by T. R. Harris
“And you said Riyad was a dangerous savage,” Jym chimed in. “Well, it was Adam Cain who taught him all he knows about being dangerous. Resist at your own peril, Ruszel, but soon you will find that resistance is futile.”
Chapter 5
Formilian ships were common at the major spaceports on Tel’or, having supplied the Juddle Nebula with advanced electronic devices for over two hundred years. So when the Formilian spaceship dropped down among the myriad of other craft in the spaceport, no one paid it any undue attention. In fact, the spaceport was a beehive of activity, with hundreds of vessels coming and going—mainly going—with looks of concern painted on the faces of the dozens of species frequenting the grounds.
Adam felt good stepping out onto the surface of a planet after thirty days in space. The gravity of Tel’or was Juirean-standard, placing it at about point seventy-five that of Earth; the air was warm and rich in oxygen, although laced with a strong trace of chemical propellant here in the spaceport. Adam didn’t mind; he took in the wide open sky and sweeping views before being approached by a slender creature with prominent blues veins threading his thin, white skin and two dangling appendages below each ear.
“Kaylor, my friend, it’s good to see you again,” Adam said, stretching out a grin while keeping his teeth covered with his lips.
“The same, Adam,” Kaylor said, although his expression displayed more concern than joy.
Adam picked up on the expression. “Any luck in finding Ruszel?” he asked, expecting the worst.
“Oh, yes, that has been accomplished. He is with Jym now in the Pegasus.”
“Then why the gloomy face?”
“The pilot says that the Kracori have revealed themselves to the Nebula and are now seeking allies against any attacks.”
“Does he know about the Juireans?”
“No, he—they—are still expecting the Humans to strike first.”
Adam looked around at the various aliens beginning to move within his landing zone now that the ship had come to a rest. With a high hood draped over his short crop of blond hair, he wondered how many of them would even recognize a Human if they saw one? None seemed to be paying them any attention. “Kroekus told me the same. Do you know if Tel’or is one of their allies?”
“Not yet, according to Ruszel, but the trend appears to be in that direction. It is best that we depart Tel’or as quickly as possible.”
Adam took Kaylor by the arm and pulled him over next to the still warm and creaking hull of the Formilian ship. “Something’s come up, Kaylor, something that will require you and Jym to stay here for the time being.”
Kaylor’s eyes grew wide. “We are not to accompany you and Ruszel?”
“Kroekus has arranged for other passage, and with an informant who has been to Elision. He has a ship and access codes to get us to the surface.”
“So you do not need Ruszel? We did all this for nothing!”
“Not for nothing; I haven’t met this informant yet nor verified his information. Ruszel—along with you and Jym—will serve as a backup in case anything goes wrong.”
“So we stay on Tel’or ... and wait?”
“Only for a few days.”
“And we keep Ruszel a prisoner for that time?”
“Prisoner?”
“Yes, he did not come voluntarily.”
Adam smiled. So the two passive aliens had come through in a pinch—more-than-likely the result of their ATD’s. “Good work, Kaylor. I would have preferred that he came voluntarily, but under the circumstances, you did great.”
Kaylor was unaccepting of the compliment. “But we want to contribute to the rescue efforts, and with Tel’or about to align with the Kracori, it may be more dangerous to remain here.”
Kaylor had a point, Adam thought. The Pegasus was a unique ship, one that would evoke suspicion if the natives began to look for Human sympathizers.
“Fine. Launch in the Pegasus, but only shadow us. Wait on this side of the Dysion Shield and only come through if we need you.” He placed a hand on the shoulder of the alien he’d known the longest. “Just having you watching my back will give me a lot of comfort. And with the reckless nature of this operation, you’re just the contingency we may need.”
“I still do not like it,” Kaylor said. “With our ATD’s, Jym and I are potent fighters as well.”
“I know you are,” Adam said, “and that’s why I feel better with you and Jym covering us. Now go back to the Pegasus and wait for my signal. I don’t know anything about this new ship the team will be transferring to, or about the informant, so I don’t want anyone outside the team to know about you and Jym—and Ruszel.”
Adam smiled even wider as a thought crossed his mind. “So, Ruszel put up a fight? How did you convince him to come along?”
“It was all Jym,” Kaylor answered, his face displaying even more concern than before. “I believe we have created a monster.”
Chapter 6
The informant’s ship was located at another spaceport on the opposite side of Saf’in. Adam left the Formilians aboard their ship and took Sherri and Andy Tobias with him for the first meeting.
In all the chaos of the spaceports—understandable now from what Kaylor had told him—it took Adam longer than he’d planned to locate the informant’s ship. Already frustrated, he did a quick walk-around of the huge ship—probably the largest he’d ever seen capable of a planetary landing. The ship had a huge landing bay hatch, and according to Kroekus carried two shuttles and a number of escape pods. Next to the large bay hatch was a smaller access door with a monitor set off to one side within the hull. Adam touched the screen and a message instantly appeared.
Welcome Adam Cain, the message read. Then it continued to scroll down. Please enter alone and leave your weapons with your companions. Because of the delicate position I am in, I wish our first meeting to be private and secure. Please comply. You are being monitored.
Adam looked at Sherri and Andy and raised his eyebrows. “Cautious bastard, isn’t he?”
“He’s probably risking a lot by helping us,” Sherri said by way of an explanation.
“Yeah, I’m sure that’s what it is.” Adam handed his MK-17 to Andy Tobias. “I detect a supply of power packs, but none are attached to flash weapons.”
“You can tell that?” Andy asked. “Damn, I’ve still got a whole lot to learn about my thingumajig. Can you detect that, Sherri?”
Sherri scrunched up her face. “Yeah, Andy, I can. Sorry.”
“No worries; I guess it is hard to teach an old dog new tricks.”
“I’m going in,” Adam stated as the door slid aside. “You both should be able to link with me if I call. Stay alert.”
“Aye aye, sir!” Sherri said, snapping off a sloppy Boy Scout-type salute, the one with the thumb tucked into the palm—which was not an official military salute.
Assuming his host would be on the bridge, Adam proceeded along a wide corridor forward from the hanger bay access airlock. He had noticed the wide bank of viewports at the forward section of the elongated spaceship and knew that if he just kept moving in that direction he would eventually reach the bridge. The spaceship was a good three-hundred feet long and half that wide, about the size of football field, and he crossed through several large intersections along the central corridor, although he didn’t take the time to investigate what lay beyond the dozen of hatches and doorways he passed. If the informant passed the test, then he would have plenty of time for exploration.
The central corridor did indeed end at the bridge, announced by a wide portal in the forward bulkhead, its double doors already open.
The lights on the bridge were dimmed and the blast shield was down, and it took Adam a moment for his eyes to adjust. The room was like most starship bridges, with consoles lining three walls, a three-window array of viewports forward and two pilot seats just below the ports with a command chair located behind the pilots. This ship was large enough to have separate pilots and a commander,
rather than like the Pegasus where the commander was often the pilot as well.
There was a figure in the command chair, and as Adam approached, the chair began to swivel around.
Adam nearly fainted as the light from the outer corridor painted the features of the person in the chair. It was Nigel McCarthy.
Instinctively, Adam reached for his weapon, but found his holster empty. Frozen for the moment, he saw a .45 semi-automatic held firmly in McCarthy’s grip, aimed at Adam’s midsection.
“I thought you were dead!” Adam blurted out.
Nigel smiled—a wide, toothy grin on his pale, freckled face. “Yeah, I hear that a lot.”
Adam opened his mouth to speak again, yet only an incoherent jumble of syllables escaped.
“Please, Adam, take a seat. We have much to discuss ... before we begin our next adventure together.”
“We’re not doing shit together!” Adam managed to finally say.
“I’m afraid you’re mistaken, mate, if you ever expect to get Tarazi out of a Kracori prison before the Juireans attack.”
Adam was shocked at the vast amount of classified information contained in that one sentence. He looked at the gun, and then into Nigel’s eyes. The Brit had an expression like that of the Cheshire Cat in Alice in Wonderland. Adam knew that McCarthy had designed this encounter to carry the most shock, and like most of the Englishman’s tactics, it was working.
Adam took a deep breath, then moved past the command chair and fell heavily into one of the pilot seats. The chair was wide and soft, signifying that the beings who built the ship were larger than Humans. Nigel turned his chair to face Adam.
“Let’s begin by getting one thing straight, Mr. Cain: I am not your enemy, not anymore—”
“Bullshit!”
“Please let me finish. I know we have had our differences in the past—”
“You killed Lee ... and probably Dawson, too, now that I think about it. That’s more than simply differences.”
“That was another time, with different objectives. It was never personal, Captain. I have actually always considered you an admirable challenger—a competitor if you will—rather than my enemy.”
“Not for me, dickhead. You are my enemy, and always have been. So you didn’t die on the Phoenix? That lying bastard, Henderson.”
“Oh, don’t blame him. He left the ship just as the Kracori were attacking,” McCarthy said. “He saw the ship explode and thought I was still onboard.” He smiled even wider. “Obviously I wasn’t.”
“So you lived, and somehow you’re here aboard this ship. What’s your involvement with this informant of Kroekus’s? Have you killed him, too?”
“Of course not, Captain. I am the informant.”
Adam’s jaw fell open. “You’re working with Kroekus?”
Nigel nodded.
“He didn’t tell me.”
“We both decided it would be best if he didn’t. Just think what your reaction would have been if he had? We need each other, Adam, whether you want to admit it or not.”
“What do you mean? How are you involved in Riyad’s rescue?”
“Well, first of all mate, I’m the one who told Kroekus about the Juireans. It’s because of me that you even know of the timeline you have to work with on this operation. And secondly, I have been to Elision. You know this; I spent seven fucking years there. And as far as I can tell, I’m the only one of your team who has.”
Adam bit his bottom lip, begrudgingly admitting to himself that McCarthy was right. “Kroekus said the informant—you—have access codes ... and that you know where Riyad’s being held.”
“That’s right. As special forces yourself, you know I couldn’t just sit on my arse all that time and not do some snooping around. I know the lay of the land, and long before I escaped the planet, I acquired a wealth of intel regarding planetary ingress and egress, defensive fortifications, industrial complex ... and where all high-valued detainees are held.”
Adam was a loss for words. He had to admit that if it had been himself on Elision for all those years, he would have done the same. Hell, he’d already begun the process during his brief time on Tel’or. It was just second nature to people like him, including McCarthy.
“So you’re willing to help me get Riyad? Why? You’re a lying, backstabbing, son-of-a-bitch who certainly can’t be trusted. What’s changed, if anything?”
“Let just say I would like to earn some goodwill points with the blokes back home.”
“You’re a turncoat, one of the people responsible for a billion deaths when the Juireans attacked. I don’t think saving one person will earn you a pardon and a pat on the back.”
“Probably not,” McCarthy agreed, nodding his head. “But combined with my warning about the Juireans, and the other intel I can provide, I might convince them to stop hunting me.”
“We had stopped hunting you; we thought you were dead!”
“That’s true, but at some point I would like to return home. If I do well here, then the powers that be might let me retire to some little island where I can anonymously disappear.”
“Have you already cut the deal?”
“Not yet. A lot of my bargaining power will come with a successful rescue of Tarazi and the information I’m willing to share with the Fleet.”
“They won’t do it, even for Riyad and your intel. You are directly responsible for everything that’s gone bad for the Human race over the past fifteen, twenty years. There have been too many deaths.”
Adam saw McCarthy’s face turn red. “You think I’m responsible for all that’s happened—is happening—even as we speak? You couldn’t be more bloody wrong! All the deaths, from both attacks on the Earth, have been your fault, not mine. You’re responsible for everything, Cain, not me.”
“How do you figure?” Adam asked incredulously. He was stunned by the accusation. “You were the one who advised the Klin and orchestrated the abduction of thousands of people from the Earth. You’re the traitor that made it all possible.”
Nigel leaned forward in the command chair. “Let me give you a brief history lesson, my friend. I was not the first, nor the only Human helping the Klin. And if you can recall, I, too was abducted by the fucking aliens. All I did was find a way to survive. And if I didn’t do what I did, they would have just found someone else. There was no shortage of people looking to gain favor with the Klin to assure their survival.”
“That doesn’t change the fact that you helped the enemy. You knew the Klin were manipulating the Juireans into attacking us, and you even knew about the Kracori.”
“I knew about the Juireans, but not the Kracori. The Klin kept that from me because they were using the Humans, not partnering with us as I had believed. I was deceived by them, just as you were.”
“That still doesn’t absolve you for the deaths of a billion people. Nothing will.”
Nigel laughed, a sarcastic, guttural laugh. “I’m not responsible for those deaths ... you are!”
“Good try, McCarthy, but that’s not going to work—”
“The Klin had a plan—a long-term plan—and it was you who disrupted it. It was you and your actions that led the Juireans to the Earth prematurely. You mucked up the Klin’s entire timetable and so they had to improvise. Deaths had always been planned on Earth—there had to be, as motivator—but not a billion, along with all the infrastructure destruction. The war was supposed to last longer, and the Kracori were to be brought along more slowly. But then you came on the scene and everything changed.”
“I can’t see how I caused this. The Klin had planned all along for the Juirean attack on the Earth. I didn’t force them to do anything.”
“You moved up their timetable. If you hadn’t, another thirty or forty years may have gone by. The Earth would have been better prepared for the attack, rather than having to rely on the Klin.”
“An attack brought about by the Klin!”
“I didn’t lead the Juireans to the Earth, Adam Cain, you
did. And let’s look at what else you did that caused even more deaths.”
“And what’s that?”
“It was your bloody Cain Initiative.”
“Again, bullshit, McCarthy. The Initiative got Humans back home, out of a situation we were ill-prepared to handle. It saved Humanity from becoming like the Juireans.”
“That part it did, but it’s the other part I’m talking about.”
Adam was growing frustrated and angry. He didn’t have time for this senseless banter. He was also sure that at any moment, Andy and Sherri would become worried and check in. And how would they react when they saw McCarthy?
“What part are you talking about, mate!” Adam snapped back.
“The part about making outlaws of the Klin and the Kracori. When you did that—and that was all you—the aliens had no choice but to attack the Earth first. You left them no option.”
“We couldn’t let them get away with what they’d done. Is that what you’re proposing?”
“Not entirely, but it would have been nice to use a little diplomacy. Instead you sentenced two entire races to extinction. They couldn’t reveal themselves, they couldn’t interact with other races, and they couldn’t even offer reparations for what they had done. You said we would track them down and we would kill them, when and wherever we found them. And then you deputized the entire Expansion into helping you.”
When Adam was silent, Nigel continued.
“What would we have done if the roles were reversed? What if our only chance for survival rested in our ability to destroy our tormentors ... and before they destroyed us? You know what we’d do. We would attack, without mercy and without warning. Our survival as a race would depend on it.”
A hard, angry look turned McCarthy’s face to stone. “When you announced the bounty and the intentions of the Humans, I had no choice but to leave Elision. I was a Human with knowledge of the location of the Kracori homeworld. And when I did leave, it traumatized an entire race. They knew I would turn over the coordinates—and then their world would be destroyed.”