Free Fleet Box Set 2
Page 15
“I want a plan written up to take those ships and to get me the head of that fleet,” Marhtu said, not waiting for a response as he ended the call.
He was going to get a fleet to be able to change the arrangement with the Syndicate and he would take over Frosha and Flor. The Sarenmenti and Kuruvian slaves were a good product. If he had them he'd be able to remove the disobedient masses of Damestrus. It’s all coming together, Marhtu. He said as he flicked to another Kaaorv going through their final training ritual, killing their family through torture.
Kaaorvs after a certain amount of using their Orv could only feel when they used it against others. Some would cry, or only touch their victims as emotions rode them. Though eventually they would use their Orvs for hours, craving the ability to feel once again. The Kaaorv cried as they applied their Orv to their mother. Marhtu watched, this was his world. This was how he had retained his power all of these years. He snapped his fingers a woman that had dared to try and start a rebellion used a razor sharp blade to cut Marhtu's food, personally feeding him. Others would have killed their opponents, it would have actually been a relief to his slaves, but Marhtu dislike death, he enjoyed watching his slaves, once great people, broken and suffering for the rest of their days. All of Marhtu's slaves spoke to his power, and his sadistic ways.
***
Min Hae had learned a lot of things he didn't like. Narvu had been a great source of information, though Min Hae felt that he was being checked out as much as he was checking Narvu. The Overseer was looking more like a tyrant than anything. He had a secret military that the Syndicate had never found out about. They were Marhtu's strength and were known to take people in the middle of the night. Slavery was a common trade between Marhtu and the syndicate crews.
Also that if a group called the Kaaorv, or red flowers came knocking it was better to kill yourself than let them have you. They were professional torturers that had been broken into obedience. Now it seemed that something was up, as markers that Min Hae had put in place were being tripped. Something big was underway, but he had no idea what yet.
“Gogs, I need something!” Min Hae said, venting his frustration as Gogs bent over his workstation.
“I'm trying to find something, anything. But these people are good. They actually write notes and destroy them once the recipients have them. If the people they lived around knew who they were they'd be killed. Keeping who they are a secret is as good for Marhtu's well-being as it is for their own.”
Min Hae knew this, but it still did nothing to relieve his anxiety.
“The fleet is sending down more people,” Gogs said as Min Hae leaned over his shoulder to read the information scrolling down Gog's screen.
It seemed that the first relations people that had come to Damestrus had been hit with a bout of flu native to the planet. Marhtu had his doctors working on it and had sent up a vaccine to be used on the rest of the fleet.
“Why does he want more people down here?” Gogs thought aloud.
“Hostages,” Min Hae said simply. Gogs eyes became decidedly darker. Min Hae knew how Kelu had threatened Gogs' family, torturing his nephew before Gogs became his slave effectively.
“There will be something eventually,” Gogs said.
“I just hope it's soon enough,” Min Hae said, knowing he would need more information to convince Salchar about his suspicions. His thoughts were derailed as Gogs squeezed his back where there had once been wings in alert.
“Marhtu is requesting for Salchar to come down to make their agreement to be part of the Free Fleet official. In two days,” Gogs said without prompt.
“It's a trap,” Min Hae said, the others in the room all agreeing in their own way.
“We need to set up a way to communicate to them without being compromised,” Min Hae said to Chrys.
“There's no way to get it to them without Daestramus knowing who we really are,” Chrys said.
If Daestramus knows, then other planets will know who the hell we are and our ability to gather information without others knowing we are will be lost.
“That's a last resort. What other options do we have?” Min Hae said, looking to everyone for suggestions.
“We need to send the signal from somewhere we can't be traced. Or if it is traced then it doesn't matter,” Ervstl said.
“We should choose someone to take the blame that wouldn’t be an issue for us,”
“How about the City Jak Governor, Roshvi?” Baldabuh said.
Min Hae looked to the man to explain his reasoning. He thought it was a good idea, but that didn't mean he was going to let his people have any easy time.
“He's the biggest supporter of Marhtu, and that’s something that the people in his city hate. He's also the nearest city, and has moved most of his underground military to aid Marhtu. He's vulnerable. If Marhtu thinks that he's been betrayed he'll elect someone else,”
“How do we know the new person will be any better than Roshvi?” Min Hae asked the floor and one of the operators/engineers put his hand up. Min Hae pointed to the grinning Chaleelian.
“We make sure of it.”
“Indeed, and we get some people into position.” Min Hae looked to them all.
“You're going to the City of Jak. I want you to use any contacts you already have to get more, there in the city. We need to have people within the city structure when it changes over to a new leader.” Instead of arguing, all of them took on determined expressions.
I picked well.
“Gogs and I will stay with the ship.” A few looked as if they were about to object before Min Hae glanced at them, silencing them before they could say anything.
“Get going.”
They dispersed as Min Hae took his seat. So close but so far.
So what do you think Salchar is going to do?” Gogs asked.
“He'll go down there. He's willing to give anyone a chance. I don't know how Marhtu thinks he's going to pull this one off.” Min Hae raised an eye brow to Gogs.
“That’s my job,” Gogs said, pulling his fingers in, making a squishy noise. Min Hae hated the noise, which was probably why Gogs did it so often.
Chapter - New Resident
Connolly didn't know when he'd been more tired. Probably back when he was doing basic training for the Free Fleet. The harsh lighting, lack of air and heavy gravity nearly broke him but he'd gotten through it. At least now he knew he was doing something productive. He knew how to fight in space as well as on ships and stations. He was learning how to do orbital drops onto a planet and his fighting skills had improved exponentially. On top of that, while working on Nancy he was seeing ships coming together. He knew how to meld, lay power conduits as well as make them, replace bulkheads and use four drones at once.
Now he watched from a crowded observation bubble as what looked like a black box the size of a tractor trailer was released from LaRe's old BC shell. It had taken four days for the AI to upload himself into his new storage center. Corvettes were on alert as a shuttle whisked LaRe down to his new home. He disappeared into a hangar. Another view appeared in the observation bubble as LaRe was pulled from the shuttle and moved into his new home. The feed cut as LaRe would be stored somewhere that only a select few knew of.
“Second shift, you're up,” George said as people groaned in the observation bubble. Connolly was one of them as he walked to his control station.
The work was unending, the ships that had been trashed in Parnmal's defense were still coming in. The Free Fleet ships were finished, as they had already been adapted over to the General Ship System. It made the ships like lego. Pick up a small power panel, slide into old power panel slot. It made fixing ships incredibly easy.
But changing ships over from whatever style they were to the new system was a pain. Which was why only the Dreadnought's and a few of the BC's were getting it, while everything else was being put together as per their old systems. There were technically five working Dreadnought's in the Free Fleet now. Two were at Parnmal w
hile a third was en-route and Resilient was out investigating the mystery planet. The last as well as the hulks of those that were beyond repair were being used by Felix.
It was a massive undertaking, and with the yards growing constantly production was always increasing. Chaleelians and even Avarians were now working at the docks as civilian contractors. Humans were trying to stiff arm their way into positions but Silly was having none of it. He picked workers based on their scores and what they'd done as well as their own blurb. Sexism and racism was basically removed through the process. It also meant that Earth's programs to get into space were getting slowed down as people from different planets were accepted into the Fleet.
The moon was being settled and there were a few Mars settlements being created, as well as plans for people to move to other planets and bodies in Sol system to study and live. Earth was finally in space, and it was slow going but it was becoming faster. People were taking up the Free Fleets deal to get into mining. There was still the ex-Commando mining facility which had expanded rapidly. They supplied forty five percent of Earth's resources and pumped the rest to Nancy, and did a swift trade with Chaleelian's as well. Earth's biggest export to AIH and Chaleel was technical items. The items weren't on par with the Free Fleet's stuff, but eventually they'd catch up. They had more people to throw at the problem than the Free Fleet.
Connolly moved his camera view to see Mars. The massive atmospheric machines were pumping their planet changing chemicals, changing it to Union standard. It would be a planet able to have races from across the Union on its surface when completed in a century, though more changes were planned to cut down that time estimate.Connolly turned back to his work. He was pulling plating from a Corvette, and he worked with two others, a runner and a replacer. It was quick work but penetrations through multiple layers of armor made it annoying to replace some panels. Connolly lost himself in his work until the Corvette's mangled panels were replaced.
“Thank you, team leader Connolly,” someone said through Connolly’s console.
“Hello?” Connolly asked, checking his open channel which simply said LaRe.
“Hello, team leader. You are probably wondering who this is. It is LaRe. I am checking if my systems are working and introducing myself to the crew. Do you have any questions?” Connolly sat back, a little surprised. He looked around noticing others also talking to the AI.
“How are you talking to everyone at once?”
“I am using an automated response system. I have collaborated your FAQ's and respond with it unless you have a question no one has asked yet.”
“Ah. So why the name LaRe?”
“It stands for last resort, as I was made from the syndicates that connected the systems that created me as a last resort.”
An alert sounded as Connolly's drones reached where they were supposed to work.
“So what do you think of Resilient?” Connolly asked as he started working on the next Corvette.
“She has a storied past. She began as a refiner, then, with the planners’ assistance, she joined the AI league. She is considered one of the wisest councillors. She brokered the contract with the Union to have the AI league join the Union through supplying them with warfighting AI's. She was one of the first to put herself into a warship hull.”
Connolly thought he heard pride in the AI's tone.
“That's quite a bit,” Connolly said.
“Yes it is. She is rather interesting,”
Definitely proud. Connolly thought with a grin, which quickly disappeared. How am I going to be able to betray these people? Can I?
Chapter - It's a Trap!
“I'm not so sure about this,” Bok Soo said to Rick as they left Salchar's meeting. “James has a point. We can't just expect people to take us on our word. We could be Syndicate for all they know,”
“Yes, but how they've kept the first team in complete isolation because of some bug they think is suspicious. No known race has a biology that should be able to cross over with the races in the fleet.”
“Maybe it was something they ate,” Rick shrugged
“Santos made sure that they had enough rations. Plus that atmospheric concoction we were living in during training should make us resilient to nearly everything.” Bok Soo's face was thunderous.
“It is indeed odd. I can also sense that there is a lot of information kept off of official channels, as well as electronic devices. Something weird is going on down there,” Resilient said.
“Min Hae hasn't gotten a message to us about anything that bad. He said he'd be on that planet. Bregend's already with Cheerleader. Look I don't like it either, though James isn't going to back down now,”
“I hope it doesn't come back to bite him in the ass,” Bok Soo said and Rick nodded his agreement.
***
Min Hae didn't like the situation at all. The first team, after a week of being in an isolation ward, were supposedly moved to another healthcare facility. Min Hae had built his network voraciously and he knew that they never went to the health care facility. Though to all official appearances it looked like they were.
They had disappeared, and there was only group that was capable of doing that with Min Hae's contacts not knowing. Daestramus' secret military were active in a big way. Thousands of them had supposedly come to Marhtu's city. But there was no extra gathering of supplies or other indicators that a massive force had gathered.
“There has to be a compound out there,” Min Hae said as Gogs took a swig of what smelt like metal and dirt.
Gogs perked up.
“What if they're already ready for something like this? And that's why they don't need all of these supplies?” Gogs put his cup down as he worked his station. “Supplies coming down by shuttle are easy to track. You get it on the ground and transport it quickly and it can disappear. Use a shell company and no one can check it back to you. They would be buying large numbers of weapons and a lot of food.” He continued typing things in as Min Hae waited. Gogs sat back, a grin on his face.
“What?”
“We know who would be supplying the money, so I checked what shell companies Marhtu has. Checked what they bought, then tracked the merchant by his implant. I'm now kind of happy that Marhtu keeps such a close eye on his people,” Gogs said as he waved Min Hae over to him. “There's bases under Daestramus' surface. I don't know how many, or where yet. But it's massive,”
Min Hae looked over Gogs shoulder. He saw the amount of supplies going into the place through different merchants and the entrances which told of its size and the depth of the bases.
“They must have built them to get away from bombardments,” Min Hae said.
“They're deep enough, though I don't know of anyone in the city that knows about them. So whoever built them is either not in existence anymore, or part of the military.”
“We need to find where our people are,” Min Hae said, with Gogs click of agreement.
“So is this enough to get Salchar to stay on Resilient?”
“No. It makes sense for them to have their military on alert. Having underground bunkers might mean that they actually care about their people. Our people disappearing is alarming, but he would ask Marhtu in person where they are. So as to not make him lose face. This is a new culture and he needs people on his side. It might be some small matter,” Min Hae replied, his voice reflecting deep concern.
“Then why are we looking into it so much?”
“Because that's our job. We're the negative department. We assume that something’s wrong and we gather intelligence we might need and see what skeletons Marhtu has in his closet. Best to know the wind and not fly, than fly and not know the wind,” Gogs said, his wing stumps twitching.
“I think that works. You find out more information on those bases. I'm going to see if I can get anything more information out of my contacts and see if there's anything else shady about Marhtu,”
Chrys's station flashed with an incoming communication. Min Hae barely had
to reach for the console in the cramped bridge.
“Cap'n! It looks like we've got some buyers on the uptake,” Chrys said, affecting an excited tone. Clearly in some crowded area, background chatter making it hard to hear him.
“Are they solid?” Min Hae asked, masking nervousness with excitement.
“Oh yah. Said they would send the credits direct,”
“Good, good. Might as well have everyone come back then, if we've got that buyer.”
“Yeah. He said it'll be good to send from the ship,”
“Alright. Seal the deal and get back here. Good work,” Min Hae said, cutting the channel.
“I didn't understand much of that, but it sounded like we have a way to communicate with the fleet now?” Gogs asked as he scrolled through information on his station.
“Yeah. Chrys and the group have got it rigged so we can send our message undetected through Roshvi. Directly from the ship instead of on the ground,” Min Hae said, getting back into his chair.
“So we're going to send them everything we know?” Gogs asked.
“No, we're going to wait. We don't know if Marhtu will catch onto it immediately or not.”
“I hate this not doing anything,”
“I know,” Min Hae grimaced. “Patience is one of the hardest things in this job. That and the fact that your decisions mean people live or die,”
***
I knew that there were certain risks with me going down to Daestramus but I had to do it. I was hesitant as to Daestramus coming under the protection of the Free Fleet. I didn't expect every planet to come under our protection, and was a bit alarmed when Marhtu was the first one who wanted to meet. After all of the time under Syndicate control I thought he might want to distance himself from me. Or not take our protection as they would be fearful of the Syndicate coming back and taking revenge on them.