The Woman Who Lost Everything (The Warlord Book 3)

Home > Science > The Woman Who Lost Everything (The Warlord Book 3) > Page 14
The Woman Who Lost Everything (The Warlord Book 3) Page 14

by M. D. Cooper


  “Resume course for that flagship,” Katrina ordered. “Let’s see what they do with us coming for them.”

  She wished she could avoid watching the main engagement around Nesella, but she knew it was her duty to at least observe. The light lag between her and the bulk of her fleet would make any directives useless by the time they arrived. She had to trust that the MDF knew what they were doing, and were prepared to put their lives on the line to protect their system.

  So far, they appeared to be doing just that. Odis and the MDF had mounted a valiant defense, and the leading edge of Leena’s fleet was in range, harrying the enemy as they closed with Regula.

  It was a strange battle, with the fleets so spread out. Parts of the first engagement were already over, ships swept past one another, now on long braking burns as they arced around the edges of the battlespace to come back for another pass.

  Dozens more ships from both sides drifted in the dark: some dead and lifeless, others burning, still more venting atmosphere, spinning on their way to oblivion.

  A few ships detonated when they took too much damage, and one ship lost bottle containment, an antimatter explosion flaring out amidst the chaos.

  The exploding ship was a Blackadder destroyer in close defense of Nesella. The blast hadn’t damaged the station, but it had destroyed another Adder ship, along with four of the enemy.

  Katrina knew that antimatter bottles were notoriously hard to breach, and suspected it was intentional. She wasn’t pleased to see antimatter in use like that, but she couldn’t help but approve of how the desperate defense caused the Boller ships to give Nesella a wider berth.

  Even so, the station was not coming through unscathed. It was too large to shield perfectly, and BWSF beams and kinetics were breaching shields and impacting the station itself far more than Katrina had expected.

  Troy announced.

  Suddenly, a notion occurred to Katrina. The beginnings of an idea that could end this entire fight before it escalated further.

  “Jordan! Get an assault team to meet me in the shuttle bay. We’re going to pay the Bollers a visit.”

  “What!?” Jordan’s mouth hung slack. “What are you—”

  “I’m going to end this,” Katrina replied as she rushed off the bridge.

  THE ADMIRAL

  STELLAR DATE: 02.07.8512 (Adjusted Gregorian)

  LOCATION: BWSS Nova Star

  REGION: Kora, Midditerra System

  Admiral Pierson let out a low whistle as he watched the group of Midditerran ships in the interlocked shield bubble destroy a cruiser.

  “That’s either the smartest—or the craziest—maneuver I’ve ever seen,” he said while shaking his head.

  “Not that effective, though, sir,” Major Doma replied from the other side of the holotable. “At that rate, they can destroy all of our ships in…oh, about a year.”

  Pierson gave a soft laugh. “I did give ‘crazy’ as an option. Tell FG Seventy-Two to cease pursuing that enemy formation. Let them flit about, boiling the hulls off their ships. When this is done, we’ll take care of them.”

  Major Doma nodded and passed the order, while Pierson surveyed the rest of the battlespace. His ships were taking a pounding—the MDF and their pirate comrades were putting up a good fight. He’d feared they’d defend their system zealously, and that fear was proving true.

  Many of the BWSF strategists had been convinced that the Midditerrans would flee in the face of a force the size of Pierson’s, but he had disagreed.

  Most systems had allies, people who would come to their aid—or at least harbor refugees. Midditerra had no such friends. If they were defeated, there was nowhere for them to flee. They’d be expelled from any nearby system they attempted to seek shelter in.

  Pierson knew that the Midditerrans understood this was a battle they had to win.

  Major Doma frowned at the battlespace, enlarging a section of the conflict. “Huh…that group in the shield bubble is coming toward us.”

  “Intercept?” Pierson asked.

  “Close. They were already pointed in our general direction. Maybe they’re just trying leave the battlespace. It’s what I’d do, in their position.”

  Pierson cocked an eyebrow at Doma, then glanced at Colonel Reg. “Colonel. I want you to work up strike scenarios to board those ships without too much damage. There’s a chance the Streamer Woman is aboard one of them.”

  “I’m in agreement with that assessment,” Colonel Reg replied. “It’s possible that ship that arrived last is her ship, too. Its hull profile has changed, but if you strip away most of the cargo pods, it is a close match.”

  Pierson agreed with the colonel. “Well then, all the more reason to be careful.”

  Pierson knew that he could very shortly be at a crossroads. His orders were to find the most expeditious means to capture the Streamer Woman—and her ship, if possible.

  However, he’d already lost hundreds upon hundreds of ships. He wasn’t prepared to leave his people behind once he had the woman captured. Taking this planet and station, at the very least, was a must. He also had to mount S&R operations to help Admiral Dalia retrieve her lost personnel.

  No, better to have her focus on that now. There’s no point in trying to take Teegarten Station anymore—though those planet pushers would be quite the prize as well.

  “Doma, tell Admiral Dalia to fall back. She needs to rescue any survivors and destroy any damaged ships. No need to let these pirates salvage more military craft than they already have.”

  “Yes, Admiral,” Doma replied.

  Pierson glanced at the holo before him, considering concentrating his rear fleet elements on Nesella station rather than the MDF ships. The station housed more weapons systems than he’d expected; taking it now would remove the enemy’s stronghold, and could scatter their fleets, making them easier to pick off in the second pass.

  The chaos of Nesella’s destruction would also benefit his endeavors. The Midditerrans could fight all they wanted, but the outcome of this battle was a foregone conclusion.

  He passed the orders to the rear formations, and then looked for the small group of ships he was now all but certain held what he was seeking.

  “Wait…where are they?”

  “Sir?” Doma asked, looking down at the holo.

  “The shield-bubbled Midditerrans. They’re gone.”

  Doma opened her mouth to reply, when proximity alarms sounded, warning of ships within one kilometer of the Nova Star.

  “Black night, it’s them!” Doma all but shouted, as more alarms sounded, indicating that the ship had taken damage.

  Pierson focused the battlespace on his flagship and saw the enemy’s shield bubble pressed against the Nova Star. Holes from plasma strikes were venting from a hundred locations, while beams tore into his ship, disabling point defenses.

  Just as suddenly as the attack had started, the enemy stopped firing.

  Pierson knew what was coming next.

  Sure enough, over two-dozen assault craft launched from the enemy vessels, crossing the gulf to the Nova Star.

  “They’re insane,” Doma whispered.

  “No. Cunning,” Pierson replied, as the ship’s captain called over the 1MC and shipnet, ordering all hands to prepare to repel boarders.

  Pierson checked his sidearm. If the Streamer Woman had launched an attack aimed at his ship, there was only one target she would have in mind.

  THE WARLORD

  STELLAR DATE: 02.07.8512 (Adjusted Gregorian)

  LOCATION: BWSS Nova Star

  REGION: Kora, Midditerra System

  Katrina peered around a corner and fired her rifle at the retreating enemy soldiers. One of her kinetic rounds hit a woman in the back, and she dropped to the ground.

  “Advance,” Katrina called back to the eight Adders with her, and they moved ahead, securing the corridor while Kat
rina followed behind.

  she passed the feed to the AI, who was correlating the information with what he and Demy knew of BWSF capital ship layouts.

 

  Katrina reached the end of the corridor, where the Adders were standing over the woman Katrina had dropped.

  “Shit, that sucks for her,” Lloyd said, pointing at the writhing woman on the deck. “Armor fractured from the shot, and I think it broke her spine.”

  Katrina looked at the woman, who had stopped moving, though she was still moaning in pain.

  “I’ll do better next time.” She flipped her rifle to pulse-mode before firing twice at the soldier’s head. The point-blank pulse shot cracked her helmet, and blood began to leak out.

  “Stars,” one of the Adders whispered.

  “No one’s going to be coming for her,” Katrina replied. “This was a kindness.”

  No one argued, and she pointed down the right-hand passage.

  “That way.”

  The team worked their way down the passage until they reached another intersection.

 

 

  Katrina nodded as she peered down the passageways.

 

  “OK, folks, we’ve gotta head up a deck. There’s a ladder shaft down that left-hand passage.”

  Lloyd and one of the other Adders took the lead, and Katrina followed. They were moving down the corridor at a good pace, when a shot rang out from behind them. Katrina spun to see one of the Adders in the back of the group fall.

  “They’re behind us!” she called out, and four of the Adders turned, firing down the passage as they picked up the pace.

  Katrina zoomed her vision, spotting a half-dozen enemies at the far end of the passage. She took careful aim and squeezed off a trio of kinetic rounds. One of the enemies fell, and she took aim at another of the Bollers, firing once before the rest fell back behind cover.

  “At the ladder,” Lloyd called, and Katrina heard the whump of a conc grenade going off one deck up. She fired more rounds at the corners of the hall where the Bollers had retreated, keeping them pinned as much as she could.

  She was almost at the ladder, swapping out a magazine when one of the Bollers leant out around the corner and fired a beam down the passageway.

  It brushed against her thigh, burning away most of her metal skin across a ten-centimeter patch, before hitting one of the Adders behind her.

  Katrina bit back a scream and increased the frequency of her shots, waving for the other Adders to all climb the ladder first.

  Seconds later, she was the last one in the passage. She lobbed a refraction grenade down the corridor before holding an arm up to her teammates.

  A strong hand clamped on her wrist and pulled her up while she continued to fire rounds through the refractive haze.

  “You good, Warlord?” Lloyd asked when he set her down on the deck.

  Katrina looked down at her thigh, surprised to see a larger divot missing from her leg than she expected.

  “Fine. Let’s move,” she replied with a grin.

  “Are you in shock?” Lloyd asked, a look of concern visible behind his visor.

  One of the Adders passed her a canister of biofoam, and she sprayed a covering over the wound. “No, it’s just funny; my skin always hurts, but this might actually hurt less. Now c’mon, let’s move.”

  If Lloyd was perturbed by the statement, it wasn’t visible behind his visor as he directed two Adders to stay behind at the ladder shaft, and the rest moved twenty paces down the hall to the comm node entrance.

  “This it?” Lloyd asked.

  Sam replied.

  Katrina agreed. Getting here had been harder than she thought—and that was even with over a dozen assault teams working their way through the Nova Star, providing distractions and masking the true purpose of the boarding.

  She placed a hand over the access panel and fed nano into the control system, bypassing the encryption systems and directly triggering the door mechanism.

  “No matter how much security you put on a door, somewhere there’s a physical lock and a motor that moves it,” Katrina said as the door slid aside. “Just have to know where they are.”

  She stepped into the room that doubled as both an auxiliary comm shack, and the location of the comm NSAI. The node on the far side of the room was larger than Katrina had expected, though she surmised that it was probably because of the ship’s role in the Boller Fleet.

  No one was visible, though there was a half-eaten protein bar on the console, and Katrina gestured toward a corner on the far left side of the room where a cabinet lay.

  Lloyd and another of the Adders strode across to the cabinet and wrenched open the doors to find a woman hiding inside. They yanked her out, and Katrina read her name tag.

  “OK, Lieutenant Sarah, you’re going to give me unfettered access to this system. We have some new orders to pass to your fleet.”

  Sarah shook her head and didn’t reply, her expression scared, but defiant.

  “Do you know who I am?” Katrina asked. “I’m the Streamer Woman you’re all looking for. I have the technology to make you do what I want, and you won’t like it.”

  As Katrina spoke, tendrils of nano formed on her metal fingertips, building up toward the woman, who began to quake with fear.

  “OK, OK, what do you want?” she gasped.

  “Provide your codes, and then pass the orders I give you to the rest of the fleet.”

  “I can’t,” the woman wailed. “You’re going to kill them.”

  Katrina shook her head. “I can’t really do that with orders. However, I can confuse them and force them into a retreat.”

  “No, no…” The woman shook her head.

  “I admire your courage,” Katrina said as she reached out and touched her hand to the woman’s head, feeding the nano into the BWSF lieutenant’s body.

  Sarah screamed briefly, then her body went limp in the grip of the two Adders.

  “Let her go,” Katrina ordered, trying not to look at the expressions of horror on her own people’s faces.

  Lloyd and the other Adder released their hold, and Sarah shuffled to the console and input her access credentials. Katrina Linked with the woman’s mind and provided orders that would confuse the Boller fleet, sending half their forces out of weapons range, while the others moved into vulnerable positions.

  Then she passed the BWSF encryption algorithms back to Sam so he could share them with the MDF and canton ships. Now they’d have unfettered access to the BSWF comms.

  “We’ve got company!” one of the Adders down the corridor called out.

  Troy advised.

  “OK, team, let’s get on the move,” Katrina called out, signaling her Adders to knock the woman out before she relinquished control.

  In the corridor, the two Adders at the ladder shaft were firing down at attackers. The deck was glowing nearby, and Katrina signaled them to fall back before the enemy melted it out from under them.

  She led the Adders through the passageways, toward where their boarding ship waited.

  she asked Sam.

 

  Katrina checked their position in the enemy ship. “OK, team, we need to get to the end of this passageway, then down three decks and we’ll almost be at our—”

  Troy interrupted. t their admiral off the ship, they’re going to blow it!>

  Katrina took off at run, sliding across the deck to the ladder shaft and dropping a conc down as the Adders raced after her. The grenade went off, and she swung down the shaft, dropping three decks before grabbing onto the rails and stopping herself.

  She vaulted to the deck and was covering the approaches when the entire ship shuddered. She held onto the ladder as the a-grav systems went offline.

 

  The ship shook again, and then white light poured through the corridor, slamming Katrina into a bulkhead. Air started racing past her. She was about to activate her magboots when another concussive wave rolled through the ship.

  She lost her grip on the ladder and flew down the corridor, slamming into the bulkheads, then into a stack of conduits. Her back hit something hard enough to break ribs, and her head smashed into the deck, then everything went black.

  FALLEN

  STELLAR DATE: 02.07.8512 (Adjusted Gregorian)

  LOCATION: Voyager

  REGION: Regula, Midditerra System

  Troy watched in horror as BWSF beams cut into the Nova Star, tearing the ship to shreds. He mapped their firing pattern and realized that Katrina was in the thick of it.

  She wasn’t going to make it off the enemy ship.

  “We have to pull back,” Rama said, her voice strained. “They’re going to shoot right through their own ship and take us out!”

  Troy replied, unwilling to retract the shields while Katrina was outside their protection.

  “If she makes it to an assault ship, we can extend the shield around her,” Carl said. “But if we all die, there’s nowhere for her to go to!”

  Troy spent another second considering possible options before finally agreeing with Carl’s logic—logic that would likely see Katrina’s end.

  he replied to his crew before addressing Sam and Jordan.

 

‹ Prev