Read Spacer Clans Adventure 1: Naero's Run Online

Authors: Mason Elliott

Tags: #Science Fiction

Spacer Clans Adventure 1: Naero's Run

NAERO’S

RUN

 

 

Mason Elliott

 

 

 

 

High Mark Publishing

www.highmarkpublishing.com

 

 

 

Seattle & Portland,       Chicago,         London

 

NAERO
’S

RUN

by

Mason Elliott

Kindle Edition

© 2012 by Mason Elliott. All rights reserved.

Published by High Mark Publishing

ISBN 978-1-
930451-04-9

Watch for
other titles by this author in the future.

 

Cover Art by

Frank Miller

frankmillerdesign.com

 

License Notes:

This
book or ebook is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This work in any format may not be re-sold or given away to other people. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each person. If you’re reading this book and did not purchase it, or it was not purchased for your use only, then please purchase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author.

 

Contents

 

 

 

 

1

 

 

The stars belong to everyone.

That
’s what Spacers believe.

All of the sentient races–
everything that exists–came from the stars. No one owns them.

Whatever
any other sentients and the Gigacorps claim.

The stars are always free.

In the end, everything and everyone returns to them.

Naero
’s parents, her friends, and her space-faring people taught her to cherish and respect the harsh beauty of space for what it was and for what it offered: Freedom. Challenge. Everything.

Her mother was her sun, and gave her light, life, and love.

Her father was her ship, her courage and adventure.

In her
Spacer Clan she found herself, others–knowledge, strength and joy. Naero woke up in her quarters and scribbled down the poetry and thoughts that had danced in her head while she snoozed. She scrawled on an old-style lighted pad with a pen she kept in reach of her bunk, the same way her illustrious father did.

T
he way he taught her. To be a poet warrior.

A philosopher king
…or queen.

She let the pad fade, lay
back down, and drifted off again, one night before her nineteenth birthday. One year before she’d come of age and could captain a ship–her own ship–just as her famous mother had done at that age.

A
strange dream overtook her; a nightmare, really.

S
he struggled against some kind of devouring darkness. It penetrated her very flesh, violating her mind with horror and abject agony. No matter how she resisted, it absorbed her like a giant amoeba.

Yet the attacking darkness came from within her as well, and that was the
most frightening part of it all somehow. The fact that such negative energy and twisted desires were part of her, and she part of them.

P
arts of her secretly enjoyed some of those demented feelings–even yearned for them.

Lusted
for the destroying power to subjugate everything and everyone to her will, and inflict suffering and misery upon them all, crushing and decimating them under the grinding heel of her enraged might.

Just
as her strength to resist failed, right on the verge of her being swallowed up by the insane annihilation, the darkness parted.

A
shining, beautiful, green young man with flowing golden hair appeared, his blinding sword cutting through the deep shadows.

She thrust both arms toward him for rescue
.

H
e plunged his blade through her forehead, transfixing her gasping face upon its blazing length. She heard, felt his voice in her mind.

I
’m sorry. This will not hold the Chaos back for long.

He jerked his sword free…

*

Naero awoke in a voiceless scream, thrashing in terror and clutching her throbbing forehead.

She sat up in her darkened gray, three-by-four meter cabin, still serving with her aunt’s Merchant Clan Fleet, still on their way through Triax Corps space to Irpul-4.

But in an alarmed daze, s
he glanced around at her inactive wall and ceiling screens rising two and a half meters above her bunk panel.

Her morning alarm chimed
.

She
sprang naked from her cluttered bunk–Naero always slept nude.

She
tripped over the stinky junk on her floor, and punched up a blinding splash of lights and a mirror on her port screenwall.

Her wild movements scattered and splashed muted pics and vids of family, friends, and new ship designs and schematics she could only drool over all across the other screenwalls and ceiling
like panic-stricken birds.

Her pres
et systems struggled to light, wake up, and compensate in response to her frantic movements. Winking as they came online.

Naero
gasped for air and pulled her long raven hair apart. Checked for the gaping wound in her forehead that she fully expected to see there.

Nothing.
Not a damn thing.

Just a few inflamed zits and her stupid pale forehead under her
slender, trembling hands that held up her long, jet black hair over wide, dark violet eyes. Eyes and hair she got from her pretty mom.

She caught her
heaving breath, nostrils still flaring. She stepped back and let her hands fall back to her sides, her black hair droop back down over her face.

Her nightmare had
seemed so real.

She
sat down slowly on the edge of her bunk, still confused and shaking.

Naero
shook her aching head, staring down at empty ration cans of Spum, the only blue meat on the market, in its mysterious sweet-and-sour blue jelly sauce. Along with various packages of other assorted bizarre snacks and junk food, hoarded from numerous interstellar ports of call.

All g
athered together for one orgasmic private pig-out session the night before her birthday. She had even skipped dinner with her mates in anticipation of her little guilty pleasure feast.

The smell
in the aftermath grew rank.

Eating all that crap must have really done a number on her brain. No wonder she
’d had nightmares and flipped out.

Four time.
The first four bells of the new day. Her birthday.

No time like the present to get her ass in gear and get on with life.
Plenty to get done before her duty shift.

Back on Old Terra it would have been April first
by the old calendar, the basis for the Spacer standard year, day, hour, etc.

What once people
on the old homeworld called April Fool’s Day–before humans finally left their dying world behind, took to the stars, thankfully, and some had the foresight to evolve into Spacers.

Her ancient history said that it
had once been a day for people to play tricks on each other and fool one another with fake nonsense.

Hell, Naero played so many goofy
jokes and scams on her friends and family already. They expected them from her on a regular basis.

Almost.

Therefore, in honor of her birthday, she had a special joke planned for everyone. A master stroke of genius if ever she had come up with one.

And only she could pull it off.

First she had to get her mates started for their secret training session.

She punched up
Gallan on her com.


You up, big guy?”

Her
extra-large bestest friend answered, his holo floating in the air at about half-size as he slipped into his togs, sealing them up.


Just getting dressed. Meet you in Practice Room 35 with the others. Sheesh, put some clothes on, N.”


I intend to. Nothing you haven’t seen before, buddy. What do you care? You like guys.”

He grimaced.
“Still, it’s just courteous. See ya.”

Next, wake her
Spacer gal pals.

Punch up Chaela.

Audio response only; holo blocked. Animalistic groan.


I will kill your dumb ass.”


Uh, okay, Chae. I’ll get back to you. It’s Naero? Remember, we agreed to–”

Another louder groan.

“I will hurt you!”


I’ll just check back in ten. Bye.”

That hadn’t gone too well.

Call up Saemar. Always taking a chance with her as well, in other ways.

Holo blocked
on her end this time, thank goodness.


Hey, Saemar. Wakey wakey.”


Oh, Naero? Hi, sweetie. Thanks for calling.”

Unfortunately, Saemar flipped
her holo on, revealing flashes of some strange guy’s naked back, arm, and hairy butt.

Naero could
even hear the guy snoring.


So…can you join us, Saemar? You aren’t too…busy, are you there?”


What, him? We were at it all night in one of the flight simulators. He comes over ta my place for a couple more runs–and then he passes out on me.”


Who…is that? Bad, bad idea. Scrap that. I don’t wanna know.”

Naero heard a groan and the guy
mutter. “Wha? It’s…not even five yet.”


Just some tek from maintenance; a new one. Had ta break him in, ya know. Hey, you–”


Don’t wake him up!”


Hey, chum, what’s your name again? Wadda ya mean, why? Because my friend wants to know. Oh, you’d really like her, she’s just like me, a real looker.”


Uh, join us in P.R. 35…if you can. Saemar.”


Of course ya gotta get up. Hurry up and roll over already. I gotta go. Okay, sweetie. See ya there. Just gimme a few. Ten, twelve, maybe fifteen tops. Won’t be too long. Like a lotta teks, this guy’s pretty quick. Ya know what I mean?”


Uh…sure. Saemar.”


And let me wake Chae up. You know how she gets just a little testy when it’s early like this.” Saemar signed off.

Noted. Fighter jocks. If Naero
hadn’t trained with them so closely, she’d have never understood their type. Saemar was worse than Jan, even. Different guys all the time. Any time. But it hadn’t always been that way with her. Chaela, on the other hand, had a steady guy from accounting.

Naero flipped up Zhen and of course got the bonus
of Tyber right there with her. The eternal odd couple, giggling and cooing together, their heads bobbing in their mist shower.


Hey, Naero,” Tyber called out.


Good morning, spacechild,” Zhen added formally. “Don’t worry. We’ll be there. Happy birthday, by the way. You sure you still wanna try out that alien psy helmet? As your physician, I still think that’s exponentially ill-advised.”

Naero laughed.
“Who asked you? You’re still just a medtek, you quack. What do you know?”


Hey, you’re the one who gave me an illegal neural-medical stimulation device to check out for you. That thing could fry your brain like a Spum meatball.”

Naero grinned, glancing at the empty ration paks littering her floor.
“I like Spum. Just be there to monitor me.”

A
ll hands accounted for. All of her best friends coming to her rescue on her birthday to help her trigger her psy talent, once and for all.

She
ignored the general disorder of her quarters and ducked in for a quick mist shower herself, a relaxing, refreshing start to any day. The firm cleansing mist massaging her toned body. She didn’t even bother using mist wash.

Nano particles wicked the excess moisture away, leaving her small, slender
, well-muscled form instantly and comfortably dry.

Naero peeled open a package and snapped out a crisp new set of black flight togs. The best thing next to one
’s skin besides nothing at all. She slipped into the luxury of the nanomaterial, attached her gear, her hidden blades, and a few other weapons. Next she put on her wristcomp and programmed or ‘pweaked’ up her three blue, glowing rank bands on her forearms.

No way she
’d forget them.

Especially the r
ank she’d worked so hard to earn in the Maeris Clan Fleets.

The Nytex
smart-material adapted and held all her gear tight and trim, as well as regulated her temp, controlled body odor, and monitored her vitals, ready to obey the presets she programmed into them. She could form boots, gloves, pockets, pouches, or even pweak up a quick bubble face shield and a sealed EV-suit in a pinch.

She could change the color
or pattern if she desired, or add flair, the way some of the Spacer kids did. But she’d always liked basic Spacer black.

Unfortunately short and small like her
champion mom, if she couldn’t be tall and stacked with bulging muscles like her champion dad, at least she could still look great.

She pulled her long
black hair into an efficient ponytail with a golden clip that had once been her mom’s, and then pweaked her wallscreens back together, more or less.

Naero g
lanced at her pitiful life savings account for her first ship.

The ship she and her
mates all dreamed about, with her as their captain, and them her crew.

Sigh. 6,713,448.21
C.

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