Read Star Carrier (Lost Colonies Trilogy Book 3) Online

Authors: B. V. Larson

Tags: #Science Fiction & Fantasy, #Science Fiction, #Alien Invasion, #Colonization, #Exploration, #First Contact, #Galactic Empire, #Genetic engineering, #Hard Science Fiction, #Military, #Space Fleet, #Space Opera, #Space Exploration

Star Carrier (Lost Colonies Trilogy Book 3) (12 page)

BOOK: Star Carrier (Lost Colonies Trilogy Book 3)
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-19-

 

If you’ve never partied with an engineering team in deep space… well… I can’t recommend it.

The crowd was a crowd in name only. Some two dozen subdued individuals in white nano-fiber resembled blocky blobs of snow in an otherwise decorative barroom. A few were boisterous, but most were drinking in stoic silence.

The walls of the establishment were raspberry. The ceiling was a collage of moving holographic color, and the lasers projected upon the floor depicting a rippling, reflective pond. Loud music thumped from the red walls until the narco-drinks numbed you and made everything seem normal. At that point, the music seemed to become muted.

Most in attendance were drunker than I. I’d activated my internal blood-toxin filters and cranked them up to the fullest. The filters were expensive toys I’d found useful time and again. I was feeling good, to be sure, but not past the point of oblivion.

Rumbold wasn’t bothering to alter or hide his state. He’d taken up with a sultry scientist with long, red hair which defied her lab suit. She’d torn holes in the fabric purposefully, claiming she was feeling hot. Her skin and hair were spilling out of her white coveralls, both in stark contrast to it. The smart clothing tried to mend itself, but she kept pushing away the crawling straps and cinches.

As the party progressed, so did their behavior. Rumbold and his newfound companion were clapping one another on the back almost as often as they were hammering for fresh drinks.

Variants served the drinks to the crowd with silent efficiency. I still found the cyborgs as unsettling as ever. Such was their speed and dexterity they were able to deploy arms reaching three meters or more to their fullest extent in a split-second. Slinging drinks from behind the bar to a waiting patron occurred in the blink of an eye.

I couldn’t help watching this in concern. If the variants decided to become aggressive, well, every human in the room would be slaughtered inside a single minute. As it was, those flashing arms might have caught someone and broken a nose or ripped away an ear as they delivered drinks with unnecessary speed.

“Can’t you get them to slow down?” I asked Director Vogel.

He was sitting at my side wearing a dour expression and sipping a coffee laced with potent drugs.

He shrugged in response to my question. “Do they really alarm you so much?”

“Yes, they damned well do,” I told him. “They should alarm you as well. You can’t know they aren’t plotting a takeover right here on Phobos.”

He snorted and shook his head. His expression was that of a man bemused by a fool. I found it aggravating.

“How can you sit there and feel no remorse for what your machines did aboard
Victory
?” I demanded with sudden vehemence. I knew that my emotions were coming out more strongly than I’d intended, but I couldn’t hold back. The drinks and the atmosphere were having some effect on me, after all.

Vogel made a flippant gesture. “You’re drunk,” he said. “I don’t take the words of a drunk seriously.”

Standing up, I found I wasn’t swaying or bleary-eyed. My mind was sharp—perhaps sharper than usual.

“What if I were to threaten you?” I demanded. “What would they do? Would they move to protect you?”

“No. They aren’t security variants. They’re bartenders.”

Deciding to test his theory, I drew my sword.

One must understand the nature of modern society to fully understand the meaning of such an act. Although the run of the mill worker on Earth might have found the brandishing of a power-blade unexpected, they by no means were unaware of its significance.

Director Vogel’s eyes went from sleepy to wide-awake within a split-second. His mouth formed an “O” of surprise.

“Are you mad?” he demanded. “Have a care, Captain, or I’ll have your commission.”

A half-smile crossed my face. “I’m only a captain of the Guard, it’s true,” I told him. “But you’re the man who created a crew of treacherous machines.”

“That’s not so—!”

I leaned close to him, interposing the sword between myself and his person.

“I watched them behead Halsey,” I told him. “I watched that on a live feed, I experienced it as if I was there.”

He stared at the sword in his face, which I’d switched on. Plasma ran down the length of it and ran back again, forming a horizontal line that lit up his dark eyes.

A hand fell on my wrist then.

“Hold, Captain!” Rumbold said to me. “You’ve had a bit too much to drink, that’s all!”

I straightened and looked at the variants. They were still slinging drinks robotically. A few of the patrons had left out of concern, but others stared curiously.

With a flourish, I lashed out with my blade. The air sparkled and then there was a flash of discharged energy. Smoking, a severed arm dropped from a variant that had just delivered a drink. The arm was withdrawn, and the variant’s oh-so-odd eyes swiveled to stare at me. There was no expression on that painted face to indicate what it might be thinking of my act.

“I shouldn’t have come here,” I said to Vogel. “It was my mistake. I’ll retire to my ship now.”

Marching out of the bar, I swept down the passages sheathing my blade. Behind me, I heard the pattering footsteps of Rumbold. He caught up and looked over his shoulder as if he thought a hundred angry technicians might be pursuing us.

“Captain Sparhawk!” called a voice.

I stopped, breathing hard. After a moment’s thought, I turned on my heel and faced the man who addressed me.

It was Director Vogel. His expression was one of concern.

“Captain,” he said, “let me tell you how sorry I am for your loss—for Earth’s loss.”

I didn’t speak, not trusting myself to do so.

Vogel slowly approached.

“I hadn’t thought of the human angle to all this,” he admitted as he walked up to us. “I hadn’t considered—you have to understand, the variants are my life’s work. They are like my children. A man has a right to protect his children, doesn’t he, even if they go down a dark path?”

“No,” I said flatly, “not when those children kill thousands—possibly millions. You must reject them. You must accept your gross failure. If anyone down at CENTCOM had any brains, they’d shut down the lot of them.”

Vogel considered. “You might be right. Why
wouldn’t
they do such a thing? I’ve been afraid of that possibility for some time.”

“Huh,” grunted Rumbold.

We both looked at him, and he shrugged. “Seems more than obvious to me. They need the variants. They need them now more than ever. They must have fresh ships. This time they might not let them aboard those ships—but they want the ships built in the first place.”

His words rang true, and we didn’t feel the need to discuss the point further.

“Walk with me, will you?” Vogel asked serenely, his pupils dilated.

I agreed, and Rumbold again tottered in our wake.

“The variants didn’t fail as you think they did,” Vogel told me in a quiet voice. “I went over their code before and after I heard of the disaster. There was no error. No self-awareness that grew to the point of rebellion.”

Puzzled, I shook my head. “Are you denying they killed the crew of at least one battleship?”

“No, I’m not saying that. I’m saying they were given fresh parameters. Their malfunction wasn’t their fault—or my fault. Of that much, I’m certain.”

“I see,” I said, “and what evidence do you have to support this theory?”

“It’s more than a theory, but I have nothing other than my word to support it. Anything I dredge up wouldn’t convince anyone. I could just as easily be showing you code that was overwritten.”

“Right,” I said, “which renders your statements meaningless.”

“No,” he said, “not at all. Think, man! If I didn’t do it, if no one here on Phobos did it—then who did? And why?”

He had managed to give me pause. I didn’t like to admit it, but his candor was disarming. He’d been defensive as the creator of the variants, but he was also realistic. The least I could do was try to respond in the same manner.

I tried to push past emotions and the lacework of drugs in my mind. The latter was easier than the former.

“All right,” I said, “I’m willing to entertain your claims because I’ve seen your machines in action. The variants aboard my ship showed no interest in aggression or rebellion. They’re fascinated by fast, effective action. That’s all. The same clearly goes for your variants here on Phobos.”

“They didn’t even care when you whacked one’s arm off!” Rumbold interjected loudly.

“Quite right,” I said, glancing at him. “All right, Director Vogel. I’m willing to be convinced you and your people aren’t at fault. Where do we go from here?”

“That would seem obvious,” he said. “We have to figure out who really hacked into my creations and suborned them.”

“And how do we do that?”

He sidled closer. “You could take me with you. We’ll figure it out—me and my variants.”

“Won’t you need an assistant?” Rumbold asked.

We glanced at him. I almost smiled.

“Did you have anyone in mind, Rumbold?”

“As a matter of fact, the lady I was speaking with expressed a wish to leave this rock—her words, not mine!”

Vogel huffed. “You’re talking about Dr. McKay, aren’t you? She’s not been working out. I’ve been considering transferring her back to Earth.”

“Perfect!” Rumbold said, clapping his hands together. “Two birds with one stone—don’t you think?”

We were both frowning at him in incomprehension.

He came closer and his powerful alcoholic breath washed over us.

“You see,” he said, “you can’t very well form an obvious team of investigators. You have to take people who are leaving for other, supportable reasons. In McKay’s case, she’ll be heading home for a transfer.”

“Why would we need to go through such complications?” Vogel asked.

Rumbold laughed and shook his head. “I can see you’re new to scheming. Whoever did this is connected. They can’t be allowed to see what’s coming.”

“I agree with your helmsman,” Vogel said after careful consideration. “They’re bound to hang all this around my neck sooner or later. I would appreciate your help in finding out what really happened, Captain Sparhawk.”

Slowly, they convinced me. The matter had to be investigated. I’d been told by Perez that CENTCOM was handling the investigation internally—but I knew what that meant. They’d probably cover up the matter as best they could and find blame outside their organization, presumably placing the matter at Director Vogel’s feet.

Their other option was far more sinister. If CENTCOM had been compromised, my own superior officers might be actively behind the plot. In that case, an investigation was bound to be fruitless. If anyone was going to get blamed, it would likely be me.

Coming to a decision, I led the group toward the docking tube, and I took them aboard
Defiant
.

We had a lot of careful planning to do.

-20-

 

To say Vogel and I didn’t trust one another was an understatement. He was a deep-gov scientist, the kind that Guardsmen rarely ever met. He held service people of any stripe in low regard.

To him, I was a foppish, self-important dictator determined to get into his way. To me, he was an irritant and quite possibly a traitor to all humanity.

Unfortunately, we had to work together. Both of us had too much to lose. Our careers were dangling on strings before our noses, not to mention our very lives.

“I’m only going to work with the three variants you already have embedded in my crew,” I insisted during the second hour of intense negotiations.

The narco-beers had long ago been filtered out of my bloodstream. I missed the chemicals dearly. Vogel was competent, but he was also difficult to deal with under the best of circumstances.

“Three isn’t enough,” he insisted. “We need a full squad of them. The trio you have here—they don’t even have the correct cross-section of skills.”

“They’ll have to do. Perez specifically ordered me
not
to bring home more variants.”

“Are you making that up?” he asked.

My face reddened slightly. I could feel it.

“I’m not accustomed to lying, sir,” I said.

“No… no I don’t suppose that you are. I reread your psych profile upon your return to Phobos. You’re painfully honest, Sparhawk.”

“Thank you.”

“It wasn’t meant as a compliment.”

“But I’ve chosen to take it as one.”

We eyed each other for a moment in anger.

“Look,” he said at last, leaning forward. “We’re about to undertake a clandestine mission. If you can’t even lie for a cause so important—”

“I’m capable of tactical duplicity. Sometimes the omission of critical details is just as powerful as the fabrication of facts.”

He nodded at last. “Good enough. That will have to do. Six variants—”

“What’s that?”

“I can do with six. We can hide three of them in crates in the hold as we approach Earth. That is what you meant by acceptable duplicity, isn’t it?”

I considered his offer carefully. He’d reduced the number of variants required to six in a remarkably short time. This fact made me want to press further.

“Three,” I said, “the same three who’ve been aboard all along.”

He made a gesture of disgust and slouched back in his chair. “This is all because you won’t break your commitment to Perez? The man isn’t to be trusted.”

“Nor are you, Director Vogel. You’ll have to make do with the three variants aboard. That’s all I can do for you.”

“What about my personal staff? How many people can I bring aboard?”

“How many do you need?”

“Five.”

I nodded after a moment’s consideration. “We have ample room in the living quarters for more crewmen. We lost a number of technicians. Your five will be welcome.”

“Ah-ha!” he said, waving a stick-like finger in my direction. “It’s not me you don’t trust, it’s my variants.”

“Of course it is. My marines could kill your entire staff within ninety seconds after I gave the order. The variants, however, would be much harder to dispatch.”

He appeared alarmed by the idea, but I pretended not to notice.

“Very well,” I said, “as we’re now in agreement, I’ll have to ask you to excuse me. I must get back to commanding my ship.”

I walked toward the conference room door, but before I could reach it, his hand jumped up to bar my path.

“Yes?” I asked him sternly.

“Would you really order your men to kill my scientists? They’re a pack of harmless civilians!”

“We’re not thugs, Director. I was speaking about a hypothetical case. Despite the fact you’ve been scanned and DNA traced since you came aboard, you might not be what you seem to be.”

He frowned. “You’ve been running background checks?”

“Yes, and much more than that. Yamada has worked up a complete file on you. The results have been fed to me during our meeting via my implant. As far as my technicians can tell, you’re human. But they could be wrong. You could simply be a traitor to your planet.”

Director Vogel appeared to be alarmed. He removed his arm, and I left him behind to think about his position. He had to understand he was in a delicate spot. I wasn’t going to let him have a free hand aboard my ship.

Just as important, all of our lives were very much in danger. We were engaged in a deadly business. It wouldn’t surprise me if we were all executed before this was over, or turned into “unpersons” by those who dwelt on Earth in her longest shadows.

I hadn’t told him about that part yet. I doubted he knew—how could he? It was only by discussing matters of state with the Council that I’d come to grasp the true nature of the political system on Earth.

The following week saw brisk improvements aboard my ship. The damage to the external decks, those near the hull itself, were slowly being cleared and repaired. Gone were the days when we could rely on Stroj-built damage repair robots to do all the work. During our many voyages and battles, the numbers of such machines had dwindled. Crewmen I could replace, but not the robots. Every one destroyed over the last few years had been a permanent loss.

After breakfast on the eighth day, I reached the command deck fifteen minutes before my shift began. As was my custom, I began the day’s routine surveying the logs of repair activities over the previous twenty-four hours.

Materials were flowing steadily up from Phobos to our end of the docking tube. The occasional part that had been too large to transport this way had been left on the surface of Phobos, to be later ferried by my crewmen using pinnaces.

Under no circumstances had variants from Phobos been allowed to come closer than the far end of the docking tube. My own crew and my handful of trusted variants waited at our end to receive the steady stream of equipment and supplies they were sending up in large loads every hour or so. They used muscle and servos to place and attach each item.

The process was slow, to be sure, but it was clearly safer this way. I didn’t want to end up making a final broadcast to Earth as Admiral Halsey had.

Vogel sent me a text about three hours after I’d relieved Durris, asking to meet me for lunch. I agreed, and when the time came I found his entire team was sitting with him at the luncheon table in the officers’ mess.

Before I could take my tray to join them, I found myself accompanied by my stone-faced Marine Commander. He’d apparently been waiting in the mess hall with his tray growing cold until I arrived. Falling into step beside me, he joined us without a formal invitation.

I didn’t make an issue of it. Zye, if she’d been here, would have done the same.

Thinking of Zye gave me a pain. I’d sent several messages to Earth regarding her, but I’d yet to receive anything back. Over the last few days I’d stopped bothering. She’d been left behind and doubtlessly had duties to perform for Star Guard that had nothing to do with me. She was a big girl—literally and figuratively—and could take care of herself.

Still, it seemed out of character for her to be silent via distant connection for so long. I hoped something hadn’t gone wrong, and I vowed to look into the matter upon my return to Earth.

Shrugging, I made an effort to pay my full attention to the team that now faced me. They looked as wary as my own crew did around their variants.

“Captain,” Vogel said, “so good of you and this… gentleman… to join us.”

“This is Marine Lieutenant Morris,” I said.

Vogel lifted the corners of his mouth a fraction, but he didn’t offer to shake hands. Neither did Morris or any of the others. Dr. McKay was there with the rest, and her red hair was now tucked away. She seemed as sober and watchful as the rest, and she barely nodded to me.

“Introductions aside,” Vogel continued, “I was hoping this morning that you’d accept some suggestions to speed up and improve the repair process.”

“Suggestions?” I asked. “Such as?”

“Well… your restrictions upon us have been severe—”

“Hold on right there,” Morris said, leaning in and speaking in a low, mistrustful voice. “You can forget it, Vogel. We’re not letting your variants run wild on this ship. You can just forget about that. The job will get done when it gets done.”

Vogel’s eyes slid to look at Morris in a startled fashion, then moved back to look at me. “That’s not what I’m talking about.”

“Please then, explain it to us,” I suggested.

“It’s about the variants here aboard
Defiant
. We’ve not been allowed to see them, to service their needs.”

“They don’t need anything,” Morris interjected again. “They suck up oil, oxygen, protein powder and electricity. Once in a while, they might shit a battery, but they pick those up on their own. They don’t—”

My hand came up at last. “Morris, please.”

He fell into a brooding silence.

“What’s wrong with our variants that might require your attention?” I asked Vogel.

“That’s just it, we have no idea. They might need any number of service requests handled. The units were built by us, Captain. They weren’t designed to run in a hostile environment full of biologicals for so long without care.”

“Biologicals?” I asked.

“He means us,” Morris said flatly. “We’re like some kind of bug colony on a plate to these people.”

“Hyperbole aside,” Vogel continued, “we need to attend to the variants.”

I pretended to consider the idea. Then, slowly, I shook my head. “We’ll see. Perhaps it can be arranged after we reach Earth.”

Vogel released an unhappy exhalation. Morris grinned.

“Captain, please be reasonable.”

“I am. When we reach Earth orbit, we’ll take up this matter again. With the help of your units, we’re making progress faster than we’d anticipated.
Defiant
will fly in a few more days.”

Vogel now appeared startled. “That isn’t possible. Phobos won’t even have had time to produce and deliver all the parts by then for a full repair.”

“One week then,” I said. “By that time, we’ll be space-worthy. Not perfect, but serviceable. Thank you for your time, and your efforts.”

I got up and left the table. They fell to talking irritably behind us.

Morris fell into step beside me.

“That’s the way to handle those people,” he assured me. “They’re almost as strange as the variants themselves.”

“Morris,” I told him, “as much as I appreciate your efforts to safeguard my person—”

“You don’t have to thank me, Captain,” he said. “I’m glad to do it. It’s my job.”

“Well, at least until Zye is back aboard.”

I said this last with a smile. Everyone knew that Zye was paranoid as my security officer, and she tended to follow me around determined to prevent encounters such as the one we’d just experienced.

But Morris didn’t respond the way I’d expected. Instead of snorting with laughter, he gave me a blank stare.

“Did you say ‘Zye’, sir?” he asked.

“Yes, of course.”

“Who’s that?”

It was the utter blankness of his expression that made me stop in my tracks. I faced him fully and began to get a sick feeling.

“Lieutenant Morris,” I asked, “have you ever met a Beta?”

“You mean one of those giant freaks that built our ship?” he asked in surprise.

“Yes, exactly.”

“Well no, Captain. I remember seeing them on the screens in battle, and I remember how they marched aboard, hulking in their armor. But I’ve never seen one alive and talked to her. No one on Earth has, that I know of. Why do you ask?”

I felt thoroughly sick. I wanted to unload the lunch I’d just consumed on the deck, but I did my best not to react visibly.

“The update,” I said aloud and staring at a bulkhead. “We got one from Earth this morning, didn’t we?”

“Uh… yes sir. You okay, Captain?”

“Yes… I’m fine. Maybe the food wasn’t the freshest.”

He laughed. “The cook on every ship is a marine’s worst enemy!”

“Just so…”

He left me then, standing in the passage outside the mess hall.

Inside my mind and my heart, there was a gaping hole. I knew without a shadow of a doubt that Zye, my companion and friend of several years, a woman who’d I’d entrusted with my life on any number of occasions, was gone.

She’d become an
unperson
. I could feel it in my bones.

Already, my mind was planning to do careful searches online and generate seemingly off-handed questions for various crewmembers—but I knew what I’d find.

Nothing.

Zye was gone. Her memory had been erased from the mind of everyone who’d known her.

What had she done back home, on Earth, to deserve such a fate? How had she managed to anger those who ran my world from their dark strongholds?

I didn’t know, but I meant to find out.

BOOK: Star Carrier (Lost Colonies Trilogy Book 3)
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