Chapter One

Sabotage

Tankar plunged, spiraling through space among the stars. Around, above and under him was an infinite array of impassive, unreachable stars. He turned and watched the Milky Way whoosh by like ice on fire. Each rotation of his body brought a glimpse of a gas cloud that was all that remained of his scout ship.

The maneuvers he learned at the Cadet Academy helped him control the speed of each turn. Slowly, the galaxy’s bank of light appeared to rock back and forth; he was just like a toy top nearing the end of its gyration. Billions of kilometers from any life form – human or otherwise – Tankar Holroy was terrifyingly alone. His heart clutched in despair, not from fear of imminent death, but from the certainty that he’d failed in his mission. He would never deliver his message to the Admiral of the 7th Fleet on Formalhaut IV. His failure meant the rebels would win and the Empire….

His short-term, immediate fate wasn’t his primary concern. Fury at the debacle roiled inside him, his anger more bitter because sabotage, rather than another soldier’s wits, was to blame. He wasn’t concerned by the thought of dying. After all, he’d put his life on the line the day he pledged his oath to the Emperor. From that day on, his life had not been his own, and every breath came at the pleasure of the Emperor.

The urgency of his mission meant Tankar had not had time to check the hypertrons. Who would have suspected sabotage on a starship belonging to the Emperor’s personal security detail? The rot of treason had spread to whoever had created a death chamber on Tankar’s ship.

He had no way of sending any message home. Hyperspace communication was in its infancy, and anything in use travelled at 15 light-years, max. No one had yet found a way to increase payload. The devices guzzled power and were only outfitted on massive cruisers, none of which Fleet 7 had yet.

He thought of the entitled scientists, experts burrowed in their labs. They were without loyalty. Seven had been executed for treason the day before Tankar set off on his mission. This time, the rebellion had been carefully plotted and given time to mature. Not like the impromptu uprisings that had overthrown Emperors Ktius IV and Ktius V and even the great Antheor III. Privately, Tankar had contempt for the current Emperor Ktius, a weak man who would have walked back all the recent reforms had it not been for the opposition of the Stellar Guard.

The morning the uprising reached his base, the shuddering barracks woke Tankar even before the deafening blast of the explosion shattered the air. He stared open-mouthed at the swirling column of fire where the Kileor arsenal once stood. He dressed like a shot to the sorrowful sound of shrieking alarms, and, five minutes later, he was standing at his place near the gangway to the starship. Tablet in hand, he scribbled down the name of the last man to board. And then, for the next two months, he and his men struggled against an enemy that constantly eluded capture. An enemy that refused hand-to-hand combat, that struck from behind and whose terrifying rebel starships always outpaced the Stellar Guard’s swiftest cruisers. Tankar fought on Mars, Venus, Earth, and he had been part of the raid on Abel, the third Proxima Centauri planet. The revolution stopped there.

Earth territories that were once Western Europe and North America had fallen. The rebels also claimed broad swathes of Asia, half of Mars, both Venusian poles, and every satellite belonging to both Jupiter and Saturn. Slowly, inexorably, Guard forces beat their retreat and inevitably left the capital city Imperia at risk. The Emperor at last reluctantly called on the External Great Fleet and its squadron not far from Fomalhaut. One, two, ten messengers were dispatched. None got through, and so the Admiral called on Tankar.

For five years running, Tankar won the Great Stellar Race from Earth to Rigel III and back. He had earned his first trophy as a cadet. If anyone could break through rebel lines and reach the 7th Fleet, he was the man. He had been given a sealed copy of the message and the fastest scout ship in the flotilla. He set off early one morning in the haze of a nasty chemical bomb and entered hyperspace just above the atmosphere. He did not mind taking the mission on solo. Most Stellar Guards lived ascetic, almost monastic lives.

No one seemed to be tailing him until an alarm shattered Tankar awake on the third day. The hyper radar screen was clean, but a quick check of the display board got his attention. The second hypertron was out of synch, and he needed to reduce speed, enter normal space and recalibrate. Guard training included advance hyperspace theory and Hytron practice. He knew he was up to the job. But mistakes come in pairs. After Tankar made the fix and was poised to leave his screens tucked as per regulation, a tiny asteroid sliced through his antennae. If he waited to get to Fomalhaut IV, it might result in missed signals. And the rule was to proceed only when any and all repairs were complete. ‘A good officer never returns with a faulty starship he could have repaired himself.’ So he put on his suit and walked out onto the hull.

Afterward – well, there had been one minor explosion, most likely chemical – he hovered in space far from the scout ship, which did not really matter as his chip implant would have allowed him to return. It was standard operating procedure to destroy after desertion. There was a tiny bomb tucked in the middle of three Hytrons that could destroy the central support mechanism and cause the hyperspatial axes to converge. Blasting wide open the gates of hell.

Tankar had about 10 minutes to rocket to safety. His poorly set jet-pack sent him wobbling away from the ship before the brilliant light of the explosion reached him. Three tons of matter was trying to occupy the exact same space at the same time. Ultradense rays shot down, and Tankar could only hope that his suit and the vessel debris were enough to shield him, although it did not matter; he would be a dead man soon enough.

Now he was nose-diving through the stars. No way to measure speed. The gas cloud did not help as he had no idea how fast it had been moving.

He could spend eternity tumbling through space, a shriveled mummy locked in his spacesuit. Or he could attract the gravity field of a nearby star and end up pulverized. In any event, he would perish without delivering the message to the 7th Fleet. Death was meaningless. People died from wounds, explosions, radiation, accidents or old age. He was 24 and strong. And yet, he would die soon. The odds against being rescued were huge but not impossible. Captain Ramsay was scooped up by a nearby ship exiting hyperspace after 16 hours adrift. Tankar knew his chances weren’t as good as the captain’s.

I’m going to die, he thought. It did not scare him. The thought fascinated him. He had seen so many people die in so many different ways. Comrades standing beside him on a starship gangway. Enemies found on debarkation calcified and shredded.

There was one night when he was guarding the palace basement and had seen the interrogation of Alton, the physicist, tried as a traitor. Tankar shook his head in an attempt to forget the memory of that death. He still had a grudge against the Admiral for including him with the three cadets standing guard that night. It was not as if the Empire did not have enough executioners and yes-men.

A methodical man, trained in space and its danger, Tankar quickly inventoried his resources. Enough air for 24 hours, 10 days’ supply of easy-to-digest nutritional concentrate and electrical charge to last a month.

“So I’ll suffocate,” he muttered to himself. “Maybe at the end, I’ll shut down the power and freeze rather than rot in the suit. Or just unscrew my helmet.” No, that would be suicide, absolutely banned by the Guard’s code of honor. Officers fight until the end.

Out of habit he made a distress radio call. Signal reach was minimal and he was pretty sure no friendly starship was wandering in this vector. As to enemies, they were too few and far between to be found this far from a planet.

There was no reply to his call. He put it on automatic SOS system, then tuned in to the imperial channel. He could hear nothing more than the usual static, the thrumming of the nebulae. Nothing else but the whistling of air pockets. He waited. He was moving in slow motion now and could have stopped rotating. He did not mind so much; in fact, movement gave him a panoramic view. He checked his digital timepiece and was stunned to see he’d only been gyrating for one small hour. Sixty short minutes. Another 23 units of time and he would be dead or dying. His breathing was growing shallower, his ears were buzzing, and his mouth opened in a vain search for more air. He hoped he had earned a place in the heavens reserved for true warriors.

Tankar had never been a student of metaphysics; few members of the Guard were. ‘Obey the Chief and your Emperor, follow orders, fight with courage, remain loyal to the end and you will have nothing to fear.’ He had been such a man but, in this cold moment of reckoning, doubt niggled at him.

The commoner religion was different; in their code, warrior virtues alone did not grant redemption. One also had to love one’s neighbor and never commit murder. Tankar failed to see how people reconciled this final commandment with blood-soaked rebellion. The Empire approved the code of nonviolence for commoners, but not for the Guards. ‘Thou shalt not kill!’ And yet, he remembered the gruesome sight of police crucified outside the temple. The texts of the religious also read, ‘Live by the sword, die by the sword.’

How did you establish and maintain the stability of the Empire without bloodshed? And if the Supreme Power was the same power invoked by the priests, how could anyone take issue with Tankar for being who he was? How could he be any different? He had been commandeered and groomed from birth to enter the ranks of the Guards. He had little recollection of his parents. His mother might have been blond with very long hair. His father was just a gigantic, shadowy silhouette.

From the time of his admission into the Academy he had only ever lived with other cadets, and later with the Guards. He spent his time in study, physical training and never-ending maneuvers. At first, his maneuvers were on Earth; then they took place in space and on some hellhole planets. For R&R the Guards visited Eugenics Centers where they were presented with commoner girls. They were all forbidden from talking to the terrified, drugged and hate-filled women. Early on, Tankar looked forward to these evenings. But over time he began to feel revulsion, sensing the men were as debased by the activity as the girls. He still remembered his friend Hekor’s last words, “How long is the Empire going to treat us like breeding stallions?”

Tankar had not seen Hekor since the Center. That same day, Hekor was transferred to march duty where he died for the glory of the Emperor. He would have died anyway in some skirmish or other with the H’rons or the Tulms or some other non-human enemy.

Tankar’s readout told him he had another five hours of air. He understood he was growing dizzy and disoriented. His thoughts circled through long-buried images in his mind: his fury at age 11 when a bigger cadet beat him up and he had cried bitter tears: not because of the pain, but because real warriors do not cry. The spring day when he smiled at a young commoner woman who sneered back at him. The corpse of a dog in the doorway of a derelict house….

He was in free fall now, his oxygen tank whistling. He was overwhelmed by his failure. Could his failure be the final end of the Empire? He should have checked the Hytrons, dammit, all good officers did. But then again, he’d been ordered to leave on the spot. He did not have time.

No, he could not have prevented the sabotage.

The air inside his suit was heavy and the sound of his busted valve was growing faint. After some quick math, Tankar realized that within an hour he would be finished. And so, he waited. After a time, the buzzing in his ears returned. The static sound briefly intensified then faded away. He thought he saw something very bright zipping between two faraway stars. He stared stupidly at the fast-growing point of light, now turning into an oval shape as it drew closer.

Finally, almost of its own will, his training kicked in and he saw a ship; no make or model he recognized. It seemed huge. It could not be part of the Empire’s fleet. Maybe it belonged to rebels or some alien race. Not that it mattered. The worst outcome would be his murder as soon as he boarded. But, should he be taken prisoner, he might someday escape and return to the Guards where he belonged. With the little bit of strength remaining to him, Tankar launched the distress-mode apparatus and heard his own SOS piped across all bands.

Red rockets burst across a blackened sky and Tankar plunged headfirst into the night.