Temporal Incursion. Stellar Flash Book Three. Chapter 5. By Neil A. Hogan

Available in Digital and in Print Formats from Amazon

Episode 1: The Hand Continued

Chapter 5

Heartness and the boff appeared next to a large window looking out onto a wide starscape. Resignedly, she stopped struggling and looked out. Her years in space meant she recognized the view. The constellation of Cassiopeia. It was the same image that might have been visible from her station at a point in the orbit around Saturn, but with an additional star near the middle.

Sol.

She sniffed the air and almost choked. Stale and recycled. Not a single whiff of perfume. Gravity felt slightly lighter than Earth normal. Possibly Proxibee normal. Proxibee was larger than Earth but its mass was made up with more low atomic weight elements, so there wasn’t as much gravity. But the humming below her suggested that she wasn’t on Proxibee. She was on a ship of some kind.

The boff released Heartness and stepped back, allowing her a moment. Heartness rubbed her arm but there wasn’t a mark. The robot had gripped her firmly, but gently.

Was it possible to escape? She looked about. Far away, on the other side of the room, was what looked to be the pilot’s area. A tiny flickering dot from where Heartness was standing, but filled with a massive view screen. Any pilot sitting there would think there wasn’t a ship, and that they were just in space. Heartness decided the pilot section was probably for emergencies. Still, it was an option.

While Earth council ships were quite conservative with their space, with every centimeter used and accounted for, corporations could be excessive. The room was at least a kilometer wide. Even with her augmented eyesight, she could barely make out the other side of ship in the distance. A prismatic point finished the ceiling far above her. Was the outside of the ship like a pyramid? The floor seemed to suggest it, stretching in an almost perfect square shape, apart from some exits to corridors on her right.

The entire one kilometer-edged triangular ship, the Stellar Flash, could fit inside with some room to spare. Was this a mother ship of some kind? She accessed data through her newly installed lobe system under her left ear, but expected it would be a while before it retrieved the information she wanted.

And then she remembered her date tonight, and sighed. Zhou would have simply told him she’d been called away on urgent business. At least it was better than telling him she had disappearing ring ice to watch.

 “Alright, boff. You’ve brought me here. I’m sure your corporation couldn’t care less about the potential fine and jail time, if I was to complain, so now what? Champagne?”

The robot officer slowly turned its retro cube-shaped head to Admiral Victoria Heartness, then lifted up its plastic four-fingered hand. “What I’m about to show you is private and confidential.” A bluish hologram began to form above it.

Heartness glared at the image taking shape. “If you’re going to tell me I’m your only hope, I’m going to have words.”

The boff remained silent as the hologrammatic video became more defined, then began playing.

It was not what Heartness was expecting at all.

A macabre image of an indistinct human hand rotated in the air in front of her, tiny waves of electricity sparking and cascading across its surface. The skin looked alive, with faint veins swollen in mid throb near the wrist. The nails were chipped and dirty, with shadows of dust in places. Dark oil marks on the finger tips, and the general blurriness of the blue image disguised its owner.

“What is it?” asked Heartness, fascinated, as the hand continued to turn. “A piece of artwork?” For a moment, she had thought it had simply been cut off by the edge of the visual reference. But then the wrist had faced her, showing a cross section of the marrow in both the radius and ulna, surrounded by muscles, veins and skin perfectly sliced through as though separated from the rest of the body at the molecular level. There was also a flickering field right at the edge, suggesting that whatever the hand was attached to, was accessing some other dimension.

“A human hand,” answered the boff, anticlimactically.

Heartness sighed, her curiosity changing back to annoyance with the robot. “I can see that,” she growled. “What happened to it? Who’s it from?”

The boff pointed at the hand above his hand. “This was found at the Proxima Centauri B Frequency Research Center, inside hexicle 18.” It turned the image off and the bright light of the field faded away, revealing the expansive room once again.

“My leasor has not informed the interstellar military yet,” the boff continued. “She wants this to be discrete. She sent me as soon as she realized some delicacy was required.”

“And so, you decided to strongly encourage me to come.” While she hadn’t taken any private gigs for some time, thanks to her work with Earth Council and the Interdimensional Coalition, she knew from experience that initially, most private organizations and government parties required some secrecy before announcing the solved problem to the world.

“We have sealed hexicle 18 until you are able to have a close look at it.”

Heartness had no idea how getting closer to the floating hand would help her be any the wiser. “Any other records? What about others on the base? Do you have any other evidence of the missing 27?”

“Updates received. The hand is the only living thing that has been found so far. Though, our benefactor is not sure about something else nearby, which she plans to show you. However, only 17 of the 54 hexicles have been explored. Investigation has now been paused while we await your response.”

“The hand is alive?”

“Still. It hangs there, not dying. The hand could not be shown to you on your station. Now that you have seen it, you are free to decide. You have your flash band and can leave from this point in space at any time. Please let me repeat that 27 scientists have disappeared, and your presence is required.”

Heartness knew this was her field. She was contacted when there was anything the bot officers, A.I. detectives, or government organizations couldn’t solve. With her extensive experience in multiple dimensions and realities, there weren’t that many in humanity’s sectors that could do what she did. She smiled ruefully. She would be happy to give them a hand. “You know my price.”

“Yes, Admiral Heartness. Labor credits are ready to transfer to your charity the moment you sign.”

Heartness moved some hair out of the way, and touched her implant. It was still searching for information on the ship, but the work contract had already been transmitted directly to her. It displayed in front of her eyes. Her analysis software did not detect anything unusual, so she sent a simple thought, and her brain wave vibration signature was transmitted via flash communication to the authorization department in the main brokerage on a satellite orbiting Proxima Centauri C. Within a couple of seconds she received the confirmation back via flash satellite relay that the first 100,000 credits had been transferred to her charity. “Boff. As you can now independently confirm, the contract is signed, and I will help the F.R.I find a solution. Please advise Space Station X-1a that I am fine and that everything is under control.”

“I’m sorry, Admiral Victoria Heartness,” said a voice in the air near her. “We must keep this a secret for now.”

“Have you been standing there invisible the whole time?” Heartness asked the air.

“The boff alerted me that you have signed, so I drifted over.” Then there was a click, and a woman phase-shifted into reality next to them, taking a couple of steps to reorient herself with the floor. She looked at Heartness seriously. “The hand you saw isn’t the only problem we have. We moved to an outer orbit to collect you more safely. The moment you arrived, the ship began moving back to the closest point we can get. We can’t flash jump closer due to the disturbances, but we’re only a few million kilometers from Proxibee.”

Heartness was unfazed by the woman’s phase-in, and briefly noted the boff had shut down as she appeared. But she had to know more. “What sort of disturbances?”

“It’s better that I show you,” replied the woman. She walked towards an exit in the distance, expecting her to follow.

Heartness sighed to herself. Well, if the woman wasn’t going to go through the introduction niceties, or at the very least say her name, Heartness would look it up herself. These outerworlders assumed everyone used facial recognition as a normal part of socializing and business, but Heartness was still a bit old school.

Her lobe storage unit had finished downloading anything related to Proxima Centauri, decades of data, and had accessed the most relevant information, predicting Heartness’ needs. The woman was Doctor Vilanna Szuki, born on one of the envirostations circling Proxima Centauri D. 37 years old. Seven PhDs. Her father was from Japan and her mother from Ghana, so her features were almost movie-star like. High cheek bones, blue eyes, mocha skin, and a lithe movement that could probably break a few hearts.

Heartness guessed her model looks might be one of the reasons why the woman was hiding away on a massive ship in another star system. Every media outlet from here to Sirius would want a piece of her. Though, if she ever got her back to the space station, that moodhair would have to go.

“I hope you don’t mind if I ask a lot of questions,” said Heartness.

“Of course.” Szuki smiled demurely as Heartness caught up to her. “But there are some things that can’t be explained and will need to be shown.”

“But what about this space? Why so large?”

Szuki laughed, her frizzy hair flickering with gold highlights. “Oh, daddy had this built for me for my 16th. You know, on Earth, parents used to give their children houses or cars. My daddy gave me this spaceship. Big enough to enjoy an almost infinite number of worlds in. I call it the Traverse.”

“Isn’t that a verb?”

Szuki touched her flashband, and the room was transformed into a mountainous terrain with a corral of horses. One of them whinnied and came over to her. She stroked it affectionately, though to Heartness it looked like she wasn’t quite touching it. “Hello stony. See you again soon.”

Szuki clicked her band again, and the entire paddock and animals disappeared, replaced by towering fluid rocks, three suns, and a group of large spikey aliens gathered around an upturned-mushroom-shaped table. “Hey, Sharpie, congratulations on your new spores!”

A slapping sound came from one of the spiny aliens, which was quickly translated to “Hello Vilanna. Thank you. Good to see you again.”

“You too!” Szuki smiled and clicked her band again, and the tableaux disappeared, revealing the empty space once more.

“So, it’s a hologram room. A gaming place,” said Heartness.

Szuki pursed her lips and her hair changed to a light green. “Not exactly. Follow me. I’ll tell you on the way.”

Heartness frowned. Getting information out of people here was going to be harder than she thought.

Temporal Incursion. Stellar Flash Book Three. By Neil A. Hogan

Available in Digital and in Print Formats from Amazon

This is the last of the preview chapters. I hope you enjoyed them. Thank you very much for reading.

Temporal Incursion. Stellar Flash Book Three. Chapter 4. By Neil A. Hogan

Temporal Incursion. Stellar Flash Book Three. By Neil A. Hogan

Available in Digital and in Print Formats from Amazon

Episode 1: The Hand Continued

Chapter 4

The triangular shape flickered green along one side, then settled into a new stable orbit around Saturn, just above the rings. The Stellar Flash was the flagship of the Earth Council fleet, and the best that human and alien engineering could provide. It was the ultimate in interfrequency and interdimensional travel, and also had the ability to travel in time, given the right coordinates.

The Stellar Flash had recently returned from 2.5 million years ago in the Andromeda Galaxy. Unfortunately, it had had to come back the long way around, and it was a bit worse for wear as a result.

The alien crew of 300, with a main Center crew of 8, were mostly on leave. Having taken a space-fold time jump back to the present, and found their cabins full of pieces of iridium, some had returned to their planets, some had decided to visit Space Station X-1a, and some, like Captain Jonathan Hogart, had decided to do what he could on the ship.

Hogart was a pinkish-white, muscular man in his early-to-mid 40s, with short, dark-brown hair, and a sparkle in his eyes that suggested he was always about to make a joke. A few days ago, he had moved to the Stellar Flash, intent on doing things that robots, other crew members, the A.I. and various software programs were capable of doing without him.

“Jonathan, just go to Earth,” Heartness had said. “Hug some trees. Smell some flowers. Take a break.”

“After my recent experience on the Floran homeworld, plants are the last things I want to see.”

His look had been enough, and Heartness hadn’t said another word. But now, after a day on the ship, he was beginning to think he had made a mistake.

“So, A.I., you’re sure this console needs my help?”

“Yes, Captain,” came the soft and feminine Japanese-accented tones of the A.I. “Analysis indicates that the bolts holding that screen to the floor are loose. In fact, all the bolts are loose on all the stands in the center. Please tighten them.”

Hogart held the wrench and stared at the consoles. “I don’t know, A.I. Surely there are other more important things that need to be done.”

“Other areas are about to be fixed by the repair system. Center bolts are at the bottom of the list, so they won’t be done for a couple of days. Your help will enable them to be done faster.”

Hogart smiled. “Well, if you’re sure. I’d be happy to help. This is a lot better than watching over Raj’s shoulder as he unlocks another door.”

The A.I. remained silent.

“Right, then.” He lay down next to the first panel and set to work.

Just then an alarm began blaring.

Hogart sat bolt upright and hit his head on the side of the panel. “Ow!” He yelled. “A.I. Did I activate something?”

“It is a false alarm from the space station a short time ago. Disabling now.”

“Well, that’s a relief.” He looked about the Center Control room, not quite wanting to lie down and tighten bolts.

Eight panels on stands were arranged facing outward to the wall and dome-ceiling screens. In the center was the flash drive – two columns like a stalactite and a stalagmite stretched downward and upward, not quite meeting. The space in the middle generated the flash drive field. Three exit doors were arranged equidistant around the circular area, and the surround screens were currently showing where they orbited above Saturn’s rings.

Hogart grinned at the sight of the colorful planet. It was hard to believe how huge Saturn really was. Even though Saturn’s day was a mere ten hours or so, it took them days to orbit it, and there was always something new to see.

Newslets and Mindshorts had indicated another of Saturn’s rings was about to disappear – the effect of their recent conflict with the Florans, or perhaps simply the aging of the rings. He supposed there would be an observation party at some point, but it meant Saturn continued to be interesting.

Just then, the door to corridor two dissolved, and a young-looking man with thick black hair and brown skin skipped into the Center. “We got door 347 open!” said Officer Raj Kumar, excitedly.

Hogart groaned. “Must you come running in here every time you get a door open? I mean, it takes at least seven minutes. Couldn’t your time be better spent? Besides, aren’t you supposed to be going back to Lahore for the reunification ceremony? It’s a Sunday in Punjab, as I recall.”

“Well, communications are still not that reliable. And, besides, why would I run? I just flash to the entrance and skip in! And in regard to Lahore, I sent a boff to rep me! I’ll watch it later.”

Hogart sighed. Sometimes it was fun hanging around people in their twenties, and sometimes it was just annoying. Raj was, what, 26? He shook himself and refocused. “What was the alarm about?”

“How should I know? I’m the door opener!”

Hogart put the tool he was holding in a box near him. If Kumar had not been assigned by Patel, Hogart might have had words about respect for rank. As it was, he just sighed again. “Just a moment.” He turned to the center of the Center. “A.I. Avatar please.”

An early thirties Japanese woman, in a T-shirt tied at her waist to reveal her midriff, and extremely tight blue pants with holes in them, appeared near the floor and ceiling columns. Hogart raised his eyebrows. “What happened to your kimono?”

The avatar grinned a big smile, her heavily coated eyelashes fluttering. “Costume program. I thought I’d try something from the 80s. Do you like it?”

“2080s?”

“1980s. I think it suits the shape you programmed. What do you think?”

Hogart looked at her clothes, quizzically. The blue pants looked difficult to wear, and made of some extremely thick material. Camping material? “Is that canvas? Like, for tents?”

The A.I. nodded.

“Well, it’s, um, nice, A.I.”

Why would she even think about changing? He had been reading some of the history that had gone on with a clone of himself in the Andromeda Galaxy, and the evolution of the ship’s avatar. While his clone had fallen in love with the previous incarnation of the Stellar Flash ship A.I., he wasn’t going to explore that option.

Perhaps the new A.I. had also read the reports, and was considering a future with him, or maybe he was just being narcissistic. He shuddered. He wasn’t ready for a digital relationship yet. “Back to my original topic. What was the ‘false alarm’?”

The avatar placed a finger on her cheek and closed her eyes. “Accessing,” she said, sweetly. “Official message from Admiral Wei Zhou. Nothing that should concern you. Continue with getting the Stellar Flash ship ready for her next mission.”

Hogart frowned. “Admiral Zhou is back on 1a already? It must be important. Tell me the details, unofficially.”

“You won’t like it.”

“A.I!”

“Confirmed.” The A.I. became unofficially official, staring directly ahead. “Admiral Victoria Heartness has been kidnapped by a robot officer owned by the Frequency Research Institute. She has been traced to a ship several million kilometers from Proxima B in the Proxima Centauri system. The corporation that has obtained her had previously offered several thousand…”

“Enough. I had heard about the bidder. I thought she’d turned it down. A.I. How quickly can we get the Stellar Flash to the system?”

“Flash drive inoperative,” the A.I. shrugged.

“Escape pods?”

“Storage centers still contain iridium stones. No escape pods have been maintained for over a million years. Hangar 27 will be the first, scheduled for tomorrow.”

Hogart stared at the almost empty Center, struggling to work out what to do next. A robot had taken Heartness. Was it a robot uprising, or was the F.R.I. seeing how far it could push its powers? Either way, tightening bolts wasn’t going to get him there faster.

“Ahem,” said Kumar.

“Are you still here?”

“Room 347?” Kumar stretched his arms out as though to say, ‘Are you coming or not’?

Hogart frowned. “I need to work out a way to save Victoria!”

“Admiral Zhou said not to worry. A robot officer took her to a corporation. Admiral Heartness is probably sipping champagne by now. Captain, the panels will fix themselves. Please, come with me.”

Hogart straightened his blue jumpsuit. “Why is 347 so important?”

Kumar danced back and forth on his feet. “Oh, come on Jonathan. Come and see. Live a little. You’ll love it.”

“I think I’m more likely to regret it,” muttered Hogart, but he followed after Kumar. As they exited into the corridor, Kumar clicked his flash band on Hogart’s, grinned winningly at him, and then they both disappeared.

Temporal Incursion. Stellar Flash Book Three. By Neil A. Hogan

Available in Digital and in Print Formats from Amazon

Temporal Incursion. Stellar Flash Book Three. Chapter 2. By Neil A. Hogan



Temporal Incursion. Stellar Flash Book Three. By Neil A. Hogan

Available in Digital and in Print Formats from Amazon

Episode 1: The Hand Continued

Chapter 2

Admiral Victoria Heartness got up from her desk at the darkening interior of her space station office and scratched at her newly extended long brown hair. Something was wrong, if the raised hair on the back of her neck was any indication. The shadows in the room were lengthening, and it had nothing to do with the reflected light from Saturn just beyond her window.

Unless it was more to do with science, she thought. Static electricity? An increase in electrons causing eyes to perceive a slight darkening of the environment?

She looked down at her arms and could see the hair on the backs of them rising as well. What could cause that? She walked around the room. Was it getting lighter in the center?

The only thing possible was the controlled formation of an isolation field of a personal flash jump. And the slow speed suggested a longer jump

Then everything became clear to her.

Someone was about to flash jump into her secure office, from outside the Solar System, illegally!

Florans coming back to get revenge?

Higher frequency aliens not realizing there are laws in Frequency Zero?

Doctor John Patel forgetting to forewarn?

Who or what else could it be?

Even her date had to meet her at the bar, and no one else was scheduled.

She went back to her monitor and quickly closed the file she had been working on, a secret services logo appearing on it before it disappeared. She briefly imagined white noise across her thoughts to erase anything related to the file, then she got up from her desk and walked around the room.

“Alright. Where are you? It doesn’t usually take this long to materialize. What are you waiting for?”

There was only one group that might be able slow the manifestation this much. The Frequency Research Institute. Those corporation types were highly likely to send a representative to beg. Nice of them to ring a doorbell first, she thought. She wondered who they would send. She hoped, if it was a he, then he’d be handsome.

She shielded her eyes as a bright oval of white light wiped the color from the room for a moment, and a chunky, one-meter-tall blue robot appeared.

To be more precise, a corporation’s leased robot officer.

She looked at it with dismay. Talk about a disappointment. “You sent a boff?” she said to whoever might be listening. “I guess you need to learn a thing or two about impressing someone.”

The robot swiveled its round eyes and cube head towards her. “Admiral Victoria Heartness identified. Your presence is required.”

“No. I already turned your request down. I have much more important things to do right now. There are plenty of other people in the System who can h…”

A piercing alarm began to sound across Space Station X-1a, and probably soon on the nearby bases on some of Saturn’s moons. Heartness swore as she remembered this kind of incursion would immediately activate any number of potential anti-foothold strategies. She quickly ran back to her desk and swiped her finger on the panel inset, canceling them. Then she spoke to the ceiling. “A.I. Broadcast the false-alarm message.” As she stomped angrily back over to the robot, she barely heard the placating message of the A.I. echoing throughout the station.

“Why are you here?” She faced down the placid face of the boff with her hands on her hips. “What possible situation could have occurred just over four light years away that needs my personal attention right now? You’ve broken quite a number of laws coming here already.”

The boff stared impassively forward. Like an ancient robot toy for children, its cube-shaped head with round metal eyes, a wide mouth with painted teeth, and even white marks on the side to indicate ears, suggested something that no one could take too seriously.

A spring of antennae stretched across the top of its head, and its head sat atop a rectangular body with additional oversized buttons and dials. When everything the boff needed to be able to function could fit into a few thin cylinders on stilts, this bulky dysfunctional throwback was almost laughable. Despite herself, Heartness marveled at the retro construction, and especially liked the large off-switch on the back.

The boff’s simplistic communications system began to explain in a tenor lilt, even echoing apologetically. Heartness frowned at the program’s attempt to appeal to her emotional side.

“I apologize, Admiral Victoria Heartness, ma’am. But my licensor says that it is urgent. 27 scientists have disappeared from our base on Proxima Centauri B. Your presence is required.”

Heartness looked at it, exasperatedly. She was tired of corporations leasing robot officers, then not programming them correctly. “Find the answers. Fix the problem. That’s what you’re programmed for. You don’t need me.”

The boff stood silent. It had delivered its message and now it was waiting on a response to that message. Nothing else.

A simple machine.

Heartness hmphed, then walked around it, while she thought. What was she going to do with it? Would it leave when she said no? Would it hang around until she said yes? Maybe she could get Watanabe in to look at its programming. Was there anything special about it? No weapons. That was a good sign. Soft plastic, though it looked metal. She could see the slots where its arms and legs were connected, and easily detachable.

Everything was easily replaceable, and some of the parts could even operate by themselves in an emergency. Heartness knew the boff also contained some organic components to ensure that at some point it would have to break down. All robots had these fail-safes to make sure there was no chance of a permanent robot takeover. Even so, it was likely an army of these mechs might just temporarily win, as everyone attempting to fight them would be doubled over with laughter.

There wasn’t enough memory or software for the boff to become sentient, and it just did what it had to do. She stared thoughtfully at the off-switch on the back. Should she…?

No.

“Go back to where you came from, and tell the F.R.I that I’m responsible for over 1000 beings and their families here. I can’t leave every time you can’t do your jobs.”

“This is your final answer?” asked the boff.

“Yes. Tell your people…”

Like lightning, the boff’s right hand snapped out and grabbed Heartness’ arm, then its left slapped an override on Heartness’ flash band.

“What?” she yelled. “You can’t do this.” She smashed her fist down on the arm, but it just bounced back.

She tried to pull the arm off from its side, but the boff was already activating the return journey.

“No!” Heartness yelled, as the flash field enveloped them, and they disappeared.




Temporal Incursion. Stellar Flash Book Three. By Neil A. Hogan

Available in Digital and in Print Formats from Amazon



Temporal Incursion. Stellar Flash Book Three. Chapter 1. By Neil A. Hogan

Temporal Incursion. Stellar Flash Book Three. By Neil A. Hogan

Available in Digital and in Print Formats from Amazon

Episode 1: The Hand

Chapter 1

2133/10/18/08:45 Sunday

The violet underside of the twelve-meter-sided, triangular interdimensional ship passed through the ceiling of the North Australia Space Port monitoring center in Darwin, and continued obliviously on its way. Admiral Wei Zhou watched it with awe, then smiled at the circumstances that had brought her there.

She had joined the Earth Council long ago and worked her way up the ranks. But as is the habit of Earth Council, once you’ve been a captain for ten years, you’re offered a promotion to allow the next recruits their chance at a captaincy.

She did miss it, but now she was monitoring the interfrequency and interdimensional ships that crisscrossed Earth’s orbit, ready to offer assistance if anything Earth was doing interfered with their journeys. If she couldn’t go out into space, then at least space could come to her.

Billions of ships passed through the Earth every day, and it was rare for one to pass along the surface of the planet, let alone through the actual monitoring station in Darwin. Most went through the upper atmosphere or through the crust of the Earth itself. Since Frequency Shift in 2033, most of these vehicles could be seen by the general population, and had long since become part of the background. But, occasionally, like this one, they were worthy of attention.

Now that it had faded through the wall, it was time to return to answering her staff. Admiral this, Admiral that. Sadly, that wasn’t as exciting, and she was tempted to flash back to Guangdong province for a quick cup of tea.

“Admiral,” called one of her assistants. Zhou looked up and recognized the brown hair, weathered skin and long beard. Bruce Jones, one of her Australian staff.

“Yes, Bruce, what is it?”

“Another delivery of powdered iridium from Saturn, just flashed into the base. Begging your pardon, ma’am, but, don’t you think we have enough now?”

Zhou raised an eyebrow. “You do know how much this stuff is in demand on Earth, right? All those people getting their mindview systems removed. That’s a lot of medical equipment.”

Jones frowned. “I do. It’s just that, there’s no more room in storage. Would you like me to organize storage in Sydney?”

Zhou had had no idea that they’d already filled all their storage areas in Darwin. The Stellar Flash ship must have brought back quite a lot. But she’d promised she would take it off their hands, and a promise is a promise. “Very good, Bruce. Yes, Sydney for the rest of it. Was there anything else?”

“Going to go fishing on the weekend. Was wondering, you know, if you’d like to come along?”

Zhou could tell he was trying to be casual about it, but his voice went a bit high at the end. She gave him a winning smile. “Thanks for the offer, but I’m strictly an indoors gal. Steel walls, lots of conveniences, and an A.I. not far away. Not sure what I’d do in an outdoor area. Probably get sunburned. I can’t even swim!”

“No worries!” he replied. He was about to turn away when he noticed something and pointed at Zhou’s left arm.

Zhou looked down to see that a light on her flash sleeve was blinking. “Oh! Thanks, mate.”

He smiled shyly, then turned back to his hologram.

She knew he had a thing for her. Not her type, though. She preferred her men to be a bit more feminine, thinner, hairless, and spend much of their time in space.

But now she had something else to attend to. She looked quizzically at her flash band. She usually got messages at her station stand. Why did it come directly to her sleeve? And who has that channel, anyway?

She quickly opened the message.

“Admiral Zhou, Admiral Heartness has disappeared. Please meet me at Heartness’ office on Space Station X-1a asap.”

Victoria had disappeared?

Again?

It was like anyone on Space Station X-1a would eventually disappear for one reason or another. She was beginning to think that the station was bad luck. Especially as it was being constructed with the number 1 on it during a snake year.

But she knew what she had to do, and quickly began getting ready.

She noticed the message was from Doctor John Patel and quickly understood the secrecy. He didn’t like to do things that were too public.

She checked her appearance in the mirror. No makeup smudges. Foundation was holding, short black hair shone healthily and didn’t need a comb, black jacket fitted well, long black pants were unlined. Should she put some bright red lipstick on? No. She grinned quietly to herself. She didn’t want to distract anyone else.

She quickly gathered some essential items into a handbag, set up a ‘called away on urgent business’ message at her console, then hit the relocation button at the bottom of the message.

A bright white light enveloped her, and moments later she was one billion kilometers away, inside one of the corridors in Space Station X-1a circling Saturn. She quickly stepped out of the way of a bloated blue balloon-shaped alien that floated past her, and did her best to adjust to the slightly different gravity, air pressure, and smells.

The coordinates she’d been given were directly outside Heartness’ office. She waited until another blobby alien squirmed and squelched past her, then reached out and tapped the door.

5:30pm in Darwin translated to 8:00am on the Space Station. Flashlag was going to be a bitch, she thought. Then she fell into a sneezing fit as her nose began to react to all the differences.

The door dissolved, and Patel appeared, standing in the center of the room. He handed her a tissue. “Wei, so good of you to come!”

Zhou took it gratefully and wiped her nose, before putting it in a pocket. “Sorry. You know it’s thirty degrees Celsius in Darwin. What is it here? Twenty?”

Then she realized that Patel was holding his hand outstretched indicating Heartness’ seat.

“Please,” he said, as though expecting no debate.

Immediately annoyed, Zhou threw her bag down on the table and turned on him. “Cryptic message, and I flashed here quickly, as agreed. But you can’t just expect me to take over the station at a moment’s notice every time. I have other responsibilities at the Space Port!”

Patel carefully lowered his arm and frowned. “Wei, I’m sorry. With Heartness gone, we need you here. You’re the best for this position.”

Zhou put her hands on her hips. “I’ve done research since then. Admiral Rasskator is best for this position. Pull her out of retirement.”

Patel shook his head. “I don’t want to sound sexist, but some delicacy is involved. And you have proven yourself time and time again that your feminine energy is superior when it comes to mediation. We haven’t forgotten your help with the Mars-Earth treaty. Basically, I need you to take care of this station of families, and any cultural conflicts that may arise. In fact, it is why I usually recommend a female for this role. I’m really not good at looking at anything other than the big picture, and males can be, how shall I put it, a bit too logical? We forget to allow our emotions to have a say.”

Zhou lowered her tattooed brows and stared at him. “Get that fabulous Admiral Klimova from the Russian outpost near Barnard’s star, then. He’s more feminine than I am! Even my muscles are bigger than his! And you should see his dance moves!”

Patel held up his hands. “I need you here. The station needs you.”

Zhou frowned, then walked around the table and slowly slid into the seat. “Fine. I’m here, again.” She sighed. “Fill me in. What’s happened to Victoria?”

Patel took the seat opposite and grinned as though the exchange never happened. “Excellent! Now, changing the subject. You know, I’m always tempted to take advantage of my power here, but I do my best not to let it get out of hand.”

Zhou almost laughed. “Really? Did you disable to cameras on the way here, again?”

Patel opened his mouth, then closed it again. “How did you… Never mind. Yes.”

Zhou smiled to herself. A point to her. Patel was the most intelligent person in the Solar System, but he allowed his hubris to get in the way – a lot. He did his best, but he could forget the little things. She’d feel sorry for him if he wasn’t so obliviously arrogant about it.

She took a deep breath, relaxed, and focused on the task at hand. “I guess the reason you needed me here so quickly is because you need something from this room before Earth Council sends its investigators. Something that only I can give as the admiral now in residence.”

Patel nodded again.

Zhou snapped her fingers. “You want me to officially access her files first! See if something is there that could tell you where Victoria went without Earth Council knowing you had looked!”

Patel sat back in his chair and steepled his fingers. “I’m impressed. You should be a detective.”

Zhou smiled, despite herself. “I might have been, if the A.I.’s hadn’t already taken all the detective jobs. Holographic scan of the crime scene, evidence analyzed in seconds, images sourced from recordings of wall reflections, DNA, fingerprints, faces located in the database in minutes, maybe two to locate the criminal, five minutes to arrest her, him or them and lock them up. That’s if the crime hadn’t already been predicted, or caught in the act first. Detectives disappeared decades ago. Not to mention the drop in crime since Frequency Shift.”

“Still, there are cold cases that the A.I.’s can’t help with.”

Zhou shrugged. “It’s all moot, now. In any case, Secret Services man. What are you hoping to find?”

Patel was silent, but raised an eyebrow as if to say, You’re smart. You work it out.

Zhou touched her chin with a finger. “Assuming Victoria was kidnapped from this room, and the investigation hasn’t started yet, then there might also be a recording.”

“Bingo!” exclaimed Patel.

Zhou looked at him quizzically. “Bingo?”

“Oh, sorry, it’s an old 21st century term for a gambling game. Before your time.”

“I see. So, like ‘Mahj!’”

“Mahj?”

“Oh, it’s from an old game from 2,500 years ago.” She waved a hand dismissively in the air. “Before your time.” Zhou looked at the screen, and it immediately unlocked for her. She peered at the processes. “The last complete room recording was half an hour ago. The current one is…disabled.”

She squinted at Patel and he shrugged. She let it pass, then looked up at the ceiling. “A.I. Replay room recording from the previous hour. Authorization Admiral Wei Zhou.”

“Confirmed,” said the A.I.

For a moment there was silence, and then a shimmer filled the room. In the center, a short, pale, dark-haired woman in a blue, short-sleeved jumpsuit, appeared to be looking for something while circling the floor.

“Can I get everything?” asked Patel.

“Pause playback. Everything?”

“I want to access her brain waves, thought processes, everything. I want to rule out any chance she has been mentally taken over. We have been working on something together that is still top secret. If whoever took her read her thoughts…”

“Accessing recordings of any person’s thoughts is usually reserved for extreme cases.”

“When not on a mission. All thoughts are recorded as standard on vehicle that has a flash system. We’ve got years of Heartness’ thoughts on record as Captain.”

Zhou stared at Patel with a look of distaste.

“Now, I know she’s a friend of yours,” he continued. “But flash jump records indicate a robot officer has taken an Admiral. If this is the start of another robot uprising, the whole of humanity could be affected.”

Zhou frowned at this new piece of information. “A robot? Any other nuggets I should know?”

Patel shrugged again as if to say, I don’t know what information to give you that you need to know.

She looked up at the ceiling. “A.I. Access entire recording of the appearance and disappearance of the boff and Admiral Heartness. Overlay reality with a holographic version, and give mental access to Heartness’ thoughts for me and… my guest. Brain wave vibration authorization Admiral Wei Zhou.”

“Confirmed,” said the A.I.

“Thank you, Wei,” said Patel.

Reality around them blurred and changed, and the recording began.


Available in Digital and in Print Formats from Amazon

Temporal Incursion. Stellar Flash Book Three. Print Cover.

Temporal Incursion. Stellar Flash Book Three. Prologue. By Neil A. Hogan

Available in Digital and in Print Formats from Amazon

Temporal Incursion. Stellar Flash Book Three. Prologue. By Neil A. Hogan

Prologue

2129/02/15/01:43 Tuesday

A bright object cut across a section of the Kuiper belt, broke apart a tumbling two-piece proto-comet, then shot out of the Solar System at high speed. Explorer satellites in the area reported it as traveling close to the speed of light.

*

An explosion rocked the little island of South Bimini, flattening palm trees, shorting out power cables, and collapsing buildings. A group of factories dissolved into a crater, then sank under a tsunami. A tiny object exploded from the center of the carnage, climbed quickly into orbit, then blasted past the moon. Luna satellites recorded a white streak but were unable to determine origin or destination.

*

Drone 478 detected the intruder as it sped past Saturn and immediately activated its staccato flash drive, materializing further along the tiny object’s estimated path. The drone recorded it as it passed, predicted its trajectory, then repeated this several times before the object entered the Oort cloud. 478 quickly flashed back to Monitoring Station Z and delivered its composite video.

*

The images faded to black, and the lights came back up to reveal a small, oval room, with a tiny porthole looking out onto a section of Saturn’s rings.

“Interesting, don’t you think?” Doctor John Patel scratched his short, graying moustache, and glanced across the leafy table at his colleague, Admiral Rasskator, an attractive, green, mantis-like being from the planet Preyos.

Rasskator remained silent, a slight movement of one antennae the only sign she had heard him.

“We’ve since been able to confirm the objects are heading to Proxima Centauri B,” Patel continued. “They’re mostly moving at light speed but pause whenever they encounter something. Best estimates suggest they’ll arrive in just over four and a half years’ time.”

Rasskator chirped quietly, and her translator Englished. “They will be in the F.R.I.’s jurisdiction, then. Why see me about these?”

Patel smiled thinly. “Admiral, you plan to retire in four years’ time. If these objects are likely to cause a problem around then, I’d like there to be a faster transition between you and the new person here, so that we have time to prepare for anything that might eventuate.”

“Always planning ahead, John. Don’t you ever get tired? Live for the now!”

“Not a detailed plan, just a, well…”

“You’d like a recommendation for my replacement in 2133?”

Patel nodded.

Rasskator, rubbed her claw across one of her long green antennae, twisted her bulbous eyes a few times, then chirped. “Well, firstly I recommend building a new and more powerful Space Station. I doubt this throwback is going to last much longer. Certainly, if there are going to be more of these particles passing through, we need to have some kind of research center nearby.”

Patel sighed, looking about at the tiny space, knowing the monitoring station was barely 500 meters across. “It’s in hand. The project will commence at the end of 2132. We’ve received enough complaints from, ahem, your station, to bring things forward.”

“Acceptable. I do recommend Captain Victoria Heartness. She will have been working as a captain for ten years by then. An ideal time to be considered for promotion, and as my replacement.”

Patel leant back in his chair and steepled his fingers. “Interesting choice. We’ll see how she goes, and maybe I’ll put in a good word. Anything else I should know?”

Rasskator pointed a claw at the time stamp at the bottom of the last video. “You might have missed something with the last recording. Hard to see tiny Earth numbers in a hologram.” Her proboscis twisted back and forth in amusement, knowing Patel knew Preyosians had much better eyesight than humans. “Let me play the images forward for you again. Watch the clock.”

The composite drone footage played again, and Patel’s eyebrows raised as he realized what he was seeing. “The image is forward but the time stamp is running backward? How did I not notice that?”

“You have billions of projects on your mind. Impossible for you to notice everything. That’s why you are always happy to get a second opinion. In any case, whatever that object is, it is surrounded by a reverse time field. If that hits a populated area, there are going to be many beings in a lot of trouble. You saw what happened to that island in your Bermuda area. You were lucky it wasn’t a lot worse.”

“Well, let’s hope it passes safely through the Proxibee system and keeps going,” said Patel. “Otherwise, it won’t just affect one world, it’ll wipe out the entire flash ship project.”

Introduction

It is the year 2133, just one hundred years after Alien Shift. Humanity can now perceive the trillions of alien races that live in the galaxy, having finally increased their frequency speed to Zero. Now a member of the Interdimensional Coalition, humanity works with alien races from all over the universe on Flash ships, exploring realities on higher level frequencies, and instigating First Contact with new alien races. The Stellar Flash Frequency Ship is the newest addition to the universal mission.


Available in Digital and in Print Formats from Amazon

Audio Book. The Andromeda Effect Stellar Flash Book Two Chapters 1-10 by Neil A. Hogan. Read by a Robot.

Audio Book. The Andromeda Effect: Stellar Flash Book Two Chapters 1-10 by Neil A. Hogan. Read by a Robot.

No time for reading? Pass the time on your morning or night drive with the first 10 chapters of The Andromeda Effect, read by a robot!

It’s available via Youtube, so you can load up the video here:

Please note that this video just contains the first 10 chapters. There are 77 chapters in all.

You can find out more about the book here: The Andromeda Effect

NB: Just checked the recording. No idea why the last couple of minutes have been cut off. A problem with Microsoft Movie Maker, I expect. Here’s the missing section:


The Hangar was reserved for visiting craft, so was quite bare, apart from various biorepair stacks and parts cabinets that lined the walls. Hogart put his hand to the window and peered closer, getting his bearings, then moved towards the door to wait.

In the window reflection he saw his two chosen companions appear not far away and quickly clack and inch up behind him.

“Hangar Bay 27 decompressed. Attack ship on reverse thrusters, and slowing. Front cone drill active.” The A.I’s voice echoed around them. “The vessel is adjusting its speed for careful penetration rather than ramming.”

“Sounds like it knows what the Stellar Flash is made of,” said Puppy, as they reached the transparent metal of the Hangar bay door. Energy shields had been erected inside so that, as soon as it happened, the ship wouldn’t be able to move any further.

Hogart trusted the A.I. would do what she needed to do at the right moment.

“Impact in 5…4…3…2…”

Moments later, the roof of the hanger phase-shifted, and the nanite shield split and rushed apart, creating a hole large enough, just as the enemy ship was about to hit the outer surface. With nothing to land on, the artificial gravity quickly pulled it through the ceiling, and it crashed to the floor, spinning awkwardly, as hard-light beams began to slow it and hold it in place.

The A.I. reactivated the ceiling, repressurized the room, then released the door. Hogart, along with his security guard and translator, stalked in, nanite suits on and guns at the ready.

“Ready to attempt translation, Cuddly?”

“Yes, Sir!”

The light beams slowed the ship to a stop, and positioned it the right way up. With a clang, the entrance door hit the ground, and to everyone’s surprise, a Floran in military regalia stood in the opening.

Hogart immediately noticed that the Floran was wearing 22nd century decorations.

He briefly looked back at Puppy and Cuddly, and shrugged. Cuddly waved an upper proleg in understanding. No special translation was necessary.

Their language systems would work just fine.

Hogart took a step towards the Floran. “I see. You thought you could come back in time and recapture me here, did you?”

The Floran looked at him coldly with its stamen-like eyes and orchid-flower mouths. “I don’t know you, and I have only two objectives. You have prevented objective one. Speaking of which…” Then the Floran turned to the ship. “Computer. Self-destruct.”

The Floran’s ship complied. “Self-destruct initiated. Stellar Flash sterilization program commenced. Power and energy build up, confirmed. Goodbye Commander Skrgypst. Six… Five…”

“Noooo!” yelled Hogart.

Not that yelling would do any good.

Audio Books Read by a Robot. Stories by Neil A. Hogan. New page online

Audio Books Read by a Robot. Stories by Neil A. Hogan. New page online.

I’ve just added a new page to the site. Audio Books. Audio Stories By Neil A. Hogan. Read by a Robot.

I created these audio versions a while ago, but hadn’t created a page for them yet. If you prefer listening to a story rather than reading them, these audio versions are available as Youtube videos.

This one is the most recent upload:

Enjoy!

The Andromeda Effect: Stellar Flash Book Two Chapter 10 by Neil A. Hogan

The Andromeda Effect: Stellar Flash Book Two

By Neil A. Hogan

Chapter 10

Hogart headed for the Center bridge, worried about their impending situation. As a technologically augmented human, he was quite happy to rely on his software implants, external A.I. inputs, and information from his crew to help him predict future events, as he always knew that, no matter how accurate they may sound, nothing was set in stone. But, he had a hard time dealing with the idea that deaths for many aliens were predetermined before birth.

Of course, if he really wanted to know when his would be, he could simply request access to the universal mind on Frequency Seven, hear from versions of his future self, then choose which life path to take that would lead to that destiny.

But Hogart liked his restrictive existence. There was a vaguely pleasantly relaxing feeling about believing that everything in the future could change, and that he could somehow live forever.

Knowing Ssyrer and five others were going to die on this mission was quite disturbing. He didn’t want to lose any of the crew, ever. But, occasionally, it happened.

His mind took him back to a time when his close friend and co-guard, while escorting one of the galaxy’s many empresses, was struck down by a neurotoxic bullet when he was the first to exit the passenger drone. Even though the memory had faded in the past twenty years, Hogart still clenched his fist in anger from the loss.

Since then, many had died as he had risen up the ranks, but it was usually the frontline soldiers, or people several positions removed. The further up he went, the further away he was from death.

He hadn’t been in the firing line for a long time.

But this new job, as captain of the Stellar Flash, meant there were only vague levels between everyone. More scientific than military, the First Contact mission also meant that chains of command were there purely to enable easier organization. All the crew were important people from their own races, and in that sense, everyone was his equal. It also meant that he would get to know all of them by the end of their seven-year mission, and any deaths would be felt quite keenly.

He only had himself to blame, of course. One of the things that got him this position was his interest in experimenting with new policies and procedures. He’d agreed to the recall chip implant. He’d agreed to be the first ship to test receiving death memos. He’d agreed to so many other things.

Introducing the update that there would be deaths, meant that Hogart now had an opportunity to avoid the situation, and not meet those crew members who were due to die, or actively seek them out and be a counsellor to them.

But, would he really be counselling them, or merely relieving himself of guilt?

And then, of course, it was unknown what time they would die. His natural human instinct made him uncomfortable attempting to meet them anytime soon. He didn’t want to be there at that moment, though as Captain, perhaps he should be.

But Ssyrer was special. He’d met her after their previous mission, and they’d had quite a chat in the station bar.

The news had been saddening.

Hogart decided, then and there, that knowing that there were going to be deaths should never be told to someone running a mission. He would submit a report as soon as he got back with that recommendation advising of the distraction, and how it would impair his ability to command.

Not to mention worrying about the impending video messages he would need to create for their families.

And then, there was one that was listed as anonymous. 300 people on board, and any of them could die at any moment.

He looked down the corridor towards the Center entrance. It was a bit of a walk for most humans. He could have just flashed there, but the idea of long corridors for able-bodied humans was to keep everyone fit. And, that was so important when many spent years in space in different gravity environments.

The International Coalition also encouraged wide spaces. They advised the humans should always be given plenty of opportunity for thinking time. Ideas came in moments of solitude, meditation and relaxation, and if the human race was to survive another thousand years, these break times must always be included. With humans reducing recreation, eating, and bathroom times, sometimes the only time they could think clearly was on a long and boring walk.

He looked down the corridor again. Almost there. What else did he have to think about?

That picture John had sent him.

The image he had seen of the Stellar Flash, and that asteroid not far away, was concerning. The evidence was there that they would arrive. He couldn’t change any of it. But would they return?

He should his head. He had to concentrate on the mission ahead.

His main crew looked at him as he entered the Center, and he knew, even with their alien body language, that there was some semblance of concern. They’d worked with humans long enough to pick up on a few things.

In just a few hours he had been captured, tortured, escaped, regenerated, updated on a mission, told six crew members were going to die, and now he was about to time travel back 2.5 million years to another galaxy, probably in the middle of an ancient interstellar war.

A normal day at the office.

“Getting up to speed is a lot harder than I thought it would be,” he said aloud, rubbing his eyes. He turned to Spiney. “So, your rescue with the new system was what stripped my skin, not anything the Florans did?”

“I’m sorry, Sir,” said Spiney. “We were attempting to find a way to avoid what had happened last time you were trapped – when you got glued to a wall on the Mushbug’s planet in Frequency One.”

Hogart could barely remember the situation, as it had been within a frequency level that was difficult for humans to recall, but according to the reports, he hadn’t been able to move as his nanite suit had been stuck. This new experiment should have enabled him to escape from any trapped situation safely, even if his nanite suit couldn’t.

If it had worked properly.

“I could have lost more than my hair!” He adjusted his pants, feeling uncomfortable.

“Anything you lose can be grown back,” stated Spiney, “as long as you don’t lose your life.”

“I think we just need to go back to flash bands for the time being. While no one really cares these days if someone is bald, I personally care. I like my hair. I don’t want to keep losing it every time I need to escape from somewhere.”

“Yes, Sir.”

Hogart turned to the rest of the Center crew. “Alright, I’m sure everyone has read the mission briefing. I’ve also received some additional intel. It’s possible we’ll be under attack the moment we arrive.”

“Ready to flash when you are, Sir,” said Tonderai.

Hogart nodded, then blinked. Things were blurred. He was in the corridor, and then…

Where was he? Aliens standing at white terminals. An attractive, green humanoid girl at the far end, staring at him – Tonderai. A 360-degree surround screen with an image of Saturn, looking up at them.

Oh. On the ship. The Stellar Flash.

Things seemed blurry, warped. Translated voices echoed.

Was he feeling faint? He reached a hand up to rub his temple and almost missed. Probably the after effects of everything. That hit on the head from the Floran. He touched his temple, confusedly. No bump? Amy must have fixed it quickly.

His security officer, Puppy, looking more like a giant spider with twelve legs, waggled the back of his head slightly. For his frightening bulk and alienness, he was probably the most human among them. Puppy was at the other end facing outward, but his back eyes were continually observing. Were they showing concern?

Of course, Puppy was used to hairy beings like himself, and Hogart had just lost all his hair. He guessed he might be a little bit more worried about him than usual.

Hogart blinked. Again he’d lost focus. What was he about to do? He shook himself again. Had the Florans done something to him?

He called up his mind-view system again. All hormone levels that helped focus thought, and even his dopamine levels, seemed to be normal, though dopamine was on the lower side.

Lack of exercise, probably. The corridor wasn’t enough.

He looked at his crew again. What did Torus do again? Was it Geo or Torus that was the astrophysicist? Cuddly was communications, and his second officer, but Spiney was his First Officer, and what? Advisor? Ideas man?

He clenched his fist in frustration. He couldn’t command like this.

There was an option he hadn’t used before. Template Hogart. All the basic memories he needed to be able to captain a crew. He tapped into it. His previous copy-self could take over while he worked this out

For a moment it was strange relinquishing control to a copy version of his memories, but eventually he found it soothing. He saw his arms and body move from behind his eyes, not worrying about anything, knowing his robot-like self would be even more efficient than he could ever be.

His copy-consciousness placed his physical hand on the white panel in front of him ready to send a message.

“I might even have a quick nap,” Hogart thought to himself. “I should have delegated to myself before.”

“All personnel,” he heard himself say, accessing recent memories. “We are about to jump into deep time. This mission back to 2.5 million years ago is strictly off the public record. We don’t want civilian Terrans knowing it’s this easy to time travel. As usual, Earth Council will be recording your thoughts via Greg and our Storyteller system. Thank you. Get ready for flash jump.”

He then took his hand off the screen and pointed at Tonderai. “Over to you, um, Officer Tonderai.”

She looked quizzically at him for a moment, then nodded and closed her eyes. Her green and olive face seemed to waver slightly as she linked completely with the ship’s Higher Intelligence and its A.I., then activated the flash jump drive.

The split central pole began flickering with white streaks of light, as the energy for the flash jump built. Then a white sphere of dark energy and liquid light began expanding from the gap in the center, mini vortexes creating faintly colorful swirls on its surface as it enveloped the control room. The light expanded through the walls, across the entire ship, and filled the triangular craft with a bright light, before swallowing the structure.

Outside the Stellar Flash, a spherical energy field formed around it, isolating it from the rest of the universe. Moments later, the ship disappeared from the Solar System.

It briefly appeared outside space/time in a grey nothingness void known as the template level reality, reconfirmed its path to a nearby galaxy, adjusted for the new space-time differential, then reemerged in deep time, 2.5 million Terran years ago.

Inside, the energy had dissipated. On the surround screen, Saturn had disappeared, the image now replaced by a massive blue star, the intense light suddenly turning everyone into vague shadows.

And, immediately, the firing began.

“Shields at maximum!” yelled copy-Hogart. “Confirm location!”

“The Stellar Flash has unlimited power,” said Spiney. “They’re always at maximum. Also, the external hull is slightly out of phase with the rest of the universe so, unless the attacking ship is made of the same material, or utilizes similar exotic particles, none of their weapons can penetrate.”

The original Hogart temporarily overrode his copy-self. “Oh, of course! Just making sure.” His copy-self backup didn’t have all the updates. Perhaps he couldn’t take that nap after all.

“Location and time zone confirmed,” said Tonderai. “Area NGC 206 of the Andromeda Galaxy, about 2.5 million years ago. Current space-time vibrating at 180 cycles per second.”

Hogart took a breath, and tried to focus on the bright shadows in front of him. “Almost Frequency One. Right. We might forget some of this. So, who is firing on us? And could someone dim that sun?”

“Dimming now, Sir,” said Geo, reaching out one of his drop shapes and sending the thought to his panel.

The star light dulled, and the room returned to normal brightness. Geo then redirected the focus of the surround screen, and it zoomed in on a small asteroid heading towards them. Fiery green bolts were shooting out of the front of it, and the Stellar Flash was pulsing with each impact, reestablishing its path again and again as the collisions tried to knock it into a trajectory towards the star.

Was it a mobile military base?

Then Hogart noticed the funnels sticking out from behind it. “You’ve got to be kidding me! Who would stick an engine on an asteroid? Where’s the maneuverability?”

Torus was first to scan it and show the schematics. “Sir, it seems that these devices are not built into the rock. Rather, using a combination of mechanics, organics, phase shifting and flash technology, it is in fact a ship that has burrowed into the asteroid.”

“A burygine!” said Hogart. “It’s a ship from the ancient galactic war in the Milky Way. We studied them in school. I had no idea they had been in the Andromeda Galaxy as well.” No wonder John had been a bit vague on details. There was no way to be sure unless you were next to one. By then, it was usually too late.

As if to reinforce that point, the asteroid split apart, and an unwieldy looking vehicle with a sharp point was revealed. There was a brief reddish light, the rocks around it vaporized, and then the ship launched itself at the Stellar Flash, like a lizard attacking prey.

“Alert,” said the AI. “Exotic particles detected in the drill bit. Compatible with the Stellar Flash outer hull. Penetration likely.”

Hogart turned to his first officer, and threw his hand out in frustration at him, about to say, “you had to say it,” then he pulled his hand back and sighed. Of course, Spiney wouldn’t get the joke.

He looked over to Puppy, who winked one of his 12 eyes at him. His sign that he had got it. Hogart grinned to himself, then turned back to Spiney, trying to figure a way out of the situation. They could stand here all day and be fired upon, but if the ship was about to drill in, that was another situation altogether.

“What about our nanite repair systems?” asked Hogart. “Can they defend the hull?”

“The nanite shield will withstand the drill for a few moments before structural integrity fails.”

Hogart swore, then turned to the ship’s pilot. “Josie. How will this affect your merger with the ship?”

“Already getting future feedback from an alternate timeline,” said Tonderai, gritting her teeth. “It’s going to be pretty painful.”

“How quickly can we turn the ship and threaten them with the dark energy beam?” Everyone was silent, their alien faces unreadable. The Stellar Flash’s maneuverability was a sore point. “Forget I said anything. Cuddly, can you communicate with them?”

“I’ve sent several contact messages, but either they are ignoring them, their communications systems are not compatible, or their ancient language is not in our database.”

“Geo, can you calculate where it’s most likely to attack first?”

Geo flipped another drop open, revealing his hairy eyes, and blinked. “Your guess is as good as mine, Sir. The ship is powering left then right thrusters randomly so that we cannot calculate its exact final position, though it is still heading straight for us. It plans to attack somewhere.”

“Right! Give me a vague estimate.”

“If the timing remains the same, if they fire their right thrusters just before impact, it’ll be above scout ship Hangar 27.”

“Great! I’d just like to remind everyone that this is a research vessel, and I would prefer not to fire on that ship. I’d rather capture, learn and release if possible. So, here’s my plan.”

Hogart outlined his idea, and everyone set to work.

 

Moments later Hogart flashed outside of Hangar bay 27. The area was in one of the outer corridors of the ship, and he could look through the corridor window and see the massive space. Big enough for 5 scout craft.

The Hangar was reserved for visiting craft, so was quite bare, apart from various biorepair stacks and parts cabinets that lined the walls. Hogart put his hand to the window and peered closer, getting his bearings, then moved towards the door to wait.

In the window reflection he saw his two chosen companions appear not far away and quickly clack and inch up behind him.

“Hangar Bay 27 decompressed. Attack ship on reverse thrusters, and slowing. Front cone drill active.” The A.I’s voice echoed around them. “The vessel is adjusting its speed for careful penetration rather than ramming.”

“Sounds like it knows what the Stellar Flash is made of,” said Puppy, as they reached the transparent metal of the Hangar bay door. Energy shields had been erected inside so that, as soon as it happened, the ship wouldn’t be able to move any further.

Hogart trusted the A.I. would do what she needed to do at the right moment.

“Impact in 5…4…3…2…”

Moments later, the roof of the hanger phase-shifted, and the nanite shield split and rushed apart, creating a hole large enough, just as the enemy ship was about to hit the outer surface. With nothing to land on, the artificial gravity quickly pulled it through the ceiling, and it crashed to the floor, spinning awkwardly, as hard-light beams began to slow it and hold it in place.

The A.I. reactivated the ceiling, repressurized the room, then released the door. Hogart, along with his security guard and translator, stalked in, nanite suits on and guns at the ready.

“Ready to attempt translation, Cuddly?”

“Yes, Sir!”

The light beams slowed the ship to a stop, and positioned it the right way up. With a clang, the entrance door hit the ground, and to everyone’s surprise, a Floran in military regalia stood in the opening.

Hogart immediately noticed that the Floran was wearing 22nd century decorations.

He briefly looked back at Puppy and Cuddly, and shrugged. Cuddly waved an upper proleg in understanding. No special translation was necessary.

Their language systems would work just fine.

Hogart took a step towards the Floran. “I see. You thought you could come back in time and recapture me here, did you?”

The Floran looked at him coldly with its stamen-like eyes and orchid-flower mouths. “I don’t know you, and I have only two objectives. You have prevented objective one. Speaking of which…” Then the Floran turned to the ship. “Computer. Self-destruct.”

The Floran’s ship complied. “Self-destruct initiated. Stellar Flash sterilization program commenced. Power and energy build up, confirmed. Goodbye Commander Skrgypst. Six… Five…”

“Noooo!” yelled Hogart.

Not that yelling would do any good.

 


The Andromeda Effect. Stellar Flash Book Two by Neil A. Hogan

Now Available in Digital and Print

Sent back 2.5 million years in time to the Andromeda Galaxy to investigate why there’s a record of them having been there, the Stellar Flash crew encounter a creature so powerful that it has taken control of the entire galaxy by thought alone.

With most of the crew unconscious, Captain Jonathan Hogart is in a race against time to defeat the plant-planet, save the galaxy, and find a way to return to 2133.

But another force is attempting to take control, to use the power of the creature from the past to take over the Milky Way Galaxy in the present. And, for this, Hogart has no defense.

How is the creature controlling an entire galaxy?

Who has the technology to transmit the creature’s power from the past to the present?

And will the Stellar Flash crew and the Space Station team be able to save both galaxies?

Available now at –

  

Amazon Digital  Amazon Print

Barnes and Noble Digital

Rakuten Kobo Digital

The Andromeda Effect: Stellar Flash Book Two Chapter 9 by Neil A. Hogan

The Andromeda Effect: Stellar Flash Book Two

By Neil A. Hogan

Chapter 9

In the wide-windowed leisure area of the Stellar Flash, a yellowish grub-like alien was decorating. She slid across the floor, up one of the windows, and over to the stage area of the large room, her antennae flickering wildly while her millions of almost invisible feet tapped the nanites in the transparent metal one by one. The microbots sent happy signals of welcome with each tap, and she shivered pleasantly.

She was going to miss this reality.

Grabbing part of a long, plastic tube, she spat on the end and stuck it to one of the bars that divided the windows, the nanites immediately understanding what she wanted. They built out a stronger attachment to hold it in place, then pulled slightly. The tube unfurled further, and straightened across the intervening space. Ssyrer then slid down, went over to the far side and attached it to an adjoining wall.

As the tube lifted higher, it inflated, words flickering across it as balloon-like decorations, well, ballooned from it.

Her translator replaced the words in her mind-view system. “Happy Death Day.”

She checked her timing. It was only about an hour away. She was going to be the first on this mission, and she was already prepared. Her bequeathments had been inscribed, her friends and family had been informed, and she had deleted all her digital accounts, sold off all her possessions, forgiven those who had slighted her and asked for forgiveness from anyone she had hurt in her life.

She was ready.

She wondered what it would be like. She knew it would be some kind of explosion, but she had no idea what would cause it, or where.

Just then, the front entrance opened and a hairless Captain Hogart strode purposefully over, sadness on his human face.

He quickly threw out his arms, pushed his stomach out and pulled it in, then closed his arms again – the closest humans could approximate for her race’s method of greeting.

She spread her front and undulated it slightly, then pulled it back in. “It was really nice of you to visit, Sir.”

“Of course, Ssyrer,” said Hogart. “When I heard, I wanted to say goodbye before the party started.” He looked about admiringly. “I love how you’ve decorated the place. You know, you could have just let the robots do it.”

“I know,” burbled Ssyrer. “It helped me to focus on something else – to keep my mind off things.”

“So, what do Slimonoids drink, anyway?”

Ssyrer split into three, and one third of her went over to one side of the room, while another third went to the other side. Those pieces reached long tendrils up to various shelves to indicate some containers, while the first piece spoke. “This is a bacteriological soup that gives us enormous energy, stimulating our electrolytic functions. And this drink here enables detoxification of the cells. We drink both of these every day.”

Her pieces came together again and Hogart felt a little embarrassed. “Thank you, Ssyrer. Sorry, my translator mustn’t be working properly. I meant a drink as in something that may intoxicate or change your perception of the world.”

Ssyrer made a sound that was almost like a burp, which Hogart knew to be her way of laughing. “Captain, we’re always intoxicated. It’s these sobering drinks that help us to focus in your reality. A bit like some of you having what you call L-Tyrosine to increase your dopamine levels.”

“So, if you don’t drink anything tonight, you’ll be too drunk to work?”

“Yes, Sir.”

“Amazing!”

They laughed together for a moment, then Hogart grew serious again. “I’m really sorry that it’s going to happen on my ship.”

“All part of the great plan.”

Hogart bowed in respect.

Ssyrer bent her head a little in return. “Well, off you go. You have a ship to run!”

“Yes. Thank you for your work. Hope to see you again before you go.” Then Hogart turned sadly, and left.

Ssyrer watched him go. As he left, some of her guests began arriving. She threw a tendril out and grabbed a drink. She would need to be at her most alert for what was to come.


The Andromeda Effect. Stellar Flash Book Two by Neil A. Hogan

Now Available in Digital and Print

Sent back 2.5 million years in time to the Andromeda Galaxy to investigate why there’s a record of them having been there, the Stellar Flash crew encounter a creature so powerful that it has taken control of the entire galaxy by thought alone.

With most of the crew unconscious, Captain Jonathan Hogart is in a race against time to defeat the plant-planet, save the galaxy, and find a way to return to 2133.

But another force is attempting to take control, to use the power of the creature from the past to take over the Milky Way Galaxy in the present. And, for this, Hogart has no defense.

How is the creature controlling an entire galaxy?

Who has the technology to transmit the creature’s power from the past to the present?

And will the Stellar Flash crew and the Space Station team be able to save both galaxies?

Available now at –

  

Amazon Digital  Amazon Print

Barnes and Noble Digital

Rakuten Kobo Digital

The Andromeda Effect: Stellar Flash Book Two Chapter 8 by Neil A. Hogan

The Andromeda Effect: Stellar Flash Book Two

By Neil A. Hogan

Chapter 8

2.5 million years ago, a conical, seed-like ship skirted the gravity curve of a blue star, flickers of green pulsing along its hull. Its sharp tip, punctuated with deep curves that circled to the main bulbous and spotted control section, began to turn, spinning faster and faster.

It had one target – a lone asteroid in orbit.

With a burst of speed, the burygine shot across the remaining space, and slammed through the soft surface of the asteroid, barely slowing as its tip bore its way into the loosely packed rock. Within moments, only its EM drive funnels were visible.

Spikes quickly protruded from the hull of the ship, holding it in place, and a field expanded around the asteroid, merging it with the ship. EM pulses were modified for the increased mass, and the asteroid began changing position.

Skrgypst, the Floran commander inside the ship, felt slightly disappointed that she could not take part in the eons-old war, but she knew she had another mission. One that was a lot more important. One that could change the future from her point in space/time.

If she could complete her mission, the Florans would rule the galaxy once more.

“Status!” she ordered.

“We are in the exact position as per the instructions,” said the A.I. in a voice that sounded like running water. “The enemy ship should be appearing soon. Subjugate or sterilize. Prevent the Great Collapse.”

The commander furled and unfurled her fronds in anticipation. There were no laws where she was now. She would take over the Stellar Flash and everything on it, and there was nothing anyone could do about it. “Prevent the G.C.,” she responded in a rustle of leaves.

If she knew what laughing diabolically and maniacally was, she might have done it now. But, as she was plant-based, the thought never occurred to her. Her only goal was to complete her mission, no matter what.

It would be so easy. She only had to wait.

And then a new timeline would be created, and the Floran race would rule again.


The Andromeda Effect. Stellar Flash Book Two by Neil A. Hogan

Now Available in Digital and Print

Sent back 2.5 million years in time to the Andromeda Galaxy to investigate why there’s a record of them having been there, the Stellar Flash crew encounter a creature so powerful that it has taken control of the entire galaxy by thought alone.

With most of the crew unconscious, Captain Jonathan Hogart is in a race against time to defeat the plant-planet, save the galaxy, and find a way to return to 2133.

But another force is attempting to take control, to use the power of the creature from the past to take over the Milky Way Galaxy in the present. And, for this, Hogart has no defense.

How is the creature controlling an entire galaxy?

Who has the technology to transmit the creature’s power from the past to the present?

And will the Stellar Flash crew and the Space Station team be able to save both galaxies?

Available now at –

  

Amazon Digital  Amazon Print

Barnes and Noble Digital

Rakuten Kobo Digital