The Silver Arm: Rove City, #3
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Maybelle works as a mechanic fixing bots and ships on Rove City and she loves it. Her life should be good. Except that her merchant father hasn't returned from his most recent trip, her younger sisters need more than she can give them, and the family is quickly running out of money. Not to mention, Gabor, a local security guard, has decided he deserves Maybelle's affections—at any cost.
She's managing, until Gabor takes his attentions one step too far: he threatens her sisters. Maybelle realizes that she can't protect them alone—it's time to track her father down. But when she finally finds him, she discovers that it's not that simple. He's being held prisoner by Amarok, a temperamental cyborg who will only let her father go under one condition: Maybelle stays behind in his place.
For the sake of her sisters, she agrees, but soon discovers that there is far more to Amarok than meets the eye. The longer she stays on board his ship, the clearer it is that something strange is going on—but she doesn't know what it is or how to fix it.
The Silver Arm is a science fiction retelling of Beauty and the Beast, and the third in the Rove City series.
Ariele Sieling
Ariele Sieling is a Pennsylvania-based writer who enjoys books, cats, and trees. Her first love, however, is science fiction and she has three series in the genre: post-apocalyptic monsters in Land of Szornyek; soft science fiction series, The Sagittan Chronicles; and scifi fairytale retellings in Rove City. She has also had numerous short stories published in a variety of anthologies and magazines and is the author of children's books series Rutherford the Unicorn Sheep.She lives with her spouse, enormous Great Pyrenees dog, and two cats.You can find her work on Kobo, Amazon, Barnes&Noble, Apple, GooglePlay, and Payhip. Visit www.arielesieling.com for more information.
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Book preview
The Silver Arm - Ariele Sieling
This book is dedicated to:
EVAN
my little brother
&
forever friend
CHAPTER 1
BELLE! WHERE’S BREAKFAST?
Sam yelled from the other end of the apartment.
Make it yourself!
Maybelle yelled back, rolling her eyes. Her sisters were so lazy. She counted out five more push-ups, then rolled up her workout mat and hopped in the shower. Ten minutes later, she was pulling her tank top over her head as she jogged down the stairs. Her two younger sisters sat at the table, gazing at her expectantly.
I’m not your maid.
Maybelle yanked a frying pan from the cupboard and tossed it onto the stove with a clang. Dad had been gone for three weeks—two weeks longer than expected so far—and her two sisters had been nothing but demanding since he left. Kiya, the younger one, she didn’t mind too much. She was only ten, after all. But Sam was fifteen, more than capable of making breakfast—and picking up after herself, changing the toilet paper roll, and finding where she left her sneakers. Maybelle might have been eight years older than Sam, but sometimes Sam acted like she was about five. Kiya, you get out the eggs. Sam, the milk.
Scrambled eggs and oatmeal. Three weeks in a row. But their father hadn’t left them much money, and Maybelle was down to their last few dollars. She would have to start dipping into her own savings if he didn’t get back soon.
Dad said you were supposed to take care of us,
Sam muttered, opening the fridge door. She pulled out the eggs and a carton of re-hydrated milk.
And he told you to behave,
Maybelle retorted. I have to leave for work in ten minutes. Put those eggs on the stove. What’s your plan for the day?
School.
Her voice was sullen. Sam made it clear that she hated it when Maybelle got bossy. Though really, she brought it on herself—always talking back, never taking initiative, only doing things halfway and forcing Maybelle to micro manage her every task. Sam cracked several eggs in a frying pan that began to sizzle almost immediately. Then soccer, then homework.
Can I go to the park tonight?
Kiya asked, her face lighting up. Lily is having a party.
Maybelle shrugged. If Sam will go with you, fine. Be home by seven.
Playground!
Kiya squealed and began to run around the kitchen island in circles.
Sit!
Maybelle ordered. Eat!
She served up a dish of barely cooked-through eggs and plopped it in front of Kiya. Then she shoved another plate toward Sam, and ate the rest of the eggs straight from the pan.
She grabbed her bag. Home by seven,
she repeated, and strode through the door, letting it clang shut behind her.
Taking a deep breath, Maybelle let herself take in the morning sounds around her. The city teemed with people. Most were on their way to work, but others drank coffee and chatted, and some cleaned the interior walls and floors. The city was built from sustainable, self-sufficient pods, all strung together with long metal tunnels that connected to the main tower in the center of the city. Queen Amina and her several dozen children lived, worked, and ruled from the tower.
The walk to the mechanic’s shop where she worked was her favorite part of the day—twenty minutes when she had no responsibilities. Her sisters would take care of themselves, no one was there to order her around, and she had no obligation to talk to anyone if she didn’t want to. The only unpleasantness she ever encountered in the morning was—
Hey, beautiful,
a voice sounded from behind her.
—right there. Of course. It was Tuesday. It was only natural he would have just so happened to be turning down her corridor at the exact moment she was leaving her house.
Gabor,
she said stiffly.
Beautiful morning,
he said. Just like your smile.
She raised her eyebrows. It’s exactly the same as every other morning. Same temperature. Same light. Same people. Same smells. Same everything.
She couldn’t remember how many times they’d had this conversation. She hated it every time.
Ah, yes, but you’re here today,
he said, grinning. That makes it beautiful.
Other girls swooned over Gabor. He was charming. Handsome. Forward. Confident. Persistent. Infuriatingly persistent. Couldn’t take no for an answer. Wouldn’t take no for an answer. He was commanding. Controlling. And he drove her nuts.
She took a deep breath. Then another. I’d like to walk alone this morning,
she said politely. As she did every time he showed up on her morning commute.
What about little old me?
He gave her a sad, pouty look.
Guess you’ll have to flirt with yourself,
she said. Or chat with one of your geese.
She glanced over her shoulder. Sure enough, three women strode behind them, tittering among themselves and waiting for a chance to mention that they hadn’t even noticed that Gabor was there! But would he be interested in walking with them? Or grabbing dinner later? Maybelle called them geese because they were always waddling around after him, squawking, gossiping, demanding attention.
Gabor glanced back too.
Gabor!
one of the women called out. I didn’t see you there! How are you?
True to form, Maybelle noted.
Well, you enjoy your walk,
Gabor said, slowing down so the women behind him could catch up. She could feel his eyes on her back as she sped up.
A short while later she entered the mechanic’s shop. It was owned by Padrik and Don, a nice couple with a small rabbit as a pet. Padrik mostly managed the front office and accounting, while his husband, Don, took care of the work. The shop itself was split into quarters. One part of the room was the waiting area, reception, and tool storage; one part was for ship repair; one part was for bot and appliance repair; and the final space was a docking bay walled off from the rest of the shop, where the ships that needed fixing could land.
She always relaxed a little when she arrived at work. Music blared from a speaker on the other side of the room, accented by the relaxing drone of the compressors and drills. Some of the other mechanics shouted at each other—while loud and noisy most of the day, Maybelle also found it peaceful in a way. It all had order, logic, organization—it made sense.
Morning, Belle!
Padrik waved as she entered.
Morning, Belle!
Don echoed, gesturing for her to come take a look at his project.
What’s this?
Maybelle threw on a work apron and gloves, and peered closely at the small metal unit, painted bright yellow with a green tree emblazoned on it.
It’s the chest of a V019-Abe bot,
Don replied.
Only the chest?
Don gestured at the workbench. A head, hands, and a variety of other dirty yellow body parts littered the surface. Poor thing had—we’ll call it a run-in—with a baseball bat.
A run-in seems like an understatement,
Maybelle replied. She leaned in to take a closer look. The robot’s head had been completely severed from the neck, probably with some kind of blade, and then the hands, arms, legs, and feet had been chopped into a hundred smaller pieces. A few of the chest pieces were still large, but most ranged from the size of her hand to coin-sized. It looks deliberate.
I’m wondering if someone wanted to hide it,
Don said. Not sure why—it’s a working bot, not anything unusual.
Who does it belong to?
Well, that’s just it.
Don frowned. No one. All identifying information has been scraped off. And the hard drive...
He shook his head and gestured toward it. No telling whether we’ll be able to get any information off it.
Well, then.
Maybelle put her hands on her hips. What do we do?
Fix it, I guess,
Don said. Or use it for parts.
Looks like a hull-bot.
Maybelle picked up one of the hands. It had heavy magnets embedded in the fingers and palms, usually there to allow bots to attach to the outside of the city and enact repairs.
Seems that way,
Don answered. Not sure what good a hull-bot is for anything besides repairing a hull.
Why was its identity erased?
Don shook his head and shrugged. I haven’t got a clue, hon.
He stood and gestured to the pile. At any rate, I’d like you to take inventory and make an assessment about whether it would be possible to turn it back into a functioning robot, or if we can only use it for parts. See if there are any files on the drive. You know the drill.
You got it.
Maybelle strode over to the workbench and began sorting the different types of pieces into piles, jotting down what damage had been done to each and what would need to be done to repair it, and then entered it into the shop’s computer system. Rove City created virtually no trash. If something was broken beyond use, it was sent to the recycling center, where it was processed and used as raw materials for something else. Anything that got expelled from the city as