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  Praise for Taken Liberty:

  "Steve Wilson delivers some dazzling writing here, juggling vivid and quietly observant, violent and sweet all at the same time... as if he's channeling Harlan Ellison, and Ellison ain't even dead!" — Best-selling author Howard Weinstein

  “The author of the Arbiter Chronicles, an award-winning audio drama, vividly brings to life a cast of compelling characters while telling a story that measures the cost of freedom. The far-future military setting should appeal to fans of David Weber’s “Honor Harrington” series as well as the military sf of David Drake.” — Library Journal

  Taken Liberty

  Copyright 2005 Steven H. Wilson

  Published by Firebringer Press

  This book is available in print at most online retailers.

  The Arbiter Chronicles is a Trademark of Steven H. Wilson

  Cover photo by Renée D. Wilson

  DISCOVER THE ARBITER CHRONICLES AND OTHER AUDIO DRAMAS WRITTEN BY STEVEN H. WILSON AT:

  http://www.prometheusradiotheatre.com/

  For the Contact Crowd, the Farpoint Committee and the Usual Suspects

  And for Renée, Ethan and Christian, always.

  Acknowledgments

  I couldn't have gotten this book finished without the support and encouragement of an incredible group of people. Scott Farquhar, Renfield, June Swords, my wife Renée and my mother-in-law, the late Beverly Volker, suffered through the early drafts.

  Eli Senter, Howie Weinstein and Cindy Woods were my readers for the final (almost, anyway) version, and gave me the confidence to believe someone might actually enjoy reading the thing. Howie, additionally, provided maddeningly good suggestions on how to fix what he thought was wrong.

  Dr. Yoji Kondo ("You are writing, aren't you, Steve?") answered endless pesky questions on interstellar travel. His daughter, the brilliant evolutionary biologist Beatrice Kondo, told me where my ideas on genetic engineering were all wet. (scientists with brilliant scientist daughters. You'd think they were characters in a Heinlein novel. You'd be right. They were, at times.)

  Sandy Zier-Teitler performed the arduous editing and proofreading tasks. Paige Senter endured damp and dust and bright lights in her eyes to pose for the cover.

  And the cast of Prometheus Radio Theatre brought the characters to life for me, on stage and in the studio. What more rewarding experience can a writer have?

  From Sentience Daily

  ("Bringing you the news that really matters")

  Wondering what's hot this week in Quintopolis? Just ask any of the young men bathing on the beaches of the Confederacy's tropical paradise planet. You'll recognize the ones we mean – their skin is just that shade of bronze, their hair blond almost to whiteness, their eyes dyed to that particular shade of ice blue, their naked bodies painted to resemble the miliary regalia of a Confederate Navy captain. Not just any Confederate Navy captain, mind you. We're talking about the Captain's Captain, Jan Atal.

  And if you don't know who he is, gentlebeing, get out from under that rock! (Unless your health or chosen lifestyle depends on that beautiful rock, and no offense meant by your humble editors.)

  That's right, Atal's back, fresh from the wars – almost. That is why the rage among the young and beautiful is to be as beautiful and harshly masculine as Atal himself. The scion and heir apparent to the Atal Industrial fortune, the leader who led our boys and girls to victory over the Qraitians in more battles than little Brand Greer has styles of nipple rings, the bad boy and plague of the Admiralty, is back. He's been away on patrol of the Qraitian Border, guarding us against threats and incursions we don't even want to know about!

  Eyebrows were raised when he was sent away on that little mission, as we're sure you know. Say what you want about our need to have the best resources out there where the Qraitian Empire lurks, those in the know know that everyone would be more comfortable with the keystone of our military right here among us. So why did he go away? You may remember, a few years back, this journal chronicling how our intrepid Captain, just back from the Qraitian War that nearly ended it all for little humanity, was placed in charge of reclaiming our worlds that those nastiest of nasties had taken from us in battle. We told you further how, learning that some Confederate military governors were skimming profits off the top for themselves on those beleaguered worlds, Atal dragged their scurvy hindsides out into daylight and saw them busted for their trouble.

  Well, guess what? Some of those embezzling crooks had friends and relatives in high places. We won't name

  names, but one had an uncle in the Admiralty itself. Any coincidence, then, that they made Atal a lowly teacher at the Naval Academy on Hestia?

  We don't think so either. Nor was it a coincidence when, not long after, the man who should have made Admiral before he was fifty was shipped off to the Border when he stood in defense of one of his cadets at a court martial. He won the case, but he was shipped off to the armpit of space in the tiny ship Arbiter. Boo! say we to the Admiralty!

  But our hero is back to protect us. Okay, sure, he won his battles twenty years ago. But a hero's a hero. And one fine piece of hero he is! Touted as a masterpiece of genetic engineering, it's rumored two genius designers spent six years apiece just mapping out his penis! (And we're still working on getting you exclusive holos of that work of art. Sorry, lads and ladies, those "authentic" replicas you've been buying in the curio shoppes just ain't even close.)

  And best of all? Public pressure has finally caused the Admiralty to get something right! Atal will be taking command of that grand old lady herself, the CNV Titan, flagship of our fleet and pride of the stars. And do you admirers of real bravery think our boy will stay out of trouble this time? Time will tell, but we think the answer's a big, fat, "no."

  Chapter One

  The Trouble with Aer'La

  "She's not human!"

  Dr. Romney Flynn's nostrils flared, and his face reddened. That was unusual. The genetically engineered citizens of the Inner Worlds usually had more control over physical manifestations of emotion.

  Unusual or not, Flynn's new Captain, Jan Atal, did not bother to mention it. He was intent on studying a readout on the efficiency of his ship's engines.

  "Eh?" asked Atal. "How's that?"

  "The one called Aer'La."

  "What about her?"

  "She's not – Captain, are you listening?"

  Atal turned to study the man. Flynn was out of shape, soft in all the wrong places. Lack of fitness was also unusual in the Inner Worlds. He'd probably been handsome once, due to good genetic design. Now, his general air of irritable superiority nullified anything naturally pleasant about his looks.

  "I warned you, Doctor, that I was very busy," said Atal. "Titan launches in less than a day, and I would not call her spaceworthy... even if the Navy would."

  "It is my job," Flynn said testily as Atal punched up a more detailed readout on engine performance, "to ensure that the crew is spaceworthy."

  "Surely you'd done the bulk of that work before I arrived. There's been very little crew turnover, with the exception of –"

  " – With the exception of yourself, Captain," Flynn finished for him, "and the officers you transferred with you from border patrol. I was hard-pressed to examine them all in time."

  "Their medical records were transferred," said Atal, crawling under a console as he spoke. He cursed to himself as he discovered dust. The automatic cleaning systems must have been disengaged.

  "Captain!" Flynn prompted, as Atal went silent for too long.

  "Still here, Doctor. I was about to say that my personal physician has kept very close tabs on the health of all the officers who came with me from the Arbiter. I'm sure you could consult with Dr. Faulkner –"

&n
bsp; "Your personal physician," Flynn interrupted, "is little more than a faith healer! I can hardly place any stock in the medical opinion of someone who would rather appeal to the goddess to realign the body's energy than perform surgery!"

  Atal came out from under the console and could not help but grin.

  "My personal physician is standing right behind you. Hello, Celia!"

  Celia Faulkner grinned acerbically. She was over one hundred years old, but she didn't look it. At least half her short-cropped hair was still its original fiery red, her face bore only the lines it needed to display character, and she stood straight. She didn't stand tall, for she wasn't; but she stood straight.

  "Good morning, Captain," she said.

  "You're too late," said Flynn. "I've already come to tell him."

  "And I'm waiting patiently – with more patience than you've shown me – to hear what you have to tell me," said Atal.

  "He thinks Bos'n Aer'La isn't human," said Celia.

  "She's not," insisted Flynn. "I've just completed my examination of her." He snapped his fingers. A holo appeared. Flynn gave it a shove in Atal's direction. It chased its way down to where the Captain still sat on his haunches and stopped inches from his nose. Unable to actually see it as it bobbled noiselessly before him, Atal shushed it to a viewable distance with one finger. As the interface programmer intended, the three-dimensional image obediently shifted two feet away from the finger which had broken its containment envelope.

  Atal grimaced at the cluster of glowing numerals before him.

  "Those," Flynn continued, "are the results of standard bloodwork. On Aer'La's blood. Note the count of 3x27-tagged proteins."

  Biology was not the Captain's forte. He asked, "Something wrong with her diet?"

  "They're antibodies, captain. The result of exposure to the Varthan Flu virus. It's an exceedingly common illness in Varthan Freespace. Humans do not develop Varthan flu, but they do develop Bergstrom's Syndrome as a result of exposure."

  "So?"

  "So, Aer'La doesn't have Bergstrom's syndrome. Has never had it. And her story about picking up the virus as a child, living on New Bedford –"

  "Well, she is from New Bedford," said Celia.

  Flynn hmphed at her. "New Bedford is a convenient birthplace. Most of the records were destroyed when the colony was lost to famine. After the food riots and the mass executions, anyone attempting to cover her tracks might claim to be a Bedford refugee."

  "Why are you so convinced she's trying to 'cover her tracks,' Physician?" Atal asked.

  "Because, Captain Atal, while there were numerous ills suffered by New Bedford during its final days, its quarantine against Varthan Flu remained intact. There was not one, single case." He sniffed again. "I did my doctoral thesis on disease on failing worlds – New Bedford, being recent, was one I researched in depth. I therefore examined Aer'La's bloodwork personally. There's no question in my mind – the little bitch is a Varthan Feral."

  Celia Faulkner's eyes narrowed, and she opened her mouth to speak. Atal gestured for her to hold her peace.

  "It's not appropriate to speak of a fellow officer that way, Doctor."

  He snorted in disbelief. "A fellow — !"

  Atal cut him off. "Aer'La is field-commissioned, but an officer nonetheless." He added. "Until proven otherwise."

  "Well, I believe I've proven –"

  "And, even if she is proven to be of Varthan descent, I will tolerate no demeaning racial slurs being applied to any person on this ship, while I'm its Captain. Is that clear?"

  Flynn nodded quickly. "Of course, sir."

  "Good. Now, as to Bos'n Aer'La... What do you propose I do, if your claims are borne out?"

  "Take her into custody, of course!"

  "I don't believe you've convinced me of her crime."

  "She posed as a human!"

  Atal raised an eyebrow. "Is that a crime?"

  Flynn considered it. "It is proof of extreme dishonesty."

  "Dishonesty – motivated by an impulse to survive – is no crime."

  "Oh, don't be dramatic, Captain!"

  "Romney, have you been to Varthan Freespace?" Celia Faulkner demanded. "Do you know the conditions the ferals have to live in? The children are raised to be nothing but sexual servitors. They're kept drugged nearly all the time –"

  "Because most female Varthan ferals can tear a human male in half with their bare hands!" Flynn shot back.

  "Superior strength is no excuse for slavery," Celia maintained. "And do you know what Varthan slavers do to escapees? The Captain is hardly being dramatic when he says that an escaped feral's very survival would depend on going undiscovered."

  "Then you admit she is a feral?" Flynn countered. "I would be surprised if that fact escaped even your medical abilities."

  "That's enough, Dr. Flynn," Atal said loudly, cutting off Celia's reply. "And I'm not prepared to discuss the matter until we've investigated further."

  "That is your prerogative," said Flynn, "But there's no doubt as to what she is. Surely, Captain, you know enough about ferals to know we can't have one running loose on the ship. With the pheromones they secrete and their... training... Just think of the effect on the men aboard! A Varthan female, unrestrained among human males, will entice as many as necessary to satisfy herself. At the height of their sexual fever, the females have been known to rape and kill!"

  Atal held out a hand for quiet. "All right, Doctor Flynn. I'm familiar with the nature of Varthan ferals." He sighed. "And granted, a female Varthan can be dangerous. But if — and I do stress if — Bos'n Aer'La is a Varthan, why did I have no incidents on Arbiter? She served with me for a year, and with Captain Miles for some time before that."

  "I — I wouldn't know, sir." Flynn said disingenuously.

  Atal raised an eyebrow and fired off a mildly dangerous sneer. "You were about to say something else?"

  "I believe you are aware, sir, that a feral attached to a human master can be controlled. The psychological bond formed, ferals being pack animals —"

  "Aer'La is not an animal, Doctor," said Celia, her voice so sharp and tight it might have sheered steel.

  "Nonetheless, Doctor, you understand my point. Like canines, ferals bond with a leadership figure, will not challenge him, will remain monogamous with that leader, if that leader is using them sexually." He looked pointedly at Atal.

  "Are you suggesting that I was keeping my Boatswain... as a slave?"

  "It would explain —" Flynn began.

  Atal stood, looming over Flynn. The Captain had never considered it fair to use his considerable height as a weapon, but sometimes it was damned effective. "You'd better worry about explaining your insubordination to a court martial board if you try to take that story any farther, mister!"

  The Doctor flushed, and, for a change, looked a trifle intimidated. "I — no offense meant, sir. I'm merely considering all possibilities."

  "Then consider that your judgment may be in error."

  Atal turned and mounted a gangway, moving to leave the engine room. He did not look to see if Flynn would follow, but assumed he would. Atal reached the bounce tube before Flynn caught up with him, Celia close on his heels. Celia never was one to miss a good fight.

  "Captain," Flynn called after him, his breath coming unevenly as he hurried, "I am well aware that you would prefer –"

  Atal seized the handholds at the entrance to the bounce tube, lifted his feet into it, and dropped. He plummeted down through several levels of Titan's huge superstructure, gliding gently along, as force fields caught him automatically and supported his mass. He emerged, quickly, on one of many gangways leading to the ship's stores. Flynn and Celia emerged soon after.

  "I said, sir, that I am well aware you would prefer another officer as your ship's physician." Flynn gave Celia a withering glare and added, "Any other officer."

  "I never said that," said Atal. "I am an officer in the Navy like any other – my assignment as Captain of the flagship notwithstanding.
I work with the people I'm assigned."

  "That's a little hard to swallow," said Flynn, "coming from a man who managed to have so many of his proteges brought aboard as midshipmen. No one who can secure prime slots for two Terrans is an innocent pawn of the Admiralty."

  "You have a problem with Terrans, Flynn?" asked Atal.

  "Many Inworlders have a problem with Terrans. Many think you included them in the crew to make a point."

  "I included Metcalfe and Carson in the crew," said Atal tightly, "because they are outstanding examples of naval officers. If that offends those who believe that only the genetically engineered are capable of excellence, I do not have time to be concerned."

  "You need to be concerned, sir, that you have developed a reputation for giving preference to non-Inworlders in your everyday decision-making. That is a sign of prejudice, don't you think?"

  They'd reached the food storage area, and Atal stopped at its entrance, turning on Flynn. "If you have a complaint to make about my treatment of you, Doctor –"

  "I do, sir!" interrupted Flynn. "Beginning with your failure to address my concern that a dangerous alien may be loose aboard this ship!"

  "And how would you have me address it?" asked Atal. "I've already told you that being an alien isn't a crime. The girl has a spotless record. You tell me she's a Varthan. What if she is?"

  Flynn's mouth hung open. "What if she – ?"

  A young man in a coverall matching Atal's rounded a corner, heading for the door they were currently blocking. Atal flagged him down.

  "Sir?" the young man asked.

  "Are you one of the quartermaster staff?"

  "Yes sir. My name's Kendall, sir."

  "Good to have you aboard, Mister Kendall." Atal jabbed a thumb at the door. "I came to check out this hold. It's rations for the casual crew, is it not?"

  "That's correct, Captain."

  Atal nodded. "And the manifests that came across my desk this morning said it contains grade-K nutrient packs."