MUTINY RISING (THE ALORIAN WARS Book 3)

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MUTINY RISING (THE ALORIAN WARS Book 3) Page 12

by Drew Avera


  “Well, shit, that gives a whole new meaning to dead to rights then doesn’t it?” Brendle rose again, his body aching, but not enough to discourage what he wanted to do. He lowered himself to a kneeling position in front of Carista. “What do they want you for?”

  She looked into his eyes. Her blue eyes, their natural color, he suspected, pleaded innocence and fear of what was coming. “They make me do things to hurt other people.”

  “Do they ever hurt you?” he asked, already knowing the answer by the expression on her face.

  “Sometimes,” she said in a whisper. He thought she might cry, but she showed a lot of strength and was holding something back. He could see it in her eyes. Whatever it was, it was beyond just tears.

  He opened his arms to her and she sheepishly accepted his embrace. Brendle could feel her apprehension fade as he patted her back lightly. If there was a way I could save you I would do it, he thought, but in his heart he knew they were out of options. There was a ship waiting to destroy them just to get their hands on this girl.

  “You have to hand me over to them,” she whispered into his ear. It was so faint he doubted anyone else heard. He even doubted whether or not he heard it, but the look in her eyes when he looked at her confirmed what she said.

  “Are you sure?”

  “It’s the only way, but they will never use me to hurt anyone again.” Her voice was in his head now, her eyes the same emerald green as his. He realized she was speaking to him mentally because they were touching. That realization seemed to make everything become clear.

  “I don’t understand, why would you want to do this?” Brendle asked.

  Carista looked around the room, making eye contact with each person before speaking again. “I’ve been in yours and Anki’s minds. I was able to see things for the very first time and understand them in a greater context. I know what is right and I know what is wrong. The right thing to do is to turn me over to them,” she said.

  He hated to say it, but she was right. Unfortunately, the right thing to do was going to get her killed.

  “What do you think will happen once they take you in?” Deis asked.

  Carista looked up at him with a frown. “They will make me continue with the tests, train me to hurt people.”

  Brendle’s body hurt, but not as much as his heart did. “There has to be another way,” he said, but he knew inside that he was grasping at nothing.

  “I don’t want to go back, but I have to,” Carista said. “But my going back isn’t to be their weapon. I told you I saw things when I was in your mind. I learned things they never wanted me to learn; the difference between right and wrong. I already knew it, but experiencing it through yours and Anki’s perspectives solidified it in my mind. I’ll go back, but on my terms.”

  Brendle looked at her, confused. “What do you mean by your terms?”

  “I’m going to use what they taught me against them, but I need your help.”

  “Anything,” Brendle said, not knowing if it was because he wanted to help, or because she wanted him to help.

  “I need one of you to go with me, to anchor me so I am not consumed by them before I can do what needs to be done.”

  Brendle looked up at Anki, her eyes just as wide as his. “And what needs to be done?”

  Carista stared at him. “I’m going to destroy them so they can never use me again.”

  Chapter Twenty-One: Anki

  “We can’t just hand her over to them,” Anki whispered to Brendle. They were close enough that they could whisper without being heard by Malikea or Carista, but Anki knew that, if the girl wanted to know what they were saying, then it was beyond her control to stop her.

  “I’m telling you, it’s what she wants,” Brendle said with pleading in his voice.

  “I know it is what she wants, but it isn’t right. They may not be the ones pulling the trigger, but the outcome is still the same.” Why would she be all right with any outcome that resulted in her harm? Anki felt guilty for the thoughts going through her mind. She was confused and afraid, and those emotions bolstered her to come up with plans that did not reflect who she was as a person. She knew why Carista wanted to do it, but it felt as if the “adults” were resigning her to a fate they knew would be brutal and cruel.

  Brendle took in a deep breath before responding. “You heard her just as clearly as I did. It is because she knows what will happen if we don’t turn her over.” He placed his hand on Anki’s shoulder and she felt relieved to feel him touch her, to remind her he loved her. “She knows what she is going back to, how horrible it will be, but she knows that they will kill us to get to her and she doesn’t want that. I know it feels dirty to turn her over, but she wants to protect us just as much as we want to protect her.”

  She is going to die either way, Anki thought. Is it not worth taking the fight to them? “Handing her over makes us complicit. Regardless of what happens.”

  “Not handing her over does as well.”

  Anki wiped a fresh tear from her eye and looked at the girl. Malikea was entertaining her, both of them smiling and laughing. She looks so innocent. “I’m not saying you’re wrong, but I feel we are condemning her to a certain death, or worse, that if she doesn’t go through with it, she will endure a life full of torment.”

  “You’re right,” Brendle said sadly. “Our hands are tied, though. Deis already tried to run from them, but they fired on us and snared us with a tractor beam. We’re caught in this mess with no way out.”

  Anki shook her head. How do we get into this shit? “Fine, but I want to negotiate a time to turn her over. She’s awake now, and she deserves to have some kindness and a decent meal.”

  “I’m not sure our rations constitute a decent meal,” Brendle said. It was a half-hearted attempt at humor, but she could tell his heart wasn’t into trying to be funny. His heart is probably breaking just like mine.

  “When do you want to contact the Yeopa?”

  Brendle straightened up and cracked his neck as he exhaled. “I have Deis standing by for that now.”

  “Is he going to do the talking, or are you?”

  “I kind of think that’s my responsibility,” Brendle answered. “Don’t you?”

  Anki nodded, fighting back a sob. She felt like she was betraying Carsita, despite the fact the girl asked to be turned back over to CERCO. What are we doing? This is wrong. “I want to be there for it.” The truth was Anki didn’t have the strength to not stand beside Brendle as they made one of the harshest decisions during their time together. It doesn’t matter that Carista asked for this, I just hope she can forgive me for going along with it.

  “I wouldn’t want to do it without you,” he said. Brendle smiled, and she knew he was trying to soften the blow that was about to come. He is definitely my rock, she thought.

  “I also want to go with her,” Anki said. She knew by the look on his face that Brendle wanted to argue, but she wasn’t about to have any of it. She went from fearing Carista to wanting to protect her. Hours ago she was willing to end the girl’s life to protect the crew. She needed to make up for it in some way, and protecting the girl as she crossed over to the Yeopa was the least she could do. Brendle went to say something, but she cut her eyes at him, disarming his argument before it even started. “This isn’t negotiable.”

  Brendle took a deep breath and nodded his agreement. “All right, we may as well get this over with. Deis, can you hail the Yeopa, please?”

  “Yes, sir,” Deis replied from the bridge.

  Brendle and Anki walked back into the medical bay and stood before a large monitor as it came to life, calling the Yeopa. The line opened up and revealed the image of an older man with a stern look on his face. She didn’t need an introduction to the man. Deis had described him perfectly, especially the scowl that accentuated his graying hair. Kich glared over the monitor at them with a smug look that she wished she could clean off with a precisely aimed shot from her weapon. “Replicade, I see you finally got
around to contacting me. I’m not blessed with infinite patience, so tell me, what will it be?”

  “Captain Kich, my name is Brendle Quin and I’m the captain of the Replicade. Your terms were just forwarded to me by the man you spoke with earlier. I apologize for not getting back to you sooner, but I was otherwise indisposed. I wanted to give you the courtesy of telling that we do plan to comply with your request, but I do have a favor to ask before we turn her over to you.”

  Kich frowned as he looked at Brendle. From Anki’s perspective the man looked uncomfortable, or he could have just been thinking about something before responding. “I’m not in a position to be doling out favors, Mr. Quin. I am here to reclaim the girl and return her to my employer.”

  “I understand, sir. I’m sure CERCO appreciates your commitment to the job and enthusiastically await her return so they can poke and prod her as they develop their weapon of mass murder. I assure you, it is really a small request. We would appreciate it if you would allow us to host her for a meal before turning her over to you?”

  The man’s expression changed to one of masked shock. Anki had seen the look many times when people wanted to manipulate a situation, or make someone think a certain way. In this situation, Kich probably had no idea that Brendle, or anyone else on the Replicade, could know much about CERCO, much less know what CERCO was using the girl for. Kich canted his head and whispered something too soft for Anki to make out. Anki was nervous because, according to Deis, the same gesture preceded the Yeopa’s firing upon the Replicade. She wasn’t much for being shot at. The man scratched his neck under his tight collar and looked back in Brendle’s direction.

  “I see no reason to not allow your request, though I will be monitoring the situation. If you so much as increase thrust of your ship by ten percent I will fill your ship so full of holes that there won’t be a square inch of the Replicade habitable. Do you understand?” Kich glared at Brendle, the look on his face seeming as if he was searching for a weakness to exploit.

  “I do,” Brendle answered, tightening his hand on Anki’s. “You have my word that we will not try to evade or cross you in any way.” A part of her felt relieved that the captain of the Yeopa would allow the girl to stay a while longer, even if it was only prolonging the inevitable, but she also feared what might happen if that kind of man lost his patience.

  “I’m extending your clock by another two hours. If you have not contacted me by then to turn over the girl, I will be forced to destroy you.” Anki thought she might have noticed a curling of his lip, but was unsure, it happened so quickly. Was he planning on crossing us?

  “Yes, sir. I promise it will not come to that.”

  “You better hope it doesn’t. Kich out.”

  The screen went blank and for the first time since the feed opened, Anki felt herself take a breath. “I can’t believe it,” she said.

  “Yeah, I was a bit surprised by that as well,” Brendle replied.

  “I wonder who he was talking to?”

  Brendle shrugged. “Probably just one of his men, but it could have been a superior too. Either way, we got what we wanted, a little extra time. I just don’t want to waste it.”

  “You didn’t get the feeling that he was trying to cross us?” Anki asked.

  Brendle grinned and turned to look at her, his eyes narrowing into slits. “You caught that too? Yeah, that’s exactly what he’s trying to do, but we’re not going to let him.”

  “How do you figure we can stop him?”

  Brendle nodded towards Carsita. “We don’t have to stop him. They want Carista bad enough to not risk harming her. So long as they feel that way, that protects us for the time being too. The tricky part will be once she returns to them. That’s when all hell will break loose.”

  “I just wish I knew what her plan was.”

  “A girl with that much power probably doesn’t need a plan to do what she wants to do. I wouldn’t be surprised if she could destroy the ship by batting her eyes, but she said she knows the difference between right and wrong, and that CERCO doesn’t want her to have that ability for discernment. If I had to guess, she’s going to take it to the bad guys in a way they won’t soon forget.”

  “I have the sinking feeling it will be much worse than we can anticipate,” Anki said.

  Brendle drew in a deep breath. “Yeah, me too, but I’m trying to think positively right now, or else I’m not going to want her to go.”

  “You agreed.”

  “I did, but it doesn’t mean I won’t regret doing so, especially now that you’re the one crossing over with her.”

  “You can’t protect me every time I’m in danger,” she said, nudging him lightly in the ribs.

  “I can sure as hell try. No matter what the cost, I’ll always try.”

  Chapter Twenty-Two: Ilium

  From where he sat in his cabin, Ilium was isolated from the disturbance taking place on the decks of the Hamæråté. He was isolated from it physically, but on the monitor before him he scrolled through the security feeds, following the armed assault team as they made their way through the narrow passageways of his ship. The King Slayer arrived and brought with it the method he would use to regain control of his ship, or at least take it away from the slithery hands of Lieutenant Vesna. Either way is fine with me, he thought as one of Vesna’s men ran towards the invading force, weapon drawn. Ilium grinned from ear to ear to see the spray of blood shooting out from the man’s body as he was riddled with rounds.

  There was no sound to his feed, but he could almost hear the percussion rounds as they exploded upon contact with their target. He was more than a little surprised to see just how many people on his ship were loyal to Vesna and in some way to Haranger as well. He thought the Organization was much smaller than what he was witnessing. He had been sworn to secrecy, yet Vesna controlled a large portion of the ship despite the secrecy he had been sworn to. I wonder if Haranger knows about this, if he condones the use of all these men who have no idea whom they really serve? The answer to that question did not matter, not in the least, as man after man fell into pools of their own blood.

  “I’ll be damned if the King Slayer doesn’t come with a ruthlessness that really holds true to her name.”

  Outside of his room he heard the throaty pop of explosive rounds coming into contact with organic flesh. Less than a second later, the sound of something wet soaking the door filled his ears. He knew there was a gross mess on the other side, but the wicked man inside of him shrilled with delight as his rescue party came with a vengeance. He heard a commotion on the other side of his door and he knew it was the King Slayer’s men coming to take him.

  Ilium stood and straightened out his uniform, zipping the front all the way up. I may as well look the part.

  The door burst open before him, smoke filling the room as shadowy figures emerged, weapons drawn. “Sir, are you all right?” the lead man spoke, his voice muffled by his gas mask. Ilium understood within a few seconds why as the smoke filling the room turned out to be gases. Ilium choked as he nodded his head. The man handed him a gas mask and waited as Ilium pulled it over his head, pulling the side straps tight to get a seal over his face.

  His eyes still burned, along with his lungs, but it didn’t feel as if he was dying anymore. “Thank you,” he choked out.

  “My pleasure, sir. We have orders to deliver you to Captain Crexon on the King Slayer. Are you well enough to walk on your own?”

  “Yes,” Ilium said, feeling the need to raise his voice to produce enough sound to hear himself through the mask. Each breath caused a plastic flap to flutter by his mouth and it was already grating on his nerves. This is the most miserable thing I’ve ever worn. I can barely breathe, and sweat is already burning my eyes. What in the hell is the point of such a contraption?

  “Follow me, sir.” The man turned to face his detail. “You two, fan out and flank us. You, cover our six.” He pointed at each of his men as he shouted his orders. The man took Ilium by the arm and le
d him out into the chaos on the Hamæråté. Everywhere Ilium turned were blood soaked bulkheads and dead men lying with their weapons beside them. A part of him thought he should feel bad, but the truth was these men were never his to lead. Haranger, using Lieutenant Vesna, commanded these men. Instead of feeling sorry for their losses, Ilium wanted to spit on their lifeless bodies to spite them.

  I don’t see Vesna’s body anywhere, Ilium thought as the man dragged him by the arm through the ship. The closer they got to the airlock, the more of the King Slayer’s men he saw, standing with the guns drawn, but not in Ilium’s direction. All of the weapons were trained on members of the crew of the Hamæråté.

  As they approached the airlock, he saw the captain of the King Slayer boarding his ship with another dozen men surrounding and protecting him. The man walked like a victorious hero who just championed the greatest defeat of his military career. In some ways he has, Ilium thought, but the true enemy was not defeated.

  “Lieutenant Commander Gyl, I am so glad we got to you in time,” Captain Crexon said. He extended a hand towards Ilium. The man’s grip was strong, commanding. Ilium liked his already. “Tell me, did the man responsible for this survive our boarding?”

  Ilium turned to face the crippled and bleeding crew, at least what was left of them. As he scanned the room, he saw Lieutenant Vesna trying to hide behind one of the other men like a coward. “There, sir,” Ilium pointed.

  Ilium looked back at Captain Crexon, who nodded to one of his men. A moment later, Vesna was pulled from the crowd and dragged to kneel before Ilium.

  “Every military leader fears a mutiny rising on their ship, but not every leader survives the outcome. You are a lucky man, Lieutenant Commander Gyl. Your quick thinking allowed us to rendezvous with your ship and retrieve your command. Are you certain this is the man responsible?”

 

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