[Fallen Empire 00.5 - 03.0] Star Nomad Honor's Flight Starfall Station Starseers Last Command

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[Fallen Empire 00.5 - 03.0] Star Nomad Honor's Flight Starfall Station Starseers Last Command Page 67

by Lindsay Buroker


  “Captain,” he blurted in surprise.

  “Going somewhere?” Alisa asked, a twinge of suspicion running through her as she imagined him off to meet some fellow conspirator to plan how to extricate Leonidas and take him off to collect that reward.

  “Yes, to rescue you. I just heard you were in jail.”

  Some of her suspicion faded. He sounded utterly sincere. But…

  “You just heard? Weren’t you here when Young-hee came to get Mica and Yumi?” Alisa looked at the women, realizing she did not know how they had all come to be together.

  “He wasn’t here,” Mica said quietly.

  “No, I just got back from—” Beck started to wave toward the temple, but paused, and his arm dropped to his side. “Uhm, an errand.”

  “An errand to betray Leonidas?” Alisa asked coolly.

  “No!” Beck lifted his hand to his head, as if to push it through his hair, but it only clunked against his faceplate. “I mean… it’s not a betrayal, Captain. You must see that. He’s a mech. He did horrible things during the war. The Alliance wouldn’t want him if that weren’t true. I don’t understand why you don’t want to work with me to turn him in. And having him on the ship, it’s a danger to you too. We’ve had people come after us already because of him.”

  “We’ve had even more people come after us because of you.”

  “Captain…” A truly anguished expression contorted his face. He lifted his hand to the fasteners for his helmet and tugged it off, his tousled blond hair as much in need of a brush as Mica’s. “I know that, and I hate that I’m putting you in harm’s way. I hate it, I swear. That’s why I want his reward money, so I can try to pay off those thugs, get them to leave me alone. Or hire an outfit even bigger and scarier to threaten them on my behalf.” This time, he succeeded in pushing his hand through his hair in a quick, agitated gesture. “I don’t want to be a burden on you, but I swear that with me, it was entirely accidental. Whatever money they’ve got on my head, it’s not fair. I was wrongfully accused.”

  “And how do you know Leonidas wasn’t?” Alisa felt for Beck, she truly did, but she could not have him gunning for Leonidas. “He’s a good man, Tommy. He’s saved the ship—saved our lives—several times.”

  “But we don’t know what he did in the war, and there’s got to be a reason the Alliance wants him. There’s got to be.” He sounded like he was trying to convince himself.

  “Would you be so eager to turn him in if there wasn’t money involved?”

  Alisa could see his shoulders slump even with the armor encasing them.

  “Listen, Beck. I don’t know his war history any more than you do, but we all did things we regret. We all committed what would be considered crimes during peacetime. But that doesn’t matter right now. They want him alive. You know what that means? That he knows something they want to know. If all the Alliance wanted was for him to die for war crimes, then his warrant would say you could bring him in dead or alive, but preferably dead. Instead, it’s very clear that he’s wanted alive. It even says that in the fine print, doesn’t it?” Alisa knew it did because she had read that digital wanted poster several times now. “The reward will only be given if he’s brought in alive.”

  “I figured it was because they wanted to torture him before they killed him.”

  “Trust me, he’s been tortured enough,” Alisa said, thinking both of his current wounds and of those he had received in the past.

  The soft murmur of Young-hee’s voice came from the doorway where she had stopped. She finished a comm conversation and walked over.

  “You should go now,” she said. “Erick is whining to Lady Naidoo that I violated Order law by striking him.”

  “Is he always this much of a pussy?” Alisa asked.

  “Yes. He used to cry in school if he had to share his toys.”

  “Thank you for your help, Young-hee,” Yumi said, clasping her sister’s hands. “I hope you won’t get in trouble for it.”

  “No more than usual.” Young-hee smiled and returned the handclasp. “To think I wasn’t going to go to that breakfast this morning.”

  Alisa waved a goodbye to Young-hee, even though she had no intention of leaving, and headed up the ramp. Beck, Mica, and Yumi followed behind her. She hit the button to withdraw the ramp and close the hatch, not wanting to be disturbed further.

  “Think they’ll let us fly out of the mist without messing with us again?” Beck asked.

  “If so, I will have wasted my time planting explosives on their docking clamps,” Mica muttered, almost sounding disappointed.

  “You may still get to blow those up,” Alisa said, heading for the stairs.

  “Oh? Why? Yumi’s sister said they’re letting us go.”

  “They may change their minds after we rescue Leonidas. Especially if fiery explosions and lots of melting ice are involved.”

  “This promises to be an interesting night,” Beck said.

  Mica only grumbled with displeasure.

  Chapter 14

  After checking his cabin, Alisa found Alejandro ensconced in her small sickbay. She almost missed him because he was sitting on the floor behind the medical table, his knees pulled up to his chest, his elbows propped on them as he gripped the back of his head. The lights were off, and he did not look up when she turned them on.

  “Doctor,” Alisa said, “I understand that you’re distraught by the loss of your artifact, but I aim to save Leonidas from what I fear may be his death in that temple, and I could use your help. It won’t take long.”

  “Go away,” Alejandro muttered, his voice barely audible.

  “I’ll be most happy to do so once you assist me in this small matter.”

  “What was I thinking? Coming here was idiotic. I knew it. But I didn’t have any other leads, and I was afraid I’d be chased—or shot—out of every civilized library along the way.”

  He was still muttering, and Alisa had a feeling he wasn’t talking to her. She wasn’t even sure he had heard her. She looked at the counters. She would not be above stabbing him with a needle or something else pointy to rouse him from his stupor. Maybe a shot of adrenaline would do it. Or a slap to the cheek.

  “Doctor,” she said, stepping around the table. “You can wallow in here later, but I need you. Let me be more specific. It’s not just that I would like your help: I require it. I need some blood analyzed, and they didn’t teach us how to do that in flight school.” She crouched in front of him and gripped his shoulders. “Please, Doctor.”

  He finally looked up at her, his eyes bloodshot, a beard shadow darkening his jaw. “They’re not going to let him go,” he said.

  “That’s why we have to go in and get him. But before launching a full-scale assault, which we probably can’t win, I’d like to apply logic, try to make them see the truth. If the person he’s been accused of murdering isn’t dead, they have no grounds to hold him.”

  “They don’t need grounds. This temple doesn’t even exist as far as imperial—or Alliance—laws are concerned. Nobody knows they’re here. Nobody’s going to enforce due process.”

  “They’re not all asteroid kissers,” Alisa said, thinking of Yumi’s sister. “And he’s not dead yet. He’s in a cell. I think if we prove that his supposed victim is still alive, that Naidoo lady might let him go.” She was not sure why she thought that, especially since Naidoo had looked her in the eye and lied about knowing a Durant, but Alisa wanted to believe it was the truth. And if the woman wouldn’t let him go… she would find another way to get him out.

  Alejandro’s gaze dropped back to his lap. “I was a fool to bring it here. They’re the last people who need powerful artifacts, and I let them have it. I might as well have handed it to them.”

  Alisa gripped his stubbled jaw, forcing him to look up again. “Doctor, the one person who might be strong enough to help you get it back is in a jail cell in there. Why don’t you help me get him out, so he can help you?” She didn’t care a whit if Leonidas helpe
d Alejandro when he got out, but it was the only argument she could think of that might stir him to action.

  “Even he can’t fight them.”

  “Are you positive? He wasn’t trying his hardest, that’s for sure. He was going out of his way not to kill anyone—he didn’t even want to hurt them.”

  “Except that fool Abelardus.” Alejandro lifted his hand to her wrist and pushed her arm away. He kept looking at her, so she let him. “Captain, I’m not positive that Leonidas didn’t kill him. He was livid about those comments.”

  “Comments?” She frowned.

  “About you.” His tone turned dry. “I heard a couple of them. Judging by the way Leonidas’s face was turning red, I think others were delivered telepathically.”

  “I’m the one Abelardus was insulting?” Alisa remembered Leonidas’s refusal to go into detail about that. She had assumed the Starseer had been denigrating Leonidas for his non-human parts.

  “Congratulations, Captain. You’ve earned yourself a knight in shining armor.”

  “I…” She had no idea what to say. “I don’t understand. I haven’t even talked to Abelardus. Why would he bother with insulting me?” Now if it had been that Erick, she would understand.

  Alejandro twitched a shoulder. “I think he just wanted to irritate Leonidas. He found a button to push that got results.”

  Alisa felt guilty if she had truly been that button, but a selfish part of her acknowledged a sense of satisfaction that he had cared enough to defend her honor. Unfortunately, that would not do anything to help either of them now.

  “I don’t believe he would kill anyone over some insults,” she said firmly. “You’ve said it yourself: he’s an honorable man.”

  “An honorable man who killed a lot of people during the war. I doubt it’s that hard for him anymore.”

  Alisa preferred not to think about that side of Leonidas. Besides…

  “He told me he didn’t do it.” She dug into her pocket and rattled the container with her sample in it. “Let’s find out together if this is real blood, Doctor. If it’s not, then we search the temple and find where Abelardus is hiding to prove that Leonidas did nothing to him.”

  “Is that a screw box?”

  “Mica didn’t have any sample vials.”

  Alejandro accepted it, but he sighed deeply and did not rush to get up. “I failed, Captain.”

  “It happens to all of us.”

  “Not… all the time. I failed with my wife, too, you know. She couldn’t understand why I worked so much, why I was so driven to advance my career, why that sometimes mattered even more than saving people. I didn’t have an answer for her, not one she could accept. She left. I failed with my children too. They’re grown now, and it’s been years since any of them even talked to me. I was gone so often when they were growing up. I can’t blame them. Now, I look back and wonder why I made work so important, a priority over family. What do the house by the beach, the overflowing bank accounts, and the yacht and aeroflyer mean now? I failed with my family. And then, when the emperor was in my arms, bleeding from a hundred injuries with his organs crushed, I failed with him too. I couldn’t save him in the end. He was still a young man, a man who knew his mistakes and could have rectified them. But I failed to save him.” He rubbed his hand across his eyes. “I can’t fail at this. This is my last chance to make a difference, to matter for someone. But I let myself be distracted for a second, and someone stole the artifact that could lead the empire back to…” He shook his head as he trailed off.

  “Maybe it’s because you’re so driven that you fail,” Alisa suggested.

  “No. I wouldn’t expect you to understand.”

  She shrugged. She didn’t want to understand. She just wanted the blood analyzed.

  Alisa took Alejandro’s hand and curled his fingers around the container. “I only need your help for a few minutes, Doctor,” she said, forcing herself to remain patient.

  He finally pushed himself to his feet. She backed up, knowing she would only be in the way.

  “What do you want to know?”

  “For starters, if it’s actually blood or if someone dumped paint on the floor.”

  “I’ll get my tools. Your sickbay is woefully under-equipped.”

  “My entire ship is under-equipped.” Alisa did not know if he had heard the story about how she’d recovered it from a junkyard, but she decided not to bring it up.

  He returned from his cabin with his duffle and withdrew prayer beads, a worn copy of the Xerikesh, and a sack of dried ka’tah petals for consecrating holy water. A handheld microscope came next.

  “Someday, you’ll have to let us know if you’re really a monk, or if your ruse is just elaborate in its details,” Alisa said.

  “We can start holding sermons on Stars Day if you wish.”

  “I’m not sure your ability to bore the crew once a week would verify or deny your monkly status.”

  He gave her a dark look and unscrewed the container.

  “Captain?” Mica stood in the hatchway, waving to her.

  “Trouble?” Alisa joined her in the corridor, figuring Alejandro would prefer it if she did not hover over his shoulder.

  “Do you even have to ask?”

  “I suppose not.”

  “We have attracted tourists.” Mica walked to NavCom, pointed to one of the camera displays, and brought it up on the view screen. Four Starseer warriors stood on the landing pad, talking and eyeing the Nomad.

  “Unfortunately, it doesn’t look like Yumi’s sister is out there to hurl them into walls,” Alisa said.

  “No, but I wouldn’t mind seeing that again.”

  “Have they tried to comm yet?” Alisa hoped Alejandro would finish his analysis of the blood first so she would have something to talk with them about.

  “No, but one of them keeps pacing. Like he’s waiting for someone. Or a response to something.”

  Alisa grimaced. “A response to the question, ‘Can we blow them back out into the mists?’”

  “I’m watching them to make sure they don’t snoop around under the ship and see the explosives I set. The docking clamps are still fastened, I noticed.”

  Yes, just because Young-hee had said they were free to go did not mean that all the Starseers felt that way.

  “Are your explosives set in such a way that they won’t damage the ship?” Alisa asked.

  Mica hesitated. “They’re too close in for us to raise the shields for protection. The clamps themselves are fastened to the hull.”

  “So, your explosives will damage the ship?”

  “Probably, but we don’t have to head into orbit right away. Just fly to a more civilized part of the planet, and we can set down for repairs. That’s better than staying here.”

  “All we have to do is survive a flight through those mists.”

  “I suggest going straight up. They may extend across the surface for thousands of square miles, but I bet you can fly out of them within a mile if you go up.”

  “Maybe.” Alisa had never studied satellite imagery of this part of the planet, but she remembered Leonidas’s encyclopedia article. She doubted all of those airplanes would have crashed if the mists only affected the first few thousand feet above the surface.

  She reached for the computer console, thinking of taking a look at the satellite imagery now, if she could pull it up. Most of her instruments had gone wacky when they had first entered the mists.

  The comm light flashed first.

  “It’s not paint, Captain,” Alejandro said when she answered it.

  “What is it?”

  “Blood.”

  So much for her theory.

  “Human blood?” Alisa asked. Maybe the Starseers had sacrificed some animal for their plot, though she hadn’t seen anywhere in the temple where livestock had been kept.

  “Human blood.”

  “Can you tell if it’s Starseer blood?”

  Mica lifted her eyebrows. “Is that possible?”
/>   “Yes,” Alisa said. “The empire tests—used to test babies at birth—to see if they had the gene mutations.”

  “Huh. Our legends of them just say they were blessed by the gods and were given magic.”

  “Please. Those people are about as blessed as warts on your toes. As far as I’ve heard, humanity is still looking for proof that gods and magic exist. If you’re interested in the search, maybe you can sign up for one of the explorer missions.”

  Mica snorted. “To be cryogenically frozen for two hundred years to wake up in another star system? One that might be horrible? You’d have to be a wacko. No, thanks.”

  “It’s how our ancestors ended up here.”

  “They were wackos.”

  “You’re so respectful of the dead.”

  “I found my DNA sequencer,” Alejandro said, interrupting the conversation. “For a minute, I thought those pirates with their grubby fingers had taken it.”

  “I don’t think they had a sickbay or cared about keeping people alive.” Alisa remembered the scalps those thugs had worn on their belts.

  “I have forty thousand tindarks’ worth of equipment in here, Marchenko.” His tone chilled a few degrees. “Don’t tell Beck.”

  Alisa closed the comm. “I’m surprised he’s telling me,” she muttered.

  “You only steal ancient artifacts, not medical equipment. Unless there’s something you’re not telling me.”

  “There’s not. You’re my engineer and confidante.”

  “Am I? Then as your confidante, I think we should try our best to leave now before those Starseers outside decide they want to do more than talk about our ship. Leonidas is a war veteran. He can take care of himself.”

  “A confidante is someone who receives scintillating secret information, not someone who gives advice.” Alisa failed to see how Leonidas could take care of himself when he was inside a jail cell and injured.

  Movement on the camera distracted her from saying as much. Six more Starseers jogged out, four male and two female, all carrying staffs. Some also wore weapons belts around their robes with the latest BlazTech pistols in holsters—the Starseers were definitely not techno-phobes. The warriors lined up in front of the closed cargo hatch of the Nomad, not facing the ship but facing outward, toward the door that led back into the temple.

 

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