Another first chapter of a story that might never be finished. I am sure I was going somewhere when I wrote this. Probably just another generic space opera story where the main character is slowly turning into an alien, maybe becoming a villain...
Who really knows.
FLEET ONE
Chapter One
The vessel was massive:
one-hundred-thousand metric tons. It was heavily armored with triple
hulls to keep the crew as safe as possible. It was biggest ship in
the fleet, some parts were so far from the core systems that you
could hear a pin drop to the deck. Not something you would be use to
if you transferred to another ship.
William Jeffery himself had thought the
life support system had stopped functioning the first time he had
come this way. He thanked his stars that nobody had seen him look
panicky as he ran to a nearby vent to feel if the air was still
circulating. He had been a newly assigned First Lieutenant back then,
now he was a Second Commander.
The younger and lower-ranked crew
saluted and got out of his way when he was walking through the
corridors because he walked fast, just nodding in response to a
salute. Jeffery did not like to waste time getting from point A to
point B. One of the few things he disliked about serving on the
Republic was that these walks took so long.
Forward Medical. He entered the outer
ward to see the line of seats were empty, no patients. With a crew
this size there were usually a couple of them sick on any given day.
Chief Medical Officer Ames Winslow, a gray-haired old coot, came to
greet him.
“Commander Jeffery. I take it you are
here for the physical.” Winslow said, it wasn't a question. The
doctor led him to the third exam room. Maybe there were a couple of
headaches or stomaches here after all. “Don't try and claim you're
too busy this time, William. I have cleared this with the Captain as
well as the Admiral.” The doctor told him, pointing at the low
table where he was supposed to sit and take off his outer and inner
shirts.
William Jeffery did not like that he
was getting older. He didn't like to see hair turning gray, or his
skin loosening and turning ashen. Not enough sun and exercise, he
expected. Too much time inside these tin cans, fighting other peoples
wars. That was a lie, there were perfectly good places on this vast
ship where he could get a tan, swim laps in a pool or work out. He
might need a reservation since they weren't huge, but it was more
than the smaller ships had.
The doctor did all the normal things,
looking in his ears, eyes, listening to his heart and breathing
before they came to the real reason why this was necessary. The
doctor place the device on his chest and waited. It made a tiny noise
and some number appeared on the display, which the doctor noted down
on his wrist computer.
“It's gotten worse, probably.”
William Jeffery said, trying to get the doctor to react. He didn't.
Jeffery knew that the blood infection had no cure but he hated that
the doctor followed orders not to even tell him how it was
progressing. “Am I going to die this month, doctor?”
The doctor grinned slightly. “No, not
this month or next. You know I can't tell you specifics, William, the
fleet would have my head. You can leave any time you want now. Other
than the obvious, you are in pretty good health but you need to get
more sun and exercise.”
The doctor left as the Commander began
putting his uniform back on. He felt good, he didn't feel like he
would die any time soon. The alien virus in his blood hadn't caused
any pain, whatever else it might be doing inside of him.
Nobody on the ship besides himself, the
Chief Medical Officer, Captain and Admiral of the First Fleet knew
about the infection. It was supposed to be impossible for humans to
get it, they had tried to give it to comatose prisoners days or weeks
before their execution. Nothing. It was totally incompatible with the
human body.
Somehow, though, Commander William
Jeffery of the carrier and flagship Republic, carried this
blood-borne disease. He wondered if future history books would record
that information and leave out the part of his service in the fleet.
It would be funny, kind of.
The fleet was holding steady near
Icarus-B, a few systems from the border with the Orinas, an alien
species that didn't want much to do with humans. They were not
especially hostile normally but they really took exception to humans.
They didn't want to talk to or see a human or their ships.
The first fleet had been relieved of
the more dangerous assignment of patrolling the border with the Issun
by the Second Fleet. Meanwhile the Third Fleet was home ported for
extended upkeep while the crews were allowed to go home for a while.
The rest of the fleet was not his
problem. The Admiral had a small staff and their own control center
on board but well away from the bridge. From this point the fleet
would be divided and sent out to patrol different parts of the border
area. This redeployment would happen over the next day or so.
The nearest ship to the Republic
was the cruiser Orion, the second largest vessel in the First
Fleet, heavily armed and with a smaller crew than one might think. It
was more of a weapon platform than anything else, it wasn't going to
be used for any non-combat mission.
The Ardmore and Landry
were carrying drop ships and Marines that could be used to evacuate
small colonies if necessary. The four drop ships were connected to
the main body in a way that made them look like some four-legged
animals. The vessel was much smaller without the drop ships, but
while connected they acted as if they were part of the ship.
There were other ships, but Commander
William Jeffery was more concerned with his own. It was in tip top
shape and you would never have known it ever saw combat. You would
never known it had been at Arbor's Moon. It's arrival was the real
reason the Issun had retreated, a ship they weren't familiar with.
One Lieutenant William Jeffery had been
manning a defense station when the alien vessel had crashed into the
Republic near where he was standing. Almost as if the suicidal
alien knew exactly where to hit the ship, a weakness most of the crew
hadn't even known existed. The alien had still been alive, but even
though atmosphere was venting Jeffery had pulled the adversary to
safety.
The reward for his kindness was the
bite that had infected him. The alien had fought back and pulled a
hidden sidearm and had to be killed. He took two of the crew with
him, though. Leaving them no prisoner to interrogate. After a bitter
fight to reach Arbor's Moon, the enemy retreated, leaving the
wreckage of dead and damaged vessels littering the space around them.
None of the doctors had a clue what the
alien pathogen might do. He was kept in isolation for five months for
tests and observation. During this time he passed paperwork for
promotion, because having little else to do he studied.
All this time he had lived with the
disease that seemed to have no effect. Maybe it was totally inert and
they had finally released back to his duties. Then six months ago, he
had a sudden fever and his eye sight became intermittent. It only
lasted a few minutes but a test showed the alien disease was very
active and reproducing rapidly. The growing count of the alien spores
had alarmed the doctors but still, nobody knew what it was doing.
Since then he hadn't been sick a day or
had any relapses. The doctor monitored the alien spore count but was
under orders not even to tell the patient. Jeffery was starting to
wonder if the count even mattered, maybe it was doing nothing at all.
By the end of the third shift Second
Commander William Jeffery was ready to hit the sack. When the Captain
walked in trailed by a Yeoman holding a notebook, he was out of the
chair before the Watch officer even announced, “Captain on the
bridge!”
“Nothing to report, sir!” He said
as he saluted. The Captain nodded and waved his hand, holding a small
slip of paper.
“The Admiral has given me our new
orders. By the time your shift comes around again, we should be well
on the way to our new posting.” The Captain said, looking at the
paper. “Wyvern-4.” He read and then looked a bit lost. “Why did
they have to rename these systems anyway?”
The
Wyvern was right up close to the border with the Osirin. Wyvern-4 was
a semi-habitable planet where there was a human research team
studying it.
His shift over, he left the bridge and
headed to his quarters. He had requested time in the pool and gym but
his turn had not come up yet. There was always a line for those and
even a senior officer could only cut in front of so many. The Captain
or Admiral would get pretty much anything they wanted though.
William Jeffery was woken up by a
banging on his door. There had been three in quick succession but not
very loud. As if the person at his door didn't want anyone to know
they had rapped the door instead of using the button. Only one person
he knew would knuckle the metal door instead of touching the button
that sounded a chime.
“Nora!” He said opening the door
with a smile. She came inside quickly and he closed it behind her.
Before he even turned all the way around he was enveloped by two arms
and her body smashed into his with a hug.
“William, I really missed you this
week!” She said with her head against his chest. “I can't believe
the Captain put us on different shifts, did you make him mad?
I thought he was okay with us.”
He pulled her toward the bed and sat
down. She sat on his knees, her arms still around his neck.
“I handled that already.” He told
her. “Our shifts should be aligned again by next week.”
She sighed in relief and then pushed
him onto his back and loomed over him like a tiger surveying its prey
from above. “I'm glad to hear that, sir.” She said in a serious
voice but with a sultry smile, “Very glad indeed.”
----
You know what is finished though...
THE FOURTH is $2.99
NEW ARRIVALS is 99 cents
If you are a Kindle Unlimited subscriber you can read them both for free.
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