he ran the risk of overlapping our shields and theirs. If he did, the results could range from nothing to explosive failure of both shields.
Loch eased farther out of the bay, centimeters at a time. He was not going to flinch first, but the fighters must have been under orders to stand their ground. His hands flew over the manual control console.
“What are—” I started.
Loch dropped the forward shield, rammed Polaris out of the bay before the fighters could take advantage, then engaged the FTL drive practically on top of them.
After the jump, the windows and vid screens showed vast quantities of empty space. I breathed a sigh of relief. No doubt we’d have to do some repairs after Loch’s little stunt, but we’d made it.
Loch tapped on the manual control screen then stood up. “Medbay, now,” he snapped at me. Fury darkened his face.
I scowled at him. I’d been about to congratulate him on his piloting, but I changed my mind. People who yelled at me didn’t get compliments.
I unclipped from my seat and stood. I wobbled slightly but steadied myself with the back of the chair. Indignation and foxy kept me going for half of the trip downstairs. The second half was powered by sheer will. When I hit the medbay, I admitted defeat.
“I think I need to lie down,” I said. My voice sounded funny. I collapsed onto the diagnostic table. My arm lit up in agony at every tiny movement.
If I never moved again it would be too soon.
Loch cut off my shirtsleeve and the trauma bandage. I hissed in pain as black spots danced behind my eyes. He pressed something cool against my shoulder, and I heard the distinctive hiss of an injector.
The pain did not lessen.
Loch prodded at the wound in my arm. I yelped and tried to pull away. “You can still feel that?” he asked.
“Yes, obviously,” I said.
“Okay, then this is going to hurt,” he warned.
“It hurts now,” I said.
“The anesthetic should kick in soon, but I don’t want to wait because you’re bleeding again. And you’re already white as a sheet, so you don’t need any more blood loss.”
I clenched my good hand. “Do your worst,” I said.
He did.
Chapter 23
My arm was cleaned, coated in regeneration gel, and bandaged, then my scraped-up feet were given the same treatment. Only then was I allowed to leave the medbay. I had also been given a large glass of orange juice by Veronica and stern instructions to drink it all.
She also insisted on escorting me up to the flight deck when I listed drunkenly to the right on bandaged feet while trying to walk out of the medbay door. Loch followed silently.
Veronica helped me slump into an empty chair while Loch dropped into the captain’s station. “Thank you,” I told her, “for everything. I mean it, even when I yell at you later for ignoring my request and risking your life.”
“You are welcome. I’m glad your arm is bandaged properly,” she said. “You should’ve let me do it before.” She sat beside me. I’d scared her and now she was hovering. I could deal with hovering.
“You’ll also have to yell at me,” Rhys said cheerfully from the navigator’s chair. “And Loch.”
“Don’t worry; I will,” I said. “I’m just saving up my strength. Where are we?”
“Ten light-minutes from the gate,” Loch said. “It’ll take longer to get a jump point, but Rockhurst will not expect us this far out. We’re stealthed. With the exception of the gate frequency, everything else is shut down. And I’ve matched our trajectory with a large planetoid; you can’t see it, but it’s below us.”
At ten minutes out, our gate communications would take twenty minutes—ten minutes to the gate and ten minutes for a response. But it made the area Richard would need to search in order to find us so vast that he’d have to get extremely lucky to even have a sliver of a chance.
“Thank you,” I said. “And nice work getting us out of the Santa Celestia in one piece, even if you did yell at me afterwards.”
Loch inclined his head. “It was a little risky, but it worked,” he said. He might be playing modest, but he’d proven once again that he was a first-rate pilot.
I turned to Rhys and Veronica. “How long does the gate take to give you an endpoint?”
“You figured out that we’d jumped before, huh?” Rhys asked.
“Richard tipped me off when he mentioned how much alcubium you had left. I suppose now