would penetrate all the way down and destroy Igneous.
I have doomed all of humankind. Ivans thought.
Fifteen blips of blue. Unopposed.
Then, rising from Alta, a single lonely blip of red appeared. A Defiant ship.
“Rikolfr?” Ironsides said. “Did the private owners actually respond to my call? Are they scrambling their fighters?” There were only eight of those in the deep caverns, but they would be better than nothing. Perhaps enough to prevent a disaster.
“No, sir,” Rikolfr said. “Last we heard, they were planning to evacuate.”
“Then who is that ship?” Ironsides asked.
All around the frantic command room, people turned from their workstations to look at the hologram and its single blip of red. A voice popped in on the flightleader channel. “Do I have this right? Confirm? This is Skyward Ten, callsign: Spin.”
It was her.
“The defect,” Ironsides whispered.
50
“This is Flight Command,” Ironsides said on my radio. “Cadet, where did you get that ship?”
“Does it matter?” I asked. “Give me a heading. Where are those Krell?”
“There are fifteen ships in that flight, girl.”
I swallowed. “Heading?”
“57-113.2-15000.”
“Right.” I redirected and punched my overburn. GravCaps engaged for the first few seconds, then I gritted my teeth as the g-forces hit me. My Poco started to rattle under the strain, even at the relatively slow speed of Mag-5. Scud. What was keeping this ship together? Spit and prayers?
“How long until they’re inside the death zone?” I asked.
“Under eight minutes,” Ironsides said. “By our projections, you’ll reach them in about two minutes.”
“Great,” I said, taking a deep breath, inching my ship up to Mag-6. I didn’t dare go faster with the amount of drag on that burned-out wing. “We might have a few more reinforcements coming. When you see them, tell them what’s happening.”
“There are more of you?” Ironsides asked.
“I hope so.” Depended on whether Arturo and the others managed to steal some ships. “I’ll just have to hold the Krell off until then. By myself. With a ship that doesn’t have a shield.”
“You don’t have a shield?”
“I have visual confirmation on the Krell,” I said, ignoring the question. “Here we go!”
Krell ships swarmed toward me. I knew there were only fifteen, but flying there—alone, unprotected—it seemed like an entire armada. I immediately cut to the side, destructors flashing all around me. I picked up at least a dozen on my tail, and my proximity warning went insane.
I pulled into a hard bank, wishing there were debris I could use for faster maneuvering. I curved around—somehow avoiding being shot—until I saw it. One slower, larger ship. Plodding along with an enormous bomb held underneath it, nearly as big as the ship itself.
“Flight Command,” I said, pushing into a dive, destructors spraying around me, “I have visual confirmation of a lifebuster.”
“Bring it down, cadet,” the admiral said immediately. “You hear me. If you get a shot, bring that ship down.”
“Affirmative,” I said, and threw myself into a spinning loop. My GravCap indicator flashed, its brief dampening effect expended, and the g-forces flattened me into the side of the cockpit and my seat.
I remained conscious—somehow—as a couple of Krell ships cut across in front of me. My instincts were to chase them down.
No. They were presenting targets to draw me away. I dodged the other direction, and the ships behind me fired an insane storm of destructors.
I wouldn’t last long in this fight. I couldn’t hold out for Arturo and the others. The Krell would finish me off before then.
I had to get to the bomber.
The Krell tried to drive me to the side, but I dodged between two of them, my ship rattling as I crossed their wakes. That didn’t normally happen; the atmospheric scoops evened out flight wakes. Mine was still working, fortunately, but was obviously in poor shape.
Teeth rattling in my skull from the shaking, I cut around more ships and focused on my goal, unleashing a barrage of destructors.
A few hit the bomber, but were absorbed by its shield, and I wasn’t close enough for an IMP. The small, strange ships that accompanied the bomber detached and flew up toward me, driving me off to the side.
I swept in a long turn, trying to ignore the fact that I was now being chased by almost two flights’ worth of enemies.
I focused on my ship. On my maneuvers.
Me, the controls, and the ship. Together, responding to . . .
Right.
I dodged away just before a Krell ship moved to cut me off.
They’re going to fire all out. I dove underneath a sudden, concentrated barrage.
Left. I made a sweeping turn