know there were—”
“There hasn’t been an official first contact with this race, but the
information we’ve received points to an influence outside of known Taran
biology. MTech’s reports refer to this new group as the ‘Robus’.”
Alien hybrids with telekinetic abilities? What the fok would a person like
that be able to do?! Kira shifted in her chair. “Sir, why are you telling me
this?”
“Because we fear that the Mysaran Coalition intends to use these alien-
hybrid Robus to attack Elusia, which we anticipate will soon rejoin the Taran
Empire. We want to stop that conflict before it starts.”
“Of course. But I—”
Kaen fixed her in a level gaze. “The Guard needs you to go back to Valta,
Kira. MTech has established a new lab. We need you to find out why.”
Kira worked her mouth, unsure what to say. She hadn’t been back to her
homeworld since she left as a teenager. Her stomach clenched, thinking about
what it would be like to return after so long.
While the Guard’s promises of using her abilities to help others had
resonated with Kira, not everyone in her community had seen it that way.
Some considered it a waste of her gift, others an adulteration. Her family had
begged her not to leave, but the opportunity to travel the stars was too much
for her to pass up. She’d left them all behind—suddenly and without
ceremony. She was certain there were lingering hard feelings, even after a
decade, and she didn’t need that kind of emotional baggage to distract her
from a mission. The Guard was her life now.
“Sir, why would MTech set up a lab on Valta?” Even as Kira voiced the
question, she already knew the answer. Whatever gives the planet its special
telepathic connections, they want it.
Mysar and Elusia had argued over claim to Valta since the system was
colonized. MTech, though, was a private company and could tread where
government could not. However, what Kira had witnessed on MTech’s
remote moon lab had made it clear that something else was going on besides
sanctioned research.
“We trust you’ll get to the bottom of it,” Kaen responded after giving her
a moment to reflect. “You have authorization to use any means necessary.”
“No restrictions, sir?” That was a first. Even in the most critical missions, Kira had always been held to strict rules of engagement about which forms of
telepathic influence were allowed—a code she followed even in her personal
life. If they were granting access to the dark side, the situation was very dire
indeed.
Kaen inclined his head. “We need this handled quickly and quietly.”
“That’s what my team does, sir.”
“Your team won’t be going with you on this one—at least not for the
initial recon work.”
Kira’s eyes narrowed. “Sir, but—”
“We feel that a more… local contact would be beneficial for the
mission.” His tone was final.
Kira sighed inwardly. “Of course, sir. I’m happy to work with anyone.”
She hoped the statement came out with a straight face. In truth, she’d joined
the Guard so she’d be among the esteemed elite rather than being partnered
with whatever poor sap happened to be assigned to a random project. Her
patience for idiots lasted about as long as her tolerance for poor musical
accompaniment to viral videos.
“When your name came up for the assignment, our local government
contacts remembered you. They located someone with the appropriate
qualifications who already appears to be an acquaintance of yours. He’ll
serve as your liaison.”
Just my fantastic luck… Kira braced herself. “Oh, and who’s that, sir?”
“Leon Calleti.”
Oh, shitebiscuits. “Um.”
Kaen raised a quizzical eyebrow.
“That’ll be… fine, sir.”
Leon Foking Calleti. That figures. It had been more like ‘foking Leon
Calleti’ a decade prior, before Kira dumped him with no notice to join the
Guard. Of anyone, he made her the most nervous to see again.
“Excellent. You’ll depart on a transport to Valta this afternoon,” Kaen
stated. “We’ll assess the right time to bring in your team once you have the
lay of the land.”
“Yes, sir.” She stood, her head swimming with the possible scenarios for
how her reunion with Leon might go. “Good luck.”
“Thank you, sir.” I’m going to need it.
— — —
It was obvious Kira has been flustered by her partnership with Leon, but
Kaen trusted her to adapt. She always did.
With the necessity for Kira’s team to be on the sidelines for the first
phase, she’d need someone she could trust. An ex, while not ideal, meant an
automatic level of familiarity that could never be achieved with a stranger.
Couple that with Leon’s degree in genetics and he was the perfect counterpart
to accompany her in an undercover investigation of the MTech facility on her
homeworld.
Kaen turned his attention to his own task: finding the mole in the Guard.
Ever since the official investigation into MTech began eight months
prior, little bits of information hadn’t added up—nothing on the scale of the
botched mission data for Kira’s team, but enough that he’d been suspicious.
Now, with the safety of his people and the fate of the Elvar Trinary on the
line, they needed to stem the problem. Fast.
He tapped his fingertips together while he thought. If the mole is working
with the Mysarans, we have to bait the trap. What information would a
potential opponent want to know?
An idea popped into his mind. He tried to dismiss it as too risky, but it
persisted. Before he could question it further, Kaen touched the comm link
icon on his touch-surface desktop. “Cindy, please draft an order for Bravo
Company to depart on the Zepher tomorrow at 06:00 for a patrol of Mysar’s
moon. However, do not distribute the communication.”
His assistant took a moment to respond. “Sir, I see no prior record of that
deployment.”
“There hasn’t been. Just save it in the public folder—I’ll talk to General
Lucian.”
“Understood, sir. Anything else?”
“No. Thank you, Cindy. Let me know when it’s ready.” Kaen ended the
comm link.
The idea now fully formed, he called up Captain Spencer Thoreau, the