Skip to product information
1 of 1

MARS BASE (PAPERBACK)

MARS BASE (PAPERBACK)

Regular price $8.99 USD
Regular price Sale price $8.99 USD
Sale Sold out

SHIPPING CALCULATED AT CHECKOUT. SEE SHIPPING INFORMATION BELOW.

MARS BASE: JUNKYARD DOG SCI-FI ADVENTURE SERIES PAPERBACK BOOK #13

The day of reckoning has arrived.

Major Margarita King needs answers from her former comrades. Why was her ship sabotaged? Who wanted her dead and who could she trust to give her the truth?

The only place to find those answers? Mars Base, home of the elite law enforcement company, the Red Barons.

Command thought she was dead. A funeral had been held. Someone is going to be mighty surprised when Rita shows up at headquarters.

Mars Base, the final novella in the Junkyard Dog series, ends where Rita’s strange and unexpected journey began–with one big difference.

THIS IS A 2 HOUR OR MORE SHORT READ.

PAPERBACK

112 Pages

ISBN

978-1-945856-55-6

DIMENSIONS

5 x 0.28 x 8 inches

PUBLISHER

Timberdoodle Press

PUBLICATION DATE

January 26, 2019

 

FAQs: SHIPPING INFORMATION

Print books are printed individually to order and shipped through our independent printing partner, Lulu Direct. Shipping rates, taxes if eligible, and delivery times will vary depending on your country, delivery address, and shipping method.

It usually takes a few days to print your order and then 3-5 days to ship in the UK, and 5-21 days to the US and elsewhere. You can track the shipping with the link in your order. 

READ A SAMPLE:

MARS BASE
Chapter 1

The day of reckoning had come.

Major Margarita King, ex-Red Baron, paced the main cabin of her ship, the Junkyard Dog. Technically the ship belonged to the Red Barons, and it was possible they could accuse her of stealing it. Even jail her.

She had no regrets.

Her ship had been tampered with and she’d been sent on a mission to die. For the last year she’d been roaming the galaxy in her repaired and renamed ship. A renegade from the organization she had devoted her life to.

A fugitive from everything she believed in.
Margarita King firmly believed in law and order. Right and wrong had always been black or white for her. Until that fateful mission there had been a distinct line separating them. Now she saw shades of gray.

Sure, she had bent the Baron’s rulebook some when it came to her job as pilot. The rule makers were planet bound desk jockeys with no real-time experience piloting a ship into space. They had no idea what a deep-space pilot endured, and in her opinion, they had no business making the rules.
Sometimes you had to bend rules for the sake of the mission. Sometimes you had to bend rules for the sake of the crew. She had no problem with that.

Rita stopped pacing and stood in the ship’s clear nosecone. Behind her in the twilight glow that simulated night on board ship, her crew slept, unaware that their leader was having doubts about the approaching self-appointed mission.

Outside the ship the stars were reduced to streaks of white, yellow, or red light as the Dog’s warp engine hurtled them through the fabric of space and time.

The ship was silent other than the quiet padding of Rita’s soft leather boots. She had dosed the crew with the Time-eze that put their bodies into a kind of stasis that made warp travel possible, but had held off taking her own.

She needed time alone to think.

Rita took a deep breath and let it out slowly. She shook her arms out and bent in half until her neatly plaited, thick dark hair swept the deck. She closed her eyes, locked her arms behind her calves and relaxed into the hamstrings stretch. Years of dance and martial arts had kept her strong and limber and she was careful to keep in top condition.

At six-two she had been one of the tallest cadets to make pilot. At thirty-one, the oldest to still be flying. She succeeded where others failed because she worked harder than anyone else in the program.
Had worked harder, she corrected herself.

Competition for the coveted pilot spots in the elite law enforcement agency known as the Red Barons was fierce and bitter. Older pilots were quickly sidelined if they couldn’t pass the grueling physicals or if they didn’t keep up with the constantly evolving technology and newly discovered species and worlds. Rita had avoided that fate by training twice as hard as the younger cadets.

She spent long hours in the training modules and studied alongside the incoming classes to insure she kept up. It made for a grueling schedule, leaving little time to make friends. Not that command encouraged friendship among the ranks.

Command preferred to have the enlisted men and women snapping at each others’ heels. They felt that that was the way to ensure everyone did their best. Sure, it worked, but at what cost?

When a Baron couldn’t depend on her crew mates to watch her back it undermined her ability to do her job. Who would wade into a dangerous situation without back-up they could trust? In hindsight and with distance, she could see that the Barons had been on a slow decline because of their culture and methods.

Rita had also been the youngest pilot to achieve the rank of Major, an honor that only increased her coworkers’ jealousy. And then her ship was sabotaged and she’d been sent out to die.

For most of the year since, she had been living under a cloud of shock and disbelief. Now she finally felt as if she was getting a handle on it. Understanding the why behind the treachery.
She knew it was time to stop running. Knew that she needed to return to Mars Base. She needed to do the right thing, and the right thing meant publicly questioning her training and her ex-superiors.

She straightened from her stretch and gazed out the window again. Exercise wasn’t helping her nerves.

She stepped over to the Redi-Meal and programmed a cup of the jasmine-scented tea she preferred. The steaming, fragrant liquid streamed into her mug. She inhaled the delicate floral scent and took the tea to her pilot’s chair and sat.
Curling her long legs beneath her, Rita contemplated her plan.

She had spent the last year racing around the galaxy with no plan. Aimless, bouncing from one adventure to another, a far cry from her entire adult life which had been mapped out–every step, every move, in excruciating detail–because it gave her a sense of control.

Living without a plan had been something she needed. She could see that now. Living without a plan meant being open to what came her way. If she was completely honest with herself–and certainly now was the time for honesty–it had been the best year of her life since before her mother’s accidental drowning.

It had liberated her from the chains of responsibility and rules that she’d wrapped herself in.

She’d had weird adventures and gathered a crew of friends who would lay down their lives for one another. The same friends who slept now, trusting her leadership. This was at the heart of her unease. What was she getting her friends into? The problem was that there were too many unknown variables in her loose plan.

It was time to root out and confront whoever had sabotaged her ship. How would that go?
Probably not well.

It was time to inform command of the Barons she had discovered moonlighting as mercenaries. Command would not be happy. Would they punish the messenger?

She had no choice. It was time to face the music. She couldn’t continue to bounce around the galaxy in a ship she had essentially stolen, afraid she’d be seen and reported.

She couldn’t build a new life with her crew until she put the Barons behind her.

Command thought she was dead. According to one mercenary Baron–now deceased–they had even held a funeral ceremony for her.

One could make the case that Margarita King was dead. She had died in Omega Lab and was resurrected by John, their Healer, when he cloned her.

Rita finished her tea, washed and put away her mug, and shut down the cabin lights. Her course was set. She took her dose of Time-eze and crawled into her bunk.

Someone was going to be mighty surprised when she showed up at headquarters.

View full details