Rodrigo Diego-Rodriguez, "Roddy", contacted Captain Christopher Raleigh to report finding a huge ship, one much bigger than a typical spaceship. Researcher Elixabeth Wu, working for Louisiana State University, had the brilliant idea of attaching a teleportation device to a space ship to move a ship from point to point instantly. Computers plotted courses to keep ships from popping up in the middle of a star or other undesirable location. Deep space travel became possible and easy to accomplish.
The Captain, an authorized pirate from Lute, looked at the huge ship and asked for information. Scans showed 1,102 humans onboard, with about 800 wearing biocollars which would mean these were indentured servants valued at perhaps 20,000 credits per “indent” – maybe more with the war going on. The Captain sent out 200 attack drones armed with energy cannons. Slowly the transport’s shields weakened and Lute’s AI system LuteNet reported confidence of their successful capture of the ship. All of the ship’s engines were disabled, but their Captain would not surrender. So Captain Raleigh had his First Officer Elijah Maxwell send in the “Intangibles.” The Intangibles were twins, brother and sister, accepted as part of the pirate crew, even though they were a bit unusual. They were survivors of the Gemini experiment, early teleportation experiments of living beings across a planet; some of those early experiments had been devastating and most did not survive. Transporting humans short distances in a ship, from ship to ground, or from ship to ship became fairly safe; but transporting individuals across a planet was not advisable. The twins would be taking the lead once they boarded the other ship. As the rest of the small boarding party glanced at them, Samuel and Skylar blinked in and out of existence, flickering once. As they boarded the other ship, everything was quiet – until a door swished up and ten bots stormed out, shooting. Would this small team of five men and one woman be able to capture this huge ship? What would they possibly find if they were successful? There were still 200 unidentified individuals according to the initial scan – who or what might be among them?
The writing in this book is excellent in many ways. The detailed descriptions of what the reader is seeing really bring the story to life. As with many science fiction stories, the reader can find it a bit prophetic in how real it all seems and how easy to believe it could happen in our own world here and now. Really well done by the author! With this being Book 1, it is a goldmine of information that the reader should have to prepare for moving forward in the story. I would strongly advise not trying to skip around but to read the books in their proper order. I truly enjoyed this one and intend to stick with the series to see where it goes.