by Nick Webb
Granger half-smiled, and turned to leave. “Define fully trained, Commander.”
Pierce followed him out the door. “We basically only have a half-complement of full-time pilots. The rest are trainees. Assigned to the Constitution fresh out of IDF Flight Academy. They were supposed to finish a six-month tour here before officially earning their wings.”
Granger continued down the hallway towards the bridge. “And?”
Pierce huffed. “And, sir, these boys simply aren’t ready for combat. I’ve only had them for about a month.”
Granger stopped and turned, letting two technicians rush past before staring his CAG in the eye. “You go to war with the army you have, Commander. They either die out there in their birds defending the Constitution and the rest of the caravan, or they die in here with their fat asses in their bunks. Ask them which they prefer and get back to me.”
He could tell his CAG still hadn’t quite understood the gravity of the situation, which mystified him a little. “Commander?” he asked, letting his voice soften a hair.
“Sir, it’s just that I still haven’t heard from my father. The Gallant. Word is that the entire third British fleet is … missing.”
Pierce’s voice wavered slightly. Granger reached out to his CAG’s elbow. “I know. CENTCOM thinks … well, let’s just say they don’t have high hopes that the third fleet survived its encounter with the Swarm.” He looked Pierce in the eye. “I’m sorry, Tyler.”
“So it’s confirmed, then? CENTCOM knows the third fleet engaged the Swarm?”
“No. Nothing’s known for sure. But given that we now have a Swarm fleet bearing down on Lunar Base within half an hour, I’d say the chances your father is alive are slim. But now is not the time, Commander. Right now we need to give these bastards a good old-fashioned whoopin’. Let’s hand their asses to them. Exterminate them. Then, when Earth is safe, we’ll grieve. Agreed?”
His CAG steeled his jaw and nodded. “Yes, sir.”
“Good man.” Granger turned once again to return to the bridge. “I want every available fighter ready to launch in forty-five minutes, Commander. And if you have to deputize the shuttle pilots, do it.”
“Yes, sir,” came the reply from down the hallway.
But Granger hardly heard it over the red alert klaxons that sounded shrilly through the corridor.
Chapter 26
Earth’s Moon
Fighter Pilot Briefing Room, ISS Constitution
Commander Pierce stormed into the fighter bay’s briefing room where the pilots were still assembling. Running through the numbers, he knew there were simply not enough pilots for the ships that Proctor would have ready for him, even counting the trainee pilots fresh out of the academy. In addition to his regular crew of twenty, and his twenty new trainees, he still had up to forty more spots to fill.
And that meant anyone on board who had any flying experience whatsoever was fair game, and the captain had given him a blank check to draft who he needed.
Most of them had arrived—a handful of former freighter pilots who’d joined IDF as mechanics or gunnery sergeants, and of course the entire ship’s complement of shuttle pilots. He nodded a quick greeting to Lieutenant Miller, who’d seated herself alongside the rest of the fighter jocks.
The room fell into a hushed silence as he reached the podium. None of them had joined IDF expecting war. Becoming an IDF pilot usually meant one was preparing for an eventual career flying the giant tourist spaceliners, or colonial transport ships, or merchant freighters.
But war was upon them, whether they were ready or not.
“I’m sure by now you all know this is not a drill. The Swarm is back and they’re out for blood.”
One of the fighter jocks interrupted, Lieutenant Volz. “Same ships as last time? Like what we’ve trained against?”
“I don’t know, Ballsy. All we’ve been told is that the entire Veracruz Sector has been laid to waste, and they’re on their way here.”
As the gravity of his words sunk in, he turned to the group of newcomers. “As you can see, the situation is grim, and we need every available fighter. That means some of you who are joining us now are being called up as pilots—”
“Sir,” began one of the enlisted crew, a mechanic, who was still greasy from working on a bird. “I haven’t flown a freighter in five years. What good will I do out there?”
“You’ll do better out there than you will in here. All that matters now is firepower. Plus, not every fighter is ready to go—there are thirty-odd birds still being brought back into service. That means we’ll start with the most experienced of you lot, and get the rest of you into simulators in the meantime. Each newbie will be paired with an experienced pilot, and two pairs will form a squad for a total of twelve squads now, twenty squads when all fighters are brought into service. Your assignments have been made and are now on your consoles.”
The pilots all looked down at the tiny computer screens on their armrests.
Lieutenant Volz nudged Lieutenant Miller, “Look at that, Fishtail, you’re with me. Try to keep up.”
She looked stunned, but managed to murmur, “Sure thing, Ballsy.”
The CAG continued. “You’ve got one hour. Newbies, get to the simulators. Experienced pilots, go with your trainees. Teach them the essentials. How to fire, how to cover, basic defensive and offensive patterns. Nothing fancy, just the tried and true.”
The red alert lights and klaxons blared behind him. It was showtime.
“Go! Be in your birds in one hour!”
Chapter 27
Earth’s Moon
Bridge, ISS Winchester
Vice President Isaacson stormed out of the captain’s quarters and raced down the hall. The two secret service agents assigned to him jumped out of their chairs and bolted after him. Ambassador Volodin followed close behind, huffing and struggling to keep up. “Where are you going?” he called.
“We’ve got to get the hell out of here,” yelled Isaacson.
Volodin huffed something else but was breathing so hard Isaacson couldn’t understand, and before he knew it he was approaching the two marines stationed outside the bridge who held up their hands indicating that they stop.
“I’m sorry, sir, only authorized personnel are allowed on the bridge.”
Isaacson bristled. “Then you get the hell in there and tell the captain that Vice President Isaacson wants to come on his bridge!”
“Yes, sir!” One of the marines disappeared through the door, and reappeared within moments. “This way, sir.”
Isaacson barreled past the remaining marine and strode onto the bridge, which was humming with activity. The ship was only a smaller Cincinnati class corvette, mainly used by IDF for transporting personnel and dignitaries around the solar system, but they apparently were gearing up for battle.
“Vice President Isaacson, we’re a little busy here, sir—”
Isaacson interrupted. “Captain, we need to get to Earth immediately.”
The captain shook his head. “I’m sorry, sir, but the Winchester does not currently have q-jump abilities.”
Unbelievable. “Currently?”
“That’s correct. As such, we’ll be escorted in by the Constitution.”
“THE CONSTITUTION?” Isaacson yelled. “You’re telling me that the oldest ship in the fleet, the same one we decommissioned today and is missing half its engines and is being flown by a bunch of washed-up failures is the ship that will be escorting the second-in-command of the government of Earth?”
Captain Day shifted uncomfortably. “Yes, sir.”
“Get Yarbrough on the comm. Now.” He pointed to one of the consoles. The captain nodded to the officer at the comm station, and within moments, Admiral Yarbrough’s voice boomed over the speakers.
“Yarbrough. What is it, Mr. Isaacson?”
“Admiral, am I to understand that the Constitution is the only warship escorting us back to Earth?”
“That’s correct, Mr. Isaacson
. We simply can’t spare any modern cruisers. If there’s any chance we can stop them here at Lunar Base, then that’s what we’ll do. I need all available ships—”
“Preposterous, Admiral. I demand you send another, more modern warship as our escort. Not just that bucket of bolts out there.”
Silence came over the speaker as Admiral Yarbrough weighed her options. Finally, she sighed. “Very well.”
“Send the Qantas.”
“But, Mr. Isaacson, that’s the flagship of IDF. We need her defending Lunar Base.”
“We need her defending the Earth, and her elected leaders. End of conversation.”
Another silence. “Fine. Yarbrough out.”
Isaacson nodded in approval. Good—it was time the admirals learned to listen to him—they’d better get used to it.
“Now, Captain Day, tell me why we can’t just make the q-jump. Tell me why we don’t currently have that ability.”
Day walked around the tactical station to face the Vice President. “The problem, sir, is that while we do have a q-jump drive, the need for it has not existed for years—at least for this ship. We mainly take on duties involving short-range transports and missions within the solar system. If we want to re-engage the drive, we’ll need a functioning quantum field coupler, and you don’t just find those lying on a shelf somewhere. It’s a delicate, expensive piece of equipment, and it doesn’t make sense to maintain them on vessels that—”
“Then find one.”
“Excuse me?” Captain Day looked confused. Isaacson rolled his eyes—were all fleet officers this dense?
“Find one, Captain. Get on your comm to Lunar Base, the Constitution, the other ships—someone must have a spare. Do it now. That’s an order.”
Captain Day grit his teeth, but nodded.
“Yes, sir.”
Good. They were learning to respect his authority already. That would come in handy after his inauguration next week.
Chapter 28
Earth’s Moon
Bridge, ISS Constitution
“Report,” barked Captain Granger, as the bridge doors slid back into their pockets.
The XO grumbled, “CENTCOM sounded the alarm a few minutes ago. Seems our approaching friends made a little pit stop at Mars. Before it blew, Phobos Station recorded images of the alien fleet.”
“And the Mars colony?”
Haws snorted. “Bastards took out the whole thing. In a matter of minutes.”
The entire Mars colony. Gone.
“Impossible. What did they use? Nukes?”
“No,” continued Haws. “See for yourself. Looks like … well, not like anything I’ve seen before.”
Granger bounded towards the command console and tapped the video display showing the priority message received from CENTCOM. A zoomed-in image of Mars appeared, and a handful of grainy-looking ships snapped into orbit, decelerating at incredible speeds. After a brief battle with a handful of defending orbital patrol ships, a harsh white light appeared in the midst of the invading fleet. As the light intensified, the image started to pulse with static. Suddenly, the brilliant light disappeared in a flash.
Moments later, an enormous red plume rising up from the surface was all the evidence Granger needed of the colony’s demise.
“Dammit,” he whispered.
Haws growled. “Close to a hundred thousand souls down there, Tim. Or, there were, at any rate, god bless ‘em.”
As they watched the video continue, the alien fleet accelerated to a huge speed, and the pixellated images grew larger on the screen, which pulsed with a regular static. Moments later, several bright green beams lanced out from the lead ship and the video went dark.
“Has CENTCOM analyzed this?” The captain glanced up at Haws.
“They’re working on it, they said. But they called a general red alert—the alien fleet will be here in minutes—sooner than they thought.”
“Why the static?”
“Tim?” The XO limped over next to him.
“That pulsing during the video. What was that?”
“Power surge?”
Granger stroked his chin. It had seemed like more than that. It was regular. Pulsing. “No, I don’t think so.” He walked over to the signals intelligence station in the tactical section of the bridge. “Ensign, I want a team analyzing that vid from Phobos Station.”
“What are we looking for, sir?” asked the fresh-faced young woman.
“I don’t know. Pull it apart. We need everything we can get at this point. Get me the highest resolution images of the alien ships you can, and see if you can determine the source of that pulsing.”
“Aye, sir.”
Granger turned back to Haws, but before he could say anything the communications officer caught his attention. “Sir, Lunar Base is signaling us. It’s Admiral Yarbrough, sir.”
“Send it to my station,” said Granger. At the terminal, he tapped the button to initiate transmission. Admiral Yarbrough’s weary face filled his screen.
“Tim, it’s time to get out of here. And you’re going to have some company. Vice President Isaacson requested that another capital ship accompany him back to Earth.”
“You mean,” Granger deadpanned, “he’s not comfortable with just the Constitution holding off an alien attack on his ship?”
“Something like that. The Qantas will join you—it’s a newer battlecruiser, and should set the Veep at ease.”
Granger thought it was a bad idea—the fleet’s flagship should be in the battle for Lunar Base, but nodded nonetheless—there was no time for an argument. “Will that leave you enough firepower?”
“We’ll be fine. Lunar Base is no sitting duck—we’ll hand their asses to them. Assuming they have asses.”
Granger chuckled—it was true, they’d never found so much as a finger from the Swarm vessels they’d managed to salvage. Even the most intact ships were completely devoid of life. Just a translucent mucus smeared everywhere.
“When you get back to Earth, report to Fleet Admiral Zingano. He’s heading up the defense of Earth. We’re not stretched so thin back there as out in the Veracruz Sector. These bastards won’t know what hit them. Get out of here, Tim.”
The tired face disappeared, replaced by the Laurel and Earth seal of IDF. Granger glanced up at the communications officer. “Is the caravan ready?”
“Aye, sir. All ships reporting in. The Qantas has moved into formation with us. Also, sir, the captain of the Rainbow would like to talk to you.”
“Fine,” he said, glancing at the countdown timer. They had less than fifteen minutes before the alien fleet showed up at Lunar Base. “Put it on my screen.”
An older woman appeared on his console’s screen. “What can I do for you, Captain?”
“Captain Granger, as you know, we’ve got a boatload of kids over here.”
“I’m aware of that, Captain.”
“This is a Cincinnati class corvette, but our q-jump capability was stripped a few years ago when I bought her. Too expensive to maintain. But all she needs is a quantum field coupler—if you have a spare, I can get it installed in under thirty minutes and be on our way. One less target for you boys to protect.”
He nodded. “We’ll look around for one. In the meantime, be prepared to head out with us. We’re your best hope for now. Granger out.” He leaned back to the comm officer. “Have operations look down in storage for a spare quantum field coupler. If they find one, get it down to Proctor and have her send it over to the Rainbow on a shuttle.”
“Aye, sir.”
“Good. Helm,” he said, turning to the navigation pit. “Get us out of here. Half-power to main drive. And get me on speaker to the caravan,” he called back to the comm.
Pausing for the comm officer to patch him through, he cleared his throat. “This is Captain Granger of the Constitution. Set your headings toward Earth, at an acceleration of two g’s. We’ll maintain that thrust for fifteen minutes and then we’ll coast the rest of the way in an
d make a coordinated deceleration. Stay close to either the Constitution, or the Qantas. If the alien fleet overtakes us, keep the two warships in between yourselves and the rat-bastards. Granger out.”
Haws nodded at him. “Short and pithy. Just how I like it.”
Granger motioned to the helm. “Take us out, Lieutenant.”
With a distant roar, the main engines surged to life as ultra-high-temperature plasma blasted out the rear thrusters. The internal gravity field took a few moments to adjust to the new acceleration and Granger swayed a bit. He noticed that no one else swayed—was he tired? Was the damn tumor spreading in his brain?
Hell—all he needed was a few weeks. Enough time to save his ship.
And his world.
Chapter 29
Earth’s Moon
Bridge, ISS Constitution
The time inched forward slowly, but inexorably. On the main viewscreen was a split-screen image of the Earth, which loomed far off in the distance but grew almost imperceptibly larger with each passing minute, and on the left-hand side was the gray orb of the moon, with the Lunar Base complex still just visible, sprawling across Mare Tranquility.
Granger drummed his fingers on his console, watching the time tick down until the expected arrival of the alien fleet. Ten minutes, twenty-five seconds.
“Captain?” The comm buzzed on his console, and he tapped it in reply.
“Go ahead, Commander Proctor.”
“Sir, we now have sixty-two operational fighters. The remaining twenty will require at least another day, sir.”
Sixty-two. Better than nothing, he supposed, and better than he’d expected Proctor to pull off, though it was still woefully short of what he wanted. The Qantas brought another ninety-five fighters, all of which were far more technologically advanced than the Constitution’s, but in spite of their almost impenetrable smart-steel armor, Granger had deep misgivings about them. They’d never been tested in actual live combat. Not like the Constitution’s fighters. Granted, those hadn’t been tested in live combat for over seventy-five years, but still.