Chains of Duty (Survival Wars Book 3)

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Chains of Duty (Survival Wars Book 3) Page 1

by Anthony James




  CHAINS OF DUTY

  SURVIVAL WARS BOOK 3

  ANTHONY JAMES

  © 2017 Anthony James

  All rights reserved

  The right of Anthony James to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted by him in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act, 1988

  The characters and events portrayed in this book are fictitious. Any similarity to real persons, living or dead, is coincidental and not intended by the author

  This book is sold subject to the condition that it shall not, by way of trade or otherwise, be lent, resold, hired out, or otherwise circulated without the publisher's prior consent in any form of binding or cover other than that in which it is published and without a similar condition including this condition being imposed upon the subsequent purchaser

  Cover Design by Dan Van Oss www.covermint.design

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  CONTENTS

  The Beginning

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  Chapter 29

  Chapter 30

  Chapter 31

  Chapter 32

  Chapter 33

  THE BEGINNING

  Halfway across the Garon sector from humanity’s nearest populated world, the prospector SC Lupus emerged from lightspeed into a barely-charted solar system, which consisted of an average sun orbited by nine equally average planets.

  “Captain Carlson? We’re fifty minutes from the fourth planet,” said 2nd Lieutenant John Houston.

  Captain Eva Carlson nodded, though her expression of concentration didn’t change. She continued to examine a series of data streams on her primary monitor. The ship’s sensors fed through the results of their first scan and blue text flew across Carlson’s screen at a speed which seemed far too quick for a human brain to comprehend.

  “It’s nice to know the mainframe on this old bucket can get it right once in a while,” said Ensign Seb Lynch. “Last system we visited, it took us a day on the gravities to get where we should have been.”

  “It was only nineteen hours,” said Carlson, finally dragging her attention away.

  “Have you found anything, Captain?” asked Houston. “Want me to take a look?”

  “I don’t think there’s any need just yet, Lieutenant. It’s as I thought – we don’t have enough data to make an informed decision. The last time a scout ship came here was thirty years ago and they didn’t stay for long.”

  “We’re going to go in close and do it by hand, huh?” asked Lynch. He knew absolutely nothing about geology and had no idea why they’d assigned him to a vessel designed for the specific purpose of discovering new and viable planets for the Confederation’s mining operations.

  “It looks that way, Ensign,” said Carlson. She was usually happy to put up with Lynch’s questions – he had the makings of a good officer once he decided where to specialise. For now, he was covering most of the comms and engines work, allowing the other two to focus on deciphering the reams of data they’d scooped up from the four solar systems they’d stopped at so far. Finding new resources wasn’t quite needle in a haystack work, but Carlson would be first to admit there was an element of luck involved. A skilled crew could improve the odds, yet there were times when the Lupus had come home after six months of searching with nothing to show for it.

  “Glantia-312 is what they’ve called the sun,” said Lynch, repeating what they already knew. “I wonder how much they pay the guys who name all this stuff. Do you think the salary is good?”

  Carlson gave a shrug. It was a gesture that said many things, depending on her mood. At the moment, it was saying stop asking stupid questions. She waved Houston over. The bridge on the prospector was large, well-lit and furnished with expensive, padded chairs – the Space Corps’ scientists expected a little more comfort than soldiers and they usually got what they wanted. The reasoning behind it was fairly straightforward – a soldier who was kept in cramped quarters for weeks on end would be more inclined to fight than one who spent his or her life cosseted and happy. On the other hand, if you kept a scientist or researcher in those same conditions, they’d never work at peak efficiency. There was no proof behind any of this apparently smooth logic and the truth of it was rarely challenged.

  “I’ve had a quick look already, Captain,” said Houston. “We can discount six of the planets right off the bat. Two of them are too hot, two of them too cold and two of them just outright hostile.”

  “I agree,” said Carlson. “The largest planet here might be viable for further checks, but I can see a storm over it that’s almost fifteen thousand klicks across. I don’t think the guys below would be too pleased if we dropped them off there.”

  “That leaves us with just the last two,” said Houston, leaning over her shoulder for a better look at the sensor data. Images of both planets appeared on a screen, each as dull and featureless as the other. “This one’s about Old Earth sized and this other one fifty percent larger. Which one takes your fancy?”

  “Neither,” replied Carlson truthfully. The Glantia-312 system was the last stop for the Lupus and after that, Carlson was due almost a month of leave. Nevertheless, she knew her duty and had no intention of leaving without checking out these two planets to see what metals were held in their crusts. They still had the Resource Base Establishment Dropship in the cargo bay – a kilometre worth of men and machinery ready to be deployed wherever there was enough metal to make it worthwhile. Carlson knew her superiors would be disappointed if she returned with the RBED still unused. She sighed. “We’re closest to the largest planet. Let’s get that one out of the way first. Ensign, can you give me a detailed sweep of the surface, please? I need a topographical and atmospheric scan.”

  “Yes sir!” Lynch replied. “Should be ready in a few minutes.”

  “I’m taking us towards the surface. Let’s get this over and done with quickly and efficiently.”

  Carlson powered up the gravity engines. The prospector wasn’t fast and didn’t need to be. They weren’t meant to face danger and their crews expected to be away from home for a long time. It was too expensive to fit bigger engines in spacecraft like this, especially with the current drain on Gallenium from the Space Corps’ extensive ship-building programme. Besides, bigger engines would have needed an overhaul of the basic design and there wasn’t much appetite for that.

  “There’s not much of an atmosphere to speak of,” said Lynch. “Nitrogen at fifteen percent. Oxygen at zero-point-one percent. Inert gases at two percent. All the usual run-of-the-mill stuff. I’m sending the latest data to you.”

  The atmospheric data popped up on Carlson’s screen and she scanned it idly. “It says oxygen at zero-point-two percent here,” she said.

  “It was definitely point-one,” said Lynch. “See, look here.” He went silent for a moment. “That’s not right. I’ll do a quick check on the sensor calibration.”


  Houston had taken an interest now. “What have we got?” he asked.

  “The oxygen level is at point-two-two now,” said Lynch. “It’s climbing.”

  Carlson frowned. “Are you sure those sensors are reading right?”

  “As sure as I can be. We have three independent front arrays, all of them reporting exactly the same thing into the mainframe. I don’t know anything about rocks, but I’m sure this isn’t meant to happen.”

  Carlson winced inwardly at Lynch’s reduction of her entire profession to the word rocks. “Keep an eye on it and continue with your scan.” She already knew they couldn’t leave until they’d found out more about the anomalous oxygen readings and they certainly couldn’t pretend they hadn’t noticed, since there was a good chance the audit logs would betray them later.

  After another twenty minutes, Lynch called out with an update on his progress. “I’m detecting metal on the surface.”

  “Just lying there, waiting to be picked up?” asked Houston. He realised he’d sounded a bit harsh. “Sorry.”

  “Not metal ore, sir,” said Lynch. “A metal object of some type.”

  “Have there been reports of missing spacecraft in this area?” asked Carlson.

  “None that I’m aware of,” said Houston.

  “We’re definitely not at war with the Ghasts anymore, are we?” asked Lynch.

  “Our instructions are to report any sightings, but hostilities are at a temporary end,” said Carlson. “If those are Ghasts down there, we should take a look and confirm. What size is the object?” She’d also been given instructions to watch out for anything else unrecognized, Ghast or otherwise. Her superiors hadn’t given specifics and had warned that the information was top-secret.

  “I’d say it’s more than kilometre to each side and nearly as much tall. The mainframe’s estimation is that it’s regular like a pyramid, rather than anything spacecraft-shaped. The oxygen’s up to point-three. Do you want me to have a guess at something, Captain?” asked Lynch.

  “Fire away, Ensign.”

  “The atmospheric levels of oxygen aren’t uniform. In fact, they’re at almost zero across much of the surface. They’re at their greatest intensity within a few thousand klicks of the object. Like it’s throwing out oxygen.”

  “Get on the comms,” said Carlson at once. “Highest priority message to the base on Atlantis.”

  Lynch made a few gestures across his panel. An expression of worry appeared that he made no effort to disguise. “I’m getting nothing on the comms, sir,” he said. “Not even static.”

  Carlson chewed her lip. Something was wrong and she knew she had to act quickly. “Take us to lightspeed,” she said. “Immediately.”

  “Right you are, sir,” said Lynch. “It’s going to be a few minutes until we can launch.”

  With a feeling of dread, Carlson turned the nose of the Lupus away from the planet. She wanted to put some distance between her ship and the surface object while the deep fission engines got ready.

  “There’s something heading towards us,” said Lynch. “It’s coming directly from the planet’s surface at about two thousand klicks per second. Our sensors are struggling to pick it up at that speed.”

  “What is it?” asked Carlson. “How did you miss it?”

  “We’re a prospector, sir, not a warship. Our equipment doesn’t see everything,” said Lynch. “It’s over two klicks in length.”

  “How long until it can fire?” asked Carlson.

  “If you’re asking are we going to reach lightspeed before the inbound craft reaches likely weapons range, I’m going to have to disappoint you.” Lynch sounded deadly calm and Carlson remembered that he’d served for a time on an Anderlecht cruiser. He sounded every bit like a military man now.

  The SC Lupus was still more than five minutes from escape when it was destroyed. The approaching ship fired a powerful particle beam, which swept through the Lupus’ engines and hull, melting a huge chunk of the vessel’s structure. This first attack killed the eighty men and women who were stationed on the RBED in the hold, heating the air and burning them alive within moments. A warship would have had sufficient engine mass to disperse the first strike, while the Lupus was easy prey. The second beam strike followed soon after, killing the remaining crew. The last thing which went through Carlson’s mind before she perished in the superheated air, was regret that she’d failed the people onboard. There was no way for her to know that their deaths had been inevitable as soon as they’d arrived in the Glantia-312 system.

  CHAPTER ONE

  CAPTAIN JOHN NATHAN DUGGAN SHIVERED. It wasn’t the temperature in his office which made him do so – though it was admittedly a couple of degrees colder on the Juniper than he’d have liked. Rather, it was the words on his screen which made him feel cold. Fleet Admiral Slender confirmed dead, was the opening sentence on the file. Duggan stared at the details for a few moments longer. He’d read the file a hundred times without knowing if he felt relief or happiness. Deep down, he couldn’t bring himself to feel either – the most suitable description was that he felt nothing.

  The file was top secret and he closed it off his screen. There was nobody in his office, but he didn’t want to leave it there for everyone to see. At the moment, it was hush-hush, presumably while the Space Corps frantically tried to come up with the best story to explain what had happened. The Dreamers had killed him, yet the news of this new alien threat was deemed too dangerous to be given to all and sundry – at least while the business with the Ghasts was still to be concluded.

  A message pinged into his inbox and he sighed when he read the subject. It was another one of the countless humdrum memos which clogged up his mailbox day in and day out. The more such messages he received, the less time he had to deal with other issues. Before he could send a bluntly-worded reply, his communicator chimed softly to alert him to a priority voice call. Duggan saw who it was and accepted it immediately.

  “Captain Duggan? I need you in my office at once.” It was Admiral Teron, his tone of voice neutral.

  “Yes, sir,” Duggan replied and ended the call.

  The conversation had been terse, since neither man liked to waste words on niceties. Duggan stood and headed towards the door, hardly noticing the utterly anonymous furnishings around the office he’d been assigned to for the last two months. The door slid open and he turned left along the metal-walled corridor. Men and women passed him by, one or two smiling absently as he made his way along. He had no idea what the Admiral wanted and he hadn’t spoken to Teron directly in over a week. The familiar plasmetal door whisked aside once the Juniper’s AI had decided that Duggan was permitted to enter.

  “Come in!” said Admiral Teron from the recesses of his office.

  Duggan wasn’t shy and had covered several paces within before the words reached him. He’d visited this room so often it felt like a home. The light in the office was average and amplified by the glow of a dozen status screens around the walls. Someone who was less familiar with Teron might have thought they were for show. Duggan knew they were not – the Admiral had an excellent eye for detail and liked to keep a watch on everything that was going on.

  “Good morning, sir,” said Duggan. Since the death of Fleet Admiral Slender in the Dreamer attack at the Helius Blackstar, life had become a bit more straightforward and Duggan found he wasn’t looking over his shoulder all the time. He’d almost got to the stage where he’d forgiven Teron for tricking him into flying the Crimson on its mission to destroy the Ghast planet Lioxi. Teron had always been a man who liked to find order amid chaos and Duggan was willing to accept the Admiral had been acting in what he thought were the best interests of the Confederation.

  “Have a seat, please,” said Teron, gesturing with one thick-fingered hand. The plasma scars on his neck burned more vividly than usual today.

  Duggan sat and met the Admiral’s gaze. “I’m going somewhere?”

  Teron grunted. “Never one to mince your words, were you?�
� Then, he laughed gruffly. “I swear that ninety percent of the people I deal with spend their lives making unimportant comments about unimportant things. I don’t have the time for it. You are going somewhere and we’ll get to that in just a moment.”

  Duggan’s skin prickled with rising excitement. He’d been posted on the Juniper as part of an extensive debriefing ever since the vast Dreamer mothership had destroyed much of the human and Ghast fleet at the Helius Blackstar. The Space Corps wanted him to be available at all times to speak to representatives of its many divisions about the coming threat. If they’d put him on a warship and sent him on a mission somewhere, he would be incommunicado when travelling at lightspeed. Even worse, he might end up getting killed and his store of knowledge lost with him. Duggan didn’t especially enjoy being confined to the Juniper, but he accepted the necessity. As it happened, he was kept constantly busy and he found it refreshing that he could provide input and be listened to. How one man’s death has changed things, he thought.

 

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