“You’re back,” a voice said from behind me, and I turned to see Vice Admiral Stoff striding toward me. He was one of three vice admirals who served under Cobb. My flightmates stepped aside to let him pass. Rig followed behind him. He hadn’t had a ship, so he’d probably asked Drape to hyperjump him to the slugs’ home location in Engineering. “Flightleader Weight, you’re under arrest for—”
Not this again. I wasn’t going to sit in the brig and watch while more people I cared about got hurt.
“The charges were a sham,” I said. “Either they were issued by my mother—who didn’t have the authority—or they were given by the false Admiral Cobb, who was actually an alien wearing a hologram.”
Vice Admiral Stoff blinked at me. This was definitely not the attitude I was supposed to take with my superior officer. On a normal day, I would have been horrified with myself.
Today I had met my capacity to experience horror. I wasn’t looking forward to the moment it all caught up to me.
“An alien wearing a hologram,” Stoff repeated.
“Yes!” I said. “You know, the hologram the Superiority learned how to construct by disassembling the remains of Spensa’s starship—the one we handed to them?”
Stoff looked around the room, but no one spoke. “How do we know that’s true if Cobb’s no longer here?”
“It’s true,” Alanik said.
Stoff sighed. “We’ll take you to the debriefing room,” he allowed, like he was doing me a great service. “We can make a determination about the court-martial proceedings after—”
“No,” I said.
Stoff stared at me. “What was that?”
“No,” I said. “We have an alliance to formalize with the UrDail on ReDawn, and my flight and I are expected to be there.” Stars, I didn’t know how I was going to get through that kind of political meeting. I lacked diplomatic finesse at the best of times. Just look at how this was going.
“Flightleader,” Stoff said, “that alliance hasn’t been authorized by the assembly—”
“The assembly got blown to bits!” I said. “Do you have footage on the monitors? Should we replay it for you?”
“I’m aware,” Stoff said. “But you don’t have the authority to—”
Saints, if we were going to talk about authority, I could talk about authority. “Section 1809 of the DDF Command Protocol says that the chain of command can be temporarily interrupted in the event that the commanding officers are unaware of intelligence that would change their orders beyond reasonable doubt if they were aware.”
“In this case,” Stoff said, “there is no such intelligence.”
“You have been taking orders from a Superiority plant!” I shouted at him. “You couldn’t tell the difference between Admiral Cobb and the alien who took his place. And he wasn’t even all that good at pretending.”
Vice Admiral Stoff’s mouth opened like he wanted to defend himself, but then he shut it again.
“Meanwhile,” I said, “my flight and I have been off on another planet trying to secure an alliance so that all of you might live to see another day. Cobb ordered us to find allies, and we did. We have a military full of UrDail fighters ready to challenge the Superiority with us. Meanwhile, you all were trying to bargain with them. How did that turn out?”
Stoff stared at me with his mouth hanging open. I was only a flightleader, but because of my parents everyone in the DDF knew who I was. Despite the recent charges, I still had a reputation for being a rule follower. This outburst was the last thing he expected from me.
“You know what?” I said before he could respond. “Maybe we should call my mother and ask her.”
Stoff looked up at the ceiling. I waited for him to cuff me and take me to the brig, but instead he nodded. “We need to have that debriefing.”
“Stars, yes, we do,” I said. “But in the meantime, no one is doing anything until Admiral Cobb is back.”
“Technically, sir,” Rikolfr said, “Vice Admiral Stoff is in charge in Cobb’s absence—”
“He would be in command if Cobb was indisposed,” I said. “But Cobb isn’t indisposed. He will be back soon. And my flight and I are the last people to whom he gave orders and direction before he was kidnapped.” I didn’t technically know if that was true, but none of them could contradict me, given that they hadn’t even realized Cobb had been replaced. “If Cobb were here, he would agree with me because you people are a mess without him. If you want proof, look at what happened to the delegation you sent!”