Aetheas dons his simulated ARC display stations himself at the controls of the simulated Tail-Fighter, placing one hand on the control stick, feeling the familiar subtle vibration of the idling ship through his hands and his hooves. He activates the ARC's HUD, groaning when he sees its analysis of the debris field outside. three Blade Ships, one Pool Ship, and what looks like the remnants of an entire Andalite fleet and a good portion of a Yeerk one, floating in a thick asteroid field. This is not going to be an easy run.
He eases the fighter off the deck of the little simulated hangar ship that served as the starting point for this particular simulation. The layout of the debris field requires him to fully open the throttle almost immediately in order to avoid the Dracon fire from the nearer of the Blade Ships that rips apart the hangar ship as he exits-- he barely clears it as it explodes, the fireball singing his own fighter. Luckily, this is a newer model fighter, and he barely feels the acceleration. He makes an attempt to use some of the asteroids for cover as he rockets towards the target Bug Fighter, but heavy fire from three sides forces him to dodge wildly, turning, diving, rolling. He finds he's not really mentally prepared to be thrown so quickly into the thick of this simulation, and his flying is somewhat erratic while he tries desperately to regain his bearings.
Finally, however, he manages to fly into the thick of the debris field, and the fire from the larger ships dies away as they shift to try to get a better angle on him. Aetheas lights up the engines and rockets through the inside of a broken Mark II dome behind the Bug Fighter, then eases off the throttle a bit to follow its zig-zagging path through a particularly dense patch of smaller asteroids. The whole time, he stands, tensed, with his tail tucked down as though he's running, and keeps his main eyes glued to the Bug Fighter. His stalk eyes frantically scan the area above and below and to the sides of his craft, watching for obstacles and fire and Blade Ships. He finds himself wishing, as he usually does when piloting a fighter, that he had another set of eyes.