Dana Cartwright Mission 3: Kal-King

BOOK: Dana Cartwright Mission 3: Kal-King
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The Dana Cartwright Series:

Mission Three

KAL-KING-CORRECTED 8-7-13

by

Joyz W. Riter

This novel is a work of fiction. Any references to historical events, real people, or real locales are used fictionally. Other names, characters, places, and incidents are the product of the author’s imagination, and any resemblance to actual events, or locales or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

Copyright © 2013 Joyz W. Riter

All rights reserved.

ISBN-13: 978-1490360713
 

ISBN-10: 1490360719
 

FOR:

Kellie, Guppy, Corwin and Aliera

Lady Pamela

&

Dame Marilyn

Contents

Title Page

Copyright

CHAPTER 1

CHAPTER 2

CHAPTER 3

CHAPTER 4

CHAPTER 5

CHAPTER 6

CHAPTER 7

CHAPTER 8

CHAPTER 9

CHAPTER 10

CHAPTER 11

CHAPTER 12

CHAPTER 13

CHAPTER 14

CHAPTER 15

CHAPTER 16

CHAPTER 17

CHAPTER 18

CHAPTER 19

CHAPTER 20

CHAPTER 21

CHAPTER 22

CHAPTER 23

CHAPTER 24

CHAPTER 25

CHAPTER 26

CHAPTER 27

CHAPTER 28

About the Author

CHAPTER ONE

“Tonnertown Control to Ambassadorial shuttle,
Seraph
, you are clear for landing…VFR.” The feminine, android voice came over the communications earpiece.
 

Captain Dana Cartwright acknowledged curtly into her COM unit, “
Seraph
, aye,” as her fingers moved over the piloting console on the bridge of the Blade Class Alphan shuttle. “I have visual.”

The spaceport filled the forward view screen, spreading out before her like a giant spider web with a labyrinthian, modern city of towers and spires just beyond. Travel texts called Tonnertown an “oasis” amid rust-colored sand dunes. Well, that certainly summed it up, except for the warnings to avoid high levels of ultraviolet light exposure on the sizzling, arid planet — third from a hot, main-sequence star.

A random thought crossed Cartwright’s mind.
Why would Ambassador Taurian want to spend seven days here? And without a security detail? It’s not exactly a sightseeing paradise.

A private pilot was rarely privy to the reasoning of paying passengers; and this passenger in particular was atypical. Since she’d become the captain of the Ambassador’s personal shuttle,
Seraph
, Dana had only once landed at one of the big, orbital space docks — his preference, not hers.
 

The Tritian Elder always mapped out the route; her job was to get him there safely, all expenses paid.

Dana made a mental note to have the ship refueled and serviced here, since their next port-of-call was the Republic Station at The Crossroads. Tonnertown could do the job far more quickly, and they could avoid the invasive crush during the Great Conference, twelve days hence.

Ambassador Taurian puttered about aft, tearing open luggage and crates, apparently searching for something elusive.
 

Cartwright called, “We’re on approach, Mister Ambassador. You should strap in for landing.”

“Oh, yes…in a moment,” he muttered, bent over a case, “just retrieving my solar cloak. Can’t take exposure to the sun here at Tonnertown. You’ll be needing one, as well. Be sure to purchase it here at the spaceport. In the marketplaces, they overcharge for everything, especially imported goods. Please remember to wear no insignia when out and about. Better not to attract attention, if at all possible.” He chuckled, adding an afterthought, “Although, with your beautiful hair and youthful figure, you certainly will, my dear, but for other reasons.”

Dana blushed, though she joined him, laughing and promising, “I can handle that sort of attention, sir.” Her thick, waist-length braid of cinnamon hair undulated like a snake along her shoulders as she nodded her head and sighed.

He went on, still seeking, “I’ve booked a suite at the big resort, and have reserved a ground vehicle and, also, engaged a local driver. You have full privileges; don’t be ashamed to indulge a bit. I have some meetings scheduled with the spaceport commissioner and a few of the other ambassadors when they arrive. T-town frowns upon point-to-point MAT transfers, except for emergencies, however, the public vehicles and transportation are efficient.”

A lot of worlds had the same restrictions, although visiting ambassadors usually received preferential treatment, and their staff enjoyed the same options.

Cartwright shrugged. “You’ve been here before then?”

“Oh, yes, lots of times, for lots of reasons. T-town collects an eclectic variety of visitors. It’s a good place to hear the rumblings of the underworld, so to speak. You’ll meet all sorts after dark. Be careful. They don’t take kindly to concealed weapons; however, you are covered as a member of my staff.”

Dana patted her thigh-high, left boot where a sheath secured an exclusive, Sterillian dagger.
 

He apparently noticed the gesture and counseled, like a protective father, “Don’t use it but in self-defense.”

“Aye, sir.”

“T-III uses a credit system. Charge everything to my suite at the resort. Should you need currency, they will handle the exchange for you at the front desk, up to a limit of one thousand credits. Anything more than that needs to go on a card, or they become suspicious.”

He kept digging.

Dana, having given the required warning, like a good flight steward, fasten seat-belts and stow all gear and all that — the standard warning that the Ambassador always ignored — focused on the approach.

In over two hundred take-offs and landings, he’d never once obeyed the caution warning. Dana guessed he wasn’t about to start now.


Seraph
, you are clear to Bay 17, inboard. Slow to impulse.”

“Roger, slowing to impulse for Bay 17,” Cartwright echoed, spotting the outer marker for Bay 95, routinely decreasing speed as the odd numbered bays sprawled out below.
 

A few big ships, mostly freighters and the like,
 
dotted the higher numbered, open-air bays. Smaller ships, like
Seraph
, being very nimble, maneuvered easily in the tighter, inboard ones.
 

Dana switched to manual controls, disengaged impulse and engaged stationkeeping thrusters, coaxing the Alphan Blade Class shuttle to a very soft landing with little drift and little fanfare, barely kicking up a whirl of red dust on the landing pad.

While reaching for the switchboard to power down, Dana heard a deafening explosion. The percussive force slammed her hard from behind. The safety bar on the pilot’s chair failed to protect her from being hurled upward, onto the console, and with it, out the shattered forward view screen.
 

Cartwright writhed in agony, trapped, left leg severely fractured, every muscle screaming, before descending into unconsciousness under a blanket of hot sand and bent metal.
 

Debris and smoke quickly engulfed Bay 17. Fire extinguishing systems hissed, spraying foam to snuff out the flames.

CHAPTER TWO

Janz Macao stared at the nearest of his captors, approximating the man’s size under the body armor, but mostly staring at the humanoid’s mismatched — left blue and right brown — eyes. Though battered and bloody, the former Star Service Captain couldn’t help the smirk crossing his lips. What were the odds of meeting this man among the first group of mercenaries encountered? Impossible odds…truly… He whispered when the dozen or so others in the cargo bay moved away from them, asking, “Are you December?”

The man looked very much like Novem, enough to be the brother of the human/Enturian/Galaxean tribrid, suffering from DNA mutations that crippled his hands and deformed his face, but his eyes…
 

“You have your father’s eyes.”

“I am Dec,” the man returned, squinting, full of suspicion.

“I know Novem,” Macao stated quietly, gaining only a minimal response.

“Know?”

“And I know January.”

That hooked him. Macao deliberated his next move.

Dec stared intently. “How does sokem know the January?”

Sokem was the Enturian word for prisoner. It made Macao’s back stiffen. He admitted, thinking fondly of the petite, young woman with her cinnamon hair and quick mind, “She is my friend.”

“The January is perfect.”

Janz nodded, assuring, “Oh, yes.” He waited.

Dec drifted closer; laser weapon pointed, but not threateningly.

“Novem is free. January took him with her to safety.”

Dec frowned. “Free? Novem is free?”

Janz Macao smiled and whispered, “Would Dec like to be free?”

“Dec is a slave. Novem is a slave.”

“Not anymore,” Macao said, shutting his eyes,
 
feigning sleep. He desperately needed the real thing, but didn’t dare relax just yet. The Crazorians terrorized and interrogated him regularly, wondering how he’d managed to single-handedly steal one of their ships. In between beatings, they’d moved him from ship to ship, bound his wrists with a strange, braided rope that seemed to breathe, tightening and relaxing of its own accord. Becoming a prisoner of the mercenaries wasn’t exactly part of the plan; Macao hoped it would get him closer to the real sokem — the imprisoned ones — four Enturians that Novem hinted were prisoners for a very long time.

The Star Service Intelligence Division — SSID — needed intel on them and, if possible, he was to free them. Macao resisted the mission at first, but finally
 
agreed to try. What more could a disgraced starship captain do to restore honor?
 

Just remembering the whole affair troubled him. Recriminations, self-doubt, self-immolation often followed. He’d been stupid to trust certain members of the
Lancer
crew. Someday he’d get over it; someday he’d resolve it all.

For now…

Dec poked him with the barrel of the laser rifle, and leaned in closer. “What is January?”

Macao opened his eyes. “Her given name is Dana. She was adopted by a medical doctor on Earth; she became a doctor, as well.”

“A doctor?”

“Aye…and a very good one…her specialty is…well, was…eyes.”

“Eyes?”

Janz winked, hoping it didn’t mean something lewd and unseemly in the slaver culture.

Dec mimicked the gesture and seemed to understand.

“She’s small and shapely,” Janz admitted, “with long, cinnamon hair down to here.” He indicated his middle. “She wears it braided mostly, but it’s very beautiful.”

Dec frowned. “What is January?”

“Well…she’s brilliant, and has an incredible memory, and…”

Dec poked him again. “What is January?”

Macao struggled to understand and then he picked up a telepathic sensation. “She’s free; she’s a Star Service lieutenant commander.”

Dec’s mismatched eyes widened. “Republic?”

Macao nodded.

“You, too?”

To admit it could prove very dangerous, so Janz Macao hedged his bets. “I was, but not anymore. Got into some trouble, so I quit.” That about summed it up.

Dec clearly did not believe him; he wasn’t sure what more could be said.

“Novem knows January?”

“Yes.”

“He is her slave?”

“No…no, nothing like that.” Janz detected jealousy, the first strong emotion the tribrid emitted since taking off the body armor helmet. Dec seemed intelligent, but had obviously been abused and browbeaten all his life. He clearly had no self-esteem beyond what holding a laser rifle generated.

Dec shut down when another slave brought him a plate of food and a jug. When the slave turned tail and
 
moved farther away, he set the weapon aside, though within easy reach.

Since being taken prisoner, Macao received one bowl of mush a day, and a cup of an awful tasting liquid that made his insides spasm when he drank it. He guessed the liquid had a chemical added; perhaps containing a drug to keep him docile, but it didn’t make him sleepy.

Dec used a spoon, but ate only half of the portion on the plate before setting it aside. He nodded towards it, beckoning. Macao gladly crawled over to eat the rest.
 

Janz forced himself to go slowly, savoring every spoonful of the meat and gravy stew, licking the spoon, scraping the plate for every last morsel. “January is a vegan,” he commented quietly.

“What is vegan?”

“She eats no meat…nothing like this,” he indicated the plate.

“Why?” Dec motioned him to drink from the jug.

“Enturians are vegan. So are Galaxeans,” he said, taking a swig of pure, fresh water that tasted divine.

Dec frowned, “I am neither.”

“You are both, plus human. You and all of the twelve are tribrids.”

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