Empire Reborn (Taran Empire Saga Book 1): A Cadicle Space Opera A.K. DuBoff (guided reading books TXT) đ
- Author: A.K. DuBoff
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âIt might be connected to the other business near the Rift,â Michael explained. âAlkeer Station is reporting strange activity in their vicinity.â
âStrange how?â
âErm, the best way to describe it might be âspatial ripplesâ. See for yourself.â Michael swiped information from his handheld to Wilâs desktop, and it popped up on the holoprojector.
The information was, indeed, odd and difficult to classifyâmuch like everything related to the alien contact through the Rift. There was an array of rolling spatial distortions heading toward the Alkeer Station, one of the more remote TSS outposts. The âwavesâ, as Wil saw fitting to call them, appeared to originate at the Rift and then flow toward Alkeer. There wasnât any consistency to it, and any given wave didnât form a continuous line. However, looking at the composite image Michael had displayed, showing all of the information recorded within the past three hours, a defined path was beginning to form between the two locations.
Wil frowned at the holodisplay. âAgreed, thereâs definitely something strange going on, and it does seem to be connected to the Rift. The relative distance to Alkeer is far greater than to the site where the Andvari was attacked. So, given that the timing and placement of the spatial distortions exceeds lightspeed transit, it means thereâs a transdimensional component to whatever is going on.â
âI havenât been able to get the image out of my head of that leviathan wrapped around the ship,â Michael said, concern tinging his voice.
Wil studied the composite image of activity, seeing where his friend was going with the observation. When he let his vision go fuzzy, the spatial distortion points were reminiscent of the curves where huge tentacles could be reaching across space from the Rift toward the station. No, the scale of that⊠He dismissed the thought. âThese entities are no doubt large, but this would be absurd! Weâre talking dozens of lightyears in span here.â
âIt doesnât have to be one of them. Ants make bridges by linking together. Gophers carve tunnels. This could just be a bridge or super-highway.â
âNot unlike what the Bakzen did with the Riftâs expansion,â Wil realized.
âObviously, this is different, butâŠâ
Wil took a moment to collect his thoughts. Theyâd strongly suspected that the event with the Andvari was just the beginning and that the beings would make their presence known again on a larger scale. Based on the limited information at their disposal, they had been working on preparations for that inevitable contact. However, they werenât nearly as far along in that process as he would have liked. The problem was that they simply had insufficient information to make informed decisions. Every new encounter would give them greater insight, but that meant going into each of those engagements at an extreme disadvantage. No matter how he looked at it, they had no choice but to face the entities head-on.
âOkay, weâll go talk with them,â he decided.
âTalk how? Itâs unclear if thereâs anyone there.â
âThereâs some kind of presence,â Wil insisted. âI have no doubt that someoneâor, more appropriately, somethingâis watching and listening to everything weâre doing.â
âI suppose it wouldnât hurt to try,â Michael agreed. âThe Andvariâs crew destroyed their own ship. Based on everything we know, these beings just mess with peopleâs heads.â
âThatâs my thought.â
âThis whole thing is crazy, for the record.â
âIt is, but we play the hand weâre dealt.â Wil stood up.
âYour pep-talks are normally more eloquent than that,â Michael quipped.
âIâm saving my creative energy for convincing these beings that this is all an unfortunate misunderstanding. The Gatekeepers listened to us and were willing to keep the peace, so letâs hope these others respond in kind.â
âExcept, the Gatekeepers said that the âothersâ wouldnât be so forgiving. So, if these are those othersâŠâ
âThe other conflict was a long time ago. Things change.â
âLet us hope. Be safe,â Michael said. He hesitated, seemingly on the verge of saying something else, then left the office.
Wil could guess at what he might have said, but the two of them had been through too much for the words to need to be spoken aloud. It was a dangerous mission; they both knew it. But they would fight for freedom to the end, and there was no point in admitting early defeat by saying goodbye.
They needed to depart for Alkeer as soon as possible, but certain preparations were required. Wil called Saera and the Lead Engineer to his office to coordinate.
âItâs go-time,â he said when both had arrived, waiting in front of his desk.
âFor what?â Saera asked.
He directed her attention to the image on the holoprojector.
Rowan, the Lead Engineer, reacted first. âFok! What is that?â Not the most professional response, but Wil couldnât blame him. The stocky manâs face had flushed up to his hairline, dark eyes wide.
âIt would seem the aliens are making their grand entrance after the prelude.â
Saera groaned. âNaturally.â
âHow is that imaging solution coming?â Wil asked.
âWeâre not finished yet,â Rowan replied. âIt sounds a lot easier to do than it is in actuality. The way that the Andvari pulled off that capture wouldnât be safe for the people on the station. I mean, they basically produced a bomb blast. To do this in a controlled fashion, weââ
Wil held up his hand to stop the rambling. I should have been working on it myself. He respected the TSSâ engineers, but it was a point of fact that he could see solutions no one else did. It was why heâd cracked the âuncrackableâ code for the independent jump drive, not to mention a dozen other engineering marvels over the course of his career. But time, not intellect, was his limiting factor. âGrab what you need, and we can work on it in transit.â
Rowan paled slightly at the prospect of heading
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