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Synopsis
Analog SF called the first two books in the series: "Fine thrillers with many resonances for today’s world." In a bombastic, thrilling ride Johnston's new book brings war to space.
The sequel to The Widening Gyre and Blood-Dimmed Tide praised by Locus, ScienceFiction.com, Booklist, Library Journal and more!
As the Zhen Empire descends into civil war, Tajen, Liam, and Katherine each have their own part to play in the final conflict between the human race and the Zhen Empire. As Tajen searches the outer regions in an attempt to find and recruit Zhen deserters to his side, Katherine heads for Marauder space to seek out technology their Tabran allies need. Liam, believing his two best friends dead, must keep the human fleet alive as it is pursued across the Empire by Zhen forces. As the final battle approaches, each of them will be tested to their limits.
FLAME TREE PRESS is the imprint of long-standing Independent Flame Tree Publishing, dedicated to full-length original fiction in the horror and suspense, science fiction & fantasy, and crime / mystery / thriller categories. The list brings together fantastic new authors and the more established; the award winners, and exciting, original voices. Learn more about Flame Tree Press at www.flametreepress.com and connect on social media @FlameTreePress
Release date: June 21, 2022
Publisher: Flame Tree Publishing
Print pages: 288
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What Rough Beast
Michael R. Johnston
Chapter One
Tajen
I’d had a long day. So I couldn’t have heard her right.
I’d fought my way through a space station under bombardment from Zhen forces. I’d taken down several Zhen in the process, including a Zhen:ko, the leadership caste. That fight had taken a lot out of me; he’d poisoned me and I’d barely made it to a ship. Once the ship’s medical suite had given me the antidote and gotten me back on my feet, so to speak, I’d fought a space battle against overwhelming odds and barely got out with my life before being basically kidnapped by an AI – the first I’d ever met – and brought to this ship. And the first thing I’d seen when I got out was that my fellow captain and good friend Katherine Lawson, whom I had thought killed in battle months ago, was alive and well.
So when Katherine told me she’d “introduce me to the Tabrans.” I was pretty sure I’d misheard her due to a combination of shock and exhaustion.
“Wait, what?” I stopped dead in my tracks. “You’ve met them?”
She gestured around us at the cavernous docking bay. “Duh.”
“This ship’s Tabran?” My hand instinctively went to my sidearm. “Where are they? Seems like there should be crew somewhere around here.”
She nodded toward a corridor. “They figured it would be smarter to have me greet you. Otherwise you might have started shooting.”
“I wouldn’t—” I looked down at my hand, clutching the grip of my pistol. “Well. Yeah, I might have,” I said, moving my hand away from my gun. “What do they want?”
“It’s complicated,” she said.
“What isn’t?”
She led me down a corridor to a nondescript door. “Deep breaths,” she said.
I gestured toward the door. “Let’s just get on with it.”
The door opened, and Katherine led me inside, where a human man, a Tchakk, and a Hun waited by a small table. On the table was a silver disc, over which floated what looked like liquid silver, shifting form periodically.
I glanced at them and frowned. “Where are the Tabrans?”
Katherine gestured to the two aliens. “Like I said, it’s complicated.” She indicated the Tchakk. “This is The Sunset After a Storm. I call her ‘Sunset’.” Turning to the Hun, she said, “This is Rememberer of Unpleasant Truths.”
“What do you call him?”
The Hun spoke up. “You may call me ‘Rememberer’,” he said. His voice had a sort of metallic tinge to it – not a sound I was used to hearing from a Hun. His accent, too, was decidedly not what I was used to from his species.
I shrugged. “Beats ‘Unpleasant’, I suppose.” I turned back to Katherine. “I thought you said you were introducing me to Tabrans.”
“These are Tabrans – or, as they call themselves, the Many That Are One.” I drew breath to speak, but she held up a hand. “Quick history lesson: centuries ago, the original Tabran species created a nano-weapon that was designed to wipe out the Zhen. But there was an accident; it got out, and due to a programming mistake, it wiped out the Tabrans.”
“That can’t be right,” I said. “I’ve fought Tabrans in my lifetime.”
“Did you ever see one?” Katherine asked.
“No, never. They don’t take prisoners, so Zhen policy was to do the same and destroy all enemy ships. And we never fought ground battles. You know that.”
“Right. But remember your history – there was a long period with no contact between the Zhen and Tabran sides.”
“Yeah.”
She gestured to the Hun and the Tchakk. “Over a few centuries, the nano-cloud released by the Tabrans gained sentience – or, well, several smaller sections of the nano-cloud did, and they either reprogrammed or assimilated the rest. The Tabrans are now sentient nanite swarms.” She gestured to the silver liquid floating in the air over the table. “This is what a Tabran looks like in their truest form,” she said.
My head was spinning. “That doesn’t explain them,” I said, gesturing to the aliens.
“The nanite swarms, on their own, lack the ability to process emotion. They operate on pure machine logic.” Her face softened as she continued, “That’s one of the reasons Jiraad happened.”
My heart suddenly beat rapidly, and I could feel heat in my face as my blood rose. Jiraad had been a human colony world settled by the Zhen despite a warning from the Tabrans that it belonged to them. When the Zhen government refused a demand to remove the colony, the Tabrans wiped it out.
I had been there, commanding the colony’s defenses in orbit. I’d witnessed the destruction of all human life on the planet, the deaths of millions of people.
Millions that included my own sister-in-law, who had been working with the colonial administration as part of her job with the colonial authority.
My failure to beat the superior Tabran forces had led to her death alongside millions of other humans, to the end of my relationship with my brother and their daughter, and to the end of my military career. I’d spent the next fifteen years on the fringes of the Empire before a message from my brother had brought me back and set me on course to lead a rebellion against the Empire. In all that time, I’d been a wreck, a broken shell of a human, pretending to give no shits about anything. Last year, I’d finally been able to put the ghosts of that experience behind me and begin to move on with my life, but healing is a long process, and I wasn’t completely done yet.
“Explain,” I snapped.
Katherine said, “They—”
“No,” I said, holding up a hand to stop her, and turned to the aliens. “I want you to explain.”
The one Katherine had called ‘Sunset’ nodded. As I watched her, I realized a couple of things I hadn’t noticed before. Her eyes glowed faintly, though I noticed, as I listened to her, that they appeared to brighten when emotion flared. Her skin, too, had glowing traceries of light beneath the surface, and like the Hun, her voice was oddly inflected and tinged with something electronic. “Not everything about our origins is known,” she said, “but Jiraad we remember well.”
The Hun, Rememberer, leaned in. “To explain Jiraad, you must know other things. Jiraad was not our first mistake. In an attempt to end the war between the Zhen Empire and the Tabran Regency, one of us attempted to incarnate with a Zhen:ko survivor. But Keeper of Broken Promises did not understand the will of a Zhen:ko.”
I held up a hand. “What do you mean, ‘incarnate’?”
The human, whom I recognized as Simmons, a crewman I’d known on Earth, spoke up. “That’s what they call the symbiotic joining of a swarm with a biological lifeform,” he said.
I nodded and looked to Rememberer.
“The Zhen:ko was incarnated without permission. She did not volunteer. Somehow, she was able to affect the will of Keeper of Broken Promises. She killed many of our incarnates, and escaped us to return to the Empire, where she now leads.”
“You’ve got to be kidding,” I said. “Zornaav is the One, the leader of the entire Empire. And you’re telling me she’s a Tabran? I’ve never heard of her glowing like you do.”
“The Empire controls the media,” Katherine said. “And you know how they can edit perceptions already.”
“But this? It’s ridiculous.”
“It is no joke,” Rememberer said.
My mind reeled. It was one thing to know that Zornaav had been leading the Empire closer to war for years now. It was another to know she was – or had been – a Tabran incarnate. But I was still missing part of the story. “Okay. How does that connect to Jiraad?” I asked.
“When the Empire chose to settle humans on Jiraad, we knew they were aware of our claim to the planet. We sent a message to the Zhen Empire, requiring them to remove the settlement. We were clear that if the colony was not removed, the refusal would be seen as an act of war, and the colony would be destroyed.”
“And it didn’t occur to you that the humans had nothing to do with that decision?”
“We did not then understand the difference between humans and Zhen,” Sunset said.
“Bullshit! You used kinetic bombardment. The math necessary to aim those damn things requires specific scans. You expect me to believe you didn’t know we were a different species?”
“Tajen,” Katherine said calmly. She placed a hand on my arm, gently pulling my hand away from my gun. I hadn’t even realized I’d reached toward it. “He’s not the enemy.”
I glanced at her. “According to whom? Them? You can’t trust them, Katherine. Not any more than we can trust the Zhen.”
All three of Rememberer’s eyestalks turned toward me. “I do not blame you for your hostility,” he said. “But I did not mean we could not tell the biological difference. We knew the humans were not the same as the Zhen in physical form, but we did not realize the dynamic within the Empire between the Zhen and your race. And the message we received from the One seemed clear enough.”
He gestured with the arm facing me, and a hologram of Zornaav sprang up in the center of the room. Unlike Zhen displays, which used our NeuroNets to simulate display screens, this one was directly projected from an unseen source. I started trying to figure out how it was done, but the One’s face began to speak, and I focused on the voice of my former Empress. “My people on Jiraad are proud to serve, and will be proud to die, for me. But your ‘Regency’ will regret any move made against us. Do not tempt us to go to war with you.”
“But you did,” I said.
“Yes. We had delivered an ultimatum, and the Zhen refused to comply. We had told them what we would do. Having said it, it had to be done.”
“It had to be done?” I sputtered. “You had to kill them all?”
“It was the will of the Corporate.” Before I could speak, Rememberer raised his arm in a human gesture. “At that time, the membership of the Corporate was entirely composed of non-incarnated nanite swarms. It was thought they could rule better without interference from emotions, acting purely logically.”
“So it was logical to kill millions.”
“Yes,” he said. “Logical. But…in the end, it was not the right thing to do.”
I glared at him, and my voice was a study in quiet rage as I asked, “And what brought you to that point of view?”
Rememberer’s eyestalks bent toward the floor. After a moment, he flicked them back to me. “When the fighting was over, we sifted through the remains of the Zhen infrastructure on Jiraad. We came upon evidence of the Jiraad government in the weeks before our attack, asking – begging, I believe is the correct word – for the Empire to allow them to leave. We found entries in personal journals, expressing fear and longing for Zhen:da to allow them to return. We found messages sent to Terra, asking for help relocating. We realized we had been blind.”
I took a moment to get control of my breathing. “Whatever,” I said, turning away from the aliens. “Why are you telling me all this? What do you want?”
Sunset spoke up. “We want your help,” she said.
“Fuck you,” I snapped, and strode from the room.
* * *
I was halfway to the docking bay when I realized the only ship I could use to leave was the Tabran-made ship that brought me here. And since Midnight, as the ship’s AI called itself, had taken control of our course and brought me against my will by order of its Tabran makers, I wasn’t sure I’d be able to convince it to take me home.
Well, worth a shot, I told myself, and kept going. I didn’t get far before I heard someone running up behind me. “Tajen!” Katherine called as she came around the corner. “Wait up.”
I kept going. “You coming with me?”
She grabbed my arm and pulled, stopping me. “Tajen, they’re not the enemy.”
I spun to face her, jerking my arm out of her grip. “Are you fucking serious? The butchers of Jiraad aren’t the enemy?”
“They’re the enemy of the Zhen. They aren’t our enemy.”
I felt the heat rising in my face. “You believe their story?”
“Why wouldn’t I?”
“Because it’s ridiculous, Katherine!”
She folded her arms. “Is it? Think about it, Tajen. Think about the Empire before we came along. The Zhen:ko running everything, and under them the Zhen:la. And beneath them the Tchakk and the Tradd, doing whatever the Zhen told them to. The Hun mostly stay huddled on their world – have you ever been there?”
“No,” I said.
“Why not?”
“You know why as well as I do.”
“Tell me anyway,” she said.
My anger faded as I began to see where she was leading me. “The Hun tried to rebel a few hundred years ago. When the rebellion failed, the Zhen imposed an occupation on them and blockaded their planet. The place is still forbidden to any but Zhen ships.”
“Where do the Hun we see in the Fringe Systems come from?”
I shrugged. “I don’t know. I assume some have escaped the blockade. Others….” I gestured helplessly to the bulkhead. “From out there, somewhere.”
“And you never went to the Hun world because….”
“I told you – it’s blockaded.”
She nodded slowly, like a teacher urging me toward an answer. “And we all do what we’re told to do, in the Empire – or we pay the price.” She leaned against the bulkhead. “Look, I remember the visuals from Jiraad. And of course I know how much it eats at you, still. But their explanation…I believe them.”
I sat on the deck, my back against the wall. “It’s not that simple, for me.”
Katherine slid down the wall to sit beside me. “What do you mean?” I pointed to my head and the neural computer nearly everyone in the Empire had. Last year I’d been forced to reboot mine, which had necessitated a very difficult experience facing some old trauma. “When I unlocked my NeuroNet last year, I did it in part by accepting there was nothing I could have done to save Jiraad. The Tabrans won not because I failed, but because they had the superior tech and the superior positioning. But that means I went from blaming myself for those millions of deaths to blaming them. And I can’t let go of that easily.”
“Nobody is asking you to,” she said. “They accept the blame, and even your hatred, if you want to give them that. But they do need our help.”
“To do what?”
It wasn’t Katherine who answered, but Rememberer of Unpleasant Truths, who had walked up to us while we were talking. “To save the Zhen – and your people – from the consequences of our mistake.”
“What does that mean, in terms of actual goals?”
“We wish to remove Keeper of Broken Promises from Zornaav.”
“But to do that, you’d have to get to her. Which means invading the Zhen Empire.” I whistled. “Even with your technological advantage, that would be a monumental task.”
“Yes.” After a moment, he said, “We have a plan….” He gestured back down the hall, to the conference room.
I stared at him a moment, then shook my head. “What the hell,” I said. “You gotta die of something.” I stood, gestured him to go before me, and followed him back in, Katherine right behind me. I looked to the Tabrans and said, “All right, I’m – conditionally – on board. What’s your plan?”
Sunset After a Storm gestured to me. “You are correct, Captain Hunt, that we cannot simply invade the Empire. We would have to fight our way to Zhen:da, and even with our technological advantage, the cost in lives would be catastrophic. But there is another way.” She waved her hand, and the hologram in the center of the room displayed a Zhen battleship, with information displayed around it.
I stepped closer to read the information before making a disgusted noise at myself. “I don’t read Tabran.”
Sunset gestured to the display, and the information seemed to disintegrate into tiny motes of light that re-coalesced into Zhen words and phrases. “English would have been nice,” I muttered, but Zhen was a reasonable alternative, since, thanks to the Zhen education system, I’d been speaking it longer than I had English.
“The Adamant,” I said. “That’s the Zhen ship that abandoned the battle at Shoa’kor.”
“Yes,” Simmons said. “According to our monitoring, the Adamant exchanged communications with your fleet before jumping out of the engagement. They have not returned to Zhen:da.”
“Well, no, they wouldn’t,” Katherine said. “They fled the battle; they’d be executed as traitors.”
“But why did they leave?” I asked. “Do we know?”
“They declared themselves no longer interested in supporting the current Zhen government,” Rememberer said. “But we do not know if that means they will help us. That is what we want you to find out.”
“And how am I going to do that?”
Rememberer changed the display, pulling away from the Adamant to display a chunk of the Empire, adding in vector lines. “The logical endpoint of their jump vector is here,” he said, indicating a place on the startup. “We want you to find them. If they are willing to help us, bring them into our alliance. If they are not, we want you to copy their ship’s database and bring it back to us.”
I blinked at him a few times. “You want me to go find one Zhen ship in the Uncharted Regions.”
“Yes.”
“The wildest, most lawless part of the Empire, where not even the Zhen manage to hold on to anything.”
“Yes.”
“The Uncharted Regions.”
“Yes.”
“That’s…that’s going to be difficult.”
“Yes.”
I grimaced at him. “Is that all you can say?”
He made a complicated gesture with all three arms. “No. But it is the most logical thing to say.”
I pointed at the map. “That’s…that’s hundreds of star systems, most of them not even explored by scouts. Half those systems don’t even have names. Not even the Empire knows what’s out there. And that’s not even mentioning the natural hazards.”
Simmons spoke up. “Which makes it the perfect place to hide.”
“But that’s the problem – it’s the perfect place to hide.” I gestured at the display. “The odds of finding one ship in all that – and not getting my own ship cut to pieces by a gravitic anomaly, or ambushed by gods-know-what – are utterly absurd. And that’s setting aside that my little rebellion against the Empire put me at the top of their hit list.”
“It is our thinking that, as one exile to another, you are the perfect person to approach them.”
“Me. All by myself.”
“Yes, you. However, you will have some help.”
“Oh?”
“The ship we created for you is Tabran technology. This will enable you to bypass many of the known dangers of the Uncharted Regions, such as gravitic shears. The jump drive is more efficient than any the Zhen have made, and the ship is well armed and armored. The AI we created for you—”
“Wait. ‘Created for’ me?”
Katherine grinned. “The ship’s AI was designed to fit with your personality,” she said. “They told me about it – they based the AI’s patterns on recorded information and psych profiles of you. Should be a match made in heaven.”
“Where did they get the profiles?”
She turned to look at Simmons, who suddenly looked sheepish. Pieces fell into place, and something clicked in my head. “Ah,” I said. “You were spying for them?”
He looked almost, but not quite, offended. “I prefer to think of it as ‘observing,’ but I suppose it could be called ‘spying’ as well. But I never gave them classified information that might interfere with my oath to Earth.”
I took a deep breath, wondering if I should be angry. I decided there really wasn’t a point to it, and turned back to Rememberer. “Go on.”
“I was going to say the ship’s AI will be able to hack Zhen systems, if you can get it access.”
“Right, that’ll do the trick,” I muttered. I tried to think of any reason to avoid this, but the truth is, they were right. We needed to know what was going on with the Adamant, and if they would help us.
“I’m still not sure I trust you,” I said. “But okay. I’ll do it. I’ll rendezvous with the Shoa’kor fleet, pick up my crew, and—” I stopped when I saw Katherine’s expression. “What?”
“We wish you to leave directly from here,” Sunset said. “We believe you – and your people’s ships – will be safer if the Zhen believe they have eliminated you.”
“They saw me jump out,” I said. “There were fighters right on my tail. Besides, I’ll just jump in, pick up Liam and my crew, and head back out.”
Katherine’s face tightened. “Tajen, you can’t. Our information suggests there were Zhen sympathizers on Shoa’kor, reporting to the Zhen – that’s how they knew when to strike. It was a trap.”
“That makes sense. Their timing was a little too convenient, but I thought we’d just gotten lucky.”
Rememberer said, “We have already fooled the Zhen into thinking you eliminated. This will make your job in the Uncharted Regions easier.”
I thought about it. “I’m sorry, but even with that chance, I can’t let Liam think I’m dead. Especially if there are Zhen spies in the fleet.”
Simmons said, “If he knows you’re alive, it will change his thinking, as well as his actions. If the Zhen realize you are alive, they may consider that sufficient reason to intensify their efforts against both the refugee fleet and the Earth, in an effort to draw you out.”
“I’m not that important,” I said.
“Did you not just point out that you are in fact at the top of the Empire’s hit list?”
I opened my mouth to argue, then stopped. He was absolutely right; not only had I said it, but it was the truth. As much as I didn’t want to be the Big Man of the Resistance, I very much was. “You really need to stop listening to me, Simmons.”
Katherine stepped up to me and put her hands on my shoulders. “Tajen, I know you want to think you’re just a part of the Resistance, but that’s crap and you know it.”
I considered her words. I struggled to keep my emotions from my face, my eyes and lips pulling downward. ...
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