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    Boundless


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      Ace Books by Jack Campbell

      The Genesis Fleet

      VANGUARD

      ASCENDANT

      TRIUMPHANT

      The Lost Fleet

      THE LOST FLEET: DAUNTLESS

      THE LOST FLEET: FEARLESS

      THE LOST FLEET: COURAGEOUS

      THE LOST FLEET: VALIANT

      THE LOST FLEET: RELENTLESS

      THE LOST FLEET: VICTORIOUS

      THE LOST FLEET: BEYOND THE FRONTIER: DREADNAUGHT

      THE LOST FLEET: BEYOND THE FRONTIER: INVINCIBLE

      THE LOST FLEET: BEYOND THE FRONTIER: GUARDIAN

      THE LOST FLEET: BEYOND THE FRONTIER: STEADFASt

      THE LOST FLEET: BEYOND THE FRONTIER: LEVIATHAN

      THE LOST FLEET: OUTLANDS: BOUNDLESS

      The Lost Stars

      THE LOST STARS: TARNISHED KNIGHT

      THE LOST STARS: PERILOUS SHIELD

      THE LOST STARS: IMPERFECT SWORD

      THE LOST STARS: SHATTERED SPEAR

      Written as John G. Hemry

      Stark’s War

      STARK’S WAR

      STARK’S COMMAND

      STARK’S CRUSADE

      Paul Sinclair

      A JUST DETERMINATION

      BURDEN OF PROOF

      RULE OF EVIDENCE

      AGAINST ALL ENEMIES

      ACE

      Published by Berkley

      An imprint of Penguin Random House LLC

      penguinrandomhouse.com

      Copyright © 2021 by John G. Hemry

      Penguin Random House supports copyright. Copyright fuels creativity, encourages diverse voices, promotes free speech, and creates a vibrant culture. Thank you for buying an authorized edition of this book and for complying with copyright laws by not reproducing, scanning, or distributing any part of it in any form without permission. You are supporting writers and allowing Penguin Random House to continue to publish books for every reader.

      ACE is a registered trademark and the A colophon is a trademark of Penguin Random House LLC.

      Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

      Names: Campbell, Jack (Naval officer), author.

      Title: Boundless / Jack Campbell.

      Description: New York: Ace, [2021] | Series: The lost fleet: Outlands; 12

      Identifiers: LCCN 2020040643 (print) | LCCN 2020040644 (ebook) | ISBN 9780593198964 (hardcover) | ISBN 9780593198988 (ebook)

      Subjects: GSAFD: Science fiction.

      Classification: LCC PS3553.A4637 B68 2021 (print) | LCC PS3553.A4637 (ebook) | DDC 813/.54—dc23

      LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2020040643

      LC ebook record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2020040644

      Cover art © Ryan Gitter

      Cover design by Judith Lagerman

      Adapted for ebook by Kelly Brennan

      This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, business establishments, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.

      pid_prh_5.7.0_c0_r0

      To Palin Spruance, a different generation of quiet warrior. A gentleman whose presence made the world brighter and who is deeply missed.

      For S., as always.

      CONTENTS

      Cover

      Ace Books by Jack Campbell

      Title Page

      Copyright

      Dedication

      The First Fleet of the Alliance

      Chapter One

      Chapter Two

      Chapter Three

      Chapter Four

      Chapter Five

      Chapter Six

      Chapter Seven

      Chapter Eight

      Chapter Nine

      Chapter Ten

      Chapter Eleven

      Chapter Twelve

      Chapter Thirteen

      Chapter Fourteen

      Chapter Fifteen

      Chapter Sixteen

      Chapter Seventeen

      Chapter Eighteen

      Chapter Nineteen

      Acknowledgments

      About the Author

      THE FIRST FLEET OF THE ALLIANCE

      ADMIRAL JOHN GEARY, COMMANDING

      FIRST BATTLESHIP DIVISION

      Gallant

      Indomitable

      Glorious

      Magnificent

      SECOND BATTLESHIP DIVISION

      Dreadnaught

      Fearless

      Dependable

      Conqueror

      THIRD BATTLESHIP DIVISION

      Warspite

      Vengeance

      Resolution

      Guardian

      FOURTH BATTLESHIP DIVISION

      Colossus

      Encroach

      Redoubtable

      Spartan

      FIFTH BATTLESHIP DIVISION

      Relentless

      Reprisal

      Superb

      Splendid

      FIRST BATTLE CRUISER DIVISION

      Inspire

      Formidable

      Dragon

      Steadfast

      SECOND BATTLE CRUISER DIVISION

      Dauntless

      Daring

      Victorious

      Intemperate

      THIRD BATTLE CRUISER DIVISION

      Illustrious

      Incredible

      Valiant

      FIFTH ASSAULT TRANSPORT DIVISION

      Tsunami

      Typhoon

      Mistral

      Haboob

      FIRST AUXILIARIES DIVISION

      Titan

      Tanuki

      Kupua

      Domovoi

      SECOND AUXILIARIES DIVISION

      Witch

      Jinn

      Alchemist

      Cyclops

      TWENTY-SIX HEAVY CRUISERS IN FIVE DIVISIONS

      First Heavy Cruiser Division

      Third Heavy Cruiser Division

      Fourth Heavy Cruiser Division

      Fifth Heavy Cruiser Division

      Eighth Heavy Cruiser Division

      FIFTY-ONE LIGHT CRUISERS IN TEN SQUADRONS

      First Light Cruiser Squadron

      Second Light Cruiser Squadron

      Third Light Cruiser Squadron

      Fifth Light Cruiser Squadron

      Sixth Light Cruiser Squadron

      Eighth Light Cruiser Squadron

      Ninth Light Cruiser Squadron

      Tenth Light Cruiser Squadron

      Eleventh Light Cruiser Squadron

      Fourteenth Light Cruiser Squadron

      ONE HUNDRED FORTY-ONE DESTROYERS IN EIGHTEEN SQUADRONS

      First Destroyer Squadron

      Second Destroyer Squadron

      Third Destroyer Squadron

      Fourth Destroyer Squadron

      Sixth Destroyer Squadron

      Seventh Destroyer Squadron

      Ninth Destroyer Squadron

      Tenth Destroyer Squadron

      Twelfth Destroyer Squadron

      Fourteenth Destroyer Squadron

      Sixteenth Destroyer Squadron

      Seventeenth Destroyer Squadron

      Twentieth Destroyer Squadron

      Twenty-first Destroyer Squadron

      Twenty-third Destroyer Squadron

      Twenty-seventh Destroyer Squad
    ron

      Twenty-eighth Destroyer Squadron

      Thirty-second Destroyer Squadron

      FIRST FLEET MARINE FORCE

      Major General Carabali, commanding

      3,000 Marines on assault transports and divided into detachments on battle cruisers and battleships

      ONE

      THEY had left behind the star system known to humanity as Unity Alternate, left behind the wreckage of the battleships Amazon and Revenge, the debris that had once been the battle cruisers Leviathan and Implacable, the remnants of cruisers and destroyers and the massive orbiting facilities secretly constructed to prolong a century-long war if defeat had finally loomed. The fleet brought all of the dead they could recover with them, as well as many wounded in a fight that no one had expected to survive.

      Behind they also left the ruin of the entire badly misnamed Defender fleet, warships crewed and commanded only by “reliable” artificial intelligences that had come close enough to self-awareness to go insane and begin attacking the Alliance they were supposed to defend. Stopping them had cost a lot of lives. The Alliance had been saved again, this time from its own folly.

      Once, the sailors aboard these Alliance warships had been certain what lay ahead. They’d fought the Syndicate Worlds all their lives, thinking that war would never end. Today they knew only what lay behind them. The Syndics had finally been beaten, and then the Defender fleet foolishly created to deal with future threats to the Alliance had been faced and destroyed when it also became a danger. Now, though, the future seemed both limitless and unknowable.

      For Admiral John “Black Jack” Geary, on his flagship, the battle cruiser Dauntless, that meant that he couldn’t help wondering if this time he had saved the Alliance only to destroy it.

      They’d jumped from the twin stars of Unity Alternate to the star called Drezwin. From there, most of the surviving ships of the fleet had jumped for the base at the star named Varandal to resupply and repair damage. But Dauntless and the attack transport Mistral had jumped in another direction to reach a star system with a hypernet gate that could bring them to the star that held the capital of the Alliance. The capital long ago named Unity in hopes that it would inspire harmony among the many star systems and peoples who made up the Alliance.

      Soon, a moment dreaded by countless people (and hoped for by countless others), would finally happen. Geary, the Alliance’s greatest hero, back from the dead, would be arriving at the Alliance capital in his flagship. That action alone might trigger the collapse of a government stressed to near the breaking point by the recently ended century-long war with the Syndicate Worlds. Even if the government survived that, the evidence being brought to the capital aboard the attack transport Mistral might well shatter the Alliance.

      And yet, in the end, he had no choice. The same sense of duty that had led him to save the Alliance when it trembled on the brink of final defeat now forced him to take the actions that could destroy it anyway.

      “Five minutes until arrival at Unity Star System.” Lieutenant Castries’s announcement carried easily across the bridge of Dauntless.

      “You look like you’re going to another funeral,” Captain Tanya Desjani remarked. Her ship’s command seat sat next to Geary’s own fleet command seat on the bridge, so she could speak in a low voice.

      “We may well be doing just that,” Geary said.

      “You’re doing what has to be done.”

      “I know.” He scowled at the display before him, which showed an image of the outside that revealed nothing. The jump space accessed using the older jump drives that had opened the galaxy to human exploration and settlement (and war), appeared as an endless, formless gray. But when using the newer hypernet gates, ships traveling from gate to gate were literally nowhere, surrounded by nothing. The blank emptiness outside the ship made him think of the dark beyond life, which did nothing good for his mood. “I’m not bothered so much by what might happen to me,” Geary added, “as I am thinking about how many men and women have died to protect the Alliance. Am I betraying their sacrifices?”

      Tanya didn’t answer for a moment, then shook her head. “I knew Kostya Tulev for a long time. And I spent much more time around Victoria Rione than any sane person would want. I have no doubt at all that both would agree with what we’re doing.” She paused. “Though that woman would’ve surely expressed her agreement in the most disagreeable way possible.”

      He knew that last sentence was an attempt to distract him from his thoughts, which dwelled on the dead in body capsules on many of the ships that had gone to Varandal. Those sailors would be given the most honorable burial possible, consigned to space, their bodies launched on trajectories that in time would bring them to the star itself, to be consumed by the light. Some far-distant day, the star would explode, hurling outward atoms and elements forged partly from those bodies, to help form new stars and worlds and all that existed on those worlds. But the spirits that had once animated those bodies were already gone, hopefully having been received into the arms of their ancestors. “I’ll never get used to it,” Geary said. “We did our duty, but so many paid the price this time.”

      “A lot more would’ve paid the price if you hadn’t made the right decisions,” Desjani said.

      “And if Victoria Rione hadn’t sacrificed herself to save the rest of us.”

      “We were all willing to do the same,” Desjani pointed out. “I honor her sacrifice, because it saved the rest of us, but we all would’ve died to protect those depending on us. Don’t forget how many lives were saved, Admiral.”

      “I—” Geary broke off his reply as he heard the brief whistle that alerted him to an urgent incoming message. He called up the message screen before realizing that there shouldn’t be any incoming messages while the ship was still inside the hypernet. “Captain Desjani, why did I just get a message supposedly sent from an outside source?”

      Tanya frowned at him. Getting up, she leaned close enough to gaze at his message display. “That’s impossible.”

      “The time of receipt says it arrived on the ship one minute ago.”

      “That’s—” She paused before speaking again. “Did you take a look at the originator?”

      “No, not yet.” Wondering why Tanya was focusing on that, Geary found the line identifying who’d sent the message. He felt a chill run down his back. “Victoria Rione?”

      “It’s not her ghost,” Tanya said, angry. “That woman must’ve somehow planted the message in Dauntless’s comm system in a way that kept it invisible until now. That’s also supposed to be impossible.”

      “Should I read it?”

      “Not until we figure out why it’s here,” she said. “And if it really is from her. If it was hidden that well, it might be from anyone, and might contain anything.” Reaching past him, she tapped the quarantine command for the message. “Comms!”

      “Yes, Captain?” the communications watch stander responded.

      “The comm system says the ship just received an external message.”

      The lieutenant took a moment to process her words, bafflement appearing on his face. “Captain, we’re still in the hypernet. It’s impossible to receive external messages.”

      “I know that. You know that. The comm system apparently doesn’t know that. I’ve quarantined the message. I want to know where it’s been hiding in the system, who put it there, and whether it contains any malware or other hazard.”

      “Yes, Captain!”

      Two minutes until arrival at Unity.

      Geary looked over at Tanya as she settled back into her ship’s command seat. “I’ve noticed something about you and this ship.”

      “What’s that, Admiral?”

      “You never have to say ‘do this now’ or ‘get this done fast.’ Your crew can tell when something needs done quickly just by the way you give the order. They can tell what you want, so they get it done without confusion or delay.�
    ��

      She glanced from the display before her to look at him. “I’m the ship’s captain. That’s how it’s supposed to work. Why is that finally getting a smile from you?”

      “Because from anyone else that’d be a boast, but from you it’s just a statement of what you think is expected of you.”

      “Standing by for arrival at Unity,” Lieutenant Castries called.

      No one could miss the impact of leaving jump space, a jolt that would momentarily rattle the strongest mind. But in that way, too, the gates were different. Dauntless exited the hypernet gate on the edge of Unity’s star system without any physical effect humans could sense. What they could feel was the sense of relief as the nothingness beyond the ship was replaced by an infinity of stars.

      The virtual display screen before Geary came to life, space traffic and other information multiplying as fast as the sensors aboard Dauntless could spot the information, process what they saw, and display it in forms easily grasped. Less than a light second away, Mistral had also arrived and was broadcasting normal status. The nearest other ship was a ponderous Alliance battleship orbiting a light minute from the hypernet gate, apparently on guard. No alarms sounded or appeared on the display to indicate potentially dangerous situations.

      “Do we head for the primary world?” Desjani asked.

      Geary nodded. “Unless and until we receive orders otherwise.”

      “Lieutenant Yuon,” Desjani ordered. “Give us an intercept to the primary world. Use point two light speed.”

      “Yes, Captain.” Yuon’s hands flicked over his own display. “Ready, Captain.”

      The projected course appeared on Geary’s display as well. Intercepting something in a fixed orbit, such as a planet, was child’s play for the navigation systems. A long arc curved through the star system, heading in toward the star and the planet orbiting about ten light minutes from it. Given that Varandal was a bit larger and a bit hotter than Sol (the star that still warmed humanity’s ancestral home world, Earth) the surface of the primary world was mostly comfortable for humans. But it also meant that the intercept was about five light hours away from where Dauntless and Mistral were at the edge of the star system. Even at two-tenths the speed of light, or sixty thousand kilometers per second, which was the sort of velocity warships could achieve in a reasonable time, that distance would require more than twenty-five hours to cover. “I’m good with it,” he said. “Make sure Mistral has it, then execute.”

     


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