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The Sol System Renegades Quadrilogy: Books 1-4 of the Space Opera Thriller Series

Page 133

by Felix R. Savage


  “Hey, Hasselblatter.”

  He had given up calling the ex-Space Corps director Dr. Phony Dumbshit, but that was still his private opinion of the man. Dr. Hasselblatter had spent most of the journey complaining, leaving his son to be looked after by the Chinese.

  “Where do you know the boss-man from, anyway?”

  “What kind of question is that?” Dr. Hasselblatter said.

  “A reasonable one. We had to hang around for months, waiting for you. He wouldn’t abandon you, even if it meant endangering our lives. I’d just like to know why you’re so important to him.”

  “Because I know about the UN’s secret pact with the aliens who run the galaxy,” Dr. Hasselblatter said.

  “O … kay.”

  “I’m just messing with you. There are no aliens. I thought you knew.”

  “Knew what?”

  “About me and the boss-man, as you call him. He’s my little brother.”

  THE STORY CONTINUES IN

  THE PHOBOS MANEUVER

  BOOK 5 OF THE SOL SYSTEM RENEGADES SERIES!

  BUY NOW ON AMAZON

  PREVIEW CHAPTER

  THE PHOBOS MANEUVER

  i.

  Alicia Petruzzelli quit her job the day war broke out.

  She was on an asteroid 360 million kilometers from Earth, dickering with a bunch of settlers over the price of kelp extract. Knowing she would succeed in securing the price she wanted, she wasn’t giving the negotiations her full attention. A semi-opaque instance of Existential Threat X was running in one eye, and several news feeds flashed across the other.

  The announcement broke simultaneously on every feed, obliterating Petruzzelli’s fashion- and game-related interest filters.

  UN President Declares War on Mars

  “Experts from every nation have agreed to classify the PLAN as a distinct threat to humanity. Punitive measures on an interplanetary scale are now being prepared …”

  Petruzzelli gasped aloud, giving away her covert feed-surfing. It didn’t matter. Enough of the asteroid settlers had also seen the news on their retinal implants that it immediately became the sole topic of discussion. This was unprecedented. The United Nations had not declared war on anyone or anything in the century and a half it had governed two-thirds of the people in the solar system.

  Belters tended to take a jaded view of the UN. These settlers quickly decided there was nothing to the announcement—it was merely a platitude to appease the critics who accused Geneva of doing nothing since the PLAN had slaughtered half the population of the moon last year.

  But Petruzzelli came from Idaho. She knew better than to think this declaration would have been made lightly.

  She inhaled and exhaled, banishing the tension that had built up in her chest. “Well, what about that kelp extract?”

  “We don’t want it.”

  “You have to buy it. Your soil analyses show a potassium and boron deficiency.”

  They were standing inside a wide tunnel bored lengthwise through a one-kilometer S-type asteroid. The far end of the tunnel was a He3 factory: a couple of old tritium breeder reactors, a lot of rad-shielding. This end—sealed off and filled with atmosphere—was full of tall, spindly people. The spaceborn were like an entirely different species. Seemingly disturbed by her non-spaceborn presence, chickens flew around madly clucking—they looked like a different species, too, as gangly as their owners.

  Specially constructed grooves spiraling around the sides of the tunnel bristled with winter squash and climbing beans. The yellowed, unhealthy leaves of the plants proved the point of the soil analysis reports. Having spun their home up to 0.15 gees—Luna-equivalent gravity—and achieved a respectable 99% water reclamation rate, the settlers of 159848 Redmayne had won UNSA “Sustainable Space Habitat” certification: they were legal settlers, not squatters.

  But to stay that way, they had to comply with UN sustainability regulations. And that meant properly maintaining the soil matrix they had kludged up from ash, mine tailings, and various other substrates.

  “Compost works wonders. You just have to give it time to do its thing,” said the matriarch of the colony.

  “Time—like the potassium and boron in your soil—isn’t exactly in abundance at the moment,” Petruzzelli said. “I’m due at Ceres in a week.” She was making this up. “Bottom line, either you buy the kelp extract or I won’t take away your recycling.”

  “We’ll just space it, then. No worries,” said a settler youth. “Space is full of garbage, anyway. A little more ain’t gonna hurt nothing.”

  “And adding to it is illegal, as it constitutes a hazard to spacefaring vessels. You could, no you will definitely lose your sustainability certification for that, too.” Petruzzelli ran her hands over her yellow-and-orange-streaked hair. She glanced down the tunnel to the settlers’ tent village. Michael, in his crab-legged mecha, was splarting sacks of garbage together into a snake. He was anticipating the outcome. That didn’t create the greatest impression.

  “What choice do we have?” said the matriarch. “Your company owns this asteroid. Yeah, we’re theoretically free to trade with anyone, but no other ships ever call here, thanks to blatant collusion by the likes of you in the recycling sector. So, fine. We’ll take the kelp extract, and whatever other overstock from Earth you’re trying to shift this month.”

  Petruzzelli just wanted to get the hell out of here. “I’ll give you a twenty percent discount on the kelp extract, and I’ll throw in a free sample of carbon nanotube filaments for your 3D printer. Great feedstock, perfect for integrated circuit components.”

  The ‘deal’ put Kharbage, LLC comfortably in the black, and the settlers not so comfortably in the red. At this rate, they’d never be able to pay off the mortgage on their asteroid. Which was, of course, the point.

  Since the UN’s project to terraform Venus had been axed—it had, while it lasted, provided a sweet income for companies with asteroids to flip—Kharbage, LLC, like others in the recycling sector, had scrambled to come up with creative new ways to aggressively monetize its assets.

  Petruzzelli donned her EVA suit and flew back to her ship, matching her speed with Michael’s mecha, which was towing the splarted-together snake of garbage sacks. Petruzzelli held the other end of the snake so it wouldn’t bump against the mecha’s ion thruster and get crisped.

  “Are we really going back to Ceres?” Michael said.

  “Yeah, but first I need to talk to your dad.”

  The Kharbage Collector idled ahead of them. The twin-module StarTractor was in desperate need of a complete systems overhaul, which it probably wouldn’t get until its aging fusion reactor broke down. For now, everything worked—just about. Two hab modules rotated around the ship’s nose on the ends of a 150-meter arm. Cargo bays—mostly filled with garbage—ringed the keel like knobby vertebrae. Petruzzelli vectored her mobility pack’s thrust towards Cargo Bay 4, where there was still a smidgen of room, but Michael headed aft towards Engineering & Maintenance. A tug-of-war ensued, with the garbage snake stretching taut between the mecha and the spacesuited woman. The mecha was stronger and emerged the victor. Petruzzelli followed it to Engineering & Maintenance, a disk-shaped module nestling in the raised heat-radiation louvers atop the drive shield.

  She couldn’t fit through the engineering airlock with all that garbage, so she had to wait outside. The asteroid 159848 Redmayne spun sedately behind her, its hills glinting a strangely beautiful bronze in the light of the distant sun where eons of accumulated dust had been rubbed off. From outside, you wouldn’t know anyone was in there. The settlers kept their ship, a poky little Steelmule, at the far end of the asteroid. They’d cannibalized its reactor to bootstrap their He3 factory.

  On the engineering deck, Michael clambered out of his mecha. It was an old mining bot with electromagnets on all four feet, which anchored it to the steel floor. Its smaller gripper clutched a bundle of shrinkfoam. Michael retrieved this and drifted towards Petruzzelli, holding out the bundle a
s if it might detonate. “They gave us some eggs.”

  “That was nice of them.”

  “What are we going back to Ceres for?”

  Petruzzelli grasped his shoulders, bringing him down to her eye level. With her red Gecko Docs sealed to the deck, Michael’s toes dangled off the floor. He was ten, and small for his age.

  She pulled him in until their foreheads bumped. “You saw the news, kiddo.”

  “Yeah. What about it?”

  “Look at this.” She sent him a feed item that had come in a couple of minutes ago. A retired Star Force admiral was quoted as saying the Force didn’t have nearly enough pilots. Michael’s pupils flickered from side to side as he read the item on his interface contacts. He was so close that her eyes crossed when she tried to meet his gaze. She smelt his non-stinky child’s sweat, layered with the tang of candy on his breath.

  “So what?” he said. “Star Force is a joke. Star Farce more like, ha ha.”

  “Kiddo, this shit is about to get real serious, real quick. They need pilots. So I figure I better volunteer before they slap a conscription order on everyone with a pilot’s license.”

  She knew there wouldn’t be any conscription, no matter how bad things got. That wasn’t how the UN rolled. She was afraid she might get left out of the action.

  “You might get killed,” Michael said.

  “I’ve got plenty of experience at that,” she said. It was a jokey reference to the immersion games she played, which Michael sometimes joined in. But he pulled away from her, scowling.

  “My dad won’t let you go.”

  “I’m not your dad’s property.” Although in reality it had sometimes felt like it, these last twelve years.

  She went up to the bridge to call Adnan Kharbage, who was Michael’s dad and also her boss. Michael followed her, swimming sulkily up the keel transit tube. In the transfer point, she held the elevator door for him. They sank out towards one end of the rotating arm, growing heavier. When they reached the command module, Petruzzelli weighed close to her full 65 kilos again, Michael half of that.

  A rare visitor to the bridge, he made a face at Petruzzelli’s clutter. She was a slob, no two ways about it. Also, she was spoiled by the spin gravity. Whereas everything in Michael’s zero-gee domain had to be tied down or stuffed into storage webbing, here she could put things down and find them again later right where she’d left them. Until they got buried under empty food pouches and discarded clothes, anyway. The air smelt like a damp, dark cellar. As if feeling right at home, fungi speckled the plastic housing of the workstations and dotted in furry clusters in corners where less light shone. Petruzzelli used her sleeve to wipe bolognese sauce off the comms screen.

  “Look at all this trash,” Michael complained. He started to collect it.

  “I hate recycling,” Petruzzelli said.

  She had to wait ten minutes for Adnan Kharbage to answer her ping. Four of them were the signal delay to Ceres—two minutes there, two back—and the other six were, she speculated, the amount of time needed for Adnan to finish up and roll off his fifth wife. His appearance on the screen supported this guess. His hairy man-boobs spilled out of a loosely belted dressing-gown. He scowled at her across 36 million kilometers, saturnine and cow-licked, like his son, but much older and fatter.

  “What the hell, Petruzzelli? It’s the middle of the night.”

  “We’re returning ahead of schedule,” Petruzzelli said. She had computed the fastest possible course to Ceres—or rather, instructed the hub to compute it—and initiated their acceleration burn while she waited for Adnan to pick up. She felt a sideways pull on her body, which decreased but did not vanish as the rotator arm swung downwards on its gimbals. This was meant to align the spin gravity with their axis of thrust. Unfortunately, the arm had jammed halfway, so for the next eight days the decks of the command module would seem to slope uphill. Michael chased snack wrappers across the floor.

  On the screen, Adnan Kharbage pottered around the kitchen of his ski chalet on Ceres. He ground coffee beans, poured them into a French press, and dropped slices of real-looking bread into a toaster. Petruzzelli’s mouth watered. She cracked one of the fresh eggs from 159848 Redmayne on the edge of her desk and slurped it straight from the shell.

  A wall screen in Adnan Kharbage’s kitchen showed the same talking heads Petruzzelli was watching herself. They were saying the things she had heard them say two and a half minutes ago—she was closer to the center of the solar system. Adnan chuckled when they brought up the PLAN’s atrocities on Luna the previous year.

  Rage boiled up in Petruzzelli’s belly. “That’s right, laugh,” she said. “You’re probably already figuring out how to make a buck off this. As for me, I’m going to join Star Force, if they’ll have me.”

  She meant to leave it at that, but after a few seconds, her long-suppressed sense of righteousness burst forth with cold fury.

  “I’ve had just about fucking enough of preying on the weak, ripping off settlers in the name of sustainability, and helping you exploit information asymmetries in the outer Belt real estate market. The recycling business used to be an essential service. Now it’s a fig leaf for bullshit predatory lending practices. Which is to say, I quit. Sir.”

  She flopped back into the comms couch, her cheeks tingling.

  Two minutes later, Adnan Kharbage’s face creased into a wide grin. He opened his arms as if to hug her through the screen. “Exactly what I would do if I were younger! I’m proud of you for making this decision.”

  “Oh,” Petruzzelli murmured. She had not expected this. Not at all.

  Adnan Kharbage went on praising her for another fifteen seconds, and then her rant about the recycling business reached Ceres. His face darkened. His lower lip pooched out. “OK, missy. I had no idea you felt that way. In that case, I do not accept your resignation, because you are fired.” He waved dismissively at the camera to turn it off. “Bring back my ship.” Almost as an afterthought he added, “And also my son.”

  Michael threw a tantrum. He swept all the clutter off the workstations. He picked up a ratchet wrench and whaled on the mirrored cladding of the elevator tube in the center of the bridge. He dumped out the trash he had bagged up and flung it at Petruzzelli. Then he hurled himself face-down on the floor, kicking and screaming.

  As soon as he dropped the ratchet wrench, Petruzzelli pounced, but he was too fast for her. He slithered under the captain’s workstation—her workstation—and yanked out handfuls of hardwired connectors. Screens went blank. The 3D starmap hanging in the air vanished. The bridge noticeably dimmed.

  Petruzzelli dragged Michael out by the heels. She manhandled him into the elevator, pushed him into freefall at the transfer point, and shoved him down the transit tube. He clutched at every grab handle along the way, but she pried his fingers loose, never allowing him to get a firm handhold. Tangled together, they fell into Engineering & Maintenance.

  Because the ship was still accelerating, they fell straight through the center of the donut-shaped mezzanine and landed on top of the sacks of recycling garbage they’d collected from 159848 Redmayne.

  Petruzzelli wrapped her body around Michael. He fit neatly into the curve between her chin and her knees. He writhed and screamed for a bit, then went still. Wet hiccups shook his chest.

  She genuinely felt sorry for the kid. His father was one of the biggest pieces of shit in the asteroid belt. But for that very reason—because Michael was Adnan Kharbage’s son—she couldn’t let herself care too much about him. If she did, Adnan would just use it against her.

  Well, he couldn’t do that anymore. She was through with the Kharbages—father and son.

  She was going to miss the kid, even though he was such a handful. She kissed the sweaty parting of his hair.

  “I have to do this, Mikey. I need you to understand. When I was your age, I wanted to be a fighter pilot. That’s all I wanted. I didn’t make the cut. Went into the private sector as an astrogator. But I never gave up
. I kept working to get my pilot’s license. Then there was an unfortunate episode back when I was crewing on one of your dad’s other ships, the Kharbage Can. I kind of ‘borrowed’ a Star Force ship …”

  “I know about that,” Michael muttered. “That was when you met Scuzzy the Smuggler, right?”

  Scuzzy the Smuggler was what they called Petruzzelli’s ex. Petruzzelli was very sure about the scuzzy part, not so sure about ‘ex.’ Could you call someone your ex when you’d only slept with them once and never talked to them since? Did occasionally—all right, frequently—stalking someone on the internet make them more ex, or less?

  “Uh uh,” she said. “That was later.”

  “Where is he now?”

  “Mikey, I have no idea. Anyway, back when I’m talking about, the PLAN was targeting Scuzzy’s home asteroid, but he wasn’t there. I was there. That’s why I took that Star Force ship: to save his people. Not that I knew they were his people at the time. I slagged three PLAN fighters, which is kind of epic, actually. And we saved nearly everyone. But the ISA didn’t want it getting out; it would’ve made Star Force look bad …” The ISA: the Information Security Agency. The spooks. They’d warned her on pain of penalties worse than death not to tell anyone the story she was telling Michael now. “So that was it; blacklisted. I got my license, but I thought I’d never be anything more than a commercial pilot. But now … This is my chance. This is what I’ve been waiting my whole life for, kid.”

  Michael wriggled in her arms, trying to get away. They sank deeper into the mound of garbage sacks. One or more sacks must have got ripped, because she could smell it.

  “I don’t get what’s so great about being a pilot, anyway,” Michael said. “You don’t actually do anything. The ship does it all. You just tell it what to do. I could do that.”

  Even though it irked her, she had to admit that was a pretty astute observation for a child.

  She let him go. He floundered to the deck. Bounding high in the Kharbage Collector’s maximum 0.15 gees of thrust gravity, he circled the mound of sacks, poking and prodding until he found the ripped one. He pulled out a double handful of e-waste: crushed screens, fried circuit boards.

 

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