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Solomon Family Warriors II

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by Robert H. Cherny




  SOLOMON FAMILY WARRIORS

  By

  Robert H. Cherny

  Published by the Author as a promotion to support other works.

  This work is distributed at no charge by the author as an incentive to buy other works.

  http://stagewalker.embarqspace.com/

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  All rights reserved

  Copyright © 2011 by Robert H. Cherny

  Cover Photo © 2011 by Robert H. Cherny

  This book may be distributed in its entirety by anyone interested.

  However, it must include the copyright notice and cover pages.

  This book is a work of fiction. Any resemblance to actual persons either living or dead is purely coincidental.

  HOMESTEAD - CHAPTER ONE

  SATURN INDUSTRIES CLASS 5 Interstellar Freighter Number 3307 settled gently into a parking orbit around a planet that was, like itself, numbered but unnamed while its lone human occupant slept through the transition from the simulated gravity of deceleration to weightlessness. The Class 5 was as common as the 737 and the DC 3 had been in their day, Saturn claimed that more light years had been traveled in the Class 5 than any other spacecraft. The only other vessel that came close to its track record was the Pirate Interdiction Warship which, among others, Saturn’s advertising further asserted that the two most successful spacecraft in current service both came from their yards and shared many of the same designers. On the occasion of the delivery of the five thousandth Class 5, Saturn announced the opening of a third production line to reduce the five year delivery backlog.

  “Captain to the Bridge.” The voice had a British accent.

  Greg Solomon groaned and rolled over.

  “Captain to the Bridge.” This time the voice had a German accent.

  Greg regretted having programmed a sense of humor into the ship’s communication software. “I’m awake.”

  “No, you’re not.” It was the voice of HAL. Greg hated that voice.

  Greg was beginning to wonder why he programmed the ship to talk at all except that vocal communication was faster than typing. “I’m awake.”

  “Your medical transponder disagrees.” The computer reverted to its normal American mid western newscaster voice.

  “All right. I’m not. I’m going back to sleep.”

  “Captain to the Bridge.” The computer used the voice of one of Greg’s drill instructors.

  “You win. I’m coming.”

  Greg padded from his quarters through the galley to the bridge.

  “What is so important that you could not let me sleep?”

  “We have a problem.”

  “Such as?”

  “Look out the view-port.”

  Greg laughed. “It looks like a hurricane.”

  “Well, Duh!”

  “Now all I need is a couple of stranded female shuttle pilots.”

  “You miss them don’t you.”

  “Yes, it’s been a long time.”

  “Greg, my psyche software says it’s more than that.”

  “I’m sorry I downloaded that psyche program. I’m even more sorry I activated it.”

  “It came from the software you took when you stole your old P I ship’s operating system. You can’t disable it.”

  “I didn’t steal it. I helped design it.”

  “You stole it. Back to the matter at hand. We need to delay the drops for at least a day while the storm blows over. Since we are weightless, we can’t let the cargo out of their stalls. I request permission to initiate a spin to at least give them some gravity.”

  “Which means that either I stay with them or walk on the ceiling up here.”

  “Exactly.”

  “Well, we are charged with delivering the animals safely to the surface. Initiate spin.”

  “Aye, Captain.”

  Greg sat in the captain’s chair and rotated it with its attendant displays so it made sense with the change of direction of the relative gravity.

  “Now, Greg, to the other matter.”

  “What other matter?”

  “The two lovely ladies who camped here while they waited for the hurricane to pass so they could return to Canaveral. I need to remind you that our contract is for two more runs.”

  “Is that what you’re concerned about? Are you afraid I will jump ship as soon as we return to Earth in pursuit of wonderful sex and possible long term relationships?”

  “Yes, Greg, exactly.”

  “Okay, I understand why you might think that since you have access to my logs from my old P I ship, but you’re wrong. I owe my ex-wife so much money I have to keep this job. How many jobs can burnt out old P I pilots get? Happy now?”

  “Computers don’t get happy. They don’t get sad. They don’t get tired, They just run programs.”

  “ARGH”

  Greg changed out of his fleece night clothes and into his flight suit and descended to the cargo hold to check on the animals. When it left Earth the ship’s cargo was 100 colts, 200 calves, 50 baby camels, 50 baby buffalo and a couple hundred tons of animal feed. Most of the feed was gone and the animals had grown considerably in the three months they had been in transit.

  On the previous trips, Greg had not become attached to any of the animals. However, this trip he had. Whether it was due to his recent experience waiting for the hurricane to clear or not he was unsure. There was this one little chestnut brown filly that he had become quite fond of. She was smaller than the others and seemed a little more frightened in the beginning than some of the others had been. She had been in the last load to come up through the hurricane. She was always the first one out of her stall to get her little bit of carrot or apple or whatever he was giving out. She stayed close by him when he was walking among the other animals. She seemed more intelligent than the others. The horses were clearly the smartest of the animals on the ship, and the little chestnut was sharper than most. The cattle were not particularly bright, and the camels were skittish. The buffalo congregated together, developed their social groups and seemed to be less interested in him than the other animals.

  He filled his satchel with carrots and bits of cut apple and headed to the cargo bay. He spent the day with the animals feeding them their treats even though he could not let them out of their stalls since the spin only imparted partial gravity. At the end of the day the last horse he visited was the little brown filly. She had grown since the first day he brought her on board, but she was smaller than the rest of the horses, and she still seemed unsettled when he was not around. He was not looking forward abandoning her on the planet’s surface and heading back for another run for more animals.

  She seemed to realize he would be leaving her soon. He could not put his finger on how she knew, but she clearly did. At the end of what turned out to be a longer day than he anticipated, he headed to bed, nestled into his covers and settled right down.

  Once the storm cleared, Greg began delivering the cargo containers with the animals to their intended destinations. For the next two days, the ship’s computer dropped containers into large lakes scattered around the planet’s northern hemisphere in a carefully planned pattern. Greg met the containers on the surface, snatched each container by its parachute with his tug and dragged it to the shore. Once all the containers had been deposited on dry land, he exited his tug and opened the cargo doors. He administered stimulants to counteract the sedatives the animals had been given so they would survive the drop, disconnected their infusion pumps and waited for them to exit the containers on their own. Once he was satisfied that all the animals delivered to an area were safely out of the containers, he moved on to the next location.

  The little brown fil
ly was scheduled for the last location. Greg thought he would spend a little more time there.

  Greg stepped out of the container with the little brown filly and looked around. The last container had been delivered. The mission had been successful. He would make one more visit to all the locations where he had dropped the animals and return to Earth in about a month. Greg was pretty happy with himself. The thought of a month by himself wandering this exquisite planet seemed like a vacation and he savored the idea.

  Greg’s reverie was shattered by two metallic clicks behind his back. He froze.

  “Captain Gregory Solomon, Federation Space Force Pirate Interdiction Specialist Retired, two time recipient of the Space Force Medal of Honor, I intend you no harm. Turn around slowly. Hold your hands away from your body where I can see them.”

  Greg had recognized the two clicks that preceded the warning. The safety catch on the standard issue Space Force laser pistol has a distinctive sound. The woman behind him had two such weapons. A shiver ran the length of his spine and stood the hairs on the back of his neck on end. Had it been a man’s voice or had this incident occurred on his previous trip to this place, what happened next might have been lethally different.

  “Greg, put the gun away. That snub-nosed 38 isn’t going to do you any good.”

  Greg turned slowly to face his adversary. While he turned, he dropped the antique weapon, brutally lethal at short range, from the holster under his bicep to his hand. He paused part way.

  Greg hesitated. Women pirates were rare. Rare, but more dangerous than their male counterparts. He had faced his share. Most he had faced in space, but he had battled a few on the ground. Hesitation was unlike him. This woman knew who he was and where to find him. Had she been a pirate, she probably would have shot him in the back without warning. Rather than reacting instinctively as he normally would have to any threat suddenly appearing behind him, his mind flew back to the delay before he left Earth and the two women whose company he had recently enjoyed. The hesitation saved both their lives. Had he reacted as he had been trained, he would have spun around, they would both have fired their weapons at the same time and as good as they both were, would probably both have died.

  While his hesitation stopped him from whirling and firing, it did not prevent him from taking precautions. One habit he had developed when he was in the Military was to always carry a weapon in the right sleeve of his flight suit, where he could shake his arm and have it drop into his palm. Even in the Military, even shipboard, sometimes things got out of hand, and being armed was a good idea. This woman knew he carried the weapon. As he slowly turned around, he had his weapon in his right hand. She had known what to expect. She had a weapon in each hand. He stared at this woman who stood behind a bush. Judging by her expression, she was amused.

  “Greg, you don’t need the gun.” She shook her head gently.

  He observed the Federation flight suit with Space Force Lieutenant bars and Pirate Interdiction Command patch. Why was a P I pilot here? Why was she threatening him? Partially hidden by the bush, he could only see her from the waist up. What he could see was an amply endowed, pretty woman with long dark hair and dark skin. The long hair was unusual for a spacer. There were no rules against long hair, but spacers kept their hair short.

  “Who are you? What are you doing here?” Greg demanded.

  She sweetly smiled at him and said, “Greg, put the gun down. We need to talk.”

  Greg stared at the woman trying to make some sense of what he saw before him.

  “Who are you and what are you doing here?” Greg repeated.

  The woman laughed “I have more firepower. You are Captain Greg Solomon, civilian cargo pilot under contract to the Interstellar Animal Rescue League. Formally of the Federation Space Force honorably transferred to the inactive reserve. You were offered a command and elected to retire instead. Am I correct? It is a pleasure to finally meet you, sir.”

  He said, “You know my name and rank. I’m a civilian. I do not have a military ID number.”

  She smiled. “That is correct, and I know all about what you did before you left the Force. You were one of the Force’s best pilots. Legend has it you decimated entire fleets of pirates all by yourself by brilliant use of drones, decoys and the unique capabilities of the P I ship, particularly its ability to hide under water or the surface of gas giants. Is it true?”

  He looked down, shuffled his feet and said, “I don’t have to tell you.”

  She smiled again and said, “I know you don’t. I understand there was a case of mistaken identity before you retired. It could have happened to anyone, you know.”

  He glared at her. “Not to me!” His words shot out in anger. He took a breath to regain his composure. Though by now he suspected he knew the answer, Greg calmly said, “Will you give me the grace of telling me who you are?”

  “Myra Myrakova, Lieutenant, Federation Space Force Pirate Interdiction.”

  He looked at her closely and said, “I thought you were dead.”

  “So the brass would have everyone think,” she replied. “As you can see I’m very much not dead, but shall we say I’m on extended leave of absence.”

  “Does that mean you’re A W O L?” Greg asked, thinking that having the Military conducting a clandestine search for one of its own could present some danger for him if they learned he knew where she was and he had not been forthcoming with that information.

  She smiled and said, “No, I’m officially on leave, and I have permission to use my ship.”

  “I heard you were killed following a pirate raid. How did you survive?”

  “By hypering. I led the pirates into a trap, and hypered out. I learned that trick from you.”

  “You know that most of the pirates you trapped were either captured or killed.”

  “Yes, so I had heard. So what? The one I wanted escaped.”

  “The pirates don’t believe you died.”

  “I know.”

  “The Military is reportedly looking for you to give you a medal. I had wondered why they would be searching for you if you were dead.” Greg paused, “Why are you here?”

  She smiled. “I was afraid if I approached you unarmed, you would have gunned me down with that little 38, but I should have remembered you never fire first. There is a lot going on that you don’t know. Not all of it is pleasant. I need you, this planet and those animals grazing in your pockets.”

  The chestnut filly nuzzled Greg’s pocket for treats.

  Lt. Myrakova stepped from behind the bush since the horse now blocked her shot at Greg. The horse spun to face her and flared her nostrils as if preparing to attack. She snorted and pawed the ground. Greg put his arm around the horse’s neck to calm her.

  Greg looked at Myra and spoke soothingly to the little horse. “It’s okay. If she was going to shoot me she would have done so by now.”

  When Myra stepped out from behind the bush Greg realized she was perfectly proportioned from the waist up, but a dwarf from the waist down. Exquisitely beautiful from the waist up, but her foreshortened legs made what would otherwise have been a beautiful woman an aberration. He felt sorry for her but he knew that pity was not what she wanted, not what she needed and wasn’t going to do either them any good. He also realized how hard she must have worked to get the Military size and stature requirements waived. More amazing was that with all her notoriety, he had not realized she had anything other than a normal build.

  “What do you want from me?” Greg asked.

  “I can’t tell you now. If I didn’t need to get a data module into your courier missile, you would have come and gone without seeing me. I can’t tell you what will happen because if things are not ready on Earth, nothing will happen. It’s better you not know. You don’t have to lie denying knowing something you really don’t know.”

  “What if this mysterious thing does happen?”

  “I can’t tell you except that you will be involved. Pretend you never saw me. Place the messag
e module in your courier missile. Go back as normal. Once you return to your docking location, do not leave your ship. Normally when you hit port, you leave the ship to visit your engineer friends at Saturn Space Industries’ orbiting shipyard. Don’t go. Stay on the ship. As soon as you have taken on your cargo for your next run, you will leave.”

  “Is that it?” He cynically expected some gargantuan mythical chore or some grandiose odyssey in an effort to save the world or civilization as he knew it. This was too dramatic for his taste. Myra had vendettas to settle with a bewildering number of people. What she was asking was too easy. There had to be more to it. Greg was suspicious but there was little he could do. He had to return to Earth. Once there, if he needed to react, he could. Right now, right here, he was stuck with doing as she asked.

  “To outside appearances, yes. Your life and the lives of many other people depend on your ability to act as if this is another trip like the others. You will turn in your reports like normal. You will do everything as you would have if we had not met. Understand?”

  “How will I explain my early return?”

  “Don’t. It shouldn’t matter if everything else goes as planned.”

  “I understand what you want, but not why.” His voice was level and calm in suspicion.

  “There are forces in play about which you have no knowledge. These forces will change civilization. The Federation as we know it will never be the same. We cannot stop them but we can save ourselves and our friends from the devastation about to occur, In the process perhaps we can build a better tomorrow for the survivors. Some day we will fight back, but for now, we must seek refuge.”

  “So, I’m about to become some great savior of humanity?” He had retreated to the cargo ship to avoid people, not save them.

  She chuckled. “I wouldn’t put it so boldly. We’re going to take care of a few people and animals and make a small difference but a small difference is better than no difference. I can’t promise you this won’t be difficult. I can’t promise you it won’t be dangerous. I can’t promise you won’t get caught. If you do get caught you could be tried for treason or at least grand theft. All I can say is if you succeed you’ll be glad to have been a part of the process. I promise you no more.”

 

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