Warstrider 04 - Symbionts

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Warstrider 04 - Symbionts Page 34

by William H. Keith


  “Eh? I’m awake. I’m awake. What is it, Fukkansan?”

  “The Alyan strangers, sir. They’re back!”

  “Strangers… what? When?”

  “Minutes ago, Chujosama. But they are close! Less than ten thousand kilometers!”

  “Chikusho!” He groped for the straps, tugging them free. His aide began helping him with his uniform. “Is it just the one again?”

  “I am sorry to say, no, Chujosama. We have counted at least ten Alyan craft, ranging in size from approximately that of a large destroyer, to one vessel that is at least twice the size of Karyu.”

  Baka-ni suruna-yo!” Miyagi snapped. “Don’t think I’m stupid!”

  “Sir!” Somehow, the aide managed an abject bow in zero gravity, no mean feat when he was adrift in the middle of the room. “Please, sir! It is the complete truth!”

  “We will see.”

  And Miyagi saw, moments later, as he jacked into Karyu’s tactical simulation. The Alyan craft—damn it, they had to be Alyans, for nothing of human manufacture looked remotely like those bizarre, bump-surfaced shapes with their stubby arms and hulls like rusted iron—the Alyans were grouped in a ragged, spherical shape with their largest vessel hanging toward the rear, and they were accelerating toward the Otori flagship at an estimated four gravities. There was no sign of plasma flare, no ion trails, not even a neutrino flux to give clues to the weird-looking vessels’ power plants. There was an unusual magnetic flux encasing each ship, a pulsing, rippling flow of power that might be propulsion, or it might be some kind of weapon.

  Seconds after he linked into the net, eight more Alyan ships appeared… or were they? The first ten were starfish shapes, differing one from another in numbers of arms and in overall size, but all essentially of the same design. These newcomers were different, lumpy, organic shapes that looked more like dark-skinned escapees from some giant’s vegetable garden than starfaring vessels. And these ships were spilling neutrinos… not to mention radar and ladar signatures that identified them as human-built and human-manned ships.

  “Battle stations,” Miyagi said softly. The order was picked up by the tactical net and broadcast throughout all the ships of the Imperial battlefleet, though most of the warships were already on full alert. “Shosho Kima? Are you on the net?”

  “Hai, Chujosan!”

  “Bring all weapons to full power. This looks like an attack formation of some kind.”

  “I agree, Chujosan. All weapons are at full power and standing by. We are tracking the targets.”

  “Excellent. Has there been any attempt at communication?”

  “We have been querying them for identification since they appeared. There has been no reply.”

  “Ah.” Miyagi watched the approaching vessels, suddenly uncertain. The hell of a battlefleet command was that there was no higher authority to appeal to… save for that of the Imperial Staff Command back at Earth. A wrong guess, a wrong move, a misstep in diplomacy or a stupid underesti­mation of a military foe, and at best his naval career would be ruined. At worst, well, even the modern and enlightened Dai Nihon still expected those of its servants bearing the greatest responsibilities to apologize for their mistakes with their lives. It was, Miyagi had always thought, an excellent system, one that wonderfully focused an officer’s attention on his duty.

  The enemy ships were well within range and still approach­ing. “Stand by to fire.”

  “Hai, Chujosan!”

  Miyagi sensed the awesome power of the Karyu gathering about him.…

  The Alyans approached the core of the Imperial battle group in two formations. In the lead were ten Alyan “warships,” the starfish shapes, including the enormous bulk of Daghar. Trail­ing by a thousand kilometers came eight DalRiss transports, each carrying a Confederation vessel in its bowels.

  The Imperials, Dev thought with a barely suppressed quiver of anticipation, must be beside themselves by now. The incom­ing ships would be unlike anything the Imperials had ever tracked; the transports would look bizarrely alien, yet their electronic signatures would include spills from the human-built ships in their bellies, neutrinos from powered-up fusion plants, and the questing fingers of weapons radars and laser ranging devices peeking through the Alyan ships’ flexible and immensely adaptable hulls.

  Linked into the Naga that was Daghar’s brain and nerves and senses, Dev felt the prick and tingle of Imperial track and search radar, and he knew that gigawatts of raw ener­gy were about to be released. He’d been counting seconds, steadily and automatically, since the first DalRiss ships had broken into fourspace. He was estimating four minutes from the time the Alyan fleet was first sighted to their decision to open fire.

  At two hundred seconds, some part of his hyperawareness overrode his intent to count out another forty. The Imperial commander must be steeling himself now to give the order to fire.

  “Group Two!” he called out over his link. “Leapfrog, now!”

  During the planning sessions back at ShraRish, Dev never had been able to explain to the DalRiss what leapfrog was, but the concept was clear enough, in any case. The trailing squadron vanished from normal space…

  … and reappeared instantly ten thousand kilometers closer to their goal, inside the core of the Imperial battlefleet and less than half a thousand kilometers from the Karyu herself.

  “Group One! Shift now!”

  The ten starfish winked out, dropping back into fourspace well behind Group Two, and angling in toward the planet, a feint designed to draw the fire of other Imperial ships. Karyu launched a salvo of missiles in the same heartbeat, followed, two beats later, by the flicker of lasers and accelerated particle beams.

  Dev felt the familiar drumbeat of excitement thundering in his linkage, the godlike thrill of destiny and power and martial glory. “Niner-niner!” he cried over the radio linkage, a code phrase meaning the call was for all spacecraft. “This is Sword. Commence fire!”

  “Targeting systems.”

  “Go.”

  “Life-support.”

  “And go.”

  “Communications. Switch off ship ICS. Going to squadron tactical.”

  “Switching to squadron taccom, and testing: alfa, bravo, charlie…”

  “Reading you on taccom, Three-five. Comtest is go.”

  Van’s mind wandered as Commander Cole went on to check the comm circuits of the rest of the squadron’s warflyers. Fighter pilots had a certain reputation, one reputedly going back centuries to the very first men to risk their lives in fragile, aerial combat machines, a reputation for being hard-living, hard-loving, hard-fighting bundles of testosterone and machismo. More often man not, the female members of the squadron came across as harder than the males, as though they had to work harder to prove that they were part of the fighter pilot fraternity.

  Still, that image had always been more for public consump­tion than a reality shared among the pilots themselves. A good pilot was part of an intricate and smooth-running machine, an intimate part of a team and not the lone wolf of popular ViRdrama. In many ways, he was more engineer than warrior, and jacking fighter or warflyer in combat more often than not required ice-cold focus and concentration, not fire-and-blood bravado.

  Sublieutenant Vandis had nonetheless done his best to live up to the image, a responsibility always encouraged by the other members of his squadron, men and women alike, wheth­er they were drinking with yujies in a public bar, or sharing there-I-was war stories with fellow pilots. It had been a long, long time, though, since he’d mingled in what the fraternity called “the real world,” so long that Vandis was beginning to think there was no world but the tight, close camaraderie of the junior officers’ mess and the squadron ready room.

  Kuso, the last time he’d been in a dirtside bar had been back on New America, just before the Impie invasion, hell, almost a year ago, now. He and Mario had jacked the tails of those three militia leggers. The last time he’d had real sex, the sweating, dirty, skin-on-skin kind with a willing
stranger, instead of the canned fantasies of ViRsex… yeah, the same night as the bar episode. Memories of that sweet little ningyo could still trigger erotic dreams.

  For nearly an entire year, then, he’d been living aboard the Zed, enclosed by gray walls, rarely seeing anyone but shipboard technicians and maintenance personnel, his yujies in Gold Squadron, and the other pilots of 1st Wing. He’d recjacked a lot, of course, including some fun and enthusiastic jackin’Jill three-ways with Lynn Kosta and Carey Graham, Gold Squadron’s two female pilots, but Van had always pre­ferred the real thing to electronic feeds, and gok the jackers who claimed you couldn’t tell the difference.

  He was sick of shipboard life. He wanted to walk dirt again… civilized dirt, not a vacant desert like Herakles or an alien jumble of surrealist art and jack-feed hallucinations like ShraRish.

  Van recognized that at least part of the frustration was this endless waiting in the dark, figurative and real, waiting for the order to launch. He was used to watching the battle unfold in his tac feed; even if he was a helpless spectator, at least he knew what the hell was going on!

  But Tarazed had been engulfed hours ago by one of those monster DalRiss transports. Since there were no electronic feeds from the Alyan ship to its cargo, the Zed was riding along in the darkness too, unable to present a tactical feed to the warflyers resting in the converted tanker’s bays and launch tubes. The only word Van had about the outside universe were periodic verbal updates by either Commander Cole or the Wing CO, Captain Bailey.

  “Right, everybody,” Cole’s voice said. “Twelve for twelve, checked and ready. Gold Eagle set for launch.” The Skipper sounded taut and hard, maybe a bit worried. Well, who the hell in their right mind wouldn’t be worried right now? He tried to picture Gold Eagle’s principal target, the Ryu-carrier, stretching across the heavens like a mobile fortress, then gave it up. He was nervous enough without deliberately conjuring up nightmares.

  “Wish they’d get a move on out there,” Sublieutenant Carey Graham said, her voice as sharp-edged as a monofilament blade.

  “Watch,” Cal Schmidt said with a chuckle. “They’ll wait until things are in a goking mess, then send us in to—”

  “Damp it down, Gold!” Cole’s voice snapped. “Fleet feed coming through!”

  “Warflyer wing! This is Sword!”

  The new voice came in through his cephlink by way of Van’sGuard’s new DalRiss radio circuit. Van recognized the voice—none other than Deadly Dev himself.

  “Your transport has just made a tactical shift and is less than eight hundred kilometers from your primary target. The larger ships will move in first and try to hammer down the Imperials’ PDLs and close defenses. I’ll give you the word to launch in about thirty more seconds.”

  Thirty more seconds. Van felt a quiver at the back of his thoughts, what his body might have felt as an anticipatory shudder rising from the hollow in the pit of his stomach. Strange. Commodore Cameron’s voice, his voiced thoughts, rather, had sounded fast-paced, almost racing. There’d been all kinds of who-was spreading through the Tarazed for the past few months, rumors that Cameron had mutated into some kind of Naga-human hybrid, rumors that he’d developed strange new mental powers, rumors that he’d formed a symbiotic link with the DalRiss. Van had discounted all of those stories as the mental short-circuitings of men and women cooped up too long without outside input. A fighter squadron was like any other close-knit group of people; deprive them of outside stimulus and they began creating their own.

  Time… time… God, it had been twenty seconds already. When were they going to get the word?

  “Warflyers! This is Sword!” Static swirled and spat. “Stand by!”

  Come on! Come on!

  “Launch warflyers!”

  “Gold Squadron, launch!”

  Stars exploded around Van’s head.

  Chapter 31

  The entire concept of space fighters needs a serious review by experts unbiased by the wilder and more romantic notions of this type of combat. After all, the exploits of fighter pilots have been the staple of the cheaper sort of fiction and ViRdrama for so long, it is necessary to examine the problem with a cold and skeptical eye. Consider! A space fighter, massing fifteen, maybe twenty tons, armed with a few lasers and some ship-to-ship missiles… how is such a toy going to fare against a behemoth massing a million times more? How is the pilot to get close enough to employ his weapons, how can he hope to survive even a near miss by a par­ticle beam powerful enough to burn through meter-thick duralloy sheath?

  —Shosho Nobuo Fujiwara

  Testimony before the Imperial Staff Command

  during hearings on military research appropriations

  C.E. 2439

  Dev’s order loosed the warflyers from Tarazed’s launch tubes, minnows to Karyu’s whale flung into the darkness four at a time. An instant after the DalRiss transports shifted in close to the Imperial squadron, the carrier had opened fire. Most of the shots missed completely, the ranging and targeting locks broken by the sudden spatial shifts of the Alyan ships. One DalRiss vessel, though, the one carrying the Constellation, glowed a dazzling white for an instant as megawatt lasers seared across its hull.

  Now the other Alyan transports were already opening up, however, unfolding like bizarre flowers, disgorging their cargoes, then flickering away into nothingness like fleeting wraiths. Constellation had to break free of the kilometer-wide starfish that had carried it this far, accelerating sharply on glowing starbursts of blue-white plasma; the Alyan ship, jolted by the release, began tumbling slowly through space, a hazy fog of crystallizing water vapor and air slowly englobing it.

  No human mind could have followed the rapid pace of events. Dev, his perceptions working at superhuman speed, could scarcely keep up.

  “Rebel! Move in close, toward the bow,” Dev ordered. “Sup­press the main laser batteries there and keep them from sniping at the fighters!” His thoughts, picked up by the Naga aboard Daghar, were relayed through DalRiss organic radios to comel-equipped communications personnel aboard each Confedera­tion vessel. “Tarazed! Start launching your wing, and keep launching, no matter what! Constellation, focus on the Ryu’s big guns, but keep an eye on those escorts! They’re coming up fast astern! Intrepid! Daring! Missiles! Use your missiles!”

  The Xenolink fed a steady chatter of voices back to Dev, scraps and snatches of conversations between ships, between pilots and gunners, even—as high-pitched electronic warbles that meant nothing to Dev—between the guiding AIs of the Confederation vessels.

  “This is Audacious! We’ve got a heavy concentration of fire coming up from three-five-niner. Charlie… see if you can give us some support there.…”

  “… launching fighters!…”

  “… One-two, this is One-five. Damn it, Gold, where are you?”

  “Niner-niner, this is Eagle. We have two Imperial frigates coming up the Ryu’s stern. Constellation, how about giving us some support here?…”

  “Watch it! Watch it! We’re taking fire from those bow guns!”

  “We’re hit! Rebel’s hit! Oh Jesus God Jesus!…”

  Rebel, cutting close past the Karyu less than one hundred meters above the monster ship’s prow, was speared by twin lances of coherent light that slashed her open from hab mod­ules to stern, spilling slush hydrogen into space in a vast, sparkling, amoebic cloud.

  To Dev’s mind’s eye, he seemed to be adrift in space, aware of his entire surroundings, though he’d narrowed the focus of his newly enlarged vision to that three-dimensional area of space where the battle was rapidly unfolding. At such impos­sibly close quarters and at relatively low speeds, things were happening with bewildering rapidity. He winced as he heard Rebel’s death scream, winced again as a short-range missile sank into the frigate’s hull and detonated with a silent, piercing strobe of blue-white light. He’d hoped to get the Confederation ships in so close that only a fraction of Karyu’s batteries could bear, but so heavily armed and armored was the R
yu-ship that a fraction of her firepower could still be devastating to relatively small and thin-skinned craft like a frigate.

  Seconds later, however, two spreads of missiles launched by Eagle and Constellation slammed into Karyu’s dorsal surface. High-explosive warheads detonated in rippling, silently pop­ping flashes that peeled open the big ship’s duralloy skin in gaping, black-edged blotches, smashed weapons turrets, crum­pled communications and fire control towers, and penetrated far enough to explode within deeply buried spaces. Karyu fired back; Eagle was struck in her port fairing by a laser beam that momentarily overloaded her power feeds to every weapons turret on that flank. With her portside PDLs off-line, a missile penetrated her ventral surface and detonated with a savage concussion. Air shrieked through ruptured bulkheads on decks three and four, and two ascraft cradled in their transport racks were transformed into twisted, half-molten wrecks.

  “Eagle!” Dev called. “Get closer! Get closer!” Safety—relative safety—for the Confederation squadron lay in moving so close to the Imperial giant that other Japanese vessels didn’t dare fire for fear of hitting their flagship, while Karyu herself could not bring her full firepower to bear on any one target.

  “Damn it, Commodore, I’m as close as I can goddamn get!” Lisa Canady’s voice snapped back. “Any closer and I’ll be goking the bastard!”

  But Eagle did begin moving closer, her 395-meter length sliding into the ink black shadow of the far larger Karyu. Huge patches on both warships were alive now with sullen red and orange heat, twisted, fiercely radiating scars where warheads had turned duralloy into glowing slag. Canady was cleverly maneuvering the Confederation destroyer into a dead zone behind and beneath the Karyu, where most of the larger vessel’s turrets had been smashed by Constellation’s missile barrage a moment before. The two Imperial frigates, however, were moving in fast, angling so close to Karyu’s hull that they could open fire on the Confederation ships without danger of hitting their larger consort.

 

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