Jeth hid a grin. This was getting better and better. A day or two would surely be enough time to find the data cell and copy it. Now, he just needed a chance to talk to Lizzie alone.

That chance didn’t come until several hours later. Lizzie spent most of the day on the bridge, trying to reroute some of Avalon’s power to the Donerail.

“We need to be able to land one of Avalon’s shuttles inside the Donerail’s cargo bay,” Lizzie said when Jeth asked why she was doing this. “The nav systems won’t fit through a hatch. Besides, I’m rerouting power to life support too. I can’t work in a bulky space suit, and I don’t want to freeze to death.”

Seeing her point, Jeth sat down to wait without arguing.

Sierra and Cora spent the morning on the bridge as well. Sierra was helping Flynn with the tedious job of extracting the nav station. Cora was there because of Lizzie—and him, it seemed. Once Cora grew bored of chasing Viggo around, she climbed into Jeth’s lap and asked, “Will you read me a story?”

“Um . . .” Jeth went red. Should he push her off? Somehow that didn’t seem like the best response, so he put an arm around her back, and she leaned into him as easily as if he were her dad instead of a complete stranger.

Lizzie stopped what she was doing and came over, an amused expression on her face. “What would you like him to read?” she asked.

Cora tilted her head, thinking it over for a couple of seconds. “‘Cinderella.’”

“Okay, give me a second to find it.” Lizzie bent toward the screen nearest to where Jeth sat and entered a search for the story in Avalon’s digital library.

Jeth groaned inwardly. Great, a fairy tale about a princess. And he had to read it in front of this audience? He’d rather have a tooth pulled. But he doubted he could beg off without hurting the little girl’s feelings, and he didn’t want to do that. Especially not now that he knew her story.

And so he spent the next thirty minutes reading the ancient tale aloud. It was awkward at first, his voice ill adjusted to the activity, but it got easier as he went along. Cora asked him questions, and he found her emotional responses to the story’s events amusing. He never realized just how dramatic the story really was until he witnessed her reactions, the way she gasped when the stepsisters were being mean or how she cheered at the fairy godmother’s arrival.

When he finished, Cora clapped her hands then threw her arms around his neck. He hugged her back, the gesture natural instead of awkward for once. He caught Sierra looking at him, her expression one of approval.

“Thanks for doing that,” Sierra said from where she sat crouched on the floor beside the nav station.

Jeth cleared his throat. “No problem.”

Flynn crawled out from underneath the nav station. “You did a good job, Boss. You voiced the fairy godmother perfectly. Sounded just like I always imagined she would.” Flynn batted his eyelashes.

Jeth glared, but before he could say something back, Lizzie shouted, “Done!”

Jeth gave Cora an encouraging push and she slid off his lap, her attention once more centering on Viggo, who was rolling a screw across the floor with his paws.

Jeth stood up from the comm station chair and stretched. “About time. So, we good to dock now?”

“Uh-huh. I’ll head over and start working on detaching the Donerail’s nav,” said Lizzie.

“And I’m coming with you,” said Jeth.

Sierra fixed her gaze on him. “So am I.”

Of course you are. Jeth did an inward eye roll. He wondered if she suspected his motives for wanting to go over there. He had a feeling she was one of those people who were super smart and clever. Shame. Super smart and gullible would’ve worked out a lot better for him.

“It’s not necessary,” he said. “Lizzie and I can manage.”

Sierra shot him a skeptical look. “Maybe so, but I’m more familiar with the ship and will probably be of more help.”

“She’s got a point, Jeth,” Lizzie said, grinning. “You’re better at breaking things than fixing them.”

Jeth glared at her. Not helping, he tried to say with his eyes, but Lizzie failed to notice.

Flynn raised his hand. “I second that motion. It’s important to do the thing right and with no breakage.”

“Thanks for the vote of confidence,” Jeth muttered.

“You’re the one who divvied up the work assignments,” said Flynn, his tone scathing.

Jeth ignored the comment. Flynn was just irritated that Jeth had insisted Lizzie handle the job of unhooking the Donerail’s nav system. He’d wanted to do it himself. Jeth had his reasons though. Lizzie knew enough about wiring and hardware to manage it, and of the two of them, she was less likely to be rattled by the body stuck in the wall. Or at least, he could count on her to keep quiet about it and not upset the rest of the crew.

“I’ll ask Vince to come up and take over for me,” Sierra said to Flynn. “He’s not doing anything important right now anyway.”

No, he wasn’t. Last time Jeth checked, he, Shady, and Celeste were playing Robot Revenge 7 on the gaming console in the common room. Must be nice sometimes not to be in charge.

“Better him than Shady,” Flynn said, then disappeared underneath the station again.

Jeth flashed an appreciative grin at Sierra. She had a knack for smoothing things over.

Sierra smiled back, once again stunning him with the way it transformed her face from pretty to beautiful. “Come on, Cora,” Sierra said, holding out her hand. “Let’s go find Vince.”




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