Trial and Temptation (Mandrake Company)

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Trial and Temptation (Mandrake Company) Page 11

by Ruby Lionsdrake


  “Yeah. Do that.” The admiral sounded bleak—even Gregor’s limited ability to deduce emotions could pick that up. Of course, everything that could go wrong for his visit already had. He must not believe a couple of mercenaries could keep him alive and get him to his meeting point.

  Gregor thought about saying something reassuring, but he wasn’t good at that, and the admiral probably wouldn’t want to be coddled, anyway. He would simply show Summers that all wasn’t lost by ensuring he made it to the planet in one piece.

  For the next fifteen minutes, he concentrated on that. He was aware of Summers shooting whenever an opportunity arose, but Gregor’s only goal was to evade the blockade. At one point, he had half of the enemy pilots fooled that he intended to run away, circling back around the moon, but as soon as they were following, he dove for the planet, raking the underbellies of four fighters as he streaked past. Lasers seared the side of the shuttle, and he kept the alarms and indicators in his peripheral vision, but mostly, he concentrated on finding the space, the angles, that others might not.

  “Nice,” the admiral purred at one point when Gregor managed to cross two of the fighters up with each other, so that they clipped wings and spun out of control.

  Gregor filed the praise away to consider later—because of the source, it pleased him more than it might from another—and let the planet fill his vision. He thought he might spot the Albatross out there somewhere, but none of the ships that showed up on his sensors were familiar. He was tempted to hail Mandrake Company and check on its status, as well as letting the captain know that he and Val had acquired the admiral, but communications might be monitored. He didn’t need to give the enemy any more information about Summers’s whereabouts and where he was going than they already had. Besides, wherever the rest of the company was, it was doubtlessly busy. Lieutenant Sequoia would be at the helm, guiding the vessel against the numerous ships of the other mercenary outfit. Gregor wished he had the firepower of the Albatross at his fingers at the moment.

  But maybe he wouldn’t need it. Nearly thirty seconds had passed since anyone had fired at him. In fact, the fighters were falling behind now, some of them veering away. Odd. They were XR-RIFS. That model should have been able to reach the planet. Ah, but Gregor saw the true reason for their turn around at the same time as a warning light flashed on the sensor array.

  “More company,” the admiral said.

  “Yes, sir.”

  “What are they?” Val asked from behind him. “They look like barges. But those are weapons, aren’t they?”

  The admiral frowned back at her. Gregor was focused on the world around them, which was displayed by the headpiece, but he imagined Val returning the admiral’s frown without fear. He wondered if she was irritated that Summers had presumed to take the co-pilot’s seat. Gregor could have stopped Summers—this was Mandrake Company’s shuttle, a privately owned craft, so he ought to be able to choose his co-pilot, but at the same time, GalCon regulations allowed for the usurpation of private vessels in times of war. This wasn’t a war that GalCon itself had much of an interest in, but Gregor didn’t want to squabble with a man who was a hero.

  “They are barges,” the admiral said. “Mining barges that were converted for the war effort decades ago—the same uglies were floating over the continent when I was a kid. They belong to the Orenkans. I suggest we avoid them.”

  “Planning to, sir.” Gregor had already altered his course. The barges would see him—they doubtlessly had the same sensor capabilities he did—but he was hoping they were as slow as they looked. He aimed for the mountain range that housed the tunnel mouth where someone was supposed to be waiting for the admiral.

  “Yes, you’re doing well, soldier. Keep it up.”

  “Yes, sir.”

  “You have a name? Captain Mandrake is… known to us—” the admiral’s voice took on a chilly tone, “—but few others in his outfit are.”

  Gregor had to answer—the admiral would find out sooner or later—but he was reluctant to do so. If Summers didn’t care for Mandrake, who was down on the books as a deserter because he had refused to take part in the destruction of his own home world, then he might not respect an officer who had also resigned because of the Grenavine atrocity, especially not one who had been on an upward career trajectory that many had noted. Of course, years had passed. Maybe the admiral wouldn’t remember him or wouldn’t have heard of him to start with. It wasn’t as if he had served long enough to become famous, especially outside of the piloting sphere. Besides, why should the man’s opinion matter anyway? Gregor wasn’t some starry-eyed cadet, longing for the approval of a senior officer. Even if that officer was a legend, and even if he had read all of the man’s papers…

  “Gregor Thatcher, sir.” He guided the shuttle away from one of the barges that had turned in their direction, glad for a distraction, so he wouldn’t notice the admiral’s silence—stony silence?—so much.

  “It was Lieutenant Commander Thatcher in the military, wasn’t it?” Summers finally asked. Yes, his tone was cool, his encouraging words of earlier forgotten. “You taught at the academy and flew in the Moon Thunder Operation. And then you quit for no reason.”

  “There was a reason, sir.”

  “No good reason. You had a promising career ahead of you. And now you’re a mercenary.” Summers made a noise of disgust in the back of his throat.

  Gregor didn’t answer. What more could he say? Summers obviously hadn’t found the destruction of a planet a reason to leave the military, so he would hardly understand why Gregor had.

  Strange, but he was relieved when the barge opened a few doors, and a squadron of fighters flew out. They were down in the atmosphere, so these were jet airplanes rather than spaceships, but they would have as much, if not more, firepower. Gregor spotted a couple of bombers in the contingent that soared after them.

  “How far to the coordinates?” Summers asked. He still had his headpiece on, so he would have seen the new problem too.

  “ETA less than one minute.” Gregor ran his fingers across the sensor computer, trying to find the tunnel he was supposed to be aiming for. The instructions he had received promised it was large enough to fly into and that there was a hangar inside. Artillery weapons were supposed to be guarding the entrance. He didn’t see any of that. All he saw was—

  “Not to doubt you, sir,” Val said, “but why are we flying straight at that mountain?”

  “That’s not a mountain,” Gregor said, pulling the nose up. “That’s a landslide.”

  The guns, the road that should be leading to the tunnel, the tunnel itself… everything was gone.

  “Don’t go yet,” Summers said. “Open communications. My people wouldn’t have left us like this. Even if something happened, they would have found a way to leave a warning.”

  Gregor wanted to take them straight back up into space—running around in these chasms and between these mountains would only get them into trouble with the fighters who knew this terrain a lot better than he did—but he turned to port instead of heading up and out. “Yes, sir.”

  He poked the comm button on the console between them, wishing he hadn’t paid so much attention to his earlier reservations about contacting the ship. They might have an update on the coordinates. “Thatcher to Albatross, respond, please.”

  Blasts of red laser fire streaked through the sky, hammering into the landslide just below the shuttle. Rocks flew in dozens of directions, and gray smoke poured into the sky. Gregor frowned at the comm controls. He needed to fly, not talk.

  “Where are they?” the admiral murmured, leaning forward, as if the headpiece would give him a better view that way. His voice lowered to a whisper, “It can’t be too late. It can’t.”

  Gregor hadn’t seen much to represent Malbakian forces yet, but he kept his mouth shut. He was having to weave and veer once again, trying to elude a growing number of fighters that were chasing him through what had turned into a canyon. The sensors showed that big
barge approaching, as well. The terrain, steep walls on either side, limited his maneuverability. The shuttle shuddered, taking fire.

  “The sensors aren’t showing any other caves,” Gregor said, wanting the admiral to order them to leave the area. “Albatross, this is Thatcher. Do you read me?”

  “—read you, Thatcher.” That sounded like Sergeant Prandor—he was usually a weapons man. What was he doing at communications? “We’re having a few complications here.” A boom sounded through the comm. A cannon hammering the ship? Something worse? “Why didn’t you answer the comm earlier? We were trying to get you hours ago.”

  Had the Albatross called? Gregor had been busy flying ever since his butt had landed in the seat. He hadn’t thought to check.

  “We were locked in a freezer,” Gregor said. He was about to add that they’d found the admiral, but someone behind them launched a torpedo. He cursed, and veered for higher—and less fenced in—air. There was nothing in the canyon.

  Someone snorted. “Knowing you, that’s probably literal. Look, the Malbakians sent updated coordinates for that cargo you’re dropping off. I’m sending them over.”

  “Understood.”

  Summers stared at the side of Gregor’s head. With disapproval? Gregor grimaced even as he steered the craft upward. He should have taken the time to call—or he should have assigned Val to do it. She might have thought to do it anyway, if the admiral hadn’t taken her seat. Gregor wished she were beside him now. She couldn’t do anything from the passenger row.

  “This is only five miles away,” Summers said, reading the new coordinates as they popped up. “Get us up over that peak and down the other side. There’s supposed to be a new tunnel, same mountain, different side.”

  “I see it, sir.”

  Down here, in their own milieu, the jets were more adroit than his craft, and with the sun and snow, his dark gray hull must have made an easy target. Despite his best efforts to shake their pursuers, the shuttle took several more hits as they neared the ridge. There were no compliments flowing from the admiral’s lips now.

  An icy gray sky loomed above the icy white mountaintop. Gregor pushed the engines, planning to surge around the peak rather than over it, then dip down and hug the contours as he descended, so the jets would have to be careful following the terrain to get to him. But just as he crested the ridge, a big black-winged ship came into view, its head—and weapons turrets—pointing straight at him. The sensors didn’t show anything, and neither did his headpiece. Only the view screen displayed the craft—one nearly as big as the Albatross.

  “Shit,” Val spat.

  The admiral barked even more profane epithets.

  Gregor was too busy hammering the controls to curse, but he already knew it was too late. The gun holes flared on that ship—four of them—and torpedoes burst forth. It was a testament to his skill—or his wild thrashing at the controls—that only one of the shells hit them, but it was enough.

  The shuttle was hurled against the side of the mountain. They smashed hard, sheering ice and rock away as they fell, debris flying past the view screen. A wrenching sound came from the side, like an old tin ration can being torn open, the sound amplified a thousand times. Gregor fought to regain control, but the helm was sluggish, barely responding. More booms came from outside. They were too busy falling, scraping and grinding down the steep mountain slope for it to matter much if they were hit again, but Gregor wouldn’t give up. He threw the lever that released the auxiliary helm and lunged across the admiral to grab the controls. These were sluggish, too, but less so. He managed to get the shuttle away from the mountain. Now, if he could just get it away from that black ship.

  “Cloaked Tiger,” the admiral growled. “I’d heard the Orenkans had gotten a couple of prototypes, but I didn’t think—where’d they get the money to finance that, damn it? Are they even importing food and feeding their people anymore? Or just buying weapons?”

  More lasers streaked past them, one clipping the side of the shuttle. It shuddered and groaned. As if it needed more damage. Gregor flew lower to the ground, following every dip so the terrain would cover them, even if only for a few seconds. One of their thrusters was out, and they were reduced to nearly half speed, not to mention he was struggling to keep them flying straight.

  He glanced at the new coordinates, even though they were already burned into his brain. That tunnel ought to be up here, somewhere close. But if it was nothing more than an unmarked hole among the hills and glaciers, he might fly right past it without ever seeing it. No, there was something. Gun platforms, and was that a shield generator?

  He checked the sensors—there was a shield. And it was up. Gregor ground his teeth. The control panel was awash in warning lights. There was no chance of the shuttle making it out of the atmosphere right now, even without the fighters snapping at its heels.

  “Admiral, do you have any way of contacting your people?” Gregor asked. “Letting them know you’re in this shuttle?”

  “I had a way, but those felons that dragged me down to the basement took everything.”

  The shuttle rocked again under a new barrage of fire. Gregor couldn’t maneuver it fast enough to dodge, not anymore. He looked over his shoulder, meeting Val’s alarmed eyes and wishing… wishing he had talked to her more, that they had flown this last mission together, that they had… He shook his head bleakly. So much left unsaid.

  “Shield’s down,” Summers barked.

  Gregor spun back to the controls.

  “They saw us coming,” Summers added. “There. In, in, go.”

  Gregor didn’t need the order. He was already veering for the dark tunnel opening between the gun platforms. It wasn’t much bigger than the shuttle, which was shuddering and jerking alarmingly against his hands, but he threaded the needle, slipping into a long ice tunnel. The big guns boomed behind them, keeping those other ships away, he hoped. The shields should be thrown back up again too.

  Light banks lined the narrow passage, but they didn’t do much do brighten the way: half of them were turned off and the other half glowed weakly or flickered. Still, it was enough; the sensors guided him further. They told him that a chamber lay ahead—perhaps the same chamber they had been seeking from the collapsed entrance on the other side of the mountain. He didn’t slump back and breathe a sigh of relief until he saw it with his own eyes.

  Another shuttle and a handful of fighter craft like the ones that had been chasing them were parked inside. There was plenty of space for the Mandrake Company craft, and Gregor picked a spot, setting down as calmly as he could in the creaking, injured craft.

  As soon as they landed, the admiral jumped to his feet. He punched the button for the hatch and jogged out without a word for Gregor. Normally, Gregor wouldn’t have thought anything of it—expressions of gratitude often seemed superfluous and unnecessary to him—but in this case, he found himself longing for some little praise from the man who had been a role model to him once, the man who’d had the career Gregor himself had once thought he would have. Maybe Summers had been disappointed by the flying at the end or by Gregor’s failure to contact his ship sooner. Or maybe, now that he knew who Gregor was, who he had once been, Summers would be disappointed no matter what Gregor did.

  A hand came to rest on his shoulder. “I’m glad you got us out of that, sir.”

  Sir. It made sense to go back to more formal address now that they were among others, but something about that formality, after they had been teasing each other—all right, she had been teasing him far more than he had been teasing her—was like another stab in the heart. He forced himself to give her a nod and respond.

  “For the moment.” He waved at the flashing lights on the console.

  “Yes, that’s impressive.” Val squeezed his shoulder and let go. “I’ve never seen so many systems errors and notifications of equipment malfunctions at once. Nothing’s going to blow up, is it?”

  “I don’t think so, but nothing’s going to fly again, eit
her, not unless they have some spare parts down here. And a couple of mechanics they would be willing to loan us. Given what I heard over the comm when I contacted the ship, I wouldn’t bet on Mandrake Company being able to come down to rescue us any time soon.”

  Val grimaced. “I guess that means I need to be polite to the admiral and not—” she glanced toward the open door, “—tell him what I really think.”

  “Perhaps a prudent idea,” Gregor said, his gaze drawn back to all of the alarms. Even if these people did have parts and trained people to spare, the shuttle might not fly again. Captain Mandrake would not be pleased about that. With the rest of the company fighting in orbit, he might not make a priority of retrieving his broken shuttle, either. Gregor and Val could be stuck in this underground bunker indefinitely.

  Chapter 8

  Val walked down the shuttle ramp to take a look at the damage from the outside. Her jaw tumbled so far open it almost tripped her. The lights flashing all over the control panel might have been worrisome, but this—scorch marks, smoke, and spots where the hull had been cut through to the insulation and wiring beneath—made it real. She shivered, and not only because of the cold air in the underground hangar. The marks showed her how close they had been to not making it at all. They would need a professional patch job for the exterior and, judging by the black smoke still billowing from the engine compartment, a lot of spare parts for the interior.

  Gregor gave the damage a glance, but headed straight for the group of people already gathering around Admiral Summers. He must have noticed Val wasn’t following—nobody was going to invite her to a command meeting, so she figured her place would be back at the ship—because he stopped and looked back at her.

  “Are you injured?” he asked.

  “Nothing a stiff shot of whiskey wouldn’t heal.” Even if the planet was covered in ice, they must have greenhouses that grew something fermentable somewhere.

 

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