by Amy Braun
I was too angry to think about what I was doing, so I didn’t hesitate to lift my shirt and show him the ugly bruises on my stomach and ribs. Sawyer looked at them impassively, but I saw Gemma and Nash wince in the background.
“That was just for showing me he had control. This,” I awkwardly twisted my hands in the binds to grab the sleeve of my shirt, rolling it up to show him the patchy scar on my right wrist, “was when he stabbed me for talking back to him. Garnet left me pinned to a wall for half a day to set an example to the rest of the colony.” I rolled my sleeve back down. “He’s threatened me and my sister because he knew we couldn’t run. Because he likes it. Even if you were half the monster he is, you think I care about that right now? My eight year old sister is with the Hellions. I don’t know if she’s alive, or hurt, or dead. There is no torture you can put me through that is worse than that.”
I didn’t realize I’d been shouting until the heavy silence crept into the air. My hands were shaking, my throat felt raw, and my eyes stung with tears. I had never been this devastated before. It was a pain I couldn’t force away, but needed to deal with.
“So go ahead and make your threats,” I said in an angry whisper. “Imprison me, hurt me, whatever will make you feel like a bigger man. But I am not staying here to fix your stupid ship. I’m going to save my sister.”
Sawyer’s jaw was tight, his chin and his back straight. Everything about him screamed leader, but his eyes told a different story. They were wide with something that looked like pity. Concern even.
Two things I didn’t want from him. Things I didn’t have time for.
Before I could lose my nerve, I turned on my heel and started walking away. I managed to get three steps before Sawyer grabbed my scarred wrist.
“Wait–”
Sawyer had bound my wrists so I couldn’t hit him. He’d taken my belt and everything he thought was useful on it. He probably checked my pockets too, but he didn’t take what was in them. He probably assumed it wasn’t anything threatening.
He should have been smarter, because he had left me with my deadliest weapon.
I grabbed the device from my pocket and whirled around. It was a little silver disk, no larger than my palm and no wider than my wrist. But that wasn’t what made it devastating. The black button in the middle did. I was terrified of carrying it, knowing what it could do, but so far I’d never had an accident. I intended to keep it that way, but I wasn’t exactly sound at the moment.
Still crazy from anxiety and anger, I applied pressure onto the button with my thumb, trying not to think about the electricity crackling under my finger. Sawyer stopped where he stood, looking at the disk in my hand. He blinked, trying to figure out what it was. The disk began to whir aggressively.
“What is that?”
“Insurance. Something to keep you from trying to stop me. I call it the Volt. Press the button all the way down and the top and bottom will spring up, then release a massive electric-magnetic charge that disrupts any and every mechanical device within a hundred feet. But if I peel off the magnetic strip at the back and stick it to something, like say, you,” I threatened, taking a step closer. Sawyer leaned back, but didn’t flinch, “the Volt will burn you to a pile of cinders in seconds.”
“Whoa,” Nash said, before grabbing Gemma and pulling her back.
Sawyer’s eyes were fixed on mine. The Volt whirred steadily, increasing the static in my fingertips and heating them up. The sides began to come apart. I wanted to release the button and let it go, but I had to keep up my ferocity. Backing down now would make me look weak and cowardly, and Sawyer wouldn’t hesitate to take the Volt from me now that he knew what it could do.
“How long have you had this?” he asked.
I blinked, surprised at the genuine curiosity in his voice. “A couple years.”
“And you didn’t use it on Garnet? Why?”
Because this is the prototype and I don’t know if it will work, I most definitely didn’t say. The Volt required tons of equipment and time to create, not to mention stolen electricity from the substations. I didn’t have a safe place or enough time to test it. I wasn’t even sure how to protect myself if I ever used it. The blast radius would most definitely turn me into a pile of dust if I couldn’t contain it. This was the first time I’d used the Volt as a threat.
“I didn’t want to hurt anyone, or to let Garnet know that I had it at all.”
Those were the only truths I could give. I only hoped Sawyer would accept them.
“Can you make more?” he asked.
I hesitated. “Probably,” I admitted. But I shouldn’t. “Why?”
Sawyer nodded at the Volt. “Shut it off and I’ll tell you. I’m not comfortable standing this close to something that can burn me to cinders, and I don’t think you are either.”
I frowned, hating that he was right. I relaxed my thumb from the button in the middle of the Volt. The sides clicked back together, and the static and heat faded from my fingertips. I gripped the sides of the Volt but didn’t put it away. Gemma had mentioned they were thieves. I didn’t want her picking my pockets and taking my one piece of leverage when I wasn’t paying attention. Besides, I still wasn’t sure if I would need to use it again.
Sawyer’s tawny eyes held mine for a long time. So long that it sent a flutter through my stomach. I wasn’t sure why. Yes, he was quite attractive, with his warm brown hair, distracting golden eyes, and the playful quirk of his lips. But he was still a man who only wanted to use me. And I was planning to do the same thing to him.
“I’m going to take a wild guess and say that you aren’t a fan of working with Garnet.”
I tilted my head impatiently, making Sawyer grin. That flutter passed through my stomach again, but I ignored it as Sawyer took half a step closer to me.
“Work for us instead. We need a good engineer, and if you really did build that Volt–”
“I did,” I snapped, offended that he wouldn’t believe me, even though I shouldn’t have been surprised.
“–then you’re more than capable,” he continued. “I guarantee that no one will hurt you, and you’ll be looked after. If you can follow my rules occasionally.”
The troublemaking spark in his eyes got the hint of a smile from me. His expression softened, and I almost gave in without forgetting the most crucial thing I wanted from this deal.
“If you help me save my sister, you have a deal.”
Sawyer’s face darkened. “I told you–”
“I don’t care what you told me. Those are my terms.”
“Then change them. The Hellions own the sky. You’ll never get anywhere near her.”
I knew he was speaking rationally, truthfully. But I still wanted to punch him again.
“Some pirates you are,” I spat. “Thought you people were supposed to be fearless.”
Anger flared in Sawyer’s eyes, but it was Gemma who spoke. “Right, and you aren’t. You weren’t hiding underground for who knows how long. Maybe you forgot that they wiped out the Sky Guard with the Behemoth, or that each Hellion has the strength of ten men, insane speed, or that they survive on human blood–”
I whirled on her. “Shut up!” I screamed. Gemma froze. “I know the concept of family must elude you, but they have my sister. I’m not going to just sit here and hope they gave her a quick death.”
Gemma stared at me with wide, angry eyes. She was probably changing her mind about liking me. Not caring, I turned to Sawyer. Nothing in his expression changed, but his shoulders seemed tenser than before.
I held up the Volt, carefully flipping it back and forth. Sawyer watched it tentatively, and I was sure that Nash and Gemma took another step back.
“How much do you miss the sky?” I asked Sawyer. “What would you do to shoot the Hellions down with your own ship? To see the Behemoth as a smoking heap on the ground?”
Rage spiraled through his eyes, turning them dark and menacing. Like all of us, he hated the Hellions. It was clear that hi
s hatred ran deep. The look in his eyes told me he would have killed them all if he could.
I took a deep breath, preparing myself for either the truth, or the worst lie I ever told. “Get me on the Behemoth. Help me save my sister. And I’ll turn your ship into the deadliest machine in all of Aon.”
He was tempted. He had to be. No marauder could deny the possibility of adventure. To overcome a superior enemy and take away their control. And if Sawyer had any kind of personal vendetta against the Hellions– the amount of hatred exploding in his eyes told me he did– then this prospect would impossible to ignore.
His crew, on the other hand, wouldn’t be so easily swayed.
Gemma’s scoff carried through the building. “Because that will be simple and not the least bit suicidal.”
“Deal,” Sawyer said, cutting off whatever argument I was about to make with Gemma.
“What?!”
Sawyer ignored her and held out his hand to me.
I stared at it, seeing the calluses and grooves that had come from years of hard work and survival. Mine were the same, but I still hesitated. Marauders were known for being liars and cheats, and he agreed quickly. They might be playing nice with me now because they wanted something, but the moment they had it, they would turn me back to Garnet.
But I couldn’t rescue Abby without their help. Even if I had a ship to take up, I didn’t know how to operate one. It wasn’t like I could ask a Hellion to drive me, either.
Before the moment became too awkward, I took Sawyer’s hand in my bound ones and shook it firmly. In spite of his calluses and the dryness of his skin, his touch wasn’t unpleasant. His palm was warm and his grip was strong, but not constricting. After a moment his hand slipped from mine, but I was reluctant to let it go.
“You can’t be serious,” protested Gemma.
He glanced at her, but didn’t say anything. It didn’t seem like he needed to.
“Gem’s right, Sawyer,” added Nash. “We should really think this through before–”
“Later,” he interrupted. “We’re not going to attack them without a plan.” His eyes cut to me. “It could take a while to form.”
Trickles of panic slipped into my heart. The longer Abby stayed on the Behemoth, the longer she would suffer. My sister was stronger than she gave herself credit for, but the Hellions never returned those they stole.
But Sawyer was right. Getting up to the Behemoth without a plan was suicide, just as Gemma suggested. We didn’t even have a working ship to get us up there yet.
Distress me as it did, I nodded briefly to Sawyer.
Gemma scoffed again. Sawyer ignored her, that teasing glint coming back in his eyes. “So,” he said. “Ready to see the damage up close?”
One look told me it was clear he wasn’t even thinking about helping my sister yet, and that his agreement was going to cost him something with his crew. I shrugged.
“No time like the present.”
Chapter 4
Sawyer let me keep the Volt, and returned my tool belt to me. It felt good to have it back. I was a hundred times more confident. When I asked, I was told we were in the last standing air hangar of the ports– a five hundred foot square building that served as a holding bay for trading ships before The Storm. It sat in the middle of a concrete tarmac a hundred yards long in every direction. According to the marauders, the tower on the opposite end of the tarmac was collapsed and empty. The hangar was the only useable building. Even if I escaped the building, the marauders wouldn’t have to look hard to see which direction I was running. For better or worse, I was trapped here.
As I walked with the three marauders to the Dauntless Wanderer, I asked how they obtained it. Given how legendary the ship was, it should have been impossible to find, let alone hide. Sawyer claimed it had been in the hangar when they arrived. I didn’t believe him, since I’d heard that the Dauntless Wanderer had been shot down in the northern part of Westraven, closer to the Breach. I was ready to point this out, until I noticed how Sawyer’s casual demeanor began to change. He didn’t want to discuss how he found the famous airship, which only made me more curious about it.
Still, I’d pushed him enough for now. I needed him– and the sulking Gemma and ominously quiet Nash– on my side if I had any chance of saving Abby.
“How much repair has been done?” I asked when he stopped in front of the Dauntless. I walked closer, craning my neck to look up at the giant ship.
“Only the exterior,” Sawyer answered. “We’ve got that under control, but we can’t get the engine started. We haven’t been able to find or bribe a willing engineer, and I don’t even know what’s missing from…”
Sawyer trailed off the moment I reached the side of the Dauntless. A web of netting hung over the hull leading down from the deck, passing by the twisted crater in the ship’s side. It was in between the row of guns, and easily climbable. The marauders didn’t protest when I started climbing the netting halfway through Sawyer’s explanations. I was still feeling sore from the encounter with the Hellion and my body didn’t want any kind of exertion placed on it, but I couldn’t stand around and do nothing. Gritting my teeth, I pulled myself up the netting and fought the pain that radiated from my shoulder and neck. It was difficult, but it only took me about twenty minutes to reach the crater and swing myself in.
I ducked to avoid the scrape of torn metal over my head and planted my feet on the iron floor. I took the torch on my belt and pulled it open. Yellow light illuminated the interior of the hull, showing how ragged it was.
All airships, even the Behemoth, used standard cannons. The difference was the type of shot. With the help of engineers, the airship gunners were able to create various types of cannon shot to devastate their enemies. Shots could be filled with shrapnel, smoke, explosives, even acid.
Whatever was shot into the engine room had turned it into a blackened, melting cave. The cannons on either side of the crater were cracked, seared metal. Corroded black boxes huddled in the corners, and burned wire cables snaked along the floor. Those wires led to a large metal cylinder near the far wall. It had been all but obliterated, but I recognized the machine covered in melted gears and dented circuit boxes. The engine.
I made my way over to it and knelt down, shining my light inside to get a better look at the damage.
The engine’s exterior was fairly intact, but the interior was destroyed. The shot– which had likely been turned either explosive or acidic on impact– had corroded all the way to the power source, leaving a hole as wide as both my arms put together. I reached inside, moved my arm through dangling copper wires, and touched the source, which was nothing more than a lifeless box lined with ragged holes dangling on weak wires.
“Well?”
I jumped, pulling the power source out with me with a violent tug. I stood and turned. The marauders stood by the open hole in the hull. Sawyer was closest to me, only steps away. He looked at me impatiently, like he hoped the problem was a simple one.
Which it was, except...
“The power core needs to be rebuilt.”
“Okay,” Sawyer said. “How long will that take?”
“Once I have the parts it shouldn’t take more than a couple days, but building it isn’t the real problem. Powering it is. The generators you have down there won’t work.”
“Why not?”
I narrowed my eyes. “Do you have anything that can haul a thousand pounds of metal up here, or extension cords long enough to hook to both the engine and the generator? Assuming the generator is capable of handling all the power needed to power said engine?”