Tales of Talon Box Set
Page 1
Tales of Talon
Books 1-3
A. A. Warren
TALES OF TALON
BOOKS 1-3
A. A. Warren
Copyright © 2019 by A. A. Warren. All rights reserved. This is a work of fiction. Any resemblance to actual persons living or dead, businesses, events or locales is purely coincidental. Reproduction in whole or part of this publication without express written consent is strictly prohibited.
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Contents
Readers Group
Talon the Slayer
Galactic Chronicles, Excerpt 1175-B
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
Chapter 29
Chapter 30
Chapter 31
Chapter 32
Chapter 33
Chapter 34
Chapter 35
Chapter 36
Chapter 37
Talon the Raider
Galactic Chronicle, Excerpt 1192-C
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
Chapter 29
Chapter 30
Chapter 31
Chapter 32
Chapter 33
Chapter 34
Chapter 35
Chapter 36
Chapter 37
Chapter 38
Chapter 39
Talon the Hunter
Galactic Chronicles, Excerpt 1814-D
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
Chapter 29
Chapter 30
Chapter 31
Chapter 32
Chapter 33
Chapter 34
Chapter 35
Chapter 36
Chapter 37
Chapter 38
Chapter 39
Chapter 40
Chapter 41
Chapter 42
Chapter 43
Chapter 44
Chapter 45
Talon and the Moon of the Emerald Empress
Author’s Note
Galactic Chronicles, Subfile 1127-C-B07
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Readers Group
Special Thanks
ALSO BY A. A. WARREN
A. A. Warren
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Talon the Slayer
TALES OF TALON: BOOK 1
Galactic Chronicles, Excerpt 1175-B
The fall of the Star Cross Throne marked the end of the Golden Era. The galaxy descended into a dark, violent age.
Decades of peace marked fleeting interludes between centuries of war. And hidden in the deepest depths of space lay the First Ones - ancient beings of unthinkable power and unknowable appetites…
Upon this tapestry of chaos and conflict, one man arose. A slave from the dusty, windswept worlds of the outer reaches. His travels shaped history. His adventures became legends.
Wielding a plasma axe and an iron will, the man known as Talon would carve his own path to destiny…
Jord’n Tomas, Dominion Chronicler
Chapter One
UNCLAIMED PLANETARY BODY
(UCB 229-71B)
Disputed Space, Dominion Border
Ten years ago…
A beam of light pierced the murky gloom of the underground chamber. It cut through the dust and debris in the air, and cast crimson shadows over the vertical rock walls. The glow from the beam intensified. Its flickering red light revealed a series of carvings... faint tracings worn down by time and the elements. The ancient symbols and figures adorned the stone walls of a circular shaft. The murals curved away into the darkness, their makers lost to the mists of time.
Then, with a sizzling hiss, the energy lance sliced through the stone overhead. Tiny chips of rock flew away from the intense beam, as it traced the edges of a stone slab that capped the shaft. The rock fragments rattled and bounced as they plunged into the shadowy depths.
The sound of heavy boots stomping on the slab echoed through the darkness. A massive section of the stone fell away, striking the bottom of the shaft with a tremendous crash. Coils of rope slid through the new opening. Within seconds, three figures in sealed environmental suits rappelled down the shaft. Lights mounted on their helmets danced across the strange hieroglyphics that surrounded them. The hiss of their breathing apparatus echoed through the confined space.
The shaft descended into a vast, domed chamber. One by one, the figures’ boots struck the bottom. They paused for a moment, checking the blinking displays mounted to their wrists. Pits and scrapes marred the exterior of each suit. Their red and orange paint had faded after decades of use in hostile environments. Sandstorms, methane gas and sulfur winds had scoured away most of the suits’ ID markings, but the name plates stamped below each helmet were still legible.
One of the crew stepped away from the rope. Their lights swept across a cracked, decaying mural carved into the dome-like wall. The tag on her suit read ‘BECK’.
“When you said the readings here were strange, you weren't joking,” she said. She whistled as her light revealed more of the chamber. “These markings, the architecture… I’ve never seen anything like it. Rydan, did you sweep—”
“Yeah, carbon dating sc
an is finishing up,” Rydan replied, cutting her off. He turned to face her, his movements slow and awkward in the heavy suit. She could barely make out his features through the scuffed faceplate of his helmet. His skin was pale, and strands of fine blond hair were plastered to his face by sweat. “It’s taking longer than usual," he continued. "Nothing in these suits works right. Even the cooling systems are breaking down.”
“That’s enough bitching,” the voice of the third figure crackled over their comm systems. “You want new suits? Well they don’t come cheap. Let’s make this a good haul.”
The wrist unit on Rydan’s suit chirped. His eyes widened as he stared at the readings. “Captain, this… this can’t be right. The ship can’t translate these glyphs. There’s no record of anything like them in the data banks. And the age of these rocks… This is no lost colony or abandoned trading post. Airborne microbial counts indicate the atmosphere in here's been sealed for thousands of years, at least. Maybe longer.”
The captain turned to face him. The name on his suit read ‘AROYAS’. He glared through his face-plate at Rydan. His eyes were deep brown, almost black. A hooked nose hung over his thin, sneering lips. Three angry pink scars ran across one of his cheeks.
“Hundskak,” Aroyas cursed. “Check it again."
The captain aimed his lights at a massive statue that dominated the center of the room. The sculpture depicted some kind of alien creature. It had crumbled and decayed, but Beck could make out a mass of reptilian scales, bat-like wings and curved claws. Even in its damaged state, it was monstrous and life-like. The upper half of the statue had fallen to the floor, and shattered into pieces. The remains towered over them in the vast, dark chamber.
“Hope we don’t find one of those down here,” Beck said, gazing up at the monstrous statue. She paced around the crumbling rocks, examining a series of control panels that radiated from the base of the sculpture. “I don’t know what these instruments are for, but they seem too sophisticated for an ancient civilization. What race did you say lived here?”
“No idea,” the captain said, pacing towards the eastern portion of the domed wall. “Whoever they were, they're long gone. All I know is, this place is old. And the first rule of salvage is, if it’s old, it’s valuable.”
Rydan’s wrist unit beeped again. “Oh, it’s old all right, sir. This chamber predates the Star-Cross throne."
“That’s pre-colonial history,” Beck said, squinting at the strange markings on the panels before her. The switch and buttons were dark and lifeless. No power or energy of any kind seemed to flow through the instruments, whatever they were.
She glanced up at Rydan as he moved to the wall near Aroyas. “Pre-colonial? Before humans settled in this galaxy? That’s really old.”
“Yeah,” he replied. “Really old. And really valuable." He brushed his gloved hands across the markings on the wall. A thin film of dust rose into the stagnant air.
"Call in the haulers,” Aroyas grunted. “Whatever this stuff is, it’s a fair bet someone will fill our hold with chips for it.”
Beck tapped the glowing display mounted to her wrist. A low hum vibrated across the ceiling. The noise grew louder, as a series of circular lights dove down the shaft towards them.
A swarm of hauler mechs emerged from the opening and drifted in the air above them. Each unit was a compact pod, about the size of a human body. As they drifted through the air, their servo motors clicked and whirred. The units unfolded into large, insectile-looking bodies. Six metal leg clamps and a pair of glowing stabilizer wings emerged from each mech's body.
Beck directed them with a signal beam from her wrist unit. Anything the light touched was “marked” for the hauler-bots’ sensors. The mechs grasped at the control panels with their spidery limbs. The metal groaned, as they tore the panels loose from the floor.
Multiple haulers clamped on to the statue, while others grappled the shattered fragments that littered the floor. As they scouted the chamber, their anti-grav propulsion fields hummed and warbled. They strained to lift the heavy chunks of rock and debris into the darkness above.
Rydan ignored the swarm of mechs. He continued inspecting the carvings that lined the chamber walls. He knelt down and aimed his lights through a dark crack that ran through one section of the carved mural.
“Hey, check this out! These walls aren’t solid rock. There’s another chamber beyond this one.”
He slipped a metal multi-tool from his belt, then placed it in the crack. “Think I can pry this panel out…” He grunted with exertion as he yanked on the tool, using it like a crowbar. Dust and a few tiny fragments shook loose, but the wall remained intact.
“Captain, give me a hand,” he gasped.
The older man chuckled. “I don’t think you understand the meaning of the word ‘Captain’. Help yourself, lad.”
“Hold on Rydan,” Beck said, glaring at the captain as she bounced over to the struggling young man. “I’m coming.”
Aroyas shrugged, and continued sweeping his lights around the chamber.
“I got it, I got it,” Rydan muttered, his voice breaking up as a wave of distortion blasted over their comm systems. “Come on…”
He yanked back again on the tool. A large chunk of stone crumbled away from the wall. He stumbled back, as falling rocks pelted his helmet. A cloud of dust billowed out of the dark hole.
“Damn!” Rydan gasped, brushing the dust off his faceplate. "Almost cracked my helmet!” He peered through the new opening. “I was right! There’s another room back here!”
Beck heard a high-pitched whine come from her wrist unit. She looked down and pressed the glowing display… She saw a small white dot rushing towards Rydan’s position.
“Rydan, look out! Proximity sensors are picking up movement!”
Rydan squinted and leaned forward into the dark hole. “I don’t see anything moving. But there is something back here. Looks like… coffins. Rows and rows of coffins!”
The beeping at Beck’s wrist grew louder. “Rydan, don’t go in there!” She was running towards him as fast as she could, but the heavy suit slowed her movements.
“Relax, I’m telling you, there’s noth— Ahhhhh!”
His scream distorted and broke up over the comm system. Rydan’s body flew forward into the hole. The armored shoulders of his suit caught in the tight opening, and his body jerked and spasmed.
Captain Aroyas spun around. “What the hell was that?” he demanded.
“Something’s got Rydan!” Beck shouted back.
She reached the trapped young man, and grabbed his wrist. She grunted as she pulled him back from the dark crevice. Before she could free him, she felt something pulling back… It was tugging on his body from the other side of the dark hole.
Whatever it was, it was strong.
She yanked at Rydan's arm again. More rock and stone crumbled away, and Rydan flew out of the hole. He hit the ground, writhing in pain. Beck gasped… there was something squirming, clinging to the man's chest. Before she could get a good look at it, Rydan flipped over onto his stomach, kicking up clouds of dirt and debris from the ground with his thrashing.
The captain rushed to her side. He drew his sidearm, and aimed the heavy pistol at the man’s twitching body. Beck slapped his arm away.
“Are you crazy? If you miss you could kill him at this range!”
She kicked Rydan’s body with her boot, rolling him over in the dust.
She gasped in horror… Some kind of creature gripped his chest, locked onto his body with six armor-plated limbs. The thing’s body resembled a cross between a rat and a scorpion, but it was far larger than either. Tufts of brown fur sprouted between the segments of its chitinous scale plates. Its three glowing red eyes peered up at Beck and Aroyas. The beast’s front claws slashed at the seams of Rydan’s suit, seeking the warm flesh within.
“Vermirak!” Aroyas shouted. “Big one!”
Beck kicked the creature with her boot, but its legs remained clamped arou
nd the man’s body. She kicked again. “Let go of him, you—”