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Yen sat upright with a start. For the past few months, he had focused entirely on Keryn’s return. He had completely forgotten that Adam had flown with her on her mission. They had shared untold adventures together. Yen chewed on his lower lip as he thought about the two of them spending so much time alone. Countless nights on alien worlds had been shared between Adam and Keryn. Secrets had a tendency to be shared when a soldier is confronted with the possibility of death. If anyone would know who the new man was in Keryn’s heart, it would be Adam. He would have to find a way for them to meet and discuss this further.

“Until we begin our approach on Arcendor,” Yen told Tylgar as he clambered out of the Captain’s chair, “I’ll be conducting inspections of the ship. Notify me immediately if the situation changes.”

Somehow, he had to convince Adam to come aboard the Revolution.

“I’m not kidding, Keryn,” Adam said as he and Alcent briefed Keryn. “He just sent a single reply, notifying us that the Phalanx and the Defiant were now under our command during the battle. It really was that easy.”

“I was just as stunned as Adam,” Alcent added.

“So he actually approved of our plan?” Keryn asked, surprised. Yen had seemed hesitant to release control of the Deplitoxide research to her during the Captains’ meeting. She found it hard to believe that he would simply agree to so uncouth a battle tactic.

“That’s just it,” Adam excitably answered. “He never even asked for our battle plan. We made our request for the Cruisers and he gave us two, no questions asked.”

Keryn wondered if, somehow, Yen had intercepted her transmission to High Council. Could her refusal of their request really have driven him to be so amiable toward her demands?

“Our problem now is more with Captains Nitella and Mandox,” Alcent stated. “They are both furious with their reassignment. We’ve already received numerous messages from both demanding to know what we did to Yen to make him into… I believe Captain Nitella’s exact words were, ‘our subservient little lapdog.’ Avalons always had a way with words.”

“Do we really think they’re going to cause problems?” Keryn asked. If they were not supportive or if they failed at the wrong time, it could cost the Alliance the entire war.

“No, I don’t,” Adam admitted. “They may be pissed and they may call us every bad name under the suns, but they’re soldiers of the Fleet, first and foremost. No matter how angry they are at what they perceive as a demotion in the Fleet’s pecking order, they will follow orders until the end.”

“Maybe I should talk to them,” she wondered.

“No!” they both replied, simultaneously.

“No,” Adam explained. “Right now, they both want our heads on a stick. Truth is I didn’t even let Alcent talk to them. Alcent is at least a great businessman, something you’re not. Even so, both of you have a tendency to use the shoot-first mentality when dealing with argumentative adversaries. What we needed in this case was tact.”

“And, surprisingly,” Alcent added, “Adam is full of it when he it matters.”

Keryn looked at the beaming Adam and shook her head. “Oh, I do believe he’s full of it. But good job, none the less.”

Sharing a much-needed laugh, they all felt some of the tension of the situation flood from the room.

“How much of the plan did you tell them?” Keryn asked.

“Some, but I don’t know how receptive they were at the time,” Adam replied. “I can try again now that they’ve had time to think about the new arrangement.”

“Please do,” Keryn said. “We need them on the same page when the battle starts. The last thing we need is our support Cruisers getting confused and leaving us defenseless at an inopportune time. Alcent, I’m leaving the bridge entirely in your capable hands. I’ll be controlling the more intricate plans from the control room with Wyck and Tora. Since Adam will be in the hangars, we’ll need you to let us know the second we begin our approach on Arcendor.”

“Will do,” Alcent said as he turned and left the room.

Once he was gone, Adam stepped suggestively toward Keryn. “Since we’re both going to be incredibly busy for the next couple days…” he left the statement hanging.

Keryn stepped close until her body pressed against his. “I think I might be able to do that,” she said coyly as she kissed him deeply. “Do you think you can be quick about it?”

Adam smiled. “I doubt it.”

Yen spent the next few days absently perusing his ship. Thoughts of Keryn had begun to wane as the thought of combat filled him with barely contained enthusiasm. After getting away so cleanly with the murders of Merric, Captain Hodge, Horace, and Vangore, Yen yearned to try his hand at murder once more. He knew that if he could kill so high ranking and visible targets with no retribution, it would be nothing to do so again with a random crewmember on board the Revolution.

Sadly, he had been robbed of the prey he desired most. Somehow, Iana had vanished from the ship. After the Captains’ conference, he had scanned the ship three times trying to locate her transponder, all without luck. Either she had destroyed it and remained on board, simply eluding his detection or, more likely, she had escaped during the departure of all the Captains and their entourages. With that victim taken from him, Yen set out to find another.

Finding himself wandering aimlessly, Yen was surprised when he approached the hangar bay. Though he was now the Commander of the Fleet, it shouldn’t have been so surprising to him that Yen wandered back to an area in which he had spent so much time as the Squadron Commander. The responsibilities of Commander, as he knew had been passed on to the Team leader for Team Four, a Lithid named Warrant Vicrux. Yen frowned as he stood before the hangar bay doors, which he had yet to open. Feeling conflicted, Yen realized that he would have felt more confident if Iana were in charge of the Squadron instead of a glory-hound like Vicrux. It was a shame that he wanted her dead, since Iana had consistently excelled in tactics and showed a genuine concern for pilots’ well being. Vicrux, by comparison, strove only for self-promotion, always ensuring that his actions were visible to those of higher command, even at the risk of his pilots’ lives. Team Four, under his command, had never truly exceeded Yen’s expectations and it was only by the Lithid’s seniority that he was promoted to Commander at all. Yen arched an eyebrow as he wondered if Vicrux might not be a good choice for his next victim. With Vicrux out of the picture, Command would fall to Warrant Salazar, a sheepish but quality Avalon pilot. While Salazar lacked the confidence to ever get his own command of a Cruiser, he was a solid pilot and malleable enough that Yen could control his actions and, by proxy, those of the Squadron.

By the same account, though, Yen still eyed Warrant Scyant as a potential victim as well. Her open hostility toward her new Captain continued even after his promotion and led to a drop in morale amongst the Crewmen and Warrants within the weapons bays. With them getting ready to engage the Terrans in a final showdown, that sort of behavior just wouldn’t be acceptable. Maybe it was time for a stern talk with Scyant, much like the stern talk he had intended for Iana.

“Can I help you with anything, Captain?” a small singing voice asked from behind Yen.

He spun and noticed a youthful Avalon standing behind him, waiting patiently to enter the hangar bay. Yen wasn’t sure how long she had been standing behind him, but he also realized that he had no idea how long he had stood in the doorway reminiscing about his not-so distant days of reckless abandon. Did Captainship truly take away his opportunity for wanton murder? Would people notice his actions more now than they had a week earlier? Did he have the power to alter the memories of everyone on board the Revolution? Of course he did, Yen realized. He had enough political and psychic power now to do anything he wanted.