Thursday, November 19, 2020

Wildfire is publishing NOW!

Okay, so, I pulled the trigger.

  Book 60, that is right Book SIXTY is in the hands of Amazon and B&N. In B&N's case, I hope they don't mess up again. It was not fun getting through the publishing process with them this go around! Wow.


Anyway,


  As the Xeno War ravaged the Milky Way ordinary citizens and military personnel from all walks of life found themselves swept up in events in unexpected ways.

As usual I'll post the links when they go live.

Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B08NWFWZBD

B&N: https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/wildfire-chris-hechtl/1138330553?ean=2940163025763

Wildfire snippet 3

 So, in a few minutes (or an hour or so if I get interrupted) I'm going to start publishing Wildfire. Hopefully B&N has their act together this time.

Anyway, I thought I'd pass on the last snippet for Wildfire beforehand. :)

Cat and Mouse

 

Cast:

Carmen “Cat” Santiago: Female jaguar cat burglar

Lee Cho: Jordan clone

Detective Tom “Mouse” Sloan: Robbery & burglary senior detective

Chief Aileen Bumpass: Chief of police for the capital

Glory Hole: Dark website where contracts are put up for bid.

 

Planet Limbo

 

“You are cornered, lady! Give it up! You aren't going anywhere this time!” Detective Tom Sloan said, leaning out the window to look at the shadowy being below on the fire escape.

Cat looked around, noted the alleyway, and saw the length in her HUD. It would be tight but she'd made that jump before.

Tom watched the thief turn, pull her mask down briefly to stick her tongue out at him, and then tense. “Don't do it!” he called out, instantly reading her body language and knowing what she was up to. “You won't make it!”

“Oh ye of little faith,” she said. “Just watch.”

She leapt backwards in an incredible somersault, spinning in the air before she landed on the fire escape of the neighboring building. She was up the fire escape as he cursed and called for backup to surround the neighboring building and expand the perimeter.

She climbed to the roof as police officers shined their lights on her from below. A police drone hovered nearby. She gave it a one-fingered salute and then kept moving.

She ran across the rooftop under the glare of the lights from the police air car and then ducked under a bunch of air ducts. The heat exchange for the HAC threw off their IR scanners.

“We lost her,” the police chopper said after a minute passed. “Yup, we can't pick her up. Expanding the search perimeter.”

“Nimble little minx,” Tom muttered with a shake of his head. He knew she'd won this round.

<(((@)))>

Cat managed to slip out from under the ducts and into the vent. She had planned the contingency hiding spot just in case. The temptation to continue to flee was strong, but she knew better. Someone running would attract attention. The drones and air cars might not be in sight, but that didn't mean they couldn't see the rooftops.

Instead, she waited, curling up for a satisfying nap.

<(((@)))>

Tom realized they'd lost her a half hour into the search. She was like a magician, damn good at disappearing. He stayed on site to deal with the forensics and the fallout through the night and into the morning.

She was good, damn good, he thought grudgingly over and over. That had been close, the closest he'd gotten to her yet. He was certain she was a female now. He replayed her brief speech and nodded. Her form said feline, obviously a medium-sized cat. Given how limber she was, she had to have some aerobatic training. He put that in her file as well as his other thoughts.

As expected forensics came up dry. The cameras had been messed with; she'd used some sort of localized EMP to knock them down to a blurry mess. The electronic techs said they might be able to get something out of it but no promises.

He'd heard that line before so he knew better than to hold his breath.

The CSI techs reported no DNA, no prints just like before. No hairs either, which was damned odd. She was good, very good; the best he'd ever seen. Clearly a pro, probably a member of one of the guilds.

<(((@)))>

Wednesday, November 18, 2020

Wildfire Snippet 2

 So, Wildfire was passed back to me by Goodlifeguide last night, shocking me. I'm debating publishing it today or waiting until tomorrow.


This is book Sixty, which is impressive to many including me. Everyone was surprised when I told them I'd written a book initially. When I told them I had 30 more planned they were shocked and amused. Now, here we are, 10 years later and I'm still going. Beyond Embers and Ashes there are 18 more books planned. We'll see if we get to them all. :)


Anyway, snippet time!

Here is something from Helljumpers:

Helljumpers

 

Cast:

Major General Brussel

Sergeant Niles Smith

Corporal X'v'll

Third Consulate Associate Perri Dinkle

Ambassador Robespierre Tennison

Sllith: Predator Union lawyer. Naga.

Bartholomew: Mog, Neodog collie mix. Representative of the colony.

 

Vespa, Beta Sector

 

Sergeant Niles Smith grimaced and crossed his arms as he watched the grade A cluster frack unfold. Marines, army, and navy personnel were all over the bay. It wasn't supposed to be like that, but hell, why not apparently. Worse, they were mixed with some civilians too for good measure.

On the one side, they had the natives. On another they had the representatives from the State Department and government. Then they had the damn Predator Union jackasses. They were the most intimidating of the bunch.

What was supposed to be a simple eviction had turned into a three-ring circus. He knew what was coming and wasn't looking forward to it, even though it was considered a combat drop and therefore a ticket in his resume. He had to survive it in order to enjoy it later.

He wasn't too afraid of the drop storm. It wasn't even a full court press; they were going to be methodical about the landing. Well, that had been the plan. Some genius had sent along cameras and had pushed for a full show of strength.

That idea had shifted after the Predator Union and some liberal types had gotten the word of the show of force and had pitched three shades of a fit, saying it was excessive and unnecessary.

It was, but some flag officers somewhere wanted to get the extra training in. Or, so they said. Really, they just wanted to show off for the cameras. Probably someone somewhere thought it would grease their way to another star or something. Who knew?

Who cared, really, he thought with a pang as he watched a camera crew and reporter interview an officer. It was an army officer, not one of his people thankfully. The Marines had a habit of playing bluff soldiers but were good at sticking their feet firmly in certain orifices according to Public Relations.

He shook his head as he watched his Marines watching the show. They were just about ready, just doing final checks to keep busy and to look busy. Good for them. He nodded slightly to Corporal X'v'll and moved on.

#==#==#

Third Consulate Associate Perri Dinkle watched the people around her as the small fleet of ships arrived in orbit of the Vespa colony. She looked at the fleet map and noted the naval escort had shifted to a perimeter around the core group.

Ships were already spreading out around the planet. They were no doubt tapping into the few satellites the colonists had. The navy would act as some of the eyes for the ground forces. She was aware that they were there not just as escorts but also to show they played a role in what was to come.

She didn't like it. She hoped they could get some last-minute trade going, get the natives to budge, and give the Dilgarth an island or something or conversely, get the Dilgarth off the planet. But so far, no such luck.

Until the Marines and army dropped, she and the other members of the State Department delegation would continue to try to negotiate with the natives, the Dilgarth, and the Predator's Union. Not that it was having much luck.

She had to admit, the Dilgarth and their supporters were right on several points. There were of course two sides to each point. Working for them, the Federation was supposed to be open to all species. That much was true. Colonization was subjective, however; if someone was paying for the star system, applicants had to apply to join the colony through legal channels. They had to pay their fair share and get approval. Plus, they had to pay for their own lands and such.

They also had to agree to the local laws of the colony and Federal laws. Once they were not in debt to the colony, they could legally vote and hold office as citizens.

Second, point in their favor; this had all happened several years ago. But the only reason that a response had been delayed was because they had filed petitions with the court to delay any eviction. They'd done so to run out the clock and exhaust the colonists into allowing them to stay.

That wasn't going to happen.

She felt bad; it was her job to find consensus, to be the bridge and to end conflict before it became violent. Her bosses insisted that they had to keep that club handy though; sometimes it had to come into play to get one side back to the negotiating table.

She just knew that employing the club would mean people got hurt. She bit her lip. Why did it have to come to that? Ordinary people could be reasonable. Predators though …

She shook herself. She was thinking along prejudicial; some might even consider racial lines. She should feel ashamed but instead felt a flicker of defiance. What was about to happen wasn't her fault.

The Dilgarth had no intention of paying their colony shares, nor pay for land they had taken, nor allow themselves to be subjected to the laws of the colony or the Federation. The Dilgarth had proven they could and would take whatever they wanted. Might made right in their eyes, period.

She looked at the soldiers assembling to drop. Well, they were about to find out what it was like to be on the receiving end of that statement.

Tuesday, November 17, 2020

Wildfire Snippet 1

   So, there are 2 short story books to go with the Ragnarok trilogy, Wildfire, and Ashes. I am currently 40% done Ashes.

Wildfire is up next. Rea just has a go at it and it is in the hands of Goodlifeinc. 

  BTW: Embers, the last of the trilogy has been written, the cover is done, and it's in the hands of those Betas who want a stab at it. If anyone wants a go, let me know.

Anyway, here is the cover for Wildfire in case you missed it:


  Wildfire is a collection of 14 short (some very short) stories. They range from the mildly amusing parodies like Monster's Inc to stories that will serve as background for characters who will play a major role in Embers. (and some may pop up in Irons time maybe!)

  One story I wrote back over a decade ago, and I've been itching to get it into a book. It was gone over by many Betas over the years, it was sort of their intro into the idea of proof reading. I had a mild re-write of it and you can see snippets in Inferno.

The story is called 'The Littlest Tug That Could'. So, lets snag a scene from that:

Space sailor class 1 Jim Runningback, a young man fresh out of the enlisted training program, made his way to his new berth reluctantly. He was assigned to a crew of a boat, which should have made him happy. Ten percent of his class has been stuck manning a post in an orbital fort or station, or even the yard. He, however, wasn't at all happy with his posting; he'd gladly trade it with some of them if he could.

Being young, he was a bit of a glory hound wanting to be on a big warship sharing in adventure and glory, not on an old run-down beat-up tug in the Sol system. 8541 was ancient, over two hundred years old. She was outclassed by all her follow-on ships; they were bigger and stronger. Better in other words. Definitely better he thought with a pang. Cleaner too. 8541 had seen a lot of years and clearly missed a lot of paint. Her hull was down to bare metal in some places. Only her bumpers looked in good order. He was a little dismayed by the cartoon tug painted on either side of her bow above her bumpers.

The captain was an old female with braided white hair. He saw her briefly in passing. She didn't look up as the two enlisted stopped and came to attention. Scuttlebutt said she had refused further promotion, sticking to where she knew she was needed. Lieutenant Commander Drominger was a rarity in the navy. She loved her battered command.

Within moments of coming on board, the young man was nearly thrown off his feet as the ship lunged. “Inertials are out of synch,” he murmured, shaking his head slowly.

“No, she's got a kick to her when we go past the red line,” a rating said, waving him onward. He stowed his locker near an empty hammock, then turned.

“We're always in the thick of things, but you'll get used to it, kid,” Merlo said, shrugging. He was a small man of Latin decent. He had some Incan in him. He was barely a meter and a half tall, but he was well proportioned. His body rippled with muscle. He wore a sweaty green tank top and shorts. He shrugged.

“Get squared away, kid, and then report to the chief. I've got to get to my post so I can't babysit you."

Jim frowned as the rating took off, ducking under pipes and cables as he moved. He shook his head.

====================*====================

Jim found the chief in engineering country of course, which was a deck down from the main deck. The chief was watching a repeater display, frowning. The lad came to attention to report for duty, but the chief waved him off with a shush.

The lad turned slightly so he could see what the big deal was. Apparently right off the bat, they had been sent into trouble, to bring a ship in that had been damaged. The kid was surprised that the little tug could do the job; the ship they had been sent after was a massive but badly mauled heavy cruiser.

He frowned, looking at the ship schematic next to the repeater. Everything was green; all systems were good to go. She wasn't even breaking a sweat hauling the cruiser around. But from the look of her shape, she even had a wheelhouse. Inside was the tiny bridge where the captain sat and monitored the situation. It had real windows, not screens like newer ships. He'd heard about that part when one of his fellow classmen had ribbed him about it.

“You Runningback? The new meat, kid?” the chief engineer asked, not looking away from the display.

“Ah, yes, sir. Jim Runningback, space sailor class 1, reporting for duty, sir.” He keyed his implant IFF registration and flicked it to the chief. He felt the chief and the ship's computer net acknowledge receipt of his ID. He'd done the same boarding the station and boarding the tug. He wasn't sure what all the security was about. He'd heard some weird rumors, but he didn't care. Protocol was protocol; you identified yourself properly when boarding a ship. He'd even saluted the battered flag painted on the airlock and asked Merlo for permission to board. Merlo had laughed. Now he wasn't sure what was going on. Sloppy, his mind thought darkly.

“You'll have to see the captain to report for duty. But she's a little busy now. I guess I should get the tour out of the way. Unless Merlo has taken care of that?” He turned briefly to the boy. Jim shook his head.

“Course not,” the chief said with a sigh. “Not his job obviously,” he grunted. “That's okay, I need a walkabout and a look over anyway,” he said waving a hand. "Let's go stretch our legs."

The chief took him on a quick tour, which wasn't much since the ship was only two hundred and fifty meters long and most of that was power plant, bunkage, shields, and engines. Great big, massive engines, with great big tractor emitters.

“Galley is that way. We eat, sleep, and breathe in each other's pockets, so don't go starting shit. Trust me; the captain is a hard ass when it comes to discipline.”

“Yes, sir.”

“You were expecting barracks?” the chief asked with a sniff.

“I didn't know what to expect, sir. I had no idea I'd draw this duty,” Jim said, trying to keep his resentment and bitterness under control. He wasn't too keen about sleeping on the deck or in a hammock.

“Get over it, kid. Right way, wrong way, navy way. You go where the navy tells you to go. Same here,” the chief said, tapping his chest meaningfully. He waited a beat, then turned. “The crew lives on this little sub-light ship. If you haven't noticed, we’re in a war. The navy can't afford to waste the fuel and time to go back and forth to the yard hab barracks daily.”

Jim nodded at the logic of that.

“We're on call twenty-four-seven so get used to not getting much sleep. Hopefully, you can sleep with the thrum of the engines, smells and all that. We don't have a crew quarters. Even the captain is stuck sleeping in her office.”

“Yes, sir. I'll make do.”

“You'd better make do, kid. You better get used to sleeping in a hammock too.”

“I did when I was in school, sir, and before that when I went camping. I'm also a spacer, sir. I came from Mars.”

“Ah. A red. Good. Still, the first couple of nights might be rough. Don't be stupid and put earplugs in; you will regret it if you do. You'll miss klaxons and alerts if you are blanked out.”

“Aye, sir.”

"You'd be surprised how easy it is to bed down when you are exhausted."

“This little girl may be small, but she has got a big heart,” the engineer told him, tapping the power plant. Unlike other ships, the fusion drive on the tug was enormous for her size. It also had an antimatter plant, but that was apparently out of fuel. There was no telling when they would get more. From the look of it, the crew had been scavenging the antimatter equipment for parts for some time. “We've kept with the upgrades; she's got a cruiser's fusion reactor and engines.”

“She's all fuel tank, engine, and power plant. Her shields and wedge are scaled to match a cruiser's. She's a bundle of energy in a tight dress. Too tight sometimes. We don't have any frills here, though, so don't go looking for any lace.” There was some pride in that description and challenge to refute it. He was fairly certain he'd get his head handed to him if he did so he stuck to what was safe.

“I see that, sir.”

“I hope so, kid. We're here.” The engineer rapped on the door then stepped back.

“It's open!” a hoarse female voice called. The engineer smiled and left without another word.

Jim opened the door and stepped through the hatch. He shut it behind him, then came to attention before the captain's small desk.

Deedee Drominger, captain of 8541, was nearly as old as her tug. She was weathered with time and hard living like her tug. But he realized, looks were deceiving. Definitely where packaging was concerned, hers might be as battered as her command's but only on the surface. The captain might have tattoos and be a bit wrinkled, but she had muscle and fire in her belly. She had an ancient little golden book with a picture of the cartoon tug on the cover. It was wrapped in plastic and framed in a cabinet.

She smiled at the lad. “I know what you are thinking, what you must be feeling. I know this is the last place you want to be; a youngling like you wants to be where the action and glory are. On the front I bet,” she said, shaking her head. “You think we're holding you back; we're not. Being a tug pilot isn't a glamorous job. I didn't expect it to be. It's a hard life but a necessary one. A job the navy, the Federation needs doing. Doing right in the worst way. It takes a delicate hand to man a tug; AI can handle some of it but not all. We do the grunt work others can't. Our job helps shave time and is a safety for those ships. Do ya think they can swan around the yard so easy, boy? No? Course not. Those big whales aren't set up for it.”

“One missed turn and they'll hit something. Which is where we come in. It's our job to make sure that doesn't happen. They are too fat-assed and too pigheaded to look after themselves, and the yard is a dangerous place. We've got to look after them, which is why the big boys don't fly around the yard on their own. We move them ourselves."

"Ah. Yes, ma'am."

"We'll be moving everything you can think of. Recovering ships, moving ships from one slip to another, the occasional Dutchman, shuttles in distress, freight—you name it, we'll tow or push it, mark my words. Now, go get sorted out and I'll see you at dinner."

"Yes, ma'am," he said, trying to salute but knocking his elbow on a low duct.

"We don't stand on ceremony here, son," the captain said with a small smile. "Just get it done."

"Aye aye, Captain."

====================*====================

Covers and AI

 Sitrep: So, I finished a fourth book and it is in the hands of the first of the Betas. If anyone of the Betas wants to input anything on th...