Chapter 6
Clipped Wings
Near Baijiu (Palomino), Qingmu County, Shanbeixi Province

At the risk of his quarry getting away from him, Li Fong spent a couple days assembling a team of deputies to assist in his efforts to bring in the target. However, no sooner had he assembled the team than he received an emergency dispatch. Something had crash-landed in Qingmu. Baron Gong's troops were heading to the scene to secure the site and Li Fong was ordered to supervise until the specialists could arrive.
Although he would have liked to personally take credit for bringing in the girl, duty came before personal ambition. He passed his lead on to the Emperor's agents. They were not likely to be as restrained as he would have been, but it was only Infernals who would suffer for it.
He was taken to the site by his personal airship. He used it rarely because he preferred to travel inconspicuously, but this case was an exception. Baron Gong had his own ships patrolling the skies and one of them challenged him as he came within a hundred kilometers of the site.
"Aircraft, identify yourself," the Gong pilot said.
All aircraft flying in Imperial airspace were required to transmit their identity code as long as the engine was running. The Gong pilot should have already known exactly who it was. Sometimes it was a simple formality, a part of training kept in practice even when there was no real need for it, and other times there was a genuine concern that an aircraft would be spoofing its ID and a verbal challenge could be enough to expose the deception.
Li Fong's pilot relied, "This is India Golf Kilo Two-dash-Two Seven Eight Niner. Renwang Commandery Inspector Li Fong onboard. Acknowledge."
"Acknowledged, India Golf Kilo Two-dash-Two Seven Eight Niner. Proceed to the designated landing zone. Transmitting coordinates now. Acknowledge."
The pilot tapped on the console, then said, "Acknowledged, Gong Three Seven Four. Transmission received. Proceeding to landing zone. Out."
"I suppose Baron Gong is keeping out the riffraff," Li Fong said.
About fifteen minutes later, they touched down at the landing zone. There were several aircraft on the ground undergoing maintenance or simply sitting idle until it was their turn to relieve the ships currently in the air.
When Li Fong exited his airship, he was met by a young officer. Though Li Fong was not in the military, the officer saluted him anyway.
"Good morning, sir," the officer said. "I am Lieutenant Li. In the name of my lord Baron Gong, I welcome you."
Lieutenant Li was no relation to Li Fong. He had heard it said that some ten percent of the population was a Li or one of its variants. That may have been an exaggeration, but it was nevertheless one of the most common surnames on the planet. Many times soldiers would go by their given name to avoid confusion, but that practice was typically reserved for the lower ranks. It was seen as contrary to an officer's dignity to go by his given name unless he was a knight or nobleman, and far too humanizing for the subofficers.
"Who is in command here?" Li Fong asked.
"That would be Colonel Wei, sir," Lieutenant Li replied, "of Third Battalion, House Gong Baronial Regiment."
Each noble house had its own household regiment, with statutory manpower limits according to rank. Barons were accorded a two thousand-man regiment, though that was the maximum limit. Many houses could not afford their full allotment and as much as three-quarters of their men could be requisitioned by the Expeditionary Forces at a given time. These numbers did not include the conscript levies whenever it was time for a campaign in the Unincorporated Territories.
None of this was particularly relevant to the current situation, though.
"Take me to him," Li Fong said.
"Of course, sir. Right this way."
They took a jeep from the landing zone to the crash site. Though Inspector Li could see it for himself, the Lieutenant explained anyway.
"There is a trail of debris spread over three hundred kilometers, but the main body is mostly intact."
The crashed ship was approximately sixty meters in length, less a portion of the back quarter that broke off during the crash. The damage was so extensive that if the cause for the crash was external, it was not readily apparent.
"This doesn't look like one of ours," Lieutenant Li said.
"That is because it is not one of ours," the Inspector replied. "I am no expert on the subject, but this is unlike anything we have ever produced."
"Then who could it be?"
"Who indeed. That is the question we must answer, Lieutenant."
This was advanced technology. at the same level as their own or even above it. While it could be the result of some top-secret project he knew nothing about, he doubted it. Certainly none of the Unincorporated Territories were capable of anything like this. That left only one possibility: a spacefaring civilization beyond their world. The official histories never talked much of the time before the Celestials came to this world, but it was not unimaginable that there were others out there and that they would eventually find their way here. Of course, while it was little surprise to Inspector Li, it could set off a panic in the wider populace, Celestial and Infernal alike, so containing this information would be critical.
"We have reason to believe there are survivors, sir," Lieutenant Li said.
The Inspector was just about to ask about the crew, but he opted to feign ignorance to see how that would affect the information he was given.
"And what makes you say that?"
"Well, sir, though there is significant damage, both internal and external, that we can attribute to the crash, we have found evidence of deliberate destruction of the electronics, weapons and propulsion systems. Our technicians say they are completely unsalvageable. We have also found residue that appears to be the remains of human bodies destroyed with incendiaries."
Destroying sensitive equipment so that it does not fall into the hands of the enemy was standard practice. Going so far as to destroy their own dead was taking it a step further. Lest he sow the seeds of the panic he was trying to avert, he refrained from suggesting that there was no assurance these were human bodies.
He heard the sound of a jeep approaching. A senior officer flanked by two riflemen with an adjutant at his side got out of the jeep almost as soon as it came to a stop. Colonel Wei, he presumed. Lieutenant Li snapped to attention and saluted as the Colonel came closer.
"Sir!"
Curtly returning the salute, the Colonel growled, "I thought I told you to bring the Inspector to my tent when he arrived, Lieutenant." He paused to give Inspector Li the briefest of salutations. "Inspector."
The Inspector responded in kind.
"Colonel."
"I don't appreciate a babysitter from the Capital breathing down my neck," Colonel Wei said tersely.
"Follow protocol, Colonel, and you will have nothing to worry about," the Inspector replied.
The Colonel scowled at this. Clearly he did not have a sufficient appreciation of the authority Inspector Li represented, but the Inspector was not the sort to begrudge a man a little surliness so long as he got the job done.
"I was just about to ask the Lieutenant about the search for survivors, but now that you are here, Colonel, perhaps you can inform me of the situation."
"My orders were to secure the site and that's what I've done," the Colonel replied.
"And did you not think that any survivors of this crash would be as valuable if not more valuable than the wreckage? Securing the site includes everything that may have come out of the site."
"I am having to secure an area of over a hundred thousand hectares with a single light battalion and a flier squadron. What more would you have me do?"
"I would have you be a little more proactive. Your fliers are equipped with bioscanners, yes? You are not only looking for incoming vehicles, I trust."
"The standard patrol flier doesn't have such sensitive equipment," the Colonel replied. "They mostly just detect heat signatures and radio transmissions, but during the day it's difficult to isolate a human's heat signature."
"We will have to do what we can and put a focus on night missions. I want you to increase our air coverage. Cross-reference heat signatures with tracker feeds. If there is a discrepancy, be ready with fast reaction teams to capture the targets. Do be sure to emphasize to your men that the survivors are to be take alive if at all possible. It has been about eight hours since the crash. Start with a two hundred-kilometer radius and expand it fifty kilometers every hour. Before we have exceeded your area of responsibility, you will coordinate with the neighboring commanders. I want fliers in the air 24 hours a day until these survivors are found and captured."
"You don't have the authority to be giving orders here, Inspector," the Colonel growled.
"That is why you will be giving the orders, Colonel," Inspector Li replied, "and if you are not willing to cooperate, I can always have a word with Baron Gong or even His Majesty."
Colonel Wei froze. The threat of involving the Emperor was not taken lightly, but it was not made lightly either. Inspector Li had no interest in propping up the Colonel's fragile ego. He was not the biggest fish in the pond and he would do well to realize that fact.
The Colonel told his adjutant, "Contact Major Fong and tell him to increase the number of patrol flights. Start two hundred kilometers from the crash site and extend the radius fifty kilometers every hour. Call Colonel Liu to request more air assets and coordinate the search with the adjoining airspaces. We are looking for human life signs that don't have a corresponding tracker signal. Assemble a couple rapid response teams and have them on standby. If they are called up, they are to detain the targets with nonlethal force insofar as it is feasible." He gave the Inspector a look. "Anything else?"
"That will be all for now," the Inspector replied. "The specialists from the Capital should be arriving soon. Have your technicians compile the data they have gathered so far."
"Yes, sir."
Inspector Li did not think he heard those words uttered so grudgingly before. No matter. So long as he had the Colonel's compliance, he did not need him to be happy about it.