After a long wait, I have been dragged back to the keyboard. . ."Captain Dube."
"I know." The tall South African Naval officer handed the jacket of his dress uniform to his steward and shrugged into his skinsuit. "How many did they take out before they go?"
"Looks like two squadrons. . . they fought well," Commander Keller admitted.
"Sound General Quarters," Dube said softly. "Contact Star Force One. Tell President Bradley that we will cover them to the jump point." He stepped onto the bridge of his ship, where the status indicator lights now glowed the deep red of General Quarters. The rest of the crew were already in their close-fitting skinsuits, the last-chance pressure suits that would protect them from hard vacuum should the ship's hull be breached.
"Quinn, give me a threat assessment," Dube said, slipping into his command chair and reaching for his five-point harness."
"Three Kig-11 Heavy bombers. . . plus one capital ship asset, Pride of Arcea. The Pride appears to be standing off, but she's staying close. . . estimate that if she puts on full thrust, she'll be able to reach combat range in thirty minutes. The fighters are closing in fast. . . we've got about ten minutes."
"ETA to jump point?" Dube asked.
"Twenty minutes," Vashti replied. "At maximum possible speed. . . Star Force One isn't a warship, she doesn't have the dampers for max acceleration."
"Cut speed by five percent, then place us in a trailing guard position. . . I want our point defense envelope to cover her as much as possible." Dube shook his head. "When was the last time we fought someone who could shoot back, Commander?"
"Three years ago. The Drengin corvette, off 'Lady in Chains'," Keller said.
"I trust you haven't forgotten how it's done?"
"Of course not, sir. Killing helpless transport vessels isn't all that different," Keller smirked.
"Wiseass." Dube reached out and tapped a control on his arm-rest, and a three-dimensional image of the surrounding battlespace appeared in the air in front of him. "All right, Quinn, take us back up to military speed, and prepare to engage hostiles."
"Firing solution entered, sir. Ready to engage," Vashti said crisply.
"On my mark. . . mark!"
There was a stacatto series of thumps as the firing tubes disgorged their deadly cargo, the tiny yellow triangles separating from the larger yellow circle of the
TAS Birmingham before streaking through space towards the three red squares that represented the Arcean fighters. The three squares quickly separated, scattering in all opposite directions like a deadly flower, dropping flares and opening up with point defense fire as they did so. "Missile one is destroyed. . . six. . . seven. . . nine. . . four. . ." Vashti shook her head. "Looks like they took out the entire volley. . . damn Arcean point defense systems."
"Enemy fighters closing in!"
"Evasive maneuvers! Brace for impact!" Dube shouted. All across the ship, crew members not already strapped into their stations grabbed ahold of what cover they could, clenched their teeth, and prepared for the worst. Quinn slammed his left control pedal to the ground and pushed the throttle control full forward. TAS Birmingham's plasma drives burned white hot as he redlined her powerful fusion reactors, the whine of the engineering alarms indicating to him that they were all going to die unless he slowed down soon. . . then the low rumble of missile fire slamming into the ship's hull, strangely quiet down here in CIC.
"Enemy fighters have disengaged. . . we're showing light damage on the starboard hull. No casualties," Petrovich reported.
"Firing Solution Entered. . . Robotech on Threat One. . . fire on my mark. MARK!" Vashti snapped.
Dube had often wondered about the origins of that term, but he couldn't fault its effectiveness. "Roboteching," also known as Missile Pattern Romeo, was a firing pattern that launched a salvo of missiles outward from the ship, sent them streaking towards the target, then attempted to envelop the target from multiple directions in an attempt to overwhelm the point defense system's tracking computer. TAS Birmingham's second volley was focused entirely on the lead fighter in the Arcean squadron. The three golden ships attempted to tighten formation, overlapping the effective areas of their point defense spreads, concentrating a greater volume of fire upon the Birmingham's missile volley.
It was almost the right thing to do.
"NOW!" Dube shouted. He needn't have bothered. Quinn had started bringing the Birmingham around the moment he'd seen the Arceans start to tighten up. Vashti pulled the trigger, and a lance of energy erupted from the Birmingham's spinal cannon, the powerful fourth-generation phazor tearing through the Arcean squadron like a hammer through a bunch of grapes.
"I show. . . two kills!" Quinn crowed. "Third Arcean fighter is moving, but her weapons systems show a complete loss, looks like we got her!"
"Give me a status report on the frigate!"
"Frigate Pride of Arcea has accelerated to military speed. . . she's closing in fast! ETA. . . oh hell!" Quinn let out a loud Chinese profanity. "Surviving Arcean fighter has accelerated to maximum speed. . . she's on a direct intercept. . . strike that. . . a collision course with Star Force One!"
"TAKE HER OUT NOW!" Dube roared.
"Firing!" Vashti shouted.
It was a good firing solution, one of her best. Snap shot, turning ship, against a small one-man fighter at maximum acceleration, medium range. . . a tough shot for any weapons officer. And she nailed it.
A good shot.
Not good enough.
**********
(Taken from the official bridge logs of Star Force One, July 17, 2237)
ENGINEER: Enemy fighter destroyed. . . debris field incoming! Brace for impact!
CAPTAIN: Vladi, get me a situation report!
ENGINEER: Heavy damage to Passenger Compartment. . .
CAPTAIN: Belay that! The jump drives, are they working?"
ENGINEER: Hyperdrive is functional, yes sir. . .
CAPTAIN: Tim, execute FTL jump on my mark. . . MARK!
PILOT: Executing. . . complete! I'm showing good colors across the board. . . ETA for hyperspace separation. . . five hours and thirty minutes.
CAPTAIN: The enemy?
PILOT: I'm showing one pursuing hyperdrive signature. . . the TAS Birmingham. Pride of Arcea is attempting to pursue. . . disengaging. Looks like the Birmingham managed to drive them off.
CAPTAIN: Remind me to buy Solomon a drink next time we're in port. . . Vladi, I'll take the rest of that situation report now.
ENGINEER: Sir, I'm showing light damage across sections four and three. . . heavy damage to Passenger Compartment One."
CAPTAIN: My God, the President's stateroom. . . casualties?
ENGINEER: Six, sir. . . three with major wounds. . . two minor. . . one fatal.
CAPTAIN: . . . is there a name on that fatality?
ENGINEER: . . . yes, sir.
**********
THREE DAYS LATER. . .
"Mister President, the Altarian Ambassador's transport has arrived," Kinnis said.
"Thanks, Laramie." President Bradley stuffed his good hand in the pocket of his black coat and looked up at the sky. "It should be raining, you know. . . or misty. . . cloudy, even. Anything but a bright sunny day." He took a deep breath, his voice cracking with emotion. "Why the hell is it so sunny. . . ?"
"Sir," Laramie replied softly. It was all she could say.
"She warned me, you know. . . she told me not to trust those bastards. . . I should have listened. . ." He took another deep, ragged breath. "Should have listened. . ."
"If you need a moment, sir, I can come back later."
"I've already had a moment. I've had too many moments." Bradley clenched his fist around the teardrop-shaped diamond earring in his pocket. "Can't have any more. I'll cry when I'm dead."
He knew it was a lie. He knew he'd cry tonight, just like he'd cried yesterday night, and just like he knew he would cry tomorrow night, just like he'd cried three days ago when the smoke had cleared and he'd seen what was left of his Jennifer after that fragment of the Arcean fighter-bomber had slammed into Star Force One. He took one last look at the gravestone, at the numbers underneath the name of the love of his life. "I'm sorry," he whispered, for the hundredth time.
He turned away and went back to war.
not the end yet. . . hopefully it won't take another year before the next chapter