Retribution: Part Four by child_dragon
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The base was settling into the night cycle when they arrived
back. Near the entrance to the hanger was their captain, reading a book which
he set aside to greet them.
"Nina. Terry. I'll save yelling at you two for
tomorrow. Go get some sleep - you'll need it, we have another mission assigned
already."
Nina groaned theatrically and the Buzz merely
shrugged, unclipping his helmet and making his way down into the corridors.
Their captain glanced over at Danner who was doing his best to stay on his feet.
"You doing okay?" he asked.
"Yeah, I'll live. I'll stop by the infirmary
in the morning and see if they can do anything for the soreness."
"Right. Good to have you back Danner."
The Kyrii turned and walked away down after
Terry. Nina and Danner exchanged glances and then the Wocky shrugged and led
the way towards where their rooms were. Due to the constraints on space within
the base all pilots were doubled-up. Danner shared his room with a rather quiet
fire Zafara named Allan. He flew as Gallion 10 and was a reliable compatriot.
Nina kept walking past his room and he cast her a lingering glance, hoping she
would look back. She didn't and reluctantly he opened the door to his room,
sliding inside into the darkness. Only then did Nina pause and look back, a
strange expression on her face. The door to the Kougra's room shut but Nina
remained there for a long time, her eyes wide like the stars.
Allan stirred as Danner entered and actually
did wake up.
"Hsst, just me," the Kougra whispered.
"Oh," he replied, "Glad you're back. G'night."
And his head hit the pillow and was lost to
sleep once more. Danner chuckled softly and quickly stripped of his suit, changing
into his plain night-shirt and climbing into the top bunk, careful to keep his
movements soft enough to not wake Allan again. Then he too fell into sleep as
soon as his cheek touched the pillow.
His dreams were troubled. Again and again he
saw the ball of flame as Rya's ship evaporated, the flash of the enemy fighter
as it veered away and got behind him. Burned into his mind were the kill markings.
Eight. That fact stuck in his mind and ran around in his subconscious again
and again. Nina's desperate plea, her desperate cry. In his dream, they switched
places, and she was the one being shot down. But when he landed and ran to her
ship, she wasn't there, there was only a crater and overhead the enemy fighters.
With a gasp he woke in a cold sweat, flinging
the covers up and glancing frantically around the room. It was dark but the
clock on the dresser read early morning. Everyone would be up by now; they'd
probably let him sleep out of courtesy. Indeed, a quick check revealed that
Allan had left the room already. With a groan, Danner slipped out of the bunk
bed and landed in a crouch, stifling a gasp as his muscles screamed in protest.
Limping over to the light switch, the Kougra remembered how he had said he'd
see the infirmary first thing in the morning. That seemed like the best option,
or really, the only option right now.
Danner met up with the rest of his crew at around
noon at the mess hall. They were clustered in a corner of the vast expanse,
laughing and shoveling into their food. Nina waved him over and he took a spot
between her and Allan.
"I got you something," she said, shoving him
a tray, "and even made you tea."
He showed his thanks by grabbing a fork and
starting his own dent on the plate before him.
"Your fur's wet," the Wocky giggled.
"Wash'd dirt n' stuffs off," he mumbled with
his mouth full.
"You feeling better?" Terry asked from across
the table.
"Yesh."
He swallowed hard and took a drink of tea.
"I heard you tossing in your sleep," Allan suddenly
piped up, "And crying out. Nightmares?"
Danner nearly choked and narrowly avoided spraying
the hot beverage out all across the table. As is, he received a stout smack
on his back after he managed to swallow and started coughing.
"Sorry," the Zafara muttered, "It's not a big
deal though. I'd have nightmares if that happened to me."
"Sure. Whatever."
The Kougra stood, suddenly not hungry anymore.
He stalked away from the table and was supremely aware of the silence that he
left in his wake. There was the scrape of a chair and he walked faster, out
into the hallway where there would be some kind of privacy.
"You can talk to me, you know."
He leaned against the wall, putting his hand
on his arm and staring down at his feet.
"Nina - I, I have no idea how to say this,"
he spilled out, stumbling over the words and his own thoughts and emotions.
"I think I do," she replied, laying one hand
on his shoulder, "You promised you would try your utmost to not leave me. And
now, I promise the same."
He turned his head to look at her, at the soft
smile playing about her lips, that tiny button nose that wrinkled in happiness,
and the shining eyes.
"Like stars," he said.
There was silence between them, but it was a
good silence, a comfortable silence. He could have drifted in it forever until
he himself turned into a moon, languid in space and bright shining from the
light of the sun. But there was the scuff of footsteps behind him and they both
turned to face their captain.
"Sir," Danner said respectfully.
"Where's the rest of the crew?" the Kyrii demanded.
"Eating."
"Fine. I'll go rouse their lazy tails. You two
get down to the hanger - we have a mission, in case you forget."
He vanished into the mess hall and Nina glanced
at Danner, then shrugged.
"I'd say he's nervous."
"I would be too," Danner murmured, "We lost
Rya, after all."
"Yeah."
Her face contorted softly and she walked away
in the direction of their ships and Danner felt guilt pierce his heart. Stupid.
He shouldn't have reminded her of their loss and the possibility of further
grief.
Their mission was a simple one. Their spies
on Virtupets had discovered another one of Sloth's planned raids on innocent
settlements. Retribution, it was called. For what? For defending themselves
against his tyranny? At that moment, Danner truly hated the enemy and it caused
something in his heart to harden.
The captain laid it out simply. The odd should
be even and the enemy wouldn't be expecting them to show up. This time, they
weren't going to arrive too late. They would intercept and prevent another tragedy.
This was something worth fighting over, maybe even dying over.
No one talked much as they flew, their ships
cutting through the open air like so many silver birds. Two missions back to
back - too much stress and fear. But Danner knew that there wasn't much of a
choice, the Gallions were the only fighter team close enough and good enough
to take on Sloth's fighters. Sure, they had a couple other teams there at the
base, but they were all bombers or escorts. Not dog-fighters like Danner and
Nina and all the rest were.
"We're approaching the target," their captain
announced, "Let's look sharp now."
The hate that had wormed itself into Danner's
heart at the word 'retribution' blossomed and he brought up the targeting sequence.
"Stay by me," Nina whispered over the comm.
but her voice was distant from the metal that separated them, "Don't leave me."
He wanted to say that it was a foolish promise.
He couldn't control what would happen here and deep in his gut he knew that
he wouldn't be shot down a second time. Not in any way that he would survive,
that is. But he had seen the hope in her eyes when he had promised and so he
remained quiet, reminding himself that she had bound herself to him with a similar
promise. It too, could be broken in a heartbeat.
The enemy was flying in a tidy formation, streaking
across the sky like an arrowhead. The Gallions came in from below, swooping
up to attack the belly of their ships. Everything dissolved into chaos then,
the formations splitting apart as the streak of blaster marked the sky.
Danner felt instinct take over, the heightened
senses of his body melding with the machine he piloted. It wasn't his usual
ship, a replacement for the one that had been destroyed, but somehow that didn't
matter. Just him and the enemy and the open sky.
By the quick snatches of words that flew across
the comm. Danner could tell that they were indeed winning, and quite easily.
Sloth's ships had been taken utterly by surprise and the sheer ferocity of the
Gallions was allowing them to keep that edge. As his blasters traced a line
in the sky and brought down a ship of his own, Danner realized something strange.
There was a ship dogging Allan. With cold precision
Danner targeted it and fired a couple shots that skimmed over the right wing
in a near miss. He hissed in anger, veering to the side as the fighter also
peeled off, allowing Allan to pull out and limp back to the base in safety.
But that wasn't the only reason the Kougra had targeted that ship in the midst
of the raging battle.
No, in the glare of the engines and fire he
had seen something. Eight kill markings along the hull of the ship, and then,
one more. Nine.
"You didn't kill me," Danner yowled, blind fury
clouding his eyes. "It is not yours to claim!"
The ship was running now, high-tailing it for
higher altitude and the relative safety of open space, out of the pull of Kreludor's
gravity. There would be more of Sloth's ships up there. The Gallions rarely
ventured into open space.
"Gallions, return to base!" their captain crowed.
"We got them running scared."
"Not yet," Danner snarled.
"Danner?"
He pulled up, chasing the fighter that boasted
nine kills. This day there would be some reckoning and a retribution of his
own.
"Danner, pull back! That's an order!"
"Shove it," the Kougra replied, and flipped
off his comm.
He bent over the controls, watching and waiting
for the moment his green crosshair centered on the ship. In his peripheral vision
he caught silver and within that, blue. A private message hailed him and he
quickly admitted it.
"You promised," Nina quickly accused, "but so
did I. Turn back if you can Danner, but if you don't, let's at least finish
this together."
Nine kill markings. Nina on his wing. His dream.
"Promises may be broken," he whispered in response.
"Not mine," she replied savagely, "Not ours.
Not while I live and breath it won't. Now choose."
His heart was breaking. To send Nina back would
be impossible, not without turning back himself. For a moment he wanted to say
yes, pull out and leave the fighter to escape. But the fires of the ruined village
burned in his mind, the cruel smile of the Gelert as he leaned on the piece
of metal pinning him to the ground, and above all the tears in Nina's eyes as
he had emerged from the canyon.
"Together," he said. "Together it is."
To be continued...
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