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Indian Hill 7: Defeat's Victory
Indian Hill 7: Defeat's Victory
Indian Hill 7: Defeat's Victory
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Indian Hill 7: Defeat's Victory

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In this explosive conclusion to the Indian Hill series we find Mike, Tracy, Drababan, BT and the entire crew of the now destroyed USS Guardian hurtling through space, head on into their destiny. But will it be the one they seek or the destruction of all they know and have ever known.

LanguageEnglish
PublisherMark Tufo
Release dateJan 9, 2018
ISBN9781370523382
Indian Hill 7: Defeat's Victory
Author

Mark Tufo

Mark Tufo was born in Boston Massachusetts. He attended UMASS Amherst where he obtained a BA and later joined the US Marine Corp. He was stationed in Parris Island SC, Twenty Nine Palms CA and Kaneohe Bay Hawaii. After his tour he went into the Human Resources field with a worldwide financial institution and has gone back to college at CTU to complete his masters. He lives in Colorado with his wife, three kids and two English bulldogs. Visit him at marktufo.com for news on his next two installments of the Indian Hill trilogy and his latest book Zombie Fallout

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    I like Mark Tufo’s books. Especially Zombie Fallout and Lycan Fallout. But these are a good 3rd. Action and fastpaced.

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Indian Hill 7 - Mark Tufo

Prologue

How is this shit even happening? Want to know how it started? Yeah, me too, only no one knows. Too much shit happening way too fast; we start to fix one thing and another dozen things break to pieces. No way to keep up. I can tell you how it started for me, if that makes it any easier. Let’s go over the basics before we skip off the rails and jump the shark trying to trip the lights fandango. What I’m about to tell you is going to sound like I simultaneously had a near death experience while I was tripping on a cocktail of acid, shrooms, and mescaline and I’d suffered a slight concussion from the beer bong that someone dropped onto my head from the second-floor window at a raging fraternity party. Either that, or I’ve fabricated this all in my head, as I’m strapped into a straight jacket, rubber mouth guard in place as I await my turn for a few joules to my screwed up noggin. But that is beside the point. My name is Michael Talbot, just a normal kid, doing mostly normal stuff. I admit, back in my youth I, umm, yeah, experimented with drugs. (Experimented my ass. I was taking those things in all variety of colors and doses like they were free candy. Which in some cases they were.) Different story, again, beside the point.

Did I tell you my name was Mike yet? Yup. Fuck, sorry, just a lot to tell you to get you up to speed. I made it deep into my teen years without too much craziness going on, or at least that could be pinned on me. But, maybe risking our sanity is a great place to start the story of the mountain of shit madness we’re in, so sure, let’s go back to that time of innocence and rock and roll. I had a great group of core friends that enjoyed partying as hard as I did, but we didn’t just sit around stoned like some underachieving couch potatoes. We were warriors, explorers, a rogue tribe…or that’s how I remember us. Some of our exploits involved the discovering and mapping out of a place called Indian Hill. Deep in a range of old, rolling hillsides, we found a series of tunnels and caverns, nearly invisible exits and paths that twisted so tight they were like knots only we could untie. It was our sacred keep. We didn’t know how true that would turn out to be.

I made it into college without too much craziness. I went off to school in Colorado to get far away from my complicated relationship with my mother. I was roommates with one of my best friends, Paul Ginson. Paul threw a wrench at me, though, nearly killed me. He introduced me to a person who, well, at the time, I thought was the perfect woman, Beth. There’s a fucking case of first impressions being wrong. Jesus, she was beautiful. I’m talking stunning, like angels got together to create her behind God’s back. Unfortunately, the one that was supposed to be working on her mind took the day off or just liked ‘em batshit crazy. I’m not saying she wasn’t smart, because she was. There were times she made us all look like idiots. It was the compassion and empathy, the heart she had…black as ink. She could conjure sympathy with great difficulty, but dismissing it was a piece of cake.

For whatever reason I can’t fathom, she decided I was worthy of plaything status and added me into her rotation. I think I was number six on her depth chart. One night we went to this concert at Red Rocks to see a group called Widespread Panic. Was having a blast, even doing my version of the horrible white man dance: beer in one hand, legs barely moving, head bobbing, fingers snapping, kind of thing. I looked to our rear, I can’t say why, looking at Beth’s ass would have been the smart play. Things were turning surreal. I looked up; I went from a feeling of strange dread to living a nightmare. When I awoke I was on an alien ship the size of Montana. Why couldn’t I have just got probed? Reality gelled around me like waking up from a coma: the male concert-goers were combatants in gladiatorial type games; the stage was a constantly changing fighting ring, spotlit and bloodstained. The women I’d seen at the concert swaying their hips and swinging their long hair were contained to one side, spoils for the victors. The ultimate prize was to become Earth Champion with Beth, the Queen of the Games, being awarded to the man who killed all comers.

I’d played sports–loved them, as a matter of fact. I was athletic, but far from a brute. I started off the games with a dismally low rating. Yeah, dickhead Progerians, Earth’s new number one race, were very much into betting. Odds were assigned, drakkar, or sometimes precious metal, gemstones or other valuable property was tossed around and the fix was on. The only reason I’m still alive is that the first guy I fought was even worse than I was; he either died from fright or had a stroke. Whatever it was, I had passed the point of no return the moment I brought my sword crashing down and into his upper chest, going all the way through until it stuck deeply in his spine. His weakened state allowed me this less than thrilling kill, then luck, fate, destiny, kismet, skill (yeah right) all played huge roles in my next fights. I kept winning, somehow. Lady Luck was doing her best to buck me out of her saddle, but I’d wrapped my hands so tightly in her hair the only way she was getting rid of me was to scalp herself. This is where the fix clicked in. Like I said, I wasn’t a fighter, or at least not a killer, it wasn’t in my nature. But the Progerians dissected that nature, found a splinter of predator, fostered it, cared for it, and spit it harshly into the center of that damned ring anyway. And my new nature rose to the occasion.

These were fights to the death. With each and every fight, I was getting as good as I was giving, which meant I was knocking on death’s door more than once. The Prog doctors would shoot me up with their near-magical go-go juice, I would hang out in hyperbolic chambers until it had run its course, then I would be good to go for the next round. The further in we went, the more barbaric the fights got. Whether it was the juice the Progs were giving us or good old-fashioned human nature coming to the fore, tough to tell. I’d somehow positioned myself to win the entire fuck-fest and the only person in my way was a monster. Durgan was ‘roided up at the concert; after his first jolt of Prog juice, even the aliens were amazed at the transformation. He was a big guy by anyone’s standards, but now he was enormous, six-five, closing in on three hundred pounds of pure muscle, mean as hell, and fast–like supernaturally fast.

Sure, I had beefed up a bit and my fighting skills were beginning to hone, I’d beaten plenty of strong opponents to get to where I was, but Durgan was on a whole other level. I was playing Junior Varsity football while he was an NFL starter. We both knew the game. After that, different leagues. By now, whatever comforts I asked for were granted and I had an alien apartment full of women; one would think I was living the dream. Not so much. I had feelings for one of them, a young woman named Debbie, especially once I figured I was going to die. It was nice to lie in the comfort of another, but the closer I got to getting to Beth, the more I pulled back from Debbie, making my home life progressively unpleasant. If I died, I’d be out of it, but that meant that my spoils, these women, went to Durgan. They all knew that, and it just couldn’t happen. He’d gone down a bunch of paths and none of them were good: sociopath, psychopath, crazy as fuck path. I hatched a plan…shit, I can’t even believe I have the stones to call it that. I saw an opportunity and I took it; to say I had a plan would be a gross insult to all plans and planners everywhere.

How the pieces all fit together I don’t think I’ll ever know, and that pretty much sums up whatever so-called successes I’ve ever had. I don’t take credit, I don’t thank any specific deity or force, shit drops and piles up in front of me and provides a soft landing. In this case, maybe the Progs just figured the hairless monkey wasn’t smart enough to even make an attempt, so they gave me those extra few inches of rope. In short, Durgan got his leg blown off, I rescued the damsels in distress, and I took the Supreme Commander as a hostage. We boarded a transport ship and were aided along our way by an exploding shuttle that was specifically meant to deliver a nuclear gift basket. We lost some good people that day. Some, like Stephanie, still haunt my dreams.

Anyway, we got back to Earth. I found out my old roommate and best friend, Paul, had started up a militia. Knowing that the Feds were covering something up on a major level, he decided to take matters into his own hands. Surprisingly enough, there were some in our government who agreed, to a point. At least they could see that we were not doing enough, fast enough, to prepare for what definitely seemed like an inevitable hostile invasion.

I gained a military commission I figured was honorary and I lost Beth. Really, we’d all started to lose Beth about that time. She was displaying the first signs that all might not be right inside that pretty skull of hers. I went up to Maine and reunited with my family, then to Indian Hill, which had become a major construction zone, one of the largest underground bunkers on Earth, in fact. Met Dennis, who sent me back out to Paul in Colorado. He had set up shop in the mountains and was training his army. The reception was frostier than I’d been expecting; didn’t know why at the time, but basically, I ended up in France…long story, so you might have to track down an earlier journal for all the details. The Progs, being the industrious, murderous fucks that they were, rebuilt their ship and decided a little payback was in order, and by payback, I mean they were leveling cities. Threatened to take France off the map if the French citizens didn’t hand my ass over.

I turned myself in before either the French did or the Progs came through on their threat. So, of course, I ended up back in the coliseum, fighting Durgan, who, even with one leg missing, was nearly too much for me. I won, but it’s tough to raise your hands and shout Huzzah! when you have to be scraped off the ground and carted away. The Prog docs had to work overtime to keep me in the game. No good letting me die before I got to fight their champion, a Genogerian brute by the name of Drababan, or as I now call him, Dee. I got to know him before our match. Dee ended up being the most spiritual, intelligent being I had ever met. It was too bad our acquaintance was going to end with him twisting my head off. The Progs, in their infinite wisdom and vanity, wanted to display their superiority over us in the flashiest way possible, a world-wide broadcast of the bout of the ages. We were to fight in a crater they’d added to France, a chance to see the Great and Mighty Earth Champion, Michael Talbot, get crushed under the giant foot of their Geno champ. Sure, it was a brilliant piece of propaganda, but Paul had a better idea.

Waiting for the bout to begin, he sent a team to save my ass, which they did, admirably. Dee, seeing a way out, escaped with me. Oh who the hell am I kidding. He picked me up like old luggage and made a run for it. And that was where I met Sergeant Yonts, a fiery redhead who made my heart melt at the sight of her. We got on a sub and steamed back to the new world. The Progs were sufficiently pissed off by now and had leveled my beloved city of Boston. We made it back to Indian Hill, which was in Walpole, twenty miles out of the city, and began our plans to retake what was ours. The Progs started putting troops on the ground once they felt they had beat us into capitulation from the sky. That’s the thing about humans though, we certainly do like a good fight. We’re scrappers at heart, and we’ve got few qualms about doing it dirty. We raided and harangued them at every turn.

Unbeknownst to me, Beth and Debbie were making their way across the states. Debbie was killed, causing Beth to lose another little piece of her mind. When she finally got to the Hill and realized I didn’t want anything to do with her, I think that was close to the last straw, the one that finally cracked the synapse. She started shacking up with Paul, who had always harbored feelings for her. I figured since everybody was getting laid, all was working out for the good of everyone. Another hasty notion. Sometimes you dodge the bullet and sometimes you stand there ignorantly waiting for it to crash into your sternum, this was one of those latter times.

I fell even more in love with Tracy, Sergeant Yonts, that is, if such a thing was possible, and my friendship with Dee strengthened even as Paul’s and mine started to fray around the edges. We learned from Dee that not all was as kosher between the Progs and what they’d called the lesser Genos, as we’d been told. It seems Dee’s race, had basically been forced into slavery by the shoot first and contemplate the universe later Progs. With Dee’s help, we found allies in their ranks and managed to get back aboard the Julipion. Third time was apparently the charm; we took that fucker over in a storming firefight and held it fast. As in any great conquest, there will be those that make the ultimate sacrifice, we laid more good souls to rest than I could ever count. But we had that ship, and that meant we had a chance. For the first time in close to two years, Earth could breathe a sigh of relief. We had time before they could get back here.

It was short-lived. Sure, three years sounds like a long time, but we could never relax. Once shit is totally scattered by the fan, you can never really form it back into one nice, neat turd. There was so much to do. Rebuilding some semblance of a government, repairing and retrofitting the renamed USS Guardian and reverse engineering some of their technology so we could manufacture new fighters that were up to speed for a war we knew was coming. Plus raising a child…(yes, Tracy and I had wed and had a bouncing baby boy named Travis. If I thought Dee and I were tight, it was nothing to the bond those two forged. Dee and Travis were inseparable, so much so that I asked the Geno to be his godfather).

The people of Earth had mostly pulled together as a unified front, more so than they’d ever before, but all was not perfect. As part of the peace plans, I had lobbied hard to have the Genogerians set up on terra firma; I knew what that race could be without the influence of their Prog masters, and I genuinely, or naively, believed humans would see this and welcome their kind. Of course, this was met by strong resistance. Paul basically wanted to blow them up and be done with all aliens on Earth, and there was also a lot of rightly earned hatred and distrust from humans who treated them badly. Couldn’t really blame them, but the Genos would only take so much, and civil disruption grew until we were on the brink of another war. I was sent in to quell the riots before Paul could pull the plug on the entire deal. Didn’t work out too well for me; got in a fight and won, but true to form, it almost killed me.

While I was trying hard not to meet my maker, who, no doubt was pissed at another missed appointment, Paul, with some urging from his blushing bride, Beth, ordered Tracy to stop the Geno army that was organized and once again scouring across the land. If Paul and I ever had a chance at repairing what we once had, it was gone when I found out. I entrusted my infant son to Dee and my father and set off to find my wife, who needed rescuing as much as a sailor needs help tying his shoes. Should be self-explanatory. Either way, it’s what I do. I went to Los Angeles and almost got killed again, which seems to be another thing I do. Ended up meeting BT, the leader of a para-military gang that had had enough of the Genos. After I won him over with my charming personality, we started the fight for LA in earnest. They had fortifications and advanced weaponry, and he was hesitant to share its origin. I didn’t push. The Genos fought like demons, as did we. For a while, we had them in a crushing vice, me and BT and our bad ass rail gun and weird bombs on one side, and Tracy and some heavy artillery on the other.

Eventually, though, the numbers won out and we were forced into retreat. We lost the battle, but I won my personal war; I got my Tracy back. We regrouped and were about to warn the factory that was the Geno’s final goal, when we found out the whole thing was a trap. Paul wanted the Genos concentrated there; and had another big nuke just waiting for them. We went to warn the settlements in the general area, instead. The funny thing about people on the edge is that you have no idea how they’ll react. We were in trouble. BT had broken his leg and we were pinned down well within the blast zone. If somehow I live to be a hundred and twenty I will never see anything more disturbing than what came out of the alien craft that arrived to save us.

Progs and Genos are terrifying in their own reptilian way, but holy fuck, a Giant Centaur Spider? Yeah, there’s not enough illegal moonshine in Tennessee to wash that away. I debated staying and just getting the extreme radiation-induced tan. The Stryvers communicate telepathically on many levels; for some reason my drug addled brain was able to pick up on their threads of communication, which, granted, I had no right to eavesdrop on. Oh yeah, they were duplicitous fucks. With one hand, they were offering aid and assistance against the big bad Progs, and with the other they were planning to suck the blood right out of us. And I mean literally. They wanted the Progs out of the way so they could move in. Like all ancient grievances, we got conflicting stories of who started what, but what we knew for sure was they had been enemies for a good long time and had crushed a great many foes between them while they chased each other across the universe. We did not want to be added to that inauspicious list. The horrifying spider creatures we would take care of later; we were going to ride out the help as it suited us.

A Prog armada had returned to Earth, hell-bent on destroying or knuckling under anything left there. Paul, now the commander of the Guardian, scampered off in the only real military strength the earth had. Rightly, I might add, or he would have been destroyed, but still-kind of difficult to instill confidence in your populace when you run away. Our buddies the Stryvers were able to track him down, and my team got back on the ship. The Stryvers offered to help repair damages to the ship, and I was able to capture a Stryver that had been sent on a mission to kill me, proving my theory that they were lying bastards despite their protestations to the contrary. Besides the now infamous spider penis debacle, (again, see previous journal) we were able to glean incredible information regarding the Stryvers.

I convinced Paul to let Tracy, BT, and myself take a shuttle back to Earth so we could reunite with our son. During an ambush, we’d set up, we figured we might not be noticed, we uncoupled from the Guardian as they shot at the Progs, and then immediately buckled. It sort of worked, except for the fighters that pursued us and ultimately shot us down. We landed somewhere outside of Area 51, which, despite our dire situation, we recognized truly as a conspiracy theorists’ wet dream. We stocked up on supplies and helped out with a mission before departing to get back to Maine. Dee, in the meantime, stuck faithfully alongside my father, Tony, and Travis and they were making their way to Indian Hill after Searsport was attacked. Seemed that the Progs had done their homework and were not going to leave any stone unturned. And guess who was the number one enemy of the State? I suppose they really wanted to make an example of me. Fuck ‘em, they can get in line like everyone else.

I don’t know if it’s me and I have the world’s biggest trouble magnet shoved up my ass but if you stick around me long enough, you can be guaranteed you’ll be in the thick of it soon enough. We found ourselves smack dab in the middle of some Genos and some mutes (enhanced Genogerians, war mutations, really) having their own battle. Made a quick and dirty alliance with the Genos for one measly skirmish that turned out to be a full-scale war. And if that wasn’t screwed up enough, the Stryvers decided to join the party. So, the mutes that we had just been fighting were now our best buds. Well, not really; more like they were the enemies of our enemies. We won the day, but as a human, I was still on the losing end. We were shuttled up to the Vicieus, commanded by Asuras. I truly thought we had found someone high in the chain of Progerian command that would actually make a deal stick so that we could fight the Stryvers together, something I deemed absolutely paramount but which put me diametrically opposed to Paul’s stance. Shocker, right? Paul had already sided with the Styrvers against the Progs and who could blame him? The species I wanted to align with had killed billions of humans, yeah, that’s with a B. The Stryvers thus far had given us a chance to combat our enemy with advanced weaponry and help, plus, they had fought on the ground against the progs’ designated hitters, the mutes.

My stance was shaky at best, but, see, I could hear them. I knew, I absolutely knew, that the Stryvers just wanted the Progs out of the way so that they could take over the whole circus. Sort of like France helping the burgeoning United States back in the 1700s; it wasn’t so much about aiding the US as it was about sticking it to England. Somewhere in the midst of all this crap, Beth had absolutely lost what shreds of her mind she still had control of. She’d befriended Uut, the Stryver I’d captured. She’d communicated with the Stryvers, and was now their person on the inside. Besides repeatedly trying to have me killed, she threatened to give them the whereabouts of the Hill, which would have meant its untimely demise.

As if it wasn’t bad enough with the enemies we had, we got to add in some disgruntled humans that Beth had manipulated. A part of me can’t even really fault the plan. Arguably the two top leaders of the planet couldn’t even get their shit together, why should she? With her little band of armed malcontents and the threat she’d promised, we watched helplessly as Beth flew off. We’d evacuated the Hill, but Paul should have pulled that trigger and blown Beth out of the air. I had high hopes that was the last we’d see of her, that maybe the Stryvers would make a nice Beth pate…lord knows her brain was creamy enough.

BT and Drababan had developed a frenemy vibe and even met in the stadium to duke it out, only that started a whole chain of events which was the beginning of our being flushed, spiraling out of control, down a huge cosmic toilet. For some ungodly reason, I was at the helm of Earth’s most powerful (well, only) ship. I employed some less than textbook maneuvers as we were besieged upon by a bevy of Stryver war ships. I gained a tactical victory, but the Guardian was basically a floating tomb by the time I was done playing with it. And oh yeah, ended up my buddy Asuras had been playing us as much as the Stryvers were. There was never a deal in place; he was placating us as we did his dirty work.

Mankind was on a rapidly shrinking island and a tsunami, along with a category 5 hurricane, were both barreling down on us. And this time there would be no help coming, no last-minute cavalry charge, no evacuation. I put a bullet in Asuras’ head for my trouble; if there’d been any chance at salvaging the relationship it left the barrel of my pistol at eight hundred and thirty feet per second. And since he was like, only ten feet away…well, you get it. I made a mess in his quarters. We had all of our personnel from the Guardian aboard his ship, and luckily, a large percentage of his people were off repairing the Guardian, since they were planning on taking it back and wanted it running. Paul gave them a megaton surprise. We were formulating a coup when the Stryvers liked the odds, and, led (somewhat) by Beth as their front man, they nailed us. The ship was sufficiently damaged by the ferocity of the attack that it initiated its own self-defense mechanism and was on auto-buckle hell bent for its home world. As if that wasn’t bad enough, we, as of yet, had not found a way to disengage this fail-safe system, and the journey there was somewhere around two and a half years long.

There were still mutes and Genos on the ground and Stryvers in the air, as far as we knew. Even if this bucket made it in one piece to the Progerian home world and we could immediately turn it around and head for Earth, we were still five years out. There was no telling what, if anything, would be left of our home world, not to mention our son, who would have effectively been orphaned for more of his life than he’d had parents. That, that above all, had the most crippling effect on me. Tracy would deal with it better than me because…well, fuck it. She’s just stronger than me, no reason to dance around it. But it was still going to take a high toll on her. A big part of me wanted to pilot this ship straight into the Progerian planet and create our own extinction event; nothing would give me greater satisfaction than to watch everything they knew and loved burn, but then I had to pull back and realize I’d be dead, so odds were, I wouldn’t actually get that much out of it. There were a good many hurdles to overcome before we got there, anyway. First and foremost was taking this ship over from the Progs once and for all, and second was dealing with the Stryvers that were following at pace. Probably not all that hard to tail us; we were like an old Chevy station wagon with burned out o-rings, meaning we were blowing blue smoke all across the galaxies.

Chapter 1

MIKE JOURNAL ENTRY 1

I was losing my shit. No, no, no! seemed about the only thing I was capable of saying. I was trying to wrap my head around the facts that had been presented to me and was doing my best to wriggle around some of the hard edges and inject some hope. Couldn’t though. The square peg that was our situation fit perfectly with zero tolerance into the reality hole we had dug. Every half-assed ill-informed idea I had was met with a thorough and resounding no before it could even be fully-assed.

Then I’m going to fuck up some Progs. This needs to be taken out on someone.

Even that got thwarted as Dee’s cooler head prevailed. I do not think that wise, Michael. We may still need them. We are not sufficiently trained in how to maintain or fly this ship and if we fight and kill the Progs onboard, we will invariably lose even more of our personnel. Much may happen during our journey; we can ill-afford to waste any potential resource.

Fly? Maintain? We don’t have to do squat, Dee. We’re passengers. All we have to do is eat and crap for the next two and a half fucking years! I kicked the wall, it gave zero shits and it hurt my toe. Maybe make sure our tray is in the upright position when we land and all that, I said to cover the limping.

There are immediate issues we need to address, Mike, Paul said. I’m listening, guys. On one hand, we can’t kill the Progs because we might need them, but we can’t just sit on the sidelines while we barrel through space.

A pin dropping would have been welcome. The rock and the hard place had fused and it just wasn’t fair. Where was my fucking hole card? I personally wanted to rail and shout, I felt like a good tantrum could actually relieve some stress.

Can’t we just kill some of them? I mumbled. What about an accidental airlock malfunction?

BT had pulled me aside. We’ll make it through this, man. But you’ve got to keep it together. I can see you getting ready to shake right out of that skin of yours. Scary as it is, you’re our best chance. I know it and so do all of those people over there, including the general and your wife. I don’t have a fucking clue how you’re going to do it, just that you are gonna do it.

I can’t be the answer this time, BT. I had tears brimming in my eyes. The thought of being away from my son for that long with neither of us knowing what was happening to the other, it had me on the edge. I’ve had stuff happen in my life, lots of it, actually, where I just lost my grip and things, important things, big fucking parts of my life just fell away and there were feelings of dread that I’d never get it back or ever get my head back to a decent place. This time though, this was a whole different ballgame. Breathing, just that most basic of functions, was eluding me. Panic. Yeah, that was the state of mind that was dominating all others. Like this ship had shrunk down to the size of a crypt and I’d somehow been mistaken for dead and buried alive. That type of panic.

Tracy had been around me long enough; had been witness to the nightmares that haunted me at night, and could spot the look of the damned when it plagued my days.

I’m here, she said, putting a hand on my face. I leaned into that caress. We’re going to get through this. We’re strong; we’re stronger than this.

You are, I said, and that I meant.

I know. And I’m going to pull you through to the other side, kicking and screaming- like.

BT smiled at that, which caused me to smile, despite it all. Okay, you can go, I said to BT as I stepped forward to hug my wife.

Typical. I do all the heavy lifting and someone else gets credit for the move.

I was just pulling back from our embrace when the ship comm came to life.

This is Sub-Commander Eenos. I wish to speak with the leader of the Earth Forces… I watched as Paul’s ears perked up and he began to walk over to a comm unit on the wall. He stopped and turned to me with a soured

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