Assassin by another Name Now Available

Kaydia Voss is dead; only the assassin Scarlet remains.

After Linora captured Kaydia, Quentin scoured the galaxy to find any sign of her. After six months of dead ends and cold leads, Quentin is forced to accept that she’s gone, and he has to move on with his life. He takes to investigating a new threat, a renegade psychic, an apostate who seeks to tear down the entire Order of the Unseen.

Linora, meanwhile, has hidden Kaydia away from the reach of the Order of the Unseen, using psychic torment and physical trauma to mold her into an obedient assassin once more. Out of the ashes of Kaydia’s broken psyche, Scarlet emerges ready to kill on Linora’s command. But a chance encounter with Quentin challenges Scarlet’s resolve, forcing her to seek a way out of killing Quentin, and the last vestiges of her true self.

Quentin must to free Kaydia from Linora’s clutches, if he hopes to help her heal. But if he can’t reach her in time, nothing will remain of the woman he loves.


Shadow’s Eclipse part 3: Assassin by another Name is now available! Check out the first chapter below.


In Mourning

“Still mourning, Quentin?”

Quentin Hall looked up from the scroll he had been reading, smiling a little as he took in the pale, squat figure with its ruff frayed silver hair. Then he sighed as the question sank in, bringing melancholy with it. “Yes, Master Valis. Six months, and I still…”

Valis Korrin held up a frail hand in a warding gesture. “You still reach for her, in your psionics. I have felt it.”

“I’ve tried to forget her, but–”

“No!” The septuagenarian Justiciar barked the word. “Love is part of the Universe, as is sorrow. Do not forget her. Only do not allow your heart to be ruled by loss.”

“But the dogma of the Unseen…”

Korrin snorted. “The dogma is a hedge about the Way -did I teach you nothing? Have you failed to profit, amongst the Seekers?”

Despite his emotions, Quentin smiled just a little. “I have not forgotten,” he said, rubbing his tattoos through the simple robes he wore. “They are part of my own flesh.”

Valis came forward, rolling his sleeve up to reveal similar tattoos. “As they are mine, Quentin. Blood of my blood, in a chain of descent from Master to Master that was forged in the dawn of the Unseen. But the time of mourning must end, my Acolyte-Son. A light is lit, and the Shadows gather.”

“For the Shadows are the guardians, between the Light and the Dark,” Quentin finished, sitting up straighter. “What…”

Valis slung a wrapped tube from off his back and handed it to Quentin. He took it, finding it contained the haft of a double plasma blade, two-thirds of a meter in length. An ancient design, from before the plasma blades could be concealed in jewelry. There was nothing odd about the materials, but touching it was like reaching through a cloud of freezing oil. “The Darkness…” he whispered. “It reeks of Darkness. But… not a relic.” He spun it, noting the balance. “The craftsmanship, and the materials… this is… new?”

The ignition switch reeked of blood and hate, and when he depressed it a meter-long bloody crimson blade ignited. “New,” he decided. “But… made to the pattern pioneered by Exira Kuhn.” He swallowed bile as he shut it down. “Someone is following the designs of the ancient heretics. But…”

“It was recovered from an Apostate warrior, slain on Baish,” Valis said.

“An Apostate…?”

“Yes,” Valis grimaced. “Not a renegade, or a half-trained sensitive with a historical obsession. He called himself The Dissident.” Valis looked at him hard, glossy eyes reflecting him. “Find his Master, Quentin. Find where he came from.”

“Where do I start?”

Smiling now, Valis produced a hologram of a sleek, dagger-like ship. “With this…”

***

Frissia
2 months after that…

“Hey, watch it!” An angry, dark-haired man growled as his beer spilled over the counter of the bar in The Quiet Fen hotel and spa. The blonde woman who had bumped into him placed a hand on his shoulder.

“Oh my goodness, I am so sorry,” she gushed, reaching over him to grab some napkins to clean up the spill, brushing her breasts against his side in the process. “I so clumsy at times.”

Catching the embarrassed look on her face, and the deep lunge leather panel dress she wore, he laughed nervously. “It’s okay, it was just an accident.” He helped her clean up the spill, taking notice of the deep valley of cleavage her dress afforded her.

“You have to let me buy you a drink,” she asserted, her other hand caressing his arm now as well.

“If you insist,” he agreed, swallowing hard. Her body was just lightly touching his, but it was enough to drain the blood from his brain. “As long as you drink with me. Zerk T’far.” He offered a hand.

“Shadi Hale.”

***

It wasn’t hard to get the man to invite her back to his room. She probably didn’t need to use a psionic suggestion, but Scarlet wasn’t taking any chances this evening. A couple of drinks and a round of unexceptional casual sex was enough to put him to sleep, so Scarlet could begin her work.

Zerk T’far wasn’t dead yet, but he would be in an hour. Inertia overdose, such a shame. It seemed the drug was everywhere now-a-days. Even on good, honest core worlds. Addiction knew no bounds.  Of course, this wasn’t an accidental overdose, but a calculated manner of death. One that was unlikely to attract much attention from law enforcement. Even less likely once she was on camera leaving his room before the time of death, and spent an hour or so in the bar downstairs, cementing her alibi. There weren’t enough jobs on the small planet to make bribing the local law enforcement worthwhile, so Scarlet had to commit the murder, and slip away with no one the wiser. What the man had done to deserve death, Scarlet didn’t know. It wasn’t her job to know, only to kill him. Well, kill him, and retrieve a holodisk.

A brief perusal of his things revealed the target object. She picked up the holodisk, furrowing her brow at the roughly scribbled name on it. Shadow. The word brought up… a lot. Memories, and hope and resentment, and love and loathing. But it didn’t mean anything, most likely. It was probably a code name for something else. Sighing, she slipped the holodisk in the pocket of her jacket. It was certainly the disk her client wanted retrieved. Whatever it contained was worth Zerk’s death.

Covering her hand with a sheet, she measured out the dose, tied off the arm and filled his veins with drugs.  Before they could be absorbed into his system, she slowed his metabolism to a crawl, turning a process that would have taken less than 10 minutes into an hour or two. Finishing up, she wrapped his own hand around the needle to leave only his own prints on it.

She spent an hour in the bar as Shadi, making sure to leave an impression. Mostly this involved flirting with the bartender in an attempt to get free drinks, obnoxiously enough to be ineffective. After all, she didn’t want to be drunk, just remembered in the bar at this time. Once she sensed that Zerk’s heartbeat finally stopped, she lingered over her last drink before signing the credit slip for her tab and heading up to her room for the evening.

Once she was alone, she pulled out the holodisk, tracing the letters with a finger. It couldn’t be him. The odds were outrageous. She looked over at the data pad sitting on the bedside table. She wasn’t supposed to look at the data on the disk, but her curiosity gnawed at her. What if it was for a Shadow Justiciar? Like Quentin was? It could be dangerous for her, if she wasn’t expecting one. If they came looking for this disk. If a Justiciar were going to hunt her down, she had a right to now. It was safer to know, for her, for Linora, for whoever the client was. With those justifications in mind, she loaded the holodisk into her data pad and examined the contents, hoping to find something that would reveal who the intended recipient was. If it was that kind of Shadow.

Invoices, schematics, part lists, receipts. All in reference to some ship, an interceptor.  A corporation allied with the trade faction, names she didn’t immediately recognize. Scarlet browsed the files for twenty minutes before becoming frustrated. Corporate espionage, she decided. While it was a hell of a thing to kill a man over, talk of war made the political situation tense, and tempers were hair-trigger. Not something a Justiciar, even a Shadow, would have been involved with. Relieved and disappointed, she exhaled.

She headed towards the bathroom, stripping out of Shadi for the evening. Quentin weighed heavily on her mind as she did, memories of his face and touch and scent flooding her senses. She turned on the shower to distract herself, but the hot water brought on more memories. He said he loved me, and would never hurt me. And yet he choked me in a tub. He said he needed me, no matter what, and yet he abandoned me to my fate in Linora’s hands. I betrayed her for him, and he never came back for me. So much for his love, his need for her, his promises. What a fool she had been, to fall for it. To fall for him.

She stepped under the stream, hoping to cleanse the grief from her mind. Still, her body remembered him, craved him. Recalled the pleasure he had brought her, even if it was predicated on a lie. She brushed her fingers along her own breast, recollecting how he savored her, his lips wrapped around a nipple, drawing the blood to them. Her hands following the trail of his kisses that was left in her memories, until her fingers filled her slit, just the way his tongue had.

She leaned back against the wall of the shower, fingers moving within her soft folds, fantasizing about his body, his tattoo shimmering in vibrant blues and reds, glistening with sweat as he leaned over her. How he seemed to fit perfectly within her. How he completed her, how she felt whole when he moved within her. His breath on her lips as he called her name, each time he filled her with his seed, and his love. She was gasping now, louder than the water streaming from the showerhead, feeling him inside her once more. As her body clenched and convulsed, shuddering in the bliss only he could bring her, she could still hear his voice, speaking the words she cherished so much.

I love you, Kaydia.

A wordlessly cry filled the bathroom, as tears flooded her eyes as arousal flooded her thighs and rapture released her from its grasp, leaving her empty once more. She finished cleaning herself off and wrapped herself in a plush robe. Settling down in bed, while memories of his skin were still warm on her own, she located her needle and drugs. He’d be gone once more, just like when they parted all those months ago.

I love you, Kaydia.

She pushed the tip into her vein, and let the numbness sweep away his face from her mind.

***

Quentin went by the name of Harlan Kwan-Don, here on this Raneis manufacturing world. Quentin Hall was a wanted dead man, after all. And he’d changed his appearance, using pigment treatments to blacken his hair and darken his skin, and changed exercises to subtly alter his stance and movements. Only his eyes remained unchanged.

Harlan was a Republic Auditor, part of an independent team brought in to review Raneis’ accounting practices and adherence to Republic trade and manufacturing regulations. He’d seen a lot of accounting ledgers, but he’d also seen some fascinating developments– like their revolutionary prototype Dual Neutrino Engine fighter.

At some other time, he’d have loved to try it out. But not now. Because Junior Auditor Kwan-Don had no business doing such things. And because Justiciar Quentin Hall was busy. Even though, right now, he was simply sitting in a bar and waiting.

“Where the hell is he?”

He was supposed to be meeting Zerk T’far, a ship designer who was his best lead to who had paid for the construction of the Apostate’s ship. But he’d been a few minutes late, and Zerk was nowhere to be seen. And now…

Now there was a corporate medical unit entering the bar. One with a crash kit. With a sinking feeling, he rose and followed them. “Back here,” the owner was saying, “in the private rooms. It’s Mister T’far!”

Quentin sighed. “Well, fuck.”

 

 

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