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Building Victoria: A Military Science Fiction Space Opera Epic: Aeon 14 (The Intrepid Saga Book 3)

Page 20

by M. D. Cooper


  Angela commented.

  “What makes you think that?” Sarah asked, her voice rising in pitch ever so slightly.

  “I know a few things about MDCs. Angela knows more. The chances of an emitter making just the right field to pass through all that rock is very, very unlikely. In fact, I would have said it was well-nigh impossible if I hadn’t been on the receiving end of it.”

  Sarah sighed. “Not everything that goes wrong is a plot, Governor Richards. Some things just happen.”

  “Some things do,” Tanis nodded. “But this did not.”

  Angela interrupted.

  Tanis asked.

 

  Tanis turned, surveying the crews in the tunnel.

  “I don’t know who you think did this,” Sarah’s face was pulled into a scowl. “But none of our people would do it. You’re the ones with a history of sabotage and subversion. It seems to me if it wasn’t an accident then it was one of yours attacking our leaders.”

  Tanis said.

 

  Tanis smiled at Angela’s avatar in her mind.

  “That was a jump,” Tanis said to Sarah. “I won’t deny that it could be someone from the Intrepid who did this, but assigning blame in the absence of a perpetrator is premature. Not to mention the fact that they tried to kill me too.”

  “So is declaring a crime without evidence.” Sarah’s lips twisted in a caustic smile. “Or maybe you’re not as well liked amongst the Edeners as you think.”

  Tanis sighed and raised her hands. “Very well, I withdraw my statement, but I still have my suspicion.”

  Angela said.

  “Angela found signs of physical access to the rig’s core that doesn’t match the maintenance records. We’ve logged it in the record,” Tanis relayed to Sarah who, like much of her generation, had never received a Link implant.

  Sarah eyed her suspiciously; some of the Victorians didn’t believe that the internal AI’s existed at all—they thought it was just a way to assert superiority.

  “Fine,” Sarah spoke the one word, then turned and walked back to the MDC crew, who were being interviewed to the Landfall police.

  Angela commented.

  Tanis replied.

  She stayed several more minutes to let Angela complete her inspection before signaling the Marines to take her to the CIC.

  “Let’s go, boys, nothing more we can do here.”

  NOWHERE

  STELLAR DATE: 3270399 / 12.13.4241 (Adjusted Gregorian)

  LOCATION: Landfall, Victoria

  REGION: Victorian Space Federation, Kapteyn’s Star System

  Jessica took a deep breath. Sometimes Markus could be infuriating; this was one of those times: He refused to believe his people could ever do any wrong.

  It was obvious to her—a defense mechanism against a technically superior people which he felt threatened by. Given the years they had worked together she wished he would be more trusting, but sometimes she thought perhaps he was becoming less so.

  Tanis never seemed to have an issue working with him. It surprised Jessica how well the general had slipped into the role of diplomat. It was a testament to the woman’s patience—a virtue Jessica was often short on.

  “I’m not accusing anyone,” Jessica said with her hands raised defensively. “I just need you to understand that we shouldn’t rule it out as possibly being intentional until we know otherwise.”

  Katrina didn’t speak. Jessica knew that the former Luminescent often held her tongue. Having been a spy, she had suspicion in her blood and saw Jessica’s point of view more often than not. But being married to the Victorian governor required her to support him, not the Edeners.

  “It certainly sounds like you are,” Markus frowned. “We can’t cast suspicion at the rig crew when there is no indication of wrong-doing.”

  Jessica rubbed her temples. This was going to give her a headache. What she wouldn’t give for the level of physical control Tanis had—even with what came along with it.

  “That’s not how police-work works, Markus. We have to look at every event as though it may have been felonious. If not, how will we ever find the acts that are? Too often people confuse the investigatory process with accusation—it’s not, its people trying to serve the greater good doing their jobs.”

  “Then—.” Markus raised his voice and a few heads in the CIC turned toward him. He stopped and took a deep breath. “Then why did I get a report from Sarah just now that Tanis showed up with Marines at the dig site and started throwing accusations.”

  Jessica sent Tanis over the Link.

  came Tanis’s response.

 

 

  Jessica asked.

 

  If there was one thing Jessica disliked about her current role, it was the tunnels. Growing up in Athabasca she had nothing but blue sky overhead. High Terra had some unpleasant sections, but there was always the surface level with its open spaces and the jewel of Earth hanging overhead.

  Heck, the Intrepid’s crew areas had more open space than the tunnels of Landfall.

  Once she got the academy up and running with some experienced police and detectives in place she would be able to get off Victoria and back to the Intrepid, or maybe Joe’s military academy, where there were portholes and stars.

  “You know Tanis,” Jessica said, bringing her mind back to the conversation at hand. “She may be impulsive, but only when faced with imminent danger. She knows who is behind this and it’s not your rig crew. Sarah has a habit of taking everything personally, which you also know all too well.”

  Markus sighed and nodded slowly. Over the last few years they had often discussed the members of the former militia who effected the rebellion and exodus from Sirius.

  Most happily returned to their former lives, the fighting in the bays and corridors of the Hyperion far from happy memories. A few found they had a taste for violence, or command—or both.

  Sarah wasn’t necessarily violent, but her temperament certainly skewed toward confrontation. Jessica knew that finding a place for the woman was tricky at best. She didn’t have the patience for a true leadership position, but as one of the foremost leaders of the rebellion she couldn’t be swept under the rug either.

  “Yesterday’s solutions are always today’s problems,” Markus said and shook his head slowly—obviously on the same train of thought.

  “More than anything,” Jessica said quietly. “This is our fault, if I had caught him back on High Terra, or Mars… none of this would be happening.”

  Markus’s expression softened. “Jessica… I’m sorry. I know this is hard for you. The day’s stresses have worn on my patience.”

  Katrina placed a hand on Markus’s shoulder—apparently she knew he would come around without her having to speak.

  “You must keep in
mind, Jessica, that while we owe the Intrepid—and more specifically Tanis and the Andromeda our lives, that gratitude will eventually expire as an excuse for behavior that is perceived as heavy-handed.”

  “I know… we’re going to fight against people’s memories for some time,” Jessica nodded.

  “Don’t forget a new generation of entitled…people,” Markus added.

  Just four more decades, Jessica thought to herself.

  BREACH

  STELLAR DATE: 3283375 / 06.23.4277 (Adjusted Gregorian)

  LOCATION: ISS Andromeda, High orbit over Tara

  REGION: Victorian Space Federation, Kapteyn’s Star System

  36 years later

  Jessica entered the Andromeda’s bridge and took her observer’s station for the return journey to Victoria. She looked at Joe and could tell he was having a serious conversation over the Link. His brow furrowed and he sat straighter on his chair.

  She checked the reports streaming in from the crews managing the cleanup after the year’s war games. Nothing stood out—nothing to give Joe that extra-worried expression he currently wore.

  The rest of the bridge crew was casting glances Joes way as well, and Jessica pinged Trist.

  she asked.

 

  Jessica asked.

  Trist replied.

  Joe was still deep in his conversation so Jessica busied herself with completing her judging reports. Many of the fleet’s ships had already left for their home ports and patrol sectors and she forwarded their final grades over the new stellar communication network.

  She heard Joe take a deep breath and settle back into his chair.

  “What’s up?” Jessica asked.

  “We’re going to have to make a short detour,” Joe began. “The sensor net picked up a blip and then lost it again, we’re going to do a physical equipment check and then deploy our array for a deeper sweep.”

  “I guess I’ll be observing for a little while longer,” Jessica said from her seat.

  “Not that you mind,” Trist said with a smile from her position at the weapon’s console.

  Jessica cast an eye toward Joe who appeared to be pretending to not have heard Trist’s comment. It was one of the dangers of being on a military ship where most of the command crew were friends. Things got a bit too chummy.

  Trist’s proficiency with a starship’s weapon systems—skills enhanced by her augmented physical abilities—made her the best weapons officer in the fleet. Even though she was an undisciplined subordinate, every captain vied for her skills during the yearly exercises.

  Joe was no exception, and though her flippancy marred the discipline of an otherwise by-the-book bridge, he tolerated it if it meant he would win.

  It had initially surprised Jessica to find that Joe liked a more formal atmosphere when he was in charge. Maybe he felt like it was part of his responsibilities—or that every commander, especially Tanis, he had worked under had run a very tight ship.

  Of course, having Jessica around didn’t help. Playing by the rules had never been her strength either. The fact that the two women had been partners for several years added fodder for some rather intimate conversations to boot.

  “Coordinates, Sir?” the helm officer asked.

  “Not quite yet,” Joe said while flipping through a virtual display only he could see. “This mission just got classified Omega. All non-essential personnel are comfined to crew areas and net access is to be restricted.”

  A hush fell over the bridge as the seven officers present glanced at one another and back at Joe who let slip one of his grins.

  “Since I let the cat out of the bag and you’re all in the know, you’re read in. Section heads are notifying their teams in case any of the crew or observers wish to stay in stasis for the duration.”

  “What do you expect the duration to be?” Jessica asked.

  “I don’t think this should take more than a few weeks, maybe a month,” Joe replied.

  Jessica sighed. So much for the vacation she had planned with Trist after the exercises.

  An hour later, Joe addressed the crew from the bridge.

  “As you know, this mission has an Omega classification. As such not all of you will know what we’re doing, but you cannot discuss any aspect of this mission with anyone, ever. Alternate logs and records are being established, including your activities for the duration of this event.

  “All non-essential personnel are required to remain in quarters or approved crew areas when not on duty. When off-duty, no aspect of this mission shall be discussed with any other crew member. Corsia will be monitoring all channels during the duration of this mission.

  “Your section heads will give you the details as they are necessary for your job function.”

  Joe waved his hand and changed his audience to the command crew, section heads and senior officers.

  “Data shows we have a blip from the direction of Sirius,” he said.

  “We’re to travel beyond the system and deploy a scanning array. Fab will need to produce the additional nodes to create an array the size Corsia calculated we’ll need. Astro-nav has also plotted a course that will take us in a wide arc around the Kap and hide us behind Perseus where we’ll go dark for several AU before picking up and boosting out to our ultimate destination.”

  The chief engineer asked over the virtual address.

  “We don’t know for sure,” Joe replied. “It was only caught for a moment. But close, maybe only a year or two out.”

  “Shiiiit,” Trist said softly. “We’re not ready yet for that.”

  Joe cast her a quelling glance.

  “We’ll assess and inform Fleetcom of the threat, if any.”

  Jeff, the commander of the Marine platoon asked.

  “That’s need to know, Commander,” Joe replied. “Eventually it will all come out, but at present the General has her reasons.”

  Jessica knew why. There was evidence that Myrrdan had reached out to the Sirians. If this was their main force, or even a scouting party, the more they could do without Myrrdan knowing the better.

  It amazed Jessica that after all this time he was still able to hide. Although the growing population and extensive settlements across the Kap system were making it easier and easier for him all the time.

  Through careful leaks, Jessica and Tanis had released information and misinformation at various levels. On several occasions they saw action based on knowledge to which only high-level officers and officials on the Intrepid had access.

  It made her skin crawl, to think that she could be friends with someone who may actually be that diabolical fiend—or at the least, someone in league with him.

  The level of patience Myrrdan exhibited was astounding. Back in Sol he rarely went more than a few years without committing some atrocity. At least that is what Jessica suspected. Many things she believed Myrrdan responsible for were never offically attributed to him.

  By her count he had at least half a million dead to his name. If he got his hands on the picotech that count would seem like a drop in the bucket.

  Sometimes Jessica thought they should destroy the tech to keep it from falling into the wrong hands, but then Earnest would tell her his dreams of how it would change everything, of how it would erase all inequality through ready availability of any resource or technology desired.

  Jessica wasn’t so sure that was a good thing, but when she listened to him it was hard to argue.

  At the very least it would give humanity some breathing room. Right now Sol was growing close to reaching a resource tipping point. Even if thousands of colony ships left each year it wouldn’t measura
bly reduce the population—and it certainly wouldn’t help the resource scarcity.

  Not to mention the fact that there were not thousands of stars nearby that could support humans—at least not with the level of technology they were accustomed to.

  The crew and colonists of the Intrepid were different. They were adventurers, people who were less interested in the creature comforts of modern civilization; eager to see what was around the next unknown corner.

  Jessica couldn’t imagine the run-of-the-mill folks on High Terra or the Cho surviving out here where real work was required to survive.

  Stars knew it took some adjustment on her part.

  It was one of the things that drew her to Trist. Neither of them signed up for a place on the Intrepid, though Trist had more warning that she would be leaving Sol than Jessica did.

  At times like this her mind went to her family in Athabasca. She hadn’t spoken to them much after joining the TBI.

  It wasn’t that they were so old-fashioned that they found fault with her body mods or sexual appetites, they couldn’t understand why someone would want to leave Earth and their family for “space living,” as they called it.

  After so long amongst the stars, Jessica did pine for living on a planet, feeling solid earth beneath her feet and endless sky above her—so long as it wasn’t in a tunnel. But she couldn’t imagine staying there forever.

  Maybe it was that after the amazing adventures she had experienced on the Intrepid, the thought of being little ole Jess in Athabasca seemed too small, like she would be a shadow of herself.

  And there was zero chance she would ever had met Trist.

  She smiled to herself at the thought. Jessica knew that she was a contradiction. An over-sexed law enforcement officer who had been thrown out of more places than she could remember. Mostly for coming on to, or copulating, with people she shouldn’t have.

  Perhaps then, the fact that she would end up with an ex-criminal like Trist wasn’t so surprising, but to her it still was.

  Trist, for all her attitude, was more reserved than most would suspect. It was one of the things that Jessica found irresistible—not to mention that since much of her body consisted of biological silicon she could do some really interesting moves.

 

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