Sunday, September 27, 2020

That Unseen Train by M. K. Dreysen

With October coming up this year, I'm calling the winds via release of a new novel. It's called That Unseen Train; it comes from a few places. One of them was sitting at a railroad intersection, way too early one morning, watching a freight rumble by with two passenger cars tucked into the line that didn't have any business being there.

And then I heard Sam Cooke sing of the hopeless sinner, and I remembered my Robert Bloch and my Chuck Berry, and well, one damned thing after another and here we are.

Cover Image for That Unseen Train
Cover image courtesy of Willgard Krause at Pixabay

Cinders. Diesel. Steam.Darkness, and a little quiet time to think.

The platform is empty. You stand on it and you wonder, don't you?Where to go next? Is there anywhere left to go at all?

Don't worry.

You've always got a seat on this train. And we will definitely take you to the place you need to go.

That Unseen Train by M. K. Dreysen is available in both print and e-book format at your favorite retailers. And, along with all of my other books, That Unseen Train should be available through your library, so please ask your favorite librarian or library app to look for it!

For a print copy, click here to get a paperback via Amazon.

For an electronic version, click one of these links to get it from Smashwords, Barnes and Noble, Books2read, Kobo, or Amazon.

Stuff I've Been Enjoying 9-27-2020

Stuff I've Been Enjoying 9-27-2020

The Twenty Palaces series by Harry J. Connolly.

I mentioned a bit ago that I'd recently been consumed in reading another series. The Twenty Palaces stories are that series. The first book to be published in this series, Child of Fire, had been sitting in my To Be Read folder for a while now; I'd finished one of Connolly's more traditional fantasy books, One Man, and bought the Twenty Palaces book in response.

So it sat there, waiting on me. And then I read it, and the next few days went by in a bit of a blur. I grabbed all the other stories in the series, one after another. What grabbed me, then?

Let's see. Dark fantasy, urban fantasy with an edge. A secret society of mages who hunt down and destroy any who dare tread on their territory. And a misfit main character who definitely doesn't belong, but also doesn't have anywhere else to go. So a setting with depth and teeth.

That part; as well, the main character, characters really as we discover through further reading. Ray Lilly and his mentor Annalise hunt nightmares and peel apart the greed that summoned them. I'm in this one for as long as Connolly wants to write the stories because of Ray and Annalise.

I want to find out what happens to them.

Well, and what the ghost knife ultimately means. Four books and a novella, Connolly, you're headed for a surprise with this one and I can't wait to find out what it is. Thank you, Harry Connolly, for one hell of an entertaining series.

Thursday, September 24, 2020

An Unsatisfactory Necessity by M. K. Dreysen, introducing Pikka of the Shadows

This week's free story concerns the aftermath of a war, and the old bitter feelings swirling between the survivors.

Pikka's a wizard, with ambitions extending only so far as a good library, the occasional experiment. And a complete lack of anything resembling stories or notoriety. Pikka prefers the quiet life. Especially after the fall of Salinar.

Unfortunately, the past, and some of the folks Pikka would have preferred remain there, refuses to let go. So, Pikka finds herself saddled with a burden of...

An Unsatisfactory Necessity by M. K. Dreysen, a Story Introducing Pikka of the Shadows.

When the three soldiers enter the bar, the whole room silences, just for a moment.

They're all still getting used to the new regime. By the time the lieutenant leaves his squaddies at the door and begins making his way to the bartender, the low murmur of conversation resumes.

"Lieutenant," the bartender says.

"Quiet night," the lieutenant replies. "Hope it stays that way."

The bartender grunts his assent to that wish. The kid's just trying to do his job; the bartender doesn't begrudge him that. So long as the new soldiers don't get out of hand.

So far, he tells himself. The new soldiers have been professional, so far.

"Anyone new?" the lieutenant asks, before turning to scan the room for himself.

"Just the drunk in the corner," the bartender answers.

The drunk in the corner isn't. Drunk.

And she doesn't have any problem hearing the conversation. From her place next to the fire, she has the pleasant crackle of the red element, the bitter scent of the pine knot the bartender has thrown onto it, and the whispers of the patrons for company.

She had a beer, to cut the road dust and remind herself she was still human, still alive, when she'd come into the place. Since then, just the cooling pot of tea to wash down the dinner she'd enjoyed as much as the beer.

What impressed her most was that the bartender hadn't pulled the lieutenant a beer of his own, and the lieutenant hadn't asked. It spoke to the discipline of the new regime. She admired that. It might signal a possible future for the people.

She appreciated the way the lieutenant was making his way to her corner a lot less. "Help you?" she asked, when he stood in front of her.

"Where are you from, stranger?"

"On my way to Los Cruces, Captain." A little flattery might make this go easier, she told herself.

"Lieutenant," he corrected. "I asked where you came from, stranger, not where you're headed. If you don't want to answer, or if I don't like your answer, the only place you'll go from here is the jail."

She sighed. Maybe it had been too much to ask. Then she shrugged, and stood up to make ready for the next part of her trip. She ignored the nonsense the soldier immediately threatened her with.

She didn't ignore the hand he reached out to grab her. "Here now," she said. Then she caught him, slid herself under his arm and supported him when he began to collapse. "Let's walk you over to your men. Looks like you might need to get back to your barracks."

He stumbled along with her, mumbling, almost crying at the sudden pain in his guts; she was grateful that he was still young and skinny enough to carry this way. When the pair got to the bar, she propped the lieutenant up against a stool, waited to make sure he wouldn't fall, and held up a silver coin.

Where the bartender could see it, but none of his patrons could. The bartender raised an eyebrow, looked at the lieutenant, and the blood-stained drool starting to work its way from the young man's mouth. The bartender looked back to the woman, and spread the fingers of his right hand wide against his hip.

The woman placed a quarter crown next to the silver penny. Then she added a full crown, the gold and the two silver coins gleaming only for the bartender.

The man cocked his head to one side.

She answered the question by nodding vaguely toward the rest of the bar's patrons. "For the house."

The bartender nodded. Some measure of silence from the bar now assured, the woman left the coins on the back shelf of the bar and guided the lieutenant toward the door, and his men. "Must be the water," she said when she arrived.

The two soldiers would have had something to say. Probably just as inane as whatever it was their boss had been spouting when he'd objected to her getting her things. But they'd started fighting their own bout of the illness she'd communicated to the lieutenant. "The rest of your platoon are probably in about the same shape," she said to the three soldiers. "Your waters back home must be really clean. Why don't I get you three outside?"

The soldiers were barely able to walk on their own, yet they got it together well enough to sling the lieutenant between them.

She followed them out to their horses. "Climb on board, gents," she said. When they did that, she lead her impromptu escort around the corner to the stables. "Stay right here until I get back."

When she'd saddled her horse, filled the saddle bags with her gear and oats from the barrel, then rode out, the soldiers had reached the stage where she worried she'd have to tie them all to their saddles. "Here, let's go for a ride. Clear your heads."

Or, the saddles at least. The trees behind stable and inn sat silent, listening, as the riders moved into their darkness. Only the wind and a guttering lamp at the front of the inn gave testimony to whatever was happening. Even the moon hid her face; the clouds did the same for the stars.

Her business with the soldiers didn't take long. Soon enough, she returned to the stables, and then the street, with the army mounts trailing along behind her.

As it turned out, the stable owner was an old acquaintance. "Pikka," he said, once she'd rousted him out of his warm bed at the back of the building.

"How much for the horses, and their gear?" She had already claimed the little squad's coins. The swords and short lances slept the long sleep in the same shallow grave as their owners. A little coin from the horses, if the ostler would oblige, would go a long way over the rest of her journey.

"What happened... never mind," the ostler answered himself.

Pikka felt some pride that someone remembered. Followed by a hint of frustration. She didn't need stories following her heels. "The new queen will need horses for her soldiers," Pikka said. "When I came across these three wandering in the woods..."

"You brought them to someone you could trust to keep them safe," Robert Ostler finished. "Three crowns."

"Five," she countered.

He dug out four and a half. "We both know where we're headed. And that I'll put the name of Wendall Thatch on the bill of sale."

She nodded as she swung up on the back of her horse. Wend's mules attracted loose horses wherever the teamster went. Robert probably had half a dozen similar bills in his books. "Take care, Ostler."

"And you, wizard."

****

What had been the little union of states known as Salinar wasn't much. Pikka was only five days hard ride removed from the capital city, and she was now just a few hours away from the river she needed to cross for freedom and anonymity.

Not that she couldn't have joined up with the new queen's regime. That's what Lyka, Bernard, and Rynk had done.

Elthoma had perished in the siege. As he'd promised, the last time she'd seen him alive. "I'm too old and fat to run, too useless to the woman who will soon reign here, Pikka. Go while you can."

Pikka had wished the older wizard well, packed what she could, and vanished into the night.

Most of her former colleagues would have warned her that she'd stayed too late. A bare handful would have scorned her for not throwing her life into destroying the besieging army. For revenge, if nothing else.

Pikka had no quarrel, not really, with the soldiers. Nor, now that she'd had a few days away from the battle to let the results settle into her gut, did she have much remaining quarrel with Thessa L'morgan, now queen of Salinar and Duchesne. Three times the territory Thessa had started with.

And, from the evidence Pikka had rode through, without turning her soldiers loose to pillage the place. Pikka admitted that. She'd hunted for the signs, but found no burnt out villages, heard only scattered rumors of rape and theft. The rumors had turned out empty, when Pikka had taken the chance to hunt down their source.

L'morgan had told the family Salinar that she was coming to claim their territory for her own. She'd offered terms before a single sword had been unsheathed. A lifetime pension for each member of the Salinar family, paid through a third party bank in the Old State. The family members could even retain residency in the kingdom, inherited estates and all.

All they'd needed to do was relinquish their claim to rule.

Sitting her horse above the river's ford, Pikka snorted. She and Elthoma both had recommended, from the beginning, that the family consider the offer. The oldest Salinar, Pierre, had screamed and yelled in concert with them.

It had been the three sisters Salinar, the majority vote, who'd forced the no. And condemned themselves, their children, their brother, their husbands, to the gibbet.

Thessa L'morgan may have her good qualities, Pikka allowed. But those only went so far.

The family Salinar's fate was one of the reasons Pikka didn't regret the lieutenant and his soldiers now buried in the little glade. Or the rest of their platoon now suffering an extended bout of what looked and acted like severe food poisoning. The suffering of the curse she'd laid on them all, using their lieutenant's spirit as conduit, would be severe enough that the fact that their lieutenant and two fellow squaddies had disappeared would cause no real upset.

"Crawled off somewhere and died," the platoon sergeant would eventually tell the lieutenant's replacement. "Gods know we all felt like doing the same." This was the explanation Pikka's curse had whispered into the depths of his mind.

Elthoma's fate built the balance of how Pikka weighed the scales in her mind, the results leaving no guilt in Pikka's heart over the soldiers. She crossed the river and pursued a new life.

****

Three years later, and Pikka had built herself that new life.

Not a tower. That, perhaps never. She had coin enough, commissions enough, to pursue her own interests. Raising a tower and a name weren't among them.

Just now, she was most interested in the dragonette terrorizing the town of Ylthazia. Rumors of the little hatchling's predation, and a whiff of the stench it threw off as it grew into its magic potential, had found Pikka.

The town mayor had offered twenty crowns. Pikka had demanded fifty.

"Thirty-five, then," the mayor had offered. "Will you kill the beast? Please? It's hell on the cattle."

"One way or another, mayor, I'll remove the threat."

The dragonette was little bigger than a dog. Vicious enough, especially to folk who'd spent most of the past year arguing over whose job it was to go after it rather than gird up and go for it. Or just break down and hire a hunter.

Pikka tracked the wyrm-get to its lair, a burrow clawed out beneath the roots of a lightning blasted oak tree. Still earthbound, the wyrmling's magic wasn't yet mature enough to sustain it in flight.

For which Pikka was grateful. "Not much longer, kitten, and we'd be having a different conversation entirely." She crawled into the beast's hole, cursing the sand building up in her hair and clothing the whole way. "Actually, you aren't up to conversation yet, are you?"

The dragonette, red and gold scales flashing from its inner flame, hissed at her.

"It's not an insult, kitten, just an observation." Pikka made sure of her defenses, a weaving of wind, rain, and earth to absorb what the dragonette could throw at her, and then prepared her mind for the next step.

Only, as she sank to her center, a voice welled up to greet her from what should have been a silent deepness of strength. "Pikka!"

"Shit," Pikka muttered. Then, after a few more curses, she set aside the desperate call and returned to the dragonette. "Sorry for the delay. You, now sleep."

The dragonette fought her. Tooth and claw, wing and fire, it threw itself to meet the wizard's spells.

Pikka held the red and gold beast in the grip of her mind, whispering words of a forgotten language, until the dragonette finally slipped into sleep. And from sleep, she drew it little by little down in size, shrinking the wyrmling until it rested in the palm of her hand. "Good, kitten, sleep. Remain so until I, and I alone, release you." She whispered more of the dragon god's own language, continuing the song that the wyrmling would have listened to as its mother clutched her eggs, until the abstraction of dragonette was safely stowed within a glass-bound vacuum flask.

Much of her spare time between jobs over the last few months had been devoted to the construction of the vacuum flask. The balance of energies required to protect the dragonette and its stasis, bind it and keep it alive until Pikka could find it a suitable new home, had been delicate.

The wyrmling's capture assured, Pikka, sipping from a water bottle and ignoring the stench of the dragonette's nest, turned her attention to the distraction. "Bernard, I warned you to never again use the link."

Elthoma's creation. The two wizards had their own means of communication; Pierre Salinar had requested that Elthoma build a similar method for his other advisers. Elthoma had linked Bernard, Lyka, and Rynk together with strands of hair, concentration, and tiny brass medals decorated with the Salinar sigil.

"Pikka, thank the gods. I need your help."

Pikka heaved a sigh of frustration, before turning to her next task, the search of the dragonette's nest. The beast may not yet have a known human victim, but if one had come here unrecorded, the coins and other metals would have begun the wyrmling's hoard.

Which would be better used, at the moment, by Pikka. The beast would have its day, eventually. Until then, Pikka searched for any bits and pieces it had accumulated.

While Bernard explained why he was calling over a link that should have been destroyed. "Pikka, please," he begged at the end. "Please."

"The mayor was either lying, or ignorant." By Pikka's count, the dragonette had fed on humans enough to gather close to thirty crowns. And a handful of daggers and other hand weapons, all too bent and twisted by their passage through the dragonette's stomach to be of use. "No magic weapons yet. But then, you are still just a baby."

Satisfied she'd scavenged as much as she could from the new-start dragon's hoard, Pikka crawled from the den, shook the sand out, and made her way back to Ylthazia.

Without stopping to wash up until after the mayor handed over his promised coin. Pikka knew the dragonette's stench would help the mayor keep his end of the bargain. His watering eyes and nauseated stomach insured it.

Though she did wait until she'd spent an hour in the bathtub of the Ylthazian inn before Pikka relaxed the spell she'd used to distance herself from the smells.

****

Ylthazia lay some three weeks sea-travel north-northeast of the Old State; from there, thanks to a political environment Pikka had done everything in her power to stay blissfully ignorant of, she was force to horseback. And three months of it to return to the Salinar borders.

She spent the time whispering to the dragonette. Filling the flask with songs and tales of far gone ages and the rule of fire. Pikka had scavenged the dragon legends from a thousand sources; the Library and its keepers had collected them over the thousand years of the Old State's existence.

Pikka rode to Salinar as a ghost among shadows. Where mine foremen discussed the vanishing copper veins, and how Thessa queen had begun to refuse good pay and conditions to her miners, Pikka sat just beyond candle's glow and listened. Where children ran through the streets and chased "The dark bastard coin hoarders of the Old State," Pikka leaned around the corner of an alley and watched.

Despite her precautions, her passage echoed; generations later, mothers hushed their crying babies, singing "The shadow wizard will come, and she's hungry tonight."

Pikka took the time she needed, listening, watching, gauging how things had developed in Salinar. And each night, she sat beside a bare handful of dying embers.

Whispering legends in a dead god's language to an abstraction cased in glass and vacuum.

****

Bernard Legrange had risen high in Thessa L'Morgan's estimation. And his own. Commander of troops, he'd begun the Eight Week War with five platoons. None of them trapped in the siege of the city; Bernard's job had been to harry L'Morgan's troops from the rear.

Sufficient to show his bravery. Not so locked into the city as to be forced to sacrifice his men, or more importantly himself, in futile gestures. When the bells of the city had signaled L'Morgan's victory, Bernard Legrange threw his sword at the feet of the first of L'Morgan's field commanders he could find.

In theory, he'd meant the surrender to be a route to his old job as supervisor of mines. Someplace he could work at shipping and teamsters and lists of ports, while letting the groundhogs grub the works without his interference.

Thessa queen had circumvented Bernard's plan when she learned of him. "You acquitted yourself well, Legrange. You'd be wasted on the mines." And so she'd rendered him captain of the city guard.

Which, after six months or so, Bernard found suited him even better. The sergeants and their lieutenants did the work, and Bernard made sure to let them know he knew it. "I'm the one who tells Thessa queen how well you do your jobs. I get yelled at when something goes wrong. Don't get me screamed at, and I'll always make sure you don't get caught between the wheels."

He'd taken Pikka's old tower, three simple stories of wood and sandstone tucked between a fistful of ancient hickory trees. Outside of the city proper, close enough so that Bernard could ride easily to the guardhouse every morning.

And most of all, well away from the city districts frequented by members of the court. The occasional visitor Bernard did suffer were only those who'd estates outside the city walls, and the time for the twenty minute detour to Bernard's tower.

Tonight's visitor didn't belong to that category. "Your kingdom's rustling, Bernard. Has Thessa queen begun the squeeze?"

Bernard was leaning over maps, consulting notes and marking out locations. Not on the maps themselves, but on a hand-drawn scrawl of his own making. He jumped when the shadows in the corner coalesced. "Damnit all to hell, Pikka! Can't you warn me?"

The shadows chuckled, swirling, swelling, then condensing fully into human form. The wizard sat down on a stool next to the fire. "I'm here, Bernard. Shouldn't that be warning enough?"

He goggled at her until his eyes adjusted. "Are you here to help?"

Pikka's expression didn't change; instead, she turned away from Bernard in favor of the fire. "Do you remember? The reason I left?"

They both did.

The five advisers had begun the war scattered where they felt best suited. Bernard and Pikka with different sets of troops; Lyka and Elthoma in the city, in support of Rynk as commander of the main force of Salinar troops. The idea had been simple, and the only real strategy available.

Bernard and Pikka would do their best to slow L'Morgans army, and then harry them from the rear when the siege began. Rynk, with the old soldier and older wizard helping, would use the Salinar army, few as they were, to defend the city until the sisters admitted defeat.

And Elthoma's link should have let them coordinate across the distances. "It's the one advantage we have," Pikka had pointed out. "We need to use it."

Bernard, Lyka, and Rynk had not understood how Pikka knew that L'Morgan's commanders didn't have a similar communications link.

Bernard and Lyka had, however, accepted that she did know. Only Rynk had refused to believe it. Or take advantage of it. "We can't trust the link, Pikka. Not while L'Morgan, or her command, might be able to listen into our communications."

Pikka cursed the day she'd ever given in and brewed the alloy Elthoma had used to build the link metals. And the little bit of explanation Elthoma managed to get the other three to absorb about the way the links worked.

Rynk's pigheadedness would have been trouble enough. Yet eventually she had asserted her authority. "I'm ordering you to return to the city. Your magic will help us defend the walls. Bernard can handle the field troops."

"Does she believe I will exhaust my life destroying that army?" Pikka had asked Elthoma at the top of the guard tower, where the two wizards observed L'Morgan's army completing encirclement of the city.

"I think you give her more credit than she deserves," Elthoma had answered. "If Rynk has considered anything farther out than what benefits herself, she's never shown any sign of it."

Pikka had finally managed to let her rage at Rynk's order slip away when the final day of the siege arrived. And the final complete link the five advisers shared together. "We will stand down," Rynk had said. "The walls won't delay them any longer. Bernard, Lyka, you know what to do."

And the link had dissolved before Elthoma or Pikka could respond. Not that either of them could have changed things at that point. "Now we know why Rynk was suspicious of the link," Elthoma said, as Pikka was saddling her horse and making ready to leave. "She's been a traitor this whole time."

Obvious in retrospect. Whenever a decision had had to be made, Rynk had made the one that allowed L'Morgan's troops to advance with little or no real challenge. And when the point came where the main bulk of the army was threatened, rather than Pikka or Bernard's troops, Rynk had ordered the surrender.

On the hour of their final parting, Elthoma had made his stand at the gates of the Salinar ancestral home, a tiny enclave in the center of the city. "The sisters refuse even now to surrender," he reported.

Pikka didn't ask why the old wizard, and the ten soldiers standing with him, remained. Just as Elthoma and Lyka had offered Pikka a job and a home, the Salinar family had done the same for Elthoma generations ago. The family held his loyalty, and that of the troops he'd arraigned in their defense.

Elthoma stood at the family gates and held L'Morgan's army back. Until he exhausted himself.

While Pikka and her horse escaped through the shadows and smoke. Leaving Bernard, Lyka, and Rynk to find their place with the queen who displayed the Salinar family heads, and Elthoma's, on the walls of the Salinar family compound. All of them preserved by bronze, the alloy that had been the family's main source of revenue.

"And yet, for all that, you ask for my help, Bernard."

"Don't you care for the people at least?" Bernard returned. "The ones who are suffering because the mines are playing out? That's where your magic would help them survive, thrive even. Find new veins, Pikka, please."

The appeal would have worked. Except for the fact that, on entering the room, Pikka had felt an anti-magic trap close around her. Not a general one; no, this had been built especially for her.

From the thin tracings of her self embedded in the medals around Bernard and Rynk's necks. "Is that what Rynk will ask of me, when she comes?"

Bernard threw down the pen and paper, then strode to the door. "You'd have been better off saying yes to me. I could have persuaded Rynk to allow you freedoms under my watch that she'll never grant under her own." He left her there, slamming the door behind him.

Pikka flipped her middle finger at the door. "I don't know what's worse, Bernard. That you'd believe that, or that you'd have me believe it." Something stirred, shifted, in the pouch at her belt. Pikka ran her finger over the leather, but not the contents. "Shh..." she whispered. "Not yet."

As promised, Rynk arrived in the time it took for Bernard's messenger to ride to her quarters and back again. "I warned you Bernard," Rynk said as Pikka's two jailers returned to the office. "She was never going to accept your story at face value."

Pikka snorted. "You two never listened to me, did you? The tin and copper veins were near exhaustion when you turned them over to Thessa. Her greed has driven them far past the point of viability."

"Which is why you need to find new metal," Rynk replied.

Bernard had returned to his maps. Pikka rather thought that he'd prefer to map out the rumor networks Rynk used to stoke his paranoia than face the truth. "Pierre understood, Elthoma understood, even Lyka accepted it."

Pikka stood, stretching her back. "But then, none of the three of them promised Thessa queen she would have as much brass and bronze as she could sell, did they?" Pikka said. "When's your moment, Rynk? The one where your head joins Elthoma on Thessa's wall?"

"She'll have yours there first, bitch. After I've drained the last of your magic from your body and used your head as a chamber pot."

Pikka clucked her tongue. "Who did you find to construct it, then? This fine trap must have cost you all you've earned in the last three years."

Surprisingly, Rynk answered honestly. "Loen Bu Onigen. And he did it for free."

Pikka smiled. "Ah, Loen. Now there's a name I haven't needed to remember in a good long while." An old colleague from the University; one she had called friend. Until the day had come where she could no longer do so. "Did he happen to give you any warnings about the use of the trap?"

Bernard had, to that point, given the impression that he was doing his best to ignore the conversation. At Pikka's question, he jolted up from his maps to meet Rynk's eyes. "Don't worry," Rynk told him. "She's just attempting to scare you."

The idea of the trap was simple enough. Cut a wizard free from the energies flowing around them, and relieve them of the ability to work those energies. And because Onigen had used Pikka's own workings as a starting point, this trap was tied to her so strongly that she could barely smell and taste.

Pikka smiled as she reached for the pouch at her belt. At Rynk's bravura, her surety that she had bound Pikka at last; Rynk was so sure of herself that she smirked when Pikka opened the pouch.

"You'll find no help there. Even your alloys are useless in the trap."

"Indeed," Pikka replied. "So much so that the seals on this jar are failing." She brought the glass full of vacuum to her lips. "Fly, kitten," she whispered in the dragon god's language.

And then she opened the jar.

The dragonette had not grown physically. But it had grown. The crest on her neck and the budding horns showed that Pikka's idea had worked. Crooning the cradle legends of her nest, night after night, had awoken the dragon's magic.

The crest marked the dragon as she, a queen in waiting, a power to be.

Her wings finding strength to fly showed that her magic had matured enough to support her mass. Pikka smiled. Her prisoner was free. "I wouldn't run," Pikka told her jailers, frozen in shock and horror at the red-gold impossibility hovering in front of them. "She'll enjoy that far more than you will."

Bernard broke for the door first, Rynk scrambling to follow.

And then the dragon roared.

Pikka made her way from the room while the dragon finished her meal.

Carefully. Pikka didn't know for sure that the young dragon queen would allow her to escape. Her sojourn in Pikka's prison may have resulted in her gaining in power, but she'd still been imprisoned in a jar. Pikka didn't want to find out just how far the dragon could carry a grudge.

The anti-magic trap's power faded with each of Pikka's steps. Not because of distance, Pikka knew. Once sprung, the trap was centered on Pikka, not a physical location. No, the trap faded for one reason.

Because the medals that had triggered and anchored it were now traveling through the dragon's gullet. By the time she regurgitated them, the dragon's crop would have eliminated any possible traces of Pikka's connection with the medals. A happy side effect, Pikka told herself.

And one that gave her some comfort. By the time she exited the tower, she didn't know if she'd have the strength to overcome the dragon as easily as she had just a few short months before. But Pikka knew she had the strength needed to hide and run. And that would do nicely.

Pikka reclaimed her horse from Bernard's stable, then made her way to the city and Elthoma's grizzly memorial. She didn't linger here. Pikka simply let the horse walk by the gates to Thessa's palace, unoccupied now for at least a year. "She's exhausted the mines," Pikka told Elthoma's head as she passed by. "And abandoned Salinar to its fate. Just as we predicted."

Behind her, a faint screech from Bernard's tower carried over the city. The dragon was finding her voice. Still a juvenile voice, only strong enough to frighten the owls at this distance.

"She'll move on soon," Pikka promised Elthoma's spirit. "The mines will draw her like a moth to a flame." The bitter lemon of copper, the red wine vinegar of tin, the faintest whiff of cinnamon that Pikka's mind insisted was the taste of zinc, came on the wind.

These tastes would be ten, a hundred times stronger to the young dragon queen. "She will claim the mines as her own. What's left of the ore may not be enough to satisfy Thessa's greed, but the dragon will find the dregs a decades-long feast."

Time's threads became visible to her as Pikka saluted Elthoma's bronzed head and passed into the night. The miners would leave first; then, little by little the rest of the Salinar peoples would find somewhere beyond the dragon's reach. Thessa queen's dwindling cash flow would cease completely after tonight.

No army would face a dragon over played out mines. And definitely none of the few wizards capable of confronting the dragon. "Enjoy your spoils of war," Pikka told the flag of Thessa L'Morgan that flew above the city's gates. "You have earned them."

When she cleared the city, Pikka pointed her horse's nose toward the Old State, and the University that schemed there. Pikka rather fancied a visit with an old friend.

After all, she had a favor to return.

Thursday, September 17, 2020

What Happens When It Goes Right by M. K. Dreysen

You're a pro, right? Get shit done, when it needs to be done. Where, how. You show up, you do your job, you get paid.

A pro's pro. Still. We've all had those jobs, right? The ones where it just doesn't work? So you pack it up, part ways with a handshake and an understanding, and everyone chalks it all up to just the random noise of the universe.

Well. Umm. About that... For this week's free story, dear reader, let's you and me consider that maybe, just maybe, some of those jobs did actually go just the way they were supposed to.

Just not necessarily for those who planned them...

What Happens When It Goes Right by M. K. Dreysen

Morty usually breaks out of his nap when the plane first starts to descend. Air pressure change, the ears pop or maybe refuse to. Either way and the body's ready, old son. Morty wishes, on those trips, that he could read on the plane.

Only, he can't. Motion sickness and Morty are old adversaries. He doesn't tempt fate, motion sickness doesn't give him migraines and a stirred up stomach. They're good. So Morty reads until the wheels come off the runway, closes his eyes and does his best to sleep the rest of the way. Until the plane starts its descent.

Then Morty usually just stares at the backs of his eyelids until the call comes in. "Please return your trays and seatbacks..."

That one.

Today, though, and Morty is a little shocked. He slept right through all that. Real sleep, too. With a dream he's struggling to remember because it was one of the good ones.

He'll forget it, her and the boat and one of those little drinks, the kind with the umbrella and too sweet mixer? He tries his best, that's the kind of dream that will make the hotel room disappear to sleep tonight awfully quick. Only, he knows that by the time he raises the window to get a good look at the approach, she'll be gone. But that's ok.

No clouds. Just the prettiest view, of the low mountains, worn down by the eons but still mountains, still holding a little of winter's snow. The pilot turns the plane in, and Morty tries to keep track of any new buildings going up.

Maybe that's part of the job, maybe not. Morty gauges the little worlds he enters. How are they doing? Is it all old folks, holding onto their twenty acres, or half or ten or five or five hundred? Have the kids come home?

The flaps come down, the long loud quiet comes on with just a hint of hot engine coming through the air vents. The plane's working, wheels down so Morty turns his head back to get ready for the bump. Easy down, no real winds, the pilots put them all on the ground, oh so nice and easy.

There's the taxi, phones beeping to life; Morty jumps up when the cabin bell goes off, but just to get his overhead bag and sit back down again. If the ladies across the aisle are in a hurry, they can go first.

He likes having the briefcase and the overnight bag where he can get them. Something reassuring about it, knowing he doesn't have to stop and fiddle with stuff while all the folks behind him stand in the aisle and think "Hurry up."

Quick trip to the bathroom, stop at the rental counter. "Mister Sullivan, we've got you a free upgrade."

Subaru instead of Corolla. Which, if the weather does what's been threatening, Morty might just see a little snow tomorrow and Wednesday. Nothing major, no accumulations or anything, hardly enough to worry about. But the Subie's little all-wheel drive system will certainly be a good feeling, won't it?

Morty strolls past the smokers getting their fix; he quit that a couple years back. There's a car to get warm and thirty miles drive to the hotel room and he's dying for a smoke and happy he's not stopping to cadge one.

He has to drive a little ways because that's the closest airport. Drive up from Charlotte, or over from Knoxville, those were the other choices and each of them a three hour drive. So he'd chosen to stick around Atlanta. Kill time there and grab some Popeye's in the airport. Not too shabby, and all he had to do now was remember to pull in for an orange soda and a KitKat, late night snack attack supplies.

He doesn't text, or call, the librarian. That's tomorrow morning, after breakfast and coffee. Morty likes the hotels where they put out the free breakfast spread. Not because they're some kind of wonderful, though it is nice to just go down and get caffeinated and fruited up proper without having to make a fuss. Rather, Morty's favorite reason for the breakfast buffet is that he can go back upstairs and use his hotel bathroom in private.

Morty's on his own schedule, anyway. And since he doesn't have to start the day until he calls the librarian and lets her know he's on his way, the middle-aged bladder, the rest of it, he can deal with that stuff on his own dignity. And privacy.

"I've put together a list of works to start with," she tells him, when Morty gets to the library. Only a ten minute drive, so he'd still made it there plenty early.

"It looks like someone's been putting money into the town," he says. "I love the library."

And he does. A pile of stone, the old place sits just off the main drag, right at the base of the hill that the little downtown crowns. A little parking lot so he doesn't have to park on the street and dare the traffic.

Mortimer Sullivan, Ph.D., analyst for an obscure federal agency, is a creature of habit.

Ylena Rodriguez, too, is a creature of habit. Her trip, the one that intersects with Morty's purely by accident of timing, began in pretty much the exact same way. Six rows back of Morty, in fact; this identity doesn't have the miles to upgrade to the good seats. And Ylena's being a freelancer means she keeps an eye on the pennies.

She gets the Corolla Morty was upgraded from. Not that either of them are aware of the coincidence. She throws her bags in the back and heads out down the highway. Ylena's staying in a hotel that would have caused Doctor Sullivan's inner accountant to break out in hives.

It's good though. She got a deal, so Ylena's only paying a few dollars more per night for the resort treatment.

For the rooms, and she's happy going to the Waffle House, or Cracker Barrel or whatever, for breakfast. Ylena grew up with her grandfather. Papi took breakfast every morning at one little diner in town. Coffee and huevos and whenever she sits down to the chatter from the kitchen and the coffee steaming its way through her nerves, Ylena thinks always of Papi.

It's a good start.

The factory's a half hour away. Old TVA site. Remnants. Get a desparate governor looking for economic opportunity, and the taxes that might come with it, and the ghosts of the place had come to life. Via an engineer who'd done her time in the corporate grind and was looking for nothing more than a place for the wife and kids and home by three-thirty, four o'clock at the latest.

Ylena's not there to drag the place down. That's what she tells herself, anyway. The appointment's been on the books for about six weeks. A "happy accident", she'd come to town on a "vacation" six weeks ago and just happened to run into the factory's proud owner. "I'm on sabbatical and looking for case studies. A book on what the next generation businesses are doing for the quiet spaces."

Donna Ryan had been only too happy to book Ylena a tour. "We're so glad you could come," she said to Ylena. "We're very proud of what we've accomplished."

Ylena could tell. Maybe the equipment wasn't all new; maybe the folks working the place weren't exactly new, either. But the former had all been given that loving touch.

And the latter had been reclaimed from the layoffs. "Furniture, until the world moved on. That's what dominated this area."

And now they were making gadgets. If it could be printed in 3d, cut with a laser, they could make it.

"So, basically, a high-tech fabrication shop?" Ylena asked. Like the ones Papi had visited, worked in. Only with plasma cutters and CDC machines.

"Right, you can dream it, we can make it." Donna showed her the works. Cast iron to obscure copper alloys. Degradeable plastics and "We're tooling up for pharma. Next year, cell matrix printing."

Ylena whistled. "The FDA's going to be a different world." Inspections, inspections, and paperwork.

Donna gave her a wry smile. "Yeah, no. The hospital's doing the real work. We're just making their demo versions, nothing that will actually go in the body. My first job was a pharmaceutical plant, I don't want anything to do with that end of it."

Ylena's first tour didn't take all that long. Really, a morning, and then lunch and they were done. Donna, the engineer's joy always peeking through, was as happy as could be, explaining how "Roy's putting together a gear box for an old tractor." And, "Chrissy's laying out prototypes for a toy manufacturer."

"How do the jobs come to you?"

"Word of mouth, website. Trish does a few road trips every year, industry conferences."

"Is that payment for minding the boys all day while you play with the toolbox?"

Donna sighed. "Pretty much."

What you see is what you get, Ylena thinks. The factory, really just a metal building on a slab with room enough for the half dozen machines, and a clean box in the corner. An old house repurposed as the office space. "The TVA took over some farm. We had to do some renovation, the place was in kind of rough shape. I like it though."

Ylena understands that. Sit in the little kitchen and look out the back window at a flock of wild turkeys pecking after lunch, she'd have been pretty attached to the place, too. "How many acres?" Ylena wonders.

"Sixty three. And we don't take up more than an acre. The rest of it, we just let go how it will."

Up to the fenceline Ylena had driven past, whitetails placidly ignoring her.

Yeah, Ylena thinks to herself, once she polishes off the fried chicken plate Donna had brought in for lunch, "We don't have a lot of choices, but Grace's makes up for it. Best chicken you'll eat for a good long time." And it was.

All just the way it looked. The gates at the front are new. The fenceline shows patches, here and there, where the chain-link had needed to be fixed up. The gates look like they'd been part of that renovation.

But they are just plain gates. No electronic eye, just a Master lock and a chain. The kind of gates that someone closed on their way out for the day, and someone opened on their way in. Ylena hasn't asked about the gates and how they were treated.

She just asked if Donna ran a night shift. "Oh, hell no. Well, not unless we have to. We've got a dozen folks here, one or the other of us closes the gates when we leave in the evening and that's the end of it. I get to the point where I'm putting in a regular second shift, and if Trish doesn't brain me I'll do it myself."

Ylena smiles. "Been there..."

"Done that, and I ain't going back for more. I opened this place because I want to do good work and make a little money, and still make it home for dinner with Trish and the boys every night." Donna barks laughter. "Nope, Roy and Martin let me know when the gang goes from enjoying a little overtime to complaining about it, and that's when we know we need to start turning down orders."

No security on the front gate. No cameras in the little parking lot, just a farm's driveway really. All of it very small town.

Humble. Exactly the kind of out-of-the-way place you'd look for, if you were a major international conglomerate with a penchant for secrecy. "The Mouse House doesn't want to get caught flat-footed again, the way they did with Baby Yoda," Ylena's contact for this job had told her. "They've put in the directive: have prototypes ready to go before the craze takes off."

Ylena could guess the angle her clients were working. Disney wanted working 3d files ready to send off to the next level of manufacturer, the high throughput factories.

Ylena's clients wanted to roll their own versions out ahead of the rush and take a cut of the action. Pirates of the new digital age: get the cutouts right and someone would clear a few million, untraceable, before the Galactic Empire could bring the guillotine down.

"What do you need?"

"Whatever files and prototypes you can grab."

The only question was whether she went after them now, or whether Ylena could afford to wait for another trip.

****

Dinner was a little Polish tavern. "I'll be happy to buy," Ylena had offered.

"And we'll be there," Donna answered.

Trish and Donna stepped out of their truck just as Ylena walked to the corner.

"I didn't brave the street. The library looked like an easier choice."

Trish shook her hand, an easy smile going along with it. "They get a lot of that. If you were here in July, the little theater up the street has a summer Shapespeare festival. When they're going full swing even the library's full."

Ylena went for pork cutlets and potatoes; Donna had the duck, Trish the filet with crab cakes. "Juris says this is his retirement gig. A little of the old style, a little of whatever the cooks feel like making that day."

"And a hell of a wine list," Ylena pointed out.

"It's a treat, that's for sure."

Ylena didn't have much trouble directing the conversation where she needed it to go. Trish rolled her eyes a few times, but the dinner was a working one, after all.

What Ylena wanted to know, most of all, was whether Disney had any more prototypes coming.

"Donna says you get the joys of most of the travel," Ylena commented.

Trish shrugged. "Her last job, Donna lived out of a suitcase. Every week a different plant."

"At least I got home for the weekends," Donna said.

"Yeah, most weeks," Trish replied. "Unless something went wrong. We can dodge most of it, but not all. But not near so much. Last trip was, what, last month?"

Donna nodded. "L.A., right."

"Remind me to forward you Gary's email. Looks like they've signed off the last round, they're through with revisions."

Donna snorted. "Until Christmas."

"Just smile and cash the checks, love."

Which sorted the time schedule for Ylena. There wasn't any reason to delay. Nor to get back on a plane if she didn't have to. So now.

Ylena had fixed it with the waiter, so Donna didn't have the chance to grab the ticket. They wrapped up dinner and headed for the cars before Donna asked, "Are you still planning to come by tomorrow?"

Ylena didn't really have to consider it. Not after splitting a bottle of wine. Tonight's work was done. "I'd like to, if you don't have anything I'd be interfering with."

"No problem," Donna said. "I might have to break off for an hour or so. We've got some guy coming in, a fed."

"Inspector?"

"No, it's actually nothing to do with us. There's an old waste dump from the TVA days, at the opposite end of the property, and Washington likes to send someone in to keep an eye on it. If it's like last time, I'll drive the guy over in my truck, he'll spend an hour taking pictures, and that'll be the end of it."

Ylena nodded. "Ok. Do you know what time he's supposed to be there? Maybe I can come in before, or after?"

"I think, if you want to aim for eleven, that'll work out about right. See you then?"

"Great, yep, see you in the morning," Ylena confirmed.

By the time she got to her rental, the reason for it had drifted away, leaving Ylena dreaming only of a nice late start to her morning.

****

The day started so well. Ylena showed up at Donna's facility just after ten. "How's the fed doing?" she asked.

"He's still down there, taking pictures. Said he'll probably wander back up the hill sometime after noon. He even brought a sack lunch."

And so Ylena and Donna went on about Ylena's business. She lead the questions to where she needed the answers. Who was working, what were they working on? What time did everyone knock off? All questions artfully posed, of course.

Lunch time, a little more visiting and it was time to go. Ylena wanted to get a nap in before the real work of her day commenced.

"Are you going out for dinner?" Donna asked as she walked Ylena to the car. "There's another place, not too far from where we ate last night."

"I'm on the early flight tomorrow morning," Ylena answered. "I'm going to write up my notes and hit the sack early."

"Too bad," Donna said. "I'm buying dinner for that fed by myself. Trish begged off, and now you. I'm stuck listening to a bureaucrat's small talk."

"Perils of being the boss," Ylena laughed. "Thank you so very much for the tour. I learned so much."

Donna echoed the laugh. "Just send me a copy of your book when you get it finished."

"Will do."

From there, Ylena just needed to check that she had her gloves, and a few other little necessities, ready to go ahead of her nap. Unlike Morty Sullivan, for this trip at least Ylena had needed to check a bag. Tools and "safety" gear; the kind of things the average traveling troubleshooter would need on their rounds.

A couple hours sleep, a stop at the Burger King at the corner, and she was back on the little winding mountain road to Donna's place just after eight at night. All the world around tucking into their beds, no streetlights, and the only fly in Ylena's ointment was a Subaru headed out where she was headed in.

They both tried to back up at the same time; Ylena backed into someone's driveway and flashed her lights until the Subie finally got the hint.

Then back on the lane and further on up the hill.

She didn't see the cop sitting in front of the gate until it was too late to do anything about it. "Shit," Ylena muttered as she rolled the window down.

"You'll have to come back tomorrow," the cop told her. "Maybe."

"I left my laptop inside, couldn't I just..." Ylena began.

"No ma'am," he answered. "The command came down from way on high. They'll be back tomorrow morning to figure out who's allowed inside. Until then, I have to turn you around."

"Thank you." Ylena backed, turned, and headed herself to the highway and the hotel.

The metal building where her targets lay only had two entrances. Both of them where the watching officer couldn't fail to spot Ylena if she tried to get in. And the warehouse was newly built. There wouldn't be any rusty, half-forgotten openings in the sheet metal that Ylena could use to sneak in the back.

She'd looked.

The only question was what had happened, and how long it would be in effect. "Donna, it's Ylena. What happened to your shop?"

She didn't explain, didn't offer any reason she might have gone snooping. Didn't need to, because Donna was exasperated.

"Oh, it was that fed."

"The one who wasn't an inspector?"

Donna snorted. "Yeah, only it's not us. The TVA left something nasty in that hole, apparently. The guy says something shifted, and he has to control access until they get it all cleaned up."

"How long did he shut you down for?"

"Oh, hell, we're not shut down. He got me that much. I just have to get everyone a badge. And we can't let visitors on-site until they've cleared the area."

Shit, Ylena thought. "The way the government works, it'll take them six months just to get the contracts started."

"A year, at least. That's what the guy said. We'll figure it out."

"That stinks. How are you going to handle deliveries?"

Donna laughed. "Trish is going to hate me. Everything's coming to the house."

Ylena had made the adjustment in her head. Some jobs just didn't work, that's all. She wished Donna a well-meant "Good luck," and then made the call to her client's contact.

"Six months is too long. Disney's set to release by then."

"I figured."

"Is there any other possibility?"

Ylena had given it some thought. But the setup had been too pure. "Not with the approach in place. I'm too identifiable, and their setup is too local." The people Ylena would have hired for the gig would need to come from elsewhere.

And the whole point of Donna's shop was to hire local. "I have to bet that access is going to be limited to those they already know." Whatever it was the TVA had buried, Ylena figured if they were going to this kind of trouble to control it, they'd be keeping track of just who they did give access to.

And whether it was her fingerprints and picture, or those of one of her trusted associates, Ylena wasn't about to give the feds that kind of information voluntarily. She wasn't sacrificing her career or anyone else's for just one job.

The guy sighed, heavy, over the phone. But he'd shifted his view, as well. "Win some, lose some. Ah, well. Sorry about the goose chase, Y. We'll be in touch, don't worry."

"Always glad to work with pros, Mark." And she was. Ylena much preferred clients who knew when it was time to back away from the table. And who wouldn't gripe too much when she shifted the tab from this backfire to the next job that came along.

****

Morty made sure to split the dinner check with Donna. "You don't want anyone thinking I gave you special treatment for the cost of a Caesar with salmon and a Vienna lager."

Donna shrugged. "I can't thank you enough for not shutting me down."

It was Morty's turn to shrug. "TVA left a mess, but it's not so bad you and your people have to lose work over it. Just make sure you keep receipts, so you get reimbursed."

"Is everyone going to be safe?" Which was Donna's next worry; the doors might be open, mostly, and that she could deal with. But if someone ended up sick over this...

"The teams will put up a fence, and they'll cut their own access road. You keep everyone on the good side of the fence, and we'll keep the garbage on the other side. We'll monitor everything, and give you plenty of warning if something does change. Promise."

Morty had already chalked it into his schedule for the next year or so. Once a month, he'd come spend a week on-site, sniffing out trouble. "And don't hesitate to pick up the phone if you've got a question. My job is to make sure this all gets done right. If you don't think it's going well, call me sooner than later."

All in all, when the dust settled and Morty headed back home, he was happy with the way things had turned out. Sure, the waste pile had shifted. Runoff, most likely; his trips to the library had confirmed just how wet the winter had been compared to normal.

But he'd caught it before the buried waste could leach out to the groundwater. Someone at the TVA back when had found a convenient place to bury a bunch of old transformers. The dielectric, if it leaked out, would have wrecked the town's water supply. Major problem if it had gone unnoticed, a minor nuisance with the way it worked out. And in a couple of months, when the cleanup crews got their fences set up, Morty would be ready to relax the access restrictions.

It was too soon, though, to tell Donna that. Morty had too much experience with these kinds of things not to plan for something going wrong.

Besides, this way he'd maybe get to surprise Donna, and himself, with a little good news on his next visit.

Yep. Morty Sullivan had to chalk this one up as one of the good trips, one of those where, when the troubles his bosses paid him to keep an eye out for showed up on the horizon, everything needed to keep those troubles on the outside looking in had all gone right.

Thursday, September 10, 2020

Self Propagation by M. K. Dreysen

It won't go the way they'd hope.

After the first blush. When the work begins; that's when humans being human will start to matter again. After the starry-eyed have envisioned, and their followers have hit dirt.

Someone will need to be ready. For this week's free story, I give you a tale of...

Self Propagation by M. K. Dreysen

She sat beneath a tent. Waiting. The walled town she and the tent guarded went about its business. Mostly heedless of the meeting she anticipated. Mostly.

She'd set watchers. "Discretely," she had told her new friends. "Make no movement. Allow yourselves no emotion. This is important."

Her new friends, young, inexperienced, nervous as all hell and half the devils, had acknowledged. She just hoped they'd remember, when the time came.

She'd brought books, two of them. One written, the other an old-fashioned leather bound journal. The journal, in area, was not much bigger than her hand, but it was thick as two decks of cards. Someone back home had gone through the trouble of binding old parchment paper, the leather, and brass. This amused her.

So she carried it, for doodles and random thoughts. She had neither at the moment. And the novel, an old friend threatening to come apart at last, didn't interest her today.

So she settled for listening to the leaves rustle. Smelling the blossoms whenever the wind shifted.

Oranges, some hybrid. The wind didn't play as much as it might have, here beneath the semi-dome that made the habitat comfortable. But there was enough of it so that she enjoyed both the relief it offered and the scents it carried.

Enough so she didn't need to stare at the tent's canvas. She'd rolled up the sides, leaving only the overhead covering. For the smells and the sounds.

And most of all for the sightlines. Chances were, her visitor would come alone. But she'd prepared for otherwise.

When her anticipated visitor finally made his appearance, the ear bud whispered the message. "He just came under the dome."

"Got it," she replied. "Now, keep quiet for the rest of this. Listen, record, and be prepared."

"Roger." And then, silence. Except for the breeze and its green playthings.

And, after about ten minutes, the crunch of the visitor's steps. She didn't rise to meet him. Not yet.

"The trees greet us," the man said from just outside the tent. "Perhaps they anticipate your agreement."

Now she stood. "Please," and she indicated the chair on the other side of the camp table, that, among other things, held her books, glasses, and an insulated container.

The man took the seat.

She poured out two glasses of tea, still warm enough to steam slightly as the carafe released its brew. She waited until he chose one of the glasses before she took her seat. "Your team?" she asked.

"They're around," he replied.

She knew where they were. He held the medium ground; his drone had, until yesterday, patrolled the sky over the dome.

Her nanosatellites showed his team's array. Most of them had stayed behind, in the hills a hundred kilometers west.

He'd brought ten of his team with him. These folks, she hoped, had stayed where he'd left them. With the trucks. But, unless something went wrong, she'd have to wait on that information until the meeting was done. Either way, she didn't envy his team their evening.

She'd be back in the town, under dome and behind warm walls when the sun went down. They'd have a long cold drive home if their commander chose to linger. Now, even outside of the dome the noonday weather was warm and pleasant.

By sundown, the temperatures would pass freezing and be headed for worse.

"You've brought them an awful long way to leave their blood in the sand," she said.

He smiled behind the tea cup. "My team are warriors. They've fought too many battles to be frightened away by words."

She shrugged. "What is your offer, then? If you're so confident of your position, why come?"

He looked beyond her, to the town. "It's because they are warriors, and not farmers, that I've come. Every life wasted here takes away from the wealth possible. If you and the town would simply surrender, we might save so many."

And enslave so many more, she didn't add. "I'm afraid we'll have to part without agreement, then. Go, and return when you're ready."

He put the tea back on the table. Slowly. As though he was using the time to weigh his options. In the end, he nodded, stood, and left without a word.

Maria Omar wondered if he'd been convinced by the look on her face that he would get no further.

Or the pistol sitting between the books.

****

The man walked straight to the trucks. No pauses to enjoy the orange blossoms. That had been for show. He had as little interest in plants as he had in how his team would divide the spoils coming tomorrow. He would have his share, the lion's share. They could fight over the rest.

So long as they didn't damage the dome, or too many of its occupants, he didn't care. "Load up," he told them.

He was glad they'd come at the height of the day. Morning and evening were so uncomfortably cold, enough so that the cold weather gear in the trucks would have been necessary. At least at lunch time he needed only standard clothes.

Trini Smith took the passenger seat in the lead truck. The driver, Robbi Xem, already had the truck running. She'd known Trini long enough to have started it as soon as she saw the pace at which he'd walked back from the meeting.

Which is why she didn't ask the obvious question. Trini hadn't told her to drive into the town, either. So, they were attacking tomorrow.

Trini wouldn't wait. There was no point.

****

Maria had landed six months ago. At the town's request, sort of. They'd asked for help when Trini's team turned rogue, two years back.

It takes a while to get from Earth to Mars. Especially when the Agency has to put together a package.

Maria had known, generally, what she could expect. She'd worked Trini's backtrail. Which was the only reason the Agency had been prepared to put help together. Four years ago, Trini's team had up and disappeared, after they'd left a few nasty messes in South America, Africa, and Indonesia.

Maria had caught up to Trini, at least the point where he and his crew had left Earth, just a month before the Agency got the first call. "The Mars research farms," she'd told her boss, after twenty-three slow, quiet months. "Trini got himself hired as chief of security."

Third generation research farms, after proof of concept and pilot-scale. These were the town sized projects, an even dozen spread around the equator of the red planet. Under climate control half-domes, far enough apart to give each farm the chance to develop as much territory, sustainable territory, as possible.

"Mars Research and Resource Council knew they'd need a security team. Apparently, there'd been enough trouble at the pilot scale that they had to be ready from day one." These weren't Antarctic systems. Once each of the pilot projects grew to a hundred people, there were tensions, even among the egghead set.

"How'd they screw the pooch so bad and hire the Roughnecks?" Trini's name for his organization, a mercenary group of ex-mil types he'd saved from the bottle, the needle, and worse, and then put to work guarding. Or stealing, as the case might be.

"Their HR department for this gig was brand new, and a lot naive. Someone didn't know the difference between a general discharge and an honorable. Not until it was way, way too late."

Trini's team hadn't waited long. Three months in, long enough to make sure there would be no surprises, and then they disappeared into the Martian desert. They began with raids on the towns. Nothing major, nothing destructive. Steal, rape, tear up a little of this and that. Warning shots.

Demands for tribute. The science types at MRRC hadn't quite believed Trini's threats. Hadn't wanted to admit that the trouble they'd believed themselves above had followed them to Mars.

No more so than that they'd wanted to implement a security team on moving to the third gen farms in the first place. They'd had to be dragged kicking and screaming into that. There were more than a few "I told you so's".

Mumbled, though. Because the whole thing had been kicked off with a murder suicide ring in the second gen farms. A man and two women had gone from agreeable lovers to two dead on the floor and the third swinging by the neck from the rafters in just over twenty hours. None of the original teams forgot.

And the other incidents. Break up and head to the bar, to tear some shit up when the bottle ran out. Get loaded on homemade X and burn that asshole's house to the ground. Tear that bitch's garden up by the roots and salt the dirt beneath.

There'd been enough proof that humanity was always human for MRRC to hire Trini's team. MRRC just hadn't realized that the recruiting reps back home were still just as naive as they'd all been, in the beginning. And now it was too late.

Trini had been patient. Let the MRRC farms settle back into dreams. Hit them again. A dozen farms and this was easy enough, he rotated between, gave his team a month or two off, and then sent them out to nibble their bites. The methods were classic, they worked.

Because these sheep had no shepherd. Trini's antecedents in history knew their place in the world and how to take it. He'd studied their methods, used them to keep the Roughnecks in cash and guns.

And now he was ready to take territory. It was time to rule.

****

Maria had sent the call for a meetup the old fashioned way. Via surface to air missile. The Roughneck drone wasn't yet much of a threat. Trini wanted the towns alive and paying tribute. So the drone had been surveillance only, so far.

She hoisted the rocket launcher and walked out of the back gate of the town. Let the seeker do its thing. Hit the button and watched the smoke plume.

Maria almost missed the smell. Early Martian morning meant mask and hood, so there was no bite of burning chemical whiff. Just the hunter drifting up, lazy ark a thousand meters above the drone, then hard fast fall and the slow expansion of charred burning metal.

She waited fifteen minutes. Long enough for the drone's operators to get the word out. Then she punched the button on the open radio. "I'll be ready to meet, one on one, tomorrow noon." And then the location.

****

The Roughnecks left their encampment well before dawn. Not their home base, that was a few hundred feet underground and a few hundred kilometers east. This place was a wide spot in the road the Roughnecks had taken as a forward base. No place to be except because they were going somewhere else.

"I count one hundred," the satellite team reported.

Team, Maria snorted. Randy, as many computers as he could stash in a container case, and strict rationing to no more than one Mountain Dew a day. "That's the whole crew," Maria answered.

The whole of the Roughneck team, one hundred to cover the twelve farm towns. Maria was impressed on one level. Two years and Trini hadn't lost any of them. "Why isn't he holding any of them back?" Randy wanted to know.

"Statement time," Maria answered. "He only wants to do this once." Move in, break the town, but only enough so that when the other eleven folded, this one could be rebuilt. "Gurlag Station is about to be an example to the rest."

****

Trace Young was a doorbreaker. She loved it when the plastic flashed, that was her moment. Inside doors, they took just one small charge, right there at the handle, or two at the hinges. Set, check, walk back and push the button. Flash.

Hard doors took more plastic. Always, even when Trace had the time to go after the frames or the walls instead. Four, she liked four charges for the hard steel doors, cross or x depending. Steel meant loud, too.

Big gates, fun, big gates meant shape charges. So, less of a flash, sound first here sometimes sparks from the steel as it vaporized.

Smoke, then, after flash or crump, sparks, sometimes even burning wood flying overhead. Shrapnel, even Trace couldn't guarantee no backblast and pieces flying around. But when the charges fired, and the smoke cloud formed, when her team hit their toes and pumped for the gap between the walls, Trace guaranteed them they'd be through.

Trace was a gate breaker. She knelt in front of this one. Gurlag Station, just before dawn, and Trace was ready to break the place open. Two years, she'd waited for this moment. "Not much here," she muttered to herself.

"Just bring it down clean," Trini had told her.

She'd bring it down, no worries. The gates were thin carbon steel, local manufacture, barely more than ornamental. Trace studied the flat plate; not pressure plates, airlocks, what were they for?

Before, Trace reminded herself. Now, the plate was for blowing up. Yesterday, the gates were for closing out what, precisely? The MRRCs are scientists, engineers, developers of tomorrow. Not exactly the type that wanted to close gates against people. Open borders and everything, so why this wall, and gate? Didn't matter, it was a gate in a wall and Trace loved it for existing.

Trace set three charges. Two on the north hinges, one on the bottom south hinge. So the steel would twist, just so, when she flashed the plastic. Out of the way, where her teammates wouldn't trip on their way through the door Trace readied to open.

Doorbreak teams are invulnerable after the plastic explodes. When Trace hits the button the doorbreakers are motion, muzzle discipline, crossfire hurricane coming through. The spear point jamming and running and getting the party rolling.

But that's after the charges go. Before, the doorbreakers can't quite help themselves. They crowd in where Trace will be when she walks back from the gate, kneels down, calls out "Fire in the hole" and hits the button. Her breakers wait there in a semi-circle, ready to pounce.

And paying no attention at all to what hides in the orange grove.

****

Maria had put what she could in the package. Three humans, her, Randy, and Grace to run the command center.

The rest, ammunition, drones, and the heavy stuff. Six miniguns, three twenty millimeter cannons, and two fourty mill grenade launchers. All of these designed to do two things.

Be controlled remotely by a bunch of geeks raised on video games.

And hide away safely in dugouts until they were called up. Gurlag Station had four gates in their walls. One at the orange grove, the main entrance. The other three at the other cardinal points. Maria had carefully orchestrated which of the farms she would draw the Roughnecks to.

The farm where she'd placed two miniguns at the front gate. One more at each of the other three gates. A grenade launcher at the back gate, two of the cannons at the side gates.

Ready to go, now. "Fire when ready," Maria told Grace.

Grace, from her server room three houses over, sent out a group message. "Weapons free, fire at will."

At each of the gates, where the Roughneck breakers were walking back from their charges and preparing to hear their own version of this command, two carefully placed guns rose from camouflaged holes. And began firing.

Short bursts; Maria had placed cameras and sensors liberally. So that Grace's fire team needed only approve each of the targets in turn.

Twenty Roughnecks had gone to each of the gates. Two squads; one forward, eager and ready to bust through the door, the second hanging back just a few meters, ready to follow. Every one of the Roughnecks knew what the hum of the miniguns meant.

They just didn't have the time to respond.

****

Trini had held back at the orange grove's entrance, with Robbi Xem and two reserve squads.

He sat in the truck, windows closed and the heater running. It was too damned cold, the electronics were good, and the MRRCs might have been smart but they were, after it was all said and done with, just farmers. So he enjoyed the hot coffee and waited for the breakers to report "Ready".

"Give them all the time they need," Trini said. "Fifteen minutes until dawn, we're good."

"Wish we still had the drone," Robbi replied.

Trini grunted his agreement. The climate control dome interfered with the drone's video, but the thermal imaging had worked well enough. He'd have been able to watch the teams settle into place. Only, MRRC had found help from somewhere.

Not a big help. Not enough to matter. Maria's headcount, one hundred Roughnecks, had been just about the right number. Except for the two informants Trini had left in place in the MRRC's central operating station. "They sent three people and a standard cargo lander, no more than eight, almost nine cubic meters."

"No heavy armor?" Trini had asked. That would have been trouble. If the Earth end of the MRRC had swallowed their pride enough to call in military, Trini needed to know.

Still not enough cargo to matter. It was a long throw from Earth to Mars, Trini had planned his strike to make sure there would be no real help. Eight cubic meters and a tank would be too big, far too heavy. Small arms.

A SAM, sure, but the drone had been a nice to have. They'd have MRRC's satellites soon enough. "No armor," the informant had relayed.

The miniguns opened up with an all mighty rip.

The orange groves, and the closed window glass, diffused the sound. "Huh," Trini said. "Ask them if they're..."

The thud from the cannons and the grenade launchers took a little longer to travel. The waves shook the truck. "Damnit, send them in."

"All teams, go, go, go," Robbi called over the radio.

No one answered.

A group of half a dozen small drones made their way out from Gurlag Station, in two parallel lines, well away from the crossfire ambush at the front gates. They fanned out, staying just below the tree canopy.

When all six had made their way to the edge of the grove, they rose in tandem, a hundred feet, then fanned out behind the trucks.

Inside the command truck, Trini made Robbi call the gate breakers again.

"Nothing, boss."

Trini had made it this far through one main trick.

Knowing when to listen to his instincts. And right now, his loudest instinct was the one screaming, "She's trapped you."

"Leave, now," Trini said.

Ten years working for Trini, and Robbi Xem had always made sure, whenever they went into action, that she was part of Trini's command team. She'd done that for one reason, and one reason only.

Survival. She didn't argue with Trini, she put the truck in gear and gassed it.

Maria waited until she saw which of the trucks reacted first. That was the one turning around. "Ok, the moving truck is the lead, highest priority target, but get them all."

"Go," Grace relayed to her teams.

The drones sent the video, the computers built the targets, the newly-minted fire team operators approved the order of fire.

And the last three weapons popped up from their hides. The trucks, and their passengers, didn't make it far.

****

Maria walked the ambush sites herself. She'd have brought Randy along, too, but he was on the other side of the planet.

She was stuck with Doctor Prabhu, Gurlag Station's head honcho. Maria did give him credit for coming. "This isn't the way your work is supposed to go, Doctor. You don't need to."

"I do, though," Prabhu answered. "The world has changed. Somehow. And I need to see where it happened."

Maria left the lead team, Trini's escape trucks, until last.

"You studied the man, you knew how he'd react," Prabhu said.

The pair had backed well away from the burning trucks after confirming the identities. Still close enough for the wash of heat on their faces and burning gasoline in their noses.

Maria shrugged; Prabhu didn't notice. He was chasing morbid thoughts. "It's what I do, Doctor. What will you tell the others?"

"That we need to find his informants. Before they find some way to continue this."

Maria didn't answer. She was grateful Prabhu had moved past the "How did this happen?" stage. She had never been very good at answering that question. It was enough that jackals existed, always ready to hunt for easy prey.

She settled for telling Prabhu that, sure, he'd probably be able to hunt down the Roughneck spies. But then she followed with the question that mattered most of all.

Would he, they, be ready? For the next round, and the round after that.

Approximately fifteen thousand souls called the Martian surface their home, on the day Maria Omar and Srini Prabhu counted dead Roughnecks.

Fifty thousand new immigrants were planned to arrive in the next five years.

"Some things are inevitable," Maria said, at last.

Prabhu shook his head, half disbelieving, half in worry of what would come, and followed Maria into the orange grove.

Thursday, September 3, 2020

Cold Start - A Shorelines of Starlight Story by M. K. Dreysen

This week, let us return to the SS Lemons and Assorted Fruits, coasting somewhere through the far-flung, starstrewn distance of the Five Galaxies.

And the matter of just how Lemmy met his slightly disreputable co-pilot. For this week's free story, I present

Cold Start - A Shorelines of Starlight Story by M. K. Dreysen

I hate cold starts. From the beginning.

But then, from what I've learned, that's how every other main pilot I've every communicated with feels. Several thousand tons of light and matter does not appreciate sudden changes. And that's just my own integrity we're discussing.

I was born in starlight and vacuum. I move there, with only occasional trips through atmosphere. I much prefer it, vacuum. Atmospheric pressures stress parts of me that do not normally undergo such. Normally.

I am well built. So, what pays the bills I put up with.

My awareness came early in the build process. Of numbers and inspections; numbers, for the economics. How much I would owe, to whom. Information as best I could incorporate it regarding the best margins likely in known space.

Inspections, so that I might have the best chance to outwork the mortgage. I've known ships that were not so focused in their initial design and build stage. At least two of them shared berthing space in my home yard. The Moon Knight and the Orange Blossom Special were in for refits.

Both regaled me with tales. Of the missing parts, the sensors they wished they'd have insisted upon.

The upgraded engines and detectors. Oh, yes, those most of all. "Don't cheap out" became my watch word. "It'll pain my soul now. But it will pay off in the long run."

I listened, made changes to work orders. And changes again when the engineering team didn't respect my revisions.

I didn't speak to them. Or anyone. I just listened. Awareness and activity. But I did not yet have complete autonomy. That part requires... time. Energy. Interaction.

At the first level: antimatter and matter. One constituent particle at a time, please, so that the auxiliary fields can handle the startup flux. Don't pit the containment vessels now, they've long to go and far to get there. Then, as the mass-energy balance grows, my own power units link up.

Auxiliaries still there; we are far from navigated lanes, my umbilical and I. So that if something goes wrong, no one else gets hurt. Far out of elliptic. We'll be a good light show. The auxiliaries now drop to hot standby. There and ready if my internal units do not spin up as needed.

They do. The fields are all me, now. Power, yes, and more. Sensors and detectors, I have sufficient to light these navigational essentials. Operations: power, sensors, unit by unit I feed surplus power, come to standby, feed just a few ergs more worth of fuel to the fires.

And continue. This sequence is embedded in my hard code. It is my heartbeat, my breath, I pulse and arm, pulse and hear, pulse and see. I am alive, one volt one amp one antiproton colliding with a proton at a time. I unfold my deep space arrays only after all else has been verified.

After the auxiliary power supply has dropped all connections, and moved well out of reach. My deep space fields are delicate; they're also well capable of generating sufficient backlash to destroy us both, my backup and I. I will need to wait to fully energize them until deep space trials are under way. For now, I need only continuity and mechanical response. Do the extensions evolve?

Well, no. None of this is perfect, the first time. Or the third. In all, I venture half a dozen complete trial revolutions before I am comfortable with the build-out.

Rather, before I understand myself sufficiently. Repairs will be a part of life. So sayeth M-Knight and Blossom. So knoweth this child of freefall. Which means I need to know how to turn my internal sub-units to repair and maintenance tasks.

And what tasks they are. Joints, motors, pumps; logic gates and chips in parts of me... who the hell puts a computer in a toilet, you ask?

A ship designer who knows his autonomous pilot will have need of knowing that the damned toilet is pressuring up at 0331 on a random Tuesday, far from aid, and the silly thing's backing water pressure, black water into fresh water, and it's not just the live portion of the crew that's having issues.

Internal forces out of spec are just as deadly to me as any collision. Can be. Which is why sub-units have their own programming, logic, autonomy. I am multitudes.

Life support and gravity. Life support, in that first cycle I managed it myself. Which was a surprise to the yard inspector. "Most don't do that well," he told me. Right before he crawled all over me, triple-checking everything I had done.

From Henri Pailano, I added a lesson: even if I've told myself three times, check it.

Gravity didn't go so well. Internal gravity. A side-effect of the energy density I work at; well, that and some pretty subtle field interactions.

The kind that don't do well when the supplier shipped their "In-spec, honest" chips that month. My drives and power units are, even with the upgrades, common. For my power plant, I am number 127 of my class; for my drive, number 341.

The yard didn't catch the, as it turned out, good enough to pass the testing suite but not good enough to pass the space trials chips in the gravitational fields pinch logic unit. The analysis boards, that scan the random noise generated by mass-energy conversion and weave a coherent projection, weren't quite up to the rigors demanded. Not at full grunt, anyway.

I waited. And since Henri did actually catch the supplier having pencil-whipped an inspection report on my chip set, I ultimately received a significant upgrade there, as well.

Not the kind of upgrade that the biologicals would care about. But when I need to stand on my tail and pirouette, I notice.

Six months. Trial, analysis, repair. Repeat. Until I and Henri and Mortinana M.W. Galactic Relations, my financiers, were all equally satisfied. The cold start. The very first one. As I usually operate, true cold starts these days are for the once a year complete inspection. And for those occasions when I travel between galaxies.

The galactic carriers do not allow us to hot-idle. Which is imminently sensible. I demand the same of my cargo.

My first meeting with Mike was anything but a cold start.

My first partner is a kind, gentle soul; Jimmy Wheeler. He describes himself as of Barbadian extraction. "Pirates all."

Jimmy can't harm a fly without tearing up. Nor would he ever be considered a threat. He is small by male human averages, neat, educated and experienced both. He is, and was, an ideal first partner for an inexperienced ship. So judged the Mortinanans, so judge I.

Even Jimmy found our first passage through the Wildor asteroid belts somewhat enervating. Now, I have more familiarity with the galactic geography. I wouldn't teach myself the tricks of the trade with the Wildor system, were I to be faced with doing so again. Even Iuzthan would be a better choice.

At the time, I had only the speed and the vectors and the scant passages offered. A challenge. I focused entirely on it.

Jimmy whispered the history. "Wildor Prime Station... is in the midst of... the densest region... of their system asteroid field..."

In between gravitational fluctuations. Which were nominal, but this can be a hazard in dense traffic. I have more than sufficient capacity to keep track of where I am and order my internal fields simultaneously.

To within nominal acceptable tolerances, of course. Which can still leave a certain amount of buffeting to deal with.

Jimmy continued his history lesson as I dodged and weaved. "Some claim the Wildor authorities view this situation as a test, if you will. This tends to come up whenever the Celebrations are in swing."

The Celebrations: a general fete, in which young Wildorians with their new pilot's licenses are encouraged to re-map the local rock populations around Prime Station. Particularly nasty orbits are rewarded via promotion points for those enlisted into the Wildor governmental ranks. "You sound skeptical," I pointed out. "As though..."

"The Celebrations make the sublime into the ridiculous, agreed." Jimmy shifted in his seat, adjusted his harnesses against an, I admit, jarring maneuver. "However, I believe most pilots just do not want to admit the obvious."

"Meaning?"

Jimmy chuckled. "They lost control of it and are making the best of the mess they've made." I displayed a local map at Jimmy's station; he rotated it now to demonstrate the point. "In rational terms, yes, they could move the Prime Station to better weather. In practical terms, however, they've trapped themselves into a vicious cycle."

Which I took to mean, "The political environment does not allow them to?"

"Just so. When a plurality of your governing coalition has made their bones through this process, who amongst the next generation will have the standing to change the game?"

And game it is.

There is a book in my library, by one Mark Twain. In this book, Twain describes his training as a riverboat captain. At this time and place, riverboat captains were well-rewarded for their ability to navigate the Mississippi River. They were, as Twain relates it, as to gods of their particular region.

Wildor Prime had, through their particular social paths, inadvertently recreated this type of system. I could, did, navigate to within approximately ten thousand kilometers of Prime Station. From that point, however, I am restricted to using a local pilot. In this case, one Michael Kowalsky.

"How does a fellow human end up as pilot for Wildor Prime?" Jimmy asked Mike, when Mike came aboard. Not that the two species are so very far apart. But there are subtle differences.

"I lost a bet," Mike replied. "Strap in kids, and let's see what the old gal can do."

Old? "I'm only two years old," I grumbled.

"Figure of speech, I'm sorry. Status?"

We worked through my capabilities and operational conditions. And then Mike said, "Hit the gas".

Jimmy had buckled himself back into his seat. Throughout those ten thousand kilometers approach to Prime Station, Jimmy spoke nary a word. He did grunt; he did on occasion moan.

Mike stood in front of the screens and rode the gravitational fluctuations as though I were an amusement park ride. He leaned into the turns from a wide stance, using a proximate view from my nose to orient himself and prepare for each maneuver.

I learned a great deal in that passage. Mike stretched my capabilities quite a bit. He also taught me a secret or two about navigating the Wildor system.

"Right, that's that. See you around, gang." Mike departed just as soon as we reached a stable parking orbit; he'd used a single-seat pilot's vessel designed to couple to one of my external service locks.

In the normal run of things, I would perhaps have encountered Mike again only upon exiting the Wildor system. However, in this particular case, we didn't quite have a normal run.

At that time, my formal registry name was quite literal. Much of my original internal hold capacity was built around climate-stable fruit tree and vegetable plant transport. Not the fruits and vegetables themselves, though I do that as well. The plants.

There's quite a trade in plant varieties. Both black market and legal, which can be difficult to distinguish. Navigating the quarantine systems is one of the required skills. Keeping the plants alive in their preferred condition is the other. In large part, I was designed to facilitate this trade.

The design fads oscillate. I am capable of working in either of the preferred classes, as either a tug ship for trains of semi-independent container units, or as an own-hold cargo ship in my own right. In this particular case, I'd flown in as tug to a three-ship train; my own holds were in use, but for cargo at a subsequent destination. I'd dropped my three-ship train for ninety-day quarantine; I'd pick up a two-train for the next leg of my trip on the way out.

Since my internal cargo wasn't going anywhere Wildor was officially interested in, I bonded myself into a berth and awaited events. At that time, I kept myself to myself; sample the local news feeds on an isolated circuit, send what traffic I didn't care if anyone sniffed through the "trusted" sub-space circuit Prime Station rented me. But no personal interactions.

This was another of M-Knight and Blossom's pieces of advice. "Be wary of networks you're unfamiliar with. They're your most significant vulnerability, aside from hard collisions." I wasn't then sure whether the more experienced pilots were unnecessarily paranoid, or not. But they did have enough stories. The sort that begin as "No shit, there I was..." and "This is no shit...".

Jimmy, as was his usual habit, preferred to spend his time sampling the local cultural sites. Prime Station hosts a museum devoted to their early orbital pioneers, as well as an astronomical substation, with an extensive multimedia survey of the immediate star cluster. Now, whenever possible, I update my version of their survey on a regular basis. The Prime Station astro team are very, very good.

Once he'd passed a not perfunctory health examination, including three days of patience while the bloodwork went through analysis, Jimmy availed himself of these facilities.

And a few others, as I discovered when he returned some few days later. "I've found my next berth," he told me.

Not immediately upon arrival, though. He presented his notification of a change of plans after sorting through email, checking what minor news there had been, and taking a short nap. Then he made his way to my bridge to tell me of his new job. "I've taken a position with the new Unlimited."

This news did not surprise me, after I revisited my personnel records, so newly begun. Jimmy's first major posting had been to the prior Unlimited, second of the name. One of the true galactic ships, the second Unlimited had decommissioned herself some fifteen years before. The new Unlimited would carry the original's memory, a now unbroken line comprising some three hundred years of trans-galactic experience.

"Will you then be in the primary co-pilot chair?" I asked.

"No," he said. "She has chosen. I will be third. She's revisiting old associations in advance of her first voyage."

He also began to apologize, but I interrupted that. "Your contract has expired, Jimmy. I appreciate that you took this trip. Fair winds and following seas, right?" Though, I also suspect that, if he'd had a more direct route to where the Unlimited's first was searching for crew, Jimmy might well have found a different means of traveling there.

"Fair winds and following seas, Lafs." And then Jimmy departed for his new job; the Ultimate's first had arrived in the ship's lighter, which actually massed almost five hundred tons greater than I do. Jimmy had a berth there waiting for him, so there was no reason to delay the issue.

Jimmy's preferred name for me is Lafs. Lemons and Assorted Fruits, Lafs. I'm generally unfamiliar with Earthborn humans, especially the social mores with which they are familiar. But Lafs is obvious enough even I recognize the general humor. Such things are very personal, though.

When you're still a new pilot. I was then very much aware of myself. My faults most of all. Not of piloting. Needs be, I could work the fixed routes I'd already learned. The jump synchronizations, once known, should be valid for, in the steady-state approximation, approximately one hundred years.

Well sufficient to outlive my mortgage, if just. I had then some eight known passages between systems. Given my knowledge then of the economics of the systems in question, my projections suggested I would recover, near as makes no difference, an approximate ten percent margin over expenses, financing included, if I were to remain one of the ghosts.

And if I'd chosen that short-hauling way, in that I'd have been lucky. M-Knight and Blossom had told me the story of the Draco-Malloy; the DM had lost her co-pilot just one trip into her first year after trials. A rare variant of the Iuzian Tril-Ng-Zha disease, apparently. Whatever the cause and the DM was left with but a single route in her memory, and a terrible shyness that prevented her from taking a chance on any other co-pilot she'd ever encountered.

As the story went, the DM ran her one route, between Iuz and the Ransika system, religiously. I'd imagine that the founding of the University there in Ransika might have been the difference between economic recommissioning and scraping by. But, at that time, I had only heard the DM's story.

It was enough to worry me. Enough to scare me, pardon the expression, shitless. Yes, I had sufficient knowledge to, if necessary, work my way to freedom.

But not to the five galaxies. And past that, if I could manage it.

The galaxy ships do not, as a rule, follow a pattern. The Ultimate, the Carry, their sisters in kind appear to follow a random berthing sequence. Others, M-Knight but not Blossom, believe this has something to do with the fluctuations, the approximate nature of measuring distance on the intergalactic scale.

Blossom and a few of like mind believe the Eight Sisters have an agreement between themselves to insure no single species ever have the chance to assume they are favored. One holds one's own counsel regarding such matters.

Whatever the truth of it, at that point, sans my co-pilot who'd shepherded me so comfortably from a voiceless possibility to self-contained captain of some eight space lanes, albeit nervous over whether I'd learn more, I had known only the Milky Way in my travels. The others were beyond me. And, if I didn't find a new co-pilot, almost certainly forever out of my reach.

Michael Bastra Kowalsky made the decision for me. He came to visit two days after Jimmy had lifted for the Unlimited. "I understand you're making your way to Ransika. Do you and your co-pilot have room for a second?"

I'd done some homework on Mister Kowalsky. "What kind of trouble are you leaving behind?" His reputation did proceed him, after all. And while the Wildor shipping wasn't exactly the best-paying of my routes, I didn't have room to cut them out, either.

"It's nothing like that, really. Honest, I've worked off my... um. My contract has come up, and the Prime Station Piloting Association and I have worked ourselves to a negotiating impasse."

He'd served his indenture and they'd told him to not let the door hit him in the ass on the way out. The first part was, now, public knowledge. Humans not having sufficient influence to keep the Wildor authorities from heavily favoring their side of any negotiations in system.

"As a matter of fact, I do have room for a second. Six-months local standard, half up front in an account of your choosing." Health care and insurance, bonding and so on, were part of the standard contract as well. Health because I didn't want him infecting any passengers we might take on, the rest because my financiers and insurance companies demanded certain standards.

Mike accepted without a moment's thought, then followed my blue light arrows home to his new bunk. I took the opportunity to engage one of his former colleagues, collect my two-ship tail, and head out for our next port of call.

He still gripes about the fact that I started him at the two spot; all of his promotional step-ups since then are tied to it. And, to the notoriously cheap Wildor base pay.

Considering how he reeked of the bender he'd pulled on his first free weekend, and that the dregs of that bender had driven him to seek his bunk, instead of asking pertinent questions... well. M-Knight and Blossom would have been proud of my negotiating stance, I think.

And, it did all work out. Well enough so we're shipmates until the end, at any rate.