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Dersa

Prologue (Scene 2)

Relief swept over her. Rissa rushed forward to cut him down, but the sheath for the small knife she ordinarily kept on her belt was empty. It had probably fallen out back where she’d come-to. She cursed herself for not checking for it, before, but when Sebastian let out a raspy cry, his eyes rolled back in his head, she gave it up and tried to focus on finding a way to get him down.
He was tied to the pole by a length of leather thong. The knot holding his arms over his head was fairly simple, but the boy’s four stone had pulled it into a tight ball. It wasn’t going to be possible to untie it with just her fingers. And the leather was too thick to tear apart. Then she had a thought.
Working quickly in the growing heat of the early afternoon, she wrapped her good arm around Sebastian’s waist and lifted his weight off of the strap. She used the shoulder of her injured arm to hold him up and pushed against the pole for balance and leverage to keep the majority of his weight from pulling down on the binding.
Rissa felt the world became a darkening tunnel around her as she pulled left-handed at the slight opening between his wrists and the loop of leather. Slowly, she worked her fingers around it and began to pull, using her own weight to stretch it out. By the time the strap was finally loosened enough to slip over the boy’s hands, Rissa noticed he had gone limp.
He was still breathing. But each breath was shallow and labored. She carried him away from the scorched earth around the poles and the smoldering remains of the farm house, and lay him down as gently as she could onto the trampled, ash-covered grass near the front gateway. The shattered wooden gate lay strewn around him, leaving him looking withered and shrunken.
Rissa knelt down beside him. She leaned over him to hold his hands and pray, and noticed just how bruised they were with angry splotches of crimson, purple, and black. She sent a silent prayer to beseech the beneficence of Naiz on behalf of her young master, and bent down to place a gentle kiss on the fingers of both hands.
When she sat back up, Rissa found herself staring face-to-face with a being of living light. She felt its grace settle over every inch of her body, and her mind was released from the strain of fear and pain and sorrow. She knew at once that it was a heavenly archon, come to protect her and Sebastian from any further harm.
Then the light and radiant love were gone as suddenly as they had appeared, and the world went black.

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Dersa

Prologue (Scene 1)
Pre-dawn light spilled over the peaks of the Barrier Mountains sitting on the distant horizon. The haze of death lay over hectares of razed fields; and the unnatural silence of the morning was broken only by the cracks and pops of a now-ruined farmhouse reduced to a smoking heap of rubble and ashes.
Rissa awoke in pain. Her head throbbed like she had hit it against the old stone wall she found herself laying against. When she moved her hand to see if there was any blood from the knock, the agony in her arm forced her eyes open through a caked layer of dirt and ash. She swallowed down a scream, and through the pounding on her temple she forced herself to examine the wound.
It was an arrow. The sight of the faded grains of the shaft erupting from her weathered skin was surreal. It was broken off about a hand’s length from her arm, but after trying to move it again with the support of her good hand, she discovered that it went all the way through the bones and muscles and was firmly embedded into the earth.
Without waiting to second-guess herself, Rissa dug the fingers of her good hand into the ground beneath her arm, scraping away enough to grab the arrow. There was no holding back her screams while her arm was forced to move while she worked at the dirt. After an eternity, she made enough space to grab the slender piece of wood with as much strength as she could muster. In a single swift jerk, she flung her arm up and off the shaft, and collapsed into unconsciousness from the pain.
She came to with the noon sun pressing against her face like a thick blanket of nettles. Her body ached for water so hard that she almost forgot the fire burning through her arm. She crawled one-handed to her knees, and tried to blink away the crust of grime from her eyes so she could look around and get her bearings.
Creeping columns of smoke crawled up from accross the barren fields that had just yesterday been a half-grown wheat crop. It took her several minutes to put together where she was. The next step had to be to get to the farmhouse, to see if there were any survivors. Slowly, she put her feet beneath her and, using the stones of the wall to push against, she gingerly stood upright. Moving seemed to help push back the dessicated feeling of dehydration, but her right arm was going to be useless. Gods forbid if it began to fester…
Between the arrow wound and her head injury, Rissa stumbled along beside the wall for the better part of an hour before she reached the remains of the farmhouse. Broken, half-burned timbers lay strewn across a pile of heat cracked masonry and pitch-blackened soil. Embers still burned in the heart of the ruins, and the smoke wafted around like Tursan revelling in the wake of his destruction.
Then the wind picked up for just a moment, and Rissa thought she could make out erect poles through the smoke. She scrambled around the rubble, tripping over the alien terrain, and sobbing for what she was afraid she had seen.
There were three poles. They had been hastily hewn from thick sapplings. Their branches were removed, but much of the bark remained. A body had been secured to each one, its hands bound above its head and its feet suspended just inches from the ground. The farm’s owner, Lantia, her husband Flevin, and their eight year old son Sebastian had been strung up and killed. Their throats torn out, no doubt, as sacrifice to the Tessods’ demonic god of conquest.
Rissa felt like she’d been kicked in the gut by a mule. She clawed at her eyes with her good hand to stop the dry swelling of tears from burning in the acrid smoke. She looked up to the deep, cloudless blue of the sky, and uttered a prayer for her owners’ souls.
“Zaer, protect these souls on their road to Everlasting Paradise.”
It stuck in her throat, only half spoken.
The middle aged farm-hand turned away from the corpses. The image of her destroyed life was seared into her mind’s eye. Memories of her years of service in Lantia’s household flashed over it. The market days. The honest, hard work in the fields. Sebastian’s unbounded youth. She could just imagine him calling for her from across a distance. Or very quietly.
She spun back to face the murdered family, forgetting the hot poker burning her arm, and almost passed out again from the sudden reminder. She rode out the wave, and quickly opened her eyes again. She stepped towards Sebastian’s small body, careful over the broken ground. He hung limply from the pole between his parents.
Rissa realized she was holding her breath, and let it go in three shuddering wheezes. Had she imagined the boy’s voice? She swallowed repeatedly, trying to moisten and clear the smoke from her throat despite her intense thirst.
“Sebastian?” she managed to force out, after more than a couple tries.
The boy’s eyes shot open. He stared at her, his face contorted in pain and concentration, and an ugly cut across his throat beginning to bleed anew.
“Help,” he pleaded. “Uncle… Peter…. Dersa.”

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The Disappearance of of Becky Blake [2]

“Hey, Rick!” A shimmer in the woods caught Becky’s attention, and she stopped walking so she could get a better look. The flickers of translucence were sometimes white, then blue, then maybe orange… and they just hung in the air, only a few yards into the treeline.
When she looked away, Becky noticed that Rick was still walking away, like she hadn’t said anything at all. “Stop, Rick…” his gait shifted, then he paused. She was too excited to stay annoyed at his petty antics. “Come here and see this!” Whatever it was, he’d think it was just as neat as she did.
Then a slender, dark skinned armed draped in a light silken cloth of deep crimson with brilliant saffron designs sprawled over it appeared to reach through the shimmering light. With it floated whispered words, like dry leaves crunching underfoot in the fall. “Daughter… of Sarah… save us… take our hand… come to us…”
Becky didn’t really consider the implications or possible consequences. She stepped over the railing between her and the brush line, and reached out to grab the genteel hand waiting for her. The world around suddenly washed out in a crescendo of harsh light. She blinked and tried to rub her eyes back into focus. It took longer than she wanted, but eventually she was able to make out the details of her surroundings.
Looking around, she saw that everything was different. She stood on a rolling hillside, and she was surrounded by deciduous trees in the fiery regalia of high fall. In front of Becky stood a slender young woman draped in a billowy but revealing garment… “dress” was an insufficient word to describe it. The fabric was a gossamer that seemed to flicker with dozens of tiny fires in he gentle breeze and sunlight, and the deep reds and yellows seemed to dance around her body in a jubilant waltz.
Looking up, Becky confirmed that the sun was, in fact, in the sky. She looked down at her watch, but the clock face said it was still ten at night. “What the hell is going on!” she exclaimed aloud. The strange woman must have thought she was being asked the question, because she held up her hands, palms out.
She spoke with a voice befitting her overwhelming beauty, slightly hushed and amiable if not outright warm. “Do not fear, child. I am the Fómharsidhe, and you are in my realm of Autumn.”

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Chapter 1 [section 4a]

I stopped outside the hab-ring and pulled my handy out of my left sleeve pocket. Two things had to happen if I was gonna have a chance of meeting the captain’s departure schedule. Venus Station was much too large for me to search even just the rings by myself. I texted a quick order to First Sargent Bryans and Sargent Castanza, “Marine Teams 1 and 2 report to docking port ASAP for search and recovery.” Both sargents confirmed receipt immediately, so I had about a minute to do the second thing that needed doing.

Beside me in the corridor was the hatch to the number six head. I popped it open and pulled myself inside. I could feel my body shaking from the adrenaline crash that I had known would follow being a part of events like what-all had just happened on the bridge – the rescue mission, the recall order, and now being sent to recover missing crewmen.

I needed my head clear of the mix of terror and excitement and numb disbelief, and it had to happen in the next thirty seconds. What I wouldn’t give for a presstab or a full night’s sleep. Right. I looked around the head, and saw that the polished chrome mirror caught my reflection face-on, showing my hands in the periphery of my vision. My knuckles were a milky brown from the strain of holding onto the wash basin. It was the only way I could keep them from shaking.

I stared myself dead in the eyes, and took a moment to examine the nebulous interplay between dark brown and an almost amber highlight in each iris. I followed the anatomical contours around my dark, furrowed brow, and down the strong arch of my nose, the… who was I kidding? The deformed skin on my left cheek and the pitting from a long, adolescent war with acne defined my face.

It wasn’t self-pity. I was an officer aboard the newest ship in the system. I was about to lead two teams of marines in a boarding party onto a space station orbiting over the planet Venus on the far side of the sun from Earth. So what if my visage wasn’t one of godlike beauty like Colonel Kelly, or a mature authority like Doc Godderson? I’d just have to make up for the lack of automatic authority someway else.

I looked down at my hands, now released from the wash basin’s death grip, and I saw that they were no longer shaking. My handy chimed that the marines were waiting for me at the air lock. It was game time.

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Chapter 1 [section 3]

Space stations have taken many forms over the nearly two centuries that humans have lived in space. The earliest were little more than pressure chambers cobbled together to make tiny habitats that rode on the very edges of Earth’s atmosphere. Modern stations are much more complex and variable, both in form and function.

On the small end of the scale are the dozens of solar weather observatories with their spartan living quarters tethered behind gargantuan radiation shields. At the other end of the scale are the ongoing projects to hollow out asteroids of various sizes in the Main Belt, built as alternatives to the more conservatively constructed outposts on Vesta and Ceres.

In between the two extremes are hundreds of orbital hotels around earth, military depots around Mercury, Venus, and Mars, and so many academic research posts that only the computers could really account for them all. Oh, and there’s the Abandonist colony orbiting the sun at about one AU opposite of Earth. Like their population, the Abandonist facilities are a jumble of ad hoc habitats made out of abandoned and retired vessels, conjoined in collective rejection of the laws and politics of the rest of humanity.

Venus Orbital Station, operated primarily by private contractors under the auspices of NATO Space Command, is one of the multiple middling-sized military depots. Imagine a grain silo with five rings stacked around it, blown up more than a hundred times in size, and spun around like a top. It’s fairly standard, so if you’ve ever been to an orbital hotel you’ve probably seen some variation of the design. Most of the station is dedicated to warehousing stores for military vessels, but there is so much space in the habitat rings that sections are often rented out for non-military purposes. At any given time, there might be as many as two hundred people living and working aboard Venus Station.

It’s size made emergency recall of Kitty Hawk personnel an exercise in controlled chaos. Lieutenant Colonel Kelly had been quick to return aboard with Marine Team Two because they were running calisthenic drills in the cargo hold just adjacent to our docking berth. Godderson and her medics were asleep in their bunks when the alert went out, and had reported from quarters within moments. It was better than ten minutes from the recall before Captain Wright stormed up the ladder and onto the bridge – a not inconsiderable feat given his mass and the acrobatics involved, null-g and magnetics or not.

“Report!” he bellowed. Kelly was the only one else on the bridge, and her gentile stoicism from halfway across the arch was all I needed to know that I was on the hook.

I stood and stepped forward, straining my neck from the awkward angle required to address the captain from where I stood. “Sir, orders from Admiral Thompson came through marked urgent.” I hesitated.

“Spit it out, lieutenant. You ordered an emergency recall, so they’d better have been end of the fucking world orders!” He was being loud, but I suddenly felt certain that his demeanor was little more than an affectation. Was he-?

JSS Himeji is missing and presumed lost in Ceres sector, sir.” I watched Captain Wright’s face for another clue of what I’d just glimpsed beneath his surface expression, but all I saw was calculation while he shuffled to the command station.

He started reading from his console as soon as he sat down, and only looked up long enough to see that I was still waiting for more questions from him. “Is there something else, lieutenant?”

I glanced back at my station’s display to confirm, and said, “Miss Lowell and PFC Smith haven’t reported in yet. The rest of the board is full, sir.”

The captain waved his hand vaguely and continued studying his display. Kelly, as if on cue from her tactical station, coughed mildly. “Perhaps you should go make certain that they return to the ship in a timely manner, Miss Nocona.”

Something seemed contrived about the order, as though the grown-ups wanted to wait for me to leave so they could have a conversation without kids around, but didn’t want me to know it. I couldn’t help but feel flustered by the dismissal.

“Quickly, lieutenant.” The captain said without looking up. “We’ll be departing at 0600 with or without any tardy crewmen.”

A glance at the chronometer showed it was 0543. I scrambled over my magnetics to the ladder, and managed half of a “right away sir” before running into Estevez, the pilot, as he came up. He looked crosswise at me, and I mumbled an apology as I ducked down the ladder-way towards the docking port.

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Chapter 1 [Section 0.9]

Third Shift on the Bridge rotation was dull work. With Kitty Hawk moored to Venus Orbital Station and most of her crew on short leave, it was pretty dead. So imagine my surprise when twenty minutes into watch the command display lit up with an ‘URGENT ACTION’ alert from engineering.

“Kitty,” I addressed the ship’s computer and cleared the alert from the display. “Call down to the Engine room, please?”

“Of course, sir.” The computer’s voice was vaguely feminine, and carried an undertone one might expect from a teener. There was a click, and a very pale but very shaggy face appeared on my console.

“Engineering, this is Welsch.” His eyes shifted as though he was making space on his display for our conversation. I tried not to react at his subtle wince when he saw my face. “Yes, can I help you Lieutenant Nocona?”

It took considerable effort not to roll my eyes at his feigned formality. “There was an alert, Mister Welsch.” I emphasized the honorific and saw him wince again, this time not so subtly. I softened my tone a touch, and asked, “How’s everything going down there?”

“Oh, nothing big.” He was suddenly distracted by something off to his right, and held up his hand, “just a…”

He left the display’s field of vision, and there were several seconds of loud clanging picked up by his audio feed before he returned somewhat more disheveled than before. “Just a minor coolant leak, sir. I’ve got flow routed around the damaged primary until the Chief can take a look at it in the…”

He disappeared from the display again, and there was a single very loud metallic thud. He sprang back into view, but it took him a moment to remember what he had been saying. “Yeah, no big deal. The reactor’s fine. Everything’s within tolerance.”

I nodded. “Sure thing, Mister Welsch.”

“Look, Cynthia,” he interjected, looking- what, sad? confused?

“Not now, Roger.” I cut him off before he could dig any further. “Be sure to send me a damage report asap.”

It looked for a second like he was going to argue, but all he said was, “yes sir.”

“I’ll leave you to it.” I cleared out the screen, and felt content that the night’s drama was done.

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Chapter 1 [sections 1&2]

“Captain,” the computer spoke over the bridge comset. “We are being relayed a communication form NATO command on Earth.”
“It’s just me, Kitty.” I blushed at the title. It was a technicality of regulations held over from the days of the great ocean-faring navies, that the highest ranking officer in the chain of command aboard a ship be called ‘Captain,’ even if it was only for a short time. “Captain Wright is off duty aboard Venus Station. I’m just keeping his seat warm”
“Well, you are Captain while he is away, Miss Nocona. So you want me to show you the message or what?” Kitty was the ship’s computer. Apparently when they wrote her personality, they thought “childishly obnoxious” would let the crew interact more naturally with her or something.

“Go ahead. Put it up on the main display?” It was the biggest screen on the ship, and I always enjoyed seeing things blown up to the size of an entire wall panel.

For a moment I thought Kitty hadn’t heard me, then there was a burst of screen snow—EM distortion across the video feed—followed quickly by a haggard looking older man in a Japanese fleet uniform, sitting in his command couch and looking much the worse for wear. He was saying something very quickly in what must have been Japanese, while the lights of a battle-stations alert intermittently bathed him in red then white light.

“What’s he saying? Is there more to the message than just the video file?”
“Hold on a second or three, and I’ll have it in English for you. That’s Captain Nakahito from Himeji! Their computer Tsuru was really nice to me when we met before the shakedown.” Kitty liked to babble while she focused on a task. Yet another programmer’s attempt to make her more personable, no doubt. “Here we go. I’ll restart the file.”
The screen burst with static again, but this time when Nakahito spoke it was in standard English.

“…is significant anomalous radiation, and there appear to be significant amounts of debris in the area, though none of our sensing equipment is making any sense. We will continue to search the region for evidence of the–”

There was another burst of static, then the display went dark before the face of an elderly woman with an admiral’s insignia on her uniform appeared.

“Captain Wright, at 2039 Zulu last night, Port Ceres lost contact with Himeji and was unable to regain it. This morning, several observation ports throughout the system were tasked to search for her, and found only trace evidence. The Japanese have asked for help on this, and we’ve agreed. Your orders are to make haste to Ceres, and use all necessary caution in ascertaining the fate of Captain Nakahito and his crew. Tensions are high right now, and nobody wants to point fingers and end up with a second Belt War. But if the Chinese are behind this, we need to know the why and how. Further information is attached, including what we know about Himeji’s mission. Godspeed, Jemarcus. Thompson out.”
“Well, fuck,” I said with characteristic eloquence. “Can you raise the Captain, Kitty?”
“I’m sorry, sir, but the station’s computer is a real blockhead. He won’t let me access anything over there.”
I sighed and shook my head in mild frustration. “Did it occur to you to page the station’s comm officer on the standard frequency? Make sure you tag it highest priority.”
“Oh, I guess I could do that too, Captain. I promise I will try that first, next time. On your screen, sir.”

There was a burst of comm noise, then the swarthy face of Venus Station’s communications second snapped into focus on my command display. What was his name? Rafe? Ralph?

“Rawlins, it’s Nocona on Kitty Hawk.” I tried not to smile over the link. That rarely went well.

He grimaced, of course.

“What do you want, Kitty Hawk?”
I could feel the sudden burn of adrenaline in my chest as I built up the importance of what I was about to say.

“We have a Priority One over here. I need a Return Call for Captain Wright and all Kitty Hawk crew aboard Venus Station.”

Rawlins’ eyes glazed over for a moment, and I realized I was holding my own breath. For a second time in fifteen minutes, I felt my face flush. Only for a moment, though.

“Roger that, Kitty Hawk. I’ll past it along.”

* * *

Lieutenant Colonel Kelly climbed up the ladder onto the bridge, and I quickly evacuated from the command station. I had a moment to stare at the riveted decking beneath my boots, and reminded myself that Kitty Hawk’s executive officer was just another mortal like the rest of us—not a goddess chiseled from living marble. She, of course, spent the entire time staring me right in the face, silently judging my demeanor.

“Report, Lieutenant?” The gentleness of the command did nothing to belie the self-assured physicality behind it.

“Orders from Admiral Thompson, sir. The Japanese lost Himeji in the Ceres sector of the Belt.” I paused to breathe, and felt my ears turn red. Addressing instructors at the academy was one thing,but even two weeks into service aboard Kitty Hawk hadn’t cured me of getting the jitters when addressing senior officers.

The Lieutenant Colonel waited through my pause, presumably to let me put my thoughts in order, then interjected right before I opened my mouth to continue.

“So what does she want us to do about it? Fly out to the Belt and rescue the poor fucks?” She stalked from the ladderway and stood over me, her iron gaze somehow daring me to admit I was joking—then she snorted and let out a half-hearted chuckle. “Relax, kid. You made the right call, waking us up. Queue up the vid for the Captain, and move over to the Communications station to monitor check-ins.”

My face got tight with an uncontrolled grimace. I turned away to hide my reluctance, and said a quick “Aye, sir,” hoping she hadn’t seen.

Kitty greeted me at the Comm station and switched the display on before I got settled in my seat.

“The medical team is reporting. Doctor Godderson says that both her medics are at their stations.” A graphic of the crew manifest popped up over Kitty’s olden LoLCats background of the day. “And Marine Team Two reports all members are at their posts.” The medics and the three marines from Team Two switched from red to black on the manifest.

“Go ahead and list me and the XO as checked in too, Kitty.”

“Of course, Lieutenant.” Quick as she was with calculations, sometimes Kitty missed obvious details of procedure. I guess that’s why they still have us flesh-and-blood people flying around in space instead of just leaving it up to the machines.