personal.”

Silence stretched in her mind, disconcertingly different from the noise erupting all around her. Keryn was beginning to fear that the Voice wouldn’t find her arrangement acceptable when it whispered a single word into her mind.

Agreed, it said softly.

Keryn’s body convulsed as the memories of twenty-two generations of warriors flooded her mind. The knowledge saturated her muscles, teaching in milliseconds techniques that had been carefully mastered over hundreds of years. Her body shook, her eyes fluttering, as the Voice downloaded all its knowledge into her body. After only a second, Keryn’s body stopped shaking and she sat perfectly still with her eyes closed. The two Terrans approached cautiously, hearing commotion but unable to see around the rock.

As they neared, Keryn’s eyes flew open, her violet irises burning with power. Her left hand reached out and clutched a jagged shard of stone which had been torn free of the boulder under the gunfire. In her right, Keryn still held her pistol, its single round chambered. The Terrans stepped to the backside of the rock. The lead soldier’s hands flickered as he shared tactics with the one behind him. Nodding in agreement, they moved around the rock.

“Now,” the Voice said through Keryn’s lips.

Her legs tucked underneath her, Keryn launched from the ground. Her pistol swung around and a single shot was fired, shattering the rear soldier’s faceplate. The Terran’s head jerked back violently as he collapsed into the snow. Dropping the pistol, her now free hand flashed out and, closing on the rifle of the lead soldier and yanking the barrel skyward. The rounds flew harmlessly over her shoulder as she pulled the Terran closer, keeping his body in between her and the Terrans on the far shore. Ignoring the fire leaping from the barrel just inches away from her face, Keryn slammed the jagged rock up through the faceplate, smashing through the plastic and lodging the point of the stone into the flesh underneath the Terran’s chin. With the man chocking on his own blood and his arms falling limply to his side, Keryn twisted the impromptu knife, sliding the tip into the man’s brain. She spun the soldier, maintaining her Terran shield, and flipped the soldier’s rifle around in her hand until she clutched it firmly under her arm. Smiling wickedly, she began firing at the far shore.

Her shots leapt into the air as she jerked the rifle back and forth along the shore. Though the Terrans had taken cover behind boulders of their own, her deadly accurate shots struck exposed limbs and tops of heads, the armor piercing rounds within the rifle tearing easily through their body armor. All along the far shore, cries of pain erupted and bodies fell limply to the ground. Standing in the middle of it all, intentionally unharmed, stood the Oterian screaming in rage.

“Kill her, you cowards,” he bellowed. He ripped a weapon from a nearby Terran’s hand, pulling the soldier from behind his concealment. Before he had time to leap back for cover, a round caught him in the chest, blasting through the body armor and tumbling through his heart and lungs. He didn’t have time to scream before he collapsed onto the ground, dead. Cardax turned his stolen weapon on Keryn and took aim. Seeing him, she released the Terran body and dove back behind the boulder. Cardax’s fire slammed into the soldier’s chest and exited through his back; the body flailed under the gunfire before falling to the ground. The soldier’s head struck and floated on top of the buoyant river. Watching the body fall and remain suspended on top of the water, Keryn smiled at her own memory and experience with the water’s surface.

Cardax stood alone on the far shore, the only Terran still alive and uninjured being the commander, who had hidden behind a nearby stone outcropping. “Come out and fight me like a real Wyndgaart,” Cardax taunted. “You’re a disgrace to your species!”

“Cardax,” Keryn yelled in reply. “Catch!”

Diving from behind the rock, Keryn pulled free her high explosive grenade and released the safety. She threw the grenade toward the stream, where it struck the tense surface and bounced, skipping like a stone. The river tension having increased in the cold, the grenade never broke the surface as she once had, bouncing all the way across before rolling to a stop at Cardax’s feet. He bellowed in rage moments before the entire far side of the stream was enveloped in a fireball. As the smoke began clearing on the far shore, Keryn stood up calmly from behind the rock, the Voice releasing her body back under her control.

Smiling appreciatively, Keryn dusted off the snow and slung the Terran rifle over her shoulder. “Good work,” she said to the Voice.

Thanks, it replied. Now let’s go home.

CHAPTER 18:

The Captain approached Yen as he stood at the entrance to the lift that would take them all to the bridge. A security team led by Horace flanked her. The security team carried a small arsenal and wore body armor, as though expecting a significant battle. Their stern looks were mirrored in Captain Hodge’s steely face, her own frustrations clearly displayed across her pale Avalon face. The group came to a halt in front of Yen, who snapped to attention in front of the Captain.

“Squadron Commander,” Captain Hodge demanded, her voice betraying none of the anger reflected in her eyes, “look me in the eyes and tell me you are completely sure of this before we proceed.”

Yen matched her look, hoping that his own determination and confidence showed in his resolve. He rubbed his sweaty palms on his pants as he spoke. “Captain, I am completely sure of the evidence.” Lowering his voice, he leaned closer to the Captain. “Ma’am, we’re doing the right thing, but we need to move while he suspects nothing.”

Captain Hodge nodded, but her eyes still showed the maelstrom of indecision. After many seconds passed, she turned toward the security team. “We’re moving now. Remember, we need him taken alive. Fire only in self defense.”

Horace led the way onto the lift, his massive, furry body taking up the back third of the spacious elevator. Yen and the Captain entered second, leaving the front of the lift open for the other three security members. By them being the last on the lift, they’d be the first off and immediately able to control the room. Entering the access code for the bridge, the lift doors slid shut. The steady scroll of passing floor numbers was the only indication that the lift was moving, though the tension became more palpable as the elevator neared their destination.

As the indicator for the bridge finally lit, the doors slid open and the security team rushed into the room with weapons drawn. All three members yelled into the room as the Captain and Yen followed, their voices intermingling in contradicting commands meant to confuse their adversary. Confusion was already well established on the bridge as both Vangore and Tylgar were standing at their posts with their hands raised high. Though Tylgar’s Lithid featureless face was unreadable, Vangore clearly showed surprise. As Horace exited the elevator, his voice boomed over the others.

“Magistrate Vangore,” Horace yelled into the room as the rest of the voices were silenced, “you are accused of conspiracy, murder, and, this being a time of war, high treason against the Alliance for the unlawful slaying of Eminent Merric, a superior officer. You are advised that you are not permitted to speak at this time, though you will be afforded the opportunity during interrogation. At this time, you will surrender to the security forces and be taken immediately to the brig. Anything said will be construed as resisting arrest.”

“What… wait, you’re making…” Vangore began. As he opened his mouth to speak, however, the three members of the security force grabbed him firmly by his tunic and threw him to the floor. He yelped as his arms were pinned behind him and manacles placed on his wrists.

“I take it that means you did not understand your rights as I explained them,” Horace remarked as Vangore grunted in pain. The Oterian Security Officer turned to the Captain, awaiting further orders.

“Take him to the brig,” she said softly, the fire gone from her voice.

The security team pulled Vangore to his feet and drug him toward the lift. As he was taken away, he continued to protest.

“Captain, I don’t understand,” he yelled before being struck with a neural stimulator. His body immediately went limp as nerve impulses were disrupted. Without another sound, Vangore was taken to the lift and the entire security team departed, leaving the Captain, Yen, Horace, and a very stunned Tylgar on the bridge.

Captain Hodge spun on Yen, her passion returned. “Would you now please explain to me exactly why I just

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