Read The Tracker's Dilemma: (A Mandrake Company Science Fiction Romance) Online

Authors: Ruby Lionsdrake

Tags: #Romance, #Military, #Romantic Comedy, #Science Fiction, #Science Fiction & Fantasy, #Galactic Empire, #Genetic Engineering, #Space Fleet, #Space Marine, #Space Opera, #General Fiction

The Tracker's Dilemma: (A Mandrake Company Science Fiction Romance) (25 page)

BOOK: The Tracker's Dilemma: (A Mandrake Company Science Fiction Romance)
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“What do you think Thatcher and Frog are doing up there?” Striker asked.

Ms. Keys had her tablet open, a display glowing for the druids.

Tick shook his head. “I can’t see through miles of dirt and rock.”

“No?” Striker squinted at him. “When do the X-ray powers develop? Hemlock told me he could see that I wasn’t wearing any underwear.”

Tick curled a lip. “I’m sure he was—”

A flash of insight interrupted him. He wasn’t sure whose eyes he was seeing the world from, but he was suddenly up in one of the combat shuttles, swooping and diving in and out of the mist, harrying a larger winged ship with the ominous black paint and official markings of a military vessel. The captain had engaged with it? Damn, if he’d been in trouble with the military before, this would seal his fate.

The bigger vessel fired back, laser beams scorching the air just in front of the shuttle. At the same time, the military craft dropped bombs from its sleek black belly.

“Shit,” Tick said. “Brace yourselves.”

Somehow, he knew that those bombs would land right above their cavern. He reached out, gripping the shuttle for support. Jamie hadn’t raised the shields—she would have had to close the hatch to do so, stranding them outside. She must have chosen against that. Since Lauren was inside with her, Tick could not approve.

Three booms came in rapid succession, and this time, the entire cavern shuddered. More than dirt fell from the ceiling. Plant leaves flitted down, and out over the chasm, a tree was dislodged with a snapping and ripping of roots. It tumbled past, leaves fluttering free as it disappeared into the depths below. Rock cracked somewhere behind the druids, the noise ominous as it echoed through the cavern.

“You saw that coming,” Striker whispered as the ground stopped quaking—dirt continued to tumble from the ceiling. “Are you
sure
you don’t know anything about my underwear?”

Tick only shook his head, no witty responses coming to mind. He was too worried, worried that the other shuttles would be pulverized by the military vessel, no matter how good Thatcher was, and worried that the destruction of this cavern was inevitable. For whatever reason, that ship was determined to bomb the druids’ home.

“Uh, maybe we should finish chatting about this inside?” Ankari said to the druids, pointing to the shuttle. “Also, if you have other people here who might want a ride out, we could help with the evacuation.”

“We will not leave our home,” the female druid said. “And we will not participate in your experiment, Ms. Keys.” Her gaze had grown cool, and her words were equally chilly.

“Staying here might get you all killed,” Ankari said. “How many of your people live here? If it isn’t that many, we can get them into the shuttle. You have to consider evacuation.”

“This has been our home for more than ten years. We trust that Willow will protect us. Even if he cannot… we will not leave this place. Thoughts of evacuation would not be necessary if you hadn’t brought this trouble down upon us.”

“I want to
help
you,” Ms. Keys said, “to make you more than you ever dreamed of being. More human than human.”

“Your interest is in helping yourself and proving that your career has not been a waste.”

Keys opened her mouth, but didn’t seem to have a response to that. Too true to refute? Tick wondered how the druids could have known when they had only just met her.

“Why did you bring us down here to talk to you if you knew you weren’t interested?” Keys asked.

“You would not have found us without help, and you would not have left until you found us and received your answer.”

The man looked over at Tick again. “Take these women and your spaceship and go,” he said, speaking directly to him. “We are always willing to share our knowledge with the system, if it is desired, but we will not be anybody’s experimental laboratory animals.”

“I—” It was all that Tick got out.

Another vision washed over him, this time with such power and intensity that it drove him to his knees.

Chapter 15

“I think I have control of the ship again,” Jamie said—she had been pushing buttons and waving her fingers through the navigational holodisplays.

“Good,” Lieutenant Sparks said. “Too bad we can’t leave until they’re done talking out there.”

He, Jamie, and Lauren were the only ones remaining in the shuttle. The sound of another explosion echoed down to them, and more dirt and foliage tumbled from the ceiling. Something landed on top of the shuttle with a clank and bounced off. Lauren gritted her teeth, wishing Tick was still beside her, both because he might be safer inside and because she wanted a hand to grip.

“Couldn’t you
order
everyone to leave, Lieutenant?” Lauren unbuckled her harness and stood up, pointedly not looking toward the gaping chasm that fell away just past the shuttle’s ramp. “You’re the highest-ranking mercenary here, aren’t you?”

She walked up to sit behind Jamie and to frown at Sparks. He hadn’t been the sort of officer to take charge, as far as she had noticed, letting Striker and Tick make most of the decisions in the instances when Mandrake hadn’t been around. With his gangly build, he definitely looked more like a tech than a fighter, and he had spent far more time back in the tiny engine compartment than giving orders.

“I am, but our employer is out there, clearly engaged with those people. We yank her away before she finishes, and the company might not get paid. I don’t want to be blamed if the men don’t get their payday.” Sparks pointed at the console. “Try raising the captain again.”

He tapped his own comm-patch, something he had done several times now without result. Either the cavern ceiling or that strange mist up there was keeping their messages from being heard. This entire moon seemed determined to keep them from communicating with each other. Or maybe it was the military vessel. Someone had suggested that another ship nearby might be responsible for jamming their communications.

“That payday won’t mean much if we’re all dead,” Lauren said.

“Captain Mandrake?” Jamie asked. “Commander Thatcher? Can you hear us?”

“Where
are
you, Flipkens?” Mandrake growled. “And why haven’t you been responding to your comm?”

“We haven’t been able to hear you, sir.” She glanced at Sparks and whispered, “Maybe they’re near the crater right now.”

“Well, get out of that valley. We’re doing our best to keep this ship at bay, but we won’t have enough firepower to hurt him until—” A
thunk-ker-hiss
noise drowned out the rest of his sentence. His shuttle being hit? “Just get out of there,” he said, raising his voice to be heard over someone’s damage report.

“We’re not
in
the valley, sir,” Jamie said.

“Good.”

“We’re under it.”

Mandrake growled.

“This Charger might have company coming,” he said. “We can’t stick around. Get Keys and our people out of there. I don’t care if you have to carry them over your shoulder.”

Jamie touched her shoulder, a narrow platform for such an activity, but all she said was, “Yes, sir.”

“Come on,” Sparks said, waving at Lauren and nodding toward the hatch.

“What?” Why was he waving at
her
?

“In case I need help convincing your sister that it’s time to leave.”

“I thought that’s what Jamie’s shoulder was for.”

Sparks grabbed Lauren’s arm, not leaving her much choice. Maybe she would just run out and throw Hailey over her own shoulder.

“Wait,” she blurted as she passed her lab. “Let me grab my tranquilizer gun.” She would get her sister into this shuttle one way or another.

• • • • •

In Tick’s mind, he saw the huge bomb strike, the explosive—and the explosion—ten times greater than the ones before it. Trees flew, torn from their roots, and earth and boulders soared into the air. Rock snapped so loudly that it deafened him, and a crack split the terrain on the surface. Underneath it all, the cavern ceiling collapsed, rubble raining down by the tons. It smashed atop the shuttle—and the people standing around it, people yelling and racing toward the hatchway. They were too late. The ledge collapsed under the weight of the falling roof, and the shuttle and everything inside of it tumbled into a chasm.

Tick gasped as someone shook his shoulder, the dream—the
nightmare
—fading from his mind’s eye. It took a confused moment for him to gather his wits, to see that Keys was still talking to the druids, to notice Striker standing above him, gripping his shoulder and snapping his fingers in front of Tick’s eyes.

“Captain wouldn’t be pleased to see you sitting down and taking a nap.” Striker waved at Tick’s position down on his knees.

“A
nap
?” Tick rasped, then swallowed, his throat painfully dry. He staggered to his feet. “We have to go. I saw—the cave is going to collapse.”

“When?”

He had no idea. In five minutes? In one? In seconds?

“Before we’re out of it, if we don’t move now.” Tick didn’t know if he could change what he’d seen even if they
did
move now. What if that future was impossible to escape? He shook his head. They had to try. “Everyone on the shuttle,” he called. “Now!”

He ran as he yelled, sprinting toward Keys and the druids. He couldn’t grab all three and drag them to the ramp, but he’d at least snatch up their employer.

“The captain said to get out of here now,” came Lieutenant Sparks’s voice from behind him.

Tick didn’t look back, not until he heard Lauren also speak.

“Hailey, we’re leaving. Now.”

Tick cursed, almost tripping. “Get back inside,” he yelled at her. “I’ll get her.”

“We’re not done,” Hailey said, dodging Tick’s first attempt to grab her. “They don’t understand what they could be. I have to explain. I—”

The second time, Tick managed to snatch her up. He hoisted her over his shoulder and waved for the druids to follow him. Hailey slammed her fists into his back. The druids stepped away, not toward the shuttle but toward wherever they had come from. If it was another tunnel or cave, they wouldn’t be safe back there, no way.

“Get them,” Tick ordered Striker and Sparks. “Everyone, get in the shuttle now. The ceiling is going to fall any—”

The great boom, the one he had been dreading, erupted in the valley above. In the cavern, the noise was deafening, as it had been in his vision. Nobody would have heard him if he’d yelled.

Tick sprinted for the hatch, following right after Ankari. Sparks and Striker had gone after the druids, but they spun back now, also running for the shuttle. Tick couldn’t blame them.

The ground lurched, and Lauren tripped, going down hard on her knees. Striker, Sparks, and Ankari made it to the ramp. Tick halted so quickly that Keys almost flew over his shoulder. Balancing her, he reached down for Lauren. She was already scrambling to her feet.

She yelled something he couldn’t hear. “I’m fine,” perhaps and resumed running.

He wrapped his free arm, the one not holding Keys over his shoulder, around her waist, having no intention of letting her trip again or fall behind.

When they were three steps from the ramp, the thunderous snapping of stone that he’d been dreading sounded above them. This time, the entire ceiling cracked open. Trees and rocks as big as the
Albatross
plummeted down from above, slamming onto the ledge.

Remembering how that ledge had collapsed in his vision, Tick lunged for the ramp, his arm still around Lauren. But a boulder slammed onto it right in front of them. Metal snapped, the ramp sagged, and Tick almost smashed into the giant rock. It completely blocked the hatchway.

“No,” Lauren cried, looking helplessly down at the tranquilizer gun in her hand.

Seeing the horrified expression on her face and feeling the entire cavern collapsing around them filled Tick with terror. Terror and anger. How dare those military idiots do this? He glared at the boulder blocking their way and imagined hurling it across the cavern.

It didn’t do quite what he had in mind, but to his surprise, it rolled to the side, tipping off the damaged ramp.

Tick propelled Lauren ahead of him and flung himself into the shuttle, diving into the interior and letting go of Keys. They hit the deck hard, limbs in a jumble, taking down Lauren with them. It didn’t matter. They were inside.

“Go, go!” Tick shouted.

Striker was gaping at him—he stood next to the button that operated the ramp, his grenade launcher aimed out the hatch, as if he’d been about to blow up that boulder. Instead, he slammed his fist against the button. The shuttle was taking off before the hatch closed, the sound of the damaged ramp trying to squeal its way into its retracted position audible through the hull. Whether it made it, Tick didn’t know.

Rocks slammed against the roof of the shuttle. From his position on the deck, Tick couldn’t see the view screen or Jamie, who must have been focused on the navigation controls in white-knuckled rapt attention. Maybe he didn’t want to see. More rocks battered them.

“Shields are up,” Sparks said—he’d managed to get into the seat beside Jamie.

“Heading for the entrance,” Jamie said. “If it’s still there. Uh.”

Tick might have gotten up to check on what that “uh” meant, but Lauren leaned against him, sweat gleaming on her forehead. Keys had already crawled away from him, but Lauren did not seem in a hurry to move. She’d latched onto one of the legs of the rearmost seats with one hand. The other gripped Tick’s thigh, digging in with terror. He wrapped his arm around her, trying to exude ease, though he had no idea if they would survive.

“The ledge just collapsed,” Jamie said.

“Any way to tell if the druids got off?” Ankari asked.

“Too busy worrying about if we’re going to get out of here,” Jamie said, thuds punctuating her words as more and more boulders struck the top of the shuttle.

Even with the shields up, the blows reverberated through the craft. Sometimes, the chunks of earth pummeling them were large enough to knock them off course as the collapsing cavern did its best to bury the shuttle along with everything else.

BOOK: The Tracker's Dilemma: (A Mandrake Company Science Fiction Romance)
10.41Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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