Which was just when he clunked his forehead against a low-hanging pipe. Recoiling back in pain, he hit another with the back of his skull. Hissing in anger and pent-up frustration, he berated himself for not wearing the Veritech helmet as a hardhat.
But he refused to turn back. Marking off the different routes and possible escape paths available to them had seemed easy at first, until he'd come to realize what a tremendously complicated and far-reaching maze they were trapped in. He'd come to so many dead ends that he constantly saw them in his dreams.
Banging on pipes and bulkheads with the metal bar had produced no results, and even sending shorts and longs over a severed power cable was a failure. Depression was hard to fight off, and he couldn't bear the thought of what would happen if he didn't come up with a solution soon.
There was one long shot he hadn't mentioned to Minmei yet, not so much because it was a life-or-death risk for him but rather because, if he tried it and failed, she would be alone. Still, his alternatives were fewer and fewer with every passing hour.
When he finally dragged himself back to the plane after more fruitless searching, he was pleasantly surprised to see that he hadn't been the only one hard at work.
'Well, Rick, how do you like our new home?' Minmei asked him, eyes shining.
Rick broke into a smile for the first time he could recall. 'It's great!' was all he could say.
Minmei had somehow figured out how to get the parachute out of the back of the pilot's seat-maybe after reading the ejection instruction plate, it occurred to him. It couldn't have been easy with
More than that, she'd draped it over the ship to make a roomy red and white striped tent. And best of all, she'd located the survival gear, set up the tiny camp stove, and put together a meal whose smell had his mouth watering until his jaws hurt.
The compartment lights were going dim according to SDF-1's twenty-four-hour day/night schedule. The two moved in under the tent, Rick sitting tailor-fashion while Minmei knelt by the stove, stirring with a plastic spoon.
'By making stew we can make our supplies last longer,' she explained. Rick repented of his earlier thought- that she couldn't pull her own weight.
'That's right; I forgot,' he said, determined to make it up to her. 'You're in the restaurant business.'
She was sprinkling bits of what seemed to be seasoning into the stew, only he couldn't remember spices being listed on the rations contents listings. Whatever she'd done, she'd come up with something that smelled heavenly.
'No, the White Dragon was my Aunt Lena's restaurant,' Minmei responded, shrugging. She thought a moment, then added, 'Actually, I want to be an entertainer.'
Rick cocked his head in surprise. 'You're planning on being an actress?'
'Well, I studied acting, singing, and dancing.' She'd been dishing up his portion. 'Here.'
'Thanks.' He was silent for a while, taken by the image of Minmei dancing. Then, 'That doesn't exactly prepare you for something like this, huh.' Ruefully, he looked down at his clipboard and the growing map of dead ends.
Five days went by.
'Can you believe they're rebuilding the city inside the ship?' someone was saying as Lisa Hayes entered the officers' wardroom. 'It's amazing.'
She saw by his insignia that he was a Veritech pilot off the
His comment about the refugees and their rebuilding was grudging. Open area of any kind in a naval or space vessel was always held dear, and now…
'You can leave the trays, steward,' Claudia was saying at the table where she waited for Lisa. 'Thank you very much. It smells wonderful.'
'Yes, ma'am.' The steward served awkwardly, a new recruit; everybody with military training had been tapped for higher-priority work these days, and it was most often serve yourself. But things were tough all over, and complaints were very few. This particular steward, Claudia had found out, was to be posted to a gunnery class next shift.
'So he expects me to volunteer and go out and get this castaway shelter module all alone, and I sez, 'Sir, I'm brave but I ain't crazy!' the VT pilot continued.
'So you didn't volunteer,' his tablemate said. 'But did you go?'
The first pilot shrugged unhappily and made a zipping motion with his hand, thumb and pinkie spread to indicate a Veritech's wings. They both laughed tiredly.
'Oh,
Claudia lowered her coffee cup. 'What's the latest on the refugees?'
Lisa pursed her lips, weighing the answer. 'We finally have them divided by city blocks and the construction's going on twenty-four hours a day.'
Claudia's dark eyes were unfocused with fatigue and with the strangeness of what had happened and what was going on.
She could only manage an understatement. 'Really? That's incredible.'
Gloval had known at once what must be done. His relentless effort to get the Macross survivors and as much salvageable and recyclable material aboard as was possible had yielded amazing results. It was the only way the humans could make the long voyage home.
Miles-square purse-seine nets had been devised overnight by the engineers to collect what could be collected of the wreckage. There'd been too many acts of individual valor to count or keep track of. Not the least of them was the work of the disposal teams, whose grim job was to remove the dead from the supercarriers and other areas where they were encountered.
Hold after hold in SDF-1 that had been reserved for future missions and future purposes that would never come to be were now filled with wreckage, and there were material stores that could be used as well. Robotech fabrication machines aboard the SDF-1 were the most advanced devices of their kind ever developed-the equivalent of an industrial city packed into a few compartments, minifactories that could replicate a staggering assortment of manufactured goods and materials.
As for blueprints and plans, they would be child's play for the SDF-1's computers, since all records of the city's construction, from the first permanent building constructed ten years earlier to the last, were in the ship's data banks.
More importantly, Gloval understood before anyone else aboard just what the long trip to Earth would entail. The civilians couldn't be expected to simply sit in packed emergency billets and twiddle their thumbs; that invited complete social breakdown, and disaster for the SDF-1.
The secret was well kept in subsequent mission reports and in announcements to the refugees, but it was Gloval's liaison officers who planted the seed of the idea:
The gouges of Minmei's calendar had multiplied: four verticals with a crosshatch now, and two more besides.
Now Rick dreaded returning to the small light cast by the miniature camp stove, dreaded having Minmei pretend she wasn't disappointed by another day of bad news.