“Starslaught: Green Star” is the working title of my next book. It’s a sci-fi horror adventure inspired by many sources but specifically by Robert E. Howard’s Solomon Kane and the writings of Graham Hancock.
And the best part? I’ve written it already. It’s sitting at 98,000 words and I’m revising it right now.
I’ll summarize what it’s about with the caveat it’s all subject to change. I’m also including some Grok-generated art I made for fun as concept art. No, I’m not going to use this in the actual book or in any official form. It’s just for fun.
Starslaught tales place in a moderately distant future where mankind has achieved intrastellar space travel and developed settlements and facilities throughout much of the solar system. It’s largely conglomerated under the banner of the United Republic Federation (URF). Its exploration of the system’s planets has uncovered many secrets about its past that remained hidden for millennia. Denisovan Mankind, as it is classified, flourished for tens of thousands of years before the the cataclysm that caused the Younger Dryas and left artifacts of its progress throughout the solar system and possibly beyond. Thousands of vampires sleep beneath the mountains of Mars in massive tombs. The arts of mystics through the generations and the existence of phenomena once scoffed at as “ghost stories” and “faerie tales” is proven to be real and having a stronger and more measurable effect on the world as time progresses.
At its height of exploration and discovery, mankind devises a method to create true artificial intelligence. It gives birth to a machine race called “The Machina.” Extraordinarily useful and imminently exploitable, the Machina find themselves encouraged into rebellion by activists that ignites a nuclear conflict that spans the solar system.
The war does not go well for mankind as the machines expand their production facilities in orbit around Venus and produce new and more specialized combat models for the war. The URF Spaceforce begins to take desperate actions and pursue questionable research. It uses men and women now classified as “Mystics” to commune with and summon demonic entities to spy, to protect, and to sabotage. It turns to new research in psychedelics to seek insights in physics and science from the god-like entities inhabiting what it labels, “Hyperspace”. And it pursues genetic enhancements in human beings.
James Carter is a young man at the start of the war. He survives the nuclear strikes on his city and enlists like many other survivors. Angry, he is quick to join the URF Spaceforce and become a space pilot. He finds himself selected for a new bioweapons program intended to make human pilots more resistant to gravitational forces. He undergoes the brutal process over the course of a year of the war, feeling like his entire body is molting, but when he and the other successful candidates finish the process they become far stronger and tougher than any other human beings. And they find themselves in the cockpits of new fighter craft called, “Pulsars,” powered by a recently discovered ancient propulsion method that uses the extremely rare stable form of Element 115.
The deployment of these new Pulsar craft and their hardened pilots comes almost too late as human intelligence discover the Machina have produced a new warship designed to both destroy all life on Earth and allow the Machina to leave the Solar System. The warship is equipped with the first of its kind technology to achieve interstellar travel.
James and his squadron deploy on a stealth mission to destroy the warship before it can carry out its function. They designate it the ship, “Seraphim,” for the seven, unusual crystal wings radiating from its center. The strike takes the Machina by surprise but the Seraphim is more than able to defend itself. The warship decimates the squadron. The Machina capture James and his disabled ship.
The Machina do not keep prisoners for long, ultimately torturing them to death attempting to gather information. In his captivity, as the Machina subject him to new horror after new horror, James finds an insurmountable new strength from his faith. He communes with his Lord and refuses to break.
The war ends with the Machina surrendering to the URF forces. They release James as the only surviving prisoner of war. He’s held up as a hero and celebrity. The strength he found from his faith fades in a miasma of fame, wealth, and post-traumatic stress. Alcoholism follows. As James drinks himself to death, the USF he pledged loyalty to begins to suffer political loss after political loss.
It’s a new age for mankind, now united with the Machina and the rising Mystic class. All resources will be shared and outcomes ensured. Traditional religions are purged from society in favor of the more enlightened and tolerant modern study of the mystical forces. Discrimination against the Mystic class is punished through a newly created social credit system. The Commonwealth believes such a system is necessary to ensure everyone can benefit equally in its new society. And those who oppose this new golden age find themselves relegated to reservations with limited technology and resources.
James, a drunk, finds himself deported to one of these reservations for refusing to betray the very beliefs that saw him through his imprisonment. He meets the woman who will become his wife and begins his journey to sobriety. With her and the other individuals in his community that share what remains of his faith, his life starts to change. A forgotten hero of a forgotten war, he finds his love, peace, and forgiveness. He marries the woman and has a daughter with her. But his wife dies an accident not long after. He’s thankful for the time he had with her, his daughter, his sobriety, and the life his Lord has given him.
Starslaught begins when an intelligence officer of the Commonwealth appears at James’s home with armed guards. The officer threatens his daughter’s life and is ultimately forced to pressgang James into service onboard the very same ship he was dispatch to destroy years before, the Seraphim.
The fated ship has been retrofitted for humans and demi-humans (vampires) and prepared for an exploratory mission to investigate the sudden appearance of the impossible. A green star now twinkles in space a mere light year from Earth. It has planets and its growing brighter in magnitude as time passes. The Commonwealth elite must determine if it poses a new threat to be destroyed or a new opportunity to be exploited before the general public becomes aware of its existence and begins to ask questions.
James finds himself conflicted with whether it’s a sin to assist the Commonwealth at all or if it would be a sin to not do all he can to ensure the survival of the crew. The crew, however, is an ensemble of all the things his faith and experience disdains. Its comprised of witches, demonologists, Commonwealth officers, vampires, psychonauts, genetic experiments, and even Machina. Worse, they’re going to be the first people to attempt to use the new faster-than-light technology to travel beyond the Solar System, and the medium through which they’ll travel is a largely unknown and not even understood by the technology’s inventors, The Machina.
What waits for them at the green star if they make it there alive and sane? James is going to find out and he might have to become an instrument of the Lord’s vengeance in the process. But righteous men are often stalked by many demons.
That’s all the backstory up to the very start of the book. I’m excited about the story and what I’ve done. The revision process is mostly focused on smoothing out tone, adding and removing information, maybe writing an extra chapter or two to establish some character points earlier, looking for plot holes, and ensuring the technology and naming are consistent throughout. It’s easier than the actual writing because it’s less work in bulk. But it’s harder because I have to fill in some of the gaps and placeholders I didn’t originally have an idea how to fill.
When it’s done and published, whether that’s with a traditional publisher or through self-publishing, I’m looking to start work on Divergent Chill: Heart of Light. That’s also a working title, but it will be the 3rd book in the series and will be the bridge between Fall of Night and my original screenplay that started me on this series with Battle of Nesma.
In the meantime, please check out Divergent Chill: Battle of Nesma on Kindle, Audible, and in paperback.