Rift

Home > Other > Rift > Page 1
Rift Page 1

by Nathan Hystad




  Contents

  Title

  Copyright

  Books By Nathan Hystad

  1

  2

  3

  4

  5

  6

  7

  8

  9

  10

  11

  12

  13

  14

  15

  16

  17

  18

  19

  20

  21

  22

  23

  24

  25

  26

  27

  28

  About the Author

  Revenge: The Resistance Book Two

  Red Creek by Nathan Hystad

  Copyright © 2019 Nathan Hystad

  All rights reserved.

  No part of this publication may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means, including photocopying, recording, or other electronic or mechanical methods, without the prior written permission of the publisher, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical reviews and certain other non-commercial uses permitted by copyright law.

  This is a work of fiction. All of the characters, names, incidents, organizations, and dialogue in this novel are either products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously.

  Cover art: Tom Edwards Design

  Edited by: Scarlett R Algee

  Proofed and Formatted by: BZ Hercules

  Books By Nathan Hystad

  The Survivors Series

  The Event

  New Threat

  New World

  The Ancients

  The Theos

  Old Enemy

  The Resistance Series

  Rift

  Revenge

  Return

  Red Creek

  Keep up to date with his new releases by signing up for his Newsletter at www.nathanhystad.com

  1

  Jish

  Grand Admiral Jish Karn rubbed her temples, trying to ease a relentless migraine. She wanted to close her eyes, but every time she did that, her captive’s beady black eyes stared mercilessly at her. Her hand trembled as she thought about him, and she was relieved when a nasally voice broke her free from the sudden onslaught of dread.

  “And that’s where we’re at, Grand Admiral. Clearly, we need to increase production at the mines in order to keep up with the new demand for our fleet.” The man stood at the end of the table, his arms active as he spoke. Councilman Tob was resourceful, but Grand Admiral Jish Karn found him a dreadful bore.

  She’d heard enough for today. She’d already sat in silence for two hours, listening as the team rambled on about the costs of running Earth Fleet, the projections on colony repairs, the logistics of growing their fleet of ships, and countless other things she didn’t want to discuss.

  “Which mines are currently step one in the supply chain?” Jish broke her silence, hardly even aware that she’d spoken. Over the years, she’d grown accustomed to allowing her brain to formulate questions she thought the subordinates wanted her to ask.

  Tob went right into it. “Uranus’ moon Caliban for the hulls, and most of the metals used in the carriers and EFF model fighters. Mercury for armaments, and of course, the assembly plant orbiting Mars.”

  Jish thought about how terrible the prisons could be. Mercury was made for the worst of the worst: men with no chance of rehabilitation, forced to spend their remaining days creating weaponry for the fleet. None of the ammunition was produced there, so the likelihood of danger was decreased, but every now and then, one of them would find a way to create chaos, oftentimes only killing themselves in the process.

  Phobos was possibly easiest on the prisoners, since they were mostly dissidents or white-collar criminals, many who spoke out about the Fleet or tried to embezzle funds from the government. Jish had spent some time touring the production facility, and was impressed with how clean an operation it was.

  Caliban was another story. She’d never visited it. The idea of a prison deep under the surface of a tiny rock disturbed her. She much preferred the openness of space to the confines of an underground hell like that. Plus, there was a nagging discomfort in the back of her mind that if she stepped foot in the women’s mine, she might end up stuck there, slogging through the smelter process with the other female prisoners.

  “Very well,” Jish said, realizing she’d been staring blankly out the window for over a minute.

  “Very well what, Admiral?” Councilman Tob asked.

  “Proceed in accelerating the production schedules of the prisons. We’ll make funds available where needed. As always, keep everything from this meeting to yourselves,” Jish said, scanning the three faces at the table.

  She often wondered how much to tell the small group. Obviously, she wasn’t able to offer them all the Earth Fleet secrets, but she was finding it harder and harder to keep everything under wraps. She used to rely on one man to discuss things with, but he’d disappeared from the face of the solar system.

  The three Fleet members stood, and Jish asked one more question before they parted ways: “Any further word on Councilman Fairbanks?”

  She saw Tob flinch just enough to tell her he might know something. She’d pry it from his cold dead hands if she had to, but instead of letting on, she smiled at him as he spoke. “No, Admiral. We’ve probed all our contacts across the system, and no one’s seen or heard from him. I think he might be gone.”

  “Gone?” she asked, raising an eyebrow.

  Councilwoman Neve spoke now. “He was last seen on Mars Minor. It’s not a safe place for any ranking officers of the Fleet to be spotted, is it? Our theory is this: Councilman Fairbanks went there and never left. He’s likely been thrown into the incinerators, like all the dead bodies found on Minor.”

  “Dead? You think he’s dead?” Jish was laughing now. “That old badger will never die. Thank you, you’re all dismissed.”

  The three glanced at each other before leaving Grand Admiral Jish Karn alone in the boardroom. She’d have to deal with Councilman Tob, and soon. He was leaving out something about Fairbanks, and she couldn’t afford to be out of the loop. The existence of their race depended on it.

  Jish crossed the room, smoothing a wrinkle from her uniform as she stood by the bar. The clear bottles called to her, and she poured a glass of Europa Scotch, sipping it at first before swallowing the rest in a quick, burning gulp. Her eyes watered at the sensation. She hated the stuff but was finding it more necessary every time she went to see him.

  She wanted nothing more than to go to her quarters, take a hot steam shower, and listen to some old-world jazz. Instead, she fought the urge and entered the ship’s halls. Her feet led her past some lingering officers who saluted her as she went by. She ignored them. Eventually, she found herself close to her destination, and she advanced into the elevator.

  She peered back down the hall, checking for witnesses. With the tap of her fingerprint, a second window opened on the console, one only she could activate aboard her vessel, Stellae. The doors closed, and Jish scrolled until she found the hidden floor in the bowels of the large exploratory vessel. She selected her option, and the doors to the elevator locked in place. It wouldn’t stop on any other floors until she was off.

  Jish thought about avoiding the encounter tonight. She’d had a long day, and there was always tomorrow. The elevator slowed, and the doors opened to reveal a narrow hall. Her shoulders brushed the sides of the walls as she entered the cramped space. The elevator closed behind her, and she heard it hum as it lifted away, leaving her alone on the hidden level.

  Turning to a side panel in the wall, Jish once again used her fingerprint to open a secret compartment. I
nside she found a stunner, and she took it, feeling the metal of the handle dig into her firm grip. It was cool in her sweaty palm.

  The hall was a hundred feet long, and she now walked with purpose, determined to get this over with so she could be in her quarters, washing the day away in less than half an hour. The door at the end of the corridor opened as she approached, her biometrics programmed into it. No one else would be able to enter this space without her alongside them.

  Her heart beat hard in her chest as her boots clanged down on the metal floor grating inside the open room. As she entered, dim lights flickered on, casting ominous shadows across the walls. The energy field at the opposite end of the room glowed a light blue, and Jish couldn’t take her eyes from it.

  Each footstep echoed loudly in the chamber as Jish approached the cell. Even though she knew there was no way for the prisoner to reach her through the barrier, being this close to him always sent shivers down her spine. Her uniform felt tight, constricting.

  Jish stood a few yards from the humming energy field, and saw the form get out of his crouched position in the corner. He stretched, his long arms hitting the ceiling with a bang. She jumped, chiding herself for being such a baby. She was a sixty-year-old woman, a powerful admiral at the top of the Earth Fleet, but this creature sent her back to a childish fear of the unknown. As she watched him approach the barrier, it was as if she were looking at the bogeyman under her bed.

  “Stand down!” Jish yelled at him, but he did no such thing. He stared at her mercilessly, his black eyes shooting countless unspoken threats. “Are you ready to talk yet?” she asked in as big a voice as her small frame had bottled up inside.

  He didn’t reply. Instead, his shoulders slumped; he walked back to the far corner of his cell and crouched back down in the shadows.

  “Talk to me, damn it!” she yelled, letting the creature get the best of her. He always did, and he seemed to know it. “What do you want with us? Why are you watching us? Tell me!”

  He didn’t move, and she knew there was no getting through to him tonight. The Scotch had hit her, and she suddenly felt wobbly in the knees. You have to stop doing this to yourself, Jish told herself. He’d only used the console once, to point to where the Rift opened on the map; otherwise, he refused to communicate.

  Jish watched him for several minutes, wondering if it would be better to just kill the being. Selfishly, she knew it would ease her own mind; she wasn’t even thinking about its pathetic existence, stuck in a cell deep in her ship for the last thirty years. At one point, she’d felt sorry for the creature, until she remembered how dangerous he was. Before her sat the biggest threat to humanity ever encountered. He was proof of alien life, and humans could never learn they weren’t alone in the universe.

  Her boots clanged against the floor as she left the room, the lights snapping off as she closed the door behind her. She meandered through the narrow hall, her shoulders bumping the walls as she arrived at the elevator.

  Tomorrow, she wouldn’t come down here. It was over.

  Jish smiled at the thought but knew she was only lying to herself. As each day passed, they were coming closer to August second, and the countdown felt like her own life’s clock ticking away.

  Grand Admiral Jish Karn stepped into the elevator when it opened and headed back to her quarters, where she could sleep so she could do it all over again tomorrow.

  Flint

  Flint sat back and took in the room. He’d been in this particular bar countless times before, but it had an off-kilter vibe today. The patrons were a remorseful bunch: dome workers with too few hours to themselves here on Mars, and even fewer credits. Flint’s drink remained untouched, even though he’d ordered it half an hour ago, and when the waitress came to check on him, he covered the top of the glass with a hand.

  “I’m just leaving,” he told her. She scanned the chip in his hand, giving him a humorless smile before moving to the next table.

  The place was sullen, too quiet, even though synth music from the Moons drifted through hidden speakers. Flint was getting tired of waiting for his contact. He had places to be and hated being stood up.

  A stranger entered. He had the look of a government man: straight-backed, and even though he’d dressed down to fit in, Flint saw through it a mile away. He mentally urged the man to leave, and got a sinking feeling in his gut when the man locked eyes with him before casually averting his gaze.

  The guy ordered a drink at the bar: something thick and purple poured by the overweight tender, splashing down the side of the gray metal cup. Flint started to get up when two Mars patrol guards sauntered past the bar’s front doors. But he plopped back down, covering his face with a hand, trying to look like the rest of the lifeless bunch drowning their endless sorrows before doing it all again the next day.

  The chair across from him grated on the floor as it was pulled back, and Flint peeked through his fingers to see the new stranger sit down.

  “Seat taken?” he asked, his accent unplaceable. A New Earth metropolis, maybe?

  “Go for it,” Flint said flatly.

  The stranger glanced over his shoulder at the patrol guards, then back at Flint. His face was friendly, with soft eyes and a long, straight nose. “Are you waiting for someone?”

  “What makes you say that?” Flint asked, finally taking a small sip of his drink. He raised an eyebrow. “Is it that unusual for a man to be sitting alone in a bar?”

  “Clark’s been detained,” the man said casually, taking a long draw from his cup. He dabbed some of the purple drink off his lip with a napkin.

  Flint’s heart hammered in his chest, and he glanced toward the exit. Guards were still standing there, their backs to him. “Why are you telling me this?”

  “Because my employer has a job for you, and I don’t want to see you detained as well,” the stranger said, smiling widely.

  “I don’t need any more jobs.” Flint got up, but the man grabbed his wrist with the speed of a cobra, pulling him closer. The stranger spoke into Flint’s ear, the drink’s potent fumes carrying into his nose.

  “You won’t want to miss out on this job. Ask for Benson. That’s me.” He slipped something into Flint’s pocket then stood up, patted Flint on the back like they were old buddies, and left the bar.

  Flint waited a few minutes after the stranger had left, and saw the patrol guards leave as well, continuing down the corridor to the next establishment. With deft fingers, he pulled the object from his pocket and held it flat in his palm, where no wandering eyes could see it.

  It was plainly a message, but he couldn’t activate it here. If Clark wasn’t coming for their meet-up, his time on Mars was over. Flint crossed the room, past the thinning crowd, and entered the corridors of Mars Major.

  The city was falling apart. Once, it had been the mecca of humanity’s future. Now it was a sad realization that space was a killer. It slayed hopes and dreams as much as it had destroyed the early colonists. Long ago, the rich had wanted to venture onto the other planets. They’d wanted to create something new and revolutionary. Flint looked around and thought it was anything but. The only thing the government did properly here was seal the cracking domes when necessary. Otherwise, the residents were left to fend for themselves amidst the dust-covered wasteland.

  Every now and then, he’d see an old propaganda poster on the wall, faded until he could hardly make out the smiling faces of the models, or the green trees and crops they’d added for color. Flint laughed at the audacity of such advertising. Earth Fleet. Join the Stars. What a bunch of crap. He’d once been drawn in by the propaganda and counted his blessings every day for breaking free from the corrupt group.

  He proceeded down the concrete hallways, avoiding eye contact with any of the shop owners, who were desperately hoping someone would stop into their boutiques to purchase something they didn’t need or couldn’t afford. Flint walked with purpose, and just the right amount of speed, until he reached his destination.

  He pa
ssed through a corridor, a glass tube that connected Mars Major with the hangar. Here he stood in a short line, with two people in front of him. These days, flights in and out of Mars were few and far between. No one but traders and supply freighters traveled there, and only a limited number of residents could afford to leave.

  When it was his turn, he flipped up his credentials. His face and the name Trent Brand showed up on the guard’s viewer. Flint smiled at her, his grin matching the photo. She waved him through. “Go ahead, Mr. Brand.”

  His nerves were steel at this point, and he walked through, heading for the connecting tube leading to his ship. It was light outside, the sun glaring through the clear two-hundred-foot dome. Flint reached his ship’s sealed access port and tapped in his code. The door hissed open, and soon he was back inside his ship; his home. Once the hatch was closed again, he took a deep breath and let out any remaining anxious energy.

  “What’s the word, Kat?” he shouted as he walked into the ship’s belly. Shelving lined the cargo bay; crates of various shapes and sizes sat strapped into them.

  A voice called over the speakers: “Flint, something’s wrong. You better get up here.”

  He jogged through the ship, passing the small crew quarters and the kitchen before making his way to the bridge of the freighter. “What is it?” he asked, looking at the young woman in the pilot’s chair.

  Kat cleared her throat and glanced back at him, worry evident on her face. “A message came through. Port guards are telling everyone to stay grounded.”

  “Damn. My contact didn’t make it, and I was told he was detained. They’re looking for us, or for what we have on this ship.” Flint paced the small bridge, trying to figure out what to do. There was only one option. “Move over. We’re getting the hell out of here.”

  “They’ll shoot us down,” Kat said, her face etched with concern.

  “Have you ever seen them actually use those old-world guns? They probably don’t even work,” Flint said, forcefully sitting in the pilot’s seat. The engines whirred to life, and the ship rumbled as the thrusters opened up.

 

‹ Prev