by T. R. Harris
So when forty-five minutes later more mines began to appear on the screen, Kaylor was able to proceed through the field simply by keeping the side mines at a safe distance. They were also able to maintain their speed, which it was learned was the reason the side mines had not had an opportunity to lock-on earlier. All this new information was organized and relayed back to the fleet.
Operator Mannes Kelsum and the other three members of the task-unit established by the Lead-Commander were at a loss as to why none of the mines had locked on. The alien ship had cleared Zone Eighty-Nine without incident, and now they were in Seventy-Six, and still no lock or detonation.
LC Ioniff was furious. He called in his own lead, and soon a squadron of Kracori warships was dispatched to the area. Ioniff had wanted desperately for it to be his department that defeated the alien; now he would have to let that honor go to others.
And then Operator Kelsum noticed something strange. One of the mines was moving, not fast, not having locked on, yet it was moving along the exact same line as the alien spacecraft as plotted by the passive sensors. It took him a moment before he realized what had happened. He summoned LC Ioniff to his station.
“The mine appears to have been caught up in the narrow gravity wake of the alien craft,” he explained. “It is falling into the well, just the same as is the alien spacecraft, yet at a much slower rate.”
“But it has not locked-on?”
“No, it is operating independently of the metallic hull of the ship and simply following the gravity-well. It is a most-unusual event. The mine must have been situated in just the right location for this to happen.”
“Accelerate the mine to contact, Operator.”
“The mine will not make contact, not until the alien craft slows, my Ludif. The generators on the mine are not strong enough to effect an intercept.”
Ioniff thought hard for a moment. The mine would continue to follow the well, yet would always be far behind the vessel until it slowed. Yet the alien craft may not slow until it reached Elision, and the squadron sent to seek and destroy the craft might possibly cause it to speed away, not slow.
“Are there other minefields along its path?”
“No, my Ludif, and the vessel has not slowed during its transit of Seventy-Six.”
“No slowing at all?”
“None.”
“How could they do that and still survive?”
“Their very speed may be helping to prevent the mines from locking on. Those aboard the vessel have learned quickly.”
“Save your admiration for after they are destroyed, Operator,” Ioniff scolded. “How long until they are within the system?”
“Two hours at present speed, Lead-Commander.”
“And to squadron intercept?”
“The same. Most of our units were on station near the Corridor. In-system units are rare and located to the opposite side, the Corridor side.”
“They will have to slow when entering the system. That may be the time when we can stop them, either with the fleet vessels or with your mine, Operator.”
“I will continue to think on ways of slowing the vessel, my Ludif.”
“Very good, Operator Kelsum. You have done well.”
119
“We have contacts! Multiple contacts!” a petty officer on the bridge of The Trident called out.
“Identify,” Admiral Christian Bergmann commanded.
“Small ... probes—and active.”
“Activate jamming and countermeasures.”
“Eight confirmed bogies, located at various locations along the fleet. We’ve been seen, Admiral.”
“Shit! Lieutenant Porter, is our jamming having any effect?”
“Not much sir. They came on us so fast that even a second’s worth of data would have confirmed our presence, and a burst transmission could carry an incredible amount of data. Jamming appears to have restricted any outgoing transmissions now, yet the probes may be storing data for later transmission, once clear of our jamming. That’s how our probes operate.”
“Then we have to assume our location has been compromised,” Bergmann announced to the bridge. “Get those damned probes out of our space. Any word yet on the position of the Juirean fleet?”
“Give it another five, ten minutes, sir,” Lt. Porter said. “Our own drones are just now arriving on station.”
Bergmann bit his bottom lip as he paced the bridge deck. “Let me know the moment the probes have been either destroyed or chased away.”
“Aye, sir,” another voice said from across the bridge.
“Petty Officer Levinson, get the Fleet Commander up here.”
“Yes sir.”
“Clear, Admiral,” a voice cried out. “Clear space surrounding the fleet.”
“Helm, prepare for course change. Come about to one-six-five, up five, on my mark.”
“Helm aye.”
“Ready, on my mark ... mark!”
The huge Human fleet began a strong turn to starboard. It would take five to six minutes for all units to be on the new heading, but hopefully making a turn straight for Elision once more would hide them from the Juireans.
“Sit rep, Chris,” Fleet Admiral Jacob Nash ordered as he entered the bridge.
“We’ve been spotted. I just made a ninety-degree turn to starboard. That will head us back in the direction of Elision. To port would have aimed us for the Shield.”
“Good maneuver, Admiral,” Nash said. “Eventually we’re going to have to fight someone. I’d prefer it to be the Kracori and not the damn Juireans. This puts us in that position. Any word from Cain?”
“Just that they passed through a couple of minefields unscathed and that they’re nearing the Kracori system. He’s going to sweep around to the Corridor side and see if he can detect any units.”
“And if he finds the fleet?”
“Then he’s counting on the Pegasus to get him out of there fast.”
Nash stepped over to his command chair and slipped in. He called an enlisted man over and asked him to get a couple of coffees for the two admirals. “I think this seat is going to be my new home for the next few hours, Chris,” Nash said with a humorless smile. “It’s all coming down to the wire.”
120
There was a lot of space traffic in and around the Kracori star system, but most was commercial in nature. Adam didn’t know what to make of that, yet. Either it could be from the Kracori military having suffered a catastrophic defeat, or they were fully intact and on station in another part of the Void. The fact that the system wasn’t full of military craft was the clue he was looking for.
He ordered Kaylor not to enter the system, but rather to sweep to port and circle the system over to the Volseen Corridor side. It was in this region where Adam last knew the Kracori fleet to be on station.
“I have new contacts, Adam,” Jym reported.
“Where?”
“Below us and definitely vectoring in. Strong sigs; military craft without a doubt.”
Adam had wondered if they were being tracked through the minefields. It wouldn’t have taken much to do so. Tiny, passive monitors would have seen them come and go and then reported the course back to Elision. He was actually surprised the intercept units had not appeared before they reached the system; an indicator of a smaller, damaged fleet?
Five minutes later, he had his answer.
By then the pilothouse of the Pegasus was packed with all the inhabitants of the ship. “Holy crap! That’s a full fleet,” Andy Tobias exclaimed.
The long-range tracking screen was displaying a near solid line of contacts at the extreme range of their detectors. The computers were already analyzing the data and counting ships.
“Over three thousand,” Jym reported in a concerned voice.
“Any debris, any intermittent or weakened grav-sigs?” Adam asked, hope evident in his tone.
“None; this is an intact fleet, undamaged and ready for battle.”
“Send it, Jym. Get t
his to the fleet.”
“Yes sir.” Even Jym had taken to Human military protocol.
“I have a new spread of ships,” Ruszel cried out as Jym moved to the comm station to send the report to Admiral Nash. “Many spreads now. They are moving to block our progress.”
“Everyone not already strapped in, do so now!” Adam commanded.
“I have a CW-link coming in, Adam.”
“Put it on speaker—”
“It is not from your fleet.”
Adam craned his neck in Trimen’s direction. “It’s not, from where then?”
“Elision.”
“Our link was open? Shit!”
“Sorry, Adam, I was not aware to do otherwise,” Trimen said.
“It’s not your fault, Trimen. Go ahead and open the link.”
“Is that you, Adam Cain, back for another attempt to thwart the Kracori war effort?”
Adam elected to keep the link on audio only. He had no desire to look into the face of Langril Nomar Polimic again.
“In the flesh, Nomar. How are things down in your capital complex? I can recommend a good rehab contractor if you need one.”
“I assume that is some kind of witticism, now lost in translation. And still you keep trying. Nonetheless, I suppose you have come back to find out what happened to the glorious battle that was about to take place, just before you made your reckless and crude escape.”
“It worked; we escaped.”
“For now you are free. We shall see what the next few minutes will bring.”
“Speaking of that, can you get to the point? I’m a little busy right about now.”
“Of course you are. Now that your fleet has been discovered by the Juireans—and your fleet has discovered them—I assume you have much work to do, preparing for a battle against two full-strength fleets.”
“They reported this to you?”
“Yes, that is what allies do.”
Adam’s stomach tightened. “How the hell did you pull that one off?”
“I detect a question there, even with some rather odd phrasing, as usual. But if you must know, the Juireans have decided that it is the Humans who pose the greatest threat to them and not the Kracori, so we had common ground on which to build an agreement.”
“That’s bullshit.”
“Ah, that phrase again. It is no bullshit, Adam Cain. And now with your fleet trapped inside the Dysion Void, it will be the Humans who shall all die this day. And how you did gloat over the demise of the Kracori. Our Legend will survive—in fact grow—now that this alliance has been formed. And your world will lie open and vulnerable to the combined forces of the Kracori and the Juireans.”
Jym had returned to his station and was now waving his stubby arms emphatically. Adam motioned for him to transfer his screen to the main forward monitor. Now Adam saw the reason for Jym’s concern.
The vectoring units had now closed on the Pegasus, as Kaylor had slowed the ship as it approached the wide cone of starships spreading out in front of it. The six ships closing on them were now moving into attack formation; they would be opening fire very soon.
“Listen, Nomar, it’s been fun chatting with you, but I really have to go. But one last thing for you to ponder as the events unfold over the next few days.”
“What is that?”
“It’s not over until the fat lady sings.”
“That comment makes no sense, even in translation, Adam Cain.”
“And that is why you’re going to lose, asshole.”
Adam nodded and Trimen cut the link.
“Prepare to come about, Kaylor. We’ll have a better chance going against six Kracori than two hundred.”
Kaylor turned to face Adam, a near-panicked and frightened look on his face. “I am afraid to ask, but what does prepare to come about mean?”
Adam merely smiled. “It means get ready to turn around. We’re heading back the other way. And Jym, help Trimen take the recording of the conversation with Nomar and send it to the fleet.”
“Captain, what would you like the rest of us to do?” Admiral Tobias asked.
“Get Riyad on the weapons. He’s done a lot of firing of flash-cannon in his day. You can hang with him and offer your technical advice. Sherri and the Chief—just hold on. I’ll have us out of here in no time. Bring us abo—turn the ship, Kaylor, back the way we came.”
Vice-Commander Wic Zimorin watched as the target ship made a tight loop in front of the spread of warships fanned out from the main fleet.
“Prepare for a blanket salvo,” Wic ordered. “This ship is fast, so we must anticipate its actions before they occur. Fire on my command.”
The alien ship had now completed its turn and was heading directly for VC Wic and his squadron. At the speed they were approaching, he would have to fire his flash-cannon long before he would have under normal circumstance. Which was....
“Fire!”
The massive electric-blue bolts shot out of three locations on each on the six ships, creating a spread of eighteen deadly, roiling balls of energy covering a wide area of space between them and the alien spacecraft. The craft took evasive maneuvers, yet it was still buffeted by the explosions that took place at the end of the bolts’ target range.
And then the alien opened fire. The bolts from this craft were not as wide or as powerful as those from the Kracori warships, yet they seemed to be very intense for their size and were extremely accurate. Two of Wic’s ships took direct hits on their shields, which were overloaded and went down briefly. And then, almost as if it had been anticipated, two more bolts shot out from the alien craft even before the shields failed on his. They aimed directly at Wic’s ships with the temporarily damaged shields ... and the Kracori commander sat in stunned silence as he saw two of his six ships disappear from the active monitor.
With a boiling anger, Wic and the surviving four ships sent out two more rapid salvos at the alien vessel, yet because of the unbelievable speed of his opponent, only two of the twenty-four bolts struck the vessel. As luck would have it, these two strikes were enough to cause a marked decrease in the speed of the craft.
Yet it could still fight. The next barrage released from the enemy took out another of Wic’s ships, however, when it lined up for another shot, nothing happened.
Immediately, the alien craft began to make radical course corrections attempting to avoid a lock-on by Wic’s weapons batteries. He smiled. The weapons were down on the alien spacecraft; all they had left was their speed and maneuverability, and the speed had suffered as a result of Wic’s prior salvos.
Mirroring the screens from the ships on his flanks, Vice-Commander Wic took control of the weapons aboard all three ships and prepared to send a battle-ending barrage of hot energy right into the mouth of the enemy. He personally gripped the fire control button and began to squeeze.
Just then he heard a loud clang and felt a reverberation move from the rear of his ship to the forward section. He looked to his executive officer.
“Something has just attached itself to our hull. It could be—”
Chief Rutledge lay on the deck with a serious amount of blood escaping from his head. Sherri knelt over him applying pressure to the wound. Tobias and Trimen manned fire extinguishers, trying to damper the electrical fire that had started near the comm station, and the pilothouse was clouded with smoke, making Adam’s view of the forward tactical screen nearly impossible to see.
They were running out of options, and with three focusing rings offline, speed was one of them.
Just then a tiny flash appeared off in the distance through the glass viewport. Adam squinted at the tac screen to see if a series of new bolt-tracks were emanating from the alien spaceships. There were none, and the more he looked at the screen, the more he became confused. The middle ship of the three aligned against them was now gone, and the other two were drifting slowly away to either side, their grav-sigs barely registering.
Not one to question good fortune for more than a mom
ent, Adam ordered Kaylor to proceed at their best possible speed directly toward where the three craft had once been positioned. Even with three rings down, the Pegasus should still be able to stay ahead of the pursuing elements of the main Kracori fleet, assuming no other units moved in to cut off their escape route.
“What happened?” Ruszel shouted from the nav station. “I registered a massive explosion in the middle of their formation.”
“We’ll figure that out later,” Adam said. “Right now, make sure we’re clear of all hostiles—and get us out of here as fast as possible.”
“Yes Adam Cain,” Ruszel said, a loud cough escaping his lungs as the room continued to fill with the excess smoke that was unable to be drawn away by the ship’s emergency ventilation system.
Adam looked around at the scene of controlled disorder. That’s when his eyes fell upon Master Chief Geoffrey Rutledge. He unbuckled and ran to his side. There were tears actively flowing down Sherri’s cheeks as she held a blood-soaked bandage against the head of the ex-Navy SEAL.
Adam pressed his fingers against the carotid artery of the Chief’s bloody neck, shifting his fingers several times, all with the same results. The pulse was gone.
And so was Geoffrey Rutledge.
Operator Kelsum’s pulse was racing; it soared to an almost unbelievable level when Lead-Commander Ioniff stalked up to his station.
“What happened?” The LC’s voice was a high-pitched squeal, causing all eyes in the room to turn toward him.
“Apparently the pursuing spacecraft moved into the path of the mine, and once it caught up to the battle, it attached itself to a friendly vessel.”
“Could you not deactivate it?”
“It all happened so suddenly, my Ludif.”
“Ludif? I am not your Ludif—not now. You are relieved, Operator Kelsum, and are to report yourself to Command for disciplinary actions.”