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Implacable Alpha
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DAW BOOKS PROUDLY PRESENTS THE SCIENCE FICTION NOVELS OF W. MICHAEL GEAR:
THE DONOVAN SERIES
Outpost
Abandoned
Pariah
Unreconciled
Adrift
Reckoning*
THE TEAM PSI SERIES
The Alpha Enigma
Implacable Alpha
THE SPIDER TRILOGY:
The Warriors of Spider
The Way of Spider
The Web of Spider
THE FORBIDDEN BORDERS TRILOGY:
Requiem for the Conqueror
Relic of Empire
Countermeasures
***
Starstrike
The Artifact
*Coming soon from DAW
Copyright © 2022 by W. Michael Gear.
All Rights Reserved.
Cover design by Faceout Studio / Tim Green.
Cover images: (sword) Derek Adams / Arcangel; (scroll) Zev Radovan / BibleLandPictures / Alamy Stock Photo
Edited by Sheila E. Gilbert.
DAW Book Collectors No. 1918.
Published by DAW Books, Inc.
1745 Broadway, New York, NY 10019.
Ebook ISBN: 9780756414580
All characters and events in this book are fictitious.
Any resemblance to persons living or dead is strictly coincidental.
The scanning, uploading, and distribution of this book via the Internet or via any other means without the permission of the publisher is illegal, and punishable by law. Please purchase only authorized electronic editions, and do not participate in or encourage the electronic piracy of copyrighted materials. Your support of the author’s rights is appreciated.
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PRINTED IN THE U.S.A.
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CONTENTS
Cover
Also by W. Michael Gear
Title Page
Copyright
Dedication
Acknowledgments
Et Cum Vitium Sum
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Ka’aak
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Timor
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
Chapter 29
Chapter 30
Chapter 31
Chapter 32
Iudicum
Chapter 33
Chapter 34
Chapter 35
Chapter 36
Chapter 37
Chapter 38
Chapter 39
Chapter 40
Chapter 41
Ennoia
Chapter 42
Chapter 43
Chapter 44
Chapter 45
Chapter 46
Chapter 47
Chapter 48
Chapter 49
Chapter 50
Chapter 51
Chapter 52
Chapter 53
Chapter 54
Chapter 55
Chapter 56
Chapter 57
Chapter 58
Chapter 59
Victoria et Tza’a
Chapter 60
Chapter 61
Chapter 62
Chapter 63
Chapter 64
Chapter 65
Chapter 66
Chapter 67
Chapter 68
Chapter 69
Chapter 70
Chapter 71
Chapter 72
Chapter 73
Chapter 74
Chapter 75
Chapter 76
Chapter 77
Chapter 78
Chapter 79
Epilog
About the Author
DEDICATION
If you Believe In Freedom of Speech and the Unrestricted
Freedom of Expression
Freedom of the Press
and
Artistic License
This Novel
is
Dedicated to
You.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Implacable Alpha would not have come to you were it not for the faith, dedication, and industry of our publishers at DAW Books. Since the publication of The Warriors of Spider back in August of 1988, Sheila Gilbert and Betsy Wollheim have been friends, mentors, and partners in our science fiction. To have had their support and collaboration has indeed been a privilege and honor.
My thanks to all the staff at DAW Books, and I hope to work with them in the years to come.
We want to offer our appreciation to Cody’s Chamberlin Inn. Elizabeth Scaccia keeps alive the creative spirit that once nurtured Ernest Hemingway. It has become our local retreat where Kathleen and I dissect plot and character. Many of the intricacies of entanglement physics, as well as the plot twists in Implacable Alpha, were solved over a beer and a flatbread.
As always, special thanks go to Theresa Hulongbayan for her dedication to our work and to our readers on the Facebook Gear fan club. Theresa walks on water!
ET CUM VITIUM SUM
I am. A state of being. Beyond that fundamental assumption, nothing can be proved. The philosophers and physicists assure us of that.
Sum. The Latin verb for “I am.”
“I am” is the only thing a person can know with any measure of certainty. Beyond that, all is perception. An electrochemical creation within the brain.
I, however, know something else.
Et cum vitii sum. Latin for “I am flawed.”
Because I am flawed, I have reached the highest rank I can achieve. I will never be more than an Imperator. A high commander, second in authority to the rulers of Ti’ahaule. I remain their instrument to command. What they order, I accomplish. That should be my only purpose. My total commitment.
But I am flawed. I desire.
And more than anything, I desire the Domina, Nakeesh.
If the Ahau knew, they would terminate me. They are the Lords, the living and immortal gods. The few remarkable men and women who have transcended every definition of humanity. Physically, mentally, emotionally. They have no tolerance for a character flaw like my ravenous desire to have Nakeesh.
I entertain these thoughts as I stand on the shore of the Nile and stare out at the river. This is not my world. Not my timeline but one split long ago from my own. The waves that wash the sand are those of the dim and distant past. The silt-opaque waters flow to an ancient sea, on an earth that will never be mine.
The people I see lifting water to irrigate their crops of teff and wheat by means of ancient buckets hanging from poles are a doomed population from whom no civilization will descend.
They are condemned by their distant future.
I turn and watch as Sak Puh, my scribe recorder, or ah tz’ib, studies her cerebrum. She must be seeing the same data that are reflected from my navigator.
Sak Puh looks up from the glowing blue holo projected above her cerebrum. “The data are clear, Imperator. Your navigator detects nothing from Fluvium or Domina Nakeesh’s devices. There is no evidence that this is the timeline to which they traveled.”
“But you do detect entangled particles?”
“I do, Imperator. Somewhere, sometime, in the future, these people will develop the technology.”
I turn my attention to the five warriors in the quinque. They stand in ranks, being Third Sword, or Tres Gladii. I can see the unease in their eyes. How their bodies have stiffened in anticipation of my next command.
“Sterilize this place.”
They know the orders as well as I do. Entanglement physics technology cannot be allowed. Not in any timeline but our own.
I watch as Publius Atole advances to the edge of the water. He unslings his pack from his shoulder and carefully withdraws a sealed stainless-steel cylinder. He turns the cap a quarter turn and heaves it into the river.
We hear it pop open as it hits the surface. The virus is exploding into the water where it will be carried downstream to infect all of Egypt. And from there, it will spread, following trade routes, carried everywhere that humans travel.
Lifting my navigator, I meet Sak Puh’s startled eyes. Together, we extend our fingers to the glowing orbs projected above our devices.
In an instant, we are falling, feeling that expansive ecstasy as we are transported to yet another timeline.
Behind us, the virus is loose. Humanity, the great apes, and other primates will be extinct within a century.
A job well done.
I wonder if I will find Nakeesh and Fluvium in the next timeline as it begins to form around us.
1
Grazier
General Elijiah Grazier might have only had two stars on his shoulders, but—as he liked to say—he punched well above his rank. His elaborate master bathroom was proof of that. The walls gleamed with polished marble, had a full-length mirror bathed in lights and matching golden Kohler faucets on the sinks, deep tub, shower, and bidet. The two-story house in Georgetown—just minutes from downtown Washington, DC—didn’t look that impressive from the outside, just red brick with white accents. As in all things, it was what lay within that mattered.
Eli padded across Venetian black-marble tiles and onto the thick carpeting in his walnut-paneled bedroom. Tugging back the blankets on his oversized king bed, he pulled his pajamas straight and checked to see that everything on his nightstand was in order: phone, light switch, flashlight, his glass of water, and the M92 Beretta. The intruder alert button was hidden from sight next to the bed and below the table’s top.
Hell of a day. But that was Washington. For the time being he had Bill Stevens, the president’s chief of staff, by the balls. And he was squeezing. To Eli’s disgust, President Ben Masters was cautious enough to keep his pit bull in reserve. As much as Eli would have loved to have cut Stevens’ throat and left him behind as roadkill, the president would have disapproved.
Stevens could be dealt with. That was just “Potomac politics.”
Eli’s pressing problem was Skientia, the cutting-edge research firm. A team in their New Mexico lab had developed a powerful technology that allowed them to project and analyze entangled particles from the past. Events out in the Los Alamos lab might have momentarily chopped the head off the serpent, but on this new battleground, Eli Grazier needed Skientia’s science and engineering know-how more than ever. That meant he had to rely on Dr. Maxine Kaplan and her engineer, Virgil Wixom.
Eli trusted Kaplan as much as he’d have trusted a black mamba. Wixom remained an unknown.
“So, is Kaplan smart enough to take the reins?” he wondered as he slipped his feet beneath the covers and lay back to fluff his pillow.
But more to the point, could he control her?
He was reaching to turn off the light when the contralto voice said, “Please do not try anything foolish. And before you reach for your pistol, I can assure you that I took the liberty of unloading it. The intruder alert is disabled as well.”
Eli froze as a green-eyed woman dressed in black tactical clothing stepped out of his walk-in closet. Her auburn hair had been pulled back in a ponytail. The bone structure in her tanned face was a perfect balance of cheeks, straight nose, and full lips over a strong chin. Were the faint patterns on her cheeks and forehead the ghosts of scars, or just a trick of the light? She stood about five-foot-six and moved with an athlete’s toned grace. Call it predatory. She didn’t need the slung M16 or the knife and pistol on her belt to look dangerous.
What convinced Eli to behave lay behind the woman’s hard green gaze: something weary, eternal, and strained. He got the distinct impression that she wouldn’t think twice about putting a bullet in his brain. That she’d been tested—a lot—and always survived. Wherever she’d been, she’d seen and lived through it all.
“How’d you get in here?”
“Let’s just say I go where I want, when I want, to whenever I want.”
And it hit him. He remembered where he’d seen those hard green eyes: in the Grantham Barracks camera footage. She had been crouched over a dying man’s body in the mental hospital’s underground garage. “You’re the woman who tried to kill Alpha and Ryan that day.”
“Alpha? That what you’re calling her?” The distaste in her words couldn’t be missed. “Her real name is Nakeesh, and her title in the Ti’ahaule is Domina, not that the term means anything to you.”
“Sorry about your companion.”
“He was a good man.” A faint smile. “Rare. In any age.”
“Who are you?”
“I’ve been called a lot of things over the centuries. Nakeesh calls me the Ennoia. Means the embodiment of God’s first thought. It’s a mystical concept from another age. She and Fluvium once considered it a cruel and sick joke. Most call me Helen, from the Greek ’Elena. As to why I’m in your bedroom? Nakeesh and Fluvium have to be stopped. Here. In your timeline. Once and for all.”
“Fluvium’s already dead. As to Alpha—”
“Are you still so limited? Despite what you’ve seen?”
Fluvium’s not dead? Eli had seen the guy’s desiccated corpse after it had been removed from a three-thousand-year-old sarcophagus.
The woman calling herself Helen studied him with that flat green gaze, one hand on the rifle slung at her shoulder. “Good. You’re starting to catch on to the whole ‘time’ thing. If Nakeesh contacts Imperator, finds a way to get her hands on Fluvium’s cerebrum, your world and your timeline are dead.”
“Who’s Imperator?”
“Your worst nightmare. Not that I give a shit. They’ve taken out better worlds than yours. It’s just that this is the first time they’ve screwed up enough that I’ve got a chance to end it.” With her free hand, she slipped a device from one of the pockets in her cargo pants and tossed it.
Grazier snagged it out of the air as she said, “Decide if you’re in or out. All you have to do is press the silver button.”
Grazier glanced down. The thing looked like a pager. Maybe two by three inches, a couple of ounces in weight. A prominent silver button could be seen on the black surface.
“In or out? You’re going to have to be a lot more specific than that.” Ely looked up to emphasize his point.
Not a trace of her remained. Not even a swaying of clothes back in the depths of his closet. But for the device he held, she might have been nothing more than a figment of his imagination.
In . . . or out?
He was about to pull his blanket back when a tingling presaged a crackling in the air around him. His skin prickled like
a thousand ants were crawling over his body, and the lights went out.
2
Ryan
My name’s Colonel Timothy Ryan. Normally, I didn’t run meetings where we discussed the safety and security of the world, let alone the future of our entire timeline. I’m still hazy about what a timeline is. Theoretical physics was never my strongpoint. But there I was, staring down the table in the conference room at a team of physicists, Mayan scholars, and engineers. Not to mention General Eli Grazier, my current superior. Wearing his uniform with all its campaign ribbons, the two stars prominent on his collar, he sat in a chair off to the side so as to be inobtrusive. Right. Eli was about as inobtrusive as a crouching tiger.
My team was in charge of saving the world. It remained surreal.
I’m a mental health professional with both an MD in psychiatry and a PhD in abnormal psych. I’d spent my life working with service personnel who put their lives on the line for this country. And too often ended up broken and wounded in ways that didn’t leave visible scars. It was one thing to teach a crippled vet how to walk again when he or she had lost both legs. Something entirely different when that person—in an effort to stop the pain—just wanted to end it all.
Working with mental illness was my passion, both in the service and afterward. It had finally taken me to Grantham Barracks, a low-profile military psychiatric hospital in the pine-covered foothills outside of Colorado Springs, Colorado. My battlefield was in my patients’ heads. Sometimes I won, other times I didn’t.
Along the way, I’d given up a wife and son, any kind of social life, and my list of close friends could be counted on three fingers. Or was it two? Been a while since I took time to keep track.
Sometimes the lines between the services got a little blurred back in the day, but nothing like what I faced as I sat at the head of the polished teakwood table in that plush conference room. I was on the opulent second floor of the Skientia lab building in Los Alamos, New Mexico. General Grazier had me fly down special for the meeting. Eli figured that it was time to bring all the disparate parts of the team together. We were three months into the analysis of data following Prisoner Alpha’s “escape.”