by M. D. Cooper
“Winter!”
Lana chased him down the hall.
“Winter!”
He clenched his teeth and walked a few paces without acknowledging her, until she called out again. Finally, he turned around and watched her run toward him. Despite their disagreement, he didn’t mind the view.
“Is there a problem?”
“No problem, but if you’re going to visit Ranstock, I want to come with you.”
“Damn straight I am. I’m going to ask her a few more rather pointed questions. Now that we know who she thinks she is, we can dig a little deeper.”
“You’re not seeing the forest for the trees.”
Winter scowled. “What the hell does that mean?”
“It means you’re so angry about what’s happened to Chimin, you can’t see when opportunity is staring you in the face. If Ranstock is who she says she is, and I believe her, then we have someone here who can take the throne from Empress Mei if Grayson can’t get her to sign the treaty.”
“So he’d just remove Mei from power? That doesn’t sound very much like democracy.”
“In times of war, it is what it is. That’s why the fleet from Silstrand is on its way. To install their own leadership until an election can take place here, and on Battia. If we can skip all that and prove that Ranstock is Mei’s daughter….”
Winter pressed his lips together and shook his head. He didn’t respond as they entered the precinct and walked to the lift that would take them to the holding cells.
Pressing his hand against the ident plate, he let out a long sigh. “I don’t know, Lana. It just sounds too convenient. How’d she know? Who told her? If she’s that scared of Mei, would she really bother to poke around in Hanoi at all? If it was me, I’d stay clear.”
“She says she wants to make a difference,” Lana said as the lift door slid open. She followed Winter in and pushed the button for the cell level. “I believe her.”
“Why?” he demanded.
“Because her eyes are trustworthy. Sincere. She’s telling the truth.”
Winter waved her off. “Since when are you such a good judge of character? If you were, you and I never would’ve slept together.”
“Hey.” Lana narrowed her eyes and poked her finger into his arm. “That’s uncalled for…although, given what you’re doing here, maybe I was a good judge of character.”
Winter grunted and shook his head, ignoring the compliment. “Sorry. You’re right. I take it back. Besides, that was one of my favorite memories of being on that ship.”
Lana smirked, and he liked seeing her dimples again. She was damn adorable…. That was part of the problem. She was young, had a future. What was Winter but an ex-con who wasn’t exactly going places?
“And here I thought we weren’t talking about that.” Lana tucked her hair behind her ears.
“We hadn’t got a chance to yet. I had things I needed to do, things I felt guilty for. I shouldn’t have taken advantage of you, no matter how much fun it was. Life’s about more than just fun, you know?”
“I’ve learned that the hard way,” Lana admitted.
“I guess you did.” Winter nodded. “Still….” He touched her chin. “Don’t mean we can’t take a break once in a while, you know what I mean?”
The lift doors opened, but neither moved. Then Lana pulled her head back.
“Doesn’t mean we can, either.”
Did she just shoot me down before I even got to a real proposition? “And what if I made a move?” he asked aloud.
Lana bit her lip. “Guess you’d have to make one and see what happens.”
Winter liked a challenge.
He stepped up closer to her and eyed her lips with both great desire and great suspicion. Lana closed her eyes, and he was pretty sure she was going to take the kiss, no questions asked.
But a moment later, shots rang out, echoing down the corridor.
ARRIVAL DAY
STELLAR DATE: 12.21.8948 (Adjusted Gregorian)
LOCATION: Solidarity, approaching Starlight Station, Dante
REGION: Dante Velorum System, Fringe
The moment had finally arrived.
Kylie gazed out at her brother’s fleet, still numbering in the hundreds as it orbited Dante. Being so close after so long put her on edge, and she couldn’t get rid of the anxiety festering in the center of her chest.
“The fleet’s STC is asking for verbal confirmation,” Ricket said. She leaned forward and activated her console with a few keystrokes, careful not to disturb the fluffy furball held in the crook of her arm.
Kylie nodded. “Here goes nothing.” She took a deep breath to steady herself. “This is Chassea of the Solidarity. Seeking permission to dock on Starlight Station for a ride down the strand.”
“Good to see you, Solidarity,” a mellow-sounding voice came back over the comms. “Is the product alive and well?”
Kylie could feel a wave of remorse coming from Marge. “Alive and kicking. We also come bearing gifts. We have a canister of the good stuff, compliments of Raynes for Paul Rhoads.”
A moment passed, and Kylie exchanged a nervous glance with Ricket. If the fleet’s space traffic control didn’t buy what she was selling, things were going to end really fast.
“Acknowledged, Captain Chassea. Welcome to Dante, remain on your current vector. You have a berth in bay 81-103.”
“Affirmative,” Ricket answered sounding exactly like Elizabeth—which made sense, since she had altered her face to look like the other woman, all the way down to the electric blue highlights that flowed down her hair. The STC signed off, and she turned to Kylie. “You ready for this?”
Kylie nodded and ran her fingers through her long, blonde locks. “What do you think?”
“You look hot,” Ricket grinned. “Surprisingly close to Chassea, even without facial mods. Actually, you might be too hot to pull her off.”
Kylie rolled her eyes at Ricket but appreciated the compliment. “Marge? Any updates?”
“It’s risky. They’ll heighten security once they discover our deceit,” Ricket said.
Kylie nodded. “I can work with that. Question is, what are we going to do about him?”
Ricket glanced down at Mr. Fizzle Pop and stroked his head. “We can’t let anything happen to the cat. I mean, Bubbs would kill us.”
Kylie smirked. “Right. I mean, you’re right. It’s true.” She leaned forward and spoke to the cat. “Hey, Fizz. Fizz….” She shoved him, but he didn’t wake up, so she snapped her fingers under his nose. “Ham!”
Mr. Fizzle Pop snorted awake. Eyes wide, he stared up at Kylie. “DINNER? LUNCH?”
“All of the above if you can help me out with something. A buffet of burgers unlike anything you’ve seen before.”
“DEAL! WHAT JOB?”
“I need you to stay behind and create a small distraction. When it’s over, escape and use your tracking system to find me.” Kylie pressed the bell hanging around Mr. Fizzle Pop’s collar. “Do you think you can do that?”
“NO.”
Kylie sighed. “Please….”
“It’s the only way we can get back to Bubbs,” Ricket said.
“FINE. OK, ASSHOLES.”
“You know what they say….” Ricket led Kylie on. “Two assholes are better than one.”
Kylie smirked. “We’d better get ready.”
“NOBODY SAYS THAT,” Mr. Fizzle Pop argued.
Mr. Fizzle Pop glanced around, bouncing on all four paws.
Kylie scratched the top of his head. “We’ll explain it to you later. If you need us—”
 
;
Kylie sighed and glanced at Ricket.
Ricket shrugged. “Giving him the Link was your idea.”