Read Lost Planet 01 - The Lost Planet Online

Authors: Rachel Searles

Tags: #Retail, #YA 09+

Lost Planet 01 - The Lost Planet (25 page)

BOOK: Lost Planet 01 - The Lost Planet
4.42Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

“Lieutenant Maurus!” interrupted a furious voice from the front console. “What do you think you're doing?”

Maurus veered the fighter out and away from the
Kuyddestor
. “Sorry, Captain, looks like you lose this round.”

“All weaponry is pointed right at you, Lieutenant—you have ten seconds to surrender,” said Lennard.

“And kill my hostages? I think that's against Fleet regulations, isn't it?”

“Are you insane?” Lennard roared. “Do you realize what you're doing?”

“Yes, I do,” said Maurus. He was quiet for a moment, tapping at the console. When he spoke again, his voice was low and hard. “Just like you knew what you were doing when you sent me to Trucon on that bogus mission. You won't get away with any of this.”

There was a pause. “Don't—” came the captain's angry voice over the console.

At that moment, Maurus launched the fighter into a fold, and they passed out of transmission range.

 

CHAPTER TWENTY

They reappeared in a quiet segment of space, and after a tense second, Maurus released the breath he had been holding. “We did it!” he said, sounding fiercely pleased. “Hang on a minute while I plot out our course.”

Parker leaned toward the front, unintentionally jamming his arm into Chase's side. “Where are we going now? What's the plan?” He was ghostly pale, and the occasional deep wheeze made it sound like he still had some difficulty breathing.

“Are you sure you're up for this?” Chase asked.

“Of course,” Parker scoffed.

“Because you look terrible.”

Parker made a face. “It'll take a lot more than a full dose of Goxar poison to keep me down. So what's the plan?”

As Chase twisted away from Parker's sharp elbow, he realized he hadn't given much thought to where he might find his sister. Qesaris was the only place he had seen her, so it seemed only natural to go back and look for her there. When Maurus didn't answer, he spoke up. “I have to go to Qesaris to find my sister.”

Parker shifted to look at Chase. “Your
what
?”

“Don't worry,” came Maurus's low mutter from the front. “Qesaris is where we're headed.”

Chase paused. He had expected Maurus to want to go straight to the safety of his homeworld. “You're not planning to go after the case, are you?”

“Why wouldn't I?”

“You heard what Vo said. Rezer Bennin is out for revenge—he'll kill you. You'll never get the case. Just leave us on Qesaris and go back to your people.”

“Go back to my people? Is that an order?” Irritation crept into Maurus's voice. “If I can get that case, I still have a chance to clear my name. And not just that—I can expose whoever it was in Fleet command that orchestrated the destruction of Trucon. This is my duty as a soldier of the Fleet.”

Chase shook his head. How could Maurus still think of himself as a Fleet soldier after all that had happened?

Parker jabbed him in the shoulder. “I'm sorry, your
what
? Can you say that again? Sister?”

It was useless to argue with Maurus, so instead Chase turned to Parker. “Yes, my sister. You remember when I told you about that girl in the bathroom, when you told me I was crazy?” He proceeded to repeat what Lennard had said to him about Lilli Garrety. “That must have been my sister—that's why she was so upset when she saw me,” he finished, trying to contort himself into a more comfortable position against Mina, who sat as still and inflexible as a statue.

“Because she thinks you're dead, just like the captain said.” Parker was silent for a moment. “How do you think she found you in the first place?”

“I don't know.” Chase had gone over the memory so many times in his head that he was able to recite their entire conversation to himself. “Wait, there was one thing. She mentioned a name, something like, ‘Dornan didn't see you, but I did.'”

“Dornan?” Maurus's voice rang out sharply. “As in, Colonel Eileen Dornan?”

“You know who that is?” Chase asked.

“She's the chief medical officer of the Naxos Vector Command. What does she have to do with you?”

“I have no idea—” Chase began to say.

“Of course! Don't you remember, dummy?” Parker interrupted. “She was the officer running things at the medical center. She put the lasobind on my forehead after I split it open.”

The older female officer with the baby-doll face! Chase gaped at Parker. “Do you tinik—?”

“Hold that thought, Chase,” Maurus said, sitting up from the console. “I've got our course entered. Lennard's going to be right on our tail, so I'm giving it the full push. Things might get a little rough—we're going to get to Qesaris in record time. Prepare for fold.”

Before Chase could utter another word, the universe collapsed around them, and the fighter tore across the galaxy in a dizzying rush, completing each fold nearly on top of the last. Bright objects flashed in the windshield, nearby planets and colored swirls of distant nebula. After an hour or so, Chase began to get a tight headache from all the folding, and his entire body ached from being cramped up for so long. It was still infinitely better than riding in Vo's decrepit shuttle.

Then the flashing images stopped, and they were enveloped in darkness again, with only the glow of the console to see by. The vehicle's gravity generator kept them seated, but Chase could feel that the Khatra was zooming downward. Gray light filtered in through the front window as they entered the atmosphere of Qesaris.

“I'm sure Lennard put an alert out on this fighter, so I can't land in any standard docking stations,” said Maurus. “I'm going to land us at the port in the Shank. This will put us close to Rezer Bennin's lair, so we can get in and out with the case in a hurry.”

We?
Chase pushed the question out of his head, and instead tried to think of how he would go about finding his sister. Her final clue,
I'm being held by the one who led the end
, was not terribly helpful, and a planet was a very large place to be hidden on. Was it possible that she was still in the café where she'd jumped him? Unlikely, but maybe it was the best place to start.

Maurus slowed the vehicle, and after a few gentle turns, they settled to a stop. Almost immediately the hatch popped open. “Alright, everybody out—quick, quick,” said Maurus, exiting the Khatra with a fluid jump and leaving Chase and Parker to pull themselves out of their cramped positions and scramble after him. Mina landed beside them with a heavy thump.

They walked swiftly through the hectic port, weaving through the tangle of parked vehicles and steaming vents and drawing stares from the raggedy men and creatures who worked there. Fortunately, the contingent of Fleet soldiers who'd been monitoring the port when they left was no longer there. Maurus rested one hand near his hip, where he carried the black baton he'd taken from the brig. They took a lift up to the street level of the Shank, and Maurus began to lead the way down a dark alley.

Chase stopped. “Hang on. Where are we going?”

Maurus glanced back at him with an impatient frown and ushered the group into a recessed doorway. He scanned the three of them. “Okay, we need a plan. Mina, you should take Parker out of the Shank, somewhere safe.”

“Don't you—” Parker began to protest.

Maurus turned to Chase. “You come with me. We'll deal with Rezer Bennin.”

“What?” asked Chase, raising his voice over Parker's noisy objections. “No, I came here to look for my sister.”

Impatience crossed Maurus's face. “Lennard is already on his way here, and it's only a matter of time before Vo cracks and tells him about the case. I have to get to it before he does.”

“But I need to find her,” said Chase, wrinkling his brow.

Maurus's voice dropped low. “I don't know if I can do this without you. We'll go look for the girl once we've taken back my case.”

“You mean if we're still alive. If we're not being chased halfway across the galaxy.” Chase's temper began to rise. “This may be the only chance I have to save her.”

“You don't even know if she's really your sister!” Maurus said through gritted teeth.

“Captain Lennard said—”

“You told us he said
Chase Garrety
had a sister, and he also said Chase Garrety is dead. Look at you! You're not human, you pass through solid objects! How can you think you're really that boy?”

Chase felt his face growing hot as a tight, angry feeling knit together in his chest. “I am. I know it.”

“You realize it's possible you never even saw the girl? Nobody else did, did they? Parker, did you see her? Her image could have been implanted in your memory as a way to control you.”

Chase paused, uncertain. Could that be possible?

“Shut up!” Parker stepped forward and shoved Maurus in the chest. “Stop trying to manipulate him. We saved your life once already, or did you forget that?”

Maurus knocked Parker's hands away. “And I'd be back with my people by now if it weren't for you!”

Parker snorted. “You still can—go back and get the Khatra. Get out of here.”

“Don't tell me what to do.” Maurus grabbed Parker's shirt, and instantly Mina's hand was clamped on his shoulder. He let go, hissing in pain.

“Stop!” Chase shook his head at all three of them, fighting over what was his decision. “Parker, I can take care of this.”

Maurus shook Mina off and turned all his attention on Chase. “I'm asking you to trust your gut. Yes, you're special. There's no one like you in the universe. But you have to realize that you can't really be that boy. You're probably walking into a trap.” He placed his hands on Chase's shoulders, his dark eyes blazing with purpose. “Let's go get that case and tell the universe who was really behind the Trucon attack.”

Chase put his head down to avoid Maurus's fervent gaze. On the
Kuyddestor
, he'd been so certain he needed to save his sister, but now Maurus was messing with his head and that certainty was crumbling. It felt incredibly selfish to ignore Maurus's noble goal in favor of his own possibly imagined one, and for a moment it seemed almost like he had no choice.

But he was so close to getting the answers he needed. How could he reach them if Maurus made him change his plans? He closed his eyes, and the girl's terrified face flashed before him. Anger pulsed in his veins. Chase raised his head and squared his shoulders. “Maybe I'm not Chase Garrety,” he said. “But I know what I saw, and that girl needs me. If you wait, I promise I'll help you afterward.”

Maurus's face tightened, and with an angry huff he dropped his hands, backing away. “I won't make it to afterward. But I won't waste any more time trying to convince you. Good-bye, Chase.” He turned and stalked down the alley, shoulders taut, quickly disappearing into the gloom.

Chase turned to Parker. “Did I do the right thing?”

“Do you really believe you have a sister out there?” Parker asked.

Chase bit his lip. Maurus had told him to go with his gut on this, and his gut told him that the frantic, desperate girl he'd seen needed his help. He nodded, and then asked, “Do you really think I'm Chase Garrety?”

“Pssht, of course! Did you not have a Chase Garrety chip in your head when I first met you?” Parker smiled. “So, how are we going to find this sister of yours? Tell me exactly what she said to you, every word.”

“Parker,” said Mina. He ignored her.

Chase racked his brain. “She said … I should know the safe place, and I should go there and ask for help.”

“And I don't suppose you remember this safe place, do you?” Parker looked at him hopefully. “No. That would be too easy. What else?”

Chase dug deeper into his memory. “She said ‘guide the star,' like I did—”

“Would be useful if we knew what that meant.” Parker squinted. “So I guess we go look for this Colonel Dornan?”

“Parker,” Mina repeated.

He turned to her. “How do we find the Fleet medical center again?”

Mina shook her head. “It's time for us to go. I'm going to contact Asa now so he can come and pick us up.”

“Absolutely not.” Parker narrowed his eyes. “You can tell him to come and get us afterward, but first we get Chase's sister. Then we can all go live happily ever after with Asa.”

Mina frowned. “This is not up for debate. We have to leave now.”

“No!” Parker raised his hands as if he were about to shove her, but he stopped himself. “Look, I'm giving you an order. My life isn't in any danger, so you can't override me. I know you have a map of Qesaris somewhere in that positronic brain of yours, so let's go find this Dornan lady and see what she can tell us about Chase's sister. Or tell Asa to come join us, if you think he'd like to help.”

Mina shook her head. “He won't come to Qesaris himself. It's too dangerous for him.”

“Of course it is!” shouted Parker. “And we all saw for ourselves on the
Kuyddestor
that Asa Kaplan puts Asa Kaplan first.”

There was an awkward pause.

“Parker, they were going to arrest him,” said Chase. “He had to get out of there.”

“Oh, he had to, huh?” snapped Parker. “He had to abandon me there, then, did he? Just like he's abandoned me my whole life? Why did he even agree to be my guardian? Why didn't he just throw me in an orphanage?”

“He wanted to keep you safe,” said Mina quietly. “You're very important to him.”

“And he shows that by leaving me stranded on a Fleet ship in the hands of a madman. Come on, Mina, you're going to have to try harder to sell me on that one.” Parker turned and threw his arm around Chase's shoulders. “Let's go find your sister.” Without a glance back at Mina, he raised his voice and added, “You're welcome to come along. But you're not stopping me.”

BOOK: Lost Planet 01 - The Lost Planet
4.42Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Loving Bella by Renee Ryan
Teaching Roman by Gennifer Albin
Precise by Rebecca Berto, Lauren McKellar
Vanilla Salt by Ada Parellada
Going Postal by Terry Pratchett
Who's Riding Red? by Liliana Hart
Captive Rose by Miriam Minger
Swan's Way by Weyrich, Becky Lee