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ship. And she would be very busy right now, weighing all the scenarios and figuring which was best out of those I had approved. I made myself shut up and wait for her to make her decision.

Fiori and Yoan both marched up the ramp to the bridge. Fiori moved over to the console and shell she had used before. Yoan moved to the engineering dash.

Dalton leaned back against his shell. “Weapons hot,” he informed everyone, then pulled the shriver from his holster and checked the charge on it, then put it back. He cracked his knuckles.

“Lyssa, how long until they reach us?” I didn’t bother clarifying who “they” were.

Lyssa raised a hand, held it palm out toward me.

Wait.

Story of my fucking life. “Come on, come on,” I breathed. “Give me something.”

Lyssa turned to me. “I have surrendered to the aliens, Colonel. They have accepted the surrender and will board in approximately ten minutes.”

I couldn’t find any words that adequately expressed my stunned bewilderment. Everyone else made shocked, choked sounds, while I stared at her.

Lyssa gave a small shrug that made me think of Calpurnia. “I did the unexpected, as ordered, Colonel.”

She had also not followed my plans. Any of my plans.

I put my face in my palms and tried to breathe.

—30—

“We are outgunned,” Lyssa explained, her tone calm, while Fiori moaned, and Dalton tried to comfort her. Lyth and Yoan crowded up around me, staring at Lyssa in disbelief. The other two ships were yelling at us, and Lyssa had their feeds running aloud, so it was noisy on the bridge.

“I calculated we were outclassed by a factor of at least three hundred percent,” Lyssa continued, “given that there are three ships approaching us with their weapons systems activated. They’re faster than us, too. I presumed you would prefer me to choose a scenario in which we lived, Colonel. So I chose the one that provided the greatest odds.”

“Surrendering wasn’t even on the list!” I cried.

“No.” Her tone was one of agreement.

“What in hell is happening to you, Lythion?” Juliyana bellowed from the overhead speaker. “Why aren’t you running like hell?”

“I advise you do exactly that, Juliyana,” I said grimly, raising my voice. “We’ve surrendered.”

“What the fuck?”

“Get out of here,” I said heavily.

“I copied that, Danny,” Sauli said. “We certainly can’t outrun them or outgun them, if Lyssa figures you can’t. We’re coming about and recoupling with you.”

“No. No!” I shouted. “We’re the tethered goat! I order you to leave. Right now!”

“You’re not the captain of my ship, Danny,” Sauli said gently.

I wanted to tear steel plating apart with my bare hands. I ached with it. “What is wrong with everyone?” I cried.

Dalton’s hand settled on my shoulder. “We’re sticking with you,” he said gently. “I know that’s a difficult concept for you to wrap your head around. Just go with it for now.”

“Fuck, fuck, fuck, fuck, fuck!” Juliyana muttered from the speaker. “Us, too,” she added. “Coming about.”

I squeezed my temples.

“Lyssa might have made a smart decision, Captain,” Lyth murmured, next to me. “These things. They take captives. They don’t kill. At least, not straight away. And if they don’t kill everyone straight away, opportunities will occur later that we can take advantage of.”

“And now we get to see them up close,” Dalton said grimly. “Lyssa, record everything, from every angle, and add it to the black box, just in case.”

“I am,” Lyssa said calmly.

“Every second we’re in their presence will teach us a great deal,” Jai said, from the overheads.

“And they’ll learn from us, too,” Marlow pointed out, his tone one of warning.

I nodded. “Good point.”

The ship shivered.

“The Omia has attached a cable,” Lyssa murmured. “The alien ships are slowing. Their weapons systems are still activated, but their FTL curtains are not deployed.”

“They really are coming aboard,” Yoan breathed. “And we’re just going to let them?”

“We are,” I said, as crisply as I could. “We’ve got mere minutes to prep for this. Lyssa, I don’t want your avatar showing anywhere, while they’re here. And nothing in the center of the ship. Get rid of it.”

“The printers?”

“They can sit on the floor. Turn them away from the freight hatch, so all these fuckers see is metal.”

“What if they don’t breathe our preferred atmosphere?” Lyth said.

“That’s their bad luck,” I shot back and headed for the ramp down to the guts of the ship. Already, the walls and interiors, furniture and objects which were made of nanobots were melting into puddles on the floor, which ran like water along the floor to the drains that led to their storage tanks. “But they boarded the Ige Ibas, so if they breathe methane or something, they already know how to navigate our stuff. I’m not rolling out the welcome mat a centimeter more than I have to.”

Everyone followed me off the bridge except Lyssa, who had disappeared as ordered.

The exit hatch opened, showing star field, as Sauli and Kristiana, Jai and Marlow all pulled themselves inside and stepped through to the middle of the ship.

Jai turned and tugged on a lead. Coal appeared in the doorway, his forepaws making swimming motions. He whimpered as he landed awkwardly on the floor inside the hatch.

Then he spotted his siblings, who were shaking off the remains of the disappearing sandpit, and trotted over to them. Behind him, Sauli hauled Venni into the ship the same way. Venni merely looked sad, her blue eyes staring accusingly at Sauli for putting her through this.

Then she moved over to join the pack.

Another small shiver announced the coupling of the Penthos.

“You’re all certifiable,” I told everyone crowded around the hatch. “Juliyana even more so—she could have fought them.”

Lyth shook his head. Just a little. “Juliyana only looks suicidal,” he said softly.

“The alien ships are closing. Fifty meters off port,” Lyssa said from the overhead speaker.

Juliyana appeared in the open hatchway, hauling herself hand over hand. Then she flipped her boots forward and let them sink into the gravity of the Lythion until they made contact with

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