Kris considered that and chose the nap.
Jack woke her an hour before they were to hit the jump.
“Did they get a good look at our renegade when it made its jump?” Kris asked.
“The Sisu, out of the Scanda Confederation planet of the same name,” Nelly reported, “jacked its acceleration up to 2.5 gees fifteen seconds before it jumped. It went through the jump at forty revolutions, counterclockwise.”
“It appears our girl did her homework,” Jack said.
“Do you know where she jumped to?” Kris asked Nelly.
“There are three systems I think she might have ended up in. Two have fuzzy jumps. I don’t know if the Sisu has the gear to spot them, Kris.”
“We’ll just have to wait and see if we end up in the same system with her and where she’s headed, now won’t we?”
“Patience is a virtue. You should develop it sometime, Your High-handedness,” Nelly said.
“Nelly, I have to put up with that lip from Abby. Just because she’s not here doesn’t mean you have to give it to me.”
“I know. But now that I have had the chance, I enjoy giving it to you all on my own.”
“Kris, may I suggest you stop while you’re behind?” Jack said.
Since they were alone, Kris stuck her tongue out at Jack.
“Do that again when we aren’t parboiled in these damn eggs and see what it gets you.”
Kris grinned. “I’m thinking of it.”
“Well, quit. It’s all going to waste.”
On that note, they motored out onto the bridge.
Captain Drago, looking somewhat better for having napped as well, motored out of his in-space cabin and took his place at the center of his hive. “Anything change while I was catching a few z’s?”
“Nothing has happened at the jump since the Sisu used it,” the navigator reported.
“Did sensors give us their feed on the Sisu’s status as it jumped?”
“Yes, Captain. We have the exact velocity within ten centimeters a second. Their RPMs were a ragged 39.64 per minute. They were accelerating at 2.47 gees for 14.71 seconds before the jump. All this is loaded in every ship in the fleet. Phil Taussig of the Hornet asks if we should all attempt the same jump or would it be better to have ships vary a bit around it for ‘Kentucky windage,’ whatever that is.”
“Nelly?” Kris said.
“I have looked up ‘Kentucky windage,’ and no, I don’t think there is enough of a chance of our numbers being off for us to split the fleet. My estimate of us following Sampson’s course approach unity.”
“Send to Hornet. ‘Good idea, Phil, but our Nelly windage beats Kentucky windage every time, Longknife sends.’”
“Kris,” Nelly asked, “would you like to hear what Sampson had to say just before she jumped?”
“Will her deathless prose surprise me?”
“Not likely.”
“Well, let’s see what was on her mind, anyway. It might prove useful.”
“Longknife, you’ll never catch me. You’ll never follow me. I’m on my way back to Wardhaven, and when I get there, it will be you up on charges. You’ll never get your privileged ass out of jail for the rest of your life.”
“And here I thought her ass was just as privileged as mine.”
“Except she is an ass,” Jack said.
“Who is running headlong into who knows what,” Captain Drago added.
“Yes. So, Nelly, you say she’s wrong about our not being able to follow her.”
“Definitely.”
“And she’s wrong about our not being able to catch her.”
“My Marines are waiting to make the catch,” Jack said.
“Well then, let’s go get her,” Kris said.
The squadron leveled off from its dive back down to the system plane a solid half hour out from the jump. It finished its braking five minutes out. Two minutes out, Nelly was satisfied that they were duplicating the Sisu’s velocity and acceleration to the thirteenth decimal place.
Kris hardly breathed as they made the final approach to the jump, put on a matching spin, and jacked up their acceleration to duplicate exactly how Sampson had done her jump.
35
“Where are we?” Captain Drago asked.
Being an admiral had certain downsides, like letting your flag captain ask the question you desperately wanted answered.
“We covered six hundred and fifty-three light-years,” Nelly answered.
“We’ve picked up a trail of reaction mass,” came from the Musashi chief on sensors.
“I have two ship reactors,” Senior Chief Beni, retired, said. “Scanda make. I think we have the Sisu.”
“She’s making for the system’s fuzzy jump,” Nelly added.
“I wonder how she got her hands on a Mark XII sensor suite,” Captain Drago said with evil intent.
“Let’s just make sure no alien gets their hands on that ship,” Kris said.
“With pleasure, Admiral. With pleasure.”
“Can we intercept her in this system, or will we have to wait for the next jump?” Kris asked.
“We’re working on that,” Captain Drago said.
On the screen above the navigator’s board, vector lines formed, crisscrossed, then re-formed and crisscrossed again.
Captain Drago looked at them from his station, frowned, and motored over to look over the young Musashi woman’s shoulder. Kris knew her place was to stay put and wait, but she was moving a split second before Drago said, “Admiral, would you come take a look at this?”
“Yes, Captain,” Kris said, and daintily motored over to look over his shoulder looking over the young lieutenant’s shoulder.
“If we go to 3.5 gees and stay there, it looks like we can intercept her a good five minutes before she jumps out of here.”
“You’re going to have to give me a hint. Is that good or bad?”
“Getting her while we have her here is good. But I’ll have to keep the reactors pushing us at 3.5 gees the whole time. We’ll also be cutting straight across the plain of this system and I make out a couple of gas bags with rings and an asteroid belt between here and there.”
“Meaning, you’d like to take it up above the plain again.”
“Yep. It takes time, but it makes sure we arrive safe and sound to bash her ears back.”
“Pin her ears back,” Nelly corrected.
“You pin them, Nelly. For me, it’s bashing time,” the captain said.
“Kris, is that what is called walking into one?”
“Exactly, Nelly.”
“I’ll remember that.”
“Getting back to the matter at hand,” Kris said. “Captain, what’s this about pushing things at 3.5 gees? I thought the new ships were good for more than that.”
“They are, Kris, but we haven’t had a serious reduced availability for maintenance for a while. We’ve been riding the Wasp pretty hard, and while we take good care of her, I’d hate to find that I didn’t take good enough care of her.”
“What I’m hearing is you want to tighten up your safety margin.”
“That, and I really don’t want to be doing my final deceleration as I’m approaching the jump with her still on this side of it. Those might be dinky 18-inch pulse lasers, but if she’s aiming them up my engines, things could get deadly in a hurry. No. Let’s catch her with our forward batteries and thickened forward armor.”
Kris nodded. “Conduct this pursuit as you see fit, Captain.”
“My, a Longknife that has learned caution and prudence,” Drago said. “As I live and breathe.”
Kris smiled at the jab. “So long as it ends with me having Sampson’s guts for garters, I have no problems with what you do between now and then.”
“Then let’s slow to three gees and take the high road, Admiral.”
“Nelly, send to squadron. ‘On my mark, reduce speed to three gees and conform to the flag’s movements.’”
“The squadron’s ships are
standing by, Kris.”
“Mark,” Kris said.
In the egg, she hardly felt the lessened acceleration.
Kris half expected to hear from Sampson, but she had nothing to say, and Kris did not choose to taunt her. A woman like her was unstable enough without Kris’s adding more to it. She wanted her ship back, and, as livid as she was at Sampson, she wanted her crew back as well.
No doubt they’d spend the next long years as loader operators on the guano island, but they’d be alive. Too many people who had crossed Kris’s path weren’t.
Around Kris, the ship went about its prebattle drill. The lasers were charged and dialed in. The armor was strengthened on the bow. Kris brought up the Weapons board on her egg.
Captain Drago must have had an alert on that. He immediately looked in Kris’s direction, then motored over to her.
“You want to handle the shoot?” he asked.
“You think I shouldn’t?”
“It’s just that there’s bad blood between you and her, between Sampsons and Longknifes. If things go well, that’s nice. If they don’t, it might be better if someone else closed the firing circuits.”
“Captain, do you honestly think anyone is better on Weapons than me and Nelly?”
“No.”
“Do we want to capture that ship in as close to one piece as possible?”
“Yes. From my viewpoint.”
“Yes, from my viewpoint, too.”
“Then the shoot is yours.”
By slowing and taking the long road, they arrived at the jump a half hour after the Sisu. Once again, the boffins and Nelly had dialed the jump in to the last possible decimal place.
Once more, the squadron followed the Wasp through the jump.
36
“We jumped a bit over a thousand light-years,” Nelly reported.
“The Sisu is four hundred thousand kilometers ahead of us, accelerating at 2.1. No, make that 2.0. Correction, she’s down to 1.9 gees acceleration,” the Musashi chief reported from sensors.
“Someone’s engines are hot,” Senior Chief Beni, ret, reported.
“Hold at three gees,” Captain Drago ordered. “We’ll overtake her carefully. Wouldn’t do to be too close if she blows her reactors.”
“Captain. Admiral,” Chief Beni said, his voice even, careful, but intent. “I have radio traffic in system. I think it’s coming from a planet closer to the sun. But I’ve also got reactors. Thermonuclear reactors with an alien raider signature.”
“Where?” came in two-part harmony from Kris and Captain Drago.
“The alien-type reactors are all the way on the other side of the system. There’s a gas giant with a major moon and ring system. The reactors are orbiting that giant.”
“Any make on the reactors?” Kris asked.
“They appear to be like the first batch you tangled with. The ones my son fought.” That made it personal.
“We’ll handle those other situations when we finish with Sampson,” Kris said, running all the complications that had suddenly appeared through in her mind. She had a subordinate who had mutinied against her and stolen a ship. She had a newfound world with a civilization at least at the early-electromagnetic stage, and she had bug-eyed monsters.
Dear God, Kris almost prayed, do I deserve all of this on the same plate?
God did not answer her question.
Smart of Her, no doubt.
Hurriedly, Kris filed the new alien and the old alien away in an ever-growing box marked TO BE OPENED LATER, and fixed her sights ahead on the ship well out of range.
It fled from them. They pursued faster.
The range closed inexorably.
“Sisu, cease your acceleration, or you will be fired upon,” Kris ordered as the renegade came into extreme range.
“You wouldn’t dare fire on a neutral flag,” Sampson shot back. “Scanda isn’t part of your old man’s bunch of political patsies.”
“The Scanda ships are under my command,” Kris said. “However, I don’t think you’re up to date on my latest wild goings-on. I fired on a Helvetican flag freighter at M-688. I have yet to add a Scandian to my collection. Don’t mind if I do, though.”
“You’re crazy,” Sampson shot back.
“You are in violation of orders. Cease acceleration and surrender your ship.”
“You’re a fine one to talk about violating orders.”
“Tell me, Carolyn, which engine do you want me to shoot out? Both your reactors are running in the red. Which one can better take a hit? I really don’t want to kill anyone, but I will not have you running away. Do you know there are aliens in this system?”
“Aliens!” came in a several-part harmony from voices not heard from before on net.
“Yeah, I know we’ve got a mudball down there with low-tech stuff.”
“And a dozen alien raiders, too. They’re on the far side of the system, but, no doubt, they’ll be headed this way as soon as they get a good look at you.”
“You said we wouldn’t have to worry about those bloodthirsty-type aliens,” came through the net hookup.
“And we won’t. They can’t catch us.” Sampson’s voice cracked as she spoke.
“Their acceleration just fell off to 1.8 gees,” Chief Beni announced.
“How are you going to outrun the aliens when your reactors are going down on you, Carolyn?” Kris asked.
“She’s right, we can’t keep this up,” said a very scared voice.
“She wouldn’t dare fire on us.” Now Sampson sounded frantic.
“We are overtaking the Sisu,” the navigator said. “We will soon be in range of those 18-inch pulse lasers.”
“Did you hear that?” Kris said. “My navigator is warning me that you’re slowing down so much that I’m at risk of overtaking you, even passing you. If I do that, Sampson will get a shot at our stern. I can’t allow that. I’ll have to shoot out your reactors before then.”
“Damn it, Sampson,” came in a tense voice on net, “you swore those guns would make us invulnerable. Now that Longknife dame says she’s gonna blow out our reactors because of them!”
“Shut up,” Sampson shrieked.
“Shut up yourself,” came right back at her.
Drago grinned. “And we thought we had a leadership challenge from that gal,” he said softly.
“Listen, Longknife, you let us go.”
“No can do, Sampson. Even if I were crazy enough to consider that for a moment, there’s the minor matter of the aliens on the other side of this system. I’m told they’re already getting underway and are headed this way. You think you can get out of this system before they get to you? You think with your red-hot engines, you can outrun them?”
Chief Beni looked rather startled to hear that the aliens were headed this way when he hadn’t announced it. Still, he reported. “They’ve fallen off to 1.7 gees acceleration.”
“Slow to one gee,” Captain Drago ordered. With the momentum already on the boat, the Wasp continued to close, but not at the eye-blinking speed it had been.
“I will fire in five,” Kris began. “Four. Three. Two.”
There was noise of a scuffle on the Sisu’s commlink.
“Don’t shoot. We’ve got Sampson under control.”
“Take all acceleration off the boat,” Kris ordered.
“Kill the engines?” someone over there demanded, incredulously.
“We better before they kill us,” someone else answered.
The Wasp flipped ship and went to three gees deceleration. Strung out behind the Wasp were the other ships of the squadron. Most had not put on the high acceleration needed to catch up so quickly. Now they closed even as they flipped ship and began to decelerate. All these ships matching velocity vectors would no doubt be fun to watch.
Kris, never actually having had command of a ship, could watch it with fascination.
But she didn’t miss when Jack began to head his egg off the bridge. She followed him. “Where are you goin
g, General?”
“I’ve got a ship to board,” he said.
“Can’t you delegate it? After all, you are a brigadier general.”
“When was the last time anyone boarded a ship making eight hundred thousand klicks an hour?”
Kris made a face. “Never, I think.”
“You don’t delegate that kind of job. I’ll be careful. Trust me. The entire crew of the pinnace and my Marine company will be careful. The Musashi company got to land at the pyramid. My team gets this landing. Fair is fair.”
“You’ll be careful.”
“That’s what I said.”
“No, I mean you be careful.”
“Of course.”
“That’s wife to husband, you know.”
“Yes, I know, hon,” he said, smiling.
In the eggs, you couldn’t give a good-bye hug and kiss.
Damn the things, anyway.
The pinnace pulled away from the Wasp, taking a third of the ship’s reactors with it. It matched speed with the Sisu, and two Sailors maneuvered a connecting tube between the ships’ main hatches. Ten minutes later, the two ships pulled well apart and began decelerating, braking toward the closest gas giant.
The squadron followed.
“Captain, can the Wasp keep this deceleration up?” Kris asked.
He winced. “I don’t think so. At least, not for long. My engines aren’t as large as the big frigates’.”
“Hornet, could you please have your pinnace replace the Wasp’s riding herd on the Sisu?” Kris asked of Captain Taussig. If the freighter’s reactors failed, someone would need to be close to evacuate the crew.
“We’d be glad to, Admiral.”
While that evolution proceeded, Kris turned her egg to face sensors. “Okay, folks, you have my undivided attention. What can you tell me about our competing alien finds?”
“The planet that’s the source of all the radio and TV is down system toward the sun,” Chief Beni said. “Its orbit has it presently on our side of the sun. Besides all the electronic emitters, there are quite a few nuclear reactors though they are of the obsolete fission type.”
Kris Longknife: Tenacious (Kris Longknife novellas Book 12) Page 22