“Yes. We were overconfident and underexperienced. Remember, we relied on our long-range defensive shields to protect us from assault for so long.”
“Well then, what about the rest of the Starfighters? The ones I was with when Enduran spoke?”
“They were all in the hangar. That one hangar.” Grig’s tone was flat and unemotional, wholly professional.
“You mean they’re all dead?”
“Death is a primitive concept. We still have little real knowledge of what lies on the other side of the line of existence that we call life. It is like different states of matter. Nothing is destroyed, only changed. You end up facing the universe in a different guise. Myself, I am something of a romantic. They were good souls all, your fellow fighters. If they hadn’t been, they wouldn’t have been Starfighters. I rather like to think of them as battling evil in another dimension.”
“’In another dimension.’” Alex swallowed before asking the inevitable next question. “How many are left? Surely some of them got out? How many?”
“Counting yourself?” The ship shook beneath Alex’s backside now, trembling with energy held in check, eager to show its strength. He wondered if the engines were prototypes too, and if so, how thoroughly they’d been tested.
If nothing else they were more thoroughly tested than he was, he thought.
“Yeah, counting myself.”
“One.” Grig touched a switch. A section of mountain vanished ahead of them. Despite the internal compensation system Alex was slammed back into his seat as the gunstar exploded skyward.
The surface of Rylos receded behind them with astonishing rapidity. Alex was nestled so snugly into his seat he couldn’t turn to look out the transparent dome covering the gunner’s position, but it was simple enough to activate the perpetually positioned display screen to provide him with the view astern as well as forward. It was not a flat image. He saw fore and aft hemispheres as the screen neatly cut the globe of the universe in two halves for easy viewing. Fore and aft, of course, were relative terms only, extrapolated from the ship’s longitudinal axis.
There was a voice in his ears, reaching him via concealed speakers. The tiny button in his left ear continued to translate for him.
“Who is this?” the voice demanded to know. “Who is taking up the last gunstar? That ship is still classed experimental and is not qualified for flight. Identify yourself!”
Alex could see Grig turned slightly toward a voice pickup. “This is League Navigator/Monitor Grig. Hi.”
“You’re taking up the last gunstar without . . .!”
“Thanks ever so much. We appreciate your concern.” The angry voice was banished from the ship when Grig nudged a control.
Alex had heard enough. “Now wait a minute, Grig. What the hell do you think you’re doing? What the hell are we doing? There’s no fleet, no other Starfighters. I thought I was coming back to help the others and now you tell me we’re the others. We don’t have a plan or backup or anything. It’s just one ship. One lousy little untested ship. You, me, and . . . that’s it?”
“Precisely.” Grig was unperturbed by Alex’s tone. He adjusted something on his console and the starfield slid eighty degrees before straightening again. The gunstar did not bank and roll like the fighters Alex had seen on TV in World War II movies. There was nothing to bank and roll against.
“Xur thinks you’re still on Earth. He knows that the main base and Command Central, together with all the Starfighters and their ships, have been destroyed. His spies will have so informed him. This will be classic military strategy, a surprise attack when least expected. They think they have us beaten, helpless, unable to resist.”
“They’re right!”
“So,” Grig continued easily, “the last thing they’ll be expecting is a counterattack. It will throw them badly off balance. They’ll start to wonder what else they’ve missed.”
“Yeah, I’m sure they’ll be terrified,” Alex mumbled.
“It will be something of a shock.”
“It’ll be a slaughter, that’s what it’ll be!”
“That’s the spirit!” Grig told him. “I knew you had the makings of a true Starfighter. You have all the base primitive emotions, the blind desire to strike back, the relentless drive to . . .”
“All the fear,” Alex said, interrupting him. “All the terror. You don’t understand, Grig. I meant it’ll be our slaughter. One ship against the whole armada! It’s worse than crazy!”
To Alex’s consternation, his declaration only seemed to please Grig that much more. “Ah yes, just think of it! One gunstar against the armada. I’ve always wanted to fight a desperate battle against incredible odds. It appeals to my sense of irony.”
Alex groaned.
“Besides, you badly underestimate your own abilities. Centauri knew his business. And you said you found the fire controls familiar.”
“Yeah, sure, but that was just a game.”
“You destroyed everything the test unit could throw against you. You must have, or Centauri would never have brought you into this. Forget reality, Alex. Make a game of it if it helps. Concentrate on your fire control and your display screen. Remember the game? It should’ve had test lights as one phase.”
“Yeah, it did.”
“Then let’s try a few. They are actually drone targets. You might want to squeeze off a few bursts while you have the chance, work any bugs out of the weapons systems. This being this vessel’s maiden voyage, we don’t want any surprises with fire control when we attack the armada, do we?”
“Oh goodness, gracious, no,” Alex replied dryly. “That would be ever so disconcerting.”
“Exactly my point,” Grig agreed, blithely oblivious to his companion’s sarcasm. The alien nudged several controls. Alex heard something go thump near the ship’s stern.
His screen immediately lit up to show three shapes moving rapidly from the rear of the gunstar. They swung around and assumed positions forward, scattering and waiting, always staying just ahead of the racing ship.
“They’ll dodge,” Grig warned him. “They’re quite fast.”
“I know that, but they look so big,” Alex replied.
“Actually they’re very small. You’re looking at false images projected by the drones. They’re designed to simulate the actual size of enemy vessels. Proceed on the assumption you’re firing at a real target.”
“Okay.” Alex leaned slightly forward and tried to imagine the fire controls under the fingers of his right hand were those of the videogame console on the porch back home. They were the same controls. They looked the same, felt the same, were located the same distance from each other, and responded to the same amount of pressure. Centauri had designed his game well.
The drones dodged the first burst of fire from the gunstar’s weapons with ease. Nerves, Alex told himself. C’mon, this is no game. Get ahold of yourself and concentrate.
He fired again, barely nicked the centermost of the three lights. They were so damn fast. Or were they? Were they really any faster than the lights on the console back home? Or was it his reaction time that was way off?
He couldn’t help it. No matter how hard he tried to convince himself otherwise, he knew this wasn’t the game in front of the general store, knew he was playing for a lot more than a few quarters. The uncertainty stole down from his mind to take control of his fingers.
Grig was there to help calm him, to try and allay his festering self-doubt. “Steady, Alex. Take your time. Remember the timing from the test machine. This is no different. Your weapons function in a similar time-frame. Relax and react just like you did back home.”
“Terrific,” Alex muttered in reply. “I’m about to get killed a million light-years from home and a gung-ho iguana tells me to relax. What next, Grig? You going to tell me to use the Force?”
“I don’t know what that refers to,” his mentor replied, “but it sounds vaguely supernatural. There is nothing supernatural about this ship’s weapons syst
ems or the track-and-fire computers that operate them. You were not chosen by Centauri because you manifested any supernatural abilities. Your talents should include preternaturally fast reflexes and decision-making ability coupled with outstanding peripheral vision both optic and mental. Use those, as you did when you operated the test game, and stop babbling.”
“I am not babbling!” Alex shouted angrily, taking grim aim at the target lights.
This time they exploded in quick succession; ping, ping, ping, his fingers running over the fire controls as if they were guitar strings. He blinked at the screen. No question, it was clear.
“Hey, that wasn’t so hard.”
“Not for you,” Grig agreed. “Not for a Starfighter born. I couldn’t have done it. But then, I’m a Navigator/Monitor, not a killer.”
“Uh, yeah. Thanks for the compliment . . . I think.” Alex allowed his fingers to stray over the fire controls, barely brushing their smooth surfaces. Memories flooded in on him blinking lights, computerized images, sound-effects and synthesized voices.
It wasn’t all that different from the videogame. Centauri had duplicated the fire control system of a real gunstar. In some ways this was easier than the game. The screen, for instance, that followed his line of sight no matter where it wandered, provided an image a hundred times sharper than the game screen. Maybe . . . just maybe . . . he had a chance to live up to Centauri’s expectations.
The difficult part was going to be thinking of the coming battle as nothing more than a game.
10
“Hand me up that wire cutter, will you, Alex?” Otis steadied the antenna with one hand and reached down with the other.
“Coming right up.” The Beta Unit paused a moment to study the odd assortment of primitive metal tools Otis had laid out nearby. Stored information connected the image of the only possible cutting tool with the older human’s request. It matched a similar image retrieved from Alex Rogan’s hastily scanned memory. He chose the instrument and handed it up.
“Thanks, Alex.” Otis began tightening the bracing wire attached to the antenna mast. Beta held the rest of the antenna ready.
While Otis worked, the Beta inspected the flimsy metal. An extremely simple device designed for recovering short-range electromagnetic transmissions. He shook his head wonderingly. The antenna was about as sophisticated as a mortar and pestle, and plucked transmissions from the air with about the same degree of efficiency.
Something tapped him on the shoulder. He jumped, holding the antenna like a weapon. Bright, curious eyes stared back at him.
“Oh, Maggie . . . it’s you.”
“I should hope so. You expecting someone else?”
“No, of course not.” The Beta stared past her, searching the bushes across the way. “How ya doin’?”
“I’m doing fine. It’s you I’m starting to worry about. Are you feeling okay, Alex? You’ve been acting awfully funny here lately.”
“I’m always funny. You know me. Good ol’ fun-loving Alex Rogan.”
“I didn’t mean funny ha-ha. I meant funny-weird.”
“What’s the difference?” he countered lamely, brushing dust from his jeans. Ploy four-six change the subject. He pointed past her.
“Hey, did you hear something over there?”
Maggie listened hard, eyeing the innocent bushes. A light breeze stirred the dry dirt around her feet. “Like what, Alex?”
“Like a Double-Z Designate . . . uh, never mind.”
She considered him a moment longer, decided pursuing the matter would get her nowhere and went off on a different tack, exactly as he’d hoped she would.
“Alex, I just came over to say that I’m sorry I slapped you last night.”
“Slapped me? With a right cross like that you ought to be training for the Olympics.” He grinned to show her she shouldn’t take him seriously.
She grinned back, a little embarrassed. “I didn’t mean to hit you so hard. Honest.”
He put his hand over his left heart and declaimed in his best melodramatic tone, “All is forgiven, Madame.” They were discussing inconsequentials again and he felt able to let down his guard slightly. “Hey, forget it, Maggs. I deserved it. I’m the one who should apologize.”
Her grin became a smile and her eyes spoke to him. The Beta found such nonverbal communication fascinating. It was no less effective than standard vocalized communication and much more economical. While rather plain, the human face was extraordinarily expressive.
“That’s settled then,” she said confidently. “We can make it up to each other tonight at Silver Lake.”
“Yeah. Right.” There was something new in her expression that he could not interpret. Alex’s memory wasn’t very helpful on that score. Oh well, he’d learn all about it tonight, he decided. Meanwhile he chose to respond by duplicating the expression as best he could with his own facial muscles.
This must have satisfied her, because she kissed him before she left.
There now. That wasn’t so difficult, he told himself. Alex would be proud of him. His manufacturers would be proud of him. He was coping with a difficult situation extremely well, if he did say so himself.
Idly, he wondered how they were going to “make it up to each other” tonight. No doubt another interesting learning experience was in store.
He was about to hand the rest of the antenna up to Otis when the noise he’d heard earlier was repeated. Though he had Alex Rogan’s body, his senses were considerably more acute. He hadn’t just been trying to divert Maggie. He had heard something.
But another detailed scan of the bushes and the road still showed no surprises. Feeling uneasy, he started for the door of Otis’s trailer. Programming commanded him to take cover the instant he sensed something but could not identify it.
Far back in the trees and scrub, a cousin to the first alien killer Centauri had dispatched lowered the monocular with one hand and the long-snouted pistol gripped in the other. It mumbled something half aloud, perhaps a few choice words of disappointment that its quarry had taken cover, perhaps a phrase or two counseling patience.
A local vehicle was coming down the roadway nearby. The alien crouched low behind a rock, grateful for the surplus of cover this primitive world afforded. Somehow it had to get closer to the target while remaining unsuspected. It studied the vehicle with interest.
It was against all laws and regulations for a visitor from an advanced system to expose himself to unsophisticated primitives, but that was a League tradition, and the League was about to undergo some drastic shifts in policy. The killer knew that its master could care less if it had to expose itself to half the local population. All that mattered was getting the job done.
If any of the natives happened to catch a glimpse of it in its unmasked form, that was their tough luck. They were going to be seeing quite a bit of the Ko-Dan and their allies before long.
The ZZ-Designate looked forward to the future. This world looked amusing. After concluding its assignment it decided it might stay a while. The inhabitants made funny targets. There was sport to be had here.
11
Alex watched the screen as it filled with images representing the incoming Ko-Dan ships. A superimposed grid located the armada precisely and readouts ticked away the distance remaining between the invaders and Rylos. The script meant nothing to Alex, but seemed ominous just the same.
“The armada will come through thusly, according to predictors.” Grig spoke carefully, methodically. “Unless opposed, they will reach geosynchronous orbit around Rylos in twenty time-parts. Squadrons of small attack ships will precede the command craft, which houses the mass driver.”
The last translation used a term vaguely familiar to Alex. He asked Grig to elaborate.
“That is the weapon that was used to destroy the Starfighter base. Actually a very primitive notion, made useful in modern warfare only because of the intervention of advanced technology. It’s difficult to defend yourself when the enemy is throwing irresi
stible forces at you from an immovable object. Think of it as the ultimate catapult. A very flexible weapon. It can fire anything you can fit inside it.”
“Then how do we cope with it?”
“We don’t,” Grig informed him. “It poses no danger to us. Only to fixed objects like ground-based installations . . . and cities. Our danger will come from ships armed with weapons similar to our own.” He adjusted a control, trying to locate the Ko-Dan command ship.
“You said the command craft will be preceded by squadrons of smaller ships, fighters. How many ships? Or maybe I should ask, how many squadrons?”
“Oh, it’s not the number of squadrons that concerns me,” Grig replied easily. The view on Alex’s screen jumped, steadied. Grig finally had the Ko-Dan command ship in focus. It was most impressive. The view leaped forward so realistically Alex almost ducked; then it slowed and crawled across the skin of the alien vessel until it stopped on, a large opaque blister located near the bow.
“It’s this command center that worries me. From there combat information is relayed simultaneously to every Ko-Dan ship, enabling them to act in concert against any attacker. The center is comprised of a series of ultra-sophisticated plotting computers operating in tandem. Give them enough time—and they require very little—and they will predict a pattern of movement for any intruding ship, enabling the fighters to concentrate on it as one.”
“How can it do that?” Alex inquired, “when any attack is bound to be made at random?”
“No machine or organic pilot functions in a purely random fashion. Each utilizes preferred maneuvers without doing so consciously. The Ko-Dan computers will pinpoint enough of a pattern to predict where an attacking ship is likely to be at any point in time. That takes the initiative away from any attacker, and initiative is vital to the success of any Starfighter assault.”
“So we’ve got to destroy that command center before it has enough time to analyze our movements.”
Grig nodded. “And deal with the fighters while they’re trying to regroup for concerted action. That is the Ko-Dan’s weakness They tend to hold back until receiving instructions from higher up. They can’t help it; it’s part of their mental makeup. Usually it works for them. They overwhelm any enemy with mass attacks. But they’ve never had to deal with a Starfighter before.
The Last Starfighter Page 16