Discover millions of ebooks, audiobooks, and so much more with a free trial

Only $11.99/month after trial. Cancel anytime.

Synthetically-Enhanced: The Cyborg Trilogy
Synthetically-Enhanced: The Cyborg Trilogy
Synthetically-Enhanced: The Cyborg Trilogy
Ebook1,071 pages17 hours

Synthetically-Enhanced: The Cyborg Trilogy

Rating: 0 out of 5 stars

()

Read preview

About this ebook

This set contains:

The Syn-En Solution:
When man becomes machine, cyborgs are the good guys. And Humans will betray them.

Admiral Beijing York volunteers his army of Synthetically-Enhanced soldiers on a mission to settle a new planet. With the promise of freedom and equality, Bei and his cyborgs encounter death and hardship on a one-way trip to nowhere. Bei has two choices: die slowly in space, or return to Earth and make the Humans who betrayed them pay.

When Nell Stafford passed out it was 2012. When she wakes up naked aboard a starship it's 2138, and she's surrounded by Syn-En carrying a grudge against Humans like her. But Nell gained something in her 120-year sleep; somehow, she knows everything the Syn-En need to survive. Now she must convince Bei and his people to trust her--as soon as she learns to trust the mysterious intelligence.

Culture Clash:
One world. Two alien races. And a secret that could destroy them both.

The new colony on Terra Dos is fracturing. A band of civilians have rejected technology and the Syn-Ens--cyborg soldiers that protect them. Syn-En Admiral Beijing York knows it's his job to protect the civilians but his human wife, Nell Stafford convinces him to resettle the troublemakers before they destabilize the new civilization.

Yet, humanity is not alone on the planet.

Under the skin of the planet, an ancient race of aliens is beginning to wake from a century long slumber. The Skaterians will do anything to reclaim Terra Dos and enslave the humans crawling on the surface. Their mastery of technology quickly defeats Bei and his Syn-En army.

Nell forges a treacherous alliance to save her husband and people. But will it be enough to prevent this Culture Clash from turning into genocide?

Registration:
Bureaucracy. Politics. Freedom comes wrapped in Universal sized red tape.

Driven from Earth, Admiral Beijing York led an armada of Synthetically-Enhanced soldiers and its civilian crew to settle an alien world. Their new society is beginning to flourish when Bei is informed that no Human, Syn-En or otherwise, can be free until the species registers on a distant planet. Determined to protect humanity, Bei and his wife lead an advanced scouting team to secure their liberty.

And an ancient enemy is waiting to intercept them.

The Founding Five won't give up their favorite slaves or medical guinea pigs without a fight. Now, Bei has to decide if freedom is worth the price when he must sacrifice everyone he loves to win it.

LanguageEnglish
PublisherLinda Andrews
Release dateJul 21, 2013
ISBN9781301786145
Synthetically-Enhanced: The Cyborg Trilogy
Author

Linda Andrews

Linda Andrews lives with her husband and three children in Phoenix, Arizona. While growing up in the Valley of the Sun, she spent the hot summer months (May through October) in the pool swimming with mermaids, Nile crocodiles and the occasional Atlantian folk. The summer and winter monsoons provided the perfect opportunity to experience the rarity known as rain as well as to observe the orange curtain of dust sweeping across the valley, widely believed by locals to be caused by the native fish migrating upstream.She fulfilled her lifelong dream of becoming a slightly mad scientist. After a decade of perfecting her evil laugh and furnishing her lair, she decided taking over the world was highly overrated. In 1997, she decided to purge those voices in her head by committing them to paper. She loves hearing from anyone who enjoys her stories so please visit her website at www.lindaandrews.net and drop her an email.

Read more from Linda Andrews

Related to Synthetically-Enhanced

Related ebooks

Science Fiction For You

View More

Related articles

Reviews for Synthetically-Enhanced

Rating: 0 out of 5 stars
0 ratings

0 ratings0 reviews

What did you think?

Tap to rate

Review must be at least 10 words

    Book preview

    Synthetically-Enhanced - Linda Andrews

    Synthetically-Enhanced: The Cyborg Trilogy

    Synthetically-Enhanced: The Cyborg Trilogy

    Linda Andrews

    Contents

    Copyright

    Join My Mailing List

    Introduction

    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

    Culture Clash

    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

    Author Note/Bill of Rights

    Registration

    Chapter 45

    Chapter 46

    Chapter 47

    Chapter 48

    Chapter 49

    Chapter 50

    Chapter 51

    Chapter 52

    Chapter 53

    Chapter 54

    Chapter 55

    Chapter 56

    Chapter 57

    Chapter 58

    Chapter 59

    Chapter 60

    Chapter 61

    Chapter 62

    Chapter 63

    Chapter 64

    Chapter 65

    Chapter 66

    Chapter 67

    Chapter 68

    Chapter 69

    Chapter 70

    Chapter 71

    Chapter 72

    Chapter 73

    Chapter 74

    Chapter 75

    Chapter 76

    Chapter 77

    Chapter 78

    Chapter 79

    Chapter 80

    Sneak Peek: Plague World

    Also by Linda Andrews:

    About the Author

    Sign up for my Newsletter

    The Syn-En Solution

    By

    Linda Andrews


    Copyright 2012, 2013 by Linda Andrews

    Published by Linda Andrews

    Editor Serena Tatti, Story-editor.com

    Cover Design Copyright Gabrielle Prendergast

    coveryourdreams.net

    All rights reserved. Except as permitted under the U.S. Copyright Act of 1976, no part of this publication may be reproduced, distributed or transmitted in any form or by any means, or stored in a database or retrieval system, without the prior written permission of the author.

    This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents are products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously and are not to be construed as real. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, organizations, or persons, living or dead, is completely coincidental.

    This ebook is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This ebook may not be re-sold or given away to other people. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each reader. If you’re reading this book and did not purchase it, or it was not purchased for your use only, then please purchase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author.

    Created with Vellum

    Join My Mailing List

    Love SciFi?

    Want access to exclusive free content, insider

    information on sales, upcoming books and opportunities to have a character named after you?


    Join my newsletter group and get a free electronic copy of The Syn-En Solution by tapping here: http://eepurl.com/b3ZrTv


    Start your galactic adventure today.


    Linda Andrews

    Introduction

    When the human race bordered on extinction, a group of wounded soldiers volunteered to become the first Synthetically-Enhanced humans (Syn-En). These proto-cyborgs donned a new generation of prosthetic limbs in order to enter areas ravaged by disease, war and radiation. Their heroic efforts saved our species and united mankind.


    Now, one hundred-twenty years later, a stratified civilization has emerged:


    Citizens—Composed predominately of the rich and powerful ruling class. Citizens control the government and its laws. They avoid technological penalties by using genetically-engineered tissue and organs to improve their looks, health and longevity.

    Civilians—Former middle and lower-class citizens who needed cheap technology to save their lives, were convicted of a crime or became so indebted that they find themselves stripped of their rights. Each are offered the option of cutting off a limb or two and replace it with prosthesis to earn their way back into society quicker than their sentence.

    Syn-Ens— Inducted into the Corps as infants, the cyborgs are taught, trained and programmed to believe the best in humanity, the sacredness of human life and to fairly enforce the law of the United Earth Council. They are prohibited by law and the amount of technology in their bodies from ever becoming citizens.


    The Syn-Ens ideals of honor and duty, plus their inability to be bribed, bought or blackmailed stand in the way of power hungry citizens and their agenda. Worse, the civilians trust the cyborgs more than Earth’s citizen rulers. When a wormhole is discovered on the fringe of Earth's Solar System, these citizens believe they have found the final solution to their Syn-En problem.

    Chapter One

    Why did I agree to leave Earth and aim my ship

    toward the stars? For the same reason that small tribe of humans left the

    Rift Valley in Africa. To get away from the people—

    Beijing York, First Syn-En Admiral

    December 12, 2138


    Earth did not send us here to die. Admiral Beijing York took care to keep his fury in check and his voice even. His blue almond-shaped eyes may betray his Eurasian heritage, but not his emotions. Never his emotions. Control and obedience had been drummed into Bei’s head before he took his first step or spoke his first word. The same could not be said for the woman fuming in his sterile briefing room.

    Then why did they send us on a mission in ships that keep breaking down? Picking at the black rank insignia on her navy uniform, Lieutenant Burkina Faso reeked of human disdain and arrogance over the Synthetically-Enhanced human she’d become, what he was. She looked down upon his men and women because she’d been raised a citizen—a human without any technology penalties to keep her alive or make her useful.

    We are the first humans to travel through a wormhole, to seek settlement outside our solar system. Although Synthetically Enhanced humans resembled people, no one ever treated the Syn-Ens as such. The soldiers had been stripped of their rights just as their limbs had been amputated and replaced, their skin substituted with dermis-looking armor, and their organs altered. No one could have predicted the toll caused by the stress of interstellar travel.

    Face it, with a population nearing pre-plague levels, Earth no longer needs her cyborg freaks.

    Bei cleared the expletive from his throat. He’d yet to meet a citizen or civilian who didn’t share her opinion, but that didn’t mean either he or his men were freaks. Unlike normal humans, the Syn-En knew their purpose—to preserve order and protect life. Lieutenant Faso’s derision of basic Syn-En behavior grated now much more than it had attracted him a year ago, when she’d arrived with newly-minted prostheses.

    The Syn-En are neither freaks nor appliances. Bei’s stomach turned at the injustice. He was human, dammit. He felt and thought and dreamed, maybe a little too much. Lieutenant Faso didn’t seem to appreciate his temperance in dealing with her delayed transition into his kind; neither did she notice that he only took her to task in private. None of his crew had such accommodation. Ever.

    Faso pressed her fists against her temples while rage blazed a red path across her brown cheeks. They keep their little tin space men locked in a box without even air holes and you just accept it.

    We know our duty. Bei glanced around the briefing room. The décor was standard issue. On the dull gray walls, LCD monitors displayed pictures of space outside the solid hull. Most humans had difficulty adjusting to life without windows, but without a solid hull they’d be exposed to lethal doses of radiation in nanoseconds even with the magnetic shields. Interstellar space travel wasn’t a good place for sightseeing.

    Or for recently inducted Syn-En humans. Why hadn't the judge sentenced her to civilian life? She would have coped much better with having only one or two limbs replaced. Yet some judge in his finite wisdom had sentenced her to a full conversion. And he hadn't had a decent two hours sleep since.

    Duty! You’ve been trained. They say bark, you ask how loud. They say jump, you ask how high. Just like a good little machine obeying your programming. Well I’m not some stupid machine. The lieutenant pounded her fist against the metal table in the center of the rectangular room. Although lithe, her synthetically enhanced hand dented the thick slab.

    You’re Syn-En. And you need to start behaving like one. Soon the Shape Memory Alloy would smooth out the dent, but what about the circuits embedded inside? Bei couldn’t afford for another computer interface to break down.

    For a moment the plating on her mechanical arm flicked from the navy color of her uniform to the gun metal gray of the SMA. Is that tin man enough for you?

    No. Leaning against the Spacefarer’s bulkhead, Bei felt the hum of the circuits across his back. The electromagnetic field caused his hair to rise as a static charge built in the metallic threads woven through his uniform and on the plates encasing his bones. He’d have to ground himself soon, or face a nasty shock across his cerebral interface. Given Faso’s impending tantrum, he didn’t need his enhancements fried by excess electricity.

    Well it’s the best I can do. So you’ll just have to accept my human failings. The woman excelled at causing trouble and escaping the blame or consequences.

    I do not. Pushing away from the ship’s exposed bulkhead, Bei strode to the table and discharged the current. At his touch, thin lines of blue light crackled over the surface before traveling down the metal legs and dissipating into the ship’s hull. His fingers slipped into the ports along the metal skirt while his fake fingernails peeled back, allowing him to connect with the table’s systems. A blue screen popped up inside his head. The diagnostic sweep reported no problems due to Lieutenant Faso’s punch. You must realize that your human failings are no different than anyone else’s aboard my ship.

    That’s flesh tone pigment on your scaly body, not flesh, Admiral. Faso’s full lips thinned as she rubbed her cinnamon-colored skin. Hatred blazed in her ebony eyes and quivered out her wiry, black hair. Raising her fist again, she caught his look. Gently, she set her palm on the table. And you haven’t been human for a long time.

    Unfortunately, he'd never stopped being human.

    A shudder rippled through his ship.

    Ignoring the typical biologic disdain, Bei hooked his booted foot around a nearby chair, pulled it toward him and sat on the flat cushioned seat. Using his cerebral interface, he switched from the diagnostics blue screen to the Starfarer’s main menu looking for whatever caused his ship to tremble.

    Red flashed inside his skull. The hull integrity icon moved to the fore and opened the ship’s schematic. Compression had damaged the outer hull where the magnetic shield had brushed against the walls of the wormhole at a narrow point. With the ever growing number of dangers posed by long interstellar space travel, babying this Syn-En had to end.

    That Neo-Dymatech Armor will save your life. We’re settling an alien world, Lieutenant. Despite benign reports from the probe, there will be danger ahead. Pinning her with his steely gaze, he mentally sent the command to the ship’s computer to release the wardens.

    Real time data streamed into his consciousness. The eight-legged, square wardens crawled like spiders out of their airlocks, hooked themselves to guy wires and skittered over the outside of his ship to inspect the damage.

    Yeah, yeah. The amazing body armor. NDA helps maintain body temperature, recharges our enhancements, and deflects bullets. That doesn’t make it skin. When she spied his cybernetic connection to the ship, revulsion flitted across her high cheek bones and narrowed her eyes. She quickly smoothed it away. Her loose hipped gait carried her down the table’s length to his side. Neither does a relatively untouched brain make you human.

    Because science had yet to improve upon the design of the human brain, it alone remained relatively untouched and kept the Syn-En clinging to the fringe of humanity. Human. The word was as much a prayer as a curse. This trip had turned inalienable human rights into a possible dream. One he’d give everything to make a reality. All of his crew would, but if they revealed how much they craved enfranchisement, they would have been denied the right to make this trip. As he’d been trained, Bei compartmentalized his true feelings.

    You forgot NDA is a hundred times more sensitive than regular dermis. A distinct advantage when defusing bombs, detecting a lie from a prisoner, and a hundred other things. Pulling his fingers out of the table’s jacks, Bei disconnected from the mainframe, leaned back in the blue upholstered chair, and waited. Four hours had passed since her last sexual overture toward him. She was overdue.

    Her hands glided over her narrow waist, cupping her full breasts through her uniform, while her pink tongue glided across her lips as she stared down at him. I haven’t forgotten that.

    Bei clamped down on his rising disgust. Like a typical female citizen, Lieutenant Faso used sex to coerce or punish. He didn’t doubt she’d used her bedroom skills on the bankruptcy judge so she could enter the Fleet as an officer instead of enlisted. The discrepancy caused hostilities among his men who earned their rank, the only distinction most humans bothered with when it came to the Syn-En.

    If only she spent as much effort into her job of technician as she did seduction, she might not be a half bad soldier.

    Yet, you’ve forgotten that under all the enhancements, we are still human. Bei clasped his hands over his roiling stomach. Sex with Faso had lost its appeal the second she tried to use it to shirk her duties.

    Lieutenant Faso’s jaw thrust forward. Planting her fists on her hips, she glared down at him. I’m not human anymore, Admiral. I’m Syn-En, same as you.

    Bei gripped the arms of his chair. To think that she could be anything like him was insulting. He’d spent his entire life, all forty-two years, in the Syn-En Fleet. He knew the price of service. She cared more about chipping a synthetic nail than her fellow soldiers. This trip, no matter how dangerous, meant freedom for them all. Rage built inside him until his arms trembled to contain it. Her insolence threatened his mission. If we have this conversation again, you will find yourself in the brig.

    You can’t order me around, Tinman. Syn-Ens have no rights. The law says so. Flopping onto the chair next to his, Faso smirked, leaned back in her chair and propped her boots on top of the table.

    Leaping to his feet, Bei grabbed the front of her uniform and yanked her out of the chair. Her toes skimmed the floor as he lifted her to eye level. Nose to nose, he faced her, yet his voice didn’t rise a decibel. I’m the law on this ship. Thirty days in solitary for insubordination.

    Solitary! That’s inhuman. Fear dilated her pupils. She clawed at his grip but a lieutenant’s upgrades couldn’t compare to his.

    By your own admission, you’re not human anymore. You’re Syn-En and all Syn-En in the fleet are under my rule. Bei inhaled deeply as fear soured her skin. For the last twelve months, he’d tried to incorporate Faso into his unit. She’d resisted at every turn. No more. She’d stay in solitary until assimilating into the Fleet looked like heaven compared to the dark four-by-four-feet cell.

    He only wished he could shove her in a life pod and send her back to Earth. Controlling his rage, Bei carefully set her on her feet.

    The humans are using us, sending us to our deaths, she spat at him. We’ll build a new empire for them and they won’t share it.

    Bei barely refrained from rolling his eyes. She’d used the argument so many times, she should have digitalized it. It might have been more effective.

    You will not fight Chief Rome when he arrives to escort you to solitary. Is that clear, Ensign? After sending a coded transmission through the Wireless Array to Chief of Security, Commander Frankfurt Rome, Bei waited for Faso’s demotion to penetrate her anger. Settling his hands around her throat, he cradled his thumbs in the hollows of her neck and waited.

    I’m a lieutenant and no Syn-En lap dog is going to deprive me of my due. She drilled her finger against his shoulder.

    Smiling, Bei pressed his thumbs at the slight nub located at the base of her carotid arteries. The action caused the plating of her Neo-Dymatech armor to lock her body in place, paralyzing her. He hated to use the technique, but she’d left him no choice. He would not sacrifice this mission or his men’s chance at freedom because she couldn’t adapt to Syn-En life. Either you go willingly, or the chief will carry you and everyone will know of your dishonorable behavior.

    What have you done? Why can’t I move? Ensign Faso’s black eyes darted around the room as she squeezed the words through clenched teeth.

    Too bad the armor couldn’t stop her from speaking. At least her time in solitary would stop her from spewing her venom to the citizens on board. Too many shared her views. But then, they too had been enfranchised humans. Once.

    The professor will be around to begin your instruction in basic Syn-En behavior. Stooping, Bei looked her in the eye. If you learn your lessons, I’ll upgrade you to the brig for the duration.

    A month of isolation might not break her spirit, but his men would enjoy the respite from her foul temper and her emotional tirades.

    The duration! Spittle clung to her full lips. You’ll regret this, Tinman. Those of us humans forced to endure the humiliation of fake body parts will make certain your kind never enjoys an ounce of freedom. I swear it.

    Bei smiled at her threat. Freedom was a word none in the Fleet, except her, had ever experienced. But all that would change once they reached Terra Dos, the new world waiting a month’s journey from the wormhole’s event horizon.

    The briefing room’s double doors sighed open. Security Chief Frankfurt Rome’s blond crew cut skimmed the door’s header as he breezed inside. His brown-eyed gaze flicked over the recently demoted Faso. A grin revealed the gap between his two front teeth and deepened the laugh lines in his olive complexion. Tell me you’re finally planting the Syn-En wannabe where the sun doesn’t shine.

    Bei nodded. Bury her in solitary and inform the professor he can see her in a week.

    Don’t touch me! Faso ground out.

    My birthday came early this year. Chief Rome rubbed his palms together and settled his hands on Faso’s waist. His Syn-En limbs rippled under his black uniform as he stared at Bei. Can I carry her stiff body or should I unlock her armor?

    Unlock me, you bastard. Faso glared at her escort. Red tinted her dark skin. You two need a lesson on how to treat humans.

    Striding toward the door, Bei smiled at his security chief. Although both men stood at six and a half feet, Bei outweighed his friend by at least ten kilos. Rank carried its own burdens, as did the hundreds of versatile units incorporated into his sixth generation bionics. Your choice, since I won’t have to get you a present next month.

    The chief tucked Faso’s stiff body under his arm and carried her feet first out of the room. Hell Admiral, her confinement for the duration is the gift that keeps on giving.

    Exiting the briefing room, Bei stepped onto the command deck, taking in his three man bridge crew, the fleet’s second in command and two civilians. He scanned the half circle shaped room and his crew. Ten steps could carry him to any of the work stations embedded in the hull, five steps to his chair in the center of the room. Panning from left to right, three Syn-En soldiers and the Starfarer’s captain manned the com, navigation, weapons and telemetry stations. Their associated LCD screens banded the room like a bank of dark windows. Overhead white lights shone harshly down on the soldiers.

    On his left, two civilians sprawled on the floor working on the fiber optic wiring of the empty science and tactical bays. Both frowned as the chief toted Faso, like unclaimed luggage, to the elevator tucked into the quarter moon space off Bei’s left shoulder.

    Next to the doors and connected to the communication’s hub, Commander Havana Keyes turned toward him. Admiral.

    She stroked the black fiber optic cables hanging from the knot of black hair restrained at her nape while her brown-eyed gaze skimmed Chief Rome.

    Commander Keyes and the chief’s sexual tension clogged the wireless array his command staff shared. Although the link was originally created to transfer data and orders during an emergency, the Syn-En had quickly learned to express their repressed emotions through the WA. These bursts of feelings not only allowed others to know how a particular soldier felt but also caused a sympathetic response in the recipient’s brains.

    Bei shifted as Rome and Keyes’s arousal wormed its way into his body. As soon as they set foot on Terra Dos’s lush landscape, Bei would use his authority to unite those two in marriage. Using the WA, he pinged both soldiers to get their attention. Save it for later.

    The chief smiled, flashing the gap in between his front teeth at everyone.

    Commander Keyes flushed.

    Their arousal melted into the background noise of the WA. One problem solved.

    Still grinning like an extinct baboon, Chief Rome stepped inside the elevator and propped Faso against one wall as the door slid closed.

    Bei strode closer to the two civilians. Would these two cause trouble over Faso’s confinement or did they view her as Syn-En? Report, Commander Keyes.

    After a fearful look in his direction, both civilians ducked their heads inside the workspace under the flat LCD panels.

    Even though they had no WA capabilities, news of Faso’s confinement would soon reach the civies. Good. It would make it easier for his men to discover those Faso’s mouth had turned against the mission.

    Commander Keyes cleared her throat and her dark eyes narrowed. Using only her fiber optic connection, she brought up images on the LCD in front of her. "The Ursa Minor is experiencing engine trouble."

    Telemetry streamed down the screen next to dart-like ship plowing forward ten kilometers and twenty degrees starboard off the Starfarer’s stern. The three fins of her cylindrical hull glowed red against the white light of the wormhole’s interior. The Ursa Minor would soon lose steerage if she couldn’t find a means to dissipate the heat.

    Bei kept his expression blank, although he allowed a spurt of frustration to join his crews’ swamping the WA. Just for one day, he’d like to have no life or death emergencies. Eying the com screen, he strode to his chair. Restlessness filled him, making it impossible to sit down, so he stood and waited for his bridge crew to do their job.

    Despite nearly six decades of service, Captain Cassis Pennig moved with ease and strength. He unplugged from the Starfarer’s telemetry station, stepped around the two young Syn-En soldiers, and jacked into the com system. He bumped in the Commander. Is it major trouble or just minor?

    A black curl escaped the bun at Commander Keyes’s nape and tumbled down her back. Humor lifted her lips for a moment before she sighed. Their captain requests emergency docking under the safe haven protocol.

    Captain Pennig, the fleet’s second in command, ran his hand through the sprinkling of white hair fringing his age spotted head before tugging on the fiber optic cable connecting his cranial implant to the ship. "Ursa Minor reports total systems failure imminent."

    Bei’s gut clenched. Of course it would be a life threatening emergency. Even nestled in the Starfarer’s mammoth wake and protected by her magnetic shields, the smaller ships endured more of the wormhole’s space-time riptides. They’d already lost twenty of their original eighty ships. Seventeen hundred people dead, but not in vain, the survivors would make it to Terra Dos. Which docking bay has room?

    Worry filling his green eyes, Captain Pennig scuttled back to the telemetry station. Bays one through seven are full. Eight through twelve can accommodate her.

    Bei nodded. Clogged with salvaged wreckage, his men were trying to weld together into something space worthy. The project kept them busy during the long months as well as giving them a sense of control over their future. It was the only thing Bei could offer them, for now. "Bring the Ursa Minor into bay eight."

    Captain Pennig straightened his thin shoulders. Ignoring the glowing keyboard on the LCD panel, he relayed the instructions directly through his interface. Bay Eight prepare for emergency docking, Orion class two ship. Bay Eight ready. Fire, rescue and medical crews en route.

    Commander Keyes bracketed the Ursa Minor on her com panel with her tan hands as if to protect the ship. Her fusion engines are running hot. Even with a boost, she doesn’t have enough thrust to close the gap.

    Worry flickered over Captain Pennig’s wrinkled features, but he set his jaw as he stared at the image of the failing ship. She’ll make it.

    Fear and doubt flooded the WA. Bei blasted the system with his calm determination, before taking everyone offline. No one needed a distraction.

    Distance? Bei yanked the finger-thick fiber optic cable from its channel along his spine. He plugged the nickel-titanium interface into the metal opening at the base of his skull before inserting the other end into the port in his chair. The influx of information slammed into his brain in the image of files and video clips. Gritting his teeth against the pain, Bei called forth his avatar to sort the data into usable bytes. A digitalized version of himself popped up on the blue screen in his mind.

    Captain Pennig’s jaw clenched. Zero point four kilometers and holding.

    "Ursa’s engines are nearing critical." Commander Keyes twirled the end of her lock of black hair around and around her finger as her raw words festered in the empty space.

    If she blew, the Ursa Minor would take out the ships flying in tight formation around her. No more dead. Bei pleaded with the fates, God, some higher power while running his options through the mainframe, looking for anything to increase their odds. He’d have to close the gap, use the exhaust to slow his ship. Vent plasma through the bow. Inform fleet.

    The ensign at the navigation hub had his hands balled into fists as he fell back on his training and used only his fiber optic link to control the engines. "Aye, Admiral. Venting plasma through bow. Starfarer speed down zero point five. Zero point seven-five. One percent."

    Captain Pennig leaned closer to his monitor. The white and black image deepened the grooves of his face, aging him. "Wake ships decelerating. Distance between Ursa and Starfarer at zero point one kilometer."

    Bei jerked as his avatar displayed his best option for rescuing the damaged ship. A forty percent chance the Ursa Minor would make it. He’d take it. Duty finished, the avatar nodded and dissolved.

    Commander Keyes’s fingertips bit into the com LCD. Her nails flashed white against her tan skin. "Plasma leak in Ursa’s port engine, Admiral. The Perseus is in her vent stream."

    Pennig nodded. Perseus altering course and slowing.

    Tapping his boot heel against the metal floor grates, the ensign at the navigation hub barked, "Starfarer speed down five percent, Admiral."

    Maintain speed. Tension bit into Bei’s shoulders. How many more ships wouldn’t make the rest of the six week journey? "Wardens, target Ursa Minor, use thrusters to bring her in range of grappling hooks. Authorization Omega-Alpha-Foxtrot."

    Wardens away. They got her, Admiral. Commander Keyes’s white teeth flashed in her brown face as she grinned at the screen displaying the box-like barnacles clinging to the Ursa Minor’s hull. Plasma contained. Her captain reports a hard fix.

    Bei’s knees shook. Hard fix. Two Syn-Ens had sacrificed themselves to manually shove a plate of steel into the escaping plasma, buying their crew a precious tenth of a second.

    "Grappling hooks in place, Admiral. ETA of Ursa in Bay Eight in four, three, two, one. Captain Pennig’s weathered hands slapped the telemetry hub. She’s in."

    Sinking into his chair before his legs buckled, Bei breathed a sigh of relief. They had saved another ship and most of her crew. He opened the WA, basked in the jubilation for a moment as his avatar danced. Pings bounced off Bei’s interface, the Syn-En equivalent of a citizen’s high five. Good job, everyone.

    The news spilled into the Starfarer’s systems, lightening the tension.

    Captain Pennig reached inside the slot beside the telemetry hub, swung down the narrow plank hidden there and gingerly lowered his body onto the utilitarian seat. He groaned and closed his eyes. Balls of light flowed from his interface under his white hair to the hub. Updating course and destination arrival date with current speed and weight.

    Are you in a hurry to arrive at Terra Dos? Smiling at his second-in-command’s eagerness, Bei noted the absence of one civilian tech from bridge. Using the WA, his avatar performed a diagnostic of the closed science hub. The digital man shook his head. Patched but not fixed. Such shoddy work was not acceptable.

    The captain stretched before crossing his arms over his thin chest. Space travel has made me a little sick. It will be good to get on land and feel the air on my face.

    Commander Keyes squatted next to the com hub and wrapped the lock of black hair around the bun at her nape. Wardens have successfully returned to their dens, Admiral.

    Bei nodded and unplugged from the ship. Status on our engines.

    The elevator door whispered open and Chief Engineer Sydney Shang’hai sauntered onto the deck. They’re running hot. Some ham-handed ensign diverted the plasma in a rush instead of slowly. Striding over to the ensigns at the navigation and weapons hubs, she placed a hand on both their shoulders. Report to engineering.

    Both young men jerked their fiber optic cables out of their respective hubs and jogged to the elevator.

    As the doors closed behind them, Engineer Shang’hai’s full red lips curved upward. Poor kids. They had just completed tank maintenance when the call went out for volunteers to settle Terra Dos. Repairing the engines will reinforce the lecture they’re about to get.

    And they’ll learn from their mistakes. Bei watched the remaining civie, still stretched out on the floor working on the tactical bay.

    Nodding, Shang’hai worked her fiber optics from her spiky pink hair then jacked into both vacated stations. Even with my genius at work, the engines were never designed to do more than jump from Earth to Mars then back again. I’ll be glad to return to normal space.

    After hanging the panel in place, the civie wiggled over to the science hub. His green eyes locked with the engineer’s brown ones.

    The sensors integrated in Bei’s armor picked up the civilian’s accelerated heart rate and the sudden shunting of blood to other pieces of the his anatomy. Had Shang’hai appeared on the command deck hoping for a little face time with the civie? Was Bei the only celibate person on his ship? He swallowed the bitterness.

    The first joint of the civilian’s fingertips peeled back to reveal an assortment of lasers, drivers and pliers. Shifting his lower body slightly, the civie removed the access panel near the floor and ducked his head inside.

    Bei pointed his index finger at the civie’s mechanical arm and read the identity chip embedded underneath the shiny alloy skin. Montgomery Smith. He’d turned to enhancements to pay his father’s gambling debts. Bei respected a man who gave up his own freedom so his mother and sister could keep their liberty. Still, the balance had been paid in full two years ago. The same time the civie had been assigned to engineering. Had the Chief Engineer’s Shang’hai’s considerable assets been enough to keep him, or was it something else? Something that would cause him to do the work of two men, while his comrade caused trouble?

    Civilian Smith. Pushing out of his chair, Bei walked the two strides to the civie’s feet.

    Smith sat up, banged his head and swore under his breath. Rubbing the red spot on his black forehead, he slid out of the bay’s guts. Yes, Admiral.

    Where did your fellow civilian go? Squatting next to the Smith’s splayed legs, Bei activated all his sensors, waiting to detect signs of deceit.

    Civilian Smith’s frown deepened the brackets around his mouth. Tim said his plates were slipping and he wanted to go to the medical bay before the injured arrived. I offered to tune him up, but you know how newbies are. So used to doctors handling everything, they don’t think that a good mechanic is better than a biomedic any day.

    Bei scratched the itch between his shoulder blades. Although Civilian Smith told the truth, neither of them believed the other tech’s story. What could the man be up to? Find Civilian Tim and send him back here. Let him finish the repairs.

    Accessing the medical logs via his WA, Bei noted the absence of anyone named Tim or Timothy. Where had the man gone? Bei woke up his avatar, handed him Tim’s photo and file to carry to security before pinging Chief Rome.

    Civilian Smith’s forehead wrinkled as he hid his tools behind his fingers. I already finished the repairs, Admiral. Don’t know why Tim didn’t complete them before he left, but I could undo them again.

    From the corner of his eye, Bei watched his men straighten. Had the missing man sabotaged his ship? Bei’s hands tightened into fists. Find the civilian and send him to me.

    The tech quickly replaced the panel and leapt to his feet. His gaze drifted to Shang’hai. Bei’s engineer had her eyes closed and her red lips clamped shut. With a sigh, the civie trudged toward the elevator. The doors opened at his approach. He entered, turned and stared at Shang’hai’s spiky pink head with hope in his eyes until the doors shut.

    Commander Keyes yanked her hair free of its bun and combed through her curly black tresses for another connection before jacking into the navigation system. Admiral, the Perseus is drifting closer to the wall.

    Despite being made of time and space, hitting the edge of the wormhole would be just like hitting cement only with less give. Neither the ship nor her crew would survive.

    The com LCD switched images. On screen, the Perseus’s saucer shape gleamed against the white glow of the wormhole. Plasma vented from the conical engines at the center of the radius. Bei considered yanking his own cable from his spine but decided against it. He would not micromanage his men. They were capable of handling a wayward ship as was her captain. Does the Perseus know of the drift, or were the sensors damaged in the plasma spray?

    He knows. Captain Pennig closed his eyes to focus on his link. But I’m sending him our telemetry and recommending a course correction of ten degrees starboard.

    The com panel flashed black for an instant, then the Perseus’s captain’s haggard face appeared. The thin cables integrating his cranium interface with his ship glowed blue. Beard stubble sprayed across his tan skin, and bloodshot eyes hung heavy over his hooked nose. Thanks for the data, Pennig, but controls are not responding. That damn plasma stream fused the engines. I have a drift of one degree portside and not a hope in Hades of changing it.

    Bei whipped out his interface. His hands shook as he connected with his ship. Manual override?

    The Perseus’s Captain shook his head and rubbed his nose. Manual not responding. Evac underway. We’re slingshotting the Civies toward the Centari now. She’s in the best position to pick them up.

    The com screen backed away from the ship’s captain’s face, revealing the Perseus’s damaged command deck. Sparks flew out of the navigation panel, igniting fires wherever they landed. Her ensign’s arms and legs flopped on the ground in front of the hub. A crewman yanked the connection free and scooped up the twitching figure.

    Another crewman aimed his fire extinguisher at the flames. Temperature rising on decks three through eight. Fires close to main engineering and engines S1-5 failing.

    Get in the damn pod, Boston, the Perseus’s captain snapped as he dropped to his seat. His legs trembled while power surged through his ship’s systems.

    Using the WA, Bei entered the Perseus’s systems. His avatar darted through the bridge computers looking for a means to regain control. A miracle would be easier to find. His avatar dug through bins of data. Come on, give me something.

    All fleet ships shift portside, Commander Keyes shouted though the emergency com while the Starfarer’s captain sent course corrections to the fleet.

    Launch recovery shuttles. Bei jerked as he felt the echo of the surges through the WA connection. God dammit. Not another one. Bei shut down the WA to all but himself. Perseus cut your engines. We’ll tow you to Terra Dos.

    Crimson trailed down the doomed ship’s captain’s pale cheeks. Electricity arced across his mouth. Main engines are on fire, but the last of my men are away. Save them, Admiral, I’m taking the chariot to freedom.

    Static blitzed Bei’s implants. His body jack-knifed as all sensors recorded the Perseus’s explosion and her captain’s death. Eyes open, Bei convulsed against the cushioned chair as his brain tried to reconcile the other Syn-En’s death with Bei’s own continued life.

    Keeping a hand on her cable, Shang’hai hooked a boot around Bei’s cable and kicked up, breaking his link. Her almond eyes narrowed in her pale face.

    His muscles turned to mush as his brain grappled with the silence. Only his locked armor kept him from sliding out of the chair. Sweat stung his eyes but Bei was too drained to wipe it away. Until he recovered, he’d only be able to communicate through the WA. He opened the channel, limiting access to his bridge crew. Status.

    Captain Pennig tugged on his interface, thinning it to the size of a hair. Maintaining the tether to the telemetry hub, he made his way toward Bei. The Centari has retrieved all civies and seven Syn-En. Shuttles are retrieving the last of the Perseus’s crew pods.

    You’re an ass, Bei. Relax and allow yourself to recover. Shang’hai’s voice was as clear as if she spoke out loud. Her pink hair quivered atop her oval head. I’ve sent a probe to determine the impact on the wormhole’s stability.

    Commander Keyes’s black eyes sparkled, no doubt at Shang’hai’s impertinence in the WA. Two darts report minor damage. The debris field has been tagged and is awaiting retrieval. Cargo bay twelve was depressurized for twelve seconds. I’ve dispatched crews to inventory the remaining rations.

    The captain knelt near Bei’s chair and manually removed his finger-shaped coverings. His tool appendages opened and closed in smoothed strokes. While my equipment may be out of date, I’m a damn good mechanic.

    Do it. Bei nodded and Pennig began his diagnostics. Once Bei’s brain activity was stabilized, the rest of the repairs would be a snap.

    Admiral, Shang’hai’s voice rose on the last syllable. Her white cheeks paled. The probe is reporting back.

    Commander Keyes’s mouth dropped open and she fiddled with the port next to Shang’hai’s. That can’t be right. Have the probe do a self check and report back.

    On screen dammit. The tremor that seized Bei had little to do with his current muscle spasms.

    Shang’hai flinched at the anger shooting through the WA but activated the LCD. Results confirmed. In ninety-seven million kilometers, the wormhole dead-ends.

    Chapter Two

    In every battle there are casualties, but Syn-En soldiers

    who sacrifice their lives for human liberty will never die.

    —First Axiom of Command, Syn-En Vade Mecum

    Where’s the event horizon? Still paralyzed in his command chair, Bei sent the wireless signal to Shang’hai and opened the WA for his bridge staff. The dark spot grew bigger on the LCD by her head. Ninety-seven million kilometers. At his ship’s current rate of speed, the Starfarer and her crew had approximately seven minutes before they would splatter against the wormhole’s dead end.

    There is no event horizon, Admiral. Shang’hai’s soft voice cracked and she shuddered. After raking her hand through her spiky pink hair, she unraveled two more optic fibers from the knot of interfaces at the base of her skull and filled the rest of the navigation hub’s ports. This part of the wormhole has collapsed. Switching plasma emission to bow vents, all hands brace for imminent full stop.

    Kneeling on the grated metal floor near Bei’s chair, Captain Pennig removed the cover plate on Bei’s cerebral interface. The smaller ships won’t be able to stop in time. I’ve ordered all hands to abandon ship. We’ll pick them up later.

    If the Starfarer stopped in time. If not, everyone would die a slow death from starvation, oxygen deprivation or hypothermia. A buzzing sounded near Bei’s ear seconds before he felt the tug at the base of his skull. Send out the grappling hooks. Lash as many ships as possible to our hull.

    Remaining at her station near the communications hub, Commander Keyes nodded once. Her brown eyes were wide as she stilled her trembling hands by placing them on the LCD. "Seven Beagal Class Starships are moving into position. Admiral we’re not going to be able to take them all without damaging the Starfarer."

    The dart-shaped ships appeared on the screen by the commander’s head.

    Age carved deep grooves around the captain’s mouth. Although kneeling by Bei’s side, Pennig remained tethered to the telemetry hub a yard away. A red close proximity warning flashed on the screen and was quickly extinguished. "Fifty ships are hanging back. I’ve ordered the Chief to oversee the evacuation of non-essentials from the Starfarer."

    Tingles erupted across Bei’s skull. His fingers jerked, then slowly curled and uncurled in response to his command. The captain would soon fix Bei’s paralysis. In the background, he heard the click and whirl as his neural software performed diagnostics and scanned for errors. For the next six minutes while his systems rebooted, he would have to fly his ship the way human captain’s did-relying on his eyes, ears and instincts instead of his technology. That did not change his duty to the Syn-En, it only made it harder to fulfill. The Starfarer has enough surface area for forty-five ships. Have the rest double-up near the stern. Our hull is Nickel-titanium Memory Alloy. It will self-repair.

    It will take four minutes for the ships to attach. Shang’hai stepped back and clutched her head. Images flashed in quick succession across the navigation screen. "Evacuating outer rings and sealing bulkheads on levels one through three of Starfarer. Bow vents at one hundred percent. Estimated stopping distance one billion kilometers."

    Not fast enough. Bei’s limbs went numb and hung from his torso like rotten hams. Damned if he’d meet his end paralyzed on the floor of his bridge. He willed time to speed up to hurry his healing but perversely he wanted to slow it down, give himself time to find a way out of this other than imminent death.

    Even with the extra weight? Commander Keyes squeaked, resting a hip against the bare metal wall next to the communications hub. And all engines firing toward the bow?

    Nodding, Shang’hai wiped her hands on her pants. The barnacle crafts won’t be able to use their engines without frying the ships attached near them. They’re attaching using thrusters.

    Damn. Bei glared at the growing black disc at the end of the tunnel. There may be a chance, just one. And like everything else on this blasted journey, it would come at a price. His men would pay it, he just wished there was another way. Bei opened the WA to all the ships in the fleet. His people had a right to choose their fate. Which ships have the fastest engines?

    Aside from us? The captain opened the repair terminal under the armor covering Bei’s forearm. He pulled out three red biometric strands. The Oppenheims, but they’re the ones with the best chance of stopping and the last ones that will attach.

    Pain blazed through Bei’s synapses as the recycled filaments replaced the burned out ones in his motor nodule. They also carry enough Helium-three to create an impressive explosion. At a dead end, it might blow the entire wad in our direction.

    Dread thickened the air as the ramifications drifted around the Starfarer’s bridge officers. With Bei’s cerebral software rebooting, the ships would have to be piloted to the end and the engines manually overloaded.

    Time counted down. Six minutes remained until their mission would come to a rather dramatic end. The knowledge filtered through the WA. The wireless com system crackled with fear and turmoil before quieting into steely resolve. The Syn-En knew their duty. Maybe a little too well. Bei allowed the traitorous thought for a moment before banishing it.

    Seven ships attached, next wave moving into position. Shang’hai picked at her thumbnail, lifting and shutting the access port underneath. Recalculating stopping distance.

    Commander Keyes’s breath came in short bursts as she slid the stowed metal seat in and out of its slot next to the com station. Oppenheims report all non-essential personnel aboard pods, command staff awaiting orders and mission status of Operation Blowback.

    Pods ejecting. Shang’hai inset the Stargazer’s aft visual sensors on her LCD.

    The tiny capsules scattered in their wake like spilled pills on luminescent paper.

    The commander shook out her hands before setting them on the LCD. "Orion, Beagel and Nebula ships launching life pods… now. Captains report all hands away. They’re moving into position on the Starfarer’s hull."

    Bei’s heart drummed inside his chest. Syn-En captains wouldn’t abandon ship, neither would their command staff. Over three hundred soldiers would be stuck to his ship like flies in ointment and he literally couldn’t lift a finger to help. Yet. His internal clock hit the five minute mark. Where are those damn calculations?

    Captain Pennig placed a hand on Bei’s chest. Rebooting motor nodule in three… two… one.

    Despite the restraining hand, Bei slid out of the chair as his armor unlocked. His head bobbed uncontrollably down the seat back and cushion. The captain thrust his knee between Bei’s legs preventing the momentum from cracking open the admiral’s skull against the floor’s metal plating. The maneuver might have hurt if Bei could feel anything.

    Shang’hai straightened, her pink hair seemed to bristle in agitation. Calculations coming in now. Operation Blowback has a five percent chance of success with damage to barnacle ships projected at sixty-three percent.

    The commander set her tan hand on the other woman’s shoulder. How many ships will it take?

    Ten. Both women turned toward Bei. Hope, resignation and sadness hummed along the WA. Shang’hai squeezed her eyes closed for a moment. They’ll all have to reach critical mass within zero point five nanoseconds of each other while allowing for not more than one degree deviation in their formation.

    Side by side, Bei’s entire complement of Oppenheims would meet their deaths. The spacecraft were the only means the Syn-Ens had to reach the surface of Terra Dos. Yet without their sacrifice no one would arrive at their destination. If they could still reach it. Bei shook off his doubts. They would reach it. There had to be a way out of the wormhole. Earth had shown the world pictures of the planet sent back from their probes. Send the call for volunteers.

    Captain Pennig looked Bei in the eye, nodded once then cleared his throat. The older man seemed to have aged a decade in the last few minutes. "All Oppenheims willing to ride the chariot. Ramping engine output and accelerating. Two are midship. The others are pulling abaft of the Starfarer."

    Shang’hai cleared the inset from the screen. Oppenheims have cleared hull. Lead ships have punched through magnetic shielding. Lagging ships pulling abreast.

    Flying in perfect, tight formation, the rocket-shaped Oppenheims raced toward the end of their suicide mission. Four minutes left.

    Bei arched his back as one by one the systems of his motor nodule came online. His limbs jerked twice as control was restored. Status of the Oppenheim command staff?

    The commander blinked in rapid succession, before wiping her nose on her sleeve. Riding with their captain.

    Fifty more deaths. By the time they reached Terra Dos, Bei would be neck deep in the blood of his comrades, all because he’d volunteered the Syn-Ens on this mission. His internal systems flashed green. How ironic to have his body back under control just as his world ended. Nodding to the captain, Bei held out his hand. The two clasped forearms and Bei struggled to his feet. His legs trembled beneath him, but held. How— How long until they reach their mark?

    At the moment, he didn’t care if his bridge crew thought the stammer was because of his systems’ reboot or the impending loss of some of his closest friends.

    Staring at the navigation screen, Shang’hai clasped her hands behind her back. T minus two minutes. Engineering is transferring maximum magnetic shielding to the bow.

    Two minutes, if the mission went as planned. That left his ship a minute and a half to stop. Bei walked the two steps to stand between the two women. Count it down.

    In an androgynous voice, the Starfarer’s computer marked the time until the Oppenheims exploded.

    Knowing his ports were too fried to connect with Shang’hai and Commander Keyes’s interfaces, he clasped one of their hands in his. The touch lacked the intimacy he’d grown accustomed to with his crew.

    The commander’s cold fingers slipped between his. I always knew we would finish our term of service together.

    I thought you always said you’d finish me before I completed my term of service. Bei smiled. As wards of the government, these two as well as half of the Oppenheims’ command staff had been conscripted into the Syn-En Fleet together. They’d been his lovers, friends, and rivals. If he could not lead them to Terra Dos, perhaps it was best to board the chariot with them as company.

    One minute remained.

    Shang’hai glanced over her shoulder at the captain then held out her free hand to him.

    Accepting it, Captain Pennig strode to her side. Delta probes in place.

    The knots in Bei’s stomach folded in upon themselves. How could he have forgotten to monitor the wormhole’s integrity? Of course, if it collapsed because of the explosion, they’d be dead before the probes reported in. He focused on the navigation LCD. The Oppenheims’ white bodies freckled the blackness.

    Thirty seconds.

    Bei cleared the tightness from his throat. "All hands disconnect from Starfarer. I repeat, all hands disconnect. Inertial dampeners to maximum."

    The commander’s shoulder brushed his as she stooped to remove all her interfaces from the navigation and weapons ports before verifying her attachment to the com system. Communications ready, Admiral.

    Still clasping Shang’hai’s hand, Captain Pennig freed her from the weapons hub but left one fiber optic cable in the navigation station. Using the nail of his index finger he secured his connection to Telemetry. All ports secure. Telemetry ready, Admiral.

    Shang’hai leaned against Bei. Navigation ready.

    Ten seconds.

    Her silky hair brushed his jaw. Bei inhaled the sharp scent of soap wafting from her head. All hands brace for full stop. Kill the visuals.

    A ripple traveled through Shang’hai into him. Visuals off.

    Black panels yawned in the silver walls of the command deck.

    Bei glanced at the soldiers beside him. If his connector hadn’t been overloaded when the Perseus exploded, he would be up here alone bearing the risks.

    Five seconds to the Oppenheims’ self-destruction.

    Take all non-essential systems offline. His heart kept time with the countdown. Three. Two. Detonation. Death.

    Commander Keyes shifted closer to him. All non-essentials offline. Grounding wires deployed. First, EMP wave rendered harmless.

    Shang’hai inhaled sharply. Sensors register three explosions. Zero point six-one percent apart.

    Three explosions. Not one. All because of a hundredth of a nanosecond delay. Would it be enough to stop them from reaching the dead end?

    Captain Pennig’s fist slammed into the telemetry hub. First blast wave in six seconds.

    High pitched alarms blasted the bridge as blood red lights bathed the deck and the ship’s computer calmly announced, Collision alert. Collision alert. Impact with wormhole in twenty-five seconds.

    Shut it down, Captain. Bei clenched his jaw. His men didn’t need the reminder of their journey’s end.

    Alarm off. Aye. The captain spoke into the deafening silence. Second wave in six point eight seconds. The third in six point twelve. Fourth wave in ten seconds.

    Fourth wave? The deck bucked underneath Bei’s boots. In unison, the soldiers beside him adjusted to the motion. All around him, metal groaned. His gut clenched. And he only heard the damage; the others would feel it like a blow to their body. Yet to break the connection would drastically increase response time. They couldn’t afford to lose even a nanosecond. One down. Could his ship survive three more?

    Commander Keyes licked the perspiration forming above her top lip. Two ships reporting damage to steering. Power surges on piggybacked ships.

    Shang-hai squeezed her eyes closed for a moment. Recalculating full stop range on new data.

    Magnetic shields down to sixty percent. Bow damage reported. Light crackled around Pennig’s fingernail. The command deck filled with the acrid scent of burning armor. Venting atmosphere on outer rings.

    The second and third blasts slammed into them. Even with the metal in his uniform, boots and bones attracted to the magnetic floor, the jolt knocked Bei across the room and the women from his grasp. Landing on his backside, he skidded over the metal deck before crashing into the elevator doors and denting them. His right shoulder dislocated with a loud pop. Pain suppressors flooded in, clearing his thoughts but the room spun, keeping him pinned to the wall.

    High pitched shrieks pummeled his auditory enhancements as the hull was peeled away from its bulkheads. Could his ship take another hit? And what of the others attached to her?

    Report. Bei pushed his body along the curved wall until he reached the recently repaired tactical bay. Baring his finger ports, he jacked into the system. Red lights blinded his visual centers. Every system had been damaged. Gritting his teeth, he fought against the Starfarer’s uncontrolled spin. Starboard thrusters were offline. He glanced at the rest of his crew.

    Shang’hai lay at an odd angle across the command chair. Red blood made furrows into her pink hair. Her optic cable had been ripped from her skull and now snaked across the metal grating.

    Still attached to the telemetry hub a foot away from Bei, the captain twitched. Sparks shot out of Pennig’s mouth and his severed finger remained inserted in the port in the hub.

    Bei would have them attached at disposal. Syn-Ens deserved to ride the chariot whole.

    Clinging to the side of the com hub, the commander moaned. She pushed her hair out of her eyes and let the tangled lengths slide over her shoulder. Slowly, she pulled herself to a sitting position. Her fiber optic cable glowed orange. Magnetic shields offline. Full stop calculations… incomplete.

    Bei dug his fingers deeper into the round ports of the tactical bay. After rebooting the Starboard thrusters and stopping the Starfarer’s spin, he’d powered off the hub and ordered a reboot in one second. Disengage from the com system.

    Commander Keyes’s connection fell dark. It was—

    The next wave hit. Metal buckled. Bei diverted energy to increase the magnetic attraction of his floor to him and his crew. His skin felt raw beneath his uniform as he slid along the wall. Sparks sprayed in white bursts from the hubs before the room went dark. Even activating his nightvision upgrades in his ocular implants made no difference. He couldn’t see a thing. Something banged loudly in the vicinity of his feet. He hoped it wasn’t the commander being hurled across the room. Focusing on his hearing, he listened for Keyes’s breathing. Nothing. Damn.

    Tingles raced up his arms. Blue static electricity crawled over his armor, casting an eerie glow around him. A instant before the tactical hub hummed to life, Bei noted the change in the room. The Starfarer had stopped. So many dead and yet… His cardiac implant quickly compensated for the skipped beats in his heart.

    They’d done it.

    No synthetic enhancement needed. Data flooded into his cranial interface, now working properly. Emergency protocols quickly prioritized the damage and relayed implementation steps. Like the touch of a long lost friend, he felt the brush of other Syn-Ens in the fleet as captains, commanders, lieutenants and ensigns checked in through the wireless array.

    A groan came from near his head before an identification ping bounced off his interface.

    Fricking implants. Shang’hai’s voice growled through the darkness. She uttered a curse a second before he heard the scrape of metal against metal. Sorry to miss all the excitement, Admiral. Stupid snap disconnect caused an emergency reboot. And humans think hangovers are bad.

    He pinged her back, a sign of his sympathy. Emergency reboots fried circuits engineers had forgotten existed in an effort to prevent an electric surge from liquefying a Syn-En’s brain. I’ve restored life support in inhabited areas, but radiation is rising and unless we can get the shield up, we’ll die of exposure long before we freeze to death.

    I’m connecting via the WA to engineering, Shang’hai grunted. The soft rasp of a panel opening fluttered around the room. Ninety percent of the hull is gone. Wardens are retrieving the larger chunks. Engines offline. Not responding to commands. Initiating manual override.

    "Starfarer’s com systems are down, Commander Keyes hissed from his left. Light flooded the command deck emanating from her wrist. She set her detached right hand against the waistband of her trousers. Stay."

    The fingers looped around her belt and clung to her flat stomach.

    Bei grinned at the old trick used to disturb their human officers. Magnets had their uses, especially in battle when spare parts were needed and just lying around ripe for the picking. I register four aft ships attached.

    They also report the least damage through the WA. Shang-hai appeared in a blue glow as she removed her twisted synthetic right leg and tucked it under her arm. Using the captain’s chair as leverage, she hauled herself to a stand then hopped toward the ladder access near the briefing room’s entrance. "I’ve asked them to focus a five percent venting at the Starfarer’s hull. The heat should quicken the Alloy’s return to its programmed shape."

    Estimated time to restored hull integrity? Bei found the emergency lights and powered them with the stored energy reserves. Orange light pulsed in the half-moon shaped room. It wasn’t much, but working by the light of amputated body parts had a negative effect on morale, especially among non-Syn-Ens.

    Thirty minutes. Keyes snapped her hand back on her wrist. Sorry Admiral, but the pieces of hull are everywhere and the wardens are having a hard time distinguishing them from the other debris.

    Bei’s forehead pounded from deciphering the data. How many are lost?

    After clicking the bits of armor back into place over her legs, the commander rose to her feet. Pain pinched her orange cast features. "Twelve darts are no longer registering. But I count only sixty life signs among the field. I’ve diverted

    Enjoying the preview?
    Page 1 of 1