“What’re you doing?” Chase demanded.

  “We can’t let Jack have it! He was going to blow up the Enterprise.”

  He looked confused. “The starship?”

  “Yes, the starship,” she snapped sarcastically. “The aircraft carrier! He was going to blame it on the Russians to start a war!” The clamp open, she pulled Excalibur from the frame, the blade lighting up once more. “Oh, shit!”

  Chase saw Mitchell running toward them, not far away now, but his line of fire was still partially blocked by sections of the generator. “He won’t shoot the mag—”

  Mitchell fired.

  Some of the spray of bullets bounced off the generator, but they didn’t damage it, hitting with dull thumps rather than sharp metallic cracks.

  Others hit softer targets.

  Chase felt as though he’d been kicked in the stomach. Another painful blow slammed into his right shoulder as he was knocked backward, instantly numbing the limb. Nina took a glancing impact to her side, her injured leg buckling. She lost her balance and fell off the platform. Excalibur skittered away across the deck.

  Plastic bullets, Chase realized—the XM-201’s nonlethal ammunition option. Gasping, he rolled over, right arm hanging limply. He gripped the now-empty frame that had held Excalibur with his left and began to haul himself up.

  Mitchell’s boot smashed into his back, felling him again. The American jumped onto the platform and delivered another vicious kick, then clubbed him with the rifle. “Come on, you fucker!” he screamed. Another kick. Chase groaned in pain. “See who’s the best now, won’t we?”

  He stamped on Chase’s chest, grinding a heel into his ribs. Breathless, Chase tried to twist out from under him, but with only one arm couldn’t get enough leverage. Mitchell loomed over him, huge electrical arcs crackling around the ring above him like a malevolent halo.

  But Chase wasn’t finished yet.

  With a strangled roar, he smashed his fist into the only vulnerable target he could reach, the back of Mitchell’s knee. Mitchell lurched forward as his leg bent, and Chase delivered another punch, this time straight up between his legs into his groin.

  Mitchell doubled over with a groan, stumbling against the frame. The pressure on Chase’s chest eased and he rolled from the platform to the deck. He looked up—

  A boot smashed into his face, cracking the back of his head against the floor. Sickening stars exploded in his vision. Mitchell’s foot stamped down again, this time on his left forearm. Agony erupted from the old wound. Chase screamed.

  Mitchell brought up the rifle and aimed it into Chase’s face.

  He switched the ammo selector. No plastic bullets this time, just pure metallic death as his mouth contorted into a sadistic leer of victory.

  A flash of light filled Chase’s eyes.

  THIRTY-FIVE

  But it wasn’t from the gun’s muzzle. Instead it was a streak of brilliant blue-white that sliced down to chop the XM-201 cleanly in two. The front half of the rifle barely missed Chase’s head as it clattered to the deck—with Mitchell’s severed right hand still clenching the grip.

  “How’s that for a flesh wound?” Nina shouted.

  Mitchell screamed, clutching the stump of his wrist as blood fountained from it. He stumbled back against the frame.

  Nina swung Excalibur again. The blazing sword stabbed straight through Mitchell’s abdomen and embedded itself deeply into the carbon fiber frame behind him, only stopping when the cross guard hit his stomach. She let go and the weapon’s glow vanished, leaving him transfixed, unable to pull the blade out of the frame.

  “You wanted power?” cried Nina, hobbling to the platform’s control panel. “Try fifty million volts!”

  She hit the button.

  The platform started to ascend toward the fierce bolts of earth energy lancing back and forth within the magnetic ring. “No!” Mitchell shrieked, desperately tugging at the hilt with his remaining hand. It didn’t move. “No!”

  He crossed the streams.

  The entire ring lit up with a surging storm of lightning. Mitchell burst into flames, instantly incinerated by the concentrated power searing through his body. More electrical arcs spat outward, burning into the walls and ceiling with blinding force.

  Nina pulled Chase aside as a bolt hit the controls, blowing the machinery to pieces. The platform plunged back down in a column of fire, scattering debris in all directions.

  More explosions shook the hold. “Are you okay, Eddie?”

  He spat out blood. “Right as rain.” A siren wailed, echoing through the vast space. “I think we should be fucking off home about now.”

  “No arguments there.” As Chase stood, Nina saw Excalibur lying among the smoking remains of the platform. The blade lit up again as she lifted it and shook off a lump of what looked horribly like barbecued ribs.

  Chase put an arm around her waist to support her. “Let’s go!”

  More energy stabbed at the walls as they made their way back down the hold. The few people still alive in the control room had gone; the siren was apparently an evacuation warning. One of the magnetic rings behind them tore from its supports and fell to the floor with enough force to shake the entire room. Other components blew apart, sections of the supporting framework collapsing.

  An especially bright flash was followed by an ominous creak of metal. “Oh, that can’t be good,” said Nina, looking back at a molten spray spitting from a gash down one side of the hold.

  Chase held her more tightly as he increased his pace toward the exit. “I think we’re about to get wet.”

  “Not again!”

  The gash burst open, metal peeling back like tin foil as seawater spewed into the hold, thousands of gallons of freezing Arctic water rushing through the widening gap. The air filled with explosions of sparks as the generator shorted out.

  Fire above, water below, a wave surging along the hold after Chase and Nina as they raced for the exit. Pain stabbed through Nina’s leg with every step, but she forced herself onward. She could hear it thundering toward them like a tsunami, about to sweep them away—

  They reached the hatch. Chase flung Nina through just as the wave hit, a chill spray biting at them as the water dashed against the bulkhead. He braced himself and pushed his back against the hatch to force it shut against the flood. It clunked against the frame; Nina dragged herself up and pulled the lever to secure it. She slumped to the deck, panting.

  “Sorry, love,” said Chase, taking her by the waist again and leading her along the corridor, “but we can’t hang about.” He nodded at the sword. “Why don’t you leave that thing, let it go down with the boat?”

  “They could still find it if they salvage the ship.”

  “Fair enough. But how about I keep hold of it? That way I don’t have to worry about you accidentally chopping off my leg.”

  She handed the sword to him as they reached a flight of stairs leading upward. Despite her best efforts to keep the weight off her injured leg, Nina still winced in pain at every step. “Ow, oh, ow! Son of a—oh, if Jack wasn’t dead I’d kill him again!”

  “I didn’t say thanks for that, by the way,” said Chase.

  “You don’t need to.”

  “Yeah, I do! You saving my life isn’t something I ever want to get all blasé about.”

  “In which case, thank you for saving me—again! What’s that, ten times now?”

  “Altogether, or just this time?”

  “Y’know, most couples don’t actually lose count of that kind of thing …”

  They kept climbing. More creaks echoed through the ship, distant thumps of explosions still rolling up from the hold. And there was another noise, an engine …

  “Fuck!” said Chase. “There goes the chopper.”

  “Well, it’s not as though we could have flown it. And hijacking it might have been a problem without any guns.”

  “I’ve got a bloody sword! Just hope there’s some boats left.”

  The
y finally reached the level of the main deck. By now it was clear the ship was beginning to sink, tipping down at the bow. Chase opened a hatch and stepped out into the cold wind, leaving Nina leaning against the bulkhead. “Shit!” The lifeboat davit was empty, cables hanging limply down to the water. Below, a large orange boat bobbed away from the freighter, a strobe light blinking on its fiberglass roof.

  He hurried across the deck to check the opposite side. The other boat was still on its cables, almost in the water. He could have jumped onto the nearest cable and shinned down into the boat, but Nina couldn’t, not with her leg.

  “What is it?” Nina asked as he ran back to her.

  “You saw Titanic, right?”

  “Oh …”

  They both lurched as the Aurora shuddered. The tilt of the deck was now more apparent, and increasing.

  “Okay, okay,” said Nina, thinking out loud, “we’re on a ship, with no lifeboats. There must be something else that floats. What floats?”

  “A witch,” Chase answered. Nina gave him a surprised look. “What? I never said I didn’t watch any Monty Python.”

  “Great, but unless you’ve actually got a witch, and preferably her broomstick, that doesn’t help much!”

  “No broomsticks,” said Chase with sudden hope, “but I know where there’s something that can fly. Wait here!” He dropped Excalibur at her feet and ran back into the ship, sliding down the stairs on the banisters.

  “Eddie, where are you—Eddie!” Nina shouted, but he had already gone. Frustrated, she waited for him to return. After a minute, Excalibur slowly slid along the deck to clink against the forward bulkhead.

  “Two sinking ships in three days,” she muttered as she awkwardly bent to retrieve the sword. “Eddie! Whatever you’re doing, now would be a good time!”

  Chase ran back up the stairs. “Yeah, I’m coming!”

  Nina saw that he was carrying what looked like a large suitcase with a harness attached. “What’s that?”

  “Our way off. Maybe. Come on, we need to get to the top deck.”

  Five more painful flights, and Nina slumped with relief against a bulkhead, only to realize that she was standing at an angle. A nearby porthole gave her a view of the antenna array, silver flowers picked out by spotlights … and beyond them, waves crashing over the top of the mock containers at the bow. It was the Typhoon all over again—only this time they weren’t even close to shore.

  She looked back at Chase, who was fastening the harness around his body. “What is that thing? A parachute?”

  “More like a jet pack.”

  “A jet pack?”

  “It’s how Jack got to Vaskovich’s—I just hope it’s as easy to fly as he said. If you’re bringing the sword, there’s a compartment in the back—stick it in there. But don’t poke any holes in it!”

  Nina limped to him and found the compartment’s cover, opening it and gingerly dropping Excalibur inside. The glow disappeared as she let go, the blade clanking harmlessly against the polycarbonate interior. She closed the cover as Chase secured the harness. The ship shuddered again, a mournful metallic moan running through the hull. “Okay,” he said, indicating an exterior hatch, “get outside.”

  Nina still wasn’t sure what he had in mind, but she limped through it to find herself on the ship’s port wing bridge, which extended out over the side of the hull. Far below, she saw one of the lifeboats moving away, an orange lozenge picked out by a flashing beacon. Ahead, the sea continued its advance over the containers. The Aurora’s stern was out of the water and rising higher, the huge freighter being dragged nose first under the black ocean.

  Chase held up a length of rope. “Wrap this around me, and then around you. Do it a couple of times and tie it as tight as you can. Trust me,” he added, seeing her expression.

  “Okay,” she said dubiously, threading the rope between his lower back and the case as he fastened a small control unit around his wrist. “So you know how this thing works?”

  “Sort of. Jack showed me. Okay, more told me than showed me, but I got the gist.”

  “I’ll take your word for it,” Nina said nervously. She brought the rope around herself and Chase for a second time and pulled it tight, squeezing them both together as she knotted it.

  He wrapped his arms around her, plodding to the edge of the wing bridge. “We need to get up on the railing. Can you manage?”

  “I’ll have to, won’t I?” Looking down as Chase lifted her, Nina used her left heel to push herself up on each bar of the railing. He followed, one heavy step at a time. She gritted her teeth as her leg wound pressed against Chase’s thigh, but managed not to cry out.

  “Good lass,” said Chase as they balanced precariously on the top rail, leaning against a post for support. “Okay, let’s see if I can get this thing started.”

  “Before you do …” Nina said.

  “What?”

  She kissed him. “Just in case I don’t get another chance.”

  He smiled. “Hey, I finally committed to a wedding date—I’m not going to bloody miss it!” He returned the kiss, then examined the control unit as Nina clung to him. “Okay. Let’s see …”

  He touched a button. The pack’s sides sprang open like the shell of a beetle taking flight, black carbon-fiber delta wings popping out and unfolding before each section telescoped outward with a clack.

  Chase was impressed by the speed and precision of the deployment, the total wingspan almost ten feet. “Pretty cool. All right, engines.” He poised his finger over the next control. “Hold on really tight,” he warned Nina. “Because when I push this button, it’s going to feel like a kick up the arse, and we’ll go over the edge!”

  Nina squeezed her eyes shut. “Do it.”

  Chase leaned forward and pushed the button.

  The four miniature jet turbines screeched to life, the heat from their exhausts instantly blistering the paint on the railing as Chase and Nina fell. The wings flexed in the wind as they dropped, picking up speed—

  Downward. They were plunging parallel to the side of the ship, decks flashing past them.

  Chase shifted position, arms outstretched as he arched his back, trying to level out. If he could build up enough speed for the wings to generate lift …

  The black water rushed toward him, patterns of light from the ship shimmering over it. Still dropping, too fast—

  The reflections started to slide under him as the engines reached full thrust and drove them away from the Aurora with increasing speed.

  It still wasn’t enough. They were past the level of the main deck, plummeting the final feet toward the ocean—

  They leveled out, the wings abruptly bending upward as if coming to life. Nina shrieked as the ropes pulled tight around her. Chase desperately leaned back as hard as he could, face pounded by the freezing wind rasping at his skin.

  Ground effect, he realized. At very low altitudes, any kind of wing traps air between itself and the surface below, giving extra lift.

  But would it be enough to keep them out of the water?

  His eyes were streaming tears in the rising wind. Something shot past to one side: the lifeboat, a barely glimpsed blur of color falling behind …

  And below.

  They were gaining height!

  Chase strained to hold his position as Nina hung beneath him, the thrust from the engines combined with the angle of the wings just enough to put them into a shallow but steady climb. He squinted at the control unit, watching a digital altimeter gradually count upward. Remembering how much fuel Mitchell had told him the glide wing carried, he struggled to figure out how high they could go before it ran out. Nina could have done the calculations in moments, he knew, but the roar of wind and engines would have made it hard to get the information across—and from the way she was shivering, she had other things on her mind. Like temperature, and gravity.

  He calculated they could go to about three thousand feet. He would be able to see to the horizon over sixty miles away, a
ssuming there was anything to see. Mitchell wouldn’t have wanted any other vessels close enough to observe when he fired the earth energy weapon. The question was, could they glide for long enough to reach anything that might be out there?

  The glide wing kept climbing. A thousand feet, and rising. Chase felt Nina’s heartbeat thudding against his chest. Rapid, scared … but gradually slowing.

  Not because she was calming down. Because she was starting to freeze in the bitter wind.

  “Stay with me!” he shouted. Her hand squeezed his side. But exposure would take its toll soon enough—and even he couldn’t withstand it forever. It had been years since he had trained for such conditions.

  Minutes passed, the altimeter still rising, the jets howling. Not much fuel left. Chase wiped his eyes, realizing his tears had frozen on his face. He could barely feel his own touch, nerves numbed.

  Three thousand.

  A red light flashed on the wrist unit. A fuel warning. One minute left, or thirty seconds, or ten? He didn’t know. But the powered part of the flight was almost over, only a long glide down into the blackness remaining …

  Lights!

  Off in the distance, a little constellation of blue and yellow. In the overcast utter darkness it was almost impossible to judge how far away it was, but Chase doubted it was anything less than twenty miles. Could the glide wing carry them that far?

  No choice but to find out the hard way. He banked, lining up with the ship.

  The engines stuttered, then cut out. The only noise now came from the wind.

  He felt Nina’s hold on him loosening. “Nina, stay awake!” he yelled. “There’s a ship, we can make it!” He didn’t know if that was true, but if he’d unwittingly lied, she wouldn’t have a chance to call him on it.

  The altimeter was counting down now. He leaned back as much as he could, trying to maintain height, but without the engines descent was inevitable.