The captured flagship was much newer than his Jacob; the systems seemed uselessly ornate. Not surprising; since his rebellion, the Army of the Constellation had paid more attention to trappings and unnecessary promotions. The last time he’d been aboard a ship like this was when he surrendered to Percival Hallholme.…
He felt confident now that he had plenty of extra vessels to disperse among the at-risk Deep Zone planets, guard dogs to protect against further depredations—and by removing so many ships from the Army of the Constellation, he had made it far less likely the Diadem would send further attacks against him. By the time Sonjeera completed repairs to its damaged stringline hub, maybe Diadem Michella would see reason. But he would not count on it. Undoubtedly, her warship-manufacturing facilities were running around the clock.
Or maybe someone would overthrow her. That would be for the best.
Adolphus paced around the bridge of Escobar Hallholme’s flagship, but chose not to sit in the command chair. That did not feel right.
Many of the surrendered vessels remained empty in low parking orbits, waiting for cleanup crews and spaceship specialists to complete inspections. A dozen programmers and engineers were gathered on the bridge of the Diadem’s Glory, working at control stations to download fleet data. Adolphus had already scanned some of the Redcom’s log to get the broad strokes of their ordeal. He wondered how much Escobar Hallholme had left out.
Since the Constellation crews had been removed from their captured ships, most of those vessels were on standby, with the systems powered down. Some of them had Adolphus’s inventory crews aboard, preparatory to reconditioning and refitting the craft. He’d also transferred over most of the personnel from the ten original DZ warships he still had, keeping only skeleton crews aboard, along with a handful of pilots for the onboard fighter craft.
The lights flickered on the bridge of the Diadem’s Glory, and the humming background noise took on a deeper, grinding sound. He heard a distant vibration, the flagship’s engines roaring unexpectedly, and the deck tilted.
“What’s happening? Report!”
The techs scrambled at their stations. At nav-control, a flushed young programmer said, “The engines just activated, and I’m locked out of the system.”
The other programmers reported being locked out as well.
Emergency signals came in over the comm. Another engineer looked at the flood of reports. “Same thing across the captured fleet, sir. The ships have gone rogue, setting their own courses and moving.”
“How could that happen?” Adolphus said. “Most of the ships are empty—we haven’t even finished sending engineering crews over!”
“Their autopilots switched on, sir.” The nav-tech hammered at his panels. “This ship isn’t responding.”
Adolphus reeled through the possibilities. “Is the fleet escaping? Under some kind of autopilot?”
“No, General. The ships have all begun to descend into decaying orbits. They’ll burn up in the atmosphere!”
With the autopilots activated and guiding the Constellation warships down into lower orbit, the minimal crews he’d placed aboard had little effect.
Panicked comments filled the codecall lines. “Can’t reassert control, General!”
“We’re locked out. Command systems nonresponsive—the ships have a mind of their own!”
“It’s not responsive, we can’t get the engines to stop! It’s a damned ticking time bomb.”
“Navigation systems are down. Crash course is locked in!”
“Everything’s dead. This ship is going down!”
Adolphus seethed as he listened to the cacophony of alarms and urgent messages. On the screen, he saw the green lines of the warships’ former orbits, along with plunging curves in red for their new suicide courses into Hellhole’s atmosphere. “Redcom Hallholme must have installed some sort of scuttling protocol before handing over his fleet.” He turned to the comm-officer. “Send a signal. On my orders, dispatch crews from our own battleships and bring experts up from the ground if you need to. I want full teams aboard every one of those captured ships. How much time do we have?”
“Not enough, General. Depends on where the ships were in orbit, but they’re all going down.”
“Find some way to disengage the autopilots! Cut them off manually, shut down the engines if you have to.” He stared at the dots on the screen.
He would not let all these newly captured ships slip through his fingers. He needed to get more people aboard the errant vessels and wrest control from the rebellious computers before they all burned up in the atmosphere.
“Other teams of programmers and engineers are heading for the nearest ships, General—our best people from the fleet. They’ll be aboard our shuttleboats within twenty minutes, but they have to catch up with each descending vessel.”
In a higher orbit, the Diadem’s Glory was surrounded by numerous smaller vessels like a shark accompanied by remoras; they drifted along in lockstep, guided by no human hand as they headed downward.
“Don’t waste a second,” Adolphus ordered. “I won’t let this whole fleet burn up before my eyes.”
In the flurry of activity, shuttleboats pulled away from the Hellhole defense ships and raced off to the rogue vessels. It required an ambitious and well-organized effort just to dispatch appropriate teams to the appropriate ships. He watched two small unmanned Constellation frigates scrape into the planetary atmosphere and begin heating up. As they continued their plunge, the empty vessels turned into comets in the air.
One engineering tech was in charge of the small crew on his flagship. “We have some operational controls, General. It’s only the engines, navigation, and control computers that refuse to respond.”
“Only?”
A female programmer wiped sweat from her forehead. “Best guess, sir, is that we’ll have to evacuate in half an hour.”
“Then we’ve got half an hour to salvage the ship.” Adolphus hurried toward the raw diagram on a status screen, where the display showed the alarming distribution of the out-of-control military ships.
The planet turned beneath them as the Diadem’s Glory continued its decaying orbit. Hellhole’s huge impact crater looked like a maw waiting to devour the ships plunging toward it.
Transmitting a ragged announcement, another team aboard a Constellation frigate abandoned ship, jettisoning themselves in evac pods before the craft burned up.
“Two more ships are entering the atmosphere!” one of the engineers called. “And three right behind them. They’ve got ten minutes left before the systems overheat.”
Adolphus saw a red tinge around his vision. “Are there people aboard?”
“Small crews, sir, but they’re having no effect whatsoever. Unable to reassert control.”
A static-filled transmission spilled out of the loudspeakers. “Our lower hull is burning up, systems are shorting out.”
Adolphus ran to the codecall. “Use the evac pods. Get out of there—there’s nothing left for you to do.”
Like spores ejecting from a mushroom, small lifeboats popped out of the dying vessels just before their hulls turned cherry red. One fuel tank exploded, spraying the wreckage in all directions. Within three minutes, the other three ships vaporized in the atmosphere.
By now, Adolphus could feel the bumpy turbulence as the Diadem’s Glory entered the upper atmosphere. He went to the flagship’s primary control panel. “Let me try something. I was trained in how these systems work.”
The programmers stepped back, shaking their heads. “It’s inaccessible, sir. We’ve got no way to get into the core programming.”
Adolphus gave a noncommittal nod. In his academy training, he had risen to an officer’s rank with a bright future ahead of him. He’d learned to fly battleships, with access to the control codes. He’d been the captain of a survey vessel in the Army of the Constellation, sent on a sabotaged mission that was designed to result in the death of him and his unwanted crew. In the intervening years
, he was sure that Supreme Commander Riomini would have changed the codes, but maybe not all of them. At least it was a starting point in the options he had. “A lot of things have changed, but maybe I can override—”
The initial command string didn’t work, nor did he expect it to. He tried a higher-level access code, but still the screen remained dead. The rogue autopilot responded to the tampering by pushing the thrusters, causing the flagship to take a steeper plunge. Shouting, the engineers tried to get their own stations to respond, but even the course-adjustment thrusters did little to halt the ship’s death plunge, and then they, too, gave out.
Adolphus suddenly had another idea. “Dispatch our squadrons, get as many ships up here as possible, even small ones, anything with engines. Maybe we can shoulder some of the Constellation fleet back up into orbit by brute force.”
“That might damage our own ships, General!”
“Then we’ll have to be gentle. Do it—we could buy some more time.”
Within five minutes, fighter craft and troop haulers dropped out of the remaining DZ Defense Force ships, seeking to match courses with the descending Constellation vessels. It was touchy flying, requiring the best piloting skill as the ships matched course and speed, then applied thrust, nudging the rogue vessels higher. Five Constellation warships were successfully deflected, to much cheering over the communication channels. One pilot struck too hard and breached the hull of the descending ship while damaging his own; he barely extricated his craft in time, backing out to a safe orbit as the damaged ship tumbled into the atmosphere.
The Diadem’s Glory shuddered and rocked. The black starry sky now showed a faint haze as they skimmed the outer stratosphere. A bow shock of heat ripples surrounded the flagship as it carved its way down. Two bridge stations exploded in sparks, injuring one of the struggling programmers.
“We’ve got ten minutes left,” said the lead engineer. “Barely enough time to make it to the evac pods. We have to jettison, sir!”
“Not yet.” Adolphus keyed in the third code, one he barely remembered—and when that did nothing, he tried again and again, transposing digits, struggling to recall the exact sequence. And finally he was into the core programming, but still unable to override the virus.
The flagship rocked from side to side, the hull groaned with the strain. Another set of alarms began to sound.
“Heat loads are reaching maximum. The shields are going to give out in four minutes.”
On the screen, another Constellation ship exploded in the atmosphere not far below them.
“As least I have access now,” Adolphus said. “I broke in. Now, one last thing to do—a complete shutdown of all systems, including the main computer. That should drag down the peripheral nav-controls, killing power to the engines. Once we shut them off cold, then reset the computer, we should restore control.”
“We’re already dead in the sky, General,” said the lead engineer.
“So it can’t get any worse. Without downward thrust, this big ship might skip like a stone across the atmosphere.” His voice remained quiet, but hard and implacable. “We don’t have time to discuss this.”
One of the programmers dove to a panel beneath the main control station. She dug her hands deep into the circuit grid to find wires, and at last she threw the manual switch that completely shut down the flagship’s engines.
The bridge dropped into blackness for a second, and all the stations went dark, lit only by the eerie glow of plasma flares, sparks, and the sunlight scattered through Hellhole’s upper atmosphere.
“Wipe the computer!” Adolphus shouted. “Start from scratch. We only need enough control to turn the rudders and navigation flaps, get us pointed upward again.”
A large blast—some external tank rupturing from the heat—tilted them to one side. Another programmer restarted the power systems. “We have no computer control, General … but thanks to you at least the autopilot’s dead and not fighting against us anymore.”
As the power came back on, another station exploded in a spray of sparks. “That was the weapons system, sir.”
“I’m more interested in the navigation flaps.”
One of the engineer pilots wiped sweat from his face. “We’ve adjusted our altitude—at least we’re no longer descending out of control.”
“Transmit to all the other ships! Give them the code and tell them to shut down power, wipe the computers. Do what they can to save as many vessels as they can.”
“There’s not much left of this flagship, sir.” The female programmer climbed back to her feet from the control access on the deck.
“It’s one little victory,” the General said. “I’ll take it.”
88
After traveling three days along the captured stringline from Buktu, Commodore Percival Hallholme’s battle group arrived at the planet bearing his own name.
During the relatively quiet trip, Percival had interrogated the uncooperative Erik Anderlos, as well as the Buktu factory workers, ice miners, and ship refitters. Before he faced his nemesis again, he wanted to develop a clear understanding of how many frontline military vessels the rebels might have in their defenses—and if General Adolphus had truly captured his son.
The inhabitants of the frozen planetoid had no chance to plan ahead or coordinate their stories, but they all lied to him nevertheless. Some gave him ridiculously inflated numbers, while others claimed that the five half-assembled ships in spacedock were all they had ever worked on.
“Useless information,” he told Adkins an hour before arrival. “We don’t have any better intelligence on the General’s defenses than we did before.”
His old aide leaned against the bulkhead in the Commodore’s ready room. “You didn’t really expect them to spill every detail, did you? These are rebels, hardened to their cause, but you’d think someone would cooperate to gain better terms for himself or his family.”
“That would certainly be the case if we weren’t dealing with General Tiber Adolphus. We know from past experience that when people join his fight, their loyalty is extraordinary.” Even his own crews did not bond with such tremendous allegiance.
Percival finished his sweet kiafa, straightened his uniform, and then glanced in the mirror to make sure his whiskers and hair were neatly combed. He gathered his formal cap. “Shall we go to the bridge? We’re about to arrive.”
Adkins had a jaunty step as they entered the lift. “Ready for your rematch, sir?”
Percival frowned; he had never viewed this as a game. “I defeated Adolphus the first time. I’ll do it again.”
His deepest worry was that Adolphus was holding Escobar as a hostage and would threaten to kill him. During the first rebellion, the honorable Tiber Adolphus would never have stooped to such tactics, but now … Percival wasn’t so certain. He himself had redefined the rules of acceptable behavior in the Battle of Sonjeera. How far would General Adolphus go now?
When the Commodore and Adkins arrived on the bridge, every officer and enlisted soldier snapped to sharp attention, looking at the aged commander with great respect. He could tell they were on the verge of applauding him, but he didn’t want that. “To your stations,” he said gruffly and slid into the command chair.
“We begin decelerating in ten minutes, sir,” the chief pilot said, sitting beside him.
“Very good.” He laced his fingers together and looked at the viewscreen, which, as yet, showed nothing. “Mr. Adkins, separate Erik Anderlos from the other prisoners, in case we need to use him as an intermediary.”
Both men knew that by “intermediary” he actually meant hostage. The Buktu deputy administrator had been tight-lipped and uncooperative throughout the entire journey. “Yes, sir.”
“Sound battle stations.”
Alarms reverberated through all thirty vessels hanging from the stringline hauler. “Pilots to your fighter craft, ready to launch as soon as we reach the hub. Every second will count.” They had drilled for this, counted down the hours a
s they sped in from distant Buktu. During the last day, he had even allowed the intercoms to play the loud and optimistic “Strike fast, strike hard!” fanfare, though he found it annoying. If there was ever a time to leverage their feelings of patriotism, it was now.
Percival had considered reviewing historical records of the final confrontation over Sonjeera years ago in order to gain more insight into the General’s previous tactics, but that would be a waste of time. He already knew how Adolphus had outmaneuvered him before finally losing.
But in the following years Percival himself had changed. During that legendary final battle, when the Diadem forced him to use despicable means to win at all costs, Percival had seen the rot at the core of the Constellation. He had withdrawn into retirement, wanting none of the glory he could have attained based on his famous victory. All that bravado now felt hollow to him—but he would be a less formidable opponent if he doubted his own beliefs, and he could not allow that.
Percival was also certain that General Adolphus had grown stronger during his years of exile. This would not be an easy victory.
He gave his obligatory speech before engaging in battle. “We must use our element of surprise to its fullest advantage. The rebels will not know we are coming, but Tiber Adolphus isn’t a man to let down his guard. We must strike quickly and shock them. Our battle group will seize this planet and its stringline network in the name of the Diadem!”
The hauler pilot’s codecall transmission interrupted his broadcast. “Arriving in the system, Commodore.”
“Very well,” Percival said. “This is our moment in history.”
As the impact-scarred planet appeared before them, growing larger by the second, Commodore Hallholme ordered the thirty warships to disengage. In a coordinated effort, like opening hands, docking clamps released the ships, all of which dropped down, engines igniting in the airless vacuum. They spread out in a deadly swarm, arrowing straight toward planet Hallholme.
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