The Legend of Earth (The Human Chronicles Saga -- Book 5)

BOOK: The Legend of Earth (The Human Chronicles Saga -- Book 5)
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The Human Chronicles Saga

 

Part One

 

Book 5

 

The Legend of Earth

 

By T.R. Harris

 
 

Copyright 2013

 

T.R. Harris and Harris Publications

 

Kindle Edition

 
 

All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. The scanning, uploading, downloading or distribution of this book via internet or any other means without the permission of the copyright holder is illegal and punishable by law.

No part of this novel may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without permission in writing from the copyright holder, except by a reviewer, who may quote brief passages in a review.

This is a work of fiction. All the characters and events portrayed in this book are fictional and any resemblance to real people or incidents is purely coincidental.

 
 
 

ISBN: 978-0-9858849-5-6

 

Email:
[email protected]

 

Website:
TheHumanChronicles.com

 

Also by T.R. Harris

 

The Fringe Worlds

 

Alien Assassin

 

The War of Pawns

 

The Tactics of Revenge

 
The Legend of Earth
 

“… because savagery enlightened by civilization of centuries

is a deadly thing to let loose among men.”

 
n
- B.M. Bower,
The Gringos
Adam Cain is an alien with an attitude.
 

His story contin
u
es…

 
 

 

Chapter 1

 

He dreamed of killing Humans….

 

In his dream, the ground before him was littered with the bloody remains of hundreds of dead Humans, splayed about in an open field on Klinmon, his ancestral homeworld.

Linuso Summlin raised his hands to his face; they were covered with blood – Human blood. He thought this odd for a Klin, to have killed with his own hands. His race was more subtle, more finessed. They usually employed others to do the killing for them.

Yet instinctively he knew this entire field of Human corpses had fallen by his hands, and as he looked closer at the bodies, he saw all their faces were the same. It was the lifeless, vacant-eyed face of Adam Cain, the Human whose mocking smugness haunted the darkest avenues of his sleep.

Is this a memory or a dream?
As the gray fog of unconsciousness began to lift, Linuso couldn’t tell which. It seemed so real – so satisfying in its aftermath – that if this
was
a dream, then he did not want to wake, forever content to live out the rest of his existence confined to this gruesome dreamscape.

Unfortunately, that was not to be the case….

Linuso became aware of a painful brightness attempting to invade his dream, filtering through his eyelids to wash away the scene of glorious death before him. When he opened his eyes – even a fraction – a spasm of light hit him with the force of an electric shock. He frowned and squinted, fighting to keep the stabbing pain away, but to no avail.

The foggy scene before him began to focus into reality; he was in a bed in a bright and sterile room with several beings hovering around him.


Pleabaen
, it is good to see you have regained consciousness,” said a voice to his right. As more awareness reached him, Linuso could feel he carried bandages and feeding tubes, while a strange, pervasive numbness lingered in his body.

“Where am I?” a weak and raspy voice uttered, one he barely recognized as his own.

“You are in a medical facility near the Estate. You have been severely injured, but you will recover … with time.”

“Injured, how?”

“Perhaps is not the time, Pleabaen. You have only now emerged from a coma.”

Linuso blinked his eyes several times, bringing the room into better focus. He managed to shift his head from side to side and saw the grave expressions on the four other Klin in the room.
Injured? I have been injured; but I have no recollection of such an event
.

“No, you must tell me now,” he commanded in his foreign voice.

There was a pregnant pause before the speaker began. “It was the Humans, McCarthy and Cain. They destroyed the communication array on the roof of the Estate and crashed it through your chambers nearly killing you. Over one hundred Klin died in the explosion and subsequent fire in the building.”

Linuso’s senses were rapidly returning; his heart raced and the veins in his temples began to pound. “The Humans did this? When … how?”

“Within minutes of being placed in the detention cell they all managed to escape. Apparently McCarthy had planned for this eventuality and placed a key and weapons within the cell—”

“Where are they now?”

“They have escaped the planet, all of them, including McCarthy and Cain.”

“And what of the battle … what of the fleet?”

Again there was a pause before the speaker answered. “The battle went to the Humans, Pleabaen. Do you not remember?” The speaker looked to the Klin wearing the uniform of a medical technician. They shared a concerned expression.

But now it
was
coming back to him, as memories began to explode in his head. Yes, the battle had gone to the Humans, through a feat of deception that completely destroyed the Juirean fleet and left in its wake a Human force which his own Klin numbers could not match. He had called off the attack, leaving the Human fleet free to roam the region.

“I now recall,” Linuso said. “I withdrew the fleet as we seek an alternative plan to defeat the Juireans – and now apparently the Humans as well.”

Through his groggy awareness, Linuso could see several of the Klin exchange more looks of concern. The speaker – who Linuso now recognized as one of his aides named Jinnil – appeared to be internally debating something more.

“What is it?” Linuso asked him. “Are there other developments?”

“Yes, Linuso,” Jinnil said slowly. “The fleet … the Kracori have assumed control.”

With each new revelation, Linuso was shocked further into consciousness. Painfully, he attempted to rise up in the bed; two aides rushed in to assist him, propping a pillow behind his back. “What do you mean:
assumed control
?”

“There has been a revolt throughout the Kracori population, Pleabaen. They have either killed or imprisoned all the Klin who have been working with them and have taken over all our land-based facilities as well as all spaceships on which they were embarked. The situation is grave. I know the rest of the Forum will be grateful that you have regained consciousness. A conference was to be convened soon if you had not. We are in dire need of leadership, Pleabaen.”

“Where is the fleet now –
this Kracori fleet
?”

“They have embarked on a course for Juir.”


Juir!
Do they intend to accomplish the
cleansing
themselves?”

“That appears to be the case,” Jinnil said. “The Juirean forces between Falor-Kapel and their homeworld are greatly diminished. There is a possibility that if the Kracori fleet can arrive before the Juireans have a chance to regroup, they could lay waste to the planet with little resistance.”

“And what of the Humans?”

“They have just now met up with the second fleet from Earth and are still in the vicinity of the Falor-Kapel system. Linuso, their fleet is now over thirteen-hundred ships strong. There is no force between them and Juir that can counter such a fleet, if they embark for Juir as well.”

“They
will
move on Juir,” the Pleabaen stated firmly, “if they know the planet is vulnerable. Have they made any indication that they are aware of this fact?”

“All our surrogates aboard the fleet have gone silent. We do not know the intentions of the Humans.”

Linuso attempted to climb from the bed, but spasms of pain in his back and legs forced him to fall back on the cushion. After fighting through the agony, he closed his eyes and took several deep breaths, calming his mind and body. “I must convene the Forum; it will have to be here, seeing as I am unable to leave. All options must be weighed and new plans devised. We cannot allow either the Kracori – or the Humans – to reach Juir before we do. The Klin have worked too long to let some outliers steal our glory. We cannot let it happen … not again.”

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