Paul Hughes - An End

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Led by the Catalyst of the Sixth Extinction and the only man immune to the metal contagion within her, a shattered humanity takes to the stars in a jihad against an alien race. The sequel to Enemy, An End transports the reader to another universe ravaged by the machine species known as silver. The recipient of the gold medal for the Fantasy/Science Fiction category of the 2003 Independent Publisher Book Awards, An End is the second book in the Silver trilogy by Paul Evan Hughes.

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“But the Fleet is everywhere. Where can we hide?”

“We’ll take the ship to the Outer.”

“Where?”

“Deep.”

“How deep?”

Hunter stabbed his blade into the angel’s splayed body in a swift, brutal motion. That which had been Tallis remained motionless. The knife’s tip tapped against the surface of the table underneath the body.

“To the hilt.”

“And him?” Hull withdrew the blade from Tallis’s abdomen.

“Space him.”

“We’ll talk to Archimedes.” Lilith looked from Hunter to Hull. “Take care of the body and get that slither operational again. We’ll need it soon enough.”

“Yes, Catalyst.”

Lilith fleur shimmered for an instant.

“Don’t call her that.” Hunter zero glared, walked away. Without looking back, he spoke to the woman. “Come on. I need you.” She nodded to the officers, left the hangar.

“Open shutters.”

Blast shielding retracted from the forward bridge. Lilith slipped into the vacuum chair beside him, still wringing the static bubble gelatin from her hair. Hand on his shoulder, she leaned forward to look out at the planet below. Hunter exhaled slowly, chin in hand, looking at and through the ruined world.

“We have to get out of here.”

Hunter closed his eyes.

“Any ideas?”

“She knows exactly where we are. Tallis would have reported everything. And if—”

“You don’t think—”

“Yeah, there could be others.”

“System?”

beep click.

“Seal the bridge.”

click beep.

“I would have felt them, if there were more.”

“You don’t know that. It took you two decades to feel this one out. We don’t know what else is riding with us.”

Lilith slumped back into her chair. She let Tallis’s silver projector roll from hand to hand. “What should we do with this? We can’t keep it on Archimedes. It has to be a tracking device.”

“This whole fucking ship is a tracking device.”

“Well, there’s not much else out here.”

“Not in this system, but there were other vessels in the Outer. Other members of the Extinction Fleet, and the prison galleons from the saved worlds. We’ll run into one eventually.”

“We’ll run into one soon. I’m sure Mother’s already dispatched the whole fleet to come get you, and to kill me.”

“We can’t think like that.”

“I can.”

The silence was unbearable. Lilith curled into Hunter’s chair, squeezed him. “I’m not going anywhere without you.”

“It would be safer if we split up. I could hide you on a galleon and start the return to—”

“You can’t go back without me.”

“It’s the only—”

She took his face in her hands. Eyes locked. “You can’t go without me.”

Hunter kissed the side of her cheek, rubbed his nose along hers, inhaled her scent and knew. He turned to look out at the system. There’d been something tickling him at the base of his neck for so long, since they’d first arrived from the flux…Since they’d first begun to orbit the target world. He sat up. Lilith adjusted.

“Archimedes online.”

beep click. online.

“Cartographics.”

online. A grid appeared in the forward bridge bubble, superimposed with crystalline perfection.

“Highlight target system planets.”

done.

“Jesus…Look at that.”

The system was huge. There had to be dozens of planets highlighted by System’s cartographic overlay.

Lilith frowned. “There’s something wrong with them.”

“Yeah. Arch, extrapolate and display orbital patterns.”

beep click. done.

“It’s so—”

“It’s chaos.” Instead of planets orbiting along a central plane, almost every world moved independently. Several debris fields indicated where planets had actually collided. Something had severely damaged the natural orbital pattern of this solar system. “Arch, what could have caused this?”

click beep. analysis implies that this was once a binary system.

“Reconstruct.”

The rotating balls of holographic light fell neatly and fluidly into two distinct orbital patterns, horizontal and vertical. It was a magnificent dance, the ballet of light pathways, gravity wells, almost-intersections. At the center of the vertical plane, Archimedes reconstructed the missing star of the binary system.

Hunter shook his head. “It’s still too empty. Fill in the holes where any missing planets should be.”

Forty new points of light joined the dance.

Hunter looked at Lilith, back at the cartograph. “Okay. Okay…So where would one star and a few dozen planets disappear to?”

“I’m so sorry.” Hunter felt all of his energy, all of his vitality pour from his body at the man’s touch. Hannon’s touch, for that is what that silken mental embrace felt like. He was a stranger, but so remarkably familiar…“I never knew—”

Hannon smiled the sad smile of ancient resignation. “Of course you never knew, Zero.” He leaned in close to the incapacitated Hunter, gently, tenderly kissed his forehead, tousled his hair. The gesture was so kind, so loving. Who was this man?

With a wave of his hand, the beams of light holding Hunter suspended in the air slowly faded, lowered him to floor level, where he stood, weakly rubbing his hands over the cold gooseflesh of his forearms. Hannon’s head tilted in concern and then understanding, and he removed his black overcoat and wrapped it around Hunter’s shoulders.

“Come on, son. There’s much to talk about, and so little time.”

“Arch?” Descending waves of deja vu. Hunter blinked.

click beep. online.

“Display positions of any Fleet vessels within range.”

beep click. done.

Lilith squeezed his hand, inhaled sharply. Hunter’s heart sank. The system display was encircled by a collapsing cloud of new pinpricks of light.

“Identify closest vessel.”

The targeting reticule highlighted a single firefly in the black of the Outer. fleet destroyer rebecca.

“Time to intercept?”

at light X, rebecca will intercept in three standard days.

“It was a binary system. When your Extinction Fleet first made an appearance, we were able to hide one of our stars here. This vessel is all we have left.”

Hunter touched the miles of glass before him, which greeted his fingertips with a cool, static attraction. The airlock door cycled open beside him.

“You have the technology to place a solar system inside of a vessel?”

Hannon scoffed. “Not the entire system. Just one star and forty planets. The others were left behind, where Mother’s fleet eventually got to them. We’ve been hiding in the Outer ever since your genocide spread this far.”

Hunter slumped against the glass in realization. Hannon made no move to help him up this time, but stood behind him, arms crossed. Hunter looked at the assembled black-robed men standing in formation on either side of the airlock, watching him. Silent. Expressions of such loss on their faces…

“No women. Mother’s fleet—”

“Your fleet, Zero. Of course, you never knew. Your Fleur never knew. You were just following orders. The virus killed them all, even after we escaped with half of the system under shield. The catalyst was at work even before the final seal was welded into place.”

“I never—

—understand your contorted schemes, my sweet.” Whistler chuckled, raised the wine glass to his lips, paused. “But that is what makes you so attractive.”

Maire smiled.

“What exactly do you want me to do?”

“There should have been a tight-beam report from the girl’s ship days ago. They’ve fallen silent. I need you to find out where they are, what they’re doing.”

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