Earth Vs. Aliens (Aliens Series 1)

BOOK: Earth Vs. Aliens (Aliens Series 1)
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EARTH VS. ALIENS

 

Book One of the Aliens Series

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

By T. Jackson King

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Other King Novels

Alien Vigilante (forthcoming), Human Assassin (forthcoming), The Memory Singer (2014), Alien Assassin (2014), Anarchate Vigilante (2014), Galactic Vigilante (2013), Nebula Vigilante (2013), Speaker To Aliens (2013), Galactic Avatar (2013), Stellar Assassin (2013), Retread Shop (2012, 1988), Star Vigilante (2012), The Gaean Enchantment (2012), Little Brother’s World (2010), Judgment Day And Other Dreams (2009), Ancestor’s World (1996).

Dedication

To the scholar Edward O. Wilson, whose books
Sociobiology: The New Synthesis
,
The Social Conquest Of Earth
and
On Human Nature
have guided me in my meager efforts to explore a future where humanity encounters predatory life from other stars.

Acknowledgments

First thanks go to my beta reader, Alicia Solomon, for her work on this and other novels. Second thanks go to novelist Jean Kilczer for her cover design help. Third thanks go to scholar John Alcock and his book
Animal Behavior, An Evolutionary Approach
(1979).

 

EARTH VS. ALIENS

© 2014 T. Jackson King

This is a work of fiction. All the characters and events portrayed in this novel are either fictitious or are used fictitiously. All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission except for brief quotations for review purposes only.

Prior publications:

“False Contact,”
Judgment Day And Other Dreams
, (2009)

 

Cover design by T. Jackson King; cover image by Algol via Fotolia license; back image of 30 Doradus Nebula, courtesy of Hubble Space Telescope

 

First Edition

Published by T. Jackson King, Los Alamos, NM 87544

http://www.tjacksonking.com/

ISBN 10:  978-1-63384-367-7

ISBN 13:  1-63384-367-X

Printed in the United States of America

 

 

CHAPTER ONE

 

Jack Munroe stared in confusion as the Alien ship appeared from behind the large comet and approached the
Uhuru
, outbound from Charon Base on a survey of the larger Kuiper Belt comets.

They’d expected to find lots of kilometer-sized comets out here, well beyond Pluto and a third of the way around the solar system’s edge from Earth’s position. The Kuiper Belt was the source of the short period comets, like Halley’s, that now and then visited the inner solar system. But no one expected First Contact with Alien beings. Least of all Captain Monique d’Auberge, too long in command of the European Union survey ship
Uhuru
, and five other humans.

Humans. They’d have to get used to thinking that way.

Jack tasted metallic sourness as, free-floating like the rest of the crew, he watched the front screen. As ship’s Technologist, he should have picked up some kind of warning that others were out here, hiding in the solar system’s backyard where the leftovers from its formation circled endlessly around the dim yellow star that was more a direction than an illuminator of deep space. Now they weren’t just a French aristocrat too full of herself, a Belgian priest, a Polish drive engineer, two British lesfems, and an Asteroid Belter whose grandpa had emigrated from the Tennessee hill country. They were people about to face something no one had expected.

After all, interstellar travel was impossible, according to the Rules of the EU bureaucracy in Brussels—and Captain d’Auberge’s need for certainty in space. No reason, therefore, to call on Jack Munroe’s dual training as an anthropologist and student of archaic cultural practices. No need, really, for anything beyond the ordinary science business of Pluto’s Charon Base as the EU searched for planet-killer comets before they could head inward and disturb Earth’s social tranquility.

“Shit!”

Max Piakowski’s curse expressed Jack’s own feelings, but not those of Monique. She twisted in free-float and frowned at Max. “Engineer, cursing won’t remove this surprise.” Her nose lifted higher. “Can you, perhaps, tell us how that ship moves without a drive flare?”

“Whaat?” Max stuttered. His thick black eyebrows squeezed together as he peered at the screen. “Oh! No clue.”

The rest of the crew now noticed how the Alien globe-pierced-by-a-spearhead moved without visible plasma exhaust, unlike their own nuclear fusion pulse Main Drive.

The six of them had gathered in the Pilot’s cabin as they approached Kuiper object QB1, a 283 kilometer-sized ball of reddish water ice and methane. They’d expected to celebrate the half-way point of their trip by geo-surveying the first object discovered by Luu and Jewitt back in 1992, long before China colonized Mars, Brazil took over the Moon, and the European Union forced America into an economic armistice that led, eventually, to mining of the Asteroid Belt and outlying settlements on Europa, Enceladus and Charon. “Getting rich is glorious” had become more than the slogan of China’s long-dead Deng Xiaoping—it had become the watchword of a world society that pretended war was extinct, commerce was always positive, and new wealth could pacify highly-taxed citizens.

Jack pushed down into his Tech station seat, snapped his restraint strap locks, and caught d’Auberge’s attention.

“Captain, do we match orbits with them—or do we turn tail and head for Earth?”

“Turn tail?” said Monique, lifting blond eyebrows. “Hardly. This is a momentous event in human history. We can’t—”

“Miss the chance to get rich?” Jack interrupted, unable to resist the sarcasm. He should be more of a team player like Gail and Hortense, the two Brits who functioned as Pilot/Doctor and ComChief/Ecological Biologist for the ship. But they’d spent six months in each other’s company and Monique had turned more and more rigid as time went on.

At Jack’s mention of the EU’s socially impolite
raison d’étre
, the Captain turned cold as a glacier. Gail and Hortense seemed embarrassed. Max looked thoughtful. And their Jesuit priest Hercule Arcy de Mamét, the Belgian comet expert who’d devoted his life to Kuiper Belt comets, frowned delicately. “Mister Munroe,” Hercule said, emphasizing for the hundredth time Jack’s lack of a doctorate, “your cynicism is out of place here. Aliens are on our doorstep. Aren’t you excited?”

Jack looked back at the screen, where the globe-and-spearhead had settled into a close equatorial orbit about QB1, just a few thousand klicks lower than their own incoming parabolic orbit. Its hull showed red, yellow and black bands encircling its length. It resembled a giant coral snake. “Excited?” He shivered. “I’m afraid. Damned afraid. And the rest of you should be scared too!”

“Enough,” said Monique, her manner brittle as she twisted in mid-air to again face the screen. “Gail, can you put us into a transfer orbit that matches up with that ship?”

“Yes m’am, I can,” said the
Uhuru’s
Pilot. “Maneuvering thrusters will be enough to match orbits. Main Drive is still off-line, but it’s Hot and on standby if we need to leave quickly. Captain, do we—”


Signal!
” yelled Hortense from her duty post next to Jack. “We’re getting a damned fucking signal from that ship!”

Jack’s gut backflipped on itself. “Radio or visual?”

“Radio,” answered Max from his Engineer’s station at the rear of the small cabin. “Damn! This is moving too fast for me. Captain, I—”

“Shut up!” screamed Monique.

The Captain’s loss of her eternally cool manner shocked everyone into silence. All but Hortense, who seemed ready to float out of her seat. “But, but—”

“You!” Monique pointed at Hortense. “It’s a radio signal? What kind? AM or FM? What power? What wavelength? And do we have enough computer power to decode the signal so we can—”

“It’s in the clear,” Hortense said, her interruption of the Captain a rare defiance of Monique’s command rigidity. “English language, on Charon Standard Channel Four. No image. Yet.”

Stunned silence filled the cabin. To be found by an Alien ship was one thing. A wild card tossed into their lap. To have Aliens talk, immediately and in English, as if this were nothing more than a Hopper cruise in the Asteroid Belt, that was something else. These show-off Aliens had just played High Trump card, up front. Jack felt like getting out and physically pushing the
Uhuru
back to distant Sol.
Get away!
his instincts told him.

Monique swallowed hard, a thin film of sweat beading her pale forehead. “
English?
They’re talking to us in English?”

“Yes m’am,” said Hortense in a mousy voice.

The Captain blinked, then her face stiffened as she caught Jack’s look. “Fine. Put the signal on the speaker so we can all hear. Switch on data recorders. No immediate reply. I’ll do that later. Well?”

Hortense dipped her head submissively. “Signal is piped to the ship’s intercom system.”

“—Human ship, we ask you to respond to our inquiry. Are you ready and willing to meet our team, at the dome on the ice body below, to discuss the Rules of Engagement? Human ship—” The signal repeated its brief message, as if on a loop.

“Engagement? Rules? Dome?” muttered Monique, scowling as if she’d bitten into a sour lemon. She motioned for Hortense to cut off the repeating signal that spoke in the voice of a man from the British Midlands. The Captain scanned them all, her manner once more that of an unmarried daughter of a French ducal family that traced its lineage back to Catherine de Médici, a Captain who expected everyone to acknowledge her inherent superiority. With a light touch against the cabin wall D’Auberge free-floated over to the ship’s telescope station, pulled up the visor hood, and bent down to look at the CCD image picked up by the Schmidt refractor. “Gail, focus the telescope on QB1, then shift traverse control to my station. Now!”

“Yes, Captain.” Skinny, brown-haired Gail Winston did as she was ordered, then peered at him and Max with a look of sheer terror. Jack felt for her. Some Alien had listened to the vibechat of BBC-1 long enough to develop a Midlands accent. That was crazy and strange and . . . terrifying.

The Captain grasped the joystick control next to the visor, tilted it slightly, and the front screen filled with the vastly enlarged surface of comet QB1. In two minutes of traversing the lumpy surface of a comet too far from the Sun to develop a coma cloud, she covered a third of the comet’s reddish surface as the breathing in the small cabin grew louder, more labored and faster paced. Jack suspected more than just he and Gail were frightened by shocking events that moved too quickly for any of them to process, let alone understand fully.

“There!” whispered Monique in a triumphant tone. She pulled back from the scope hood, looked forward and frowned at an image of QB1’s north pole.

Jack looked too, like everyone else. He saw nitrogen and methane snows, scattered like dandruff atop the flatlands of water ice, all of it aged red-brown thanks to impacts from cosmic and ultraviolet rays, what Max called the Johnson-Lanzerotti Effect. The Alien dome where someone wanted to discuss the Rules of Engagement sparkled sugar-white against the shadowed landscape. The dome had a transparent roof and four small dots moved under the roof. Aliens? Jack cleared his throat, forcing Monique to acknowledge him with a backward glance.

“Captain, it’s time to leave,” he said, putting aside his fear and trying for cool logic. “I mean it. These Aliens, whoever they are, know too damned much about us. They know our commerce language, they know our comlink channel, they know—”

“Too damned much!” shouted Max, his space-darkened face sweaty as he gripped tightly his armrests. “We’ve got no weapons, no way to call home in less than five hours, no—”

“No sense of duty,” Monique said scathingly, looking from Max to Jack, then over to Gail, who sat strapped in to her Pilot’s seat, ready for thrust-gravity. “Pilot, fulfill my order. Put us into an orbit that parallels the Alien ship, but keeps us a hundred kilometers out. And tell the EVA computer to warm up the Lander. We’re going to meet our new neighbors.”

“Complying, Captain,” said Gail as she punched on the thrusters, moving them from freefall to thrust-gravity.

Jack wanted to hit Monique. He
always
wished that whenever she used her disdainful look and arrogant tone on him. He didn’t. Over the last six months, the woman’s behavior toward Jack had worsened, as if his Belter-style questioning of Brussels’ Rules upset her need for certainty, her need to believe the frozen unknown could be safe, routine and unsurprising. She’d even abandoned the official dogma of Cooperative Consensus of the Communitarian Unity and its long-dead founder, Amitai Etzioni. Around him, the others worked hurriedly at their stations or watched the front screen, acting as if the Captain’s decision wasn’t insane. He tried one more time.

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