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The Gate at the Grey Wolf Star (Perseus Gate Book 1) Page 8


  “The first answer is simple,” Krissy replied. “They want a mirror. Finaeus must have been certain he could still get one, even after they had their misfiring.”

  “You mean where they attacked the station,” Bes said. Krissy noted by his inflection that he meant it as a correction, not a question.

  “Oh, is that what happened?” Krissy asked, peering in to the Grey man’s eyes, curious if he would let a tell slip through his cold expression.

  None did.

  “You saw the logs—from your own ships. They don’t lie. Not all of them,” Bes said while holding her gaze.

  Krissy nodded slowly. Until a few hours ago she would have believed that without reservation. Now…not so much.

  “No luck so far, Admiral,” Major Michaels said as he turned back to them. “I’d like to take another crack at that ship. We’re certain we have a plan that will work this time.”

  “No,” Krissy said with a wave of her hand. “You’ve already squandered what chance we had of winning this without further bloodshed. First, we try to find their compatriots, then we try to negotiate. If that fails, then you go in.”

  “Yes, ma’am,” Major Michaels nodded.

  “Major, I’d like to hear your plan,” Bes said.

  “Belay that, Major!” Krissy turned to Bes, a fire rising in her chest. “Colonel Bes. May I remind you that I have orders to capture and turn over two people from that ship, and arrest the rest. Nowhere in my orders does it even insinuate that I have to give you one iota of tactical control over this situation. So, if you’ll kindly shut up and return to your ship, I’ll consider not filing charges of insubordination. Consider not—you better have good protection from the top.”

  Major Michaels blanched, and Bes opened his mouth to deliver a rejoinder when Krissy held up a finger. “I’ll remind you, Bes, that we are deep in the Inner Stars, and are on a war footing. Out here, in this realm, I am your god. The Grey Division may be safely back on Airtha, beyond my reach, but you, Bes, you are within my grasp. You’d do well to remember that.”

  “Admiral,” Bes ground out. “The Division will hear of this.”

  Krissy felt her calm slipping away entirely. “One more word and we’ll see if they can hear it from my brig. Now get out of my sight!”

  To his credit, Bes spun on his heel and left the bay without another word, and Krissy turned her eyes to Major Michaels. She took a slow breath as the man visibly wilted before her.

  “Major. The next time someone shows up here—and I don’t care who it is, it could be President Fucking Tomlinson—you don’t surrender tactical control of an operation without first clearing it with me. Am I clear?”

  “Yes, Admiral Krissy.”

  “Am I crystal clear?”

  “Yes, Admiral Krissy!”

  “Good! Now go do your fucking job—somewhere out of earshot would be nice.”

  Krissy felt shame over losing her temper so spectacularly—especially while in hearing range of hundreds of her soldiers. Still, it didn’t hurt for them to be reminded that the admiral had teeth and she wasn’t afraid to use them.

  She looked back up at the Sabrina wondering if Finaeus was looking down at her. Someone was playing a dangerous game, and she wondered who it was. One thing was for certain, some of his crazier ramblings were starting to make sense.

  Krissy turned and surveyed the troops in the bay. Her faith in Major Michaels and his operation was only a hair above nil right now.

  she called the Regent Mary’s XO.

  Nelson replied.

 

 

  Krissy closed the connection and her gaze settled on a pair of soldiers moving toward the ship. There was something familiar about them.

  A WINK AND A NOD

  STELLAR DATE: 07.22.8938 (Adjusted Years)

  LOCATION: Docking Bay F34A, Gisha Station

  REGION: DSM Ring, Grey Wolf System

  “I say we just walk on,” Jessica suggested.

  “What? Past all those Sender soldiers?”

  “Are you just messing with me now? You gotta say the C.”

  Iris offered.

  “I like that,” Cargo chuckled. “Scenties.”

  Jessica put a hand to her forehead and shook her head slowly, turning her attention back to the scene before the pair of them. They stood on one of the upper catwalks in Docking Bay F34A, Sabrina lying below them and the growing contingent of TSF soldiers arrayed around it.

  “Doesn’t seem like she took any damage,” Jessica said. “With any luck we can use the hackit to get the doors open and get the heck out of here.”

  Hank said.

  “Yeah, back before we realized that Krissy is being forced to take orders from the dark side and is going to ship us all off to some secret prison or something.”

  “Probably the secret prison for me, and the ‘or something’ for you,” Cargo grinned. “Anyway, I like your plan. We just walk toward the ship, maybe cut across the front down there so that it’s not obvious until the last moment, and then we run.”

  “Think Sabrina will spot us and have a lock open?” Jessica asked.

  Hank said

  “Fine by me,” Jessica replied.

  The pair walked to a lift and rode it down to the dock’s main level where they casually strode past a platoon setting up a pair of crew-served slug throwers and another group of soldiers readying armor-piercing javelin missile launchers.

  Iris commented.

  Jessica asked.

  Iris said with a mental grin.

 

  They passed by a pair of scouts who were crouched behind a stack of crates, their railguns trained on the starboard airlock.

  Jessica was about to suggest that maybe the approach was too dicey when the sound of yelling caught her attention. She glanced over her shoulder and saw Admiral Krissy dressing down a major who looked absolutely terrified.

  Iris said.

  Jessica replied.

  Jessica’s gaze lingered a moment too long and she cringed as Krissy looked their way and caught Jessica’s eye. The admiral frowned.

  Hank sighed.

  They kept moving hoping against hope that the next words weren’t, ‘seize them!’.

  To Jessica’s relief, Admiral Krissy called out to the two scouts watching the starboard lock, repositioning them further down the dock, creating an opening for the pair.

  Jessica touched Cargo’s shoulder.

  Cargo didn’t respond, but cut across the remainder of the TSF soldiers’ front line, then took a deep breath and walked out into the no-man’s land around the ship.

  For a moment, Jessica thought that they’d pass through free and clear, but then a voice called out.

  “Hey! What are you doing?”

  “Stop!” another voice hollered.

  Jessica broke into a run, dodging and weaving just in case anyone decided to shoot. She saw Cargo doing the same out of the corner of her eye and nearly stumbled when a shot did ring out, and a projectile whistled past her ear.

  She poured on as
much speed as she could. Hopefully Sabrina did see them and would make a hole, or she was going to slam at full speed into the stasis shield. She was wondering if she’d passed beyond its protection yet when a pulse blast hit her in the back and sent her sprawling.

  The staccato beat of projectiles ricocheting around her brought her back to her feet, expecting to see rounds tearing through her.

  But she was unharmed.

  Jessica turned and saw bullets, rail pellets, and beamfire all striking an invisible force mere centimeters from her face.

  She was through the stasis shield.

  “You don’t see that every day,” Cargo said.

  Sarina asked.

  Cargo replied as the pair ran to the starboard airlock. There was no gantry, and they clambered up and rolled onto the deck floor as the lock cycled.

  Cargo ordered.

  Nance said.

  Jessica exclaimed, struggling to her feet as the inner lock door opened.

  Nance replied.

  Iris said.

  As they talked, Jessica and Cargo ran down the starboard passage, climbed the ladder to the crew deck, and then the next up to the command deck.

  They entered the bridge to see Nance sitting at one of the scan consoles.

  “What do you mean they left?” Cargo growled. “Whose dumb idea was that, anyway?”

  “I’ll give you three guesses,” Nance said quietly.

  Iris said.

  “I’d rather they left it as weak as possible,” Cargo said. “What’s the word.”

  Iris said.

  “Out where?” Cargo asked brusquely.

  Iris said.

  “What?” Jessica yelled.

  “Jess! Damn I’m glad you’re OK,” Trevor said as he burst onto the bridge. “I take it you’re yelling about Cheeky and Fin going on a little walkabout.”

  “Yeah, they walked right off the station.”

  “What…you’re kidding, right?”

  “It seems not,” Cargo said. “Options, people. They’re out there looking for our crew, and we need to reach them first, then get the hell out of here.”

 

  Jessica threw an image of Gisha on the main holo, and Iris populated it with the last known location of Finaeus and Cheeky.

  “Any chance that they faked the Teebies out and are still in the station?” Cargo asked.

  “Really? Teebies?”

  “Seems like a stretch,” Nance shook her head.

  Iris interjected, sounding annoyed at the banter.

  Sabrina said.

  “So, two to three hours tops before they run out of air,” Cargo said. “Depending on how much Cheeks is hyperventilating right now.”

  Jessica could only think of one way to get off Gisha, and that was opening fire on the soldiers and the bay doors. But after what Krissy had done to help….

  “Only way out of this tin can is to shoot our way out,” Cargo said, echoing her thoughts. Jessica met his eyes and the captain sighed. “Right, but we have to warn Krissy somehow.”

  “What? The evil admiral who is trying to take us all out?” Nance asked.

  “It’s more complicated than that. She has some significant history with Finaeus—more than just a few drinks once, like he said—enough for her to help us escape. I don’t think she wants to see him die.”

  “Yeah, but he’s not here anymore,” Trevor said. “She has no special attachment to us.”

  Iris said.

  Sabrina said.

  “Why’s that?” Cargo asked.

 

  Cargo let out a long breath. “But once we get out into space…we have to bubble the whole ship.”

  “Right. No heat dispersion,” Nance added.

  “Batts one and two look good,” Cargo noted.

  Sabrina said.

  “OK, so it’s going to be dicey out there,” Jessica said. “But we still—”

  Sabrina said.

  “Yeah, but just show her Jess and me. Leave her guessing about who else is still onboard.”

  Admiral Krissy appeared on the holotank, her surroundings a blank grey—which told Jessica that the message was coming from her mind and not visible to anyone near her.

  “Captain Cargo, Jessica,” she said. “Please ensure that this message is encrypted properly per TSF Naval code 837.322.11A.”

  Admiral Krissy began to recite the charges against them and the crimes and punishments they faced in a droning, monotone.

  Jessica glanced at Cargo and mouthed ‘what?’.

  Iris exclaimed.

  Sabrina replied.

  Suddenly Admiral Krissy’s voice changed—though the visual did not.

  “Good, I hoped you’d figure that out.”

  “What’s going on, really,” Jessica asked pointedly. “What does Finaeus mean to you?”

  The admiral didn’t reply for a moment, though her image kept moving, soundlessly reciting the charges they faced.

  “Ah, what the hell,” Krissy finally said. “He’s my father.”

  Iris demanded.

  Sabrina said.

  Jessica wondered what currency the AI were exchanging as a result of their bet—and why she hadn’t been in on it. Aloud she said, “That explains a lot.”

  “He’s the one that’s out there, isn’t he?” Krissy asked. “Just like him to go on some hair-brained adventure. Station can’t find him, but my fleet’s sensors picked up a ping out past the docking ring. Could be nothing, or it could be them. A man I can trust on my flagship has suppressed it from the logs, but as you know, I can’t rescue them. I’ll be damned if I’m going to turn my own father—one of the founders of the Transcend—over to the Greys to do whatever it is they do.”

  Her voice paused and Cargo looked to Jessica, his face showing more emotion than she expected. She wondered what was troubling him.

  “You have to get him, and get out of here,” Admiral Krissy finally said.

  “How will we get out of the docking bay?” Jessica asked. “Without killing all your people, that is.”

  “If you fire up your main reactor and warm up your engines…slowly, I’ll pull everyone back and get someone to trigger an emergency release
on the cradle and bay doors. Lloyd would probably do it. He’s been having kittens ever since you docked—though he might have upgraded to elephants when you shot up the STC.”

  “OK, deal,” Cargo said.

  Sabrina said.

  “You need to hurry,” Krissy said. “If they get too much further, they’ll pass out of the gravitational doldrums….”

  She didn’t have to finish her statement. Everyone knew that beyond the doldrums lay the crosscutting gravitational fields of the black holes and the Grey Wolf Star.

  Sabrina said without waiting for an order from Cargo.

  “Good, you’ll—shit! Lieutenant, raise the Excelsia now! I want that ship to stand down!”

  “What is it?” Jessica asked.

  “It’s Bes, he’s coming around with his destroyer and they’re powering weapons.”

  “Stasis shield to max!” Cargo yelled. “Widen it to protect Krissy’s people!”

  Jessica dropped into the pilot’s seat. If Bes wanted a fight, they’d give him a fight. He’d find out that this little freighter had some sting in her.

  “Trevor! Weapons!” Cargo called out as he took the command seat. “Power all beams, get the RMs in the tubes.”

  “Yes, Captain,” Trevor replied.

  Jessica brought up the bay doors on her holodisplay, praying for the cradle to release its clamps before Bes fired on them.

  “Come ooooon,” she whispered, then let out a cheer as a light flashed on her console, indicating that the cradle was opening up.

  And then the bay’s exterior doors exploded.

  Laser and particle beam fire tore into the space, splashing off Sabrina’s stasis shields, and melting the walls around the ship.

  Sabrina cried out.

  Jessica activated the port and starboard grav drives, directing their graviton wash along the half-melted bulkheads, trying not to shred too much of the station behind them as they pushed out against the withering fire from Bes’s ship—which floated a scant two kilometers beyond Gisha’s hub.