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And then, even as his brain tried to make sense of it, the second fighter veered away from its prey. It cut hard to the left, its guns blazing full power, and exploded into a fireball of its own.
"Jack?" a familiar voice called.
Jack felt his breath go out of him in a whoosh, his muscles going limp with relief.
He'd forgotten all about Uncle Virge.
"I'm here, Uncle Virge," he called back. "On the ground, in the Lynx near the burning hut. Leave the Flying Turtle alone—they're on our side. Anyone else in the area?"
"Looks like they've got three more fighters coming in from the south," Uncle Virge reported. "Still a few minutes away. Pretty amateurish for supposed professionals, if you want my humble opinion."
"They weren't expecting to have to fight around here," Jack said, gazing thoughtfully out the windscreen into the distance. An idea was starting to form in the back of his mind.
"I'm coming in to get you," Uncle Virge said. "Did you know that fire is putting out xancrene gas?"
"Yeah, I did, thanks," Jack said, keying on the engines. "On second thought, I'll meet you two miles west of the city."
"There's no need for that, Jack lad," Uncle Virge protested. "I wouldn't trust that flying cattle car of yours farther than I can bounce a barge. Don't worry; the xancrene is mostly blowing north."
"I wasn't worried about the xancrene," Jack told him, lifting the transport into the air. "And relax, this thing will get me far enough."
"Jack lad—"
"Look, I know what I'm doing," Jack interrupted him. "Alison? You still there?"
"Still here," she confirmed. "Thanks for the assist."
"Like I said, I have friends," Jack said. "Look, I'd ask you all aboard, but we really don't have the space. I'm afraid you'll have to find your own way off Sunright."
"That's okay," she assured him. "We'll manage."
"The Edge will be watching for you," he warned.
"Like I said, we'll manage," she said. "I have friends, too. See you."
The comm clicked off. "Yeah," Jack muttered, her last words tingling across his mind. I have friends too ...
He headed off into the night. Directly ahead, the dim lights of the mine buildings loomed against the darkness.
The mine that had sparked all this trouble in the first place. The mine that had trapped both the Agri and the Parprins into devil's bargains with greedy mercenaries. The jackpot both the Shamshir and Whinyard's Edge were playing their deadly little games for.
As Uncle Virgil would have said, it was time to take the jackpot off the table.
He lined up the transport's nose on the entrance to the main mine building. "Draycos, you said there were some grenades back there?"
"Yes," Draycos said. "Nine of them."
"I don't suppose you'd know how to rig a delay fuse on something like that."
"Explosives are not to be dealt with lightly or casually," the dragon said, his voice starting to sound suspicious. "I am not trained with these particular devices."
"Never mind, then," Jack said. "We'll do it the old-fashioned way. Can you get them out of the locker and line them up along the floor? Straight down the middle should do just fine."
Draycos's head lifted up from Jack's shoulder. "Jack, what is it you intend to do?"
Jack nodded toward the mine buildings. "The Shamshir want the mine," he said. "So do the Whinyard's Edge, if you believe Lieutenant Cue Ball. What do you suppose they'd do if the mine wasn't there anymore?"
Draycos pondered a moment. "Those who care only for its wealth would leave this world."
He twisted his head around to look squarely into Jack's eyes. "But this is not your property, Jack," he added. "You have no right to choose its destruction."
"Not even to save people caught in a war none of them want?" Jack countered. "Come on, K'da warrior, let's hear those ethics of yours. Is the wealth from a mine more important than the people who own it?"
"The people are of course more important," the dragon said, his voice oddly sad. "But there must be another way."
"There isn't," Jack said firmly. "Look, I trust you in warrior stuff. Trust me in this, okay?"
Draycos bounded from Jack's collar, landing on the deck behind him. "Very well," he said reluctantly. "If there is no other way, then let us do it."
Jack smiled tightly. The K'da poet-warrior had done his part of the job. Now it was time for the human con artist to do his. "Just line up those grenades," he said. "I'll do the rest."
The main doors were wide and tall, designed to let large ore-carrying vehicles in and out. They were also built pretty strong.
Fortunately, the Lynx was built even stronger. With a crash of breaking wood and the screech of torn metal, it broke through the doors and rumbled into the main building beyond.
"How are you doing?" Jack shouted over the crunch of demolished support beams and wall siding as he drove the Lynx inward toward the tall tower that stood over the mine opening itself.
"I am nearly ready," Draycos called back.
"Good," Jack said. "Brace yourself."
And with a final thunderous crash, he slammed the transport through the lower part of the tower and settled to the floor squarely on top of the shaft leading down into the ground.
"We're here," Jack a
Draycos looked up from the neat row of grenades he had laid out from the rear of the compartment to just behind Jack's seat. "Pardon?"
"Let's get out of here," Jack clarified. "Come aboard."
With Draycos on his back, Jack picked his way through the splintered wood and other debris outside. The Essenay was waiting just outside the entrance, bobbing slighdy on its lifters with an air of worried impatience. "Come on, lad, come on," Uncle Virge urged as Jack ran up the ramp. "Those other fighters will be here any minute."
"Then let's give them something to light their way," Jack said as he raced to the cockpit and slid into the pilot's seat. "I want a quick laser burst straight in the hole we made."
"Targeted where?" Uncle Virge asked.
"Targeted on the back of the transport we made the hole with," Jack said, doing a quick check of the Essenay's weapons systems.
"The transport?" Uncle Virge asked, sounding confused. "But—?"
"Never mind," Jack said. "You just aim. I'll fire."
"We should move back," Draycos murmured. "The blast could be considerable."
"Good point," Jack agreed, keying the Essenay into a fast backward drift. "Everyone ready?"
"I suppose," Uncle Virge said. Draycos didn't answer.
"Good," Jack said. "Here goes."
The lasers flickered, and he held his breath. If this didn't work ...
And then, from the entrance came a flash of return light, then the roiling flicker of fire. The rest of the Lynx's fuel had caught. "That should do it," Jack said, pulling the Essenay around and heading for the sky. "Let's grab some distance before the grenades go."
"The grenades?" Uncle Virge echoed. "Jack, lad—"
And then, the grenades went.
It was even more spectacular than Jack had expected. The sides of the main building blew out as a ring of fire sliced horizontally outward in all directions. The tower, directly above the explosion, shot probably half a dozen feet straight up, then toppled over. It landed on one of the two side buildings, crashing through its roof.
A few seconds after it had begun, it was over. The buildings had collapsed into shattered ruin, with everything flammable in them burning furiously. It was like one of the triumphal bonfires Jack had read about, except that there was no one here celebrating anything.
Maybe the Agri who had worked so hard to create the mine would thank him. Eventually.