The Gilded Cage

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Authors: Blaze Ward

Tags: #Science Fiction & Fantasy, #Science Fiction, #Hard Science Fiction, #Two Hours or More (65-100 Pages), #Literature & Fiction, #action adventure, #hard sf, #ai, #Space Exploration, #Space Opera, #Galactic Empire

BOOK: The Gilded Cage
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The Gilded Cage (The Science Officer: Volume 3)

Blaze Ward

Copyright © 2015 Blaze Ward

All rights reserved

Published by Knotted Road Press

www.KnottedRoadPress.com

 

Cover art:

Copyright © Innovari | Dreamstime.com – Orbital Space Station And Spaceship Photo

 

Cover and interior design copyright © 2015 Knotted Road Press

 

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This book is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. All rights reserved. This is a work of fiction. All characters and events portrayed in this book are fictional, and any resemblance to real people or incidents is purely coincidental. This book, or parts thereof, may not be reproduced in any form without permission.

The Gilded Cage (The Science Officer: Volume 3)

BOOK FIVE: WILHELMINA

Part One

The voice coming out of the comm was such a surprise that Javier nearly set his workbench on fire with the welding laser.

“Science Officer to the bridge,” Captain Sokolov growled from speakers on several walls.

Javier took the time to disarm the laser and set it down carefully. He really didn’t feel the need to explain to the Chief Engineer how he managed to set off the fire suppression system.

Again.

He stood and scratched a spot on his kidneys as he stretched and weighed the urgency in the captain’s voice.

The desktop was a mess. But the man had sounded a bit cross. Worse than usual, even.

Javier couldn’t remember what he might have done this time to set the captain off. After all, Sykora wasn’t back from her trip yet, so he really didn’t have anybody to bicker with.

Too bad he couldn’t figure out how to keep her gone permanently. He might even like it on this ship, regardless of his status as a highly–valued slave.

Javier considered adding a fancy sash to the basic ship uniform of slacks, undershirt, buttoned–up tunic, and occasional jacket.

They were pirates. Weren’t pirates supposed to wear a fancy sash? They did in all the movies.

I wonder what uniform I could convince the crew the ancient Janissaries wore. Probably get Kianoush Buday to work up me something swanky. She’d be tickled.

Still, Sokolov hadn’t asked politely. And he didn’t sound like today was going to involve him using the word
please
a lot.

Javier flipped a coin in his head, studied the results, and started gathering key electronics components into his hands and sliding them into his pockets. For now, Suvi’s little flitter was scattered all over the place, part of the shell here, optical sensor turret brain sitting to one side, lifter controls physically removed and sitting on a shelf.

The key components: her secondary processor, radio encryptor and transmitter, and backup memory storage, were what he wanted right now. He was in the process of upgrading the flitter’s processing power, and adding more horsepower to the controller portable, so his secret AI assistant could think faster.

It was amazing what kinds of spare parts you could scavenge on a ship this size, just by paying attention.

Suvi was still a little pissed at not being a starship anymore, with all the power of a nav computer to think with and store movies and books and stuff.

But when Sokolov and his pirates had captured the two of them, Javier had just barely managed to sneak her memory and personality chip off the vessel, and then pour her into the only thing he had to hide her in, his short–range airborne autonomous remote. The one that looked like a big gray grapefruit, covered with sensors.

It wasn’t his old probe–cutter,
Mielikki
, but Suvi could hide in the remote, safe from the pirates. They would have killed him if they knew about her, and turned her into a slave, too. Another slave. The flitter was as close as he could get her to starflight right now. And she had saved his ass more than once in the little flier.

“Now, Aritza,” Sokolov growled from the speakers again. Apparently, he knew his Science Officer a little too well.

“Coming,” Javier yelled back, stuffing things into pockets and moving to the door.

Part Two

Zakhar Sokolov sat in his command chair and stewed.

Externally, he maintained the façade of
command
.

Aloof. Charismatic. Demanding. Durable.

The Captain
.

Storm Gauntlet
was on her late first shift. Normally, he would come off duty in another hour or so and go hit the tiny gym at the back of E–deck for some sweat and mobility. That wasn’t going to happen today. At the same time, Javier Aritza, his Science Officer/botanist/pain in the ass slave/Centurion would have come on duty at that time.

With Djamila Sykora and Piet Alferdinck away on a mission, he was down to a very small group of centurions to stand watches, which meant he actually had to do it, instead of delegating like he normally did.

And it wasn’t going to get any better.

Sokolov looked over to his administrative assistant and comm tech, Kibwe Bousaid. The man had the size and bulk to be a successful soldier or dragoon, if he had any trace of killer instinct in him. Instead, he was big, and soft, and quiet, an introvert with a passion for paperwork. And he was probably worth his weight in exotic metals as a result.

“Bousaid,” he called across the bridge, waiting for the man to look up. “When the science officer and the chief engineer get here, you’ll be in charge.”

Bousaid nodded, powered down his station, and stood up.

Sokolov hadn’t planned to interrupt what his aide was doing, but he recognized the sense of purpose the man brought to any task, so he stood as well. Bousaid would sit in the command chair, deadly serious, and be
In Command
, when he could have just kept working at his station and answered any rogue questions that came up.

Sokolov shrugged and moved to one side. They were all pirates, usually by choice, with one exception, and even Aritza had chosen to be here, when push came to shove. They all could handle their jobs with a minimum of adult supervision.

The main hatch cycled open to one side of the bridge.

Zakhar looked over and pointed at Aritza, then at his chief engineer, Andreea Dalca.

“Primary conference room,” he said, moving that direction. They both stopped and turned around to head back up the hall.

Ξ

Javier suffered a moment of despair as he considered the old battered table in the conference room. The last time he had been in here for something important, he had arrived early, taken over a whole corner, and committed a petite tea ceremony while waiting for the rest of everyone to gather.

Now, it was a much smaller group, and no warning. Javier plopped his old battered coffee mug on the tabletop and settled into a chair.

He watched Sokolov blanch slightly when he saw the other side of the mug, which, based on the amount of hot coffee inside, would currently be a beautiful young woman with green hair, and no clothing north of her belly–button.

Javier smiled.

He hadn’t been the person who picked it up from the tourist shop in a brothel on
Merankorr
. He’d just found it down in the officer’s wardroom about a week ago.

And kept it.

It wasn’t as good as the custom team mug he had sent with Wilhelmina when she and Sykora left, but it still was very obviously his now, which kept the pixies in the wardroom and galley from stealing it when he wasn’t looking.

They did that. Well, used to. Obviously the captain had worked his command magic on them at some point and made them stop. He had even said so. Not in so many words, you know. But it was all captainy magic. Bad juju.

Sokolov didn’t waste any time today on polite questions or fripperies. Also, not a good sign.

“An hour ago, we received a message, transmitted from well outside the minefield, by someone who knew where the safe boundaries were located.”

Inside, Javier snarled to himself, remembering all the
fun
to be had when this ship, this little private service strike corvette,
Storm Gauntlet
, had first come to
A'Nacia
, the Haunted Star, and gotten trapped in an ancient mine field like a fly in a spider’s web. How much
fun
it had been figuring out how to save the ship, and her crew, when he’d really just wanted to say
I told you so
.

But in the end, they had rescued a princess from a dragon, fixed her starship, and sent her off to live happily ever after. Not bad for a bunch of pirates.

Still, there was something about the tone of the captain’s voice. Something ominous and dangling, like any good bait.

Oh, what the hell.

“From whom, Captain?” Javier asked.

He wasn’t going to like the answer. Might as well get it over with.

“Wilhelmina Teague.”

Huh?

Apparently, Captain Sokolov had been sand–bagging, probably just to see the way Javier felt his face screwing up sideways in confusion.

Inside Javier’s head, little warning buzzers and klaxons were going off as the reactor that was his brain scrambled itself and began to shut down. Or words to that effect.

Whatever.

“I’m sorry,” Javier replied as he fought to keep his brain on–line. “I thought you said Ms. Teague.”

“It gets better,” Sokolov growled sarcastically. “She’s in the smallest deep–space yacht you’ve ever seen. Apparently, she stole it.

“And where are Piet and Sykora?”

“They’ve been captured and are being held for ransom.”

Well, so much for a quiet day.

Part Three

Javier watched his sensors and readouts like a hungry raptor. Not that there was anything he could do if something went wrong as they slowly transited the minefield back out to deep space. No, if that happened, they’d be dead so quickly they would probably never know what hit them.

He had mapped all the mines around them. Big purple triangles marked the ones that could probably gut a battleship at this range. There were a lot of those.

Out beyond that, a pretty, pink star, because that was how he thought of Wilhelmina. Not that he had really seriously considered trying his luck with the woman. His grandfather had always warned him never to chase a woman smarter than himself.

You can’t catch them. And worse, what if you did?

She was one of those. Brilliant, decisive, incisive. Several different college degrees in a variety of fields. And totally freaking nuts, but at least in a good way.

She was a Shepherd of the Word. A missionary. Probably the last of them. From what he had seen, years ago, the sad, modern remainder of the order had none of the spark of the early missionaries like her.

Rip van Winkle.

At least she was nice to look at. Half a hand taller than he was. Not as tall as Sykora, but tall. Maybe a little squishier than he liked them, but five centuries in cryo–sleep would do that to you. Nothing a few months of effort couldn’t fix if she wanted to.

Warm blue eyes that didn’t miss anything. Cute freckles. Ready smile.

Javier smiled to himself. It would be nice to see her again.

Not that he’d been bored or lonely. He was still the new guy to many of the folks on this ship, and none of them had any misconceptions about marriage or white picket fences. But there was nobody aboard the ship that could discuss Kierkegaard or Schumpeter. And certainly not while roaring drunk.

Well, maybe Sokolov, but who wanted to get drunk with their dad?

No, it would be nice to see her again.

On the console, a single bright green light, with a helpful ping, interrupted his train of thought before it really got going.

“Aritza?” the captain asked carefully.

“You remember the range you considered safe? Sure we wouldn’t trigger any mines?” Javier replied.

Sokolov nodded. “Was that it?”

“Oh, no, sir,” Javier smiled innocently. “I’m eighteen percent more paranoid than you are. But we’re clear.”

Sokolov’s glowering scowl was almost worth getting out of bed this morning, all by itself. That man was one of the few people Javier had ever met who could pull it off.

“Engines ahead three quarters,” Sokolov growled. “Kibwe, keep Teague updated with our ETA.”

“Aye, sir.”

Javier smiled. It would be nice to see her again.

Even if she was coming with bad news.

Ξ

There were days when Zakhar regretted not having sold Javier to an agricultural colony somewhere. Sure, they’d all be dead right now without him, but that man seemed to know exactly how to annoy people. He was like a sliver under the skin. Not painful, but something you could not ignore.

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