“It was Kal-El!” he reported. “He’s destroyed it!”
The son of Jor-El? she raged. That womanborn turncoat?
A murderous fury ignited inside her, hotter than Earth’s gaudy yellow sun. The World Engine was essential to their plans to reshape this wretched planet. Kal-El had destroyed more than just a machine—he had murdered the dream of a new world that had sustained Krypton’s only true survivors through all their years of bitter exile.
She shook as her fists clenched at her sides.
The Phantom Zone was too good for such a traitor. Kal-El must pay for his perfidy, along with the miserable human beings he chose above his own kind.
“He did it!” Dr. Hamilton shouted via the comms. “The gravity fields are out!”
Lois grinned, trading excited looks with Hardy. The view from the cargo plane’s windshield confirmed the scientist’s pronouncement. The punishing gravity column had been sucked back into the Black Zero, while the ship’s halo of levitating debris was being dispersed by the wind. At long last, they had a clear shot at their Kryptonian target.
Thank you, Superman, she said silently. I knew you could do it!
The C-17 banked around for its final run. Two remaining F-35s provided escort.
“NORTHCOM, this is Guardian,” Hardy reported. “We are passing through phase line red. We are good to go.”
“Godspeed, Guardian,” Swanwick replied. “You are cleared hot.”
Hardy glanced at Lois.
“We’re lining up our final run.” he said. “It’s up to you and Hamilton now.”
Finally, she thought. Unbuckling her seatbelt, she scrambled toward the cockpit stairs, clutching the Kryptonian command key. Hardy barked into his headset as she headed for the cargo hold.
“Loadmaster, power panel switch and open doors!”
The rear cargo ramp was just opening up as Lois rushed into the hold, joining Dr. Hamilton, Gomez, and the two armed guards. Strong winds invaded the hold, blowing against her. The Kryptonian space capsule rested securely on the rails, waiting to be deployed.
A quick glance at Hamilton’s gravity map confirmed that the dangerous fields had evaporated entirely.
“Doors are open!” the loadmaster reported.
The World Engine’s cataclysmic demise knocked Superman for a loop. Crashing back down onto the island, he landed in the shadow of a rocky spire outside the flattened disaster area. Displaced seawater, which had been caught up in the gravitational vortex of the machine, flowed back into the ocean, leaving behind a series of tide pools. The toxic clouds emitted by the Engine began to disperse, letting the dawn through. The morning sun shone down on the island.
Thank heaven, Superman thought.
He stirred upon the barren shore, barely able to move. His hard-fought battle against the World Engine had left him drained of energy. A shaft of sunlight, slicing toward him, might have restored his strength, but the spire’s long shadow cut him off from the tantalizing yellow radiance so that it might as well have been miles away. Straining, he groped for the light, but his desperate fingers fell short by mere inches.
Salvation was just out of reach.
“Please—” he croaked, his voice barely a whisper. “Please.”
He stretched his arm as far he could.
Hardy’s voice rang out over the plane’s PA system:
“We are LZ inbound and two minutes out! Lining up the drop!”
Lois joined Dr. Hamilton next to the space capsule. She shouted over the rushing wind.
“Time to activate the drive!”
He nodded enthusiastically, looking as excited as a kid on Christmas morning. Never mind saving humanity from extinction, the scientist clearly saw this as the experiment of a lifetime.
Lois took the command key and tried to insert it into the matching control port, just as Jor-El had instructed. She wished Clark’s birth father was around to supervise the procedure, but apparently Boeing hadn’t equipped the Globemaster with holographic projectors.
She fitted the key to the port and pushed gently, as she had in that detention cell aboard the Black Zero.
But the key refused to go in the whole way.
“Are you kidding me?”
Hamilton observed her difficulty. He tugged on his goatee worriedly, as though recalling that the fate of mankind depended on everything proceeding as advertised.
Frustrated, Lois whacked the key with her fist.
No dice. It still wouldn’t budge.
“Let me try,” Hamilton volunteered. Squeezing past her, he wrestled with the recalcitrant object, trying to force it into the port, but with an equal lack of success. “The mechanism is jammed! It must have been damaged.” Stepping back, he examined the Kryptonian capsule. “Help me check the fittings, the cables… anything!”
Lois wondered when the capsule had been damaged. During Zod’s attack on the Kent farm, or when the ship had first crashed to Earth, thirty-plus years ago? Or had it been struck by an asteroid or comet during its long voyage from Krypton?
Not that it mattered. Fixing the port took top priority now.
Working together, she and Hamilton pored over the alien capsule, examining every inch of the craft’s extraterrestrial carapace and inner cavities. She took off her flight helmet to get a better look, even though she had no idea what she was actually searching for.
What did she know about the workings of a Kryptonian Phantom Drive?
She could barely change the toner in her printer!
In the cockpit, Hardy wondered what the holdup was. He hit the comms.
“This is Guardian,” he asked, wanting an update. “What’s our load status? Are we ready to jettison?”
“That’s a negative, Guardian,” the loadmaster replied.
Hardy didn’t like the sound of that. Deciding he needed to see just what was going on in the hold, he turned the flight controls over to Brubaker.
“Co-pilot’s airplane!”
He unstrapped and hurried for the flight deck stairs.
Faora watched from the bridge as the bulky aircraft approached the Black Zero, escorted by two sleek airborne fighters. She gave the human pilots credit for persistence, but was in no mood to tolerate their feeble attacks. She felt like killing something, preferably with her bare hands.
Handing the bridge off to Commander Gor, she raced to the nearest escape pod. She climbed inside the pod and sent it hurling down the launch tube. Unlike the dropships, the unit lacked weaponry and long-range flight capabilities, but that didn’t matter to Faora. The enemy was right outside, and she didn’t need plasma cannons to destroy them.
Maybe she couldn’t bring back the World Engine, but, by Rao, she could make the humans pay
Hardy dashed down the stairs and into the cargo hold.
“We’re inbound for the drop!” he said urgently. “What the hell is going on here?”
Lois and Dr. Hamilton looked up from the balky space capsule.
“We’ve had a setback!” the scientist reported unhelpfully. With no time to offer a fuller explanation, he dropped to his knees and peered beneath the tethered starcraft. His eyes lit up as he spotted something.
“Ms. Lane!”
Crouching down on the opposite side of the capsule, Lois saw what he was pointing at. Two dangling filaments appeared to have uncoupled on the underbelly of the craft, just out of easy reach. Marginally closer to them, Hamilton tried to squirm beneath the ship. His trembling fingers groped for the strands.