A Matter of Honor (Privateer Tales Book 9) (2 page)

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Authors: Jamie McFarlane

Tags: #Science Fiction & Fantasy, #Science Fiction, #Exploration, #Military, #Space Fleet, #Space Marine, #Space Opera, #Space Exploration

BOOK: A Matter of Honor (Privateer Tales Book 9)
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"Do you want to talk about it?" she asked.

"Not tonight," he said.

"You must be hungry." It was an easy guess. Amon was always hungry.

She slid a thick slab of bread, which she'd covered with a paste commonly called peanut butter onto a plate in front of him. The ground up legume, an indigenous plant, was a staple in every home.

"Was that hematite in the back of the mule?" she asked, making small talk.

"There's an entire hillside of it," he said. "I chiseled that piece off and would have loaded more, but the Ophies attacked."

"Rumor is Eliora should have picked up on the attack," she said.

"Who would say that?" Amon asked, suddenly angry, spinning to look his mother in the eyes. "It's ridiculous! It happened so fast, we had no chance."

"It's coming from her. She says she missed their approach and if she had been more vigilant, Ozzie would have lived," Nurit said matter-of-factly.

"I'll talk to Gian. She couldn't have known they were there. Without Eliora, I'd be dead too."

"I'm sure he'd like to hear that from you." Nurit patted his back, hoping to return a sense of calm to her son.

"They'll need help digging graves tomorrow," he said, his shoulders slumping under her hand.

"We'll go together."

IN FOR A PENNY

Planet Curie, Tipperary Star System

 

A light breeze, a perfect twenty-six degrees, a rum drink with an umbrella, and the shade of a wide-leafed, tropical tree all conspired to cause my eyelids to droop precipitously.

It felt good to relax, allowing the stress of the past few months to dissipate. We were on Curie after receiving an invitation through Admiral Tullas' office to meet with an anonymous client about a new mission. Whoever it was had even sent fifty thousand credits to cover fuel, food and lodging. It was a lot of credits to splash around, and I was doing my best to ignore the niggling feeling in the back of my mind.

We'd been fully loaded leaving Nuage Gros, delivering goods to Curie's two moons, Irène and Ève. It had taken nearly four weeks to get to Curie and I, for one, was thinking we'd made a great decision. But then, who didn't like a little sun and sand after an adventure? Why shouldn't we have a nice payday, too?

"Hey! Look, I'm flying!" Tabby's excited voice cut through the fog of sleep.

I sat up in my lounge chair and scanned the waves. My AI drew a reticle around one of the wind surfers who had launched herself off the back of a breaking wave, sailing no less than seven or eight meters in the air. I marveled at her grace.

"You're insane." I laughed, waving at her.

I loved watching Tabby, my fiancé, do just about anything. You wouldn't know by looking at her gorgeous lithe frame, that she'd recently had major reconstructive surgery after being severely wounded in battle. No, Tabby had a new lease on life and woke every morning ready to go.

She waved back as a gust of wind caught the board at just the right moment, twisting it from beneath her. Instead of landing with her normal skill, she tumbled into the water, losing her grip on the sail. I jumped up and pulled my shirt off.

"Where are you going?" Marny asked. She was our heavily muscled security officer and girlfriend of my best friend Nick.

"She might be in trouble," I said.

"First, I don't think there's enough trouble within a hundred square kilometers to worry that girl," she said, giving me a lopsided grin. "And second, you're the worst swimmer I know."

As if in response to Marny's declaration, Tabby resurfaced and clambered back onto the board.

"You distracted me," Tabby exclaimed once she'd pulled the sail out of the water and was scooting back out to sea.

"I can honestly say,
you're
distracting me," I replied.

"Lech."

Our conversation was interrupted as Ada ran up.

"You guys want to join a pickup volleyball game?" she asked.

Ada was probably the most naturally gorgeous woman I'd ever met and today she was in top form. Her ebony skin was a beautiful contrast to the brilliant blue two-piece suit she wore. Even more than her beauty, Ada's ebullient personality attracted followers wherever she went.

"Marny? Nick?" I asked.

"Hey, I'm in," Tabby said over the comm.

Marny didn't answer other than to slide to the end of her chair and pull a pair of shorts over her single piece suit.

By the time we'd had our fill of volleyball, hunger set in, so we caught a three-segment tram back to the resort. It was inconvenient that structures weren't allowed on the sandy beaches, but as I looked back toward the water, I could appreciate how they'd retained the natural beauty of the location.

Only twenty percent of Curie was habitable. Though the atmosphere was breathable, the only surface water to be found was a single salt-water sea. Completely surrounded by tall mountains, it had been formed by the cataclysmic impact of a planetoid. It was that collision that had sheared off Curie's two moons, Irène and Ève, and left the thousand kilometer diameter crater where we'd discovered the pristine white sand beaches and brilliant blue waters of the Radium Sea. With only two hundred million people on all of Curie and extremely restrictive environmental safeguards, it was hard to imagine a more beautiful location in the known universe.

The resort was two kilometers from the water and its huts spread back into the jungle, connected by elevated, wood-plank boardwalks. We'd rented a large hut with three separate bedrooms and a living room, a configuration we often selected when traveling on business.

"What are you wearing for dinner tonight?" Tabby asked as she stepped out of the shower naked, holding a towel in one hand.

I had difficulty focusing and didn't answer as quickly as she expected.

"Hey, sailor, eyes up here." She pointed two fingers at my eyes and then back to her own.

"Uh, I was thinking of wearing my Nuage civvies," I said.

In the cloud city of Nuage Gros we'd befriended a clothing designer who'd set us up in the style of that city. That same colorful clothing would fit well in the festive atmosphere of Curie.

She turned back to the head and gave a little skip to her step, knowing I'd follow her progress out of the room. She looked back over her shoulder to make sure I was watching and gave me an alluring smile.

"I'll dress accordingly, then," she said.

I took her smile as an invitation.

We were only a few minutes late to dinner and I appreciated that no one called us on it.

"So who is it from Belirand that we're meeting with tomorrow?" I asked Nick as we waited for our dinner to arrive.

"It's more of a mystery than I like," he said. "We received the invite through Admiral Tullas' office, but when I pushed Lieutenant Peren on it, all he'd tell me was it came from the highest levels."

"What do you suppose that means?" Ada asked.

"Sounds like someone is looking for an off-the-books mission," Marny said. "We'll want to be careful with this."

"What time are we meeting tomorrow?" Tabby asked. "I'd like to get a run in."

"Shuttle is picking us up at 0800 local," Nick answered.

Where Marny was Earth-born, tall and heavily muscled, Nick was small, even by spacer standards. What Nick gave up in size, he more than made up for with raw intellect and his capacity to plan. Tabby, Nick, and I grew up together on a mining colony in Sol's main asteroid belt and had been best friends for as long as I could remember.

"We have a load to pick up on Curie's main orbital platform sometime tomorrow. It'll fill
Sterra's Gift
completely. After that, I've got an appointment to take a look at a segmented container tractor. It's pretty roached out, but the scans show it has good bones," I said.

"How would you get it back?" Nick asked.

"It has operable engines. We'd sail straight to Meerkat shipyard on Gros. Worse case, we piggy back on
Sterra's Gift
. Without seeing it, I can't be sure," I said. "One nice thing is the guy selling it has two sixteen container link segments. No engines on them, but we have those engines you picked up a few weeks ago."

"What shape are they in?" he asked.

"They'll need work, but they've been used as recently as two months ago. The guy is either retired or is trying to retire and is cashing out," I replied.

"I hope he's realistic about price," Nick said.

"He's asking seventy thousand for the entire setup and we've an appointment day after tomorrow to check it out," I said.

"Do we have that much free?" Ada asked.

"Barely," Nick answered. "All of our capital is tied up in ore that needs to be delivered to the Belirand Terminal Seven project."

"How much are we sitting on?" Ada asked.

Nick flicked a spreadsheet to her from his HUD. "If you skip to the bottom, you'll see the total. Once we deliver that ore we should be sitting on one-point-one million. Subtract fuel costs, that looks more like an even million," he explained.

"And," I added. "We'll clear forty thousand for this trip in delivery fees after fuel," I said.

"That's insane," Ada said, breathing out. "I knew the ore had value, but I didn't realize we were sitting on that much."

"That makes two of us," Tabby agreed.

"Big Pete really wants us to get an armor-glass kiln if we can find one. 'The bigger, the better' were his exact words," Marny added.

"Frak. I forgot about that," I said. "But I don't see that we can afford it on this trip."

"He might be okay with a small one if it's between that and nothing," Nick said.

"This would be the place to find it," Tabby said.

She was right. Ninety-five percent of Tipperary's total population was spread out between Curie, Irène and Ève. If we were going to find something as specialized as an armor-glass kiln, our best shot would be the orbital bazaar that was tethered to the temperate, forest planet of Irène.

We finished dinner and walked along the boardwalk. The night sky of Curie was littered with bright stars and we could just see the edge of the Petri Nebula that was also visible from Lèger Nuage.

"Cards?" Tabby asked as we arrived at the deck separating the three huts. A metal fire-pit was inset into the center of the wooden deck and surrounded by comfortable couches.

Nick started the fire that had been thoughtfully arranged and we settled down for a few hours of cards. It was well after 2400 when we finally turned in.

I didn't even hear Tabby when she left early the next morning for her run. She'd given up trying to get me to come along as I couldn't run fast enough to make it interesting for her. Unfortunately, Marny didn't mind waking me up. We were compatible running mates and she felt it was her duty to keep me in shape. I wondered if there was some collusion between the two women, but they never would admit to it.

 

***

 

"I'm starving, are you sure they're going to provide food?" Ada asked as we met on the deck.

"That's what was passed along," Nick said, referring to the instructions Lieutenant Peren had forwarded from Admiral Tullas' office.

"They better have something to eat or I'm going to be grumpy," Ada said.

I laughed. For such a small girl, she always worried about where her next meal was coming from.

A shiny silver, oval shuttle landed next to our huts, just down from the stairs leading to the beach.

"That's us," Nick said.

A small gang-plank extended from the side of the shuttle and we trooped down the stairs, meeting a formally-dressed man in a black suit and white shirt.

"Greetings, Mr. James, Ms. Bertrand, Ms. Masters…" He spoke as we entered the shuttle, making eye contact with each of us. "My name is Jonathan and I'm here to make your journey comfortable. If there is anything you need, please don't hesitate to ask."

The shuttle was large enough to carry at least thirty people, so there was plenty of room for the dining table that had been set up at one end. Jonathan showed us to the table that was covered in a white cloth complete with five place settings.

"I've taken the liberty of having our chef prepare a light breakfast of eggs, toast and local fruits," he explained as he leaned in, turning over fluted glasses and filling them with water. He was joined by a middle-aged woman, who wore a black uniform.

The shuttle rose gently from the ground and the three hundred sixty degree windows darkened to the point of being opaque.

"Excuse me, Jonathan?" Marny asked.

"Yes, Ms. Bertrand."

"Is it your employer's intent to obscure our destination?"

"It is. My employer is private and prefers that his whereabouts are not generally known. I hope this is acceptable," he said.

"You're asking us to take a lot on faith," she replied.

"I assure you, Ms. Bertrand, everything is aboveboard. It is simply a matter requiring discretion. We will allow you to retain your weapons as a gesture of good faith," he said.

"How far are we going this morning," Nick asked.

"The trip will take ninety minutes, Mr. James. Would anyone like coffee?"

I'd spent much of my short career studying people and their response to stressful conditions. If Jonathan felt stress, he sure wasn't showing it.

"In for a penny," Nick said and picked up the delicate coffee cup in front of him.

"Quite," Jonathan replied.

We ate the provided breakfast in an awkward silence. Jonathan and his cryptic answers did nothing for our comfort.

After breakfast we adjourned to the couches that would have otherwise provided a good view. Jonathan seemed content to clean up after breakfast and then sit quietly at the other end of the shuttle.

I held Tabby's hand. Like all of us, she preferred things to be out in the open and her stress level was rising. She was also the most likely to make an issue of it if the uncertainty went on for too long.

Mercifully, a small bump warned us that the shuttle had come to rest.

Jonathan was the first to stand and walked to the entry hatch, where he palmed a security pad. The door slid into the hull. The shuttle had landed in such a way that it opened onto a well-lit hallway.

At that point, I was ready to get off the shuttle and would welcome whatever we'd gotten ourselves into - anything to end the awkward trip. Jonathan's reassuring smile at the doorway did nothing to ease my discomfort.

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