Lindsay Buroker's Blog: Lindsay Buroker, page 6

June 19, 2019

The New “Space Travelers” StoryBundle!

If you’re heading into summer with your to-be-read pile woefully low (I know, I know, let’s pretend!), and you enjoy science fiction space adventures, I invite you to check out the newest from StoryBundle, ten novels about cool characters traveling between the stars:


https://storybundle.com/space


My Fractured Stars novel is a part of the bundle. You can get a few books for $5 or unlock all of the bonus books (including mine) for $15. The ebooks are all DRM-free, so if you have one already, you can give it to a sci-fi loving friend. If you choose the option, 10% of the proceeds from your sale will go to the non-profit AbleGamers charity.


The bundle is only available for three weeks, so if you’re interested, check it out now.


And if you’d like to know about how Kristine Kathryn Rusch (the curator) selected these titles, you can read a little more here.


You can also scroll down to read the first few pages of Fractured Stars. Thanks!



Fractured Stars Excerpt


The closet in the captain’s cabin of the Star Surfer held the requisite amount of clothing one would expect from a female occupant, but the variety was decidedly limited. Ten white brushed-cotton shirts hung on hangers, six pairs of soft blue-and-gray Rocket X exercise pants were tidily folded on a shelf, and four pairs of identical mesh ship shoes were lined up equidistant from each other on the deck. Bags of unopened shirts and pants in the same style and colors as those on display rested in cubbies, awaiting their turn in the rotation. A stack of three shoe boxes also waited.


McCall Richter, captain and owner of the Star Surfer, frowned at the boxes. “That’s concerning, Junkyard.”


The hundred-and-fifty-pound mutt sprawling on the deck of the cabin twitched a floppy ear.


“I’m down to three backup Hemingtons. With my rotten luck, they’ve already stopped production of the LX-7s and have thrown some new crap up in stores with an entirely different fit.”


A twinge of panic ran through McCall’s veins, and she dug her netdisc out of her pocket and thumbed the holodisplay to life over the palm-sized circular device. Her Hemingtons, the only ones she’d found that fit just right, were listed on the store’s sys-net site. Only seven left in stock. Who knew if there would ever be more?


“We’re too far from the core worlds to order instantly, but I’m putting this in now before it’s too late. I should get all seven to be safe, right? Definitely.”


As she tapped a finger in the air to press the holo button, Junkyard twitched his ear again.


McCall sighed and lowered the netdisc. “You’re right. I came to put on my off-ship clothes, not shop.”


She waved toward the set of garments tucked in the back of the closet, a smaller collection of identical clothing, sturdy long-sleeve shirts, trousers with numerous utility pockets, and broken-in waterproof hiking shoes suitable for the vagaries of ground travel.


“Though why I agreed to go to this meeting, I don’t know. I don’t need to network with people. I am people.”


Junkyard lifted his head, ears perking as she grabbed the hiking shoes.


“All right, that sounded arrogant. I know. But seriously, all I ever get from these events is other people asking for favors. And it’s not like I will ever want favors from them in return. Even if I did, yuck. You know I hate asking anyone for anything. Or relying on other people.” McCall shuddered. Dealing with people at all was always so… fraught. And tiring. Why did she let herself get talked into these events?


Junkyard sprang to his feet and wagged his tail.


McCall looked at the shoes in her hand. “Sorry, boy. We’re just landing for a meeting. I’ll take you for a romp somewhere afterward, but I can’t bring you to the conference center.”


Junkyard refused to believe her. He wagged vigorously at her—and the shoes. Off-ship shoes. He knew which ones were which.


“Listen, I’ll ask Scipio to look for a place where we can set down afterward so you can run around. There won’t be grass though. Sherran Moon is a red-rock hell where spiders big enough to eat you crawl out of all the crevices. We—”


A shudder coursed through the ship, and the deck trembled under McCall’s socked feet. “What in all three suns’ hells was that?”


Junkyard’s tail drooped, and he eyed the closet, his favorite hiding place. One of the few where he fit.


“Captain,” the detached male voice of her android business partner Scipio came over the communications system, “we are being pursued by an imperial law-enforcement vessel, model Imperial Charger, name Truncheon 4.”


A shot of fear rushed through McCall’s veins. She was a law-abiding imperial subject and ought to have no reason to worry about the enforcers, except for that one tiny incident…


“What do they want?” Cursing to herself, McCall jammed her shoes on without sitting down. She wobbled and almost pitched into the closet, her balance as reliable as always.


“Unknown. They have not opened communications with us, nor otherwise announced their intentions.”


The ship shuddered again, and McCall almost pitched over again. “I think they’re announcing their intentions now. Are they shooting at us? Are the shields up?”


“They are shooting extremely close to us, using what I believe are warning shots. I was uncertain if we should raise shields or take evasive maneuvers when being pursued by a law-enforcement vessel. Standard imperial law states that we should stop and prepare to be boarded.”


“Uh huh. Raise the shields.”


“Excellent, Captain. I am raising them in accordance with Comet Cruiser Defensive Protocol Number—”


“Good. I’ll be right there.”


McCall ran into the corridor with Junkyard trotting after her. A left turn, four steps, and she strode into Navigation and Communications.


Scipio sat in the pilot’s seat and started to rise. She waved for him to stay and headed for the co-pilot’s seat, though she stood behind it, leaning against the backrest instead of settling in. She fiddled with a bracelet she always wore on her left wrist, turning it around and around, barely conscious of the tinkle of the old brass charms.


A wrap-around holographic display provided almost a three-hundred-and-sixty-degree view of the area around the ship, so she had no trouble spotting the white law-enforcement vessel pursuing them. Scorch marks marred the belly of the craft, as if it had been hammered by e-cannons, and missing hull plating revealed circuits and conduits that shouldn’t have been exposed to space.


“They’re damaged?” McCall asked.


“Yes, according to our sensors, the charger is heavily damaged.”


We didn’t do it, right?” She couldn’t imagine Scipio wantonly firing at law-enforcement vessels.


“Correct.”


The Truncheon 4 fired again, a white e-cannon round blowing past just above the Star Surfer.


“Do they know that?” McCall asked. “Why are they shooting at us?”


McCall sat in the co-pilot’s seat so she could reach the comm panel. Was it possible this was a mistake and the captain of the other ship believed the Star Surfer had been responsible for damaging his or her vessel?


“I am unable to interpret human motivations and emotions to gauge reasons for their actions with more than forty-four percent accuracy.”


“Yeah, you and me both.” As McCall reached for the controls, intending to open a channel to the other ship, a small alert popped into the air above the comm panel.


“They have opened communications,” Scipio said, “and are requesting a response to their hail.”


“I see that.” McCall looked at him, debating whether to ask him to leave NavCom so he wouldn’t be visible on the video display.


He wore an impeccable Kuan-and-Chien hand-tailored gray suit with a dashing blue cravat and an imperial puff cap with a band that matched the neckwear. Usually, she made him the face of her tiny business, but today, that might be a bad idea. With his pale skin, precisely trimmed brown hair, and silver eyes, there was no chance of someone not recognizing him as an android. That in itself wasn’t odd, as all manner of personal assistant, combat specialist, and translation and computation androids proliferated the dozens of planets and moons, hundreds of space stations, and thousands of ships in the Tri-Sun system. The problem was that he hadn’t been legally acquired.


“Do you want to wait in the back?” she asked.


“Should defensive maneuvers be required, I am a more able pilot than you, Captain,” he said, though she had no doubt he knew why she’d asked.


“Most people are. I flunked my pilot’s test three times. You know what I’m talking about, Scipio.”


He pursed his lips in Thoughtful Expression Number Two, as McCall had dubbed it. She was awful at judging what people were thinking based on facial expressions, but the few dozen expressions Scipio had been programmed with were precise and identical each time. She’d learned them well over the last two years they had worked together.


“I do indeed understand my need to avoid the notice of law-enforcement officers, Captain, but may I remind you that I am one of five thousand identical androids that were made in the NB-75 line? It is unlikely I would be identified as stolen property unless someone boarded and did a close scan to learn my serial number.”


“You weren’t stolen; you were liberated.”


“Or rescued, as I often think of it.” Scipio offered her Pleased Smile Number One. “I shall stay in my seat in order to assist you. I do not believe it is necessary, but you may wish to use the narrow camera angle so they will not see me in the feed.”


An irritated bleep came from the comm panel. A second attempt to hail them.


Not wanting to get in a real fight with that ship, even if it was damaged, McCall took a deep breath and answered the hail. She thought about keeping it to audio only, as she did when interacting with clients—if her preferred method of communicating via text wasn’t an option—but she didn’t want the officer to suspect her of hiding anything. The suns knew she couldn’t lie her way out of a maze with a single corridor, so she would prefer not to have to make the attempt.


“This is Captain McCall Richter of the Star Surfer.” She kept herself from demanding to know why they were firing on her ship, since politeness was always safest when dealing with imperial law enforcers. The government ought to adore her for all the criminals she’d helped them find over the years, but she had been paid for her services, and they would be quick to point that out.


“Sheriff Axton, Border Law Enforcement,” came a gruff grumble through the comm. Interestingly, a video display didn’t come up along with the voice. “My ship is damaged. I require yours. I am transporting prisoners to Frost Moon 3.”


McCall stared at the comm panel, hoping she had misunderstood the man. She was less than an hour from Sherran Moon and her meeting, and he wanted her to travel five days across the system to a moon around another planet? Or did he even want her along? He wasn’t proposing some trade where she handed over her ship while he marooned her on his damaged one, was he? How could she get out of this?


She looked over at Scipio. He might be able to stay out of the vid pickup for a comm call, but how would he avoid being noticed on a five-day voyage—potentially five days both ways—with however many strangers aboard?


“My ship isn’t properly equipped to handle prisoner transport, Sheriff,” McCall said.


“You have a brig.”


“I have one cell next to the refrigerated storage in the back, and there’s an environmental glitch I never bothered fixing. The temperature in the cell is equal to that in the lettuce bin next door.”


“That will suffice.” His gruff voice changed slightly, and he spoke the next sentence with relish. “Felons are supposed to suffer for their crimes.”


She could tell she was dealing with a real imperial hero here.


“You will slow your ship and prepare for boarding,” Axton said. “Then step aside while I take command for the duration of my mission.”


“We’re only an hour from Sherran Moon,” McCall said, taking one last stab at evading this fate, though it seemed inevitable. “Surely, you can abscond with a ship there that would be more suited to your mission.”


“Your ship is fast, and it’s here. We’re not absconding with it. We’re borrowing it for imperial business, and we are fully within our right to do so. Prepare for boarding.”


Before McCall could say anything else, the channel went dead.


“The Star Surfer is a fast vessel,” Scipio said, “refrigeration issues notwithstanding. It’s understandable that he would prefer it. Also, based on the scans I did, I read dangerously high temperatures in their reactor coils, and the ventilation duct for their environmental control unit has been melted shut.”


“Meaning they might not be able to make it to Sherran Moon?”


“Correct.”


“We could outrun them, couldn’t we?” McCall tapped her chin thoughtfully as she wondered what the consequences would be for doing so. A fine? She could afford to pay a fine. A mark on her record? That wouldn’t be ideal, but if it ensured Scipio wouldn’t be discovered and taken back to the factory where she’d found him…


“I advise you do not risk your livelihood or your freedom by fleeing, Captain. The empire can be draconian with its punishment. You are currently considered useful to them, and you have a great deal of freedom, compared to the typical subject. Do not risk changing that status. I will simply power down for the duration of the trip and remain in storage.”


McCall winced at the idea of Scipio boxed up in his closet for days. Even though he was an android, and she rationally understood that such wouldn’t truly be a punishment for him, she hated the idea. He and Junkyard were her best friends. It didn’t matter that they weren’t human. She wanted good lives for them.


“Before you do that, look up the Truncheon 4 and Sheriff Axton, will you? Let’s make sure everything they said was true and that these aren’t criminals impersonating them to get to my ship.”


“I have already done so, Captain, and the ship’s pilot, a Deputy Arjun Deshmukh, transmitted their identification codes. They appear to be legitimate officers.”


McCall sighed, wishing they hadn’t been.


“They are closing to boarding distance,” Scipio said. “They may lock a grab beam onto us shortly. Do you wish me to increase speed and evade them?”


McCall inhaled and exhaled slowly. “No.”


She hoped she wasn’t making a mistake.


~



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Published on June 19, 2019 19:08

June 16, 2019

The Next Fantasy Series Will Be…

My Star Kingdom sci-fi series will keep me busy for the rest of the year (I just sent Book 4 off to my editor, and I think there will end up being around eight in the series), but I like to plan ahead, so I’m already starting to think of 2020’s projects.


I’m probably going to write one or two more novels to finish up the long-neglected Rust & Relics series, but I also will want to do something all new. The new stuff is what pays the bills and keeps the dogs rolling in dehydrated pizzle sticks. (Yes, a pizzle is exactly what you think it is… and they love them.)


Since I haven’t decided on anything for sure yet, I thought it would be fun to put up a poll and see what you, the reader, think. These are some of the ideas that I’m kicking around. What sounds the most interesting?


Note: There is a poll embedded within this post, please visit the site to participate in this post's poll.

 



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Published on June 16, 2019 20:00

June 10, 2019

Star Kingdom Extras: Character Interview with the genetically engineered Qin Liangyu Three

As you know from my last post, the third novel in my Star Kingdom series (Hero Code) is out. To help get you excited for the adventure, I’ve located a special, if somewhat dubious, journalist willing to interview one of my more eccentric main characters, the genetically engineered warrior cat-woman Qin Liangyu Three.


She goes by Qin in the stories. I wish I had some artwork for her! The picture included here isn’t quite right as this cat seems to be lacking a human half… but it is cute!


Interview with Qin


Beautiful cat in outer space. Elements of this image furnished by NASA.


Journalist: Greetings, Qin! I’m very excited to speak with you.


Qin: *blinks and swivels her pointed ears*


You are? But you’re… We’re in the Kingdom for this story, and the people here don’t like genetically modified tomatoes, much less lab-born creations such as… me.


Journalist: That’s the official policy, yes, but I’m a member of GESS, and I do interviews for our underground news feed. We do our best to stay out of the public eye, since some of our opinions are not popular, but we have monthly meetings where we toss back GMO tomatoes like popcorn.


Qin: …GESS?


Journalist: Genetically Engineered Secret Support. You’ve been here on Odin for a couple of days, and we heard you’re having adventures. What brought you here?


Qin: My captain. She’s a bounty hunter, though right now, she’s trying to get paid for a patent on some kind of bandage-dispensing robot vending machine.


Journalist: Er, bandages? I suppose a bounty hunter would have need of such things.


Qin: It’s a long story. For myself, I’m here to help out. My new friend Casmir is in trouble with some terrorists. If they go after him while I’m around, I’ll show them how my retractable claws work. *she demonstrates for the journalist*


Journalist: Those are indeed impressive. And also, er, is that nail polish? And… sequins?


Qin: *grins* I found a bedazzling gun. I’m having fun. And the captain does a lovely job with nail polish.


Journalist: I see. You’re not quite what I expected from a genetically engineered super warrior.


Qin: I’ve fought lots of battles, first when I was owned by the Drucker-family pirates, and now as Captain Lopez’s assistant, but I’m happiest when I get to hang out with friends or read magazines and listen to music in my cabin. Or shop! Do you want to see my candle collection?


Journalist: Uhm.


Qin: I didn’t get a chance to do any of those things with the Druckers, and they didn’t pay us, so I’m enjoying being able to buy things and decorate my cabin now that I earn money.


Journalist: Of course. What do you plan to do here on Odin while you’re visiting? Aside from showing your claws to dastardly enemies.


Qin: I do more than show my claws to my enemies.


But I do enjoy doing other things. I can smell the ocean and a park with lots of trees from the ship here. I hope to get to visit them. I’ve spent most of my life on space stations and spaceships. Sometimes, stations have trees, but they’re not the same.


I also wouldn’t mind meeting some knights. Some nice knights. Noble and chivalrous ones who don’t mind that a girl… doesn’t look quite like a girl. I’ve met Sir Asger, but he tried to kill me the first time he saw me. *wrinkles nose*


Journalist: Ah, yes. Sir Asger. I’ve seen his calendars.


Qin: We get along a little better now, but I’d still like to meet a knight who’s truly chivalrous. Like Casmir but with more muscles. Someone I can spar with!


Journalist: Casmir Dabrowski, the roboticist?


Qin: Yes, he’s a nice man. He’s never called me a freak.


Journalist: But he doesn’t have enough muscles?


Qin: Not for sparring with me. Or… anyone. But I have sparred with his bodyguard robot, Zee. He’s all right, but not really equipped for anything other than fighting. It’s also really hard to get a hold on him. Literally. He’s all smooth, and he can turn into liquid metal if you do manage to grab him.


Journalist: It sounds like you have an eclectic group of… friends. What did you say your goals here on Odin are? Something about battling terrorists? Do you know where their base is? How many allies do you have?


Qin: I just looked up GESS on the network here, and there aren’t any mentions of it. Are you sure you’re here to interview me for a news article? You sound suspicious.


Journalist: Me?


Qin: You’re not working for the terrorists, are you?


Journalist: No, no, certainly not. But I think I’ve got enough for my piece so I’ll…


*Qin flashes claws*


Journalist: See myself out. Bye!


~


See for yourself what Qin is up to in Hero Code: https://amzn.to/2WrRVFs


If you haven’t started the series yet, Book 1 is Shockwave: https://amzn.to/2K58KUY


The books will be out in stores other than Amazon in 2020. Thanks for reading!



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Published on June 10, 2019 13:28

The Star Kingdom Series Rolls on with Book 3, Hero Code

Star Kingdom, Book 3, Hero Code is officially out!


I wrote the first three novels in my new sci-fi series before publishing Book 1. This was so I could release them back-to-back and give you guys lots of fun adventures in the first month.


If you’ve already started the series, I hope you’re enjoying them! If you’ve been waiting for more to be available, Book 3 ends in a pretty good spot (more adventures to come, but it’s not too cliffhangery — yes, that’s a word).


I’m working on getting the paperbacks out to go with the ebooks (the Book 1 paperback is available now), and Podium Publishing is going to produce the audiobooks. They also did my Dragon Blood and Fallen Empire Series, along with some other adventures. We’re going to bundle the first three novels into one big audiobook (we did this to great results with Dragon Blood), so Audible subscribers can get 30+ hours of listening fun for one credit. It will take a while to get that together, but I’ll share an update when the audiobook is out.


In the meantime, I’m sharing the links so you can pick up a copy of Hero Code, if you haven’t already. I won’t post a preview chapter since it would be hard not to include spoilers for the first two books, but I do have an interview with one of the characters coming up soon (Qin — she’s a point-of-view character for the first time in the new book), so stay tuned.


You can order Hero Code and the rest of the books at Amazon (Book 1, Shockwave, is still 99 cents there for a couple more weeks):


Amazon US: https://amzn.to/2WrRVFs


Amazon UK: https://www.amazon.co.uk/Hero-Code-Star-Kingdom-Book-ebook/dp/B07S2FK5WP/


Amazon CA: https://www.amazon.ca/Hero-Code-Star-Kingdom-Book-ebook/dp/B07S2FK5WP/


Amazon AUS: https://www.amazon.com.au/Hero-Code-Star-Kingdom-Book-ebook/dp/B07S2FK5WP/


Amazon DE: https://www.amazon.de/Hero-Code-Star-Kingdom-English-ebook/dp/B07S2FK5WP/


This series is exclusive to Amazon this year, but for the non-Amazon folks, you can always get the books early (before they are published) in all formats as one of my Patreon subscribers:


https://patreon.com/lindsayburoker


And if you pre-ordered Hero Code and have already read it (because you’re awesome!), have no fear, I’ve just sent Book 4 off to my beta readers. It’ll be coming in July.


Thanks for reading!


 



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Published on June 10, 2019 11:28

May 11, 2019

Star Kingdom Extras: Character Interview with Kim Sato

To go along with the launch of my new series (preview chapters for Shockwave here if you haven’t checked it out yet), I’m taking the role of helpful journalist and interviewing one of the unlikely heroes, Kim Sato, bacteriologist, kendo practitioner, and space adventurer. (The latter being more by accident than the former.)


Journalist: Hello, Scholar Sato. May I have a moment of your time? Our readers would like to know more about your recent activities.


Kim: Do you wish me to break down my work on radiation-consuming bacteria in laymen’s terms? I’ve published several peer-reviewed articles about our successful movement from the second to third stage of our human trials, but I’ve witnessed that newspaper journalists tend to cherry pick sentences out of context and give the public the wrong idea about advancements in science. It’s good that you’ve come to me.


Journalist: Actually, I meant your activities in space. When you and Professor Casmir Dabrowski left the planet to avoid robot assassins. That’s so exciting! Our readers want to hear all about it.


Kim: You’re… not here about my academic work?


Journalist: No, sorry. I understand that you and the professor barely escaped with your lives and had to hitch a ride with a dubious smuggler and an evil genetically engineered freak of a warrior woman. Is that true?


Kim: Technically, Captain Lopez is a bounty hunter down on her luck, and Qin is neither evil nor a freak. Please don’t call her that around Casmir. She was designed by pirates who wanted a super killer, but she has a surprisingly amenable soul. And she likes to read fairy tales and romances. While I have no data to back me up, I would hypothesize that such are not the typical entertainment preferences of an “evil” being.


Journalist: Is it true that you and Professor Dabrowski met the heinous, evil, and dastardly pirate Captain Rache? Surely he doesn’t read romances. What was he like?


Kim: You used three adjectives to describe him. What else could I add?


Journalist: Did you see under the mask he wears? They say his men don’t even know what he looks like.


Kim: I did not. Did you by chance see that I have a new article out in Microbiology Monthly? I would be quite pleased to speak about my work and help educate the public on scientific advancements.


Journalist: Do you think Captain Rache is horribly maimed or half cyborg? Maybe that’s why he wears a mask.


Kim: I believe he has cybernetic enhancements. I gather that’s not atypical for people who fight for a living. But I would prefer not to speak about Captain Rache.


Journalist: Oh, really? Let’s go back to Professor Dabrowski then, shall we? I understand he was able to thwart some troublemakers, despite his… He has a few medical issues, doesn’t he? Not the best genes, eh? You’d think in this modern world that we’d be able to fix seizures and the like.


Kim: He gets by. He’s relatively normal. Medically speaking, anyway. I don’t think his genes can explain his inability to use a coaster when he puts his condensation-dripping beverages on the coffee table.


Journalist: You’re kind of stiff, aren’t you, Scholar Sato?


Kim: I would rather discuss science than human beings.


Journalist: But our readers find it much more exciting to get the stories of real people!


Kim: That’s disheartening.


Journalist: I understand the professor’s knowledge of robotics came in handy against some mercenaries. Could you tell me about how that went?


Kim: If you’re interested in Casmir’s exploits, you should probably talk to Casmir. He likes talking. Even if nobody is around. I once caught him discussing the merits of loosely coupled particle robots with decentralized control algorithms… with the coat rack.


Journalist: Oh? That sounds impressively intellectual.


Kim: The next time I passed through, the discussion had shifted to how well balanced superhero powers are in modern comics. Like I said, he’s chatty. He’ll give you enough for a whole book, if you want it.


Journalist: A book?


Kim: Yes, those things with pages and bindings. Admittedly those features are usually virtual these days.


Journalist: I know what books are, thank you. I was just considering if anyone would read a book about a roboticist in space. The bestselling thrillers at the launch-loop book shop always feature strapping Fleet captains, warrior knights, and cunning police detectives. I don’t know if anyone would buy a book about a roboticist.


Kim: And a bacteriologist.


Journalist: Pardon?


Kim: I was there too.


Journalist: Yes… that should give it much more commercial appeal.


Kim: *flat cool stare*


Journalist: I’ll just see myself out.


Kim: Do.


~


If you’re ready to meet Casmir in person (and the ever warm and friendly Kim), check out the first book:


Shockwave (Star Kingdom, Book 1)


Amazon UK | Amazon CA | Amazon AUS | Amazon DE


Thanks for stopping by!



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Published on May 11, 2019 12:48

Star Kingdom Extras: Character Interview

To go along with the launch of my new series (preview chapters for Shockwave here if you haven’t checked it out yet), I’m taking the role of helpful journalist and interviewing one of the unlikely heroes, Kim Sato, bacteriologist, kendo practitioner, and space adventurer. (The latter being more by accident than the former.)


Journalist: Hello, Scholar Sato. May I have a moment of your time? Our readers would like to know more about your recent activities.


Kim: Do you wish me to break down my work on radiation-consuming bacteria in laymen’s terms? I’ve published several peer-reviewed articles about our successful movement from the second to third stage of our human trials, but I’ve witnessed that newspaper journalists tend to cherry pick sentences out of context and give the public the wrong idea about advancements in science. It’s good that you’ve come to me.


Journalist: Actually, I meant your activities in space. When you and Professor Casmir Dabrowski left the planet to avoid robot assassins. That’s so exciting! Our readers want to hear all about it.


Kim: You’re… not here about my academic work?


Journalist: No, sorry. I understand that you and the professor barely escaped with your lives and had to hitch a ride with a dubious smuggler and an evil genetically engineered freak of a warrior woman. Is that true?


Kim: Technically, Captain Lopez is a bounty hunter down on her luck, and Qin is neither evil nor a freak. Please don’t call her that around Casmir. She was designed by pirates who wanted a super killer, but she has a surprisingly amenable soul. And she likes to read fairy tales and romances. While I have no data to back me up, I would hypothesize that such are not the typical entertainment preferences of an “evil” being.


Journalist: Is it true that you and Professor Dabrowski met the heinous, evil, and dastardly pirate Captain Rache? Surely he doesn’t read romances. What was he like?


Kim: You used three adjectives to describe him. What else could I add?


Journalist: Did you see under the mask he wears? They say his men don’t even know what he looks like.


Kim: I did not. Did you by chance see that I have a new article out in Microbiology Monthly? I would be quite pleased to speak about my work and help educate the public on scientific advancements.


Journalist: Do you think Captain Rache is horribly maimed or half cyborg? Maybe that’s why he wears a mask.


Kim: I believe he has cybernetic enhancements. I gather that’s not atypical for people who fight for a living. But I would prefer not to speak about Captain Rache.


Journalist: Oh, really? Let’s go back to Professor Dabrowski then, shall we? I understand he was able to thwart some troublemakers, despite his… He has a few medical issues, doesn’t he? Not the best genes, eh? You’d think in this modern world that we’d be able to fix seizures and the like.


Kim: He gets by. He’s relatively normal. Medically speaking, anyway. I don’t think his genes can explain his inability to use a coaster when he puts his condensation-dripping beverages on the coffee table.


Journalist: You’re kind of stiff, aren’t you, Scholar Sato?


Kim: I would rather discuss science than human beings.


Journalist: But our readers find it much more exciting to get the stories of real people!


Kim: That’s disheartening.


Journalist: I understand the professor’s knowledge of robotics came in handy against some mercenaries. Could you tell me about how that went?


Kim: If you’re interested in Casmir’s exploits, you should probably talk to Casmir. He likes talking. Even if nobody is around. I once caught him discussing the merits of loosely coupled particle robots with decentralized control algorithms… with the coat rack.


Journalist: Oh? That sounds impressively intellectual.


Kim: The next time I passed through, the discussion had shifted to how well balanced superhero powers are in modern comics. Like I said, he’s chatty. He’ll give you enough for a whole book, if you want it.


Journalist: A book?


Kim: Yes, those things with pages and bindings. Admittedly those features are usually virtual these days.


Journalist: I know what books are, thank you. I was just considering if anyone would read a book about a roboticist in space. The bestselling thrillers at the launch-loop book shop always feature strapping Fleet captains, warrior knights, and cunning police detectives. I don’t know if anyone would buy a book about a roboticist.


Kim: And a bacteriologist.


Journalist: Pardon?


Kim: I was there too.


Journalist: Yes… that should give it much more commercial appeal.


Kim: *flat cool stare*


Journalist: I’ll just see myself out.


Kim: Do.


~


If you’re ready to meet Casmir in person (and the ever warm and friendly Kim), check out the first book:


Shockwave (Star Kingdom, Book 1)


Amazon UK | Amazon CA | Amazon AUS | Amazon DE


Thanks for stopping by!



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Published on May 11, 2019 12:48

May 9, 2019

Star Kingdom Launches! Read Preview Chapters from Book 1, Shockwave

Yes, it’s true. I’ve set the dragons aside (temporarily, mind you) and am back writing science fiction.


This week, my new Star Kingdom series kicks off with Book 1, Shockwave. If you’re excited about a geeky roboticist, a socially awkward microbiologist, a genetically engineered cat woman, a jaded 70-year-old bounty hunter, and a sentient spaceship starring in a book, you can head over to Amazon right now and check it out.



Shockwave (Star Kingdom, Book 1)


Amazon UK | Amazon CA | Amazon AUS | Amazon DE


If you’re on the fence, here’s the prologue and first chapter for you to try. Thanks for taking a look!


Prologue


“When can I eat normal food again?”


“Normal?” Dr. Yas Peshlakai looked toward the vat lamb and rice dish on the bedside table. It was bland, as he’d ordered, but ought to pass for normal on Tiamat Station.


“Yes.” President Sophia Bakas smiled and folded her hands atop the blanket, the silver light of a faux moon streaming in the window and highlighting a surprisingly girlish expression on her timeworn face. “Deep-fried, ice-creamed, and alcohol-filled.”


“Ah. Normal food. Well, I’m not your regular doctor, Madam President, but I recommend you give your liver time to recover from the poison before consuming more. You do have two years left to serve, and the station inhabitants are quite fond of you.”


“Yes, and it is good to be liked. By most people.” Her long fingers curled into the blanket, tendons standing out under her papery skin.


“Star Kingdom zealots aren’t people.”


“My charming young intelligence officers tell me the poisoners were loyal station citizens, irritated that the vote went against them. It seems they hoped to rush along my passing so the more Kingdom-friendly Vice President Martinez would be in charge.” Bakas shuddered, her narrow shoulders hunching. “I don’t understand why anyone would want to live under that backward rule again. Under their draconian laws, half the people here wouldn’t be allowed to breathe the air there. They don’t allow genetic engineering on human beings, not even to cure diseases. They don’t even allow modifications to their plants or food. And their backward stances on marriage and relationships.” Bakas shuddered again, perhaps thinking of her two wives.


“I gather it’s the other half of the people who are a problem.”


“I’m glad you’re not one of those zealots. And that you were able to identify the poison.” President Bakas grasped his hand. “Thank you, Doctor.”


“It was a simple matter, as I knew it would be as soon as I heard the symptoms. During my years at the university, I took several toxicology classes, and for one, I wrote a paper on the ongoing alterations to the archexia family of plants to create potent hallucinogens as well as more deadly substances. It was published in Galactic Plantae, a prestigious peer-reviewed journal in the field. I understand professors at several universities throughout the system are now teaching from that article. It’s shameful that so few doctors are familiar with the less well-known uses for the plants. Your personal physician should have…” Yas made himself close his mouth and shrug. It wasn’t his place to denigrate others. Not everybody had been granted the educational opportunities he had, though it was difficult to fathom that anyone but the best would have been selected to work for the president.


“You’re a touch arrogant for someone so young, aren’t you?” Bakas smiled.


“I’m thirty-five, ma’am.”


He had been a surgeon as well as a toxicology consultant for nearly ten years. The latter was an interest he kept up with, not his main profession, but it pleased him that the station hospitals often sought his advice on tough cases.


“That makes you a mere child, good doctor.”


Since she was approaching a hundred and fifty, he couldn’t argue with her perspective on age. But the rest?


“I merely state the facts, Madam President. I do not, as arrogance would imply, exaggerate my own worth or importance.”


She arched her eyebrows.


“A former girlfriend called me lovably pompous,” he conceded.


“Former? Perhaps your pomposity wasn’t so lovable after all.” Her smile turned into a yawn.


“You should rest, Madam President.”


Yas drew her curtains, eyeing the bright full moon hanging in the starry sky, all of it a technological illusion to hide that the only thing above them was the other side of their habitat. If one hadn’t been to a real planet, one might believe the station was a natural place, with parks and cities and lakes, birds and insects and animals. One might forget that it was a giant cylinder spinning inside a hollowed-out asteroid in System Hydra’s Beta Belt, miles of stone protecting its inhabitants from the sun’s radiation.


“I’ll rest a bit,” Bakas said with another yawn.


Yas made sure she had water, then dimmed the lights as he stepped out of her bedroom. Two presidential bodyguards were posted to either side of the door, and he nodded to them as he passed.


“She’s fine,” he said.


They nodded back.


They had no reason to question him. Yas’s prominent family was known and trusted on the station, and his father had donated to the president’s election campaign. Yas had grown up here, leaving only for a few volunteer medical missions to other parts of the system where people dealt with the vagaries of living on planets and moons.


He passed unbothered through corridors and down lift tubes, his white jacket and white bag with its symbolic red blood droplet on the side identifying him as a doctor. He’d entered the presidential residence through the servants’ entrance and started to depart that way but paused to watch the huge screens in their break room showing the last few points of a zero-g squash game.


Superhumanly agile bodies contorted into impossible positions as the two contestants flung themselves around the enclosed court, ricocheting off the walls almost as fast as the ball. Yas knew the game well, and had played it all the way through school, but he had given up an opportunity to compete on the professional circuit to become a doctor. To become everything his parents had always expected him to be—which didn’t involve bouncing off the walls of a sports court. He didn’t regret channeling his energy into his career, but there were times when he missed the game, the sheer joy of unbridled athletic exertion.


The famous Donahue Dorg scored the final point, and the vid feed cut to a crowd cheering while imbibing beer and the potent sunflower-seed alcohol the station was known for.


Yas waved to the staff still watching—none of them noticed him taking his leave—and headed out the back door. As he stepped into the alley behind the residence, the street lights reflecting softly off the recycled carbon-fiber pavement, four uniformed figures strode out of the shadows to one side. Station Civil Security.


“There he is, right there.”


“Get him!”


Yas looked down the alley in the other direction, certain they meant someone else. But the big men stared right at him as they broke into a run.


“I’m Dr. Yas Peshlakai.” He raised his hands.


A sergeant grabbed his wrist, and meaty fingers bit into his shoulder. “We know who you are. What you just did.”


“You’re going to cuff him, Sergeant? He killed the president. He deserves…” A corporal pointed a DEW-Tek 900 pistol at Yas’s temple.


Yas almost dropped his medical kit.


Killed?” He gaped at the glaring men now surrounding him. “I was just up in her room. She’s fine. She’s recovering well. She wants ice cream.”


“When Garon walked in, she was dead. You were the last one in there with her, the only one with a bag full of medical poison.” The sergeant with the death grip on his shoulder reached for the flex-cuffs on his utility belt.


“No trial for him, Sarge,” the corporal with the pistol said, his eyes full of rage. “Let’s say he ran, and we had to take care of him, of the Kingdom sympathizer. He’s a Kingdom assassin. He deserves death, not to weasel out of everything with some high-priced lawyer.”


“No lawyer for the assassin,” another corporal growled and slapped Yas’s medical kit away.


It clattered to the pavement, tipped open on its side, and spilled its contents everywhere. A jet injector bounced up and hissed as it struck the sergeant’s leg.


He yelped, his grip on Yas’s shoulder loosening.


Yas doubted anything had pierced the man’s skin, but he took advantage and broke free from his captor. He glimpsed the corporal’s grip tightening on the pistol and ducked. A red bolt of energy seared a chunk of hair from Yas’s scalp and slammed into the wall behind him.


He stumbled, bumped the other corporal, and shouted, “Watch out for the bag. The poison is gaseous.”


As the four men’s gazes lurched to the innocuous medical kit, Yas sprinted away from them. It was probably the worst thing he could have said, an implication that he was guilty, but it took them a few seconds to recover and give chase.


He lunged around a corner and down a main street away from the residence, sprinting past delivery robots and electric auto-trucks zipping along the center rail. There was nothing to hide behind alongside the thoroughfare, no crates or barrels, no parked vehicles.


Yas pumped his legs. Where could he go? Not home. They would be waiting. To the Civil Security station to talk to someone sane? Someone who grasped that suspects weren’t executed on Tiamat, especially not before they’d had a trial?


The security men burst onto the street behind him. Knowing he was in their sights, Yas sprinted for another alley. Something slammed into the back of his knee, and pain roared up his leg.


He grabbed a wall, just keeping from pitching to the ground. More weapons fired with soft buzzes as the energy bolts lanced down the street. Yas lunged into the alley, his leg almost buckling every time he tried to put weight on it. He kept running, but his gait was lopsided, agonized. They would catch him soon.


Or they would shoot him soon.


A drone whizzed past, its camera recording him. There was nowhere to go on the station, nowhere to hide. He was miles from the docks and a ship, even if he could somehow slip past port security and stow away on an outgoing vessel.


Gritting his teeth, Yas stumbled out of the alley next to a café, outdoor tables dotting the sidewalk.  A scattering of people sat in the chairs, their faces turning curiously toward him. He meant to run past them and into the café to hide, but he twisted his injured knee and tumbled to the pavement. A fresh wave of pain shot up his leg, and tears sprang to his eyes.


“There he is!” one of his pursuers cried from the alley.


Yas rolled to the side an instant before a red energy bolt skimmed past, slamming into the side of a store across the street.


Panting, he rolled again, angling toward the tables and hoping to get out of the line of sight. He bumped into a chair and tried to rise, to scramble farther away, but his leg wouldn’t support him. It only sent more agony blasting through his body.


Yas raised his hands and flopped onto his back. If he appeared helpless and surrendered, maybe they wouldn’t kill him. Maybe they would follow proper procedure and arrest him for a trial. This was insane.


As soon as the shooting had started, most of the people sitting outside the café had lunged for the door or run off down the street. But a dark-skinned woman with short black hair peered calmly down from the table right above him, one of her eyes glinting unnaturally in the lights shining through the window. A coffee cup hung poised in her gloved hand.


“Is this because we didn’t tip?” She tilted her head toward Yas and quirked an eyebrow toward the man sitting opposite her at the table.


Yas assumed it was a man. He wore a cloak with a hood pulled up and some kind of mask on his face. A DEK-Tek pistol and a double-barreled SK-Ram hung in holsters from his belt.


Yas’s fingers twitched. He could have reached for the Ram. But it was a weapon of deadly force, and he couldn’t shoot to kill, not even to save himself.


But as footsteps thundered in the alley, a squeak of “Help?” escaped his lips before Yas could debate the wisdom of the request.


“Dr. Yas Peshlakai,” the man said dispassionately, as if he were reading the name off a report. He had probably already run a quick facial identification search, the results scrolling down his contact display or whatever networked implants existed behind that hood. “A renowned surgeon and toxicology expert. Huh.”


“And not a criminal.” Yas feared the news bots were already circulating the false story.


The speaker gazed down at him, his features, his thoughts, hidden behind that mask.


The security men jogged into view, slowing as they saw Yas so close to two other people. Yas prayed they were done flinging weapons fire wantonly around, but as they stalked closer, fury in their eyes, he knew they were only getting close enough to ensure they couldn’t miss. There were three of them. There was no sign of the one sane man, the sergeant who’d only wanted to arrest him.


“You’ll serve me for five years if I save your life,” the masked man said calmly, as if Yas wasn’t a second from being shot, as if his blood wasn’t staining the pavement under the table.


“Yes,” Yas blurted in agreement, even though it had been a statement, rather than a question.


“Excellent.”


The masked man sprang from the table and charged the security officers with the speed of a bullet. His opponents fired at him, but he somehow anticipated the shots in time to fling himself into an agile roll across the pavement, one that brought him up between the men. They tried to fan out, to find spots where they could shoot him without endangering their comrades, but he blurred around them, movements too fast to track without augmented eyes. Yas gaped as one man flew into a wall, his head striking hard enough to knock him senseless.


Someone fired wildly, and a red bolt burned through the base of a nearby table, hurling the top into the air. It landed with a resounding clatter on the pavement.


A hand grabbed Yas’s shoulder. The woman.


She pulled him to his feet with a grip hard enough to hurt. His leg threatened to give way again, but she supported him, tugging him away from the melee, from the pounding of fists and cries of pain. Yas pressed his back to the wall, gasping for air and for the strength to keep his legs under him.


“Who—” Yas started to ask, but three precise shots boomed, echoing from the walls of the now-empty street. The SK-Ram, firing bullets instead of directed energy bolts.


They had an alarming finality, and all sounds of the battle ended. The masked man walked around the corner, his cloak flapping around his ankles as he holstered the Ram.


“Come, Doctor.” He extended a hand toward the street. “I have a ship with a sickbay in need of a surgeon.”


“What ship?” Yas asked as the woman and the man gripped him by either arm, lifting him into the air as they walked at his side, his feet dangling an inch above the ground, his injured leg leaving a trail of blood. “Who are you?”


“The Fedallah,” the man said. “Tenebris Rache.”


If Yas had been walking, his legs would have given out again.


Captain Tenebris Rache was the most notorious pirate in the Twelve Systems. And Yas had just sworn to serve him.


Chapter 1


“Fly, little birdie, fly,” Professor Casmir Dabrowski whispered.


He stepped back with his kludgy remote control, promising to build something better once his prototype proved successful. He tapped a button, and the robot bird sprang off his desk, delicate wings flapping furiously as it attempted to fly.


Casmir bit his lip. Would it work this time?


The bird dipped below the level of the desk, and he winced, certain it would crash. But its self-learning neuromorphic chip compensated quickly. The bird tilted slightly and adjusted its wingbeats, then slowly gained altitude.


Casmir’s wince turned into a grin as it sailed toward the ceiling of his lab, swooping left and right like a songbird seeking seeds. Its flight was so natural, it made his heart ache.


It—no, she, definitely she—was beautiful. He couldn’t wait to show her off. Maybe the media, not just the university presses, would write up the project. The news would travel through the gate network, and roboticists throughout the Twelve Systems would see his work and realize his home world of Odin wasn’t backward, at least not in this field. No government policies held back these scientific developments.


That’s what you’re working on now?” a familiar voice asked from the hallway. A few passing university students peered through the door around the man. “You don’t find that underwhelming after three years at the Kingdom’s top military research and development lab?”


Hearing the disdain from one of his former instructors made Casmir want to snatch the bird out of the air and hide it in a desk drawer. He told himself there was nothing demeaning about his project, but he couldn’t keep his cheeks from warming.


“Actually, Professor Huang—” Casmir hoped his voice came out casual and self-confident, even while wondering what it would be like to actually feel self-confident, “—I find it morally refreshing after three years at the Kingdom’s top military research and development lab.” He tapped the remote to command the robot to find a perch. “I never entirely trusted King Jager’s promise that my work would only be used to defend Odin and not to mow down enemies in other systems.”


Technically untrue. It had taken a while for his trust to falter, for him to realize Jager wanted more than to avoid the assassination plot that had taken down his father. The king had ambitions.


“I’m sure he’s not going to do that with your combat robots.” Huang walked into the room, his cane clacking on the tile floor. He was known to twirl it like a pirate’s rapier, prodding students who fell asleep in class. “He’ll use them to make sure Odin, bless our beautiful world, is never conquered by foreigners.”


“So I was told when I started working there. But you hear the same news I do. You know the pushes Jager is making, the sympathizers his agents are cultivating in other systems.”


“I do my best to ignore the news, in truth. Better for the sanity.”


When the bird alighted on the desk again, Huang bent to peer at it through his glasses. He murmured something, and the light of a tiny display flashed in one of the lenses. Showing magnification? Or some more in-depth analysis?


At the same time as he’d had the childhood eye surgery that had failed to fix his strabismus, Casmir had received a neural-interactive chip and contacts with an interface. A lot of the older staff preferred the removable voice-activated lenses to newer technologies.


“This is just a hobby.” Casmir shrugged, as if the project didn’t mean as much as it did. “My team is working on self-aware medical androids to be deployed to remote habitats and scientific outposts where there aren’t human doctors. This girl—” Casmir gently touched the smooth head of his bird, “—Chaz, Simon, Asahi, and I are going to enter in a realistic-flight competition. Humans have been making drones for ages, but we’ve yet to create a robot that can truly emulate a bird’s flight.”


“Because there’s not much need, eh?” Huang straightened and adjusted his glasses.


“I suppose not the need that there is for military robots, but maybe that says something distressing about our society.”


“War and battling over differences has been the human norm since we first discovered fire back on Earth. Or so the history books tell us.” Huang smiled and wavered his hand in acknowledgment of how much information had been lost between the time the original colony ships had left Earth, arrived in the Twelve Systems, and clawed their way back to a spacefaring level. “I’ll admit it is impressive that you got Simon and Asahi to work together. I thought they were mortal enemies.”


“They are, but Simon is a stellar programmer, and Asahi is a wiring genius.”


Some people pick teams based on compatibility of personalities rather than the brilliance of individuals.”


“That sounds like a recipe for mundanity.”


“But fewer explosions in the labs.”


Casmir was about to point out that he’d succeeded in getting his team to finish the project, but an alert pinged on the wall console. He habitually held up two fingers in the standard hold-please-while-I-answer-a-message-or-access-the-net gesture. The display identified the caller: Kim Sato.


“Hello, Kim,” Casmir answered, surprised she hadn’t opted for chip-to-chip messaging rather than the city comm system.


“Did you complete your bird project?” Kim asked, no visual coming up with the audio.


“I did. It’s working. For its preliminary flight around the lab, at least.”


“Congratulations. I will see you at home.”


“Wait,” Casmir blurted, surprised by the abrupt end of the conversation, though he should have been accustomed to her atypical approach to social conventions by now. “Is that all you wanted?”


She paused, and he imagined her puzzling out what an appropriate response would be. He waited patiently. He was used to all types of smart, eccentric people, including Kim.


“I am placing a grocery order to be delivered by dinnertime tonight,” she said. “I am considering whether to simply select our agreed-upon staples or add in a bottle of celebratory wine. There are seven varietals in stock with that adjective in the description. I assume one of them will be appropriate to honor career achievement.”


“Ah.” Casmir grinned, now reading her pause as a debate on whether celebratory wine should be a surprise or not.


“Do you have a preference of red or white?” she asked. “Or sparkling?”


“Red, please. Sparkles optional.”


“I see an appropriate bottle. Goodbye.”


Professor Huang arched his eyebrows after the comm ended.


“Girlfriend? Or android?” Huang smirked. “Or both?”


Casmir’s cheeks heated again at the suggestion that he couldn’t find a flesh-and-blood girlfriend if he wanted one, even if it had been over a year since he’d had a modicum of success in that department. His left eye blinked a few times of its own accord, and he grimaced, willing the obnoxious tic he’d had since childhood to stop. Contacts corrected his myopia, if not his monocular vision, and medication kept his seizures under control, but some symptoms of his flawed genes defied modern technology and pharmacology.


“Roommate,” Casmir said firmly. “And not an android. She’s a bacteriologist who has made many excellent contributions to the medical sciences. She’s good with microbes. Humans are more problematic for her.”


He shook his head, not sure why he was explaining someone Professor Huang was unlikely to ever meet. Mostly because he was still smirking. From his time as one of Huang’s students, Casmir remembered well that the man had a dirty streak, especially considering he was eighty or ninety. Which was old on Odin. It wasn’t like in some of the other systems where genetic tinkering had vastly extended the human lifespan—for those who could afford it.


“Roommate with benefits?” Huang winked.


“If you consider that she’s buying me wine a benefit, then yes. As for the rest, I don’t think she ever notices a man’s—or woman’s—anatomy unless she’s poking it with a sword.”


Huang’s mouth drooped open. “A sword?”


Casmir, realizing that could be misconstrued as an innuendo, rushed to clarify. “Her father and half-brothers run a kendo dojo. The swords are real swords. Well, no, they use wooden ones, mostly, I think. Uhm—”


“Professor Dabrowski?” an unfamiliar voice from the doorway said, mangling the pronunciation of the last name.


Casmir spun toward the stranger with relief, glad for an excuse to end the conversation.


“You can call me Casmir. My students all do. I…” Casmir trailed off when he got a good look at the person standing in the doorway.


The tall, broad-shouldered man wore dark silver liquid armor that covered him from boots to neck, leaving exposed only his strong, lean face and black hair long enough to flap in the wind. Or so Casmir assumed. The knights in the animated law-enforcement posters always had breeze-ruffled long hair and an equally breeze-ruffled dark purple cloak. This man had both, though the building’s ventilation system was not sufficient for ruffling.


He also wore an imposing weapon on his utility belt, what looked like an Old Earth medieval halberd on a short axe shaft. A pertundo, the legends called them, the traditional knight’s weapon and far more sophisticated than they appeared. With a telescoping shaft, it could be used like a spear, but the long, sharp tip fired energy blasts similar to bolts from DEW-Tek firearms, and the blade could carve into the best combat armor in existence. At least according to the war vids.


“Can I help you?” Casmir stepped forward, silently commanding his chip to search the network for a match on the knight’s face.


“I’m here to help you.” The knight glanced both ways down the hallway before stepping inside and palming the sliding door shut. “I’m Sir Friedrich of His Majesty’s royal knights.”


As he said his name, Casmir’s net search came back, displaying the man’s face, name, and address. Daniel Friedrich, knighted eight years earlier. Residence: Drachen Castle.


“Shit, Casmir,” Huang whispered. “What did you do?”


Casmir shook his head. All he could think was that this had something to do with his old job. He’d seen a couple of knights at the military research facility in his years there, but the elite defenders of the crown’s interests were spread across the system, and even some of the non-Kingdom systems. They didn’t stroll into the world of academia often.


The knight strode toward Casmir, his face hard and determined.


Casmir lifted his hands, fearing he was about to be arrested. But for what?


“I bring a message.” Friedrich halted in front of him and glanced at Huang.


Huang leaned his hip against the desk and folded his arms around his cane, not looking like he intended to leave.


“You must flee,” Friedrich said, focusing on Casmir again. “Get off the planet. Out of the entire system, if you can.”


“Uh. Any particular reason?” If anyone else had been making this suggestion, Casmir would have scoffed, but if this man truly was a knight who lived in the castle… “Are you entering the robotic flight simulation contest? You’re not my competition trying to get rid of me, are you?”


Friedrich gripped his arm, his lean face humorless. “This isn’t a joke, Dabrowski. Knights don’t get sent out for pranks.”


No, Casmir knew that. But cracking jokes was easier than accepting the fear starting to roil in his gut. Fear and confusion. He was shocked a knight would have been sent out for him under any circumstances. Even a squire would be an oddity.


“Who sent you?” Casmir asked.


“Your mother.”


Casmir would have fallen over backward if the knight hadn’t still gripped him. “My… you mean my adoptive mother? Irena Dabrowski?”


“No.”


Casmir opened his mouth, but he couldn’t find words. He didn’t know who his real mother was. His parents—his adoptive parents—hadn’t told him. They’d always said they didn’t know, and in the thirty-two years he’d been alive, he’d never found anything to suggest his real mother lived.


“Someone wants to ensure you do not see another sunrise,” Friedrich said. “She told me to tell you to get off-world. Don’t return to your house before you go. Just take what you have and find passage on a ship. Don’t use your banking chip. Take your ID chip offline.”


“My mother spoke to you? Today? I don’t even know—” Casmir gripped the knight’s arm back and shook it, as if he had the strength to affect the large fit man. “Who is she?”


“She—” Friedrich broke off and frowned, his eyes unfocused as he received some message. He cursed and stepped back, easily shaking off Casmir’s grip. “They’re coming. Two of them.” He opened a rectangular pouch on his utility belt and pulled out a folded disk. “I’ll do my best to delay them so you can escape.”


Escape? This is where I work.”


“Not anymore.”


Friedrich strode not toward the door but toward one of the windows. It was an old-fashioned casement window with real glass, so he could open it and peer out onto the streets and walkways of the campus eight stories below. Without pausing, he hopped onto the windowsill.


“Sir Knight.” Casmir lifted a hand and started toward the man.


Friedrich looked over his shoulder, his eyes intent. “If you value your life and the lives of your friends, get off Odin now. Get out of the system altogether. Go.”


Friedrich sprang out the window.


For a second, Casmir could only gape in surprise as the knight disappeared from sight, the wind whipping his hair and his cloak. Casmir rushed to the window in time to see Friedrich flick his wrist and the disk unfold into a driftboard.


The knight maneuvered it under his feet as he fell, his cloak streaming above him. Scant feet from the pavement, the board’s thrusters fired, and he slowed. But not for long. Board and rider zipped across the street and mag-rails, barely missing an auto-cab delivering students. On the other side, he disappeared inside the four-story cement parking garage.


“Are you going to listen to him?” Huang asked.


“I… I don’t know.”


As Casmir gripped the windowsill, the salty breeze of the Arashi Sea tickling his nostrils, a boom erupted from the parking garage. Flames sprang through the windows on the bottom level, and smoke flooded out through the entrances.


“Did he do that?” Huang asked.


“I don’t know.”


Casmir ran to his desk and waved a hand to activate the built-in computer, wondering if his staff position would get him access to the parking-garage cameras. Already, sirens wailed outside, ambulances or police coming.


“Show me the parking garage, ground level,” Casmir ordered as the desktop display came to life.


“People are running out,” Huang said from the window, his gaze locked on the garage. “There’s smoke everywhere.”


The computer took an eternity to complete a retina scan on Casmir, then showed him the hazy bottom floor of the garage. Wreckage lay everywhere, including in the stall where he’d parked his scooter that morning. He groaned. It was gone, completely destroyed.


A breeze gusted through the garage, stirring the smoke and revealing Friedrich crouched amid the wreckage. He’d put away his driftboard and drawn the pertundo, the shaft extended to more than six feet, and gripped it in both hands. In the legends, knights were always slicing and perforating enemies into bloody pulps with them, usually while balancing on train trestles over rivers or some other ludicrous place for a fight. But Friedrich wielded it like a rifle and fired green bursts of energy into the smoke.


Screams sounded, not from the display but through the window. The knight hadn’t gone crazy and started shooting innocent students, had he?


Huang cursed at something outside. Casmir almost ran over to look, but on the display, the smoke cleared enough for him to see the knight’s opponent.


A faceless, tarry black humanoid figure strode toward Friedrich with deadly intent. It carried no weapons—it didn’t need them.


“No,” Casmir whispered in horrified recognition.


The figure sprang forty feet, more like a panther than a human. Friedrich fired bolts that would have killed a man into its torso, but they bounced off. He didn’t appear surprised. He shifted his grip on the weapon as his foe came into melee range.


“What is that?” Huang came to Casmir’s side and looked at his face. “You know.”


Casmir nodded mutely, unable to take his gaze from the scene playing out.


Friedrich lunged and thrust his pertundo into his attacker’s black torso, the point sinking in and branches of white lightning streaking out and wrapping around it. His foe did not slow at all, merely striding forward to deliver an attack of its own.


Friedrich dodged an impossibly fast punch, the knight displaying speed and agility that would have made him a match for any human, maybe even a genetically enhanced one from another system. But this was no human, and it caught Friedrich on his second attempt to dodge, hefting him into the air.


The knight shortened his pertundo and swung it like a one-handed axe, even as he dangled, his feet well above the pavement. His foe held him at arm’s reach, but one of the swipes landed, the blade cleaving deeply into its side, more lightning coursing around it.


Casmir held his breath, hoping the legendary weapon might be a match for the deadly construct. But a tarry black hand came down and yanked the blade out. The wound in its torso closed, melting together as if it were made from molten wax, and re-hardening into its original form.


Friedrich snarled and tried to land another blow, but his enemy hurled him through the smoke and into a cement wall. He struck with bone-crunching velocity.


“Casmir.” Huang gripped his shoulder. “There’s another one on the mag-rails outside, throwing people around as if they weigh nothing. What are they?”


Casmir swallowed. “Crushers.”


“The robots you helped develop?”


“Yes.”


Huang ran back to the window. “Shit, that one’s coming this way. Casmir, get out of here. If they really are after you…”


“I know,” he croaked numbly.


On the display, the crusher stalked toward Sir Friedrich, who was stirring, but not quickly. Casmir made himself tear his gaze away. For whatever reason, that man out there was buying him time.


He rushed around the lab in a panic, grabbing the bird robot and a bunch of tools and materials, anything that seemed like it might be useful. He stuffed them into his satchel with his lunchbox and a half-full bottle of fizzop, then laughed shortly. Almost hysterically. Was this what he was going to flee the planet with? He had to go home first. This was ludicrous.


“I’ll tell them you went out of town if they come up here,” Huang said. “Do they talk?”


“Yes, they can talk and interrogate you like a professional soldier. Professor, you need to get out of here too. Don’t put yourself in danger. Don’t talk to them. Nobody should talk to them. Try to evacuate the building.” Casmir paused, looking at his desk and the work benches and his satchel. He was throwing things in without rational thought. He’d just stuffed the stapler in his bag.


“Casmir…”


“Just do it, Huang.” Casmir flung his bag over his shoulder. “And be careful.”


He raced for the door, half-expecting to find a crusher looming in the hallway outside.


But the hallway was empty. The knight had come in time. Maybe. Crushers could outrun an auto-cab. If they spotted him…


You be careful,” Huang called after him.


Casmir waved a curt acknowledgment as he ran down the hallway, already contemplating where to go to get a ride off the planet. Zamek Space Station? Would it be safe? Or would those crushers or whoever had programmed them be waiting there? Was there another place with ships that took passengers off the planet? He had no idea. He’d only been outside of the city twice—for camping trips as a boy. He got seasick and cabsick, so he’d always been certain space would be a miserable experience best left for those with iron constitutions.


He ran down the emergency stairs, accessing the net through his chip and searching for transportation options. But he halted and swore as a realization smacked him in the face like a sledgehammer.


Kim. She would be headed home from work soon if she wasn’t already. If the crushers knew to look for him at his workplace, they would know his home address.


What if they were already there?


~


Pick up Shockwave for 99 cents (currently exclusive to Amazon), and continue the adventure…



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Published on May 09, 2019 21:40

May 7, 2019

Reminder: Get My Books Early on Patreon





Just a reminder that I’ll be publishing my new sci-fi series (Star Kingdom) exclusively through Amazon this first year. If you are not an Amazon fan and/or want to get the books EARLY, you can get them through my Patreon campaign, where I release advanced reader copies before publishing them to Amazon.





It’s $5 per release (though anything that will be 99 cents I give to the Patreon folks for free, such as Star Kingdom, Book 1 — which is available over there until tomorrow), so you don’t end up paying more than if you bought it at the bookstore.





I share the books through a Bookfunnel link, and Bookfunnel has instructions to help you get it onto your preferred e-reader.





https://www.patreon.com/lindsayburoker





You’re very welcome to buy my books elsewhere. I just offer this for the non-Amazon readers or anyone who wants to get the books early and doesn’t mind downloading them from Bookfunnel.





Thanks, guys! I’m looking forward to sharing this new series with you. 



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Published on May 07, 2019 11:19

May 2, 2019

The Amazon Conundrum (AKA Why Some of My Books Are in Kindle Unlimited and Most Are Not)

I’ve been meaning to write this post for a while, because I get these questions a lot:



Why isn’t X book available in Kindle Unlimited?
Why isn’t X book available on Kobo/Barnes & Noble/Apple/etc.?

I wanted a place to send folks where I can explain. It’s hard to get all the points across in a response to someone’s Facebook comment. Especially since I always forget how to do the darned hard returns (SHIFT + ENTER, in case you also didn’t know or keep forgetting) there.


So, here’s the scoop: 


Amazon requires authors to make their books EXCLUSIVE to their store in order for them to be enrolled in “KDP Select.”


Among other things, checking the KDP Select box puts your book into the Kindle Unlimited subscription program. For as long as it’s enrolled there, you are forbidden (yes, they enforce it) from selling the books on other stores or even your own website.


So, why do some authors go along with this?


As I write this in May of 2019, each borrow through Kindle Unlimited counts as a sale in regard to determining sales ranking and overall visibility in the Amazon Kindle store.


I’ll pause for a moment so you can debate whether that actually makes sense. When you’re a KU subscriber, you essentially get any books in the program for free with your subscription. Yes, you pay $10 a month for the service, but that money gets automatically sucked out of your account every month before you even notice. It feels like those books are free.


And yet Amazon weighs borrows the same as sales in determining sales rank.


And sales rank determines how visible your book is in the store, i.e. how many people (potential new readers) have a chance of seeing it when they’re browsing the Top 100 lists in their favorite genres.


Thus, it’s a clear benefit to authors to have their books in Kindle Unlimited. Putting aside how much they make from borrows of books (payment is on a per-page-read calculation and, for all but very long and very inexpensive books, is less than an author would make from a sale), the authors are more likely to have their books seen by readers in their target audience.


What may be less obvious is that it’s now a huge disadvantage on Amazon if you launch a new book and it’s NOT enrolled in Kindle Unlimited. You have to get let’s say 200 sales a day to rank in the Top 20 for your genre whereas the author who is enrolled can get 100 sales and 100 borrows, or no sales and all borrows, and achieve the same position–gain the same visibility.


If you’re curious, go take a look at those Top 100 lists and see how many books have that “Kindle Unlimited” tag on them. In the genres I write in, it’s almost all of them. All of the independent books. Sometimes there are some traditionally published juggernauts by authors we all know and buy. Those guys are big enough that they can overcome this disadvantage and still sell well on Amazon. Most indie authors struggle to do that.


It’s why you get situations like the one I find myself in.


I don’t WANT to be exclusive to Amazon, and I resisted that for a long time, but it became clear that I was releasing new books, and it was mostly only my regular readers picking them up. They promptly dropped off the genre lists because they couldn’t compete in sales with books that were being checked out (essentially) for free.


Yes, you can decide to just accept that you’ll only sell to your existing fans, but that’s tough for new authors without many fans yet. And even for those more established authors, there’s always attrition. Some readers won’t follow you into a new series or a new genre. Some readers just fade away with time. If you want to be a career author, you have to continuously work at getting new readers to try your books.


This is not to say that it’s hopeless and you can’t sell books if you’re “wide” in all the stores and not exclusive to Amazon. It’s to say that it’s easier to sell a lot more books on Amazon if you’re in Kindle Unlimited.


But, you may ask, don’t you lose out on a lot of sales by not being in the other stores?


In my case, I definitely lose some sales. Or at least delay them.


My current strategy is to launch new series into Amazon and then, once they’ve stopped selling as well, take them out of exclusivity and publish them in the other stores. To somewhat get around the fact that this means readers on other stores may not get the books for a year, I run a Patreon campaign where I release my books in mobi, epub, and pdf there first (before I launch on Amazon and click the exclusive box).


It’s not ideal, as most people would prefer to buy from their favorite store and have the books automatically appear on their devices, but it’s at least an option that sort of works for now. For those who are on my mailing list and know about it. The rest of the readers have to scratch their heads in puzzlement (or irritation) when they can’t find my new releases in their stores.


So, yes, even with workarounds, I lose out on some sales to readers on Kobo, Apple, Barnes & Noble, etc., But I’ve always made at least 80% of my income from Amazon (sometimes that creeps closer to 90%). Amazon is the largest store by far and has the most potential book buyers by far. My numbers have been like that since the beginning (eight years now), even before Kindle Unlimited and KDP Select existed.


I don’t honestly know how long I’ll play the exclusivity game. As you can imagine, it’s tough seeing your income take a huge hit by opting out, but I may get fed up at some point and just make do. Even if that means making less money and getting my books into the hands of fewer readers.


My point with this post is not to bash Amazon (though I won’t try to hide my ongoing frustration with the exclusivity setup) but to explain the situation to readers.


If X book is not in Kindle Unlimited, it’s because the author wanted to sell their books in other stores, or because they wanted to be paid a 70% royalty rather than accepting a smaller cut from a subscription service. If X book is not available on your store, it’s because the author is staying exclusive to Amazon for now because they feel they have to for the sake of their career. Amazon moves more ebooks than all the other stores combined, and, for the most part, ebooks are how indie authors make money.


I hope you found the answer you were looking for here, even if it wasn’t a satisfying one. As always, thanks for stopping by!



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Published on May 02, 2019 12:56

May 1, 2019

Chains of Honor Wraps up with Book 4, Great Chief

The fourth and final installment in my Chains of Honor series (set in my Emperor’s Edge world) is now available everywhere. Follow Yanko, Lakeo, Dak, Aaryevo, Kei (the very important racist parrot!), and the rest of the gang as they do their best to bring peace to their people… or die trying.


You can pick up Great Chief in these stores:


Amazon | Smashwords | Kobo | Apple | Barnes & Noble


Haven’t checked out this series yet? The first novel, Warrior Mage, is also out everywhere:


https://books2read.com/CoH1


For those who have been waiting for my triumphant return (or at least a return) to science fiction, I’ll soon post a preview chapter of Shockwave, the first book in my new Star Kingdom series. Thanks for reading!


 



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Published on May 01, 2019 14:53

Lindsay Buroker

Lindsay Buroker
An indie fantasy author talks about e-publishing, ebook marketing, and occasionally her books.
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