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The Saga of Seven Suns
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Praise for the Saga of Seven Suns
“A breakneck epic. … Kevin J. Anderson is one of the best plotters in the business.”—Brandon Sanderson
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“A setting so rich and detailed that the reader will suspend disbelief and actually be there.”—R.A. Salvatore
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“Kevin J. Anderson writes the kind of inventive and entertaining space opera that is exactly what I want to read.”—Peter F. Hamilton
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“One of the greatest science fiction writers of our time.” —Ray Kurzweil
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“A space opera to rival the best the field has ever seen”—SF Chronicle
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“Science fiction on the grandest of scales, a modern classic.”—The Alien Online
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“Anderson delivers action, engaging characters, and credible fantastic worlds in spades…. A future epic not to be missed.”—Publishers Weekly
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“Wondrously imagined”—Kirkus
The Saga of Seven Suns
Two Short Novels
Kevin J. Anderson
The Saga of Seven Suns: Two Short Novels
Copyright © 2019 WordFire, Inc.
Veiled Alliances Copyright © 2011 WordFire, Inc.
A different version of this story originally appeared in the graphic novel Veiled Alliances from Wildstorm/DC Comics, copyright 2004, WordFire Inc.
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Whistling Past the Graveyard Copyright © 2016 WordFire, Inc.
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All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including photocopying, recording or by any information storage and retrieval system, without the express written permission of the copyright holder, except where permitted by law. This novel is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents are either the product of the author’s imagination, or, if real, used fictitiously.
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Hardcover ISBN: 978-1-68057-046-5
Trade Paperback ISBN: 978-1-68057-044-1
Ebook ISBN: 978-1-68057-045-8
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Cover paintings by Stephen Youll
Cover design by Janet McDonald
Kevin J. Anderson, Art Director
Published by
WordFire Press
PO Box 1840
Monument CO 80132
Kevin J. Anderson & Rebecca Moesta, Publishers
WordFire Press Trade Paperback Edition November 2016
Printed in the USA
wordfirepress.com
Created with Vellum
Contents
Veiled Alliances
Whistling Past the Graveyard
About the Author
If You Liked …
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This short novel takes place 183 years before the beginning of Hidden Empire
2249 AD
1
Chairman Malcolm Stannis
Alien ships filled the skies of Earth, like snowflakes in a menacing blizzard. With extended solar sails, weapons antennae, sparkling windowports, and anodized hull plates, the warliners looked like a school of fearsome fighting fish.
“We always knew the Ildiran Solar Navy would come,” muttered Malcolm Stannis, Chairman of the Terran Hanseatic League. He stared up into the sky from a high balcony in the Whisper Palace. “But I never expected anything like this.”
Beside him, his adviser, Liam Hector, spoke in a scratchy voice. Hector was middle-aged, with hair so short it was only a bristle of brownish-gray, and he had no charisma whatsoever. Hector would never be Hansa Chairman—very few people had the skill for that—but he was reliable. “From what we know of the Ildiran Empire, Mr. Chairman, the aliens are obsessive about pomp and showmanship. This is intended to impress us.”
“Or intimidate us.”
“That too, sir.” The two men continued to watch, but further words failed them.
The Terran Hanseatic League, or Hansa, was so widespread and influential in the solar system that it had become the de facto government of Earth, the Moon, industrial outposts in the asteroid belt, settlements on several moons of Jupiter, and the military base on Mars. Since his election as Chairman six years earlier, Stannis had come up with so many plans for the future of human civilization that he kept a journal, jotting down his thoughts so as not to forget his best ideas. Now, if only he could implement them all.
The arrival of a dramatic and alien military force had not figured in even his wildest plans.
Malcolm Stannis was in his early thirties, only recently elected to the post of Chairman, the youngest person ever to fill that position. He was a handsome man with dark hair, olive skin, deep brown eyes. He had trained his lips to remain in a firm, unreadable line at all times. He frowned no more often than he smiled, since either expression revealed too much information about his inner thoughts. Though not vain, he dressed with care in impeccable dark suits that fit him like a glove and were as comfortable as any other man’s casual clothing.
The people had applauded the unanimous vote that made him Chairman of the Hanseatic League. With all the politics, arranging that vote had been no small feat for Stannis, considering the others who vied for the position, the squabbling power brokers, the shifting alliances. Stannis had convinced many voting members to select him on the basis of his own merits; when that didn’t work, he bribed the ones he could and blackmailed the remaining ones when he had to. Whatever the means, he currently led the Hansa, with all the power, prestige, and opportunities the position entailed.
The Ildiran fleet’s arrival, however, changed everything. For the good of the Hansa, Stannis was glad the job had not fallen into the hands of one of his less-competent rivals.
Despite the fact that he was Chairman, Stannis rarely appear-ed in public. King Ben existed to serve in that capacity. And today, the figurehead King would certainly earn the high stipend the Hansa secretly paid him—if he did what he was told.…
From the Whisper Palace balcony, Stannis watched the ships in the air. Damn, this made him nervous. The Ildirans claimed to be friendly and had already helped some of Earth’s far-flung generation ships, although the Chairman couldn’t understand why. He disliked not understanding motivations, especially in such a dangerous and complex situation.
Per his orders, the Earth Defense Forces were on high alert, an entire “escort” fleet transferred here from the Mars base in anticipation of the Ildiran representative’s arrival, but the ships were under strict orders to take no aggressive action unless definitively fired upon. The last thing Stannis wanted was an interstellar war started by some fool with an itchy trigger finger.
But they also had to be ready to defend Earth, to stand against a major sneak attack if the warliners should prove to be an invasion force. These Ildirans were aliens; anything could happen.
Hector pointed to the chaos of colorful warliners overhead, identifying one in particular. “There, sir. That will be the flagship bringing their military commander.”
Stannis fixed his gaze on the vessel as it detached itself from the rest of the grouping and dropped toward the designated land-ing area in the Palace District. “His title is Adar,” he corrected the aide, though he didn’t know what the term meant in their language.
As it approached, the flagship warliner appeared to dwarf the Whisper Palace, though it was only a matter of perspective—he hoped.
The King’s residence, the lavish seat of power from which the Hansa monarch issued the statements and rulings that were carefully written for him, had been designed to inspire awe. The cost of the Palace had been historic, nearly incalculable by any tra
ditional economic formula, but the Terran Hanseatic League had experienced record profits. To demonstrate the Hansa’s continued success, Stannis’s predecessor had broken ground on another wing, expanding the gigantic structure; for the past decade, the Palace District had been a constant bustle of construction.
Even with its tall towers, gold-plated cupolas, multilayered fountains, fairy-work bridges, and banners flapping from every spire, the Whisper Palace did not seem as impressive as those exotic alien ships.…
Crowds had gathered to stare in terror or elation at the Ildiran fleet. Wearing crisp, bright blue uniforms, the Royal Guard fanned out to impose order, herding the public into a designated safety zone as the flagship warliner came down. Though the Royal Guard put on regular parades for King Ben’s benefit and had drilled for the arrival of the Solar Navy, many of the soldiers’ faces were turned up to the sky, eyes wide, mouths open, gawking at the giant warliners just like any other civilian. The Chairman made a mental note to pass along his criticisms to the Guard Administrator … but only after all this blew over.
Stannis touched the bug-mic in his ear as the Royal Guard Captain transmitted on his private channel, “Mr. Chairman, the plaza landing area is cleared and secure. Royal Guard in position and ready to receive the Ildiran Adar.”
Stannis acknowledged. “Nothing sloppy, Captain. This is going to be the most important hour in your life.”
“I understand that, sir.” Muffled in the voice pickup, the captain snapped to his troops, running them through their paces.
Smaller Ildiran ships flurried around the descending warliner, while the rest of the ornate battleships remained overhead, like peacocks loaded with exotic weaponry. Malcolm Stannis reserved judgment, for the time being. He still didn’t know what to make of the benevolent Ildiran “rescue” of the Earth generation ships, or what the aliens wanted from the human race.
Almost a century-and-a-half before, a tired and crowded Earth had dispatched eleven massive, slow-moving ships out into the starry emptiness—more emptiness than stars—like arks for the human race, searching the Spiral Arm for new habitable planets. When Malcolm Stannis reviewed the old history and understood the ships’ vanishingly small chances for success, he was amazed that investors and governments had been convinced to fund the project at all. Carrying optimistic (or perhaps naïve and reckless) colonists, those eleven ships had plodded off in different directions like messages in bottles tossed out into a vast, empty sea.
The generation ships flew out on a one-way trip, and Earth had never expected to hear from them again. For 144 years, they were all but forgotten. And then five years ago, one of those wandering generation ships had blundered into a scout from the Ildiran Solar Navy—humanity’s first contact with any intelligent alien race. Taking pity on the tired and bedraggled colonists-without-a-colony, the Ildirans rescued them, delivering that first ship, the Caillié, to a habitable planet.
After settling the colonists, the Solar Navy dispatched search parties to follow the last known courses of the human generation ships, and sent a contact mission to inform an astonished Earth what they were doing. In short order, they found ten of the eleven lost vessels, and now, finally, the Ildirans had sent a formal delegation to Earth.
Chairman Stannis realized that such a world-shaking event could cause economic and political upheaval across the Hansa, but he preferred not to panic. Instead, he saw it as an opportunity. And there could be many more to come.
But what did the Ildirans want?
“I’d better give King Ben a refresher briefing,” he said to Hector, “make sure he is clear on how to act and what to say. He’s never had to do anything like this before—I bet he’s about to wet himself.” Stannis drew a deep breath and turned away from the view of the alien ships. Good thing he was there to make the decisions. The Hansa needed a strong leader right now.
He hurried down the steps.
King Ben paced nervously in his opulent dressing room, a huge chamber with polished stone floors and veined marble columns supporting a ceiling ten meters high. His quarters were larger than a town meeting hall.
While waiting for Stannis to come for him, the King had done a decent job of dressing himself. He already wore his elaborate ceremonial crown, but the Chairman fussed over the long purple cape the old man had draped over his slumped shoulders, when the blue tunic had not proved loose enough to hide Ben’s rounded potbelly. With his flowing beard, plump face, apple cheeks, twinkling blue eyes, and grandfatherly air, King Ben bore a strong resemblance to Father Christmas. He had a deep, rumbling laugh, a warm smile. The public loved him—as they were meant to.
Stannis leaned close to the King’s ear. “Remember, say nothing important and agree to nothing. After we hear what the Ildirans have to say, I will write your reply.”
As the Chairman arranged the folds of purple fabric and brushed the old man’s beard for him, King Ben said, “What if I’m not ready for this, Malcolm?”
“You have to be.” He stepped back, tugged down on the cape, and gave a nod of approval. “Today’s events will forever change the human race. Those new stardrives the Ildirans promised us will open the whole Spiral Arm to colonization, and the resources will be a glorious boon for the Hansa.” He wasn’t sure the aliens even knew the value of what they were offering. Stannis narrowed his eyes. “You’d better not botch this.”
King Ben drew a nervous breath, pressed his lips together as if practicing his expressions. Stannis watched the process as the old man composed his face, reviewed his lines, and got back into his character. “You can count on me. I may have been an unknown actor when your predecessor chose me to fill this ceremonial role, but I’ve done it well for the past few decades, haven’t I?”
“Adequately,” Stannis said. The King had outlasted two Hansa Chairmen before him.
“I know what’s at stake today. I promise you, this will be my best performance ever.”
“It better be.” He shooed the King out of the dressing chamber. “Now get going—it’s time for you to meet the Ildiran Adar. And don’t forget your lines.”
2
Adar Bali’nh
He had met and interacted with humans before, in small groups. He didn’t dislike them, simply failed to under-stand them. But he was the Adar, supreme commander of the Ildiran Solar Navy, and the Mage-Imperator had honored him with this assignment to lead a formal delegation to the King of Earth.
Adar Bali’nh had studied all the information available to him. The competent computerized companion OX, a diminutive robotic servant and historian from one of the retrieved generation ships, had briefed Bali’nh thoroughly during their voyage from Ildira. After their many conversations, the Adar felt he under-stood OX better than he understood humans.
The Ildirans had numerous discrete kiths, like breeds. In general, they were similar to humans in appearance—at least the noble kithmen were—but Bali’nh did not let himself be fooled that humans were the same. All Ildirans were connected by an invisible web of telepathy, the thism, centered on the Mage-Imperator; the thism bound them into a tight community, allowing them to act with unity. Humans had no such connection; they were separate and alone. He tried not to pity them too much.
Bali’nh would discharge his duty, make the Mage-Imperator proud by treating King Ben with formal respect … but deep in his heart, Adar Bali’nh knew that opening the Spiral Arm to these ambitious humans meant that his steady, predictable life was over.
The Ildiran Empire had changed little over the fifteen thousand years of its existence. Every event was chronicled in the Ildiran epic Saga of Seven Suns. His people did not react well to change.…
As his maniple of forty-nine warliners descended toward Earth’s capital city, Adar Bali’nh gave orders for all ships to deploy their grandiose thermal-radiating panels, and extend the colorful decoration on the warliners’ hulls so that the Solar Navy provided a most spectacular show.
Seven groups of seven warliners spread across the sky in for
mation while the Adar dispatched his flagship to the designated zone in front of the Whisper Palace.
Below them, King Ben’s residence was an ornate structure surrounded by parks, fountains, and statue gardens. Regarding the view from his command nucleus, the Adar could not put aside his racial pride. Even though this was an impressive place, Earth could not match Ildira with its dazzling seven suns that bathed the planet in constant golden light. Night fell here on Earth, and Ildirans did not like the darkness.
As the flagship landed in the Grand Plaza in front of the Whisper Palace, Bali’nh mused to the human-shaped robot, deciding to be polite. “So this is Earth. Your descriptions have not done it justice, OX.”
The little compy turned his golden eye sensors to study the city before him. “I have not seen it for a long time, Adar Bali’nh. In fact, I never imagined I would see it again. Each generation ship carried a compy such as myself to serve as a teacher and historian to preserve the memories of home for successive generations. When I departed Earth aboard the Peary one hundred forty-nine years ago, the Whisper Palace had not yet been constructed. My knowledge is extremely out of date.”
“Then we will both learn the current situation. Shall we go and meet Earth’s King?” The two descended toward the departure deck.