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M.J. Markgraf
M.J. Markgraf

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Blue Star Enterprises Chapter 2-23

“Captain!” a chorus of surprised shouts greeted Vitor as he walked into the room.

“At ease,” he said tiredly. He may not have been injured in the attack, but receiving the box of tags taken off the dead had weighed heavily on him. There was also the activation crystal to think about, but that was a whole other matter. “How is everyone?”

“We’re ready on your command, Captain!” one of the surviving Marines declared.

Vitor pinched the bridge of his nose and groaned. “While I appreciate the sentiment, there will be none of that.”

“But they are holding us prisoner, Sir,” the Marine stated.

“Are they? Did you try leaving?”

“…Well, no, not yet. We were waiting for everyone to recover first.”

“Do me a favor, Marine. See if they stop you from leaving. And don’t hurt anyone while trying.”

The man looked confused by the request but nodded anyway and left the room. Vitor checked in individually with everyone who was up and mobile, after a half hour, the Marine wandered back in.

“I apologize for my assumptions, Sir. We are not prisoners, but they still control the ship.”

Vitor shook his head and pulled out the fusion activation crystal. “I received this along with the tags from the fallen. Our hosts have also treated the injured and rescued us. I have spoken with the owner, Mr. Alexander Kane. He has assured me we are free to leave whenever we can find suitable accommodations.”

“Why doesn’t he just provide one for us?” someone asked angrily.

“He doesn’t have a functioning FTL-capable ship, crewman. And there is no Qcomm here.”

“Sir,” his sensor operator came forward. “I don’t want to disparage the people who rescued us, but I don’t think that’s true.”

“Are you thinking of the mining ship?”

The Ensign nodded hesitantly, “That is one option, Captain, but there was also a small freighter on the landing pad.”

Vitor didn’t know about the freighter, probably because it was unimportant during the fight. He decided to address the mining ship first though. “That mining ship belongs to a captain by the name of Mingyu Na. Assuming he returned after the battle, I doubt he would be receptive to taking us back to STO space. Nor would any of you be able to leave once you stepped aboard said ship. The STO quarantined the vessel. Nobody who goes aboard is allowed off in STO space. It could be a way to get news back to headquarters, but let's hold off on that for now. Ensign, what can you recall about that freighter?”

“It was small enough for a surface landing and there was no transponder beacon coming from it. At the time I just figured it was another derelict like the shuttles, but I’ve been thinking about the scans. The shuttles were all cold, but the freighter wasn’t. It was probably in standby mode. If that was the case, the transponder beacon should have been active.”

“It’s probably a smuggler freighter then. It will be a last resort. In the meantime I want you to work in groups of two and get a picture of this facility. Don’t do anything stupid though. We might be here for a while, and I don’t want to risk alienating the locals against us. Since they turned this room into a bunk for us, we’ll meet back here at night and discuss anything we’ve found. If an opportunity arises, we may try to take advantage of it, but not before we have a clear plan. Is that understood?”

“Yes, Captain,” came a unanimous response.

He gave a sharp nod of approval. “I’m going to check in on the people who are still recovering, you have your orders.”

The room emptied as everyone did as they were told. When he was alone, he allowed his exhaustion to show. It had been hard pretending that everything was fine when he looked at only a handful of survivors from the few hundred that served aboard Epsilon’s Dawn. Based on the tags, he knew the true count, but knowing it and seeing it in person were two very different things.

After collecting himself, he made his way to the infirmary. There were only five people in medical beds and one in an actual medical pod. While the room didn’t look much like a hospital, it was decked out in a considerable amount of equipment. He had seen newer stuff back on Earth but even Varlen’s military hospital didn’t have access to half of these diagnostic machines.

A nurse glanced up and watched him for a bit before she went back to a holo she was watching silently.

Most of the injured had broken bones. Without access to quick heal meds, they would be in for a long road to recovery, but they would recover. Vitor made his way to the one person in the medipod. He was surprised to find his Chief Engineer. Parson was in a coma and it looked like half his body was burned.

“Nurse, do you know what happened to him?” he asked, gesturing to the pod.

The woman paused her holo and looked up at him. “First off, I’m not a nurse. My name is Gabriella, and I am the Head of Medical Services on Eden’s End, not that the title means much. It’s not like I got a medical license or anything. I’m simply doing my best.”

Vitor blinked at the woman’s statement. Was she just winging it?

“As for what happened to your crewman?” she shrugged. “Burned through his suit. Probably some electrical discharge if I had to guess. The medipod is keeping him sedated until we can bio-print replacement skin. It will be a long process, but he should survive. If it looks like he’ll take a turn for the worse, we have a stasis pod on standby.”

The offer of a stasis pod surprised him. Those were expensive. Then again, Kane seemed like he had no issues with money if he managed to put this all together.

“Thank you for healing my people.”

The woman snorted. “Don’t thank me, I’m only doing what Alex asked. If he wasn’t here, nobody would have bothered rescuing your lot.”

Vitor forced a smile on his face. He had to remember this place housed a large colony of drifters. The STO and drifter populations didn’t have a good working relationship. “Where can I find Mr. Kane to thank him personally?”

“Oh, I’m sure you’ll figure it out eventually,” she said, going back to her holo.

Vitor knew a dismissal when he saw one, he nodded politely to the woman and strode out of the room.

***

Gabriella watched the man leave from the corner of her eye. She didn’t know why Alex didn’t want the man to know where his workshop was and she didn’t particularly care.

Kane was a bit of an enigma. Like everyone else on Eden’s End, she had heard the rumors from the Hawks that he was remotely controlling the robot from a stasis pod. The only problem with that rumor was that the only stasis pod that existed on Eden’s End sat in the medical storage. And it was empty. She knew this because, like most drifters, she kept track of anything that might be of use. It was a habit of survival when moving to new places. So she knew without a doubt that Kane only had a single stasis pod.

Considering what Alex had done for the residents, she hadn’t brought up the strange inconsistency. Not that it mattered. People were starting to notice other inconsistencies in his story. She recalled a dinner she had with Damien and Lucas a while back. Lucas kept going on about how Alex got past the lag time to operate his body at the Lagrange point. The inquisitive young man wanted to understand why the signal couldn’t be detected by their transceivers. Other than a Qcomm link, that shouldn’t be possible, he claimed. It never even occurred to the younger man that there might not be any signal. Since it was clear both her boyfriend and his younger brother suspected something was off, she mentioned the pod.

That only produced more questions from the young man, which annoyed Damien until he finally put a stop to it. “I don’t give a shit if he’s a popsicle, a brain in a jar, or whatever the fuck a memory endgram is. I don’t want you digging any further into the man’s secrets.”

That was that.

Damien might come off as a cynical asshole most of the time, but he cared in his own way. And while he and Alex didn’t always see eye to eye, Damien respected him for what he did back during the attack. He just had a hard time showing it. Keeping his brother from pestering the man about these questions was a monumental show of respect.

***

Damien cursed Alex in his mind. Couldn’t the man understand that letting the surviving STO Navy personnel wander the facility was a recipe for disaster? Or did he simply not care? It was bad enough he had to keep his uncle in check.

He had caught the man snooping around places he shouldn’t. He warned him away, but he knew the man wouldn’t listen. If he thought family ties would keep Damien from arresting him when he finally did something to cross a line, he had another thing coming.

Soon the person he was waiting for exited the medical facility. He could have gone in and spoken to him, but he knew better than to get on Gabriella’s bad side.

He was glad the guards now had an actual uniform. Straightening the suit that marked him as facility security, he cut the man off before he could head down one of the side hallways. “Captain Krieger, I assume.”

The man stopped short before running into Damien. Annoyance flitted across the man’s face for a moment before the STO captain repressed it. “I am. Can I assume you are in charge of security around here?”

Damien didn’t answer the man’s question. “You are guests of Alexander’s. This does not give you any special privileges other than food, water, and lodging. If your people cause trouble, don’t expect them to escape punishment. Keep them in line, or I will.”

The man narrowed his eyes at Damien. “Is that a threat?”

“No, Captain, that is a promise. I know you sent your people out to collect information for you. Feel free to spy all you want but if they are found someplace restricted, they will be locked up until someone comes to pick your sorry asses up. I suggest you convey this warning to them as soon as possible. Have a good day, Captain.” Damien walked past the stunned man without waiting for a response.

He would have preferred to set a watch on every group of Navy personnel, but he didn’t have the manpower to do that while also guarding the restricted areas of the facility, and patrolling. The warning would have to suffice.

Comments

Where's chapter 22

Kirk Foster

I'm on the other end of the spectrum here, I believe the author did a great job in showing an individual attitude. A person who views an organization as an enemy is not going to just roll over on a first meeting saying "Thank you for saving my life." Especially, if they believe the save was not necessary and they had to save the rescuers.

Milton Skipper

good chapter

Archit Goel

My thoughts exactly. Her feelings about STO should have stopped at the point where they saved them at the cost of nearly being wiped out. Even if they hadn't suffered such a huge loss, they still intervened when they didn't have to as far as they knew. The guy even thanked her for her help! Being polite and not an ass is kinda important unless you can survive all by yourself, which she can't. So far I'm not liking these drifters' attitudes at all. Damien actually redeemed himself a bit here. Hopefully Gabriella and the rest of the drifters learn to stop thinking everyone from STO are cut from the same mold and stop being nasty to people. I get being annoyed at them for spying on them, but being civil is kinda called for after what they sacrificed.

Vanessa S.

Gabriella. Come the fuck on. STO or not, by accident or not, these people saved all your asses and paid a heavy price for it. If “don’t be a fucking asshole” isn’t enough of a reason, at least don’t intentionally antagonise the guy in charge of a few dozen really well trained people who just lost a lot of friends and whom you’ll be sharing the facility with for the next eight months. I don’t expect any better from Damien, but I’m really disappointed in Gabriella here. What a dipshit.

Thomas V.

Interesting developments. I see what Alex is doing though, but in a rare case I agree with Damien.

Hammy

I loved the different perspectives in this chapter. It looks like Alex may need to come clean to a few people in the near future.

DaftWully


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