Starless Nights Read online




  Other Books by Rae D. Magdon and Michelle Magly

  All the Pretty Things

  Dark Horizons Series

  Dark Horizons – Book 1

  Rae D. Magdon

  Amendyr Series

  The Second Sister - Book 1

  Wolf’s Eyes - Book 2

  The Witch’s Daughter - Book 3

  Michelle Magly

  Chronicles of Osota - Warrior

  Starless Nights

  (Dark Horizons - Book 2)

  By Rae D. Magdon and Michelle Magly

  ©2015 Rae D. Magdon and Michelle Magly

  ISBN-13: 9781310317736

  This is a work of fiction - names, characters, places, and incidents are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons living or dead, business, events or locales is entirely coincidental. All rights reserved.

  No part of this publication may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means, including photocopying, recording, or other electronic or mechanical methods, without the prior written permission of the publisher, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical reviews and certain other noncommercial uses permitted by copyright law.

  Editor: Kellie Doherty

  Cover Design: Rachel George

  Back of the Book

  In this sequel to Dark Horizons Taylor and Maia did not know where they would go when they fled Earth. They trusted Akton to take them somewhere safe. Leaving behind a wake of chaos and disorder, Coalition soldier Rachel is left to deal with the backlash of Taylor’s actions, and soon finds herself chasing after the runaways. Rachel quickly learns the final frontier is not a forgiving place for humans, but her chances for survival are better out there than back on Earth. Meanwhile, Taylor and Maia find themselves living off the generosity of rebel leader Sorra, an ikthian living a double life for the sake of the rebellion. With Maia’s research in hand, Sorra believes they can deliver a fatal blow against the Dominion.

  Acknowledgments

  There are a few people we need to thank for this this book. Without them, we would have never finished it, and we appreciate the support they have provided us through this project. We would first like to thank our respective partners. Both provided support and insight into the writing process when we struggled. Thanks to our editor, Kellie, and to our cover designer, Rachel. Both were instrumental in making this book everything it could be. Finally, thank you, Lee, for keeping us moving forward.

  Dedication

  To our fans.

  Table of Contents

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Chapter Twelve

  Chapter Thirteen

  Chapter Fourteen

  Chapter Fifteen

  Chapter Sixteen

  Chapter Seventeen

  Chapter Eighteen

  Chapter Nineteen

  Chapter Twenty

  About the Authors

  Other Books by Rae D. Magdon

  Other Books by Michelle Magly

  Note to the Readers

  Chapter One

  LIGHT STUNG RACHEL HARRIS’ eyes as soon as she stepped through the door. She winced and raised a hand to her forehead, shielding her eyes to get a better view of the room. She couldn’t see much with the floodlights aimed at her face, but if she squinted, she could just make out a long row of shadowed figures seated in high-backed chairs. Her stomach dropped. Every person of rank near San Diego Base had to be here, though she could not see who they were. They would hide from her even at her own trial. The door shut behind her with a loud clang, and her shoulders suddenly felt heavier. It took effort to keep them straight.

  “Rachel Harris,” a deep voice said, coming from the middle of the group. She recognized it immediately. General Hunt was usually fair, but as the commanding officer of the base, he was ultimately responsible for the recent events that had brought her here. “You are charged with treason against the Coalition. According to reports, you aided Lieutenant Taylor Morgan’s escape from Earth with a valuable prisoner of war. How do you plead?”

  Rachel locked her hands behind her back and chose a spot on the wall to stare at. She was the scapegoat. That had been clear since they first accused her. They needed someone to pin their mistakes on, and she was the lowest-ranking soldier involved. Of course she had to take the fall. “Not guilty, Sir.”

  “So you’ve stated before.” Hunt glanced down at the datasheet in his hand, scrolling down the glowing screen. “Your statement says that you followed Chairman Bouchard’s orders in an attempt to capture the fugitives when they tried to escape.”

  Fugitives. The word made her stomach clench. Even though it was technically true, it felt like a mask. Taylor was a traitor, an outlaw. Yet only a few weeks ago, they had been close friends. Before that damn ikthian's arrival, this situation would have been unthinkable for both of them. She pushed the thought aside and nodded. “That’s correct, Sir.”

  Hunt set the sheet back on the table and stared directly at her. Rachel kept her shoulders squared, refusing to cower under his gaze. Even though she was already guilty in his eyes, she didn’t want to look it. “Chairman Bouchard is neither a military official nor your commanding officer. He is only a liaison between the Coalition and the military. Why did you defer to his orders instead of approaching your commanding officer with your concerns?”

  Rachel had heard it all before. This might be her official sentencing, but she had already been found guilty a month ago, the night Taylor had escaped with Maia Kalanis. “Sir, I approached Chairman Bouchard because I also suspected Commander Michael Roberts of treason. He was close with Lieutenant Morgan, and—”

  “You failed to follow the appropriate chain of command,” someone else interrupted, although she couldn’t tell who was speaking. “Your disregard for protocol came with too high a price.”

  “I know I failed. I’m not denying it.” She had done worse than fail. She had kept quiet when Taylor had been assigned to guard the ikthian prisoner. She had done nothing when her friend started to show signs of being bewitched by the alien’s powers. She had waited too long, and during her last chance to make things right, she let Taylor get away. She’d had a gun pointed at Taylor, but she hadn’t been able to use it.

  “We’ve also taken a statement from Chairman Bouchard,” the voice continued. This time, she recognized General Lee’s face through the glare. He was another of the Coalition’s five generals, and if the number of seats in front of her was any indication, the rest of them were in attendance as well. She swallowed back a rising lump in her throat. “He claims the traitor, Lieutenant Morgan, was responsible for the death of Commander Roberts. Your statement claims otherwise. Would you care to elaborate?”

  Rachel flinched. She had hoped it wouldn’t come up. She was just a grunt with a couple of bars on her chest. Even though he had shot Roberts, Bouchard was untouchable. He was an elected representative, outside the military, and he didn’t have to follow the chain of command. They would take his word over hers no matter what she told them.

  “No, Sir,” she said, struggling to keep her voice steady. “Everything I need to say is in my statement.” Roberts was a traitor like Taylor, but watching him die had been ugly, in some ways uglier than watching ikthians slaughter their troops. With most of the galaxy against them, humans couldn’t afford to start murdering each other, too.

  The dark figures in front of her moved. A few turned to whisper at each other. Rachel’s heart sank. They would never clear her of these charges. She would be stripped of her rank and sent away in shame. If she was lucky, they’d ship her off to an asteroid mine where she could work herself to death for the war effort. She would never see her family again.

  At last, General Hunt spoke up. “We have one last question. Do you know anything about Lieutenant Morgan’s whereabouts?”

  Rachel tried to conceal her surprise. She knew the brass hadn’t caught up with Taylor yet, or they wouldn’t have called her here to take the blame. But if they were desperate enough to ask her, they had to be completely out of leads. “Taylor...Lieutenant Morgan is probably headed for Nakonum or maybe one of the other planets in that system. She escaped on a naledai ship with Akton. She’s got this delusion about helping the rebels on their homeworld.”

  “A delusion indeed.” Hunt peered down at the report again and furrowed his brow. “If we’re to believe your assessment of the situation, you would have us accept the possibility that the ikthians are rebelling against their own kind and are in league with the naledai, our allies.”

  Rachel blinked against the bright lights. She had to choose her next words carefully. “I didn't want to rule out any possibilities in my report, Sir, but it’s what Taylor told me. Whether it's true or not, she believes it.”

  “It’s what Taylor told you while under the influence of a dangerous war criminal.”

  “Where else would you prefer to look, Sir?” Rachel asked.

  None of the generals responded at first. Hunt stood and walked around the table, approaching her slowly. She stood at sharp attention, waiting without hope. “We are done looking,” he said, staring at her with a stern expression. “Rachel Harris, as punishment for your act of treason, this tribunal court sentences
you to exile from the planet Earth.”

  Rachel knew there was more. There had to be more.

  “You are to seek out the fugitives Taylor Morgan and Maia Kalanis and bring them back to Earth if possible. This assignment is strictly off the records, and as such, you will receive minimal aid from military personnel. You will reveal to no one the nature of your assignment, and you will not enlist the help of the Coalition of Humanity. Should you fail to apprehend Morgan, you will execute her. Until you succeed in your task, you are not to return to Earth.”

  Rachel could see the pity in Hunt’s face. This was not a special assignment. It was a death sentence. Hunt could no longer meet her gaze, but Rachel stared at him. She wanted to remember the guilt in his eyes so she would remember to kill Bouchard the next time she saw him. She had messed up, yes, but the slimy politician had left her to the wolves. Despite his rank, Hunt had no power in this matter.

  Finally, Rachel took a step back. Her path was clear. There really was only one choice from this point. “I’ll leave immediately.”

  “I suggest you do. You're dismissed, soldier.” Hunt nodded, and Rachel threw one last salute before turning and exiting through the door. More whispers came from behind her, but whatever the generals thought of her fate didn’t matter. On paper, their decision would look generous. They were offering her a chance to fix her mistakes and redeem herself. But in reality, they had sent her on a suicide mission. Even though Taylor had been bewitched by the ikthian, she was still a very dangerous fighter, and she would not be alone. Rachel would be outnumbered and outgunned, assuming she even managed to track her quarry down.

  Once she stepped into the hallway, Rachel headed for the nearest wall and leaned against it. The two guards posted by the door stared, but she ignored them. She needed a moment to ground herself. She closed her eyes and sighed, trying to decide what to do. Despite everything, Taylor was still her friend. It wasn’t her fault the ikthian prisoner had warped her mind. She didn’t deserve to die, but she couldn’t stay with the ikthians either. Not if she was going to help them.

  Rachel opened her eyes again and pushed off the wall, striding down the hallway with new purpose. She would follow the brass's orders. She would find and stop Taylor, kill her if she needed to. She would make sure Kalanis never turned another human again. Then, if she survived, she would come back to Earth and take care of Bouchard. He was to blame for all of this. Now that she was exiled, there was nothing stopping her from taking justice into her own hands. The military couldn’t touch him, but she wasn’t part of the military anymore. If Taylor was going to die and Roberts was already dead, Bouchard deserved the same.

  She stopped in front of the elevator and hit the pressure pad, waiting for it to carry her to the lower levels of the building. She needed to go to her room, grab her kit, and take one of the shuttles. If the brass really did want to keep this quiet, they wouldn’t get in her way. If the look on Hunt’s face meant anything, maybe he would feel guilty enough to give her a little money for food and ammo.

  Once the elevator reached the bottom floor, she headed outside. The sky was clear, and she stopped to look up as a soft wind blew past her face. A brilliant blue flooded her vision. This would be the last time she ever got to see Earth’s sky, the sun, or anything else familiar. She hadn’t been born here, but Earth was her home and had been ever since she enlisted. She didn’t want to leave.

  “I’m not going to let them take Earth from me,” she whispered. The ikthians, the brass, Bouchard. They had ruined her life, forcing her to abandon her home in the middle of a war. And they were all going to regret it.

  Chapter Two

  TARKOHT ORBITAL STATION APPEARED on the ship’s navigation screen before it was visible through the viewport. Taylor had to stop herself from gasping when they flew close enough to see its outline. She had visited many stations on her tours of duty, but the behemoth looming in orbit around the small planet dwarfed everything else.

  “This is the heart of the rebellion?” she asked Akton, breathless with disbelief. “It’s huge! How could they miss it?”

  The naledai shrugged and leaned further back in the pilot’s chair. It was hard to tell with his wolfish face, but even he looked impressed. “Oh, they know exactly where we are. Officially, Tarkoht is a naledai trading port under Dominion control. Most of the population here is ikthian, with a few naledai and other ‘assimilated’ races thrown in to keep the place running.”

  “Well, that explains why they haven’t blown it out of the sky yet.”

  Taylor paused when the communications light blinked on to signal an incoming transmission. Akton hit the “accept” button, and an automated voice filtered through the speakers. “This is Tarkoht Station. Please give us your authorization code.” He rattled off a series of numbers, and the voice confirmed they were clear for landing before listing a docking bay for their use.

  “Security here is tight," he said as they drifted closer. "If those landing codes weren't on their list, they would have dispatched a sentry to gun us down.”

  “That seems a little hostile for a trading port, doesn't it?” Maia asked from the navigator’s seat. Taylor smiled and turned to look at her. She had chosen to remain further back instead of gawking through the viewport. Her blue eyes were bright with curiosity, and she had the same look that crept across her face whenever she discussed her research.

  Akton laughed, and Taylor cringed. Although she had grown used to the tall, fierce aliens, naledai vocals still sounded harsh. “Tarkoht isn't any old trading port. It's the largest, busiest space station on this side of the galaxy. They have to be hostile to survive.” Taylor glanced over and watched him engage the docking protocol. His massive claws worked the naledai controls with a deftness she could scarcely believe. “And Sorra always makes sure Tarkoht survives.”

  Maia’s curious look disappeared. Instead, she groaned in exasperation and rolled her head back against the seat. “Oh no. Sorra is in charge here? I should have guessed.”

  Akton glanced over at Maia, and they shared a look that Taylor didn’t understand. “So, you’re…familiar with her?”

  “Familiar enough to know she has a flair for dramatics,” Maia muttered.

  “Good. Then you won’t be surprised by whatever welcoming committee she’s arranged.”

  Taylor grew curious enough to turn away from the viewport as they pulled toward the docking bay. “Who is Sorra? How do you know her?” she asked Maia. “And what kind of welcoming committee are we talking about here?”

  “Every ikthian knows Sorra’s name, even though most won’t admit it.” A wrinkle formed in the middle of Maia’s forehead, and Taylor had to resist the impulse to smooth it away. “I know her a bit more personally. Back when my research was still funded by the Dominion, my files would often go missing. It didn’t matter how many times I backed them up or what kind of protection I used. She always found a way to corrupt the data, usually right before I was due to present. Some of her agents even stole my physical hard drives once, along with a great deal of expensive lab equipment.”

  Taylor shifted, resting some of her weight on the armrest of Maia’s seat. “Didn’t the Dominion just corrupt your research for their own goals anyway? It’s probably a good thing she destroyed it. Well…” She hurried to backtrack when she saw the irritated look on Maia’s face. “I didn’t mean it quite like that.”

  Maia sighed. “No, you’re right. I don't want to think about what the Dominion would have done with some of the genetic research Sorra stole. It was just frustrating. You put in months of work, stay up for several days straight to write a presentation, and right before you’re finally finished, everything falls to pieces. It was like I was back at school all over again, without any homework to give the professor.”