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Prodigal (Scattered Stars: Conviction Book 6), page 1

 

Prodigal (Scattered Stars: Conviction Book 6)
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Prodigal (Scattered Stars: Conviction Book 6)


  PRODIGAL

  SCATTERED STARS: CONVICTION BOOK 6

  GLYNN STEWART

  Prodigal © 2023 Glynn Stewart

  Illustration by Jeff Brown Graphics

  This is a work of fiction. All the characters and events portrayed in this book are fictional, and any resemblance to any persons living or dead is purely coincidental.

  Published by Faolan’s Pen Publishing Inc.

  Faolan's Pen Publishing logo is a registered trademark of Faolan's Pen Publishing Inc.

  CONTENTS

  Visit Me Online

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  Chapter 29

  Chapter 30

  Chapter 31

  Chapter 32

  Chapter 33

  Chapter 34

  Chapter 35

  Chapter 36

  Chapter 37

  Chapter 38

  Chapter 39

  Chapter 40

  Chapter 41

  Chapter 42

  Chapter 43

  Chapter 44

  Chapter 45

  Chapter 46

  Chapter 47

  Chapter 48

  Chapter 49

  Chapter 50

  Chapter 51

  Chapter 52

  Chapter 53

  Chapter 54

  Chapter 55

  Chapter 56

  Chapter 57

  Chapter 58

  Chapter 59

  Chapter 60

  Chapter 61

  Other Books by Glynn Stewart

  Preview: Evasion by Glynn Stewart

  Chapter 1

  Evasion by Glynn Stewart

  About the Author

  VISIT ME ONLINE

  For all the Glynn Stewart book news, announcements, and insider information, visit GlynnStewart.com

  1

  Despite Admiral Kira Demirci’s best efforts, her boyfriend was still terrible at basketball. The slightly built blonde mercenary dodged around Konrad Bueller on the court, putting her back to her partner to deflect his grab for the ball as she slipped into position and took her shot.

  The basket cheerfully dinged her success, and the scoreboard her headware implant was feeding her vision ticked up another.

  “Okay, I think I’m done,” her boyfriend said with a chuckle. Bueller was roughly twice his girlfriend and boss’s sixty-kilogram mass, heavyset and muscular with pale skin and copper hair against her slim build, Mediterranean skin and blonde hair.

  “You’re not going to try for a second point?” she asked brightly, retrieving the ball from the gymnasium floor and absentmindedly dribbling.

  “I think I would need to call it, uh…best of thirteen, I think? And then stop you scoring even once.” He shook his head at her, still smiling. “I’d love to tell myself that you have a program in your headware or some kind of implant to make you a super basketball player, but…”

  “I’ve been playing this game for over thirty years, Konrad,” Kira pointed out. “I’ve lost count of the ships and planets I’ve played it on.”

  Mostly spaceships, in truth. That she was currently in a planetside gym, with actual dirt underneath the polished wooden floor, was unusual for her. Kira Demirci, after all, ran the Memorial Force mercenary fleet.

  Now up to two carriers and three cruisers, plus escorts, her little fleet was actually worthy of the term. Unfortunately, the task before her required…more.

  The news had reached Samuels, their current employer and the location of the basketball court, four weeks earlier. Konrad’s homeworld, Brisingr, had invaded and conquered Kira’s homeworld, Apollo.

  Interstellar invasion was supposed to be impossible, but Kaiser Reinhardt had managed it.

  “Hey,” her boyfriend said, putting his hand on her shoulder. “Should take more than the word planet to send you down that rabbit hole, love.”

  Konrad had apparently followed her thoughts perfectly.

  “Hell of a job in front of us,” she murmured, still bouncing the basketball.

  “Yes. And you’re not supposed to be thinking about it right now,” he told her. “Come on. Let’s freshen up. We’re meeting the First Minister in an hour, after all.”

  First Minister Buxton was the leader of Samuels and Memorial Force’s employer for a few more months. Kira wasn’t going to break contract, after all. Not when Samuels’ Defense Command had saved her life from a Brisingr-led ambush only a few weeks earlier, anyway!

  The house the local government was providing Kira and her people had, until very recently, been the personal residence of the Brisingr Ambassador. The back and forth between Samuels and Brisingr had been entertaining. For Kira, at least.

  The government of Samuels—a system founded by Quakers and with pacifism enshrined in their blood, let alone their constitution—had done everything to avoid war with their neighbors in the Colossus System except surrender without a fight.

  The wrench in the gears had been the Brisingr Kaiserreich supplying the Colossus System with nova warships. That, Kira could probably lay at the feet of the Equilibrium Institute, a think tank turned militant conspiracy from the inner sectors of human space—but then a Brisingr Kaiserreich Navy carrier group had ambushed her ships and tried to kill her, specifically.

  Buxton and the rest of his government had taken the deployment of BKN warships and the fact that Samuels had been manipulated into putting Kira in position for that ambush personally.

  So, there was no longer a Brisingr Ambassador to Samuels, and residence and embassy alike had been seized by the Ministries, Samuels’ government.

  “The First Minister is on their way,” an armored mercenary soldier told Kira as she stepped out of the change room in a fresh uniform. “We’re coordinating with their security detail.”

  “Thank you, Corporal,” she told the woman.

  The First Minister’s security detail, like most of Samuels’ military personnel, were Gorkhali. Roughly ninety percent of Samuels’ population were either Quakers or similarly pacifistic branches of Buddhism. But, from what Kira could tell, when a large contingent of pacifist Buddhists had set out to colonize a planet with other pacifists, several clans of their northern neighbors—also known as Ghurkas—had decided to come along to keep them safe.

  “What’s the Minister’s ETA?” Kira asked.

  “Roughly two minutes before your scheduled meeting, ser,” the mercenary replied.

  “Just enough time for Milani to make sure they are who they say they are.” Kira chuckled. “Does Em Koch know?”

  Jess Koch was Kira’s steward: a chef, bodyguard and administrator originally trained to enter the service of the Queen of Redward, the mercenary fleet’s current home port. She ran Kira’s life with a level of efficiency Kira wouldn’t have thought possible.

  “Of course,” the mercenary confirmed.

  Kira gave them a nod of thanks and turned to watch as Bueller emerged behind her. The stress of the last couple of years had carved away any of the chubbiness to her partner’s body, leaving behind hard-edged muscle and far too many stress lines.

  Neither of them were young—they hadn’t been young when they’d first met, during the last war between Apollo and Brisingr, where he’d been a prisoner of war and she’d been one of his captors—but she had to admit that the heavyset man had a definite look to him.

  And she definitely wasn’t biased.

  “The First Minister will be here on time,” she told Bueller. “Are you ready for the briefing?”

  “I’m not sure why I’m briefing the First Minister on the status of their ships,” her chief engineer said. “But yes, I’m ready.” He chuckled. “I spent two hours yesterday on a videoconference with Buxton’s husband, getting updates.”

  “As I understand it, Buxton and Tapadia want an outside perspective on all of the mechanical parts,” Kira pointed out. Batsal Tapadia was the man in charge of the spaceborne construction yards run by Samuels-Tata Technologies, one of the largest industrial concerns in the Samuels System.

  He was also First Minister Buxton’s husband, resulting in the First Minister recusing themselves from a lot of decisions around the new nova-capable defense force Samuels was building.

  “Well, I can manage that,” Bueller said. “I feel like I spend more time organizing other people’s building programs than acting as engineer for our ships.”

  “Well, the only ships of ours currently in Samuels are in the same yards we’re briefing the First Minister on,” she said. “Huntress is due back shortly, but the cruisers are all getting their scratches buffed out.”

  “That’s…one description for the hole my old countryfolk put through Deception,” Bueller said. He shook his head. “‘Scratches.’”

  First Minister Buxton was one of the largest human beings Kira had ever met. Not the largest, but at over two meters tall, they towered over the petite mercenary Admiral. Even Bueller, who was far from a small man, looked short as he took his seat across from Buxton.

  “Admiral, Commander,” Buxton greeted the mercenaries. “I appreciate you making time for me.”

  “We are still under contract for several more months,” Kira reminded them. “While that doesn’t necessarily give you complete command of our time, you do have some small priority.”

  The First Minister chuckled, glancing aside quickly as Jess Koch emerged from a side door with a tray of drinks. The nervous twitch was new. As someone at least partially responsible for Buxton’s security, Kira approved of their increased attention to potential threats.

  She still had to feel a moment of regret, though. Buxton was more practical than some of the other Samuels natives who leaned hard into their pacifism, but they’d never seriously been threatened before.

  Koch, though, was a known entity—and that she was serving the drinks herself told Kira that the bodyguard-slash-steward already knew this was a confidential meeting.

  “I appreciate it nonetheless,” Buxton told them. “Huntress is due back soon, I understand?”

  “Yes.” Kira nodded. “She was making a swing back Rimward after her patrol to pick up some new recruits, but she’s due today or tomorrow.”

  “I’ll be glad to see her,” the First Minister admitted. “I know that we are secure here, but we did just flip off the most powerful state in our astrographic region.”

  Samuels had maintained the same array of asteroid fortresses and other defenses as any other Rim star system, generally considered impenetrable by a nova-capable force of remotely equivalent technology.

  They had not, prior to Colossus getting aggressive, maintained a nova-capable force of their own. That was changing now, but they were still understrength for the commitments they’d taken on.

  “We did just receive a new update from Brisingr,” Buxton continued. “With the full withdrawal of Ambassador Schirmer and her staff, our contact is much reduced.”

  “You did ban Brisingr ships from the Samuels-Colossus Corridor,” Bueller murmured.

  The Corridor was what made the two systems rich—and what made them politically and militarily important. In this region of the Rim, there was a roughly thirty-light-year cube of space where Samuels and Colossus were the only places a ship could stop to refuel and discharge static.

  And the farthest a nova-drive ship could go without discharging static was about thirty light-years. To pass through the Corridor and pass between the inner and outer regions of this section of the Rim, a ship had to discharge at either Samuels or Colossus.

  Or go around, and add at least two weeks to the trip.

  “We did, and so far as we know, no Brisingr civilian ships have challenged that,” Buxton agreed. “I now have formal notice from the Brisingr Diet that they do not recognize our authority to close the Corridor to their shipping, but that’s…pretty toothless.”

  “Right up until they use that as justification to force the Corridor with a battle group,” Kira said grimly. “I am much less certain of when the rest of my fleet is going to arrive than of Huntress’s return. And Brisingr has recently promoted themselves to a two-star-system power.”

  Those were rare. Very rare. In the entire Rim—the region from about a thousand light-years to about fifteen hundred light-years from Sol—Kira was aware of four.

  “Which is, of course, why I want to hear Commander Bueller’s assessment of our repairs and shipbuilding program,” Buxton agreed. He took a glass of water from the tray Koch had delivered, and gestured at Bueller.

  “Well?”

  The engineer chuckled.

  “There’s a few moving parts there, I’ll admit, but let’s take them in turn,” he rumbled. “First up, and most immediately critical, the destroyers.”

  The attempt by the Brisingr Kaiserreich Navy to ambush Kira’s mercenaries had ended in the surrender of half a dozen BKN ships to a mixed force of her mercenaries and the Samuels Defense Command.

  The joint force had found themselves in possession of two cruisers of ninety-five thousand cubic meters apiece and four destroyers of forty-five thousand cubic meters. There could have been all sorts of arguments over who got what, but Kira had agreed with Buxton that an even split of the cubage was fair—she got the cruisers, and the SDC got the destroyers.

  “Two of the D-Twelves had taken relatively light damage and have completed their repairs,” Bueller told Buxton. “As I’m sure Mr. Tapadia told you, they are undergoing trials and training right now.”

  The gendered honorific still felt…rough around the edges to Kira. Outside of Samuels, most of the galaxy had long settled on the neutral “Em” for everyone. In Samuels, though, marriage was considered massively important. So, Mister, Missus, and Mix had reemerged in their cultural lexicon, leaving Em for unmarried individuals.

  “I was told that, yes,” Buxton agreed. “But I want your assessment, Commander Bueller.”

  “The D-Twelves are…” Bueller paused thoughtfully. “They’re decent ships, First Minister. I don’t like the compromises that went into supplying them with heavy guns in single turrets, but that gives them a punch well above what their size would suggest.

  “For herding merchants, they’re overkill, but they’ll definitely do the job. The damage on the first pair is pretty light, so Samuels-Tata fixed them first for two reasons: one, to get ships into service faster, and two, to see what a D-Twelve is supposed to look like before someone puts a torpedo into her.”

  “But they are appropriate to be reactivated?” Buxton asked. “I am uncomfortable enough with commissioning interstellar warships, Commander Bueller; I do not wish to commission ships that are less safe for our people than possible.”

  “The two that are recommissioning are ready,” Bueller confirmed. “The other two…”

  He shook his head.

  “They are repairable, and I’ve gone back and forth with your people on how best to do so. I think it’s going to take longer than they’re hoping—but we are talking three more months instead of eight weeks. They’re not particularly large ships as Inner-Rim warships go.”

  “I believe my husband may have split the difference on the estimates,” Buxton said with a chuckle. “He told me ten weeks. Minimum.”

  “For the purposes of the next few weeks, two destroyers backed by Huntress should suffice to maintain the blockade,” Kira told the First Minister. “More hulls will always be better. Even gunships would be helpful right now, though I understand the logic in only building full-scale warships.”

  The repairs to the six ex-BKN ships and her own Deception—also an ex-Brisingr ship, though by a longer time period—were occupying every yard Samuels had online and would do so at least until the destroyers were online.

  She knew that Bueller was using the repairs to make certain that Samuels-Tata and their partners definitely had the skillsets and toolsets necessary to build ships of their own.

  “And will our people be ready to build warships from scratch in ten weeks?” Buxton asked.

  The First Minister, it seemed, was also aware of Bueller’s ulterior motive in helping supervise the repairs.

 

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