âItâs hardly a breach of conduct,â Ptolemy said into Natalyaâs communicator.
Natalya pressed a hand against the lockers to brace herself from the shuddering building. The bombardment was getting more intense.
âThatâs not the point!â Natalya shouted.
âThe city will likely be reduced to radioactive rubble in a few hours. No one will miss it,â Ptolemy countered.
âPtolemy, Iââ
âThe shield room is only three doors down on the next right turn from here. I suggest you take the loot and hurry.â
Natalya slammed a locker with the butt of her carbine, furious at Ptolemyâs deception. The strike opened one of the smaller drawers, revealing a stack of platinum chips, or plats as they were commonly called. Natalya wanted to leave the coins on the ground just to spite that calm-toned jerk sitting on her ship. But she knew those coins meant more than just money. They meant survival. They meant fuel for her ship and food for her crew, and most of all, time. Time to keep going, to keep trying.
âCo. Drawer,â Natalya said, taking a guarding stance at the door as Co yanked the aforementioned drawer off its hinges.
The womanâs robotic arm made quick work of the sealed locker. Co made no sound of delight or annoyance as she loaded the wealth into her packs, plats clinking against thick pouches of slugs and grenades.
âReady,â Co announced when sheâd filled her packs.
âOkay,â Natalya said, âletâsââ
A blast rang out in the corridor. Natalya had just enough time to duck behind the door. She leveled her carbine, but before she could land a shot, Co put a blast in the manâs head.
The shot had come from the guard Natalya had spared. He must have had a second pistol hidden in his uniform. Natalya cursed herself for not checking him, and blinked at the sight of the dead man.
âThis way, right?â Co asked, tilting her head down the hallway as she stood over the stilled guard.
Natalya nodded, and ran.
She turned right at the intersection, gun leveled and ready as she and Co made their way through the quaking corridor. Vowing to strangle Ptolemy if the third door didnât contain shield controls, Natalya stopped in front of the passageway and tilted her head at the locked, plastic door.
Co kicked the barrier off its frame. Natalya stepped through with coordinated precision, landing a shot in the arm of the lone soldier who stood in the back of the room. He went down, bleeding on blinking consoles. A pillar in the center of the cylindrical room displayed the shieldâs status on viewscreens. They flickered with the bombardment, the air defense systems blinking in ready status.
Technicians ducked behind consoles that encircled the viewscreens, some of them officers and likely armed.
âTwo options,â Natalya announced in an authoritative tone as she strode into the center of the room. âMy way, or her way. This is my way.â
Natalya pointed at the bleeding, but alive, soldier.
âAnyone want to find out what her way is?â Natalya asked, tilting her head toward Co.
Co leveled and primed her weapon.
âIâll give you a hint,â Natalya said. âItâll make your friend here stop screaming.â
Natalya counted to three, eyes searching the room for anyone who thought to call her bluff. When the technicians and officers all folded, raising their hands above their heads, she said, âGood choice. Now deactivate the shields around the landing zone and youâll get rid of us. Wonât that be fun?â
âDoesnât sound fun to me,â Co added.
âMy friend doesnât think that sounds fun.â
âShields down!â a technician announced from the far side of the room.
Natalya heard a buzz from the central viewscreens and saw a flashing red light, indicating the landing zone shields were off.
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âThanks,â Natalya said, then blasted the technicianâs console. The display flickered and froze. Natalya was sure they had a way to reroute commands, pretty sure, but she needed time to get orbital before that happened.
âSee this?â Natalya asked, showing the technicians a plastic gum container. She set it on one of the consoles, making sure the Black Cherry label was hidden. âThis is a motion sensor. Move, and it sets off a series of explosives my friend here placed at the door.â
That should buy us some time, Natalya thought.
Natalya glared at the technicians, daring them to disagree. When they folded once more, Natalya turned toward the door.
âIs that you, Natalya?â a familiar voice called at her back. She stopped and turned to see a round face, blue eyes, and yellow-tinted skin beaming through the viewscreens that had a moment ago displayed the shields and weapons status.
âQin,â Natalya said.
âThe Traitor of Farbind, still at it. Treason wasnât enough for you? You have to flee with criminals? Not as high crimes as yours, of course, but wanted criminals all the same,â Qin said.
âYou had them raise the shields,â Natalya accused.
The techniciansâ eyes went wide, none of them daring to move.
âHe said Prosper would send strikes at Horizon if we let you leave,â an officer in Changyu fatigues said, referring to the primary planet of the Changyu Confederation.
âThe colonies have their battles, and Prosper is not going to take sides. However, if Changyu wants to interfere with Prosper businessâ¦â Qin said, leaving the conclusion unspoken. âSurrender your ship, and keep all those on it contained. You may survive this attack if you do.â
Prosper. It was the home planet for every single human being in the galaxy, whether they wanted to admit it or not. The first colony planets of Horizon and Progress, the Gaozu Hegemonyâs central planet, had broken away with dozens of other planetary systems during Prosperâs long civil war. Now the colonies themselves were attacking each other, vying for control of habitable planets.
âIâll pass,â Natalya answered.
âYou will answer for your crimes one day, traitor, of that Iâm certain,â Qin said, his mouth narrowing in a scowl.
âIâm sorry, youâll have to speak up.â Natalya fired a blast at the viewscreen. The scowling image of Qin erupted in a shower of sparks. Natalya glared at the technicians.
âWant me to blow up the room?â Co suggested.
Several technicians let out gasps, struggling with indecision on whether they should run or duck for cover.
âHey!â Natalya threatened. She pointed to the gum tin, daring anyone to question her. âOrder still stands! No movement. Letâs go, Co.â
Co shrugged and joined Natalya, running back through the halls.
Qin. He was the one whoâd ordered the Puqi City spaceport to keep her grounded. But why? Heâd sent ships after her before, but for all sheâd done she was low on the manâs priority list. He was Chairman of the Zhou, the council that oversaw Prosper and the colony planets still under the home planetâs banner. The Civil War had only ended half a century ago. Powers still vied for control. Why did Qin want to keep Natalya on Puqi?
âShields down, Augustus,â Natalya said into the communicator in her ear.
âYou know he likes it without protection,â Augustus replied, the sound of engines humming in the background. âOoh, he likes that. Purr for me, baby.â
âWeâre headed to you.â
âHold up,â Co said, stopping Natalya.
âDonâtââ Natalya began.
Natalya couldnât finish her sentence before the corridor in front of her collapsed, a fireball erupting across the intersection. The spaceportâs old food court completely caved in.
âDonât move!â a technician shouted back in the control room.
Natalya, however, knew differently. âYou do that?â she asked Co.
âFigured weâd need to cover our trail. Blast was supposed to go off two minutes ago, actually,â Co said with a shrug.
âIf that was the blast, we can move,â announced another technician in the control room. âIâll bet she was lying thatââ
A second explosion rang out and the ceiling in front of Co and Natalya fell apart. Natalya stepped back as smoke billowed around her legs.
âShe wasnât lying!â repeated the technicians.
Natalya raised an eyebrow.
âPut that one in the vault,â Co explained.
âCaptain, itâs getting hot out here. Had to lift off to cool down,â Augustus announced.
âThe refugees?â Natalya asked.
âShipâs gorged full.â
âThen weâre coming to you. Co, this way.â Natalya strapped her gun over her shoulder and climbed the fallen ceiling onto the low roof. Co jumped through the opening and onto the roof in a single leap, gun searching for threats as Natalya hooked an arm onto the sunbaked solar panels. She brushed aside Coâs offered hand and hoisted herself onto the roof, taking a deep breath.
Two dogfighting fighters streaked overhead. The shockwave of their supersonic flight reverberated against the roof and cracked dozens of black-glass solar panels. Above Puqiâs green-blue clouds, the massive fleets, no more than dim lights from the ground, had begun to engage, raining meteorites of debris through the atmosphere.
âThe more you delay the more heâs gonna like it, Captain,â Augustus said.
Natalya searched the sky but couldnât find her ship. Then, with a burst of air-to-air blaster fire from a thick tower at the center of the spaceport, it appeared.
The bow came to a point like the sharp beak of an eagle, a thick head near wide as the rest of the ship connected via a narrow fuselage to the arrow-shaped main body. Wings to give stability and house the colorful engines spread from the fat, round body like the leathery wings of a bat. An arched stern fanned out behind the wings, multicolored panels catching the wind as Augustus tilted the ship toward Natalya and Co. Two box-shaped structures attached to the front of the main fuselage like jagged paws, and just behind these was the sealed gangplank on the cocoon-shaped cargo bay.
Chimera was its name. The ship never looked so beautiful.
âTo us, Augustus!â Natalya announced.