Chapter 1
Talk about unlucky missions. Everything that could go wrong had. One moment Azsla and her crew of four “fugitive” slaves had been on course for Zor, the next the starboard stabilizer had malfunctioned, damaging the hull. The spaceship had jolted, and engine failure had turned their systems inside out, and slammed her crew into unconsciousness. The cosmic whammy had dealt them one hell of a beating, and she thanked Holy Vigo for the lifelong supply of salt that had given her strength and enabled her to remain alert.
The ship was currently powerless and drifting toward the portal that was supposed to have transported them to Zor and freedom. The lights flickered. With the snap of a toggle, Azsla cut the blaring alarm. She didnt need a news flash to know that unless she altered her damaged ships course, the forces sucking them into the black maw would squash them flatter than a neutron particle.
By now, the backup system should have come on line automatically. Azsla initiated emergency procedures and flipped open the auxiliary engine panel. Twisting the manual override, she thrust the handle to starboard. But the reboot mechanism was also on the fritz. When no lights or controls lit up, licks of alarm shot down Azslas back. Mother of Salt—a double cosmic whammy.
Keep it together. Shed drilled for emergency situations. Only this was no drill. They were in trouble. Bad trouble. And fear ignited in the pit of her gut like a retro-rocket on nitro.
She checked her watch, then estimated the triple threat of time, distance, and mass. At the inescapable result—certain death—her scalp broke into a sweat. As a First of Rama, Azsla had been entitled to a life of privilege and all the strength-building salt she could swallow. But what should have been a life of luxury on Rama had been destroyed by a slave rebellion that had led to hundreds of thousands of slaves escaping from Rama to Zor, a planet in another solar system. To prevent further uprisings and retaliation from the slaves, shed agreed to go to Zor as a spy. Shed always known her mission would require sacrifice and shed accepted the danger of pretending to be an underfirst, a lowly slave, in order to assess what kind of weapons Zor was developing against Rama. But to succeed, she had to get to Zor.
Right now, that didnt seem likely. Or even possible. She glanced around at her still unconscious crew. Shed always thought shed understood the risk of covert operations. When her superiors had cooked up this mission, shed volunteered. The decision hadnt been a hard one. Fifteen years ago when shed been in her early teens, a slave uprising on Rama had killed her parents and ruined her home. Some 200,000 slaves had escaped her world and resettled on the planet Zor. Eventually the Firsts had regrouped and regained control, but life as Azsla had known it was over.
After losing everything, her existence had gone from street orphan to ward of the state. When the Corps offered to train her as a weapons specialist and promised her a shot at stopping any chance of another slave rebellion, they hadnt had to ask twice. As a First shed understood, even as a teenager, that as long as Zor offered safe haven to slaves, all Ramans stood in peril, their way of life threatened. And it had been surprisingly easy to leave behind her regimented, friendless existence where no one would miss her.
But to become an effective spy, Azsla had been asked to accomplish what no other Raman had ever done: suppress her Quait, a Firsts ability to dominate. Shed accepted she might never succeed—but after years of training she had achieved the impossible. Sort of. As long as she kept her emotions in check, her Quait didnt take over and Azsla could prevent herself from overpowering the will of her crew and outting herself. By reining herself in tight, she could now pass as one of them.
Shed never considered that engine failure might kill her in this tin can before shed even landed on Zor.
If her crew ever sniffed out her real role, theyd sabotage the journey to Zor. Slaves might be weak, but they were fanatical. Dangerous. They placed little value on life, even their own. To find out what the Zorans were up to, Azsla had to be just as ruthless. Knowing any one of them would turn on a First to keep her away from Zor reminded her to keep up her guard. Always.
One by one, the systems went down. Getting to Zor, at this point, was secondary to staying alive. Artificial gravity failed. The air grew stale. It was already freezing cold, as if the heat hadnt been on since liftoff three days ago. Azsla gripped the command console to maintain her position at her station and ignored the white vapor puffing from her mouth, the prickly bumps rising over her flesh, her body-racking shivers. Her unconscious crewmen floated away from their stations as the ship lost gravity and she couldnt blow off a spark of sorrow over their plight. But during the long months of training for this mission, shed come to know her crew, and, to her surprise, respect them. Now, she couldnt remember when shed stopped thinking of them as slaves and started thinking of them as people.
“Anyone awake?”
None of her crew answered, likely frozen, shocked, and possibly injured. Yet, they werent dead. Rak, her second in command, drew in choked breaths. Kali, the copilot and chief engineer, flailed on the ceiling, seeking leverage to alter his attitude.
Knowing she had mere moments to divert the ship, Azsla stayed put. If she couldnt change their course, the wormhole would devour the ship, leaving nothing, not even scattered debris, to mark their passing.
“Report,” she insisted, her voice lowering an octave as if ashes filled her mouth, her cold-numbed fingers flicking the damaged control toggles, frantic to restart the engines. Surely Jadlan or Micoo in the sleepers had been jarred awake? Or had they ditched protocol, abandoned their posts, and ejected in their escape pods? Azsla had no way of knowing, not with her instruments off line, but as always, she cut her crew some slack, all too aware that none of them had her superior intellect or physical strength. After all, they were slaves.
Taking stock, she assessed their predicament with as much presence of mind as she could summon. Instant depressurization had collapsed the aft stabilizer. Her damage-weakened ship now spiraled end over end—straight toward hull-crushing forces that would terminate her mission—unless she found some miraculous way to steer clear.
Azsla ripped open the panels cover to examine the wiring. The reek of burning plastic singed her nostrils. Smoke filtered into the cabin and fear scratched along her skin like claws, ripping and shredding, threatening to tap out her last reserve of Quait control. Damn her crew. They should have responded by now.
Not that she was even close to normal. Her fingers trembled and she loathed her own weakness as much as that of the underfirsts who hadnt responded to her plea for information. With her gut doing a slow spin job, she battled fresh panic.
Easy. She was beginning to hate the empty brutality of space. Not that she was bitter. Sweet Vigo, people were supposed to live on planets where they didnt have to breathe recycled air, where every little mechanical failure wasnt life threatening, where a stray piece of dust didnt create lethal havoc with her ships systems.
Trying to buy herself a little relief from pounding panic, Azsla attempted to dial down her emotion. She cornered it, squashed it. Beat it into submission. Pretend its just another drill. After ten years of keeping her cool and suppressing her Quait, her spontaneous instinct to dominate should have been under control . . . yet, as the port fuel tank exploded, her natural inclinations to overpower kicked in. Hard. Every cell in her body ached to reach out and make the crew work as one. But if she reverted to instinct and used her Quait to save all their lives by forcing them to fix the ship, her crew would then learn that she wasnt one of them. If they didnt kill her, she would wind up returning home in defeat. Sure, mind scrubbers could erase her crews memories, but the Corps didnt accept failure. Azsla would never get another shot at returning to Zor.
But the aching instinct to survive at any cost began to burn. Sizzle. Her blood boiled with the need to take charge . . . for the sake of self-preservation.
She was about to lose it and take over the will of every underfirst on board. With no time to talk herself down slowly, she popped a tranq, swallowing the pill without water. Immediately, the fire eased. The seething boil cut to a manageable simmer. Of course, later, if she lived that long, shed pay for relying on the tranq. If her superiors ever discovered shed resorted to artificial tactics, it would put them off—enough to shut her down, boot her from the Corps. But with the metal hull groaning, official consequences were the least of her problems.
The portal was sucking them in. Thanks to the tranq, her Quait settled and the need to dominate abated. Finally, praying to save the ship from annihilation, she struggled to route the last remaining battery power into the bow thrusters.
Her fingers manually keyed in instructions, and she regained her normal tone of voice. “Kali. Whats doing?”
Kali groaned, opened his eyes, shoved off the ceiling and buckled into the copilots seat. He slapped his flickering monitor. “Navigations a bust. Hyperdrives nonoperational. Engineerings off line. Life supports nonfunctional. Time to bail?”
Unless she could alter their direction, theyd have to abandon ship or be crushed four ways to summer solstice. However, the portal would draw in the sleeping pods, and, as long as the emergency batteries maintained the pods shielding, theyd shoot straight through to Zor. Hopefully someone at the other end would pick up an automated distress signal—if not, they would drift in space, frozen. Forever. Not an appealing option, but neither was instant death.
Azsla jerked her thumb toward the escape pods. “Hit the airlock.”
Although her crew often disappointed, not quite living up to her standards, they tried hard. And she wasnt cruel enough to dash their hopes and reveal they had little chance of survival, never mind escape. Of course, the Corps never intended for her crew to achieve the freedom they sought. On Zor, theyd be rounded up by other spies and sent back to Rama in chains as an example of what happened to slaves who attempted escape from the mother world.
Kali unsnapped his safety harness, snagged Rak off the ceiling, and swam toward the rear. “Captain, you coming?”
“Just messing with the bow thrusters.” She didnt exactly lie. Although she had little hope of cranking out a course alteration with the bow thrusters, she used the excuse to stay at the helm to secretly shoot the logs and a report of the disaster back to Rama, a last-ditch effort to inform the Corps of their predicament. Notifying home was a calculated risk. Her crew believed theyd escaped Rama, when in actuality the government had allowed them to leave in order to insert Azsla into their midst. If any of them caught a whiff of what theyd consider betrayal, there was no telling if she could handle them after swallowing that tranq.
“Captain.”
At Kalis sharp tone, Azsla stiffened. Had he seen her dispatch the log? Despite the tranq, she couldnt conceal the edge to her voice. “Yes?”
“Ship temperatures approaching freezing. The hulls breached. Shields are failing. We need to leave, now.”
Relieved her cover remained intact, Azsla skimmed her hands over the keys, robbing the remaining power from every system except the pods. “Im right behind you.”
Kali soared through the control cabin into the ships bowels. She heard him pop open the pods and the terrified voices of her crew. So the others had awakened. She shouldnt be thinking about them. Slaves were easily replaced. Weak. A waste of salt.
Yet . . . this crew had trained hard. Not as hard as she had. But then they didnt have her abilities. Still, theyd done what they could with what they had.
Finally, she shunted the last of the power into the boosters.
Done. She turned and shields began to go down. The injured hull squealed in agony, the tearing of metal a death knell. Diving for the escape pod, she overshot her mark. Kali snatched her by the ankle, saving her from a painful smack into the bulkhead.
“Thanks.” She seized a handhold and righted herself. Hed already stuffed Jadlan, Micoo, and Rak into the pods and ejected them through the airlock.
“Ready to bounce?”
“Absolutely.” Totally on board with the plan, she slapped the button to open her sleeper. Kali slid into the last remaining pod.
She tensed her muscles to do the same. Only her pod didnt open. “What the frip?” All hell was about to come down on the ship and she nailed the button mechanism again with her fist.
And got zip. Zero. Zilch. The canopy refused to budge. Her high-pitched gasp shamed her and she hoped Kali put it down to the cold that seemed to have frozen her bones.
This was insane. Surely every freaking system on the ship couldnt fail . . . unless someone had sabotaged the mission. But who? If the slaves had known about her subterfuge, they would have killed her, or died trying. Not even they would have vandalized the entire ship. And she had no other enemy. The Corps wanted her to succeed.
The delay didnt seem to faze Kali. Instead of ejecting, he moved smoothly, climbing from his pod. “Let me.” Picking up a wrench, he slapped the release button.
“Its no good.” She pointed to the hull that had caved, crushing her pod, the metal cross brace obstructing the release mechanism from firing properly.
The hull howled like a wild beast, the last of the shields failing. From the ships bowels, the engines rumbled like a volcano about to erupt. Her ability to issue orders dulled by the tranq, she said nothing as Kali picked her up, slipped her into his pod, and closed the canopy with a click of finality. Hit the eject button.
Her last sight of him floored her. He seemed at peace. Eyes closed, his lips moved, and if she hadnt known better, hed appeared to be praying. At peace with his death.
She shot into space, a rush of emotions flooding over her tranqed emotions. Relief. Hope. Astonishment.
Kali had given up his chance to live. For her.
She hadnt even used her Quait. She closed her fingers into fists. Kali had meant nothing to her. Slaves were easily replaceable. Unworthy. Yet, shed spent enough time with her second in command to know Kalis life had meant everything to him. Hed planned to begin anew on Zor. Marry. Have children. His dreams would never have happened because of her mission . . . but Kali hadnt known that.
Turning, she watched the ship implode and vanish into the portal. Kali was dead, his body relegated to tactonic dust.
She shouldnt have cared. Cold from the sleep capsule spread over her skin like guilt. She told herself slaves died every day. So what?
But if Kalis selfless sacrifice didnt matter, then why was her vision blurred? Why were tears freezing on her cheeks? Copyright © 2008 by Hair Express, Inc. All rights reserved.