The First Nova I See Tonight

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by Jason Kilgore




  The First Nova I See Tonight

  by

  Jason A. Kilgore

  Copyright © 2021 Jason A. Kilgore

  Caution: This book contains depictions of sexuality (with aliens!) which may not be suitable for individuals under age 18.

  This is a work of fiction. Similarities to real people, places, or events is entirely coincidental.

  Dedication:

  For my lifelong friend, Matt McFarland, a real-life hero.

  Acknowledgments:

  Cover: © 2021 Ivan Zanchetta & bookcoversart.com

  A special thank you to my friend, Adam Breashears, whose generous patronage paid for the cover art. You can help, too, at: ko-fi.com/worldskilgore

  This book was edited by Donovan Reves of Bloomsday Editing & Proofing (bloomsday.net).

  Thank you to my beta-readers, Ashley Hay and James Lundberg for their awesome feedback.

  And my everlasting thanks to my writer's group, the Peeps of Corvallis, Oregon,

  who critiqued every word and helped me take my writing to the next level.

  CHAPTER ONE

  EXCELLENTIA

  Just this one more job, Dirken Nova thought, and I'll get a ship of my own again. He reached into a breast pocket of his leather jacket and rubbed his lucky Rigellian runestone. Easy money. He closed his eyes and tried to picture his dream ship, but he kept going back to the last one he had. The Brilliant. She had been perfect. Fast. Deadly. For two long years he'd gone without a ship of his own.

  Dirken snapped back to reality, focusing on the immaculately clean, white room he shared with his smuggler partner, Yiorgos Ganas, who sat on a cot across from Dirken's. Yiorgos looked down at his cybernetic right arm, adjusting something in his wrist, his head bent in concentration. The entire top of his head and the right side were robotic, including a computerized cranial implant, an auditory implant in the place of a right ear, and a purple-glowing right eye. His vocal cords were replaced with an implant that could translate and reproduce all Terran languages and many alien ones. Both of his legs were robotic, too. Dirken didn't want to think about the accident that led to all of these "upgrades," as Yiorgos put it, but Yiorgos didn't try to hide his cybernetic additions with realistic limbs or lab-grown tissue. Instead, he embraced his identity as an active member of Cyberalia, a religious interplanetary and interspecies network of cyborgs who practiced the ritual of Netfolding.

  Yiorgos glanced up, noticing Dirken's gaze. Dirken gave a nod of acknowledgment, then turned his gaze out the little window in the door of the room.

  Outside the room was a spacious, well-lit corridor. A yeoman with curly blond hair and slim physique stood outside, having been assigned to "assist" them. Dirken knew full well, though, that the captain had put him there to watch over them. The yeoman looked back and gave a nervous nod, his pale blue eyes registering something other than just professional courtesy. Recognition? Dirken had never seen him before this mission.

  "The sooner we reach our destination the better," Yiorgos said, his voice tinged with a metallic rasp. "This gig is fishier than a vat full of Proximan eels."

  "Don't worry about it. Nothing can go wrong. We're sitting near the bridge of a United Worlds starship — a destroyer, in fact. No one would dare attack this ship, and no crew would defy the captain."

  Yiorgos shook his head and returned his attention to his wrist. "I still don't like it. The sooner we can get this safebox to Nüwa the better."

  They both glanced down to the safe that they had been paid to escort. The nondescript metal safebox had an old-fashioned alphanumeric keypad lock on its door and a handle bolted to the top. Dirken continued, "Escort it from Earth to Nüwa, don't open it or let anyone touch it or scan it, and hand it over to the Nüwan ambassador undamaged. Simple."

  "Well, at least we have more comfortable bunks than the last job."

  Dirken looked away. He hated being on UW starships. Most people thought of them as works of art. Sleek. Silvery. Wide beam. Not a straight edge or sharp corner to be found. Seeing them in orbit was like watching the flexing arm muscles of a fucking gigantic chrome robot.

  Inside, each section was wide and well-lit. Feng shui ruled the decks. Wood was used wherever possible. Plants graced the corners. Large screens broadcast video and audio of vibrant forests, babbling streams, and windswept mountaintops. The entire ship was like some sort of corporate lobby.

  Worse yet, the philosophy extended to the entire crew. All UW uniforms were matching, white, and clean. Prompt haircuts. A shower every day. Personal grooming was mandated, right down to cleaning their fingernails. Everything was timed, with ship-wide chimes and notifications. Twice each Sol day – at each shift change – there was a mandatory group stretching and aerobic exercise in the Commons.

  Plus, when ships of the "Silver Fleet" arrived at their destination, scores of smaller private ships would fly out to meet them in orbit and escort each ship to the surface. They landed like ballerinas, the crew parading down the gangplank like god-damned dignitaries.

  And every single member of the crew was human. It shouldn't be called the United Worlds, Dirken thought. More like the United Human Worlds. Even though the three UW planets, Earth, Nüwa, and Tesla, were majority human, or Terran, and officially speaking the Terran language, alien species were quickly growing in numbers due to immigration and reproduction — and accusing the UW of discriminatory policies — and were now the majority on the various UW offworld mining operations. The other worlds were no longer dependent upon Earth for support and feeling the economic drain from supporting their "parent" planet simply for cultural reasons. Where there's imbalance, there's war and corruption, he thought, and that means profits!

  Though it hadn't come to war, yet, there was an ever-growing secessionist movement on both Nüwa and Tesla, with public protests, insurrectionist cells, and even terror attacks. They were self-sustaining worlds, and their economies had overtaken that of Earth. Why be tied to the old homeworld, with its climate-ravaged deserts, cities swallowed by rising oceans, and populations grown fractured by old animosities that, somehow, hadn't carried over to the new worlds? It was all so… profitable, honestly, for a smuggler like himself.

  For this mission, at least, he and Yiorgos had to suffer through an entire flight from Earth to Nüwa – three Earth days and five hundred light years of stifling uniformity and perfection – onboard the United Worlds destroyer, Excellentia.

  Then he reminded himself again of the money he and Yiorgos were earning. Seven-hundred thousand UW chits! Added to their savings, it was enough to purchase a gleaming new interstellar corsair or corvette from the shipyards on Rockmir.

  The thought brought him back around to his last ship. Technically a clipper originally built in the Mars shipyards, the Brilliant had been everything the Excellentia wasn't. Utilitarian. Efficient. He didn't give a shit about Feng Shui. Parts inside and outside of her had been cobbled together from half a dozen other ships from as many solar systems, each part making it deadlier, faster, or better-defended. Outside were plasma jet engines and expanded gravwell panels, railguns, and a ten-petawatt laser cannon. A pair of Argolan mini-missile arrays had festooned the surface. And inside, the smells of ionized plasma and the sweat of years of tense situations mixed with the exotic scents of distant planets. Yes. And a crew of four besides him and Yiorgos, plus or minus the occasional adventurer. No chimes or schedules or fucking fake scenery on the screens. The crew could be themselves. Laughing, drinking, cussing, and gambling. Every centimeter of the ship served an important purpose without some decorative effect added to it. And the Brilliant was so fast, he could pick up an illicit load and transport it halfway to the other side of the quadrant before any UW ship or
planetary militia could figure out it was missing.

  But that dream had ended too soon. When the Pleiades Syndicate had found the Brilliant near Rorgos, and Dirken had refused to give them a share of his cargo of illegal Rigellian cloner modules, the resulting firefight didn't quite go his way. They crash-landed her on Rorgos. Two dead right away. Another two died during the five months of being stranded on that fiery planet, dodging lava flows and surviving earthquakes, until they had finally been rescued. Since then, there had been odd jobs as security to anyone willing to pay, trading legitimate commodities, and the occasional smuggling of illicit goods. He and Yiorgos led a vagabond life.

  But this job! This took the cake.

  "What are you thinking about?" Yiorgos asked, looking over at him with one human eye and one mechanical one. The human eye blinked; the mechanical one didn't. It used to unsettle him a little when that happened.

  Dirken cleared his throat and looked away. "Who says I'm thinking about anything?"

  "You're doing that thing again," he said. "Moving your mouth as you soundlessly talk to yourself. Eyes glazed over." He looked down to Dirken's hip. "Hand on your blaster."

  Dirken chuckled and took his hand off his weapon, a Gree-tech singlehanded pulse emitter with duel fusion batteries. It was outlawed on the UW worlds — not because the blast was strong enough to blow a hole through eight-centimeter carbon-inconel plates with its plasma pulses, but because the fusion batteries were unstable and potentially explosive. Yet for the right service, such as running a load of unregistered uranium ore from the outer mining colonies, the Gree were still willing to trade for a few blasters.

  "This job," Dirken said, flashing a confident smile. "Look at us. All we have to do is sit here and guard that safebox. Then we go buy a new ship!"

  Yiorgos huffed. "We would have had enough by now if you hadn't screwed up the weapons deal with the Free Sisters of Luhman 16, Dirk. Couldn't keep your dick in your pants, could you?"

  Dirken tensed his brow. "Well how the hell was I to know the Queen's daughter was still underage… at 86?"

  Yiorgos threw out his hand, the mechanical wrist interface whirring as he did so. "She didn't have her fifth neck-tentacle! Everyone knows Luhmanians don't reach adulthood until they grow the fifth one."

  Dirken rolled his eyes. "Stupid star system, anyhow. I'd question the sanity of any species that wants to live in orbit around a brown dwarf. That fucking star wreaked havoc on our magnetic systems."

  Yiorgos just shook his head and leaned back on his cot.

  In addition to what they earned on this gig, there were people who still owed them plenty. Fellow smuggler, 'TakTrak, for instance. That birdbrain owes me ten thousand UW chits, Dirken thought.

  They were in a small storage room just off the bridge, not even the normal berth that would be given to the crew, much less passengers. Could be worse, Dirken thought. They could have shoved us in the corner of a cargo hold like on that freighter for the last Rigel job. It was obvious that the Captain wanted to keep a close eye on them and the safebox.

  He looked again at the safe and wondered for the millionth time what was in it. For gigs like this one, the best course of action was not to ask, and it was clear at the outset that he wasn't going to get an answer if he did. They were due to arrive at Nüwa in just a day, deliver the safebox, and be on their way. Easy money.

  But a niggling doubt kept scratching at the back of his mind. Maybe too easy.

  CHAPTER TWO

  GRAVJUMP SIX

  The ship's intercom chimed for shift change, then the First Mate's gravelly voice piped through. "All crew, prepare for Gravjump Six." This would be the sixth of eight jumps that it would take to get to Nüwa, with periods of slower-than-light flight between each jump point.

  Yiorgos cupped his hands in his lap, then a small projector in his cheek implant sprung to life and projected a bluish sphere into his hands. The sphere changed, turning from transparent blue light to a darker blue and gray, rotating, and materializing. A tracery of golden lines and swirls rippled across it, shimmering, taking on intricate shapes. The "Sphere of Unity."

  This was the Ritual of Netfolding, practiced by cyborgs like Yiorgos who had cerebral implants, and a central component of the Cyberalia network. It was a form of meditation where they probed their inner neural network, their natural brain and their digital "neurosphere" — cleansing themselves of immorality and spiritual inefficiencies and connecting both minds into one. Masters claimed to be able to completely separate the two minds on command or to perform feats of intellect far surpassing their theoretical limitations, all for the purpose of achieving a new "awakening." Netfolding was supposed to be performed at least once a day by adherents. Yiorgos usually did it twice.

  Dirken didn't believe in such religious mumbo jumbo. Every culture had its wacko religions, even cyborg culture. The closest thing Dirken had to religion was his sense of freedom.

  All the talk about the Luhmanian Queen's daughter had gotten him aroused. He glanced over toward Yiorgos to see that his partner was meditating, then he reached into his pack. Rifling past a change of clothes, food packages, and a couple of Martian ales, he pulled out a tablet and headband. Accessing his extensive alien porn collection on the tablet, he found a particularly titillating vid title, "D'bee Does Dracorda." One of his favorites.

  Dirken eagerly donned the silvery headband and clicked on the tablet link. The headband came alive with vibrations and beamed the video directly to his brain and all five senses for a full sensual experience. Immediately he found himself standing in the hibernation chamber, cocoon swings hanging from the low ceiling and warm, steamy waters swirling around the edges of the room, making the chamber a sauna. A door opened, and in stepped a Pleiadean male. Faun-like, covered in brown fur and with feet that were hooves, he wore only a loincloth. "Oh dear," the Pleiadean said, scratching at the mass of tiny horns on his head, "I think I'm lost." The squeaking Pleiadean language had been dubbed into Terran.

  Teslan disco music started up and one of the cocoons parted. A reptilian leg, green and scaly, stepped out. Then an arm. Then out slipped a large Reptiloc woman, her iguana-like head opening to show rows of sharp teeth. "Lost, you say?" she asked, also dubbed. Her hands ran down her tight abdomen to a bikini bottom. "You poor man. I'm D'bee. Let me comfort you."

  The Pleiadean's eyes opened wide in fear, but his loincloth betrayed a growing erection.

  The Reptiloc woman slipped off her bikini and laid back into the cocoon. She opened her legs and revealed her cloaca between, wide and wet, with three folds of light green, fleshy lips, running horizontally between scales. She slipped a three-fingered hand down to it and rubbed it. The lips turned from green to a vibrant red as they engorged. The disco music grew louder and more urgent. Dirken smelled the musky scent of her pheromones.

  "Well, maybe just a quickie," the Pleiadean said, letting his loincloth drop and revealing his throbbing white penis and overlarge, furry testicles.

  "Oh yes," the Reptiloc woman moaned, opening her legs wider and inserting a thick finger into herself, claw and all.

  The Pleiadean stepped over to the cocoon swing, between her legs, and entered her with a…."

  "Hey!" Yiorgos shouted.

  Dirken was shaken out of his revelry, then pulled off the headband to look at the cyborg, annoyed. "What?"

  "Get your hands out of your pants and stop watching porn. You know I don't want to see that shit. I'm trying to meditate here. Find somewhere else to masturbate!"

  Dirken huffed in annoyance and put the tablet and glasses back in his pack. He stood, straightened his leather jacket, and adjusted his holster. "Fine. I need a change of scenery anyway." After touching a glowing contact, the door slid open and he stepped outside into a corridor that overlooked the bridge.

  He bumped into the curly-headed yeoman.

  "Sorry, sir!" the yeoman said.

  Dirken grimaced in annoyance. "Maybe don't stand in front of the fucking door?"

 
; "Is there something you need, sir?"

  "No. And we don't need a yeoman chaperone."

  He just grinned back and blinked innocently… and didn't leave. "A drink, perhaps?" He gestured with his arm as he said it.

  Dirken noticed an odd scar on the man's wrist, a small "A" no bigger than a thumbnail branded into his skin.

  Dirken shook his head in exasperation and turned away, stepping the short distance to the ship's bridge and command center.

  There were two levels to the bridge. The upper level was where the Captain and First Mate presided, along with other principal officers. The lower level held the secondary officers: navigators, engineers, sensor techs, medical, and weapons specialists. Both levels looked out over a wide bank of windows made of transparent aluminum, like all the windows of the ship. Dirken stood at an entrance to the lower level.

  Most of the officers were busy at their workstations, but some of them glanced his way, then back to their consoles. The glance was enough to gauge their opinions: he was a civilian interloper on a military vessel: in the way, out of place, and not fit for a uniform.

  Captain Chen looked down from the upper bridge railing at him and narrowed her eyes as if to say "you shouldn't be here." She started to open her mouth but was interrupted.

  "Commander," a navigation lieutenant said to the First Mate, a white-haired man named Prasad who stood next to the Captain. A hologram of navigation charts floated in front of the navigator. "Gravwell engines are ready. Awaiting your command."

  The First Mate gave a glance to the Captain, then turned back to the navigator. "Proceed with Gravjump Six." It was clear from the look Captain Chen gave him that Prasad was trusted.

  "Aye," the navigator said. "Proceeding with Gravjump Six." Then he relayed a series of coordinates and pressed a button. A pleasant, double-note tone sounded through the ship, notifying the crew that it was proceeding, then he slowly pulled on a lever.

 

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