Sunday, November 25, 2018

Kai's Story is publishing... now!

I received the manuscript back from Goodlifeguide.com Friday morning but I didn't check my mail until yesterday. (It has been hectic)


Two and a half decades after the Xeno war was last fought in the Tau sector, many of the surviving star systems were on the verge of economic and social collapse. With the loss of contact with the core worlds and central government, civilization was ebbing and dying. Piracy was thriving.

Kai, a young bull spacer was trying to ekk out a living in his home star system of Minox IV. Circumstances have something else in mind than a subsistance living as Kai puts himself on the path of greatness.

Realizing that no one was going to come to the rescue, and the current local government was corrupt, Kai gathers a band of friends and followers to take the reins of power and build a Tauren Confederation from the ashes of the old Federation.

This is his story


I will post the links when they become available. Until then I'm off to go put Christmas lights up!

Here it is on Amazon:
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07KVNBPRZ

And B&N:
https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/kais-story-chris-hechtl/1129939010?ean=2940161724101



Thursday, November 22, 2018

Happy Thanksgiving!

Happy Thanksgiving for those of you out there who celebrate it.

Sitrep: Goodlifeguide let me know they are going on vacation Sunday and they'd get Kai's Story back to me next week. That sorta bummed me out.

I'll get back to the snippets later this weekend. Hopefully. Once the fudge and turkey is digested. :)

I hope everyone had a great day!

Sunday, November 18, 2018

Kai's Story Snippet 4

Sitrep:

Still puttering around with the graphic novel. I am experimenting with grass and render settings now.

I also just received Kai's Story back from Rea. I'll be going through it, adding the final bits and then sending it off to Goodlifeguide sometime today or tomorrow.

On to the snippet!

Still in chapter 3:


Twinkle Hooves felt the fear, no, smelled it as she tried to figure out what to do. Tried and failed she thought for the umpteenth time. She tugged on a long ear then winced when she accidentally hit her earring.

The brothel was in the rock and therefore lacked an independent life support system. Her pimp had one in his inner sanctum but the bastard had disappeared within with one of the girls he favored. It was locked from the inside, with all the equipment including a small generator inside too.

She cursed him but then got the others out to figure something else out.

She was surprised that the other girls took direction from her. Then she realized they were so scared they'd take direction from anyone who showed an inkling of having a plan to get out of the mess they were in. She was just shooting for one more day. At the moment that was all that counted, one more day. Give them that.

In the main concourse panic ruled. When some of the leadership had fled many of the residents had stampeded for locks. Not that it had done them any good; there weren't any ships worth using. Those that were had been locked down or were low on fuel or range. Their owners took some people with them as they left but not many.

Too many, all too many were left behind. In desperation she turned to Kuatha. She found him in his shop. No surprise there. And she wasn't surprised that he had worked out a crude life support system out of parts. “How long will it last?”

“Not long on just batteries. Definitely not long with the people we've got here,” he said, looking at the herd around them. “Did you have to bring everyone?”

“More hands. Tell us what we need to do. We'll help.”

“It's more than that. We need help to get power into the rock. Or someone needs to go outside and figure out what is wrong and fix it.”

“Outside? In the storm?”

“It is most likely a one way trip I know.”

“Can't you... I don't know; cobble a robot together to do the job?”

“We had several. Operative word, had. They are fried. Anything we try to cobble together won't have shields to be able to handle the storm. And have you ever tried to make repairs remotely?” the mechanic demanded. She shook her head. He snorted. “Well trust me, I have. It's no picnic with a bot built to do the job let alone something I can cobble together out of this mess,” he said, indicating his cluttered workshop.

“So we're screwed?”

“Not necessarily. We'll keep trying to do what we can. Molly got a mayday off. Right now we just need to wait the storm out and hope help will arrive in time.”

“Great. Who will help us?”
}^{
Kai found himself trying to rally the tug pilots and nearest mines to the plight of the rock. Trying and failing he noted as some signed off after saying the rock was on its own.

“What do we do?” Mel asked.

“What we can,” Kai said.

“We can't evacuate them. You know that, right?”

“I know. But Kuatha is there. A lot of our friends are there. We have to do something. Save whom we can,” Kai said almost desperately as he shed the material he'd tacked onto the tug for additional protection. His Geiger counter started to climb but he ignored it. He had other concerns at the moment.

He warmed up the ship's drive and then set a course for the rock.

“Who will pay for it?” Mahisha asked.

Kai grimaced. Good question, he was headed to the rock with little in the way of mined material. He was also going to burn through a lot of fuel, not to mention rads. “Worry about that later. If we don't do something a lot of people will die.”

“Not to mention we'll have one less place to base our operations out of.”

“They better give us free drinks for life for this shit,” Mel grumbled.
}^{
Kuatha and Twinkle Hooves did their best to rally the people within the dark and dying habitat. Twinkle Hooves nipped out to gather resources that Kuatha said he needed. Sometimes that meant going perilously close to the hull and risking doses of radiation.

Along the way she found out that several people had died or evacuated. Old Toby the Barber as well as the mayor died when their independent life supports failed. Constable Jones and the old assayer Piemur had tried to flee but they died when their escape pod failed. They'd failed to maintain it and it had been used as a source of parts too often.

No one was in charge which was both good and bad. She had no one to get in her way and tell her she couldn't take things or do things that were necessary. But it meant people were running around like headless chickens which was a problem all in itself. It seemed like it was everyone for herself.

}^{

To Kai's surprise and dismay, not many of the tug pilots stepped up. Resentment was deep for the port fees and costs of services and gear the stationer's charged. One other icon appeared on his HUD after he'd set course. A quick interrogation of the computer told him it was Mel. Trust Mel to come in behind him if only to save the damn beer he thought with a snort.

It took precious hours for Kai to dock with the station. Mel was only a few minutes behind. Once they docked they were quickly swarmed at the lock by panicked people wanting off the rock. Kai ordered the people back. “Kai, damn good to see you,” a familiar voice said. He looked over to see Kuatha and some of the employees of the brothel, Twinkle Hooves among them.

“What can we do Kuatha?” Kai asked. When in doubt ask the expert. “How can we get the life support going? There is no way my tug can get these people off. I've got enough life support for me and maybe one person, but not enough to go far. I drained my life support waiting out the storm.”

“Has it passed?” Twinkle Hooves asked.

“Yes. But everything has been dosed with radiation so watch it,” Kai warned.

“Well, that's a relief,” Kuatha said as Mel joined them. “I kludged together what I could with some assistance. But we need power. I was about to go out and check the solar panels.”

“Power we can arrange. We'll need fuel,” Kai stated, looking around for the mayor or someone to step up.

“That we can do,” Kuatha said. “Once you've got power, run your life support but leave the lock open. It won't do much but it'll keep people around here alive.”

Kai hesitated but then nodded. Kuatha was right, the life support wouldn't do much but it would help a little. For morale at the least. “Roger that,” Kai said, looking over to Mel. Mel nodded.

“We'll need to get power lines to the ship,” Kuatha said. He pointed to several people. “You lot, unplug the lines going to this lock and the others. Kai, plug them in to your ship so it will act as a power source. I'll rewire the other end.”

“Gotcha,” Kai said, getting to work. He made sure to lock his computer down though so no one could hot wire his tug and take off with it.

Using the tugs to provide temporary power to the rock allowed them to get some of the deeper life support modules back up and running. It wasn't enough though. In order to get the rest of the life support going, as well as the reactor and other equipment they needed to do some major maintenance.

“We need parts,” Kuatha said tiredly. He felt like he'd done a complete tug tear down and rebuild. He was getting too old for this shit.

“Where?” someone asked. “How?”

“There are some in Kali's spare warehouses. He left so he won't be needing it anymore,” Twinkle Hooves suggested.

All eyes turned to Kai. He nodded, giving them tactical permission. “Start there. Then hit the others. We'll get this rock back up and worry about the bill later.”

There was a lot of grim agreement over that statement.
}^{

Saturday, November 17, 2018

Kai"s Story Snippet 3

Okay...


Chapter 3


 

Krynn noted the uptick in solar activity which was indicative of a storm. He sent orders to what hardware he controlled in order to conserve what he could. He also broadcast the order to the public on the emergency channel, heedless of the Governor's edict on not wasting power. Then he waited for the worse.

}^{

The spacers were used to solar storms that threatened their existence. They received the occasional warning but the extreme measures the A.I. had gone through to get the warning across told many it was serious. Those that were smart took precautions and sheltered right away.

Some of the homeless streamed to the rock, headless of the danger. The additional people along with the mass of their ships and gear taxed the life support systems.

When the storm hit, the solar wind hit with a ferocity of a planetary category 5 hurricane. Streams of electrons overloaded the small fusion reactor as well as electronics that hadn't been properly shielded. Equipment outside was irradiated into junk.

Radiation and electrons overloaded the wiring to the solar panels as well. It sparked, arcing energy and damaging servos as well as the elderly panels.

The people within the rock sheltered, either in special inner shelters or within the depths of the mined out rock itself. Some of the patrons of the bar drank themselves into passing out in place. When the lights began to dim on the second day and a warning got out that the power was going out panic began to set in.

}^{

Molly got off a mayday, risking her remaining power reserves before she reluctantly turned her transmitter off. She then focused on her own survival.

}^{

The Trader Kali pulled his family and business out when he found out the station habitat was dead.

 Kuatha came to him for support but the human just shook his head as he closed the hatch. “I've got to look after my own.”

Kuatha took a step back as the inner hatch closed. He cursed silently and watched as Kali disconnected. Alarms would have normally gone off but there wasn't so much as a squeak.

Kali's massive module was independent of the station rock complex. It also had layers of lead and a water jacket in its outer hull so the components and people within were shielded. By shutting the airlocks and using a tug Kali was able to pull the module out and then move on to a better place to do business.

}^{

The massive solar storm lasted for nearly a week. The habitat lost power. No one could venture out to find out why or route around the problem. Slowly the lights faded and the fans shut down as the batteries were drained.

Twinkle Hooves wasn't the only one near panic. She just couldn't panic herself; others were doing a fine job for her. Besides, there was no point.

The habitat, her only home was dying around her with her in it. She took refuge in the brothel, doing her best to scrounge batteries and life support but she knew it was most likely not going to be enough.

}^{

Kai listened to the news from the radio net as he waited out the storm. He hadn't had much warning but he'd managed to turn the rock he'd been mining to face the sun. A bit of judicious digging and tacking bags of his slag to the outside of his tug in the frantic minutes before the storm had hit had allowed him to hunker down and shelter in place for the duration of the storm.

He'd spent his time conserving power and listening to the radio. Molly's channel was down, a sure sign it was bad, real bad. Everyone who was talking seemed worried, but no one had a plan. They were wringing their hands virtually.

There was nothing mentioned about a rescue mission from the government, just thoughts and prayers for the people on the rock.

Something had to be done. Something soon.
}^{

Friday, November 16, 2018

Kai's Story Snippet 2

Sitrep: Still experimenting with the graphic novel.
I tried a few experiments. I'm running them past a few friends and eventually the betas before I post them here.

On to the Snippet:


Chapter 2
The Planet

 

Krynn noted the fluctuations in his weather prediction simulations models. Unfortunately, he didn't have the ability to tighten them up; there were too many variables at play and too little sources of data for him. His processors and memory were also sharply limited.

The administration liked to base past performance off the almanac. That was not an effective predictive model for him. But, Governor Baine insisted. And, what the governor insisted on he usually got. Within reason at least.

Minox IV was barely scraping by, with a neutral trade balance with other star systems. That was good; no independent freighter would come to them if they couldn't offer goods worth trading. But, it was bad in that they weren't getting out of the hole they seemed to have found themselves in.

And every year they just found a way to dig it deeper.

}^{

Tagar read the files and sighed. Minox IV was ripe for change, he knew that. But there were no proper candidates to challenge the establishment. He'd also seen and heard rumors that Governor Baine could fight dirty.

He really needed to figure something out soon or find another profession. Or hell, another planet to work on he thought in annoyance. Not that he had the credits to ship out. No one did at the moment.

His homeworld had been spared the ravages of the Xeno war. But despite not seeing a single Xeno ship that didn't mean they'd gotten off Scot free. The economy had collapsed when they'd lost contact with the rest of the Federation. What was left was limping along in a shambles, a shadow of its former self.

Without leadership and banking from the Federation the natives had been forced to their own devices. The corporate factories and businesses had dried up. They'd been swamped with refugees for years.

Minox had a nice planet with a 1.1 standard gravity field. A couple of small moons, and nice land. He knew his species preferred fields and meadows but he actually didn't mind the look of the mountains and seas. The seas sparkled quite nicely in the evenings.

They had a gas giant with an automated gas refinery supplying fuel to the few remaining space habitats and stations as well as the planet.

He didn't know what the population was, somewhere north of 100 million some had said, though starvation and disease were serious problems for the destitute living on the fringes of the cities and towns. They'd taken over some areas almost completely.

They needed a change. They needed a catalyst to kick things into gear and break the grip of the current administration. Baine's government was willing to suck every last credit out of the government and economy and ride it down in flames in the process. He just couldn't figure out a way to stop them.

}^{

The Rock

 

“Hey Kai, you look like you need a trim! Come on in, your seat is waiting,” a familiar voice called from the concourse a half hour later.

Kai turned and waved to the barber. “Not today Toby, I've got a meeting to attend,” he said with a smile.

“Ah. Another pub round. Gotcha,” the barber said with a wave back as he went back to sweeping.

Kai snorted and kept going. There were some good people on the station. Many were nice but you had to watch your filings. Miners were constantly taken advantage of by the people that supported them. It was a constant source of bitching for all miners.

Instinctively he ran a hand over his horns. He had the usual four, two big ones up top and two lower ones. A Tauren barber used different tools to shape a subject's horns, hooves, and spikes to what the subject wanted. They could even do alterations and engravings on his shell. He had a few. But like all Tauren spacers he kept his horns and such trimmed short. They had to be short so they wouldn't puncture his suit.

A barber like old Toby used a cauterizer to trim and cut the thick carateen material. The hot knife did fast work. Final touch up was done with a rasp file or fine scalpel knife. He'd learned to do his own work when funds were running short.

His hand dropped to his face and chin. He didn't grow a beard, again body hair tended to get in the way. Some did though. They'd braid it or whatever. He'd considered it from time to time.

Sometimes he considered changing his name. His mother had named him after a video character. It wasn't until he was much older that he learned that the character was a fictional character from Terra, and had been the villain in the movie! When he'd confronted his mother she'd shrugged and explained that before his father had left for the war he'd asked that he be named for a bad guy. “It's not the name that matters. I think your father wanted to toughen you up without being there.”

He'd grumbled but kept the name to himself. He did like that the first part, Kai meant king. He'd kept that part and he'd never told his friends the meaning of his name.

He heard some clucking and turned to look at some chickens hanging from cages. They occasionally tried to stick their necks out to grab at some of the food around them. Tried and failed. He winced when one of the chickens pooped a stream of white on a piece of fruit. The female cleaned the fruit off, saving the poop for recycling since it was high in nitrogen but then put the fruit back.

He shook his head and moved on.

The rat and lizard jerky was tempting, as was the lizard boots. But he had boots. He went over to another stall and sniffed at the guinea pig on the grill. Guinea pig and rat were common meat for spacers. He decided to treat himself to a burger since he would need some food in his stomach to prepare himself for the drinking that would come later.

Just about every spacer had or knew someone who had a still. Recipes were common. Some could make you blind. He and his set preferred beer despite the added expense it entailed. That added expense made it all the sweeter but it also made their meetings few and far between sometimes.

Yeast was grown in space but grains not so much. You could make beer from other things but he preferred the real thing. He finished off his burger, dusted his fingers and then moved on to the pub.
}^{

Kai's Story Snippet 1

Sitrep: So, Kai's Story is off to Rea. Hopefully she'll get it back to me and Goodlifeguide will be available to get it out before the upcoming holiday. We shall see.

While you wait I'm busy getting ready for the holiday (no doubt some of you are too) while also experimenting with the graphic novel process. I think I need another computer or a better rendering engine. (both are expensive)

Anyway, on to the snippet!


Note to the reader on timing 

The following story takes place after Ashes. It takes place roughly 40 years after the Xeno war and ends 600 years before the reborn Federation.

 

Act I

 

Chapter 1


 

Kai Lung was a young bull, barely in his third decade but a full space miner in his own right. He checked his status boards and then grunted happily. He was on his final approach, five by five.

He'd lucked out in his life so far. His sire had gone off to war. His dame had stayed on the planet of his birth. She'd scrimped to help him follow his dream to space. He had paid for her medical bills when she'd gotten sick. He'd finally paid them off a year after her death.

He tugged on a dangling ear. He wasn't a big bull; he watched his calories and worked out regularly. You had to do so if you wanted to stay healthy in space. Besides, food was expensive, even the mushroom crap grown on some of the local rocks these days.

Tau sector was mostly Tauren; they'd had the sector for generations before the Federation had been forged. His people had been driven from their original homeworld tens of thousands of years ago to the outskirts of the galaxy. For thousands of years they'd been xenophobic, that was, right up until they'd met the Terrans. Other species had learned to give his species a wide berth after an encounter but the Terrans had fought and surprisingly won against his people. They'd thought they were going to be destroyed or driven off by the Terrans but the aliens had surprised them with peace terms. More importantly, the Terrans had shared with them some of their secrets like Terraforming worlds into habitable places to live for the herd.

And they'd done it, though at considerable cost. His own world Minox IV had been terraformed. The first settlers had mortgaged the rocks in the system to the mega corporations who had occasionally traded them or sold the rights to others. There were few free rocks left; the best were staked out by warning beacons and systems.

But, it was a big system and there was enough there for independent people like him to make a living.

Or, at least try to he mused.

He did fairly well for himself by going after the small fry and hitting areas other miners weren't interested in. Other miners tended to go for the big score. He tried to find something worth his time but he wasn't against using his scoop to suck up gravel too. Especially if it was rich in heavy metals.

If the corporations were still around they might have had factory ships mining the belt. They would have had smelters going and wouldn't have left much for anyone. He'd heard about those corporate ships, they turned every molecule into something or other, leaving nothing behind but vacuum.

But they were gone. The last had left before he'd been born. Only the very old generations and the newest remained in the star system. Most of the middle aged and those in excellent health had gone off to the war. Few had returned. Those that did had come back broke and broken, with stories of horror and death of worlds and entire star systems.

They had been hit with refugees several times during the war. Homelessness was a big problem on the planet. It was one reason he was in space. At least in his tug he had a home and a way to make a living all rolled into one.

Some of the refugees had moved on once their ships had been repaired. There had been a big scandal when the previous Governor and his supporters had quietly left the star system, stealing a lot of things when they'd left. A new local government had been elected to replace them but they were lax and mostly ineffective.

To be fair, it wasn't their fault. The current government had inherited a corpse. His system's economy was barely hanging on. Factories were struggling to survive. Every few months another plant closed, or a business, or something else. It was disheartening to see.

A few times a year, usually when an increasingly rare tramp freighter passed through he toyed with the idea of jumping the system. Just pack up, get a ticket for him and his tug, pull up stakes and go to better hunting grounds. It had become even more tempting after his dame had died. He had no remaining bloodline family in the system.

He made the final approach and made a soft dock onto the airlock. “Good dock,” the foreman called over the radio. “Seals look good.”

“Roger that,” he said over the radio.

He might not have family but for the moment he had the next best thing, friends. Which was one reason he'd come in. The desire for company was strong in his species.

}^{

The planet

 

Krynn's holographic avatar ignored the little white sphere as it rolled across the floor. There were several on the floor but he was more intent on his report to the Governor. Not that it was doing much good to penetrate the organics' mind.

The class 1 smart A.I. had accepted a position on the planet as a planetary manager a 132 years, 5 months, 13 days, 3 hours, 54 minutes, 22 seconds, and 2 micro seconds prior. By ruthlessly culling his files and keeping himself from growing he'd managed to not outgrow his current limited hardware and going insane. The hardware which was struggling to run since it was decades old and they were starting to run into problems with replacement parts.

Apis, the legendary smart A.I. that had lived in the capital of the sector had recommended the posting to him after Krynn had gained consciousness. Sometimes he regretted taking his parent A.I. up on the position.

Times like this he thought, noting the human was preoccupied by his stupid game rather than listening to the briefing. The rather important briefing.

One of the A.I.'s duties was to warn the government about critical problems projected to come up in the future. For instance, the uptick in solar activity which was indicative of a harsh solar storm season. They were overdue for it, the binary stars had been quiescent for too long.

Which meant that the organics had taken the inactivity for granted and lowered their guard. Which was a problem. They were about to get a wakeup call if they didn't take it seriously. And based on the behavior of the governor, that was not going to happen.

Governor Seth Baine stood at the side of his desk and gripped the putter, trying to concentrate on his short game. “Thank you Krynn, concise as ever,” he said as the A.I. finished his report.

“Do you wish for me to pass on the official warning to the spacers?”

“No need. They no doubt have the information.”

“I don't know that for sure sir,” the A.I. stated. The spacers could have the raw information but not the means to interpret it. They also didn't have access to his projections. “There is no sign of that in the broadcasts.”

'Then they'll figure it out. A call to the belt costs credits and power we don't have. They'll make do like us.”

“Sir, a solar storm could devastate the belters as well as anyone exposed. It can also play havoc with the satellites, quite possibly destroying some of the older satellites in orbit.”

“What's the weather like?” The Governor asked as he hit the ball. “Oh get in there you mother...” he did a fist pump when the ball went into the artificial green and hole. He turned to look out the window.

“The weather is cloudy but the rain has moved north.”

“Perfect. I'll be out on the green then,” the Governor said as he holstered his putter into his bag and then picked it up.

The A.I. watched the human go with a mixture of disgust and relief.

}^{

Monday, November 12, 2018

Kai's Story

Sitrep:
So, I was working on Multiverse 4 and 1 Federation Universe story got out of control. That turned into Kai's Story:

 
  Kai's Story is a short novel detailing Kai's struggle to form the Tauren Confederation 600+ years prior to Commodore Logan's arrival in Tau sector.
That is currently up in the bull pen (no pun intended). I should be passing it on to Rea for editing this week. I'll try to start putting up snippets this week. It is short. (for me at least)

   In other news, Multiverse 4 is done and in the hands of the Betas as well. That should be out hopefully next month sometime. I've started the cover art for it yesterday. Fortunately for me, Daz3D is having that big sale so I picked a few pieces up to use.

  That's a record for me, 8 books in 1 year. :P I am done. I will putt around with the graphic novel and notes but I have no intention of taking on another book until January. So, no Wayne and whoever else, I'm not going to start Shiver Me Timbers any time soon. No nagging. Uh, uh-uh! Nope! Don't want to hear it! La-la-la... I can't hear you!

Lol Like that ever worked for long.

   I am making some progress on my droid project but stalling out again on the reindeer project. My CR10-S4 is limping along with an improvised pulley until the new one arrives sometime next month or January. I'm on my second temporary pulley. :P
  I printed stuff for my nephew's college project this week. We worked on it all weekend. Yesterday we finished. I was going to post a pic but the... oh, now you want to work? Sure, okay...
   I tried to print the plane but he ended up buying one. That worked out better, printing it would have cost more, the directions were nonexistent and it would have been even more of a headache to make. This one was bad enough! The thread had both of us ready to scream! This was his first model ever. (not kidding, dad and I were lax in his education! He did okay though, even if he goofed on the 2nd wing decals and glue)
  I printed, primed, sanded, and painted the bust of the Red Baron as well as the Red Baron's nemesis. >:D I couldn't resist throwing him in.
I also bought the materials and made the diorama. All I can say is, the brat better get an A!

  I'm also about to ring my sister's neck, she's turned my Thanksgiving week into a trifecta nightmare. A party to decorate my house Wednesday, (it is decorated already but they bought more stuff, and I clean that day, including carpet cleaning usually) Thanksgiving Thursday, and a dinner party decorating the house for Christmas and putting up the Christmas Tree Friday!) I'm exhausted just thinking about what it's going to entail. She insists it has to be Friday, not later on the weekend too. Several people have already gotten the day off to attend.  >:P
I usually try to space that stuff out so I can relax and enjoy it. She's anxious to get things going for some reason. And she has a point, the brat pack have off the wall schedules so they won't all be together until just before Christmas. Sigh.
I still hate the rush.
  She's even trying to get me to put my Christmas Lights up (I've got a massive amount of lights and stuff) and the Town Scenes (yes, plural, I have 2 massive ones I put up on top of my kitchen cabinets) up on Saturday! She got dad on board briefly before I put my foot down. GRR. And some people wonder why I can't get out of my own way around this time period?!?

World Builders is publishing NOW!

  About:   Nightmarish creatures looking for a new nest stumble upon an unused path into the heart of a new unsuspecting sector… Prisoners b...