Notes: Who needs a break from all the violence? Me me me! Have a happy chapter of Reformation. Don't worry, it'll get vicious again soon.
Title: Reformation: Chapter Thirty-Six
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Chapter Thirty-Six
Cody didn’t shut his eyes during their descent.
He probably should have. As good as the shielding was around
the bike, it wasn’t tinted, and his eyes didn’t naturally protect themselves
against brightness like a normal’s did. He was going to be seeing spots when
the fire finally burned itself out, but for now he couldn’t bear to look away.
It was all he could do to keep breathing, calm and steady, for Ten’s sake when
he really wanted to scream with sheer joy.
This, this was
what he wanted in life. Not to be coddled or gentled or taken care of, although
sometimes those things were nice too. But Cody wasn’t built for that, and he
didn’t know where the urge came from—both his biological fathers were pretty conservative
about risks—but he wanted to push himself right to the edge and then stand
there, toes hanging over it, take a deep breath, and then think about falling
right off.
And now he was
falling, plummeting through the sky like a meteor, so shrouded in flames it
seemed like it must have consumed him, it must have, because how could anyone
live through something like this? Something so beautiful, and so impossible?
Superior engineering,
you idiot, he heard Ten say in his mind, and Cody let himself blink for
just a second, patted the back of Ten’s trembling arms around his chest and
reminded himself that he was still alive, this wasn’t a dream, and he’d better
be prepared to handle their landing because it was clear that Ten wasn’t in any
condition to.
He watched the numbers fly by on the altimeter, and as the
flames finally began to give way to dark night skies, Cody punched the
activation for the antigrav drive. It sputtered, electronics probably confused
from extreme cold and extreme heat, and didn’t light up. Cody punched it again.
Glanced at the altimeter. Did it again. Primed it with oil direct from the
engine, dangerous to do but they were under five thousand meters now, and
punched it again.
This time the power caught and held. The bike slowed and
came to a trembling stop a thousand meters above the roiling sea, its batteries
hovering at around five percent. Not good. The shields had drained them more
than Ten had anticipated they would. Cody squinted—yep, still seeing stars—and pulled
up a map of the surrounding terrain with his implant. Their calculations should
have brought them down near the coastline, less than twenty miles away from
Pandora City…
There was the coastline, and the great fuzzy blur of energy
his implant was showing him in the distance had to be the city, protected from
incursion by its own shields. Originally, the plan had been to drive the
hovercycle straight to the edge of the city and enter on foot, but even as he
watched, the battery went from five percent to four. It wouldn’t recharge until
it spent some time in the sun, and there wasn’t going to be any of that on this
side of the planet for at least another nine hours.
“We’ve got to set down early.”
“hmsmnggle.”
Cody patted Ten’s arms reassuringly. “It’ll be okay, we’re
fine, we’re just low on charge. We’ll make it to the Box tomorrow once we get a
little sunlight.” Ten’s solar battery design was ten percent more efficient
than the kind that was commonly commercially available, and Cody had seen it in
action before. “A few more minutes and we’ll be on the ground.”
“mnfsjppser.”
“Yeah, baby.” Cody aimed them for the coast and increased
their speed. Thankfully the sky was pretty clear tonight—hopefully that would
last through the morning and a recharge, and they could sleep outside with some
of the survival gear he’d packed, although it wouldn’t be comfortable…
But wait, no. Weren’t there bunkers set up along the edge of
the cliffs? Cody was almost positive that he’d heard Garrett mention them
before, failsafes dating back to the expansion period that had never been decommissioned,
just kind of forgotten about. One of those would be perfect. He set his implant
to scan for habitable enclosures, and two-point-five seconds later, it outlined
a squat, round shelter in his head. Less than a mile away. Excellent.
Getting there was easy. Getting Ten to let go of him long
enough to actually dismount from the bike was significantly harder, and
involved a lot of petting and promises before Ten could even lift hir head.
Cody twisted around in his seat and kissed Ten softly on the mouth. “Okay now?”
“Oh…okay, yes, of course I’m okay.” Ah, that was more like
the Ten that Cody knew and loved. “I’d be more okay if my ass wasn’t half
asleep and we were inside that bunker instead of out here in the wind and the
cold like—” Hir voice broke off for a moment as ze stared quizzically at the
bunker. “But this one is already inhabited.”
“What do you mean?”
Ten rolled hir eyes. “I mean the door is cracked open, there’s
a dim glow coming from inside, and this close I can actually hear voices
murmuring. Did you stare at the fire for too long?”
“No,” Cody protested, not about to confess that maybe he was still seeing a few flashes
of light here and there. There was a bit of a glow around the right side of the
bunker’s door, but he’d dismissed it as an afterimage. And he didn’t have Ten’s
hearing modifications either. “Do you think it’s someone from a Federation
ship?”
“Maybe. The only other option is that it’s someone from a
pirate ship.”
Oh, and wouldn’t that just be perfect? To get all this way
only to fall victim to a pirate once they were on the fucking planet.
They didn’t get the chance to debate it any further. A
second later, a cylindrical object emerged from the crack in the door and
steadied itself in their direction. Cylindrical…it was weird, but Cody was
almost sure that was a—
“Gun!” Ten hissed. “Whoever’s in there is pointing a gun at
us! Get the shields back up, now!”
“We don’t have enough power to raise them again!”
“Well, we better have enough power to fly away, because—”
“Identify yourselves!”
That—wait. Cody shook his head. That voice… but no. It couldn’t
be.
“Identify yourselves now
or face the consequences!”
It had to be. It was impossible, but it had to be. Cody had
heard “face the consequences” in almost that exact tone more times than he
could remember. He cleared his throat, but his voice was still scratchy as he
managed to say, “Dad?”
The gun wavered. “Names, now.”
“Dad, it’s me.”
After a whispered, furious conversation inside the bunker,
the door opened far enough for Cody to get a good look at who was behind it.
All he could see was the man’s silhouette thanks to the flashes in his vision,
but that was all he needed to see. He’d know that person anywhere. “Dad!”
“Cody? What the hell—”
As astonished as Jonah sounded, though, his arms were open and ready for Cody
when he practically fell into them a moment later. “Oh my god.” His dad’s hand
carded through his hair, pulling him in as close as Cody could get. “Oh my god,
kid, what are you doing here? I thought you weren’t with the rest of the fleet.”
“’S a long story.” Cody felt almost drunk with relief. But… “What
are you doing here? Why aren’t you
inside the city?”
His dad laughed weakly and pressed a kiss to his forehead. “That’s
a long story too, son. That Ten with you?”
“Yeah.”
“Of course it is.” He didn’t sound mad, though. Mostly
pleased. “You two need to come inside and get warm. The tales will have to wait.”
Under the circumstances, Cody definitely agreed.
Woohoo! A good break from all the bluster of war. And MOST of the Helms family is back together. Now all we need is for Garrett to fall from the sky! LOL
ReplyDeleteLove it! Thank you!!
Scottie