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  “Radio silence. Now!”

  It took a moment for One-Ear’s command to penetrate. She looked to him for instruction. He pointed to Utgard.

  Escandala looked where One-Ear pointed, could see nothing, so magnified the image until she saw a flash on the surface of Utgard. Then there was another; it was an attack on a mining settlement. Scanning for the source of the bombardment, she saw a pair of Muranyi monitor boats: unarmored weapons platforms with poor maneuverability. Perfect for nuking defenseless worlds into glassy slag.

  She noticed Horden insert the memory crystal into the console, ignoring the slaughter around him.

  Millions lived on the moons. Aliens, it was true — she couldn’t even remember the species — but they were her wards.

  “Horden!” One-Ear barked the name in the human tongue, prompting Escandala to turn to her mentor. “Do not make that communication to Earth.” He had a sidearm aimed at Horden.

  “I won’t stop,” said Horden. “You will have to kill me.”

  “Do not make me.” One-Ear ground his teeth in irritation. “We were told the Earth-loyalty meme sweeping through the humans on Detroit was to be tolerated, a harmless morale booster. The White Knights will be very disturbed if they even suspect one of their human slaves had contacted Earth. When they are disturbed they lash out. Their punishments are severe and indiscriminate. Do you wish to be responsible for the extermination of your entire species?”

  Horden stopped, looked at Escandala, and then turned back to his task at the communication console. “Better to die free than live a slave,” he said.

  One-Ear stiffened the grip on his weapon.

  Horden whirled around, his combat knife arcing toward One-Ear’s throat.

  One-Ear fired. A jet of plasma burrowed through Horden’s chest, out his back and into the vessel’s communicator, which sparked and went dim. Twin plumes of crimson steam erupted from the holes in Horden’s suit, freezing instantly.

  Escandala looked to One-Ear. Horden’s knife was buried deeply into the Jotun’s throat.

  Both were dead.

  She alone was responsible for the children now. There would be no last-minute rescue from the radioactive ash on Utgard’s surface.

  Her suit reported only seventy minutes of air remaining.

  ~*~

  Their remnant of the Pheidippides never did reach Utgard orbit. Instead, it began yielding to the pull from the mass of Akinschet. When the Muranyi monitor boats passed around the far side of Utgard, Escandala was surprised to find herself relaxing. Death for her was only an hour away. No matter how much she might fight it, her air would run out whatever she did. She decided to spend her final hour in appreciation of Akinschet’s murderous beauty.

  With her boots wedged in the Sleeve frame, she hitched a ride on the Pheidippides only tens of meters away from the crèche with no way of knowing for sure whether anyone lived inside… until a child’s voice spoke in her helmet.

  “We heard everything you said. You and Sergeant Horden.”

  Distortion scratched at the transmission but there was no mistaking the voice was her son’s. “How can you—?”

  “No time. Christophe is eldest and most augmented. Do you know, he can launch processing threads in his cognitive implant up to a limit of eight teraflops? Still took a while to rig a short-range transmitter. Listen, we can effect Sergeant Horden’s plan, though we must do it the hard way.”

  “Explain.”

  “We will deliver the design of our augmentations inside our desiccated corpses.”

  “But... Zenothon!”

  “No, it’s all right, Momma. Christophe has found a way to pump a semi-inert atmosphere by reversing components of the air scrubbers. That should arrest the decay of our cadavers, and the crèche will shield us from cosmic radiation.”

  Zenothon misunderstood her again. How could she explain? She didn’t want her emotionless cyborg of a son to succeed!

  “Christophe has been hacking into the navigation system for the last three subj-years,” said Zenothon. “Calculating a couple of slingshots around our star to aim at Sol is no sweat.”

  “What? In this?”

  “Yes.”

  She did not doubt them. Not their capability but she did doubt the rightness of forcing their change upon Earth. If the child corpses ever did get to Sol, no good, nothing human would come of it.

  “We need your help,” said Zenothon.

  Escandala ground her teeth. She did not wish to give her help.

  “I can’t,” she said. Then she added: “Good luck.” But it was no use: the children would know she was lying. She wished them well, but not luck. Zeno would die knowing his mother wanted his life to end in failure.

  Then she let go. A quick burst from her thrust pack and her velocity diverged enough from the Pheidippides to watch the twist of silvered metal drift away.

  “We need two of the engines shifted to the port side,” said Zeno. “They need to be aligned with the others. Doesn’t have to be precise but we need this soon.”

  The engines already on the port side burst into a violet-blue flare for ten seconds.

  “Please...”

  Another burst of fire. The Pheidippides was pulling away, shrinking against the churning disc of Akinschet.

  “Momma, we can’t do this alone.”

  Escandala told her suit AI to match velocity with the children. A long sigh escaped her lips, fogging her faceplate until the environmental systems cleared the obstruction away.

  She repeated the harsh words she’d spoken to her son on the gravitoid. “You are no longer human,” she whispered to the Universe. “But I am.”

  She gave freely of her fuel until the Pheidippides drew nearer. In her heart, she knew that her Zeno, however corrupted, deserved hope and purpose in his breast when he died.

  To realign the vector adjustors to Christophe’s requirements was a simple task; it took her only a few minutes.

  “Thank you,” said Zenothon. “We can go home.”

  The engines she had positioned began a series of short calibration bursts. Escandala released her grip on the Pheidippides, letting go of the children.

  “You imagine your home is Earth,” she told them. “Mine was always here, in vacuum lit by alien worlds, fighting someone else’s war.”

  Overriding the safety, she popped open her neck seals and removed her helmet, freeing herself to the void. Air exploded out of her open mouth; her tongue prickled as its moisture boiled.

  The cloud of steam erupting from her mouth obscured forever her view of Zenothon’s vessel as it began the long journey home.

  Good luck!

  * * *

  Welcome Home, Janissary is a Human Legion short story taken from the anthology Further Conflicts, available now in hardback, paperback, and Kindle from amazon.com and amazon.co.uk

  * * *

  On a hostile alien world a crack army unit mourns one of their own, little suspecting the horror that awaits them; death stalks the classrooms of Ridgeway school as the Harvesters come to reap at will; a warrior returns home from galactic war and must face his greatest challenge knowing that victory might cost him everything; a missionary doctor harbours an alien fugitive, hiding it from its own people despite the consequences of discovery; an interrogator must break the will of a man he knows can never be swayed; a war artist realises that the murky politics of conflict can be deceptive… All this and more awaits readers within the pages of Further Conflicts

  Thirteen tales of human striving, of ingenuity, brilliance, desperate action, conflict, and resolution. Thirteen tales of Science Fiction at its finest, featuring authors such as Dan Abnett (the UK's best selling SF author for 2009 and 2010), Lauren Beukes (winner of the Arthur C. Clarke Award 2011), Eric Brown, and Tony Ballantyne.

  All stories are original to this collection.

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