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Aurora Rising (ARC)

Page 8

by Amie Kaufman


  “Yes sir,” I sigh.

  Best friends forever, right?

  7

  Kal

  The song is always the same.

  It is two hours since we returned to realspace through the decrepit FoldGate near Sagan station. Ninety minutes since the Syldrathi refugees aboard began negotiations. One minute since Scarlett Jones finally broke the news that a member of the Warbreed Cabal was present aboard our ship. Ten seconds since Sagan’s defense grid locked missiles on us.

  Humans are such fools.

  Well-meaning fools, sometimes.

  But fools, always.

  “… And I respect that, sir,” Scarlett Jones is saying, trying to ignore the large missile lock flashing on our displays. “But Legionnaire Gilwraeth is our combat specialist. If we’re to fully examine your defenses—”

  “No member of the Warbreed Cabal will set foot upon this station while I am First Walker!” comes the reply. “By the spirits of the Void, I vow it!”

  I study the holographic projection Scarlett is speaking to. Taneth Lirael Ammar is an elderly man—at least two centuries by the look. His skin marred by faint wrinkles, the silver sheen in his hair is darkened by age, swept back from the small sigil of the Waywalker Cabal etched on his brow. The glyf reminds me of my mother. How far I am from home.

  What is left of it, anyway.

  It is often said other among other races that we Syldrathi are arrogant and aloof. That we hide our feelings behind walls of ice and stares of stone. But still, Taneth is clearly outraged at my presence. His violet eyes flash as he speaks, and a faint flush of anger shows at the tips of his tapered ears.

  Tyler Jones raises his hands in supplication, trying to calm him. “First Taneth, Legionnaire Gilwraeth is a member of the Aurora Legion, and I can—”

  “He is Warbreed!” Taneth glowers. “He is not welcome here!”

  I look at my squad leader, and bite down on the words I told you thus.

  It has been two years since the war between Syldra and Terra ended. Twenty months since I tried to forge a new future as a member of the Aurora Legion, despite my mother’s protests. I have studied among the Terrans. Lived and worked and fought among them. And I still do not understand them.

  They are like children. The youngest race among the galactic milieu. Oblivious in their righteousness. Firmly convinced that any problem can be solved with enough faith or good hard work or, when all else fails, bullets.

  But they have not seen their sun die. Their people burn. Their world end. And they do not know, yet, that there are some breaks that cannot be fixed.

  “Maybe there’s a compromise?” Scarlett Jones suggests to Taneth, running one hand through her flame-colored hair. “If you’re willing to let Legionnaire Gilwraeth into the cargo bay, he can deliver the medical supplies while the rest of us see to Sagan’s onboard systems?”

  Hmm.

  I look at the human who would speak for me.

  A wise one.

  First Taneth remains silent, stroking his brow in thought.

  “Honestly, sir, the faster we work, the sooner we’ll be out of your business,” Tyler Jones assures him. “I give you my word, Legionnaire Gilwraeth will follow all AL protocols while aboard Sagan station.”

  I look at the human who would be my leader, eyes narrowed.

  A trusting one.

  Despite our diplomat’s assurances, I still do not believe Taneth will agree. Syldrathi are a noble and ancient people. The warriors who followed the Starslayer, who refused to accept peace with the Terrans, named themselves “the Unbroken” in their hubris. Even those of us who accepted the peace still felt our pride stung by the treaty. Though we Syldrathi are fallen far from what once we were, we do not accept charity from others. Especially not those who made their first stumbling steps into the Fold only a few hundred years ago.

  And so I am surprised when Taneth purses his lips, and bows his acquiescence. Looking at the shadows under his eyes, the desperation on his face, I realize their situation must be more dire than I imagine.

  All is not as it seems here.

  •••••

  Our Longbow’s airlock hisses open, and I immediately taste stale oxygen and old sweat. Faulty lighting flickers in the cargo bay, and I see half a dozen Syldrathi waiting for us. They wear traditional robes, glyfs of the Waywalker Cabal etched in the flowing fabric, Void crystals strung on silver glass about their necks. They are tall and graceful. But thin. Haggard. Many have centuries behind their stares, and aside from a psi-blade at the waist of their youngest, none are armed.

  Physical contact is an intimacy among my people. Syldrathi do not touch strangers, but I know it is custom among Terrans to shake hands upon meeting others. And so I am surprised when Scarlett Jones walks forward to Taneth, raising her fingers to her eyes, then her lips, then her heart in perfect greeting.

  The First Walker repeats the gesture with a small, puzzled smile, obviously pleased to see a Terran so versed in our ways.

  Scarlett Jones introduces the other members of our squad. “Tyler Jones, our commander. Zila Madran, science officer. Finian de Seel, engineer. Catherine Brannock, pilot. And finally, Kaliis Idraban Gilwraeth, combat specialist.”

  One by one, the Syldrathi close their eyes and turn their backs on me, until only Taneth remains facing us. And he does not spare me a glance.

  “The five of you are welcome here,” he declares to the others. “Though we do not ask it, we will gratefully receive any assistance the Aurora Legion offers.”

  Tyler Jones looks about the cargo bay, notes the fluctuating power, the wires and circuitry spilling from tears in the walls, the staleness of the air. He sees their plight as swiftly as I do. This station was abandoned by its original owners years ago, and without money and maintenance, it is falling apart. The people here are in obvious need. But still, a part of me is saddened to see those of my race lunge so eagerly for help. To prostrate themselves like beggars before children.

  Once we walked the dark between the stars, unequaled.

  What have we become?

  “Where are the rest of your people?” Tyler asks.

  Taneth blinks. “The rest?”

  “Legion Command told us there were close to seven thousand refugees here.”

  “We are a hundred at most, young Terran.”

  Tyler Jones shares an uneasy glance with his sister. Zila Madran simply blinks, like an automaton storing data for later inquiry. Finian de Seel has the same question in his large black eyes as Cat Brannock does. As I do.

  Why travel so very far, risk so much, for so few?

  “Do you have a command and control center?” Tyler Jones asks. “We need a better look at your systems so we can prioritize repairs.”

  “And a chapel maybe?” Our Ace mutters, peering about the bay. “So we can ask the Maker what the hells we’re doing here?”

  “We have a central control.” Taneth nods. “Please, follow me.”

  He turns to the youngest among them—the female with the psi-blade at her belt. “Aedra, please oversee the delivery of the medical supplies. And watch”—a glance at me—“that. Carefully.”

  The female glares at me with cold violet eyes. She replies in our own tongue. “Your voice, my hands, First Taneth.”

  Tyler Jones looks at me with one eyebrow raised in question. I bow in reply, assuring him all will be well. The rest of my squad accompanies the Waywalkers into an elevator that looks older than Taneth, and twice as decrepit.

  “You kids play nice, now.” Finan de Seel smiles.

  The elevator rises slowly to the upper levels, clunking as it goes. It shudders to a brief stop for no apparent reason, and our Gearhead thumps the control panel to get it moving again. Finally, my squad disappears from sight.

  I find myself alone with the female.

  She is tall
, willowy. Her skin is tanned, her hair silver, tied back from her brow and spilling in gleaming waves over her shoulders. Now that we are out of sight of the Terrans, she allows her disdain for me to show more openly, curling her lip, hatred glittering in her eyes. I know she is scanning me telepathically—my mother was also of the Waywalker Cabal, and she taught me the signs. I can feel the gentle press of Aedra’s mind on my own as she skims my surface thoughts.

  I glance down to the hand on her psi-blade, see the glyf encircling her forefinger. She seems young to have answered the Pull. And yet, from the single teardrop inside the circle, I know her lifelove has already returned to the Void.

  “May the spirits guide him home,” I offer.

  She moves. Swift as a sunbeam. An arc of energy springs from her psi-blade’s hilt; mauve, crackling, reflected in her eyes as she raises it to my throat.

  Something surges inside me as she brandishes her weapon.

  The call in my blood.

  The Enemy Within.

  But I push him back. Forcing myself to be calm.

  “You may have deceived those childlings you call your comrades,” she growls, “but I see your soul. You are born to brutality. Drenched in the blood of our homeworld. You and all your wretched kin.”

  I know this song. Every Syldrathi cadet at the academy sang it. Every Syldrathi I have met since our star was burned to ashes. The glyf at my brow tells them who I am before ever I have a chance to speak. But I speak anyway, hoping the tune will be different this time.

  “The Unbroken are no kin to me,” I say. “The Starslayer betrayed us all when he destroyed our homeworld. I bleed as badly as you.”

  “Not yet, Warbreed,” she spits. “But speak to me again, and you shall.”

  I look into her eyes, fighting the urge to meet rage with more rage. To succumb to what I was raised to be. The call is so strong, the anger so real, it feels like a flame in my chest. Threatening to burn me alive. Screaming for release.

  Instead, I bow slowly, my palms upturned. Slower still, she lowers her blade. And turning to the Longbow’s airlock behind me, I clomp inside, busying myself with unloading our medical supplies.

  I do not blame her for hating me.

  I try to speak every time.

  But the song is always the same.

  •••••

  “Kal, this is Tyler, do you read?”

  The voice crackles from my uniglass as I step back into the cargo bay for the fifty-third time, placing the med container on the loading ramp with a thud. The containers are large, almost too heavy for me to carry. The work would pass twice as swiftly if Aedra would deign to help me, but she simply follows as I work, one hand on her psi-blade’s hilt, eyes on me at all times.

  “I read, sir.”

  “How’s it going down there?”

  I glance at Aedra, who is studying the wall and trying to appear as though she is not listening to my every word. Her lip curls to hear me call a Terran “sir.”

  “Slowly,” I reply.

  “Well, take your time, we’re gonna be a while. Zila is getting life support back up to speed. Finian and Cat are checking defenses.”

  Cat Brannock scoffs on her channel. “Such as they are.”

  “It’s not exactly state of the art down here,” Finian de Seel agrees. “Their missile grid has been cobbled together from the skiffs they flew here in, so the good news is they probably couldn’t have shot us down even if they wanted to. But that’s also the bad news. Short-range scanners should be back online any second, though.”

  “I will be finished unloading the supplies within the hour,” I say.

  “Roger that,” my Alpha replies. “Anything you need in the meantime, sing out.”

  “I would like to ask a question, sir.”

  Scarlett Jones pipes in. “Is it the one about where babies come from?”

  “No.”

  “Someone’s going to have to explain it to you sooner or later, spunky. …”

  I suppose she is trying to be funny.

  “Since Syldra’s destruction, there are millions of Syldrathi refugees scattered over the galaxy. All of them in need. All without home or succor.”

  “I’m not hearing a question, Legionnaire,” Tyler Jones says.

  “Of all the places they could send us, why would Legion Command choose here? A derelict station in a nowhere system, with only a hundred people aboard?”

  I can tell from the silence over the feed that my comrades were all asking themselves the same question. We may be the dregs of Aurora Academy. Most of us are in this squad because nobody else would have us. But it seems we are being punished for something we haven’t done yet.

  “I don’t know, Legionnaire Gilwraeth,” comes our Alpha’s reply. “But I do know you and I swore an oath when we joined the Legion. To help the helpless. To defend the defenseless. And even though the—”

  “Um, sir?” Finian de Seel says. “We might have a problem.”

  “You mean aside from you interrupting my speech?” Tyler Jones asks. “Because I’d been practicing it in my head for an hour and it was gonna be great.”

  “And I can’t tell you how distressed I am about that, sir, but I got scanners online as promised, and you know how Legionnaire Madran and her brain told us the odds of the Unbroken stumbling across us out here were eight thousand to one?”

  “Eight thousand seven hundred and twenty-five,” Zila Madran corrects. “Approximately.”

  “Well, maybe ‘approximately’ means something different on Terra, because a Syldrathi war cruiser just dropped in from the FoldGate. Fully armed. Wraith-class. They’re flying Unbroken colors. And they’re headed this way.”

  Aedra looks at me across the cargo bay, her eyes growing wide.

  “Um, totally unrelated question,” Scarlett Jones says. “But did anyone bring a spare pair of pants, perchance?”

  “Yeah,” our Gearhead replies. “But I think I’m going to need mine.”

  “Knock it off.” Our Alpha’s voice is hard with command. “Finian, I want those missiles hot. Zila, you’re on comms. Kal, I need you up here. Move!”

  Adrenaline kicks me in the stomach, and I heft my crate of medical supplies, shuffle over to the perfect stack I’ve been building. We have perhaps ten minutes before that Unbroken ship is in range. A Wraith-class cruiser is small, with a crew of twenty-seven adepts. But still, with only our Longbow and this station’s crude defenses, we are outgunned and outmatched. The promise of violence tingles in my blood.

  The Enemy Within, awakening.

  Aedra is looking at me with fury in her eyes, fists clenched.

  “This was your doing,” she spits.

  I feel my lip curl. “What?”

  “We have hidden here for six months, undiscovered. You arrive, and barely an hour later, the Unbroken follow?”

  “Obviously others know you are here,” I say. “Legion Command, for one. But you immediately assume I betrayed you?”

  “You are Warbreed,” she hisses.

  I try to bite down on my reply, but the Enemy has the better of me now.

  And you are a fool, I hear him say.

  Aedra’s eyes widen, and with a snarl, she draws her psi-blade again. And though her form is swift, smooth, splendid, she was not born as I was.

  I was born with the taste of blood in my mouth.

  I was born with my hands in fists.

  I was born for war.

  The violence within me unfurls, full and hot and pounding. The thing I was raised to be takes hold. I step aside as she swings, thought and motion becoming one, stabbing her neck with outstretched fingers. Quick as silver. Hard as steel. All too easy. The nerve strike numbs her arm and she gasps, stumbles into my neat stack of medical crates. The containers topple to the deck, the latches on the largest springing open with the shar
p song of snapping metal.

  And out of it, spills a girl.

  She is slender as a lias tree. Her hair is dark as midnight, with a streak as white as starlight running through it. Her skin is a light brown, and the freckles across her cheeks are perfect constellations. Her gasp is thin and pained as she tumbles along the deck, and still, it sounds like music to me. And as I look at her face, I feel a stabbing in my chest, bright and sharp and real as broken glass.

  A feeling I thought I might never feel.

  But …

  But then I see she is …

  Human?

  “Um,” she says, looking at Aedra. “Hi.”

  She pushes herself up on her elbows, and finally looks at me. And behind the pain and the shock and the surprise, I see another color in her eyes.

  Her thoughts are a kaleidoscope.

  Her voice is a whisper.

  “I’ve seen you before. …”

  8

  Zila

  The bad news is that the life-support system I have been trying to revive belongs in a museum. I’m certain the comms system is worse.

  The good news is that their condition may not matter much longer.

  Finian peers at me from inside the terminal he is fixing.

  “You know what I don’t understand?” he asks.

  “Probably,” I reply.

  9

  Auri

  It’s the guy from my vision. Mr. Middle-Earth.

  Only he’s real.

  And he’s standing right here in front of me.

  And I …

  “Treachery,” a voice snaps behind me. “When were you going to tell us there were seven of you?”

  I tear my eyes away from the guy from my vision, twisting around to check on the speaker. She’s the same species, tall and slender, with the same olive skin, the same long, silver hair. The small tattoo in the middle of her forehead is different, though—his is three crossed blades, but hers is an eye, crying five tears.

  “I did not know.” The guy behind me sounds uncertain, but less like he wants to cut me open and see what’s inside, so I edge closer to him, sliding on my butt. My arms and legs are still cramping from the tight space of the cargo crate, my eyes aching from all the reading I’ve been doing on Magellan’s tiny screen. Also, I need a bathroom break. Why does that never come up in spy movies?

 

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