UnArcana Stars Read online




  UnArcana Stars

  Starship’s Mage Book Six

  Glynn Stewart

  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 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  Chapter 29

  Chapter 30

  Chapter 31

  Chapter 32

  Chapter 33

  Chapter 34

  Chapter 35

  Chapter 36

  Chapter 37

  Chapter 38

  Chapter 39

  Chapter 40

  Chapter 41

  Chapter 42

  Chapter 43

  Chapter 44

  Chapter 45

  Chapter 46

  Chapter 47

  Chapter 48

  Chapter 49

  Chapter 50

  Chapter 51

  Chapter 52

  Chapter 53

  Chapter 54

  About the Author

  Other Books by Glynn Stewart

  UnArcana Stars © 2018 Glynn Stewart

  Illustration © 2018 Jeff Brown

  This is a work of fiction. All the characters and events portrayed in this book are fictional, and any resemblance to any persons living or dead is purely coincidental.

  1

  There was a recurring debate among constitutional scholars as to where the First Hand of the Mage-King of Mars fell among the five most powerful individuals in the Protectorate of said Mage-King. The bearer of that title, after all, wielded the full power and support of the Mage-King everywhere outside the Sol System, and the current bearer had been declared above even the Council of the Protectorate.

  On the other hand, Damien Montgomery realized, constitutional scholars and kittens didn’t speak to each other much.

  “No, Persephone, you are not allowed on the desk,” he told the ten-month-old black kitten measuring the jump. “We’ve had this conversation.”

  Persephone listened as well as she ever did. She landed on the touchscreen covering the desk, scattering the overlarge icons across the screen. Several flickered up onto the “glass” screen of the external window of the observation deck Damien had claimed as his office.

  The First Hand of the Mage-King was a small man, barely a hundred and fifty centimeters tall and slight with it. The cat purring on his desk matched the color of both his hair and the suit blazer he wore.

  He eyed Persephone for several seconds then reached out a hand. The black leather gloves he wore didn’t conceal the unmoving state of his fingers. The gap between the gloves and his shirt showed the truth as well, the strange ridges of burn scars once again holding the shirt sleeve up.

  Damien twitched his hand and conjured power. One moment, the kitten was purring at him from his desk. The next, there was a slight pop of air and she was on the floor.

  Still purring.

  He sighed and reached down to scratch her head. It was a careful, somewhat painful process, but it was why he even had Persephone. Petting an animal was good therapy for his burnt hands and fingers, so Kiera Alexander, the sixteen-year-old Princess of Mars, had found him a kitten.

  “System, reset screens to forty-five seconds ago,” he ordered aloud. The computer wasn’t smart enough to recognize feline intervention, but it would follow orders.

  Unlike the kitten.

  From his observation-deck office aboard the Royal Martian Navy battlecruiser Duke of Magnificence, Damien could see the ships scattered through the void outside. His convoy was resting in deep space, waiting for the Mages aboard the various vessels to be ready to jump.

  A second cruiser, Glory in Honest Purpose, was far enough away to be little more than a star. The computer screens in the observation window, however, happily added a subtle iconography to help Damien track his ships.

  Between Duke of Magnificence and Glory in Honest Purpose hung fourteen freighters, a hastily gathered convoy carrying over a hundred and fifty million tons of grain, rice and other non-perishable food supplies.

  The relief convoy was one jump outside of the Korma System, but Damien had ordered that they wait until they had two Mages ready to jump. He didn’t want to bring the convoy into the Korma System until he was certain he could bring the convoy out.

  Korma was one of the UnArcana World systems that had seceded from the Protectorate eighteen months before. Technically, Damien was violating the borders of the newly-founded Republic of Faith and Reason.

  The colony on Kormar, however, had made the rather common decision to concentrate the majority of the planet’s food production into the regions most accommodating to Earth-standard crops. A newly mutated bacteria had decided said crops were an amazing delicacy and, from the reports the Protectorate had received, eaten basically the entire food crop.

  Famine wasn’t normally a problem in the twenty-fifth century, but few Mages would jump a ship into a Republic where they were automatic second-class citizens at best. No one had ever found a way to travel between the stars that didn’t require a Mage to teleport a starship, which meant the Republic was highly reliant on the few Mages who would take their money.

  That wasn’t enough ships to feed a world. One of those ships’ captains, however, had reported what he’d learned about Kormar to the Protectorate…and now Damien was here.

  He studied the readouts on his ships and teleported Persephone back to the floor in mid-jump, before she could mess with his icons. The kitten landed on the ground with a thump and a confused mewp.

  He was bringing enough food to feed Kormar’s populace for most of a year, more than enough time to get their crops back in order. His only real concern was how the Republic world would react to the help being offered by the Protectorate.

  As far as Desmond Michael Alexander the Third, the Mage-King of Mars, was concerned, his protectorate was all humanity. The nation of the Protectorate might have shrunk when the Republic seceded, but the Mage-King’s responsibility to guard humanity hadn’t.

  A grumpy meow distracted Damien from his thoughts, and he glanced aside to watch Persephone jump onto his desk from a completely different angle, where he didn’t see her until she landed on the smooth surface. She skidded to a halt and met his gaze with sparkling blue eyes.

  He sighed and raised one of his broken hands. There was a pop of displaced air, and Persephone dropped onto his lap. He carefully lowered a hand to scratch her ears, and she leaned into him with a purr.

  “Don’t worry, Persephone,” he told her softly. “This is a relief mission. Even the Republic isn’t going to cause too much trouble when we’re here to feed a planet.”

  If only he truly believed that.

  “Lord Montgomery.”

  Mage-Captain Kole Jakab was a tall man with the pale skin of a lifelong spacer. Contrary to his appearance, Damien knew Jakab had been born in London, on Earth. He also knew Jakab rarely traveled to Earth and never to England.

  “Mage-Captain. Are we ready?” Damien asked.

  “All of the convoy ships report ready to jump,” the Mage-Captain replied. “Glory and Duke are at battle stations; all hands are prepared for the worst.”

  �
�I hope it doesn’t come to that,” the Hand murmured.

  “So do we all, my lord,” Jakab agreed. “But this is also the first time RMN ships have entered a Republic system since the Secession. This has every chance of turning into a diplomatic nightmare.”

  “And that, Mage-Captain, is why I’m here,” Damien reminded him.

  Before Jakab could reply, their conversation was interrupted by the arrival of Persephone on Damien’s desk again. His controls were set to be used without having mobile fingers, so the cat was far too able to mess with his settings.

  Fortunately, Damien managed to catch her before she managed to turn off the call. He winced as her purring weight settled onto his hand, and carefully brought his second hand to bear to carry the cat to his lap.

  “How’s the cat therapy going?” his Captain asked, manfully restraining his laughter.

  “If nothing else, she’s good for keeping my ego in check,” Damien said. “It’s nice to have one person around who doesn’t follow my orders. No matter how much I beg.”

  “And your hands, my lord?” Jakab said, his voice suddenly gentler. “Are you…are you up for this, Lord Montgomery?”

  Damien snorted.

  “It’s a little late to raise that concern, isn’t it, Captain?” he replied. “I’m in better shape than I’ve been in for eighteen months.”

  Jakab arched an eyebrow at him.

  “And how long before you’re expected to have full function again, Damien?”

  “At least another eighteen months,” Damien admitted. “I cannot sit idly by and do nothing, Captain. I will not. Injured or not, I remain the First Hand of the Mage-King. I will do my job.”

  “If I’d lost the use of my hands, I don’t think my doctors would have let me go back to work yet,” his subordinate pointed out.

  “Yes, but, well…I am the First Hand,” Damien said with a chuckle. “Rank has its privileges, I suppose, and today those privileges include helping to save a world from famine. Shall we get this show on the road?”

  “‘Helping,’ the man who organized the whole thing says,” Jakab replied dryly. “We await only your order, Lord Montgomery.”

  “Then you have it,” Damien said firmly. “Let’s go save a planet, Captain. I’ll be on the flag deck in five minutes.”

  The convoy Damien had put together would normally have had a flag officer attached to it. While he’d basically grabbed every ship to hand, including his normal ride in Duke of Magnificence, he’d missed acquiring a flag officer.

  That put him in command himself. In theory, at least. Most of Damien’s space battle experience consisted of sitting on his hands while Kole Jakab carried the day. The Mage-Captain was just about due to get kicked to flag rank himself, which was all but guaranteed by the glowing recommendation of the First Hand.

  But Duke was Kole Jakab’s ship, which meant the Mage-Captain was on the bridge. At the center of the warship, the bridge also acted as the simulacrum chamber, the nerve center of the magic that propelled the vessel between the stars.

  Jakab’s location meant the battlecruiser’s flag deck went unused, so Damien had taken it over long before. The Hand had lived aboard the cruiser, off and on, for several years now. Jakab was used to having a Hand in his back pocket, and Damien was used to having a ship and crew he could rely on utterly.

  “All right, Captain,” Damien said as he slid into the Admiral’s seat on the flag deck. The chamber around the big hologram was sparsely occupied. Damien didn’t use a full flag officer’s staff, and most of the Navy staff officers he did have knew perfectly well that he expected them to support Jakab, not him.

  “What have we got?”

  The Korma System rotated in his hologram, icons marking twelve worlds. Damien categorized them almost absently: four gas giants, eight rocks, no significant asteroid belt. One habitable and inhabited planet, Kormar.

  “About what we were expecting,” Jakab told him. “We had to jump in at the freighters’ safe distance, so we’re a good day from orbit of Kormar. About a two-minute round trip for coms whenever you want to say hello.”

  “Warships?” Damien asked.

  “Twelve Legatan-built Crucifix-class gunships,” his captain replied instantly. “Duke or Glory could take them out in a single salvo if they decide to be troublesome.”

  “If that’s needed, things have gone very wrong,” Damien told him. “You are authorized to take whatever actions you see necessary to defend the freighters, though. Am I clear?”

  From the way Jakab swallowed, he recognized that Damien had just handed him a blank check to start a war. Of course, Damien wouldn’t have given him that authorization if he didn’t trust the man.

  “Yes, my lord.”

  “So, a dozen gunships, no fortifications?” Damien asked.

  “Kormar didn’t have anything significant before the Secession, and it doesn’t look like they’ve upgraded. If there’s anything here we weren’t expecting, it’s at Baghdad with the cloudscoop.”

  The closest gas giant to Kormar flashed on the hologram on the flag deck. There wasn’t a lot of industry there, but with the UnArcana Worlds’ refusal to use magic, a cloudscoop was a necessity. If you didn’t have Mages producing antimatter, then you needed hydrogen and helium for fusion generators.

  And if you were running a fleet, you’d need the same to keep your ships fueled. If there was a Republic force in the system, it would be at Baghdad.

  Damien’s intelligence suggested that the Republic had maybe sixty Mages who’d been tempted into working for them by vast piles of cash. Any Republic force would inevitably be small in numbers—though he suspected the Republic had surprises for them.

  The core of the Republic was Legatus, after all, and Legatus was the single most industrialized Core World, second only to Sol itself in human space. They might only have sixty Mages, but if they put each of them on something equivalent to the RMN’s battleships, well…

  “Keep an eye on Baghdad, then,” Damien ordered. “For now, though, I need to make a call. We need to let the locals know their groceries are here.”

  2

  “This message is for the government of Kormar,” Damien told the camera. With over a light-minute between his convoy and the planet, there was no point in attempting to have a live conversation.

  “I am Damien Montgomery, First Hand of the Mage-King of Mars. News of the damage to your agricultural zones has reached us via one of the ships that visited earlier this month. We organized this convoy as quickly as we could.

  “I am attaching a manifest of our cargo, but to summarize: we are carrying just over one hundred and fifty million tons of non-perishable food supplies. I also have a specialist team of microbiologists who have volunteered to help finish getting the bacterial problem under control.”

  In all likelihood, Damien knew, the problem was already under control. The resources of even a single world were immense, after all. They just couldn’t conjure food out of thin air.

  “My convoy consists of fourteen freighters of various sizes and two Royal Martian Navy cruisers under my direct authority,” he continued. “You have my word that we are not here to harm anyone, but I cannot justify allowing the convoy into Republic space without an escort.”

  He smiled sadly. That wasn’t something he’d even thought of on his own. He’d originally only intended to bring Duke, but Jakab had pointed out that the Republic was hardly friendly space these days.

  “I make our ETA into Kormar orbit approximately twenty-five hours,” he told them. “We have sufficient shuttle capacity to deliver the cargo to distribution centers identified by you in roughly ten days. We do not know how the situation has progressed, so any information update you can provide us will allow us to help you more effectively.

  “If we need to complete the delivery more rapidly, we will need assistance from local transport.

  “I await your response.”

  He cut the recording and hit Transmit, leaning back in his seat to study
the hologram as he waited.

  “Do you think there’ll be trouble?”

  Damien looked over at the head of his bodyguards, Special Agent Mage-Captain Denis Romanov of both the Protectorate Secret Service and the Royal Martian Marine Corps. Romanov had a similar slim and dark-haired build to Damien himself but was over forty centimeters taller than his boss.

  “I want to say that this is a humanitarian mission,” Damien replied. “I want to believe that the Governor and his people will be reasonable and accept our help in the spirit it’s offered in.”

  “So do I,” Romanov agreed. “But?”

  “I’m expecting trouble,” the Hand confirmed. “I’m hoping for just some bureaucratic pushback and chest-thumping bullshit. Maybe some ‘spontaneous’ demonstrations when the shuttles touch down—and potentially some legit food riots when we’re making deliveries.”

  “We have Marines assigned to every drop,” his bodyguard pointed out. “Assault shuttles flying cover, with Nix-Seven supplies and SmartDarts. We can neutralize any riots without casualties.”

  “With minimal casualties,” Damien corrected. Both Nix-Seven—Neutralization Solution Seven—and the auto-calibrating taser SmartDarts were almost guaranteed not to actually kill anyone. It still wasn’t reasonable to knock large swathes of people unconscious without expecting some injuries and deaths.

 

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