Compete (66 page)

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Authors: Norilana Books

Tags: #ancient aliens, #asteroid, #space opera, #games, #prince, #royal, #military, #colonization, #survival, #exploration

BOOK: Compete
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With my peripheral vision I watch the rapid-fire pattern of Start/Finish Line holo-projections speeding by on both sides of us, as we move in and out of the left, then the right channels between formations.

Seconds tick away, as we weave around hundreds of ships, dizzying our vision. . . . We pass slower shuttles, while faster ones pass us. I have no idea how our speed is compared to the others.

“How much longer till the flagship and the top of the column?” I mutter, when the clock reads 06:34 minutes.

As if to answer me, the automated traffic controller says:


Shuttle #47, prepare to turn ahead. . . . Fleet termination, ten second warning.”

“Okay, Braking now!” Chiyoko exclaims hastily.

I relinquish the Red, and she takes over on Green, slowing us down gradually, and circle swiping in a nice clean arc, as we enter the 5-kilometer boundary between the second ark-ship and ICS-1.

We come around in a perfect circle, and then descend below the ship to enter the bottom-level lane for the return leg of the Race. Other shuttles swoop down all around us, doing the same maneuver.

So far, so good, smooth sailing. . . .

We start
ripping
toward the back of the Fleet, once again weaving around the middle column #2, except now we’re below the underbellies of the great ark-ships.

“Time looks good!” Chiyoko says, in a voice that’s almost surprised.

I glance up and the Clock reads 09:26. Not bad at all. . . .

I keep circle-swiping on Red, weaving us in and out.

Hundreds of ships. . . .

The pattern starts to blur in my mind, and it’s also become easy now.

I breathe evenly, and slowly, gradually increase our speed.

“What are you doing?” Chiyoko notices our increasing velocity.

“Don’t worry,” I mutter, focusing in utmost concentration on maintaining the Zen state.

“Are you sure?” Her voice sounds high-pitched and nervous, while her micro-corrections on the Blue Grid speed up to match mine on Red.

“Yup,” I say. “Doing okay there, not too fast for you?”

“No, I’m okay, actually,” she responds.

And we keep moving at the increased speed.

At some point we weave back around ICS-2, our own home ship, but we’re not done yet—in this type of race course we have to keep going, because it’s not considered a finish until we make a complete circle around the entire Fleet, so now we have to reach the anchor ship, ICS-4.

“Doing okay, Chiyoko?” I mutter, never taking my eyes from the gestalt of movement and flow in the window ahead.

“Yes,” she replies, concentrating on her own Blue Grid.

I check the time, and wow, Clock says 11:42. We’re making very decent time!

Meanwhile, the shuttle traffic around us is picking up now, as though everyone has figured out their rhythm, and is now trying to beat the clock.

Just a few minutes more, and we hear:


Shuttle #47, prepare to turn ahead. . . . Fleet termination, ten second warning.”

Okay, so we’re just about to reach the back end of the Fleet and ICS-4.

“I’m on it!” Chiyoko takes over and goes Green to Brake.

I watch her turn us around in another wonderfully smooth perfect circle around the penultimate ark-ship, in that 5-kilometer gap between it and ICS-4.

It occurs to me momentarily,
this is the exact same spot where Hugo and I lost control during the first QS Race
. . . . The place where we were driven off course by those other out-of-control shuttles and where we spun out, then started to drift like crazy until we Breached. . . .

No, don’t think.

Instead I take deep breaths and watch us do a perfectly controlled, beautiful maneuver, thanks to Chiyoko.

However, the two shuttles directly in front of us are not so lucky.

“Oh, crap,
no!
” I exclaim, as I watch in horror the sudden out-of-control wobble and then wild slide of one shuttle about a hundred feet ahead of us as it starts to turn, but instead goes spinning. . . .

Not again!

But it does not endanger us.

Instead it spins and flies directly at the same formation ark-ship that we are presently circumventing. And now it’s on a direct collision course with the giant hull wall of violet plasma. . . .

Chiyoko and I both scream, and she Brakes forcefully to get us away from the out-of-control spinning
second
shuttle—which barely manages to regain its turning axis and then keeps going into the proper turn, and rises up to merge with the upper level traffic racing lane heading the same way as the Stream.

Meanwhile the first shuttle hurtles head-on into the ark-ship . . . and we stare as it slams at the plasma force field. . . .

And
disappears
.

“Oh my God . . .” Chiyoko whispers in horror.

We continue coasting carefully and slowly as we wait a few seconds . . . for what? For a silent space explosion, maybe? Anything?

Instead, there is no trace of the shuttle.

There is
nothing
.

It’s as if, the moment it made contact with the plasma energy shield it ceased to exist.

“Wow,” I whisper. “Was it vaporized? I don’t see any debris. . . .”

Chiyoko shakes her head. “I don’t know. . . .”

“Okay, we should probably keep going then,” I mutter. “We only lost about twenty seconds on the Clock.”

And so we pick up speed and start rising in order to merge back onto the home stretch of the race course.

In that moment, just as we’re almost at the upper level, I glance at the lower section of the viewport window and see a strange sight.

The shuttle that had disappeared about thirty seconds ago, suddenly
emerges
from the
inside
of the ark-ship . . . about three hundred feet away from its original disappearance spot.

At the same time, the
location
where it reappears seems to flicker peculiarly. The plasma crackles. . . . And then just for a brief crazy moment, the
entire outline
of the great ark-ship shimmers and flickers also.

For a moment it looks unreal, flat, two-dimensional.

And the shuttle that came out is perfectly
unharmed
and now makes its way back on course.

“Look!” I exclaim. “Did you see that? Okay, that’s just impossible!”

“What?” Chiyoko glances up nervously, but she missed it, and she does not recognize the shuttle.

“That—that’s the same shuttle—” I stammer. “It’s back! It returned! But—that makes no sense.”

“Huh?” Chiyoko mumbles.

Unless. . . .

And then the truly crazy thought comes to me.

The ark-ship—it is not real. It’s a hologram.

Stunned, I almost forget to do my part on the Red Grid propulsion.

“Sorry, I don’t understand,” Chiyoko mutters. “Okay, can you please hurry up, Gwen? We need to merge.”

“Right, never mind,” I say, while my mind is reeling and I try to get a grip.

That ark-ship flickered like a standard hologram undergoing a brief static charge.
I am completely sure of it. It explains why there was no collision, no debris, no destroyed shuttle.

But—what the hell does that mean?

What’s a hologram of an entire ark-ship doing in the Fleet formation?

And then an even scarier thought comes to me: what if it’s not the only one? What if the entire Fleet formation is full of ships that are holograms?

Holy crap! No, that can’t be, that’s just crazy
. . . .

My mind begins to panic, but I don’t allow myself the luxury. Instead, I slam down a steel wall of focus and concentrate on the weaving pattern before me.

A few minutes later, we reach the ICS-2 Finish Line.

As we pass the wide holo-strip of golden light projected from our home ship across the flight lane, our Race Clock freezes at 16:48. That’s a great time.

Chiyoko exclaims in wonder. I force myself to smile back at her.

But instead of celebrating, it’s with a heavy heart that I let Chiyoko take over on the Green Brake. And we enter the launch tunnel and return to ICS-2 Shuttle Bay Four.

Tonight I am going to see Command Pilot Aeson Kassiopei.

And he’d better have some answers for me.

 

Chapter Forty-One

 

B
ut first, we get out of our shuttles, give up control to the next Pilot Pair in the relay and stand aside nervously, watching the rest of the Quantum Stream Race along with the crowds in the shuttle bay.

The Race is over about an hour and a half later, as the last of the Pilot Pairs return in the shuttles.

Our Final Scores are tabulated instantly, and we all crowd to the smart boards to see our Cadet Standings. For a while I allow myself to forget the hologram ark-ship situation and just bump shoulders with everyone else as Chiyoko and I push our way forward to see our numbers.

The smart boards refresh, and here come our numbers for ICS-2 in one column, and our overall Fleet Scores in the other. . . . It’s also interesting to see that the four Quadrant general rankings have changed slightly, so that Blue and Red are neck-to-neck, followed by Yellow and then Green. Go, Yellow—my Quadrant’s moving up!

Everyone mutters, exclaims, holds their breath.

We watch as Alla Vetrova and Conrad Hart are the reigning champions, with a #1 standing for the ship, and a 100% perfect Fleet Score. Which means they could be in the top 200 across the Fleet overall—though, with top Cadets from 2,000 ark-ships vying for only 200 spots, there are no guarantees.

But if some of those 2,000 ships are only holograms
, the crazy persistent thought plagues me,
then maybe their odds are way better
. . . .

Okay, I really, really need some answers, and fast, before I go insane.

I watch the scroll and see that in spot #2 for ICS-2 is Logan Sangre and Oliver Parker, with a 99% Fleet Score.

Wow. . . . Logan is really pushing his way up the ranks
, I think.

Meanwhile, the Tsai siblings, Erin and Roy, have been knocked down to #3, with a 98% Fleet Score, followed by Leopold Deller and DeeDee Kim at #4 and a 97% Fleet Score.

And then, as Chiyoko and I stare in amazement, we see our names listed.

We’re at #5 for ICS-2.

And, we have a 96% Fleet Score.

No effing way!

Chiyoko makes a stifled scream and puts her hands over her mouth, and starts crying. I scream also, and then hug her. . . . She hugs me back, and we sort of dance around and scream, holding each other, and getting out of the way of others.

“Oh my God! Oh my God!” she mutters and I mutter. I think we’re both hyperventilating at this point.

“I don’t know how, but we did it, Gwen! Thank you for being such a good partner!” Chiyoko says, smiling and sniffling at the same time, and constantly wiping her reddened face and the running tears.

“I can’t believe it either! And no, thank
you!
You were awesome!”

Well, this definitely changes things for both of us—being in the top five for our ship. Chiyoko is going to have nice Fleet placement opportunities available. And me? My chances are so much better now—when at the end of next month we finally arrive in Atlantis and the CP has to make his decision about allowing me to compete in the Games of the Atlantis Grail.

Eventually we look up at the smart boards again and start to watch for other people we know and their numbers to scroll by. Looks like, after the initial rush to learn their own, everyone is doing it too.

Well, I don’t have to wait long for Blayne Dubois and Leon Madongo—there they are at #18 and their Fleet Score is 93%! Way to go, Blayne and Leon!

Out of curiosity I stick around and wait to see Hugo Moreno’s score. It’s way down in the lower middle of the scroll, at #419, and the Fleet Score is a dismal 61%. I wonder if Marc Goldstein now regrets becoming his Pilot partner. . . . Hey, not my problem.

 

 

T
he rest of the day goes by quickly. I get back to my cabin and call up Gracie and Laronda to make sure they both did okay, and apparently all is well.

Gracie and her partner got an excellent #35 for their ship standing, and a 90% Fleet Score, while Laronda has landed #104 for her ship and an 87% Fleet Score, which is not bad at all. With these numbers, both of them have a solid future in the Fleet.

Well, now the not-so-good part.

While most of the Cadets are celebrating or just recovering from the grueling event of this morning, I brood for the whole day, waiting for an opportunity to speak with Kassiopei. It’s QS Race Day, so there are no duties scheduled for me at the CCO. However I do have the voice training at 8:00 PM.

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