,” Jyra said.
With the help of a winch, a dolly, and lots of muscle, the
three managed to move the generator up the passage. They parked it in the
cavern with the crates then reset the winch to pull the bomb up from Macnelia’s
room. The explosive was much easier to handle compared to the cumbersome
generator. Jyra took greater care while pushing bomb, even though the safety
pins were still in place. Once it was stored next to the generator, Berk turned
their attention to the piles of boxes.
“I think
everything is ordered based on need,” he said. “The stuff we load in first will
be the most inaccessible. Crates closest to the exit right now are supposed to
be low priority.”
He seized a large box and walked toward the mouth of the
cave. Craig and Jyra picked up a heavy crate together and followed Berk. Once
they were outside, they saw what Berk had rigged to simplify the loading
process. A thick cable was fixed around an exposed steel wall stud in the cargo
bay and the other end was anchored to the mountain right by the cave. A pallet
hung from four cables that all attached to a burly pulley, which rolled freely
on the line between cliff and ship.
A rope tied to the pulley allowed a controlled descent, so
the pallet didn’t slam into the cargo bay wall.
Jyra couldn’t help smiling when she realized how much time
and energy the suspended pallet would save.
“It’s fantastic,” Jyra said. “What a relief.”
“Load it up,” Berk said gruffly, but Jyra saw through his
whiskers that he was smiling, too.
They did have to take care to balance the loads on the
pallet. Shandra, Macnelia, and Leonick worked in the cargo bay, stacking the
crates and supplies. The pulley squeaked as it glided down toward the ship and
jumped on the jerking cable as Berk pulled the empty pallet back to the cave.
It hadn’t stopped snowing and the drifts were nearly level
with the cargo bay floor. The wind increased and the pallet swung so much, one
load overbalanced and the crates toppled free. They plunged into the swath of
white below and new snowflakes began covering them. The workers in the cargo
bay, all clad in heavy coats, jumped outside to retrieve the supplies. By the
time they rescued everything from the tipped pallet, the snow was spilling into
the cargo bay and sheets of it that gathered on the hull were sliding off and
piling up around the ship.
Craig, Jyra, and Berk were all sweating from the effort of
loading, but they only had a few more piles to go. Macnelia shrugged off her
coat and gave it to Neeka who appeared in the cargo bay. Macnelia helped unload
the next pallet and then rode it back to the cave.
“I’d better go pack,” she said, stepping off the pallet and
shivering. Berk tied off the pulley rope and the four of them walked into the
storage cavern.
“Nearly there,” Macnelia said, glancing around. “Just a
couple more stacks. Neeka’s got the Nilcyn com recognition programmed into Mastranada’s computers so we’re set
there.” She disappeared into the passage.
Craig, Jyra, and Berk finished with the crates and now faced
the two largest items. Berk picked up another coil of cable and began wrapping
it around the generator as though tying a ribbon around a gift.
“Won’t fit on the pallet, but we can clip this onto the
pulley,” he said. “I’ll need you two helping me with the rope for this one.”
Pushing it to the mouth of the cave was quite simple. Once
they had it out on the mountainside, Berk unclipped the pallet and let it freely
crash upon the rocks. He pulled the loose cable around the generator and tried
to attach it to the pulley, but the hook was too far away.
Craig and Jyra pushed against the load and the dolly slid
out onto a treacherous patch of ice.
“A little more!” Berk said. They pushed one last time and
one of the casters skidded off a rock and whole dolly high-centered in place.
Berk yanked on the pulley and stretched the generator cable
toward it. Jyra watched as he grunted with the effort and the generator began
to tip. It was falling toward the toward the pallet.
“Grab the rope!” Berk shouted.
It had happened so fast, Jyra didn’t even see that he had
succeeded. Now the generator swung on the pulley, which was picking up speed as
it headed for the ship. They all grabbed the rope to arrest the generator,
which gathered speed as it glided on the pulley cable. The weight of the load
pulled Craig right off the cliff. He let go of the rope and landed, face first,
on the snow-covered ledge.
Jyra and Berk tugged as hard they could and managed to slow
the generator so the others could control it and unclip it from the pulley.
“Send the cable back!” Berk said over the wind, as Jyra
climbed down to help Craig back up.
“If I didn’t know any better, I’d say that thing was heavy,”
Craig said, shivering as they scrambled past the fallen pallet.
They used the same cable to secure the bomb to the pulley.
It was much easier to transfer to the ship.
“Someone’s got a chilly job ahead of them,” Berk said. “They
need to get under the ship and get that bomb in one of the mounts.”
“Now?” Jyra said. “Why?”
“It’s better to put a bomb where it belongs the first time,”
Berk said. “We’ve still got to inspect the hull, too.”
Jyra wasn’t smiling anymore. The largest obstacle to their
departure seemed to be the packing and loading, which they had finished. Now,
they had to dig out the snow underneath the ship and brush all the snow off the
hull to make sure it was sound.
“Wait,” Jyra said. “Why waste time digging and sweeping when
we can just take the ship up and do a quick circle? During landing, the launch
thrusters will blow most of the snow on the ledge out of the way.”
“That’s not a bad idea,” Berk said. “We’ll still have to do
an inspection of the hull once it’s clean, but overall it’s still a faster
plan.”
Within half an hour, everyone aboard had strapped the crates
and boxes in place in the cargo bay. Once Berk unhooked the pulley cable from
the wall stud, he and Jyra headed to the cockpit. The cargo door closed and Mastranada awoke. The cores were heating
and on standby to fire the engines.
As Shandra left the cargo bay, she felt the launch thrusters
spinning beneath her and heard the sound of loose ice and rock striking the
belly of the ship. Mastranada lifted
and dived into the valley, leaving a trail of ice and snow in its wake.
“She flies fine with the load,” Jyra said, checking the cargo
weight report on her monitor.
Berk pulled up and made a wide circle around a nearby peak
before coming back toward the ledge.
“Bring us in at thirty-five degrees to the cliff,” Berk
said. Mastranada rotated so her belly
aimed at the snowdrifts in the landing area. Berk increased the power flow to
the launch thrusters and Jyra held the ship’s position for a few moments.
“That should do the trick,” she said.
The two pilots leveled the transport and lowered it onto the
ledge.
“Extending the landing pads,” Jyra said. “It’ll make it
easier to get the bomb into the mount.”
Berk nodded as the noise of the engines and launch thrusters
faded. They made their way back to the cargo bay. Shandra had already opened
the door. Everyone pulled on coats and jumped onto the ledge. The snow had been
cleared down to the rock. Most of it had been blown against the mountain.
“Get the bomb out of its straps and let’s get it under
here,” Berk said. He, Jyra, Craig, and Shandra all lifted the explosive out of
the cargo bay. They crept under the ship, muscled the bomb over to the forward
incendiary mount, and placed it beneath the three steel arms. Berk opened them
to the proper dimensions. While the rest held the bomb in place, he tightened
the mount and the bomb hung in its cradle.
“Hull inspection,” Berk said once they crawled out from
under the ship. Leonick and Neeka had unhooked the other end of the pulley
cable from the mountain and wound it up. Berk lifted the coil and pulley easily
into the cargo bay and he clapped Leonick on the shoulder.
“How do the cores look during operation?” Berk asked.
“They look as they always do,” Leonick said. “As for their
operation while the ship is running, they could use maintenance. Corrosion in
the lower sectors reduces overall output.”
“Can you do that work while we’re flying?” Berk said.
Leonick nodded and took a swig of whiskey. Craig lowered a
stepladder out of the cargo bay and Berk grabbed it.
“Great,” Berk said. “Craig and I will take the roof while
the rest of you start checking the sides.”
“I’m going to find Macnelia,” Jyra said, realizing she must
still be packing.
Jyra clambered up the slippery snow bank and crept into the
cave. The benches were still clustered around the fire pit. Jyra walked down
the passage. Macnelia’s door was open, but she wasn’t in the room. The bed had
been stripped and the desk cleared. Two large bags sat on the floor. Jyra heard
a clicking sound coming from the main cavern.
When she reached it, she saw the source of the noise.
Macnelia had a camera pressed to her eye as she took photos of the main cavern.
Jyra emerged from the passage and made an effort to increase the sound of her
footsteps. Macnelia looked over her shoulder and smiled.
“Memories,” she said, tilting the camera in her hand.
“The cavern looks bigger without all the machines,” Jyra
said.
“It’ll look a lot different once the bomb on the battery
bank goes off,” Macnelia said.
“Is it ticking?”
“Eight hours,” Macnelia said.
“The hull inspection’s happening now,” Jyra said.
“Then we’ll get the bomb mounted,” Macnelia said.
“That’s already done.”
“You all worked fast.”
Jyra explained how they had cleared the snow from both the
ship and the ledge.
“I was down at the batteries,” Macnelia said. “That’s why I
couldn’t hear the engines. I’m glad you didn’t leave me here.”
Jyra laughed but saw a glint of seriousness in Macnelia’s
eyes.
“What? We wouldn’t desert you here. You’re the master
planner of this whole strike,” Jyra said.
“I wouldn’t blame you if you did,” Macnelia said.
Even during their discussion about Dario’s death, Jyra
hadn’t heard Macnelia sound so despondent.
“What’s the matter?” Jyra asked. “We’re ready to launch our
attack. Your bomb is waiting. Let’s go.” She started walking toward the passage
and Macnelia followed a few paces behind.
“It’s a funny feeling,” Macnelia said, letting her camera
hang on the strap around her neck. “I’ve been planning this for so long. I
sought vengeance against TF for those who couldn’t seek it themselves. Then I
heard about Dario and now my personal stake in this—”
She trailed off as they walked into her room. Each woman
grabbed one of the bags and proceeded up the passage.
They stepped out into the snowstorm. Jyra could see the
snowflakes already reclaiming the blast zone from the launch thrusters. Both
Craig and Berk were on top of the ship checking the hull. Shandra stood on the
ladder near the stern, running her fingers over the cold seams that fastened
the plates together.
“Berk’s loading system saved a lot time,” Jyra said, hauling
Macnelia’s luggage down the snow bank.
“Ship’s good so far!” Berk called out.
“Keep looking!” Macnelia replied. She and Jyra heaved the
bags up into the cargo bay.
“Can the pod get out of there easily?” Berk said. Jyra
checked and saw only a few crates blocking it.
“Yeah,” she said. “Why?”
“The other side of the ship hangs over the cliff. If someone
sits on the supply rack, they can check the hull over there.”
“Let’s do it,” Macnelia said.
After pushing the crates aside, Macnelia donned a coat and
clung to the rack while Jyra piloted the pod around to the starboard side of
the ship. She brought it in as close to the hull as she dared. The wind made it
hard to hold the pod steady. When she was ready to move ahead, Macnelia knocked
her fist on the cockpit dome. By the time the pod returned to its home behind
the crates, the others had finished their inspections.
“Clear?” Macnelia said, once everyone had gathered in the
cargo bay and they all nodded.
“Neeka, any Nilcyns around?” Macnelia said. Neeka shook her
head.
“Derek’s waiting,” she said.
“We’ve all been waiting for Derek,” Macnelia said. “Let’s go
get him and complete our mission. I made these a few months ago after getting
the design set for the bomb.”
She pulled squares of fabric from inside her coat and handed
them out. Jyra looked at hers and realized it was a badge. The shape of the
bomb, complete with the safety chambers, had been embroidered in green onto a
black background.
“Why green?” Berk said, holding his badge up to his chest.
“I figured it’s the bomb that’s making life possible again
on Tyrorken,” Macnelia said. “Which reminds me, I don’t suppose anyone pulled
the pins yet.”
She didn’t wait for an answer before she jumped out of the
cargo bay and crawled under the ship. Berk and Shandra helped lift her back in
and Macnelia held up the pins.
“Ready to go,” Macnelia said. “Berk and Jyra, are you our
pilots?”
They both nodded.
“Take us to the enemy,” Macnelia said. “Everyone prepare for
takeoff.”
Moments later, Jyra and Berk took their seats in the
cockpit.
“Was Macnelia ever in a military?” Jyra said. Berk shrugged.
“She told me she took a public speaking class in school,” he
said.
“How did that come up?”
“The night Leonick and I met Neeka and Macnelia at a bar in
Horbson,” Berk said. “She spoke with an eloquence that completely disguised her
inebriation and I asked her why she was so good with words.”
“If she was so eloquent, how could you tell she was drunk?”
Jyra said.
“Tripping on the same table twice while trying to leave gave
her away,” Berk said. He reached into his jacket and pulled out a flask, which
was empty. He replaced it and drew out another.
“How many of those do you have?” Jyra said, as she threw the
switches to prime the energy cores.
“Enough to keep me happy,” Berk said. “Let’s get out of
here.”
As Mastranada
lifted from the ledge for the final time, Jyra heard and felt the low frequency
drone of a powerful explosion.
“Gun the engines now!” she shouted. The ship lurched forward
and leapt across the valley in seconds. “Turn one-eighty,” Berk said. Mastranada spun around so the pilots
could look back through the snowflakes at their old base.
The mountain eroded before their eyes in an avalanche of ice
and rock. Entire facades broke loose from the peak as fire and smoke spewed
from below the ledge where the ship just launched. Moments later, great slabs
of granite from above crashed onto ledge as the upper part of the mountain
imploded from the explosion. Neither Jyra nor Berk said a word as the remains
of the peak toppled into the valley. The swish of liquid sounded from a flask
as Berk took another swig.
“She said it wasn’t going to go off for eight hours,” Jyra
said.
“What?”
“Macnelia said she’d set the time on the bomb at eight
hours,” Jyra said.
“When did she start it counting?” Berk said. “That bomb
nearly killed all of us!”
“She seemed distracted when she mentioned it,” Jyra said.
“Maybe she entered the time wrong or started it earlier than she meant to.
Although she said she didn’t hear the ship when we flew it around to clear the
snow. She was down at the batteries.”
“Where the bomb was,” Berk said. “She must have either set
it then or checked on it. We all get distracted sometimes, but that nearly
ended everything.”
Shaking his head, he engaged the engines and Jyra steered
the ship to face the sky.
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