by Ian Whates
Crises and Conflicts
Celebrating the First 10 Years of
NewCon Press
Table of Contents
Title Page
Crises and Conflicts | Celebrating the First 10 Years of | NewCon Press | Edited by Ian Whates
Contents
Introduction | Ian Whates
The Last Tank Commander | Allen Stroud
Between Nine and Eleven | Adam Roberts
Taking Flight | Una McCormack
The Ten Second War | Michael Brookes
Decommissioned | Tade Thompson
Another Day in Paradise | Amy DuBoff
Round Trip | Robert Sharp
Arm Every Woman | Nik Abnett
Hill 435 | Tim C. Taylor
The Wolf, the Goat, and the Cabbage | Janet Edwards
Pickaxes and Shovels | Christopher Nuttall
The Gun | Ian Whates
Tactics for Optimal Outcomes in Negotiations with Wergen Ambassadors | Mercurio D. Rivera
The Story of The Ten | Jo Zebedee
The Beauty of Our Weapons | Gavin Smith
About the Authors
Now We Are Ten
Crises and Conflicts
NEWCON PRESS
Crises and Conflicts
Celebrating the First 10 Years of
NewCon Press
Edited by Ian Whates
NewCon Press
England
First edition, published in the UK July 2016
by NewCon Press
NCP 98 (hardback)
NCP 99 (softback)
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
Compilation copyright © 2016 by Ian Whates
Introduction copyright © 2016 by Ian Whates
“The Last Tank Commander” copyright © 2016 by Allen Stroud
“Between Nine and Eleven” copyright © 2016 by Adam Roberts
“Taking Flight” copyright © 2016 by Una McCormack
“The Ten Second War” copyright © 2016 by Michael Brookes
“Decommissioned” copyright © 2016 by Tade Thompson
“Another Day in Paradise” copyright © 2016 by Amy DuBoff
“Round Trip” copyright © 2016 by Robert Sharp
“Arm Every Woman” copyright © 2016 by Nik Abnett
“Hill 435” copyright © 2016 by Tim C. Taylor
“The Wolf, The Goat, and The Cabbage” copyright © 2016 by Janet Edwards
“Pickaxes and Shovels” copyright © 2016 by Christopher Nuttall
“The Gun” copyright © 2008 by Ian Whates, originally appeared in Where There’s A Will There’s A Way (Speculative Realms)
“Tactics for Optimal Outcomes in Negotiations with Wergen Ambassadors” copyright © 2016 by Mercurio D. Rivera
“The Story of the Ten” copyright © 2016 by Jo Zebedee
“The Beauty of Our Weapons” copyright © 2016 by Gavin Smith
All rights reserved, including the right to produce this book, or portions
thereof, in any form.
ISBN: 978-1-910935-16-3 (hardback)
978-1-910935-17-0 (softback)
Cover art copyright © 2016 by Chris Moore
Text layout by Storm Constantine
Contents
Introduction by Ian Whates 7
The Last Tank Commander – Allen Stroud 9
Between Nine and Eleven – Adam Roberts 35
Taking Flight – Una McCormack 45
The 10 Second War – Michael Brookes 57
Decommissioned – Tade Thompson 75
Another Day in Paradise – Amy DuBoff 91
Round Trip – Robert Sharp 101
Arm Every Woman – Nik Abnett 111
Hill 435 – Tim C. Taylor 129
The Wolf, the Goat, and the Cabbage – Janet Edwards 149
Pickaxes and Shovels – Christopher Nuttall 173
The Gun – Ian Whates 187
Tactics For Optimal Outcomes in Negotiations with
Wergen Ambassadors – Mercurio D Rivera 197
The Story of the Ten – Jo Zebedee 207
The Beauty of our Weapons – Gavin Smith 219
About the Authors 251
Introduction
Ian Whates
I hold Poul Anderson responsible for my enduring love of space opera. As a kid I would devour the David Falkayn and Dominic Flandry books, and still consider Tau Zero to be one of the great SF novels.
A few years back I published two anthologies, Conflicts and Further Conflicts, which led to the eBook Total Conflict combining stories from both. My brief to the authors was pretty simple: “write me an SF story containing conflict.” This resulted in varied content, not wholly military SF but with a strong thread of that running throughout. As submissions for the 10th anniversary anthology started to come in, the thought occurred to me: why not produce two anthologies, one of which could focus on military SF and space opera?
There is a booming market in military SF which British fandom as a whole is largely oblivious to, with titles selling in tens of thousands – particularly on kindle. I’m delighted to be publishing stories from two of the leading lights of this ‘underground’ success: Christopher Nuttall and Tim C. Taylor (who featured in Further Conflicts and with whom I’ve recently co-written two novels set in his Human Legion universe).
In the summer of 2015, Dan Abnett and I were both guests at the wonderful Celsius 232 Festival in Spain. Chatting with Dan’s wife, Nik, I learned that she too is a writer and that she had this kick-ass military SF story looking for a home...
With two anthologies planned, every accepted story had to be allocated to the most suitable volume. In some cases, this was easy: Una McCormack’s poignant piece has all the sensibilities of space opera and, off-screen, even a convenient war, while both Gavin Smith’s ambitious era-spanning saga and Allen Stroud’s fast-paced tank mission were naturals, but others defied expectation. I had assumed that Peter F. Hamilton would deliver a slab of space opera, but in fact his inventive tale is anything but (serves me right for pigeon-holing), so it appears in the other book, while Adam Roberts, whom I associate with stylish stories at the more cerebral end of science fiction, submitted a (still stylish) space-combat piece that fitted right in.
Janet Edwards has always claimed that she doesn’t write short stories, but let slip over a drink at a convention that she recently has been, so I pounced and refused to accept no for an answer. Jo Zebedee I’ve known for a while from an online forum, and I’m delighted to see the success she’s enjoyed with her space opera novels, while Amy DuBoff was recommended to me by Allen Stroud.
I approached Tade Thompson after reading some of his work online, while I met Michael Brookes and heard him read at 2015’s Lavecon (a convention centred on the Elite Dangerous game). I was so impressed by another reading, given by Robert Sharp at an Unsung Live event late in 2015, that I decided there and then, “I’m having that!”
I wasn’t intending to include anything of my own in these books, but a last minute read-through of the MS for Crises and Conflicts brought to mind “The Gun”, a story published in an Australian anthology some eight years ago which has never appeared since. Tonally and content-wise, it struck me as a perfect match, so in it went.
(Mercurio) David Rivera is responsible for some of the most interesting and original SF around. I was proud to publish his first short story collection a few years back (particularly as it includes
“Longing for Langalana”, which I rate as one of the best stories Interzone has ever featured). During a recent online natter, I mentioned the ‘10’ anthologies, and was delighted when he asked to submit. David is one of us, after all – a NewCon author – and, as with so many who feature in these volumes, it seems only fitting that he should be included.
And that is the book. I hope that you, the reader, enjoy these selected stories. Thank you for your continued support, and thank you for the first ten years.
Ian Whates
Cambridgeshire
May 2016
The Last Tank Commander
Allen Stroud
Transmission begins:
Madam Secretary,
A continued update on our progress.
We have concluded all tests on the planet’s environmental conditions that we can manage via the satellite array.
The ionisation is not a localised phenomenon. We cannot be sure whether this is a natural occurrence or some form of defence system from the native life. Since all standard remote access probes lose signal with operations control when they enter the ionosphere, we have only limited data on what to expect from a landing. However, all indicators remain consistent and, in as far as we can determine from the three high shielded missions launched, the concentrations of bastnäsite, our potential terbium source, are waiting extraction.
Efficiency requires us to apply the optimum solution from the resources available on the colonial barges.
We have come too far and expended too much effort to fail.
My name is Jeff Saunders. In 2017, I was a corporal and driver of an FV4034 Challenger 2 battle tank for AJAX Company of the British Royal Tank Regiment.
According to Hermes control it’s now AD 3483.
The comforting thrum of a working engine is the same as before, only this time I’m not driving. Instead, I’m perched in the turret like an officer talking down to a crew of kids while they work the tracks; load the guns and everything else.
Perched doesn’t do this turret justice, though. Compared to what we had back in the day, we’re in a luxury penthouse of touchscreens and duraglass. The whole tank is a weave of ceramic and aramid synthetic fibre on the outside and a cool set of spaceship boxes within.
“Distance to the lander site?”
“Six kilometres.”
“Speed?”
“Forty-five kay.”
Still need to convert the numbers in my head. Eurometrics became a worldwide standard in 2043. I key instructions into the tactical display, cybernetic fingers anticipating my intention; spooky stuff that I’d prefer not to rely on, but there’s no place for Parkinsons on a military operation.
“Tewan, give me a sweep scan of the perimeter. Tag anything that pings back.”
“Unlikely we’ll pick up much with the interference.”
“Do it anyway.”
I can feel the stares being exchanged below. Three girls and one young boy, all crammed in a box with me as their surrogate grandpa. These kids think they’re humouring me, when actually I’m humouring them. Idle hands and all that, something they probably wouldn’t understand, growing up in vats with direct data education like they did a few weeks back.
On the 17th of February 2017, we deployed into the Lugansk region of Ukraine under NATO command; one of the first engagements of a global conflict that became known as ‘The Last World War’. Six months of street fighting later, the governments of the day were finally convinced that they couldn’t solve the argument with soldiers. We pulled out and the drones went in instead. Eight years on, resource depletion achieved what both we and the drones couldn’t.
Peace.
“Scan complete, anomalies are on your screen.”
“Th-Thanks.”
I paw through the blips, my real hand shaking too much to help. My implant has been triggered and a dopamine substitute will be coursing through my veins, but drugs can only do so much. The boy, Juonal, is right: we can’t tell which of these might be a threat and which are distortions from the atmospheric effects; the whole reason they got me down here. Still, at least there’s something to look at.
“Angle us thirty degrees left, around those rocks, no sense in risking the tracks on anything we don’t need to. Traverse turret right to compensate.”
“Yes, sir.”
“Corp or Jeff is fine, Krees. R-Remember I work for a living.”
“Sorry, Corp.”
I can’t smell petrol like we used to. These kids don’t seem to sweat much either, the air in here is cool and recycled. No option of cracking the hatch and deploying a proper mark one eyeball. Outside its noon and the reader says sixteen Celcius; colder than Earth by a ways. Patches of weird grass and shrub pass by; sometimes like Earth, but with clumps of strange orange, purple and red. This is not our world, we’re trespassing and this planet’s trying to decide how to react. The atmosphere’s breathable, but tense; the charged air is a risk we can’t take on the equipment, so we’re left staring through duraglass. Makes everything unreal, like those headset games people played.
In 2075, I was selected as an elder for the Kepler 452b mission. I decided to apply and go because it would be the last thing I could do with my life. My family are all grown up with kids and my Helen passed away a couple of years ago. The colonists would be born off-world with no ties to Earth. Travel back would take more than a lifetime. Sure, they’d have a database of historical events and such to learn about humanity’s past, but no chance to talk to people who’d lived back in the day. Elders were on board to provide that opportunity. We were the final piece in the jigsaw; the perfect project for humanity to fire into space and forget about; a colony of people about to die and people who’d never been born.
I didn’t expect to visit another planet, that wasn’t part of the job description. Neither was designing, building and commanding a tank, but sometimes new problems require old solutions.
“Range to target?”
“Less than a kilometre. Should be in sight.”
I squint into the fading sun. “Might be for you.”
I never built a tank before, but my experience of driving one, along with the ship’s database, advanced fabrication systems and the willing help of these vat grown kids, warmed me to the task. We needed something armed, mobile, robust and resistant to the excessive ionised atmosphere. A crew operating the vehicle would need to be self-sufficient and organised, able to operate without reporting back to base every few minutes. That’s why, in the end, I had to come down here.
The embodiment of an old solution.
I call her Jane. That was Helen’s middle name. She’s got higher tracks than anything we had in the army and extended compartments over the front and back of the wheels; more like a big truck container with an engine and a turret on top. She’s rugged, tough and belligerent, built to push through, like the old girls I used to drive, but there’s a beauty too, something that speaks to you, just you alone.
I loved my Helen. She was my rock. Maybe I’ll learn to love Jane too.
When I was at school I went to an old people’s home and interviewed war veterans. We prepared questions, but I got shy and after I ran out of things to ask, went and hid in the coat room. The teacher found me and told me off, but I couldn’t face talking to people like that, making them dredge up the past and all those bad memories, but I think I judged wrongly. I realise now that they wanted to talk, so kids like me wouldn’t make the same mistakes people made in their day.
The lander is in view; a four sided pyramid with the top chopped off. The damaged ceramic hull is strangely out of place. Reminds me of an ancient temple rediscovered by archaeologists, the broken up ground evidence of their search.
“Penn, Get us alongside and facing outward,” I tell our driver.
There’s a grunt of reply from the bowels below. Gears shift and we start up and incline. The left track slows, bringing us about in a lazy circle until we stop exactly where I asked.
“Krees, tar
get and deploy comms.”
“Firing now.”
I hear the dull thump of the modified harpoon gun and the faint impact of the suction grapple. It tethers us and drills into our target, the rubber cable providing a communication and datalink link to our system.
“We’re connected.”
“Well done. Prep for EVA and extraction.”
A mass of movement below me as Penn, Jounal, Krees and Tewan unstrap themselves and make their way to the airlock. Turret control is transferred to my station and I strap my shaking left hand to the miniature joystick. The trembles are calming down and won’t be enough to disturb things unless I want them disturbed.
“Ready to disembark.”
“Go ahead.”
There’s a scraping sound as they unscrew the side access hatch. I lean over and press my face to the glass. I can just see them trooping out over the tracks, each of them packed into rubber lined pressure suits and plastic helmets. They head to the lander, crack open the door and disappear inside. I bite my lip. These kids aren’t soldiers. They downloaded everything the mission computers think might be relevant, they’re strong and young, but with no real experience, whereas I’m all experience and no strength; weak wisdom against a planet full of unknown.
This is the first of sixteen landers. Our task is to visit them all, assess their state, download data and retrieve core samples. Ultimately, these shells will form the starting blocks for the new colony. Each contains a whole array of equipment and automated science, stuff I was never hired to understand.
I turn back to my screen. Some of the spots are moving, surrounding the site. I can’t see anything outside, but they’re out there. I can feel them. I don’t know who or what they are, but they’re waiting. I’d be waiting until now, the moment when we’re tethered, separated and vulnerable.
My thumb shifts the stick, the turret swivels forty-five degrees left and I spot something moving over the open ground, throwing itself behind rocks near where we drove up. I key up the 2GW laser and feel the charging vibration.
“Penn, you receiving me?” The reply is a bit garbled, but it sounds like a yes. I carry on. “I think we’ve got trouble. If you can hurry up, that’d be helpful.”