Natalya ran to the other end of the square, climbing over the wrecked bus. She kept her carbine shouldered, and Jasper kept his sword at a high guard. When they reached the wide street in front of the cake-shaped building, Natalya knelt in front of the window, her gun trained on the dark opening.
âIâll go first,â Jasper offered.
âHavenât we gotten to the point where thatâs a given?â Natalya asked.
âI announced it to make sure you donât shoot me, not to stop you from going first.â
âJust get in there already.â
The hole was small enough Jasper had to crawl through, sticking his legs in first then pushing himself to the other side. Natalya kept her carbine trained on the interior, the golden light from Jasperâs sword reflecting off pale, stone walls. After Jasper had walked through a doorway, the room apparently a small office, Natalya followed.
The thick air stank of rotten leaves and humanity. Natalya spotted a few cots in darkened rooms as she followed the golden light of Jasperâs sword.
âUh, Captain,â Augustus said in Natalyaâs ear as the hallway opened to a large, pitch-black room.
âYeah?â Natalya asked.
The sound of falling water came from the room ahead. Jasper paused.
âWe just picked up another ship in the area,â Augustus said.
âDo you have the Key Core yet?â Ptolemy asked.
âGetting there,â Natalya replied.
âDiscretion is vital, Natalya.â
âThen be ready to land when I tell you. Now shut up, Iâm working.â
Natalya nodded at Jasper, who entered the dark inner chamber. As he raised his sword, the glow reaching a high ceiling, Natalya saw the dribbling artificial waterfall, the polished stone counter at the center, and the painted pathways leading all directions.
âHotel lobby,â Jasper explained. âStayed here once. That waterfall was beautiful, once.â
âLoss of aesthetics isnât my priority,â Natalya said, searching the trash-strewn ground. âDoesnât look like there was any fighting in here. Hello!â
Natalyaâs voice echoed the question back.
A fuzzy clump of hair peeked from the other side of the hotelâs check-in counter.
âCaptain,â Jasper said, pointing at the counter.
âI see it,â Natalya said. She didnât aim her carbine, she lowered it, but made sure to stand close to Jasper just in case sheâd made an incorrect assumption as to who this was. âHello there.â
âIs that a sword?â a tiny voice asked, the clump of hair rising to reveal two wide eyes and a small, pink forehead.
âYes it is.â
âAre you here to fight dragons?â
âExcuse me?â
âI only heard of swords used to fight dragons. But there arenât dragons, just robots. Are there dragons now too?â
âNo, thereâs no dragons. Whatâs your name, sweetheart?â Natalya asked.
âDana Kiran,â the little girl answered.
âMy nameâs Natalya. This is Jasper. Where are your parents?â
âThe robots took them. If youâre not here to fight dragons, are you here to fight the shiny man?â
âWhoâs the shiny man?â
The sound of a gunshot, muffled with distance and the many layers of stone walls, echoed in the lobby.
âCaptain, we have a problem,â Co said in Natalyaâs ear.
âIs there anyone else with you?â Natalya asked Dana.
Dana screamed and ducked behind the counter, fleeing toward the other side of the lobby.
The story has been illicitly taken; should you find it on Amazon, report the infringement.
âStop!â Natalya hurdled the counter and grabbed Dana around the waist, struggling to hold onto the screaming child. âJasper, get to the square â Iâm right behind you!â
âLet me go! I donât wanna go, I wanna stay here!â Dana pleaded, tiny fists pounding on Natalyaâs arm.
âDana. Do you want to learn how to fight dragons?â Natalya asked.
âYou said there werenât dragons!â
âI lied. There are dragons, and the man with the sword is here to fight them.â
The girl stopped squirming.
âWe need your help, Dana,â Natalya said. âDo you want to help the man with the sword fight dragons?â
Dana nodded.
âGood. Then take this,â Natalya let go of the girl. Dust rained down from a distant explosion as Natalya handed Dana a small electro-stick, a short-range stunning weapon the little girl looked at with wide-eyed awe.
âHit anyone with it who comes too close. Can you do that?â Natalya asked.
âI can,â Dana replied.
âGood. Hold my hand. Weâre going to a ship.â
âI thought we were fighting a dragon.â
âOne thing at a time.â
Dana put her hand in Natalyaâs, and Natalya pressed her carbine against her shoulder to steady her one-handed aim as she ran to the exit.
They reached the tiny window in time for a wave of dust to cloud their view. Natalya never let go of Danaâs hand as she crawled through the opening, pulling the girl outside a moment later.
âStay low,â Natalya said, crouching and raising her carbine.
The dust began to part. Natalya saw the ruined pyramid on the far side of the square, stone still collapsing on top of mangled hoppers as more of the robots leapt through the ruins. Co was better than a destruction crew sometimes. Natalya just hoped Dana was the only one whoâd been hiding in the ruins.
Co, the robotic-armed beast of a woman, stood in the center of the square, blasting away at incoming hoppers.
Sisi hid behind her, using her welpro to hurl chunks of the mangled pyramid at the robots. Jasper took the majority of the robotsâ fire, deflecting their blasts into the air.
Natalya added her carbineâs blasts to Coâs, pin-point shots hitting hoppers right in their sensor nodes, or rendering them lame with shots to their gyroscopic midsections.
âWhereâs the dragon?â Dana asked over the gunfire.
âAuggie, whereâs that air support?â Natalya asked.
âComing in. All fresh and warmed up for ya,â Augustus answered as Chimera burned its way through the atmosphere. He came in like a fiery rocket, and fired twin blasters at the hoppers. Chimera turned about, descending over the flat square as Co and Jasper mopped up the remaining robots.
âDragon!â Dana shouted, screaming and running back for the hotel.
Natalya hooked an arm around the girl and was just able to catch her. âNo, thatâs not a dragon, itâs our ship,â Natalya explained.
âYou said you were going to fight a dragon!â
âI lied again.â
âYouâre a mean liar.â
âI know. Auggie, whatâs the status of that other ship?â
âOrbiting the planet on its way toward us,â Augustus answered.
âI recommend we hurry, Captain,â Ptolemy said. âWe should just be able to make it out of the system if that ship maintains its current speed.â
âProsper, Gaozu or Changyu?â Natalya asked.
âItâs not registered with any of them, but it looks like a Prosper ship.â
âGreat. Okay, Dana, ready to go?â
Dana shook her head.
âWell weâre going anyway,â Natalya said, and ran into the square with the child in her arms.
Co raised an eyebrow at Natalya when she spotted the captain coming closer. Moving refugees meant money, so the more the merrier. But unless Danaâs parents were wealthy, and still alive, bringing the child with them would be less than profitable.
âEverything okay?â Natalya shouted over the sound of Chimeraâs engines. Augustus was trying to find a safe spot to land in the debris-filled square.
âGirlâs got the Key Core, Prophet didnât die,â Co said, giving what amounted to the most celebratory explanation of the engagement Natalya could expect.
Jasper ran to Natalya and Co, nodding with approval.
Sisi emerged from the other side of the ruined bus a moment later, the safe containing the Key Core hovering in front of her welpro.
âGood thing this safe is blast, scanner and lick-proof. Weâd be bits of protons if the Key Core got hit,â Sisi said. âCourse weâre bits of protons now, but I like my protons in the current mass they occupy and not scattered throughout theââ
âJust get it ready to board,â Natalya said.
ââkay.â
âHoppers,â Co said, her eyes, and now her gun, pointed back toward the ruined pyramid. âOn the way.â
Natalya knew even the many theyâd destroyed couldnât be the extent of the opposition on this ruined planet. She set Dana down as she leveled her carbine, ready to give Dana and Sisi cover.
âHurry it up, Augustus,â Natalya ordered.
âThese things takeââ Augustus began.
âWeâre in a rush, Auggie.â
Chimera finally set down on its extended legs, billowing a tornado of dust as it settled. The gangplank lowered a moment later.
âBoard the ship, Dana,â Natalya said as Jasper lit up his sword and ran to the rubble.
Before Jasper or Dana could take two steps, a flash of lightning streaked across the sky. Natalya saw a glowing object hurtling toward them like a fiery blue comet.
âAuggie, I thought you said we had time!â Natalya accused.
âTime for what? The other shipâs still in orbit,â Augustus replied as the comet seemed to evaporate. Pieces peeled away and fell toward the square.
âRun!â
The small craft got close enough that Natalya fell to the ground with the blast of its sonic boom. It tilted up a moment, coming to a halt over Chimera. One last piece fell off the side of the tiny ship, landing with a pulse of a shield emitter on the dust-laden square.
As Natalya got to her feet, carbine raised, the dust parted to reveal a man braced with one arm on the ground to cushion his fall. He rose on his feet, gray and black compression cloth over his entire body showing his muscle-solid, thin frame. Grey metal protruded from his skin like boils all over his body. An angular gash scarred his right eye. His black hair was long and wild, and his eyes were concealed behind a thick pair of black discs.
His forearms glowed blue, the tell-tale sign of a micro shield emitter. But he wasnât holding such a device, and it glowed brighter than the tiny emitter on Coâs arm. When he stood, he looked directly at Natalya and raised a pair of black pistols.