The thrilling adventure based on the acclaimed Star Trek: Picard TV series!
Starfleet was everything for Cristóbal Rios…until one horrible, inexplicable day when it all went wrong. Aimless and adrift, he grasps at a chance for a future as an independent freighter captain in an area betrayed by the Federation, the border region with the former Romulan Empire. His greatest desire: to be left alone.
But solitude isn’t in the cards for the captain of La Sirena, who falls into debt to a roving gang of hoodlums from a planet whose society is based on Prohibition-era Earth. Teamed against his will with Ledger, his conniving overseer, Rios begins an odyssey that brings him into conflict with outlaws and fortune seekers, with power brokers and relic hunters across the stars.
Exotic loves and locales await—as well as dangers galore—and Rios learns the hard way that good crewmembers are hard to find, even when you can create your own. And while his meeting with Jean-Luc Picard is years away, Rios finds himself drawing on the Starfleet legend’s experiences when he discovers a mystery that began on one of the galaxy’s most important days.
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In which Cristóbal Rios meets a mermaidāand takes it on the lam
1
KRELLENāS KEEP
VEREX III
āLook, I donāt want to be a killjoy, but are you gonna sit in that chair or marry it?ā
The black-haired customer ignored the starship dealerās yammering. His focus was fully on the seat before him. It didnāt look comfortable. Ebon and gray like the rest of the freighter, it appeared to have been built to serve its purpose and nothing more. But Cristóbal Rios regarded the furnishing with reverence, his hands noting every contour.
A captainās chair was a captainās chair.
He heard the nasal voice behind him, again: āPal, are you all right? Youāve been standing there a long time.ā
āItās been a long time,ā Rios mumbled. Too long. Without looking back, he asked, āWhatās the cargo capacity?ā
āPlenty. Ninety thousand cubic meters.ā
āItās a freighter, not a concert hall.ā Rios turned to face the speaker, the shorter of the pair of starship dealers who had been showing him around the vessel. āListenāwhatās your name again?ā
āI told you. Twice!ā
āListen, Mister Twice, if you donāt know an answer, donāt bullshit me. It wonāt help you make the sale.ā
āSmart guyās got a mouth,ā the short one called out to his partner.
āDonāt be rude,ā the reed-thin man said, stepping forward to intercede. āThis is Burzeāand I am Wolyx, at your service.ā Wolyx doffed his hat.
Both he and his huskier colleague wore brown slacks and white shirts, but while Burzeās sleeves were rolled up sensibly, Wolyxās were buttoned, as was his collar. He wore a tie, to boot. It seemed to Rios an odd choice for Verex III, a barren bit of nastiness where even midwinter was oppressively hot. āDonāt you sweat, Wolyx?ā
āOh, no. Not in here.ā Wolyx lifted his arms in a flourish. āWhy would I? This ship is paradise itself. Risa every day.ā
āIf you think this is Risa, you stayed on the wrong planet.ā
āQuite amusing, sir.ā The balding trader attempted a smile that Rios found wholly unconvincing. Then he gave up and fanned himself with his hat.
Burze rolled his eyes. āWe donāt have all day. Have you seen enough?ā
āIāve smelled enough,ā Rios said. He winced as he took another whiff. āDid something die in here?ā
Burze giggled; Wolyx hedged. āItās just this planet, Mister Rios. Youāve been outside. But in here, all you need do is cycle the air for a minute andāā
āParadise. I got it.ā
Rios glanced out the forward port at the parking area. Verex IIIās volcanic seams vented enough that ground fog was ubiquitous, but he could still make out a number of ships by their silhouettes. One, he noted, was absent: the shuttle that brought him had barely stayed long enough for him to get his duffel out of the hold.
It wasnāt wise to linger long at the spaceport, even in daylight, the pilot had said. āEspecially not then. They can see you coming.ā
The Federation might be a post-scarcity society, but Verex III was not in the Federation, and possession was doubly implied in the name of Krellenās Keep, the planetās largest outpost. It was also the biggest bazaar in the sector when it came to used starships.
Burze tugged at Riosās arm. āDonāt bother looking at that junk out there. We told you, this machine is just what you want. Itās a beauty.ā
Wolyx quickly agreed. āIt has everything you could imagine.ā
āYeah, itās strewn all over.ā Rios turned again to look at the debris spread all across the shipās upper level, stretching all the way back to the warp engine. Discarded containers, broken ceramics, parts of some ancient farm implementāeven a stuffed Klingon targ. And that was nothing next to what heād seen below on the galley and cargo decks. āDid a chimpanzee program the replicator?ā
āA what?ā Burze asked.
āWhich part havenāt you heard of?ā
āListen, buddyāā
Wolyx intervened again, nearly stepping on Burzeās shoe. āThe ship has a very fine replicator. And not one earthly simian.ā
āThen what about all the junk?ā Rios asked.
Burze snickered. āTheāuh⦠former owner wasnāt available to remove his stuff.ā
Seeing Wolyx shuffling uncomfortably, Rios blinked. Okay, maybe something did die in here.
Wolyx recovered and grinned. āWe simply didnāt want to wait to put this little wonder on the market. Consider the rest⦠a bonus. A treasure at every turn.ā
āFree crap. I get it. Is the reason it was carrying so much on board because thereās a problem with the towing system?ā
āOh, this model comes with state-of-the-art couplers designed to connect to a variety of cargo modules!ā
āDo they still work?ā
Wolyxās grin wilted a little. āThey require a little service.ā
āNo towing system.ā
Burze threw up his hands. āWhen youāre done jawing, Iām waiting outside.ā He passed his partner on the way. āCall if this jerk wants to do more than complain.ā
As Hard Sell headed downstairs, Soft Sell started in again. āForgive my associate,ā Wolyx said. āBut Iām sure youāll agree, this shipāthis yacht, reallyāis perfection. Itās not missing a thing.ā
āIt is,ā Rios said.
āImpossible!ā
Rios gestured to the empty space ahead of the command chair. āControl panels.ā
āAh. The Kaplan F17 Speed Freighter captainās interface is holographic. It only appears when authorized.ā
āIām not an idiot, Wolyx.ā
āOf course not. I didnāt meanāā
āAuthorize it.ā
āOh.ā The dealer shook his head. āNo, no, they donāt like me to do that.ā
They? That would be whomever it was that Burze was waiting with, Rios imagined. He upturned his palms. āI said I had to inspect the bridge. Without the interfaces, itās just some chairs and a window. Itās an observation lounge.ā
āSurely, itās more thanāā
āIām not paying for an observation lounge, Wolyx.ā Rios turned over his hands and lifted them into the air before him. He held them there, fingertips poised over nothing. He shot the dealer ten percent of a smile.
Well?
Wolyx considered for a moment. Then he repeated his own name, followed by a curious phrase: āThe hoard, the hoard, the journeyās reward.ā
At those magic words, glowing holographic control interfaces appeared suspended in front of the command seat. Rios glanced at them for a moment before sitting. āNice passphrase. What is it?ā
Wolyx clasped his hands together. āOh, I chose that. Itās from The Songs of Uthalla, an Orion classic.ā
āSort of āopen sesame.ā ā
āOh, you know A Thousand and One Nights!ā Wolyxās voice bounced. āThat phrase probably first appeared in Antoine Gallandās versionāthough I prefer the newer one by Wu Hezar.ā
The people you meet, Rios thought, his fingers dancing over the glistening controls. āYou read a lot, Wolyx?ā
āEvery chance I getāwhich sadly isnāt often in my trade. But my people take books very seriously.ā
More than one part of the comment puzzled Rios. The dealer looked human, although that didnāt really mean anything. And it was much more common to hear people referring to stories, rather than books. The physical media still existed, to be sure, but for many they were a curio.
Rios included.
āThereās another line,ā Wolyx said, pacing ahead of the navigatorās station. ā āFor the ship is my castle, this chair my throne.ā Now, that really puts into perspective how importantāā He stopped as he noticed his listener. āEr, what are you doing?ā
Rios allowed the shipās awakening systems to answer for him. He felt the hum through the command chairāand he liked seeing indicators coming online on the display panel of a class of ship he had never piloted before.
No, no rust there.
Wolyx stepped before him and waved his hands in alarm. āMister Rios, Iām not authorized to allow you to activate the ship.ā
āYou literally just authorized me to activate the ship.ā
āYes, but that was so you could see there was a console, not toāā
Rios punched a holographic key, and the hum became a thrum, reverberating faster and faster.
āReally, I canātāā Wolyx said, only to be interrupted by a chirp from his personal comm unit. Flustered, he answered it. āWhat?ā
āItās Burze. Whatās going on?ā
āHeās started the ship.ā
āI can see that, moron. Who started the ship?ā
āHe started the ship!ā
Rios lifted a finger in the air to correct: āHeās flying the ship.ā The freighter lurched off the ground, causing Wolyx to lose his balanceāand to drop the communicator. āYou might want to find a seat,ā Rios said.
While Burze ranted inaudibly over the fallen comm unit, Rios peeked outside to see several individuals advancing. Whoever they were, they quickly thought better of it. The freighterās warp nacelles extended well forward from the ship, like a javelin in each outstretched hand; as Rios rotated the ship, everyone on the platform retreated for cover.
Sprightly. The word had been in the sales description heād been sent, and Rios had found it an odd choice for something that hauled cargo; obviously it had been written by Wolyx rather than Burze. Rios found it to be apt. The freighter spun a full rotation one way and then another as he gained altitudeāall while the dealer fumbled alternately for his communicator and his hat. Verex Prime cut through the haze, stabbing light onto the bridge.
āMister Rios!ā Wolyx declared, clutching in vain for an armrest of one of the forward seats. āDescend immediately!ā
āOkay.ā Rios slammed the virtual yoke and hit the throttle, angling downward toward the rock-hewn structures of Krellenās Keep. For a full kilometer, the freighter buzzed just above the ground, startling passersby and barely missing several hovering transports.
He worked the controls swiftly, banking back and forth as he searched for a path to space. Air traffic here, skybridges thereāand the freighter, weaving below and between. There were minute performance flaws, little divergences from Riosās expectations. He mentally cataloged them but did not ease back. After another kilometer, he spotted the open sky he was looking for.
Thereās a genie in this bottle, Rios thought. Letās let her out.
2
VEREX III
The freighter blazed forward and upward, ripping so near to a towering structure that it scared half the roosting avians right off it. The other half of them took flight a second after that, terrified by the sonic boom.
Wolyx, who had managed to steady himself against a support, was in motion again, too, on a stumbling journey in the worst possible direction: aft. That way led to the open well to the galley deck, and certain injury. He got no closer to it, though, as Riosās arm shot out, allowing him to grab the dealerās tie. He reined the older man toward him before glancing behind him and to the right.
āChairs,ā Rios said. āI canāt give you a fancy quote about them, but they help.ā
Gulping, Wolyx composed himself. āVery well.ā He stumbled to a seatāarriving just in time to be thrown into it as Rios shifted from thrusters to impulse.
The freighter tore from the Verexian atmosphere into space, where a convoy of incoming transports coasted. Rios angled the ship toward them and accelerated. Before the vesselsā pilots could react at all, the freighter neatly bisected the caravan. Rios then saw another target, one of the planetās silvery moons. He made for it.
The ship was rounding the airless globe at an elevation of thirty meters when Wolyxās comm unit skittered past his fee...