Destiny Lost: A Military Science Fiction Space Opera Epic: Aeon 14 (The Orion War)

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Destiny Lost: A Military Science Fiction Space Opera Epic: Aeon 14 (The Orion War) Page 11

by M. D. Cooper


  He rushed down the corridor, firing his rifle on its highest setting while the remaining enemies were still off balance from the shift. The one who had already been clipped in the shoulder slumped to the deck after taking two more hits.

  Flaherty got three more shots off at the other trooper before crashing in to him and slamming him against the bulkhead.

  At that moment, the transfer to FTL completed and the airlock yawned open to the total void of the dark layer. Their ears popped as air rushed out into the space between Sabrina and its shielding. Beyond the shield, two soldiers who had been in the umbilical could be seen floating away in the void.

  Flaherty pulled a beam rifle off one of the unconscious enemy soldiers and took careful aim before firing a shot through each of the drifting men’s heads.

  “Why’d the hell did you do that? You should have let the dogs suffer,” Thompson said, as he approached the airlock.

  Flaherty didn’t look away from the void. “No one deserves that.”

  Cargo stepped beside Flaherty, silent, his breathing ragged. Then, with a curse, he slammed his fist into the bulkhead. The trooper who Flaherty had crashed into made a noise and stirred from the sound. Flaherty reached down, tore his helmet off and slammed his head against the hull.

  The other soldier was also moving, his breathing sounded strained through his helmet and he was moving his head erratically. Cargo reached down and pulled his helmet off. The man looked haggard, his face a massive bruise from the effects off the pulse rifle. His eyes were bloodshot and barely open. He still managed to scream as Cargo fired the pulse rifle point blank into his left eye.

  The trooper’s head crumpled, but the scream didn’t stop. That was a first, Cargo thought, until he realized the sound was coming from behind him. He and Flaherty turned to see Thompson holding his gun to Drind’s head. Completely forgotten, the tech had been curled up on the floor.

  “Want me to ice this bastard, too?” Thompson asked.

  Hearing that, followed by seeing the cold eyes of Cargo and Flaherty upon him, Drind seemed to shrink inward even further. “Please, please don’t do that to me, too. I’ll do anything you want, please just don’t kill me.” He was sobbing now, his shoulders heaving and hands over his head.

  “No. We’ve done enough killing for one day,” Flaherty said.

  “Stick him somewhere out of the way,” Cargo agreed, and Thompson nodded wordlessly as he gestured with his rifle for Drind to stand up. They were all feeling the loss of the captain; it was best not to do anything else rash just yet.

  “What’s that sound?” Thompson asked.

  They all stopped, Flaherty turning his head as he listened.

  “It’s not out there,” Cargo said. “It’s in here.” He tapped his head.

  “It’s Sabrina,” Flaherty replied.

  “I’ll be on the bridge,” Cargo said as he took off at a run.

  Less than a minute later Cargo stepped on to the bridge, and confronted the concerned faces of Tanis, Nance, and Cheeky.

  “Something’s wrong with Sabrina,” Cheeky said. “She won’t respond and is making this strange noise on the net, almost like a whimper.”

  Cargo looked around at the bridge’s observation cameras. “It’s okay Sabrina. We’ll get her back.”

  “Get who back?” Cheeky asked, the color draining from her face.

  “SHE’S GONE!” Sabrina screamed over both the Link, and the ship’s audible systems. “I CAN’T HEAR HER ANYWHERE!”

  “That’s because we’re in the dark layer and she’s not with us,” Cargo said with more compassion than he would have thought he could manage at the moment.

  “She’s what?” Cheeky screamed and Nance let out a gasp.

  The wailing coming over the Link and audio was increasing in pitch; Cargo was starting to have trouble thinking with the sound slicing through him.

  Flaherty’s voice broadcasted onto the ship’s net. he insisted, but the ship didn’t stop her cry.

  The keening lessened and Sabrina spoke,

  Flaherty said.

  Sabrina made a noise that sounded uncannily like a sniffle.

  As the sound faded away, Cheeky fixed Cargo with a hard stare. “You told me to go to FTL. Why would you do that if they had the captain?”

  “Because we’d be crawling with Rebecca’s soldiers if we didn’t get out of there.”

  “Rebecca?” Tanis asked. “What happened to Kade?”

  “Rebecca killed him.”

  “She what?” Cheeky yelled and leapt back to her console. “Kade’s one thing, but Rebecca hates Sera. She’ll kill her! I’m pulling us out and getting back there right now!”

  “You’ll do no such thing; they’d waste us in a second,” Cargo said, his trademark calm becoming ragged.

  Cheeky couldn’t speak, for a moment she just stared at her controls and then let loose a sob.

  Tanis knelt down beside her and stroked her hair. “What do you propose?” she asked her eyes hard as she looked up at Cargo.

  “We need to drop out of the DL, alter course and then get back in, or they’ll get higher v and then skip along waiting for us. They know how fast we’re going and can predict our course with ease. Figure out a new course on a different vector and get us on it. We need to get safe and then figure out what to do.” Cargo said.

  Tanis turned to her console and began pulling up plots while Cheeky looked up at Cargo.

  “I abandoned her.”

  “You did as you were ordered. I am the one who abandoned her, and I intend to get her back.”

  “How are we going to do that?”

  “We’ve got that Drind guy. Since he was the big expert with the scan and nav, I’m betting he’ll know where they’ll go with her.”

  They all clung to that hope as Cheeky and Tanis worked out a new vector and effected the transition to regular space. Cheeky quickly altered course and dropped back into FTL. Scan didn’t pick up any of Kade’s ships when they were in regular space, though that didn’t mean there weren’t any sensor arrays nearby relaying information. They made two additional course alterations before they began to feel comfortable.

  With Sabrina monitoring the bridge, everyone met in the galley to work out what they hoped would be their plan to rescue the captain.

  “What is our damage report?” Cargo asked once the coffee had been poured. No one wanted to talk about their missing captain just yet.

  “Not much,” Thompson replied. “The meatheads hit a few power couplings, but secondaries re-routed. Lucky they didn’t hit those, too, or we would have disintegrated when we tried to go into the DL. Most blasts hit engine shielding, which held without a problem.”

  “Hit a return flow pipe on an enviro system,” Nance added. A return flow pipe was a nice way to say sewage. “It was clear at the time, but no one use the cargo deck’s port-side head till I fix it or you get to clean up the mess.”

  “Repair time?” Cargo asked.

  “Not long.”

  Cargo was silent a moment, but he couldn’t withhold the details from the crew. They needed to know. “Kade had fallen for our little ruse. Rebecca hadn’t. She pulled a blaster on the captain and then Thompson, Flaherty, and I showed up with the pulse rifles, and we told her to stand down. Kade was on our side and told her to back off, as well. So, Rebecca turned the gun on him and took the top of his head off.”

  Sabrina was an on-the-fringe sort of freighter, running a bit of this and that, things she probably shouldn’t. They’d even gotten in a few dockside shootouts in some seedier stations on the edge of nowhere, but never had anyone died on her decks. Everyone was stunned to silence.

  “Great, dead people,” Nance exclaimed. “I’m not cleaning that shit up!”

  “Don’t worry about it. We’ll
just shift the atmo shield in a few feet and let the void take it all. Lock’s still open anyway,” Thompson said.

  “Noticed we blew out some air,” Nance sighed. “I’ll handle all that. It’s what I get paid the big bucks for. Do we want to keep anything as evidence? Isn’t there a bounty out on Kade?”

  “Yeah, it’s some damn serious cred, too,” Cheeky said. “Maybe we could use the money to buy the captain back.”

  Thompson’s expression was dark and he cast a glance at Tanis before he spoke. “I told the captain this was a bad idea. We should consider just turning her over in a trade. Be nice and fast.” Tanis’s expression grew cold as he spoke, but she didn’t reply.

  Cargo ignored Thompson’s statement. “If we turn in Kade’s body, we may have to answer some tricky questions about how we got it. Captain may be up to that sort of fast-talking, but I don’t know if I could handle it. Freeze it for now and toss the goons. We’ll use it later.”

  “I guess my suggestion is out,” Thompson said sourly.

  Flaherty leaned forward as he reached for a plum in the fruit bowl. “Sera made it clear that we don’t trade in human cargo. She decided not to give Tanis over to them. I think we should respect her decision.”

  Everyone nodded in agreement, though some were more reluctant than others.

  Thompson let out a sigh and leaned back with his arms crossed. “Whatever.”

  Cargo looked at Thompson for a moment, wondering what trouble the man would cause. “We do have one piece of good news. We got their tech and one of their goons,” he paused as Flaherty shook his head slowly. “OK, so just their tech. I’m betting that he can tell us what we need to know about where Rebecca will have taken the captain. Who wants in on having a little talk with him?”

  Every hand shot up, even Tanis’s. “Okay, it’s gonna be me and…Thompson. We’ll get answers out of him.”

  “He’ll be pissing himself in ten minutes,” Thompson said.

  “No good, Cargo,” Flaherty said. “He watched you kill that pirate. You’d scare him too much for him to talk.”

  “Let me in on it,” Cheeky said. “I’ll get him talking.”

  “You’re not exactly intimidating,” Nance shook her head.

  “I have some pretty intimidating outfits.”

  “Never know, he may go for that sort of thing,” Thompson chuckled, most likely trying to visualize Cheeky in one of those outfits.

  Cheeky pouted. “True…haven’t met a guy yet that didn’t seem to enjoy my dom routine, no matter how much I hurt him.”

  “I’ll do it,” Tanis said, unflinching as every eye turned to her.

  “Why should you do it, you’re as much a part of the problem as that Drind guy,” Nance said as she looked around the table. “Thompson has a point. Don’t you think that Sera may have changed her mind, now that she’s been captured? We all know how much Rebecca hates her.”

  Thompson nodded his agreement and cast Nance a small smile for her support.

  Cheeky’s face was twisted in an uncomfortable grimace. “Part of me wants to try it; it’s the quick and easy fix. But, I don’t think it’s ethical. Besides, like you said, Rebecca has always really hated Sera, but by extension Sabrina, and all of us.”

  “You’re one to talk about ethical.” Thompson said with an unkind edge to his voice.

  Cheeky flushed. “You wouldn’t understand why I do the things I do. To you it’s all just raw sex. Sure, some of it is, but there’s more to it than that.”

  “Cheeky’s sexual proclivities aren’t the issue here,” Flaherty said, his voice toneless and level. The look in his eye sent shivers down everyone’s spine. “Stay on topic.”

  “You don’t have to like me,” Tanis said. “You don’t have to like why I’m here or why people are killing and dying to get me. Trust me; I like it just as little as you. You may have had a bad year or two in your lives, but I’ve had a bad century or two. It sucks. But all recriminations and whining aside, I’ve had training in this sort of thing. I’ve commanded units that had to get information in pretty short order before.”

  “So you tortured people for it?” Nance asked.

  Tanis didn’t reply for a long moment. “Yes.”

  Strangely, it seemed to be the right answer.

  Cargo steepled his fingers, “Okay, then. Tanis you do the talking, and Thompson will do the intimidating. The rest of us will watch over the Link.”

  “Good, I’ll make sure you don’t try anything funny,” Thompson said.

  “What ‘funny things’ would I try?” Tanis was clearly growing tired of Thompson’s attitude.

  “Whatever pain in the asses did five thousand years ago,” Thompson said.

  Tanis sighed and followed Thompson down to the hold where they had dumped the tech. He unlocked the door, but before they stepped inside, put his arm across the entrance.

  “You may think you’re all special and hot shit, but if I even get an inkling that what you’re telling us to do will harm Sera, I’ll kill you myself.”

  Tanis didn’t flinch as she stared the large man down. She was going to reciprocate the threat, but then stopped herself. “I promise you, that won’t happen.”

  She pushed his arm out of the way and stepped inside. Drind was sitting propped against a crate. A sack was over his head and his hands were bound behind his back. The sack wasn’t tied on; Drind just hadn’t tried to get it off.

  Tanis had found him to be a nice, if somewhat shy, man when he reviewed their logs and scan data on the bridge. She knew how he must be feeling, but pushed it from her mind. Rescuing Sera was the best way to get back to the Intrepid—though simply commandeering the ship had crossed her mind more than once. But Sera had saved her; she wouldn’t repay that with treachery.

  Crouching in front of him, she snatched the sack from his head, then grabbed his hair in one swift motion. He tried to scramble back from her, his eyes closed while she pulled his head back.

  “Look at me!”

  Startled to hear a woman’s voice his eyes opened and latched onto Tanis like a drowning man.

  “Rachel! You’ve got to help me; they’re going to kill me.”

  She doubted Drind had many friends in Kade’s—now Rebecca’s—organization. Being the tech on a ship full of pirates probably was a tough job.

  Angela said.

  Tanis replied with a sigh.

  Angela’s voice had an edge of pleading to it. She had never been squeamish during torture before.

 

  During her chat with Angela, Drind came to the realization that it was Tanis who was pulling his head back at an extreme angle and he shrunk inward.

  “Please don’t hurt me,” he whimpered.

  Tanis ignored his entreaty and asked angrily, “Why did you kidnap Captain Sera?”

  His shock was plain and denial strong. “What? I didn’t do that. That psycho Rebecca did. She blew Kade’s head off! I didn’t have anything to do with it.” He was beginning to shake uncontrollably; Tanis decided to back off a bit or she’d have to conduct the rest of the interrogation over the smell of urine.

  “Please don’t kill me, too,” his voice was little more than a whisper.

  Tanis let go of his head. “So you didn’t know what she had in mind?”

  “No! She didn’t want me to come, told Kade to just take the ship by force and find the container they wanted. Honest, I didn’t want to come! Staying far away from her is the best way to live a longer life.”

  Tanis stood and paced back and forth in front of him. She allowed her expression to soften somewhat and glanced at Thompson who didn’t look the least bit convinced, though the look he cast her contained a small hint of appreciation. Good. She paused her pacing for a moment.

  “And you didn’t know what Rebecca had planned? The kidn
apping or killing Kade?”

  “No, I swear it!”

  Tanis grunted and paced a few more times, then turned back to the poor man. “I may believe you, but I’m still having reservations. Some of the other guys,” she jerked a thumb back at Thompson, “aren’t as convinced. You better sweeten the pot with something substantial or they may decide that they’re through with my soft talking.”

  Drind hung his head like a man who had given up hope for his life.

  Angela said.

 

  He was supposed to think she was his hope. Tanis crouched down in front of him and resisted the urge to cup his chin in her hand to raise his face up.

  “Hey, they’re not banging down the door yet. Why don’t you tell me what you know and I’ll keep you safe.” Now she was going too far the other way, but this poor guy wasn’t going to notice. She was out of practice, but keeping up her skill at interrogation wasn’t on the top of her list of abilities to refine. “What was in the container that Padre’s men took?”

  Drind raised his head, a bit of hopefulness in his eyes. “I don’t know, but it seemed pretty valuable. Not the ‘racing hound’ they told you it was; that much is for sure.”

  “Rebecca and Kade never talked about what it was?”

  “I overheard an argument about it, and some of the other guys did too. They seemed to be arguing about what to do with it. A couple of times I swore Kade slipped and called it a ‘her’, but I wasn’t listening too closely, that doesn’t pay on the Vertigo.”

  “Is that where you’re stationed? On the Vertigo?”

  “Sometimes.” Drind was starting to warm up now, hopeful that he could spill his guts and save his life. “I’m back at HQ a lot, too. Depends where they need me.”

  “Kade had an HQ?” Somehow, his appearance had caused Tanis to think of him as nothing but a guy with a few ships causing trouble.

  “Of course, haven’t you been there? I mean you’re one of his ships.”

  “We aren’t that scum’s ship,” Thompson growled.

  Drind lowered his head closed his eyes—Tanis smiled inwardly. Thompson was playing along really well. Either that or it was just his natural disposition. It worked to her advantage though—it was best not to let Drind get too comfortable. If he did, he’d start thinking he could turn things to his advantage.

 

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