Cockpit
Amelia spared a brief glance at the captain, but then did as ordered. For a brief second, she felt the ship's artificial gravity overlapping with the planet, but then normalized once it stabilized. "Shutting down CFS," the astrogator echoed, flipping a few switches on a panel besides her.
Sienna's hands worked over the consoles around her in a flurry, and amid her swinging she called up the ship's general address intercom. "Y'all hang on back there," she barked, and gripped the flight sticks in her hands as she braced herself in her seat. Pulling back on the controls, she pitched the ship's nose upwards, increasing their angle of attack through the atmosphere, causing the already jittery ride to roughen significantly. The sound of clanking metal around them grew louder as the vibrations intensified, and still Sienna continued to pitch harder, exposing more and more surface area of the hull to the brutal forces of friction and drag.
Meanwhile, Amelia kept monitoring the displays and watching the readings in front of her as the ship shook. She understood, finally, what the captain's intentions were, and the calculated risk that it involved. She just hoped that the drones, being cheaply built as they seemed to be, wouldn't be something else than they seemed to be in relation to that.
More alert tones started to angrily chastise the women in the control couches, warning of the increasing hull temperature and the fact that the ship's shields were offline. Sienna bore down harder into her seat, pressing her feet as hard as she could against the floorboards to firmly hold her haunches in place as she continued to increase their angle. The shaking was approaching the point of a violent earthquake by then, the rattling forces threatening to tear the ship apart. Gingerly she released one hand from the controls, adjusting something on a display, and grabbed hold of it again. "Get ready," she yelled over the chaotic noise, and with but a tilting twist of the controls, redirected their thrust to a straight forward vector all at once, slamming them both hard back into their seats.
Outside the Ship
The drones bolted to the belly of the ship were taking a beating from the intense heat and thick air battering their cheaply-crafted bodies with all the brutality of a flurry of hammers. For some time, they continued to hold fast, some of their legs starting to scramble about as they struggled to maintain a hold on the hull, or at least keep from being ripped away by the pounding air. One of them split open under the strain, bits of it starting to be torn away like the layers of an onion, until finally it disintegrated down to nothing more than the rivet and the lower section of its dome. The others held fast, at least up until the sudden change in direction. Their inertia, coupled with their weakened structures, caused their bulk to continue along their original path at first, and instantly every drone but one was torn away, blasted to pieces and tumbling back down to the moon's surface like metal slivers of rain.
Cockpit
Amelia gritted her teeth as the ship pulled some Gs, and to feel lightheaded and her vision greying out as the blood in her head started going down towards her legs. To counter that, the astrogator took deep and quick breaths as she tensed the muscles on her thighs and abdomen, forcing the blood back to her head. "One drone. Left!" She yelled between breaths, still watching the displays beside and in front of her, her knuckles white behind the gloves as she gripped the armrests of her seat.
The captain, head still spinning from the blow she took and now from the intense G-forces ripping her every which way, was noticably rattled by the maneuver, and her face was completely drained of color. The ship lolled over to the starboard as she slumped in her seat slightly, only for a second, but more than enough to toss the ship and its contents even more than before. Were it not for the artificial gravity assisting, competing with the moon's gravity, the sudden sway may very well have killed anyone inside not properly braced. Sienna instantly awoke from her near-lapse in consciousness, righting the ship in a panic, tossing them back the other way. "One left," she repeated in a weak voice, and cleared her throat in determination as she pulled back on the stick to repeat the maneuver.
The astrogator braced for the maneuver again after a brief flash of surprise, grabbing into her own set of controls this time in case the captain blacked out again.
Sienna strained to stay awake as the ship started to shake violently again, pouring all of her strength into the sticks. Her bleary eyes turned to the side at Amelia's hands briefly, some of her hair stuck to her eyebrows, then rolled back out towards the canopy. "May... need you to... get this one..." she muttered, and clenched her jaw as she fought back the blackness.
"Got it!" Amelia replied, both hands holding firmly onto her own controls. She understood that it was just a matter of time until Sienna, who probably wasn't conditioned to these effects, to black out, and so she grabbed onto the controls to keep the ship from veering off course.
The ship's pitch neared its apex again, rocking and shaking with the buffetting force of the atmosphere, and once again Sienna redirected the thrust to rip the final drone away from the hull. With the sudden inertial force bashing them again, Sienna's pounding head would take no more. She was thrown back into her seat and was unconscious before she struck the cushion, her arms going limp and flying free of the sticks, as the ship lurched again, and had it not been for Amelia having a firm hold of her own controls, would have gone spiralling out of control back towards the moon's surface.
The astrogator tried to stabilize the ship as best as she could with all the stabilizers and automatic systems offline, briefly cursing Crash from leaving them to their own devices at such a time. She struggled to keep the ship from veering off its original vector towards space, hoping that the sudden changes in temperature would also take its toll on the remaining drone. Gritting her teeth, she cast another glance to the side at the unconscious captain. If this kept out for too long there could be permanent damage from the g-LOC.
On her console, the volumetric representation of the remaining drone leeching on the ship dissipated into dozens of tiny dots and "poofed" away from the holographic symbol of the ship. The maneuver had succeeded, but the alarms around her continued to scream. Amelia felt the accelerating force behind her sputter and become erratic, jostling her back and forth in her seat as she was thrown alternately between the atmospheric drag and the erratic blasts of the gravity drive. Another volumetric display blinked to life, rotating an image of the ship to a top-down view, and the engine section started to flash a plaintive red. Their speed plateaued, and started to fall as the drag overtook them, and between bursts of forward motion, started to drift back down towards the moon in a freefall.
Amelia felt her body lurch from the inertia as she felt the ship stop accelerating away from the planet. Brushing the display away, she quickly worked on rebooting the engine, adding all power to it and the ship's CFS.
The lights throughout the ship flickered and some went dark as the ship struggled to re-light the engines, all the while gaining momentum as it plunged back to the ground. It started to pitch and roll sideways, falling with its port side towards the ground, and the artificial gravity went offline, throwing everything and everyone inside not bolted down to the walls. The altimeter's readout dropped faster and faster. 2 kilometers... 1 kilometer... 800 meters...
With a sudden blast of energy, the gravity drive regained its footing and came back online, and Amelia felt the power almost surge back into her hands. She started accelerating back to regain altitude, gritting her teeth again as the ship pulled more Gs to reduce its falling speed before it could actually start to rise again. The crushing forces continued to bear down on the slight-framed astrogator for several seconds more as the altimeter continued to spiral its numbers down towards certain doom, but just as the ship dropped to less than a hundred meters above the treeline, the numbers slowed to a crawl, and then stopped. In a screaming, inverted parabolic arc, the ship was righted and started to climb, at last rocketting away from the moon's surface.
Breathing a sigh of relief, Amelia faced the displays again. Sweat wicked her hair and forehead inside the helmet, much more from the stress of the situation than from the temperature, since the suit's insulation would remedy the latter. She quickly worked on redirecting the power to the proper systems so that the ship could safely exit the atmosphere this time since it was safe from the drones clinging onto the hull. She looked at the still blacked-out captain besides her for a brief moment, but then returned to the process of safely guiding the ship with all its automatic systems offline.
Sienna only groaned softly.