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He punched the bulkhead in frustration, and then was slammed against that same bulkhead as the rest of the crew behind him—who had all made the same charge at their one identified enemy—crashed into his back.  Nathan pushed back and up, crying out, “Off!  Get off!  It’s not here any more!”

They all surged off of him as fast as they could.  Nathan looked around when they were clear and surveyed the situation in the mess.  The Patron was nowhere to be seen, but its avatar still stood rooted to the deck behind them.

Nathan drifted over, approaching the statue warily, looking for any sudden movement from the marbled form.  Nothing.  He reached out a hand to touch its shoulder, but just before he made contact … .

The mess room suddenly shook and shuddered.  The avatar, which had been firmly planted upon the deck, came free and drifted up to bounce off the overhead and float uncontrolled through the room.

Nathan jerked his hand back and then looked around him again, his eyes seeking out Kris and Edwards.  “What was that?”

They both, along with the others, looked around carefully.  Kris reached upward, pulling herself into contact with the overhead and laid her ear against the metal surface.  She looked back at them.  “I hear a rumbling or a roaring transmitted through the hull.”

Master Chief smiled.  “I think our hosts might be having a bad day today.”

There was another sharp blow, and a couple of the crew cried out.  Nathan reached down to the deck and felt the unsteady vibration Kris had described.  He nodded.  “I think you’re right.  Either something’s gone wrong on board … .”

Kris grinned back.  “Or something’s been made to go wrong.  I wonder how long we’ve been out?”

“Long enough for Earth to build at least one effective defense,” Nathan answered.  “Thank God.  I was afraid Sykes and his cronies would keep a damper on the programs Lydia had going.  I wonder how close to home we are now?”

Edwards grunted.  “More importantly, how much time do we have before these art snobs get their acts together and decide to put us back in a still life?”

The ship shook again, this time severely enough for it to affect their own jury-rigged wiring.  Compartment lights flickered and they could hear the groaning of the hull as the stresses the Control Ship endured were imparted on what remained of their destroyer.

Nathan grimaced.  “Yeah.  It would be just our luck to hitch a ride all the way back to local space and then get killed by friendly fire.”  He quickly locked eyes with his remaining crew, glancing swiftly from one to the next.  “All right, everyone, we’re going to get out of here and, if possible, join up with the home-team.  And if we can do a little mayhem on the way out to help our brothers-in-arms, well, all the better.”

Edwards quirked a brow.  “Do you happen to have a plan for this effortless egress, Skipper?”

Nathan shook his head.  “I don’t, COB, but she does,” he said, gesturing to Kris.

The ship shook again as it took another hit.  Edwards glanced back and forth between Nathan and their Chief Engineer.  “Oh.  Really?  I must have missed that particular meeting.  Care to share, boss?”

Nathan moved closer to him and grasped him on the shoulder.  “Afraid not.  I don’t want to inadvertently give away our plans to unfriendly ears,” he said, waving a hand at the slowly drifting avatar.  “Just do what she says.”

Everyone turned expectant eyes upon Kris, who, despite everything that had happened to them, managed to blush slightly.  “It’s not a very safe plan.”

Mike Simmons, their TAO and Ops Officer who had led them in decimating half the Patron fleet, grunted a laugh.  “And waiting here doing nothing is so much safer.”

Kris shrugged.  “Okay.  Andrew,” she said, addressing the helmsman, Andrew Weston, “The remaining engineers and I are going to be jury-rigging some power.  I need you to go to the bridge and set up a program for remote triggering … .”

She went on, handing out assignments, providing little detail, but all of them had worked together for years, and for over a year and a half on the voyage itself.  They listened to what she said as well as to what she did not say, filling in the blanks for themselves.  A few pairs of eyes grew fearful, but most of the crew began to smile wickedly.  They might all die in the attempt, but if it worked, it would be spectacular.

In pairs and groups of three, they all departed—some headed to the banks of batteries and capacitors where their only remaining power was still stored, while others headed to watchstations to set up automated programs to aid their escape, and still others hit the SSTOS Hangar and the weapons locker / armory.

Soon, Nathan was all alone in the mess, just himself and the quiescent avatar.  The only sound breaking the tableau was the occasional repeated lightning crash of a strike upon the Control Ship surrounding the destroyer.

He approached tentatively, the fear, nerves, and anticipation built up during the talk of escape falling away to be replaced by renewed feelings of hate and devastation.  The captain pushed off the overhead such that he could match the statue’s drift, and he looked upon the frozen white face of his XO.

Nathan gazed into the flat, marbled eyes of the avatar, searching for any hint of awareness, any sign of life or humanity, but there was nothing there.  This was simply an inert tool of alien design—a golem cleverly sculpted to mimic a friendly, trusted face.

Despite the resemblance, there was nothing about the avatar’s form in homage to Christopher Wright.  This marvel was, if anything, a repudiation of everything that Wright had been, an insult to his life and memory.

Nathan snarled, reached out to grasp the statue by the shoulders, and pushed it back violently.  Since they both floated out of contact with the deck, his shove pushed him back in a spin exactly opposite to the one he had given the avatar, but where the statue spun stiffly—striking the bulkhead behind it with a loud crack—Nathan reacted smoothly—tucking in to spin faster, then kicking off the deck and the opposite bulkhead to drive his outstretched hands at the statue like a battering ram.

He slammed into the avatar and pinned it in the corner between the bulkhead and the deck with his momentum.  There was a loud crack and the statue broke in half at the waist, casting stone dust out to hang motionless in the air.

Nathan grunted, grabbed the torso by the wrist, braced himself, and swung the upper half of the heavy avatar down onto the table.  Another crack and the arm shattered.  He shifted holds, swung again, and the torso was rendered armless, with long chips and cracks appearing on the statue’s head.

Nathan breathed heavily, only briefly worrying about the nano-created stone dust he inhaled.  He rested a foot upon the statue’s head and glared down at the broken form.  Wright’s face was placid.  Nathan shook his own head and whispered, “I’m sorry,” as yet another attack thrummed through the hull.

Holding himself in place with the edge of the table, he kicked out with his free leg and snapped the head from the statue in another explosion of dust.  It bounced up and rebounded from bulkhead to bulkhead until it eventually drifted slowly over the deck, bumping along as it spun around, uncontrolled.

Nathan surveyed the devastation one last time with a heavy feeling of regret and self-recrimination, and then pushed off toward the hatchway to join Kris.

There were nearly 18,000 lasing fusion mines distributed along the expected path of the Deltan/Patron convoy, but even with the alien’s course well-predicted, it was unrealistic to expect more than a small percentage of them would actually be in a position to engage the enemy.  Space was simply too large, and prudence dictated that the field be spread wide in case the aliens altered their path as they closed with the solar system.