by Jason Fry
DEDICATION
FOR MOM AND DAD,
WHO TAUGHT ME THAT A HOUSE
OVERFLOWING WITH BOOKS
IS A GOOD START
INHABITED MOONS OF SATURN
THE SHADOW COMET
CONTENTS
Dedication
Inhabited Moons of Saturn
The Shadow Comet
CHAPTER 1: Asteroid Encounter
CHAPTER 2: Death Ship
CHAPTER 3: Titan
CHAPTER 4: The Tale of the Iris
CHAPTER 5: Mission to P/2093 K1
CHAPTER 6: The Hunted
CHAPTER 7: Return to Ceres
CHAPTER 8: The Mysterious Message
CHAPTER 9: Water and Ore
CHAPTER 10: Loris Unger
CHAPTER 11: A Princeling of Ganymede
CHAPTER 12: Jupiter Invasion
CHAPTER 13: Europa and Io
CHAPTER 14: The Callisto Depths
CHAPTER 15: The Iris Cache
CHAPTER 16: What Vesuvia Knew
CHAPTER 17: Showdown at Saturn
CHAPTER 18: The Family Is the Ship
CHAPTER 19: At Saint Mary’s
A SPACER’S LEXICON
Back Ad
About the Author
Credits
Copyright
About the Publisher
1
ASTEROID ENCOUNTER
Tycho Hashoone went over the checklist in his head one more time before he stepped back from the cannon in the bow of the Shadow Comet.
Projectile loaded into drum. Charge set. Projectile transferred to loading cradle. Cradle status green. Barrel clear. Barrel status green.
“Good to go, Mr. Grigsby,” Tycho said.
The Comet’s hulking warrant officer nodded, his white dreadlocks bobbing. He looked over at Huff Hashoone, who stood watching them in the gunnery bay. Grigsby raised an eyebrow, and Tycho’s grandfather grinned—or at least, a smile split the half of his face that was still flesh and blood. The right half of his head was gleaming chrome, his artificial eye a brilliant spark of white light.
“Ready to fire then, Master Tycho?” Grigsby asked. The tattoos on his powerful arms illuminated in response to some internal timer, sending green, orange, and blue fire snaking across his dark-brown skin.
Tycho looked back at the cannon. The firing console was silent, waiting for the command that would send a shell hurtling across space. He started to go through the checklist again, then shook his head. Huff and Grigsby were just testing him, trying to throw off his confidence.
“Ready,” Tycho said. “Fire at will, Mr. Grigsby.”
“Pow,” said Grigsby as he pantomimed tapping the gun’s firing console with his fingertips.
“Yeh only forgot one thing, lad,” Huff said. “Too bad it was important.”
“What?” Tycho asked. “What did I—”
He stopped and went through the checklist again. Cradle status green, barrel status green, and . . .
Oh.
“I fired the gun with the projectile locked in the cradle instead of chambered in the barrel, didn’t I?” he asked in a small voice. “You have to release the cradle and then fire. Glad I don’t have to explain that one to Mom.”
“Wouldn’t have been no explainin’,” Huff said. “At that power level, the plasma arc would’ve melted the cradle, the cannon, and a few meters of the hull. Yeh been growin’, lad, so you’d be at least a couple of handfuls of ash.”
Tycho paled. Grigsby grinned, then tapped the console, cycling back through the firing menus.
“Rest easy, Master Tycho—cannon won’t fire with the cradle locked,” Grigsby said. “But it would dump the charge, and you’d have to recharge instead of firing. Not a great strategy with enemies about.”
Tycho nodded, angry with himself.
“Let’s take it from the top then, Master Tycho,” Grigsby said. “Starting with the Comet’s weapons complement.”
Tycho hesitated, knowing he could refuse. Though only fourteen years old, he was a midshipman who served on the Comet’s quarterdeck—and he was a Hashoone. That meant he outranked Grigsby and anyone else from the lower decks.
Yes, he’d made a dumb mistake. But did he really need to recite weapons specifications like some eight-year-old who’d just been sent down the ladder to learn the spacer’s trade?
Then he noticed his grandfather staring at him, the warning plain on his ruined face. When Tycho was born, Grigsby had already spent decades serving aboard the Comet. He knew the privateer’s systems better than anyone aboard—maybe even Huff. And Grigsby’s father had been a Hashoone retainer before him, as had his grandfather, and so on back for centuries.
“My apologies, Mr. Grigsby,” Tycho said. “I was still mad about that blasted cradle release. This gun is called the bow chaser, because—”
Alarms began to blare.
“Bridge crew to quarterdeck, all hands to stations,” said the clipped, calm voice of Vesuvia, the artificial intelligence program that the Comet’s computer used to communicate with her crew.
The order left no time for polite conversation. Grigsby was already hurrying out of the gunnery bay, gold coins jangling below his holsters. Tycho ducked around his grandfather and ran after him.
The alert had come during one shift’s midday meal, and crewers were still wiping their mouths on their sleeves as they rushed out of the wardroom. Scarred, hard-eyed men and women mumbled greetings as Tycho ran down the forward companionway and emerged into the lower deck, dimly lit and thick with smoke. Tycho dodged retainers as they strapped on pistols and swords, spun to avoid gun crews as they wheeled projectile cannons across the deck, and picked up a foot as the ship’s cat shot by, seeking shelter.
The bosun whistled out orders on his pipes as Tycho reached the forward ladderwell and scrambled up the rungs. Four meters above, he emerged in a different world—the well-lit quarterdeck, whose broad viewports overlooked the emptiness of space. This was the exclusive province of the bridge crew, all of whom were his family.
His mother, Diocletia, was buckling herself into the captain’s chair, closest to the bow. To her left and slightly behind her sat Tycho’s eighteen-year-old brother, Carlo, the Comet’s pilot, his handsome face creased by a pale scar across his right cheek that he’d received battling pirates two years before. The seat to Diocletia’s right was still vacant—it belonged to Tycho’s father, Mavry Malone, the ship’s first mate.
On the main screen overhead, a cross marked the Comet’s position deep in the asteroid cluster known as the Hildas. A flashing triangle indicated an unknown object, with a dotted line mapping out its current course. Tycho studied the rows of numbers on the screen. The object was moving too quickly to be an asteroid, but very slowly for a starship.
“Look out below, Tyke!” someone yelled. He took a quick step forward as his twin sister, Yana, hurtled down the ladderwell with only her hands on the outsides of the ladder, kicking her feet nimbly to land with a thud on the quarterdeck.
“Don’t call me Tyke,” Tycho protested.
Diocletia gathered her black hair into a loose ponytail and looked over her shoulder with a scowl.
“Yana, must you arrive on my quarterdeck like a supertanker missing its dock?” she asked.
Yana ignored the criticism, peering at the main screen. “Is that a ship?”
“Sensors are your job—strap in and take a look for yourself,” Carlo said. “But so far there are no ion emissions or responses to our hails.”
The Hashoones were privateers who made their living by seizing cargoes carried by freighters and other civilian craft. Any ship that came their way was a potential prize to be captured—and a payday for the Comet’s crew.
But they had to be
careful. As privateers the family had to obey the laws of space. They held a letter of marque authorizing them to attack enemy ships on behalf of the Jovian Union, which governed the nearly two dozen inhabited moons of Jupiter, Saturn, and Uranus. Only Earth’s ships could be considered enemies; those crewed by neutrals or their fellow Jovians had to be allowed safe passage.
Tycho jumped as someone else crashed to the deck behind him. His father had descended in the same reckless manner as Yana. Tycho turned back, heart still thudding, to find his mother’s mouth set in a thin line.
“What?” Mavry asked with a grin. Diocletia just shook her head and sighed. Giggles leaked out from the hand Yana had clamped over her mouth. Tycho felt laughter threatening to rise up in his own throat and hastily looked away.
“Whose starship?” he asked. He wasn’t talking about the unknown object out there among the tumbling rocks of the Hildas, either; he was asking who was in charge of the Comet.
“Mine,” Carlo said. “If you’re done gawking like a tourist, why don’t you sit down and run communications?”
Tycho bit back an angry reply—he was indeed still standing beside his station while the rest of his family finished strapping in. He sank into his chair and brought his console to life with practiced keystrokes. He settled his headset over his dark-brown hair and shrugged into the harnesses, buckling them across his chest.
“My boards are green, Vesuvia,” Tycho said. “Taking over communications and navigation.”
“And I’m up on sensors,” Yana said, all business now. “Bogey’s eighteen thousand klicks out. Let’s try a full-spectrum scan.”
“I’ll keep navigation, Tyke,” Carlo said. “I’ve already got an intercept course keyed in if we need it.”
“Understood,” Tycho said. “Vesuvia, open all audio channels. Black transponders.”
“Acknowledged,” Vesuvia said coolly. “Transmitting no recognition code.”
Under normal operations, every starship transmitted a signal indicating its name and allegiance. But in deep space, few freighters or civilian craft broadcast such information unless interrogated by another ship—at which point they could hide behind a false identity in an attempt to avoid trouble. Privateers did the same thing, but for the opposite reason, hoping to draw close to unwary vessels before revealing their true allegiances and intentions.
“Unknown ship, we have you on our scopes,” Tycho said, trying to make his voice sound deep and confident. “Identify yourself.”
There was no response. Tycho raised the volume as far as it would go but heard nothing beyond a hiss of static.
“Unknown ship, I repeat, identify yourself,” he said. “We have you on our scopes and are preparing to intercept you.”
“Scans show no emissions whatever,” Yana said. “And no temperature signature. If that’s a ship, she’s as cold as space.”
“Vesuvia, scan visual channels,” Tycho said. “Maybe her audio transmitters are down.”
“No transmissions detected,” Vesuvia said.
Tycho studied his control board, determined not to miss anything. He and his siblings cooperated as a crew, but they were also competing to succeed their mother as captain of the Comet, and she noted every decision they made—good and bad—in the electronic record known as the Log.
Carlo drummed his fingers on his console.
“Vesuvia, lock in that intercept course,” he said. “Let’s take a closer look, shall we?”
“And hope this time we make some money,” Yana said with a sigh.
“Belay that,” barked Diocletia without turning around, her shoulders rigid.
Yana looked at Tycho and shrugged—she hadn’t said anything they hadn’t all been thinking. Two years before, the Hashoones had captured Thoadbone Mox’s pirate ship, the Hydra, and been paid handsomely for rescuing Jovian citizens from one of Earth’s corporate factories. The windfall had been enough for the Comet’s crewers to indulge in an epic shindy of a shore leave that had ended with six in the infirmary and three more in jail, to the lasting pride of all involved.
But since then, little had gone right. The Jovian Union had claimed the Hydra for its own, leading to a bitter battle in the courts that still hadn’t been resolved. And for much of the last year, the Hashoones’ luck had been stubbornly bad: most of the vessels that strayed into the Comet’s path turned out to be Jovian. Those that did fly the flag of Earth were escorted by warships, or they carried cargos that weren’t worth the time and effort to seize.
Maybe the ship out there would change their luck.
If it was a ship.
“Detach tanks,” Carlo said.
“Acknowledged,” Vesuvia said. Above their heads, they heard a metallic clank as the Comet shook slightly and separated from the cluster of spherical fuel tanks she used for long voyages.
“Tanks detached,” Vesuvia said.
“Beginning intercept,” Carlo said. “Tyke, Yana, eyes and ears open. Tell me anything I need to know.”
Sudden acceleration pushed the Hashoones back into their seats.
“Mind the fuel economy, son,” Mavry said mildly. “That stuff you’re burning isn’t cheap.”
Carlo apologized, but he was smiling—and Tycho found himself smiling too. His brother was a naturally gifted pilot, and it had been too long since he’d had a chance to demonstrate his talents.
The Comet descended in a smooth arc, her tanks shrinking behind her until they were just another point of light among the stars. Freed of her long-range tanks, the Comet was an elongated triangle about sixty meters long, with a trio of maneuvering engines protruding from her stern.
Carlo wiggled his fingers on the yoke and rolled slightly to port to avoid a drift of loose rock and ice, leaving just a few pebbles to rattle against the forward viewports.
“Display colors,” Carlo said.
“Displaying,” Vesuvia said, switching on the Comet’s transponders so they broadcast her true Jovian allegiance.
The Comet’s bells clang-clanged four times—it was 1400 hours, the midpoint of the afternoon watch.
“Unknown ship, this is the Shadow Comet, operating under letter of marque of the Jovian Union,” Tycho said. “Heave to and prepare for boarding.”
“Building a sensor profile,” Yana said. “Mass and configuration match commercial fuel tanks. Analyzing what’s attached to them. Still no detectable levels of emissions.”
“Well, at least she’s a ship,” Carlo said, then activated his own microphone. “Mr. Grigsby, this is the helm.”
“Aye, Master Carlo,” Grigsby said from his station in the wardroom.
“We are inbound on a bogey—eight thousand klicks to intercept,” Carlo said. “We read no ion emissions or transmissions. Tell the gunnery crews to be gentle with the triggers. Right now we’re just taking a look.”
“Light fingers it is, Master Carlo,” Grigsby rumbled.
“Seven thousand klicks,” Yana said. “She’s about forty meters long. Mass profile is consistent with tanks being half full.”
“She’s not trying to evade, and she knows we’re out here. So why the silence?” Carlo asked.
“Maybe she can’t respond,” Tycho said.
“The solar system is full of mysteries,” Mavry said. “Let’s get some facts.”
“The solar system is also full of dangers,” Diocletia said. “Yana, keep scanning the area. Remember all the pirate attacks we’ve heard about in recent months. I don’t want any surprises.”
“Aye-aye,” Yana said. Unlike privateers, pirates obeyed no law, preying on any ship they thought they could capture. Sometimes they held crews for ransom. Other times they sold them into slavery—or killed them.
Impacts like hammerblows emerged from the ladderwell, followed by grunts and a series of inventively awful oaths. The Hashoones didn’t even turn—they were familiar with the sounds of Huff Hashoone ascending from belowdecks.
“Initial scanner profile complete,” Yana said. “She’s a Jennet-class t
ransport. Profile match eighty-five percent. Probably an ore boat.”
Huff, still grumbling, stepped onto the quarterdeck with a clank of metal feet, clamping one hand onto a rung and standing behind Tycho and Yana.
“Arrr, a Jennet,” Huff rumbled. “Is she full?”
“She’s too small to get a good estimate, Grandpa,” Yana said. “I’d just be guessing.”
“Piratin’ is half guessin’, missy,” Huff said. “Whose flag she flyin’?”
“No transmissions,” Tycho said. “Best as we can tell, she’s dead in space.”
“I’m going to circle,” Carlo said.
As they approached, the unknown ship grew from a bright dot into a tiny cluster of bulbous tanks. Carlo swung the Comet wide of the transport, which was a boxy, unlovely craft. Then Carlo wheeled the ship around to approach from above and behind, careful to keep the Jennet’s fuel tanks between the Comet and any guns that might be pointed at her.
“Any ideas?” Carlo asked.
“Either there’s nobody at the helm or controls are unresponsive,” Diocletia said. “Otherwise they’d blink the running lights, or roll the craft, or something.”
“So we can salvage her then?” Yana asked.
“Depends how long she’s been out here,” Mavry said. “And if anyone’s looking for her. And how much money we’re willing to spend in court.”
“And if anybody on board is alive,” Tycho said.
“Arrr, that one’s easily solved,” Huff said. “Put a ventilation hole in ’er, wait a few bells, an’ then finders keepers.”
“That’s piracy, Grandfather,” Carlo said. “It would mean the hangman.”
“Ain’t never been afraid of the noose.” Huff snorted.
Diocletia turned to regard her father, one eyebrow cocked.
“And if it turns out she’s Jovian, Dad?” she asked. “Or registered on Mars or Ceres and overdue in port? If I ever forfeit our letter of marque, it won’t be for a rusty ore boat adrift in the Hildas.”
Huff subsided into muttering.
“But Mom, what if that rusty ore boat’s full of platinum from the New Potosi asteroid?” Carlo asked with a grin.