Auster retracted the visor of his helmet, his square-jawed face glaring out at Vijay. “You’re welcome,” he said. “I overheard your comm chatter. I came to back you up.”
“Why didn’t you go back up Blaze? She’s the one up there alone. Or do you still think she’s the bad guy?”
“If she’s turned on Thorne, I’m willing to give her the benefit of the doubt. But it sounded like she had things in hand. And if what Green Blaze said is true, you have a very valuable prisoner to secure. I figured you needed more assistance.”
“You mean that if we were going to bring in Thorne, you wanted to grab your share of the glory.”
“Think what you like, Arjun. What matters is—” Auster broke off, looked around. “Where is Thorne?”
Vijay whirled, scanning the beach. The only sign of Thorne, aside from his blood staining the sand, was the trail of footprints leading away … overlapping Emry’s.
20
Blood Ties
Bast hated free fall. Flying was for birds, and birds were food.
In gravity, her sense of balance and position was flawless, of course. But it was hard to get a sense of position when there was no up or down. True, like all Neogaian warriors, she’d had free-fall combat training, and naturally she was superb at it and looked great doing it. But it was something she had to think about. She was happier relying on instinct.
Here in the warehouse, at least there was this nice gridwork of cables to orient herself by (though if Hanuman made even one crack about a “cat’s cradle,” she was out of here). Long, stringy things were always good, though they were better when they wriggled around. (Like the long braid the scrawny blonde was wearing. Bast had to struggle to resist snatching at it.) But she didn’t like having to negotiate a path between all these big, massive crates and containers just hovering in midair. She knew they couldn’t fall, that as long as they stayed clipped to the cables and the cables stayed taut and their thruster pods didn’t fire, they would stay right where they were. But her instincts kept telling her they were going to fall on her. And if her instincts said something, then the universe shouldn’t do things differently.
For a moment back there, she’d almost had a chance to work off her anxiety when she’d caught the faint sound of someone pursuing them, someone whose presence was masked. The chase had been entertaining for a while, but hadn’t paid off, and then Hanuman had made them come this way through all the crates. Bast was more eager than ever to kill something, and she wasn’t getting her wish. That shouldn’t happen either.
So she hissed with delight when she caught another scent, one she knew well. The redhead! The one with the thick, yummy blood, who’d rudely refused to let Bast rip her throat out back at Chakra City. Hanuman had told her the redhead was dead—but now Bast had another chance to feast on her after all!
Hanuman and the scrawny blonde turned back at the sound of her hiss. “More pursuers?” Hanuman asked.
Beyond him, Bast saw, the reinforcements he’d called were arriving—Sifaka from his personal bodyguard staff and some dock security guy she didn’t know, a jackal or dingo or some other damn dog. If she told Hanuman who it was, he might send them with her, and Bast wanted the redhead all to herself. “You go on,” she told them. “I’ll check it out.”
Hanuman nodded and pulled the blonde farther along toward the guards. Bast caught herself on a cable, stopping her forward motion, and turned to consider the arena. If I have to think … I might as well think.
But her instincts still told her the place should be falling down on her. Wait! Her eyes widened. Maybe her instincts were steering her the right way after all.
Clutching the cable with hands and feet, she slinked to the end of it and began unhooking it from the wall. Stringy things were always better when they wriggled around.
* * *
Once more, Emry soared through the maze of crates and cables, closing in on Kwan and Psyche. She was close enough to track their scent now; Emry might not be as good at that as a Neogaian, but scents stayed airborne longer in free fall, and she knew Psyche’s fragrance intimately (a thought that made her shudder now). Besides, Kwan and Bast both left a sparse trail of fur to follow.
There—she caught a glimpse of Kwan and Psyche between two cargo bins, a few dozen meters ahead. She thought of calling out to Psyche, telling her Thorne still lived, but decided to wait until she got closer. Kwan was willing to murder his most powerful ally to control Psyche’s power. If he lost her willing cooperation, there was no telling what he might do. Best if Emry either incapacitated Kwan or separated the two of them before she revealed herself to Psyche—and kicked her perfectly pert ass all the way back to, well, to whatever court might have jurisdiction for trial alongside her father.
But Emry realized the maze was changing shape. Cables were floating loose, cargo bins drifting. She grabbed a still-taut cable and pulled herself to a halt, looking around. The containers were moving slowly, but some were very massive, and it wouldn’t do to get caught between two of them.
Just then, the cable she held sprang loose, and Emry had to lunge for the next one and pull herself out of the way as it whipped past, discharging its tension. It struck the shin of her boot, sending a loud crack echoing through the bay and causing her pain even through the light armor. It was the same leg Thorne had bruised in the fight.
What’s going on? she wondered, and pulled herself along to find a better vantage point on that cable’s former terminus. Before she got far, a series of dull clangs and thuds began, and a medium-sized crate before her got struck by something behind it and came toward her at more than a drifting pace. Emry pushed off the crate beside her and dodged it.
Beyond it, the orderly lattice of the warehouse was falling into slow, stately chaos. A number of large crates and bins were in motion now, bouncing off each other and adjacent cables and starting a chain reaction of spreading disarray. Emry saw part of the cause: a forklift robot was attached to a particularly large cargo bin, firing at full, continuous thrust, knocking aside the free-floating crates and loose cables in its path. As Emry watched, it collided slowly with a still-taut cable and stretched it tauter, continuing to thrust. Uh-oh. Emry reversed course and tried to get as far as she could before that cable snapped.
She found her path blocked by a flying cat. Bast slammed into her, yowling with feral glee. Her greater momentum knocked Emry back toward the strained cable. She clenched Emry’s torso, biting at her neck and slashing at her thighs and abdomen with her hind claws, keeping Emry’s limbs too busy to snag a passing cable. Emry’s armor protected her from the claws, but as they neared the straining cable, Bast pushed off with a fierce kick to Emry’s gut, reacquainting her with the damage Thorne’s brutal punch had inflicted there. Emry’s back slammed into the edge of a crate, flipping her head and shoulders back against its side, and she saw another crate drifting toward her, sandwiching her upper body. She pulled free moments before they crunched together.
Just then the cable snapped. Emry kicked off from the crate as a jagged cable end whipped through the air and gouged a deep furrow in its side. The forklift and its large bin shot forward, slamming crates aside. The next cable it hit got caught between it and another crate’s edge, snapping within seconds. The whole lattice was falling apart as crates slammed into each other, breaking them free of their moorings. Some smashed open, sending hundreds of smaller boxes and containers bouncing around the bay. And Emry was caught in the middle of it.
* * *
Psyche grabbed a cable and pulled herself around to investigate the clanging, crashing noises resounding through the bay. “What’s going on back there?”
“It must be the Troubleshooters,” Hanuman told her. “We must hurry! We can still circle back to the bunker, but it’s a roundabout path.”
Psyche resisted. She thought she smelled Emry. It was probably just the residual scent on Hanuman from when he’d hit on Emry this morning, but it seemed faintly stronger. You’re imagining it, she
thought, afraid to let herself hope. But if there was any chance.… “Bast could need help,” she said, starting to go back.
Hanuman nodded to the jackal guard, who caught her arm and refused to let go. “You’re too valuable to risk, my dear,” Kwan said. “Eliot would have wanted me to get you to safety.”
Her heart clenched in her chest, and she knew Hanuman was right. She had to do what Daddy wanted. She shook off her foolish hopes and let the others lead her away.
* * *
Emry did her best to calculate the angles, estimating the safest path through the whirling debris, and made her way as best she could. She knocked aside the spilled cargo as she went, but made the mistake of punching through a loose bag of fertilizer, which ruptured and sprayed its contents into her face, stinging her eyes and making her choke. Blinded, she got hit by a couple more bags, but retained enough momentum to drift clear of the expanding cloud.
As she blinked to clear her eyes, she realized she could smell more than just the fertilizer. Sawdust, grain … the air was filling with particulates. She’d grown up on a rural habitat, so she knew a thing or two about silo explosions. The collisions were generating static discharges in the dry warehouse air, and if the dust built to sufficient concentration, along with the fertilizer and the other flammables that were likely stored here …
Emry caught another faint glimpse of Psyche past the swirling debris. She and Kwan were nearly to the exit. Good, she thought. Now I just have to get there too.
But just then, more cables snapped. Maybe the big crate had angled sideways and hit them. All she knew was that one cable whipped around her uninjured ankle and yanked her back deeper into the bay, slamming the back of her head into one crate and jabbing her in the hip with the corner of another.
Once the cable’s tension was expended, Emry untangled herself and tried to redirect her momentum back toward the exit. But Bast was not finished with her. The she-cat was leaping from crate to cable, closing on Emry, forcing her to veer off toward the spreading wave of collisions and snaking cables. Emry shot between two massive bins that were closing on each other at a stately pace. But when she emerged from between them, Bast came around the side and pounced on her. Emry flipped around and caught her wrists, holding her claws at bay and squeezing hard. Bast’s jaws went for her throat again, and she blocked them by crossing her (and Bast’s) arms before her. “We have to get out of here!” she cried. Bast snarled back, and Emry kicked in her Banshee voice to scream over it. “The dust—it’s explosive!”
Bast didn’t listen, but she caught someone else’s attention. Psyche whirled, grabbing the edge of the hatch to halt herself. “Emry!” she cried in shock. Beside her, Kwan looked equally shocked and dismayed. “Where’s my father?!” Psyche shrieked.
“He’s alive, Psyche!” she cried. She got her legs up and kicked Bast away—which unfortunately sent Emry back toward those two large bins. “Listen, we’ve got to—”
“Don’t listen to her!” Kwan cried. “If she survived, she must have known about the bomb! She killed him!”
“No, Psyche!” Emry called. “Kwan planted the bomb. He’s using you! He wants to—”
Bast drowned her out with a yowl as she kicked off another bin and back toward Emry, claws splayed and eyes gleaming with bloodlust. Emry pushed off to duck between the Symplegadean bins, but pulled herself short, for they were now only a third of a meter apart. She dodged right, but it was a dead end, another large bin in the way, and Bast was too close, grinning at her miscalculation. All Emry could do was brace herself against the bin for Bast’s impact. The she-cat hit hard, pinning her to the side, and Bast dug her claws into its polymer shell as her jaws went for Emry’s throat once again. Emry got her left arm under Bast’s chin, but she was weakened and Bast was determined. Those fangs snapped closer, closer.…
And then Emry’s right hand snaked around, grabbed Bast’s tail, and yanked it sideways between the two large bins just before they collided.
Bast’s shriek almost deafened Emry, and made the cat lover in her feel guilty. It still echoed through the warehouse as Emry broke free and gave Bast one good sock to the jaw to put her down for the count. Kwan’s guards drew their guns and opened fire as Emry kicked off toward him. She caught herself on a cable, ducked behind a crate. “Stop shooting, you idiots!” Hanuman cried before she could. He clearly understood the risk as well. In this enclosed space, the overpressure of an explosion would kill them all even if the shrapnel and heat didn’t. And it would probably blow open the hull like a balloon.
“You’re lying,” Psyche said to Emry, though she sounded confused. “Hanuman wouldn’t do that to me. You must have … Hanuman, let me take her! I can pull it from her!”
“No, she’s too dangerous! We have to get to the bunker now! Trust me, Psyche!”
“I…” Psyche floundered. She should be able to tell, Emry thought. Perhaps she couldn’t read Kwan’s simian microexpressions, but she should have questioned his changing story, should have known to be wary of his plans for her. But that’s just it, isn’t it? Psyche’s so used to being the puppet master … she can’t recognize when she’s the one being played.
“Psyche!” The call came from elsewhere in the cargo bay … and it changed the whole situation. For it was in the unmistakable voice of Eliot Thorne.
Emry looked up to see Psyche whirling, her face bursting into joy. “Daddy!” He was closing in on them, pushing his way through the clashing debris with no evident concern for the danger, as though his determination alone would clear a path. So far, it seemed to be working. Thorne was clearly struggling, badly hurt and rasping wet breaths, but he was a juggernaut, refusing to slow down.
Hanuman ordered his guards to hold Psyche, but she broke free without a thought, her eyes fixed solely on her father and brimming with tears as she kicked off their bodies to send herself toward him. But Thorne’s eyes were locked on Hanuman. “Kwan!” he rasped with fury.
“Oh, bother,” Kwan sighed. “I’ve changed my mind,” he told the jackal guard as he gathered up the lady lemur and backed into the exit corridor. “Shoot all you want. Do pardon the cliché,” he called to Emry and Thorne, “but if I can’t have her, well…”
Hanuman waved a jaunty farewell through the closing door as the guard began opening fire, his shockdarts striking Psyche, her convulsions tangling her in the cables. Stray shots hit the tumbling crates and containers around her, discharging fierce electricity, setting some of the small containers on fire. “No!!!” Emry cried.
They had seconds to live now. Emry saw one chance. Just beyond and ahead of Thorne was a burst-open crate lined with shock-absorbing foam for fragile cargo. With its contents nearly spilled out, it was big enough to hold a few people.
But there was no way of getting to Psyche in time.
Hating herself for the choice, she grabbed Bast and kicked off the biggest crate behind her with all her might. The two of them barreled into Thorne’s side and Emry grabbed hold as they veered onto a new vector, away from Psyche. Thorne screamed and struggled, trying to break free and get to his daughter. Emry held him firmly as they struck the open lid of the crate and rolled in. Emry looked back for Psyche, hoping she was following.
Just in time to see the blinding flash.
The shock wave slammed the lid shut, saving their lives. Even through the protective foam, the noise and heat of the explosion tore through her body and mind as the crate tumbled and shrapnel bombarded it, tossing her mercilessly against the others. The afterimage of the explosion burned across her retinas.
Then the crate hit something and cracked open, and the air was ripped from her lungs as she and the others tumbled free. Her eyes burned, and her bare arms and head tingled and ached fiercely as they swelled from within. They were in vacuum! But not open space—the cargo corridor within the docking module, its walls scarred from the debris that had blown through it like chaff from a cannon. The cargo lock had blown out—no doubt designed as an emergency release valve t
o protect the hull from rupture. The end wall of the corridor had blown out to vacuum in turn, but a nanotube-cable mesh had caught and held most of the cargo, including their own crate, while allowing the literally explosive decompression of the corridor. Beyond was blinding light from the sun mirror, rippling as stray debris punched through the mirror’s thin film.
Emry, Thorne, and Bast were now drifting back inward through a cloud of debris. Beads of their own blood trailed them like cometary tails. All around them were passages leading to docked ships—plenty of safe havens. If only she could get to one of them and get it open before her body’s oxygen reserves ran out.
But wait … one was opening on its own. A light beckoned.
Emry’s swollen fingers clumsily grabbed the arms of Thorne and Bast, both of whom were virtual dead weights. As their course brought them toward a wall, she planted her feet on it, let her knees bend, and pushed off toward the lock, straining against the others’ momentum. She got the aim right, but they were drifting toward it too slowly; she was weakening already. She felt consciousness starting to fade.…
But then she was breathing and aware again. The three of them floated in the lock as it repressurized. Bast remained limp, and Emry could see that she’d lost much of her tail, probably sliced off by the door of the cargo bin.
But that was nothing to what Eliot Thorne had lost. Once he could breathe again, he screamed and wept for a long time. For the first time in over half a century, he was out of control.
* * *
Emry had just finished securing Bast in Zephyr’s medbed when she heard him undocking. “Zeph? What’s going on?” She looked around to see that Thorne had disappeared.
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