Mother Ship Read online




  Contents

  Title Page

  Copyright

  Free Books

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  Epilogue

  Dedication

  Acknowledgments

  Mother Ship

  By Scott Bartlett

  An alien invasion novel.

  Mother Ship

  © Scott Bartlett 2019

  Cover art by Tom Edwards (tomedwardsdesign.com)

  Typography by Steve Beaulieu (facebook.com/BeaulisticBookServices)

  This novel is a work of fiction. All of the characters and events are fictitious. Any resemblance to actual persons living or dead or events is entirely coincidental.

  Creative liberties have been taken with real-world locations.

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  Scott is giving away a military space opera ebook, Captain and Command, for free, along with 2 other ebooks in the same genre.

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  1

  9 days to extinction

  On the day aliens invaded, Max Edwards was watching a horse being integrated into its new herd.

  Jimmy Somerton was waiting for him in the driveway as Max pulled up to the Somerton acreage in his parents’ blue Subaru. He got out to greet his old friend with a handshake and a one-armed hug, both of them slapping the other on the back.

  Jimmy brushed his dirty blond hair out of his eyes and gave Max the same unrestrained grin he had on the day they’d met. “If it ain’t my friend the stick jockey. You an ace yet?”

  Max shook his head. He didn’t have Jimmy’s quick wit, not when it came to making clever remarks anyway, so he couldn’t think of much to fire back. “Not after just one year at the academy.”

  “Oh, the academy!” Jimmy said, holding a pinky to the corner of his mouth and speaking in a British accent. “Excuse me, good sir. I didn’t realize.”

  Max laughed. He knew not to take Jimmy seriously—at least, he knew now. They’d met at the end of freshman year, when Max had been fourteen and socially inept enough to take everything to heart. That had almost put an end to their new friendship, but Jimmy hadn’t given up on him.

  “So, your folks let you take out their baby?” his friend said, glancing at the freshly waxed blue car. “Surprised they trusted you with it in rough country like this.”

  “They’re on a work trip, getting back soon. They said they’ll grab an Uber from the airport, but they still want the car back by tonight. I’ll need to leave in a few hours.”

  “Work trip.” Jimmy’s eyes all but sparkled as he repeated the words. “To where?”

  Max sighed, overselling it a little. “New Mexico.”

  “Roswell. Right?”

  “They didn’t tell me where in New Mexico, Jimmy.” Max knew this was why Jimmy had befriended him in the first place. In high school, Jimmy had been one of the ‘cool kids’—the kind who would never hang out with an outcast nerd like Max. Except, Jimmy was also a huge alien conspiracy theorist, and when he’d heard that Max’s parents worked on some secret government project, with frequent trips to New Mexico, he’d zeroed in on Max like a fly drawn to honey. Convinced that Peter and Cynthia Edwards were part of the massive government cover-up people like Jimmy usually believed in.

  Max had never figured out why being a UFO nut didn’t disqualify Jimmy from the cool kids’ club, while playing D&D and Magic: the Gathering kept Max out, and he’d given up trying well before they’d graduated together last year. But he didn’t hold it against Jimmy, just like he didn’t resent the reason they’d become friends in the first place. What counted was that they’d stayed friends, during a time when Max hadn’t had anyone else.

  “It’s alien stuff,” Jimmy said. “And don’t try to tell me it isn’t.”

  “They’re biotechnicians, Jimmy.”

  “Sure. And they study alien biology. It fits. I bet they were poking and prodding the little gray bastards just this morning.”

  Max could only laugh. He wished he knew enough about what his parents did to prove Jimmy wrong—but then, if he could have done that, they probably never would have started hanging out in the first place. Either way, that was the nature of his parents’ work. “Top Secret” didn’t mean “it’s okay to tell your kid.”

  “When do I get to watch this horse get introduced?” he asked, attempting a change of topic.

  “Oh. Right now.” He motioned for Max to follow, and together they passed into the pasture using the triangular walk-through gate, which was big enough for people but not horses. “The boarders are separating out a couple more horses as we speak. This is gonna be something to see, Max. I’ve seen plenty of herd integrations, but never a situation like this one.”

  Max nodded, looking past Jimmy at the red roan that stood in the center of the field, ignoring the hay Jimmy had put down in the hopes it would distract the creatures from beating the crap out of each other. The great beast seemed to be looking right at Max, but he knew that wasn’t true—horses could only see to the side, not straight ahead.

  “Did I tell you we already tried integrating them once, last week?”

  Max smiled. Jimmy’s memory is as bad as ever, he reflected. His friend had told him about last week’s attempt over the phone, all in a breathless rush. How the new horse had clashed with the herd’s current alpha, Bert, and the two had savagely bitten and kicked each other. Their owners rushed out, yelling and waving their hands, somehow managing to separate their animals without getting stampeded. “You said it was a mistake to try him with the whole herd, all at once.”

  “Sure was. There’s not a gelding in the county more dominant than Bert. Except maybe that one.” Jimmy jerked his thumb toward the roan. The new horse.

  All seven horses would need to learn to live together, but only two of them would decide what that would look like: Bert, the herd’s current alpha horse, and Yago, the newcomer.

  “I tried to tell them we needed to introduce the other horses to Yago instead, a couple at a time. Let those horses warm up to him a little, then let in a couple more. But they wanted to do it all at once.” Jimmy lowered his voice. “Yago’s owner, Cal, he’s some tech star in Oklahoma City, and Bert’s owner is a big oil exec. Neither of them has time to do things properly, see.”

  “Hmm.” Max understood having no time, but he was also used to doing things well in spite o
f it. His first year at the US Air Force Academy had taught him that.

  As for the horses, they knew nothing of busy schedules or work demands. Their lives were determined by their owners, and Max didn’t have much sympathy for a horse owner who didn’t properly take responsibility for that.

  “When were those two introduced to him?” he asked, gesturing toward the white and the chestnut munching on hay beside Yago. As Max spoke, the white started toward the fence where most of her old herd waited—all four of them lined up, staring in at the horses feeding inside the pasture.

  Yago whinnied sharply, then veered in front of her, cutting her off. The white screamed, then wheeled back.

  “Couple days ago. Yago’s developed a pretty unhealthy relationship with one of the mares—the white, there. He’s been totally dominating her. I don’t think her boyfriend’s very happy about it, either. Can you tell which one’s her boyfriend?”

  Max studied the four horses lined up at the fence. One of them stood more rigid than the others, ears pinned back flat against his head. “The gray?”

  “Yep. Ollie’s his name.” Jimmy chuckled. “He’s eighteen too, just like Yago. Pretty old, for horses as spiteful as they are. Daisy likes the older men—that’s the white’s name.”

  “Do you think the boyfriend will give Yago trouble?”

  The left side of Jimmy’s mouth quirked toward his ear. “Nah.”

  With that, Jimmy went to help the horse owners divide the four waiting horses in half, and they introduced the boyfriend next, along with a docile pinto who kept to one side as Yago met his new romantic competition. The humans retreated to the outside of the pasture, near Max, where they would monitor things over the fence.

  Every time the gray tried to get close to his old lover, Yago would intervene, turning on a dime to aim his legs at Ollie. Knowing a kick was coming, Ollie backed off each time, trotting around for a better angle.

  “Yago has some energy,” Jimmy said, peering down the fence at Cal.

  The man Jimmy had said was a tech star nodded. “I forgot to tell him he’s getting old.”

  That brought a chuckle from everyone except Rita, the oil exec who owned Bert. She stood near the fence with her husband, on the opposite side of Max and Jimmy, seeming to keep her distance from Cal.

  Ollie made a dash for his love—and this time he overextended himself. Yago spun, hooves flashing out to connect squarely with the gray’s chest. He shrieked, then scampered away, making no more attempts to get past the roan.

  On Max’s right, Rita exchanged glances with her husband. “Should we bring Bert in?”

  Jimmy frowned. “Ideally, we’d give them a few days to settle like this.”

  “Bring him in now.” Cal’s smile had taken on an unusual cast, to Max’s eye. “Let’s get this over with.”

  Rita nodded. “Yeah. Okay.” She and her husband crossed the pasture to let in the final two horses.

  “They own Bert and the other one, Brandy,” Jimmy said. “Those two have been together almost since they were foals. That’s one reason Bert always fights so hard to remain the alpha—if he has control of the herd, then he’s able to protect Brandy. Not so much, if another horse is in charge.”

  Cal shifted his stance against the fence as he stared at Bert, who almost seemed to vibrate with pent-up energy. “He’s a beautiful horse, there’s no doubt about that. All muscle. But Yago’s going to take him apart.”

  Jimmy’s frown returned. “Hopefully, neither of them gets taken apart.”

  The tech worker shrugged. “They would, if they were alpha stallions fighting in the wild. They wouldn’t stop until one of them was dead.”

  “Well, they’re geldings, and this isn’t the wild. They’ll figure it out.”

  Cal just smiled.

  The gate opened, and Bert charged straight for the other horses as his owners jogged back toward Max, Jimmy, and Cal. Yago aimed his hindquarters at the oncoming alpha, but Bert veered around, sinking his teeth into the roan’s neck. Yago shrieked, pulling away. Bert followed.

  Max heard Cal cursing under his breath.

  By the time Rita and her husband took their positions against the fence, Bert had Yago fully on the run. But Bert wasn’t chasing. Instead, he herded the other horses together in the center of the pasture, keeping himself between them and Yago. As for Yago, he loped in a wide circle around the herd, occasionally making a try for his favorite mare, only to be repelled by Bert.

  “He’s beating himself out,” Rita’s husband said. He smiled at his wife. “Bert’s holding strong. It’ll be over soon.”

  Max didn’t know how well horses understood tactics—maybe they understood them better than most humans. Either way, Bert was being smart by conserving his energy, keeping Yago running while staying put and locking down his herd. If it came down to another clash of biting and kicking like the one Jimmy had described from before, it was clear which horse would be freshest for it.

  “Why do you keep running?” Cal said through gritted teeth. “You’re smarter than this.”

  Rita stared down the fence at him. “Hey. The main thing is they sort this out without injury, right?”

  Cal stared back at her, lips a thin line. “Yago’s the alpha. He’s always been the alpha. He’s not going to accept a lower spot.”

  “Sure looks like it,” Rita’s husband said. “He’s charging less and less.”

  It was true. Sweat gleamed on Yago’s dappled, dark-brown coat, and his breathing came in snorts and gasps. At last, he slowed to a trot, then stopped altogether. He began to graze.

  “Good.” Rita let out a relieved-sounding sigh. “It’s over.”

  Bert still looked rigid and alert as he seemed to stare Yago down, making sure he’d truly given up. Then he began nosing Brandy, apparently checking her over to make sure she wasn’t hurt.

  Without warning, Yago broke into a run, quickly reaching a gallop as he barreled at his adversary, teeth flashing.

  Bert’s head snapped up, and he turned to bring his rear legs to bear.

  But he was too late. Yago was upon him, legs flashing out—and one of them connected with Bert’s right hind leg while he was still turning.

  A dry crack filled the air. Bert screamed, staggering away from his attacker. His leg dangled limply from his haunch.

  Shocked silence from the watching humans. Then, Rita threw herself into the pasture, sprinting across it toward the injured animal.

  Max knew what a broken leg meant for a horse. It meant death. There was no cure for a horse with a broken leg, except to be put down as humanely as possible.

  “He’ll need to be put down,” the husband said, echoing Max’s thoughts in a voice that mixed disbelief with anger. “Your horse just killed Bert. Why are you smiling?”

  Max looked, and it was true—a victorious smirk stretched across Cal’s face.

  “Quentin.”

  The husband turned to face his wife, who was staring at Yago from a few meters away.

  “His horse is shod,” she called out.

  Quentin turned on Cal, his fists bunched. “You bastard. You left shoes on him? For this?”

  “No one told me not to.”

  Quentin stepped forward and took a swing at the tech guy, landing one on his chin. Cal staggered back with a hand to his mouth, then he glared at Quentin, lunging at him.

  “Hey!” Jimmy shouted. “Cut that out!” He stepped forward.

  “Break it up.” Max circled around the grappling men and grabbed Cal’s right fist as it extended toward Quentin, twisting him into an arm-lock. Next, Cal tried to get Max with his left, which he also blocked, then grabbed that wrist, too.

  Jimmy was standing with his hands planted on Quentin’s chest. Both men still glared at each other.

  “I understand how upset you are,” Jimmy said. “But there’s been enough damage done here today. You need to see to your horse. I’ll lend you our trailer so you can take him to the vet. All right?”

  A tense silence d
escended, and for a moment Max was sure Quentin would go for Cal again. He couldn’t restrain two men at once, and he doubted Jimmy could handle Quentin alone.

  He turned Cal around, keeping steady pressure on his arm. “Where are you parked?”

  “There,” Cal grunted. “By the barn.”

  “The Nissan?”

  “Yeah.”

  “Okay.” Max released him, giving him a gentle shove toward the green car. “Go on home. Your horse is fine, and you’re done here. Go home.”

  Cal stared back at him with rage in his eyes as he rubbed his wrist. “You’ll be hearing from my lawyer.”

  “Sounds like a waste of your money,” Max said. “But you can go ahead, if that’s what you want to do.”

  “I will.” With that, he stormed to his car, climbed inside, slammed the door, and peeled out of the drive.

  Getting the maimed animal onto a horse trailer was a whole other ordeal, one which Max could only watch helplessly from the sidelines, trying not to wince whenever Bert shrieked from the pain. But Jimmy had been around horses all his life, and together with Rita they managed to guide Bert up the ramp. With that, they closed the trailer door, and Jimmy told Rita and Quentin how sorry he was for their loss. They nodded, saying nothing, and drove off to take Bert to be destroyed.

  Jimmy exhaled through his teeth as he approached Max again. “Sorry you had to witness that.”

  “I’m just sorry for Rita.”

  “Yeah. Say, did you find it a bit weird, how Quentin and Cal got into it like that?”

  “You mean, how fast it happened?”

  Jimmy shrugged. “I guess, yeah. Something about it seemed off. And the weird way Cal was acting through the whole thing. Almost like he was enjoying the violence between the horses. Is it supposed to be a full moon tonight or something?”

  “Guy’s got a few screws loose, if you ask me.”

  “Seems like it.”

  A silence passed between them, and Max was about to say he should get the Subaru back to his parents. Then, Jimmy looked up, and his gaze became riveted to something behind Max.

  “What the hell?” Jimmy stepped past him. “Max…look at that thing over the city.”

  He turned, and his mouth fell open.