The Black Lung Captain - Chris Wooding [91]
“Two points to starboard,” Jez said.
Frey adjusted. An odd feeling of unreality had settled on him. Flying through this black churn of wind and rain and flickering light, the air charged and taut, he could almost believe that he’d slipped into another world entirely. He picked up the earcuff from the dash and clipped it back on. Suddenly he needed to be connected to something familiar, something outside the storm.
“Anyone see anything?” he asked Harkins and Pinn.
“No, Cap’n,” said Harkins, who was in a sulk.
“Me neither,” said Pinn.
“Keep your eyes peeled,” Frey advised. “You won’t see them ’til you’re right on top of them.”
“What was that?” Pinn cried suddenly. Frey jumped in alarm.
“What? What?” Harkins was already panicking.
“Something went flying past me in the dark,” Pinn said. “Missed me by a whisker.”
It took Harkins a long moment to get it. “You rancid bastard, Pinn!”
“Meow,” Pinn said.
Harkins erupted in a barrage of incoherent swear words. Frey looked over his shoulder at Jez and grinned. Jez shook her head in despair.
The Ketty Jay was battered and flung in every direction, but she’d ridden out plenty of storms before. Frey kept her under control, dealing with the jinks and dips with practiced skill. Malvery yelled periodic reports, to the effect that the Storm Dog was keeping pace with them. Jez offered course corrections now and again.
Frey tried to concentrate on the journey, not the destination. His nerves were jangling, and not just from the electricity in the atmosphere. Pinn was the only one among them looking forward to the prospect of a dogfight. Anyone with any sense was scared silly.
“I see ’em!” Pinn exclaimed. “Dead ahead!”
“He’s right!” Harkins said. Their differences were immediately forgotten. “I saw them … er … in a flash! Of lightning!”
“Dead ahead, Cap’n,” said Jez. Frey thought he detected a slight edge of self-satisfaction in her voice. “Three kloms, I make it.”
“Nice work,” said Frey. Jez had put them right on top of their enemy, plotting their course by dead reckoning, based on a glance from kloms away. The woman was phenomenal.
Now it was his turn. He killed the Ketty Jay’s taillights: a signal to the Storm Dog.
“Brace yourselves, everyone!” he yelled. “Dive! Dive! Dive!”
BLACK CLOUDS FLURRIED AT the windglass as the Ketty Jay dove through the clouds. Frey sat hunched over the flight stick, heart thumping in his ears. The cockpit rattled and shook all around him. An unfamiliar and distressing whine had developed in the engines, but it was too late to worry about that now. Too late to do anything but press forward.
The clouds tattered and fluttered away, and there below were the rolling moors of the Flashpan, lit by a stunning blast of lightning. The Delirium Trigger was beneath and ahead of them, huge and black and terrible, its deck and flanks spiky with cannons. Frey felt a little bit of sick jump into his throat at the sight. It was shadowing a double-hulled barque several times the size of the Ketty Jay but still dwarfed by its escort.
“Storm Dog’s breaking through the cloud behind us, Cap’n!” Malvery yelled from the cupola. “If I were you, I’d get out of the way!”
Good advice, thought Frey. He rolled the Ketty Jay to starboard, swooping out of the Storm Dog’s line of fire, and angled toward the barque. His guns couldn’t scratch a frigate like the Delirium Trigger, but they could certainly put a few holes in the Awakener craft.
“Open fire!” he called to Malvery. With exquisite timing, the Storm Dog picked that moment to unleash her battery of cannons in a deafening barrage.
The Delirium Trigger was taken completely by surprise. A chain of explosions ripped across her hull and deck, blooms of flame lighting her up against the rain and the dark. The force was enough to knock her off course, and she went yawing and tipping to port. Frey grinned savagely as he imagined the panic and shock belowdecks. Surrounded by open terrain, when they thought they were all but invisible, they must have believed themselves