Monday, December 31, 2012
Tuesday, December 18, 2012
Saturday, August 4, 2012
Vampire Alien Chronicles FREE
Free for five days starting 8/05/2012
Free for five days starting 8/05/2012
I ripped the Other from its perch but its free foot lashed out at me and caught me flush on the side of my jaw. Even as we fell a hiss of pain momentarily drew my attention to the roof line of the home adjoining Brid's, and I was in time to see the blood splashed visage of one of the Others falling back from the roofs edge. It had turned to see what would become of its companion, possibly even to come to its aid, and had found itself an easy target for one of Sonafi's home-made thrown missiles. Even as I fell towards the ground, still fiercely gripping the ankle of the Other I had pounced upon on the wall, I heard the thump of the one Sonafi had attacked as it fell and the thrashing as it kicked out its death throes. It would not survive.
As we fell the creature twisted and swiveled upon me, its tiny mouth twisted into the rictus of hatred with which I was so familiar with the Others. In its right hand was a shiny object. The moonlight glinted momentarily from its reflective surface. A small blade. As it turned on me, its right-hand came across its body, the blade plunging at my face. I slapped it aside in mid-strike, its speed like that of an uncoiling spring, but the being was many times my juvenile and I was never in any real danger. The blade went spinning away out of his hand and bounced against the wall before vanishing into the night. This all at hyper acceleration. We had barely even begun to fall. The velocity generated by gravity miniscule compared to the capabilities of both Vampire and Others. We seemed to fall in slow motion.
As we fell the creature twisted and swiveled upon me, its tiny mouth twisted into the rictus of hatred with which I was so familiar with the Others. In its right hand was a shiny object. The moonlight glinted momentarily from its reflective surface. A small blade. As it turned on me, its right-hand came across its body, the blade plunging at my face. I slapped it aside in mid-strike, its speed like that of an uncoiling spring, but the being was many times my juvenile and I was never in any real danger. The blade went spinning away out of his hand and bounced against the wall before vanishing into the night. This all at hyper acceleration. We had barely even begun to fall. The velocity generated by gravity miniscule compared to the capabilities of both Vampire and Others. We seemed to fall in slow motion.
Saturday, July 28, 2012
Tanya
The burst from her left hand blaster flashed just above the
floor and barely caught the edge of the front entrance, the explosion terrific
but the two humans were already out of the explosion’s main concussive force.
Not pausing as they entered to fire, but rushing forward instead, saved their
lives. The blast still sent both flying to the floor. Tanya didn’t have any
more time to think about them for the moment. Even as her left hand blaster
fired, Tanya was trying to bring the right hand blaster to align on the lizard.
It’d been buffeted only a little and it was swinging its weapon around even as
Tanya was raising hers.
Friday, July 20, 2012
Antz First Trilogy FREE!
Gregory Matlin looked up from his work
as klaxon's and lights began to ring and flash, not only in his
little electronics shop, but in the wide corridor outside his shop as
well.
He had only purchased this place four
months ago, but he had never seen the alarms triggered like this in
that span. Several gawkers out in the corridor seemed as confused as
he, but these were obviously tourists, judging by their outlandish
garb.
“Attention residents and tourists of
Anton Brusele Station,” the intercom spoke as the alarms silenced.
Gregory recognized the voice of Anton Brusele the Third, as it was
with him that Gregory had made the arrangements to purchase this
little retirement spot to practice some of the skills he had learned
as a fighter and troop transport pilot within the employ of the Space
Corps Infantry Division of the United Federation of Worlds Space
Corps Fleet. In between engagements, anyway. A forty year hitch he
had barely survived, one which none of his friends had, but it was a
wide Universe and most races humans encountered were entirely
unfriendly.
“I have bad news,” Anton Brusele
the Third went on, “and I'm not exactly sure how to say it, so I'm
just going to say it.” In the short pause that followed, Gregory
Matlin was already moving. He didn't know what he was about to hear,
but forty years in the Service had taught him not to be caught with
his pants down. He wasn't surprised when he heard the rest of the
announcement. “According to Military sources, an unknown alien
element has breached the Protected Zone, destroying a section of the
Automated Defensive Shield with, I was told, little hindrance. I am
informed that they will be here by tomorrow morning at the latest.”
Screams of hysterical tourists, mixed
with the yelled commands of men and women taking charge, most of the
Station's permanent residents were ex-military personnel of one kind
or another, Spacers tended to prefer remaining in space after
completing their hitches, dominated the air. Gregory was most of the
way into a space suit and that after removing the side arm he never
went anywhere without, except the toilet, shower or bed, and shortly
was re-buckling it back into place over his lightweight, flexible
suit. After the sidearm came the helmet, which adjusted itself after
he had put it in place, then he was moving towards the exit.
Though he locked the door on his way
out, Gregory doubted he would see the place, and his considerable
investment therein, ever again. He was seldom wrong about such
things. Anton Brusele Station was right on the Fringe. A small Jump
from the Protected Zone. He had been a fool, but it had been a long
time since any race man had encountered had proved technologically
advanced enough to breach the Zone, much less breach it with little
hindrance. If they had breached the Zone with little hindrance,
there was nothing man could throw in their way soon enough to halt
their advance upon Brusele Station.
Not that the military would
throw anything away to attempt to save Brusele Station. Brusele
Station was lightly armed and could put up a defense against the
average pirate, but she was by no means what you would call armed
by military standards. Unarmed, she had no military value, thus, the
military would not value her. They would throw away no ships in a
suicidal attempt to save her.
Much of a hardened sort, Gregory
Matlin had made few friends here in the four months on Brusele
Station, but he had met a woman. An Officer of the Corps
Intelligence, now retired like himself, and about as unfriendly a
person as he had ever met. They had taken to one another immediately.
She was now the only person he thought of in the mad rush for the
evacuation vessels he knew would be coming in from every available
location.
“Mary Beth Holter.” Gregory
thought, the cue all that was necessary to attempt the communication.
She responded immediately.
“Yes I heard! How could I have
missed it!”
“Need a lift?” Gregory asked,
though he knew the answer.
“I should ask you that. That little
minnow might get you swallowed up.”
“Broke through the Zone with little
hindrance!” Gregory repeated what he had heard.
“Take some doing.” Mary Beth
Holter said, then in a softer tone; “Kinda grown fond of you.”
“Where you going?” Gregory asked.
Though they had been seeing one another for the past three months,
neither really had ever spoken of it in that way. They were both too
tough, to querulous and gruff and impersonal to allow such
sentiments.
“I guess it will be Stanton Station.
We should have them stopped by then.”
“If they don't . . . ” Gregory
said, leaving the thought hang. “I'll see you there.”
“They have to.” Mary Beth said.
“I'll see you there.”
The line made the little sound that
meant it had been disconnected, although of course there was no
actual sound. The brain interpreted the signals as sound, just as it
interpreted vibrations on the eardrum as sound. Same principle, just
added into the circuit farther up the line. Gregory was running.
Wherever Mary Beth was, he knew one thing for sure, she was running
also. An unknown enemy meant unknown technology. An unknown
technology meant an unknown Propulsion System. Gregory Matlin did not
trust the assessment that this enemy would not be here until tomorrow
morning theory!
Once
installed in his little ship, the best of everything money could buy
besides square meter-age, he was only moments getting free of Brusele
Station. It was a free-for-all of ships clearing the Station but few
had gotten ahead of him and none could've caught him once in the
freedom of open space.
Piloting
his little minnow, as Mary Beth liked to call his Transient,
between a huge liner that had not even gotten docked and was now
turning ponderously away, and a large luxury yacht, the liner, of
Trans Verse Lines, cutting it very close, Gregory applauded the
piloting, it was clear the liner's pilot was an expert, but hadn't
counted on the little Transient flying between.
On one side was
what to all extents and purposes was a massive cliff like wall of
liner, on the other the bulk of the luxury yacht, it's nose still
embedded in the side of Brusele Station. Despite the gravity field of
Transient's propulsion system the mass and inertia of the huge liner
would smear him all the way down the side of the yacht if they were
merely to touch. The pilot of the liner was cutting it close. It was
reversing and turning at the same time, normally a procedure that
could cost a commercial pilot his license, but under the
circumstances might earn him a citation. If the liner escaped. A
luxury liner would have no need of a propulsion system in a ratio
proportionate to that of Transients. Luxury liners weren't designed
for fast trips. Transient was.
Gregory slammed
his control toggle all the way up and felt only the slightest inertia
as Transient flipped over and dropped like a runaway elevator. In
most cases you weren't supposed to feel any reaction at all but
Transient had too much drive field for her own good. Or at least in
most cases.
Gregory watched
expectantly as the liner closed the gap between itself and Transient.
Transient was already but less than a meter from the yacht behind it
and Gregory still couldn't see the bottom of the liner. This
particular liner might've been as large as a small moon and could
carry twenty or thirty thousand passengers in complete luxury.
Some of those
passengers might've noticed Transient as it passed, but if they did,
by this time all they saw was a blur. Then Transient was beyond and
accelerating out into open space beyond, the first ship to . . .
A blip he had his
computer programmed to recognize was out there ahead of him, though
he was slowly gaining on it. Before he could pull close it vanished
into the spectacular light show that was Jump.
“How in the
hell!” Gregory swore, but there was no answer. Communications
between the dimensions, or normal long-distance communications at the
span they would now be separated, were not possible with either
Transients technology or his internal link. Gregory allowed his
computer to plot a Jump, then both he and ship disappeared into its
maw.
Gregory
exited Jump well behind Mary Beth, fourteen minutes after he and
Transient had entered. Jump velocity was fixed, of course, nor did
velocity at entrance matter except in the minimum velocity
requirement. Try going into Jump too slow and you wouldn't come back
out. Most theories on the subject tended towards the belief that you
were separated at the atomic level and spread across a vast section
of Real Space, that a certain velocity was required to make the push
through the dimensions, or folds of space, though nothing had ever
been conclusively determined on the subject.
“That was
foolish!” Gregory said when he regained contact with Mary Beth. She
had gone into Jump just above the required velocity, probably only
just to beat him.
“You forget my
instrumentation.” Mary Beth responded. “I was well within
tolerances. Better hurry up, slowpoke, or you won't get a berth.”
“I'll dock to
you and pay the berth.” Gregory said. “There's going to be a lot
of ships coming in.”
“Yeah.” Mary
Beth said. “I was trying not to think about that. Don't worry about
the fees, there aren't any. Military Emergency Act 2714.”
“Right.”
Gregory said, though of course he had never heard of it.
Gregory
followed her and her Mystical
into a plot relegated to the smallest of ships. Mystical wasn't as
small as Transient, but was still small enough for these berths.
Gregory set the autopilot to dock them and locked onto Mystical even
as she locked onto Stanton Station.
There were few
ships as small as Transient. Large sleeping quarters, a small
kitchenette, a very small head, a living/dining area and small rec
room. The rest of her area was made up of drive, reactor and
weaponry. She was overpowered in those areas, by some large
percentage. Mystical was three times her size, and for its credit,
almost as fast. Once docked, the two ships were essentially one.
“Slave your
engines over,” Mary Beth ordered, “then come over, if you like.”
Mary Beth was used
to giving orders, a full Bird in the Service before her retirement.
Gregory didn't argue with her. A man who had spent most of his life
alone, who had found it difficult to get along with those of the
opposite sex, he had somehow found it easy to give in to Mary Beth.
It was simply one of those things he had been unable to explain, it
simply was what it was. He slaved his computer over to hers, making
them in essence one ship with now nearly double the drive, and walked
into Mystical through the open hatchway.
Mary Beth sat at
the Captain's console reading a military briefing displayed there. Of
course she didn't look her sixty-eight years. Rejuvenation treatment
came free for Officers and at a reduced cost for all Service
personnel. Physically she was no more than twenty-six, her last Rejuv
having taken place right before her retirement. Rejuvenation was the
main reason the ranks and files of the Service were so full, when the
state of near constant warfare was perpetually thinning them.
Gregory's own hopes for an escape from military service, if he also
wished to maintain his youthfulness, would be destroyed with the
destruction of Brusele Station, if this new enemy force took interest
in it. All of his savings had been invested there.
“Admiral
Nelson Sandgarth and the 401st
Destroyer Detachment are proceeding to intercept.” Mary Beth said,
turning her beautiful eyes on me. Tragic, beautiful eyes. Those were
the eyes which had captivated me, but she was a beautiful woman in
every aspect, from her honey coloring to her muscular, 1.7 meter,
lithe frame. I knew why her eyes were tragic.
“What is her
complement?” Gregory asked.
“Nineteen
Destroyers and forty-seven Frigates.” Mary Beth said. “They are
essentially a police force. They were having piracy problems along
the Frontier here.”
“They'll
never stop a force that broke through the Zone with little
hindrance.” Gregory said,
setting his own youthful frame into the copilots lounge. Young in
body but old in spirit. “Warfare appears to be the natural state of
affairs. When I retired I vowed never to participate again. Now it
looks as if I'll have no choice.”
They had never
talked of such things. Each had had their own reasons for their
decisions. Perpetual youthfulness had not been enough to allay the
weight of the things he had done in mankind's name. If he had not
retired he might one day have turned the guns of his fighter or
transport on his own Commanding Officers. The Service Psychs must
have reported somewhat similar findings because he was given his
retirement without argument, when pilots of his skill were seldom
released graciously.
Mary Beth made no
comment and went back to the news release she was reading. She knew
she had never been as close to the actual fighting as had Gregory,
she knew she could never feel what he felt, but her reasons for
retiring had been similar. In her opinion man had forever been too
eager to make war on those races it had encountered. Complete
subjugation to mankind's rule or complete destruction. She had always
agreed that no enemies could be left within man's ranks, but those in
positions of authority had always gone farther than she would have.
Disarmament, she had always thought, should've been the answer.
Now however, Mary
Beth was not so sure. Now an alien race had come to them, showing an
aggression and an ability previously unknown to any but man. Maybe
war was the natural state of affairs and survival belonged only to
the fittest. Unlike Gregory, Mary Beth was not crushed by the weight
of the things she had done. The decisions which she had made that had
caused the deaths of untold enemies, the actual number of whom she
would never really guess. What she understood that Gregory did not
was that with which Gregory was made. Mary Beth Holter was an
instinctive commander of both men and women and what she had seen in
Gregory Matlin, why she had taken him both to her heart and her bed,
was the carbon which underlay his personality. It was something the
Psych Techs could never understand with all their ridiculous little
tests and questions. When the chips were down was when Gregory Matlin
would be up. He was a survivor.
Brusele Station
Anton
Brusele the Third sat in the luxuriously monstrous chair behind his
desk of real teak wood in his office aboard Brusele Station and
watched the monitors on the walls for the first telltale signs of
either the 401st
Destroyer Detachment or the incoming alien fleet which had breached
the barrier of the Protected Zone and according to reports was
heading directly towards him. He realized he was a fool for
remaining, but he wasn't the only fool to have done so. There were
still hundreds aboard who had refused to go, though there had been
plenty of available transport. His own yacht was still berthed in its
slip, its crew dismissed and gone, with their pay. He had heard the
military analysis, as had they all. He was surprised they were
attempting a military intervention at all.
More than likely,
Anton guessed, the Federation Destroyer Detachment would make a feint
to try and forestall further aggression, but would pull back if a
superior force continued its advance.
Everything Anton
Brusele the Third possessed was tied up in this Station, however. The
whole venture had been a calculated risk. His only insurance coverage
was for his remaining debts. The Station had only just begun to pay
for itself. Fifty years was the mortgage and then he would have
become a very rich man. To flee now, to flee the destruction of
Brusele Station, would only be to flee into poverty. Anton Brusele
the Third had decided to stay and pit his tiny guns against whatever
alien horde had broken through the Zone. He hadn't long to wait.
The screens on the
walls to his left erupted in brilliant colors, like a star suddenly
opening its eyelid and staring out in fusion brilliance. Out of the
blazing eye emerged the massive body of a Federation of Worlds
Destroyer, emerging slowly but steadily into a new existence. All
around it other points of light erupted, also spewing forth their
massive machines. Many, many more points of light spewed forth the
smaller Frigates.
On
Anton's screens the Detachment seemed like an invulnerable force, but
the military authorities had made no bones considering their
estimation of the Destroyer Detachments probability of success. The
401st
wouldn't have a snowballs chance in hell of successfully penetrating
the Protected Zone, so unless this unknown assailant had lost most of
its force just penetrating the Zone, they had no chance of stopping
them.
“This
is Anton Brusele the Third,” Anton said, hailing the 401st,
“welcome to Brusele Station.”
“Thank you. This
is Admiral Nelson Sandgarth. You are to evacuate.” Came the
response, nor did he sound particularly happy to find civilians still
aboard. “I'm sending a Frigate over. Your life is in grave danger.
Is there anyone else aboard?”
“No.” Anton
said slowly. He had already attempted to talk those who had remained
into leaving. Those who were too hardheaded to leave before now had
made up their minds. Anton didn't want to complicate Nelson
Sandgarth's job any more than it was already. “Just me, and I'm
staying. Brusele Station isn't completely defenseless. I'll fight for
what is mine. In any case, my time is up.” The right-hand screens
had begun to blossom with their own spots of brilliance, though these
were farther out.
“Jump
technology.” Anton heard Sandgarth say. “Last chance?”
Sandgarth added.
“Too late.”
Anton said. “Anyway, the Captain is supposed to go down with his
ship.”
“It's your
funeral. Good luck.” Then the circuit was dead. Anton brought his
weapons systems online, targeting the distant Armada still entering
Real Space.
There
was no question shortly that he had pulled his own hole card as the
unknown alien Armada continued to appear in Real Space. His computer
continued to annotate each distant blip with its schematics. The
ships coming through were huge,
some nearly the size of Brusele Station. They kept coming for four
hours, slowly advancing on Brusele Station to make room for the
smaller ships which followed. That lasted even longer. In the interim
Admiral Sandgarth docked a Frigate and took aboard several Stationers
who changed their minds. Anton had nothing beyond Brusele Station and
stayed with the few recalcitrant's, who, like himself, had their
entire investments tied up here. Several others, who owned small
ships, there were no ships of any size remaining now, he had sent
someone else on with his own, had taken up positions of defense
between the growing alien Armada and Brusele Station.
Admiral
Sandgarth and the 401st
slowly fell back as the alien Armada advanced. Anton still had some
hope he and Brusele Station wouldn't be destroyed, but it gradually
decreased over the day as it became obvious they were moving directly
towards him. He had never seen a Federation Detachment besides the
one now retreating, so this was his first glimpse of anything so
massive. These massive alien Capitol Class Ships literally dwarfed
the Luxury Liners which frequented Brusele Station, and there were
thousands of them. Later in the day, when the last of the advancing
alien Armada's ships had finally all entered Real Space, Anton
attempted a communication;
“This is Anton
Brusele the Third and this is Brusele Station, welcome, in the name
of mankind.” He sent this message out on every channel at his
disposal, but there was no response. The Armada just continued to
advance.
Admiral Sandgarth
sent out similar messages, which Anton viewed, and got a similar
response. Nothing.
“Admiral
Sandgarth, Sir.” Ensign Rawlings, a mere tech said, interrupting
his reverie. “The enemy has ceased advancing.”
“I
can see that.” Admiral Sandgarth said, but a little too harshly.
Like nearly everyone else in military service he appeared young. He
was young, physically.
In standard years he was two hundred-fourteen and felt the weight of
the years squarely on his shoulders as he assessed the strengths and
weaknesses of the advancing alien Armada.
He
refused, yet at this point, to call it an enemy
Armada. To do so would be to admit that he was powerless to stop what
would be the destruction of many millions of innocent human lives,
due to the fact that the Fleet had nothing close enough to stop them.
“We
are beginning to gather some preliminary findings.” Jennifer
McClury, his Chief Engineering Officer, said from her Station. “The
gravitational fields they are using are not
drive fields.”
“Then what are
they?” Sandgarth asked, not able to imagine what else they might
be.
“Purely
defensive, as we also use them.” Jennifer said. “Their drives
appear to be primitive fusion. Possibly Cold Fusion with helium 3,
but I wasn't able to get an accurate reading through their particle
fields. Unless their fusion engines are some type of backup, which I
can't imagine, they'll never be able to catch us, Sir.”
“Nor will we be
able to stop them!” Sandgarth said. “And we're the only thing
between them and several dozen inhabited worlds.”
“Not to mention
Brusele and Stanton Stations.” Lieutenant Commander Bradley Vincent
said.
“Do we have any
type of weapons analysis yet?” Sandgarth asked Vincent.
“We can't read
anything through their shields.” Lieutenant Commander Bradley
Vincent said.
“They're
attempting a full spectrum analysis of our own capabilities.”
Tamasia Dalby, his Chief Electrical Systems Engineer said. “They
can't read us any more than we can read them.”
“Yet they seem
to have no intention of communicating.” Sandgarth said. “They're
looking for weaknesses.”
“Or strengths.”
Lieutenant Commander Vincent said. “Their intentions are obviously
hostile. Our refusal to run has probably confused them, considering
their numerical advantage.”
“That confusion
will be cleared up when they do attack. If their arsenal is merely
atomic and nothing more advanced, which I doubt,” Mark Kennedy, his
Chief Weapons Systems Engineer said, “they'll still walk through us
as if we weren't even in the way. Anything heavier, anything as
sophisticated as we carry, and it will be a short battle.”
“I'm aware of
our limitations,” Sandgarth said, “but thanks for pointing them
out. We are here to hunt pirates. These aren't pirates.” Sandgarth
felt the wave of relief from those on the Bridge, but if he had
thought for one second that sacrificing every ship and every life of
his command would save those planets he wouldn't hesitate for one
moment. There were millions of civilians who would never get
evacuated in time, notwithstanding this intruder Armada's slow
propulsion system.
“How are the
evacuations going?” Sandgarth asked.
“Word
of the invaders,” Chief Communications Officer Brenda Stanford
began, then paused at Sandgarth's look, and corrected herself, “word
of the alien force
reached the general population before authorities could institute
Martial Law.” She said regretfully.
“Which
in layman's terms means those with ships escaped without care for
those left behind.” Sandgarth snarled. “I want every one of those
who fled in empty ships charged with Treason.” There were several
gasps of astonishment in the huge Bridge of Sandgarth's Flagship
Bellefontaine, but he
didn't care. Mankind had never been so threatened before and he
wanted to make examples. To flee and leave your fellow humans to
perish was as cowardly an act as he could imagine and this would help
stem its repetition if the enemy continued to advance. If the enemy
continued to advance, the planets only now directly in its path
wouldn't be the only ones to fall. Man's domain spanned trillions of
light years and millions of inhabited planets. Admiral Sandgarth
could imagine no enemy strong enough to exterminate man, but an enemy
of sizable proportion and technological ability could cost her
billions or trillions of lives.
Here on the Fringe
the planets were yet sparsely inhabited, but only a short span
farther into man's sphere of influence, it would be a totally
different story.
“They're doing
something.” Lieutenant Commander Vincent said.
Thursday, July 19, 2012
Chronicles of a Space Mercenary
The thing I hated most about working
for the government, any government, they all seemed to think alike,
was that then they invariably thought that they owned you.
Patriotism, duty and all those other words that meant they thought
they were entitled to what was yours. All meaningless trite to a
world-less vagabond like myself. My ship was my home and I needed no
other.
“They’re waiting for a response,
Captain!” Tanya Serensen said, my strong First and the meanest
bitch I have ever met.
The war was over. We were, had been,
part of the Federation forces which had unsuccessfully attempted to
unify the four hundred and seventy-two known human worlds. We had
been smashed ruthlessly, to put mildly what had been a lost cause
from the beginning. I had been paid handsomely with trade goods and
supplies; semi-precious metals and fuel rods, to be exact, plus I’d
brought my ship, Last Chance, and my crew through without a scratch.
So I had not complained when everyone started signing peace treaties.
The problem began when I informed my
erstwhile employers that with hostilities ended, so too were my
obligations. I had fulfilled to the letter our contract. I owed
them nothing more. They had not agreed.
There were now three of my former
allies, positioned in attack formation outside Last Chance’s hull.
Not only did they not feel as if I had not completely fulfilled my
end of the bargain, but I was getting the distinct impression they
would not be satisfied until they had added Last Chance herself to
their now depleted arsenal. I guess they felt, that with all the
losses they had suffered, that Last Chance would be a welcome
addition to their much depleted Navy. I guess they hadn’t quite
learned their lesson about attempting to force their wills on
unwilling subjects. Some people are simply incapable of
understanding. Especially people in positions of power, like
governments, for example.
“You bastards!” I snarled. I
should have known these ungrateful hypocrites would try to back stab
me, especially now that every planet was a law unto itself, only
answerable to itself, and they angry at the defeat they had suffered.
They were quick at jumping on the bandwagon of self governance, now
that no unifying government held sway. That was for sure.
“Is that your response?” Tanya
asked, no inflection in her voice.
“No!” I snapped. The crazy bitch
would repeat it too, if I didn’t specifically say no! A
first impression of Tanya Serensen would never give you the
insightful depth that existed behind her innocent appearing,
stunningly beautiful face. Blond hair, blue eyes, body and face of a
love goddess, barely fifty kilos soaking wet, but as vicious as a
Tarnian Bola Raptor when angered, and if you’ve ever been to Tarnia
you know there is no living creature meaner nor better able to defend
itself. That’s my Tanya, in a nutshell. A very tough, unbreakable
nutcase.
“What are we going to do?”
Demanded David Bren, my Science Engineer, when I didn’t immediately
make a decision. Bren is a mathematical genius and quite able to
compute our odds, no matter which decision I ultimately made; whether
we fought or fled, against the three Class Four Katon Destroyers
which were arrayed around us now in a roughly triangular formation.
Not that it took a mathematical genius to figure these odds.
We were fucked, and that was the long and the short of it! To
fight would be bad. To flee, worse. To surrender, the worst! They
weren’t going to let us survive to go running around telling anyone
who would listen how we had been robbed by the honest, law abiding
Katons. They had their tourism and immigration to think about, but
they also needed ships to patrol their borders. Hell, I was
seriously worried, and I, Marc Deveroux, am usually quite
unflappable. There was really only one answer.
I keyed ship’s intercom; “Battle
Stations. Delegate targets. Fire on orders only!” I looked into
Tanya’s cool blue orbs and winked my left eye. A left wink meant
to be prepared to fight. The wink was redundant, of course. There
was no other option but to fight. She smiled at me serenely, the
calm before the storm.
“Tell them,” I said, “that we
surrender.” I smiled my own smile back at Tanya, my goodbye, if
that was what it would come to, but we had been through so many such
tough scrapes, that it seemed impossible that this one could really
be the end.
“You damned maniac!” Bren yelled,
jumping up from his seat at his computer console, glaring at me
furiously, but he shut his mouth on whatever he had been about to say
when Coto, my pet Xiong, chittered insect-like at him from the
ceiling above me where it was resting. Impossibly, and as
comfortably as I was myself sitting in my own seat, it clung
effortlessly to the seamless, smooth ceiling panels like a fly, or
spider, and this under full gravity. I was not one of those Captains
who preferred his ship’s gravity at near zero for the comfort it
provided. I liked my full gravity, and even more, upon occasion, to
keep my body fit. Coto clung to the ceiling now under that full
gravity, as if on some invisible perch.
Coto appeared to be some kind of sick
hybrid of ant and spider, except on a mammalian scale. Six legs,
segmented brown body with bristly short black hairs, lusterless matte
black eyes (it was impossible to tell where Coto was looking) and
razor sharp pincer mandibles. Though only the size of a small dog,
it could be a vicious killer if antagonized, and it didn’t like
anyone yelling at me!
Xiongs were considered partially
sentient, able to use simple tools when it was necessary, but having
been adapted to survival so well from the beginning (they had been at
the top of the food chain on their own world until humans arrived)
that they hadn’t needed to evolve further. I had saved Coto from a
gang of boys with shock-sticks and the aggressive little creature had
been my loyal friend and protector since.
Not that I needed a protector.
Tanya ignored the little drama and
passed along my message.
“Prepare for boarding!” The
Bridge speakers relayed immediately, aggressively.
My answer was to buckle the
acceleration harness of my Captain’s chair. David sat back down,
looking as petrified as he always did before a confrontation, but he
buckled himself in as well. Tanya was already secured.
“Melanie, Janice, Manuel?” I
asked over ship’s intercom.
“What’s happening?” Manuel
Terrarium asked. “Why am I looking down the barrel of a photon
cannon? What the hell did you do now?”
“Thanks for the vote of confidence.”
I said sarcastically. “The Katons want to confiscate Last Chance.
I think you can guess what will happen to us if we let that happen.”
“It looks like they’re
succeeding.” Melanie Vang said.
“Do you have a plan?” Janice
Ortiz asked. “One that doesn’t involve breathing vacuum or
copious bleeding!”
“No.” I said.
“Be ready to fight. There are no odds in surrender. They’ll kill
us sure as I’m Marc Deveroux. Anyway, there are only three of
them, so the odds are in our favor.” I thought I sounded
convincing, and no one contradicted me, though Bren was staring
daggers at me from his station. If looks could kill . . . !
Maybe I am a maniac and maybe I
sometimes enjoyed risking the lives of everyone around me (as well as
my own), but there was absolutely no doubt in my mind that we didn’t
stand a snowballs chance in hell once we’d surrendered Last Chance,
and ourselves, to the merciless Katons. Our time remaining in this
life could at that point be measured in the number of steps it would
take to march us to the nearest airlock. No. Surrender was not an
option.
“Forward Destroyer moving in to
dock.” Tanya said. “Ten seconds. Nine. Eight. Seven. Six.
Five. Four. Three. Two. One.” The hull rang as the pilot of
the Katon Destroyer brought his vessel up against Last Chance’s
docking locks.
“Engage locks. Seal all airtight
hatches.” I told them. Bren’s fingers moved over his keyboard
and we heard the locks engage gratingly and seal with a clang. Our
two ships were now one. Locked together. Our Fates inseparably
intertwined. That left only the two unengaged ships able to fire on
us from their attack formation, and even they would have to worry
about damaging their own comrade if and when they did, or the
secondary fusion reaction if we were destroyed while the two of us
were still mated. The Katon ship now locked to our side was as
fucked as we were, because I did not feel for one moment, not one
second, that the two remaining Katon ships would refrain from firing
just out of consideration for their comrade. When we opened fire,
they’d return it, in spades.
We had no time to dally. The engaged
ship could blast or cut through the lock in only moments. If I gave
them those moments.
“Fire on free targets!” I yelled
into the com, at the same time engaging Last Chance’s main fusion
engine, throwing the controller over hard to thrust away from the
Katon locked onto our side, hoping literally to rip it loose and fill
it with nothing. Fill it with the vacuum of space and the joys of
explosive decompression. If they had not thought to seal their
interior airtight hatches, it would be all over for Destroyer number
one. A rather gruesome way to go!
The thrust threw me back in my seat
despite Internal Gravity. It could only compensate for just so much.
Last Chance groaned desperately under the dangerous stress as she
tried to pull away from the ship attached to her side, and failed,
the metal straining but somehow holding, the Destroyer coming along
for the ride with us.
The two loose Destroyers, shown on
separate view screens, were glowing with stripes of luminescent green
death as Last Chance’s plasma cannons poured the green fire into
them at such close range, the gelatinous plasma smeared across the
hulls of the ships sticking where it struck and eating into the thick
armor like napalm on flesh. Nothing but nothing could scrape it off
once it adhered. The thick armor of the Katon ships boiled away into
space in billowing clouds as the plasma tried to eat its way down
into those ships.
The image on my right hand main screen
(Last Chance sported two main view screens plus twelve smaller,
secondary screens) showed the Destroyer to our stern taking fire from
both Janice and Melanie’s rear guns, though the way we were
beginning to rotate, those targets would soon swap positions, and the
Destroyer on the left screen would be under those twin guns, Janice
and Melanie’s, which were mounted above and below the main rear
fusion engine. The Destroyer now under those guns was losing armor
quickly. It was taking a hell of a beating.
Melanie and Janice were pouring their
fire into the same area amidships on their joint target, hammering
the same spot over and over again until the whole section was glowing
green fire and which was rapidly creating a huge sink hole in the
side of the ship. Atmosphere exploded outwards from the red-hot and
green glowing area as the Destroyer lost hull integrity, blowing a
green and yellow flame many meters out into space as the red hot
plasma ignited the escaping oxygen into open flame.
I shoved my controller back over to
avoid throwing us into a complete spin and to maintain those two
stern guns on the damaged ship as long as I could, and in the hope
that I could get the bow Destroyer under Last Chance’s photon
cannon, at whose controls Tanya was eagerly awaiting the opportunity
to fire the powerful weapon.
As powerful as the plasma cannon were,
they were but a minor nuisance compared to the energies of the photon
cannon. The photon cannon was too large to track independently,
however, its mounting fixed and immovable, so if I wanted Tanya to
get off a shot I had to bring the enemy under our nose, even if only
momentarily, for the opportunity to become reality.
The bow Destroyer realized my aim and
lit her own engine, shooting past us before I could give Tanya her
chance, but we striped her with green fire as she flashed past, but
doing insignificant damage.
“Destroyers falling behind!” Bren
yelled.
“We can see that.” Tanya said,
glaring at him for a moment while she had nothing else to do, angry
that she had not been given her chance.
The Destroyer we had hulled was
floundering behind us, but the second Destroyer, having spun out to
our side and having missed its first opportunity to fire its photon
cannon at us, either out of surprise or the fear they would
hit their own companion locked to our hull (a plan that paid off for
once) were thrusting side-wise to get around behind us and realign
their main gun again, evidently willing to risk their companion now
in their own fear and anger.
I couldn’t allow them a shot down
our fusion engine. One such direct hit would mean the end for a
certainty. Maybe for them as well, as they looked to be well within
the blast radius, if I were any sure judge. Space battles were
seldom fought at such close ranges. They were usually long over
before two such vessels could get to such intimate proximity. It was
much easier to target the photon cannon on a long distance target
than it was to try and twist around to get it within your own moving
targeting brackets. Such contests were normally determined by which
ship possessed the largest capacity to generate fusion electricity,
because that ship would have the longest striking ability. I on the
other hand, am quite familiar with this close in infighting. It was
my style. Last Chance was far too small to engage the larger vessels
she most frequently found herself contesting. And anyway, I wasn’t
interested in a victory that included my own destruction.
Last Chance’s plasma guns were
firing wildly, their green streaks of fire fanning off into space
around the second Destroyer as I pushed Last Chance hard into her
spin, the Destroyer riding our side helping our spin as I fought to
get our gun on our enemies before they finished their turn and got
their big gun on us. A battle of orientation, of maneuverability.
“Be ready.” I told Tanya calmly,
but it was hardly necessary and I doubt she even heard me. Her
entire concentration was centered on her fire control screen and the
ship I was slowly putting in the cross-hairs of her photon targeting
brackets. She was smiling suddenly.
Last Chance was swinging around
rapidly now, her exterior cameras, under Bren's sure control,
tracking the second Destroyer, keeping us on target.
Suddenly the Destroyer whipped across
the screen. Whipped across the red targeting cross-hairs. Tanya
stabbed at the fire control on her console. The pencil-thin red beam
of the condensed particle stream flowed out along the the cross-hair
targeting bracket, following it even as Last Chance continued to
turn, the beam curving away into space, and then it cut across the
nose of the Destroyer, separating it cleanly from the rest of the
ship.
There was time only to begin seeing
the sections separate before the Destroyer exploded in painful
brilliance and the video dampeners blocked the screens to save us
retinal burns.
“Hit their photon cannon!” Tanya
said cheerfully as the screens slowly brightened and we could see
where we were going again.
I pushed the stick over and fought
Last Chance’s inertia to twist us around for a photon cannon shot
at the first Destroyer, and to keep the pressure on our
piggy-backers, whom I couldn’t forget would be doing all they could
to get inside us. This I could not let happen. The turn threw me
over hard in my seat but I wasn’t in time to give Tanya her shot
and the Destroyer slipped out of our grasp as it went tumbling beyond
us, tossed mercilessly by the explosive force of its dying comrade.
The explosive repercussion of its
comrade had snuffed out the fusion fire of its main engine or the
green plasma fire it took would have been blown away like so much
chaff on the wind. Several of Last Chance’s plasma guns now poured
the green fire right into the bowl of the extinguished engine as the
great ship spun past us, completely out of control. I knew what was
going to happen next before it happened and threw my stick forward as
far as it would go, racing to get as far away from the doomed ship as
I could get us, before . . .
If I had thought
the explosion of the first ship bright, it was as nothing to that of
the second. Unaware that the bowl of their engine was full of
burning plasma, or maybe they were aware, and knowing their only
chance at that point had been to ignite their engine to
attempt to blow away the plasma, they had lit their engine and
allowed the burning plasma an inlet to their fusion reactor. Instant
cataclysm. A minor star going nova might not have been the brighter.
It was the same stuff, only on a smaller scale.
Though we were
running and putting distance between ourselves when it went, the
explosion sent a tremendous shock wave through us that rocked us to
our core. Stressed metal screamed and groaned and I let off the
stick immediately, fearing if I didn’t I would tear us apart.
“Release docking
locks!” I yelled at Bren as all of our screens once again went
dark. Even our forward screens, which were pointed out into the
blackness of space. It was a sure measure of the forces which had
been unleashed. Universal forces. The stuff of creation, except in
this case, the stuff of destruction!
The locks grated
momentarily, pinned under the pressure of the spinning ships and
dissipating force from the fusion explosion, then gave way silently.
I felt it as a change in our inertia when the Katon Destroyer left
our side, but it wasn’t until the screens came back up that we
could see for ourselves the ship was gone. It was spinning away from
us, out of control, having been unprepared for its sudden release.
“They’d already
released their own locks.” Bren said redundantly. Tanya gave him
a look which was easy to interpret and which he ignored.
Our plasma cannons
were lighting up the third Destroyer even as it spun away from us,
but it had twisted in a way that did not give our guns an open shot
on its engine and suddenly it was burning and the ship trying to
right itself, and throwing plasma fire right back at us. From four
turrets!
Last Chance
shuddered under the attacks from the larger plasma cannons but
continued to put distance between us as I held the stick forward,
outrunning most of the fire but not all. We seemed to stagger under
each new blow, but then we were beyond range and accelerating
rapidly.
“I wouldn’t
plan any vacations in Katon for awhile.” Tanya said
conversationally. “I hope everyone cleaned out their bank accounts
before we left.”
“Never did like
Katon anyway,” I said, “and I brought my bank account with me.”
I patted the armrest of my Captain’s chair.
“You sure know
how to wear out your welcome.” Tanya added.
“I burn my
bridges as I go.” I said. It was the story of my life. “As I
recall,” I went on, recounting a worn out story, “you had more
than worn out your welcome on Teva when I came along and saved your
bacon. Something about some missing Crown Jewels! Suspiciously like
those you’re wearing around your neck right now!”
“Allegations.”
Tanya replied.
“Yeah, and you
almost dragged me down with you.” I said. “You just couldn’t
leave without the goods!”
“They’re worth
more than this crappy ship you set so much store by.” Tanya
replied. “A crappy ship we all just risked our lives to save, need
I remind you!”
“That’s really
amusing,” I said, “when this crappy ship is the only
place you can wear those jewels!”
“Funny,” Tanya mused, “but I bet
the Katons report Last Chance as a stolen ship!” Now she really
smiled. An evil smile if I ever saw one, and one that meant she had
scored the point. “Plus we wouldn’t have been in this mess in
the first place if you hadn’t lost all your money gambling on the
Kievor Trade Station. A fool and his money are soon parted!”
“We wouldn’t have been in this war
in the first place if it hadn’t been for you.” Bren accused.
“We nearly lost our lives a dozen times all because of your sure
thing on the card table.”
“They cheated!” I defended
myself. It was true; they had to have cheated.
“Put us in warp space, Bren.”
Tanya said disgustedly, playing her advantage to the hilt, as was her
wont.
Bren’s fingers worked over his
console board and suddenly space shifted sickeningly around us. I
really, truly hated the transfer in or out of warp space. Human
bodies weren’t designed for this. Warp space is a completely
different dimension. When you transferred in or out of warp space,
you felt the transfer right through your body, all the way down into
and within the very smallest particles of your body.
Yet I didn’t like the idea of
hanging around and fighting it out with the Katon Destroyer, either.
Once again I had scraped us through an impossible situation
unscathed, so now was the time to make my curtain call, and get out.
The Katon Destroyer would not be able
to follow us. It was not equipped with the drive necessary to enter
or travel through warp space. Only the Katon’s big boats came
equipped with warp capability, and the rest, their Destroyers, mine
layers, torpedo boats, fighters, scouts and all else rode piggy-back
through warp until back in normal space again where their
conventional engines would once more find purchase. It wasn’t a
good system but one that they thought would save them money in the
long run. It hadn’t. I had seen too many of those unequipped
ships left behind in battle zones when their transport vessels either
left them behind under fire, they couldn’t get docked in time or
the Capitol ships hadn’t made it through the battles themselves.
It was the latter in most of those cases. Those planets had been
fighting for their independence and there was no man who fought
harder than the man who was fighting for his home, his family and his
freedom. The Katons had shown little regard for those left behind.
I began gagging dangerously as we
pushed into warp, taking much longer than usual because of our slow
relative velocity. We'd had no choice in the matter with the Katon
Destroyer swinging around to get a bearing on us. It was either warp
out at our slow velocity or face the Destroyer’s photon cannon
while our own was pointed out towards open space. My mouth flooded
with saliva and my stomach lurched. Nausea washed through me in a
wave that reached from all the way down into my guts and outward and
upward, nearly rising into my throat. Goose bumps rose over my
entire body.
I reached to unclasp my safety harness
so I could get out of my seat and get to Bren’s station to shut off
this hell. The controls for the warp space engine had been
deactivated on my own console for just that reason. I would shut it
off mid-jump and damned the consequences, not caring where we came
out, or even if we did. Suddenly we were through the wall of normal
space however, and fully into warp and the terrible sickness was
gone. Gone as quickly as it had come, and all that was left to
remind me of the horror of it all was the taste of the bile in my
mouth and the burning sensation it had left in my throat. I had held
it down but only barely. I glared at Tanya;
“We could have gotten up a little
more velocity first! We had plenty of time!” I had been watching
the Katon Destroyer’s progress as it came around onto us and we had
still had plenty of time. I knew that she had ordered the
early warp just to make me sick.
“Screw you.” Tanya replied
sweetly. “You’re not risking my neck to save yourself a couple
moments of warp sickness. You can shove it right where the sun
doesn’t shine!”
I have always been able to bring out
the best in a person. Any person. It’s one of my unimpeachable
assets. I smiled at her to let her know she had won no points with
me. She smiled back, not the least bit perturbed.
I unbuckled myself and breathed a sigh
of relief, but quietly. No one could know that the great Marc
Deveroux had been sick or concerned, not about three lousy Katon
Class 4 Destroyers and certainly not about any little old warp jump
sickness. Not miscreant Marc, as my loving mother, bless her honest
soul, had so unwittingly called me as a child. Marc Deveroux didn’t
get worried, because no matter what, Marc Deveroux was going to come
out on top!
I’m an indomitable specimen of
mankind. Six foot, two hundred and ten pounds of solid muscle and
aged at only about 21 Terra Standards. I had just undergone my first
rejuvenation treatment even though I had been, at my thirty-nine
calendar years, just as handsome as I had ever been. At least I had
thought so.
“We’ve jumped out of the frying
pan,” Bren said, “so where’s the fire?”
Tanya at Amazon US
Tanya at Amazon UK
Tanya at Amazon UK
She was
running for her life, exerting every ounce of strength. Her pursuer was right
behind her. His footfalls on the plas-crete sidewalk beating themselves into
her consciousness as they steadily caught up to her. She had no time to look
back to see but had reached the place to which she was fleeing. It was a rotten
gaping hole in the mortar foundation of a massive tenement building. One of thousands
of such entrances throughout the ghetto that let into the old sewers below- now
known as the warrens.
Tanya jumped
straight into the opening with the footfalls of her pursuer right behind her. She
slipped and slid, gouging out a long deep patch of meat along her lower thigh
on the rough edged opening. She hit the ground within and instantly turned with
the scrap of carbon to slash at the hand reaching in for her through the
opening.
Her pursuer
had not expected the beautiful, frightened, filthy slip of a girl-child to turn
on him. Nor had he expected the razor sharp scrap of carbon. He had not
expected the raggy street urchin to turn and attack, like a crazed animal
rather than a human being.
Tanya was a
thirteen year old ghetto-vagabond who had already seen the worst life had to
offer and clearly understood what this one wanted with her. She’d seen him
before, with his girls, and now apparently he had seen her. There was no law
here in the tax-free zone, so whatever could be taken and held was property. To
be sold or bartered to the constant stream of those who frequented this place.
Whatever
could be taken and held was the property of the holder. That was the only law
of the ghetto, the tax-free zone. That was the only law Tanya knew, so she
would struggle just as ferociously to escape the jaws of a predatory lizard as
she would this man, or the many others like him who thrived in these places.
The outcome in both cases would be the same.
Showing the
coordination of a trained gymnast, the ferocity of the gladiator, or maybe it
was only her utter terror which drove her. Tanya spun as her feet hit the
ground, slashing at the hand reaching in for her. The piece of carbon was
sharp, its edge only one atom thick, but of this or anything else which would
be learned in an educational institution Tanya was unaware. She knew there were
places where people lived normal lives, but of those place’s inner workings she
knew nothing. She could neither read nor write nor even spell her own name.
Tanya knew
only that the merest touch of the scrap would sever anything of flesh and bone.
She took off the last three fingers of his left hand with a desperate stroke.
The fingers left the hand to flip almost as in freeze-frame through Tanya’s
vision. Before the first squirt of arterial spray left the severed ends of
newly shortened fingers, she was running again while he screamed his agony and
despair.
Then she was
gone into the darkness of underground passages she knew better than the streets
above. Better than she could remember her own mother, now seven years gone, and
a killing ground for anyone foolish enough to attempt to follow her. Many
followed. They wanted the credits she would earn. Many just wanted her alone.
They wanted her blond hair and her blue eyes, because she was different and because
she was beautiful.
She stood
out in a nearly homogenized race. Her mother and father came here from
someplace else, but hadn't survived long once they got here. Her father simply
failed to return the last time he went out, the victim of a violent social
structure he had not been able to adapt to quickly enough. Tanya understood
intrinsically what had occurred, her father’s sad but smiling face still in her
memories. He was tormented with the knowledge of his failures but trying to put
a brave face on it for her.
Her mother
had worked as a prostitute at the end, but there was little else she could
remember of those times. They had not been good times. As a thirteen year old
girl, Tanya was now well acquainted with the lusts of men. Those who had
pursued her recently met death in the underground warrens, the scrap of carbon
flashing out of darkness too Stygian to comprehend, then Tanya fleeing like a
ghost while the predator turned prey pumped his blood onto the thirsty
plas-crete.
.………………..
Those old memories faded away even as Tanya came to understand what she was remembering, and then her target walked into the cross-hairs of her scoped flechette rifle and her thoughts returned to the business at hand. There were better weapons for this type of sniper work, but this job wasn't work. This was personal. Tanya took a brief moment to note the hand; it looked to have been repaired to perfection, as well as his youth restored through Rejuvenation, but she knew that these were recent changes. That he had climbed the ladder of success and he had been just recently able to afford it. She had thoroughly researched him, and she had learned everything there was to learn. What a shame for him that his success was to be so briefly enjoyed!
Those old memories faded away even as Tanya came to understand what she was remembering, and then her target walked into the cross-hairs of her scoped flechette rifle and her thoughts returned to the business at hand. There were better weapons for this type of sniper work, but this job wasn't work. This was personal. Tanya took a brief moment to note the hand; it looked to have been repaired to perfection, as well as his youth restored through Rejuvenation, but she knew that these were recent changes. That he had climbed the ladder of success and he had been just recently able to afford it. She had thoroughly researched him, and she had learned everything there was to learn. What a shame for him that his success was to be so briefly enjoyed!
The
flechette rifle was merely her touch. It would shred him like hamburger. They
would have to pack his body into sandwich bags. He was walking out of a
restaurant with three of his girls. Not the same girls he'd had then. All of
those and many more had died along the way working
for him, that life a brutal and short one for the girls caught in it.
His now
opulent lifestyle was financed by dozens of whore-houses in several ghetto
locales, which was why Tanya was here. She had seen him by accident only, but
instantly remembered him with a flash of knowledge like a stab of brilliant
light from the blackness of a childhood forgotten. Amnesia, she had been told,
though why she suffered it and knew nothing of her childhood was a mystery.
With sight and surfaced memory had come the first glimpses into her forgotten
childhood- the first that she had ever received. She then studied him and
learned everything about him- far more than the government records showed- as
well as his quasi-legal ghetto activities. She learned everything, and now she
was here.
Though he
actually never harmed her, other than the deep scrape, and conversely she had
harmed him, the fact remained he had tried. He tried to catch her, and if he
had caught her he would have beaten and raped her, strung her out on drugs and
then prostituted her until the end of her days. If she was stronger than most
and survived until she became too worn to draw even the worst dregs of those
who purchased such things, she would be cast aside as the useless flotsam she
had become and then to die a quick death of starvation on the cold streets.
Tanya didn't
forget such things. Tanya didn't leave enemies behind herself, even if they
would never know who she was. Even if they would never recognize her with the
years gone by and she grown and changed! Tanya didn't leave enemies behind
herself, and maybe just a little vengeance for all the girls, though that was
hardly the primary reason. Tanya wasn't interested in correcting the wrongs of
the Universe. There were far too many for that, had she cared about such
things; her concern in this matter was entirely personal.
Tanya's
finger slowly depressed the trigger as she exhaled a slow even breath. The
cross-hairs were rock-solid steady on her target. The flechette rifle sighed in
her hands. She held the trigger depressed, not letting up, the cross-hairs
remaining centered on his body even as he was flung back into the building
behind him- Tanya anticipating the reaction with the precision that only an
expert could know.
Pleased by
the remorseless spray of flechettes, thousands upon thousands of micro-thick
aerodynamic flying razors tearing through his body, literally shredding him as
the girls leapt away from the silent death assaulting him from nowhere,
screaming in silent horror through the magnification of her scope.
When she had
expended the magazine Tanya quickly slid back from the edge of the roof-line
and rose to her feet. Still wearing her gloves and the weapon clean, she spun
like a discus thrower and launched the weapon out into the air towards the roof
of the next adjoining building. It sailed through the darkness invisibly and
landed with a clatter. She ran towards the opposite edge of the roof from which
she had been firing and when she reached it simply dove out into a swan dive
and began the twenty-one story drop to the plas-crete street below.
The wing-suit
didn't have lift and wouldn't hold her in the air long, but four blocks away
Tanya pulled the rip cord of her parachute and came to a rough landing in the
small park she had already designated during her planning. She rolled and came
up, quickly disengaging the harness and simultaneously scanning the park for
witnesses, but she had seen no one as she was floating in and there was no one
here now, lucky for them.
Tanya was
wearing a ski-mask and no one would be able to identify her from a description
of a black wing-suited ninja that floated out of the sky, but she wouldn’t have
hesitated to terminate any who had been unfortunate enough to be here when she
arrived. She would neither be stopped nor later identified by anyone, and that
was a rule Tanya did not break.
She left the
parachute where it lay and made good her escape, the ground car exactly where
she had left it, and no one yet the wiser.
Chapter 2
Tanya ran
through the twisting warrens still fearful she was being pursued. Running and
fighting, had become her existence. Her feet were hard and thick with calluses tougher
than shoe leather. She had no shoes and didn’t need them. She could not
remember ever having any. After running in the wrong direction and after making
sure she hadn't been followed, she turned and made her unerring passage through
the consuming darkness.
She couldn't
see anything- there was no light trickling down from above at all- but she
didn't need to visibly see to know where she was going. This place, a monstrous
derelict building, and the old sewer systems that ran under it and under all
the ruins here, had been her home since her mother had died, some six years
ago. A worthless measurement, as time had ceased to have meaning for her.
Existence was hand to mouth and that was what Tanya knew.
The squeak
of a rat was the call of the sentry. Tanya returned the call.
“Come in.”
The sentry whispered.
Tanya moved
forward until she was standing beside the sentry. She couldn't recall his name
quite yet although she remembered now who he was. Perhaps the name would come
to her, but for the moment it remained elusive within her newly resurfacing
memories. She was beginning to remember a great many things since she had seen,
recognized, and assassinated the pimp.
The sentry
gave the signal of the day, a complicated series of knocks on the old carbon
door and a small slot in the door opened, allowing a shaft of pale light to
spear out into the darkness of the plas-crete tunnel.
“It's
Tanya.” The sentry said, though that wasn't really her name. That was the name
they gave her when they found her, though of that original group six years ago
only a few remained, and only children who had been younger than Tanya at the
time she had been taken in. The door was unbarred from inside and Tanya
entered. The door closed softly behind her and the makeshift bar was thrown
back in place.
When the
door was closed they allowed themselves a small bit of light, the lamps coming
on once the door was sealed and there was no chance of the light betraying
them. Their only light sources were several old but nearly indestructible
crank-lamps that were used by many who lived in these places where there was no
electricity. Tanya moved over to the room's one table as the children all
gathered around her. From the folds of her rags she produced the treasure she
had procured and set it reverently upon the table.
“Rice!”
“A whole
bag.” They chorused in their astonishment and surprise. A whole bag of rice
would feed the twelve of them for a long time. None had large stomachs.
“How did you
get a whole bag of rice?” The second oldest asked. Malcomb. His name was
Malcomb. She suddenly remembered the only true friend she had ever had, he
asking vocally even though he knew she wouldn't answer, because he knew she
couldn't. He always spoke vocally to her anyway, never giving up on her and
hoping that one day she would respond. Tanya couldn't utter a word no matter
how hard she tried. She could make sounds, the calls they used to communicate,
but she couldn’t speak a word. It was as if her throat would just seize when
she tried, a terror she could not understand seemed to grip her throat and
nothing would come out. She didn't know why, what trauma she had suffered that so
devastated her sense of self-confidence, but she just couldn't. Not since her
mother had gone. Not a single syllable.
The Tanya of
now swallowed the memory and forced herself to concentrate on the business at
hand. The strange memories had come again. Brief flashes of her very own life
if she could believe what she was remembering, these the first such hints Tanya
had ever received of even having a life prior to what she now knew. Not until
now and so far only the two brief flashes. The first glimpses of her forgotten
past. She put those thoughts aside for the moment and looked through the scope
of the laser rifle.
The target
would be visible through the dia-glass bay window of his high-rise condo as he
opened the curtains in the morning. It was the only routine Tanya had been able
to find in his schedule, this fifty-fourth day of her surveillance, which also forced
her to extremes of action she would rather have avoided. But he was a careful
man and Tanya had to make necessary allowances.
Six days in
a row she watched through video surveillance feeds as he opened his curtains
every day at roughly the same time, and now she waited. The couple who owned
the condo where Tanya was now lying prone on the carpeting of the living room,
her laser-rifle propped with a monopod and steady in her hands, were at that
moment lying dead in their beds. Tanya did not leave witnesses.
The memories
rose again suddenly from nowhere and flooded her mind, trying to wash away her
concentration, but she could not allow that to happen and forcibly changed what
she was thinking, subduing the memory from repeating itself, at least for the
moment. She had replayed the first remembrance over and over again, attempting
to dredge up more memories, but nothing had come, until now. Possibly the
stressful situation, Tanya thought, though it wasn't all that stressful. This
was her job and she was more than just an expert. She was the best in the
business. Cool, calm and collected, she waited.
The curtains
began to open, the mark now coming into plain view. He was walking across his
living room when Tanya took her shot. With the cross-hairs centered on the back
of his head Tanya depressed the trigger. The laser-rifle was held rock-steady
in sure hands, and the shot took him in the back of his head. He was dead before
he was falling to his floor. Still, Tanya was thorough and put in four more
shots as he went down. It would be a closed coffin funeral.
She left the
rifle where it lay as she got up and went into the bathroom to check her
appearance in the mirror. Her disguise was still in perfect order as she had
known it would be, but she liked to check it anyway. It was a good one with
tight black curls, olive skin set off by even darker brown contacts, puffed out
cheeks to ruin computer recognition and a few more kilos than she normally wore
around her midsection. Altogether making it entirely impossible to recognize
her once the disguise was gone. She couldn't escape the security cameras of
this building, but this had been one of those jobs where extenuating
circumstances drove her to do things she wouldn’t ordinarily do. Walking past a
security camera after a hit was a bad deal, but there were no other options in
this case and they would never find the person they thought they were looking
for.
In her
business suit and briefcase in hand, carrying all manner of weapons, Tanya
walked out of the building and disappeared into the crowds. No one gave her a
second glance.
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