acclivity rings that are too small to fly ships. Our bikes could go full three-D in little bursts, but each bike is allotted a fixed amount of air time. Part of the strategy is knowing when to use it.”
She sounded wistful. “Do you miss the game?” I asked.
“A little. Mostly my team. This is way better though.” A flash of destructor fire sprayed around us. “More dangerous. More of a rush.”
We did a wave-dodge, where we split in opposite directions under heavy destructor fire. Hurl stayed on our target while I looped back down and offered fire support, chasing off the enemy.
I caught up at the next turn, falling in behind Hurl. Our target flew extra low, only a hundred feet or so off the ground. We descended, tossing up plumes of blue-grey dust behind us, and darted past an ancient piece of debris. Long since scavenged for its acclivity stone, it lay exposed like the skeleton of a disturbed grave.
“So,” Hurl said as we flew through valleys, staying on our target, “what about you? You never talk about what you used to do before the DDF.”
“Aren’t we supposed to keep our ‘head in the game’?”
“Eh. Except when I’m curious.”
“I . . . I was a ratcatcher.”
“Like, for one of the protein factories?”
“No. I was solo. The factory scouts hunt the lower caverns out pretty well, so I built my own speargun, explored farther caverns, and caught them on my own. My mom sold the meat for requisition chits to workers on their way home.”
“Wow. That’s badass.”
“You think so?”
“Totally.”
I smiled, feeling warm at that.
The Krell turned and accelerated upward. “I’m going in,” I said, and hit my overburn. I raced up at an angle, my g-force line going to max.
Tonight. I thought to the Krell, your ashen remains will mix with the planet’s dust, and your howls of pain shall echo upon the wind! I cut into the ship’s wake, getting just close enough to hit my IMP and destroy its shield.
Hurl flew past me, her destructor fire sounding over the blaring klaxon that warned my shield was down. The Krell ship exploded into molten debris.
Hurl let out a whoop, but then I blushed, remembering my line of thought. Ashes mixing with dust and howls on the wind? That sort of thing—once so exciting to me—now seemed . . . less the words of a hero, and more the words of someone trying to sound heroic. My father had never talked like that.
As I reignited my shield, a light on the communication panel lit up, announcing that Cobb was listening in. “Nice work,” he said. “You two are starting to make a good team.”
“Thanks, Cobb,” I said.
“It would be better if Spin could spend time with the rest of us,” Hurl added. “You know—instead of sleeping in her cave.”
“Let me know when you intend to take that up with the admiral,” Cobb said. “I’ll be sure to leave the building so I don’t have to listen to her shout at you. Cobb out.”
The light went off, and Hurl hovered her ship down beside mine. “The way she treats you is stupid, Spin. You are a badass. Like that stuff you always say.”
“Thanks,” I answered. I could feel my cheeks heating up. “Those things make me feel self-conscious now though.”
“Don’t let them get to you, Spin. Be who you are.”
And who am I? I looked upward, wondering if the simulation ever created holes in the debris—if it ever let you see through to the highest sky.
We ran a few more exercises before Jorgen called us back in to line up. We hovered in place, and I checked the clock on my dash. Only 1600? We still had several hours of training left. Was Cobb going to call it early and send us for more centrifuge time, like he’d done yesterday?
“All right,” Cobb announced over the radio. “You’re ready for the next lesson.”
“We get to use destructors?” Kimmalyn exclaimed.
I leaned forward in my seat to look out at her cockpit. We’d been fighting with destructors for weeks now.
“Sorry,” she said. “Got caught up in the hype.”
A Krell bomber materialized in front of us. It was a sturdier build than the average Krell ship. It was the same shape, but in the center between its wings, it carried an enormous lifebuster. The bomb was even bigger than the ship was. I shivered, remembering the last time I’d seen one of these—when Bim and I had chased one down.
A scene materialized farther out: a