Read Burnt Worlds Online

Authors: S.J. Madill

Burnt Worlds (14 page)

He couldn’t contain his surprise.
 
“What?
 
What's going on?
 
Are you a fugitive?”

The Palani’s eyes found his.
 
“Yes, Captain.
 
I suppose I am a fugitive.”
 
She shook her head.
 
“But I am not a criminal.
 
I have…,” she paused, then started again.
 
“It is political, Captain.
 
I have certain political ideas that are… unacceptable to the Pentarch.
 
They seek to silence me, and so I fled my homeworld.”

Dillon felt a massive weight land in the pit of his stomach.
 
“Damn,” he said quietly.
 
He felt slightly dizzy as his thoughts began to swim.

“Please, Captain,” said the Palani.
 
“If you give me over to my government, it will be the end of me.
 
I will be arrested, and will disappear forever.”
 
She glanced down at her hands in her lap, and then back up to him.
 
“You are my last hope.”

The Captain sighed.
 
He realised he was rubbing his face with his hand, pinching his temples with his thumb and forefinger.
 
“I don’t…,” he began, then stopped.
 
“Okay,” he tried again, “I need to think.
 
I need to contact the Commodore—”

The Tassali interrupted him.
 
“No, Captain, please do not do that,” she said.
 
“You are using Dosh channels.
 
If you tell your Commodore, the Dosh will hear about it.
 
It would shame my government, and they would become furious.
 
They would kill over such an insult.”

Dillon sighed again, suddenly feeling exhausted.
 
He put his hands in his overcoat’s pockets.
 
He focused on breathing calmly, noticing as he did that the citrus scent was nearly gone from the room.
 
He wondered if the Tassali had stopped using her breath, or if he had become used to it.
 
No, he decided, if he were inhaling opiates he would feel less stressed than he currently did.

“Tassali,” he said, choosing his words one at a time.
 
“We are about to arrive at the Oronezu system, to look for supplies—”

“I have been there before, Captain.
 
I could be—”

“— and after that we’ll be travelling for five days to rendezvous with your flotilla.
 
So please let me focus on Oronezu for now.
 
After that, I will be able to concentrate on a solution to this new problem.
 
I can only handle one crisis at a time.”

The Tassali nodded.
 
“I understand, Captain.
 
You are being very fair.
 
Thank you for agreeing to think about it.
 
I trust you.”

“Yeah,” he said, turning wearily toward the door.
 
“you and a few other people.”

14

“Oronezu,” said the Chief.
 
She looked up from the helm at the bronze-coloured planet that had abruptly appeared.
 
“Anyone know what there is to do here?”

Dillon was perched in the Captain’s chair, one leg crossed over the other, his foot tapping.
 
He glanced up from his datapad.
 
“Geosynchronous orbit, please.
 
Sensors?”

“Sir,” said the crewmember at the sensor console.
 
“Twenty-three ships in orbit or in transit, sir.
 
All fifty metres or less.
 
Grab bag of classes and technologies.
 
No active sensors from the surface.
 
Seven other ships are landed around a settlement, including one of cruiser size.
 
I suspect the cruiser is a hulk, probably crashed.
 
Though its reactor is up.”

“Powering the settlement?”
 
asked the Captain.

“Could be, sir,” said the Chief.
 
“So,” she nodded, “we’re the big kid on the block.
 
I like this place already.”

Dillon grunted.
 
“No emissions from the planet.
 
That doesn’t make a lot of sense.
 
What are those ships up to?”

“Sir,” said the sensor tech, “Six of them are underway, making their way calmly yet directly away from us.
 
Everyone else is parked.”

“Huh.
 
Tell me about the settlement.”

“Prefab structures, sir.
 
Hundreds of them.
 
Looks like there was a bombardment at some point.
 
A few structures have been repaired and are now occupied.
 
Total population maybe a thousand, sir.
 
Weather is fifteen degrees and clear.”

“Good, thank you.
 
Chief, ask PO Lee to form up his team in the shuttle bay.
 
Same kit as last time.
 
Time to go shopping.”

The Chief was watching him closely, a hint of tension in her forehead.
 
She stepped closer to him, her voice almost a whisper.
 
“You're not going yourself, are you?
 
Send Atwell or Cho.”

Dillon shook his head.
 
“No Chief,” he muttered.
 
“Between you and me, I think our passenger's going to leave us.
 
If she does, there'll be hell to pay.”

Chief Black nodded.
 
“And you want to be the one that pays it.”

“Yeah.”

“Aye aye, sir.
 
I’ll talk to you when you get back.
 
If they’re having any good sales, let me know.”

-----

Dillon stepped off the elevator, checking the safety on his pistol for the third time.
 
He holstered the weapon and went back to checking the clasps on his armour once again.
 
The hangar airlock hissed briefly as it opened, and he stepped in toward the shuttle.

The rest of the team was standing near the shuttle’s open side hatch, and they looked up at him as he approached.
 
He noted the tension in the air, and then he noted the extra person.

In addition to Saparun, and Lee with his five armoured crew, there was an eighth person present, wearing the same nondescript overcoat as they had all worn on Tashann.
 
With her hood down, her long blue hair stood out.

“Captain,” said the Tassali.
 
“I wish to accompany the team down to the surface.”

Dillon stopped in front of the group.
 
He forced his hand to stop fidgeting with his armour. “Tassali, there is the potential for danger here.
 
May I ask the nature of your interest in Oronezu?”

The Palani shifted her feet, looking tense.
 
She looked him in the eye.
 
“I have been here before, Captain, in a… professional capacity.
 
I know several reputable merchants who may be able to assist us.”

“How long ago were you here?” asked Dillon.

“About ten months, Captain.”

He watched her cobalt eyes carefully.
 
It was difficult to look away.
 
“So,” he asked, feeling many sets of eyes on him.
 
“...will there be anyone here who would be unhappy to see you?”

“Not that I know of, Captain.
 
When I left, the unhappy people were… already gone.”

Dillon sighed.
 
“There’s a lot you aren’t telling us, isn’t there?”

“Yes.
 
But nothing that would endanger anyone or our common purpose.
 
Captain, this is the last habitable planet before the Burnt Worlds.
 
I can let you know if there is anything here that warrants special attention.”

Dillon thought about it for a moment.
 
If she wanted to leave the
Borealis
, this would be her best chance.
 
Just get down to the surface, and walk away.
 
Problem solved
, he thought, and gave a small nod to the Tassali.
 
He glanced at Petty Officer Lee, who stood next to the Palani and was watching her closely.
 
Lee's expression was a mixture of suspicion and fascination.
 

“Lee?” asked the Captain.

“Sir,” said the petty officer, turning to look at his commander.
 
“I recommend we all stay covered and incognito.
 
Don’t let anyone know who we are.”
 
He glanced momentarily at the Tassali.
 
“Any of us.
 
At least not until we know how friendly they are.”

“Okay Tassali, you can come for the ride.
 
But stay covered.
 
That goes for everyone. And if things smell wrong, sing out.
 
We can abort and try a different planet.
 
Better a few days’ detour than a big mess.
 
Mount up.”

-----

The shuttle landed in the middle of a thruster-scoured circle of charred ground, several hundred metres from the edge of the settlement.
 
Six other ships were parked nearby, and piles of shipping crates and equipment lay scattered throughout the landing area.
 
There was a stiff breeze, and it blew bronze-coloured dust across the landscape.
 
A few battered shrubs competed with tufts of coarse grass, clinging to patches of wind-worn ground.
 
In the distance, the rusted hull of a larger ship slumped awkwardly in the dirt.

Small groups of aliens, many of them armed and armoured, sat on crates or on the hulls of spaceships.
 
They stopped their conversations to look with interest at the big grey-and-red shuttle with its engines powering down.

A wide hatch slid open on the side of the shuttle, and they hopped down to the ground, spreading out and appraising their surroundings.
 
Dillon looked at the nearby ships and the aliens that were now watching his crew.
 
“Okay,” he said calmly.
 
“We have the attention of the locals.
 
Tough-looking bunch.”

“Aye, sir,” said Lee.
 
“I think we can do this.
 
They’re interested, but not jittery.
 
Even though that one’s got a pet over there, look.”

The Captain looked toward where the petty officer had nodded.
 
Under the nearest parked ship was a dog-like creature.
 
It was two metres tall at the shoulder, with vicious-looking fangs and claws, and a ridge of long spikes down its neck.
 
It stood up and sniffed the air.

“I’ve seen those before,” said Saparun.
 
“The Jaljal have them… they call it a spine hound, I think.
 
Guard animals.
 
Fiercely territorial.
 
Stay away from its ship and there shouldn’t be a problem.”

“Yeah, and it’s chained up too, sir,” said Lee.
 
“Doesn’t look like much of a sit-in-your-lap dog, though.”

“You never had a dog?”
 
asked Dillon.
 
“All dogs are lap dogs.
 
Doesn’t matter how big they are.”

The Tassali, who had been standing in the shuttle hatch behind the Captain, stepped quietly to one side, until she was out of sight.
 
“Captain,” she said softly, “Crimson Banner.”

Dillon glanced over his shoulder.
 
“Pardon?
 
Crimson what?”

“Crimson Banner mercenaries,” she hissed from the shadows of the shuttle’s interior.
 
“They do not normally come here.
 
I must stay out of sight.”

The human looked back at the armoured aliens standing around.
 
Most of them had splashes of deep red paint across their breastplates.
 

Saparun’s hooded cloak nodded.
 
“The Tassali is correct.
 
Five… six of these locals appear to be wearing Crimson Banner marks.”

The Captain sighed.
 
“Someone bring us up to speed, please?”

A hushed voice from inside the shuttle.
 
“Ruthless and profit driven.
 
Very highly skilled, Captain, they are not to be underestimated.
 
If you are not part of their current contract, they will ignore you.
 
But seeing one of my people here would upset them.”

Dillon’s voice sounded sharper than he intended.
 
“Why?”

There was a moment’s silence.
 
Dillon turned around and looked at the Tassali, who was watching him.
 
“The Crimson Banner works with fortune hunters who pillage the Burnt Worlds for religious artifacts.
 
Palani artifacts.
 
For this sacrilege, the Army of the Divines hunts them.”

“Damn it,” said the Captain.
 
“Army of the Divines?”

The Dosh’s voice was a quiet grumble.
 
“Palani religious commandos.”

The Tassali sighed.
 
“A better translation would be ‘templar’, Head Mechanic.”

“In any event,” said Saparun.
 
“Not subtle people.”

“If you say so.”

“That’s enough,” growled Dillon.
 
“Are these mercenaries a problem?
 
Yes or no.”

“I think ‘no’,” said the Dosh.
 
“If we were their contract, they would already be shooting.”

“I agree,” said the Tassali.
 

The Captain looked around at the nearby ships, crates and mercenaries.
 
“Okay,” he said at last, “Tassali, you stay out of sight.
 
Graham and O’Neil with the Head Mechanic and myself.
 
Lee, the rest of your team stays here.
 
I’ll keep you informed.”

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