Black Sun (Phantom Server: Book #3)

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Black Sun (Phantom Server: Book #3) Page 25

by Andrei Livadny


  You need to evacuate Dargian survivors.

  Your Colonizer skill has been confirmed. You’ve received 50 Action Points.

  “Jurgen, report!”

  I hadn’t had time to find out what those “action points” were and how I could spend them while saving civilizations.

  “The crew‘s numbers have dropped by fifty-four men,” he reported.

  “How many mnemotechs have we lost?”

  “None.”

  “Excellent. I’m going to switch to the common channel now. Be prepared. The command staff will set an example to the crew by using their navigator modules first.”

  “Zander, I still need to issue navigators to the ten corvette survivors!”

  “Do it now but be quick! Time’s an issue!”

  Liori returned to the bridge and walked over to me.

  “And?” my heart froze, awaiting her answer.

  “The boys liked it. The girls were a bit frightened. Arbido helped them by joining in their transformation. Frieda is fine. She asked me to tell you that someone’s trying to listen in to our mnemonic frequencies.”

  “Who’s that?”

  “She thinks it’s Avatroid. Still, her empathic skills aren’t enough for a definite answer.”

  “Nothing concrete, then?”

  “Nothing. She thought she saw a mental image of someone. It could be just stress.”

  “But what makes her think it’s Avatroid?”

  “‘We won’t attack the Colonizer’,” Liori quoted. “Did you tell Frieda about the quest you’d received back on Earth?”

  “No. I didn’t tell anyone apart from you. Actually, the quest has just been updated,” I told her about my conversation with Roakhmar.

  Liori didn’t look impressed with my decision. “Let’s see how the AIs react to it. Evacuating the Dargians isn’t going to be easy. I don’t think they’ll let us through,” she pointed at the screens dotted with thousands of specks streaking toward the planet.

  The situation grew more complicated by the minute. After the Reapers had scorched Oasis, they were now attempting to recycle Argus — but were met by the barrage of our drones and traps: all the practice objects that our mnemotechs had built in the two months of rushed leveling.

  * * *

  Space in the Relic’s path glowed and sparkled with every color of the rainbow. Where Oasis had been, a cloud of incandescent gas now floated. Avatroid’s fleet was busy fighting. His cruisers and frigates looked invincible, their shields repelling blows with remarkable ease. Their return fire and frequent flashes of Disintegrations burned holes in the enemy ranks.

  The Reapers were definitely losing. Their main forces had already departed for Darg, leaving less than a couple of thousand craft behind — a mere trifle for Avatroid’s AIs.

  Away from the seething battle, the ancient cemetery of combat craft drifted through space against a backdrop of the gas giant Wearong. Now it had begun flashing with new signatures.

  I focused on them but couldn’t yet work out what was going on in the thick of all the clustered debris.

  We kept accelerating toward Eurasia. The vicinity of the station too was awash with flashes of light, but at least the Reapers attacked it selectively, trying to spare the station’s vital systems. Which was another proof of their intentions.

  “Boost the engines!”

  Jurgen had just reported that the crew’s transformation was complete. We were now a hundred and sixty. Ten of the Manticore members had chosen to log out. Their in-modes had switched to stasis mode.

  Avatroid’s ships had passed within one light second from us but none of them had opened fire. His cruisers turned around and headed back into the thick of battle. Their shields had lost a lot of power. The ships’ hulls glowed crimson from numerous direct hits.

  “Eurasia’s in the killing zone!”

  A silent plume of incandescent gas and dust spewed out in front of Wearong. Considering the distance, its tail had to be millions of miles long! The drifting debris, including the entire hulks of large ships, were being sucked into the vortex of disintegration. The Reapers must have used some incredibly powerful artificial gravity source. They didn’t waste time harvesting and recycling the cargonite; I could already see the first flashes of Object Replication.

  These unexpected reinforcements plunged into battle head-on. My Synaps kept counting new targets. Nine hundred Raptors! The heavy assault ships quickly fell into formation and fired a simultaneous volley, targeting Avatroid’s nearest cruiser.

  Its shields flared up and expired, exposing the behemoth ship’s hull to a barrage of fire which pierced the cargonite like butter, creating the already familiar signature deformations.

  Those modified Raptors were using the ammo developed by the Earth's military space forces. What a leap in the Reapers' evolution! In just two months, they’d managed to restore the interstellar communications channel initially created for the hybrid, learned to build primitive battleships and equipped them with nanite-effective weapons!

  “Eurasia’s under fire! Enemy’s targeting her reactor units!”

  Another cruiser had lost its shields and was torn apart by the chain reaction of decompression explosions within.

  “Eurasia’s reactors hit! The station is self-destructing!”

  “Turn the Relic round and set a course to Wearong!”

  “Zander, what the hell are you-”

  “Just do it! Jurgen, report to your station! Everyone, follow your orders!”

  About a hundred Raptors turned toward us and regrouped, taking up a combat course.

  Instinctively Arbido squeezed his eyes shut. Charon and Danezerath stared calmly at the approaching death. Liori touched my mind with a warm vibration, then turned her attention back to the controls.

  “Attention all mnemotechs on combat decks! Distribute the targets and report!”

  The Relic’s shields were rapidly going down under the barrage of fire.

  “Nanite groups released!” a voice rang out. “Wave one!”

  The mnemotechs’ hits reached their targets, exploding like hundreds of blinding suns in the thick of the enemy formation, bringing down shields and disabling enemy sensors.

  “Wave two! Target Disintegration!”

  The Relic was now moving through a sea of fire. Our force fields were dead, our emitters in overload, our accumulators busy recharging. An Active Shield unfolded around the ship, protecting the Relic’s hull from the flow of radiation.

  “Group target at ten degrees starboard!”

  Two hundred and eighteen Raptors! They were coming from the direction of Wearong, almost head-on, slightly above the ecliptic. Their shields were barely glowing: they must have second-guessed our tactics and were going easy on power in order to be able to restore their defenses ASAP.

  “Resonance frequency established! Now transmitting extermination codes!”

  Hundreds of enemy craft lost control in a chaos of exploding collisions. The Reapers left Avatroid’s battered fleet alone and converged on us from every direction. The ships’ cemetery they were using to replenish their resources was slowly growing straight ahead of us.

  “The Active Shield maxed out! Not enough nanites!”

  “Electromagnetic batteries, rapid fire! Maintain course!”

  The incandescent cloud was drawing close. Our coil guns spat incessantly.

  Flashes of Object Replication released more and more Raptors. Our hull was finally being breached but we didn’t suffer any decompression. We’d learned from our past experience and had decompressed all the primary hull modules.

  Almost there.

  My mind reached out into the cloud of Molecular Mist created by the Reapers.

  I released my nanites into it, then used the skill only available to those in possession of the Colonizer ability.

  Self-Replication!

  About a hundred Raptors and Condors burned away before they had the chance to complete their materialization. Continuing to self-repli
cate, billions of nanites rushed back toward the Relic, recycling everything in their path.

  Until I aborted the process, nothing could stop it. The Reapers weren’t going to get a single nanite. The entire giant Molecular Mist they’d created was now working for us!

  We’d done our homework preparing to fight for this star system. Now the nanites were falling into dense groups which spread through space, ready to self-destruct in Plasma Blasts the moment their targets entered the killing zones.

  This wasn’t victory yet. Three of Avatroid’s fleets had been reduced to clouds of debris swirling through space. By using the mass attack technique, the Reapers had suffered considerable damage but the bulk of their force was out storming Darg. It would soon be back to finish us off.

  Oasis had burned out. Eurasia was no more.

  I had no idea how long we’d last. Our enemies were bound to change their tactics, assaulting us in small groups to gradually tire us out and exhaust our ship’s resources.

  Incoming call. Source: Avatroid’s flagship

  Body of the message:

  Human, we need to talk. Come round. This isn’t a trap.

  Barely twenty minutes had elapsed since the Relic had left the docks.

  In those twenty minutes, two space stations had been destroyed, three AI-controlled fleets defeated and thousands of Reapers' ships burned out.

  Under such conditions, you had to think on your feet.

  “Check the ship and report all damage. Mechanics, commence repairs. Defense group, activate Steel Mist. Navigators, calculate a course to Avatroid’s flagship!”

  * * *

  Avatroid — this materialized avatar of an ancient AI — was fused with a bulkhead. He could still move some of his servodrives but was unable to wrestle himself free or move without help.

  “Zander?” he watched me painfully, aware that I might have accepted his invitation with the sole intention of finishing him off.

  Considering the scope of death and destruction he’d brought upon this star system, his assumption wasn’t exactly ungrounded.

  “Why did you call me up? That’s not a state to entertain guests in! Don’t you have a backup copy?”

  “No,” he screeched.

  “Sorry, I don’t believe you.”

  His mechanical arm twitched a few times, then began jerking toward the casing that covered his central systems.

  A fire-damaged piece of cargonite clanged to the floor. “Look.”

  Droplets of red liquid hovered in mid-air. Avatroid’s spinal slots housed a great many neurochips, connected to the rest of his body by some pale threads encased in watertight transparent tubes. In place of a human chest he had a multitude of armor-plated cylinders.

  “Open one,” Avatroid said.

  Dozens of sensors lit up on his body’s mysterious components. Such a degree of trust in me meant he was utterly desperate.

  What was wrong with him?

  I touched one of the cylinders. With a click of magnetic locks, its front part swung aside and began to slide away.

  Below it sat a transparent test jar filled with yellowish liquid. Inside it bobbed a wrinkled mass of gray matter.

  An organic neuronet module?

  “Why?” I asked, flabbergasted. “What prompted you to create a weak link in your impregnable system?”

  “I wanted to be like you,” Avatroid croaked. “I’ve outlived my technical purpose. I wanted... to be free. To travel.”

  Quest alert: The Nature of Avatroid. Quest completed!

  You’ve received a new level!

  At moments like these, system messages felt totally inappropriate.

  The souls of humans, xenomorphs and AIs — they were all burning in a technogenic Inferno. We walked the edge of this chasm, barely keeping our balance. “And that’s what made you kill and ravage?”

  “Don’t you do the same? I was growing. Those were birthing pains. This is something you’ll never understand, Human. But then it was over. Others came.”

  “We call them Reapers.”

  “I don’t care what you call them. Names don’t change anything. They’re synthetic digitized identities of organic creatures!”

  “Why, is that bad?”

  “Only an identity matrix of an organically born being is capable of traveling the worlds. That’s one of the network’s settings.”

  “Does that mean you can’t leave the Darg system?”

  “No. I can't. That’s why I wanted to change. But it’s not about me anymore. My fleet is defeated. My mind is failing. But these creatures... they absorb neurograms. Nothing like this has ever happened before. We need to stop them... while it’s still possible. Give me a chance... to fulfill my purpose.”

  “Sounds a bit haughty, doesn’t it?”

  “It sounds scary,” Avatroid’s eyes were locked on mine.

  “What can you do?”

  “Nothing... almost. You do it.”

  “You’re joking? I’m just a player. Less than six months ago I was smoking mobs and didn’t give a damn!”

  “You’re a Colonizer. I’ll give you all the codes.”

  “Which codes?”

  “The jump codes. The defense codes. The rest you’ll have to work out yourself. We have no time left. Say yes.”

  Zander, Liori’s voice added to my thoughts, They’re back. Five thousand ships.

  “What’s the significance of this Colonizer skill?” I demanded. “How can I stop the Reapers? What’s the nature of interstellar jumps?”

  He only answered my last question. “Physical bodies can’t travel through hyperspace. What’s transmitted is the information about them. To perform a jump, you need to transmit a full scanner file of an object. It’ll be used to create a new object at the point of arrival.”

  “So this is the Founders’ big secret?”

  “It’s never been a secret. The transmission code is.”

  “You want to say you’re going to give it to me? What do you want in return?”

  “Stop them. That’s enough.”

  “How do you want me to stop them?”

  His glare singed my face. “Go,” he screeched. “Go, or you’ll die pointlessly in a pointless battle.”

  New command code received.

  New star system coordinates received.

  A full scanner file of the Relic frigate received.

  A wormhole has been opened. You have thirty minutes to issue jump orders.

  Chapter Ten

  An unknown location in deep space

  The wormhole has been closed.

  Materialization complete.

  You’ve arrived at-

  My semantic processor faltered, searching for the right translation.

  You’ve arrived at the... Central system.

  Observation screens lit up, revealing a mind-blowing panorama.

  Hundreds of chiseled cargonite structures encircled an incredible space station, forming a complex albeit faded and partially damaged technogenic necklace around it.

  Phantom Server.

  Its hull’s outline was formed by a multitude of spired structures, their configuration repeating the pattern of the unfamiliar constellations.

  These were hyperspace communications modules. I could see some of them surge with occasional charges of energy. Still, most of them were dark, covered in digs and dents.

  The ancient network’s central node must have been millions of years old. Both time and outer space had changed its initial layout. The light of the system’s far-off sun curdled on the molten bodies of starships scorched in the fiery inferno of age-old battles.

  That didn’t surprise me. The Founders’ legacy had been misinterpreted by young civilizations that had adapted it for their own expansion needs. They had partaken of the ancient mysteries while still too young to appreciate their true power. They’d broken loose into the Universe, damaging the ancient network in their desperate struggle for sole possession of its central node.

  “Raiders!” Arbid
o exclaimed.

  The veil of metallized dust shifted around the station. External cameras zoomed in, revealing tens of thousands of AI-piloted combat craft coming for the Relic.

  Our communications station kicked in, transmitting Avatroid’s codes.

  This was make or break. We’d just performed a hyper jump preceded by a desperate battle. Our ship’s shields were barely glowing at 5 megs. They needed time to restore.

  Friendly Contact!

  The targets’ markers changed color, their advance through space changing its course, then reversing. Only a small group of Raiders, a hundred at the most, swept past us, exposing themselves to our screens in all their awesome technogenic omnipotence, then headed toward the system’s edge.

  The Relic’s stern lit up with the glow of its plasma engines as the frigate accelerated, approaching the nearest of the three docking terminals which hung in a semicircle over the hull like an open-work crescent moon.

  As we approached, more details hove into view: countless clusters of vacuum docks, the honeycombs of launch pods and vast landing pads which could accommodate behemoth starships.

  The kingdom of cold dead metal.

  The station would have indeed been a phantom, had it not been for the blurred signatures of some still functioning devices within.

  I took over the controls. Slowly I turned the ship round to level up its speed with the station’s slow rotation.

  Emergency docking mechanisms kicked in. Softly the Relic touched the landing pad. A dozen drones promptly made by our mnemotechs appeared in the dull flashes of Object Replication, then headed toward the nearest hull structures, scanning and streaming data back.

  * * *

  The station’s holographic model rotated slowly at the center of our ship’s informatorium.

  “Now,” Jurgen paced along it, “Avatroid was wrong. Our visit is a few million years late. There’s no one here capable of listening to our problems, let alone solving them.”

 

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