by Joe Vasicek
Stars of Blood and Glory
by Joe Vasicek
Copyright © 2013 Joseph Vasicek.
All rights reserved.
Editing by Josh Leavitt.
Cover art by Lorenz Hideyoshi Ruwwe.
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any similarity to actual persons, organizations, or events is purely coincidental.
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Table of Contents
Copyright Page
Table of Contents
Prologue
Part I
1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5
Part II
6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10
Part III
11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15
Part IV
16 | 17 | 18 | 19 | 20
Epilogue
Author’s Note | Acknowledgments
THE ONLY HOPE FOR THE LAST FREE STARS NOW LIES ON THE PATH OF BLOOD AND GLORY.
The princess of Shinihon could not have picked a worse time to run away. The largest Hameji battle fleet ever gathered threatens to overrun the last of the free stars. To make matters worse, a rogue assassin from an unknown faction has killed the high admiral of the Federation. Without clear leadership, the war may be lost before she can be found.
But Danica Nova and her band of Tajji mercenaries are no strangers to lost causes. They've fought the Hameji before, and they'll fight them again—not for honor, or for glory, but simply for the pay. War has been their way of life ever since the diaspora from the homeworld.
Master Sergeant Roman Krikoryan is one of the few remaining mercenaries still old enough to remember the homeworld. But he's an old cyborg, and his humanity is fading. Death is a mercy he doesn't expect to find on this mission.
They aren't the only ones after the princess, however. Hungry for glory and eager to make a name for himself, Sholpan's son Abaqa seeks to make the girl his slave. Though only a boy, he'll stop at nothing to prove himself to his Hameji brethren.
With the Federation in disarray, the bloody end of the war may come too soon for some of them. But one thing is certain—not all of them will live to see it.
Prologue
Kill him.
The thought resounded in the girl’s mind almost as loudly as the high-pitched buzzing in her ears. She opened her eyes and uncurled from her hiding place just inside the hatchway, stretching out her cramped muscles one at a time so as not to fall from her precarious perch in the darkness. Through the bulkheads, the low groan of metal on metal alerted her that they’d docked.
Swiftly yet silently, she slipped out of the narrow recess and reached for the smooth metal walls of the ship’s main water tank. She went by touch rather than sight, feeling her way over the moist, slippery tiles. The mechanical suction cups on the palms of her hands caught and held, and she leveraged for position until she was sprawled out across the inverted surface like a lizard on the underside of a rock.
Kill him.
The thought, though cold, carried no anger or malice. If she felt anything, it was only a sense of professional precision, like a dentist picking out his tools before performing a complicated extraction. An image of her target came readily to her mind through the datalink implant in the back of her neck: tall face, thick black hair, piercing eyes. Subtler details followed: the sound of his voice, the style of his gait, the twitch in his forehead when he was stressed. As she crawled upside down toward the base of the reservoir, she felt almost as if she were on her way to visit an old, familiar friend.
Kill him.
The girl carefully lowered herself down the wall, the frame of her skin-suit stiffening to give her added strength. The water wasn’t particularly cold, but it had a slightly metallic smell. She reached below her chin and pulled a flap of thick fabric up over her mouth and nose, breathing into it to activate the oxygen mask. Satisfied, she took a deep breath and slipped into the water headfirst.
Even through the skin-suit, the wetness made her shiver. Ignoring it, she swam to the bottom and felt for the sluice gate where the floor tapered into the drain. She took a deep breath of the stale, filtered air to reassure herself that she wasn’t drowning.
A dull groan in the walls told her she didn’t have much time. Slapping one of her hands against the floor for traction, she reached with the other to find the manual release for the grating. The thick metal bars were covered with a light film of slime, but she managed to find the lever, release the lock, and pull it aside. It made a painfully loud scratching sound against the tile floor, but only because every little noise underwater was amplified in her ear.
A loud click echoed through the duct, followed by a low rumble. The girl hastily released the suction cups in her gloves and flipped herself around, hugging her arms tightly against her chest. She no sooner did so than the drain flew open and sucked her into its maw.
Her heart pounded as the current sucked her through the pitch-black tunnel. The duct was so narrow that she barely had enough room for her arms, even with her shoulders scrunched together. Fortunately, the cold metal walls were smooth and slippery.
Her feet struck the grating on the other end flat on, making her gasp at the force of the impact. Recovering quickly as the water rushed past her, she tapped her right heel against the wall to extend a laser-file from the toe of her boot, which she used to cut through the thick metal bars. She worked with practiced speed, alternating between bars to keep an even pressure on all sides, and fastened her gloves to the walls to leverage as much of her weight off of them as possible. Still, the strength of the current made it incredibly difficult. She cut through the last three bars as quickly as she could, then kicked the grating out of the way and released herself.
Moments later, she found herself floating in the bottom of a dimly lit pool. She opened her eyes and blinked, making out shapes through the bubbles. She was only a few feet below the surface, but the room was still dark enough she didn’t think anyone had seen her. She waited for almost two full minutes, breathing slowly through her mask, until she was sure the catwalks above were empty.
Coming out of the water felt almost like rebirth. She pulled the mask down and allowed herself the luxury of one deep breath before crawling hastily up the wall to a niche where the auxiliary lights didn’t quite reach. Once there, she waited in silence until the skin-suit had fully shed the excess water, leaving her dry.
Kill him.
Her heart beat faster now, but out of anticipation, not fear. She wet her lips and crept forward, past the main doorway to the maintenance hatch on the side.
The sound of footsteps on the metal grating of the catwalk made her heart skip a beat. She froze, not making a sound even to breathe.
“What was that?”
“Eh? What are you talking about?”
The girl reached slowly to a compact pistol at her belt. Her muscles tensed as she kept herself perfectly still.
“I thought I heard something down there. Something in the water.”
“It’s probably just your imagination. Come on, let’s go.”
The footsteps faded until a door hissed shut beyond the girl’s vision. Just to be safe, she counted to sixty before slipping out of her hiding place and into the nearest maintenance shaft.
The datalink provided her with a detailed map of the station, which she analyzed quickly as she slipped through the narrow shaft. The network of maintenance corridors would bring her within three levels of the command center, but less than fifty meters from the war room. Security this deep was surprisingly minimal: a couple of cameras and a door lock that shoul
dn’t give her any more than a few minutes’ trouble. Her exit would be slightly more complicated, but with dozens of jump-equipped shuttles at the station’s various platforms, she had her pick of options.
It took a little less than ten minutes to get to the exit point. After double checking the station network to make sure there weren’t any cameras watching the corridor, she did a quick thermal scan through the door and palmed the access panel. The door hissed as it opened, making her cringe at the noise, but there was no one on the other side. She slipped out and quickly palmed it shut.
Kill him.
The white-tiled corridor was surprisingly well-lit. Even with her prosthetic enhancements, it took a moment for her eyes to adjust. The space was narrower than the main hallways, but it still felt open and dangerous. She kept close to the wall and moved swiftly, her hand at the pistol on her belt. Now that she was deep in the station, adrenaline pulsed through her veins.
Kill him.
She reached a secondary elevator at the end of the corridor, where it came to a T with a wider one that was curved so that she couldn’t see further than twenty meters in either direction. A quick check of the network showed that the elevator was currently unoccupied. She hastily palmed the access panel and waited for the elevator to open.
“… it’s going to be big this time, I tell you,” her audio enhancements picked up from around the corridor. “They’re not going to let us off easy again.”
Footsteps—two men, by the sound of it. Within a few moments, they’d be close enough to see her.
“You really think so?” said the second voice, growing clearer as the speaker came closer. “I don’t know. This isn’t the first time they’ve threatened to attack.”
“Yeah, but the latest intel shows a lot more movement than before. I heard that they’re pulling forces from as far away as Tajjur and the New Pleiades.”
“Come on. You can’t trust everything you hear. Stars! Who knows how rumors like that get started?”
The two men stepped plainly into view just as the elevator doors hissed open. The girl slipped inside before either of them had time to see her and quickly keyed in her destination, three floors up. The doors hissed shut, keeping her safely from view.
She permitted herself one silent gasp of relief as she hastily searched the station network for the command schedule via her datalink implant. According to the public schedule, her target would be holding a strategic planning sessions in—yes, that was it—forty minutes.
Kill him.
The elevator slowed as it reached its destination, and she kept close to the wall as the doors hissed open. The corridor outside was empty. She slipped out and stepped briskly toward the war room, stopping only to hold the palm of her hand over the access panel as her implants hacked the lock. Within moments, she was in.
The empty war room was wide and elliptical, with a vaulted ceiling almost twice as high as the corridor outside. Giant display screens covered the walls, streaming video from the exterior of the station so that the girl felt as if she were alone in a giant observation dome. The starry band of the galaxy glowed brightly in the depths of space, the orange-blue wisps of the Good Hope Nebula passing slowly out of view down by her feet. Directly in front of her, the black silhouette of the rogue planet opened like a maw of darkness. An enormous holographic projector sat in the center of the table, with a dozen plush leather chairs around the edge.
It didn’t take her long to find a hiding place. Using the suction cups in her gloves and boots, she crawled beneath the table and pressed herself against the underside, keeping her profile as low as possible. The frame of her skin-suit stiffened, allowing her to relax as she settled in for the forty-minute wait.
She closed her eyes and controlled her breath. Seconds passed into minutes as reality faded from her consciousness. She visualized a wide open sky, with an empty wasteland of rust-red desert stretching all the way to the unbroken horizon. The memory of the familiar landscape calmed her into a meditative state. She could practically taste the dust in the air and hear the whistling of the wind as it passed over the barren landscape.
She turned and saw a cluster of weathered adobe huts and sun-faded tents, with a rickety old windmill towering up near the center. Home. She stepped forward, sand tickling her toes as her dress and headscarf fluttered in the wind, until she reached an old sun-faded rug draped over a doorway.
Inside, a narrow tunnel of brick and stone stretched out in front of her, with cozy, familiar rooms branching off on either side. Arabesque carpets covered the uneven dirt floor, while old, faded glowlamps illuminated the interior from various niches in the adobe walls.
The moment she stepped inside, a feeling of supreme peace swept over her. She ran her hands along the rough adobe, letting the familiarity of the place fill her. Just around that corner at the end of the corridor, someone was waiting for her, someone who—
Kill him.
The datalink implant jolted her out of her trance, alerting her to the sound of footsteps in the hallway. A heady rush passed through her, making her shiver, but with practiced concentration she kept herself perfectly still.
The door hissed open, shattering the last remaining shards of her meditation. From her vantage point, she watched the boots of almost a dozen Federation officers as they entered the room and gathered around the table.
“Colonel Jameson, you’re looking quite well.”
“Thank you. I wish I could say the same of my men.”
“I haven’t seen Major Hector at all yet—does anyone know where he is?”
“Last I heard, he was engaged in counter-recon operations down by Eyn-Gatta.”
“You don’t suppose—”
The room grew silent as one last pair of boots stepped into the doorway. There was a quick shuffle as the others drew themselves up at attention, facing the newcomer.
“At ease, gentlemen.”
The sound of his voice sent chills shooting down the girl’s back. She licked her lips and flexed her fingers.
Kill him.
The men took their seats around the table. A couple of them stretched out their legs so that their feet were a hand’s breadth from her hiding place, but the external frame of her skin-suit kept her fastened in place. She drew in a silent breath and settled in, biding her time.
“I’m afraid I have bad news,” said her target. “A courier from the fourth division just arrived with reports of massive Hameji movement in the Gamma sector. Major Hector’s forces have been overwhelmed and routed from their positions.”
“Overwhelmed? By an advance party?”
“Yes—an advance party that outnumbered his own forces three to one.”
A nervous rumble arose from the men. One of them scooted his chair back and rose to his feet.
“But Admiral Genjiro, why would the Hameji move to attack us so soon? Our reconnaissance shows that they’re still assembling their forces out beyond the local cloud.”
“Because, gentlemen, I believe we are dealing with more than one battle fleet.”
The room fell deadly silent. Two of the men started tapping their feet nervously against the floor.
“There are several reasons to believe that this is the case,” her target continued. “Analyzing the Hameji movements further, however, we see that their fleets are not uniformly coordinated. This development, I believe, warrants some attention.”
“Begging your pardon, Admiral, what does that matter when their capital ships outnumber us by so many?”
“At this point, any advantage, if properly leveraged, may prove decisive. We still hold all of the important star systems in the sector. If we coordinate our movements, we might be able to repel their advance.”
“But if they’ve already entered the rift,” a new voice said, “how can we possibly hold our current position?”
The admiral sighed. “You’re right, I’m afraid. Every moment we spend at this outpost, we risk getting flanked or pinned down. I therefore propose that we l
eave a small force at Eyn-Gatta to harrow the enemy’s rear and move our base of operations back to New Vela.”
His proposal met with a chorus of assent.
“Ende, I want you to move toward the Gamma sector and try to cut off the Hameji advance fleet from their main command. It won’t stop them, but it might slow them down. Webb, I want you to provide the support for Ende’s rear and watch for any Hameji flanking maneuvers. We’ll concentrate the balance of our forces in the rift—whatever else happens, we can’t afford to let them through.”
“Are you sure that’s wise?” asked a young man. He nervously tapped his fingers against his knees only inches from the girl’s face. “If we fail to secure Zeta and Omega sectors, the Hameji could launch a secondary campaign and bypass the rift altogether.”
“I realize that,” said her target, “but I don’t believe the Hameji will come at us that way. The hasty disorganization of this first attack shows me that their fleets are disunited, with each commander hoping to beat the others to the first spoils. It takes more than a standard month to bypass the local clouds, and I don’t think any of them have the patience for that.”
Silence again. From the lack of objection, the girl guessed that the rest of the officers agreed with him. She could easily visualize their nods of approval.
“I have a strong feeling that the coming campaign will prove decisive,” he added in a low voice. “No military force in the galaxy has ever struck the Hameji a decisive defeat, but every empire must one day fall. For the sake of the last remaining free worlds in this galaxy, let us all perform our duty with valor and honor. To your ships, men.”
The girl waited in careful silence as the men all rose from their seats and made their way to the door. A few of them lingered to chat about inconsequential things, but she kept a close watch on the boots belonging to her target. As expected, he stayed behind until he was alone.