Just what he needed. More pressure. “Thanks, Barry.”
“Keep your chin up, buddy. You guys are doing fine, okay? I mean, you should hear what goes on with other contracts. Seriously, this is nothing.”
“Thanks again.” Gavin disconnected the line. It certainly didn’t feel like they were doing fine. The office door slid open, and Jazza stood silhouetted against the corridor lights.
“Jazz?” Gavin’s stomach sank. He tried to swallow but his throat was tight. “What is it? Where’s Dell?”
She took a step inside and the room’s lights reflected in the wet corners of her brimming eyes. She held herself together, but the effort to do so was visible.
“It’s Boomer,” she said, “It was too much damage this time. He’s…he’s really gone.”
* * *
A recorded hymn played as they sent Arun “Boomer” Ainsley into whatever great adventure awaits in the everafter. Gavin set the service in the Rhedd Alert hangar, and the recording sounded terrible. The last somber note rebounded off the room’s hard surfaces and harsh angles.
He wished they could have had a live band. He would have paid for an orchestra, if one were to be had on the orbital station. Even a bugle would have been better tribute for the man who had brought Dell into his life. For the man who taught him and Walt so much about living a free life in the outer systems.
Dell’s arm felt small around his waist and Gavin pulled her in close to him, unsure if that was the right thing to do. He turned to kiss her hair and saw Walt’s lean form looming beside them. Walt’s face was fixed in a grim mask.
Gavin knew his brother well enough to know that Walt was berating himself inside. He didn’t deal well with guilt or responsibility, and Gavin suspected that was a big part of why Walt always ran.
The gathering started to break up. Pilots and the hangar crew busied themselves with tasks around Rhedd Alert’s battered fleet of fighters. Dell didn’t move, so he stayed there with her. Walt rested a hand on his shoulder.
“Gavin. Oh gods, Dell. I can’t tell you how sorry I am.”
Jazza leaned in and spoke in a low tone, almost a whisper. “Landing gear up in ten, boss. Your rig is on the buggy.” She motioned with her chin to where his ship waited.
Dell turned into him and squeezed. “Be careful.”
“I will, babe.”
“You come home to me, Gavin Rhedd. I’ll kill you myself if you make me run this outfit on my own.”
He pressed his lips to the top of her head. Held them there.
“Wait. What?” Walt’s jaw was slack, his eyes wide. “Tell me you aren’t going back out there.”
Jazza bumped Walt with her shoulder, not so much walking past him as through him. “Damn right we are, Quitter.”
“You know what? Screw you, Jazz. All right? You used to quit this outfit, like…twice a month.”
“Not like you. Not like some chicken sh—”
“Jazz,” Gavin said, “go make sure the team is ready to roll, would ya?” With a nod to Gavin and a parting glare at Walt, she moved away into the hangar.
“Let it be, Walt. We really do need to go. After last time, we can’t risk being late for the pickup.”
“Screw late!” Walt’s eyes were wide and red-rimmed around the edges. “Why the happy hells are you going at all?”
“Walt—”
“Don’t ‘Walt’ me, Gavin. There is a pack of psychopaths out there trying to kill you!”
“Walt, would you shut up and listen for two seconds? We don’t have a choice, okay? We’ve got everything riding on this job. We’re months behind on this place and extended up to our necks on credit for fuel, parts and ammo.”
“They can damn well bill me!”
“No,” Gavin said, “they can’t. Your shares reverted back to the company when you quit. But I’m legit now. You think we lived life on the run before? Just you watch if I try to run from this.”
Walt turned to Dell for assistance, “Dell, come on. You gotta make him listen to reason.”
“Boomer’s shares transferred to me when he died,” Dell said. “We’re in this together.”
“Okay, boss,” Jazza called. The three of them looked to where she stood with a line of determined crew. “It’s time.”
* * *
Walt watched the big bay doors close as the last of Gavin’s team left the hangar. His fighter and the few remaining ships looked small and awkwardly out of place in the big room. Standing alone next to Dell gave him a great appreciation for that awkwardness.
“I’m so sorry, Dell. If I’d been there—”
“Don’t,” she stopped him with a word, and then continued with a shake of her blue-tipped hair. “Don’t do that to yourself. I’ve been over the tactical logs. He got beat one-on-one, and then they OK’d him. There was nothing you could have done.”
“I still feel rotten,” he said. “Like, maybe if I hadn’t left…I don’t know.”
“Gavin blames himself, too. That’s just the way you two are built. But believe me, there was never a soul alive able to keep my dad out of the cockpit. He was flying long before you Rhedd boys tumbled into our lives.”
That gave him a smile. A genuine smile. It seemed to brighten Dell’s mood, so he did his best to hang onto it.
“Come on,” she said. “It’s been a long couple of weeks. Join me for some coffee?”
He did, and for a time they spoke softly at the tall tables in the hangar’s kitchenette. Dell caught him up on life aboard Vista Landing since he had left. She was clearly exhausted and not simply from a sleepless night and her father’s funeral. Her shoulders sagged, and dark circles under her eyes were the product of weeks of labor and worry. The constant apprehension of the Hornets’ vicious attacks had apparently exhausted more than just the pilots. It seemed odd that the attacks felt strangely personal.
“You know what I can’t figure out?” he mused aloud. Dell looked at him, tired eyes politely expectant. “What the hell are these guys after?”
She nodded, “Yeah. There’s been a lot of speculating on that question.”
“And?”
“Hard to say, isn’t it? Could be political wackos opposed to the research in Haven. Or maybe it’s one of the old gangs that don’t like us going legit. Could be it’s a group of Tevarin lashing out against UEE targets. Who knows?”
“Naw. If they were Tevarin, we could tell by how they fly.”
“Then you tell me, if you’re so smart. I mean, you were out there. You fought them.”
Walt shrugged and took a sip of cooling coffee. Something she said nagged at him. “Hey, you said you had navsat tactical logs from the fight, right?”
“Yeah.” What remained of her energy seemed to drain away with that one word. Walt cursed himself for the insensitive ass that he was. He’d just asked her about recorded replays of her father’s murder.
“Dell. Ah, hell…I’m sorry. I shouldn’t have asked.”
“It’s okay,” she said. “I’ve been over and over them already. Really, I don’t mind.”
They moved to a console and the lights dimmed automatically when she pulled up the hangar projection. She selected a ship, and oriented the view so that the hologram of Boomer’s Avenger filled the display. No, Walt reminded himself, it wasn’t Boomer’s ship any more. Dell was his heir and—along with his debt—Boomer’s assets now belonged to her.
Dell bypassed the default display of the structural hardpoints and dove into the ship’s systems. Something caught his eye and he stopped her. “Wait, back up.” She did, and Walt stopped the rotating display to look along the undercarriage of the ship. He let out a low whistle.
“That, Walter Rhedd, is a Tarantula GT-870 Mk3.”
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