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Authors: Veronica Scott

Wreck of the Nebula Dream (26 page)

BOOK: Wreck of the Nebula Dream
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“To where?” Mara asked. “You said the shuttles didn’t have enough range to reach safety. I’m game to try it – anywhere is better than here, but –”

 
“We go along the tangent I expect rescue ships to use. It’ll take the pirate ship a few precious minutes to disengage from the
Dream
and come around to fire on us. Shuttles don’t do hyperspace, unfortunately, but I can pilot a pretty mean zigzag course. We’ll have a good head start, and a chance of getting away.”

Pausing for a second, Nick surveyed his five surviving companions. Even the two children were solemn.
We’re all pretty battered and beaten, one way or the other.
“If we’re about to be captured again, either on the
Dream
or on the shuttle, I’m taking steps to ensure we’re not taken alive, understand?”

“None of us,” Mara replied, demanding his unconditional promise.

“None of us.” Nick’s voice was flat, emphatic. “There won’t be any debate, no retreat, if I decide it’s come to that. Agreed?”

They each nodded, including the children, although Nick doubted Gianna had any idea what she was agreeing to. Paolo probably did understand.

“May I suggest the women take turns carrying Gianna, leaving us free to deal with any pirates we may meet on the way to the grav shaft? As we are now regrettably reduced to one blaster?” Khevan said. “We can make better time.”

“No problem – good thought.” Leaning over, Mara scooped the child into her arms. The girl nestled into her hold, hiding her face between Mara’s neck and shoulder, locking her arms around Mara’s neck tightly. Nick reached over and ruffled the toddler’s black curls, offering some wordless reassurance.

“Right, let’s go, quickly and quietly.” Nick emphasized the last admonition. “Get into the grav shaft no matter what.”

Nick leading the way, Khevan bringing up the rear, the erstwhile prisoners slipped through the portal and into the corridor. The D’nvannae paused briefly to force the storeroom door to close as far as it would go in its broken condition, before running light-footed after the others.

Luckily, the grav lift lay in the opposite direction from the captain’s dining room, or the pathetically simple plan might have been doomed.
It would have had to be the ventilation shafts then, and Khevan and I are big-shouldered men. Wouldn’t have worked for us, but at least it might have bought Mara and Twilka and the children some time.

There was a dead Shemdylann sprawled across the corridor.

“Probably killed in a spat over loot.” Checking the corpse briefly but fruitlessly for a weapon, Nick motioned the others to move by.

Reaching the sanctuary of the grav lift, everyone darted inside, each beginning the descent as soon as they stepped over the threshold. Twilka had no reluctance this time, although she gratefully clung to Khevan, burying her face in his shoulder. Encircling her with his arms, the Brother leaned his head wearily on hers.

 
“This is absolutely nerve-racking,” Mara whispered to Nick, as they floated past Level Three. “I wish we could make better time.”

“The pirates won’t check in here, not even if they know we’ve escaped. I promise,” Nick reassured her.
 

“But they could find a way to cut the power, right?” she said. “I can’t take much comfort from Shemdylann anatomical issues with grav lifts.”

Hugging her close as they descended, he tried to be reassuring. “If they think of it, yes. But they probably haven’t even discovered our escape yet. Shemdylann aren’t the brightest lights in the Mawreg constellation. Low-level bottom feeders, you know? Not big strategy thinkers. Hell, they wouldn’t have left us unguarded if they’d any extra brain cells in those saurian heads, no matter how beat-up I seemed to be.”

“Lucky for us they don’t know how dangerous you really are, then.” Mara tried to smile.

“Coming up on Level Eight,” Khevan said, his voice barely above a whisper.

They hovered slightly above and opposite the closed door to the level, bobbing up and down a bit in the anti-grav flow. Nick gave Mara’s hand a quick squeeze, then released her and moved to the door, his blaster at the ready.

“On the count of three,” he said to Khevan, who simply nodded, moving Twilka easily away and behind him in the anti-grav.

Nick keyed open the access door, doing a somersaulting dive into the corridor, twisting to the left side as soon as he hit the deck, scanning anxiously in both directions. He heard Khevan grunt as he flung himself through the door, to the other side.

“All clear,” Nick called softly to Mara and the others, still safely in the grav lift. Standing up as the women and children came through, he set off down the corridor, toward the big shuttle hanger where they had all come on board this doomed vessel only a few days ago.

The others rushed to catch up, Khevan taking rearguard.

Nick remembered it as being a short walk from the shuttle bay to the grav lift, but tonight it felt endless. He had the acute sense that time was running out for all of them, one way or the other, especially if the pirate captain had transmitted news of his incredible find to the Mawreg. The worry gnawed at him, a physical pain in his gut.
Who knew how close the nearest Mawreg ship or base might be?
The enemy would come with all possible speed to collect Nick. Live Special Forces personnel did not fall into Mawreg possession often, so they wouldn’t waste this rare opportunity to gather intelligence. The D’nvannae captive was additional incentive for the Mawreg to prioritize the prisoner transfer.

The mere thought of an impending Mawreg arrival caused him to redouble his pace, overriding the signals of complaint from his abused muscles.

“Should be around the next curve,” he called over his shoulder in a low voice. Then, as he approached the last bend in the corridor, Nick stopped, blaster lowered. “Why can’t we get a fucking break tonight? Just one?”

“What is it?” Mara peeked over his shoulder. “The pirates?”

Nick shook his head. “Worse. I’m afraid our plan has one major flaw I didn’t anticipate. See those flashing red lights reflecting on the wall there?” He pointed with the muzzle of his Mark 27.

Mara, getting the picture immediately, stared up at him. “The shuttle bay is open to space? How can that be?”

“Can’t we close it?” Twilka wanted to know, apparently not yet seeing the problem as a major hurdle. “I mean, come on, it’s a basic maneuver,” she added with unusual practicality.

Nick led them the few yards to where the corridor dead-ended at a massive space door, blocking access to the shuttle bay, wide open to the vacuum. Various indicators and readouts confirmed the situation in no uncertain terms. Leaning against the bulkhead, he swore. “I should’ve thought of this, but it never occurred to me Bonlors would be so thorough. So unprincipled.”

“Perhaps the pirates –” Khevan walked over to examine the data.

“No.” Nick shook his head. “This has the fingerprints of our recent captain and his SMT boss all over it. Damn! They wanted to make sure even if there was someone left on board who could pilot a shuttle, or who was crazy enough to take the chance, there was no access. Takes too long to disable a shuttle, see, but it only takes a few minutes to disable the outer hangar controls, lock them into open configuration.”

“So we can’t close the hangar doors from out here, repressurize the bay?” Mara asked. “I can’t believe this new obstacle is insurmountable.”

“No, we can’t.” Nick shook his head.
Damn Bonlors. I hope the Lords of Space throw him and his cadre of scheming officers smack into the path of oncoming Mawreg or pirate vessels. Or another asteroid. Yeah, a big one.

“Could we get some suits, go in there and close the doors from some other control panel?” Mara was working the issue, trying not to panic at this barrier to their escape. She obviously wasn’t about to give up now, this close to getting off the ship. “There has to be a control panel inside the bay. I don’t care how badly this jinxed ship was designed, there’s got to be another control panel, Nick.”

“The suits are all stored inside the hangar bay,” Nick said. “When we came in from the planet I noticed the screwy setup.”

Mara stared at him in disbelief. “But it makes no sense. There must be some in a crew storage locker somewhere else? On another level?”

“When McElroy spent the day giving me a tour, he specifically mentioned the problem, in fact. Said he was writing up a change order to correct it.” Nick frowned. “SMT seems to have been going for the record for inefficiency and stupidity, as well as the speed records.” He took another glance through the window set into the blast door, staring hungrily at the two gleaming passenger shuttles, sitting so near and yet impossibly far from their reach. Beyond the shuttles, he could see the blackness of interstellar space. “We are well and truly screwed.”

“The rescue ship will sail right into the pirate ambush,” Mara said. “There’s no way to warn them off now, even if you could fastlink again so soon.”

“I’d risk it, if we had the base station,” Nick agreed. “I hate to bring anyone else into this debacle.” Unkinking the spasming muscles in his back, he stood up straight. “Well, there’s one last thing we can do, on Level Ten.”

“But Ten’s where the engines are.” Twilka’s face took on puzzled lines as she considered his remark. “How does going there help anything?”

“I believe the captain intends we throw the Yeatters out of balance again,” Khevan said.

“But then the ship blows up!” Twilka half screamed. She stared from Nick to Mara and then over to Khevan. Deep in thought, the Brother was frowning at the closed space door, flexing his fingers.

“That’s the idea, I imagine.” Mara gently placed a hand on her shoulder. “If we can’t escape, we can’t just do nothing, can’t simply hand ourselves and all those poor people out in the LBs over to the Mawreg. Right, Nick?”

“Will it hurt?” asked Paolo in a small voice. “I don’t care for me, but I don’t want my sister to be hurt when the ship blows up, okay?”

Glancing at Mara, Nick tried to convey a silent apology.
Forgot the kids were listening
. He knelt on the deck so he could be eye to eye with Paolo. “It won’t hurt, trooper, I promise. It’ll be so fast, we won’t even know it happened. And then we’ll be beams of light, riding all over the galaxy together, forever.”

Paolo swallowed hard. “Okay. I just wanted to know.”

“You’re a great brother, always thinking about your sister.” Nick genuinely admired Paolo’s attitude. “I had a younger sister myself, a long time ago. I’m afraid I wasn’t as good at taking care of her, though.”

“What happened to her?”

Mara put her hand on Nick’s shoulder, forestalling whatever answer he might have made. “I think the captain told us, Paolo, in the observatory, remember? But maybe you were busy talking to Lady Damais then. The Mawreg killed the captain’s sister.”

“Oh.” Paolo stared at Nick, who nodded, unable to speak for the moment. Taking a quick step forward, the boy hugged him awkwardly, patting his shoulder once or twice. “It’ll be okay, to make us into light. It’ll be better than getting killed by the Mawreg. It’ll be okay,” he repeated, going to his sister. Taking her by the hand, Paolo led her in the direction of the grav lift. Twilka stared at Nick and Mara and then hurried after the children, to keep an eye on them.

“Damn, I hate this!” Nick stood and smashed a fist into the bulkhead. “How could that bastard Bonlors do this to a whole shipful of innocent passengers? No damn speed record, no amount of obscene profit, is worth risking eight thousand lives.”
 

There was no answer to his unanswerable query. The overconfident actions of the SMT Line president and his senior captain were so inhumane and reckless as to be nigh unto incomprehensible.

“Well,” Nick said, shaking his fingers to work out the pain from punching the wall, “let’s get on with this. Retreat to the engine room then, and hope we can get access to the controls there. The AI told me engineering central had been blasted by a micrometeoroid, but I’m pretty sure we can reach the actual engine room.” He held up the Mark 27. “I can take the Yeatters out of sequence with one blast from this, and then the
Nebula Dream
blows up about five minutes later.” Reaching out, he enfolded Mara in a comforting hug. “It won’t hurt. I wasn’t lying, you know. It will all be instantaneous.”

“Captain.”

Arm around Mara’s shoulders, Nick glanced at the D’nvannae. “Khevan?”

“There may be another possibility. We shouldn’t abandon hope of escape yet.”

Counting the obstacles off on his fingers, Nick frowned. “No suits, no atmosphere in the shuttle bay, no way to close off the outer doors from here. What am I missing?”

“This is my task, as sending the fastlink call was yours, and shielding you from the pirate torture was Damais’s. I can call upon She Whom I Serve, I am an Intimate Initiate –” Khevan smiled at their blank faces. “This means nothing to you, I realize, but I can call directly upon the Red Lady’s own energy. Not often, not lightly, but it can be done.”

Mind busy exploring the possibilities of this unexpected suggestion, Nick had one question. “This far away from D’nvannae?”

Khevan nodded.

Nick remained skeptical, which must have been obvious from the expression on his face, because the Brother made further arguments. “I can summon the power of the Lady, wrap myself in it –”

BOOK: Wreck of the Nebula Dream
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