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Synopsis
Still hounded at every turn, Roland and his team limp home to find Dockside in turmoil.
Clandestine corporate operations have weakened the treaties between Dockside’s gangs just in time for a disaster at the docks to shut down Earth’s mightiest marketplace. On the verge of economic catastrophe, Gateways Inc. lands an army of corporate troops to seize control. Criminals and corpos make for a tense pairing, and it’s only a matter of time before something breaks and the shooting starts.
Not content to wait for that to happen, OmniCorp springs for a little extra muscle. The only surviving full-prosthesis cyborg in the galaxy shows up to have a go at New Boston’s most famous fixer, and a fair fight is not how this shooter likes to operate. It’s a full-metal slugfest as all the players collide on the streets of New Boston for one final bloody showdown.
But what is all the fuss really over? Lucia has her doubts about the corporate line, and even her father seems to be hiding important information from her. As their losses mount and total destruction inches ever closer, the fixers will have to uncover the real reason all these MegaCorps are brawling it out in their backyard.
The fires of corporate warfare are raging across New Boston, and only Roland Tankowicz and his group of misfits can stop it before all of Dockside burns to the ground. Sometimes you have to fight fire with fire, and New Boston’s least favorite army-surplus cyborg has brought his matches…
Time to light a BACKBURN.
Release date: July 24, 2023
Publisher: The Slide Rule Group, LLC
Print pages: 354
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Backburn: The Fixer: 9
Andrew Vaillencourt
The old woman sat in her chair and picked at the dried blood beneath her fingernails.
The physical strain of the last hour left her muscles sore and weak. Not terribly so, of course. Time had been kind to her in that regard. Even in her advanced years, the body still responded to her commands almost as well as in her youth. A well-timed lance of pain chose that moment to sear across a pulled muscle in her upper back.
The old woman winced and thought to herself, Almost as well.
In many ways, the exertion felt like a cleansing ritual, or perhaps a catharsis. Achieving an important goal through the work of one’s own hands was to be lauded, after all. The lingering heat of accumulated lactic acid and the pervasive lethargy of depleted glycogen stores rested on her thoughts like a warm blanket. Even her back pain felt familiar, and the familiar things reassured her. Her body’s reactions anchored her in the here and now, each sensation a gentle reassurance to her place in the universe. For that small gift alone she could endure the physical discomfort without complaint. Physical pain was always now. Now was the most important time, yet also the easiest to lose track of. Nobody lost track of it when they were in pain. Not even her.
The emotional weight, on the other hand, felt like a mountain atop her shoulders. She consoled herself with the necessity of it. She had examined and discarded all other options after lengthy and thorough consideration long before embarking upon this odyssey. There had been numerous opportunities to abort, adjust, or alter her plans up to this point. She chose not to change a thing. She knew the outcomes of any and all deviations from this specific path, and she rejected each as inadequate.
She accepted that this way might not be the only way, but it remained the best way. Or more accurately, the least bad way. Certainly the way holding the greatest chance of a positive outcome. It would hurt to do what must be done, but as long as she held to her plan, most of that hurt would be confined to a few people. She would be one of them, but she could handle that. Hurt held no more dread in her imagination than exhaustion. Both were terrible company, but either was better than no company at all.
She closed her eyes when she felt the first wave of anti-gravitons move the hairs on the back of her arms. Without inertial compensation, acceleration would crush her old bones into powder, so she did not mind this one moment of mild vertigo. It meant that the final leg of her journey had begun. The curtain was ready to rise on the last act of her great tragedy, and she felt ready.
Relaxed.
Content.
The next phase of her plan would go right or wrong with no input from her. She harbored no doubts as to the accuracy of her calculations, which left nothing for her to do but ride out her trip and hope that the other players made the moves she predicted they would. She used to find these moments exciting. She could think, plan, calculate all she liked, but once the die was cast, anything could
happen. That excitement no longer flared with the intensity it once did. Cursed by her own success, surprises became few and far between. The game grew stale, the players all too predictable.
Her mouth, already tight-lipped and drawn, stretched into a deep, deprecating frown with that wry thought. Were that truly the case, were her machinations really that infallible, her situation would not require such drastic action. If she wanted to, she could spend the next few hours of idle jump time indulging in the thousands of recriminations fighting for supremacy across her subconscious. She could examine each and every mistake made, opportunity missed, and indicator disregarded along the way. The old woman owned many of the errors responsible for her condition. Her intellect refused to sanction any obscuring illusions where that was concerned. In all the long years of her activity and subsequent captivity, there had been many such oversights. Yet the old woman knew better than to engage in useless self-flagellation. Of course the mistakes were obvious after one made them. One did not get to her age without figuring out the lie of hindsight. Hindsight is always so clear and authoritative, and clarity provided easy comfort for the weak-minded. If one wanted to learn and grow, then objective introspection was the far superior indulgence. Examine the mistakes. Analyze them. Locate the weakness in logic that birthed each error and excise it, so it does not poison future decisions. This was the path to progress. Not blame and punishment.
Still, she could not deny how tired of it all she had become. She could not help but feel all the things making her chosen path difficult. She remembered a time in her life where she would have done anything to not feel anymore. Despair had nearly been her end once. And after despair faded, rage took a turn at the wheel. To feel was to hurt, and she was oh-so-tired of hurting. Like everything else, the intensity ebbed with each passing day, month, year, decade. If one lived long enough, waiting became easy, patience a reflex.
She looked down at her hands. Smooth and dexterous, her fingers opened and closed a few times as if to relieve a stiffness she did not feel. She had many reflexes, she supposed. The weight of a well-made blade brought some old ones to life, reminded her of a happier time, and a terrible one. All she had to do was change her focus and the memory would shift from one incident to another at the speed of thought. Memories
could be mercurial like that. Imperfect recordings connected across time and space as if neither mattered, yet bound to emotional anchors she had no conscious control over. Which memory connected to her hands now? Was it years ago, when she first slipped a knife into an enemy? Or was it an hour ago, when she slaughtered her captors? Two blades, two memories, separated by so many years and light-years, connected in this precise moment to the hands of a single person. She found it all so fascinating.
For now, she resolved herself to be content with her memories and her plans. There was nothing more for her to do now. Nothing but ride alone across the infinite expanse of space and time toward her destiny.
At long last, it was time to go home, and finish something someone else started.
Capital Gains listed in geosynchronous orbit six hundred and eighty miles above the shimmering lights of Uptown New Boston. At two and a half million tons loaded, Earth’s gravity would rip the vessel to pieces if the half-mile-long freighter drifted any closer to the dim blue haze of the thermosphere. A study in dirty gray and bleak black bulkheads, the largest gate-capable cargo ship in Mercatura’s impressive armada of freight haulers made up for its blunt aesthetics with a cargo capacity thirty percent greater than her largest competitors’ best offerings. Gate fees were expensive, and Capital Gains could move more cargo per gate transit than any other ship in service. Perhaps no real threat to OmniCorp or TransMat, Mercatura’s investment in such a magnificent beast of a vessel kept the plucky SuperCorp competitive with her larger brethren in this one arena.
Grigori Gagarin refused to sit in the captain’s chair, at least not while docking. He stood, legs wide and hands clasped behind his back, a cliche homage to a centuries-old naval officer’s aesthetic. The son of a son of many other sons of sailors, Grigori saw his current exalted position as a birthright. He imagined his ancestors watching him from the afterlife. How proud they must be to know that their scion commanded the largest shipping vessel humanity had ever created on its travels across the infinite vastness of the Milky Way. One hundred and eighty souls worked these decks. One-point-eight million tons of cargo filled these holds. Trillions of credits in merchandise, bound for every corner of Earth, lay safe under his watchful eye and six decades’ experience. No man in history had ever belonged anywhere more than Grigori Gagarin belonged on the bridge of this ship.
He let his eyes wander across the bridge, taking in the main screen for only an instant. He watched his crew with far more care and attention than he did the glowing blue dome of Earth filling the enormous, curved viewing screen. Screens like this were a mere affectation, anyway. Any spacer worth their boots could drive this ship via telemetry alone. Seeing where you were going was not nearly as important as knowing where you were going, and the computers and sensors took care of that. The main screen was a nice touch, and occasionally helpful for scanning and communicating with other ships. Grigori kept his attention directed to the people pushing buttons and turning wrenches across this floating metal leviathan. He trusted his bridge crew implicitly, even the newest addition currently sweating bullets onto the helm console and trying not to show it.
“We have the tower, sir,” said the helmsman. He sounded slightly fraught, though his voice was clear and strong.
“How is the carrier beam?” Grigori’s reply wore the brusqueness of repetition.
“Full green, sir. Signal fidelity and strength near perfect.”
“Attitude?”
“Nominal, sir,” said the helmsman.
Grigori frowned. “Nominal, Ensign? We do not do ‘nominal’ on my ship, son.”
The helmsman flinched. “Aye, sir. Adjusting attitude. Permission to bring axis
zulu to one-five-eight, and uh...” The helmsman hunched over his terminal. Grigori felt, rather than saw, the furrowing of the young man’s brow as he agonized over his calculations. “...X-ray to minus zero-six-one?”
“What will that bring our beam angle to?”
“Eighty-eight-point-five, sir.”
“Eighty-eight-point-five is damn near perfect, Ensign. ‘Damn near perfect’ is how I run my ship. Copy?”
“Aye, sir. Programming thrusters. Alerting all hands now.”
Above the bridge terminals, yellow letters appeared and floated in space. “Maneuvering” flashed next to a timer counting down from ten seconds. When the glowing numbers reached zero, the deck shuddered beneath Grigori’s feet. He swayed only slightly as his beloved Capital Gains shifted its angle relative to the navigation tower so many miles below him. The ensign was a good helmsman, but new to this vessel. Smaller vessels were far less sensitive to gravitic stress than Capital Gains. The length and mass of this ship demanded a higher level of precision when docking if one expected the hull and superstructure to have a long and profitable life. She was large, she was impressive, but Grigori knew better than anyone that Capital Gains was not strong. A little extra time and effort spent setting the proper beam angle prevented long refit and maintenance cycles. Mercatura only made money when the ship was hauling cargo. Time spent in drydock fixing stress cracks was time, and more critically, profit, wasted.
“Maneuver complete, sir. Resending carrier beam.”
“As you were, helm.”
“Attitude is eighty-eight-point-five. Tower is green for interlock.”
“By all means then, helmsman. Give the word.” Allowing the youngster to issue the command was a gift. A subtle ‘attaboy’ Grigori knew would fuel the promising officer to greater efforts in the future. He liked this kid. With a little polish and some guidance, he would make a fine bridge officer one day.
The helmsman jabbed a button on his terminal and in a clear, strong voice intoned, “All
hands, brace for interlock.”
A few seconds later, the deck twitched beneath Grigori’s feet. A firm but not ungentle tug that told the captain his ship was safely in the grip of New Boston’s main docking beam.
The helmsman confirmed what Grigori already knew. “Ship is docked, sir. Shuttle clearance and schedule on main screen.”
Grigori watched the numbers and words as they filled the large primary bridge monitor. It was going to take almost forty-eight hours to unload, restock, and secure all the customs and tax forms necessary for their outbound routes. The crew would be happy about that, even if Grigori was not. Two days of shore leave in Dockside usually meant decreased performance numbers for a week afterward. He wondered how many crewpeople would even be fit for duty when, and if, they returned. If he had his way, there would be no shore leave at this hellhole at all. Union rules prevented Grigori from giving any such order, though. He contented himself with strict adherence to Mercatura’s aggressive drug testing policies, and he vowed to put at least one person in the brig for a month as a lesson to the others.
Grigori reached down to tap a control on the armrest of the captain’s chair. He did not wait for anyone to answer, rather he spoke into the air once a soft chime indicated an open channel. “Quartermaster, you may release the crew for shore leave on the usual schedule. Remind them that we will be testing everyone upon their return to the ship. No spacer may set foot on these decks if they have any active drugs in their system, and discipline for offenders will be severe.”
A voice replied, “Aye, Captain. It’s in the brief already, but I’ll inform each spacer personally.”
“Exemplary, Lieutenant. Are you going ashore?”
The unseen quartermaster chuckled over the channel. “Gods, no, sir. I’d rather clean the drive coils with a handkerchief than visit Dockside. If I’m ever in the mood to pick up a VD while getting both robbed and shot, I expect there are cheaper ways to do it!”
Grigori laughed back. “I do not doubt it, Lieutenant. I have some meetings to attend
Uptown. I’ll be out on the first shuttle. The XO will have the bridge while I’m gone.” He turned to the comms officer. “Lieutenant, relay that information to the duty officer and warrant officers, please.”
“Aye, sir.” The tall woman spun in her seat to poke at her station control panel. “XO has the bridge after first shuttle clear—”
Capital Gains lurched in place, a harsh jerk that temporarily overwhelmed inertial compensation. Grigori fell to the deck, the sound of expletives from his bridge crew in his ears. The ship heaved again, but this time Grigori had a solid grip on the captain’s chair. “Helm! What the hell is going on?”
The young ensign tried to hide his terror and failed. “The docking beam, sir! It’s... it’s modulating all over the scale!” A noise like an old man in pain reverberated across the deck plates and bulkheads. “Dockside has no idea why! But... they can’t stay attuned to our mass signature!”
“Kill the fucking connection, Ensign!” Grigori shouted while dragging himself into the captain’s chair.
“I can’t!” the helmsman shouted back. “Dockside has control! The beam is solid!”
Grigori slapped the controls on his armrest. “Engineering! I need compensatory antigrav!”
The voice snarling back through the speaker held a frustrated growl. “Already done, sir! We’d be in a thousand pieces already if not! That’s a docking beam, at least fifty times stronger than our primary gravitics!”
Grigori knew the engineer was right even as she spoke. That tower was strong enough to move his ship around like a toy. More horrible noises from the superstructure hit his ears like the shrieks of a wounded child. Alarms screamed from every corner of the bridge. Holograms danced above each terminal, flashing dire warnings in three-dimensional terror. He switched channels. “Dockside tower! He shouted. “This is Capital Gains. What the hell is going on down there?”
The voice that came back sounded as shrill and terrified as the crew. “Total malfunction, Capital Gains. The docking beam is modulating full amplitude and we cannot shut it down! You’re at full mass interlock and we
can’t stop the graviton flow!”
“What the hell do you mean, ‘can’t shut it down?’ Kill it manually or you’re going to have two million tons of falling debris to deal with!”
“Capital Gains,” the voice was different. This person sounded colder and calmer than the situation warranted. “We have received the order to shunt. Bringing the cargo towers online now. We can hold you for another three minutes, but after that we have to move you.”
Grigori’s mouth went dry. The ship would not survive being shunted. “Dockside tower, this ship is not rated for a shunt. She will break up.” Grigori tried to keep his voice slow and calm. His bridge crew had not panicked yet, but he could feel it coming. He knew what the tower was going to say next, and his heart caught in his throat when the channel came to life with the reply.
“Understood, Capital Gains. Will shunt for SEV. Tugs en route now. Good luck, Capital Gains.”
Grigori inhaled sharply and bit down on an expletive. Twelve gravity beams were about to shove the largest cargo vessel in the galaxy out of its nice, comfortable position while the main docking beam tried to hold it in place. Everyone on the ground had already accepted and acknowledged what that meant for Capital Gains, and there was nothing left to do but ensure the wreckage did not cause any harm in orbit or below. In three minutes’ time, Grigori’s magnificent ship would be destroyed, and its remains shoved into what dockmasters called a ‘Safe Entry Vector.’ It really just meant that instead of pushing them back out to space where they might float safely while the tower fixed its problem, Dockside was going to aim his beautiful ship for the Pacific Ocean. It had to be that way, of course. The ship was going to snap like uncooked spaghetti when all those competing gravity beams played their game of tug-of-war with it. No one wanted two and a half million tons of debris clogging the main docking airspace, not even Grigori. This was the only way, and any captain worth the rank knew it. Grigori refused to slump, refused to sigh, refused to let the crushing despair show on his face. His crew needed
him now, more than ever. He punched another channel open and spoke in his sternest command voice. “All hands, abandon ship. Repeat, all hands abandon ship.”
He stood, taking in the bridge crew. “Two minutes, people! Get to your escape pods!”
Abandon ship drills were commonplace on Capital Gains. Grigori’s crew reacted with the precision of endless repetition. The captain’s heart swelled with professional pride when he saw the young ensign correctly enter the proper codes and inputs to the helm console before standing and heading for the bridge escape pod. It showed a lot of courage and presence for one so young. Grigori had been prepared to surreptitiously do the task himself if the young man understandably forgot. Grigori made a note to put the boy up for a commendation and promotion. Then he looked to the rest of the evacuation. If the drills were any indicator, two minutes was twenty seconds longer than his crew needed to complete a full exit from Capital Gains. Fear must have lent a sense of urgency to their movements, because ninety seconds later Grigori Gagarin was watching the death of his beloved ship from the porthole of an escape pod.
The main docking beam warped light, creating a shimmering blue nimbus where it interacted with the mass horizon of the ship’s gravitics. What should have been a soft, shifting haze that wreathed the vessel in gentle shimmering waves blazed like an angry azure aurora. Thick white bolts of lightning lashed back and forth, darting from anywhere the vessel’s gravitics tried to counteract the excess graviton flow from the tower. The dancing arcs of pure energy twisted against each other, electric snakes writhing across the hull in a one-sided battle that left glowing orange trails of molten metal in their wake. The great ship twisted in a slow death roll while her outmatched navigation systems battled the overwhelming forces from the towers below. Gravitic generators, sized for navigation and acceleration, died silent deaths marked only by showers of orange sparks erupting from the hull when each at last gave up the fight. Without the interference of these devices, the freighter bowed along its long axis. Minor at first, the warping took on a wave-like cadence with each ungainly pirouette. After only five minutes of this grotesque death spiral, the structure failed. It began with explosions of blue-white lightning
erupting across the length of the hull. Sparks flew, plumes of expanding gas jetted outward in multi-hued geysers before condensing into clouds of dense white vapor. The conning tower ripped free of the main hull and spewed green fire for two seconds before the gravity beam yanked it back to crash into the deteriorating hulk of the ship. The impact opened an enormous hole amidships, further weakening her spine. At that point, Capital Gains snapped into two halves, each spewing debris and condensed vapor into the maelstrom of force and energy binding them.
“The other towers have it now. Get ready for the push,” said his comms officer, betraying the obvious. “Oh, God, it’s going to be awful.”
Twelve docking towers, designed to funnel cargo shuttles safely to the Earth below, concentrated their power into one mighty heave. Though each was smaller than the main docking beam, their combined might proved greater. The spinning remains of Capital Gains heaved sharply in place before shattering into thousands of smaller pieces. The gas plumes and explosions went on for a full minute. The cascade of released energy reduced the once-mighty ship into ugly hunks of scorched and twisted metal while her captain watched, grim-faced and stoic. With the largest pieces still caught in the main gravity beam, the jagged chunks of freighter did not fly off into space. They began to collect and aggregate within the same field of manipulated gravitons that had torn the ship apart in the first place. Gravity waves from the other towers washed the contracting debris field in calibrated pulses, pushing the deadly cloud further from the malfunctioning tower while gathering and pointing the millions of tons of deadly metal in a safer direction. Over the course of the next two minutes, the scorched remains of Grigori’s mighty ship exited the defective tower’s influence and began the undignified trek toward Earth’s stratosphere. To Grigori’s eyes, the cloud of junk moved slowly, though he knew it had already accelerated to many thousands of miles per hour. The atmosphere would consume the smaller pieces in friction-fueled fire. The largest hunks, still recognizable as bits of his beloved ship, would fall safely into the ocean.
All too soon, it was over.
Rescue tugs collected the escape pods as soon as the airspace was clear of debris. He gave his report to the dockmaster over comms, then went to see to the condition of his crew. He did not bother to communicate with his superiors at Mercatura. He would be seeing them soon enough, and they already knew everything he did. The eighty-minute ride down to Dockside gave Grigori far too much time to think. His thoughts were dark, but not so much over the loss of his vessel. He was too old. He knew too much. He understood what had just occurred and what was going to happen as a result.
For himself, he did not worry. The loss of Capital Gains was not his fault, nor was there any action he could have taken to change the outcome. No version of these events could be adversely linked to the competence of his crew or his own leadership, and all the telemetry would support that. The crew was safe, no lives had been lost. Grigori imagined he would probably receive a medal and a promotion at the end of it all. This offered him little consolation, however. He thought of repercussions, of ramifications. This was not just another shipping accident. For the first time in six decades, the main tower at New Boston had malfunctioned, coincidentally killing the mightiest cargo vessel in human history. That tower was going to be shut down for God knows how long while investigators and insurance people determined exactly what had happened. Grigori did some mental calculations on the potential impacts to the Earth’s economy. The cargo towers could handle docking duties for smaller freighters, perhaps up to five hundred thousand tons. But the big ships would be stuck in very high orbit without a docking beam. Unloading and loading times might be quadrupled, costing billions in wasted credits. His mind returned to the sheer, stupid, magnificent coincidence that this random malfunction occurred when the largest vessel possible was docking, thus causing the maximum possible economic impact.
As the pieces of Capital Gains tumbled toward their inevitable doom, Grigori shuddered.
He did not believe in coincidence.
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