Legacy Fleet: Hammerfall (Kindle Worlds) (Khorsky Book 1) Read online




  Text copyright ©2016 by the Author.

  This work was made possible by a special license through the Kindle Worlds publishing program and has not necessarily been reviewed by Nick Webb. All characters, scenes, events, plots and related elements appearing in the original Legacy Fleet remain the exclusive copyrighted and/or trademarked property of Nick Webb, or their affiliates or licensors.

  For more information on Kindle Worlds: http://www.amazon.com/kindleworlds

  Contents

  Blurb

  Books

  First Page Header

  A quick guide to gratuitous Russian

  - 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

  - Fantasy and Sci-Fi

  The planet Syrene is gripped by Separatist rebellion. Pavlov’s Dogs, a team of Russian spetsnaz lead by Lieutenant Petya Pavlov, are dropped into a world at war.

  Their task is simple. Defend Hammerfall, a research centre right on the front lines, surrounded by steaming jungle. There are enemies to fight and battles to win, but the greatest dangers come from within, and the Russian Confederation faces a threat much more serious than anyone could have possibly believed…

  The Khorsky Incident begins at Hammerfall.

  Part I of III in the Khorsky trilogy, and a novel-length prelude to the Khorsky Incident.

  Other David Adams’s Books

  Lacuna (FREE)

  Book one of the Lacuna series

  Symphony of War (Kindle Unlimited)

  Book one of the Symphony of War series

  Ren of Atikala (FREE)

  Book one of the Kobolds series

  Other Legacy Fleet fan works

  Meridian

  by Moira Katson

  Ascendance

  by Saul Tanpepper

  Chronicle Worlds: Legacy Fleet

  presented by Samuel Peralta & Nick Webb

  A collection of short stories by many authors, including “Pavlov’s Dogs” by me!

  Hammerfall

  A novel set in the universe of Legacy Fleet

  Part I of III in the Khorsky trilogy

  “Sometimes paranoia means having all the facts.”

  — William S. Burroughs

  Illustration © Tom Edwards

  Tom EdwardsDesign.com

  A quick guide to gratuitous Russian

  Cука блядь (Cuka bljad’) - a rude exclamation, lit. “Fucking bitch”

  Заткнись (Zatknis’) - “Shut up”

  За ваше здоровье (Za vase zdorovje) - “A toast, to your health!”

  Здорово (Zdorovo) - “Awesome!”

  The Great Patriotic War - World War II

  CHAPTER 1

  Russian Confederation ship Varyag

  Orbit of Planet Syrene

  Liv System

  Sixteen years before the events of Constitution

  “LOOK ALIVE, PAVLOV. TIME TO wake up.”

  Light. Light that cut through his hangover with a savagery entirely unbecoming given the early hour. Junior Lieutenant Petya Pavlov squinted at his watch. 14:20. God.

  He struggled up into a sitting position, his gut aching. He could barely make out the blurry face of his CO, Major Ninochka Yanovna—a hard Russian woman with equally hard fists—stood outside his cell, hands folded behind her back, vertical plastic bars distorting her figure.

  Pavlov wasn’t wearing his armour. He didn’t have his rifle, or Apalkov’s flask, but there was something in his pocket. A lump he’d been lying on. He ignored it.

  Someone was in the cell next to him. He could see the vague outline of a person through the semi-opaque plastic wall. He couldn’t make out their face, but it was probably a woman. Whoever they were, they were short and stocky, with cropped hair. Like some kind of pixie cut. A huge, hulking, brutish man stood guard beside Yanovna, hands folded behind his back.

  “Why is it so damn bright in here,” he said, then added, “ma’am?”

  “Because,” said Yanovna, her tone joyless and so completely done with all of this, “I turned up the lights. You need to answer questions, Pavlov. First and foremost, why you were drinking right after your mission? I had expected a debriefing on the events at Hammerfall to the array of senior officers who have, at my personal request, come a very long way to hear what you have to say. Instead I got…” she glared at him. “A drunk dropped on my metaphorical doorstop, too sloppy to even talk.”

  The knowledge filtered through the grey fuzz that was his memory. Too much alcohol. Not good booze either. Something else…

  It had been necessary to drink. Very necessary. “It’s complicated, ma’am.”

  “Заткнись! Dammit, Pavlov, the captain and Colonel Volodin both wanted you shipped out to a military prison on Kiev Prime the moment you stepped back aboard the ship. I was the one who talked them out of it.” Her tone soured even further. “Maybe I shouldn’t have.”

  And yet, here he was in a cell anyway. He put his face in his hands. It was so hard to think. Wait…the others. “Any word from Chuchnova, or…anyone from the surface?”

  “We haven’t received any transmissions,” said Yanovna. “No sign of survivors. Not that we were expecting any—the only ones left down there are Separatists.” Her eyes narrowed slightly. “And why would they talk to their enemies?”

  “Cука блядь, my head is pounding. I don’t know.”

  “Well, after an explosion that big, there won’t be anyone alive for kilometres around that facility.”

  Now he remembered. Of course…the reactor. He’d blown it up.

  There wouldn’t be any survivors.

  “I read your preliminary report,” she said. “It claims that Separatist militia overran your defensive positions. You got to the only working shuttle and retreated, right before the research station’s reactor exploded. I’ve only skim-read, but most of it’s straightforward.”

  “Most of it’s lies,” he said.

  Yanovna reached up to brush a stray strand of blonde hair out of her eyes. “We saw the explosion from orbit.”

  “Yes, ma’am. Arf arf.” Pavlov tilted his neck until it cracked. “Captain doesn’t believe it was the Separatists, or she wouldn’t be dragging a half-dozen flag officers to the arse end of nowhere just to hear me repeat everything again. Neither do you.”

  “I’m not sure what I believe,” Y
anovna said, her tone even. “And don’t bark at me. I’m not one of your dogs.”

  “Aye aye, ma’am.”

  She pursed her lips. “Although it is odd that you escaped alone. That’s one of the less straightforward parts, and it implies…well. It implies something I’m hoping is untrue.”

  It was easy to see where she was going with that. “Major, I promise you this: I didn’t abandon my squad. They were all dead by the time I escaped.”

  “Killed by the Separatists?”

  “Killed by me.”

  She stared at him through the transparent wall of the brig. Then, she folded her arms behind her back. “That’s a crucial detail you might have, you know, mentioned. The murders.”

  “I didn’t murder them. It was self-defence. They all—” How could he make her understand? Not with the whole truth, certainly. “They…went crazy. I had to do it, to defend the Confederation. I was saving all of us.”

  Yanovna nodded understandingly. “So they were trying to kill you? All of them, together? Highly trained spetsnaz all lost their minds at the same time, in the same way?”

  This was stupid. Pavlov put his hand over his eyes to shield out the light. “Yes and no, ma’am.”

  Yanovna took a shallow, even breath. “You know…if this is about Private Minsky, you can just say it.”

  “No,” said Pavlov, his tone flatter than the deck plating. “I didn’t go crazy. This isn’t a Combat Stress Reaction. This has…almost nothing to do with Minsky.”

  “Then why don’t you tell me what really happened?”

  How could he? The more he talked, the crazier he would sound. It was why he’d lied in the first place. “No. It doesn’t matter. Not important. What is important is this: we have to get to Vitaly Three. It’s a planet in the Khorsky system. There’s some seriously bad mojo in that sector. I promise you, we’ll find answers there. More than I can give you in this cell.”

  She didn’t answer for a brief moment, a window in which Pavlov felt scrutinised, as one might examine a quivering rat in a cage.

  “Have you told anyone else about what happened?” asked Yanovna.

  “Nope,” said Pavlov. He hadn’t had the chance.

  “Good,” said Yanovna. “After recent events, we don’t know who to trust.”

  “Okay,” said Pavlov, “but listen…I can tell you on the way to the Khorsky system. We need to q-jump as soon as possible.”

  “I am not,” said Yanovna flatly, “going to petition the captain to move the Varyag to the Khorsky system, or any system, unless you give me a very good reason as to why. A Confederation warship is not a civilian yacht to be dragged around space at a whim.”

  “You won’t believe me if we don’t,” he said. Pavlov threw his hands up in the air, immediately regretting letting the light in. “Not you, not the captain, no one will.”

  “Try me,” she said, something in her tone suggesting that—hope against hope—she might actually listen. “Convince me, and maybe I’ll talk to the captain, tell her we should take the ship to the Khorsky system. Or…possibly a small team attached to a frigate.”

  He had to try. Otherwise, he would spend the rest of his life breaking big rocks into smaller rocks in the gulags of Noveu Siberia…if there would even be a Noveu Siberia left by then. “Cука блядь. Where should I start?”

  “At the beginning,” said Yanovna, pulling out a thin tablet from her breast pocket. It glowed as it started recording. “Start with your deployment from the Varyag six weeks ago. Dropping down to the research station. Do you remember that?”

  “Yeah,” said Pavlov, dragging the memories back from the dark corners of his mind to the forefront. “I remember…”

  CHAPTER 2

  Dropship Anarchy

  70km above Syrene

  Six weeks earlier...

  “I’M JUST SAYING,” SAID JUNIOR Sergeant Apalkov, “I’d do her, sir. Arf arf!”

  “I know you would.” Pavlov grinned good-naturedly as the dropship Anarchy shook, descending through the thick Syrenian atmosphere, nine spetsnaz crammed into her passenger compartment. Four women, five men. What little air there was reeked of gun oil and body odour. “Apalkov, you’d literally have sex with anything. Man, woman, beast…sometimes you’re not even that picky.”

  “You’re damn right.” Anarchy rattled as it descended. Apalkov leaned forward in his harness, grinning like a jackal. “Lieutenant Yanovna her name was, right?” He laughed. “Gorgeous. I’d love to check her six, if you know what I mean, sir. I would do things to her that would be illegal throughout the Confederation. I would—”

  * * *

  Pavlov’s Cell

  “I don’t need to hear this part,” said Yanovna, bristling firmly.

  “It’s my story,” said Pavlov. “The details are important. You told me to tell you everything. This part is very important.”

  “Fine,” she said, in that way that indicated that it was entirely not fine. “Proceed.”

  * * *

  Dropship Anarchy

  “—I would lick a bar of her soap just to taste where it’s been.”

  “You’re a sick bastard,” said Pavlov. Anarchy jostled again. Pavlov adjusted his armour, a full body, airtight suit that protected him from the hazards that tended to try and kill people in his line of work. Bulletproof, save for high velocity rounds. Explosion proof, except for the really big stuff. Heat resistant. Vacuum resistant. “I always assumed you field medics were a little more…wholesome.”

  “You clearly didn’t go to medical school,” said Apalkov. “But hear this: this medic is spetsnaz, and spetsnaz will sleep with anything. Anything.”

  “My understanding is that there is not that much sleeping involved.”

  Ilyukhina pulled her rifle into her lap, checking the scope alignment. Her blonde hair tumbled down her shoulders. “There is if you’re bad at it.”

  Apalkov snorted playfully, his breath fogging his visor for a brief moment. “I’ve had no complaints.”

  “That only means you like polite women,” she said, tweaking a knob on the rifle’s electronic sight. Each of their weapons were linked to a camera that fed into the visor, allowing the wielder to shoot around corners and peak around obstacles without exposing themselves. “With a whole world of choices available to you, why would you walk into an ice cream parlour and select harmless vanilla?”

  “But I like vanilla,” said Apalkov.

  “I like vanilla too,” said Junior Sergeant Jakov.

  “Me too,” said Private Antonina Karpola, her first contribution to this conversation. Or any conversation. Her taste in ice cream was all Pavlov knew about the short Mongolian woman—that and she had a Russian name. “It’s delicious.”

  “Hey, vanilla is nice,” said Pavlov, “but that’s ice cream. Not sex. With sex, you gotta have someone a bit more—” The dropship pitched downward, stealing the words from his mouth. For a brief second, he thought they were crashing, but the craft levelled out. “Interesting.”

  “Like Minsky?” asked Apalkov.

  Nobody said anything. Suddenly things had become awkward.

  Minsky was dead.

  It had been nearly a month, but the wounds were still raw. His boyfriend had been shot by Separatists. Or was that ex-boyfriend? Was someone your ex if they were dead?

  He and Minsky hadn’t been together for long, not really, and it was a super bad thing for an officer to be fraternising with an enlisted man, probably for exactly this reason.

  But Pavlov had fought through it. He’d continued to lead his squad. Do his paperwork. So everyone had been quietly understanding and ever so slightly more polite than they would otherwise be.

  Politeness. Politeness pissed him off. He wanted it to be over. This whole shit with the Separatists, squabbling with the Confederation over urban development laws, which had slowly degenerated into armed aggression.

  His boyfriend had died for a war which ultimately boiled down to a taxation and zoning dispute.
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  “Doesn’t matter,” said Pavlov. “Doesn’t matter.”

  More awkward silence.

  Mercifully, the voice of their pilot filtered over the intercom, a woman’s voice that carried far too much energy for his tastes. “Good evening, Pavlov’s Dogs! We will be touching down momentarily. We haven’t had any communications from the settlement since their mayday call, so I hope you got your war faces on! This research station is a stone’s throw from Separatist territory.”

  “Great,” said Pavlov to Apalkov, casually sliding a magazine into his rifle. “Maybe we’ll get to pop some heads sooner rather than later.”

  Whatever remained of Apalkov’s mirthful, joking face slipped away. “You sure you’re okay for this, sir?” he asked. “This is the first time back in the field, after all…”

  “I’m fine,” said Pavlov, keeping as much strength in his tone as he could. “Don’t worry. This assignment is a milk run anyway.” They must have felt sorry for him. “I’m sure it’s just a communications glitch. We’ll investigate, stay around to make sure everything’s okay, and be back ship-side in a couple of weeks. Maybe less. I can’t imagine that these Separatist bumpkins are interested in a research centre.”

  “Arf arf,” said Apalkov. “What do they study at this place anyway, sir?”

  Good question. Pavlov touched his wrist, bringing up the mission dossier. He scrolled through the information. “Apparently,” he said, scrunching up his face, “cattle and other livestock. Insemination techniques, breeding, and genetic diversification. They also butcher some of their test subjects and distribute the meat.”