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Chapter 73 - The Last Descent

The alarms were still screaming.

I didn't need them anymore. The ship was alive with warning lights, the steady, grinding sound of metal against metal, the whine of failing systems. But it didn't matter. I had already seen this moment. The chaos, the madness. I had already decided I wasn't going to die here.

Not like this.

My head was a pounding mess from the impact earlier, my body still feeling the crushing weight of the G-forces, but it didn't stop me. It couldn't. Time was running out. The atmosphere of Mars was clawing at the hull, pulling us down at an unforgiving speed, and I had 2 mere minutes before I was going to hit the surface.

The rocket was spinning, too fast. The turbulence had me pinned in my seat, but I didn't need to be strapped down. My instincts were already moving ahead, calculations flitting through my mind like some kind of expert orchestra.

Instincts. Endurance Boost. Precision Engineering. Spacecraft Operations

They came together like strands of string creating an intricate web. A flash of everything I had done. Everything I had known. 

I knew I had to stabilize the ship.

Focus.

The left booster was still operational. It had to be. The right one was a lost cause in the middle of this death spiral. But if I could work with the left one, shift the controls, redistribute the power— I had to trust the systems.

My hand shot out. My fingers found the console in a blink, pressing buttons and activating switches that made the ship groan in protest. The rapid spin made it nearly impossible to focus, but I didn't have time to care.

Every turn of the rocket's spin was a second wasted.

I slapped the manual override. With the last of my strength, I shifted all power to the left booster, manually igniting it.

Boom.

The engine flared to life.

The ship jerked violently as the left booster fired, the right side dragging against the planet's pull. The rapid descent slowed for just a moment.

Fifty-degree angle.

I could feel the spin decelerating, but it wasn't enough. The descent wasn't over. Mars was still coming at us too fast, the surface looming closer by the second. I could still feel the rush of the atmosphere pressing in, suffocating, trying to tear the ship apart.

Focus.

Every second felt like a minute. Every inch closer to the surface was another push of adrenaline to my veins. I couldn't just land straight. I couldn't risk all the force being concentrated in one spot.

I had to make it skid.

The rocket's body was shaking under the pressure. Skidding would spread the damage across the surface area. It would save the ship from a catastrophic impact.

But the timing had to be perfect. I had to ride the edge between controlled chaos and total destruction.

I exhaled sharply, sweat running down my forehead.

Everything I had trained for—every job, every skill—had led me here.

The red surface was almost below me now, the horizon of Mars stretching out like a waiting abyss. The sand was closer than I had expected.

I grit my teeth, leaning forward as the control systems blinked. I knew I was at the edge.

Brace.

My hand flew to the throttle, adjusting the power flow. Slowly, carefully, I tipped the rocket on its side, fighting against the force of gravity and the failing systems to keep it level.

The ship tilted just enough to start skidding, the metal beneath us groaning, scraping across the Martian surface. A shockwave rattled through the ship as it sliced through the sand.

Yes.

The ship hit the ground with a thunderous crash, the world a blur of motion and dust. I threw my hands up instinctively as the ship spun one final time, grinding across the surface, sparking and screeching like the death cry of a beast. The shuddering, rattling, screeching descent continued for what felt like hours, but I held on. I didn't let go. I couldn't.

And then—silence.

The rocket came to a halt.

I didn't even know how long I sat there, breathing in the aftermath. The ship groaned, but it was still intact. Not much left in the way of systems, but it had survived.

I was on the ground.

Mars.

The dust settled around the rocket, the harsh red sands stretching out for miles. It was surreal, seeing the red planet's surface outside my window, still a bit hazy from the impact. I was alive. My heartbeat thrummed in my ears, deafening.

And I still had no idea how I was going to get out of here.

The ship was badly damaged, but not destroyed. I could repair the right booster with the right resources. That was something.

I unbuckled my harness slowly, the weight of everything pressing down on me, and pushed myself up. My body felt stiff and sore, but I didn't have time for that. I had a mission. I had a reason for being here.

I walked to the hatch, my boots thudding softly on the metallic floor. I gritted my teeth, fighting the sensation of vertigo as I finally reached the exit.

I paused for a moment, looking back at the interior of the ship—its systems blinking uselessly, the damaged booster hanging at a twisted angle. The left one was still operational, but the ship's integrity was compromised. Still, it had done its job. It had brought me here.

I opened the hatch, feeling the cool Martian air rush in, the thick scent of dust and metal filling the cabin.

I stepped out.

The sand crunched beneath my boots, the gravity of Mars pulling at me with a gentle force. The surface was dry, barren, and yet… it was beautiful. The Martian landscape stretched out before me, a red and orange tapestry of emptiness. Jagged rocks, dusty dunes. The sky overhead was a dull, cloudless expanse of red, as if the world itself had been painted in the hues of fury and silence.

I took a deep breath, my helmet blocking the dust and the weight of the atmosphere. But I still felt the rush of air. The reality of where I was.

I had made it.

I'd reached Mars.

I slowly turned around to look at the ship again, assessing the damage. The right booster was twisted, smoke rising from where it had burned out. It wasn't impossible to repair, but it would take time. 

Still, I wasn't completely stranded yet. Not if I could find the right resources. Not if I could survive long enough to make it work.

I backed up, my gaze scanning the terrain. The rocket was angled upward, resting on a small hill of sand that had caught the landing. It was precariously perched, but there was hope in that.

Hope meant I could possibly escape.

I could feel the weight of the situation—of everything that led me here. My bones were heavy with the truth, the burden of knowing that my survival wasn't guaranteed. I'd reached Mars, but that didn't mean I was done. Not yet.

And then, just as the quiet settled over me, a notification blinked in my system's interface.

Quest Completed: Event – The Last Descent

I couldn't help the smile that tugged at my lips. I was alive.

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