Read OMEGA Guardian Online

Authors: Stephen Arseneault

Tags: #Sci-Fi & Fantasy

OMEGA Guardian (8 page)

BOOK: OMEGA Guardian
9.19Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

I looked at Garmon. "I once had a sleek starship from the Betagen shipyards that was heavily armored and had powerful twin ion cannons. I once busted a ship’s captain who was transporting thousands of liters of bleurgh. And I freed a stolen freighter loaded with refined cesium ore. I received my fifth star by capturing a freighter hauling upwards of thirty million blaster tips that were to be used in a revolution."

The second Feldon turned back towards me. "Hmph. Bleurgh. Well, I will commend you on your storytelling. Perhaps we will all be in the same work crew. I'll be in need of stories to pass the days as we are made dumb like Garmon in the lead mines, just before we die. My name is Jallis. Jallis Karmea. This is my brother Garmon Karmea; that is Alto and Riga. These other poor souls I do not know."

I replied, "Jallis Karmea. It is a strong name. It would be respected on my home world."

Jallis shook his head. "You don't have to sell me so hard, Grunta. We are on the same side now. We are both worthless as dirt and will be dead within a year."

I smiled. "Perhaps some of us will be."

Jallis half laughed. "You think you can escape the Talisans? They will kill you, and a hundred others, just for thinking about escape. If I were you, I would prepare myself for the end. It will be coming soon enough."

I replied, "If you go into this fight defeated, your defeat will be certain. As a Grunta, what I believe is that there is no fate. Life is what you make of it. You are the one who has the most control over your outcome. Sometimes life is difficult. If you place the responsibility for your life in others’ hands, you should expect only the life which they are willing to allow."

Jallis shook his head. "We are sitting in the back of a slaver ship, chained to a bench. What options do we have?"

I tugged at the chains to test their strength. "So long as we are alive, we have opportunity. And it is up to us to make use of that opportunity. Until they take life from us, we should strive to regain our freedom. If we die trying, we at least die with freedom still in our hearts and minds."

Jallis offered a half smile. "Freedom in our hearts and minds isn’t much use when you are dead, but before you get any more philosophical, I get what you are saying. I'll still have to be convinced that there is opportunity."

A Talison guard walked back and stood in our midst. "You are now property of the Talin Corporation. You will do exactly as we say, no more, no less. Before doing anything that you have not been instructed to do, you must ask permission. That includes talking. There will be no further talking on this ship. Be silent, and you may find that your next meal is not withheld."

The guard turned and walked away from the benches. The flight down to Telfor was made in silence. When we touched down, a bright light shone as the hatchway was opened.

A Talisan guard stepped up and unlocked the chains securing us to the bench. "Walk down to the light. When you step out onto the deck, take a good look around you. It will likely be the last time you ever see the surface of a planet again. Hahahaha!"

One of the Feldons in our group said, "Where are we being taken?"

The Talisan walked up to the Feldon, raised the butt of his blaster rifle, and smashed it into the Feldon’s shoulder. "You did not ask permission to speak! Let this be a lesson to all of you. Do as you are told, and you will not be punished. Step out of line, and the punishment will be severe. Now, get off my ship! Follow whatever orders are given, and you might just live to see tomorrow!"

I followed the others out onto the spaceport deck. A second ship was parked beside us with another set of slaves emerging. Two Talisan guards stepped up and motioned us toward a small transport. The spaceport sat on a high hill above a lush jungle landscape. Several kilometers away, I could see the face of a mountainside that was dotted with mine shafts. Our lives as slaves were about to begin.

Chapter 8

The shuttle landed at the base of the mountain. We were herded into an empty warehouse and forced to sit on the ground. A mine administrator soon emerged from a separate room and walked to our location on the floor.

The administrator spoke. "You will only be told once. You will only be punished once. Any violation of the rules I am about to read to you is punishable by death. In fact, anything is punishable by death. The Talin Corporation now owns you, and they will determine whether or not you are an asset or a liability. Just so you know, liabilities are done away with just off the end of this plateau.

"As you came from the transport into this building, you probably got a hint of the smell of prior liabilities; their bodies are rotting at the bottom of a ravine just over that far edge. Of course, I am only talking about the ones that die from the fall. Any who live are attacked by the native Garantian Bears that roam these jungles. They are not eaten, but they are killed, as the bears are very territorial.

"Occasionally, for our own entertainment, a slave who has been found in violation of the rules will be lowered down into the ravine with an omnidirectional camera so we can watch. The longest runner lasted four hours. If you have any thoughts of escape, you are wasting your time thinking about it. There is nowhere to go."

A Feldon raised his hand and received a gesture to proceed with his question. "Are we to be fed? It has been over a day since I have eaten."

The administrator smiled. "You will be housed, clothed, and then fed, after which you will be assigned tools and a work shaft. We run on Earth Standard Time here, since you will not be seeing sunlight. Shifts are sixteen hours, with eight hours for personal time and sleep. If you choose not to use your personal time for sleep, you will be sent back to the shafts to work. If you are unable to rise for work, you will be taken to the edge of the plateau and dumped.

"I do have one more item to add. It is the Corporation’s benevolent desire that any slave who completes six years in good standing, while in the employ of the Corporation, be given their freedom. While I cannot say how often that has happened, I can say that it has happened. Now, if you will all rise and proceed to the doorway over there, my associate will guide you to your new quarters."

As we stood, the administrator singled me out. "Grunta. You stay here for a moment with me."

When the others had moved through the far door, the administrator spoke. "It is not often that we get beings in here of your stature. I believe you might be the first Grunta on Telfor. Physically, you are much bigger than most here. Therefore, you will have an increased quota. Think of that increase as payment for the larger bunk you will receive and the larger food portion you will also receive. Both of which I believe constitute a fair trade.

"Also, we have had others here of large stature that caused problems. The last was a Vautan. He was equal to you in size. After his second instance of rebellious behavior, he was lowered down into the ravine with a camera around his neck. His attempts to stay alive were a welcome distraction to our staff. If you should turn out to be a problem, keep in mind that the staff workers here will not hesitate to turn you in. They are always eager to find the next great runner."

I replied, "I will be of no issue."

The administrator smiled and nodded. "Sometimes trouble has a way of also finding those who have no issues. Make sure you don’t give any staffers a reason to turn you in, for they will not hesitate. Go join your crew."

I turned and was soon through the door. After a short run, I caught back up to the others. We were taken into a cavernous room that was lined with bunk after bunk of smelly, sleeping slaves that came from a variety of species. The Omega sector was called home to seventeen sentient species, and each was represented in the bunk room before me. I also took note of the fact that most had segregated themselves to bunk with those of their own kind. It was a form of discrimination that all sentient species practiced. It was natural for one to gravitate toward others of the same or similar culture and appearance. It had been that way all through time. The microcosm of the Omega sector that the slaver bunk room offered proved that norm to be true.

The Feldons with my group walked to a section occupied by other Feldons and began to select from the available bunks. As I stood surveying the room, I noticed Jallis Karmea waving his hand in a gesture for me to join them.

I made my way over and spoke. "I appreciate the invitation, Jallis."

Jallis laughed. "Well, the way I see it, I would rather have you as a friend in here than not. Who knows, maybe your size will come in handy. This place is about as close to a prison as you can get, and prisons always have a pecking order for who’s in charge. I figure that if you are with us, we are much less likely to get messed with. You can be like our guardian."

I thought for a moment before responding. "Hmm. That is the second time I have been referred to as a guardian in the last month. I would say that I was not very successful at it, as I am not able to protect the one who said that first."

Jallis pointed to one of the larger bunks. "You might want to grab that one. And if you want to make up for disappointing whoever said that first, just do a good job of protecting those who are saying it now."

Jallis looked around the bunk room. "It looks like the lights stay on here all the time. That is going to do wonders for our sleep habits."

As Jallis turned to sit on his bunk, another Feldon approached him. "I’m sorry, you will have to move over to the bunks over there."

Jallis replied, "Who says?"

The Feldon pointed back towards a sleeping Feldon. "Javel Gerkam is the Feldon Governor at this mine on Telfor. He makes the rules for all Feldons."

Jallis snarled. "We don’t answer to any made-up Feldon Governor. You tell him that we—"

I held up my hand. "You tell Mr. Gerkam that we will gladly comply. We are not here to cause trouble."

Jallis turned towards me with a scowl. "I invited you over here so we wouldn’t have to worry about idiots like this Javel. We picked these bunks, and we are keeping them!"

I shook my head. "If you truly want my protection, then you will have to listen to my counsel as well. If you butt heads with the established order on the first day, you are begging to be tossed over that cliff out there. The Talisans look for any excuse for doling out that punishment. Causing unrest in an ordered environment would make you subject to such punishment. We should comply with this request, at least until we are able to evaluate the situation."

Jallis sighed. "If you haven’t already figured it out, Grunta, I'm a hothead. I don’t like to be pushed around or taken advantage of. I don’t start fights, but I don’t back down from them if they come to me."

I nodded. "I take it that you see the reason in my suggestion. Keep this in mind: if I am taken away by the Talisans, who will be here to protect you then?"

Jallis snarled and walked to the bunks that had been pointed to by Javel Gerkam’s messenger. I walked to the next large bunk and sat down. I spun and lay back, extending my feet. I groaned as they stretched out beyond the end of the bed. Jallis grabbed the bunk nearest and pushed it forward until my feet were at rest upon it.

Jallis spoke. "I’m short, I won’t be using that end of the bunk anyway. You might as well keep it for your own."

I nodded. "I appreciate that, Jallis. Anything that you can do to provide for my needs is something that I shall endeavor to return. I am now in your debt."

Jallis half laughed as he pointed toward a sleeping Javel. "You are already paid in full. Just try to keep me out of trouble if you can."

A Talisan approached. "Let’s go! It’s time you received your work clothes. Line up and follow me."

When we arrived in the next room, the floor was wet.

The Talisan turned and spoke. "Drop your clothes in a pile over here. Then move to the center of the room."

I could see the discomfort in the eyes of some of the female slaves. They disposed of their clothing and huddled together in a mass of naked Feldon flesh. The Feldon men did their best to not stare. Streams of cold water then fell from valves in the ceiling, dousing the naked slaves. I could see shivers coming from the Feldons as their body temperatures dropped. My own thick skin meant the cold water was little more than refreshing.

When the water stopped falling, the Talisan guard spoke. "At the end of your shift, you will be brought through this room. You will deposit your work clothes in a pile just like this one, and then proceed to the rinse area. The table beside the clothes pile has soap. Make as little or as much use of it as you will. When the rinse is complete, you will proceed to the next room, where you will be sonically dried. In the room following that, you will be issued a new set of work clothes.

"When you are dressed, proceed through the next door to the chow line. Fill your bowl to the brim and eat all that you can, as this will be your one main meal per day. During your shift, a bread slave and a water slave will be bringing you bread and water every four hours. You will have to time your eating and drinking so that you continue to meet your quotas. When you are finished in the chow line, I would recommend that you go straight to your bunk and make full use of it until your shift starts. Tomorrow, your exciting new life on Telfor will begin. Hahahaha!"

The stew provided was not of the best quality, but it was designed to provide the nutrition needed to keep the slave miners working. I was given two bowls and ate every gram of the overly salted mixture that I could scrape from the bowls’ bottoms. We were then marched back to our bunks and told to sleep until our shifts would begin.

As I lay back on my bunk, I looked around at the new Feldon slaves who surrounded me. All eyes were open wide as the reality of where they were began to fully set in. Even though the bunk room smelled of the many poorly washed slaves sleeping within it, it was kept in a relatively sanitary condition.

The Talisans knew how to work their slaves to get the maximum production from them. There was a cost to obtaining new slaves, and while there was nothing of substance done to make slave life easy, it was understood that a relatively happy slave was a productive slave. I forced myself to sleep for the remainder of my personal time.

Five minutes before the new shift began, a loud buzzer sounded, rousting us from our sleep as the prior shift’s crew headed to their bunks. Other than the introduction of new slaves, the operation ran continuously. We were marched down a long hall to a large elevator. From there we descended nearly a half kilometer into the base of the mountain before the elevator stopped. We were led to a room with standard miner’s gear, picks, shovels, hammers, and pry bars.

The sixteen miners of least stature and strength were then separated from our group of forty-eight. They would be bringing the bread, water, and any tool replacements that we required, and would be responsible for hauling away the material we dug out of the shafts.

The gelana ore was difficult to mine by hand, and inhalation of the lead dust over long periods of time was deadly to most species. Humans had a high tolerance for lead as compared to most others. Gruntas were immune to its effects.

I grabbed my pick, shovel, hammer, and pry bar and was directed down a shaft. "You, Grunta, go down here. You will find the start of a new vein about a hundred meters down. Work that vein until it runs dry. And I have been told to keep an eye on you to make sure your production stays well above the others. If you fail to do so, I will happily report it to the supervisor. Now, get to work!"

The Talisan attempted to give me a shove as I walked past him. To his dismay, he was unable to affect my progress, instead pushing himself slightly backward. I chuckled as I continued to walk.

When I reached the ore vein, I turned to see Garmon standing behind me with a smile. "I’ll be loading for you, Mr. Beutcher."

I nodded as I eyed the crude conveyor that ran the length of the shaft we had just come down. As I looked it over, the conveyor came to life. It was time to begin work on our quota.

I pointed at the conveyor. "Do your best to keep up, Garmon. We will try to keep as close to the quota as we can. We could do more, but they would then always expect more. So, we will give them only what they asked for."

I turned around with the pick and began striking the gelana vein. The first few minutes saw little progress. However, I soon developed a technique that would keep me digging at the necessary pace to meet quota. While the labor was very physical, my frame was well designed for that purpose. I pulled the ore from the wall, and Garmon drug it up the shaft to be loaded onto the conveyor.

The sixteen-hour shift was a long and arduous undertaking. In our first day, Garmon and I had managed almost four meters of digging. I was told that most veins ran tens of meters at best and were generally only a few centimeters wide. As we hit the third meter, the ore vein widened. Our quota had become easier to attain.

The following week saw us falling into a routine that for me was easily sustained. Garmon was doing his best to keep up, and other than the lead inhalation from the dust, he was holding his own.

After our seventh day in the mines, I lay back in my bunk.

Jallis said, "We have got to devise a way out of here. The guards are sloppy. They often come too close. I could run through the one who watches over me with a pick before he knew what hit him."

I replied, "I too could easily overpower my guard. Our problem lies in what we would do next. The forward guards have little more than shock sticks to prod us along. Here, in the showers and bunk room, I have only seen one guard with a blaster rifle. If we were to exit the mine with that single blaster, we would not fare well against the Talisan guards outside. There are too many."

Jallis continued, "What if we were able to get that blaster and to make it down into the jungle? Certainly we would be able to defend ourselves against bears with a blaster. I have to do something. The anger inside grows with every swing of the pick. I’m afraid that I will just one day explode and start something I cannot stop."

BOOK: OMEGA Guardian
9.19Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Le Temps des Cerises by Zillah Bethel
The Big Book of Submission by Rachel Kramer Bussel
Games of the Heart by Kristen Ashley
Touch by Marina Anderson
The Songbird's Seduction by Connie Brockway
Learning to Live Again by Taryn Plendl
Rory's Glory by Justin Doyle