
Pump one tenth body weight in each fist for as long as the arms can stand it, pushing on wings the size of a pterodactyl's. Do that under a pressurized dome at one atmosphere sea level, but subject to one sixth gravity on the Moon. Now contend with a swarm of chiseled, fearless, superbly trained flyers, buffeting the air space around you like peregrine falcons. This was the sport of piloting. After helium-3, it was one of the first things that entered anyone's mind when Borealis was mentioned. It was helium-3 that powered humanity’s far-flung civilization, feeding fusion reactors from the Alliances on Earth, to the Terran Ring, Mars, the Jovian colonies, and all the way out to even distant Titan. The supply, scooped up from the surface of the Moon, had once seemed limitless. That was a long time ago, though. Borealis, the glittering, fabulously rich city astride the lunar North Pole, had amassed centuries of unimaginable wealth harvesting it. She was the first to realize tha . CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD THIS BOOK FOR FREE