Space Battles is a collection of 17 different short stories centered on, you guessed it, space battles. They each have their own unique way of displaying a battle and include anything from one-on-one gun fights, to dogfights between single ships, to even full scale assaults on battle cruisers. Space Battles has a good mix of female and male characters, and generally speaking the women kick even more tail than their male counterparts, a refreshing thing to see especially in this genre. In Space Battles you will find mixtures of humor, a wide variety of sub-genres such as Space Opera and Military Science Fiction, as well as all the action you can handle and more. You will find sentient spacecrafts and Amish space truckers, that’s right I said Amish which are shown in a way you could never imagine! There is a little something in Space Battles for everyone.The character depth is excellent despite the fact that the average length of the stories is about 15 pages or so, quite an achievement when you consider that they have to pack these short stories with as much action as you can handle as well. You have some stories that will make you laugh such as The Thirteens by Gene Mederos where a particular incident involving slippers had me in a fit of giggles. Others will make you appreciate those in the military as admirals valiantly fight to save their ship, and their way of life such as in Like So Much Refuse by Simon C. Larter. Some examine the will to live and the will to die such as in Never Look Back by Grace Bridges. I was hardly able to set the book down as each new story sent adrenaline into my system.
If you enjoy anything in the realm of science fiction this is a book I highly recommend you go out and get. The writing is excellent and if battles themselves are your thing, regardless of genre, than this book will suit your fancy just fine as well. Honestly if you just want some quick reads that are done very well Space Battles is a good choice. The characters do not suffer for the short length of the stories, even in Bait and Switch by Jaleta Clegg which is a mere eight pages! Obviously if you have read this far you can tell I thoroughly enjoyed Space Battles. I really don’t have any complaints.
The second story in Space Battles: Full Throttle Space Tales #6 is by Gene Mederos. Born in Cuba and raised in Brooklyn, he wrote his first story in second grade. Mederos received a BFA in Theater from the University of Miami and has worked as an illustrator, graphic designer and various odd jobs including a seven year stretch at the The American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals in NewYork City. In 2007, he discovered filmmaking and currently teaches editing and filmmaking at the Santa Fe Community College. Most recent stories in print include the stories “Moons of Blood and Amber” in the Tangle XY anthology published by Blind Eye Press, and “A Touch of Frost” in the Space Horrors: Full-Throttle Space Tales #4 anthology published by Flying Pen Press. He can be found online at Facebook or via his website at http://lostsaints.com.
BTS: How did you find out about the Space Battles anthology and what made you decide to submit?
Gene Mederos: I was in the Space Horrors anthology and I like the imprint, it hearkens back to yesteryear.
BTS: Tell us a little about “The Thirteens.” What’s it about? Where’d this particular idea come from?
GM: At the core, the story is about tolerance for diversity, even toleration for the intolerant. It’s an old Sci-Fi trope, that the only thing that will unite warring parties is a bigger, badder alien or even the unknown. As for the inspiration, I have friends from the extreme left to the extreme right, politically, so it wasn’t hard to craft the mindsets for the characters.
BTS: You’ve contributed to multiple anthologies in the Full Throttle Space Tales series. Are they tied to this story in any way?
GM: They nominally take place in the same universe, one where physics is not as abridged as on Star Trek and Star Wars, but faster than light travel is available, and about two hundred years in the future.
BTS: How’d you come to be involved with this series?
GM: My friend Trent Zelazny put me in touch with David Lee Summers who was putting together the Space Horrors anthology. It’s all about who you know…
BTS: How’d you get started as a writer?
GM: I’ve always loved stories, and am always telling stories. It was a natural progression to start writing stories to share with others that way.
BTS: Where’d your interest in SFF come from?
GM: Comic books, the original Lost in Space and Star Trek, and the first musty hard cover edition of Dune I found at the local library.
BTS: Do you have plans to do any more with this universe?
GM: Yes, as a vehicle, or a common canvas, not necessarily with any of the characters already seen in print, but cameos are fun.
BTS: What other projects do you have in the works that we can look forward to?
GM: I have lots in the works, lol, most writers do. I’ve submitted a story to Bad Ass Fairies 4 which I hope they’ll publish, and am hunkering down to write an extreme planet story for another anthology, and I have the requisite novels. But I believe mastery of the short story form is a prerequisite to a good novel, so I consider myself still in training.
Here’s an excerpt from “The Thirteens,” Gene’s exciting story from Space Battles:
The Thirteens
Gene Mederos
Nestled deeply in the foam mattress of the semi-luxurious hotelsuite her rank afforded her, Captain Andromeda Sax was sound asleepwhen her com went off. The double pulse told her it was somethingimportant enough to warrant a secure connection. Even less than halfawake her hand automatically flew to the spot on her jaw below herright ear. She pressed the small stud embedded there under her skin.
“Go ahead.”
“Captain, a bogey has entered the system,” the officer of the watchon board her ship, La Espada de la Libertad, informed her. That could have been anywhere from four to six hours ago,depending on which of the outer system beacons had first detected the incoming ship and transmitted the alert. A bogey was a ship thatdid not, or could not, transmit a valid ID code. It could be a smuggler,a legitimate freighter with a screwy comp—or it could be theenemy. Sax allowed herself a small smile; after all, there was no one around to see it.
“Recall the crew, priority one.” That gave the crew ten minutes to get back aboard the ship. She spared one last glance at her room. Aquarii Station was on the frontier, but it still managed to offer most of the comforts of the more cosmopolitan stations of the home-worlds. Accommodations on La Espada were much more austere. She smiled again. Five minutes later she strode onto the bridge. She hadn’t really had time to dress, just comb her short-cropped jet-black hair and throw on her officer’s greatcoat, but the voluminous garment covered her from neck to ankles. And if anyone noticed she was wearing slippers instead of boots, they wouldn’t dare comment on it. The guards at the door snapped to attention. The crew on the bridge was all in uniform and seated at their stations. She always kept a full watch on duty while the rest of the crew took liberty.
“Inform the stationmaster we are launching to investigate,” she instructed the com officer, then requested the general hail. “Emergency separation from Aquarii station in T-minus four minutes.” That was sure to make the stragglers scramble, for anyone left behind would have to fend for themselves out of their own pocket. Stations were notorious for separating crew from their coin, and the community service often imposed to pay off a debt was the most odious of station maintenance work. Some of the crew would not return, for the ship had its own share of odious duties as well as providing a greater chance of getting killed. She’d deal with any of those persons when she returned. She never thought ‘if’.
“Release hook-ups,” she ordered on the mark.
“Hook-ups released,” the officer at conn replied. She heard the usual chorus of clicks as everyone strapped themselves in.
La Espada was now completely on its own power, air and water. Sax strapped herself into her chair.
“Cast off.”
The station’s magnetic clamps released the ship and she imagined the hiss of air as the powerful propellant tanks pushed them away from the station and felt the familiar tug as the gravity provided by the station’s rotation gave way to the gravity generated by the ship’s sudden acceleration. She felt the weight ease an instant before the conn announced they were standing clear of the station.
“Full sail,” she ordered. The most insane and courageous members of her crew were the riggers. At her command they jetted out in EVA suits along the masts and struts to unfurl the giant micro-thin solar sails. The riggers claimed watching the golden sails catch the rays of the sun was akin to a religious experience. She’d never seen the phenomenon herself, but figured it must be quite a sight if it could induce one to hurl oneself into the void to see it.
Acceleration under sail would increase slowly, but surely.
“Begin rotation,” she ordered.
“Beginning rotation,” the engineering deck replied on the ship-wide hail, the only warning the crew would get that up and down had to be taken into account again. The sound of the engines that rotated the cylindrical ship within its frame of struts and masts starting up did not need to be imagined. It reverberated and shook throughout the ship. Fortunately, once the ship began to spin at speed, inertia was maintained by magnetic induction and the engines would be almost silent.
The captain felt herself sink ever so slightly into the cushioning. A thought, via implant and wireless transmission, was all it took to make the chair turn slightly on its horizontal axis. She, like the crew, enjoyed the automated, computer guided functions on the ship while she could. During battle, with the comp taken offline, everything had to be done manually. The navigator’s station came into view and with it the senior nav officer, Poole. This was the one crewmember she would never leave behind. As she understood it, the ship ran on numbers, and this was the man who crunched them when the comp was down. Poole raised his head from his displays, as if he could feel her scrutiny like a sensorite. Like all the human beings from his planet, Cygni-I, his skin had a slight blue cast and his hair was colorless. These obvious and innocuous signs of the genetic modifications undertaken by his ancestors to survive on their relatively oxygenpoor world were all that the Purists needed to hate Poole’s kind. Sax thought them fools. If anything, the Cygni were far more dangerous for what they had done to their minds.
“Have you correlated a course, Mr. Poole?”
“Yes, captain.”
“Let’s have it then.”
Immediately, a heads up display appeared before her, La Espada’s course outlined against the current layout of the system in a bright certain blue. Lines shaded from yellow to green showed the most probable courses of the bogey, extrapolated second by second as more sensor data came in from the beacons arrayed throughout the system. She was pleased to see that the most probable vectors would intercept with her ship well above the plane of the ecliptic, where there would be plenty of fighting room, if necessary. She knew that the universe was more empty space than matter, but to her the Aquarii system had always seemed cluttered with asteroids, comets and other debris.
Debris that could damage her ship.
She willed La Espada to go faster, and closed her eyes to imagine the nonexistent creaking of the rigging and masts as light pushed the solar sails out against the star’s pull on the ship. She’d been on a sailing ship once, on the oceans of Maravilla, before the Associated Worlds lost the Lalande system to the Purists. Someday, she meant to win that world back. But since the faster than light engine could not be used anywhere near a star’s gravity well, the ship could go faster only as they got farther from the star. She could order a burn, and kick the ship up to her full speed of a hundred kilometers per second, roughly a third the speed of light. But if she were headed for battle, she would be wise to reserve all the fuel in the tanks for maneuvers.
It would take a little under thirty hours for the ships to meet, and there was much to be done. “Steady as she goes,” she ordered Poole as she turned her chair to line up with the exit from the bridge. This brought Augusto Lo into view. His bronze-brown skin was a few shades lighter than the captain’s, his eyes and tousled hair darker. He was actually earth-born, yet had rejected the Purist philosophy and immigrated to an Associate world as a youth. He was slouched at his usual station at the rear of the bridge, his eyes half closed, his head resting on his fist, his other hand fiddling idly with the buckles on his disheveled jumpsuit. To all appearances he was oblivious to what was going on around him. But it was all an act. The captain knew that the ‘State Liaison Officer’ never missed a thing that happened on the ship. So she wasn’t the least bit surprised when he came up behind her in the corridor as she waited for the lift. The guards wouldn’t stop him from coming after her like that, after all, they ultimately answered to him.
“Odd, isn’t it?”
She raised an eyebrow in reply.
“If I’m not mistaken, that bogey is following the same trajectory as the last Purist ship that attacked this system.”
The captain nodded. “Yes, I’d noticed that.”
“But that approach gives you, the defender, the weather gauge. The bogey has to expend fuel to fight the same solar wind that La Espada has at her back, filling our sails, leaving it less fuel to maneuver. These were decisive factors in our victory against the last incursion.” Again, the captain raised her brow.
“And your superior skill at command and tactics, of course,” he amended with a small grin. Sax smiled in return, more because of his use of the archaic term ‘weather gauge’ than his sardonic compliment. “Everything means something,” he said in return.
“Then figure it out,” she said, after pausing for a moment to visualize her deck number.
Lo nodded. “Nice slippers,” she heard him say as the lift doors closed.
An hour before intercept the captain was touring her ship as she was wont to do before a battle. And she had no doubt that there would be a battle—the bogey’s course was lining up exactly with the last Purist ship’s incursion. A statistical impossibility, Poole had assured her. So this ship was using the last ship’s comp data, possibly retrieved from the latter’s logs, which would have been downloaded into a locator beacon before the ship went into battle. It made no sense to her, but then, she thought the whole Purist agenda made little sense. She entered the rigger’s loft in the core of the ship. Since the ship rotated around the core, there was no gravity in the long, cold cylinder. It was the perfect place to store cargo, house the ship’s engines and, of course, the riggers.
A rigger spotted her and snapped to attention, his elongated prehensile toes grasping a length of cable to steady himself. He was blond and blue-eyed, not too bad looking, with a crooked nose and a wry twist to his mouth that suggested he was always smiling. He was tall and thin, his arms and legs of equal length, with all twenty digits being equally dexterous. His name was Jaller. He’d served on her ship for the past four years and she knew him to be brave, loyal, and kind. And even though the rigger’s section of the core was only partially heated, he was naked, as was their wont. Diversity. The idea and the reality that the Purists condemned as unnatural.
She drifted among the riggers, male and females both, for no few minutes, praising their courage, thanking them for their service and exhorting them to battle. Despite her duty uniform and her boots, she still managed to skillfully make her way in Zero G among the giant web of cables that the riggers called home. Their ancestors had destroyed their world in a paroxysm of industrialization that had seen the world laid waste in just six generations after colonization. The riggers had been forced to evacuate onto space stations and ships and had during the centuries of the sundering, when all of humanity’s worlds had lost contact with each other and faster than light travel had been abandoned, modified themselves to live in micro-gravity. Members of no fewer than five of the existing seven modified human races served on her ship and of the remaining two, the Aquarii had inadvertently made themselves highly susceptible to space sickness and the folk of Twobit were devout pacifist.
Her last stop on her tour was always the medical deck. Doctor Stures was a sensorite, his people hailed from the dust-cloaked planet of Gliese 876, Umbra. The world was metal poor and had erratic magnetic fields so technology had been difficult to maintain.
Without much artificial illumination, the people of that world had modified their other senses to compensate for the gloom. His skin was blue-black with raised oblong bumps that ran from his hairline to his jaw. She knew them to be receptors, allowing the doctor to feel minute changes in temperature, in air pressure and displacement, even vibrations. His eyes were hidden behind a band of dark glass, to protect them from the ship’s bright illumination. He greeted her in his usual way.
“Ah, Captain, in excellent health I see.” And by see he actually meant by smell, by feeling her body temperature and by hearing her heart beat in her chest. “All is in readiness for the coming battle.” She had expected no less. His people were sensitive by nature and design, but they were also pragmatists. He wasn’t one of those medical officers who questioned the need for battle.
“We don’t know that the bogey is hostile—” she began to say.
“Pshaw,” the doctor interjected. A liberty he could take here, on his deck. “From what I’ve heard, how could it be anything else?”
“Indeed,” the captain said, raising her brow. News travelled fast on a ship. She believed the ancient term was ‘scuttlebutt’. Satisfied that her ship was in order, she headed for the bridge.
As the captain stepped onto the bridge, the ship’s executive officer, Commander Ortencia, saluted and left. The XO’s station during battle was located close to the core, half the ship’s length from the bridge, a hopefully safe distance from anything that might happen to or on the bridge. The commander would monitor all activities on the bridge from there and issue orders in support of the captain’s activities during battle. In exchange, Major Drummond, the Captain of the Guard, took a station on the bridge. When ships sailed on oceans his troops would have been called marines.
“We are coming to transmission and targeting range,” Poole said.
“Furl sails, retract masts,” she ordered the riggers. “Advise the ship and begin viral transmission,” she ordered the com officer. She waited until all decks had acknowledged.
“Take the computer network offline, Mr. Poole.”
A few seconds later she saw the board at the Armscomp station light up.
“Bogey firing missiles!”
Continued in Space Battles: Full Throttle Space Tales #6 which you can purchase here starting now (preorders end April 17).