Warstrider 04 - Symbionts

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by William H. Keith


  “But how can such a weapon be resisted?” one of the watchers asked. Kima thought that the voice was that of the xenosophontologist who’d asked about QPTs earlier. His name was Imada, and he was a civilian, a scientist attached to the Imperial Sekkodan, or scout service.

  “In this case, by making a preemptive strike with irresistible weapons of our own,” Miyagi said. “That, however, is not our primary problem. The Emperor, gentlemen, is troubled by reports that the rebels have managed to ally themselves with the Xenophobe. Clearly, the control these creatures have over the physical environment gives them awesome power and makes them a threat wherever they may be encountered. It is the Imperial Staff Command’s belief that they will pose a threat only on worlds already occupied by a Xenophobe, worlds such as Mu Herculis, and these, fortunately, are rare.

  “Still, the possibility remains that this rebel Confederation will learn how to seed other worlds with Xenophobes, with Xenophobe ‘buds,’ rather, from organisms that they have com­municated with. They might learn how to employ Xenophobe fragments aboard their ships or use them as a kind of infes­tation introduced onto worlds that we control. At Herakles, we’ve all seen how deadly this alliance of Man and Xenophobe can be.”

  “Sir…”

  “Yes, Taisa Urabe.”

  Urabe was captain of the cruiser Kuma, a dour and phleg­matic man. “Sir, if the rebels have achieved some sort of alliance with the Xenophobe, isn’t, I mean, wouldn’t it be better to let the rebels go their way?”

  “Neboken-ja nayo?” Miyagi snapped. Literally, the phrase meant “Aren’t you half-asleep?” and, depending on the tone, could be humorous or harsh. The admiral used the words like a whiplash, chastising. “Our new Emperor has determined that the rebels must be brought back into the fold,” Miyagi con­tinued. “If we fail—and I must stress that the responsibility is upon us, upon the men and ships of this squadron—if we fail, we invite the rule of Earth and the Empire by the half-civilized shiro of the Frontier.”

  A deathly silence hung among the virtual presences gathered within the electronic conference space. The word shiro meant “white” but could be construed as “white boy,” as much an epithet as “nigger” was to a black. Miyagi, Kima knew, was part of the inner circle of high-ranking military officers within the Imperial Staff Command who were determined to eliminate gaijin influence from all levels of the Imperial government and military… and from the subsidiary government of the Terran Hegemony as well, if possible. He hated gaijin with a passion, and Kima was pretty sure that that was why the man had been chosen to command this mission.

  “I apologize,” Urabe said. “It was certainly not my intent to question the Imperial will.”

  “Of course not,” Miyagi said, the words softer now. “And I understand that you all have been under considerable strain, preparing for this mission. Remember, however, that the Emperor and his senior people, including Gensui Munimori and the entire Imperial Staff Command, are watching us with the most exacting scrutiny. We cannot fail. To do so could encourage the rebellion’s supporters on fifty worlds and fan the flames of insurrection to a blaze that we could never contain or extinguish. The rebel weapon is a fearsome one, yes, but the mission planners and our colleagues with Imperial Intelligence are certain that this operation, if carried out precisely according to plan, will allow us to avoid the destruction suffered by Ohka Squadron. Instead, the Heraklean Xenophobe will be destroyed, together with the so-called rebel government and whatever scraps of disaffected Hegemony deserters they may have assembled there. We will strike without warning and without mercy. The Rebellion, gentlemen, will be crushed with this single blow, once and for all.”

  From the way he launched into the speech, Kima wondered if Miyagi might not actually have been waiting for Urabe’s statement, and the chance to demonstrate, with his outburst, the importance of victory.

  Whether the outburst had been arranged or not, Kima agreed with the reasoning behind it. The rebel challenge to the order and stability of the Hegemony—and behind the Hegemony, of Dai Nikon’s Imperium—could not be permitted to stand, not without crippling the government’s effectiveness forever. If the rebels won, the future promised to be a howling darkness, as the barbarians assaulted the rational order of the Empire.

  As commanding officer of the Karyu, he’d been personally involved in the drafting of the squadron’s operational orders, and knew the plan was a good one, with a good chance of success. Still, Kima’s military experience had taught him to be cautious about confidence in any venture with as many unknowns as this one, however. No plan survives contact with the enemy. Who had said that? A Western strategist, he was sure. And the Western-descended inhabitants of the Frontier had more than once demonstrated the truth of that axiom.

  He would not feel truly confident until the Imperial fleet’s first blow had fallen. That blow would be irresistible, dead­ly… and inescapable, no matter how close their alliance with the world’s damnable black Xenophobe.

  After that blow had fallen, the rebels would have no chance for survival whatsoever.

  Chapter 12

  The true test of man lies in space travel… not in the mastery of the technology that makes it physically poss­ible, but in the mastery of self and mind and imagination that bridges the psychological gulf that for so long iso­lated Man on the world of his birth. It was this mastery of self that gave us the stars, far more than the mastery of such purely physical systems as the Power Tap and the K-T drive.

  —Man and His Works

  Karl Gunther Fielding

  C.E. 2488

  If I’m not careful, Dev thought, late one shipboard evening as he climbed out of a comm module on Eagle’s recreation deck after another session with the AI monitor, I’ll be interfacing with AI software more than I am with human beings.

  Despite the intense crowding aboard any military warship, it was actually difficult to do otherwise. It had always required an effort of will for Dev to communicate with other people on any level deeper than polite greeting or shipboard routine. In fact, Eagle’s close quarters tended to increase Dev’s isolation, as week followed week in the unending monotony of the K-T Plenum. Most military personnel, through both their Hegemo­ny training and experience, tended to adopt an almost Nihonjin sense of personal space, a privacy of the mind in a place where physical privacy was hard to come by, and Dev was no exception. Imperials referred to it as naibuno sekai, the inner world, and the walls it raised were seemingly as impenetrable as duralloy sheathing. A man and woman could be furiously coupling against a bulkhead in the main passageway and others would pass them by, not staring, not even seeing, a selective blindness that allowed crew personnel to maintain their sanity as day followed day in unending and unchanging routine.

  Starships were by their nature crowded. Eagle was a giant, 395 meters long and massing eighty-four thousand tons, but the vast majority of her bulk was taken up by power plant, drives, and reaction mass tankage; four hundred men and women lived in her two rotating habs, in quarters that might have comfortably accommodated fifty.

  The best therapy for the pressures induced by a long K-T passage, of course, was the time rationed to each person for access to a ViRcom module. There, for an hour or two every other day, dreams became reality, and the stinking, overheated, overcrowded monotony of shipboard life could be forgotten for a time within the virtual reality of the dreamer’s choosing. Dev spent much of his time in multiple linkages with members of his staff, of course, just in pursuit of his day-to-day routine of conferences and planning sessions, but interaction there was impersonal and professional. He could count most of Eagle’s officers as friends, including both Lara Anders, her senior pilot, and Lisa Canady, her new skipper, but in an unwritten law extending back to an era when wooden ships sailed liquid seas, no commanding officer could afford friendships, platonic or otherwise, that might hamper his ability to command.

  So despite the crowding, Dev felt alone… and lonely. His sense of isolation had ste
adily increased since his hasty departure from Herakles. He was having trouble reading those he talked to, he often missed the undercurrent of emotion and body language that was the foundation for any communication deeper than “hello.” Virtual reality linkages made things so easy—remote, detached, and sanitary—that they were infinite­ly preferable to meetings face-to-face.

  He missed Katya, of course, missed her more, if possible, than he had during their last separation, but she was where a regimental commander was supposed to be during a transit, with her troops aboard their ship. She was making the passage aboard the transport Vindemiatrix and would not be shifting to Eagle until after they arrived at their destination.

  In any case, after the disastrous nightmare in the cargo bay of the docked shuttle, he scarcely dared to open himself to anyone. Command granted him a privacy that he appre­ciated now.

  The AI continued to give him a technomegalomania rating of point four. He was convinced now that there was something else wrong with him, something stemming from the Xenolink. He felt torn—dreading the power that had been his during the Xenolink on one hand, craving the sense of power and completion and wholeness that was his while linked with a ship’s AI on the other. At first, he couldn’t relate those two seemingly opposite drives in his mind, not until he began questioning whether or not the comforting embrace of a ship’s AI might not be, in some small way, at least, a substitute for the far vaster and more sweeping transformation of mind and body that had been his, briefly, on Herakles.

  Was he going mad? Could he know if he was going mad? There were no answers, no promises of answers. All he had was the growing desire, the need to link again with Eagle’s AI and take the ship into combat.

  Linked, he felt complete. When unjacked, an ordinary man, he tended to avoid the other members of Eagle’s crew, with­drawing into the naibuno sekai if he could not withdraw from them in the real world. His status as the commodore in command of Farstar helped maintain that separation, a certain measure of personal isolation that he found he now welcomed.

  He did remain available to those who needed to talk, of course. Many of the people aboard Eagle had wives, sweet-hearts, and family members still living on New America or on other worlds threatened by the Empire, and the enforces separations added to the pressure cooker atmosphere of ship­board life. Occasionally, when the pressure got too much, there would be a fight or some other infraction of the tightly woven web of rules and regulations by which every ship lived and died, and then he would officiate over a punishment mast. Sometimes, punishment consisted of forfeiture of recjacking time in the modules, but as time went on, forcing members of the crew to endure shipboard life without the temporary reprieve of virtual reality became counterproductive. Most often, fights between crew members were themselves resolved through ViRsimulation, with the combatants assuming fighter analogues for themselves or engaging in battle through simu­lated warstriders or flyers. Therapy, Dev found, could double as training, a means of keeping his people jacked in and hard, ready to meet whatever was waiting for them at Alya.

  Through all of this, Dev remained as aloof and as unin­volved as possible. He could not risk showing even a hint of favoritism, needing to be seen by all in the crew as both fair and impartial. At the same time, he found himself erecting higher and higher barriers against the other officers aboard, until by the end of the passage he was taking most of his meals alone in his quarters and talking to others only in the strict line of duty.

  Fifteen weeks after their departure from Mu Herculis, Eagle emerged into normal fourspace on the fringes of the Alya A system. Constellation, Rebel, and the corvettes Intrepid and Audacious were already there, having arrived on station sev­eral hours earlier. Passive scanning had detected the neutrino emissions of fifteen ships already in-system, twelve of them tucked in tight around Alya A-VI, the other three in transit to or from the planet. So far, there was no sign that the newcomers’ arrival had been detected.

  The sun Alya A was a tiny, intensely brilliant disk set in a milky glow of zodiacal light, while its distant twin glowed more brightly than Venus seen from Earth. The Alyan suns were young as stars go; less than a billion years had passed since they’d emerged together from the nebula that had given them birth, and both nestled at the centers of vast accretion disks of planetoids, dust, and meteoric debris. Comets, too, were more common in these younger systems, and several glowed with pale, wispy delicacy, their tails aimed outward away from the sun.

  Dev, linked into Eagle’s sensor suite, considered the vista of light-scattering dust and debris ringing Alya A. The speed with which life had attained intelligence here was astonishing; more astonishing still was the tenacious grip with which life clung to existence in a system where meteor and comet impacts were commonplace. Dev remembered watching the meteors visible as golden flashes against ShraRish’s nightside during his previous visit three years before. Brenda Ortiz had told him during the voyage out that dinosaur-killer impacts—strikes as devastating as the one that had driven so many Terran species to extinction sixty-five million years earlier—probably occurred on ShraRish every few tens of thousands of years. Somehow, life on the DalRiss worlds had learned to survive the cosmic bombardment. Current theory suggested that the frequent impacts were partially responsible for the diversity and toughness of Alyan life; if radiation from those young, hot stars drove evolution in the system, the weeding-out of existing life by infalling planetoids and comets contributed to the cold discrimination of natural selection.

  The dust had also suggested a strategy, one that Dev had been working on in simulations throughout most of the long passage from Herakles. They had deliberately emerged within the outer fringes of the star’s accretion disk, far enough out from ShraRish that the burst of energy released from the K-T plenum by their arrival should have gone unnoticed, as had the steady flux of neutrinos from their fusion power plants. The debris fields sheltered them from radar and ladar detection from the planet, of course, and shielded their own infrared emissions.

  There, the tiny fleet waited for the arrival of the rest of the squadron. While fifth-generation K-T drives allowed ships to cross space at the rate of roughly a light year per day, the skill of the jackers, the unpredictable effects of currents within the godsea, or the pure, random bad luck of a malfunction could affect a ship’s expected arrival time by days one way or the other—more if a power plant or drive breakdown left the ship helplessly adrift in the deeps between the stars.

  They could not afford to wait longer, however, even hid­den within the outer edge of Alya A’s accretion disk. The neutrinos released by a ship’s fusion plant were not masked by interplanetary dust. The fact that the Confederation ships could detect the neutrino emissions of the Imperial ships meant that the Imperials could in turn detect them. Each passing hour increased the chance that the sensor suite aboard one of the Imperial ships in orbit would spot the Confederation vessels… or that mistake or bad luck would in some other way reveal their presence.

  Dev had wished he could try deception to get close enough to launch an attack but knew that would not be possible here. There was too much chance that the enemy commander had heard of similar deceptions, at Athena and at New America. Besides, the rebels would have to use reconnaissance probes during the approach just to find out what they were up against, and no incoming Imperial squadron would ever do that.

  An operational plan for direct attack, then, had been worked out before they’d left Herakles, and polished in sim dur­ing the voyage. The squadron would wait, lurking in the dust and maintaining communications silence for fifty hours past the arrival of the Rebel, by chance the first Confed­eration ship to reach Alya. During that time, all but three of the other vessels arrived—Constellation, the frigate Val­iant, the corvettes Intrepid and Audacious, the big ex-tanker Tarazed, four of the five unarmed merchantmen, and, much to Dev’s relief, the Vindemiatrix. Still missing were one of the merchants, the corvette Daring, and the armed transport Mirack.


  That last absence could mean trouble. Mirach was carrying half of the 1st Confederation Rangers’ troops and equipment, and he didn’t want to commence the attack without her, but to wait longer exposed the squadron to discovery and attack. Briefly, Vindemiatrix docked directly with Eagle’s ventral access hatch, allowing personnel to cross from one ship to the other.

  Eagerly, then, Dev waited for Katya in Eagle’s lounge.

  Katya, too, had been lonely throughout the long passage out from Herakles. Vindemiatrix was roomy as starships went. Less maneuverable and with a lower acceleration than any warship, she required far smaller reserves of reaction mass and could devote a much larger percentage of her onboard space to passengers than could Eagle. But even with half of her huge, rotating cargo bays equipped for passenger accommodations, Trixie was carrying nearly eight hundred troops and mainte­nance personnel in addition to her crew of forty-five, twice Eagle’s complement crammed into vast, open dormitories that allowed no privacy at all save that of the inner world. The transport did have one hundred link modules installed in one of the zero-G bays, which meant that the passengers could enjoy a positively luxurious three hours of recjacking out of every twenty-four. The rest of the time was spent in train­ing, shoulder-to-shoulder calisthenics in the dormitories, and classes in tactics, maintenance, field ops, and planetology delivered the old-fashioned way, by lecture instead of by cephlinkage… anything to keep the troops busy.

  By the time they’d emerged from K-T space, though, her unit had been ready to face any odds, any enemy, if just to escape the gray-walled prison of the transport.

  And Katya, too, for that matter. She was mildly claustro­phobic, a hangover from an accident suffered while she’d been jacking a merchantman years before, an AI link failure that had left her awake but blind for long hours before her rescue. Normally, she was able to keep the feelings of dread when faced by small enclosures or pitch-blackness under control, but enduring fifteen weeks locked up in the hot, people-stinking closeness of the transport had taxed her self-control to what she was certain was her limit.

 

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