Coming Home (Free Fleet Book 2) (18 page)

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Authors: Michael Chatfield

BOOK: Coming Home (Free Fleet Book 2)
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“Suuuuure.” He said, his tone unsure as he shrugged. “Worth a shot, don't worry, I know everywhere you hangout! I'll make sure they get the interview of their lives.”

The other people in the room had looks of amusement or interest as they looked to me.

“Here I was, thinking you'd take it easy on your poor old commander.”

“Hey, your younger than me there bucko!” My moping face split into a grin as I shook my head.

“Anything else?” I asked, still with a grin on my face.

“The kids,” Rick said and the room became somber.

“They're ours. We'll look after them as such. We'll educate them on the basics of space travel, give them citizenship of the fleet, which gives them citizenship of whatever planets fall under our protection. We have some people looking after them but we need nannies and support. I'm nowhere near qualified for all of that, but I know we can get an education program set up. We need people to fill the roles of caregivers.”

“I'll put it on the forums,” Rick said.

“All of them,” I said, looking off at nothing as I talked.

“Send the offer to every planet. If they're brought up with caregivers of every race, they'll be better adjusted,” I said with a nod.

“They've been accelerated into adulthood as we were,” In Sook said.

“Set up defense classes. Teach them to use their strength for good,” I said. Henry raised his hand.

“Sir, I know this is going to sound insensitive, but why don't we just put them in adoptive care on Earth?” he asked.

“Couple of reasons. These are our kids. They're going have to deal with issues we've dealt with and they’re in a group of people that are in the same situation as them. They can help one another. Put them in homes, then people don't know how to deal with the issues that could come with these kids. They'll also be seen as freaks, two year olds looking like adults,” I said.

“Though the first group is at the mental age of a fourteen year old, the second ten, the third six. By two they'll have the bodies of adults, and the minds of them. What are we going to do? Keep treating them as kids?” Henry asked.

“Not going to lie, I haven't thought that far ahead. We're going to have to look into that.” No one looked happy at that.

“All of them are going to be like that, stopping their treatments would send them into dangerous retrograde. They could die,” Rick said. These kids weren't going to be given childhoods. Within the space of twenty four month's they'd be the same as any other eighteen year old in cognitive ability and body.

“We'll take care of them. Part of looking after kids is adapting to them,” I said. I could see in the others eyes that they too had accepted the responsibility of these kids.

“Anything else?” I asked.

“Get some damned sleep! I swear, we're becoming your mothers,” Rick said, his face looking serious, but his tone was light and playful.

“Alright, I will.” I said as everyone looked to me with
you better
stares, and I put my hands up in hope of placating them.

“Till later then,” Henry said, pushing away from the desk and standing. I did the same, stretching as I made for the door.

Watch Commander Vashna was sitting in my chair as I emerged. She made to stand, but I waved her scaly hide back into it.

“I've been ordered to nap, and as such, I will listen,” I said by way of explanation.

“Then I hope they told you to take a long one.” Vashna said.

“That's my girl!” Rick said. I let a laugh out as Marleen quirked an eyebrow in his direction.

“Marleen,” He finished somewhat seriously, pointing at her as if he'd meant to do that the entire time. Marleen laughed as she shook her head and turned back to her work. A few laughs could be heard.

“Smooth Rick.” I said, getting a
well-crap
shrug from him.

Krom and Janice followed me down to my room.

“So, I never asked, did you and Dave get annulled?” I asked as we exited the blast doors.

“Nope.” She grinned as I looked at her.

“Been through so much, dunno, kinda feel comfortable with the old sod now,” she said as I smiled.

“Good.”

“I wish you humans were a little more subtle about your excitement with your partners. Your pheromones do reek on every ship, and now station,” Krom said and I hit his shoulder.

“Just wait till you find the one, then we'll be the ones having to wear clothes pins on our noses for your pheromone stink.”

“Would be better if she released less, as to be better in battle,” he said solidly.

“Oh, you are quite the romantic, aren't you,” Janice said, rolling her eyes as I got to my room. “I think we're going to have to talk on the finer points of women, dating, and getting to know one another. And pheromones is low on traits.”

“Night,” I said, feeling a grin on my face as I left Krom to her mercy. I climbed onto my bed and had my battle suit run a cleanse as my body seemed to bleed off tension and unknown fatigue. It gave way to sadness and loss as faces came from the darkness to remind me of the company I kept in sleep.

***

Eddie hated this part of the ship, the bridge.
Just a bunch of people pretending they have control over something.
He mentally sighed as he walked through it and to the conference room that Salchar was in. Calerd let him in and he found Salchar working on a data pad and a holographic display. He looked through it, seeing Eddie.

“What do you want that BC shell for?” he asked,
no messing about, good man,
Eddie thought as he pulled up a rough sketch on his data pad and gave it to Salchar.

“I'm going to use it as extra armor.”

“Okay, but this thing is going to be a pig with the engines.”

Eddie came around as he flicked through a few pages. “It's here somewhere,” he muttered as he found the new power and engine diagrams he'd scratched together.

“This is a complete remodeling. You're going to take two type-three power plants,” Salchar said as he nodded appreciatively. Few people understood his doodlings.

“Yes, which is why I want the EMP'ed BC.”

Salchar nodded.

“I see you've got the new weapons for it.”

“Well, we don't want to give it second hand crap, do we?” Eddie said, inspecting Salchar who returned his data pad.

“No, and I give you the go ahead, though it's low priority, okay? You can do it after we've got to seventy percent among all ships here. As you know, we've got a weapon shipment coming in, which'll help out. Are the factories doing well?”

“Of course, we've cranked it up to a hundred and thirty percent production. Shrift thinks he can get it to a hundred and fifty easily, though we're burning through our resources. We need miners.”

“There's a group of ex Commandos out there. They're just getting set up though.”

Eddie thought on it. “We're going to need more, especially if we're going to make this a permanent position.”

“Has Shrift talked to you about my ideas to move the station?”

“Yeah, I got them. It'll be easier for us to get resources to the place.”

“I'm going to need someone to come up with a plan for changing Mars' moons into bases and such.”

Out of the bunch of five year olds I have to herd around?
Eddie thought. Salchar crooked an eyebrow, and Eddie found out his thoughts hadn't stayed  private.

“Look, some of them are good, but most of them just want to know more. Working is secondary in all but a few,” Eddie said as Salchar nodded.

“Well, they don't need to be Kuruvian. If you feel they don't work, we have people from multiple races. On that fact, it should be three days until people are allowed to be recruited into the Free Fleet as the Earth completes their side of the protection agreement.”

“More idjits that don't know a hammer from a wrench,” Eddied muttered darkly as Salchar grinned.

“I've seen you use both for the same use once.”

Eddie took on an appropriate look of shock.

“I would never!”
Though there was that lug bolt and the plasma conduit. Couldn't fit a hammer in there.
“Well, unless I couldn't do it with anything else.”

Salchar's grin grew. “Okay, well, they'll be all yours once they finish basic. For now I just want someone thinking on how to get Mars, her moons, and Earth's moon ready for a base. As well as others to look at turning Jupiter and Saturn into refining plants, ready to supply our ships with fuel.”

“We'll need to get working on mining and getting the resources we need to keep our repairs going,” Eddie suggested. Salchar's grin made Eddie think the commander knew he couldn't resist the job. Eddie was an engineer. If nothing else, he liked building things.

“Very well, I think that's all. I'll leave it to you,” Salchar said.

“I'll get on it,” Eddie said in a resigned voice.

“Thanks, now how’s the Resilient coming along?”

“Quite fine,” Eddie couldn't help but perk up as he was finally getting the work he'd planned to do on the old girl for years finally started.

“We've got all of the small power plants installed and, with Shrift changing over to creating the type two or medium power plants, we'll be getting those in within two months. With the small ones, I was able to rip up the fuel and waste lines and replace them, as well as fix original power lines instead of having to run them through secondary or tertiary lines.

“Environmental's being fixed up. Weapons systems are being replaced. Pretty much, in four months we'll have everything done except the stuff we need a dock for.”

Salchar quirked an eyebrow as Eddie continued.

“Fixing up the girls structure, revamping Resilient's own server room, replacing most of the armor and adding additional to it, as well as more weaponry, upgrading the shield generators, get the main power plants installed, replace the capacitors.”

“It sounds like we're rebuilding her more than anything.”

“Not just rebuilding but upgrading.” Eddie grinned.

“She'll be a carrier buster! Give me eight months and no ship will be able to touch her toe to toe.” Eddie looked hopefully to Salchar.

“I'll give you as much time as I can, though I don't know if she'll be that powerful. Felix and Min Hae have only found a few upgraded systems from the Union information caches the Syndicate had.”

“While that stuff is good, there's nothing like looking to other sources for information.” Eddie grinned as Salchar's questioning look seemed to deepen. “Kuruvuians, while known for our almost insane want to learn more, also connect it to our old knowledge. There's groups all over the fleet that are looking at Earth and its information and adapting it to what we currently have. Like reactive armor, Gatling guns, removable armor, practices to cool or heat materials, information on physics, science, and such.”

“Though humanity can't get further than the Moon.”

“Oh, you could, though you're so focused on challenging everyone over Earth that your people never moved past Earth. The constant wars have made you think of incredible ways to kill, protect, and heal.”

Salchar nodded.

“With the different ways in which your world, my own people, and the Union and Syndicate think coming together there are connections made that none of any four would think,” Eddie finished.

Salchar looked excited. “I never thought of that, but it's kind of awesome to see how people think alike, and how it can combine into something new and kinda awesome.”

“Plus, it's helping to plug some holes in what we knew. We were pretty much plug and play. Well, except for me and Shrift, Resilient taught us more, though her memory cores went into retrograde.”

“Has she helped add more information?”

“She's helped in a lot of ways, though she didn't ever teach more than what Shrift or I ever knew from the Syndicate, so we had to learn from there.”

“Why didn't she?”

“I don't know,” Eddie said.

“I think it might be because she didn't want us to help the Syndicate if they found about her, or how we now knew things they didn't. Made sense to me, plus, we figured out quite a lot without her,” Eddie said and Salchar nodded appreciatively.

“Maybe we should ask her. Well, Resilient, how about it? Got anything we can add that might help the fleet?” Salchar asked.

Resilient appeared. Eddie nodded to his friend and one of the very few people that he counted as his peer. She nodded back as she bestowed a look that reminded Eddie of a mother being proud of her son's discovery.

“Yes, I do.”

“Why didn't you say so before?” Eddie asked. Salchar had an amused look on his face.

“You didn't ask,” she said and Salchar's amusement grew.

“Resilient, could you compile information from Earth? All the races, Syndicate, and what you've got, and give a copy to myself, Eddie, Shrift, and encode a copy for Felix and Min Hae?”

Eddie looked to his data pad as a file appeared there, taking some time to load.

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