[Inaius] The Stars Are Ours

Esplandia

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The Hub Solar System

October 3, 2957

“Engine Room reports Phase Drive at full capacity, Captain.”

Captain Douglas Merrill nodded absently, not even bothering to look towards the technician who’d given him the report. He downed the last of his lukewarm drink, grimacing at the bitter caffeine taste, but finished it anyway. Korfe* was always the first thing to run out on a starship on deep space missions. He’d be missing it soon enough, lukewarm or otherwise.

“Zabaiev, bring the Nikoshima online,” he ordered, putting the empty mug down on the back of a consul. He heard the familiar thrumming through the hull as the ship's powerful FTL drive powered up and watched on the monitor as the sun crested the horizon of Welksmund, sending rays of brilliant blue light shining into the viewport. He polarized the monitor, turning the brilliance into dull amber colors. The dockyards that had held the Repentant Sky the last nine months were already well behind them, still in the night-shadow of the planet.

“Confirmation of Flight-plan has been received,” Aleksiei Zabaiev said as he walked up behind Captain Merrill. He held out the message displayed on his hand-held. Merrill nodded, giving the device and the report on it a cursory glance. Their orders would be to take the Repentant Sky out to patrol the frontier, deep into the space between the Hub and their surrounding neighbors. The normal length of such a patrol was seven months; a long stretch even for a cruiser. But they were well provisioned and the overhaul the ship had gone under had seen significant upgrades to propulsion and auxiliary systems. They’d be able to go further out for this trip. High Command was likely getting paranoid about increased patrols by the Ithorian Dominion and the Yviiri Directorate in the old Avalon space. That’s what he suspected anyway. He wouldn’t know his orders until he opened them.

“You seem apprehensive, Captain,” Zabaiev observed, giving Merrill a worried look. “Something bothering you?”

Merrill met his executive officer’s gaze, trying to keep his pose appropriately stoic. “Seems strange,” he said, keeping his voice low so only his officer could hear. “Sending a warship to patrol the frontier without escort or fleet support.”

Zabaiev shrugged dismissively, but Merrill knew the younger man was also thinking the same thing. He’d been serving under Merrill for two years and was close to a command of his own. He was the closest thing that Merrill had to a friend, especially after his wife had passed. The two men had become surprisingly close and Merrill felt he could accurately guess what the XO was thinking. Today though, Zabaiev was keeping a well disciplined stoic disposition.

He wouldn’t push him to open up, not out here on the bridge. “Prepare to set a course to Navigation Marker UM-94,” he said. Zabaiev nodded and repeated the order as he stalked over to the navigation station, leaving the Captain to continue trying to puzzle out the purpose of this patrol.

The thrum of the reactor increased as the Nikoshima Drive drew more energy, nearing full power in preparation for a phase-jump. The ship's big engines slowed down as the Nikoshima drive neared capacity. The lights around the bridge dimmed for two seconds before the engines could compensate. As the lights brightened up, a series of dull clanking noises rattled up and down the hull. Merrill listened to them with half an ear, instead keeping himself busy with the power levels displayed next to his command chair. The sounds were the normal sounds of the ship’s hull being ionized in preparation for a phase-jump. The noises built up for a few seconds and then settled into a series of low clicks, the ship vibrating in synch, signaling the engine's readiness.

“Engineering reports the drive is ready,” Zabaiev reported. “Destination laid in.”

Merrill gave one last look over the display, making sure there were no warning lights flashing, before giving the order. “Activate phase-drive, Commander.”

There came a sickening feeling, a sensation deep in the gut like a thousand ants all running around together. The ship seemed to stretch out ahead of them, reality expanding the space between objects. For a second the Captain could see the twinkling of stars through the hull of the ship as the bonds between atoms were stretched. And then there was a bright flash of light and they were once again back in real space. He felt like his body was snapped forward a little. His equilibrium was off and his ears were plugged. He was an experienced officer and knew it would fade in a few minutes. This wasn’t his first phase-jump.

“All stations, report in,” he ordered. He yawned to pop his ears as his crew went about their tasks, checking their stations, giving him the okay one by one. Everything had gone perfectly, the phase-jump was a success.

“That shit makes me want to fucking puke every time,” came the voice of Commander Maximillian, who had just stepped onto the bridge. “How long before you get used to it?”

Merrill pivoted his chair just enough to see the Second Officer approaching. He was a pudgy, middle aged man, his hair thinning on the top. His uniform was perfectly ironed, its buttons and badges perfectly polished and trimmed. This was a man who’d spent very little time out in space. Merrill disliked him greatly. “You never get used to it,” he answered dryly, “you just learn to get on with your job until it passes.” He pivoted his chair back to face the forward displays.

Zabaiev returned to stand next to Merrill’s chair. “Jump completed,” he reported, “we hit our target destination within a point oh-oh-oh-one degree.”

“Within military guidelines,” Maximillian said. “Acceptable.”

“That’s well within guidelines,” Zabaiev stated. “It was a flawless jump.”

“Indeed. I shall put that in my report to command.”

Merrill and Zabaiev both knew what the true meaning of that statement was. He’d mention that Zabaiev had disrespected the company’s loyal propaganda officer. The captain decided it was best not to continue this conversation.

“Ensign Martin,” he called over to the comms station. “Plug us into the Star-Net**. Have Command relay the mission codes. Forward them to my office.”

He stood up and addressed his two most senior officers. “Shall we, gentlemen?”

Merrill’s office was two decks below the bridge, sitting snugly between the officer’s mess and galley. It wasn’t a large room, only big enough for his desk, two small couches, and a large cabinet on the wall. He’d personalized it somewhat with a handful of landscape paintings and a finely calligraphed poem.

Merrill opened the lower doors on the cabinet, revealing a safe with three separate dials on it. The mission codes hadn’t been relayed yet so he opened the top cabinet, took out a bottle of nine year-old hawq***, and poured three shots.

“To the motherworld,” he said, raising his glass.

“Here, here,” Zabaiev agreed.

“To the People’s Collective,” Maximilian added, showing off his zealous loyalty to the party. Then they drank. Merrill set his glass down and picked up the bottle and poured out about one shot onto the floor.

“For the ground that birthed us and earth that sustains us,” he said. He gave Maximilian a sheepish look. “A tradition on Heavensfall,” he said, apologetically. “An old one that I haven’t quite given up yet.”

Maximilian nodded. “I understand, commander. One cannot give up their folk superstitions easily.”

The codes were transmitted after they’d drank, which pleased Merrill. He wouldn’t have to figure out a topic of conversation that the propaganda officer would appreciate. Maximilian was an unimaginative man with a complete lack of personality. They each verified their codes independently, referencing their personal encryption books.

Merrill dialed his combination first, twisting the handle when he was done and heard a satisfying click. Zabaiev went next, taking the middle dial. Maximilian went last. He floundered at the dial, having to put it in three times. Merrill was expecting him to fail on the third attempt, locking the safe for six hours before they could try it again, but the handle clicked into place and Maximilian swung the safe open.

“They really need to replace these things with digital keypads,” he chuckled, standing up. “Would make this part easier.”

He was still smiling when Merrill made his move. Maximilian had stepped into the puddle of hawq on the floor and the captain swept the heavier man’s legs out from under him. Maximilian lost his balance and fell backwards, his head collided with the side of Merrill's desk with a sickening thud.

He fell to the floor, blood already flowing out of a deep wound on the back of his skull. Zabaiev pulled a hand towel out of the cabinet then kneeled down next to Maximilian. He placed the towel over the man's mouth and nose and held it there. Maximilian did not struggle. He’d been knocked out cold by his collision with the desk. Zabaiev held the towel over his face for a solid three minutes, to make sure.

Removing the towel Zabaiev checked for a pulse, and confirmed he was dead. In the meantime Merrill had checked the order-code they’d been transmitted, and pulled out the corresponding packet from the safe. He didn’t bother opening it. Instead he took another packet out of his desk, and then gingerly removed the label from the old packet and placed it on the new one. He put the new packet back in the safe and the old one he tossed in his document destroyer. He’d incinerate it later, but for now he made sure the hatch was secured.

Zabaiev confirmed Maximilian was dead. Merrill checked his watch. It had been less than five minutes since the codes were transmitted. He took a deep breath and then let it out in a sigh to soothe his nerves. He stepped to the comm panel on the wall and pressed the page button. “Doctor Feehan, report immediately to the captain’s office. Bring your medkit.”

He nodded to Zabaiev. “Put on your game face.”

The first officer nodded, checking the body of the second officer one last time. He tucked the towel into the dead man’s hand, as if the man had been grabbing for it as he fell.

The doctor knocked on the door and the captain let him in. A handful of crewmen were standing in the hallway, likely curious as to what was going on, so the captain made sure not to secure the door after letting the doctor in. He needed as many witnesses now as possible.

“By the Angel!,” the Doctor said, seeing Maximilian and the blood. “What happened?”

“The commander spilled some hawq on the floor, and as he was getting a towel to wipe it up he slipped and hit his head on the desk.”

The doctor kneeled down and checked for a pulse. His brow furrowed and he scowled. He got out a stethoscope and listened at the heart. He stood up and leaned in close to the captain. “I’m afraid he’s dead.”

“Is there nothing you can do?”

“I can’t reverse death, so no.”

Merrill put his hand on the bulkhead. It was important to appear distraught. He made sure the curious crewmen in the hall saw the grief and shock on his face. “This is a catastrophe, doctor. Especially at the onset of our mission. And I’m sorry, this means as a third senior officer present I have to convey onto you the duties of the second officer.”

“Oh, fuck me,” the doctor said. “You’ve got to be kidding?”

“We had just received our orders but haven’t opened them yet.”

Doctor Feehan didn’t respond but called for a stretcher. They’d need to move the body down to the medical bay in preparation for an autopsy. He refused to do anything else until that task was out of the way. Merrill gave the doctor the go ahead. Once the body had been removed the captain secured the door to his office and had the doctor verify the code sent by command and retrieve the correct packet of orders from the safe.

Feehan opened the packet as Merrill closed the safe. The doctor didn’t even bother reading the orders, he just passed them to the captain and then leaned against the door, staring at the drying blood on the floor.

Merrill didn’t need to read the orders. He’d written what was in them, but he pretended to anyway. It was a single sheet with the red stamp of the fleet directorate on it, and the signature of the First Consul. They wouldn’t hold up to scrutiny, but the forged seals would pass as accurate to anyone not familiar with orders direct from high command. Such as the ship’s doctor.

He passed the orders to Zabaiev who read them. The first officer also pretended to be dumbfounded by the contents. “Is this real?” he asked in convincing shock. “This has to be a joke.”

“What?” the doctor asked. Zabaiev handed him the orders. The doctor read it and his shock was truly genuine. “By the first tree! Has command lost their minds? They want us to go into the Dead Zone? This is insane!”

Merrill took the orders back, looking over them one last time. “Those are our orders,” he said firmly. He tossed the orders and the packet they came in into his document destroyer, and then turned the machine on, incinerating the false orders, and the real orders as well.

“Return to your duties doctor, and say nothing of this to anyone,” Merrill said. Feehan just shook his head, giving the captain a look between bewilderment and fear.

“We can still call this off,” Zabaiev stated after the doctor had left.

“It’s too late for that,” Merrill replied. “I sent command a letter right before we left. So I couldn’t change my mind at the last minute. Our course is set.”

To his credit, the XO didn’t seem surprised by the captain’s admission. “I wonder what our real orders were,” he said looking at the closed hatch of the incinerator.

“Doesn’t matter,” Merrill said. He poured himself one last glass of hawq. “Prepare the crew. Set course for the Star-Net closest to Dead Space. And once our capacitors have refilled, I want you to plot the furthest phase jump possible. We need to get as much distance as we can before they send pursuers after us.”

Zabaiev saluted and left to fulfill the captain’s orders. Merrill took a long look at the now dried blood of the propaganda officer. He then took a drink of his Hawq before calling for someone to come clean up the floor.

Trouble -Adam Agin

*Korfe: a hot coffee-like drink made from the roasted and ground seeds of a temperate shrub. The word korfe may actually have an etymological root back to the word coffee, but the plant is not related to the earth coffee plant.
**Star-Net: a network of satellite buoys arranged around the Hub system in a net pattern that allows up-to-date navigation and instant communication across the system.
***Hawq: an alcoholic spirit distilled from malted grain, similar to whisky or gin.
 
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Londergran Dockyards

October 3, 2957

Sariah walked down the deserted hallways of the dockyard’s office complex, her high heels clanking on the metal plated floor, echoing with each step. It was late, most of the administrative staff had gone home. The docks themselves were still busy, as work continued thirty-six hours a day. The designers and engineers got to go home in the evenings, leaving only a handful of desk jockeys working late.

Sariah had been at a fancy dinner. A meet and greet for some of the Mercantile Trader Authority’s top investors and company directors. It had been a fascinating evening of half the people there making subtle xenophobic remarks, and the other half making overt sexual ones, usually about her tail or horns. When she received the message to report back to the office immediately, she took the chance to flee the situation.

She wished she had grabbed a coat as she left because the dockyard station was ten degrees colder, and the dress she was wearing was too sheer. And the heels, custom made to fit her feet, were really something better left to human anatomy than her own.

She found the Director’s office still lit up. The desk of his secretary was empty, but his door was open, pouring light out into the hall. She knocked, letting him know she was there.

He was turned away from her, speaking furiously on the phone. He waved her in, his voice rising in irritation. “...can’t continue to meet these ridiculous deadlines if my resources keep being diverted to Stanep’s vanity project,” he growled. “No, no. I don’t want to hear the company line. I go to all the meetings, I can repeat it in my sleep.”

Sariah smiled, remembering her own ordeals of trying to get this project off the ground. The company had been hesitant back then as well, worse because she had no supporters in the Astroconsul or even the directorate in those days. She took the opportunity to pour herself a drink. She didn’t even bother to read the label. She just picked something that was dark in color, hoping that meant it was higher in alcohol content.

“Can you be any more obtuse? I’m talking about real progress here. Atlas will be ready for trial runs within the month. What’s the deadline on this so-called superweapon? Oh, that’s not the point? Come on. Is the Astroconsul just gonna keep jerking me around or are you gonna...motherfucker hung up on me.” He slammed the receiver down on the base.

“Sounds like a pleasant conversation,” Sariah said with a weary smile, passing him a glass.

“Funny,” he stated humorlessly. Fleet Director Isaiah Campbell knocked back the entire drink in one go. He let out a series of surprised coughs. “Damn you went straight for the top shelf.”

Sariah sat down, adjusting her tail so she wouldn’t sit on it. She sipped her own drink. “You know I can’t tell the difference in quality.”

He raised his empty glass to her. “At least it washed out the bitter taste of having to talk to the Subconsul. An overpaid moron.”

“Ah, so you’ve had no better luck than me.”

He raised an eyebrow. “Not a single potential investor was interested?”

“Not in the project,” she scowled. “Just in my ears and my horns. Oh and the tail. A bunch of them even tried to grab it, when they weren’t pawing at my ass.”

Campbell got up and poured himself another drink, choosing a different bottle this time. He downed the glass then poured himself another. “If the trials don’t run a hundred percent, we’re sunk.”

He stood in front of the window, looking out at the bright lights and the sweeping compound of the naval dockyards. Transports whizzed about among the gathered homeworld fleet. Dozens of battlecruisers, frigates, corvettes, and even a hulking carrier drifted in perfect synchrony around the massive station. And beyond the fleet, in all its wonderful glory, the shining jewel of The Hub hung majestically against the stars; the homeworld New Eden.

Sariah of course just saw it as another planet. She didn’t have the same connection to it as Vallhallanders like Director Campbell. Her home planet, wherever it was located or whatever it was called, was far from the Hub. And on top of that, she’d grown up in Tellusian space, fostered by a colonial family.

She enjoyed thinking about her adoptive parents, the sensation that humans called sentimentality. Tonight she didn’t have time for sentiment. Campbell had paged her for something important. He certainly wouldn’t have called her away from an important dinner party with their funding hanging in the balance, unless it was urgent. The way he was standing as he stared out his office viewport told her that something big was bothering him. He ran the MTA’s entire Research and Development department and had never buckled to the stress of the job before.

Finally he sighed and spoke. “I received a letter earlier today,” he said, gesturing to where it lay neatly folded up on his desk. “It’s from one of the fleet's command officers. Captain Douglas Merrill.”

“I don’t know him,” she said, reaching over and plucking the letter from the desk.

“You wouldn’t,” Campbell said. “He and I served on the Steadfast as junior officers. You couldn’t call us friends, but he was a decent man. Who just couldn’t keep his cynicism about the Procantors to himself. So whenever he was up for promotions he seemed to often be passed up. Apparently resents I was given a directorate while he was left to languish in a command position”

Sariah read the letter as he talked, amused at the anachronism of writing a letter on paper. They had faster than light communications and this man had written a letter on paper. As the reason for the letter became clear she realized it was a letter so that the time needed to deliver it would give him a further head start. When she finished reading the letter she put it back on the desk.

“He intends to start a war,” she said dispassionately. “Get the Yviiri, Kalorians, and Ithorians fighting each other. High Command already thinks it’s inevitable anyway. Are you going to tell them?”

Campbell cleared his throat, a sound Sariah knew to mean she’d said something that irritated him but wasn’t necessarily wrong. “Plenty in the directorate think the same way. That pitting our larger neighbors against each other will keep any of them from looking towards the Hub. And some of them would even consider letting Merrill go through with it. But they’re all damned fools. If there’s to be a war it won’t just go around us, it will come home to us. We’re not positioned to stay neutral on an Ithorian-Yviiri front line. We’ll be forced to pick a side and picking the wrong side will destroy us. And that’s if that imbecile can actually start a fight without getting caught, which will bring all three of those powers down on us anyway.”

“What will the directorate do?” she asked.

“Well they’ll put the fleet on high alert. And they’ll send somebody after them.”

“Have you told them?”

“Not yet,” he said, looking at her from over his shoulder, before returning his gaze back to the shipyard. “I’ll forward a copy to Director Achenko in the next hour, and he’ll bring it to High Command. The directorate will want to keep this from the Astroconsul as long as they can. Which will be my only chance of surviving this.” He paused for a moment, his hand resting on his chin. “They’ll need a scapegoat, and since the letter was addressed to me, that makes me the prime choice of meat for the roast.”

Sariah took another sip from her drink, then another. She was already beginning to understand why Campbell had called her to his office. “How long ago did Captain Merrill leave the Hub?”

“Sixteen hours, twenty three-minutes,” Campbell answered. “His ship, the Repentant Sky is a Gemini-class, and it just finished extensive refits. She’s now the fastest ship in the fleet, capable of further phase-jumps than anything outside the Atlas.”

“Which is weeks away from being spaceworthy,” she said. “That’s if we can get its power draw issues figured out.”

Campbell groaned. “I don’t want to discuss the damn power draw issues right now.”

“It’s still an issue that needs to be addressed,” she said, trying not to sound too blunt. She and the director had developed a repartee, a close working relationship, but that didn’t mean they were in any way friends. Her long career working with the MTA had taught her to never push those in authority too far.

“The Angel damn us all!” He finished his third drink, looking towards the bottles, contemplating pouring a fourth. Of all the nights to drink heavily, this was the apotheosis of nights to drink. Instead he put the glass down on the desk. “Months trying to get backers and funding, and now the Atlas isn’t ready when we need it. Merrill can be all the way to the ruins of Avalon in three days. And he can do a lot of damage between here and there.”

“So whatever the directorate decides won’t matter. He’ll be too far ahead for us to track down. And they’ll string you up for it.”

“What we need is a ship faster than Merrill’s,” he mused. “Something that has a phase drive as well, something that can’t be tracked either.”

“You might as well wish for unicorns, too.”

It was the first thing she’d said tonight that amused the director. He laughed heartily, his belly shaking with each thunderous laugh. “That’s funny,” he said. He wiped a tear from his eyes. “Unicorns. Ha! But actually, I have the perfect ship in mind.”

Sariah raised an eyebrow, realizing what he was referring to. “The directorate isn’t going to back this idea. They think he’s just a pirate.”

“I wasn’t thinking about letting the directorate know,” he said, a devilish smile beginning to curl the corners of his lips. “They’re gonna want to keep this whole situation quiet, which gives me an advantage. If he succeeds, even if they find out, they won’t be able to do anything. Not without admitting to the Astroconsul that they knew about the situation and kept it from them.”

“If it works,” Sariah said. “Because if it doesn’t, they will execute you.”

“Details,” he joked humorlessly. “I know you don’t make it planetside much, but have you ever been to New Eden?”

“Can’t say that I have,” she answered. “Why?”

“Because we need his help and that’s where he’s been hiding out. And if I asked him, he’d say no. But I think he might be more willing to listen if asked by…well…someone who isn’t human and certainly isn’t a Vallhallander.”

Sariah relented with a sigh. “You owe me big time for this. So don’t get yourself executed by the directorate before I’ve had a chance to collect."

Fire Escape - Civil twilight
 
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Hastaña Province, New Eden

October 4, 2957

The repulsor-car turned off the electric roadtop onto a gravel driveway. The sound of its engines changed from an almost imperceptible hum to a loud whine as the repulsors, helped before by the smart surface of the roadway, now had to work harder to keep the car up over the ground.

Sariah rarely went planetside, preferring the cleaner and more controlled habitat aboard a station or starship. The people of the Hub were very insular, so she had few chances to go planetside. Mostly on Welksmund, a few times on Heavensfall, and never on New Eden. So she was excited for this chance to visit the capital world.

Despite having grown up among them, adopted by a loving Tellusian family, she found humans hard to categorize. There were just too many of them with too many varying views and beliefs. While she wasn’t human, she considered herself to be one of them. A sentiment not reciprocated by the Valhallanders. To them she would always be an outsider, and a xeno one at that.

New Eden was the largest habitable planet in the system with the largest population outside Welksmund and Lamplight, and yet the planet was mostly vast areas of rural farmland. And Hastaña was as rural as they came. “It's grapf* country,” Director Campbell had told her. “Finest wines in the Hub come from there.”

“And he’s now a grapf farmer?” she asked.

“It’s vintner,” the director corrected her. “And no. I’m told his grandparents were. But he just lives in one of the old villas out there. The grapf-fields are collectivized now, owned in trust by the company.”

So she had been fascinated to see the fields, expecting them to grow like the Rishi** fields on Heavensfall. Fields of grain waving in the breeze as far as the eye could see. But grapf was a fruit, and instead there was row upon row of vines growing taller than three humans. The thumb sized fruit came in either green or white, with a hard outer rind, and grew in hanging clusters. The Valhallanders had been fermenting them into wines for as long as they’d been in the Hub. Longer, as they’d brought the fruit with them to the planet.

Rows of vines stretched away, covering the hills and valleys as far as the eye could see, except for the occasional house or barn or winery. The dirt road they were on headed straight through the grapf-fields towards one such house. It was a modest two story house atop a hill, with a veranda that ran around the entire structure on the second floor. Two white pillars framed the steps leading up to the front door. A neatly mowed lawn, well maintained outbuildings, and a wooden fence finished the idyllic homestead.

The repulsor car came to a stop, its engines shutting off, then fell to a gentle landing in the driveway at the foot of the front steps. The car's auto driver chimed out a friendly, “You have arrived at your destination.”

Sariah opened the door and stepped out. She grimaced at the humid heat and took off her jacket, tossing it back onto the seat of the car. She snatched up her bag and closed the car door. She’d expected someone to notice her arrival, but no one had come out to greet her. She climbed the front steps into the shade of the porch. No one answered when she rang the bell. She waited and rang again. Knocking didn’t even bring anyone to the door.

She peeked through the curtained windows, seeing a neat and orderly sitting room. But there was no movement, and no one was sitting inside.

She walked back down the porch, circling the house. At the rear she found an entrance to the kitchen. A screen door was closed, keeping the bugs out, but the house door was open. She saw no movement in the house, though a large pot was simmering on the stove. There was bread and cut vegetables sitting on a small table with four chairs around it.

“Anyone home?” she called, but there was no answer. She tried the door, and it was unlocked. She just let it swing shut again. She didn’t feel right entering a house without being invited. She looked around the yard, listening for any movement. Far away a large piece of equipment could be heard going about the fields. Insects buzzed. A wispy cloud passed in front of the sun, and a light, but still cool, breeze ruffled her hair.

She did hear something else. It sounded like music, something acoustic. It was coming from one of the outbuildings. She trudged across the neat grass lawn towards it, the music getting clearer. The door to the building was open enough to step through sideways. It was a workshop, filled with the tools and machinery for the design and construction of robotics. A radio was playing at the back of the shop, and a man was sitting at a table, carefully assembling components.

Sariah didn’t venture any further into the building. She waited for the man to finish putting two parts together, and as he shifted his attention to something else, she coughed loudly. He looked up, a pair of glasses making his eyes appear comically large. He put the parts down and stood up.

“Hello?” he said.

“Are you Captain Morrison?” she asked.

He removed the glasses, placing them next to what she could see was a partially assembled neural processor. “I used to be Captain Morrison,” he said, “but I’m retired. Call me Valentine.” He offered his hand.

Sariah stepped forward and shook it. “I’m Sariah Sun, head of Military Research at Londergran Station.”

He nodded, chewing the side of his upper lip. “I know who you are,” he said. “The tail gives it away. And the horns.”

His response put her off. It wasn’t said with any derision, just matter-of-fact. She supposed it was that she was the only one of her species in the Hub, and one of the few aliens allowed in-system. So of course he’d know who she was on sight. “I’m here on behalf of Director Campbells office,” she informed him.

There was a brief pause. “Ah,” he said. “I suppose we should talk in the house.”

He didn’t wait for a response, instead brushing past her and heading outside. He walked fast, and she had to jog to keep up. He let himself into the kitchen, holding the door for her to follow. “Have a seat,” he said, gesturing to a chair at the small table. He checked on the food simmering on the stove, giving it a quick stir, before putting the lid back on and raising the temperature of the burner a little bit.

“You’re accent?” he asked., sitting in a chair across from her. He grabbed a loaf of bread, tearing off an end and started buttering it. “Is that a hint of Tellusian?”

“I grew up on Rusenna,” she answered.

He pointed to himself with his knife, butter still on the end. “I was born on Nova Rem.”

“I know,” she responded. “I read the dossier the company has on you.”

His eyebrow twitched a little at her words. “So what can I do for Director Campbell’s office?” he asked.

“There’s been an issue with one of our fleet officers,” she explained. “Do you know Captain Douglas Merrill.”

He shook his head, passing her the piece of buttered bread. Not wanting to appear rude she took it as he tore off another piece for himself.

“Well late last night…” she paused, realizing the time difference between here and the station. “A few hours ago,” she corrected, “the director received a letter from the captain where he laid out his plan to carry out a series of hit-and-run attacks against Ithorian, Yviiri, and Kalorian patrol forces within the Dead Zone with the express purpose of starting a conflict between them.”

“And you approached me with this information because…?” he asked.

She checked her time piece, calculating how long it had been. Campbell would already have given them the letter, and the directorate was still likely meeting over the matter. “In the next hour, if not two, the company is going to put the fleet on high alert and send ships after him. But with the head start Merrill has, it’s pretty much assured he’s going to make it into the Dead Zone before they catch up to him.”

Valentine chewed his piece of bread, never looking away from her. Sariah took the time to try the piece of bread he’d given her. It was delicious, and she nervously ate the rest of the piece.

“And unless they want to inform all those major powers that one of their own went rogue, there’s nothing they can do. Because if they follow him into the zone it’ll be considered a hostile incursion into occupied space?” Sariah didn’t even bother confirming it, but her silence was enough confirmation for him. “So you need my ship.” He leaned back as he said it, still chewing on the last bit of bread.

“The dossier says that your ship is more advanced than anything in this region.”

“Human ones, yeah. But the Valkyrie’s never gone up against a Kalorian vessel. Or an Yviiri one. I’m not looking to pit my ship against one of theirs.”

“This is the same ship that took on six Tellusian Heavy Cruisers at the battle of Olbea? The dossier says you were her commander then too.”

He put his butter knife down on the table. “I don’t know how much that dossier says, but it should tell you that the deal I made with the company, the one that let’s me live here in semi-retirement, says they’ll never bother me as long as the Valkyrie stays outside the Hub. With the exclusion of Lamplight.”

“I read that part,” she said. “What I didn’t read in the dossier is how your ship is currently sitting in an industrial wasteland on Welksmund hiding from our scanners. Thus invalidating the deal you made with the company…”

“Alright," he said, cutting her off. “How long has the company known?”

“They don’t,” she answered. “Outside of me and Director Campbell. We have access to much better scanners than the rest of the company.”

He leaned forward, resting his elbows on the table and leaning his bearded chin on his folded hands. He looked directly into her eyes, a look of new respect for her on his face. “Alright so we both know the state of the board,” he said with amusement. “This leads to my final question. What’s in it for me?”

“I don’t turn your ship’s location over to the company,” she said.

He sat up straight, laying his still folded hands on the edge of the table. “You’re not going to do that,” he scoffed. “You need my ship, remember? No, you’re going to give me something in trade. Tell the director he’ll owe me a favor in the future, something big. He can’t say no when I come to collect.”

“And what will the favor be?”

“I don’t know yet. But I’m sure I’ll think of something. I don’t really think he’s in a position to turn me down.”

Sariah didn’t say anything. She listened to the sound of the pot on the stove simmering, smelling the rich smell of whatever he was cooking. She realized she’d been up most the night and hadn’t eaten in a few hours. “I’ll run it by the director,” she said. “But I want something too.” She pointed at the bread laying on the table. “More of that, and a bowl of whatever’s on the stove.”


She’d stepped outside to make a call to the director, and Valentine took the opportunity to freshen up. He washed the sweat and grime from his face and combed the tangles out of his hair. His beard needed a trim, he’d let it start going wild.

He never would have let it go back when he still wore a uniform. But the war had ended twenty years ago. He’d tried to keep the fire alive, dreaming of creating a renewed resistance among those who’d fled the Republic after the war. But bit by bit he’d lost his way. With every compromise, every job taken just to eat, he’d slowly gone from noble renegade to pirate and highwayman.

He noticed, and not for the first time, the wrinkles around his eyes. His hair was starting to gray at the temples, and even his beard wasn’t as dark as it had once been.

He splashed cold water on his face, and combed his beard down. He pushed the thoughts of the past down. Things had changed and he’d changed along the way. Wasn’t that what life was about? Change?

He heard Sariah return to the kitchen, the screen door closing with a thump behind her. He stepped into his bedroom and went to the small wardrobe on the far wall. Inside was a worn leather bag, packed and ready for him to grab in a hurry. It had a few sets of close and other stuff necessary for a quick get away.

He grabbed the bag and tossed it onto his bed. He pulled out a few more items from his wardrobe and tossed them on top.; another jacket, and a heavier coat. He also pulled out the small blast-pistol he kept at the bottom of the wardrobe, checked it’s charge level, and then tossed it on top of the pile.

He checked his room to see if there was anything else he’d need when he left. His eyes fell on a picture next to his bed. It was an old image. A young officer in his Tellusian dress blues, a beautiful smiling woman standing next to him holding a small child in her arms. He stepped over and picked it up, the thoughts of the past coming back unbidden.

He traced the face of the woman with his index finger, remembering how soft her skin was. He caught a smell of the perfume she’d worn, the rich herbal scent. Her smile, and his, so long ago. What seemed like many lives ago.

He was shocked from his reverie by metal clanking against glass. He then remembered the alien woman in his kitchen. “Everything alright?” he hollered towards the kitchen. Realizing that tears had appeared at the bottom of his eyes he wiped them away with his sleeve.

“Just trying to get some butter,” Sariah called back. “And I dropped the knife.”

“Go ahead and serve yourself some stew,” he told her. “Bowls are in the cupboard above the sink, and spoons are in the drawer by the stove.”

He heard her open the cupboard and take something out of it. He gave the picture one last look and reached out with it to put it back on the nightstand. But he hesitated. Reconsidered. Then he tossed it on top of the pile. He’d pack everything once he’d eaten.

He turned and headed out of the bedroom.

Some of Adam’s Blues - Quaker City Night Hawks

*Rishi: A species of grain with a dark purple kernel, grown as a cereal grain in the Hub and used to make the alcoholic beverage Hawq.
**Grapf: A type of vine fruit that grows in clusters, each fruit having a hard outer rind and juicy inner flesh. Grapf is used to make wines in much the same way as grapes and may have a genetic link to earth grapes.
 
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Dead Zone Border

October 4, 2957

“Final phase jump complete,” Zabaiev reported as captain Merrill yawned to pop his ears. The captain gave a curt nod to acknowledge the statement. He looked about the bridge, watching his crew perform their post-jump duties. Helm was already checking their actual position against the plotted one, seeing how far off they were so that the computer could readjust for their next calculations. Engineering would be charging up the capacitors for their next jump. But mostly, Merrill looked to see if any of the bridge stations had any alarms chiming. But all was quiet, aside from the normal sounds of machinery and men and women going about their duties.

Zabaiev provided the jump report as soon as it was finished. It had taken the computer just under nine seconds to calculate. Merrill took the hand-held from his Executive Officer and looked it over.

“Our position offage was zero?” he asked in surprise.

“It was below the decimal threshold so the computer logged it as zero,” the XO replied, his back straight and the slightest proud smile curled the corners of his lip.

“A 6.2 light-year jump, and our position was off by less than what the computer could calculate?” the captain shook his head in good natured disbelief. “That is beyond fantastic. Quartermaster!” he called.

A blonde man in his late twenties walked up and stood at attention beside Merrill’s chair. “Sir!” he said.

“A glass of hawq for the entire crew with dinner tonight,” the captain ordered.

“Yes, sir!” the quartermaster replied with a smile.

“Well done!” Merril said to everyone around the bridge. “This is the finest crew in the Star Force. I have no doubts. You should all be proud of your performance.”

He was met with a chorus of “Thank you, sir!” with smiles and back pats all around.

The capacitors would take three quarters of an hour to recharge, so he had the ship hold position, though her initial drift was in the direction of the Dead Zone. In the meantime it was customary in the MTA Star Force for the commanding officer to post the ship’s operational orders and exhort the crew to carry them out at the highest professional standard. Merrill posted the orders for all to see outside the ship’s entertainment suite. This was a room with three couches and a handful of electronic game consoles, as well as a collection of books and literature, for the crew to relax in between shifts.

Merrill had decided to disclose their orders the day after they’d set out to give his crew a chance to settle into the ship’s routine. This also had given him enough time to take the ship just beyond the last buoy of the Star-Net, so should one of his staff officers have doubts to the legitimacy of their orders, they’d be unable to make a secret call to command to double check.

Merrill also decided, due to the uncharacteristic orders, to hold a crew meeting at 27:30 hours, just twenty minutes shy of when the capacitors would be at full charge. Those not currently on duty were required to attend. He held the meeting in the main mess on deck seven, the only room large enough for the whole crew to gather.

He stood at the end of the mess, a small podium having been placed for him to stand at. He’d written down a few notes, but mostly would wing-it. He had never been particularly good at public speaking, but found when it came to rallying his men, improvisation was more of his strong suit.

“Compatriots,” he said, clearing his throat after. “Officers and crew of the Repentant Sky! You all know that our beloved friend and first officer, Commander Aaron Maximillian, died yesterday in a tragic accident. Our orders do not permit us to inform fleet command, nor to return his body for proper interment. But we will dedicate our efforts to the memory of our compatriot, a fine shipmate, a loyal company man, and a courageous officer.”

He paused for a moment, pretending to read his next note card. In truth, he felt slightly sick to even say such things about a man whose sole purpose was to rat on his crewmates to the directorate and the astroconsul. But he had to maintain the ruse, for the sake of his true mission.

“Compatriots!” he continued. “We have orders from fleet command and the MTA directorate, and they are orders truly worthy of the men and women serving on this ship.

“Our orders are to be the ultimate test of the Sky’s upgrades for which she has gone under extensive refits over the last nine months. As some of you already know, we phase-jumped out from the most core ward Star-Net buoy. Yes, we are headed into the Dead Zone! The people of the Hub were not part of the fight against the Leviathan, but we know all too well how dangerous that enemy was. To look into the eyes of the Avalonian refugees who had fled to Lamplight and Welksmund was to see the true horror of the beast. The fate of the Avalonian systems was to make sure it would remain evermore devoid of life, least a fragment of the beast spread again. But now the Yviiri, the Kalorians, and even the Ithorians have deployed more and more ships into the Dead Zone and this may be a prelude to hostilities. Our orders are to pass through the Dead Zone, scouting out the old Avalonian worlds, taking stock of the fleet sizes and composition of the major powers there.”

Merrill looked up at his crew who had sat silently through the meeting. He’d expected shock and surprise on their faces, but instead saw determined grins and expectant nods. He supposed they were eager to prove themselves. The men and women of the MTA rarely left the Hub, and when they did it was on a deep space patrol, or less likely to a neighboring star system on official company business. To undertake this mission would be as close to fighting in glorious battle as anyone here could hope to get to.

Merrill changed the card in his hand. He had given them the good news. It was time to give them the bad.

“This mission will not be easy. The Sky has been outfitted with new sensor blocking technology which we hope will render us invisible to any scans, but do not doubt for a second the danger of this mission. If we are caught, we are not to allow the major powers to know of our origins from the Hub. We are to destroy any ship that attempts to stop us in carrying out our mission, or to destroy our own lest we betray the motherworld. Every officer and crewman aboard must do their duty to the company and the motherworld. Make your compatriots proud! That is all.” Merrill set his last card down on the podium and stepped away. The crew stood up and saluted him as he left. It hadn’t been a bad speech, he decided. Short and to the point. He checked his timepiece. It had only taken him three minutes.

He was able to grab a bite to eat in the officers mess on the third deck. The chef had made him a sandwich; a bacon lettuce and tomato. The tomato was still firm and fresh, and the lettuce crunchy. The bacon sadly didn’t measure up, and was too chewy for his liking. The flavor told him it wasn’t made from pork (which had to be imported to the Hub) but was instead likely some other type of meat that may be better not knowing.

At 27:45 he returned to the bridge. He was greeted by subcommander James Agar, who had the watch. “Capacitors are nearly full,” Agar reported. “Do we have jump coordinates?”

Merrill provided them, and took a seat as Agar distributed them to the helmsman and navigator. The navigator began plotting the course, trajectory, and energy required for the jump. As soon as they had the numbers, the helm entered them into the computer. Once the calculations had been entered, Agar returned to the Captain and reported the readiness of all stations.

“Make sure we use all phase-energy during our jump, subcommander,” Merrill ordered. “I want no bleed over.”

“Sir?” Agar asked, confused.

“I don’t want us venting any heat on the other side of the jump. Nothing that will set off any passive sensors. Do you understand? A one hundred percent energy drain.”

Agar nodded, and gave the order to navigation and helm so they could update their calculations. Merrill doubted the major powers had set up any kind of deep space sensor network. The size and cost of it would be staggering. They’d have networks closer to the dead planets. That was a given. But he had no intention of being caught on their first jump. He intended to evade capture as long as possible. Long enough to do as much damage as he could. He busied himself with the pre-jump checklist, making sure each department was ready. The capacitors slowly filled with phase-energy.

Way Down We Go - KALEO
 

Outland Barrens, Welksmund

October 4, 2957

The MTA transport shuddered as it entered the atmosphere. Sariah shifted in her seat trying to get her tail in a position where her weight didn’t crush it with each shake of the craft.

“Touch down in two minutes,” the MTA pilot called from the shuttle’s cockpit. “There ain't much out there. You sure this is where you want to be dropped off?”

“The coordinates are correct,” Sariah answered, wincing as a jostle pushed her down onto her tail.

Captain Morrison was unbothered by the shaking. He sat with one leg crossed over his knee, while reading a book. He turned a page gently even as the shaking pushed him against his harness. “You look uncomfortable,” he said, looking up from his reading to see the pained look in her eyes. “Not a fan of orbital landing craft?”


“Not a fan of human seats,” she moaned.

His eyes flicked to her tail then back to her face. “I’ll try to remedy that on the Valkyrie.”

“There’s no need for that,” she said, wincing as another jolt rocked the shuttle. “I’m not gonna be aboard that long. Just until we find the Repentant Sky.”

“You expect us to catch him quickly?” Morrison asked while reading his book.

“It may take a few days, I know. But your ship has a longer jump range so we should be able to catch up to him in three or four jumps.”

Captain Morrison turned another page on his book. “You seem to know a lot about my ship.”

“Only what I’ve read in reports. I know you can make it across the Ithorian border from here in under two days.” The violent shuddering of the shuttle had nearly stopped, replaced by a continuous low shaking as they flew above the planet's surface towards their landing spot. “The MTA has a far more extensive dossier on you and your ship then you’d probably like to think.”

He didn’t look up at her statement, just raised an eyebrow while he continued to read. “And it will be even more extensive once you get back,” he stated wryly, though she could see a half grin forming on his face. “If I didn’t need your access to the star-net and your connections to the MTA…”

“Yeah, you’re glad to have me along,” she rolled her eyes. They stopped talking then as the pilot let them know they were a minute out. Captain Morrison didn’t acknowledge, he just continued to read his book. She wondered why he even bothered with such an outdated means of knowledge storage. A data pad would be far lighter, and could carry an immense amount more information than a cumbersome printed book.

“What are you reading?” she asked him, her curiosity getting the better of her. She’d tried reading the title but it was in a form of writing she was unfamiliar with. The illustration on the cover was of some strange winged humanoid creature falling through clouds.

“Paradise Lost,” he answered,raising the book up so she could get a better look. “In the original English.” He must have noticed the confused look on her face because he clarified some more. “It’s a book from Old Terra, written in one of their old dialects. I learned how to read it from my mother.”

“What’s it about?” she asked.

Her question made him laugh. It was a good natured laugh, not meant to be derisive. “That would require me explaining a bit of Earth mythology,” he told her. “Do you know what the Devil is?”

“I don’t think I’ve heard of him. Was he…” Her answer was interrupted by the pilot calling out, “On final approach. There’s a heavily westerly wind so the landing might be a bit rough.”


Captain Morrison put the book ribbon between the pages he was on and closed the book. He held onto it as the shuttle banked steeply to the portside, descending rapidly. Sariah felt her stomach rise in her throat, but the heavy banking had pushed her against her harness and relieved the pressure on her tail. The shuttle came to a rest with a heavy thud, but they were finally on solid ground.

Sariah unhooked the harness clasp and stood up quickly, rubbing some of the ache out of her tail. Captain Morrison was a little more relaxed, releasing his harness and putting his book back in his duffle bag before standing up. He grabbed a pair of respirators from the shuttles overhead storage.

“There’s a lot of silica dust and other toxic particulates in the air out here,” he explained, passing one of the respirators to her. “You don’t want to breathe any of that crap in.”

She clasped the respirator snuggly over her mouth and nose. He also handed her a pair of goggles to protect their eyes. Once they were both ready he signaled to the pilot, who opened the inner hatch to the airlock. They stepped in. It was a tight fit, with barely any room between them. The inner door closed and they heard a hiss cycled. The outer door opened and the airlock was immediately filled with dust, swirling in on a heavy wind.

They stepped down the shuttle ramp into the full force of the wind. It was a barren and inhospitable place. The moon had been terraformed just enough to support life, and then slowly stripmined for resources, leaving a broken and desolate landscape.

The ground was made up of broken and crumbling rock slag that crunched under her feet as Sariah walked. It was like walking on both sand and beach rock at the same time. She had to shift her center of mass lower, worried she would fall.

“Head towards that rock outcrop towards the south,” Captain Morrison’s voice said, sounding electronic from the speaker built into his respirator. He pressed controls on the outside of the shuttle and the ramp retracted as the outer doors closed. He pointed her in the direction they needed to go. She saw the rock outcrop about three miles out, and followed him as he headed off that way. Behind them the shuttle made a loud rushing noise as it lifted off and climbed back towards orbit.

“How far is the ship?” she asked, her voice amplified by the microphone. “Is it past the outcropping”

“We won't have to go that far,” he answered. From his pocket he pulled out a small device and clicked a button on it. A green light at the top blinked. Then in front of them the terrain shimmered like a wave of heat was rising up before them. Then the shimmer took the shape of a vessel, and then the ship was right there in front of them in full view. “A visual cloaking shield,” he explained with amusement in his voice, even through the speaker. “I bet your dossier didn’t have that in it.”


They were lifted up into the ship by a cargo into the main hold. They were greeted by a wethered man at the top of the lift. He was dressed in a worn black leather coat, and though he had a fierce five o’clock shadow, his hair was cut in a short military crop.

“I want you to know how hard it is getting a crew together at the last moment,” he informed the captain as the cargo hold doors closed below their feet. He gave a curious look to Sariah, but didn’t seem surprised at her being there. “Most of our go-to’s were either off-world or drunk into oblivion.”

“Sariah Sun, this is my executive officer, Isaac Wolfstern,” Valentine introduced the man.

Isaac held out his hand, which Sariah shook perfunctory. He in return seemed uninclined to do more than acknowledge her presence. He released her hand and immediately went back to speaking with Valentine. “We don’t have a full complement. Hell we don’t even have a complement. I wouldn’t even stretch it far enough to say we have a skeleton crew.”

Valentine took it all in stride, leading Sariah and Isaac across a suspiciously empty cargo hold. “Who do we have?” he asked.

“Well Og and Drel, but they were already on board…”

“They’re always on board,” Valentine interjected.

Isaac ignored him and continued. “Cameron and Jeorda arrived here just before you, and Bethany will be here any moment.”

“Who else?” Valentine reached the elevator and pressed the button. The doors opened with a soft hiss and they stepped inside. He pressed a button and the elevator raced upwards.

“No one planetside. Most of our regular mercs have been splurging our last payday on Hawq and Moebian Bliss.”

“Last payday?” Sariah asked, chiming in for the first time.

“Nothing illegal,” Valentine assured her. “Well, at least nothing illegal here in the Hub.” He turned back to Isaac. “What about off-world?”

“Annabelle was the only one I could reach. She said she could meet us at Revelry, and she’d have Petrov and Markov with her.”

“Alright, so we make a quick pit stop and pick them up. That’s not too bad.”

“That’s barely enough to run the ship.”

“It’ll be enough. We’ve got Abby.”

“Who’s Abby?” Sariah asked.

A mechanical voice then came on over the intercom. “Hello. I am Abby. Sindaxo Virtual Interface Module AB-8Y. I am an all-purpose Virtual Intelligence starship interface.”

“Oh,” Sariah said. “Nice to meet you.” She then looked towards Valentine. “A ship’s AI?”

“Yes, quite advanced. We picked it up on one of our travels. It’s fully integrated into our ship, and nearly capable of full automation. So we can run the ship with a small crew. Which means bigger shares.”

The elevator came to a stop. The doors opened to reveal the ship's bridge. She was surprised at how small the command bridge was, despite the ship’s size. A single command chair at the center. Two forward stations, one was likely helm, the other navigation and communications, and then a handful of other stations to either side. She’d been on corvettes half the Valkyrie’s size with larger bridges.

Only one person was on the bridge. He was sitting to the side at one of the stations. When they entered he rose to his feet. Sariah had never seen one of his species before. He was tall and wiry, with a rodent-like face, and fine short hairs covering his entire body. He was dressed casually in trousers and a plain shirt.

“Ship’s engines are warming up,” the alien reported.

“Thank you Drel,” Valentine responded. “Let me know once Bethany is aboard so we can get underway.”

“Yes, sir,” Drel said. “Who’s the new recruit?” he asked, nodding towards Sariah.

“Sariah Sun,” he introduced her. “She’s here as an advisor.”

Drel’s fuzzy ears twitched. “What kind of advisor?”

“An advisor for the company,” Isaac answered flatly, taking a seat at the helm.”

“Ah,” Drel mused. “We contracting with the MTA now?”

Valentine shook his head. “Only this once. Extenuating circumstances. Miss Sun is only here to help us track down a mark.”

Drel’s ears twitched even more at that statement. But he seemed to have run out of questions because he sat back down at his station. “Bethany’s aboard,” he reported.

Valentine signaled to Isaac. “Take us up.”

And then Sariah felt the ship lift off the ground. It wasn’t a lurching motion. Nor were there any heavy G’s pressing her down. All she felt was a shifting in her gut as the ship rose up into the sky and made its way out of the atmosphere.

As the ship climbed into the sky Drel half turned his head to the captain. “So who’s the mark?”

“I’ll brief you all after we pick up the rest of our crew from Revelry.” Valentine answered.

Drel’s ears wiggled. “Well can I at least know if we're taking them dead or alive?”

Valentine gave a quick sidelong glance to Sariah before answering. “Either, though I have a feeling the MTA would prefer dead.”

“That’ll make things easier,” Drel said turning back to his screen.

Sariah just stood there shocked. The way they were casually discussing the possibility of killing someone. What kind of people was she dealing with?

Through the Valley - Shawn James
 
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