âYou should really go to the medical bay, Captain,â Augustus insisted as he opened the lifeboatâs doors.
âIâm fine,â Natalya replied, limping her way through the corridor to the bridge.
Augustus had piloted their shuttle in a way it was never designed. It was a lifeboat, built for short-range travel in limited direction in the event of a catastrophe. Heâd used the compressed gas thrusters at the shuttleâs nose to guide the craft safely into the cracked cargo bay. It was like threading a needle with your toes, and heâd got it on the first, and only possible try.
Somewhat less impressive was guiding the lifeboat back to its dock. Ptolemy steered Chimera, much thinner due to the loss of its cargo bay, toward the shuttle. With a little coordination, they returned the lifeboat safely to its dock.
Every muscle in Natalyaâs body felt like itâd been stretched, burned, and snapped, but she stepped out of the lifeboat the second its hatch opened.
Co met her in the corridor, guns ready.
âWhereâd they take him?â Co asked.
âDo you care?â Natalya replied, stumbling toward the bridge stairs. Co put her robotic arm around the captain, and Natalya accepted her help.
âYou point, I shoot.â
âGood to know.â
Augustus and Sisi were right behind them, stopping on the stairs.
âWhat are we doing, Natalya?â Augustus asked.
âWe just got attacked. Weâre going to show those Prophets they canât do that to my crew and get away with it.â
âIs Jasper part of the crew?â Sisi asked.
âHe is if I say he is.â
âDonât worry, Captain, they hurt my sweet Chimy. He looks much slimmer now without the cargo bay, but still, I liked him the way he was,â Augustus said as they reached the bridge.
âWhat about the space station?â Sisi asked.
âYes, what about it?â Ptolemy added, rising from the pilotâs seat as Natalya leaned against the communications console, scanning for any ships in the area.
âWeâre going to get it. Weâre just going to take a detour first,â Natalya replied.
âCaptain, this is exactly what weâd planned for.â
Natalya froze. She glared at Ptolemy.
âJasper is in the hands of the Prophets. The path to the space station is clear,â Ptolemy continued. âYou nearly lost your life and we lost our cargo bay, but the situation is no different than if you had decided to turn over Jasper.â
âTurn over Jasper?â Augustus asked.
Co crossed her arms.
âYou hadnât made your choice yet, Captain,â Ptolemy said. âNow the choice has been made for you.â
âIt has,â Natalya replied.
âWe both appreciate what Jasper did. But heâs gone now. One life isnât worth much in the grand scheme of things. You said so yourself.â
âAuggie and Sisi found a way to save me.â
Augustus held his hand out for a fist bump. Sisi raised a questioning eyebrow at him. Augustus raised her hand and performed a manual fist-bump with her. She then smiled with understanding.
âThatâs different. There was a chance of saving you,â Ptolemy reasoned. âNow thereâs no chance. So we might as well make the most of Jasperâs sacrifice andââ
âNo,â Natalya said. âItâs no different. You could have jettisoned the cargo bay at any moment. I told you to do that.â
Natalya glared at Augustus. He smiled back.
âBut you didnât. You risked your lives to save me,â Natalya continued.
âA mild endeavor compared to where Jasper is,â Ptolemy replied. âThe risk to the ship was marginal. It was simply a matter of proper timing to rescue you, not to mention the Key Core.â
âThen itâs the same with Jasper.â
âJasper doesnât have the Key Core.â
âIs that all you care about?â
âYou canât save everyone, Natalya. But we can keep Qin from getting this station. We can honor Jasperâs sacrifice by escaping.â
âOr we can escape with him.â
âThink, Captain, is this the same stubbornness that convinced you it was possible to save Farbind?â Ptolemy asked. âAre you being reasonable or prideful?â
Natalya paused. She looked out the viewscreens, at the stars around her. Doubt crept in like darkness. Was she being stubborn? Was she hoping for something impossible? Should she just accept this and move on?
âIf one life doesnât matter, then my life doesnât matter,â Co reasoned. âJasperâs good in a fight. I say we get him.â
Once again, Coâs words snapped Natalya back to focus.
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âWeâll find a way. That or weâll die and Qin will get the space station. Either way, it will be very interesting,â Augustus said.
âI mean, itâs hypothetically possible we could rescue Jasper. Hypothetically in that I just got a signal from Pulâs shield emitters. They put off a distinct code that, well, is very complicated,â Sisi said.
âWhat are you saying, Sisi?â Natalya asked.
âJasper and Pul are on Shihuangdi. If⦠if that makes a difference.â
Natalya took a deep breath and exhaled. âIt doesnât.â
âI mean, itâs still hypothetically possible to break into the most advanced ship in the Prosper fleet and rescue the most wanted man in the galaxy from super-advanced tech and soldiers and magic-like Prophets holding him captive, but just because itâs hypothetical doesnât mean itâs impossible.â
Sisi blinked.
âIâd like to help him. Jasper saved my life. That matters, even if his and my life donât,â Sisi added.
Natalya looked at Ptolemy.
Ptolemy tapped his fingers on the console. âYouâve made your decision, then?â he asked.
Natalya nodded.
Ptolemy sighed, and nodded as well. âIf it must be done, it must be done right. Fools that we are,â he said.
âDoes this mean weâre blowing up a capital ship? Because Iâd want to do that if Jasper was on it or not,â Co noted.
âA less confrontational method may be in order.â Ptolemy typed commands into the communications console. âThere is a way we can board the ship undetected.â
âAnd you didnât tell us about this?â Natalya asked.
âI wanted to make sure you were thinking reasonably, that you all were.â
âEven though you donât want to do this?â
âThe logical course of action is to head straight for the space station. But it is illogical for Jasper to have helped us in the first place. Consider this my unmaking of a debt, Natalya, a payment for services rendered,â Ptolemy said as he pulled up an image of Qinâs great, black capital ship. âYou and I are even.â
âAre you betting against me, Ptolemy?â Natalya asked.
âI bet for you long ago, Captain. Youâre making me put more chips on the table than Iâd like. Very few people have that kind of influence on me, which is exactly why Iâm willing to go all in, so long as you are.â
âI donât play cards,â Sisi noted.
âThen forget the metaphors. Letâs get our crewman back so we can get my station. Maybe we can kill Qin while weâre at it. Hopefully this will distract the Prophets from our course to Farbind as well.â
âNow youâre talking,â Co said.
âSo how do we board Qinâs ship?â Natalya asked.
âWe have a transmitter that can broadcast any signal we want. And a ship made out of junk,â Ptolemy explained.
Augustus gasped with offence and patted Chimeraâs hull. âDonât listen to him, youâre beautiful,â he said.
âIâm not talking about aesthetics, Iâm talking about the shipâs parts.â Ptolemy typed more commands into the communications console, grimacing as the computer hummed its calculations. After a few moments, the touchscreen showed a little map of a twin-star solar system, and a flashing black dot in the center.
Ptolemy projected the image onto the front viewscreens. âHere,â he said. âShihuangdi is in the Sui system.â
âHowâd you find it? Sisi, were you tracking him?â Natalya asked.
âNo,â Sisi said. âI just got confirmation of Pulâs signal and counter-referenced it to the energy signature of the ship he was on by examining the proton emissions set off byââ
âDock workers and supply personnel also serve as viable sources,â Ptolemy interrupted. âManifests can find their way into the wrong hands if the right payments are made.â
âYou knew Jasper was on Qinâs ship before Sisi?â Natalya asked.
âShe confirmed it.â
âAnd you were just going to keep that information from us?â
âForgive me, Captain. I didnât want to go on a suicide mission unless it was confirmed as absolutely necessary.â
âYou vowed to not withhold anything, Ptolemy.â
âAnd a challenging vow that is. Captain. Iâm on your side,â Ptolemy said. âI want to help.â
âTo help yourself,â Natalya noted.
âLetâs call it a win-win. Nowâ¦â Ptolemy continued. He zoomed out of the Sui system. âQin doesnât know where my space station is. If I were him, Iâd be torturing Jasper for that information, even if he honestly claims to not know it.â
Natalya bit her lip.
âThis is me not withholding anything, Captain,â Ptolemy explained.
âI appreciate it,â Natalya said, trying to keep her voice level.
âShihuangdi is positioned close enough to the demilitarized zone to quickly reach the Farbind system.â The viewscreens showed the distance between Farbind and Qinâs ship. Even though it was several billion kilometers of stars and planets, the viewscreens showed only a meter or so separating the two.
âThe battle of Farbind occurred long enough ago that debris would just now be making it passed the demilitarized zone,â Ptolemy said. He made the viewscreens display a line from Farbind to Shihuangdi.
âThatâs a near statistical impossibility!â Sisi declared. âThe debris would have to have exploded with enough velocity, passed through several systems without being caught in the gravity of dozens of stars, andââ
âRanger participated in that battle, and our transmitter can log its distress signal as having originated in Farbind.â
âBut that still doesnât get us inside the ship. Shihuangdi has shields and short-range scanners that can pick up Chimera easy,â Natalya noted.
âWhich is why weâll only get close enough to launch a lifeboat. Sisiâs welpro can be configured to basically cloak a small object. It wonât work for Chimera, but it will allow a lifeboat to slip through the shields undetected. And then, you make your way inside the ship.â
Ptolemy zoomed in on Shihuangdi, the black vessel dominating the viewscreens. A flashing yellow dot moved toward the ship, and entered it via one of the four cannon at its sides.
âYou want us to fly through the cannon?â Natalya asked.
âAugustus is more than capable, Iâm sure,â Ptolemy replied.
âAw shucks, Ptolemy, you know I blush whenever you think I can slip in and out of things with skill,â Augustus said.
Natalya raised an eyebrow at Sisi.
âAgain, hypothetically, it could work,â Sisi stated.
âAlright,â Natalya said.
âAs long as they donât fire the cannon. Then weâd explode.â
âNoted.â
âIt would be a very big explosion, too.â
âNoted.â
âThis is a long-shot, Captain. Everything will have to be done with perfection,â Ptolemy said.
âAnd if it doesnât, Co can take on an entire ship full of Qinâs soldiers,â Natalya said.
âIâd rather not. Jasperâs there,â Co said.
âAw, Coâs caring. Itâs adorable,â Augustus cooed.
Co drew a pistol from one of her pouches and leveled it at Augustus. âIf you were on that ship, Iâd leave you.â
âYouâre so cute when you lie, Co.â
âIf Augustus was on that ship, weâd go after him. If Sisi, or Co, or even Ptolemy were at risk, weâd put ourselves on the line to bring them back,â Natalya explained.
âYou too, Captain,â Sisi said.
Natalya felt her heart try to beat its way out of her chest, adrenaline, fear, and pride surging through her veins. âLetâs do this right.â
âIâm afraid thatâs up to you, Captain,â Ptolemy explained. âThis will get you on the ship. Finding Jasper, getting him off Shihuangdi, and dealing with the White Prophet? That may prove challenging.â
âCo, Iâm assuming you already know how to blow that thing up from the inside out?â
âI have a few ideas,â Co replied.
âIf they even think of teleporting Jasper off that ship, weâll make Qin regret it.â
âLast chance to change your mind, Captain,â Ptolemy said. âIf we destroy Shihuangdi it may be worthwhile militarily, but keep in mind our final goal.â
âJasper helped get us this far, Ptolemy. If heâs not there when we reach it, itâs not worth reaching.â Natalya looked at the members of her crew. âAnyone disagree?â
No one replied.
âGood,â Natalya said. âLetâs plot a course.â