Solar Kill Read online




  Solar Kill

  The Sand Wars

  Book I

  Charles Ingrid

  Copyright © 1987

  Cover art by Frank Morris

  First Printing, July 1987

  CONTENTS

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 1

  Being a Knight didn’t necessarily mean he’d been promised Camelot—but where in the hell was the transport? What had happened to recall? Jack fought the maddening impulse to scratch inside his armor, as sweat dripped down, and the contacts attached to his bare torso itched impossibly. To scratch now, the way he was hooked up, he’d blow himself away.

  Damn. Where was that signal? They couldn’t have been forgotten, could they? If the pullout had happened, they would have been picked up … wouldn’t they?

  As sweat trickled down his forehead, he looked around.

  Sand. They had been dropped in a vast sea-gulf of sand. Everywhere beige and brown and pink dunes rose and fell with a life of their own.

  This was what Thrakians did to a living world. And the Knights, in their suits of battle armor, trained and honed to fight a “Pure” war destroying only the enemy, not the environment, were all that stood between this planet of Milos and his own home world lined up next in a crescent of destruction that led all the way back to the heart of the Thrakian League. Jack had been galvanized to be here to keep the Thrakian menace from his own homestead.

  They’d been lucky here on Milos, so far. Only one of the continents had gone under … still, it was one too many as far as the lieutenant was concerned. The Dominion Forces were losing the Sand Wars. And he was losing his own private struggle with his faith in his superior officers. They’d been dropped into nowhere five days ago and had been given the most succinct of orders, gotten a pithy confirmation that morning and nothing since. Routine, he’d been told. Strictly a routine mop-up. You didn’t treat Knights that way—not the elite of the infantrymen, the fastest, smartest and most honorable fighters ever trained to wage war.

  Jack moved inside the battle suit. The Flexalinks meshed imperceptibly, the holograph that played over him sent the message to the suit and, in turn, the right arm flexed. Only that flex, transmitted and stepped up, could have turned over an armored car. He sucked a dry lip in dismay over the reflex, then turned his face inside the helmet to read the display.

  The display bathed his face plate in a rosy color and his eyesight flickered briefly to the rearview camera display, checking to see which of the troops ranged at his back. The compass wasn’t lying to him. “Five clicks. Sarge, have they got us walking in circles?” His suit crest winked in the sun as he looked to his next in command.

  “No, sir.” Sarge made a husky noise at the back of his throat. Sarge wore the Ivanhoe crest—a noncommittal comment on what he thought of his lineage and his home world, but it made no difference to Storm. A man who came into the Knights might come from any walk of life and the only criteria was whether he was good enough to use a suit. If he was, and he survived basic training, his past became a sealed record, if that was the way the man wanted it.

  Jack wondered if the sergeant was chewing again, even though it was against regulations. His mouth watered. He could do with a bit of gum or stim himself. The sand made him thirsty. He waved his arm. “All right, everybody spread out. Advance in a line. If the Thraks are here, that’ll flush ‘em. Keep alert. Watch your rear displays and your flanks.”

  The com line crackled as Bilosky’s voice came over in sheer panic. “Red field! Lieutenant, I’m showing a tracking red field!”

  Storm swiveled his head to the sound, cursed at the obstruction of the face plate, and re-turned a fraction more slowly so that his cameras could follow the motion, “Check your gauges again, Bilosky. It’s a malfunction. And calm down.” The last in a deadly quiet.

  Bilosky’s panic stammered to a halt. “Yes, sir.” Then, “Goddammit. Storm—those Milots have pilfered my suit! Every one of my gauges is screwed. I’m showing a red field because I’m running on empty!”

  Storm bit his tongue. He chinned the emergency lever at the bottom of the face plate, shutting down the holograph field. Then he pulled his arm out of the sleeve quickly and thumbed the com line switches on his chest patch so that he could talk to Bilosky privately. Without power or action to translate, his suit stumbled to a halt. The Flexalinks shone opalescent in the sun.

  “How far can you get?”

  Not listening, Bilosky swore again. “Goddamn Milots. Here I am fighting their fracking war for them, and they’re pirating my supplies—I ought to—”

  “Bilosky!”

  “Yes, sir. I’ve got … oh, three clicks to go, maybe. Then I’m just another pile of junk standing on the sand.” He turned to look at his superior officer, the black hawk crest rampant.

  Storm considered the dilemma. He had his orders, and knew what his orders told him. Clean out Sector Five, and then stand by to get picked up. The last of Sector Five ranged in front of him. They could ration out the most important refills for Bilosky once they got where they were going. “We’ll be picked up by then.”

  “Or the Thraks will have us picked out.”

  Storm didn’t answer for a moment. He was asking a man with little or no power reserves showing on his gauges to go on into battle, in a suit, in full battle mode. Red didn’t come up on the gauges until the suit was down to the last ten percent of its resources. That ten percent would carry him less than an hour in full attack mode. Not that it made any difference to a Knight. Jack sighed. “We’re on a wild goose chase, Bilosky. You’ll make it.”

  “Right, sir.” A grim noise. “Better than having my suit crack open like an egg and havin’ a berserker pop out, right, lieutenant?”

  That sent a cold chill down Storm’s back. He didn’t like his troopers repeating ghoulish rumors. “Bilosky, I don’t want rumors like that bandied around. You hear?”

  “Yes, sir.” Then reluctantly, “It ain’t no rumor, lieutenant. I saw it happen once.”

  “Forget it!”

  “Yes, sir.”

  “Going back on open air. And watch your mouth.” He watched as the other lumbered back into position. Then, abruptly, Jack dialed in his command line and watched as the miniscule screen lit up, his only link with the warship orbiting far overhead. The watch at the console, alerted by the static of their long range com lines, swung around. The navy blue uniform strained over his bullish figure. He looked into the lens, his nostrils flaring. The squared chin was cleft and it deepened in anger. A laser burn along one side of his hairline gave him a lopsided widow’s peak.

  “Commander Winton here. You’re violating radio silence, soldier. What’s the meaning of this? Identify yourself.”

  “I’m Battalion First Lieutenant,” he said. “Where’s our pullout? We were dropped in here five days ago.”

  “You’re under orders, lieutenant. Get in there and fight. Any further communication and I’ll have you up for court martial.”

  “Court martial? Is that the best you can do? We’re dying down here, commander. And we’re dying all alone.”

  The line and screen went dead with a hiss. Suddenly aware of his own vulnerability, Storm pushed
his right arm back into his sleeve and chinned the field switch back on. His suit made an awkward swagger, then settled into a distance eating stride. Fighting wars would be a hell of a lot easier if you could be sure who the enemy was.

  Bilosky and Sarge and who knows who else were talking about berserkers now. The unease it filled him with he could do without. He squinted through the tinted face plate at the alien sun. Strange worlds, strange people, and even stranger enemies. Right now he’d rather wade through a nest of Thraks than try to wade through the rumors surrounding the Milots and their berserkers.

  There was no denying the rumors though. The Milots, who had summoned Dominion forces to fight for them against the Thraks, those same low-tech Milots who ran the repair centers and provided the war backup, were as despicable and treacherous as the Thraks Storm had enlisted to wipe out. And there were too many stories about altered suits … suits that swallowed a man up and spawned instead some kind of lizard-beastman who was a fighting automaton, a berserker. Rumor had it the Milots were putting eggs into the suits, and the heat and sweat of the suit wearer hatched those eggs and then the parasitic creature devoured its host and burst forth—

  He told himself that the Milots had a strange sense of humor. What Bilosky thought he’d seen, whatever every trooper who repeated the gossip thought they were talking about, was probably a prank played at a local tavern. Knights always took a certain amount of ribbing from the locals, until seen in action, waging the “Pure” war.

  Ahead of him, the dunes wavered, sending up a spray of sand. His intercom burst into sound.

  “Thraks at two o’clock, lieutenant!”

  Storm set his mouth into a grim smile. Now here was an enemy he could deal with. He eyed his gauges to make sure all his systems were ready, and swung about.

  Thraks were insects, in the same way jackals were primates or ordinary sow bugs were crustaceans. They were equally at home upright or on all fours, due to the sloping of their backs. Jack set himself, watching them boil up out of the sand from underground nests to launch themselves in a four-footed wave until they got close enough to stand up and take fire. Thraks were vicious creatures with but a single purpose—total destruction—at least, fighting Thraks were. Diplomatic Thraks were as vicious in a more insidious way.

  He cocked his finger, setting off a burst of fire from his glove weapons that slowed the wave. The line of Thraks wavered and swung away, even as they stood up and slung their rifles around from their backs.

  On Milos, they had the slight advantage, having gotten there first and having begun their despicable terraforming. Even a slight advantage to the Thraks was disastrous to the Dominion. Milot was already as good as lost … battalions had been wiped out, driven back to the deserts, to make as graceful a retreat as possible. Inflict as many casualties as they could, then pull out. Jack’s job, as he understood it, was to make the toll of taking Milos so heavy, so dear, that the Thraks would stop here.

  Storm’s grim smile never wavered, even as he strode forward, spewing death as he went, watching the gauge detailing how much power he had left. Bodies crunched under his armored boots.

  They were mopping up. They were to distract the Thraks and the cannon long enough to let most of the troop ships, cold ships, pull out, and then they would be picked up. That was the promise…

  He strides through the line, knowing the wings of his men will follow, and seeing that the front is not a front, but an unending wave of Thraks. What was reported as a minor outpost is a major staging area, and he’s trapped in it, wading through broken bodies and seared flesh. He sweeps both gloves into action, firing as he walks, using the power boost to vault over newly formed walls of bodies and equipment.

  Somewhere along the way, Bilosky lets out a cry and grinds to a halt, out of power. He screams as his suit is slit open with a diamond cutter and the Thraks pull him out. Jack ignores the screams and plows onward. He has no choice now. The pullout site is ahead of him. He has to go through the Thraks if he wants to be rescued. Ahead of him is the dream of cold sleep and the journey home. The dream…

  Surrounded by what is left of his troop, and by stragglers from other battalions, he lives long enough to fall into a pit, a pit ringed by Thraks. The Dominion warriors stand back to back for days, firing only when absolutely necessary, watching the unending wave of Thrakians above them. And he sees a suit burst open, days after its wearer expired with a horrendous scream, and the armor halted like a useless statue in the pit. He sees the seams pop and an incredible beast plow out, and charge the rim of the pit, taking fully a hundred armed Thrakians with it, even as it bellows. He knows he is dreaming that he has seen a berserker, and tries to ignore the shell-like empty suit left behind in shards, with the crest of Ivanhoe settling into the sand.

  Even as he stands and fires, he thinks of what it is he wants to dream. He wants to dream getting out of there alive, with his men. That is what he wants most. Then he wants to be able to scratch. And he thinks he hears something inside the suit with him, something whispering at his shoulder, and he knows he’s losing it. Aunt Min back home always said that when the Devil wanted you, he began by whispering to you over your shoulder. Storm is scared to turn around. All he wants to do is find his dream of going home. And when the recall comes, he doesn’t know if he’s hearing what he’s hearing or not … or if he can even be found behind the wall of Thraks.

  A gigantic metal gate clanks open.

  “… no survivors.”

  “There can’t be. This ship has been adrift for seventeen years. All systems are shut down, some kind of massive power failure. Look at them. Frozen solid. Transported out of hell, only to die on the way home. God. Look at these antique cryogenic units. No wonder they didn’t make it.”

  Jack is still dreaming. He sweats cold tears because he can’t wake. He’s locked in. The twenty-two years of his life play over and over like a möebius strip. But he senses a stirring.

  “One of the bays is illuminated, doctor.”

  “My god. The auxiliary system is still functioning here. Get the life support in here, and quickly. We might just be able to save this one—”

  “But orders—”

  “Fuck orders! Imagine finding one of them alive, after all these years … and I’m going to do everything to keep him that way.”

  A tingle of warmth in his icy existence. Is he dreaming or dying?

  “If we wake him, do you think he’ll be sane? What does a man dream of for seventeen years?”

  “He’s locked into a debriefing loop. We’ll be lucky if he has any mind left at all.”

  A scraping. Something scratching at his death mask…

  “That’s enough chatter. Get the coffin open and get ready to plug him in … god. Look at his feet. Frostbite. And his hand. He’s set the auxiliary system off himself…”

  “That’s impossible. He’s in cryogenic suspension.”

  “When the power failed … he may have come to enough to know there was trouble. He’s jammed his right hand against the emergency panel. It’s the only thing that saved him. After he’s stabilized, check the other coffins. See if any of the dead reacted as well. This man must be a born survivor…”

  “Look at these suits.”

  A distracted grunt, then, “Destroy them.”

  “Destroy them? These are relics … the black market…”

  “You know the orders. Destroy them! Nurse, get your mask on and get ready. The coffin lid comes open … now.”

  Jack bolted up in his bunk. Sweat poured off his forehead and into his cupped hands. He took a deep breath, feeling the darkness and the night sway around him. With that deep breath, he began to count down, sending his mind into a hypnotic mode that he’d learned as second nature.

  And when he calmed, he told himself, “I’m awake this time. Awake and alive.”

  As he dropped his trembling hands from his face, he looked at the clock, though he didn’t really need to. The graying edges of the room told him it was nearly
dawn,

  He’d only awakened three times that night. Slowly, but surely, he was getting better. It wasn’t that his dreams frightened him … memories of the Sand Wars weren’t pleasant, but he could endure them. No, it was the stuff of dreams themselves. The trap. Would he awake into reality or be ensnared again?

  Jack put out a hand, reaching for the vial of mordil on his nightstand. It came up empty in his palm. He grimaced, then threw the bottle away into the grayness. It clattered in the corner. Black market, the mordil hadn’t done much good, anyway, though it had come guaranteed to give sleep without dreams. There was no telling how much the mordil had been stepped on before getting to him. Sometimes it worked, and sometimes it didn’t. This night, it hadn’t. Not that any of his doctors would have approved. Dreams were necessary, he’d been told, to keep a man sane.

  He swung his feet over the edge of the bunk and listened to the sounds of Claron coming awake. The early morning stir and tentative bursts of birdsong swelled in his hearing. Making his rounds in the virgin green forests of Claron would do more for him than any mordil. Jack stood up and began to get dressed in his serviceable Ranger grays.

  Before he left the station, he walked to a locked room and thumbed the door open. It was small, closet-like, and when the storage door swung open, Jack felt the shock, like a physical blow, thump him in the chest.

  His battle suit hung in drydock. Its mother-of-pearl form swayed off the meathook, the stirring of the air in the chamber awakening it. It had the service markings painted on, though fading, and the even more garish personal markings that the twenty-year-old rookie had illustrated for himself. And he looked at the crest, chosen by the innocent young volunteer who could hardly wait to be a full-fledged Knight. Two years later, that rookie would be a veteran lieutenant, abandoned to the Thrakians on Milos.

  When the transporter had finally found them, he was the only one left at the bottom of the pit, but it didn’t seem to matter, when he boarded the transport cold ship. Only one ship. It left three-quarters full, carrying the only survivors of the Thrakian invasion of Milos. They’d been scraping them off the surface of Milos like so many squashed bugs … all that was left of the Dominion’s finest.