OUTPASSAGE, by Janet Morris and Chris
Morris. Authors Cut Edition published by Perseid Press, February 2014.
Copyright © Janet Morris and Chris Morris 2014.
386 pages. Cover art, Design and Frontispiece by Vincent Di Fate,
copyright © 2014 Vincent Di Fate.
You
only die once.
That is not only the theme of this excellent
science fiction novel — it is also at the very heart of the novel’s story
premise. Once again, I continue with my reviews of my favorite novels by Janet
Morris and Chris Morris. But how I ever missed Outpassage when it was first published in 1988 I cannot say,
because this is exactly the type of science fiction story I grew up reading in
the pages of Amazing Stories and The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction.
So this is the first time I’ve had the pleasure to read this great science
fiction adventure.
Outpassage is action-packed,
character-driven, and thought-provoking. The science is grounded in reality,
but isn’t integral to the plot, and the tech never gets in the way of story and
character: there is no garbage science or techno babble to muddle the plot. While
this story has the feel of an old-fashioned, traditional science fiction novel
from back in the day, it has a hip and modern sensibility to it. The characters
are vivid and memorable, and the lean prose style is perfectly suited to the
story. The dialogue is perfectly matched to each character — crisp and sharp,
and very smart, with a fine balance of humor and gravitas. Outpassage moves along like a starship going warp factor seven,
with twists and surprises nearly every step of the way. And that wrap-around
cover — wow! Fully captures the tone of the novel, and is a loving homage to
classic SF covers. Once again, “fantasy’s power couple,” as one reviewer
recently dubbed them, delivers a fine and rousing tale filled with mystery,
espionage, religion, politics, and corporate shenanigans.
It begins on an outer space mining
colony called X-31A, where a special forces Ranger Dennis “Det” Cox and his
team are called in to “eradicate” a problem and clean up a mess. But the
mission turns into a disaster, and Cox isn’t quite sure whether or not he saw
signs of an alien presence on the piece of intergalactic real estate. Once he’s
back home on earth and debriefed, Cox meets up with a woman named Paige
Barnett, whom he was matched with on an internet dating site called Dream Date.
Paige, however, is the Girl Friday to the top dog of a corporation called IST,
who has their hands in terraforming, mining, and a few illegal activities, as
well. Well, as blind dates often go, this one goes horribly wrong: both Cox and
Paige are shanghaied and are then separated. She is thrown into a labor group
on another mining colony called X-66B, where she falls in with a group of rebel
workers. Cox, however, has been nabbed for a paramilitary mission to find real
evidence of an alien presence, and to target the rebel base of union-organizing
workers — on the very same X-66B.
During one sortie, Cox once again
catches a glimpse of a ghostly alien hand, just as he did on X-31A. His team
also discovers a rock sample that may or may not be a genuine alien artifact. A
character named Locke, who may or may not be on Cox’s side, and may or may not
have an agenda all his own says at one point, about “black ops” agents and
their mission: “I’m just saying that those black operators who briefed us up
there and gave us every little thing we asked for…they want any alien life or evidence of alien life eradicated. You
think bringing this piece of stone over here fits that description?” And then
that rock sample is somehow mysteriously pulverized, quite by accident, or so
Cox is later told.
Meanwhile, Paige gets herself more
deeply involved with the revolutionaries, and takes part in a ritual that so
totally blows her mind, she starts to question everything she knows about IST,
the CEO she is secretly in love with, and IST’s mission statement: about life,
death, and her own place in the universe. Integral to all this is a black
co-worker, a powerful presence of a man named Freedom Ayoub — “the man who had
been dead.” He becomes Paige’s self-appointed protector and guru, and it’s
mostly from him that she learns about Redemption,
Resurrection, and the Holy Way. This philosophy, this cult is at the heart
of what happened on the X-31A mining colony, and the ghostly alien hand Cox
first sees there and then again on X-66B. This new religion is also the very
heart of the workers’ revolution: what it is, what it means to Cox, Paige,
Freedom, Mankind, and the very nature of existence is also the foundation upon
which this wonderful science fiction novel is built. To say more on this new
religion and the ultimate truth it contains would be to give away too many
spoilers.
When Cox receives a transcript from one
of his men — a message calling for help from a woman claiming to be Paige
Barnett, he sets out to search for her. The fact that they were shanghaied
together while on their dream date, the fact that she is the right-hand of the
CEO of IST, and now her presence on X-66B convinces Cox that he isn’t crazy,
that the presence of alien life is very real, but whether or not this presence
is tied in with the labor movement and the growing religion of Redemption,
Resurrection and the Holy Way remains to be seen. Cox needs Paige for
validation, and goes to great lengths to find her. A female pilot named Frickey
follows orders that get most of Cox’s Alpha and Beta teams killed — including
Schultz, who was more than a teammate to her — and then sets out to make
amends. She rejoins Cox and together they go search for Paige, while working to
uncover the truth behind what is going on.
The last act of this intriguing story
finds Cox left with the decision to obey a direct order to destroy X-66B,
killing all those left behind, or to fake the destruction of X-66B, which would
consign those same people to a long, slow and agonizing death. Will he find and
rescue Paige? How and where does Freedom Ayoub play into all this? Can X-66B
and all those left behind be saved? And what will Cox’s final decision be?
You’ll have to read Outpassage and
find out for yourself. Many questions are answered, and then even more questions
arise that need answers. This is thought-provoking science fiction, with the
action and feel of a space opera, and with elements of mystery and espionage to
keep us turning the page. And the characters ring true, jumping right off the
page….
Paige Barnett is a thoroughly modern
woman — a brilliant, tough, no-nonsense bureaucrat who rules in her corporate
world, but find herself way out of
her element when she’s shanghaied and taken to X-66B. Could this possibly have
been a set-up to get her out of the way because she knows too much and has
spoken out against IST’s corporate policy on what first happened on X-31A? What
she sees, what she learns, and what happens to her brings her to a place of
enlightenment she at first fears, and then accepts. What about Freedom Ayoub,
the quiet, powerful and yet almost childlike “man who had been dead”? What’s
his story? Why is he so integral to Paige, and why is she determined to see
that he lives and is returned to Earth to tell all that he knows and all that
he is? And then there’s Frickey, ace-pilot and rock-steady warrior who
undergoes her own transformation during the course of this novel. Will she
overcome her guilt and grief and help to bring home Cox, Paige and Ayoub?
But this is truly Dennis “Det” Cox’s
story. A non-com and experienced warrior cut from the cloth of the Homeric
ideal of a hero. He’s plain, blunt-spoken, and takes no bull from anyone; a
real ground-pounder, a soldier who hates politics, but does his job and does it
well. He’s the guy you want on your side, the guy on whose side you want to be.
He faces decisions and moral dilemmas, as well as the heat of combat and the
intrigues of corporate policy. But what revelations he is forced to see and
accept are the hardest things he’s ever done. Enlightenment is there for him to
grasp, but it disturbs him with its reality-changing truth, and he is left to
face more decisions in a finale I did not see coming, but is perfect,
nonetheless. For Cox, that moment arrives when he witnesses, when he touches
and learns the truth behind the words…You
Only Die Once.
Why this outstanding novel was
overlooked for Nebula and Hugo awards is beyond me. When you combine a great
story with flesh and blood characters, with plenty of action, and then toss
into the mix the machinations of a powerful business conglomerate, paramilitary
activity, corporate intrigue and espionage, politics, religion, and an
undefined, possible alien presence…you have a novel that succeeds on many
levels.
Once again, bravo Janet and Chris
Morris!
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