The Lost Destroyer (Lost Starship Series Book 3)

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The Lost Destroyer (Lost Starship Series Book 3) Page 41

by Vaughn Heppner


  “Amazing,” Meta said.

  “It reminds me of an old saying,” Maddox said.

  “What’s that?”

  “Greater love has no man than this, that he lays down his life for another.”

  “That’s beautiful,” Meta said. “Who said that?”

  “An ancient carpenter named Jesus,” Maddox said.

  Meta stared into the captain’s eyes.

  That’s when Maddox realized he would fulfill his promise. “Meta,” he said. “Kane had a message for you. He said he did those things because…because he loved you.”

  “What?” she whispered. “You’re kidding me?”

  Maddox shook his head.

  “Kane loved me?”

  The words coming from Meta shocked Maddox. He recalled what Kane had told him at the end. They had been the man’s last words, heavy with meaning. Kane had told him to stop being a fool. Did the dying see things others couldn’t?

  Maddox squeezed Meta’s fingers. “So do…” He was going to say, “So do I.” But that didn’t sound right. “Meta,” he said. “I…” The words stuck in the captain’s throat although he couldn’t figure out why.

  Maybe Meta could see his dilemma. “You silly fool,” she said. “I love you. Do you know that?”

  Maddox stared into her eyes.

  “I’ve loved you for a long time, Captain, but do you hold it against me for having traveled with Kane for so long?”

  Maddox shook his head.

  Meta smiled, and tears welled in her eyes. It made her features look even more drawn.

  She was so beautiful, and he had almost lost her.

  “Meta,” he whispered.

  Her eyes became bright.

  “I love you,” Maddox said.

  She beamed up at him while squeezing his hand.

  He leaned low and kissed her. She clutched his head, whispering, “Maddox, Maddox.”

  Finally, he disengaged from her. “You should sleep,” he said.

  “Will you stay and watch over me?”

  “Of course.”

  Meta closed her eyes. “Thank you,” she whispered. “Thank you…” Before she could finish her thought, she was asleep.

  Maddox gazed down at her for a time. It was crazy that it had taken the admonishment from an agent for the New Men for Maddox to say the words he felt in his heart. Love, it was a strange emotion. But once one had tasted it, nothing else compared.

  -48-

  Several days later, Maddox found himself back in Geneva, in the brigadier’s office.

  Meta was healing rapidly. One of the world’s best surgeons had already operated to repair Oran Rva’s damage. The captain had been surprised to learn how much wreckage a single knife-thrust had been able to achieve. Thank God for modern medicine.

  Dana was planning a surprise party for Meta. Maddox was supposed to drive Meta there in a few hours. He hoped he could get out of Geneva in time.

  Behind the desk, O’Hara lowered a tablet she’d been scanning. The Iron Lady looked tired. It showed in her eyes and the hunch of her shoulders.

  “That was far too close, Captain,” O’Hara said. “Another half hour and the Lord High Admiral would have engaged the doomsday machine. According to Commander Guderian’s report, that would have ended the Home Fleet.”

  “How is the commander?” Maddox asked.

  O’Hara’s tired eyes became haunted. “It’s too soon to say. Strand…I wonder if Lieutenant Noonan spoke with the original.”

  “I suspect she did,” Maddox said.

  “Do you care to elaborate on that?”

  “Certainly,” the captain said. “These past few days, I’ve been sorting through what everyone knew. I’ve come to believe that the original Strand manipulated Oran Rva.”

  “Is that possible?”

  Maddox smiled wryly.

  “Come now, Captain, none of that. What are you suggesting and why?”

  “According to Oran Rva, Strand and Ludendorff are two sides of the same coin. It’s clear the New Man knew more about those two than we do. It almost seems as if those two have been manipulating events behind the magic curtain, so to speak.”

  “When did you become poetic?” O’Hara asked.

  Maddox shook his head. “I believe that Ludendorff and Strand are privy to knowledge the rest of us lack. Strand created or helped to create the New Men, but he lost control of them.”

  “Meaning what?” O’Hara asked.

  “In this instance, that a group of Methuselah People created a society that went its own way. The New Men rebelled, deciding for themselves what the good life consisted of. They rejected the idea that they would be humanity’s defenders, deciding to be its rulers and remodelers instead. I’ve spoken with Dana. She told me that such things have happened before.”

  “Really?” O’Hara asked.

  “History is replete with military organizations forged to defend a society that decided to take over the reins of power. The Mamelukes or slave soldiers did it in Medieval Egypt. The Muslim rulers bought horse archer slaves to fight for them. After a time, the Mamelukes began to rule Egypt. To a lesser extent, the Praetorian Guard of ancient Rome did that too. They made and unmade many an emperor. The German barbarians in the Roman legions, brought in to fill the places the peaceful citizens refused to take, took over in the end. I could go on and on.”

  “That does nothing to solve the problem of Strand and Ludendorff.”

  “We know about them now,” Maddox said. “That will go a long way to solving the problem. We also know more about the New Men.”

  “True,” O’Hara said. “We also know that the doomsday machine greatly aided them. The Wahhabi Caliphate is a shattered remnant of their former selves. Their navy isn’t going to help us in any appreciable way in the ongoing war with the New Men.”

  “That’s true, Ma’am, but I think you’re overlooking a critical factor that is going to help us.”

  O’Hara studied the captain with her tired eyes. “I’d like to hear this. Yes, we dodged a bullet, as the saying goes. But how does defeating the doomsday machine help us in the greater war against the New Men?”

  “I’m surprised you don’t see it,” Maddox said.

  The Iron Lady drummed her fingers on the desk.

  “Even now,” the captain said, “Intelligence is combing the various estates and industries of the Methuselah People. The nuclear detonation in Monte Carlo has created an outcry for it.”

  “I’m quite aware of that, Captain. The increased workload has given me many a sleepless night.”

  “In his grab for the doomsday machine, Oran Rva used up some of the New Men’s most deeply embedded agents on Earth. We’re sweeping up more enemy espionage people by the day. Their secret service is shattered here, a broken reed.”

  “That’s true,” O’Hara said. “Yes, I see your point. We’re consolidating our position.”

  “It’s more than that,” Maddox said. “The Earth and the Commonwealth is uniting. We’re hardening our resolve. The enemy is losing his ability to learn about our plans. Given our espionage breakthroughs, it’s possible we’ll soon discover the location of the Throne World.”

  “Are you suggesting we go onto the offensive?”

  “Absolutely I am,” Maddox said. “I’m also suggesting that Victory spearhead the assault.”

  “Without the help of the Wahhabi Navy?” O’Hara asked.

  “It’s time we gathered the Windsor League warships and the Spacers under our command.”

  “Such a thing will take time,” the brigadier said thoughtfully.

  “If I might make another suggestion, Ma’am, I think we should rush a flotilla to the Xerxes System.”

  O’Hara smiled tiredly. “The Lord High Admiral is already planning just that. As I said, we dodged a bullet, and our fleets are intact. The idea, though, of Builder drones still working after all these centuries and transferring pyramids in space… It leads us to a frightful question. Are more of those aliens ou
t there?”

  “More?”

  “What would you call the doomsday machine but an alien vessel?” O’Hara asked.

  “That’s a good point,” Maddox said.

  O’Hara drummed her fingers on the desk until she sighed deeply. “We’ve uncovered some critical plots against us, only to discover that there are even more mysteries out there. Who built the doomsday machine? What happened to the Swarm?”

  “I suggest we worry about these things one at a time,” Maddox said.

  “Then I have a question for you. Do you believe we’re going to be given that luxury?”

  “Only the future will tell us that, Ma’am. I’m still elated at our present victory. I want time to soak it in.”

  “I can understand the feeling, Captain. But you must know the ancient saying, ‘There is no rest for the wicked.’”

  “Is that us, Ma’am?”

  “What else would you call the people of the Intelligence Service?”

  Maddox didn’t answer the question, but turned away, staring at a glass case of model starships. He’d been wondering about something ever since the fight in the doomsday machine. He hadn’t told anyone his thoughts about it. More than ever, he wanted to know his father’s identity. Could it have been Oran Rva? He didn’t like to think so. As much as he disliked the New Men, he wasn’t sure he wanted to be his father’s killer.

  O’Hara sighed. “Captain, I’m tired. The constant worry, the latest espionage war with the host of enemy agents…I need a rest. I plan to take a week off and recuperate. I suggest you do likewise.”

  “Is Star Watch content to let Galyan orbit Earth alone?”

  “We are in constant communication with the AI,” O’Hara said. “The Adok intelligence has made it quite clear that it will allow no other commander aboard Victory but you. Like it or not, you’re going to remain a starship captain for the foreseeable future.”

  “I’m going to want my crew with me.”

  O’Hara nodded as if that was obvious. “Now, if there’s nothing else, I believe you have a lady to escort to a surprise party.”

  “How do you know about that?” Maddox asked.

  “Please, Captain, I am the head of Star Watch Intelligence for a reason.”

  “Yes indeed, Ma’am. I can see that.”

  O’Hara smiled. “You did excellent work, Captain. You must realize that I’m proud of you.”

  Maddox nodded ever so slightly, feeling a flush creep up his neck.

  “Now you must go before I say something I’ll regret later,” O’Hara told him, “Goodbye for now, Captain.”

  ***

  Maddox flew to the hospital in an air-car. He picked up Meta, pushing her wheelchair out of the building.

  “This is ridiculous,” she said.

  “It’s an old custom, I hear.”

  “An Earth custom,” Meta said. “I’m a Rouen Colony woman, much stronger than the natives of this backwater planet.”

  “Much prettier, you mean,” the captain said.

  Meta smiled up at him.

  Maddox stopped by the air-car, opening the passenger-side door. Then, he held out a hand, helping Meta into the vehicle.

  He folded the chair and put it in the trunk of the air-car. Soon, he lifted, heading for a Normandy beach.

  “Is Galyan in orbit?” Meta asked.

  “Keeping watch,” Maddox said.

  “I can’t imagine being him. In fact…” Meta faced the captain. “I’ve begun to feel sorry for Galyan.”

  “Just a minute,” Maddox said. He turned on the radio. “Galyan?”

  “Here, Captain Maddox,” the AI said.

  “Are you feeling lonely?”

  “That is a preposterous notion,” Galyan said. “I am in constant communication with the Earth’s greatest chess master. So far, I have beaten him three times. I have also configured a new probability process that will—”

  “Galyan,” Maddox said, interrupting.

  “Yes, Captain?”

  “I just wanted to check in to make sure you’re doing all right.”

  “Thank you, Captain. That was thoughtful of you. Is Meta in the air-car with you?”

  “Do you really need to ask?”

  “No,” Galyan said. “I have been monitoring you since you left the hospital. If the air-car should falter, I have devised a method to use my tractor beam to—”

  “Galyan,” Maddox said, interrupting once more.

  “Yes, sir,” the AI said.

  “Thanks for all you’ve done. I, personally, appreciate it.”

  “Thank you, sir. And Captain?”

  “Yes?” Maddox asked.

  “Nothing,” Galyan said a moment later, as if reconsidering. “Enjoy your time with Meta.”

  Maddox glanced at Meta. She shrugged. “I plan to,” he said.

  “This I know,” the AI said.

  “Okay,” Maddox said. “I’ll see you soon.” Then, he turned off the comm.

  Meta smiled, stroking one of the captain’s arms. “Thanks for showing me that Galyan is doing fine. He’s enjoying himself.”

  Maddox grinned at her.

  She leaned near and they kissed. Afterward, Meta peered out of the bubble canopy. “So, where are we going?”

  “Hang on,” Maddox said, increasing speed. “I’ll show you.”

  ***

  Later that evening on a beach in Normandy, a fire blazed. Six people sat around it in beach chairs.

  Dana Rich sipped a glass of wine. No doubt, she thought about Professor Ludendorff. Whenever someone spoke her name, Dana smiled. From time to time, she stared at the flames, lost in thought.

  Keith Maker ate a polish dog. The ace had been grinning all night. He laughed a lot, and his hair was tousled. None of the others seemed to get tired as he retold various flying exploits.

  Treggason Riker flexed his new bionic hand. He said little, one side of his face puffed out from holding so many sunflower seeds. There were a mass of shells at his feet. He seemed content, occasionally guzzling from a beer bottle and spitting seeds.

  Valerie Noonan added wood to the fire, keeping it a hot blaze. Often, when a log popped, throwing up a shower of sparks, she laughed with delight. Her father had taken her on a camping trip once. The same good feeling filled her tonight. She was with her family, and she was happy to be alive.

  Meta held the captain’s hand. She kept thinking about Kane. The Rouen Colony man had saved them because he’d loved her. Life had been hard for Kane. The New Men had misused him. In the end, Kane had helped the old-style humans over the so-called dominants. Meta was determined to beat the enemy. Such a noble sacrifice shouldn’t go to waste.

  Captain Maddox glanced at his crewmembers. They were his responsibility. He had to make sure to use their talents to the best of his ability and then he had to make sure to bring them back alive. Meta’s near death and watching Ludendorff’s android die had brought that home more than ever.

  The war had been ugly, and it would likely get worse. Tonight, though, they celebrated another victory. Who knew how many more surprises were in store for them. Who knew whether they were going to pierce the many secrets swirling around them? The origin of the doomsday machine, the reasons for Strand and Ludendorff’s differences—

  Maddox released Meta’s hand. He stood, and he held his arms wide as if encompassing his crew. “You people are the best in the universe,” he said. “And let’s be honest, we have the greatest starship there is. I’m proud of each one of you. We saved the Earth and…”

  The captain lowered his arms. He gazed into each face, finally nodding. “I don’t have the words to say anything other than this: thank you.”

  “If I had a drink, I’d toast you, Captain,” Keith shouted. “Instead, I salute you, sir.” The ace stood up and saluted crisply.

  The others cheered, clapping their hands.

  Maddox grinned, nodding in appreciation. Afterward, he sat down, as did Keith.

  The party continued as the fire bla
zed on the Normandy shore.

  ***

  High in stationary Earth orbit, Galyan kept his best sensors trained on the crew. He watched them, with several weapons systems ready in case anyone should try to harm his friends. Without them—

  Galyan shied away from the thought, content to know that his people were safe and happy for this moment in time.

  The End

  To the Reader: Thanks! I hope you’ve enjoyed The Lost Destroyer. If you liked the book and would like to see the series continue, please put up some stars and a review. Let new readers know what’s in store for them.

  —Vaughn Heppner

 

 

 


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