by John Mierau
ALLIANCE MARINES
THE ROAD TO WAR
JOHN MIERAU
Copyright 2016 by JOHN MIERAU
CHAPTER ONE
January 02 2347 Interstellar Calendar
Earth Convoy staging ground
2 Million miles beyond Lunar Orbit
Reach Convoy 51
Aboard Convoy flagship Lucky Strike
Fold Event: Imminent
“If you’ve got nothing to hide, show me what’s in your holds.”
“I’m surprised you haven’t hacked or bought your way in already.”
“Admiral, I must protest! This, this…Earther is obstructing our right to inspection!”
“It’s the each ambassador who’s obstructing. They’re intentionally delaying transfer of cargo already we paid them for!”
Admiral Ashlan Daku ignored the angry words and passed the glowing screen back to the officer standing at attention before her. “Thank you, Lieutenant. Be safe up there. Dismissed.”
The message-bearer couldn’t hide his gratitude as he saluted and fled the elegantly appointed sitting room for the spartan ship’s corridor beyond.
Airlock doors slid in from both walls to seal in the middle. Their surfaces were painted with swaths of color to disguise their purpose. The entire room was bathed in elegance. Glass-front bookcases, paintings, luxurious sofas, and chairs populated the room. Persian rugs were even fixed to the floor. Soothing yellow light thrown from lamps instead of glow squares and wall tracks completed the sense that this was an important place. Only one incongruity pierced the illusion of timelessness and order: in the very centre of the room stood a circular plastic and glass table. Seven crash couches, raised to sitting positions, surrounded it.
Only two couches were occupied. Ashlan kept the weight of her concerns from showing on her face, instead constructing the understanding, patient expression she saved for rich fools and politicians. “Ambassadors,” she purred in her deep, smoky voice as she reclaimed the seat between a man and a woman. “This is no way to start our journey together. Let’s begin again, shall we?”
The man and the woman were silent as Ashlan secured her flight harness into place. “My aunty once shared with me her secret to a happy marriage,” she said lightly, her smile warming the edges of her mingled Persian and Ostrovian accent. “Shall I share it with you? Dennis?”
The ambassador for Earth stopped glaring at the other woman long enough to catch Ashlan’s eye. People had a hard time staying angry when she poured on the charm. She hoped she had enough of it stocked for the years ahead.
She peered at him playfully, and Dennis rolled his eyes. “Yes, Admiral,” he chuckled. “Please do.”
She nodded her gratitude and swung her head to the woman, her eyebrows asking for permission.
The ambassador for Reach shrugged her shoulders noncommittally. “Sure, Admiral.”
She held a hand to her chest. “I am Ashlan, please.”
The woman rolled her eyes. “Spare me the ‘I’m just a simple woman’ routine, ‘Ashlan.’ Wearing robes and silks instead of a uniform doesn’t fool anyone. You’re no grandmother, you’re military commander of a thirty-six thousand person, twenty-nine ship strong military force, Admiral.”
Ashlan laughed. “Coral! The convoys are joint ventures between all seven world members, not…not invasion Fleets.”
She ran her silk scarf between her fingers. “I wear no uniform because I represent no government. Convoy law governs us all, even if I do enforce it on this particular crossing. There are no other laws where we are about to go: just like a marriage, we need to work together. I have shepherded three convoys before.” She sighed. “No one talks about the work done between our worlds, in the distance between them. But we always do the work.” She leaned forward whispering conspiratorially. “We will do the work again. Consider it…our honeymoon.”
That provoked nervous laughter all around. There were no windows in this room, deep inside the centrifugal wheel providing convoy flagship Lucky Strike with gravity, but the bolts of energy surging and arcing around the convoy were on their minds just the same.
Folding a bubble of spacetime full of ships, cargo, and crew through a man-made hole in the universe was a proven shortcut to traversing the stars in years instead of centuries. Traveling by Fold was the great boon that allowed Earth to found the six colonies, of which Reach was one, as was Ashlan’s own home of Ostrov.
The Fold was also a great equalizer.
The moments after the universe went away—or rather, the Fold holding the convoy was pushed outside of it—were marked by violent gravitic, electric, and magnetic storms called ‘the Churn.’ Ships were tossed like marbles. Some were sucked to the edges of the Fold’s tiny, temporary, spherical reality where titanic forces crushed them to nothing.
People died. Even rich people. Even important people.
Even the ruling elite, like Dennis and Coral, could disappear in the Churn. Mostly they survived. Seldom were the heavily fortified bunkers like this one—on ships strategically positioned in the safest parts of the convoy—ever touched.
But it could happen.
Like the first sailing ships who braved the seas, the first space ships to pierce the black of space to plunder other planets followed a siren song crooning of wealth, prosperity, and opportunity on a scale too vast not to pursue.
But those minutes before the Fold took hold were murder on the nerves.
The Fold would happen when the Fold happened. The science of predicting the threshold for a Fold even was only accurate to within thirty-one hours. Therefore, other than ‘today,’ the men and women of the convoy could only wait for the rough weather to come.
And wait they did, in ships of all kinds and sizes. Some were little more than airtight buildings, reinforced against the treacherous Churn. Spinning wheels provided gravity to some. Others were the barest scaffolds of metal connecting engines to tanks of air, and water, and fuel. For all the ships -the awkward and ungainly, the impractically beautiful, the stalwart and ugly- the waiting was hard.
As often happened when frightened laughter was let loose, Ashlan, Dennis, and Coral were soon hooting and howling. The cathartic release was on a scale beyond the joke, but that was okay, too.
“The secret?” she prompted again.
Dennis nodded, wiping tears from his eyes. This time Coral, too, gestured for Ashlan to continue.
“A happy marriage,” Ashlan shared, “is the union of two good forgivers.”
Dennis and Coral eyed each other warily again.
“There needs to be trust for forgiveness,” Coral said, directing the words past Ashlan to Earth’s ambassador. “We know about the ‘farm equipment’ you sent to Reach in the last convoy. You want Reach to trust you? We need some assurances we’re not going to pop out the Fold over Earth 2.0.”
Dennis sniffed. “We’ve taken sensible precautions, nothing more. Gov has never and will never initiate a conflict with a colony world. You have my work.” He leaned forward. “Now, I would like your word that the cyber-attacks and surveillance of our in-convoy research projects and business assets will stop!”
“Yes, this is what time in the convoy is for,” Ashlan assured them both. “Additional inspections can be arranged,” she assured Carol, raising a hand to pre-emptively calm the Earth Ambassador, “and in exchange, an effort could be made to sway the rogue agents involved in politically motivated cyber intrustions.”
Carol stiffened. Ashlan touched her arm. “There’s room for movement on both sides, yes?”
Neither ambassador replied.
Ashlan extended her hands towards the empty chairs around the table. “There’s just us three, this
time. We have twenty-six months together, Ambassadors. We owe it to the citizens of a hungry Earth, and to a colony being asked to do far more than anyone ever imagined, to make that time count.”
Coral’s lips pressed together as she pondered the mystery of those empty chairs.
Ashlan kept her confident smile going as she, too, stared at the empty places.
Four empty chairs. Four lost colonies.
Yanshou.
Prise du Pied.
Glory.
Drayton.
If Ostrov did not send a convoy soon, it would officially be five lost colonies.
While Reach, the last child of Earth, suffered to meet the needs of its mother, and its hungry billions.
“Earth really doesn’t know?” Coral asked, her eyes desperate for an answer from the admiral or Earth’s ambassador.
“No one knows why the convoys stopped coming,” Ashlan answered, and Dennis struggled for opacity. He knew no more than she, Ashlan was sure. Even Earth couldn’t keep a secret of this magnitude. Why would it? No, Dennis did not know… and that’s what made him so angry. To cover the fear.
Artfully hidden emergency lights flashed red.
Dennis stiffened. “Did we Fold?”
Red lights. Not yellow. Ashlan hid her own concern. “Let’s see.” Sliding her fingers across the table, she triggered a view of what lay outside.
Red and orange streaks of energy, swirling fast just beyond the outermost ships of the convoy. The Moon and Earth in the distance.
They had not Folded, Ashlan saw. What caused the alarm, then?
The doors hissed open. Another break in protocol, Ashlan thought, anxiety rising. Had there been another terrorist attack? Had violence broken out between Earther and Reacher factions, even here in the convoy?
Thundering boots echoed in the hall. Too many people were on their feet instead of strapping in, as was protocol with the Fold almost on top of them. It could happen in minutes, or hours, or seconds. What had possessed her crew?
Ashlan was shaken further to hear panicked shouts from the veteran convoy crew racing past in the corridor.
She was on her feet and rounding the table when the senior duty officer for the wheel appeared, screaming for Ashlan to come. To see.
She followed. The ambassadors followed. The duty officer held her hand to her mouth, unable to answer their questions. Ashlan pressed her for answers in commanding tones and honeyed ones, but to no avail. They squeezed into the elevator and rounded on the duty officer, but she backed into the corner, shaking her head. Tears leaked out her eyes. She pressed her other hand over her mouth, as if holding in a scream.
The doors opened on the outer level of the spinning, gravity-providing space wheel. Here, audible alarms hammered her ears. Dennis succumbed to the duty officer’s terror and froze in place there in the elevator, but Coral followed Ashlan. Half a dozen crew were on their knees in the corridor, or slumped against the walls, crying. Aslan ran past them, danced around stumbling, unseeing senior officers struck dumb and mute from shock.
Ashlan made it to the outer observation deck. Her decades aboard ship allowed her to look out at the stars spinning around, and orient herself quickly enough to see what had changed in their world.
Her legs almost gave out.
“By My Gods, no!” Ashlan gasped.
“What? Ashlan what is—?” The Reach ambassador’s words cut off as her eyes locked onto one of the blown-up images covering even screen in the room.
Wordlessly, she buried her face in Ashlan’s shoulder, shaking with silent sobs and screams.
“It’s coming!” someone screamed, just as the orange and red bolts racing faster and faster around the convoy exploded into a solid wall of brilliant light. The pink of sunset, shifted to bloody neon and finally exploded into a searing, corona of white for the barest of instants.
When the light was gone, so was the convoy, in another place. The faintest afterimages of the light remained to illuminate the black of true nothingness beyond.
Ashlan grabbed the woman crying on her shoulder and squeezed her tight. Her own tears spilled.
They were in the Fold, their years-long journey to Reach begun.
The world outside was gone.
CHAPTER TWO
January 02 2347
Reach System
Planet Reach
Southern Hemisphere
Caran Corp Mining Facility 12
Lehu ‘Lee’ Zhang watched the bird arrive with a hand shading his dark brown eyes.
The moons reflected Reach’s sun in the early pre-dawn hours, turning the sky a bright orange before daylight settled it back to its usual pale yellow.
Lee felt the weight of the decisions to come.
If the worst came to pass, he hoped he had the strength to make the right call.
The ship from South Reach City had spiked into low orbit before rocketing back down on a pillar of fire. Lee shrugged his shoulders inside the ridiculous black suit jacket Caran Corp regulations required all department heads and executives to wear, and watched the unusual arrival descend from the heavens.
There was nothing usual about today, Lee thought, again fighting down panic.
This was no cargo ship, and this was not a typical rough dropship landing. This was a Caran Corp passenger craft. The big burners at the bottom of the rocket flared out long before landing, replaced by four jet-assisted rotors, landing the glossy black craft with a feather’s touch, right at the end of the landing grid closest to the gantry into the mine.
“Jesus, Zhang,” growled Lee’s boss and Facility 12’s Chief Administrator Louis Helman. “You look like a miner!” He held up a slate to Lee’s face, letting the built-in camera show Lee the smear of dirt down his left cheek.
Lee rubbed his cheek with the arm of his suit jacket. “Sorry, sir.”
Helman shook his head in disgust, then started towards the ship. “Let’s go,” he wheezed, forgetting Lee and fidgeting nervously with the curved plastic tubes of his nasal cannula, then tugging on the fanny pack he carried his oxygen pack inside. Lee followed behind.
Lee barely noticed his own cannula. Like virtually all the colonists natively born on Reach 581, the third planet in the solar system, wearing air tubes outside was second nature.
Louis Helman was an Earther, on a 5-year tour with Caran Corp. His ruddy complexion had only gotten ruddier in the three months since he’d arrived. The mine administrator was embarrassed about the purply splotches on his hands and tips of his ears, even though medical had cleared him to remain on duty.
All of which made his standing order banning face gear from admin-level meetings all the more curious. He’d even docked Lee’s pay for leaving his cannula draped around his poorly knotted tie while delivering his weekly departmental report up in the administration office.
Lee hid his contempt for the imported Corporate Stooge as they walked onto the landing and take-off tarmac to meet Caran’s VP of Resource Management for the entire planet of Reach. It was a beautiful day, topside, and he tried to savour it. Lee usually welcomed every chance to get out of the mine and enjoy the crystal clear vistas offered by the site’s isolated location amidst rolling hills—and by the thin atmosphere which made the nasal cannula’s a necessary precaution for anyone leaving a pressurized structure.
The view had no calming effect today.
Ahead, the shining, impeccably maintained luxury craft’s rotors were already disappearing beneath smooth, aerodynamic panels which would ease the craft’s journey back up through what atmosphere Reach had.
Administrator Helman waited at the bottom of a ramp being lowered to the tarmac. He turned and grimaced for Lee to hurry his ass up and fall in line behind him as they waited for the mighty Caran VP to disembark.
Lee obliged him and hurried up, but he knew he had minutes left before anyone from Caran head office would step out of the craft. ‘Head Orifice’ was full of suits like Louis: imported from Earth to manage wealth most native Reachers woul
d never touch in a lifetime of work.
The purply cyanotic skin splotches were common on Earthers, among the other symptoms of poor adaptation to Reach’s low atmospheric pressure and oxygen content.
There was a joke kids liked to tell about that, contrasting the splotches with the exploding dye packs company stores mounted to food. Nobody stole more, nobody was more greedy than Earthers, so when they came to steal from Reach, the planet gave them the marks to prove it.
Lee was used to seeing greed marks on his co-workers, two years into his first five-year tour as Chief Engineer—technically an executive position, and one of the highest he’d ever heard a Reacher of attaining.
Lee didn’t know any Reacher who’d been elevated to administer level by Caran or any of the dozens of other corps who kept the colony functioning at a profit. Or of one who’d owned stock in said corporations. He certainly didn’t know anyone besides his corporate overlords who’d ever left the planet.
He took the time waiting to stare back out at the rolling mountains. Thanks to the low barometric pressure tea boiled at lower temps, faster, bread baked hotter and faster and the views of the rolling hills that covered most of Reach were always staggeringly beautiful and ultra-high-definition clear.
He turned his head and tried again for a moment of calm from the unchanging landscape. He thought of Maggie, how she would be staring out at almost the same view, from their farm on the outskirts of Sixth Landing.
Reach was full of big views, wide-open spaces, and thin air that was eagerly gulping all the chlorofluorocarbons the terraforming plants could churn out to thicken and heat the planet. No matter how much of a hurry Earth was in to pillage Reach, it was a big planet with a long way to go before the impact would be felt.
But Earth corps like Caran aimed to take all they could from Reach… and they were just getting started.
“We all know you love your details, Zhang,” Louis muttered out of the corner of his mouth as the door in the side of the craft finally unbuttoned with a hiss, “but if VP Dhawal asks a question, just stick to the bullet points. Keep it short, yes?”