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    The High Ground


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      Contents

      Cover

      Also by Melinda Snodgrass

      Title Page

      Copyright

      Cast of Characters

      Prologue

      1. Two Fathers

      2. Refusals

      3. Meeting by Chance

      4. Confrontations

      5. Gifts and Guilt

      6. Unpleasant Truths

      7. So it is to be War

      8. A Lack of Manners

      9. A Fragile Construct

      10. Cabals

      11. Pretty, Petty Things

      12. Games

      13. This is Love?

      14. Is Everyone Crazy?

      15. It’s All a Bit Intoxicating

      16. It Ultimately Comes Down to Numbers

      17. Affairs of Honor

      18. Go Along to Get Along

      19. Efficient Ways to Kill

      20. The Strongest Part of the Blade

      21. Wings & Prayers

      22. Cojones

      23. Politics, Politics, Politics

      24. Knowing Who Your Friends Are

      25. You Have my Permission

      26. Lockdown

      27. Somewhere in the Darkness

      28. Bigger Problems

      29. Something to Bury

      30. Not Without Cost

      31. The Best You Can Hope For

      32. The Game of Kings

      Acknowledgements

      About the Author

      Coming Soon from Titan Books

      Also Available from Titan Books

      Also by Melinda Snodgrass and coming soon from Titan Books

      IN EVIL TIMES (JULY 2017)

      The High Ground

      Print edition ISBN: 9781783295821

      E-book edition ISBN: 9781783295838

      Published by Titan Books

      A division of Titan Publishing Group Ltd

      144 Southwark Street, London

      SE1 0UP

      First edition: July 2016

      10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

      Names, places and incidents are either products of the author’s imagination or used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead (except for satirical purposes), is entirely coincidental.

      © 2016 Melinda Snodgrass. All Rights Reserved.

      No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means without the prior written permission of the publisher, nor be otherwise circulated in any form of binding or cover other than that in which it is published and without a similar condition being imposed on the subsequent purchaser.

      A CIP catalogue record for this title is available from the British Library.

      This one is for George R.R. who loved this universe so much that he wouldn’t let me give up on crafting the right story. And when we couldn’t make it happen as a shared world project where we could play together he generously gave me the despicable—oh, excuse me, George—the charming, handsome and debonair Boho to abuse… er… use. Thanks, dear friend.

      CAST OF CHARACTERS

      THE IMPERIAL FAMILY

      His Imperial Highness Fernán Marcus Severino Beltrán de Arango, Emperor of the Solar League

      Her Imperial Highness Mercedes Adalina Saturnina Inez de Arango, the Infanta

      Her Imperial Highness Estella de Arango

      Her Imperial Highness Julieta de Arango

      Her Imperial Highness Izzara de Arango

      Her Imperial Highness Tanis de Arango

      Her Imperial Highness Beatrisa de Arango

      Her Imperial Highness Delia de Arango

      Her Imperial Highness Dulcinea de Arango

      Her Imperial Highness Constanza de Arango, Emperor’s consort

      THE HIGH GROUND

      OFFICERS

      Vice Admiral Conde Sergei Arrington Vasquez y Markov

      Captain Lord Manfred Zeng

      Captain Baron Tarek El-Ghazzawy

      Commander Lord Trent Crispin

      Commander Jeffery Baldinini

      Commander Father Tanuwidjaja

      Commander Phillip McWhinnie

      Commander Michael Westfield

      Recruit Commander Nathaniel Deal

      Recruit Commander Yas Begay

      STUDENTS

      Marqués Clark Bennington Kunst

      Marqués Ernesto Chapman-Owiti

      Vizconde Beauregard (Boho) Honorius Sinclair Cullen

      Vizconde Mihalis del Campo

      Vizconde Yves Riccardo Petek

      Baron Jasper Talion

      Lord Arturo Espadero del Campo

      Lord Sanjay Favreau

      Ensign Prefect Caballero Marcus Gelb

      Caballero Davin Pulkkinen

      Caballero Hugo Devris

      Lady Cipriana Delacroix, daughter of the Duque de Nico-Hathaway

      Lady Danica Everett, daughter of the Conde de Wahle

      Lady Sumiko Tsukuda, daughter of Caballero Arashi Tsukuda

      Thracius (Tracy) Ransom Belmanor

      Mark Wilson

      Donnel (Cara’ot batBEM)

      Mela (Isanjo batBEM)

      Tako (Hajin batBEM)

      THE FORTUNE FIVE HUNDRED (FFH)

      Rohan Danilo Marcus Aubrey, Conde de Vargas

      Analise Aubrey, Condessa de Vargas

      Duque Musa del Campo

      Duque de Argento y Pepco

      Marqués C. de Vaca

      Lord Estevan de Vaca

      Caballero Sasha Olsen

      Caballero Malcomb Devris

      Lady Pearl Devris

      Lady Opal Devris

      Lady Ruby Devris

      Lady Topaz Devris

      Lady Citrine Devris

      Caballero Stefan Devris

      Caballero Rafe Devris

      Caballero Brandon Devris

      Father Jose del Campo

      THE COMMONERS

      Alexander Belmanor

      Bajit (Hajin)

      Flanon (Hajin)

      PROLOGUE

      SECRETS AND SCHEMES

      They listened to the screams of pain and terror and watched the humans die courtesy of the monitoring devices that had been slipped into the hull of the spaceship by the Isanjo builders as it was being constructed. Ma’utea gave a slow beat of Cara broad, fleshy wings and took a slow turn through the thick mist on the bridge, then returned to Cara post.

      It was difficult to watch sentient creatures die but the task of the Cara’ot scout ship was just that—to witness and report. Never to intervene. Not that they could have; the enemy that was currently destroying the human ship was beyond the Cara’ot’s ability to defeat.

      Perhaps if the humans had not fired upon the spires they would have survived, but when the crystalline creatures had begun to nudge at the small vessel there had been the predictable human reaction. The guns had fired, torpedoes had shattered spires and death had been the response. Ma’utea sighed and returned Cara attention to the main screen.

      It was split into several sections. The center showed an exterior image of the ship under assault. Others revealed the humans inside that fragile metal shell, their bodies being rendered by the touch of the crystalline scales that had broken off from the main alien body, and were slicing through their ship.

      Weapons fire lit the corridors of the Solar League’s warship, and alien scales were shattered. But not enough and not quickly enough to save the human males fighting inside. Hours passed and the Cara’ot watched as the human frigate, the Ave Rapaz, was reduced and rebuilt into a tiny glittering latticework of crystal. The scales became ropes and towed what had once been a ship to the main snowflake-like body of the alien hive. Another ship was gone.

      “Did they get off a message buoy?” Ma’utea asked Cara comm officer.

      “Yes.”

      “Track and destro
    y.”

      “Is it not time for them to know what they face?” asked Cara first officer. The long proboscis waggled as Cara spoke.

      “No, they fear the unknown that might lurk beneath the bed far more than the reality,” Ma’utea replied.

      “And fear breeds anger,” piped up Silea from Cara comm station.

      “And their anger is their greatest asset,” Ma’utea added softly. Cara spun slowly in the dense atmosphere, and briefly wondered when that anger would be turned against the Cara’ot. Soon was Cara guess given the truculence of the species.

      Ma’utea touched the control panel with Cara prehensile feet, and their ship lifted away from the head of the comet behind which they had been sheltering on the edges of this star’s system. The engines sprang to life, and their ship overtook the human distress buoy. A quick blast from the port weapons and it was reduced to debris.

      Ma’utea switched screens to show the rapidly receding system. Of the seven planets in this system, four had already been transformed. The strange crystal lattices that had replaced the planets glittered in the light of the system’s sun, and like tumbling silicon snowflakes the alien colonies were already spinning toward the next planet. There the strange Star Ants would kiss, enfold and reform every bit of matter that formed the world and rebuild it into an inexplicable shape of unknown purpose.

      Alien vanguards had noticed the flare of power from the Cara’ot ship and were speeding after them. If they did not wish to join the dying planets they needed to be gone. The Cara’ot ship slid into the heliosphere, and entered folded space just as the crystal vanguard arrived.

      * * *

      The naked human lay on the surgical table. Hair curled on his chest but thinned as it scaled the thrusting belly. It was as if the climb had exhausted the pale red strands. The harsh light of the operating room was not kind to the supine, pasty figure. Shadows pooled at the edges of the room and figures moved in the darkness with the soft ting of metal on metal as they prepared.

      The man’s twin stood next to the table dressed in a high-collared coat and the tight pants that were all the rage, but not kind to a man of his age and girth.

      He tugged at the collar that only accentuated his double chin. “Well, I’m off to home and the wife.”

      “They’re not all that fond of one another,” a female voice spoke from the pools of darkness at the edge of the room.

      “Oh, I’ll soon have the condessa billing and cooing,” the man said as he walked out of the room.

      1

      TWO FATHERS

      His Most Noble and Puissant Emperor of the Solar League stood on a large footstool while his tailor knelt at his feet, pinning the hem of his dress pants.

      “A little more break over the instep, Your Imperial Highness?” the tailor asked. The Emperor turned slightly to survey his image in the gilt-edged mirror.

      “That looks good.”

      The tailor marked the edge with a bit of chalk and moved to the other leg. “How are your children, Majestad?” the stoop-shouldered man mumbled around a mouthful of pins.

      The Emperor noted and appreciated the tactful phrasing of the question. Children rather than daughters. He glanced down at the grey head bent over its task and decided to say what he was thinking.

      “What a shame I can’t tap you for the diplomatic corps. You are far more judicious and thoughtful than many of my so-called diplomats.”

      “You’re too kind, Your Imperial Highness.”

      The Emperor turned back to the mirror and studied the tired face of the man reflected there. Emperor, Highness, Majestad—so many words to connote his power, and all of them nothing but meaningless sound. He sighed. For the ruler of the humans’ far-flung galactic empire had managed to sire only daughters, nine of them from five different wives in his fruitless attempts to obtain a male heir. Two years ago a clandestine medical test had made it clear that approaching a sixth young woman of impeccable birth and breeding would not alter the situation.

      He had broken laws to obtain that information and hidden his transgression by the discreet removal of the creature who had run that test, but the reality remained. If he did not change the laws governing succession, his cousin or his cousin’s children would succeed him, and that he would not accept. He was determined that his eldest, Mercedes, would take the throne upon his death.

      Sadly it was proving to be a daunting task. Not because of political resistance. It had taken over a year, but he had rammed the amendment through parliament, changing the right of succession to include daughters. No, the problem was Mercedes. When presented with his legislative triumph the girl had refused to take the first, necessary step to ascend to the throne—entering the League’s military academy The High Ground. She had done so in a show of the famous Arango temper, and had spent the last two days locked in her suite.

      Emperor, Highness, Majestad, but at the end just a baffled father.

      The Emperor pulled his thoughts away from his damaged sperm and his recalcitrant child. “And your… son, isn’t it? How is he?”

      “He’s fine, Majestad. Kind of you to ask.” A sigh seemed to arise from the depths of the tailor’s soul.

      The vast levels of rank fell away and the Emperor realized that this father was also having problems with his offspring. Two perplexed fathers separated by rank, wealth and power but sharing an eternal human problem.

      * * *

      “Trouble?”

      The tailor stared up into the jowled face. Fatigue gouged lines around the Emperor’s mouth, and hung pouches beneath the brown eyes. The tailor knew he shouldn’t speak, propriety dictated he not. The Emperor seemed to sense his dilemma, and he gently encouraged: “Go on, it’s all right.”

      He couldn’t hold it back. Discretion was thrown aside and the tailor blurted out, “He’s won a full scholarship to The High Ground, but he refuses to go.”

      The Emperor stared, then burst out laughing. The tailor stiffened, hating himself for speaking. He had opened himself up to mockery. He forced down the flash of pride and resentment, and managed to assume a tone of humble gratitude as he said, “You are right to laugh at my foolish child, Majestad.”

      “No, no, you misunderstand. I am facing the exact same dilemma with my eldest.”

      The tailor’s eyes flicked up to briefly meet the Emperor’s, and he rose stiffly to his feet, feeling and hearing his knees crack.

      “My Tracy has an opportunity to move up. Men have won titles in combat. I don’t want him to have my life,” he murmured, gazing down at his gnarled hands.

      “And I moved heaven and earth to give her mine. I guarantee her the throne and she says I’ve ruined her life. What the devil is wrong with these kids?” the Emperor demanded. The tailor merely shrugged. “Why is your son refusing? The scholarships have always been a way to reward the deserving poor.”

      And that attitude, thought the tailor, is exactly why he is refusing. He stared up into the face of his sovereign and sought the diplomatic answer. Once again they stared at one another, but this time from distant vantage points. The tailor was saved from answering by a knock on the great double doors.

      “Come,” the Emperor called.

      An aide dressed in the uniform of the Orden de la Estrella hurried in. He bowed and said, “Highness, we have lost another ship.”

      2

      REFUSALS

      Thracius Ransom Belmanor, known (despite his best efforts) as Tracy, stared at Principal Naranjo, seated behind his scarred and tap-pad laden desk, and tried to process what he was hearing.

      “…So sorry, but it comes directly from the school board and I can’t…” The older man spread his hands in a gesture of futility and helplessness.

      The blood rising into Tracy’s face made him feel like he had a fever, and rage quivered deep in his gut, an angry animal waiting to tear free and destroy the man across the desk. He yanked his focus away from Naranjo’s face, studied the ugly faded paint on the walls of the office, the diploma and the few commendations, the picture of the princip
    al taking part in a pep rally in the gym.

      “I had written my speech,” Tracy mumbled, then realized that sounded pathetic so he added with appropriate heat, “And Hugo is a meathead. How many grades had to be changed for him to suddenly be the top student? Which teachers were willing to do that?”

      Naranjo folded his hands in front of him, the knuckles flaring white, and remained silent, but his jaw worked as if he were holding back unwise and unwary words. “Doesn’t matter. Caballero Hugo Devris will be the valedictorian.”

      Tracy clutched at the strap of his tap-pad case that was slung over his shoulder. “Caballero? Hugo? When did that happen?”

      Naranjo simply said, “His father was just knighted. Hereditary title, not a life grant.”

      Tracy understood now. The newly minted noble at this working-class high school clearly had to receive the top honor. It would be an insult to the FFH—the Fortune Five Hundred—if the son of a tailor took that title over an aristo, however recently his blood had been turned blue. The College of Peers had probably stepped in and applied pressure to the school board who had pressured the principal who had leaned on the teachers, and now Hugo—oh excuse me, Caballero Hugo—was the best student in this year’s senior class.

      It was clearly magic. Just as magical as the touch of a sword that had turned Hugo’s crass, big-bellied and sweating father, the so-called Flitter King, into Caballero Malcomb Devris, Knight of the Solar League and worthy to join the Fortune Five Hundred. Word in the Alibi, the only really independent news outlet in Hissilek, was that Devris had been selling flitter cars to the FFH at well below market value.

      “I’m applying to universities. I needed this for my scholarships,” Tracy said.

      “But you have a scholarship,” Naranjo said pointedly.

      “I’d be the only intitulado at The High Ground. It’s nothing but aristos up there. And I hated RCFC. I never want to be a soldier.”

      “There’s a big difference between the Reserva Combata Formación Cuerpo and The High Ground. That’s Orden de la Estrella, not the fusileros. You’d be on a ship, not humping a gun dirt side or getting wet in the navy. And you’d graduate an officer. There have been commoners who have won high honors in battle.”

     


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