The Jolo Vargas Space Opera Series Box Set

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The Jolo Vargas Space Opera Series Box Set Page 14

by J. D. Oppenheim

He thought of Jaylen: her hair tied up in a pony tail, her thin arms and the curve of her chin. If he made it through this he was coming for her.

  Jolo knew the man in black would send someone for him. He hoped it would be the skinny man in the suit himself. He’d never tried to actually kill anyone with his gun. At least, this version of him hadn’t. He figured his former self had killed many men. But the current version of himself planned to kill the black freak.

  Jolo almost didn’t see the man in full battle gear, tethered to a thin safety cable, sneak up behind him. He’d gone out the lower escape hatch and the gun was on Jolo faster than he thought, faster than he could jump with the magna boots. Jolo caught a glimpse of the shiny, metallic green suit, and the burst from the energy weapon came all at once. He darted to the side and was thrown down, the boots were the only thing that kept him from falling off into the ravine several hundred meters down. His knees bent and his body hit the hull of the Valhalla, but he was still conscious, the magna boots holding tight. He could hear the Fed coming, but then he felt a shock and the boots gave way and he was falling. Someone had sent a charge through the entire ship, and Jolo’s boots had released. Not Fed protocol. The Fed in the green battle suit got shocked, too.

  The fall was sickening. The energy blast through the hull knocked the boots backward and had him in a spin and he couldn’t stop. His hands kept reaching out for a hold, but there was nothing but air rushing up under him.

  Computer, what was our last altitude?

  238.7 meters.

  How high a fall can a human survive?

  20-40, depending on weight and impact surface.

  Half way down Jolo came out of the spin and was dropping feet first, the heavy magna boots leading the way down, down to his death.

  But then he had another thought. I’m only half human. And he calmed just a bit, and braced for impact. The tiny blue line that marked the stream from above was now a narrow river and he shot right down into the cold water and hit bottom feet first.

  And he didn’t die.

  It was like he’d jumped down from a tall ladder. His knees bent and absorbed the impact--his hands went down and felt the silty bottom. He rose up and was standing in waist deep water. He looked up and could see both ships above him. He unlatched the magna boots and waded to the shore and hid under some over hanging bushes. He reached under his arm and felt for the gun--it was still there.

  A few seconds later Jolo heard the distinctive hum of a hover bike. He pulled out his gun and stayed in the darkness, hoping the old Colt would still work even though it had been briefly submerged in the river.

  He watched the tiny hover bike grow larger as it came down. Was it the thin-tied bastard? The small craft made it down to the surface of the water and Jolo knew instantly it was him: black suit, his jacket flapping in the wind. The tie. He was staring into the water darting from one side of the stream to the other. He had an energy weapon slung over his shoulder.

  Jolo waited for him to get closer. He could tell by the man's movements, at first quick and twitchy like he was expecting an attack, but now slower and more relaxed, that the man thought he was dead. The man sat down on the seat and relaxed a bit. And as the bike edged closer, his face still aimed down into the water, Jolo stepped out from the bushes onto the shore and pulled out his gun.

  "Looking for me?" said Jolo.

  But the man did not have time to answer. His head turned to face Jolo, the light of the moon reflecting his shiny forehead. And that's exactly where Jolo's bullet went.

  The man's arms went limp and his body arched backwards, as he slowly, almost gracefully, fell into the water. The hover bike remained a foot over the surface. But the man in black, caught up in the gentle current, floated away.

  Jolo looked up and now there were four ships: two big cruisers on either side of the ravine and the Valhalla and Jessica in the middle. He worried about George. He pulled the hover bike into the cover of the bushes and was about to take off when he saw another person falling down from behind the Jessica.

  He landed in the water, much like Jolo had just done, and started heading to the other side of the river. Jolo called out and George turned in the waist deep water and headed towards him. Jolo looked up just as both cruisers and the Valhalla had backed off the Jessica. Suddenly the dark sky erupted in bright red as both cruisers unleashed their cannons at Jolo’s ship.

  “Run!” he yelled at George, gesturing with both hands, as the Jessica tilted at an odd angle, an ion cannon blast tearing a hole into her fuselage. The engines failed instantly and she broke in half and started falling.

  Jolo jumped on the hover bike and wound up the thruster. A very calm-faced George hopped on the back and Jolo punched it. One of Jessica’s main engines smashed down into the water right behind them with an earth shaking boom, sending a hot wave of water to either side of the stream.

  He looked back once as both halves of the fuselage crashed into the stream, but by then Jolo was twenty meters down the ravine, gliding a few feet over the water and gaining speed. The ground shook when the full weight of his ship hit the bottom of the ravine.

  He felt a sharp pang of pain and regret. He’d lost the Jessica. He put his head down and raced towards the safety of Marco's house.

  Corsair

  Duval

  “Too many jumps,” said Hurley. The whole crew was in Marco’s library standing around the 3D map. The tiny moon on the edge of known space the Vellosians called Montag was in the center.

  “We could send a refuel ship out ahead,” said Koba.

  “Nope, they inspect every ship in the sector three jumps beyond Bakanhe Grana space,” said Marco. “During the war, the Feds made a resupply line and made it out to Montag, but paid dearly for it.”

  “We just need a single ship that’ll make eight jumps and be able to break through the outer patrols,” said Jolo. “That old Racellian pod I flew in on made it.”

  “Bigger ships ain’t been able to do it,” said Hurley. “A freighter can go five tops, then it’s recharge time, or float in space until the pirates come. And them bastards’ll take everything down to your last pair o’ dirty skivvies.”

  “There was one ship that could’ve done it,” said Marco. “Computer, pull up the last known sketch of the Leviathan project from the Fed archive.”

  “Mr. Vargas, have you been pilfering into Federation databases?” said Katy.

  He just smiled.

  Up popped a 3D image of a large war ship with four front mounted ion cannons and a larger beam weapon mounted topside that no one had seen before. Marco had the computer overlay a Federation Defender next to it so they could see the scale. The ship was enormous.

  “The Fed was working on a ship to take out the BG home worlds. A ship that could break past the outer defenses and penetrate deep into BG territory. It was to be called the Leviathan, and it was claimed they’d figured out how to get ten jumps out of it.” They all stood around and marveled at the thing, slowly circling in the center of the 3D imager. “But then the war ended and the plans were scrapped.”

  Another quiet moment as they mourned the loss of a great ship that would never be.

  Katy broke the silence. “That looks like the Corsair.”

  “The Fed party boat?” said Greeley. “That shiny big-ass, girly boat, slow as one of them Kanabun sub-space transports?”

  “Yeah, that shining symbol of Fed-BG solidarity that stays in orbit just over Sol,” said Katy. “The dignitaries flock there. The president meets the BG Emperor there. I used to make trash runs to that thing and they’d make us wait for hours until the upper crust Fed ships had fully disembarked so they wouldn’t have to get near the shit down at the bottom. That’s a shiny symbol of Fed greed, is all,” said Katy.

  "When they built that Corsair monster, they shoulda been buildin’ the Leviathan," said Hurley.

  "Well maybe Katy’s on to something," said Jolo. "Computer, overlay the Corsair on top of the Leviathan."

  The c
omputer overlaid the Corsair on the Leviathan and everyone stared at the two ships. The Corsair’s nose was sharper and longer than the Leviathan and the middle was a little wider with subtle wings. The were both big ships, but didn’t look anything alike. The Corsair had a big observation deck right where the large beam weapon was supposed to be and the surface of the ship was different.

  "Ain't the same ship," said Greely. "No gun turrets on that party boat. Only got one thruster in the rear. One of them big Sonic 883 jobs that the Nam Corp. freighters use. Those engines are made to push a heavy load, real slow."

  "Yeah, and the 883 goes three jumps tops, before you got to rejuice," said Hurley.

  "I'm not so sure," said Marco. "Computer, how many months after the end of the war did the Corsair officially launch?"

  "The Federation ship Corsair, officially launched 73 days after the peace accord was signed between the Federation planets and the BG."

  "So the Corsair must have been in production prior to the signing of the BG accord. It takes a long time to build a ship that big," said Jolo.

  "Years," said Hurley.

  "Computer, access the Federation archive. Pull up any known references to the Corsair prior to the signing of the peace accord."

  Everyone waited quietly as the two ships, superimposed over each other, circled in the center of the room.

  Finally the computer responded: “There are no references to the Corsair prior to the signing of the Accord.”

  “So the shining symbol of BG-Fed harmony, a ship that should have taken a few years to build, was whipped up in 73 days?” said Katy. “Ain’t buyin’ that.”

  “Still ain’t seein’ it,” said Greeley. “Them ships ain’t the same.”

  “Computer,” said Marco. “Round off the Corsair’s nose and replace the observation deck with a large beam weapon.”

  And suddenly the two ships did look alike. Everyone moved in together to get a better look.

  “Computer,” said Greeley. “Get rid of that fancy cowling shite along the fuselage of the Corsair and add two more thrusters in the rear.”

  And the Corsair became the Leviathan right before their eyes.

  “I bet them thrusters on the Corsair are still there. They just got ‘em hidden. That ain’t storage space right there,” he said, his finger reaching into the 3D drawing, little lines on his hand. “They just threw some metal around the jets.”

  “So how do we steal it?” said Jolo.

  “Impossible,” said Katy. “It’s in Fed space for crying out loud. In Sol of all places.”

  “Yeah, but it doesn’t stay in Sol,” said Koba.

  “Computer, pull up the itinerary of the Federation ship Corsair.” A list popped up. Most were planets close to Sol, but there was one entry that stood out.

  “It’s going to Iris in two weeks,” said Katy. “Small planet, out of the way, agricultural.”

  “Perfect,” said Jolo. “We’ll take her there.”

  “How?” said Katy. “They’ll have at least one Defender and a bunch of smaller ships that could put a big hurt on the Jessica. I mean, uh, if we still…” She gave Jolo a hug.

  Jolo sighed. “That ship was never really mine, anyway.” He looked at Katy. “I’ll find a way to get there.” And then he turned to the rest. “This is my fight. You don’t have to come.”

  But no one moved.

  “I think we’re all in,” said Marco. “And I think I gotta fix for your no ship problem.”

  ……

  After the meeting Jolo found George in the atrium.

  "We may have found a way to make it all the way to the BG home world," said Jolo. George turned and looked at him, but the usual glimmer in his eye was gone, his head slightly bowed. His one arm resting in his lap.

  "You look sad," said Jolo.

  "Thank you. Most synthetic life forms do not show feelings, do not have feelings. But I believe I am feeling something close to sadness."

  "Your arm?"

  "I suppose."

  "Can't it be, fixed?"

  "Yes. But unfortunately those who could fix it, the Velossians, have all been wiped clean from the face of the galaxy."

  "You did well. There's something to be said for taking out two BG warriors."

  "Thank you, again."

  There was a moment of silence and Jolo grabbed two small cherry tomatoes from one of Marcus’s plants. He offered one to George. George held it in his hand in front of his face, tilted his head.

  "It is a beautiful thing, and I could pretend to eat it, but it would merely come out the other end, unprocessed. That's not how I recharge." He handed it back to Jolo. "Is it worth it?"

  Jolo just looked at him and shrugged, not understanding the question.

  "I mean this quest to find a girl that no one has heard of. Is it worth it?"

  "I can't get her out of my mind. The BG have her and I must save her," Jolo said. His hands balled into fists and his back and stiffened. And then he relaxed a little. "Katy says it's love."

  "Or something else entirely.”

  "If we go, are you in?"

  "I am but half of my former self."

  "Yeah, but still twice as much as any human."

  "Okay. The one-armed synth is in."

  ……

  Katy pulled up a detailed schematic of the Corsair’s levels. “Okay, here’s how we are gonna do it. I think Jolo and I have worked out a solid plan. The jump drives are located here.” She pointed to 5L, the fifth level below main deck.

  “That’s all fine and dandy, but how’s that help us get the ship?” said Greeley.

  “That’s just it,” said Jolo. “We don’t take the ship, we take the drive. Taking the ship is too risky, the drive is easier.”

  “I don’t think so,” said Koba. “That thing weighs a ton. You can’t lift it. Not even George, with both arms.”

  “No worries, I’m just a synth, I have no feelings,” said George, slapping Koba on the back just a touch too hard.

  “I didn’t mean—” Koba started to say but was cut off.

  “We don’t carry it out,” said Jolo.

  At this point Katy started to grin. She held everyone in suspense, still smiling and nodding her head.

  “Well?” said Hurley.

  “We let the trash bots do it,” she said. “All we gotta do is get a Fed issue trash container around it and the bots will send it right down to 6L here.” She pointed to a spot on the map at the very bottom of the ship towards the rear.

  “Just like the bunghole of a yasugo fish like we used to catch back on my homeworld, Hudson,” said Greeley.

  “Thank you for the color commentary,” said Katy. “Jolo and I will steal a trash boat from the docks and run right up to the, uh—”

  “Bunghole,” said Greeley.

  “The trash bay connector,” said Katy. “We sneak in via the first trash run, grab the drive, have the trash bots bring it to the hauler during the refuse transfer.”

  “Yeah, but you can’t just pick the drive up and toss it into the trash, it has to be extracted. There’s protocol. It’s connected to the ship’s engineering section, into the ship’s computer, to the engines of course…” said Koba.

  “Yeah, he’s right,” said Hurley.

  “I can do it,” said Jolo.

  “You don’t know how to extract a Fed jump drive,” said Koba.

  Computer, display Federation manual, search for jump drive removal.

  Ship class?

  Galaxy class or larger.

  Instantly a detailed list popped into Jolo’s head. He began reading aloud: “First shutdown power to primary grid at base of unit. Primary is offline when indicator light turns red on the forward status screen. Next, remove computer link cable via Fed issue 35mm hex spanner. One clockwise turn while pressing the release jumper will disengage the aft—”

  “Okay, okay,” said Koba.

  “So, y’all just gonna tell the engineers down there to kindly step aside while y’all jack the drive? I
figure me and Betsy might could get in there and help clear the room, so to speak,” said Greeley.

  “Betsy?” said Katy.

  “Yeah,” said Greeley, rubbing the wooden stock of his new sawed-off shotgun, a gift from Marco.

  “Yeah, I was thinking you and George, and uh, Betsy, could stir things up on an upper level, say, in the ballroom or the lounge. Draw the security detail your way and Katy and I will clear the engineering room.”

  “Remember, the Corsair’s trip to Iris is mainly to check some recent repairs so they’ll be running a skeleton crew and will not have as many passengers on board. They’ll have up to 5,000 people on board during conferences and meetings in Sol, but there should be far fewer people in Iris,” said Marco.

  “Katy and I will be wearing Fed engineering coveralls, and George and Greeley will be service staff,” said Jolo.

  He paused for a moment in case there were any other questions, then ended the meeting. “Okay, we’ll hammer out the finer points tomorrow. In the meantime, get some sleep and get ready.”

  What a Frog Doesn’t Know Can’t Kill Him

  Bakanhe Grana Homeworlds

  Warumon 5, Humanoid Synthesis and Production Facility

  In the days after his separation from Jamis, Merthon stayed quiet and obedient. He immersed himself in work. Caring for the Emperor’s children was time consuming and required all of his faculties, but it was what he did best. Maybe Jamis was right, Vellosians were no good at scheming and plotting the demise of far stronger adversaries. I am beaten, he thought, get over it.

  The angry days when he had risked everything to sneak the mangled body of a Fed war hero into one of the sick tanks without tripping any alarms, and the chances he took getting working fuel cells into the old Racellian pod seemed like another time, another Merthon.

  He padded through the halls slowly, sometimes humming snippets of old songs his mother had taught him in the pools long ago. He ate little. Slept less. Those bad thoughts, the ones where he would challenge a random warrior with mock ferocity in hopes of being taken from his misery by the hot end of a Grana’s red blade flared up now and then, but faded just as quick.

 

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