by Britt Ringel
Confidence Game
By Britt Ringel
Smashwords Edition
Copyright 2017 by Britt Ringel
All rights reserved.
No part of this book may be reproduced, scanned or distributed in any printed or electronic form without permission. Please do not participate in or encourage piracy of copyrighted materials in violation of the author’s rights. Purchase only authorized editions.
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, business establishments, events or locales is entirely coincidental.
Contents
Tuoma Class Freighter
Deck Plan
Galaxy Map
Coreward Corporate Zone Map
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
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
Chapter 45
Epilogue
Author’s Acknowledgments
K—My Love, Always
If you enjoy this book, a large reason why is because of my fantastic beta readers. I can’t believe they’ve stuck by me for this long. They’ve each read over a million words of my works for nothing more than the short paragraph before you now. Derek, Carol, and Law, your patience and diligence are amazing. Thank you for spending your time improving these novels.
If you enjoy the cover of this book, you should go to www.ampersandbookcovers.com. Monika MacFarlane’s art is phenomenal and well worth a look. Thank you, Monika, for your talent and flexibility in providing me a cover that I truly love.
Speaking of art, the image of Zanshin that appears in this book was created by the highly talented Mike Doscher. I have consulted his DeviantArt webpage many times when searching for inspiration. I cannot thank him enough for his generosity in permitting me to use his art. CSV Zanshin is an important character in the story and his incredible artwork helps bring it to life.
Thank you to my wife for her continued patience and expertise. I feel like I get to do the fun part (write the book) while she gets the short end of the stick (formatting, marketing, etc.). Thank you and I love you, Karen.
Finally, as stated on the copyright page, all places are fictional. I often use regions and cultures on our planet to help give different star systems different personalities but please believe me that they are plot devices used to add flavor and life to my fictional universe. I’m very aware that my made-up, fantasy corporations or governments have zero resemblance to the real-world cultures of contemporary Earth. Jag älskar dig, Sverige.
For more maps, layouts and information regarding my books, please visit http://www.thiscorneroftheuniverse.com.
Tuoma Class Freighter
Corporate Sailing Vessel Zanshin
Tonnage: 150,000 tonnes
Length: 230 meters
Beam: 11 meters
Draft: 17 meters
Crew Complement: 4 - 6 (3 deck officers, 1-2 engineers, 1 cargo master)
Cargo Capacity: 11 standard intermodal containers, TUES or FUES dimensions
Drives: 4 Toland-Malatech Type-33
Sensors: Standard Encountrix-60 suite
Shuttle: 1 Class-F craft
Deck Plan
(Visit ThisCorneroftheUniverse.com for larger version and extra content.)
Galaxy Map
(Visit ThisCorneroftheUniverse.com for larger version and extra content.)
Coreward Corporate Zone Map
(Visit ThisCorneroftheUniverse.com for larger version and extra content.)
Chapter 1
Yellow-orange light from the K1II star intruded into the narrow, grimy hallway of the Svean correctional facility’s primary detention wing. The humidity outside was already approaching unbearable. By midmorning, it would rain as the prison saw daily, torrential downpours during the wet season. The inexorable precipitation soaked the continent’s black soil to create quagmires that prevented all wheeled vehicles from operating in the fields during the month-long deluge. The morning rays straining into the detention wing were mostly unwelcome by its guests, heralding another backbreaking day of labor. A cautionary buzzer sounded tersely before the echoes of outer doors clanking open beckoned three hundred fifty-seven inmates to the front of their plasti-steel cages.
Inside Cell Forty-four, Reece Lochlain stood at the ready near the barred door that would soon open. The only adornments on his orange jumpsuit were his identification number, SPCÄF583324-232, and the mud stains collected over the last months.
In the adjacent cell, Lochlain heard the hoarse, rumbling coughs of a prisoner suffering from upper respiratory cristaphibacillus. Caused by local mold spores infiltrating and multiplying inside the lungs, its symptoms started mildly enough but progressively escalated to a nearly constant hack that culminated in ruptured lungs. When contracted inside the prison, URC was a death sentence.
Click. “Open Forty-four!” The shouted command rang down the filthy hall to Lochlain’s relief. The buzzer sounded a second time and he watched his cell door abruptly retract.
Click. “Two-Three-Two, front and center!”
Lochlain left his cell without a backwards glance. He turned down the hall but failed to keep his distance from the bars. Faster than he could perceive, a meaty hand from the next cell hooked the left sleeve of his jumpsuit. Thick, stubby fingers clenched around the orange fabric and yanked him off balance.
Click. “Code Red!”
Lochlain heard the distant shout and heavy footsteps as his face rebounded cruelly off plasti-steel bars. The brutal impact brought tears to his eyes and stars to his vision.
A scarred, sneering face appeared behind those stars. “You think we’d let you walk away without a present, you snitch?” The man’s breath was rancid.
Lochlain did not fight to break the hulk’s inescapable hold but flung his own body sideways using his full weight. A crude shiv thrust outward from the cell and sliced through the air where his torso had been moments ago. Still bleary-eyed, Lochlain grabbed wildly for the hand clasped around the deadly implement. He caught the man’s sizeable thumb and held on for dear life.
The burly fist began to retract slowly into the cell despite Lochlain’s best efforts to pin the hand against a cell bar. Both men grunted under the strain but the sheer physicality of the behemoth behind the bars allowed the man to reclaim his right hand even as he pulled Lochlain closer with his left. Lochlain felt his grip break and the shiv slipped back into the cell for the next strike.
A jolt of electricity suddenly lanced its way through Lochlain’s body. He felt his muscles spasm and legs stiffen before the hallway turned on its
side. He was solely a passenger as his body toppled like a felled tree. Once on the hard floor, he gasped for several seconds before regaining his senses. Twisting his head back to the cell, he witnessed his would-be assassin twitching fitfully under a stun-baton.
Clad in ice-blue armor, a mud-speckled guard relentlessly stabbed the baton into the prisoner’s side. An abrupt click from the guard’s full helmet activated its external speaker. “Front and center, Two-Three-Two. Now.” The armored man continued to pour current into the writhing prisoner on the dirty cell floor.
Lochlain inhaled deeply and pushed himself off the floor. The sleeve of his jumpsuit was torn. A quick brush at the left side of his face informed him that he would be sporting a prominent bruise soon. He began to step away but faltered, the pain in his cheek escalating as his fingers probed for damage. Angrily, he looked back to the cell. “Joe, can you hear me?” The man grunted and Lochlain felt the corners of his mouth pull upward, causing a fresh bloom of pain. “You enjoy your time in the mud, okay? How long is it? Twenty-five years?”
The man was still twitching under the guard’s continuous assault and Lochlain’s taunts grew louder. “I’ll just bet that you’ll love your time mucking about in the filth. After all, you’ve never been anything more than a rutting pig.” His eyes swept toward the guard as he urged, “Keep hitting him with that baton, I want to remember those squeals.”
The guard finally relented his cruel attention on the sprawling prisoner and turned threateningly toward Lochlain. The maneuver caused Lochlain to burst into motion down the hall. “I’m on my way, warder.” He casually waved behind him and bellowed, “Tell the crew thanks for the memories, Joe, and remember that crime doesn’t pay, except for some of us.”
Lochlain stiffened his back and strode confidently down the center of the mud-caked hall, ignoring the catcalls and threats in his wake. When he reached the end, he presented his hands and felt the alloy bite of magnetic restraints around his wrists. Once secured, he walked in silence, flanked by twin escorts who guided him through the maze of interlocking detention areas before arriving outside the facility.
The Svean air was dank and a steady drizzle hit his face to cool his aching cheek. Lochlain took the ten steps necessary to reach and climb aboard the back of a tracked detention transport. The enormous vehicle was coated with black mud. Even the numerical code stenciled atop the transport was unreadable. Settling onto a hard alloy bench, he shook off the rain and peered at his two, sodden guardians. “This weather can’t be too pleasant for you guys either,” Lochlain mused aloud. “The Vosstäder CF must be a real dream location for Svean security-police. I bet only the cream of the crop gets stationed here.”
The transport lurched into motion. Click. “Shut up, Two-Three-Two. Knowing your big mouth, I wouldn’t be surprised to see you right back here after your sentencing.”
“No, thank you,” Lochlain answered with a coy smile while shaking his head. “I’m reformed, see? I know better now than to fight the law. That’s why I worked with CBP and testified for them during the trials—”
A guard cut him off with another click. “You testified against your own captain and crew to save yourself. You rolled your own crew, convict.”
Lochlain’s jaw dropped in open indignation. “You wound me, sir!” His lips pressed together briefly before the smile reappeared. “If my motives were so self-serving, then why did I work with Customs and Border Protection before we were arrested? Before we even knew that CBP was on to us?”
The guard shook his helmeted head. His next words were a garbled mess. Lochlain knew that Svean armored security suits could encrypt their outbound communications and that only another suit would decrypt the words into meaning again.
The second guard replied indecipherably but ended in an obvious laugh.
Unwilling to let the slight to his honor pass, Lochlain brought his manacled hands up and tapped at his chest. “I saw the harm we were doing and while we never smuggled drugs or trafficked people, I realized that even the petty laws set by Appiation Unlimited need to be followed. And so, I’ve turned my back on a life of crime and I’m going legi—”
An ear-piercing squeal sounded from the first guard’s helmet and screamed through the back of the transport. The shrill screech was a favored tactic used by the officers to terminate their infrequent conversations with inmates.
The rest of the long journey passed without words.
* * *
The minister shifted his eyes to the defense table presently occupied by two men. The rest of the courtroom was empty save the bailiff. Even the prosecution’s table was vacant. The minister cleared his throat and asked, “Counsellor, does your client wish to address the court?” After a moment’s consideration, he added, “Hopefully briefly, if at all…”
The defense attorney stood and began to shake his head but Lochlain placed a hand on the man’s shoulder as he rose beside him. “Your Honor, I certainly have no intention of wasting this esteemed court’s valuable time, for I was just a minor cog in the machine of justice that removed eighteen wanted smugglers from among the lawful citizens of Appiation Unlimited.” Lochlain shifted his hand to cover his heart. “I’m just grateful to have played my small part in making our corporation safer for everyone.”
The minister nodded an acknowledgment and prepared to levy his sentence.
“I believe it was an ancient Terran poet,” Lochlain continued, “who once said that ‘crime generally punishes itself.’ Your Honor, those words have rung true to me for many years now. Every misstep I’ve taken I’ve reflected upon and I’ve done so well before the crew of On Margin was incarcerated.” He pursed his lips in thought for a moment before speaking humbly, “Your Honor, I’m not one for elegant speeches so I’ll just say that I’ve been paying the price for my criminal activity for a long, long time. I believe Customs and Border Protection called my willingness to endanger my own life by testifying in the other trials a ‘great sacrifice.’” He looked down to the table and shook his head dolefully. “I guess I just don’t see it that way. I can honestly tell you that it’s not a sacrifice if it’s something you’ve yearned to do, something you’ve craved.” His gaze tracked carefully and overtly to his hands. “These will never be clean… I know that, but at least the small sacrifice I made for the corporation has made me realize that it’s far better to abide by the law and follow the rules of society because, for the first time…” He raised his head to meet the judge’s eyes directly. “I can do this, sir. I can hold my head high.” His voice cracked slightly and his eyes watered. “Even if I’m sent back to prison, where I’d most certainly be killed for being an informant, at least I can finally raise my head again.” Lochlain wiped theatrically at the tears in the corners of his eyes and collapsed into his chair. “That’s all, your Honor,” he mumbled as he squeezed his eyes to stem the flow.
The judge swallowed before ordering quickly, “The defendant will rise.”
Lochlain popped to his feet again, head held high.
“The defendant has pled guilty of gross violations of Articles Thirty-one, Thirty-two, Thirty-three, Forty-seven and Forty-eight plus lesser violations of numerous other corporate articles. The combined weight of his crimes carries sixty-five years of hard labor in a penal facility. However, in light of Mr. Lochlain’s enthusiastic assistance to CBP both before and during several other criminal trials and in full consideration of the remarkable testimony of CBP Agent Brooke, who has stated that without Mr. Lochlain’s aid her identity would have been compromised, I am following recommendation and commuting the sentence to time served. Mr. Lochlain’s criminal record will be sealed during his ten-year probation. After its successful completion, his record will be expunged upon the determination of his parole officer.” The minister rapped his gavel twice and added, “This court is now in recess.”
Lochlain covered his face as his body quivered. The defense counsellor wrapped a consoling arm around his client and whispered, “You deserve this, Reece. A
gent Brooke testified that you risked your life to save hers.”
Through his hands, Lochlain muttered, “Brooke… Mercer Brooke, is that her real name?” His body began to still.
“I guess so,” the counsellor answered. “Never mind about her. Seize this opportunity, my friend. You’ve earned a second chance with Appiation and those rarely come to the commoners.” He clutched his arm harder in support. “I know it’s an emotional moment for you. It is for me too. Take time to let this all sink in.”
A short distance away, the bailiff held open the faux-wood door for his minister and followed him from the courtroom. Once the door closed, Lochlain dropped his hands and turned toward his defense attorney. “So, where can I find more appropriate clothes and grab a bite to eat in this hellhole?”
Chapter 2
The rain fell in sheets and even the rich soil had quenched its thirst, causing water to pool in every depression. Lochlain jumped over one such pool only to land in another. The water splashed around his boot, soaking a leg of his new trousers. With a curse, he veered off the street and pushed through a light containment field to enter a nightclub.
The low humidity inside was a welcome relief and the conditioned air felt decadent compared to what he had grown used to over the last two months in prison. The music blaring throughout the club resonated deep within his chest. He found the driving cadence only mildly less irritating than the shouts, clangs and vulgarities of his former setting.
Lochlain swept a hand through his wet hair while approaching the human mountain dressed in a fine suit that posed as club security. The bouncer’s jaw dropped open at the sight of him. “Reece Lochlain,” the huge man hissed by way of greeting. An obvious disbelief fixed the man’s uncertain expression. “Ms. Larsson told me if you had the nerve to show up that I was to bring you straight to her.”
Lochlain smiled roguishly. “That’s who I’ve come to see, Mitch.” He raised his arms from his sides as if formally presenting himself and stated with a curt bow, “I bet you thought you’d never see me again.”