Ep.#14 - "The Weak and the Innocent" (The Frontiers Saga) (33 page)

Read Ep.#14 - "The Weak and the Innocent" (The Frontiers Saga) Online

Authors: Ryk Brown

Tags: #Science Fiction & Fantasy, #Science Fiction, #Adventure, #Exploration, #Hard Science Fiction, #Military, #Space Opera, #Space Exploration

BOOK: Ep.#14 - "The Weak and the Innocent" (The Frontiers Saga)
9.23Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

“Launch speed in three minutes, Captain,” Mister Chiles reported from the Aurora’s helm.

“Very well,” Nathan replied. He
slowly rotated to his left, coming around to check on the utility station in the aft port corner of the bridge. “How’s it looking, Lieutenant Tillardi?”

“Jump KKV prototype systems all show green, sir,” the lieutenant replied. “We’re ready to raise the device into launch position.”

“Mister Delaveaga, if you please?” Nathan requested.

“Raising starboard main elevator pad to launch position,” Luis replied.

“Shuttle Four has just jumped into the launch area,” Mister Navashee reported.

“Receiving message from Shuttle Four,” Ensign Souza announced. “The target area and all areas down range are clear.”

“Very well.” Nathan turned back to Lieutenant Tillardi. “There’s no chance we’re going to send some chunk spiraling toward Earth, is there?”

“Not a chance,” the lieutenant assured him. “If the weapon even glances that chunk of ice, there won’t be anything bigger than a snowflake left of it.”

“Just checking,” Nathan replied.

“One minute,” Mister Chiles said.

“Starboard pad is in position,” Lieutenant Delaveaga reported.

“Running final checks now,” Lieutenant Tillardi added.

“Coming up on launch point,” Mister Chiles announced. “Speed is fifty percent light.”

“Kill your mains,” Nathan ordered.

“Mains coming down,” the helmsman replied.

“Release the device,” Nathan instructed Lieutenant Tillardi.

“Release the device, aye,” the lieutenant responded. “Device is away.”

“Translate downward, Mister Chiles… Nice and easy,” Nathan directed. “Put up the pad cameras.”

The image on the main view screen changed suddenly, showing the jump KKV as it slowly rose from its launch cradle sitting in the middle of the starboard elevator pad at the top of the Aurora’s forward section.

“Three meters separation, and increasing,” Lieutenant Delaveaga reported.

“Bring up the deceleration drive, Mister Chiles,” Nathan ordered. “One percent only.”

“Opening outer doors,” Mister Chiles replied. “Decel drive is hot. One percent, firing.”

The image of the jump KKV rising from the top of the ship appeared to drift forward as well, as the Aurora’s forward speed began to fall in relation to the device.

“Increase separation rate by fifty percent,” Nathan ordered.

“Increasing separation rate, aye,” Mister Chiles responded.

“Device jump point in two minutes,” Mister Riley reported. “Our jump point in ninety seconds.”

“Running final systems check now,” Lieutenant Tillardi announced.

“The device is on course and speed,” Mister Navashee confirmed from the sensor station.

“Decel up smartly, slow us down,” Nathan ordered.

“Deceleration drive to full power,” the helmsman replied.

Nathan watched as the jump KKV rapidly shrank, disappearing from view seconds later as the Aurora fell further and further behind it with each passing second.

“I don’t suppose you’re planning on putting engines in these things?” Nathan wondered.

“Not at the moment, no,” the lieutenant replied.

“Seems like a lot of propellant to burn, bringing the whole ship up to half light just to launch a KKV.”

“It would take a hell of an engine to get them up to speed on their own,” Lieutenant Tillardi explained, “but we
are
working on a variant of the Scout class, with beefed up engines and greater propellant storage, that should be able to launch them instead.”

“Thirty seconds to jump,” Mister Chiles reported. “I have the final jump algorithms for the device ready, sir.”

“Transmit the updated jump algorithms,” Nathan ordered.

“Transmitting,” Ensign Souza replied.

Lieutenant Tillardi watched his telemetry screen for a moment. “Algorithms updated,” he finally announced. “We’re good to go.”

“Clear to jump, Mister Riley,” Nathan ordered.

“Aye, sir. Jumping in ten seconds.”

“Forward cameras.”

The view screen switched back to the main forward-facing cameras again.

“Jumping in three……two……one……”

The jump flash briefly illuminated the interior of the Aurora’s bridge with its familiar blue-white light.

“Jump complete.”

“Target in sight,” Lieutenant Delaveaga reported. “Twenty seconds to impact.”

Lieutenant Tillardi turned to face forward. There was nothing left for him to do but wait, and hope.

“Verify range is clear,” Nathan ordered.

“Range is clear, Captain,” Mister Navashee replied.

“Ten sec…”

“…Jump flash!” Mister Navashee shouted, cutting the lieutenant off.

“Weapon inbound, impact in five…”

“Full magnification,” Nathan ordered.

“…three…”

Lieutenant Tillardi stood, moving slowly forward as if drawn toward the tumbling chunk of ice on the main view screen.

“…one……imp…”

A flash of light appeared on the main view screen where the chunk of ice had once been. The light immediately faded, revealing a spreading sea of tiny particles of ice, reflecting the faint light from the distant star like a glimmering mist.

“Target is destroyed,” Mister Navashee reported, disappointment evident in his voice.

Nathan looked at Lieutenant Tillardi, who looked crestfallen. “Something wrong?”

“It was early, wasn’t it?” he replied, turning toward Luis at the tactical station.

“Only half a second, Til,” Luis replied sympathetically.

“But it did work,” Nathan reminded them. “The target was obliterated.”

“Yeah, but it was a head-on shot,” Lieutenant Tillardi replied. “If it had been a side shot at a fast moving target, it would’ve missed.”

“Mister Chiles,” Nathan said as he rose from his command chair, “continue deceleration and jump us back to Earth as soon as we get down to something resembling orbital velocity again.”

“It’s got to be something in the jump sequencer,” Luis suggested. “A few lines of unnecessary code, or something?”

“We went over that code a hundred times,” the lieutenant said.

“Don’t worry, Tilly, you’ll fix it,” Nathan assured him as he turned to head aft.

Lieutenant Tillardi looked at Nathan. “How can you be so sure?”

“Because billions of Cetian lives depend on it,” Nathan replied with an impish grin as he patted him on the shoulder in passing.

Tilly sneered at him. “Oh, thanks. Thanks a lot…really.”

* * *

Naralena felt weak. She had eaten only a single piece of flat bread per day for the past three days, and had been given precious little wa
ter to wash it down with.

The last thing she remembered before her prison cell was the burning sensation in her leg, and then falling in the water…

Then hands. Lots of them.

There had been voices speaking Jung during her attempt to escape. She remembered that. Odd, though, that she had heard no one speaking around her since her capture.

She had been locked in a small room, barely large enough for her to lie down. There had been a couple of ratty blankets, a very old pillow, and a large bucket for her bodily waste, of which luckily there had been little.

There was also a small window—more of a vent, really—that was so high up she could not reach it to see outside. It was her only source of light, as well as her only method to track the passing of time. She had found it oddly amusing that she couldn’t find anything in her cell with which to scratch markings on the wall to count the days of her imprisonment. Then again, it had only been three days.

Or was it four?

She had tried to pass the time as best she could. She even tried singing, but by the end of the second day, her spirits had declined so much that she couldn’t bring herself to utter a note. The nights were the worst. In the daytime, she could fold up the blankets and make herself a nice pad to sit upon. Night was different. Night was cold. Not the bitter, frigid cold that eventually knocks you out, but the lingering chill that just keeps you awake.

The cement floors did not help.

Her only contact with the outside world was the man who would slide open a small hatch at the bottom of the door and slip the flat bread and a cup of water through to her. She called to him each time, all three of them…
Or was it four
? She begged him to tell her where she was, who they were, and what they wanted from her. Had they asked, she would have gladly told them anything.

Shameful, really. Without any real torture, she was willing to tell them everything she knew. Then again, it wasn’t like she really
knew
anything of value. Not like Jessica. Jessica would have been a gold mine of information, if captured by the Jung.

Of course, Jessica would never have allowed herself to fall into the hands of the enemy.

Even worse, the isolation made it impossible for her to not think about things that only served to depress her even more. Sergeant Weatherly, Gerard, Major Willard. The millions who had died on Earth, as well as all the other worlds the Jung had conquered…or punished for not
allowing
themselves to be conquered.

Of course, such thoughts only served to boost her defiance. She would
not
tell them anything, no matter how much they tortured her. Then again, she didn’t really
know
anything. So why were they keeping her locked up for days on end, without so much as a single question? They had not even asked for her name. But they would, of that she was sure.

And she was right.

She had no warning, no footfalls in the corridor outside her door, if there was a corridor. The door just suddenly swung open, bright sunlight spilling inside, silhouetting a burly man with a bag in one hand and a rope in the other. She cried and pleaded as he approached her with menacing intent. She thought about trying to get around him, to make a break for the door, but with her wounded leg and her weakened condition she had not the strength to resist.

So she did not.

The bag came down over her head, she was pushed to the ground, and the rope was tied painfully tight around her wrists. She was then picked up from the floor and led out of her cell. Where was he taking her? What was going to happen to her?

All she could do was sob.

She felt the warmth of the Cetian sun on her shoulders as she was marched, limping, across bare open ground. She could smell the dust, taste it as the breeze whipped it around them. Her foot struck a step and she tumbled forward, her brutish escort roughly grabbing her arm to keep her upright as they entered another building. He shoved her to the left and they walked down another corridor. Another left, and then he pushed her down, into a chair.

An actual chair,
she thought with relief. A silly thing to be thankful for. She heard more footsteps, but still no talking. The man pulled at her hands, but not to untie them. Instead, he bound them to the chair in which she sat.

Then the door slammed shut.

She sat there for perhaps a full minute, fighting back the tears, and listening. Listening for the sound of movement. Listening for the sound of someone breathing. Was she alone?

“Hello?” she asked in Jung. “Is anybody there?”

There was a rustling of fabric nearby, then the hood covering her head was pulled away. Bright sunlight shone through the open window, blinding her. She had barely seen any light at all, over the last few days, save for that tiny stream coming through the vent in her cell.

She tried to look at the man standing before her, but her eyes were not yet accustomed to the light. “Who are you?” she asked, still in Jung. “What do you want from me?”

“The very questions I wish to ask you,” the man replied, but not in Jung.

The man was speaking Koharan.

“Who are
you
?” the man asked.

“I am Naralena Avakian,” she replied, still speaking in Jung.

“That is not a Koharan name,” the man replied, sticking with the Koharan language.

“Avakian is my father’s family name,” she told him. “He is not from Kohara.” Naralena surprised herself that she had not lied, yet had not offered him any information either. It was a small victory for her, but an important one nonetheless.

“Why did your people attack my world?” the man asked in Koharan.

“My father?” she asked, still speaking in Jung.

“You obviously speak Koharan, so do so. I am not in the mood to speak Jung at the moment.”

“I don’t understand,” Naralena told him, switching to Koharan.

“Why did your people attack my world?”

“What people?” Naralena wondered.

“You can drop the pretense, Miss Avakian. We saw the reports. The Jung are looking for you and your friends, the Earth woman and the Koharan man.”

Jessica and Gerard
, she realized.

“They are offering a substantial reward for your capture,” the man said. “Why is that? Are you one of the infected ones from Earth? Have you been sent here to spread the bio-digital plague to my people?”

“Are you insane?” Naralena said. “My name is Naralena Avakian. I live
in
Cetia. I do not know that woman.”

“How do you know you do not know her? I have yet to tell you anything about her.”

“You said she was from Earth. I don’t know anyone from Earth.”

“If you live in Cetia, what were you doing so far from home, and in the middle of an invasion, no less?”

“We were on a nature hike,” she told him, “for nearly a week…”

“We who?”

“My husband and I.”

“Your husband? Odd then, that it took you this long to ask about him.”

“I am weak with hunger, and I have not slept in days…”

“…You can stop the pretense,” the man told her. “Our doctors sampled your blood. You have no nanites within you, therefore, you are either a member of the CLA, or you are not of this world. Given that I can find no government records matching your description or biometric signature, I must conclude the latter.” The man paused to take another breath. “So I ask you again… Who are you, and why did your people attack my world?”

Naralena stared at him defiantly.

“I can put you back into your cell until you cooperate,” he warned, “giving you just barely enough sustenance to keep you alive, and in misery, until you are willing to tell me the truth.”

Naralena continued to stare at him. “I already did,” she stated. “You simply choose not to believe me.”

“Then back to your cell it is,” the man said, rising from his chair to depart. He stopped suddenly, turning back to her. “Of course, there is another way. Unpleasant, but effective.” He turned toward one of the inside walls and pulled back the long curtain. Behind that curtain was a window. On the other side of that window was another room, and in that room was Gerard, sitting in a chair just as she was, bound and gagged, his hands behind his back.

Gerard’s eyes suddenly opened wide, silently pleading with her, as if he knew something terrible was about to happen.

Other books

The Lion of Midnight by J.D. Davies
The Revelations by Alex Preston
Love or Money? by Carrie Stone
Breathless by Kelly Martin
The Noise Revealed by Ian Whates
If You're Gone by Brittany Goodwin
Press Start to Play by Wilson, Daniel H., Adams, John Joseph