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Home Front: A Science Fiction Adventure Series (Sever Squad Book 4)

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by A. R. Knight




  Home Front

  Sever Squad - Book Four

  A.R. Knight

  Contents

  1. Homecoming

  2. The Drive

  3. Inspectors

  4. Show and Tell

  5. Bad Hit

  6. Reversal

  7. Knife Fight

  8. The One Rule

  9. To The Rescue

  10. Post-Op Treatment

  11. Infestation

  12. Old Friends

  13. Diplomacy

  14. Vacuum Twist

  15. Paper Thin

  16. Behind The Glass

  17. Follow The Plan

  18. Friendlies

  19. Threats and Bets

  20. Finding Kaia

  21. Corporate Objectives

  22. Last Shot

  23. Smokescreen

  24. Jump Start

  25. One Over All

  26. Restless Warrior

  27. Never Stop

  28. Changing Stakes

  29. Burnout

  30. Partners

  31. Messages

  32. The Left Behind

  33. Break Point

  34. Wishes and Wants

  35. The Choice

  If you liked this story, please leave a review!

  Want More Stories?

  Also by A.R. Knight: The Skyward Saga

  Also by A.R. Knight: The Wild Nines

  Also by A.R. Knight: The Riven Trilogy

  Also by A.R. Knight: The Hero’s Code

  Also by A.R. Knight: Sever Squad

  Also by A.R. Knight: The Far Horizons

  Acknowledgments

  About the Author

  One

  Homecoming

  Aurora had missed a button, again. The man standing across from her in the passenger assembly, a broad empty space normally reserved for cargo on freighters like these, laughed at the sour expression Aurora had never figured out how to hide. She took criticism like most people took gut punches, and getting caught out by the same guy three times over a two week journey . . . Aurora wanted to hit something, but the freighter didn't even have simulators.

  "Don't worry," Deepak said, throwing an anger-dousing grin her way. "I'm sure you'll take it out on me when we get to the real action."

  "I will," Aurora said, fixing the rogue button. "Thanks for pointing it out."

  They, and the other hundred recruits onboard the freighter, were due to dock with their new flagship, their home with DefenseCorp, the galaxy's largest mercenary contractor and, really, the biggest military force around. Aurora had found that out the hard way when her security gig on a space station had been supplanted by DC troops, but when she'd gone to protest at the new offices, the manager there had signed her up and shipped her out instead.

  Deepak came from a tighter background, a full schooling regime that had him set up to play a more administrative role on the Nautilus. Jumping right to an officer's rank, which meant, as soon as they set foot onboard the flagship, Aurora would have to watch her insults.

  "You excited?" Deepak said as the displays around the passenger bay shifted to show the docking process, a countdown till the bay's big doors opened and their new lives began. Some official DC talking head gave some speech about their new lives that nobody seemed to be listening to. "I'm, at least, ready for better food."

  "I'm ready to get out and do something," Aurora replied. "I've never spent this much time stuck on a starship before."

  "Guess we'll have to get used to it," Deepak said. "The way I understand it, this ship will be our new home."

  "For you." Aurora pointed to the rank on Deepak's chest. "If I'm on this ship too long, then I'm not getting what I'm here for."

  "Which is?"

  "Cash, Deepak," Aurora said, and the man laughed. "You think I'm doing this for my health?"

  "I suppose, then, that we can hope getting one doesn't mean losing the other."

  The countdown hit zero, the bay doors marking the occasion by hissing their way open. The crowd shifted towards the exits, and the first shouts from squad leaders calling to their recruits echoed overhead. Aurora heard her name, held up a hand in goodbye towards Deepak, who replied with a nod of his own, and Sever Squad's newest rookie vanished into the adventure.

  Aurora walked down the ramp into the Nautilus for what could’ve been the hundreth, the thousandth time. The polished, gleaming floors occasionally marred with the asteroid making up much of the Nautilus’s frame looked as they always had. The too-bright lights made her wince as they always did.

  The guns in her face? Those were new.

  A full squad, sporting power armor in various colors and configurations, packing hard heat, waited for Aurora to descend the ramp. Sever’s other four squaddies followed, spreading out behind Aurora as she hit the floor and suffering through, as she did, an up close inspection to pull out any hidden weapons.

  The troopers didn’t find any, because Aurora had made sure her squad wasn’t going to try anything stupid.

  The conversation hadn’t been a fun one. As Eponi guided their newly stolen ship, the Prisa, away from the blackrock planet Wexer and towards the Nautilus, everyone figured they ought to be ready for a fight. Sai wanted to bring his katana, Gregor his hammer, and Rovo whatever-the-hell his scythe thing was. Eponi just wanted to stay on the Prisa, where she could turn its lasers on anyone that gave her an ugly look.

  That they were going into a bad situation was obvious for them all, but the alternative was worse. DefenseCorp, Deepak and the Nautilus made it clear they would pursue Sever as far as Sever ran, and while Aurora had no desire to get back into the giant company’s fold, she didn’t want to spend her days getting hounded by heavily armed fighters.

  “We take this deal,” Aurora had said with the Prisa on approach, “we play by the rules this one last time, and we’re free. Think you all can do that?”

  “Doubt it,” Gregor rumbled a reply, “but I can try.”

  Assenting nods all around after that, and the grudging go-along had the five standing inside their old headquarters, disarmed and at the mercy of an organization that, less than a day ago, had burned down part of a city to find Sever.

  “I’m glad you made the right decision,” Deepak said, coming into the bay once his inspecting squad gave the all-clear. “Clearly, we didn’t part on the best terms, but in my view, Sever Squad still deserves respect for all you’ve done for DefenseCorp.”

  The Nautilus admiral didn’t look all that different from when Aurora first met him on that freighter. Continuous missions had added scars to Aurora, both mental and physical, while Deepak’s time showed in the gray lines strewn throughout his dark hair, the sagging bags beneath his eyes and a striking, deep wrinkle along his left cheek.

  The man’s uniform, in DefenseCorp’s crimson, had every button perfectly placed.

  “All that respect didn’t get us much,” Aurora replied, very aware that she and Sever stood in a jumbled civilian clothing mix ransacked from the Prisa’s prior owners.

  “It will, if I can do anything about it,” Deepak said, then he spread a look beyond Aurora to the others. “Aurora and I are going to work out the terms of the deal. While we do so, the rest of you are free to head to the mess, or to the Quartermaster to retrieve your things. Should our conversation proceed as we both expect, you’ll be back on your craft before too long.”

  Separating the captain from her crew. Aurora wasn’t all that surprised, but if Deepak had bad intentions, splitting Sever apart would be a good first step. Then again, if Deepak wanted them dead, the Nautil
us could’ve roasted the Prisa once Eponi brought the ship close.

  Slow down, Aurora. Not every move needs to have an ambush at its end.

  Aurora glanced back at her squad, “You heard the admiral. Take a breather. Get some food. Once we get off this boat, it might be awhile before we have a chance to stretch out legs.”

  “You sure you want to go alone?” Sai offered, hands loose, eyes watching for Aurora to sign back a better clue.

  Except, there wasn’t anything to sign. Aurora had to trust Deepak here, trust that working with DefenseCorp to find Kaia would keep Sever alive and safe.

  “I’ll be fine,” Aurora said. “Deepak’s too scared to threaten me.”

  “All too true,” Deepak agreed.

  At Deepak’s gesture, Aurora formed up beside him as they left the bay. The Nautilus built itself like a cube inside a sphere, with three main levels, each with three length-spanning concourses connected by numerous smaller hallways, larger rooms, and vertical lifts. Crew members, active troops, and bots crawled all over the ship, tending to maintenance, mission prep, and the general chaos onboard a big cruiser like this one.

  After days spent on Wexer, breathing in dust and feeling its constant cool breeze, Aurora didn’t mind the recycled air, purified to almost nothing. The hum and churn of the big ship, a vibration that lingered in her nerves, felt more like home than the still earth they’d been sleeping on. Even the overhead announcements calling this and that person, squad, or specialty to this location or that area felt like buttery background noise, comfort sounds for the soul.

  Breaking from the bay into one of the main corridors, Aurora and Deepak broke left, heading towards the Naulius bow and, presumably, its bridge. Deepak would have rooms there they could use for a private discussion. Sever’s other members split right, disappearing into the crowd.

  “That went rather well, I think,” Deepak said as they walked. “Nobody started any fights. Almost better than your normal post-mission returns.”

  “We’re tough, Deepak, but we’re not suicidal,” Aurora replied.

  “And yet, you deserted. An act tantamount to suicide.”

  “You and I both know DefenseCorp doesn’t give a damn about deserters. Not enough to chase them with a ship like the Nautilus, anyway.”

  “Most deserters don’t get themselves involved in dangerous webs before they run away.”

  Aurora looked over Deepak as the man spoke. The admiral kept his eyes ahead, a straight face, but frustration lingered in the words as they floated through the air. Deepak had sent Sever on the mission to Dynas, the one that started all this, without any information about what really lay on the swampy planet, about the secret city and its less-than-legal experiments.

  And without any notice that DefenseCorp itself had an interest in keeping Dynas secret.

  “You didn’t know,” Aurora repeated what Deepak had told her before the Prisa docked. “You said you didn’t know, and you sent us to Dynas, and now you’re angry about what we found?”

  “I’m not angry at you, Aurora,” Deepak replied. “Never was. You know me. I’m always on the side of my soldiers. When the call came in, the buyer and the request, I should’ve cleared it. Would have, too, except the grade was minor. A single person extraction? On an empty planet?”

  “It sounded like someone had stranded themselves.”

  They reached the Nautilus’s bow lift bank and snagged one of the dozen-person containers to send them up. Deepak went inside first, Aurora followed, and several others poured in behind them. A couple squaddies, chatting about their soon-to-start shift, and two more, wearing maroon-and-black rank-less uniforms with their eyes buried in their wristlets.

  “I received a message from up the chain not long after you landed on the planet,” Deepak said. “At first, the order was simple. I had to call for you to withdraw. When I explained that you couldn’t do that—”

  “Because you only gave us a drop shuttle.”

  “A normal thing for Sever! Your missions actually have better outcomes when I don’t give you a real ship to defend.” Deepak held up a hands, as if to calm himself. “When I explained I couldn’t get you off world, couldn’t even reach you, that’s when things got difficult.”

  “For you.”

  Aurora didn’t try to keep the sarcasm away: Deepak had been dealing with some spicy messages while Sever had been fighting for its life on a mission that’d gone way beyond any expected scope. Tough to square those two.

  “Right, I don’t expect any sympathy,” Deepak said.

  “Good.”

  Deepak laughed, a bitter bark that took Aurora back a step. The admiral had always been a happier one, confident. Not one to let things get to him, but the person Aurora saw before her now didn’t have that same carefree glow.

  “I’m glad to see all your running hasn’t changed you,” Deepak said. “Because it’s changed me, Aurora. For the first time I feel like I’m being watched. This whole deal? What I’m offering you? All I can say is that you should take it.”

  “It’s not just me,” Aurora replied as the lift settled into the top level, doors opening. “Sever has to decide together. We made that call when we split from you.”

  The chatting soldiers went off first, dipping into the concourse without a second’s thought. The other two, eyes still on their wristlets in silent browsing mode, didn’t move. Deepak put a hand on Aurora’s shoulder, gave a slight push to get them going outside. Aurora shrugged off the gesture as Deepak nodded across the way, to a locked section dedicated to high priority personnel.

  “Then you’ll want to get them to say yes,” Deepak said. “I know threats don’t mean much for you, but this isn’t just about you anymore. Not just about Sever either.”

  “Can’t wait to hear who it is about, then,” Aurora said as they wove across the crowd to the other side.

  Deepak set his badge against the lock, which flashed blue and opened. Beyond a tighter hallway showcased rooms on either side, and again Deepak used his hand to guide Aurora into the closest one on the right.

  As rooms went, this one kept it basic: a long oval table with eight chairs set around it. The room’s back wall doubled as a big screen, and a single long silver light overhead made sure Aurora could see everything just fine. Which meant she had a clear view of the room’s only other occupant, a man in Deepak’s crimson uniform, but one coated with more insignias than Aurora had ever seen. Insignias that she stopped caring about when he turned to look her way.

  Aurora had seen that face before in one place, flickering in the gray halo reserved for long range video communications. That face had threatened their lives, had told them in no uncertain terms what waited for Sever if they didn’t give DefenseCorp everything they knew about Dynas.

  Except, unlike Deepak, the only reward for coming clean would be a swift death.

  “Aurora,” Deepak said as she stopped. “Sit down. Please.”

  Behind her, two more people filtered into the hallway, crowded the doorway. The wristlet watchers from the lift. Aurora had Deepak next to her, two goons behind her, and the salty, plastic face in front.

  Not everything had to end in an ambush.

  Right.

  Two

  The Drive

  Aboard Anaskya’s ship, after Dynas, Sai voted to say goodbye to the Nautilus forever. At the time, flush with their escape and riding the emotions that came with victory over a virus that should’ve turned him to sludge, Sai didn’t think too hard about what he’d left behind. What was waiting for him at the Quartermaster’s holdings.

  After Sever’s trio left the bay, they split up again at the next crossway. Gregor declared a need to fill his stomach, and Rovo echoed the sentiment, while Eponi stayed behind to make sure the Prisa was good to go for a longer journey. That left Sai heading towards the Nautilus’s aft and the section dedicated to the massive ship’s supplies.

  While you could walk your slow way through the Nautilus, moving walkways enhanced the speed for
those willing to slide through idling personnel. Sai, feeling eyes all over him in the shabby clothes he’d taken from the Prisa’s former owners, took the opportunity to cement his unusual appearance by all-but running along the walkways.

  The speed was both unnecessary and absolutely so: back on Wexer and before, Sai had written off the chance of seeing his family, actually getting a video with his children’s faces, his wife’s patient smile. Such things didn’t easily transfer across the cosmos, much less when the target kept moving. Sai had been able to send messages out to them, directed across galaxy-wide satellite networks, that would leverage physics tricks to get home before too long.

  Any reply sent his way would reach nothing and nowhere, because Sai wasn’t standing still.

  The Nautilus had been Sai’s last permanent station, and in the belongings now held by the Quartermaster, Sai’s saved recordings would be waiting. He could pull up videos of birthdays, of school plays, friends, and holidays. All beamed to the Nautilus.

  “Can I get them loaded onto a stim drive?” Sai asked when he reached the Quartermaster, a big section sitting over the engines.

  With its name spread over the long entry in big red letters, the Quartermaster split its space between windowed slots where Nautilus personnel could request to give or take their own items, or requisition general supplies. Bots stood at attention at each slot, requiring the proper forms and permissions for any interaction.

 

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