Description
Zuri dreaded what was coming . . .
Stratan—the final planetary system on Delta Squad’s epic journey across the void.
Home planet of the Alien Marines who had shown no mercy on Earth, murdering defenseless members of her platoon—friends and trainees alike.
Plagued by bitter memories, her emotions raw, Zuri recalls the final words of a mortally wounded alien’s plea for a desperate people, dying in their droves. So devoid of hope, they sent their Marines on a 300-hundred-year flight across the cold of space in search of one last chance of survival.
Had they found it?
Is it just “me and mine” when an enemy holds out their hand for help?
In the sixth book of the Weapons of Choice Series, Delta Squad reach a planet laid waste by humanity. Ravaged by nuclear war and disease, plagued by paranoia, they cling on to survival, trying to rewild a world that fights back.
Mourning the loss of their trainees and fellow reserves, the desperate situation forces Finn, Zuri, Smith, and Noah into life and death choices while defending those that murdered their own. With emotions high, Noah makes discoveries about his past and Smith battles his own nature, finally deciding on his human/machine hybrid future.
As Yasuko seeks the answers to a bacterial scourge, and the secrets hidden by bitter enemies, she begins to feel the acceptance and self-worth she always sought, the irony of finding it on an embittered and desperate human-seeded world not lost on her new awakening.
Amid the chaos, Zuri and Finn try to hold the squad together. With fractures deepening and political pressure building, they face working alongside traitors, killers and political enemies to save a people they deeply mistrust, one that would commit genocide to save their own skins.
And just when they thought things could not get worse, the sea begins to sing.
Humans are an Invasive Species, and the planet wants them gone.
“Wildly creative . . . action-heavy thriller that will satisfy any fan . . . writing (that) continues to push boundaries.” —Self-Publishing Review
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