Book Read Free

Space Fleet Sagas Foundation Trilogy: Books One, Two, and Three in the Space Fleet Sagas

Page 31

by Don Foxe


  “BooRah,” which was the last thing Genna, or Adele remembered of the evening.

  CHAPTER 10

  Genna planned on giving a personal good-bye and good-luck to Adele. Instead, she held onto the toilet in her cabin’s head, unable to stand, and afraid to lie down.

  Kennedy sent their regards to the AI of the SF PT-109, Rosy, who would pass them to Adele, who had not emerged from her cabin. Nothing in Fleet protocol required the avatar’s presence for the official launch of the ship. Few rules existed regarding Space Fleet avatars, as only two currently served.

  Captain Tal, feeling queasy herself, refused to let it show. Slowly, and carefully, she piloted the ship away from the dock, and into space. The AI helped assure the ship made it up, and out of the opened roof without incident.

  On the viewing platform, crew members from the PT-109 were present for the 99’s departure. They stood alongside MSD personnel; civilian and military. A delegation from Earth, led by Fleet Admiral Patterson, and including, in toto, the Governing Board of the UEC, cheered when a bottle of Champagne hovered out, and shattered against her hull. Their newest spaceship disengaged from the magno-clamps to more cheers.

  Five high-ranking officers from the 109 wore sunglasses, against accepted protocol for a Fleet event. Col. Anton Gregory, without shades, appeared alert, and engaged in the ceremonies.

  As the Roosevelt moved away, Patterson moved to Cooper’s side. Sotto voce, she asked, “Celebrate a bit much last night?”

  “I’d say about exactly enough,” Coop replied, not looking directly at the shorter officer.

  “Meeting in my office, in one hour,” Admiral Patterson said. “I’ll bring Nathan, and you can make sure Anton is there.”

  “Yes, Ma’am. One hour.”

  ****

  Nathan handed Cooper a data stick.

  “Everything you, and Hiro require is on the stick. When he inserts it into his scanning systems, it will automatically adjust them to pinpoint deposits of the crystals. It could locate storage locations, if they store crystals in sufficient quantities.”

  “Nathan asked to go with you, and was denied,” Patterson’s use of first names indicated this was a more personal, off-the-record meeting. “We cannot afford to lose him. Manny Hernandez will join you. He has the expertise to get the tachyon cannons operational on Rys. He is as familiar with crystal technology as Nathan.”

  “Don’t think Manny would like knowing he’s expendable,” Nathan quipped.

  “Coop and Anton are to make damn sure no one is expended,” Patterson responded. “Coop, it is also your responsibility to stay on mission. Your priority is getting crystals. If you make friends with the races on Rys, it’s a plus, and important. But if you have to use force to get those crystals, I am giving you final authorization for the use of that force.”

  Patterson turned her attention to the Russian. “Anton, your Marines are our back-up, if diplomacy fails. You will be greatly outnumbered.”

  Anton shrugged. “Outnumbered is not outgunned. We will face gem cutters and miners. I’m sure they are tough enough, but everything we know suggests they are not fighters. We also have the 109, and Demon watching over us. If we must use force, we will have force-capable assets.”

  Patterson sat back before continuing. “No one can know the potential military aspect of this mission unless absolutely necessary. Anton, you have to prepare your Marines for the possibility of a forced extraction of materials, without letting them know who they may confront.”

  The Marine Colonel replied, “No problem. It’s how we train anyway. Always train for the probable, expect the improbable, and treat enemy combatants with respect for their ability, regardless of how stupid they may appear.”

  “Nathan, final report on the 109’s tachyon refit, as well as crystals, and materials for the weapons designated for Rys?" Patterson seemed glad to leave the subject of potentially going to battle, if not war, with the Lisza Kaugh, and the Dwards.

  “The new weapons systems on the 109 perform to specs. Material needed to build six surface-based cannons are stored aboard. Once the 99’s trial is complete, the 109 can take off,” Trent informed them.

  “Dr. Trent, and I must return to Earth,” Patterson said. “Because we will not be here when the 109 departs, I will say this now. God’s speed and good luck.”

  CHAPTER 11

  Two weeks passed without incident. Time spent in drills, and practice with the tachyon cannon. Crew and ship integrated its firepower with the other armaments.

  The John F. Kennedy’s flight pattern placed her near the Mars Shipyard and Docks orbital station when word arrived the Franklin Delano Roosevelt, SF PT-99, had returned to EMS2. Systems functioned above standards. Every trial taken, and passed. The JFK was free to begin its mission to Rys.

  Travel required four uneventful days in space-fold to reach the rim of the solar system. Once there, the reduced gravitational effects from the sun, planets, and objects within the system allowed them to operate the crystal-laser array at maximum output. The ship entered natural space to verify conditions, and beam a good-bye to MSD.

  ENS Harper Leigh, twenty-three, and a statuesque brunette at six-feet, occupied the pilot’s seat. Coop ordered the ship into space-fold, and Leigh directed them toward the Rys system.

  The only other person on the bridge, LCMD Sonoritsch, a Bosine, and former Assistant Captain of the Star Gazer cruise ship, operated the Operations/Tactical console. He methodically ran potential scenarios for confrontations between the 109, and Zenge battleships. The threat-analysis based largely on tactical data obtained during the Star Gazer battle. Op-Tac programs would determine possibilities for success, or failure of a confrontation. The gaming involved the 109 facing a battle group of Zenge warships. The LCMD varied the 109’s weaponry from a full compliment, to having no weapons available, to a number of possibilities between.

  “Anything interesting, Sonoritsch?” Coop asked. ENS Leigh’s head came up to listen.

  “The 109 seems to do fairly well against ten or fewer Zenge ships. With either the tachyon cannon, or the railgun functioning, and laser cannon operational, we win. Loss of the tachyon cannon reduces our chances of success against numbers by twenty-percent. If we lose the railgun, we are more likely to get killed than kill. If only lasers and torpedoes remain available, we have a chance of escaping with minimal damage, while rendering six Zenge ships non-operational. If we possess torpedoes alone, or we deplete our torpedoes, and have no weapons available, then I would suggest we use our speed to get the hell away, and fight again another day.”

  All three wore Fellen-designed translators, and Leigh snuffled at the last comment. With translators, you were unsure how near the intended meaning a remark might land. In this case, Coop, and Leigh decided they heard exactly what Sonoritsch meant to say.

  “Commander, you have the bridge,” Coop told him. “I have an appointment with Dr. Kimura." The bridge of the 109 performed less formally than the traditional Navy ships modeled by Space Fleet crews. Coop did not require a reply, nor expect the Bosine to actually take the command chair. He left him to his war games. ENS Leigh would monitor ship’s systems until relieved.

  Coop’s appointment with Dr. Kimura had nothing to do with the doctor’s expertise as a planetologist. Hiro Kimura came to the Space Ranger Project from a private para-military group which protected the last remaining royalty of Japan. While no one admitted to it, the group was rumored to consist of Samurai warriors. Hiro selected to represent the Japanese, because he was the best they had.

  In his cabin, Coop changed into his training gi, a black karate uniform with red stripes. He reverently removed a katana sword from a secure storage unit. The weapon gifted him by Hiro, nearly three decades earlier. During the Space Ranger Project, the two discovered they were evenly matched in hand-to-hand combat, and both proficient with edged weapons. They sparred whenever their paths crossed with time available to schedule a session. The upcoming session would occur in the Marine
s’ training area. The third match held in the past six weeks. Hiro won the first, and Coop the second. The first two featured wood Kendo swords. This time they would practice using their personal weapons. First cut decided the victor.

  Coop, running late, quickly completed dressing, cinching his black belt around the pull-over top. He took the shortest route to the training space. With sheathed katana in his left hand, he entered the designated studio, and was nearly pushed back by the roar of the crowd inside.

  Hiro stood apart, across the room, on a corner of the mat serving as their ring. He joined his sparring partner to chants of “Coop, Coop,” led by two blue females.

  Hiro wore traditional bottoms, flared at the calf, and cinched at the ankles. He wore no shirt, displaying a six-pack, muscled chest, shoulders and arms. The Japanese warrior-scientist shrugged as Coop neared. “I believe word has spread of a grudge match,” he told the taller Cooper.

  “And I believe I know which two played a hand in spreading the word,” Cooper replied, eyeing Sky and Storm. The pair seated on benches no more than five feet from the matted area. “Do I smell popcorn?”

  “It would also appear Chef Sandro has provided refreshments. And Col. Gregory is, I understand, in charge of wagers.”

  Cooper looked around, and spied Anton Gregory standing on a crate, with a tablet in hand, inputting credits wagered, and by whom. Cooper yelled at the Russian, “Odds?”

  Anton smiled. To be heard over the fifty-something people, humans and aliens, filling the training room, he yelled back, “Hiro, by a mile. I’m keeping the odds down on purpose, to persuade a few people to lay a few credits on how long you’ll last.”

  Captain Cindy Shah, Anton’s top officer, and the person in charge of Marine’s hand-to-hand combat training on board, would act as referee. “When people heard you would fight with real edged weapons, everybody on board, not stuck with a job, decided to show up,” she said to both. “As referee, I fully intend to stay the hell out of the way, and not interfere in any manner whatsoever. When I see blood, I’ll blow my whistle, and the match is over.” She left them to join Sky and Storm.

  Coop and Hiro nodded. Fighting with distractions constituted a major part of learning to fight the proper way. The crowd would only bother them up to the point the duel began. Coop backed away from Hiro, stepping backwards on the mat, and across twenty-four feet, until he stood in the opposite corner. He knelt, and placed his sheathed sword on the mat. Hiro mirrored his actions. Both placed foreheads to the mat, with both hands on their swords.

  After a heartbeat, and in unison, they removed the katanas, blades up. The crowd quieted. The singing of the swords unsheathing filled the room. With left hands, they placed sheaths off the mat, then rose fluidly from kneeling to standing position. They stepped to the center of the mat, slight bows of respect exchanged.

  A sword fight is commonly over quickly. Swordsmen hardly ever use more than a fraction of the techniques and strategies learned over years of practice. Cooper, actually more comfortable with a spear or stick, had taken to the sword quickly. He learned a great deal from Hiro, and other sword masters, over the years.

  There was no official start. They would not fight in rounds. The match would begin with first strike, and end with blood.

  Hiro struck first using the most fundamental Japanese sword cut. From an overhead position, with the sword perfectly horizontal, he cast his katana out, much like casting a fishing rod by pulling with the left hand at the bottom. Using the hand like a lever, aiming for contact with Coop’s head or shoulder. The follow-through would bring the sword down, to stop horizontally again. The action done without power, but with incredible speed, allowing the blade to drop quicker than the eye could follow.

  Hiro did not use too much force in the right hand, which was simply guiding the blade. His intention was to cut Cooper, not slice through him.

  Cooper raised his weapon with both hands, catching Hiro’s blade cross-wise. His speed matching the Japanese master, and his strength halting the downward track of the katana.

  With his sword already at horizontal for the block, Coop continued the swing, much like the basic attack Hiro initiated. The blade begins facing out horizontally, sliding beneath Hiro’s sword, and levered by the left hand, arcing out with the cut moving back toward’s his opponent’s torso. The tactic designed to make contact with the target, and cut through to the other side.

  Designed, but failing when Hiro stepped back. Coop’s katana swung through its arc, and into open air.

  Hiro countered with a vertical strike. A vertical cut designed to target the right side of Cooper’s shoulder, and exit through the armpit. The strike began in the same position as the basic overhead cut he used to start the match. He employed leverage with his left hand, tilting the blade slightly onto a diagonal path.

  You can tell a Japanese sword is swung properly by the sound it makes cutting through the air. As his arms extended, momentum should carry the blade through the target, finishing in a position slightly lower than horizontal, finally breaking with the elbows touching the body.

  But Hiro’s arms failed to reach full extension. Coop’s backhand sweep blocked the sword, pushing it away, as he pivoted through the block, spinning to deliver a horizontal slash to his friend’s torso.

  Off balance, the Japanese martial arts master whipped the blade up, backwards and down, catching Coop’s blade before it could complete the sweep.

  The match flowed into a rhythmic dance combining the major categories of Japanese sword training from Iaido, kenjutsu, and kendo. The audience would not discern the differences. At the speed the two crossed swords, there was hardly time between collective gasps, as a blow delivered became blocked, to applause, as one or the other avoided a blow by ducking, or tumbling, or twisting out of the path of an incredibly quick strike.

  Five minutes into the match, Hiro was covered in sweat. Sweat dripped from Coop’s hair, and off the cuffs of his gi. Both men wore headbands, to keep perspiration out of their eyes, and wristbands, to keep their hands dry. This did nothing for the audience, especially those sitting closest to the action, sprayed repeatedly with sweat when arms, legs, and bodies flashed by.

  Two minutes more, and both contestants appeared winded. Despite re-engineered strength, speed, and endurance, the match taxed them. It became more dangerous. In the beginning, despite the speed, and power expended, the two masters always remained under control. As they grew weary, the chance one would get seriously injured increased.

  Looking to finish the match, Hiro leapt high, and launched a front kick at Coop’s sternum. It was a feint to get him to pivot left, or right, and away from the kick. As Coop pivoted on his left foot, Hiro jabbed his sword toward Coop’s unprotected, and now exposed front left side. The thrust did not carry sufficient momentum to cause serious injury, but the blade could nick him, ending the match.

  Coop had no time for a block, and his pivot shifted his balance. He could not pivot a second time before Hiro’s blade landed. He simply collapsed to his knees, folding his upper body back. His body doubled over his heels. Hiro’s front kick crossed overhead. Twisted in the attempt to nick Coop with the tip of his sword, Hiro exposed the left side of his torso. Coop’s raised katana raked along his ribs, leaving a red line, eight-inches in length.

  Cindy’s shrill whistle cut through the mad cheering and foot stomping.

  Cooper let his sword-hand drop. His shoulders pressed to the mat, his heart hammering the inside of his chest.

  Hiro landed, realized he had been cut, and sank to his knees. His head bent forward, forehead against the mat, palms down, keeping him from collapsing. His sword left lying to his side.

  Gregory threw cool, wet towels on top of both men. He lifted Hiro to his feet. Sky and Storm did the same for Coop.

  The Captain, and the doctor faced each other, and bowed.

  Gregory said, “Best ten minutes ever, without a woman or a drink.”

  Captain Cindy Shah took Hiro from Gregory,
and whispered in his ear. From the Japanese sword master’s smile, Cooper assumed Hiro was about to have his wound cared for, along with his psyche. When the two walked off together, he became quite sure.

  Gregory watched his first officer, and Hiro leave, then turned his attention back to Cooper.

  “Your two ladies picked up about 1,000 credits,” he told the still-winded captain. “Plus, I made ten-percent on everything wagered. Not a bad day. You stink to high heaven. Could you please go find a shower?”

  “Yes,” Storm whispered, adding a purr, “a shower sounds perfect.”

  Sky agreed. “It does sound good, even though I’m already very wet.”

  CHAPTER 12

  IN THE VOID BETWEEN STAR SYSTEMS

  The 109 traveled within the void of folded space. Science, principally physics, was unable to fully explain the phenomenon of space-fold. The term itself, used more as a metaphor, than a designation. A single sheet of paper could not accurately represent space. Folded, to bring points on the sheet nearer, too simplistic a demonstration of space bent by the crystal array. Time, though not always linear, should remain constant. The Martian array caused the space in front of a ship to compress, or fold. It concurrently compacted time. The result actually space-fold-time-abridged travel. While scientists on Earth and Mars attempted to discover explanations, the John F. Kennedy simply employed it to journey between star systems in days, instead of centuries.

  Captain Cooper, in the command chair, taking his bridge shift, watched the people around him at work. A crew had little to accomplish while in space-fold. It was instructive to observe how people utilized their time. Everyone engaged improving their systems, their control, and their reaction times. He had not called for a drill. This was self-improvement.

  The current bridge crew would have the same station assignments when the 109 arrived at the Quentle system. Captain Javaari Canedee's presence, the one exception. Canedee, a Mischene military officer captured and held by the Zenge, was among the captives freed during the Star Gazer battle.

 

‹ Prev