A new year, a new novel: Six-Guns and Sorcery

I’m a reader – maybe even more of a reader than a writer. (I know, scary thought.) In the past few days, I’ve read a number of “2013 – A Year in Review” type writeups, mostly focusing on how bad a year it was. Even on my Facebook feed, a number of acquaintances exclaim how they hope 2014 will be so much better than that dastardly 2013.

Personally, 2013 has been a great year for me. I quit my management job at a Fortune 500 company to pursue writing, penned two novels that have seen overwhelmingly positive feedback, doubled the size of my house (while doing the vast majority of the work myself), and saw the birth of my first son.

That’s sure as heck not a bad year, as far as I’m concerned.

But 2013 isn’t the point of this post; as the old saying goes, past is prologue.

I’ve been working on a plan to get writing done in a timely fashion – after all, success in the independent world requires regular feedings of the beast (or in my case, liquor for the  (Angry Villagers so they don’t ever get riled up enough to take those torches and pitchforks after me). Nothing breeds success on Amazon (and the lesser ebook sellers) than putting out high-quality fiction on a regular basis, with a huge emphasis on “regular basis.”

Now, I already missed one deadline – I wanted to have Contract Hunt done by Christmas, and I’ve written a whopping two chapters. Now, granted, I was very productive during the period between the Dead Man’s Fugue release and Christmas, but it wasn’t the kind of productivity that brings in royalty checks.

So,  I’ve been working on a new writing schedule to keep me focused – which is, I know, boring and dull stuff. (And no, I’m not going to post it here. You guys don’t need to know how badly I miss my own projected deadlines.)

Written into my new schedule is, one day a week, time set aside for “free novel writing.” Yes, a free novel. (Not free writing, which is something else entirely and seldom yields anything readable from me.)

The new novel is a project that’s been pestering me for a while, but I’ve kept pushing it to the side because I didn’t think it’d sell. For that matter, it still probably isn’t salable in large quantities, so it’s going up here on Writing Under Duress first. After it’s completed, it’ll be pulled down, edited, and made available on the various ebook platforms for a small price.

Meaning?

You now have a reason to visit Writing Under Duress on a weekly basis!

Urban Fantasy is all the craze right now, from the titular mad wizard Harry Dresden of The Dresden Files to more militarized versions like Joe Nassise’s Templar Chronicles to the ever-devolving Anita Blake: Vampire Hunter series which has turned into a parody of itself. So, being a good writer, I’ve been plugging away at a new urban fantasy novel (in contrast to the high fantasy of Destiny’s Heir and the science fiction of Shattered Expanse).
That isn’t the novel I’m posting here.
No, what I’m putting up here is a prequel of sorts, set in the rough and tumble days following the American Civil War. It follows the footsteps of a Confederate veteran whose family was killed during Sherman’s March to the Sea, and sets out into the post-war West to exact revenge on the Union officer who ordered the killings. Unfortunately for him, nothing is as it seems, and he quickly finds himself over his head dealing with citizens of the Old World who are decidedly unimpressed with little toys like black powder, and with an enemy seeking power – the kind of power to reshape a world.

You can expect the first chapter of Six-Guns & Sorcery on Friday, January 3rd.

A Merry Christmas to all the Angry Villagers!

I’m writing this at 7:30 on Christmas Eve, but you’ll only see this on Christmas day. (Thank you, WordPress’s scheduling feature.) I’m sitting in a recliner in the hospital, and we’re quietly celebrating the birth of our first son.

I’m going to pretty much leave it at this, with one of my favorite poems/hymns. It is very much descriptive of how I feel about the world quite often at Christmas!

I heard the bells on Christmas Day
Their old, familiar carols play,and wild and sweet
The words repeat
Of peace on earth, good-will to men!

And thought how, as the day had come,
The belfries of all Christendom
Had rolled along
The unbroken song
Of peace on earth, good-will to men!

Till ringing, singing on its way,
The world revolved from night to day,
A voice, a chime,
A chant sublime
Of peace on earth, good-will to men!

Then from each black, accursed mouth
The cannon thundered in the South,
And with the sound
The carols drowned
Of peace on earth, good-will to men!

It was as if an earthquake rent
The hearth-stones of a continent,
And made forlorn
The households born
Of peace on earth, good-will to men!

And in despair I bowed my head;
“There is no peace on earth,” I said;
“For hate is strong,
And mocks the song
Of peace on earth, good-will to men!”

Then pealed the bells more loud and deep:
“God is not dead, nor doth He sleep;
The Wrong shall fail,
The Right prevail,
With peace on earth, good-will to men.”

 

Merry Christmas!

North Dakota Author: Josie Blaine

North Dakota is a small state – according to Google, we have around 700,000 people right now. (We probably have more than that, as oilfield population is hard to keep track of, and the Bakken has definitely increased our headcount.)

We’re a fairly rural state, as such things go, with a slowly urbanizing population and small towns fading a bit more each year. We have a reputation for being a bit backward and a fondness for hunting that is usually associated with the deep South. (Personally, a deer is a regular part of our meat diet for the year, and not drawing a tag hurts us pretty badly.)

The more urbanized parts of our state aren’t exactly considered high culture. Areas like Minot, Williston, and Dickinson are all associated with oilfield work; Bismarck is the state capital, Grand Forks and Fargo are college towns, and a good number of western North Dakotans would just as soon give Fargo to Minnesota.

What I’m driving at is that North Dakota isn’t anyone’s idea of a home for great artists.

That isn’t to say we haven’t had some great people come out of North Dakota. We’ve had at least a few representatives in almost everything, like basketball great Phil Jackson and boxing legend Virgil Hill, or the more notorious like Paula Broadwell.

But as far as authors go, there’s only a few that really pop to mind, and Louis L’Amour is far and away the most famous of those. (If you don’t know who he is, you need to go buy a dozen of his books and read, and then be ashamed of yourself for missing out on a freaking legend.)

So, I’ve rambled enough to make my point.

Now I’m going to take it up a notch.

My hometown in North Dakota (to which I returned three and a half years ago with my wife) has a population of about 1200 people.

And I’m not the only author.

There is, of course, my brother Cory who spent seven years writing a humor column for the area paper called Neu’s Ramblings and published a book of short stories entitled My Horse Got A FlatYou could say that’s not even unexpected – we both have our own flair for storytelling. But this post isn’t about him.

No, after 370 words, I’m finally getting to the subject of this post – fellow hometown author Josie Blaine.

Josie’s first book, published in September just a few weeks after Dead Man’s Fugue, is called Something about Sophia. I may be looking toward the future or other worlds when I write, but Josie is looking into the past. Something about Sophia is the story of a German immigrant to the plains of North Dakota – a story that echoes many of the families here in one way or another on the central plains.

And, like me, Josie’s not content with just one book. She has been working on several more books to come in the next year (including a Kindle version of Something about Sophia, which should be out early next year), so there’s more to look forward to.

If you’re looking to support another North Dakota author, and one who pens stories far more realistic than my own, pick up a copy of Something about Sophia. I don’t think you’ll be disappointed.

I’m not sure if it’s something in the water here, but this town sure has produced a surprising number with a literary bent!

Natural Born Thrillers

NBT Final Cover Art

 

I had the honor of being included in a bundle deal, Natural Born Thrillers, with some excellent authors. I really feel like the little kid at the adults’ table here, but go pick up this deal for the so-low-you-stole-it price of $0.99 on Amazon!

Books in the bundle:

  • BENEATH by Jeremy Robinson – the bestselling, parsec award nominated, sci-fi thriller that takes a crew of astronauts and scientists to Europa, the sixth moon of Jupiter, in search of life beneath the ice.
  • THE HERETIC by Joseph Nassise – the first book in the bestselling Templar Chronicles series, where modern Templar knights battle supernatural threats and enemies.
  • THE CRYPT OF DRACULA by Kane Gilmour – For too long, evil has slumbered. But now, the prince of darkness has arisen…and he thirsts.
  • SILVER by Steven Savile – the first book in the international bestselling series pits the Ogmios team against a terrorist organization calling itself the Disciples of Judas. History, religion and conspiracies collide in this explosive thriller.
  • DOURADO by David Wood – In book one of the bestselling Dane Maddock Adventures series, the search for a sunken ship sends Dane Maddock on a search for the sword of Goliath.
  • THE CURSE OF ONE-EYED JACK by J. Kent Holloway – An FBI analyst begins an investigation into the disappearance of her brother. The trail leads her to a dark, dangerous parcel of Appalachian wilderness where even darker things lurk…including a man named Ezekiel Crane.
  • MAGIC MIRROR by Sean Ellis – It begins with a mysterious disappearance…it will end with the world on the brink of destruction. What will be revealed?
  • KIM OH 1: REAL DANGEROUS GIRL by K. W. Jeter – You know you’re having a bad day at work, when partnering with a psychotic hitman to kill your boss is your best career move.
  • PARALLAX by Jon F. Merz – a Mafia hitman and a former terrorist with a psychic connection embark on a cat-and-mouse game with huge stakes on the streets of Boston.
  • KIDNAPPED by Rick Chesler – A priceless biotechnology, an FBI agent, and an unspeakable act of familial betrayal collide in a Hawaiian kidnapping more twisted than a DNA double helix.
  • DEAD MAN’S FUGUE by yours truly – A man is resurrected by his life insurance policy to find the criminal underworld and law enforcement alike are after his head…but he doesn’t remember why.
  • PHAROS OBJECTIVE by David Sakmyster – A legendary treasure chamber beneath the ancient Pharos Lighthouse has defied discovery for over two thousand years…Until a team of psychic archaeologists dare the impossible.

Grab your copy today!

How Time Flies

Wow, am I way behind on posts here on Writing Under Duress.

So, I’ll do the quick updates.

1.) I have a novel I’m working on purely for Writing Under Duress. That’s right, a full novel to be posted here on a one-chapter-per-week basis. A good friend of mine is working on the cover art for it, so expect to get a sneak preview before Christmas. Until then, revel in the suspense – I’m not even leaking the title yet.

2.) Dead Man’s Fugue is currently on sale on Amazon for the two weeks before Christmas. That’s right, it’s available half off! If you haven’t picked up a copy, now’s the time to do it.

3.) And most importantly…

Destiny's Heir Cover - eBook Final

Destiny’s Heir is now up for sale! The ebook is out now, and the paperback should be available this week.

That’s not all the excitement for this week – check back to see what else is coming down the pipe. It’s a doozy!

I do apologize for the long time between updates. The next generation is due to arrive in less than two weeks, and I’m working like a madman to make sure the house is ready. Trust me, the construction pictures are ugly.

Dead Man’s Fugue – one month out

Well, it’s been a month (nearly) since Dead Man’s Fugue was released to the world. It’s been pretty exciting, and I think I’m doing rather well for a first-time author. So, here’s the quick rundown of what’s happened so far!

On Amazon, I’ve got a dozen reviews and I’ve been selling fairly well. Most indie published books supposedly sell around 250 copies or less; I’ve more than doubled that in my first month. Fortunately, the Angry Villagers got me off to a good start, and I’ve had a run on the ebook. The paperback is selling far less, but that doesn’t surprise me at all.

Kobo sales have been slower – as in, I’ve sold one copy. That’s okay, though–it’s better than Barnes and Noble, where I’m still fighting with the site to even let me publish for Nook. Yes, after a month, I’m still not able to get it out on the Nook store, which saddens me.

I finally got around to listing Dead Man’s Fugue on Goodreads, and already got a positive response. Anything to help raise a little visibility, right?

I managed to get plugged on Instapundit, and it’s a major enough site I didn’t comment on my first name being misspelled. I can deal with that, right?

I’m pretty much outed as a conservative author now, so I’ll mention my plug on The Other McCain, which actually was a prelude to a major run on Dead Man’s Fugue after the initial rush quieted.

I’m hoping to get plugged/featured a few other places, but it’s a slow process – lots of people seem reluctant to review a book for a first-time, independent author. Fortunately, that should get easier with time, particularly as my reader reviews keep coming in and praising my book. (I appreciate it!)

I would be amiss if I didn’t mention the local publicity. (Note that the linked story is an excerpt from the full published article.) Yes, I wound up in full color on the front page of the local paper – an event exciting enough my brother called me from his mailbox when he saw it.

I’m having a local book signing at the coffee shop here in town on Tuesday night, from 4 PM to 7 PM. Hopefully the good publicity will continue!

I also sat down today and started putting some serious work into Contract Hunt. Between that and the work I need to get done in the house before the baby comes, I’m definitely not going to have a lot of extra time to get it done. My intention is to have Contract Hunt done by Halloween, which will give us a couple weeks to proofread and edit before publishing by Thanksgiving.

I’m not getting bored any time soon!

There and Back Again

Image

It’s amazing how quickly time can slip away. First, the professional:deadman'sfugue

Yes, that’s the cover for Dead Man’s Fugue, the final title for the project I wrote under the working title Dead Man Walking. I know, I’m so creative when it comes to titles, aren’t I?

I finally finished my edits of Dead Man’s Fugue today, and now my mentor is in the process of editing it. (He’s been at it longer than just today.) As soon as he’s finished, either Friday or Saturday, I’ll make a final read-through to ensure everything sounds good to my ear, and it’s on to publication.

My aim for quite some time has been to have the book available the first week in September. Depending on timing, it may be pushed back a week or two, but I’m trying hard to stay on target with this.

A month ago, I would have called my deadline easy to meet. Unfortunately, between then and now, I had my appendix removed, which screwed me up for several weeks and set me far back on the project. So I’m in a bit of a rush mode right now, but pushing myself harder, even if I miss my preferred deadline, always ensures a more timely completion.

Dead Man’s Fugue will be available as both ebook and paperback. Pricing isn’t available yet, but the book will be available primarily on Amazon (as well as Barnes & Noble and Kobo).

 

 

So what else is on the agenda?

I don’t often touch on the personal here, but my wife and I are expecting in December. As such, I have a lot of handyman work to do around here–the biggest being an expansion to finish, but also a nursery to build. A big stack of the material I needed for the expansion actually arrived the week before I found myself in the ER. Recovery has been slow, but I’m finally reaching a point physically where I can get to work.

I’m also outlining the sequel to Dead Man’s Fugue. Given my tendency to change titles, don’t count on this one sticking: Skiptracer’s Contract. Rake will be back!

Also on my agenda is the release of Destiny’s Heir. Yes, it’s going to be coming out–as an ebook and paperback. I’m intending on a first-week-of-December release (along with Skiptracer’s Contract), to coincide with both Christmas and the release of the next Hobbit movie.
There’s plenty to be excited for before the year ends!

 

Dead Man Walking – Ring of Lantash

“You know,” Caree said cheerfully as she slathered salve on Rake’s battered chest, “I never got to ask you. Where’d you get the money for the insurance policy?”

Rake grimaced, more from the coolness of the gel than from pain. “What are you talking about?”

“I’m not a fool, Rake,” she said lightly. “You’ve been involved in a lot of jobs in the outer worlds. Including several in the zero security zone, outside civilization. You’ve made a name for yourself as a great pilot and a man who can think on his feet. But none of those jobs have been a big score—nothing that would’ve taken the millions you would’ve needed for an insurance policy.”

“Oh, come on,” Rake complained. “Are you really telling me you’ve seen my finances? You’ve been looking into my books?”

“No,” Caree said with a shake of her head. “I don’t need to do that. I also know what kind of lifestyle you’ve lived. You’re burning cash like anyone living in the outer worlds. Not to mention the upgrades to your ship,” she added. Then she paused. “That reminds me—do you have another insurance policy?”

Rake shook his head. “No, I don’t. There was only enough cash for one.”

“So where’d the money come from?”

The pilot hesitated for long moments, the silence heavy as Caree finished smearing salve and began wrapping his wounds with bandages. Finally, he said, “I don’t know.”

“You don’t know?” she repeated skeptically.

“No. I was given a large lump of cash over a year ago, with express instructions to get a life insurance policy. I didn’t question it—just made a trip to Terra and went through the process. Then, three weeks ago, I got another payment with instructions to ensure my memory was up to date—enough cash to cover the update and the trip to Terra.”

“And you didn’t ask where this was coming from?”

“I did look into it, a year ago, when I got the first payment. The money came from an account on New Persia with a name that went nowhere. I had some friends look into that, and the money for that account came from Earth, and the transfer date was before the Great War.”

Caree grimaced. “So, no way to trace it.”

“No, there’s no way.”

“So, you think your mystery benefactor had something to do with your death?” Caree asked. “I mean, it’s like he knew you might not make it through…whatever you got yourself into.”

Rake nodded. “Good chance.”

“So, that begs the question—what were you involved with a year ago? Someone apparently was making an investment then to ensure you survived.”

“I’m not sure,” Rake confessed.

“Why not?” Caree asked.

Rake considered his options carefully. I really don’t remember, but that might be because of this body. Or maybe it’s because I really don’t remember. Until I can get my ship back, and get to all my ship logs, I really don’t know.

“Most of my memories from…before…are kind of fuzzy. According to the doc on Terra, it’s common after the wake up,” he lied. “He said it might take a few weeks for me to recall everything clearly.” In a few weeks, I’ll either be clear of this, or dead.

“So, what’s your plan?” the woman asked. “Besides get to your ship?”

The pilot slid off the bed, carefully pulling on a fresh shirt over his tender skin. “If I can find my ship, the navigation logs should tell me where I’ve been. Between that and my personal logs, I should be able to reconstruct what I’ve been doing, and hopefully pay off whatever crime boss is sending all these guys after me.”

“A crime boss?” Caree was skeptical. “Those were Lantash authority sloops that shot up our tail, not pirate ships.”

“A skiptracer working for the law wouldn’t risk shooting up an insurance facility,” Rake said firmly. “No, it has to be someone on the outer worlds—maybe even someone in the zero security zone.” He raised an eyebrow. “You want some help with your wounds?”

The dark-haired beauty offered a wink before smoothly doffing her shirt, offering Rake a smile. “Not the first time you’ve seen this, now, is it?”

Rake nearly swallowed his tongue as he picked up the can of salve. As methodically as he could manage, he carefully began rubbing in salve over her wounds. Like his own, they were small and many, tiny cuts that had covered her chest in a sheet of blood. With his off hand, he picked up a towel and carefully began to clean the blood from her skin as well.

“No, not the first time,” he finally managed to say.

Caree offered him a teasing grin. “Pay attention to your work,” she said lightly.

“Of course,” he said, reverting to biting his tongue.

“So,” she said after a few moments of silence, “what comes after you find your ship? You round up your crew and go after…whatever it is?”

“No crew,” Rake said.

“No crew?” she asked in surprise. “How do you man your ship?”

The man hesitated for a moment. How many secrets do I really want to give her? “She’s an advanced ship, designed for a minimal crew. The complement is supposed to be three, actually—a pilot, a weapons officer, and an engineer.”

“And you, of course, do all three.”

“I’m a man of many talents,” Rake boasted.

Caree leaned forward against his hands, still cleaning up her battered chest. “Yes, yes you are.”

He did his best to maintain composure, but she was very good at distracting him. “I do my best.”

“So,” the dark-haired woman said after a few moments of silence, “What’s the name of your ship?”

“Getting personal, are we?”

“Given our mutual lack of clothes, I’d say we’re already personal, aren’t we?” Caree winked.

“So do you really want to talk about my ship?” he asked dubiously.

“Isn’t that the way to sweet-talk you pilots?” she asked in return. “Talk about ships and engines and guns? I thought you’d like that kind of pillow-talk.”

“We’re not on a pillow,” Rake said dryly.

“Let’s fix that,” Caree grinned, taking his hand.

 

 

 

Almost eleven hours later, the intercom in Caree’s cabin beeped for attention. The dark-haired woman lazily rolled off Rake’s chest and stretched out to tap the button. “Go ahead.”

“Cap, we found the canyon,” Wings reported. “Just like Earthstepper described.”

“Put us in stationary orbit over the canyon and wait for us,” the captain ordered. “We’ll be there shortly.”

Wings was silent for a moment. Rake guessed he was processing the meaning of we. “Yes, cap.” The intercom beeped to signal the line closing.

“Guess that means we have to get up,” Rake grumbled.

“Are you complaining, sweetheart?” Caree asked with a wicked grin. “Didn’t get enough rest?”

“Plenty of time in bed, but not much rest,” he answered lazily. “I haven’t had much sleep since I woke up from the insurance facility.”

“Sleep when you’re dead,” she teased.

“Already did that once. Wasn’t restful.”

Caree smacked him playfully in the shoulder. “Quit your complaining and get dressed, dead man.”

 

 

 

It took twenty minutes of haggling over the short-range radio to secure permission to land—eight minutes of arguing over Rake’s out-of-date clearance code, and another twelve minutes to settle on berthing fees that, while still high, weren’t as outrageous as the initial offer. Caree had wanted to continue the negotiation, but the Starfall’s passive sensors had picked up faint sensor pings from one of the Lantash sloops—too weak to reveal the location of the ship, but plenty of warning that the authorities hadn’t given up their search.

The landing zone was concealed at the bottom of the canyon, with no external lights or signals to betray the location. Rake had to admit that, in spite of his professional distaste for riding in a ship he wasn’t flying, Wings was a pretty fair pilot. The big man slipped the freighter under the overhanging rock, putting plenty of cover between them and their pursuers.

It took another minute of careful maneuvering to mate the Starfall’s airlock with a docking tube extended from seemingly sheer stone wall.

As the airlock hissed open, wind blew over Rake, ruffling his too-long hair. His ears popped as the pressures equalized, and the artificial breeze died off.

The gun in his hand felt wrong. Not because Rake had any problem with carrying a handgun—especially into ratholes like the Lantash Six smuggler hole. He had, for that matter, carried a sidearm most of his adult life. No, the problem was that the pistol was all wrong. The weapon was too light, the barrel too long. The balance was entirely off, and he couldn’t feel the natural point of the weapon when he swung on a target.

“No boarders?” Caree asked when the airlock and connecting tube remained empty. “I thought they’d send a welcoming party.”

“No reason to bother,” Rake said grimly. “Everyone inside will be armed, so if we run in guns blazing we’d be dead. They’ve probably got dozens of coilguns embedded in the rocks pointed right at the ship. If we do anything too stupid, they’ll cut the Starfall to shreds.”

“Ah. So why, exactly, are we walking into this place?” Caree asked warily.

“This is hardly the first smuggler hole you’ve walked into,” Rake commented. “Any place like this can’t depend on local security—they’re hardly going to call the Lantash authorities, are they? So they take precautions to ensure nothing too horrid happens.”

Caree glanced back at her crew, gathered behind them. “So, I’d guess we should leave the crew here.”

“That would be ideal. We don’t want to risk starting a fight.”

Caree waved off her crew. None of the four looked happy, but they retreated back into the Starfall as per their captain’s wishes. When they had all vanished, the dark-haired woman looked over at Rake. “After you.”

“Yep.” Rake walked through the airlock and into the connecting tube.

The air was a bit stale and smelled of grease and solvent, and he could hear a faint hiss of escaping air. Must be a leak somewhere, he thought uneasily. Hope the whole place isn’t like that. It sure wasn’t the last time I was here, but that had to be three years ago.

Wasn’t it? The fact that he couldn’t precisely remember bothered him. Is this body going downhill already? Or is it normal to not remember details like that? The uncertainty was nearly as bad as the memory loss in the first place.

“So, what do we do now?” Caree asked quietly.

“Looks like company is coming,” Rake nodded toward an approaching man in a dirty brown uniform, flanked by two armed guards.

The station’s staff made no pretense at friendliness. “Rake Earthstepper. Different ship than the last time through.”

“Not mine,” Rake said as he jerked his thumb toward Caree. “Hers.”

“Who’s paying the fees?”

“Rake volunteered,” Caree said casually.

He grunted a reluctant agreement. “From my account on file,” he said. “We also need to fuel the ship.”

“Fuel’s hard to come by,” the unarmed man said. “Expensive to get out here.”

“Five,” Rake said.

“Ha! Didn’t know you were a comedian, Earthstepper. Twelve.”

“For twelve I could buy a ship with a full take of fuel,” he said with a shake of his head. “Seven, no more.”

“Eight, and I send someone out to scrub the windows,” the staffer said dryly.

“Eight it is. How long?”

“It’ll be slow,” the station’s negotiator said. “The passives we have on the ring shows a couple of Lantash sloops headed this way. They haven’t found us yet, but we’ll have to run the lines manually. No heavy equipment when the authorities are that close. Two hours, maybe?”

“Less would be more,” Rake said.

“I’ll see what we can do. In the meantime, are you going to enjoy our local facilities?”

“Just the pub. Which way?”

The man pointed down one of the shafts hewn from the stone of the rings. “Surprised you even have to ask. And I have to ask, what happened to your ship?” the man asked. “I’ve never seen another like it, and it’d be a shame if some authorities got their hands on it.”

“Just on my way to retrieve her,” Rake said casually. “No one flies my ship but me, and no one will ever catch her, either.”

The negotiator and his two flunkies disappeared toward the docking ring and the Starfall, presumably to start the fueling process, while Rake led Caree down the stone hallway toward the pub. “You handled that well,” the captain commented. “You’ve been here a few times, haven’t you?”

Rake shrugged nonchalantly. “A couple times. It’s a good refueling hole, and not a lot of people know about it. The people that do know keep their mouths shut, which is why there’s a smuggler hole this close to a ‘civilized’ world.” He raised an eyebrow at her. “Your crew will keep their mouths shut, won’t they?”

“I’m insulted,” Caree said, her tone sharp.

“Hey, secrecy keeps a lot of smugglers alive, including me. I don’t want one of my holes compromised.”

“You might have already compromised them by sending us here with those patrol boats chasing us,” she retorted.

“Doubtful,” he said dismissively. “They’ve kept their heads down plenty of times when the local authorities are orbiting overhead. Dozens of meters of solid rock is a good cover, as long as no one goes in or out with a sloop nearby. Now,” he added as they stepped out of the passageway and into a larger, dimly-lit cavern, “let’s just relax with a few drinks while they refuel the Starfall.

Like the passageways, the cavern had been carved from the solid stone of the rings. The ceilings were rather low—barely two and a half meters high—but the room itself was nearly sixty meters across, roughly circular. A handful of passageways led away from the pub, with dozens of small niches carved into the walls to provide privacy.

Lamps rose from the floor, a scant meter high, providing the sparse illumination. Power cables and cords were strung openly across from the floor, trip hazards that the pub’s proprietor didn’t seem to care about. Tables, sparsely occupied, were scattered through the open space, some near lamps and some shrouded in darkness. There seemed to be little pattern to the lights and the tables, and the lack of order bothered Rake just a bit.

He didn’t let his discomfort show, however, as he led Caree toward the center of the pub.

The pub’s owner and operator, a too-thin woman barely in her twenties but tougher than the stone walls of her business, was busy cleaning a sinkfull of plates, her back toward Rake and Caree. The bar cut a neat, illuminated circle in the middle of the pub, with a small cooking range and stove at the center of that.

“Rake Earthstepper,” she said gravely without turning her head. “What the hell are you doing here?”

“Alo, Meg,” he said easily as he slid onto one of the stools ringing the bar. “How’s business?”

“Quiet. I like it that way.” She turned away from her dishes, eyeing Rake warily. “Your poison?”

“Couple of your local brew,” he ordered. “One for me, one for the captain.”

Meg raised both eyebrows as she produced a pair of dark bottles from under the bar. With practiced ease she twisted both tops off simultaneously and set them down before the spacers. “Didn’t know you would work for someone else.”

“Not my preference, but I do what I have to do.” He picked up the nearer brew and gestured for Caree to take the other. The captain gave him a dubious glance but took a drink, which was followed by a surprised look and a longer, slower drink.

Meg smiled at Caree. “Zero-gee brewing, Cap. Can’t make a brew that’ll touch mine if you’re stuck on a planet.”

The captain frowned. “But you have gravity here.”

“Artificial, just like your ship,” Meg explained. “And only in the habitable places. Storerooms are all packed tight with the grav shut off, unless there’s some reason for it.”

Rake took a swallow of the beer and smiled. “Nobody could brew like you, Meg, even if they could figure out your secrets.”

“Such a flatterer, Rake.” She raised a blonde eyebrow at him. “So, what are you doing working for someone else, and showing them this little hidey-hole?”

“On my way to Clarion to get my ship,” Rake clarified. “This is a short-term gig only.”

“I’d heard a rumor you got yourself killed on Clarion,” Meg said dubiously. “You have to make a run for it without your ship?”

“Something like that,” Rake smiled. “So what, exactly, have you heard?”

“Well, popular rumor was you took a job you shouldn’t have—a job from Boss Bruno. Whole thing went south, and you got killed by some of Bruno’s lackies on Clarion.” She laughed as she twisted the top off a brew for herself, taking a long, slow pull. “’Course, that all seems rather foolish with you standing here.”

“Mmmhmm,” Rake said noncommittally as he took another swallow of beer. Fear soured the taste, though. Oscar Bruno. What the hell was I thinking to take a job from him?

“What doesn’t make sense about the whole thing,” Meg continued, “is that there’s still a price on your head. I checked the ComNet when I heard you were trying to land here with your old code. See, you landed here a few weeks ago with that code and picked up a new one. Between that, you being reported dead, and a price still on your head, tells me you had an insurance policy.”

Rake set his beer down on the bar silently. He opened his mouth to respond, but found himself struggling for words when he saw a pistol in Meg’s hand, leveled straight at his forehead.

Dead Man Walking – Unfriendly Hails

The bridge of Caree’s ship was already crowded when Rake stepped up through the hatchway.

Caree herself stood in the middle of the bridge. Rake glanced around, soaking in the details. She’s standing because she has no command seat, he noted with some surprise. Only seats available are the pilot’s chair and the navigation chair.

Both the aforementioned stations were occupied—the former by a dark-skinned man who looked like he came from a high gravity world, the latter by a pale girl with nearly-white hair that looked far too young to be voyaging into the space lanes. She can’t be more than fifteen years old, by Earth standards, he thought in dismay.

Two more crewman stood at the back of the bridge, a man and a woman with similar ice-blue eyes under dark hair. Brother and sister, Rake guessed. And, unless I’m completely wrong, that should be Caree’s entire crew.

“Captain Staka,” Rake said, keeping his voice even. No sense causing any trouble for her with the crew, he decided immediately. So keep it professional.

“It appears you have some friends, Rake,” she said lightly, but there was an undertone of tension in her voice. “Some more friends, I should say. They’ve been asking very politely if you’re on board.”

“And what have you been telling them?” he asked with a raised eyebrow.

“We haven’t officially replied to their query yet,” she said with a smile. “Until we figure out how to answer.”

“So who’s doing the asking?” Rake wanted to know.

The gorgeous captain reached up and pulled down two screens from the ceiling. She impatiently tapped the corner of one of the screens, until at last they yielded up images of two patrol craft. “These are your friends,” she commented. “They’re bearing the colors and identification codes for local militia.”

“What’s local?” Rake asked.

“What, did you forget your navigation charts?” Caree responded. “We’re in the Lantash system.”

“Lantash?” he repeated. “That’s hardly the first jump toward Clarion.”

“It’s the long way around,” the captain agreed, “but if you died on Clarion, and your policy was cashed in at one of the Terra facilities, skiptracers are probably going to be watching the usual routes. It’ll take more fuel, but it should have kept us from getting caught.”

“Except it didn’t.”

“Except it didn’t,” Caree agreed. “They must want you bad.”

“You think they already know I’m alive?” Rake asked.

“Maybe. From what I know of Slade, he was probably working solo, but it looks like they’re covering all the bases to try to grab you.”

“What are those patrol ships packing?” he changed the subject.

Caree tapped at the second screen. When it didn’t respond, she banged it with her fist in annoyance. After another moment, streaks of red began to light up on the diagnostic of the patrol boat.

Rake stepped forward to get a better look at the screen. The vessel was a sloop—hardly considered a capital ship by modern standards. At a hundred meters long, it packed two dozen small-caliber coilguns highlighted in red on the diagram, which would be plenty against any freighters or pirate ships plying the space lanes. A trio of powerful engines could propel it at decent acceleration, and a point drive allowed for intersystem travel. The whole vessel was vaguely wedge-shaped with smooth, flat surfaces, a typical design for a warship: it allowed for high-firepower, low-profile edges to point at an enemy.

“How much firepower does your ship have?” Rake asked quietly.

“The Starfall isn’t a warship,” Caree reprimanded him. “I can’t go to guns with two of those patrol boats—they’ll tear us to shreds.”

“How many gees can you pull?” was his next question.

“Running?” Caree raised an eyebrow at him, then looked at the diagrams. “They’ll take us to pieces before we can get out of range.”

“I have a hunch about that,” Rake said. “But we can outrun them?”

The captain nodded. “Yes, we can pull a lot more gees than they can.”

The navigator spoke up. “If we try to run, cap, we’re going to wind up stranded.”

Caree looked over at the white-haired girl. “Again?”

“We won’t have enough fuel for a jump if we run the engines for a long burn,” she explained. “There’s no way we could head back to Terra or continue on to Clarion without refueling.”

“So why didn’t you let me know we needed refueling?” the captain asked.

“Cap, we were going to refuel at one of the Terra stations,” the pilot interjected. “You told us it was going to be a simple pickup, and we’d have a few days in system.”

“Damn,” Caree muttered. “Damn, damn, damn. We’re caught because we’re out of gas.”

The navigator nodded. “We can outrun them, but wherever we choose to set down to refuel, we’ll light up their sensors like a candle.”

“Wait,” Rake interjected. “You just mean re-entry, right? That everyone will know we’re there from the fire?”

“Right. No need for fancy sensors or spaceport controls, just the physical signs we’ll be giving off,” she affirmed.

“Can you bring me up a system map?” Rake asked Caree.

The captain frowned but tapped the secondary screen’s corner again. Several irritated taps later, the image of the patrol sloop vanished to be replaced by a map of the star system. “Not to scale, of course.”

“Of course,” Rake murmured as he studied the display. At the center was, of course, the system’s sun. The two planets orbiting closest were both colonized and boasted first-class starport facilities, capable of accommodating ships even larger than the patrol sloops and refueling any starship short of a nuclear reactor. The third and fourth worlds were smaller, cold rocks incapable of hosting life. The fifth world was partly terraformed, but the process had been left incomplete by the Great War. The sixth planet was a ringed gas giant, while the seventh and last world was so small it was hardly considered a planet at all.

“This is perfect,” he murmured. “Lantash Six is the closest world.”

Caree frowned at him. “Lantash Six? It’s a gas giant. We can’t land there—the atmosphere is so dense it would crush us like a bug before we made it to the ground.”

“Which is why it’s perfect.” Rake glanced at the navigator. “Do we have enough fuel for an in-system jump?”

“Yes, but it doesn’t change the fact that we need to land to refuel,” the girl replied. “There’s no orbital stations for us to try to get fuel.”

“You’re right about that,” Rake agreed. “Do we have the power to run now?”

Caree glanced over at the pilot. “Wings?”

The dark-skinned man—Wings, apparently—glanced over his own status screens before answering. “Yes,” he answered. “Our engines are warmed up and ready after the cold jump from Terra.”

“What’s your plan, Earthstepper?” the captain asked him.

Rake tapped the display. “Are you familiar with the rings of Lantash Six?”

“I’m guessing there’s something I don’t know about there?” she asked instead of answering.

The man nodded. “Something, yes.” He tapped the display. “Put in a direct course for Lantash Two, full burn. As soon as you have the point drive spooled up, we jump straight to Lantash Six, as close as you can manage. It’ll throw the patrol boats off.”

“That’ll just burn up more of our fuel,” the navigator protested.

“Trust me.” Rake offered a confident smile.

“This is crazy, cap,” the girl said, looking past the passenger.

Caree slowly began to smile. “Lay in the course,” she said. “And start the calculations.”

“Cap,” Wings protested, “when I light the engines, those patrol boats are going to light us up.”

“No, they won’t,” the dark-haired woman said. “They’re hunting our friend here. Judging by that skiptracer back on Terra, I’d guess they want him alive. They won’t risk blowing us up.”

“They don’t know he’s on board,” one of the siblings said from the back of the bridge. “We haven’t replied.”

“Is our course laid in?” Caree asked.

Both pilot and navigator nodded.

“Get ready to punch up a full burn,” the captain ordered. “And everyone strap in. You too, Rake.”

As Rake strapped into one of the jump seats lining the back wall, Caree dragged one of the screens to the back of the bridge with her. The display hung up at one point until she jerked it, freeing it again to slide aft until it hung in front of Rake’s chair. The captain strapped herself in beside the fugitive, then slid the screen over until both of them could see it.

“Caree?” he murmured.

She grinned at him. “Trust me.” She reached out and touched the display and, for once, it responded immediately. The system map vanished, replaced by the image of a man in a uniform. “This is Captain Staka aboard the Starfall,” she announced. “I have Rake Earthstepper on board.” She grinned. “Catch us if you can.”

The ship seemed to leap out from under Rake as the pilot bunched in the full burn. He didn’t have time to contemplate it, though, as the monitor smashed into his chest, thrown into him under the massive acceleration. The very chair he was sitting in vibrated with the rumble of the vessel’s mighty engines.

He could feel shards of glass jabbing into his chest and guessed the screen had shattered under the impact. With an effort, he glanced over and saw Caree was similarly grimacing under the pressure. “I forgot,” she muttered with an effort. “This is exactly what happened last time.”

“Last time?” Rake managed. “You do this often?”

The freighter bucked, hard, but the crew was all firmly strapped in. “We’re taking fire!” the girl at navigation shouted.

“If they wanted us dead, our hull would already be full of holes,” Caree grimaced. “They’re making a show to try to get us to surrender.”

“Ready to jump at any time, cap,” Wings called.

“Don’t wait on account of me,” the woman answered.

There was another gut-wrenching jerk, and then Rake felt as though his bearings were again entirely stripped away. It wasn’t as bad, this time—he didn’t lose consciousness. Nausea swept over him, but he managed to keep from retching as the ship vanished from one location and appeared in another.

The roar of the engines fell away, and the ship quit shaking a few moments later. Out the viewport, Rake could see the massive, colorful swirl of Lantash Six nearby. It was further than he thought, of course—gas giants were huge, and appeared closer than they really were.

The rings of Lantash Six were a phenomena unmatched in the Expanse. Planetary rings were, by and large, colorful bits of space debris. They consisted of bits of dust and small rock and stray gases, and while solid-appearing from a distance, they were quite insubstantial while at close range. In some ways, they were as deceptive as clouds.

Except the rings of Lantash Six.

There was speculation among scientists that they had been formed of molten material ejected into orbit by a series of meteor strikes; others held that the rings were simply so ancient they had accumulated massive amounts of free-floating space debris. In either case, the rings of Lantash Six were utterly unique.

They were solid, unbroken, fused stone.

And they were barely five hundred meters away from the Starfall.

Wings yelped in surprise. “Plotted that one a bit tight, didn’t you?”

Rake was pressed back into his seat as Wings applied power from the engines. The Starfall’s nose came up, but thousands of tons of momentum kept pushing it toward disaster. The freighter shuddered as the pilot applied full thrust, the engines roaring in response. Painfully slowly, the vessel’s momentum changed, even as the vessel skimmed along the ring. Mountains thrust up like fingers, jagged from millennia without the eroding effects of wind or water. The freighter slowed as Wings applied counterthrust, using every technique he had to avoid disaster.

There was a tiny “ping”, barely audible over the scream of overdriven engines, and then the Starfall was gaining altitude, pulling away from the ring.

Rake blew out a sigh of relief. “That was too close.” Then he winced as pain stabbed through his chest again. “Ow.”

Caree grimaced as she pushed the broken monitor away from the two of them. “Next time, Joy, could you leave a little more margin for error?”

The girl at navigation—Joy, apparently—looked up with an abashed expression. “Sorry, cap. I plotted that a bit tight.”

Rake shook his head. “That was insane. I’ve never seen someone plot a jump that tight.”

“She’s just that good,” Caree said as she looked down at her bloodstained shirt. “She’s a lot smarter than her captain, too.” Her gaze lifted to lock with Rake’s. “Since this was your idea, where to now?”

“We’ll need a scan of the ring’s topography,” he instructed as he looked at his own blood-soaked shirt. So much for the clothes I left behind, he thought. “We’re looking for a canyon two kilometers long, with a single mountain capping either end.”

“I don’t have anything like that where we can see it,” Joy said.

“I didn’t expect us to be that lucky. We’ll have to orbit until you see it.”

“And what’s so important about this canyon?” Wings asked.

Rake’s smile was small and tight. “Back during the war, Lantash was controlled by Terra, but not all the locals liked it. The Earth loyalists set up a resistance base on the rings. Friendly forces coming through used it for refueling and repairs, and the Terrans knew it was there, but they never found it.”

“But you knew where it was,” Caree stated.

“Not until after,” Rake said with a shake of his head. “After the war, the loyalists there turned it into a smuggler hole. Now days it’s used for brokering deals and fueling ships that can’t, for whatever reason, deal with the local authorities.”

“Like us.” Caree smiled broadly. “How did I never know about this?”

“It’s not widely advertised,” Rake said. “Even on the worlds I frequent. The few people that know about it have plenty of reason to keep it quiet—after all, if word got back to the officials on Laranth One, or even Terra, they’d send in a couple of frigates to clean the place out.”

“So, when we find this canyon, what do we do?” Joy asked.

“I transmit the code clearance, we land, we pay exorbitant prices for fuel, and then we get the hell out,” Rake said grimly.

“Great plan,” Caree said. “I’ll make sure we charge the fuel to your account. Come on, let’s go down to the medical bay and get cleaned up. This could take a while.” She offered a small smile. “You and I have some things to talk about.”