Boomer’s Avenger crept to a halt beside him. Deep inside the warren of caverns, the moon’s rotation was enough to give them a sense of up and down. Still, holding a relative position inside a small spinning moon was not as easy as one might think. Stabilizing thrusters fired continuously in short, irregular bursts.
Gavin checked his orientation and distance from the walls. He was in place. The tag team system they’d come up with had been working pretty well, using one ship to draw fire while a second swept in to blast each turret. It was tedious and sphincter-tightening work, but the moon was nearly cleared. Only a small handful of tricky defenses remained intact.
“Okay,” Gavin settled his hands on his flight controls. “On my mark.”
He left the mic open and triggered a timer on his navsat. He watched Boomer’s ship ease slowly into the turret’s line of sight to the steady countdown of the timer. Right on cue, Gavin hammered his thrusters and sped into the cave, just as the first blast from the turret struck Boomer’s shields.
Gavin yawed to the left, swinging the nose of his ship until he could see both the turret and Boomer’s ship. The old man’s Avenger bucked under the constant fire. The shields held, but the blast forced the Avenger back out into the tunnel before Gavin could take a shot.
Gavin fired, and the turret’s twin barrels swiveled with such impeccable precision and speed that they looked like identical empty dots. “Oh, sh—” the barrels erupted in a fusillade of crimson light.
Gavin fired again and had no clue if he was anywhere near the mark. The turret’s aim was flawless, however. There was an odd pulling sensation when the cabin lost pressure and his suit pressurized, squeezing around his limbs and chest.
Another barrage hammered into him and he felt the Cutlass crunch ass-backward into the wall of the cavern. The ship rolled, nose pitching wildly to one side. Gavin saw an open blackness of empty space yawn into view. He punched it, hoping he was heading back out into the tunnel and not to his death inside the smugglers’ cave.
Relieved, he saw Boomer’s Avenger flash by beneath him. But dread gripped him again when the walls of the narrow tunnel loomed to fill his entire view. He reversed thrust, hunched tight around the controls and braced for impact.
It was bad.
He hit hard, and the impact sent him careening down the cavern. He tumbled over and over, willing his ship to hold together. When he finally forced himself to release the flight controls, the ship righted itself.
“Holy hells,” Boomer breathed. “Gav? You alive, buddy?”
His chest heaved like he’d been running. “I seem to recall some idiot bitching about this job being boring.”
Walt, exploring a tunnel in another part of the moon, answered, “That sounds like it was directed at me. You two okay?”
“No, I’m not okay. I just got blown up!”
“Simmer down, son,” Boomer said. “I’ve been blown up plenty of times. That was nothin’. I, uh…I don’t think you’re taking another crack at that turret until we get your ship patched up, though.”
“Oh, really? Ya think?” Gavin’s comms flashed on an incoming line. “Hold on, guys. Call coming in.”
Boomer laughed, saying, “They probably heard us planetside and want us to keep the noise down.”
“Very funny. Actually, it’s Dell. Now shut it.” Gavin accepted the incoming line.
“Gav?” He couldn’t tell if Dell sounded scared or angry, maybe both. “We got a problem, babe. Jazza’s out of here. Says she’s taking a ship unless she gets her cut of the turret job before she goes.”
“What? What do you mean ‘out of here’?”
“She’s leaving,” Dell said. “Leaving the company, I mean.”
Walt cut in on the squad channel. “Hey Gav, I’m all finished in here. You want me to come take a look at tha—”
Gavin juggled channels. “Hold on, Walt.” He squinched his eyes closed, sore, frustrated and confused. “Dell. Where’s Jazz going? You mean she’s quitting?”
Boomer kept the chatter going on the squad channel. “Sounds like he’s getting an earful, Walt. Glad she didn’t call me.”
“Tell her Gavin just got blown up.”
“That would improve her day significantly.”
They both laughed.
Gavin spread his hands in an open-armed shrug for no one’s benefit but his own. “Would you please shut the hell up?”
They did. Dell did not. “What did you just say to me?!”
“Not you, babe. Walt and…you know what? Never mind all that. Just tell me again, what’s going on with Jazz?”
His mobiGlas vibrated. Gavin swore silently and balled his fists to keep from shooting something. From within his pressure suit, it was difficult to activate the mobiGlas. He managed it while Dell filled him in on Jazza’s desertion. She was going to look for work with one of the smuggling outfits hidden in the Olympus Pool. Paying work. Blah. Blah. Deserter.
Gavin finally powered on his mobiGlas display. There was a message from a contact marked “unknown,” but Gavin knew exactly who it was from.
“Dell.”
“I tried to talk her out of it, Gav,” Dell sounded close to tears. “I really did.”
“Dell, listen to me.”
“What?”
“Get Jazza back. All right? Do whatever it takes.”
“I’ll try, Gav, but…”
“Whatever it takes, okay? We’re going to need her. We’re going to need everyone and then some.”
“What’s going on, Gavin?”
He keyed his mic to transmit on both channels, “Everybody, listen up. They only got two bids on the Navy contract. We’re the low bid.”
“Is low bad?” Boomer asked.
“Dell,” Gavin said, “have Jazza join us in Oberon. We’re working ’round the clock until we’ve cleared the last few turrets.”
Gavin sat in his damaged Cutlass, cheeks stretched in an unfamiliar grin.
“Guys,” he said, “we just won the Navy job.”
* * *
“Go on in, Miss Brock.” A lieutenant held the door open for her. “Major Greely and his guest are already inside.”
The major’s guest. How wonderful. Morgan Brock smoothed the front of her pleated skirt and then swept through the doorway into Greely’s conference room. The major and his “guest” stood near the head of the table. Greely was looking more Marine than Navy in his shirt sleeves. The man had arms as thick as most men’s legs.
“Brock. Good of you to come personally. Let me introduce you to Gavin Rhedd, one of the co-owners of Rhedd Alert Security.”
Rhedd was younger than she’d guessed, a handsome man with a sturdy frame. He’d made the curious decision to wear a weathered, civilian flight suit to the meeting. Perhaps he needed to convince everyone that he was, in fact, a pilot. Still, the rig fit him well. He looked uncomfortable but not self-conscious standing beside the granite slab that was Major Greely.
“Pleased to meet you, Miss Brock.”
She refused his extended hand and put an end to the pleasantries.
“So you’re the cherry that low-balled my contract.” She made it obvious that it wasn’t a question. “Let me be entirely clear. The termination clause stipulates that I participate in a transition meeting. Let’s not pretend that I’m pleased by the opportunity.”
“Well okay, then,” Greely said. “I suppose that will do by way of introductions. Let’s get started, shall we?” He took a seat at the head of the table and motioned for each of them to sit. “Now, the award and protest periods are over.”
“There will be an appeal filed,” she said.
“I don’t doubt that, Morgan. But my office and Navy SysCom have every reason to believe that the award will be upheld.”
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