Read Ouroboros 4: End Online

Authors: Odette C. Bell

Tags: #Science Fiction & Fantasy, #Science Fiction, #Adventure, #Space Opera

Ouroboros 4: End (8 page)

BOOK: Ouroboros 4: End
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There was such a somber, sad presence to her watchful gaze, it was a surprise a tear didn’t streak down her cheek.

Again his heart went out to her.

She’d be feeling the entity’s guilt. No doubt it surged within her. The fact she was keeping her tone controlled and measured was a testament to how much she could control it. Right now the entity would be fighting her with everything it had.

She didn’t glow blue, but she did keep her left hand clutched and pressed up close to her leg.

Eventually she blinked, and swiveled her head back to face the Board.

Everyone was speechless.

His report had been one thing: clinical, precise, and by the book.

Her display, though quiet, was one of the rawest emotional experiences he’d endured.

Admiral Forest slowly rose from her chair. Her hands looked slick with sweat, her fingers trembling as she clutched a hand on her collar and compulsively neatened her pips. With a grim expression touched with shock, she considered Nida before managing, ‘I see . . . Cadet.’

Forest was never speechless. Forest always had an answer for everything.

There was nothing to say now though, right? To speak would be to admit the unfathomable danger the Coalition was now in.

Though her history had not always been smooth, the United Galactic Coalition had never before faced the threat of near total annihilation.

That threat now loomed. Soon, the Vex would appear.

Nida held the datapad out, waiting for Forest to take it. Eventually the Admiral did, gripping the toughened edge of the screen with such a powerful grasp, he could see her knuckles pop against her pallid white skin.

‘Thank you, Cadet,’ Forest found her voice, though it shook with nerves. ‘Do you have anything more to add?’

Nida paused in thought before shaking her head.

When they’d walked into this room, she’d looked ready to pop. He’d assumed standing before the Academy Board would freak her out, rendering her speechless and more awkward than usual.

How wrong he’d been.

She had her voice, alright. And her words had done something his couldn’t: with one look around the boardroom, it was clear every person present now understood the full severity of the situation.

‘Very well,’ Forest breathed through her fear, straightening up as she did, ‘that will be all. Please remain outside in the corridor. We will call for you if you’re needed.’

Nida nodded. As she turned to walk away, she paused. ‘Shouldn’t I return to the secure room in the medical bay? I’m still under observation, right?’ she asked.

‘All readings so far confirm that modified TI is doing its job. I would commend whoever crafted it, but I fear that unless I heed your warning now, I’ll get to meet them in person. We need to do everything we can to stop the Vex.’

Nida swallowed, nodded low, snapped a perfect salute, and turned.

Not before shooting Carson a look. It was vulnerable, it was confused, yet her chin was still held aloft with undeniable strength.

If his heart had gone out to her before, now he swore it tumbled free from his chest.

She was incredible.

Christ, words couldn’t express what she’d been through, nor the courage and strength she’d drawn on to continue.

Carson could easily admit he’d never felt like this about someone before.

Cadet Nida Harper. She most definitely was not meant to be his type.

She was.

Now he couldn’t imagine his life without her.

. . . .

As she left, the fear set in.

Unless he did everything he could, he’d lose her, and his beloved Coalition too.

It took Forest several seconds to speak. She was still clearly lost in thought and fear. Soon enough she cleared her throat. Pressing a hand into her mouth, muffling her words, she managed, ‘what do we do?’

For a woman as in control as Forest, it was symptomatic of this situation that she couldn’t find her own answers.

A few people muttered. Soon enough, it built, and everyone blurted their thoughts at once.

‘We need to amass the fleet and take it to Remus 12. This time we’ll be ready for them. We can obliterate their ships from space just as they realign with our timeline.’

‘We have to fall back, create a defensive line in a remote system, and bolster it, ensuring no Vex ship can cross and reach Earth or any other Coalition planet.’

‘We have to evacuate Earth. It will be a huge expense, but we need to move all civilians to planets beyond the Vex’s reach. We’ll wait out their attack. It will only last a day.’

‘No,’ Carson spoke, surprising himself. ‘None of that will work. Nida told you not to underestimate them, and she’s right. If we confront them or run, they’ll still find a way to overcome us.’

‘Then what are our options?’ one Admiral erupted. ‘Confront or run are the only possible scenarios we can entertain. If neither will work, are you suggesting we give up?’

All eyes settled on Carson.

His mouth became dry, an itching heat tracing up his back and down the insides of his arms. Clamping his hands tight, he shook his head.

He knew the answer to this. He’d always known the answer. Ever since their return from the future, Carson had concluded there was only one possible way to defeat the Vex safely.

And forever.

He couldn’t push the words out though. Once they were out, he knew the Board would agree.

In doing so, that would break his promise to Nida.

He’d told her they’d find a way to fix Vex’s timeline. To heal the damage the entity had done.

There was no way, though. Not a safe one. The Vex were an incalculable threat to the Coalition.

So he knew what he had to do.

Wincing, actually feeling his words stab into him like swords, he forced them out, ‘we destroy the planet. We can’t afford to fight the Vex. It’s that simple.’ He felt sick, and he thought of Nida, but he forced himself to continue. ‘If we destroy the planet before the timelines can realign, we’ll prevent it from ever happening.’

Silence met his admission.

It stretched for barely five seconds until the Admiral nodded her head firmly, ‘I concur. It is the only way. The Vex timeline is broken, and there is no known way to fix it. Even if we do not destroy the planet, and find some way to ride out their attack, we will simply be condemning the future. Though the entity has now been removed from Vex’s timeline, we cannot know for sure that another of its kind will not leak through to this dimension and continue its cause.’

Her words were cold, hard, ruthless. But right.

They could not afford to risk the Coalition. It was comprised of hundreds of races, thousands of planets, and too much life to gamble.

Still, it was a horrible decision, one he’d pay for when Nida found out.

He just hoped that once the entity was removed, she wouldn’t feel its guilt anymore.

Things would go back to normal.

He held onto that belief as the details of the destruction of Vex were discussed.

The rest of the Board did not need convincing of the validity of this plan. There was no other way to safeguard the Coalition.

The meeting ran for over an hour. When it was done, Carson felt as though he’d been in a fight for his life. He was weary and emotionally fatigued.

He couldn’t sleep though.

It wasn’t every day the Coalition decided to blow up an entire planet. It wasn’t an easy task, either. Few cruisers had the firepower required to rip away the rock surrounding a planet’s core and obliterate it completely.

The technology did exist, though, and was now being assembled at break-neck speed.

The wheels were in motion, to borrow an old Earth phrase, and soon enough a fleet would leave for Remus 12.

To destroy it.

Using top priority routes, it could make it there in time. All other traffic along the transport lines would be shut down to preserve speed, but any inconvenience caused would be a small price to pay for the ultimate survival of the Coalition.

Carson would accompany the fleet to Remus 12. He still knew the most about the Vex, and he’d be an asset to any team.

Nida would come too. The Admiral was adamant her unique perspective may come in handy. Nida had clearly impressed the Admiral with her assessment of the Vex, and the worst recruit in 1000 years had skyrocketed in Forest’s eyes.

Carson was in two minds about bringing her along. Yes, she knew a lot about the Vex, and if their plan went wrong, she really would be an incalculable asset. She could fight alongside him, and with her control of the entity, it could give them a chance.

He could also keep an eye on her, try to bolster her spirits whenever he could.

. . . .

But was it really a good idea to take her along? What if the entity did something? What if Nida did something?

Though he’d never question her loyalty, he knew she’d be appalled at the decision to destroy Remus 12. An ordinary cadet would have to stow their opinions and get on with the mission.

Nida never had been and never would be a normal cadet.

Once she found out the Coalition’s intensions, she could . . . what? What did he honestly think she’d do?

Join the Vex? Side with the entity?

Of course she wouldn’t.

This was Nida; she’d do what was right.

Satisfied of that fact, he walked through the Academy halls in a bit of a daze. Though there was so much to do, he was having trouble focusing. He just wanted to get it all done already. Snap his fingers, arrive on Remus 12, destroy it, and finish this sorry adventure.

He couldn’t.

So he’d have to learn to live with the sinking feeling in his gut.

Still in a daze, Carson walked into someone. Apologizing immediately, he maneuvered swiftly around them to continue on.

‘What the hell?’ the guy turned.

Carson froze.

‘Where the heck have you been? I don’t see you for weeks, and now you’re pretending you don’t know me?’

It was Travis.

God, it was Travis.

Carson faced his best friend.

He was alive.

His best friend was alive.

Carson started to laugh. He coughed through it, his chest shaking, his cheeks paling in disbelief as he locked a hand over his mouth.

Travis was alive.

Of course he was—he’d died in the future, but this was the present.

That wasn’t the point though. The memory of Travis’ sacrifice was still so raw in Carson’s mind, he could feel it tingling in his gut and the palms of his hands.

Travis looked at him askance. 'Ah, what?'

'You're alive,' Carson breathed through his surprise. He couldn’t shake the shock of seeing his best friend. It shook through him instead.

‘. . . Ah, yeah, last time I checked I was. Why are you being so weird? I heard you had a wild adventure—though no one’s deemed to share the exact details with me.

Apparently they’re top secret or something. Seriously though, were you hit on the head? Of course I’m alive.’

Carson was speechless. To see Travis in the flesh and blood, joking as he always did, was confronting.

It brought back memories of seeing him sacrifice himself and his ship for a slim chance of saving the present . . . .

Carson sucked in a deep breath.

Travis narrowed his eyes. ‘What’s up with you? You’re all pale? And what the heck happened with that Nida character, ha?’ Travis’ demeanor suddenly changed. In fact, light bulbs appeared to go off behind his eyes, a worrying enthusiasm infiltrating his tone. ‘I heard from one of the guys on Harrington’s security team that you held hands with her. Now how cute is that? The great Carson Blake holding hands, I mean, wow. I kind of had a feeling there could be something between the two of you.’

Carson shook his head.

He could barely process this. Seeing Travis so cheerful and oblivious was jostling with the memory of seeing his ashen and broken face from the future.

Clamping a hand over his mouth, Carson simply breathed.

‘So anyway, when the Academy finishes debriefing you, we should go out. Bridget, that friend of Alicia, keeps asking after you. Though I suppose I should tell her you’re now accounted for, ha?’

‘Travis . . . I’m not going to get a chance to go out tonight.’

‘What? You and Nida got other plans?’ he smirked.

Carson didn’t react. He didn’t care that Travis was teasing him. Heck, all Carson cared about was that his best friend was still alive.

He’d have to try hard to keep him that way, though.

‘No, we don’t have other plans. Travis . . . I’ve still got something to sort out with the Academy.’

News of the Vex had not and would not spread. Only those on the Board would know of the plan to destroy Remus 12, only those on the resultant mission to destroy the planet would ever know what had happened.

BOOK: Ouroboros 4: End
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