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Authors: D.L. Jackson

Last Flight of the Ark

BOOK: Last Flight of the Ark
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This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are the products of the author’s imagination or used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

 

Last Flight of the Ark

Copyright © 2013 by D.L. Jackson

ISBN: 978-1-61333-565-9

Cover art by Tibbs Designs

 

All rights reserved. Except for use in any review, the reproduction or utilization of this work, in whole or in part, in any form by any electronic, mechanical or other means now known or hereafter invented, is forbidden without the written permission of the publisher.

 

Published by Decadent Publishing Company, LLC

Look for us online at:

www.decadentpublishing.com

 

 

 

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Last Flight of the Ark

 

By

 

D.L. Jackson

 

 

 

Chapter One

 

 

“Barometric pressure?”

“Stable.” Jessica’s voice crackled back through the com.

“Radiation?”

“Within normal parameters.”

“Surface temperature in sector three?”

“A balmy eighty-seven. Terra II is primed and ready. We should arrive within twelve hours. All the readings from the meteorological remote say it’s stable. No surprises.”

There should be no surprises; they’d been through the numbers four times.

“Good. That should do it. Why don’t you call it a night?”

Melissa would relieve him soon, until then…. Colonel Kaleb Titan stretched and reclined. He threw his feet up on the instrument panel and yawned. Melissa would have a fit if she saw them on her baby’s console, but he really didn’t care. He wouldn’t be on this bucket of rust much longer.

All he wanted to do was sit back and take it all in from the best seat in the house. They were close enough he should be able to see Terra II with the naked eye and he’d been waiting all night for the chance. She’d look more like a star from the distance, but that didn’t matter. Novae, the equivalent of Earth’s sun, would be illuminating the sector on the surface that contained their home—right about now. He had to see it. To date, he’d only viewed pictures of Terra II, sent by a satellite that monitored the world.

Eight months. He’d worked so hard for this moment, and all his dreams were about to materialize. It couldn’t get any better than this. Well, maybe. He could use a cold beer and a slice of pizza. He flipped a switch and opened the visor, ready to soak in the view of his new home.

Kaleb’s eyes widened. “Ah, shit.” His feet hit the deck with a
thump
. He’d been too busy going over the damned reports from the surface of Terra II to notice. He punched his com and paged Jessica, hoping she hadn’t left the lab yet.

“Sir?”

No, she’d lingered, perhaps feeling as restless and unable to sleep as he had.

“What the
fuck
is that?” He leaned forward. A purple cloud spread before them. Electrical sparks danced like fireflies through the mass. “You got a reading on that?”

“A reading on what, sir?” Jessica said.

“Open your visuals and look out the fucking glass.”

Seconds ticked by and the com jumped back to life. “Whatever
that
is, we should probably go around. I’m not the best one to define that. Why don’t you ask Captain Deluzio? She’s the nav.” The com went dead and then crackled again. “I’d appreciate if you’d keep the cursing to a minimum.”

“No reminder needed. I’ll keep it to a fucking minimum.” Eight months of this shit, he’d earned the right to cuss and if he wanted to, he’d fucking cuss, females present or not. They could deal with it.

They’d played every card and board game known to man at least a million times. He’d swilled his last beer a month ago and frankly, he was sick and tired of being cooped up. Whatever that mass was, it looked like it might keep him stuck on the damned ship a bit longer.

“Goddammit.”

“Relax, sir. No reason to get ugly. Wait to see what Captain Deluzio has to say.”

He didn’t need Jessica’s lecture on etiquette. He didn’t need to be told to relax and he sure as hell didn’t need the complication he knew that cloud would bring. Yeah, it made him grumpy. So what? He studied the mass. The thing looked like it stretched for light-years.

Another delay?

Twelve hours out?

This isn’t happening
.

“How far off course and schedule is it going to throw us?” The sooner they got to Terra II, the better.

“I’m a biologist. Again, that’s Captain Deluzio’s call, sir.”

“We’ve been on this mission for eight months. I thought we established I didn’t want to go all military out here. Keep it like family. It’s only the three of us.” She’d been fine with calling him Kaleb yesterday. What the hell was her problem now?

“I’m still a lieutenant, sir. You’re not my daddy, or my brother.”

And did he know it. Oh God, did he know it. He growled and punched the nav-com. Forget it. There was no sense in trying to decipher her mood swings. Women were an enigma best left unsolved. He threw himself back in his chair and stared at the ceiling. “Melissa, report.”

“If I’ve told you once, I’ve told you a thousand times, it’s Captain Deluzio, sir.”

Christ. Not Melissa, too? They ought to award him some kind of medal for dealing with this shit. They knew he hated that title. They were intentionally provoking. “Would you two stop with the
sir?
I’m a scientist.”

“Do I need to remind you, sir, you took the commission and the title that went with it? I know we relaxed it for a bit, but we’re back in Terran territory and that means we need to tighten up on the regs and get back with the program. We are military, even if you think you’re not. We talked about this.” Her com died and the doors slid open behind him.

Yeah, they’d talked about it, and he’d known sooner than later things would have to go back to the way they were, but not today. Not now. He already had too much to wrap his head around, and playing officer wasn’t one of those things. He could pull rank if that was what she wanted, but the next twelve hours of his life would be unlivable.

“Never mind, Captain. Can you tell me anything good about that cloud?” He pointed.

Melissa walked past him to the glass. “Technically, it’s not a cloud, sir.”

“Then what would you call it?”

“I’d call it some kind of space dust.” She pointed to a gauge above and pushed a button. Something was here once upon a time. Now all that’s left is debris.” She narrowed her eyes and leaned in. “That’s not good. It’s not just space dust, it’s irradiated. Look at the readings.”

“What?” Kaleb moved closer and studied the meter, reaching out to give it a tap. “Not good isn’t exactly what I’d call that. That’s gamma radiation.”

“Yeah, and it gets better. The radiation coming from it is off the charts, but that’s not the worst of it. I suspect….” She pulled data up on the screen and dragged her finger from one side to the other, getting a digital read on the mass of the debris field. She moved to another control panel and began type at a furious pace, pulling up stats on the fuel and life support supplies. “You want the bad news?”

“I thought that was the bad news.”

“It’s also too big to go around. We don’t have enough fuel to detour that far out and we don’t have enough to go back to Earth. We could wait for our sister ship and hope she’s got fuel to spare, but that’s unlikely. She’s as limited on her resources as we are and a week behind us. If we wait, we might not have enough fuel to reach the planet on a straight shot. It’s too close to call.”

Melissa glanced down at the instrument panel and back at him. Fire leaped into her eyes. “Did you have your feet up on my control panel?”

“Does it matter?” How the hell she knew he’d had his feet up there was beyond him, but she seemed to have a sixth sense about when he abused her baby.

She stared him down. “Since we don’t have time to argue about why you shouldn’t use my billion-dollar panel as a footstool, I’m going to let it go. We need a command decision, sir.”

“Aren’t you full of sunshine?”

“Bite me.”

A smile twitched at the corner of his mouth. So much for military regulations—even Melissa had a breaking point. “Regs, Captain, regs.”

“Bite me…sir,” Captain Deluzio said and crossed her arms over her chest.

She was right. Not the biting part, the command-decision part. Kaleb snorted. He’d told
them
he didn’t want the command of this vessel, but they’d insisted he was the man for the job. A scientific mission. No tactics or enemy to worry about, pure science and exploration, what he did already. Not complicated. Fly the ship to Terra II, offload the cargo, and study the animals for a couple of years.

When
they
put it that way, he couldn’t help but take what they offered. After all, who wouldn’t want to be part of something that big? But it came with a price, one that bugged him consistently. Rank. Hell, he really wasn’t military. It was a token command. They’d said he couldn’t be in charge of the mission without the promotion. He hadn’t served a day in the military before that, but their damned regulations said he had to be an officer to be in charge of his own damned project. If not him, they’d send a real officer to fuck up all his work from the last ten years, and he hadn’t been about to let that happen, nor did he plan for them to tell him how to run his own project. So, he’d let them “promote” him.

Now look what they’d gotten him into. The lives of his crew and the mission were at stake. He wasn’t a great military strategist and knew little about
command decisions
. But then again, it didn’t take an admiral to figure it out. Pretty simple, really. Go through and expose the crew and cargo to the radiation and deal with the side effects, or go around and die. Someone needed to give the order and because he’d accepted the job, he had the lucky designation of being
the one
. “Let me secure the cargo and we’re going to shoot through it like a bullet. The faster the better.”

“I agree. Minimize the exposure. You do know radiation sickness is a bitch, sir.”

Yeah, he knew that, but the alternatives were worse. “So are cabin fever and suffocation, if we don’t freeze to death first.”

“I’ll plot a course and prep the ship to jump.”

The hairs on his neck stood at attention as he stared at the debris. This was supposed to be a simple, boring trip. Nobody expected a cloud of radiation would complicate the mission.

Terra II was ready to be stocked with wildlife. She’d spent the last ten years being cultivated and groomed for it. They’d created Eden, and he was one of the first people who’d bring life to it.

Eight hundred various animals were on the
Genesis I
, a.k.a. the
Ark
. All had been vaccinated and acclimatized for the conditions on the new world. If the animals thrived, Earth Command, a united organization of several countries, planned to settle the world. Given the deteriorating environmental conditions, they’d had no choice but to work together and find a solution. Mankind had overrun their own planet.

BOOK: Last Flight of the Ark
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