The Phoenix Requiem (The Phoenix Conspiracy Series Book 7) (17 page)

BOOK: The Phoenix Requiem (The Phoenix Conspiracy Series Book 7)
9.38Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Ro was tranquility perfected. Never before had such a utopia been established in the galaxy, so far as Alex was concerned. And, as he watched the ripples in the lake below, seeing the reflection of the great glass and stone towers, he reflected on the fact that Ro, when translated to other languages, roughly meant “
Peaceful
.” This, he thought, is a peaceful world. And I hope beyond all the non-existent gods that I have done the right thing to keep it that way.

 

***

 

The sounds of the Council in session were audible several steps before the end of the tunnel. Calvin could not understand any of the words—they were in Polarian. However, he could tell by the tone of the voices that there was no sense of alarm or urgency. Whatever impressive materials the ancient Polarians had constructed the Alcazar, the Villa, and the Dome out of, able to withstand grenades without so much as a scuff, was also the kind of material that smothered noises. And so it was no surprise to Calvin that their sudden appearance inside the Council Chamber, with the High Prelain as their hostage, would be the last thing any of the other Prelains expected to see. But, see they would.

They shuffled the final few steps toward the white light, and Calvin hesitated for a moment. He turned behind him and whispered to Nikolai, “Double-check and make sure the men have the correct magazines loaded.”

“Already did,” the burly soldier whispered back.

“Now, remember, stay hidden until I give you the signal to come out,” Calvin whispered.

“Or until it’s obvious that we should come out—like if you are taking fire.”

“Right,” Calvin nodded. He then looked at Rez’nac, who had one hand clamped around the High Prelain’s mouth—somewhat reluctantly, Calvin could tell—and in his other hand he held the High Prelain firmly in place, guiding him along with a shove or a push as needed. As for the High Prelain himself, his hands were shackled and his mouth covered—he was no threat.

The rest was entirely up to Calvin. He had a knife in one hand and a pistol in the other. He checked his own magazine, making sure it too had the correct cartridges loaded, and then he nodded toward Rez’nac. Thinking to himself,
it’s now or never. Time to find out if I’m right, and I shatter everything Rez’nac believes, or if I’m wrong and Rez’nac kills me where I stand

Without further hesitation, Calvin and Rez’nac barged into the Council room, dragging the High Prelain in front of them. It was a small room, with multiple exits, and seemed to be made of the same dark stone-like material that composed the Alcazar. Seated on mats, in positions not unlike the lotus position, were thirteen Polarians in long flowing robes. Around them, and near the exits, Calvin counted seven bodyguards. Unlike the useless ceremonial guards that had been protecting the High Prelain in his private Villa, these Polarians wore modern armor and brandished modern beam weapons. They immediately pointed their weapons at Calvin and Rez’nac—who made sure to keep the High Prelain close to make any shots fired their way too risky to take—and all chattering amongst the Prelains stopped. A few even stood up, apparently in alarm, while the others remained seated; Calvin wondered if their respective reactions had to do with whether or not a given Prelain had been replaced by a Dark One.

The three of them moved far enough into the room that they were in plain sight of everyone. The room was lit by white crystalline torches, bright enough to illuminate everything. As soon as they came to a stop, Rez’nac began speaking boldly in the Polarian tongue. Calvin wasn’t sure exactly what the Polarian was saying, but he had a guess. Something about the Dark Ones, and the Council being deceived, and other accusations. The Prelains responded in kind, no doubt demanding they unhand their precious High Prelain, and explain why—Rez’nac especially—had taken such drastic and unrighteous action, and why he had brought an unclean human with him. Though, again, Calvin was only guessing.

Whatever Rez’nac said had some effect, because the guards lowered their weapons, although they remained in place and appeared on high alert. Rez’nac spoke more and the rest of the Prelains stood up—a few of them backing away slowly. Calvin took note of them, suspecting they were the likeliest to be the Dark Ones and they feared exposure.

Those are the imposters, I’ll bet
, he thought.

 

*** 

 

If the arrival of the
Harbinger
and its squadron of strange starships had been something of a surprise, the sudden appearance of seven-hundred Rotham starships had been a profound shock. Ravinder, like most of the Fleet Admirals, had been scurrying their ships in and out of formation, trying to coordinate with the other fleets, and, most of all, determine when and how to engage this new enemy—if a new enemy they were. As the orders trickled down the chain of command, they were instructed to not only hold their fire on the Rotham ships, much like the
Harbinger
’s squadron, but to also incorporate the Rotham warships and supply ships into Capital System’s defense pattern. For Ravinder, that translated into one thing, she was the beneficiary of fifty-seven Rotham ships, ready to be deployed according to her instructions. The trouble was, she wasn’t quite sure what to do with them.

As far as her orders stood, her Seventh Fleet was still the primary vanguard, standing vigilant and ready to deliver the first punch against the Dread Fleet—hoping, after attack after attack, to divide the force into smaller units, weakening their phalanx shield. What confused her was the presence of Raidan’s squadron, which, to a ship, other than the
Harbinger
itself and another called the
Arcane Storm
, had maneuvered into a position that would allow them to be the first line of combat rather than the Imperial vanguard. That was fine with Ravinder, the first to engage in battle was often the first to fall, but it did wreak some degree of havoc by confusing the captains of the many ships under her.

“We are to hold our position until I say otherwise,” she had that order broadcast throughout the Seventh Fleet. “All ships clear for action and stand ready. The enemy will be upon us soon.” Barring the arrival of any more surprise allies—or alleged allies—the next wave of alteredspace exit signatures would belong to the Dread Fleet. Although the Dread Fleet seemed to move at a snail’s pace, it promised to devour and destroy anything that ran afoul of it. Ravinder knew her ship, the
Hyperion
, and all those belonging to her Seventh Fleet, including the additional fifty-seven Rotham warships, would be among the first to charge into the maw of the Dread Fleet itself. An unenviable death sentence; she knew it, and the captains and commanders beneath her knew it too. They must have. She couldn’t imagine them not knowing. Yet here they all were, together, in formation, waiting. Watching as the hours, minutes, and seconds ticked by.

The time was spent with idle chatter on her bridge; her staff tried to mask their anxiety with a blanket of denial, many of them discussed what their plans were for after the battle. Ravinder allowed it, whatever made them feel more comfortable with their ultimate destiny was all right by her. But she knew, as did they all, that there would be no
after the battle
. Not for the ISS
Hyperion
. And not for the vanguard.

Eventually the silence of her thoughts was broken again. This time by her Chief of Operations. Before the man could speak, Ravinder knew what he was about to say. In her mind, she could faintly hear the ringing of the Lacrimosa bells ringing in her head. Humanity had come a long way since abandoning organized religion—they no longer clung to supernatural hopes that remained forever unfulfilled—however, in that particular moment, Ravinder found it hard not to hope, just a little bit, that she and most of humanity had been wrong. That her death was not the dark, experience-less oblivion that awaited all life, but instead something else.

She had no reason to believe in such a thing. In fact, to her, surviving one’s own death was a concept that made no sense. But as her Ops Chief announced the arrival of, “Massive numbers of alteredspace signatures congregating at the edge of Capital System,” and Ravinder was forced to snap into action, ordering her fleets to begin the interception protocol, she felt a twinge of hope that maybe, just maybe, her sacrifice would not be the end. Perhaps, in some other universe—for physics had proven that there were infinitely many—I will be born again, she thought. And with that, she made her peace and allowed herself to be consumed by the moment. To command her forces with all the best of her ability and to hopefully be a very small part of what might turn out to be a very important victory.  

“It’s definitely the Dread Fleet this time,” said her Ops Chief. “I can’t even count the number of exit signatures that are appearing—and the computer is unable to estimate the mass. And, worse still, they just keep coming. Pouring in in droves…”

“Shields double front, weapons live, all hands prepare to initiate first strike,” she said, making doubly sure she was strapped tightly in place.

“Aye, aye, sir,” came the reply.

“And to the rest of the Seventh Fleet and our Rotham allies…Godspeed.”

 

***

 

Shen awoke with a start, realizing he had no idea where the hell he was. Slowly, the memories returned to him. He’d been on Remus Nine with a group of lycans. They had encountered and defeated a group of Strigoi…all over some strange device called the Phalaxium. He remembered drinking something—something strange, at the urging of Tristan. And then…that was it.

Now he was here. Wherever the hell
here
was.

A bright light shined above him and he squinted it out then attempted to sit up, only to find himself restrained to a hospital bed. As he looked around, he could tell he was in some sort of starship infirmary. It wasn’t the
Nighthawk
—too large—nor was it the infirmary of a major starship or space station—too small—he didn’t recognize it, nor did he recognize any of the staff wandering around, or the few patients he could see from his restricted position. As far as he was aware, he was the only one restrained.

“Hello,” he said finally, trying to get some attention. “HELLO,” he repeated. That time, it worked. A nearby orderly—or was he a nurse?—Shen couldn’t tell, ran to his side and began checking his vitals.

“How do you feel, Mr. Iwate?” the man asked.

“I assure you, I’m quite alive,” said Shen.
Well, at least as alive as a human-Remorii hybrid can be
, he thought. “Where am I?” he demanded. “And how the hell did I get here?”

“Your pulse is good, heart rate strong. Take a deep breath for me, please,” said the medical practitioner. Shen decided the man was probably a nurse after all.

“How about you answer my questions first?” said Shen.

“You seem to be talking just fine,” said the nurse. “That means your lungs are all right.”

“Really?” asked Shen, sarcastically. “I’m talking
just fine
? Then why aren’t you answering any of my questions?”

The nurse looked down on him with a pleasant smile. “Everything seems to check out. We should be able to release you in no time.”

“Release me where?” demanded Shen.

“I’ll get the doc so she can start the paperwork.” And with that, the nurse was gone.

Well, to hell with this, thought Shen. He knew how strong he was—how strong the Remorii toxins had made him—so he wasn’t about to take this lying down, literally or otherwise. So he struggled against the restraints, intending to break them. They should have snapped like twigs against his superior strength but, to his surprise, they held him bound. He could scarcely move.

Wow, they really make these things strong
, he thought.

Before long, a woman in a lab coat was standing over him. “Hello, Mr. Iwate, how are you feeling today?”

“Fine,” said Shen. “Who are you? And can you remove these restraints please?”

“Your vitals are good, your blood work came back; it looks good too,” the doctor said, as if she hadn’t heard his question. “I’ll begin the paperwork for your immediate release.”

“Thank you,” said Shen. At least when he was free of his restraints he could figure out just where the hell he was, and what had happened.

“In the meantime, there’s someone here who I think will be excited to see you,” said the doctor. “I’ll go get her.” The doctor left.

Shen waited five minutes, but it felt like fifty. However, the wait proved well worth it. He was pleasantly surprised to see Sarah standing over him, as beautiful as ever, beaming. “Oh, my God, Shen, it’s so good to see you awake. You had me so worried!”

“I’m sorry,” he said automatically, feeling bad for having made Sarah worry. “Can you tell me where we are, and what exactly has happened?”

“What’s the last thing you remember?” asked Sarah.

“I was on Remus Nine and Tristan had me drink something…some weird concoction. I don’t know what it was. Then…everything is black after that.”

“That makes sense,” said Sarah, “You were in a medical coma by the time they got you back to the ship. Tristan carried you himself. We then got transferred to an Imperial starship, one with better medical facilities, once we arrived at Capital System.”

BOOK: The Phoenix Requiem (The Phoenix Conspiracy Series Book 7)
9.38Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Pledged by Alexandra Robbins
The Highest Bidder by Jenika Snow
Halfway House by Weston Ochse
Calamity Jena (Invertary Book 4) by janet elizabeth henderson
The Wedding Dress by Marian Wells
Smoke and Fire: Part 4 by Donna Grant
Deadly Nightshade by Cynthia Riggs
Under His Skin by Sidney Bristol