Wings of Honor Craig Andrews (ebook reader for pc .TXT) đ
- Author: Craig Andrews
Book online «Wings of Honor Craig Andrews (ebook reader for pc .TXT) đ». Author Craig Andrews
The rest of the squadron might not know it yet, but they were going to need every pilot they could get.
21
Ready Room, SAS Jamestown
Alpha Centauri System, Proxima B, High Orbit
âWhereâs Uno?â Coda asked, surveying the half-empty ready room.
The remaining pilots of Commander Colemanâs squadron mingled, sharing smiles, attempting to ignore the vacancies left behind by their departed friends. That was the fighter pilot way: to move on and act as if the cut, the loss, or the death had never happened. Dwelling on it meant confronting failure. Confronting death. Oneâs own mortality. To a pilot, that meant losing their edge. And the moment a pilot lost their edge, they became slag.
âHave you seen Uno?â Coda asked, turning to Squawks, who, like Noodle, sat next to him.
âHeâs probably taking a dump,â Squawks said.
Noodle snorted, but Coda didnât feel like laughing. âI havenât seen him all morning.â
âMaybe itâs a stubborn one.â
âA what? No, never mind, I donât want to know.â Coda shook his head, trying to get the mental image to disappear. âHe should be here.â
âSettle down,â Squawks said. âHe will be.â
âYeahâŠâ But for some reason, Squawksâs words didnât make Coda feel better. Objectively, Coda knew he shouldnât be worried. Like every other member of their group, Uno had finished above the failure line and would advance to flight status, but Coda still couldnât shake the uneasy feeling in his gut. Something wasnât right.
âAttention on deck!â
The pilots snapped to attention as Commander Coleman stepped into the ready room.
âTake your seats,â he said, taking his usual position behind the podium.
Once the pilots had found their seats, the room fell deathly quietâsomething that was even more pronounced by the number of empty seats. When the pilots had first arrived, theyâd been excited, nearly bursting at the seams, but that energy had suddenly dissipated, leaving a gloom as if the squadron had lost a major battle and taken fifty-percent casualties.
âCongratulations,â Commander Coleman said, giving his obligatory speech. âThe men and women in this room have advanced to basic flight. The chief is still readying your fighters, so despite my better judgment, Iâm giving you the day off. Enjoy it, because itâll be the last one you get before the end of your training.â
The room erupted into cheers, pilots clapping and laughing, slapping each other on the back.
A day off. Coda couldnât remember what that was like. Twenty-four hours to himself. He didnât know what he would do. Sleep. Yes, that sounded nice. Sleep. His eyes felt heavy just thinking about it.
âFlight schedules have been downloaded to your tablets,â Commander Coleman said once the ruckus had died down. âCheck then double and triple check your flight times and craft number. Failure to arrive on time and at the correct spacecraft will result in an automatic SOD.â
A SODâor a âsign of difficultyââwas the pilotsâ version of a strike, and as in the great American pastime of baseball, after three strikes, the pilot was out of the program.
âThis is the real thing, ladies and gentlemen. I expect you to be ready. Iâll see you tomorrow.â
Coda turned to his friends as the commander strode out of the room. âCome on.â
âWhere?â Squawks asked.
âJust follow me.â
Coda pushed his way through the pilots, making for the ready room door, then chased the commander down the corridor. âSir!â Coda shouted. âSir!â
Commander Coleman stopped and turned to face him. âWhat is it, Coda?â
âItâs Uno, sir,â Coda said. âWe havenât seen him and were wondering if you knew where he was.â
âLieutenant Hernandez?â
âYes, sir.â
âCoda,â Commander Coleman said, âLieutenant Hernandez is set to depart with the rest of the washouts at oh nine hundred.â
âWashouts?â Coda said. âSir, there must be a mistake. Uno was above the line.â
âYes, he was,â Commander Coleman said. âWhich is why it was so unexpected when he came to my quarters last night and withdrew from the program.â
âHe quit?â Coda couldnât believe what he was hearing. âI thought you said we couldnât quit.â
Commander Colemanâs face grew hard. He apparently didnât like having his words thrown in his face any more than anyone else did. âI wonât have a pilot in my squadron who endangers everyone else he flies with. The lieutenant didnât believe he had what it takes, and I didnât disagree with him. Anything more than that, and youâll have to ask him.â
âHeâs still here?â
âAs I already said, Coda, he departs at oh nine hundred. You can find him in the hangar bay.â
They found Uno sitting against the wall, his arms draped over his knees, watching as specialists worked under the watchful eye of the chief, frantically trying to get the remaining Nighthawks ready for flight. When he saw Coda and the rest approaching, his mouth fell open, and his face grew several shades redder than it had been before.
âHey,â Coda said, crossing his arms and stopping in front of him.
âWhat are you guys doing here?â Uno asked.
âWhat are we⊠Uno, what are you doing here? The commander said you quit.â
Uno turned away.
âUnoââ
Snapping his head around, Uno jumped to his feet. âWhat do you want me to say? I told you I couldnât do this, but you wouldnât listen. âYou just need more time,ââ Uno said, giving Coda an exaggerated impersonation of himself.
Coda felt his blood rise and forced himself to take a deep breath. âUno, you were above the line. You want to say you couldnât do it? Youâre full of it. You did it. You passed.â
âAnyone can pass a test, Coda.â
âWhatâs that supposed to mean?â Coda asked defensively. Was that a shot at Coda nearly failing FAM Phase?
âIt just means I can pass whatever test the commander puts in front of me, but that doesnât change anything. I know I canât do this. I know I donât have what it takes.â
âWe donât believe that,â Noodle said.
âIt doesnât matter what
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