Orders of Battle
Orders of Battle
Orders of Battle
“How are you feeling?” Halley asks when the other funeral
guests have left, and we are the only two people standing in
front of the burial plot. I think about my reply for a moment.
“Diminished,” I say. “I got most of the grief out the night
she died. Now I just feel smaller. Like my world has shrunk
down to only you and me.”
Halley rests her head on my shoulder. We look at the rows
and rows of nameplates on the ground, each of them marking
two hundred square centimeters. Once upon a time, Earth had
enough empty space for people to bury their dead as they
were, whole bodies in wooden coffins. But this is the twenty-
second century, the world has a hundred billion people living
on it, and cremation is mandatory even in a middle-class place
out in the mountains. The cemetery is divided into rows of
little plots, each holding fifty burial capsules in the area where
they would have buried a single person a hundred years ago.
Mom’s space is almost dead center in the middle of the
plot, a temporary last entry in the rows of names. Half the plot
is still empty, and I know it will be a while before they fill it
up—a few months, maybe a year. Out here, people live longer
lives, and the town is almost insignificantly tiny compared to a
PRC. In death, she will have neighbors all around her again,
just like when she lived in the welfare unit. But the sky
overhead will be blue more often, and there are live trees just a
few dozen meters away, their leaves rustling in the cool
October wind.
Halley kneels down in front of the rows of names. She
runs her hand over Mom’s nameplate, tracing the letters with
her fingertips.
“I’ll miss her,” she says. “I was family to her. Sorry my
parents couldn’t be the same to you. I’ll never forgive them for
that.”
“Don’t worry about it. I don’t.”
Halley slowly shakes her head. “Your mother didn’t have
anything. Didn’t come from anywhere special. Didn’t know
anyone important. She would have been a nobody to them. But
she was nice to me from the moment we first met. And they
have the gall to think of themselves as better.”
“Don’t get angry over that. Not today,” I say.
Halley stands up again and sticks her hands into the side
pockets of her thermal vest. “I’ve never stopped being angry
over that, Andrew,” she says. “My world shrank down to just
you and me the last time we walked out of their house.”
She lets out a slow breath, then kisses me on the cheek.
“You’re right. This isn’t the time. Sorry.”
I’d said my last good-bye in person, right before Mom
died, when she could still see and hear me through the fog of
pain meds. It seems pointless to repeat the sentiment to a grave
marker and a cylinder full of ashes. Whoever she was in life is
gone now, the molecules that made up her body dispersed in
the atmosphere and returned to the cosmos, to be reused in the
constant cycle of life. Her consciousness is gone, and there’s
nothing in that little stainless tube that can hear or understand
me. But it would feel callous to walk away without a final
gesture, so I kneel in front of the plot and duplicate what
Halley did, running my hand over the nameplate, feeling the
edges of the engraved letters with my thumb.
“See you among the stars,” I say. “I love you.”
I can hear the gunfire on the range long before I round the last
hill. The staccato thunderclaps of supersonic muzzle reports
echo back from the surrounding mountains. The propellant in
the new rifles has a peculiar sound, a hoarse cough rather than
a sharp boom. From what I have heard, the R&D teams
calibrated the new caseless ammo to be low in flash and
report, to minimize the sensor disruptions when it’s fired in
underground environments.
I walk down the hill and onto the range, past the flags that
mark a live-fire environment. My company NCO, Master
Sergeant Leach, is standing behind the firing line with his
arms folded, observing the proceedings. The range has half a
dozen live-fire pits. Each of them has a Eurocorps student and
an NAC instructor in it, and more Eurocorps troops are lined
up in the safe zone behind each pit, waiting for their turns.
I stay behind the safety line until the course of fire has
ended. When the pits change students, Master Sergeant Leach
turns around to shout instructions at those in line, then walks
back to where I am standing.
“Good afternoon, sir,” he says. “I didn’t know you were
going to join us.”
“I didn’t know either until I got in, two hours ago,” I
reply. “Wasn’t in the mood for sitting on my ass. Not after that
ride from Keflavík.”
“Understood, sir. I see you brought your boomstick.”
“Don’t tell me you were just about to call a cold range and
pack it up. I’d hate to have dragged this thing all the way out
here for nothing.”
“No, sir. We still have an hour left to go.”
“How are they doing?” I say with a nod at the waiting
lines of trainees. Master Sergeant Leach follows my gaze.
“They’re quite all right. I mean, it’s clear that some of the
Euro countries spend more time at the range than others. But
the baseline is pretty good. The Germans and the Brits
especially. They’d still get their clocks cleaned by an SI line
company, though. Never mind a podhead team.”
We watch as the students in the pits get their weapons
ready under the watchful eyes of their instructors. All the
Eurocorps trainees are noncommissioned officers with lots of
special operations training, and the lowest-ranking ones are
still at least corporals with two years of service. But when I
look down the line at the trainees who are waiting with their
helmets under their arms, they all look impossibly young to
me, and I voice the thought to the master sergeant.
“Tell me about it,” he says. “Buncha fucking kids. They
got good training, mind. But none of them have combat
experience. The most senior ones? They joined the year after
Mars.”
“Shit,” I say, and the sergeant grins without humor.
The wind coming from the sea carries the smell of the
ocean water, unadulterated by the pollution of a city, a scent so
clean and inoffensive that I’d have a hard time describing it to
a PRC kid who has never lived in unspoiled air. Overhead, a
few seabirds are circling in the breeze, seemingly unperturbed
by the ruckus of the gunshots.
“How many years have you been in, Leach? Eleven?”
“Twelve,” he says.
“No shit. Same as me? You went to Basic in ’08?”
Leach nods. “San Diego.”
“I went to Orem,” I say. “January ’08.”
“Then you have three months on me, sir.”
“I’m shocked they haven’t made you an officer, too.
Damn few of the pre-war crowd left.”
“Oh, they tried,” Master Sergeant Leach says. “Several
times. But I wasn’t dumb enough to let them. No offense,
Major.”
“None taken. And you’re smarter than I was. Those stars,
they come with all kinds of baggage. Plenty of days I wish I’d
remained an NCO.”
“Some of us have to do it,” Leach says. “And I’m glad
when it’s someone who knows the business. But I’m still
happy it’s you and not me.”
He nods at the rifle that’s slung across my chest.
“You want me to slot you into the firing line, sir? We
brought plenty of ammo along.”
“Well,” I say. “I didn’t bring that for decoration, I guess.”
The four officers waiting for me in the briefing room get out
of their chairs when I step through the door, and I immediately
wave them off.
“As you were,” I say.
They sink back into their seats. There are several empty
chairs around the big table that takes up most of the room, and
I sit down next to my new section leaders. The Force Recon
captain is immediately obvious in his SI camouflage. The
other three are wearing the same Fleet pattern I do, and I can
only place them when they turn toward me and make the main
qualification badges on their uniforms visible.
“Good afternoon, sir,” the SEAL captain says. His name
tape says “HARPER,” and he’s a squat and muscular man with
a jawline that makes him look like a heavyweight prizefighter.
The other officers in the room add their own version of the
greeting.
“Good afternoon,” I say. “If it’s that late already. It’ll take
me a week to get used to shipboard watch cycles again, I’m
afraid.”
“I’m not even adjusted yet, and we’ve been on this boat
for a week and a half,” Captain Harper says.
I pull my PDP out of the leg pocket of my cammies and
place it on the table in front of me.
“I won’t take up much of your afternoon,” I say. “I’m
Major Andrew Grayson, the new CO of STT 500. General
Masoud asked me to fill in for Major Mackenzie. I know it’s a
pain in the ass when you have to get used to a new boss in the
middle of a deployment, so I’ll try to grease the process as
much as I can.”
“We’re still in pre-deployment prep,” the Force Recon
captain says. “It’s all just stowing kit and getting used to the
new digs.”
“Anyone get wind of where we’re going yet?”
All four captains shake their heads.
“No, sir. Command’s holding their cards close to their
chests on this one,” Captain Harper replies. “Not so much as a
whiff. If you discount the speculations they trade on the
hangar deck, that is. You know how it goes.”
“The Enlisted Underground,” I say. “The only faster-than-
light comms network in the Corps. Spreads bullshit at blinding
speed.”
The other officers chuckle.
“So we have no idea yet where we are going. Or what we
are doing once we get there,” I say.
“That’s about the long and short of it, sir,” the combat
controller lead, Captain Burns, says with a smile. I know his
face from somewhere, probably a combat deployment over
Mars a few years back, but I’ve never had him as a teammate
or subordinate, and I have no idea whether he remembers
running into me. All four of these officers are a little younger
than I am, and slightly less experienced. The time in service
for a captain is ten years, and promotion to major is all but
certain at that point for seasoned podhead officers because of
the constant scarcity of highly qualified personnel. The men
sitting at the table with me were young lieutenants when I was
a captain, and now they command platoon-sized special
operations teams, just like I did when Masoud made the Fleet
pin officer stars onto my epaulettes seven years ago.
“Let’s hope for a training milk run. But let’s prepare for
combat. Let me ask you this, gentlemen. If we had a surprise
pod drop on the menu next week, how would you feel about
the readiness of your sections? And no need to blow smoke up
my ass. I don’t care about starched uniforms or spit-shined
boots. I care about skills and attitudes. We’ve had a long
stretch of peace, if you don’t count garrison duty bullshit on
Mars. You know, where the company-grade officers stand in
line for twelve weeks of platoon command so they can claim
combat awards. No hard surfaces left for us podheads to hone
our edge.”
From their subtly shifting expressions, I know that I’ve
picked the right tone and theme for my little pep talk—
emphasizing our commonalities and setting us apart from the
regular infantry and the support branches.
“Honest assessment,” I continue. “Are we ready for
battle? Let’s hear it. SEAL section?”
“We’re in good shape,” Captain Harper says. “I have two
second lieutenants that still have the sap coming out of their
ears. But they’re eager to get in the game. And all my squad
leaders know their business. I’ve assigned the most
experienced ones to the squads with the new officers. To keep
them between the guard rails.”
“Same here,” Captain Taylor, the spaceborne rescue
leader, adds. “We’ve made it common practice in the STT to
assign the section SNCOs to the squads with the greenest
second lieutenants.”
“I heartily endorse that practice,” I say. “No better
backseat driver than a grizzled master sergeant. I can’t count
the times my SNCO saved me from myself when I had my
first platoon. They should issue one to each new second
lieutenant as soon as they get that star.”
“Force recon is a go as well,” the SI captain says. His
name is Lawson, and he looks like a recruiting-poster model:
handsome, whippet lean, and with hair buzzed to the minimum
length the clippers will allow. “Same story. I’ve got a few
more new corporals than I’d like, but the squad leaders and the
command element are solid. We’ll get it done, whatever it is.”
“You’ve all served on Mars, right?” I ask. Every officer in
the room nods.
“Who here was on the ground for Invictus?” I add.
Invictus was the name of the operation that culminated in the
Second Battle of Mars, when Earth’s combined space-capable
forces tried to retake the planet from the Lankies seven years
ago. Only Captain Harper, the SEAL, and Captain Burns, the
combat controller, raise their hands.
“Then you know what these things are like,” I say to
them. “When we don’t have them bottled up underground.
When we are in the minority. If we spend the next six months
doing practice assaults on Titan, it won’t break my heart. But
don’t plan for that. Plan for them to dunk us into a bucket of
angry hornets. You know what the fight will be like if we drop
onto a colony. One where they’ve had years to prepare the
battlefield.”
I pause for emphasis and look at their serious expressions.
For the moment, my misgivings about being called “sir” by
officers close to my own age are gone. Half of the captains in
this room and all the junior officers in the STT either joined
the service after the invasion of Mars, or they were still in
officer school when it happened. Whatever experience they
have with fighting Lankies, it’s in the atypical environment of
post-invasion Mars, where we have suppressed the remaining
Lankies and cowed them into retreating deep underground.
None of them have ever had to hold the line with a squad
or a platoon that had a dozen Lankies bearing down on them in
the open, with no air support forthcoming and no PACS to
shore up the flanks and lay down heavy fire. It’s a terror
nobody can really convey in a classroom, or in anecdotes told
in a bar after hours. Every veteran of Mars I know doesn’t like
to talk about the battle with people who weren’t there. The
lack of a common reference point upon which to hang the
emotional ballast makes it feel like trying to communicate in
different languages. There’s a sharp delineation among us
between the Before and the After, between those who dropped
into battle on Mars and whose who didn’t, and I know it’s not
going to go away until the last of the survivors have left active
duty.
We spend the next thirty minutes going through the
administrative minutiae of a command team meeting—status
reports on the individual sections, personnel concerns,
coordination of team training, and half a dozen other bullet
points. I don’t know the other team leaders yet, so I am
relegated to listening and observing the interactions of my
section leads. But they know that this isn’t about loading me
up with information, that it’s mostly about us getting a feel for
each other.
“Thank you, gentlemen,” I say when the captains have
concluded their turns. “I’ll drop by each section separately in
the next day or two. I’ll want to look at the training schedules
and introduce myself to the squad leaders as well. If you have
any needs or wants for your sections, bring your concerns to
me. Now’s the time to make sure all the gears are turning
freely. Once we leave the dock, it’s down to whatever we
brought along. I strongly encourage you to take one last look
at your section rosters. You know your people. This is your
final opportunity to tweak the lineup if you have any
reservations. Be sure that you’re happy with what you have
when we head out.”
I get out of my chair, and the section leaders follow suit.
“One more thing,” I say. “The STT is directly subordinate
to the ship’s CO. The next step up from my office is the
commander’s ready cabin. That’s the place you need to go if
you ever have any misgivings or complaints about your new
company commander. But everything else ends at my desk. I
want to keep our internal SOCOM business our own.
Command has given the STT a long leash. Let’s not give them
a reason to take the slack out of it.”
“Aye, sir,” Captain Harper says, and Taylor and Lawson
echo the statement.
“Copy that, sir,” Captain Burns says.
Burns, Taylor, and Lawson file out of the room. From the
way he’s lagging behind, I can tell that Captain Harper wants
to have a quick word in private.
“Anything else on your mind, Captain?” I ask when the
other three have left.
Harper turns toward me and straightens out his
camouflage tunic, then brushes some nonexistent lint from the
flap of his chest pocket.
“You probably don’t remember my face,” he says. “But I
was on the team that went to Leonidas with you. Seven years
ago, when you were in charge of the infantry platoon.”
I look at his face again. Something about it triggers a
vague recollection in my brain, but I wouldn’t have been able
to pinpoint it to a specific time or place if he hadn’t told me.
“You were on Masoud’s team,” I say.
Captain Harper nods.
“I was a young second lieutenant. Second combat
deployment. We were the ones who stuck nuclear demolition
charges on the terraformers. Spent a week sneaking around in
the shadows while you were raising all kinds of hell on
Arcadia.”
“We didn’t raise hell. We poked the hornet’s nest with a
stick. And then we spent most of the week running away. One
platoon, with a whole garrison regiment on our asses.”
“I read the after-action report,” Harper says. “And the
award citations.”
“Lots of posthumous awards,” I reply. “That’s not really
one of my favorite memories. Any particular reason why
you’re bringing that up?”
He shifts his stance a little.
“Look, I know there was some bad blood between you
and Masoud after Arcadia.”
“You could say that,” I say.
“It wasn’t right of him to do what he did. We all knew you
grunts were coming along to keep the garrison busy. I didn’t
find out until later that he didn’t tell you in advance. We all
volunteer to stick our heads out every day. Nobody likes
getting volunteered.”
“I’m not sure I believe that the whole SEAL team was in
the dark about that,” I reply, trying to keep my rapidly
increasing irritation out of my voice.
Captain Harper shrugs.
“What you believe is not up to me, sir. I can only tell you
what happened.”
“Again—why are you bringing it up now?”
“I wanted to put all the cards on the table before we head
out,” he says. “In case you want to ask for another SEAL
section lead. I didn’t want you to find out a few days from
now when you read through the deployment history in my
personnel file.”
I study the captain’s earnest face and try to discern his
sincerity. With my own anger tingeing my judgment, I know
that I can’t make that call on the spot. But in the absence of
other evidence, I decide to give him the benefit of the doubt
for now. Arcadia was seven years ago, and he was just a young
lieutenant fresh out of training. There’s nothing to be gained in
the moment from blaming him for Masoud’s actions.
Still, it’s not an easy absolution.
“There’s still bad blood,” I tell Harper. “But it’s between
me and the general. Not between me and the SEALs. Or you
in particular. I appreciate your forthrightness.”
“Thank you, sir. I’m glad there are no hard feelings.”
“Of course not,” I say.
But as the SEAL captain walks out of the room and leaves
me alone with my thoughts, I find that I’m not so sure about
that after all.
CHAPTER 8
KEEPING UP WITH THE
KIDS
The top of the platform is two meters above my head, and the
wall in front of me is too smooth to climb. I flex my legs and
feel the fiber strands of my armor’s power liner contract along
with my muscles. A vertical jump like that would have been
impossible for me to do even at the peak of my physical
fitness back in Combat Controller School. But with the Mark
V HEBA suit, I leap off the flight deck’s rough nonslip surface
and get high enough for a handhold on the first try. I hook my
fingers over the edge of the platform and pull myself up. The
HEBA suit weighs over thirty kilos, but the power assist from
the armor liner makes the load feel inconsequential. I swing
my leg over the edge and haul my bulk on top of the obstacle-
course platform, where I allow myself a little pause to catch
my breath and take a brief look around.
We are a week out of Daedalus, and I still don’t know
where we are going or what our task will be. In the absence of
a concrete mission for which to prepare, we spend our days
with maintenance and training. Today, we have set up an
obstacle course with lightweight, collapsible modules. The
course forms a loop on the deck that’s a hundred meters on its
long sides, but we’re still only taking up a small portion of
Washington’s cavernous flight deck. The periphery is lined
with the biggest assembly of military spacecraft I have ever
seen in one place. The Avenger-class battlecarriers have a full
space wing allotted to them—two attack squadrons, two drop-
ship squadrons, and three support squadrons. All in all, there
are over a hundred attack birds and drop ships parked all
around us, painted in the latest high-visibility pattern, in the
bright white-and-orange color scheme of the Avengers.
Exercising with all these state-of-the-art war machines beats
the hell out of running on the road at a base somewhere. It
makes me feel like I’m in the middle of a recruiting vid.
Two hundred years of camouflage conventions thrown out
of the airlock, I think. If we ever go up against the Sino-
Russians again, we’re going to be repainting a lot of gear.
The next obstacle is a single steel bar that bridges a ten-
meter gap to another platform. There are no form requirements
for the course other than “finish it and don’t fall on your face,”
and I can tackle the problem any way I choose. The power
assist of the suit gives my muscles a lot of extra boost, but I
don’t quite trust it to give me the power for a ten-meter jump,
and I don’t want to bust my ass on the deck below while half
the STT troops are watching. Instead, I run across the gap on
top of the bar. The power assist doesn’t just amplify my
muscles, it also helps me keep my balance even with thirty
kilos of armor wrapped around me. The fiber strands of the
armor liner are made of a new flexible wire that contracts
when it is electrified, and the tech wizards of the military
R&D department have found a way to work it into a material
that functions like an external layer of very strong muscles.
Turning on the assist drains the power cell of the armor faster,
but it provides a ridiculous performance boost that never fails
to be intoxicating. The bug suit already gives me a near-
omniscient view of my surroundings on the battlefield, and
now the new power liner lets me run faster and jump higher
than ever before.
The other end of the platform has another two-meter drop.
I jump down and let the armor cushion the impact. The next
section is a twenty-meter run of knee-high tunnel that has to be
navigated while crawling. I dive to the deck and make my way
through the dark tube on elbows and knees. Ever since my
near-death experience in the Lanky tunnels on Greenland, I’ve
had a phobia of dark and confined spaces, so I rush through
this obstacle as quickly as I can to reach the light at the end of
it.
The course is pretty grueling, even for a SOCOM troop in
power-assisted battle armor. Every obstacle is designed to
require the use of a different group of muscles. By the time
I’ve reached the end, I’ve run, dodged, climbed, jumped, and
crawled through two hundred fifty meters of increasingly
demanding structures, and every part of my body aches with
fatigue. But it feels good to sweat in earnest again, and the
backdrop of armed spacecraft serves as a motivator, a
welcome reminder that I am training for a fight again instead
of a yearly physical fitness evaluation for my personnel file.
“Not bad,” First Sergeant Gallegos says when I take off
my helmet and walk over to the spot where he is keeping
score.
“Let’s see,” I say, and he holds up his PDP so I can look at
the screen with the results. When I see the numbers, I flinch a
little. Of all the STT troops who have run the course so far, my
time places me solidly toward the bottom of the middle.
“Good God. Who’s Sergeant Khan? I’m a minute and a
half slower.”
“Khan’s in the Spaceborne Rescue section. Third Squad.
He’s a freak of nature. I swear he could outrun a Lanky even
without power assist.”
“I can’t keep up with these kids anymore, Gallegos. Not
even with a juiced bug suit.”
“Neither can I, sir,” the first sergeant says. “It’s a young
man’s game. But you’re still forty-five seconds above the
cutoff. I’d say you have a few years still.”
“Thank you. I’m glad I know my expiration date now.”
I watch as the rest of the STT troopers make their way around
the obstacle course. They’re all young and fit, highly trained
soldiers in their physical prime. As always in joint units made
up from different specialties, there’s a good-natured
competition going on between the sections. The ones who are
finished with the course take turns motivating the others with
cheers and shouted encouragements. All around the obstacle
course, maintenance crew and deck hands are watching the
SOCOM soldiers tearing through the exercises. These kids are
the new generation of special operations troops, trained and
raised to the trident or the scarlet beret after the desperate rear-
guard battles we had to fight in the first five years of the war.
But they’re every bit as fast and strong as First Sergeant
Gallegos and I ever were, and maybe more so. The food has
improved greatly again, and the new tactics we bled to develop
on the battlefield are now part of the classroom curriculum in
Combat Controller School and SEAL training. The military is
no longer underfed, stretched to the breaking point, or forced
to fight unwinnable battles with unsuitable weapons. Every bit
of the world’s military spending and R&D in the last half
decade has gone toward the effort against the Lankies, and
these men and women are part of the return on that massive
investment.
“That’s the whole lot,” Gallegos says when the last STT
soldiers have made it around the concourse. “We’re going to
leave the obstacle course up until 1700. One of the SI
companies asked to use it. They’ve volunteered to do the
takedown and stowing for us after they’re done.”
“Fine with me. As long as the jarheads don’t break our
stuff. You know those SI grunts.”
Gallegos nods with a mock expression of parental
sternness.
“Lock ’em in a room with two anvils, and in ten minutes
they’ll have lost one and broken the other,” he says.
I leave the first sergeant to his business and wander off
onto the middle of the flight deck while the STT troopers
gather to head back to their quarters for post-exercise showers.
It’s soothing to be in the center of so much new firepower,
even if it’s a reminder that I’m on a warship that’s headed into
harm’s way. But it no longer feels like we are at a breaking
point, and that the end of the world is just one lost battle away.
I walk along the long rows of drop ships, dozens of
advanced Dragonfly-F models and a handful of Blackflies, our
special operations birds. The ones we used to infiltrate the
Arcadia colony were painted in a flat black that seemed to
absorb the light. These new Blackflies are no longer black at
all. Instead, they are wearing the same white-and-orange paint
as the Dragonflies and Super Shrikes next to them. Visual
stealth was good against other humans, but Lankies don’t have
eyes. Even the camouflage patterns on our field uniforms are
pointless now, but we keep them because they make us feel
more soldierly than walking around in high-visibility colors.
There’s an open section on the deck between the drop-ship
parking spots and the Super Shrike attack craft. It’s maybe
fifty meters square and marked off with a red-and-white line.
Several civilian techs are busy with gear that’s unfamiliar to
me. One of them is standing next to a row of knee-high
devices that look like enormous twenty-sided dice. A
diagnostics cable is laid out on the deck, with connectors
leading to each device. They make me think of mines, but I
dismiss the thought immediately because there are no
ordnance flags on them, and I know that neither our ammo
handlers nor the civilian techs would handle live munitions or
explosives without warning labels. I walk over to the tech who
is holding a hand terminal that’s plugged into the end of the
diagnostics line.
“What on earth are those things?” I ask.
The tech turns to look at me. She wears her long brown
hair tied up in a ponytail, a very uncommon sight on a
warship, where almost all the female troops keep their hair
short enough to fit under a helmet. The name tag on her
overalls says “FISHER, C.”
“They haven’t really settled on an official letter salad for
the designation,” she says. “But they’re drones. The R&D
techs call them ‘Wonderballs.’”
“Wonderballs,” I repeat. “What’s so wondrous about
them? If it’s not a secret, I mean.”
I take a closer look at the nearest device. The surface is
faceted, and every one of the facets has a variety of sensor
windows set into it.
“It’s basically a ball of high-powered optical sensors,” she
says. “Plus laser-based comms gear. All wrapped around a
power cell and tied into a central processing core. It’s for the
new early-warning network, Arachne. But don’t ask me what
that stands for. We haven’t come up with a cool backronym
yet.”
“How new is that? It’s the first time I’ve heard about it.”
“Well,” Technician Fisher says. “This will be the first field
deployment, actually.”
She points her stylus at the row of drones.
“The ship carries a few hundred of these. They come in
packs of twelve, launched with a deployment drone. We float
them out a few hundred thousand kilometers, and they’ll auto-
deploy into formation. Extends our bubble of awareness by a
factor of twenty.”
“I thought seed ships were too hard to spot for mobile
early-warning systems,” I say.
“These don’t spot Lanky seed ships. Well, not exactly.”
She smiles when she sees my puzzled expression.
“We beat our heads against that wall for a while. Then we
finally figured out that if we can’t see what’s there, we can
program these to see what isn’t there. Like the light from a star
that blinks out when a seed ship passes in front of it. Or the
light from another Wonderball.”
“An optical trip wire,” I say, and she nods.
“These have twenty optical lens clusters pointing in every
direction. No need to turn it a certain way because all
orientations are right. And the neural core does all the
thinking. Every Wonderball is linked to every other one. And
when one of them sees that a light is going out where it
shouldn’t, all the others know it, too, at the speed of light.”
“Not bad,” I say. “Not bad at all.”
“And the best part? It’s all without active radiation.
There’s a low-power comms laser that sends telemetry back to
us, but that’s it. The power cell and all the neural networking
inside is EM shielded. The Lankies may notice one if they fly
past and they’re close enough to bump it with their hull. Other
than that, it’s just inert space debris.”
“Clever,” I say. “Let’s hope they work as advertised. It
would be nice if we could see a seed ship coming from a long
way out.”
“They’ll work,” Technician Fisher says with conviction.
“I’ve been busy with the software and hardware integration for
a year and a half now. You’ll be able to spot seed ships for the
Orions from a few hundred thousand kilometers out.”
“If we deploy them along the right vector,” I say, and she
shrugs.
“I don’t work on the tactics. Just on the nuts and bolts, and
the computer code.”
Something about her pleasant, earnest face and her small
frame in bulky shipboard overalls triggers a vague recollection
in my brain.
“Have we met?” I ask. “You look familiar. Have you been
on a deployment with the Fleet before?”
She hesitates for a moment and then nods slowly.
“I was on the PACS field test team on Ottawa. Four years
ago.”
Now that she has put a missing piece into the puzzle, my
brain rushes to supply the rest.
“That’s right. You were one of the exo jockeys,” I say
with a smile. “You guys saved our asses down on New
Svalbard. Without the PACS support, they would have overrun
us.”
“It was just supposed to be a field test,” she replies.
“Never thought I’d be in the back of a drop ship on the way
into battle. With live ordnance on the rails. But there was
nobody else around who was trained.”
“Yeah, the Lankies had their own timetable. None of us
thought it’d be anything more than a training cruise.”
“I never want to be that close to any of those things
again,” she says. “I tried to tell myself it was just a day at the
range. But that didn’t work so well once I was on the ground.”
I recognize the haunted expression that flits across her
face as she recalls the memory, and I guess that her nightmares
probably look a lot like mine. The civilian contractors
volunteered to be dropped onto the battlefield when we were
holding New Longyearbyen against what seemed like
hundreds of Lankies, in the middle of a blinding snowstorm
that neutralized our long-range weapons and our air support.
They shored up our flanks with the PACS and stemmed the
tide long enough for us to get all the colonists off the moon,
but the battle was like a knife fight in a frozen meat locker. I
can’t imagine the terror they must have felt to be going into
battle without military training or mental preparation. It was
against every regulation in the book, but it let us turn a certain
defeat into a draw, and the brave R&D techs saved many
hundreds of lives that day.
“Andrew Grayson,” I say and offer my hand. “I’m in
charge of the special tactics team on this ship. I wouldn’t be
here if it wasn’t for you and those PACS. And don’t take this
as a come-on, but I’d love to buy you a drink or two at the
RecFac sometime.”
The small and fleeting smile she gives me in reply looks
like she’s not quite sure whether I am serious or making fun of
her. Then she accepts the handshake.
“I’m Callista Fisher. I’m the lead tech for the R&D team,”
she says. “I don’t really drink. But I appreciate the offer. It’s
good to know that we made a difference.”
“I felt bad that we had to leave all the exos behind. After
all your efforts.”
“We didn’t have the time or space to load them up,” she
says. “I barely made the last drop ship. I think the Lankies
were maybe a hundred meters behind us when we took off and
left the place. But I built that machine. Drove it almost every
day for over a year. It wasn’t great to see it sitting there on the
airfield when the tail ramp went up.”
“Like an abandoned puppy,” I say.
She waves her hand in a dismissive gesture. “Just a
machine, right? We got to build new ones. They’re just
things.”
“We get attached to things,” I say. “Especially when
they’ve served to save our lives. You wouldn’t believe how
much I love my bug suit.”
Technician Fisher flashes that unsure smile again, as if
she’s still trying to figure out if I am genuine. Then the
terminal in her hands lets out a series of low beeps, and she
seems almost relieved to be able to pay attention to it.
“I don’t usually drink,” she says. “Only when things go
really sideways. The only time I’ve ever really gotten drunk
was when we got back in from the New Svalbard evac. The
infantry guys said it would help with the shaking knees.”
She taps a few things on her terminal’s screen and furrows
her brows.
“And right now I need to get back to figuring out why
Wonderball eighty-three here is still stuck in a boot loop even
after two hard resets of the processing core. But I may take
you up on your offer at some point. Might be nice to try a
drink for recreation instead of stress relief.”
“Look me up if you do,” I reply. “Those of us who were at
New Svalbard made a pledge that none of the PACS drivers
from that day will ever have to buy their own booze again if
one of us is around.”
“I will,” she says. “I just hope it won’t be because things
have gone sideways again. I feel like I’ve fulfilled my lifetime
quota for unexpected close combat.”
Overhead, a 1MC announcement starts blaring.
“All command-level officers, report to the flag briefing
room at 1730 Zulu. I repeat, all command-level officers report
to the flag briefing room at 1730 Zulu.”
I check my chrono. A command-level meeting can only
be called by the skipper. Whatever the subject of the briefing,
it’s important enough to hold it on short notice. Right now it’s
1633, which means I barely have time to turn in my armor and
get a shower.
As I make my way to the forward bulkhead at a trot, I
look back at Technician Fisher, who is focused on her hand
terminal again. She’s probably around my age, but somehow
she looks too young in her bulky overalls among all the war
material on the deck.
Let’s hope it’s just a bullshit briefing, I think, even though
I know that no skipper with any sense calls those on short
notice. I suspect that we’re about to find out what task the
Fleet has thought up for us, and I’ve been in the service for too
long to hope for a milk run to a training range. Any podhead
with more than six months in the Fleet who’s still an optimist
is either naive or a complete moron.
CHAPTER 9
MARCHING ORDERS
“Glad you could join us, Major,” the XO says when I walk
into the flag briefing room. All the other command officers are
already assembled. I check my chrono to see that I am thirty-
eight seconds late. I could point out that I am the only member
of the command quintet who had to turn in a set of combat
armor and shower before the short-notice briefing, but I take a
seat without commenting on Lieutenant Colonel Campbell’s
little dig.
Everyone in the briefing room outranks me. Three of them
are colonels—the ship’s CO, Colonel Drake; the commander
of the air and space group, Colonel Pace; and the commanding
officer of the SI regiment, Colonel Rigney. The next one down
the rank ladder is Lieutenant Colonel Campbell, the executive
officer of the carrier. As a major, I am on the low end of the
totem pole here. But as the leader of the special tactics team, I
am not subordinate to either the CAG or the Spaceborne
Infantry. The STT is attached to the SI regiment during combat
ops, but it remains in the Fleet command structure, so my
direct superior is the ship’s commander. I look at Colonel
Drake to see if he shares his XO’s mood, but he merely nods at
me and returns his attention to the PDP in his right hand. I try
to divine the nature of the briefing from the expression on his
face. He seems focused and somber, which is not an
encouraging sign.
Here we go, I think.
“All right, listen up,” Colonel Drake says. He looks
around at everyone and leans forward in his chair, then folds
his hands on the tabletop in front of him. “We finally have our
marching orders, and they are . . . interesting.”
“Uh-oh,” Colonel Pace says in a wry tone. He’s tall for a
pilot and almost unreasonably good-looking, flashing perfect
’burber teeth in a boyish smile.
“I’m sure you’re about to give us your definition of
interesting,” Colonel Rigney says. He’s the only other person
in the room wearing camouflage fatigues, a stern-faced grunt
with a severe-looking gray regulation buzzcut.
“There’s a lot to unpack,” Colonel Drake replies. He
activates the holographic projector in the middle of the
briefing table and links his PDP to it. Then he brings up a star
chart that depicts a slice of the inner solar system.
“All right, let’s start with the setup. We are not heading
for Mars, but you’ve all figured that out already. We are on the
way to an assembly point outside of the asteroid belt. Once we
get there, we will wait for the rest of our entourage for this
mission. We are going to form a joint task force with ACS
Johannesburg and her battle group. That’s CVB-67, the
African Commonwealth’s shiny new Mark II Avenger.”
Colonel Pace lets out a low whistle. “A two-Avenger task
force. That’s not going to be a training run, is it?”
“Only in the context of letting Jo’burg and her crew get
some deployment experience under our experienced tutelage,”
Colonel Drake says. “Our combat systems will be fully
integrated. This will be the first time one of the allied
Avengers deploys into combat with us. They’ve done a turn
above Mars since their commissioning, so they’ve fired war
shots before. But this is going to be their first out-of-system
deployment. So we’ll be their backup, and they’ll be ours.”
“I’m not sure how I feel about having to teach the ropes to
a green carrier crew,” the XO says. “Colonial deployments
could mean Lanky contact. That’s a pretty unforgiving
learning environment.”
“They have to start pulling their weight at some point,”
Colonel Drake replies. “And the Fleet wants to make sure they
have the most experienced Avenger crew from our side along
for the ride. Truth be told, I suspect we’ll be doing the heavy
lifting if it comes down to that.”
“So where are we going, boss?” the CAG asks.
Colonel Drake looks around the table in silence for effect.
Then he brings up another hologram and shunts it next to the
first one until they slowly rotate side by side for everyone to
see. It’s a star chart I don’t recognize immediately. When I
finally recall the configuration of the system, I feel a surge of
anxiety welling up inside my chest.
“We’re going to Capella A,” Colonel Drake says. “Back
to the place where it all started with the Lankies, twelve years
ago.”
There’s some murmuring from the other officers in the
room.
“We’re teaming up with an inexperienced task force,” I
say. “To go into a hot system that the Lankies have held for
over a decade.”
“That’s what the Fleet wants us to do,” Colonel Drake
says amiably. “You were there at Capella A, weren’t you?
Back in ’08 when we made first contact?”
I nod. “I was on Versailles. We pulled up into Willoughby
orbit and ran right into a Lanky minefield. Lost a third of the
crew right there. And a bunch more on the surface. We had no
idea what we were facing.”
“But now we do,” Colonel Drake says. “We have the
experience and the gear. And we’re not going to roll into
Capella with a blindfold on. It’s going to be a reconnaissance
in force. With limited objectives in-system.”
“A hit-and-run raid.” Colonel Rigney leans back in his
chair and folds his arms across his broad chest. “Are we going
to engage in ground action?”
“That depends on what we see when we get there. But I
think it’s pretty safe to say that we won’t be asked to reoccupy
a colony the enemy has fortified for twelve years. Not even
with a full regiment. If we do anything on the ground, it will
be limited to targets of opportunity. We’re not set up for
holding territory in a hostile system. The plan is to stick our
heads in, kick some asses if they present themselves for an
easy kicking, then get the hell back out.”
“They could have a hundred seed ships in that system by
now. Could be we don’t get a chance to get the hell back out
once we transition in,” I say.
“Like I said, we aren’t going to go in with a blindfold on,”
Colonel Drake replies. “The Fleet has allocated a lot of recon
assets to this mission. The stealth corvettes are going to
precede us and map out the opposition before we commit the
task force.”
“Any idea why we’re doing this now, sir? We haven’t had
a tussle with the Lankies in four years. That may change if we
start going out and poking beehives,” I say.
“We’re still at war with those things, Major,” Lieutenant
Colonel Campbell says. “We can’t just hole up in the systems
we have left and hope they’ll leave us alone. We have to press
our advantage now. Before they figure out how to counter the
Orions and the Avengers. Because if that happens, we won’t
be able to cook up something new.”
“It’s a risk,” Colonel Drake says. “We’ll be committing a
sixth of Earth’s operational Avenger force. If we don’t make it
back out, and the Lankies decide to come back for a second
helping, the rest may not be enough to stem the tide.
Especially since the Mark IIIs are still on their shakedown
cruises and Ottawa is going in for her first overhaul in a few
weeks.”
“You podheads are usually more gung ho about locking
horns with the enemy,” the CAG says to me. “I’m surprised to
see the SOCOM guy trying to be the voice of caution.”
I look around the room to see that everyone at the table is
looking at me and waiting for my reaction. A few minutes ago,
the knowledge that I am the junior officer in the room might
have intimidated me into acquiescence. But now that I know
where we are going, I don’t have any reservation about giving
voice to my experience, even if it means I may be stepping on
the toes of the assembled colonels.
“I know that strategic deployments aren’t exactly my field
of specialty,” I say. “And I’m not a xenobiologist. But I’ve
been fighting these things on the ground since the day we ran
into the minefield around Willoughby. And the only thing
anyone knows for sure about them is that we don’t know much
about them at all. Every single time we’ve faced them in a
large-scale battle, they’ve managed to surprise us and blow our
plans to hell.”
Colonel Drake nods.
“Your concerns are justified, Major. But trust me when I
tell you that I have absolutely no interest in biting off more
than I can chew. We have our mission parameters. But we
decide the execution every step of the way. If it looks like
we’re in over our heads, we are heading for the back door.”
He looks at the other officers in the room.
“If any of you have misgivings at any point, I want you to
bring them up to me right away. I don’t intend to run this
operation from the top down. You are all in charge of your
own shops. Any command decision that’s not an on-the-spot
call, we sit down and make sure that Fleet, SI, and SOCOM
are on the same page. If you see that we are about to do
something stupid, don’t hold back your opinion. I have
specialist department leaders for a reason. The Fleet gave us
the mission, but they’re leaving the ‘how’ up to us.”
The commander changes the holographic display to a
side-by-side star chart of the solar system and Capella A.
“We’re going in with two carriers and their combined
battle groups,” he says. “That’s a lot of firepower. More than
we’ve ever thrown at the Lankies. But that doesn’t mean we
have to use all that ordnance. We are sneaking into one of their
neighborhoods, and I intend to tread as softly as I can.”
“If sneaking is the objective, we can send one or two
stealth corvettes and get just as much intel,” Colonel Pace
says. “Maybe more, because they won’t see the stealth ships.
We show up in their backyard with two battle groups, they
may not go about their daily routines. They’ll just throw
everything they have at us.”
“Did Fleet Command tell you what they hope to get in
return for risking two Avengers?” I ask.
“We can do the recon with the stealth corvettes, that’s
true. But they won’t be able to do anything other than sneak
and peek. If they come across any targets of opportunity or
immediate threats, they’ll have to make the run back home and
call for reinforcements,” Colonel Drake says. He magnifies the
chart of the Capella A system. Willoughby, officially charted
as Capella Ac, is making its orbit around the parent star, but
unlike the smaller map projection next to it, the Capella chart
offers no up-to-date tactical information. It’s as empty as an
instructional hologram in astronomy class.
“Four years since our last major contact,” Drake
continues. “Command wants to see what they are doing out
there, why they haven’t made any more excursions into
human-controlled space. Did they pack up and run? Are we
going to walk into an empty system? Or are they biding their
time and assembling a few hundred seed ships for the next
invasion wave? Four years may be nothing to them. Like
taking a quick breather in between rounds.”
He pokes his finger at the planet we called Willoughby,
once home to a settler colony of ten thousand people, and
occupied Lanky territory since the year I joined the Corps.
“We need to get a feel for their posture,” Colonel Drake
says. “And command wants us to take their pulse right there,
where it all started for us. In the place they’ve had under their
control the longest. If their stance is defensive or avoidant, the
stealth corvettes will do the job just fine. But we’re taking in
the two Avengers in case they’re not defensive or avoidant. If
we have a sudden need for big guns, we don’t want to have to
send for them from out-of-system and hope for a timely
delivery.”
He looks at me and nods.
“You are right, Major. We don’t know much about these
things at all. But we know they’re still out there. And if we
want to be prepared for the next time they come into the solar
system in force, we have to find out more about them.
Otherwise we’ll just keep being reactive, adjust our tactics to
theirs, hope we’ll always come up with a last-minute fix when
things get tight. It’s time to turn the tables, let them react to us
for a change. That’s what the Fleet hopes to get in return for
risking two Avengers.”
“I am not disputing the logic,” I say. “Or the need for the
mission.”
“I’m sure Fleet Command will be relieved to hear that,”
Lieutenant Colonel Campbell says with a smile that’s dry
enough for me to see dust coming off it.
“We’ve come a long way in twelve years,” I continue.
“And we know the Avengers can hold their own. I’m just
saying that we need to have as many emergency exits as
possible when we stick our necks out into their turf.”
“You worry about the SOCOM mission,” the XO says.
“We will take care of the tactical aspects of the task force
deployment. I know we lack your experience in direct ground
combat, but we’ll try not to blunder into a trap at full throttle.”
“No need for turf wars,” Colonel Drake admonishes. “I
asked for input, after all. Let’s not tear into each other over
voicing reservations. We’re all pulling on the same rope. If we
screw up, we’ll all end up dead. Let’s keep that in mind.”
“Yes, sir.” Lieutenant Colonel Campbell stops her staring
contest and looks at the projection in the middle of the table.
“What is the timeline for this little field trip?”
Colonel Drake adds the icons for the combined battle
groups to the plot and moves them toward the intersection of
the two sector maps.
“We will rendezvous with the Jo’burg battle group in
thirty-three hours, then proceed to the outbound Capella A
transit point and commence last-minute replenishment
operations. It’s a three-day ride from the rendezvous point.
We’ll be in Lanky space in five days. How long we stay there
will depend on what we find once we transition in.”
He shunts the battle group icons over into the empty
sector map for Capella A.
“We’ll build in plenty of emergency exits,” he continues
with a glance at me. “We are sending in the recon ships first.
Once we get the all clear, the battle group follows. Washington
and Johannesburg will stay in mutually supporting positions
close to the transition point and deploy a recon network before
we venture deeper into the system. If anything comes our way
that we can’t handle with two Avengers, we turn around and
transit back out of that system as quickly as we can spool up
the Alcubierre drives. No heroics, no unnecessary risks. We
have nothing to gain from losing even a single ship in that
place.”
The colonel magnifies the projection and lets it rotate
slowly between us to show the sector maps from all angles.
“Those are the parameters. Prep your departments
accordingly. Give me a go/no-go by 1800 hours tomorrow. If
there’s anything you need, anything that concerns you, bring it
to me. Oh, and the deployment destination is classified from
this command level down until we come out of Alcubierre on
the far side. Command wants us to keep this one quiet. Quieter
than usual, I mean.”
“Gosh, I wonder why,” Colonel Pace says.
“To give them time to tweak the message if they end up
losing two whole battle groups,” Lieutenant Colonel Campbell
replies.
“If we go in and kick ass, it’ll be a morale booster. If they
kick ours, it may cause a worldwide panic,” Colonel Drake
says. “But it’s harder to keep a lid on this if everyone knows
where we went. Keep OPSEC tight on this. We don’t want a
thousand people broadcasting our mission objective back
home. It’ll be on the Networks before we even hit the
Alcubierre chute.”
“A discreet mission,” Colonel Campbell says, wry
amusement on her face. “With a sixth of the Fleet.”
“That is our script. And we will play our parts.” Colonel
Drake freezes the map projection and gets out of his chair.
“Readiness reports by 1800 tomorrow,” he repeats. “Brief
your section leaders but remember the OPSEC restrictions. I
know it’s a pain in the ass, but those are the orders from
above.”
“That’s going to really put water onto the rumor mill,”
Colonel Rigney says. “By the time the platoon leaders brief
the grunts, we’ll have two dozen wild-ass theories floating
around.”
“Like I said, that’s the script we were given. Now let’s
make sure we won’t bomb the play. Dismissed,” Colonel
Drake says.
An hour and a half after our transition, the battle group is back
in combat formation on the Capella side of the Alcubierre
chute, and we are headed away from the node at a slow and
careful pace. In front of us, Washington’s recon drones are
rushing ahead into the system, little flashlights illuminating a
path for us in the vast darkness. My anxiety has lessened a
little, but I still watch the plot display out of the corner of my
eye as we advance, expecting to see the signal-orange icon of
a confirmed Lanky contact pop up at any moment. They didn’t
lie in wait and ambush us at the transition point to take our
fleet out one by one, so the most dangerous part of this phase
is over. But I know that doesn’t mean the Lankies didn’t notice
our ingress into their territory and send out half a dozen seed
ships to intercept our battle group.
“The recon drones have covered half the distance to
Willoughby,” the tactical officer says from her console. “No
contacts reported so far.”
“We’re still calling it Willoughby, are we?” The XO steps
up to the plot table and leans forward to examine the
deployment pattern. “I think it reverted to Capella Ac when
they scraped the last of us off the rocks down there.”
“It’ll be Willoughby again someday,” Colonel Drake says.
“Just not this week. Not with what we brought. But we can
knock down the odds a little for when that day comes.”
When that day comes, I think. We’re still prying Lankies
out of the ground on Mars, seven years after beating them on
the surface. When they have taken over a planet or a moon,
they cling to it with a ferocity and determination that we can’t
match. And Willoughby—Capella Ac—was a bit of a
backwater colony before the Lankies claimed it, with nothing
special to distinguish it that would bump it to the top of a
priority list for invasion. What we’re doing now really is like
poking a hornet’s nest with a stick to see how many of them
remain, even if it’s a really big stick. That day, if it ever does
come, will be too far in the future for me or Halley to see, and
the certainty of that knowledge is a profound comfort. We will
be the generation that stopped the tide. Pushing it back will be
the task of another. There are too many of them and too few of
us out among the stars for it to go any other way, no matter
how many new weapons we have built in the last seven years.
In our solar system, on our own turf, the battle group
seemed stupendously powerful. Sixteen state-of-the-art
warships, armed with the latest weapons, more destructive
power than we’ve ever put into space together at the same
time. Kinetic energy missiles, particle cannons, nuclear
warheads, automatic rail guns, enough potential energy to
throw Earth itself into a long and lethal winter. But now that
we’re on the other side of the Alcubierre chute, with the sea of
darkness cloaking the unknown all around us, our formation
doesn’t seem nearly as formidable as it did above Daedalus a
few weeks ago. Just a few thousand humans, probing their
way through the void in fragile titanium hulls, having to carry
all their air and food and water along with them as they go.
The situational display is zoomed out to the maximum
awareness scale of the passive sensors, light-minutes of space,
and the little cluster of ship icons at the center of it looks very
lonely in the middle of so much unfriendly emptiness.
I hope we’re enough, I think. For whatever it is they sent
us to do out here.
CHAPTER 13
INTERCEPT
Six hours after we arrive in the Capella system, I see my first
Lanky seed ship in four years.
It’s almost a relief when the bright orange lozenge shape
of a confirmed enemy ship appears on the plot, where it
somehow becomes more significant than all the other symbols,
as if the Capella system just shifted its center of gravity to it.
Until this moment, the primitive part of my brain has done its
best to convince me that the Lankies have found a way to
avoid the passive sensors from our drones and scout ships, that
we have been advancing into a cloud of seed ships without
noticing them. The orange icon on the tactical display is proof
to the contrary. But that same part of my brain has been
primed for years to associate the signal color with mortal
danger, and it reacts with the same reflexive fear that
prehistoric humans would have felt at the sound of a pack of
wolves howling in the darkness beyond the light of the
campfire.
“Contact,” the tactical officer, Captain Steadman, calls out
in a voice that is unreasonably calm to my ears. “Enemy seed
ship, bearing three-five-five by positive zero-one-one, range
eight million, five hundred fifty thousand. Nashville is
confirming the drone data, sir.”
“Twenty-five light-seconds out,” Colonel Drake says. “I
was hoping for a little more range on our eyeballs. But I’ll take
it. Better than having one pop up inside of minimum missile
range.”
On the plot, the blue orb representing the former colony
planet Willoughby has appeared just inside our sphere of
awareness, and the orange icon is right in front of it, the bright
color enhanced and emphasized by the blue background.
“Tactical, we have our first customer of the day,” Colonel
Drake says. He gets out of his chair and walks up to the plot
table. The XO follows suit. I stay right where I am because I
have no useful input on the ship’s tactical disposition, and
because I am quite content to remain hooked up to my chair’s
service umbilical. We’ve been at general quarters for hours,
but my bug suit has kept me perfectly comfortable with its
built-in cooling. The vacsuits of the rest of the CIC crew only
have rudimentary comfort features, and I can tell by the sheen
on the faces all around me that it’s much rougher to spend six
hours in a vacsuit than in HEBA armor.
“Designate target Lima-1,” Captain Steadman says.
“Target velocity is two hundred fifty meters per second. That’s
pretty much the rotational speed of Capella Ac. Looks like
they’re in geostationary orbit right above the planetary
equator.”
“One seed ship,” Lieutenant Colonel Campbell says in
wonder. “If that’s all they have in-system, this will be a short
fight.”
“I’ll never be one to complain about favorable odds,”
Colonel Drake replies. “But let’s not charge in with our guns
blazing just yet. Tactical, get me a firing solution on Lima-1.
Comms, let Nashville know to sit tight and wait out the
planetary rotation. I don’t want us to show up in orbit and find
there were six more of them hiding on the other side of that
rock. Do we have enough juice left in the drones to spotlight
the far side?”
“Affirmative, sir.”
“Then send them around and save us some time. Send the
recon data to the rest of the battle group, and inform
Johannesburg that we intend to engage the enemy as soon as
we have the full picture from the drones.”
“We’re not going to give them the honor of the first shot?”
the XO asks. “They’re probably itching to be the first allied
ship with a confirmed kill.”
“It’s been four years since we launched a war shot at a
Lanky ship. And this will be the first time we use one of the
Orion Vs. I’m not too keen on putting that responsibility on a
green crew. They’ll get their chance soon enough, I think.”
I bring up the optical feed relayed by the scout ship that is
holding station five million kilometers ahead of us with its
sensors trained on Capella Ac. When I was here with Halley
on the frigate Versailles twelve years ago, I didn’t have much
time for sightseeing, but I remember that the planet looked
different. Back then, the view was Earthlike except for the
shapes of the continents. But there was lots of blue and green,
patches and swirls of clouds in the atmosphere, sunlight
reflecting off the surface of the oceans. Now the whole planet
is shrouded in clouds, without a single gap in the cover to give
me a glimpse at the surface below.
The Lankies like their worlds warm and high in carbon
dioxide, and whatever they use to terraform the colony planets
they steal from us can flip the atmosphere to their preference
in mere months. Willoughby has been theirs for over a decade,
plenty of time to turn the place into whatever they consider
their ideal habitat. I remember the mortally wounded
Versailles, shot full of holes by Lanky penetrators, already on
a trajectory that would lead her down into the atmosphere and
turn her into a fiery comet when Halley and I dropped out of
her hangar with the spare drop ship, the last people to leave the
ship before it disintegrated. I wonder if any of the major
wreckage pieces made it down to the surface, and whether
they sit there still, overgrown and corroded in the warm,
humid air. There were scores of human dead down there as
well, but I’m sure that there won’t be any bodies left after all
this time. We don’t fully understand what the Lankies do with
human remains, but we do know they collect them and carry
them off. The scientific consensus seems to be that they need
the proteins as building materials for the seed ships, but the
most common opinion in the Fleet is that they eat the corpses,
and the gruesome theory naturally has more staying power
than the clinical one.
The seed ship is a streamlined black cigar shape in front
of the planet’s cloud cover. I feel a chill trickling down my
spine when I look at the familiar outline, bumps and ridges on
an irregular surface that is so black it seems to swallow the
sunlight. It plods on along its orbit, seemingly motionless as it
rotates in sync with the planet below, oblivious of the virtual
bull’s-eye our tactical officer has drawn on it already.
I wonder how many protein chains in that hull used to be
my crewmates, I think with a little shudder. But I was only on
Versailles for a few weeks, and after all this time, I find that I
can’t recall a single name other than that of Colonel Campbell,
who was the XO of the ship and went on to command
Indianapolis. I still remember some of the faces, however—
random crew members of Versailles, caught by surprise by the
sudden decompression of their compartments and asphyxiated,
corpses with terrified expressions floating in the semidarkness
of the ship’s passageways. They died without seeing what had
killed them, the last humans in history who would know
nothing of Lankies.
“We have a firing solution on Lima-1, sir,” Captain
Steadman says. “Orion time on target is twenty-nine minutes,
forty-two seconds.”
“Keep them locked in and update the solution as we get
closer. I want to be able to launch our birds at any time.
Weapons, warm up Orion missiles in tubes one and two.”
“Warming up Orion tubes one and two, aye,” the weapons
officer replies. “Launch prep initiated.”
The new Orion V missiles are half the size of the old
Orions we used above Mars, so each Avenger can carry twice
as many. But they’re still enormous ship-sized missiles that
have more mass than a corvette, so even an Avenger only has
eight Orions, tucked away in two rows of ventral launch silos.
Between Washington and Johannesburg, the battle group can
engage sixteen seed ships at long range. Not every Orion
we’ve ever launched in anger has scored a hit, but those that
did have a 100 percent kill rate. Even if a quarter of our shots
miss, we can blot a dozen seed ships out of space with the rest,
and we’ve never faced off against that many, not even when
we went up against the fleet they had around Mars. With two
Avengers aiming their Orions at it right now, the solitary seed
ship in orbit around Capella Ac is living on borrowed time,
and it will die as quickly as my shipmates did above the same
planet twelve years ago when Versailles ran into a Lanky
minefield. The thought of this impending karmic symmetry
fills me with grim satisfaction.
For the next thirty minutes, we continue our course
toward the former colony planet. The distance readout next to
the seed ship’s blaze-orange icon counts down with every
passing second. There’s no maximum range for the Orions—
they will burn out their nuclear charges and then coast
ballistically once they’ve stopped accelerating—but there’s a
line on the plot marking the minimum range, the point in space
where a launch would be too close to the target for the kinetic
warhead to build up enough energy for a certain kill. It’s still a
long way from reaching the orange seed ship icon, but it draws
closer to it every minute. The Avengers have a very long spear
and a very short sword to back it up, and nothing at all to
cover the range in between.
“New contact, bearing three-five-eight by positive two,”
the tactical officer announces. “Distance seven million, two
hundred thirty-nine thousand. Designate Lima-2. Another seed
ship just popped up on the equatorial horizon. Same bearing
and speed as the first one.”
“Looks like Jo’burg will get a shot at glory after all,”
Colonel Drake says. “Hand off the target data to them and ask
them to lock on with their Orions for a simultaneous time-on-
target launch.”
“Aye, sir,” the tactical officer says and turns toward his
console to contact his counterpart on Johannesburg.
The second Lanky seed ship emerges on the left side of
the planet just above the horizon and makes its way around the
equator line, following the course of the first seed ship.
Against the vast backdrop of the world, it looks tiny and
forlorn even at maximum magnification. I bring up a window
with the live image from the other ship and move the outlines
next to each other on my screen. The second ship is noticeably
different from the first—shorter by maybe five hundred
meters, with a more streamlined and even hull shape. However
the Lankies manage to put these things together,
standardization does not seem to be on their list of priorities.
“Give me a time to target for the Orions, please,” the
commander says.
“Time to target is twenty-four minutes, eleven seconds,
sir. Johannesburg has locked on to Lima-2 and is tracking the
target. They are reporting ready for launch.”
Our recon drones continue their patrol arc, expanding our
sphere of awareness with every passing minute. When the plot
expands beyond Capella Ac and starts to show the space on
the far side of the planet, I almost expect to see a cluster of
two or twenty orange icons, a hidden fleet of seed ships ready
to spring their trap and converge on us. But when the drones
complete their sweep, the only orange markers on the plot are
the two seed ships we have already spotted.
“The drones have eyeballs on the dark side,” Captain
Steadman says. “Nashville confirms that we only have two
bogeys above the planet.”
“Hand off terminal guidance to Nashville and open the
launch door on tube one.”
“Uplink confirmed. Opening launch door on tube one.
Tube one is ready to launch, sir.”
Colonel Drake looks around the CIC, where everyone
seems to be holding their collective breaths.
“This is where we commit,” he says. “Weapons, fire on
my mark. In three. Two. One. Fire.”
Lieutenant Lawrence, the weapons officer, flips the
manual cover off the launch button for Orion silo number one
and presses down firmly. A second later, a slight vibration
goes through Washington’s hull as the one-thousand-ton Orion
V missile leaves its launch tube, propelled by a chemical
booster rocket. I watch the feed from the starboard sensors to
see Johannesburg disgorge her own Orion from its ventral
launch tube. Both missiles streak away from the formation in a
wide arc. When they are a few thousand kilometers from the
battle group, their guidance systems nudge them onto new
courses, and I watch their trajectories on the plot curve toward
the Lanky seed ships.
“Booster engines shutting off. Nuclear ignition in three
. . . two . . . one,” the weapons officer narrates.
On the plot, the little blue V shapes representing the Orion
missiles leap ahead as if someone accelerated reality by a
factor of ten. Some five thousand kilometers away from the
battle group, the two missiles just started their nuclear
propulsion systems, expelling atomic charges and igniting
them behind the ablative pusher plates at their rears, one
explosion every second. It’s a crude and brutal approach to
propelling a missile, but it’s by far the fastest method to
accelerate an object, and no other way comes even close. If we
had people on the Orions, the hundreds of gravities of
acceleration would overwhelm even the best artificial gravity
compensators in a few milliseconds and turn the crew into a
fine organic mush. But the warheads on the tips of the missiles
are inert blocks of super-dense materials—depleted uranium
and tungsten—crude-looking cylinders that nobody bothered
to even shape into penetrating points like our rifle bullets.
Whatever the Orions hit at the end of their acceleration run
must absorb insane amounts of kinetic energy in a few
nanoseconds, and not even seed ships are tough enough to
withstand that sort of blow.
“Missiles are on the way,” Captain Steadman says. “Time
to target is now twenty-two minutes, thirty-one seconds.”
On my screen, I still have an active overlay that shows the
seed ships side by side. They’re creeping along their orbital
paths quietly and steadily, unaware of the warheads
accelerating toward them at hundreds of gravities per second
and working up apocalyptic levels of kinetic energy. If one of
the missiles fails to hit its designated target, it will slice
through the atmosphere of Capella Ac in mere seconds and
slam into the ground with a force many times greater than all
the nuclear warheads in the task force combined. We never fire
Orions at seed ships when the backstop is a planet with
humans on it. But Capella Ac has been Lanky soil for a long
time now, and any lives we wipe out on the surface with a
missed shot would only be a bonus.
Twenty-two minutes feel almost indeterminable when
they are spent watching two little V-shaped icons crawling
across the holographic orb of a tactical situation display. The
missiles streak along at fractional light speed after using all
their nuclear propellant charges, but it still takes a while to
cross seven million kilometers of space, and as much as I
would like, I can’t will them along any faster. After clashing
with the Lankies so many times, I fully expect some
unforeseen twist that will put us on our heels once again. Any
minute, the target ships will alter course and throw off our
aim, or more seed ships will appear nearby seemingly out of
nowhere and send our battle group running back to the
Alcubierre node in full flight.
“Orions are tracking true,” the tactical officer says when
the missiles have reached the last phase of their intercept.
“Nashville is switching the birds to autonomous terminal
guidance. Velocity is one point one three percent of light
speed.”
“Don’t nobody look out of the window over there and
flinch,” the XO mutters. Every set of eyeballs in the CIC is
glued to the tactical display now.
“Thirty seconds to impact on Lima-1 and 2,” Lieutenant
Lawrence calls out.
“Put the target image on the forward bulkhead, maximum
magnification,” Colonel Drake says. A few moments later, the
same image as on my terminal appears on the bulkhead, two
long-distance visual feeds from Nashville’s sensors tiled next
to each other. The seed ships are still making their way along
their orbital track, sinister shapes contrasted against the cloud
cover of the atmosphere.
The two blue icons rush toward the orange ones,
increasing the gap between the missiles at the last moment to
home in on their respective targets thousands of kilometers
apart. The first seed ship is a few minutes away from
disappearing behind the equatorial horizon. The other is a
quarter of a planetary circumference behind, perfectly
presented in the middle of the cloud-covered sphere like the
bull’s-eye in the center of a practice target.
“Ten seconds,” Lieutenant Lawrence says.
On the plot, the blue Vs are close enough to the orange
lozenges that I can’t see any separation between them from my
vantage point at the TacOps station. The time readout next to
them races down toward zero. I shift my attention to the visual
feeds projected onto the forward CIC bulkhead.
The Orion missiles are much too fast to show up in the
image. Both seed ships disappear in brilliant flashes of light at
the same instant. The fireballs are so intensely bright that they
wash out the center of the sensor feed momentarily. Nashville
zooms out a few factors of magnification until the frames
show the entire planetary hemisphere. Two small suns are
blooming in the spots where the Lanky seed ships were
making their way around the planet just a few seconds ago.
“Kaboom,” Lieutenant Colonel Campbell says softly,
deep satisfaction in her voice. Her comment is drowned out by
the claps and low cheers that erupt in the CIC. I stifle my own
relieved cheer and pump my fist at the fireworks display on
the screen instead. Whenever we engage the Lankies, I expect
them to pull a new trick out of their sleeves because they have
done it before more than a few times. It’s a relief to see that
our tactics still work even after four years, that our enemy
hasn’t adjusted to our new weapons yet.
“Splash two,” Lieutenant Lawrence shouts into the
commotion. “Intercept on Lima-1 and Lima-2.”
“Good shot,” Colonel Drake says. “Quiet down, everyone.
Hold the parade until we have a post-strike assessment from
Nashville.”
We watch the fireworks on the visual feed for a few
moments. The fireballs expand and start to dissipate, losing a
little of their intense luminescence with every second. If
there’s anything left of the seed ships, it’s too small for
Nashville’s optics to pick up. Each seed ship just had the
kinetic energy of a one-thousand-ton warhead traveling at 1
percent of light speed dumped into it, more than a gigaton
released in a fraction of a second. Our species already had an
amazing ability to devise ways to kill things, but the threat
from the Lankies has pushed our destructive capabilities into a
whole new dimension. I wish they could communicate with us,
if only to make them appreciate the fact that their attempts to
conquer our space has made us far more formidable foes than
we were just a decade ago.
Should have finished us off when you had us on the ropes,
I think. Now this won’t end until one of us wipes out the other.
We’re just wired that way.
“Nashville confirms successful intercepts on both targets,”
Lieutenant Steadman reports from the tactical station.
“Textbook broadside hits, no visible wreckage observed.”
“Very well,” Colonel Drake replies. “Send our
congratulations to Johannesburg and inform them they can
now paint a kill mark on the hull. Well done, everyone. Now
let’s get into orbit and see what the new management has done
to the place since they kicked us out.”
I’m not used to streaks of good fortune when it comes to
dealing with Lankies, but it seems that the day still has some
luck in store for us. When we approach Capella Ac a few
hours later, the two space control cruisers take point to clear a
way through the usual Lanky minefield for our initial scouting
run. But when the cruisers have finished their optical survey of
the space above the hemisphere, there are far fewer orange
mine markers on the tactical display than I had expected.
When we started our invasion of Mars, there was a cloud of
Lanky proximity mines around the planet, and the
Hammerhead cruisers in all the battle groups had to expend all
their ammunition to blast gaps into the minefield for the drop
ships. The minefield around Capella Ac is more than just
patchy in comparison. After two hours of survey, the
combined sensor data from both cruisers shows just a few
dozen mines in the vicinity, with hundreds of kilometers of
empty space between them.
“Guessing they weren’t expecting visitors anymore after
all these years,” Lieutenant Colonel Campbell says when the
cruisers have finished their data upload.
“That’s fine with me. We won’t have to use up half our
rail-gun magazines just to get a good look at the surface.”
“Something else, sir,” Lieutenant Steadman says.
“Nashville says that the mines seem to be inert. They flew one
of the recon drones past a few of them, and there was no
reaction.”
“Really.” Colonel Drake frowns at the plot, where the
observed mines form a very sparse net above the hemisphere.
Mapping and clearing mines is one of the main jobs of the
Hammerhead cruisers. Their optical sensor suites map each
mine and calculate its trajectory for the next few hours. The
plot is crisscrossed with dotted orange lines.
“This is too easy,” Lieutenant Colonel Campbell observes.
“If they guard all their colonies like that, we can have them all
back by next year.”
“We haven’t looked at the surface yet. Shooting seed ships
out of orbit is just step one. It won’t get us a square meter of
ground down there,” Colonel Drake says. He walks back to his
chair and sits down, then takes off the helmet of his vacsuit.
“Tell the cruisers to clear whatever mines they see. I don’t
want those things to come close to the battle group, inert or
not. Maybe they’re just on standby and slow to wake up. I
don’t want to get too used to easy.”
The colonel looks over to me and nods.
“Major Grayson, prepare to get a team assembled for a
possible field trip. We’re sending out recon flights as soon as
the cruisers knock down those mines. Command meeting in
the flag briefing room at 1400 hours.”
“Aye, sir,” I say and disconnect the service line that
tethers me to my station. I still have a sense of unease, as if
we’re setting ourselves up for an elaborate trap. But right now
I am glad for something else to do than look at a hologram and
a set of display screens, even if it means preparing for a drop
onto a planet that’s most likely lousy with Lanky settlements. I
never look forward to battle—no sane grunt ever does—but I
had almost forgotten just how invigorating the feeling of
anticipating a fight can be. The sense of tension and
heightened perception that comes with an impending combat
drop makes me feel more alive than anything else. It feels like
my entire purpose is focused to a single razor-sharp point in
place and time, with no place for uncertainty or ambiguity.
Maybe that little bastard Masoud was right, I think as I
leave the CIC and head down to SOCOM Country to put the
STT on alert. Maybe I’m the fucking idiot he thinks I am, and I
did miss the war after all.
CHAPTER 14
PLANNING A FIELD TRIP
This time, I make sure to be in the flag briefing room ten
minutes early just so I don’t give the XO another reason to
dislike me. In another life, back before I learned to put the
satisfaction of my ego further down in the stack of my
priorities, I would have enjoyed taking up the gauntlet. Now
it’s just a minor irritant, not important enough to justify the
expense of energy or brain bandwidth.
“So far, so good,” Colonel Drake says when we’re all
assembled. “We’re still here, and there are two fewer seed
ships in the galaxy since we arrived. If I were superstitious, I’d
say it’s a good omen for the remainder of the mission.”
He turns on the viewscreen on the briefing room
bulkhead, which changes to show a slice of the tactical plot, all
sixteen ships of the task force in loose orbital formation, a
fifty-kilometer chain of warships of all sizes. If we had any
colonists left alive on Willoughby, they’d probably be ecstatic
to see the fleet that just showed up in orbit. But we’re over a
decade too late for a rescue mission, so I am genuinely curious
to learn why the Fleet was willing to risk two Avengers to pay
the place a visit.
“Situation,” Colonel Drake says. In the harsh light of the
briefing room fixtures, I can see that he has faint freckles on
the bridge of his nose and his cheekbones, a rarity among
capital ship commanders who spend most of their time inside
sealed metal hulls. His shipboard uniform is tailored to fit his
frame, and it’s obvious that he’s very trim and slender, which
is also uncommon among officers of his rank and occupation.
“The task force is in orbit around a Lanky-occupied
colony, Capella Ac, formerly known as Willoughby. We
neutralized the enemy orbital garrison six hours ago with
Orions, and our cruiser escorts have removed all mines in the
neighborhood.”
“Mission,” the colonel continues. “Our orders are to
conduct a reconnaissance in force, and that’s what we will do
until we encounter unfavorable odds. Battlespace Control
Squadron Fifty-Five and Strike Fighter Squadrons Fifty-One
and Fifty-Two have been conducting recon flights of the
surface for the last five hours.”
The colonel switches the display to show a series of low-
altitude shots of the surface. The Willoughby I remember was
mostly barren mountains and gravel fields, as unfriendly and
forbidding as most barely terraformed worlds, years away
from being temperate enough to support agriculture. The
imagery on the bulkhead screen shows rolling hills overgrown
with green-and-blue foliage, an explosion of color that looks
nothing like the memory of the place in my head.
“That’s Willoughby now?” I ask.
“Affirmative,” Colonel Drake says. “This was taken just
three hours ago by one of the birds from BCS-55. The weather
down there is a bit of a party. Ceilings at a thousand feet, with
fifty-knot gusts. It’ll take a while to get the full picture from
that low altitude. We’re going to focus around the area of the
colony capital instead of trying to map out the whole planet.
We’re still keeping EMCON just in case there are more seed
ships somewhere out there in the system. So radar mapping is
out of the question for the moment. High-altitude
reconnaissance will be limited to thermal imaging. We don’t
want to light up an electromagnetic bonfire and draw the bugs
to our front porch. Even if we can zap them now.”
“Any sign of our tall friends yet?” Colonel Rigney asks.
Colonel Pace, the commander of the space wing, shakes
his head.
“None yet. Two of the recon flights passed over what
looked like Lanky settlements, but they didn’t see movement
on the ground.”
“That doesn’t mean they aren’t around,” I say. Even
though I am not looking at the XO, I can feel her gaze trying
to bore into the side of my head. “As soon as we have boots on
the ground, they’ll come out of their holes. Just like they did
on Mars.”
“On the plus side, the visibility under the cloud ceiling
isn’t total shit,” Colonel Pace says. “The grunts will have line
of sight for half a kilometer or more. And if we have eyes on
the ground, we can still vector in air support. The Shrikes can
drop blind from inside the soup as long as there’s someone on
the deck to designate targets.”
“What’s our objective here?” Colonel Rigney asks. “If
we’re putting boots down, I mean. Are we drawing them out to
see how hard they will bite on the bait?”
Colonel Drake shakes his head.
“The seed ships were easy. But I don’t want to lose sight
of the fact that we are way out on a ledge here. I don’t want to
stick out more than we can pull back in a hurry. Just in case
the door slams shut on us, and we need to make a fast exit.
There’s nothing to be gained from a few hundred dead Lankies
on the ground. Not if there are still a few thousand
underground. And especially not if it costs us a bunch of
casualties and half our ground-attack ordnance.”
“If we put the regiment on the ground, we’re committed,”
Colonel Rigney says.
“Exactly,” the commander replies. “Say we land the whole
SI complement, plus the STT. All the chips on the table. We
lure out the Lankies and start mowing them down with
exoskeletons and close air support. And they throw everything
at us. Like on Mars,” he adds with a glance in my direction.
“We’d have another fighting withdrawal,” Colonel Rigney
says. “A tactical stalemate. And we’d pay in lives and
material.”
“And get nothing in return,” the XO says. “Fact is, we’ll
have nothing to show for it even if we wipe them out on the
ground. We can hold the planet with a thousand grunts. For a
while, anyway. But to what end?”
“We came to do a recon run,” Colonel Drake says. “Not to
plant the flag again and reclaim the whole colony. Just because
it was easier than expected to get into orbit doesn’t mean we
need to bite off more than we’re ordered to chew on this one.”
At least he’s not a glory hound, I think with some relief.
Over the years, I’ve known enough officers who would have
seized the chance to go above and beyond, to plant the NAC
flag down there and liberally invest the lives of enlisted troops
in an attempt to get into the history books.
“But I’d hate to have come all this way without something
for the intel division to sink their teeth into,” the commander
continues. “Let’s make it worth their while. And ours.”
He turns to the bulkhead display and moves the aerial
recon images to one side, then brings up a map and enlarges it
to fill most of the screen.
“This was never a bustling colony,” he says. “The Lankies
got here before it could really get off the ground. Not quite
two thousand colonists. Just a terraforming network and one
major settlement—Willoughby City. For a very flexible
definition of ‘city,’ of course.”
He makes his point by centering the map on the settlement
and zooming in to magnify the view. The colony capital is
smaller than some military bases I’ve seen. It has maybe a
hundred buildings, all lined up on a neat road grid that
surrounds a central administration complex. I know that the
map doesn’t reflect the current realities on the surface because
there’s a terraforming station just a kilometer away from the
settlement, and I know that the Lankies destroy those first
whenever they take over one of our colony planets. There’s
still no firm consensus whether they just hate the
electromagnetic radiation the fusion plants emit, or they
understand the function of the terraformers—that those large
buildings make the atmosphere more suitable for us and less
so for them, and that the settlements need the power from
those fusion reactors to survive. Either way, I have no doubt
that the terraformer on the map has been a shattered ruin for
over a decade now, stomped into rubble by the Lankies shortly
after they landed.
The commander brings up another aerial image and puts it
next to the map. The computer rotates it and zooms in until the
scale of the image matches that of the map exactly. It’s
recognizably the same town because the Lankies left most of
the buildings alone, but even from a thousand feet up, the
deterioration is obvious. I saw this place once from the same
vantage point, when Halley did a slow pass over the complex
after our dash from the terraforming station to see why
Willoughby City wasn’t responding to radio calls. Back then,
the streets were strewn with dead colonists, killed by Lanky
gas pods like vermin in a basement. The memory is still clear
in my brain despite the time that has passed since then, and I
feel a very unwelcome sense of déjà vu.
“That’s a lot of green,” Lieutenant Colonel Campbell
says. “Should it be this overgrown already? I thought the
colony wasn’t yet set up for agriculture.”
“When I saw it last, they barely had grass between those
buildings,” I say.
“No, it shouldn’t be this overgrown,” Colonel Drake
replies. “Not from the bit of stuff the colony had growing in
their greenhouses. This is whatever the Lankies bring with
them when they set up shop.”
The colony buildings are the standard modular concrete
domes, but there’s so much green on them now that they look
like they’ve been intentionally camouflaged by a very
thorough unit of combat engineers. I remember the mosslike
growth I’ve observed on Lanky-occupied worlds, but I’ve
never seen this much of it in one spot. It looks like a hundred
years have passed since humans last walked around down
there. This looks like the network shows my mother liked to
watch with me when I was little, science shows about what the
world would look like if humans all disappeared and let nature
take over. There are no corpses on the roads and walkways
between the buildings, just a carpet of green coming up
through the perforated concrete slabs of the prefabricated
street sections.
This is how they all ended up, I think. Every settlement on
every colony planet we’ve lost to these things. Like the
aftermath of a natural disaster.
“The colony administration building is still standing,”
Colonel Drake continues. “It’s a standard Class IV hardened
shelter. Reinforced concrete walls one meter thick. If they
went into security lockdown, that building was sealed from the
inside the moment they noticed they were under attack. As you
can see, the Lankies either left it alone or they couldn’t crack
the place open. There’s a potential treasure trove of data in the
basement, and I want us to go down there and secure it for the
intel division back home.”
“The data storage modules for the neural network,” I say.
Colonel Drake looks at me and nods with a smile.
“Very good, Major.”
“I was a neural network admin before I became a
podhead,” I say. “And I once spent a few weeks in the ops
center of a Class IV.”
“Very good. Then you can take point on the retrieval
mission,” the commander says. “I want you to put a team
together to go down there and see if the data storage facility is
still intact.”
“The Lankies knocked out the power to that place almost
right away,” Colonel Rigney says. “Is there anything on those
memory modules that’s worth a few hundred SI lives?”
Colonel Drake shakes his head.
“I don’t want to send a few hundred SI troops down there.
We’ve cleared the planetary orbit, but we could get jumped by
more Lankies at any time. If we have to make a quick exit, it
will be much easier to pick up an STT platoon than to airlift an
entire infantry battalion plus heavy gear out of there.”
“A platoon isn’t going to be able to hold much ground if
the resident Lankies start popping out of the ground in
numbers,” Colonel Rigney replies. “Podheads or not. I’d want
at least a heavy weapons company down there with PACS.”
“The skipper has a point,” I say.
“I would have figured you’d rather have some heavy guns
on overwatch while we’re rooting around above the Lankies’
heads,” Colonel Rigney says.
“More guns are always better guns, Colonel. No argument
there. But we had that scenario at New Svalbard, four years
ago. A whole regiment on the ground, plus PACS. And when
the Lankies started to roll up our line, we barely got everyone
out in time. We needed the SI regiment to hold off the Lankies
while we got the civvies on the drop ships. But this time we
don’t have to hold the line if things get tight. We can have a
pair of drop ships on standby in low orbit. We take in a few
STT squads, we can be out again in a few minutes,” I say.
Colonel Rigney shrugs. “Don’t get me wrong. It won’t
hurt my feelings if I don’t get to send my people down there to
get bloody. And I am sure you know what you are doing. But
that’s a long wait for backup if you find yourself needing us
after all.”
“Is there anything on those storage modules that’s worth
even setting foot in that place?” Colonel Pace asks.
“Something we can’t gain from just letting the recon birds
map the whole place from top to bottom?”
“The neural network would have been tied into all the
sensors on the planet,” I say. “Every terraformer, every
satellite. Every surveillance sensor. The network forensics
people could dissect the entire event from start to finish. It’s
like the colony wrote a real-time diary of its own death.”
“Well, that’s a bit morbid,” the XO says. “But I can see
the value. I don’t think we’ve ever had a firsthand account of a
Lanky invasion.”
“Even if there’s no military value to that data, we lost
almost two thousand colonists here,” Colonel Drake says.
“Four hundred eighty-nine families. I checked the files. We
can’t bring their bodies home. Not anymore. But we may be
able to retrace their steps. Take back whatever last messages or
images they left before they got wiped out without warning. If
there’s a chance we can recover any of that, I’d say it’s worth
the risk so we don’t go back home and tell their relatives that
we went forty-two light-years to this cemetery just to take a
few pictures.”
There’s a moment of silence in the room.
“I’m for it,” Lieutenant Colonel Campbell says. “But I’m
not the one who will be sticking out my neck down there. If
we go through with this, the podheads will have most of the
risk.”
She looks at me expectantly. “What do you say, Major?
This may be a quick in and out, and everyone pats you on the
shoulder. Or you have boots on the ground, and ten minutes
later, you are in over your heads.”
I look from her to the map imagery on the bulkhead
display and shrug.
“That’s pretty much our job description,” I say. “But I’m
not going to lie. Five hundred meters of line of sight isn’t
much. By the time we see them coming, they’ll be almost on
top of us. And then we’ll be back at square one because we’ll
need a whole space wing’s worth of close air support to extract
a handful of podheads.”
“We can do a little better than that,” Colonel Pace says.
“BCS-55 has a bunch of the new seismic mines in inventory
now. With the target area being as small as it is, we won’t even
need to deploy a lot of them. Two dozen, maybe, and we can
triangulate incoming Lankies. It’s not accurate enough for
close-air-support runs, but we’ll know if something is headed
your way. Even if it’s underground.”
“How much early warning are we talking about?” I ask.
“Depends on how much of a hurry they’re in. But I’d say
at least ten minutes. They’ll be able to give you a rough
vector.”
“If they work as advertised,” Colonel Rigney says. “Last I
heard, that was still experimental gear.”
“So were the PACS four years ago,” I say. “Anything’s
better than flying blind. Ten minutes ought to be enough to
call down our ride and get the hell out before the
neighborhood watch shows up.”
I look around at the faces of the colonels at the table. “I’m
comfortable with those parameters if everyone else is fine with
it. I conclude with the XO that the potential payoff is worth the
risk.”
“Very well,” Colonel Drake says. “In that case, the
mission is a go. Colonel Pace will have BCS-55 send down the
recon birds to place the seismic gear. Major Grayson, assemble
your team and designate a backup for the standby drop ship in
case we have to come and get you. We will coordinate the
mission from the CIC and give the STT team the green light
for deployment as soon as we’ve dropped the sensors dirtside.
All departments, report mission readiness by 2200.”
“Aye, sir,” I reply. The other officers at the table murmur
their assent as well. Colonel Drake shuts off the bulkhead
screen and gets out of his chair.
“I know it may be a bit of a letdown,” he says. “Twelve
years later, and the best we can do right now is a smash-and-
grab burglary. But I don’t want to commit us to a fight we
can’t win. We have more to lose out here than they do.”
“If we get my team back up here with the data modules
and no casualties, I’d file that one under ‘win,’” I say.
CHAPTER 15
RIDE-ALONG
Half an hour after the briefing, I am back in my quarters and
rinsing off in the shower when my comms panel trills its
incoming message alert. I step out of the tiny bathroom of my
cabin and walk the three steps to my desk, where the terminal
base flashes a soft, pulsating red light.
“Major Grayson,” I say when I accept the comm.
“Major, this is the CO,” Colonel Drake’s voice says.
“Could you report to my ready cabin when you get a minute?”
“Of course, sir. I’ll be right up.”
I slip into fresh camouflage uniform trousers and spend a
minute rolling the sleeves of the blouse before putting it on.
When I check my appearance in the mirror, I notice that I have
a few strands of gray hair now, made obvious by the harsh and
unflattering light of the mirror’s LED fixture.
“Fabulous,” I mutter, and grab one of the little silver
strands to yank it out. It comes away clean, and I look at it for
a moment as it curls between my fingers.
At least I got old enough to start getting gray, I think.
Then I flick the strand of hair into the garbage receptacle on
the wall next to my desk and turn to walk out of my quarters.
“Why don’t we have armor for this sort of thing?” Elin asks
against the rumbling of the hull as the drop ship slices through
the atmosphere. I’m glad for her that she can’t see the light
show I know is taking place on the other side of the titanium
skin, where the superheated plasma from the friction of our
descent is making us look like a shooting star.
“We do have armor,” I say and tap on the hard shell of my
bug suit’s breastplate. “Won’t keep a Lanky from squishing
me, though. There isn’t anything you can wrap around a
trooper to be Lanky-proof.”
“I mean armored vehicles,” she says. “It’s weird that we’d
come all this way in these sophisticated machines and then just
send a bunch of people with rifles to do the work. It seems like
it would be good to have wheels for driving away quickly.
And a big gun on top for shooting all the stuff you can’t drive
away from.”
“Mules,” I say. “The SI has them. They weigh twenty
tons, and you can fit only one into a drop ship. And the places
we go, most of the time we have to disembark anyway and do
the job on foot. The mules can’t go into Lanky holes or up
steep rocky inclines. They need lots of fuel and power cells.
And you need an entire drop-ship wing to transport enough
mules for a single company. You can get four times as many
grunts on the ground without the armor. And if we need more
mobility, we already have drop ships. Those cover way more
ground anyway. The new PACS are better than anything on
wheels. For what we do, anyway. But those take up space, too.
Four per drop ship, versus forty troopers.”
“I see,” she says. “You’ve probably figured out by now
that infantry combat is not my department.”
The drop ship gets jolted roughly, and Elin grabs the side
of her jump seat briefly.
“This is like the worst roller coaster ride ever,” she says.
“I hate roller coasters, by the way.”
“Didn’t they give you combat training with that
commission?” I say to keep the conversation going and
distract her from the bouncy ride.
“I haven’t fired a rifle since Basic Training,” she says.
“We qualify with sidearms once a year. Fifty rounds. I don’t
know why they even bother. It’s not like a Lanky would even
feel those.”
“Last-ditch defiance. It’s basically a magazine full of
fuck-yous,” I say, and she laughs.
“Ten minutes to drop zone,” the pilot sends from the flight
deck. “It’s going to be choppy all the way down, so don’t
nobody get up to go to the bathroom.”
“Copy ten minutes to LZ,” I send back. Then I switch to
my all-platoon channel to address the SEAL team.
“Ten minutes to go-time,” I say. “Final gear checks and
briefing now, people.”
I bring up a tactical map of the target area on my helmet’s
heads-up display and send it to the entire team.
“Deployment as discussed in the initial briefing,” I say.
“We put down on this plaza a hundred meters north of the
admin center. Proceed south on the main boulevard until we
reach the building. Dagger Two and Dagger Four will take up
overwatch positions on the northeast and southwest corners.”
I mark up the map as I go through the steps we rehearsed
in the pre-mission briefing. Everyone knows their jobs and
places, but this, too, is part of the ritual, and it serves to focus
everyone on what’s about to happen.
“Dagger One and Dagger Three will breach the admin
building at the main entrance vestibules. The access panels run
off solar, so they should still have juice to let us punch in the
master code. If the panels are dead, we’ll breach with shaped
charges. We make entry, and I’ll take Dagger One down to the
network operations center. Secure the data modules, exfil,
return to the pickup point, and call down the ship for dustoff.
Any questions?”
“Rules of engagement for the overwatch squads,”
Lieutenant Philips says. He’s the leader of Third Squad,
designated Dagger Two for this mission. “If we have company
showing up halfway through, how close do we let them get
before we light them up?”
“We’ll play it by ear,” I reply. “Depends on the line of
sight we have once we are on the ground. If they’re headed
your way and you can drop them, it’s up to you. If they’re too
close or too many, we retreat to the admin center and let close
air support take care of it.”
The team members all send back their acknowledgments.
I check the vitals overview on my screen for the fiftieth time
on this descent. Comms green, weapons green, biometrics
green. I have a team of the best special operations troops in the
Corps, and they’re all ready to be let off the leash for a little
bit.
“Hand signals for comms whenever possible,” I caution.
“Keep our EM noise to the bare minimum. And no explosives
if we can go in soft at all. No need to stir the neighborhood
more than necessary.”
Another round of acknowledgment marks shows up on
my screen next to the list of team member names.
“One last word to the wise,” I say. “For all those who
haven’t been up against these things on the ground yet. They
move like they’re half-asleep, but they’re much faster than
they look. Don’t get tunnel vision, or you’re in deep shit
before you know it. Do not go out of your way to put rounds
on target just because you have one in your sights. We get
nothing out of killing a few Lankies. There will still be
hundreds or thousands of them. Not even a dozen dead ones
are worth trading a single one of us.”
The ship gets buffeted again, hard enough to feel like
we’re shifting sideways in the air by a meter or two. Outside,
it’s noisy now because we have air on the other side of the
hull, and I can hear rain lashing the titanium-alloy skin of the
Dragonfly. Next to me, Elin Vandenberg looks like she is
trying to disappear in the depths of her vacuum suit.
In the atmosphere nearby, a thunderclap goes off like a
proximity-fused artillery shell. The ship lurches, then rights
itself. On most descents, I like to tap into the eternal sensor
feeds to see what’s ahead of us. This time, I elect to remain
blissfully unaware. Until the skids of the Dragonfly hit the
dirt, our fate is entirely in the pilot’s hands, and there’s nothing
I can do from the cargo compartment even if I see trouble
coming our way.
Going out to tap-dance on a ledge in the middle of a
storm again, I think. Outside, thunder rolls once more, as if to
underline my thoughts.
Outside, the rain has slacked off a little while we were below,
but the visibility hasn’t improved much. There’s a warm,
humid mist in the air that is drifting in and out of the gaps
between the buildings. When I step off the rubble pile and
onto the plaza, my boots splash into deep puddles. As soon as
I am beyond the entrance vestibule, my TacLink screen comes
to life again and populates with all the data updates I’ve
missed while I was shielded behind the thick concrete walls of
the admin building.
The recon flights placed a network of seismic mines on
the ground around Willoughby City that activate whenever
they detect a ground disturbance. It’s such a new system that
I’ve never seen it in action before, but as I check the readouts,
I find myself disappointed at the coarseness of the
information. I wasn’t expecting precise locations and accurate
pictographs of incoming Lankies, but I was hoping for
something more concrete than the vague red-shaded sector on
my map that forms a wedge extending to the west of the city.
According to the map legend, the width of the wedge indicates
the approximate number of incoming Lankies, and the
intensity of the color indicates the rough distance. I compare
the values and feel a swell of dread.
Ten-plus individuals, five kilometers or less.
“We have five minutes. Maybe ten if they’re not in a big
hurry,” I send to the squad leaders. “Dagger team, double-time
back to the pickup point. Threat vector is two seventy degrees,
distance five klicks and closing fast.”
“Copy that. Moving out,” Captain Harper acknowledges.
He signals to the assembled squads. “We are leaving, people.
The neighborhood’s about to get unfriendly.”
Next to me, Elin looks pale and wide-eyed behind her face
shield.
“Remember how you said you were hoping to see a live
Lanky in the wild?” I ask. “It looks like you may be about to
get your wish.”
We start running after the SEALs, who are already making
their way across the little plaza to head for the pickup spot.
With the Lankies on the way already, I decide to throw EM
emission restrictions to the wind and call down our ride. It’s
been a while since I’ve had to do battlespace coordination on
the run, and I find that I haven’t really missed the experience.
“Rapier Three-One, Dagger Actual,” I send to the drop
ship. “We need immediate evac. Dagger team is on the way to
the LZ. Incoming hostiles from the west, five minutes out.”
“Copy that, Dagger Actual,” the response comes. “We
are on the way. ETA four minutes, twenty seconds.”
“We are on the central thoroughfare and coming into the
LZ from the south. All friendlies are moving on the main drag
and within a hundred and fifty meters of the pickup point. If
you see any hostiles outside of those bounds when you’re on
final, you are cleared to engage.”
“Copy cleared hot, Dagger Actual. Stand by for pickup.”
I drop the channel and concentrate on running again. The
torn-up roadbed and the omnipresent plant growth makes for
tougher going than I would like right now as I have to hop
from patch to patch to avoid getting slowed down by debris
piles or overgrown patches. Next to me, Elin stumbles when
she steps into a deep puddle, and I reach out to help her up
again.
Guess you won’t be collecting any samples today, I think.
Sorry about that.
The LZ is an open space between the rows of housing
units and a small cluster of service buildings, uncluttered by
vertical obstacles that could range up a drop ship. When we
landed, I didn’t pay attention to the signage on the buildings,
but as we reach the plaza, it jumps out at me because our
helmet lights illuminate the reflective letters on the signs:
WILLOUGHBY CITY PUBLIC SCHOOL. From the way
Elin’s eyes widen, I can tell that she has seen the signs as well
and understands the implications.
I turn my back toward the building and make myself face
west, toward the incoming threat, because I don’t want my
helmet light to reach through the windows or the clear
polyplast view panels of the nearby doors. The scene in the
admin center was dark and hopeless enough for another year
or two of recurring nightmares. I don’t need to see what the
Lanky gas pods left behind in that school building, where the
four hundred and eighty-nine families of this colony sent their
children on the day of the attack. Next to me, Elin is still
looking at the building as if transfixed by the message on the
reflective letters. I touch her shoulder to get her attention.
When she turns toward me, I shake my head slowly.
The SEALs deploy around the pickup spot in a ragged
firing line, rifles pointed to the west. The sky is an angry shade
of dark gray, illuminated from the inside in irregular intervals
by lightning bolts. The buildings to our west are all one-level
residential structures, but the visibility isn’t good enough to
even see where the rows of houses end and the surrounding
plateau begins. Mist blooms everywhere between the
buildings, drifting across our field of view and swirling in the
wind like ghostly tendrils.
“ETA one minute, thirty seconds,” Rapier Three-One
sends.
The wedge extending to the west on my map display is
now a good twenty degrees wide, and as I watch, the color
changes from a coral red to a dark crimson. “DISTANCE:
<1000 METERS.”
A low vibration shakes the ground a little under my feet, a
familiar thrumming that spikes my heart rate. Another follows,
then a third, each a little stronger than the first.
“They’re in the squall just beyond our line of sight,” I
send to the platoon. “Weapons free. Engage as soon as you get
a fix. Do not wait for effect. They’ll drop when you’ve shot
them enough.”
Next to me, Elin Vandenberg looks like she’s starting to
regret some of her recent life choices. I nudge her behind me
and check the loading status of my rifle. I want to assure her
that she’ll be fine, that we’ll stop the threat, or that there’s a
place she can hide if we don’t. But the truth is that these things
are huge and immensely strong, and that we usually draw the
short end of the stick whenever we have to go toe-to-toe with
groups of them at small-arms distance. If we don’t hold the
line, Dr. Vandenberg will die with us right here on the spot,
seconds away from safety. But that was the choice she made,
whether she believed the magnitude of the danger or not.
In the squall line ahead, a huge shape appears. Then the
Lanky is close enough to be distinct against the backdrop of
the mists and the shimmering bands of rain, twenty meters of
spindly appendages and rain-slick skin the color of eggshells.
For a moment, I have a strong sense of déjà vu. Twelve years
ago, the first Lanky I ever saw walked out of a similar squall,
only a few hundred kilometers from here, in front of the
disbelieving eyes of a handful of Corps marines and stranded
Fleet sailors. But back then, we were taken by surprise,
defeated because we had inadequate weapons and no
knowledge of our new foe. Now we know that they can be
killed, and we know how to kill them.
“Light it up,” I shout into the platoon comms.
The SEALs need no encouragement. The Lanky has taken
two long steps out of the rainy curtain of the squall line when
sixteen JMB rifles open up all at once. The bright red tracer
charges of the rifle bullets look like angry, suicidal fireflies as
they streak across the distance to the Lanky in the blink of an
eye. Some of the tracers deflect on unfavorably angled skin
and careen off into the rainy darkness, but most of them strike
true.
The Lanky falters, stumbles, and lets out its earsplitting
distress wail. I haven’t heard that sound in years except in my
dreams. It’s the soundtrack of crushing fear and imminent
death. Every part of my body wants to recoil from it, crawl up
inside itself and refuse to share a reality with it. But instead of
obeying my base instincts, I put my target marker on the
Lanky’s chest, and I send my own scream back at it, three-
round bursts of tungsten and uranium slugs, made to punch
through Lanky skin and make a path for the fifty grams of
explosives that are piggybacking on each bullet.
Seventeen rounds left. Fourteen. Eleven. Eight. Five. Two.
The Lanky falls just as my magazine indicator shows
empty. Struck by hundreds of armor-piercing rounds, it crashes
sideways into a row of residence buildings, flattening half a
dozen concrete domes as it skids along, still wailing its distress
call. The new rifle rounds are not as powerful as the silver
bullets we used to use, but they make up for it by being much
easier to shoot and allowing for much bigger magazines.
In the squall line behind the stricken Lanky, three more of
them appear, walking almost side by side in a slightly
staggered line. They seem to pay no mind to their fallen mate.
I eject the empty magazine block from my rifle and swap in a
full one, then press the button for the automatic bolt
mechanism to cycle a fresh round into the chamber. The
SEALs engage the newcomers without requiring direction. A
new swarm of tracers rises from our position and rushes out to
meet the Lankies. I add a whole magazine on full auto to the
fusillade, then reload and burn through a third. As I reload
once more, I glance over at Elin Vandenberg, who is squatting
on the ground with her arms over her head, as if she could
plug her ears with the bulk of her suit’s sleeves even through
the thick laminate layer of her helmet.
“Two hundred meters,” Captain Harper shouts.
As the Lankies close the distance, our rifle rounds become
more effective, retaining more energy to funnel into their
penetrator points. Another Lanky falls, shrieking and flailing
its limbs. The one behind it stumbles over its mate and goes
down with it, then starts to right itself and get back to its feet.
Beyond the squall line, I see more movement, heralding new
arrivals. I know that no matter how many we drop, there’ll be
more of them following. Whatever instincts they have, self-
preservation has never been among them. Their main tactic
has always been to grind us down by sheer attrition and then
crush our lines with numbers, and it usually works because
they have the numbers to throw away. Sooner or later we will
run out of bullets, and if they still have live bodies on the field
when that happens, they win by default.
“Rolling in hot,” I hear over the radio. “Dagger team,
keep your heads down.”
From somewhere in the eastern sky, two insanely fast
comet tails streak across the battlefield and smash into the
Lanky that is still on its feet and striding toward us. The shock
wave from the detonation of the missile warheads rocks the
ground beneath our feet, and I lose my footing and go to one
knee next to Elin. When I look up again, I see bits and pieces
of the Lanky’s torso flying everywhere. Part of one arm sails
off into a group of housing domes and bounces off with a
sickening thudding sound.
Then the drop ship is overhead.
Rapier Three-One swoops out of the low-hanging clouds
like a pissed-off guardian angel. The pilot pulls out of the
descent and brings his ship to a hover right above our position,
fifty meters overhead. A moment later, the heavy automatic
cannons mounted on the side of the fuselage open up, sending
little concussive shocks from the muzzle blasts rolling across
the square and making the water in the puddles jump. The
pilot keeps his finger on the trigger button for what seems like
half a minute, hammering a storm of tracers toward the
remaining Lankies and raining empty shell casings down onto
the ground all around us. When the furious thunder finally
stops, the Lankies in our line of sight are all on the ground,
dead or dying, finally mauled and mangled into submission.
“There are more incoming,” the pilot cautions. “Setting
down for immediate dustoff. Do not dawdle.”
“Get up,” I say to Elin and pull her up by the sleeve of her
suit. “More Lankies in the forecast. We are getting off this
rock.”
She’s clearly shell-shocked, but she nods to acknowledge
me even as she looks around wild-eyed to take in the scene.
It’s hard for a civilian to fathom just how much death and
destruction can be unleashed in a few minutes of combat. I’ve
used up over half my ammunition load already, and we have
only engaged four Lankies, two of which needed drop-ship
assistance to be finished off. Three blocks of Willoughby City
are crushed to rubble or blown to pieces in front of us. There is
no training in the world that can really prepare a normal, sane
human for being in the middle of this much concentrated
violence.
The drop ship descends into the middle of the landing
spot, its tail ramp opening even before it puts down. When the
skids hit the ground, the SEALs retreat toward the ship,
weapons still aimed in the direction of the threat.
“Go, go, go,” the pilot shouts over the radio, as if any of
us need the encouragement.
I take a knee by the side of the ramp and keep my weapon
at the ready as the SEALs rush up the ramp and file into the
cargo hold.
“Go now,” I shout at Elin and point up into the cargo
hold. She nods and follows the SEALs into the ship. When the
last of the Dagger team members are inside, I get up and
follow. As welcoming as the drop ship is right now, I am the
ranking officer on the ground, and my pair of boots needs to
be the first to step onto the planet and the last to step off.
The cargo hold is abuzz with frantic activity as the SEALs
secure their weapons and hurriedly strap into their jump seats.
I sit Dr. Vandenberg down in one of the empty seats and strap
her in. When I finish, I give her a thumbs-up, and she nods her
thanks in response.
I secure my own harness and give another thumbs-up, this
one to the crew chief by the front bulkhead, who looks
understandably impatient right now.
“Three-one, we’re all strapped in,” I say. “Tail ramp clear.
Go, go, go.”
The pilot wastes no time hauling his bird back into the air
and out of the reach of angry Lankies. The rain lashes through
the open tail ramp and splashes against my helmet as we leave
the ground and pick up forward speed. Underneath the ship,
the housing units of Willoughby City zoom by, still too close
for comfort. Then the tail ramp blocks my view of the outside
as it seals into place.
“Two hundred and climbing,” the pilot sends. “We are in
the clear.”
I look around the cargo hold and take stock with my
helmet display to make sure all the SEALs made the dustoff.
“Dagger team, all accounted for,” I tell the pilot. “Mission
accomplished.”
“Glad to hear it,” he responds. “That was a bit close.
Sorry for the delay, but I had to keep the ship above the
weather.”
“All’s well that ends well,” I say. “But I am going to have
a talk with the R&D people about the meaning of the term
‘early warning.’”
In the seat in front of me, Elin looks like she has just run a
marathon without preparation. Her face has the familiar
expression I’ve seen on a hundred young grunts after their first
brush with combat—the unfocused stare into the distance as
the brain needs all available bandwidth to process what just
happened, to figure out how to compartmentalize the
experience and keep it well away from the sane stuff.
“You got your wish,” I tell her over helmet comms. “Live
Lankies, in their natural environment. What do you think?”
She looks at me for a full ten seconds before she responds.
“I think,” she says slowly, and her voice sounds like she’s
speaking from the middle of a dream. “I think I am going to
check and see if they have any openings in the xenobotany
division.”
CHAPTER 18
FLAMEOUT
The weather grew more ferocious while we were on the
ground. The ascent back to the ship is much bumpier than the
combat descent less than an hour ago. Even the seasoned
SEALs are looking a little green after five minutes of rough
flight, and I’m feeling more than a little queasy as well. But
the adrenaline in my system is slow to ebb, and my anxiety
just transferred from the danger of Lankies in close proximity
to the danger of getting blotted out of the sky by a hardware
failure. My crash on Mars a few years ago is still vivid in my
memory, when material fatigue caused a wing to break off the
garrison patrol ship I was flying in at the time. The ejection
seat and the parachute both worked, but I’ve been a little more
nervous on drop-ship flights ever since, especially when I am
not sitting in an ejection seat.
Across the aisle from me, Elin avails herself to her suit’s
built-in vomit tube for the second time since we left the
ground. She looks small and exhausted.
“We’ll be all right,” I say. “These pilots know their stuff.
My wife flies one of these.”
“You’re married?” Elin asks, and I nod.
“How about you?”
“No time,” she says. “I’m constantly on the go. Had a new
duty station every year for the last six years. When you don’t
get out much, a year’s barely enough to find out where all the
good food places are.”
“We have the same problem,” I say. “But we’ve made it
work for twelve years now.”
“You’ve kept a military marriage going for twelve years?
Respect.”
“Married for eight. Been together for twelve. We met in
boot camp, if you can believe that.”
“Really.” She smiles weakly and eyes the end of her puke
tube again. “So how do you deal with it all? The time away
from each other. The . . .” She gestures around the cargo hold
vaguely. “The this. Going to places where things want to
stomp you flat. Flying in weather that nobody should be made
to fly in.”
“It’s always been our life, I guess. We’re used to it by
now. We just try to make up time whenever we are together. At
least we can’t ever really get sick of each other.”
“That’s one way to look at it, I suppose,” Elin says.
“It helps to know that we could quit anytime if we
wanted. Resign our commissions, leave the Corps. We
wouldn’t have our retirement funds. But we’d have no more
this,” I say, and make the same vague gesture to encompass
the cargo hold.
She narrows her eyes and smirks as she studies me with
mock intensity.
“I hate to be the bearer of bad news,” she says. “But if you
had the chance to walk away and didn’t, you’re both still in
because you like it.”
I give her a little shrug and a smirk of my own in reply.
“Married a drop-ship pilot—” she begins.
A mighty jolt goes through the Dragonfly, and even some
of the SEALs let out shouts of anxious surprise. The lights in
the cargo hold flicker and dim. A moment later, there’s a
muffled bang, and the engine noise on the other side of the
hull changes pitch and drops by half. I can tell by the shifting
feeling in my stomach that the ship is quickly leveling out
from its climb. When it’s clear that we are transitioning to a
downward-facing attitude, my anxiety spikes again, and I taste
fear at the back of my throat.
“Three-One, Dagger Actual,” I send to the flight deck.
“What the fuck just happened?”
It takes a few tense moments before the pilot replies.
When he does, I hear the warbling of cockpit alarms in the
background of the transmission.
“Sit tight,” he says in a terse voice. “Lightning strike on
the starboard engine. We have it under control. Stand by and
keep those harnesses buckled.”
“Wonderful,” I reply, but the pilot has already cut the link.
A smell of ozone and burning plastic is wafting into the
cargo hold. I look around for possible smoke from an onboard
fire but fail to find any.
“Pilot says we lost the starboard engine,” I tell the SEALs.
“He says they’ve got it, but I am putting SAR on notice
anyway.”
“Fantastic idea,” Captain Harper says and checks the
tightness of his safety harness. “What a shitty fucking end to
the day that would be.”
“We have an engine out,” I tell Elin. “But we’re not
crashing.”
“Yet,” she says.
I bring up my tactical screen and check the assets in the
area. The close-air-support flight is still in the air a hundred
klicks to our southwest, two Shrikes with twenty tons of anti-
Lanky ordnance between them on their wing pylons. If we
have to put this ship down, I’ll be able to vector in the Shrikes
to take out nearby Lankies. But a Shrike can’t land on rough
ground, and even if it could, the Fleet’s main ground-attack
craft has no space or provision for passengers. For the second
time today, I decide to break EMCON.
“Washington TacOps, this is Dagger Actual on Rapier
Three-One,” I send.
“Dagger Actual, Washington TacOps, go ahead,” Captain
Taylor’s voice responds. He’s the on-duty officer manning the
TacOps station in the CIC, and just the man I want to talk to
right now because he is the leader of the Spaceborne Rescue
section.
“Rapier Three-One has an engine out,” I say. “We may
have to put down on the surface. Get the Ready Five search-
and-rescue birds warmed up and into the pits. I’ll update you
as soon as I get word from the pilot.”
“Copy requested launch prep for Ready Five SAR flight,”
Captain Taylor replies. “Alert is out. The birds are moving into
the clamps right now. Good luck.”
The sound from the remaining engine does not build
confidence. It changes in pitch every few seconds as the thrust
level rises and falls seemingly at random. The storm is still
tossing us around, and I have the very distinct premonition that
it will be a while longer before I get to take my post-mission
shower today.
“Dagger Actual, Three-One,” the flight deck finally sends.
“Everything okay back there?”
“Three-One, we’re good,” I reply. “Tell me we’re not
about to fall out of the sky. Because that would fuck up my
dinner plans.”
“Starboard engine’s gone. We won’t be able to make orbit
with the thrust from the port engine alone. I’ll have to find a
place to set down and call for SAR.”
“I’ve already put them on notice. The Ready Five birds
are waiting in the clamps.”
“Fantastic. Stand by for updates,” the pilot says.
I’m not going to die on this fucking planet, I think. Even if
it does seem to have it in for me.
The SAR drop ships arrive a few minutes later, flying a slow
circle over the area before setting down next to our broken
Dragonfly. The Lankies on my tactical display have moved off
to the east and west in two separate groups. Considering what
we just witnessed, I am certain that we won’t need to worry
about having to avoid them for a while. But it’s not the thought
of the threats on the surface that have me putting an extra
spring in my step as I follow the SEALs to the cargo hold of
the waiting search-and-rescue drop ship.
“Can you give me a slow pass over this area before you
start your ascent?” I send to the pilot when we are seated and
strapped in. I have the TacLink map on my helmet display, and
I’m marking the spot where we saw the Lanky disappear.
“What’s over there?” the pilot asks.
“Scientific intel,” I say. “For our guest from the R&D
division. We saw something that might be relevant in the
future. If we ever make it back here.”
“Copy that. I can give you a three-sixty before we leave.”
“Good enough, Lieutenant. Thank you,” I reply.
Elin Vandenberg is sitting next to me, watching the ramp
as it rises with a soft hydraulic whine. I tap her on the
shoulder, and she turns her head toward me.
“Your suit is not tied into TacLink,” I say. “I asked the
pilot for a slow pass of the valley where the Lankies went
under. I’m going to make sure to pass on the footage to you
when we’re back on the carrier.”
“I appreciate that,” she says. “I have it on my own system
from ground level. But that was from a few kilometers away. I
have a feeling that this will make me the most popular
xenobiologist in the Fleet for a while.”
When we pass the valley a few moments after takeoff, the
pilot does as promised and puts the ship into a slow left-hand
turn to circle the area. I watch the feed from the hull cameras
as the terrain pans underneath the ship. The spot where the
Lankies lost half a dozen of their group is now an almost
perfectly circular patch of disturbed soil and shredded
vegetation. For a moment, I am worried that even five hundred
feet of altitude may not be sufficient to keep us in the clear,
but the pilot finishes his turn before I can voice that concern
over the radio. Whatever is lurking underneath the soil down
there is big and strong enough to seize a three-hundred-ton
Lanky and drag it under, and it’s cunning enough to lay
deliberate traps for them. There’s no telling if something of
that size even registers humans as a potential threat or food
source, but I am not curious enough to find out right now.
When the pilot levels out the ship and climbs above two
thousand feet, I slowly let out a breath of relief.
“What a day,” Elin says. “Turns out that too much
adrenaline gives you a bitch of a headache once it starts to
wear off.”
“And nausea,” I say. “Don’t forget the wonderful nausea.”
CHAPTER 19
A DARK VIEW OF
HUMANITY
“That colony was started fifty years ago,” Colonel Drake says
in wonder. “Half a century. They were blasting holes and
driving anchors for terraformers on every continent down
there for years. Whatever that is, nobody has encountered it
before.”
We’re sitting around the table in the flag briefing room,
watching the aerial footage from the SAR ship side by side
with the helmet cam imagery we took automatically. For the
last hour, I’ve seen the ten-second event dozens of times. Even
from a few kilometers away, it’s pretty clear that something
ambushed the Lankies and pulled down half a dozen of them
in the blink of an eye. I watch again as the straggler nearly
escapes the trap, then gets pulled back in with such force and
ferocity that it makes the dirt spray ten meters high.
Next to me, Dr. Vandenberg clears her throat.
“I don’t really think it’s indigenous,” she says.
Command staff meeting are usually only for the
department heads, but nobody objected to the presence of the
ship’s resident xenobiologist today. She looks out of place in
her fresh, new pair of medical technician overalls. We’ve spent
the last three hours on decontamination and debriefing, and
from the way the day is going, we’re nowhere near the finish
line.
“What makes you say that?” Lieutenant Colonel Campbell
says. She seems to have transferred her mild dislike of me to
the outside expert I brought along to the briefing, and her
verbal interactions with Elin Vandenberg are curt and matter-
of-fact.
“The Lankies aren’t,” Elin says. “And the chances that
Willoughby has an organism on it that’s adapted in isolation to
take them as prey is pretty much zero. Whatever this thing is,
I’d bet money that it came from the same place where they
evolved.”
“What kind of species brings its own predator with it
when it goes out to settle another planet?”
“It may not have been on purpose,” Elin replies. “Could
have been by accident. We’ve introduced invasive species to
colonies by accident, and we have all sorts of procedures to
prevent that.”
I’m freshly showered and in a clean set of fatigues, but I
don’t feel renewed. The mandatory decontamination session
after the mission was twice as long as normal, and the briefing
followed right after. I’m yearning for a meal and eight
uninterrupted hours of sleep because I still have the post-
mission shakes, and those won’t go away until I’ve mollified
my body with some carbohydrates and reset my brain with
sedative-boosted sleep. Watching the same terrifying event
over and over on the briefing screens isn’t helping much to
soothe my frayed nerves, either.
“They accidentally introduced something that can hunt
them,” the XO says with a skeptical tinge in her voice.
“We’ve done worse shit to ourselves,” I say. “As a
species, I mean. By accident and on purpose.”
“I like the idea of Lankies getting eaten,” Colonel Rigney
says. “In fact, whatever that thing is, I may make it our new
regimental mascot.”
“I don’t have any particular problem with that, either,”
Colonel Drake says. “But it does take Willoughby off the list
for reconquest. At least until we can figure out if that species
is a danger to us.”
Colonel Pace chuckles.
“Even if it’s not, can you imagine the pushback? Trying to
send a bunch of settlers to a planet that has subterranean
monsters on it that are big enough to catch Lankies?”
“Any idea what exactly we’re dealing with here?” Colonel
Drake asks Elin.
She looks at the images on the screen again and makes a
gesture to stop the repeating footage in a certain spot. It shows
the dirt fountain erupting behind the hapless Lanky, and the
pincer-like protuberance that’s shooting out of the ground to
snag its prey.
“Lankies are ten meters from the hip to the top of the
cranial shield,” she says. “On average. That grabbing
appendage there is half again as long, and we don’t even see
what it’s attached to. But with the force on display here, I’d
say it’s something a lot bigger and heavier. Underground
ambush hunter, so it’s probably what my little brother would
call ‘dirto-dynamic.’” She smiles an apology.
“That’s a pretty vague set of parameters,” the XO says.
“Like a funnel spider. Or a millipede.”
“That’s one hell of a millipede,” Colonel Drake says. He
unfreezes the footage and watches for the fiftieth time as the
Lanky gets pulled back into the hole toward its unseen
attacker. The thought of anything that size even remotely
resembling a funnel spider makes me want to launch a twenty-
megaton bunker-buster nuke at that spot.
“No shit,” I say. “One moment we’re looking at eleven
Lankies. Next thing we know, half a dozen are gone. And it
only took a few seconds.”
“Your new regimental mascot came up through the ground
and grabbed a combined two thousand tons of prey in a single
attack,” Elin says to Colonel Rigney. “I have no clue what
other abilities it has, but that fact alone already makes it the
strongest organism in the observed galaxy by far.”
“The Lankies were freaked out,” I say. “They didn’t stick
around to fight back or try to help their pals. They just ran.
First time I’ve seen a frightened Lanky.”
“If they’re frightened of it, they have encountered it
before,” Colonel Drake says.
“We have what we came for.” Colonel Pace leans back in
his chair and crosses his arms. “Dagger team got the memory
modules from the colony. There’s nothing else of worth down
there anymore. Let the Lankies keep the place and have fun
with their new neighbors.”
“We came for recon,” Colonel Drake says. “We will keep
gathering data until the Lankies run us off, or we run out of
fuel and ammo.”
Elin starts to raise her hand, then catches herself and
lowers it again.
“On that note, sir. Can I make a request on behalf of the
science division?”
“You sure can, Dr. Vandenberg,” the commander says.
Next to him, Lieutenant Colonel Campbell’s face is impassive,
but I can sense the implied eye-roll.
“While we’re on station, I’d like to go back to the spot on
the video and drop some of the remaining seismic sensors in
the area. It’s not nearly as good as ground-penetrating radar.
But we can get a rough idea of what’s there, and how it moves
around.”
“We can probably do that,” Colonel Drake says and looks
at Colonel Pace.
“CAG, have the battlespace control squadron take stock of
what’s left and see how we can put it to best use.”
“Will do,” Colonel Pace replies. “I’ll update you as soon
as I have data.”
“Planning on capturing one, Doc?” the XO asks.
Elin shrugs. “Maybe not the whole thing. But I wouldn’t
mind getting a sample.”
“Just as long as you don’t go down there and try to make
friends with it.”
“That wouldn’t be such a bad thing, would it?” she
replies.
Lieutenant Colonel Campbell laughs and shakes her head.
“Just think,” Elin continues. “It hunts Lankies. It can grab
six of them as fast as you can clap your hands. Imagine the
amount of work we could save the military if we figured out
how to set a bunch of those things loose on every Lanky-
controlled world.”
Colonel Pace lets out a low whistle. “I like that mental
image.”
“You’re much more savage than you look,” I say. “You
just met your first one a few hours ago, and you’re already
thinking about how to turn it into a bioweapon.”
“It’s my field,” she says with a shrug. “Military R&D.
We’re not all just flower pickers down in the biotech labs, you
know.”
“I don’t know how long we will remain on station here,”
Colonel Drake says. “That depends entirely on our spindly
friends in the neighborhood. We have the drone network out
for early warning, and the two recon corvettes are keeping an
eye on things. But we may have to leave here in a hurry. So I’d
rather not commit to any extensive ground ops. Nothing that
we can’t pack up and haul back into orbit in thirty minutes flat.
Whatever missions we execute while we’re here, let’s tailor
them around that requirement.”
“You called this mission a smash-and-grab burglary at the
briefing. But this doesn’t really feel like a burglary,”
Lieutenant Colonel Campbell says. “I feel like I snuck
downstairs into the kitchen in the middle of the night to swipe
some cookies. And now I’m holding my breath and waiting for
my mom to turn on the light because I clonked the lid against
the jar by accident.”
After the briefing, I head for the main ladderwell to head down
to Grunt Country and finally get a meal and some sleep. My
stomach is rumbling, and I feel like I’ve been up for twenty-
four hours even though we only left for the mission eight
hours ago. Combat time passes differently from normal time,
at least as far as the wear on the body is concerned.
When I reach the ladderwell, Elin is waiting for me in the
passageway, hands in the pockets of her overalls.
“I was joking, you know. About turning those things into
weapons.”
“You were half joking,” I say. “But it’s not a bad idea.
When you get bullied, go hire the biggest bully on the block to
punch back.”
“When I proposed the idea, you looked like I had kicked a
puppy or something.”
I gesture down the passageway, and she falls into step
next to me.
“It’s because I know what a bunch of shitheads we all
are,” I say. “Humans, I mean.”
“In what way? Not that I don’t agree with you in
principle.”
“Because we haven’t yet designed a weapon that we
didn’t end up using against each other in the end,” I say. “We
figure out how to sic these things on the Lankies, we won’t be
able to resist the temptation to paint national flags on ’em once
the Lankies are gone.”
“That’s a pretty dark view of humanity,” she says.
I tap the NAC patch on my upper sleeve with my index
finger.
“When I put that on for the first time, there were no
Lankies to fight. I fought other people. Even our own. Hood
rats, SRA, shitty little Earth militaries. And even after the
Lankies arrived, it took us years to stop killing each other and
focus on the real threat. Trust me. Ten minutes after the last
Lanky dies, we’ll start fucking with each other again. It’s not a
dark view of humanity. It’s just our nature.”
“Some of us are trying to be better than that,” Elin says.
“I know. That’s why I’m still doing this job. Just don’t
give the bio-weapons division any terrible ideas.”
She steps up to me and gives me a curt one-armed hug,
then pulls back quickly as if she changed her mind in the
middle of the action.
“Thanks for keeping me alive down there, Andrew. And
for letting me tag along after trying to talk me out of the whole
thing in the first place.”
“My pleasure,” I say. “Don’t let it seep into your dreams.”
“I hope that’s not the last we’ll see of each other. Come
down to the medlab for a chat whenever you feel like it. We
have some spectacularly shitty capsule coffee.”
“Thanks. I’ll keep it in mind.”
She nods and turns to walk down the stairs. I watch as she
disappears belowdecks, braid bouncing against the collar of
her civvie tech overalls. She has some steel in her, but she’s
not a soldier, even if she has a commission certificate that
makes her a captain in the Corps. If she’s lucky, she’ll never
be anywhere near a battle again, and this day will be merely an
anomaly, an exciting anecdote for the rest of her life. For us,
it’s the ordinary grind. I think about Halley, who speaks my
language and understands all of this without a need for
explanation, and the sudden yearning I have for her company
feels like an open flame that’s searing the inside of my chest
cavity.
Another day closer to home, I think. Maybe the fates are
kind, and this was the worst one on this deployment. I made it
through a Lanky attack and a forced landing today, and that
should be enough to fill my danger quota for a while.
I am halfway down the final passageway to my quarters
when the lighting changes to red, and the klaxon of the ship’s
battle alert blares through the deck.
“General quarters, general quarters. All hands, man your
combat stations. Set material condition Zebra throughout the
ship. This is not a drill.”
“You have got to be shitting me,” I say into the
semidarkness, after a brief look around to check if there are
enlisted nearby.
CHAPTER 20
CLOSE COMBAT
When I rush into the CIC to take my spot at the TacOps
station, my first glance goes to the situational orb above the
holotable. There aren’t too many things that can trigger
General Quarters out of the blue, but until I see the color
orange on the plot, there’s still a sliver of hope that we’re just
suffering a reactor shutdown, or that some frigate in our
entourage collided with the supply ship during a refueling op.
But as I take my seat and strap in, I see three orange icons on
the edge of the display, slowly edging in toward the cluster of
friendly blue icons in the middle of the orb. I turn on my
screens and secure my supply hose to the receptacle in the
pedestal of my chair. This is not a drill, and it’s not a refueling
accident. It’s death coming our way in long, black cigar-
shaped form.
The CIC is controlled chaos all around me.
“Bogeys Lima-1 through 3 are now at forty-nine by
positive one-ten,” the tactical officer calls out. “Speed five
thousand meters per second steady, distance 5,313,000, still
CBDR.”
“Nashville confirms they have visual on three seed ships,
sir,” the comms officer, Lieutenant March, says from his
station. “They are on reciprocal heading to the bogeys and
coasting ballistic.”
“The quiet was fun while it lasted,” Colonel Drake says.
“Warm up Orion tubes two through four. Energize the particle-
gun mount and shift it to standby mode. What’s the story on
Jo’burg?”
“They are coming about to intercept bearing.”
“Helm, light the main drive as soon as we are clear of the
formation. Tell the cruisers to shield the tin cans and form up
for egress to the Alcubierre point. Bring us up and around for
the intercept bearing and punch it.”
The tactical display is a swirl of movement as the smaller
ships maneuver out of the way to give the gigantic carriers
space to turn and accelerate. Cruisers and frigates can’t do
anything against seed ships, so the doctrine is for the carriers
to shield the fleet’s retreat to the transit node and take out the
approaching seed ships from long range with Orions.
“We are clear of the formation and ready to burn, sir,” the
helmsman reports.
“Punch it. All ahead flank,” Colonel Drake orders.
We accelerate toward the Lankies at twenty gravities per
second. A few kilometers to our starboard, Johannesburg
follows suit. The numbers next to the orange icons on the
situational display begin to count down with worrisome speed.
“Five million is a little too close,” Lieutenant Colonel
Campbell says. “We should have picked them up at ten million
klicks already. They came right through the drone picket.”
“It’s not infallible technology,” the commander says.
“Doesn’t matter. Weapons, open outer hatches for Orion tubes
two and three. Tactical, upload firing solutions for Lima-1 and
Lima-2. Hand off Lima-3 to Jo’burg. And make sure there’s
absolutely no ambiguity about who shoots at what.”
“Lima-1 and Lima-2 are locked in,” Lieutenant Lawrence
says. “Outer hatches open. Ready to fire tubes two and three.”
“Jo’burg reports they’re locked on to Lima-3 and ready to
fire. Fire control is linked, sir.”
Everything is happening so quickly that I haven’t even
had time to get properly nervous. Barely thirty seconds have
passed since I rushed into the CIC, and both carriers are
already on an intercept course with the enemy seed ships, with
Orion missiles armed and locked on to the targets.
“All right,” Colonel Drake says. “Let’s take a deep breath
and double-check our numbers before we launch thirty percent
of our remaining long-range ordnance into space. We don’t get
extra points for speed right now.”
“Bogeys are still CBDR,” Captain Steadman says.
“Distance five million, one hundred thousand. Hell of a
closing rate, sir.”
“You’re right. No need to rush in. Cut throttle and go to
ballistic, and signal Jo’burg to do the same. We’re far enough
from the rest of the task force now.”
On the tactical display, the cluster of blue icons has split
into two distinct groups. Both carriers are interposing
themselves between the incoming seed ships and the rest of
the fleet, which is making for the Alcubierre node at full
acceleration. If the carriers fail to stop the seed ships, the rest
of the task force will have enough of a head start to make the
node.
I have no task right now, no cog I can turn in the
machinery to help the ship get ready for battle. My special
tactics troopers are buckled in at their action stations close to
the escape pods in Grunt Country, and that’s where they will
remain until we are out of battle one way or the other. I have a
front-row seat to the event, and I don’t need to try to guess
what’s going on from the noises in the hull and the movements
of the ship. But I haven’t decided yet whether that makes
sitting through a ship-to-ship combat engagement more
bearable or less so. Everything happens quickly, and the life
and death of the whole ship and all three thousand people on
her can flip on a single number in a firing algorithm or a
fraction of a second of missile flight time. And all I can do is
check the tightness of my harness belts and listen to the CIC
crew around me as they do their jobs. It’s almost worse than
getting launched through a minefield in a bio-pod. If you die
in a pod, at least you have privacy.
“Particle-cannon mount is energized and on standby, sir.”
“Thank you, Lieutenant Lawrence,” the commander says.
“Range five million. We have a green firing solution.
Johannesburg is still linked and ready to launch.”
“Fire.”
“Firing Two. Firing Three.” Lieutenant Lawrence looks
up from his control screen. “Sir, Johannesburg’s bird cleared
the tube with a second-and-a-half delay.”
“Fuck,” Colonel Drake says in an uncharacteristic display
of emotion. “Ready tube four and match firing solution for
Lima-3. Open outer silo door and prepare to fire.”
“Ready tube four, aye. Matching firing solution for Lima-
3.”
The blue missile icons on the plot rush out from the two
carriers and streak toward the incoming orange icons. We
watch the blue tracks extend from the center of the plot, one
blip every few seconds, like the heartbeat on a medical status
screen. One of the missile icons is a beat behind the other two.
It doesn’t seem like it should make much of a difference at
these speeds, but the commander found it worrisome enough
to warrant a swear, so now I am anxious about it as well.
“Bogeys are still CBDR,” Captain Steadman says.
“Coming in straight and dumb as usual.”
“It had to be three,” Lieutenant Colonel Campbell says.
“One less, and we could have engaged them all by ourselves.”
“Well, yeah, that’s the way the launchers work,
unfortunately,” Colonel Drake says. “Two at a time. We
needed that bird from Johannesburg in the mix.”
“On the plus side, nobody’s splashed three seed ships in
one strike since Mars,” Captain Steadman says in a tense
voice. His eyes haven’t left the blue missile icons on the plot
since they appeared there a few minutes ago.
“The day it starts to feel like this has become easy,”
Colonel Drake replies, “is the day we get our asses kicked all
the way up to our ears.”
“Nashville is still tracking the bogeys. Intercept in thirty.
Twenty-eight. Twenty-six.”
For the second time in two days, I try to will the
disembodied little icons on the screen to hurry along to their
targets: blip-blip-blip.
“Give me the visual from Nashville,” the commander
orders. “Put it up on the bulkhead and magnify.”
The screen that expands on the forward CIC bulkhead
shows a vast dark square of space, and only the little red cross-
shaped target markers superimposed by Nashville’s computer
provide evidence that we’re looking at something other than
empty vacuum. The Indianapolis-class stealth corvettes have
the most powerful surveillance optics of any ship in the Fleet,
and even those high-powered lenses and their software
algorithms aren’t always able to pick out Lanky seed ships in
deep space. But this time, we got lucky once again, and our ad
hoc early-warning system gave us enough advance notice to
employ our long-range firepower.
“Ten seconds to intercept.” Lieutenant Lawrence counts
down. “Eight. Seven . . .”
The pulses of the blue missile symbols on the tactical
screen seem to be in sync with the beats of my heart now as
they merge with the orange icons.
On the viewscreen, a bright flash turns the display white
from edge to edge.
“Intercept,” Captain Steadman calls out. “Stand by for
post-strike assessment.”
The flare-up on the viewscreen dims slowly to reveal an
irregular cloud of glowing fragments expanding into every
direction from the center. A few moments later, a small red
marker appears on the right half of the image, moving in jerky
little steps with every one-second update from Nashville’s
sensors.
“Splash two,” Captain Steadman says, with a hesitant note
on the second word. “Successful intercepts on Lima-1 and
Lima-2. The bird from Johannesburg missed Lima-3. Target is
still CBDR, distance now four and a half million klicks.”
“Weapons, update the Orion in tube four with the firing
solution for Lima-3 and fire when ready,” Colonel Drake says.
“Aye, sir.” Lieutenant Lawrence moves his fingers over
the data fields on his control panel so quickly that they’re
practically a blur. “Firing solution updated and verified.
Launching tube four.”
Another little blue V-shaped icon appears in the center of
the tactical display and rushes outward to meet the remaining
orange symbol approaching from the periphery of our
awareness bubble. The other ships of the task force are
halfway to the edge of our screen on the opposite side, making
full speed for the safety of the Alcubierre node back to the
solar system.
“Tell Johannesburg to ready another tube for a follow-up
shot and fire on our mark.” Colonel Drake has unbuckled his
harness, and now he gets out of his chair and walks over to the
holotable in the center of the command pit, as if he can better
divine the information flow from the computer by looking at
the readouts more closely.
“Aye, sir. They have a new bird ready and locked on.”
“That’s half our Orions gone already,” the commander
mutters.
The missile races for the point in space where the
computer has calculated the intersection between the kinetic
warhead and the Lanky seed ship, building up speed with
every passing second. There’s a practical minimum range for
the Orion missiles where the accumulated speed isn’t yet
enough to create the energy for a certain kill, and we are
getting closer to that line every minute.
“Ten seconds to intercept on Lima-3,” Lieutenant
Lawrence says.
“Sir, there’s an aspect change on the bogey. Lima-3 just
changed course.” Captain Steadman looks up from his tactical
screens.
“Lima-3 just did what?”
“They just made a vector change, thirty degrees to port
and twenty down from their previous approach ecliptic.”
“Three seconds. Two. One.” There’s a pause from the
weapons officer, and then a sharp intake of breath. “That’s a
miss. Orion Four failed to intercept.”
“The Lanky dodged at the last second,” Captain Steadman
says with disbelief in his voice.
“Lankies don’t fucking dodge,” the XO says. “They can’t
see the Orions coming. You can’t dodge what you can’t see.”
“Another aspect change on Lima-3, sir. They turned back
toward port, ten degrees offset from their original trajectory,
and positive twenty on the starting ecliptic. He’s definitely
dodging, ma’am,” Steadman replies.
“He’s zigzagging,” Colonel Drake says in wonder. “We
gave him a warning with that missed shot, and now he knows
there are sharks in the water.”
“Johannesburg is asking if they are weapons free for a
follow-up shot,” the comms officer says.
“We’re kissing up on minimum Orion range,” Lieutenant
Lawrence warns.
“Goddammit.” Colonel Drake strides back to his chair and
sits down. “Tell Jo’burg to hold their shot. No point wasting
another Orion on a dodging target.”
“Aye, sir.”
“Give me Jo’burg on comms, please,” Colonel Drake
says.
“Aye, sir. You are on.”
“Johannesburg, this is Washington Actual. We’ve missed
our opportunity for a clean trap. This one is tap-dancing inside
our minimum intercept range now.”
“Washington, Johannesburg Actual. That’s on us,
unfortunately. We will be happy to take point for a close-range
intercept.”
“Negative, Commander. Turn your ship around and shield
the task force. We are going in for a knife fight. If they make it
past us, you hold off the bogey while the battle group
transitions out. And let’s not argue over who gets to take it on
the nose right now. We are quickly running out of elbow room
here.”
“Affirmative, Washington. We will come about and take
up blocking position. Good luck.”
“Same to you, Commander. Washington out.”
Colonel Drake slips on his harness straps again and
tightens them.
“Comms, lay in a direct intercept course for Lima-3,” he
orders.
“Intercept course for bogey Lima-3, aye.”
“One gravity acceleration, nice and easy. Give us some
margin on the closing rate. Light up the drive.”
“One gravity acceleration ahead, aye,” the helmsman
acknowledges.
“Weapons, it’s all on you now,” Colonel Drake says to
Lieutenant Lawrence. “It’s a head-on engagement, so you get
one shot with the particle mount before we have to take
evasive action. That’s a second and a half, Lawrence.”
“It’ll do, sir,” Lieutenant Lawrence says.
“I hope so. Because otherwise we’ll have a few million
tons of seed ship coming through the forward bulkhead.”
“Lima-3 changed course again, sir,” Captain Steadman
reports. “Now forty degrees south of the approach ecliptic,
descending bearing. He’s mighty nimble for his size. I’m not
sure we could do the same course changes if we had to.”
“Bobbing and weaving like a boxer,” Colonel Drake says.
“Well, let’s get in there and trade blows. See who hits harder.”
“Ready on the particle mount, sir,” Lawrence says.
“Lock the system to auto-fire mode and hand the triggers
to the fire-control computer.”
“Particle-cannon mount is now armed and live, sir.”
I haven’t moved in five minutes, and the air-conditioning
in the CIC is working just fine, but I feel sweat trickling down
my back between my shoulder blades. Washington and the
seed ship are rushing headlong toward each other like two
medieval knights in a joust. We are well inside the minimum
range for the Orions now, and any missiles we fire will not
have enough of an impact to break the hull of the Lanky ship.
That leaves the particle cannon, which is powerful but short-
ranged. With the sizes and speeds of the combatants involved,
ten thousand kilometers isn’t a very long distance in ship-to-
ship battles. Every time I’ve seen the footage of the two
particle-mount kills we’ve achieved so far, it looked like the
old gun-camera footage from World War II atmospheric
fighters, where the firing craft is so close to its target that it
takes up most of the windshield, and bits from the stricken
target fly off and hit the pursuing plane.
I look over to Colonel Drake, who is checking the straps
of his harness again to give his hands something to do, as if
the tightness of the chair’s restraints will make even the
slightest bit of difference if we collide with a three-kilometer-
long seed ship head-on. But I know that in the face of mortal
danger, we all have our little tics and rituals, our brains’
individualized ways of dealing with the stress of our possible
impending death. I’ve run out of fasteners and latches to
check, and now I’m reduced to watching the orange icon on
the holographic orb.
“Lanky is changing course,” Captain Steadman says.
“He’s turning to port again. Twenty degrees. Forty. Fifty.
Seventy-five. Lima-3 is now on a perpendicular heading at
twenty-five to positive twelve degrees. He’s still turning, sir.”
“How does he haul that much mass around this quickly?”
Colonel Drake says.
On the other side of the tactical orb, Johannesburg has
opened the gap as she’s burning her drive at full throttle to
catch up with the battle group, increasing the distance between
us with every refresh blip of the display.
“The Lanky just started to accelerate.” Captain Steadman
looks from his screen to the holotable display and back. “He’s
on a heading back to where he came from. I . . . I think he’s
making a run for it, sir. We scared him off.”
“Oh, hell no.” Colonel Drake shakes his head. “That
won’t do. If he gets away, there’s no telling what’s going to
come down on our heads next. Can we catch up with him at
flank speed?”
Steadman checks his screen again.
“He’s at two and a half g. We can catch him.”
“Helm, all ahead flank. Plot an intercept course that gets
us within gun range as quickly as possible. There is no way
we’re going to let this guy leave the neighborhood and call all
his friends. Comms, inform the battle group that the remaining
seed ship is trying to break contact, and that we intend to
pursue and destroy.”
“Pursue a Lanky ship,” Lieutenant Colonel Campbell says
with a dry smile. “I don’t think anyone’s ever put those words
in that particular order.”
Washington has the higher acceleration rate, but the Lanky still
has a head start, and for the next hour, the distance readout
above the orange icon ticks down with agonizing slowness.
“We’re well past the drone picket now,” Captain
Steadman warns as we reach the sixty-minute mark of our
stern chase. “If there’s anything else out there, we may run
right into it without warning.”
“Then we better take care of this customer and head back
to the battle group,” Colonel Drake says. “But we’re
committed now. For better or worse.”
“He’d pull away faster if he went in a straight line. But
he’s still zigzagging.”
“I’m fine with him making our job easier. We can’t use
the Orions at this range anyway. And I am not about to let him
open the distance and then get away when he dodges the next
volley,” the commander says.
“Seven minutes, thirty seconds to weapons range for the
particle mount,” Lieutenant Lawrence says from the weapons
station.
“Tell me we still have green lights on the mount.”
“That’s affirmative, sir.”
“Steady as she goes, then. At least the closure rate won’t
be a problem,” Colonel Drake says.
The display is empty now except for the single orange
icon that’s moving closer to the center of the tactical orb with
every second. Ever since we first ran into the Lankies, a
solitary Fleet ship would do everything in its power to get as
far away as possible from a Lanky ship. It goes against every
instinct to do the opposite and try to get closer, and it’s even
more unnatural to see that seed ship run away from us.
We’re chasing a Lanky, I think. At some point, the
universe must have flipped itself upside down somehow when I
wasn’t paying attention.
There’s a head adjacent to the CIC for the use of the command
crew, and I relieve myself for what seems like forever. Then I
step in front of the sink and wash my hands and face, savoring
the feeling of the cool water on my sweaty forehead and
cheeks. It’s only when I dry my face and take stock of my
fatigue that I realize the absence of the bone-deep discomfort
that usually comes with Alcubierre travel. It still feels like any
metal surfaces I touch are slightly charged with electricity, but
I no longer feel like something is trying to stretch my bones.
A rumbling vibration shakes the deck under my feet and
makes me lose my balance enough to cause me to grab the
edge of the stainless sink. The lights in the head go out,
leaving me in the dark momentarily. Then the dim emergency
lighting comes on.
That’ll be just my luck, to die in the fucking head after
everything that’s happened, I think.
I dash back to the CIC, which is bathed in the red backup
lighting. All the viewscreens and consoles are dark again. As I
rush over to the TacOps station and fling myself back into the
chair, there’s another low rumble deep inside the hull, and the
consoles come back to life seemingly all at once.
“We are out of Alcubierre,” Lieutenant Cole shouts.
“That means we are still alive,” Colonel Drake says. “Get
the sensors back up, and get that propulsion online.”
“Aye, sir. Reactor restart complete in seventeen seconds.
Sensor network is online.”
The tactical display appears above the holotable again. It
stays empty for a few moments, and then the orange icon of a
seed ship appears.
“Hostile contact, bearing one-eighty-nine by negative
twenty-two. Distance thirteen thousand kilometers and
increasing.”
“Weapons,” Colonel Drake shouts. “Bring the particle
mount online and set the system to live as soon as those
reactors are up.”
“Aye, sir. Preparing to charge coils,” Lieutenant Lawrence
replies.
On the plot, the distance between us and the Lanky
rapidly increases. He’s behind and slightly below our stern,
and with every second, we gain another thousand kilometers
on him.
“Reactor reboot sequence complete in ten. Nine. Eight
. . .”
“Lay in a course that brings us around on a least-time
intercept with that seed ship,” the commander orders. “As
soon as the drive comes back online, bring us around so we
can blow that son of a bitch to hell.”
“Reactors are back online. All systems green. Main
propulsion is lit.”
“Execute intercept maneuver. Swing us around, helm.”
There’s no atmospheric friction in space, no way to bank
and turn a five-hundred-thousand-ton ship like a fighter from
an old war documentary. Instead, we have to change direction
with thrust only, a difficult act that Halley once likened to
balancing a ball bearing on a dinner plate while skating across
a frozen lake. The tactical display whirls around as the
helmsman uses thrusters to turn the bow of the ship, then
burns the main engines selectively to redirect our momentum.
I’ve been looking at situational displays on warships for a long
time, but I quickly lose track of the vector lines and
projections as everything twists and swirls.
“Bogey is accelerating,” Captain Steadman says. “Lima-1
is now at two thousand meters per second and climbing, two
and a half g.”
“Coils are charged. Particle-gun battery is ready to fire,
sir.”
“Lock on to the bogey and set for auto-trigger,” the
commander orders. “Let’s finish what we started.”
When the plot stabilizes, I can see that we aren’t on a
straight course for the Lanky. Instead, the helmsman has used
our momentum and thrown the ship into a curved trajectory
that looks like we are drifting around a turn in a race car. Our
nose is pointing at the Lanky, though we’re not close enough
yet to be in our effective weapons range. But as we continue
on our wide parabolic curve, I can see that each passing
moment brings our arched trajectory a little closer to the
Lanky’s straight one. The physics involved in maneuvering in
zero gravity are still a mystery to me, and I’m glad that the
crew are well-trained experts, no matter how young some of
them seem.
I was launching onto Lanky worlds in bio-pods when I
was just twenty-three, I remind myself.
“If that’s his top acceleration, there’s no way he can get
away before we make our pass,” Lieutenant Colonel Campbell
says with satisfaction.
“We almost had him in range once before. Let’s not do a
victory dance until that thing is an expanding cloud of
superheated debris,” Colonel Drake cautions. He fixes the
orange icon on the holotable with a glare and drums the
fingertips of his right hand on the armrest of his chair.
“The optics are having a hard time tracking him even at
this short range. If we hadn’t known where he started out in
relation to us, we may have never gotten a lock.” Captain
Steadman looks concerned. “Something is off about this ship
all of a sudden. It’s like trying to get a visual on a black cat
running across a dark cellar.”
“Just don’t lose track of him now, Lieutenant.”
“Negative, sir. We have him.”
“Firing window is five and a half seconds,” Lieutenant
Lawrence reports. “We’re getting a nice, juicy flyby of his
broadside for two seconds of that pass. And if we miss, we get
another shot just past the apex.”
For the next ten minutes, we watch the two icons on the
tactical screen shift position ever so slightly with every refresh
of the hologram. We are closing in on the Lanky with what
looks like an insurmountable speed advantage. The little
yellow cone that marks our particle cannon’s firing arc and
range creeps closer to the dotted line with agonizing slowness.
“Visual of the bogey, on-screen,” Colonel Drake orders.
The image that appears on the forward bulkhead shows
just the vaguest and most indistinct outline of a seed ship in
the darkness, enhanced by the image intensifiers and
processing algorithms of the ships’ optical sensors. Where our
spaceships leave the bright thermal bloom of a fusion drive in
their wake, there’s nothing trailing the Lanky that gives any
clue about how their propulsion systems work. We have fought
them for over a decade, but their technology is still almost
completely unknown to us. We know what they do, but not
how they do it, or how they developed the way they did. But
we know that they can be killed, that their ships can be
destroyed, and that’s all the knowledge we need in the
moment.
I wonder if you’re scared, I think as I look at the shape of
the seed ship on the screen. I wonder if you’ve ever had to run
away before. It’s not a fun experience, is it? I wonder if you
fear death like we do.
“Twenty seconds to intercept,” Captain Steadman says.
“Coils charged, auto-trigger enabled. Reactors are at full
output.”
The low noise in the CIC progressively decreases in
volume the closer our blue icon gets to the orange one. By the
time the yellow firing cone of the particle cannon touches the
dotted line where the seed ship is going to be, it’s dead silent
except for the static hum of the machinery and the soft
whispering of the air-conditioning.
“Dodge this,” the XO says softly.
“Five seconds. Four. Three. Two. One. Fire.”
The lights in the CIC dim as the twin particle-gun mounts
claim almost all the available power output of the ship’s bank
of fusion reactors. Deep down in the hull, the cannons
mounted along the centerline spew hydrogen atoms at the
Lanky seed ship at just below the speed of light, carrying
terajoules of kinetic energy across the intervening space.
The dark image on the screen turns into a bright white
one. Ten thousand kilometers in front of Washington’s bow, a
new sun briefly blooms in the inky black as the hull of the
Lanky ship is superheated by subatomic particles that chew
through the armor in a few microseconds and unleash the fury
of a hundred nuclear warheads inside.
“Target,” Captain Steadman shouts. “Splash one.
Broadside hit. Lima-3 is history.”
The CIC crew breaks out in cheers and whistles. This
time, I add my own relieved shout to the chorus. Colonel
Drake sinks back in his chair a little. From where I’m sitting,
he looks like he has aged about ten years and shrunk ten
centimeters in the last few minutes.
“Well done,” he says into the din. “Cut the drive and
secure weapons. Wait for the poststrike assessment before we
officially break out the party hats, people. I am not taking a
damn thing for granted today.”
When I leave the flight deck to head for the CIC and my duty
station to prepare for the upcoming scouting mission, I stop at
the painted threshold in front of the forward bulkhead that
marks the official deck line for reporting in. The ship’s seal is
painted on the bulkhead in a five-meter-tall mural: NACS
WASHINGTON CVB-63—PREPARED FOR WAR.
I turn around to look at the flight deck. It stretches for
hundreds of meters, the biggest open space by far in this
immense warship. As quiet as it is tonight, there are still
hundreds of people out there doing their jobs or utilizing the
space for training or coming down from their watch. As I take
in the sensations of the place one last time before I have to
head up into the confines of the upper decks, I realize that the
feeling of low-level dread that has been coiling in the base of
my brain since we unexpectedly went into Alcubierre with the
Lanky has disappeared. I don’t know what has triggered the
feeling of inner peace that has replaced that dread. Maybe it’s
the acceptance of the fact that on the cosmic timescale, our
existences are a blip in the collective consciousness of the
universe anyway, and that I got to live my little life span with
more agency and autonomy than most. I got to have a purpose
and someone to fight for, and that’s more than most people get
these days.
We may not make it back, I think. But even if we don’t, it
will be all right in the end.
Overhead, the bell sounds over the speakers, signaling the
change of watch, eight strikes of the bell rung in pairs: ding-
ding, ding-ding. It’s a signal to everyone on board that the
routines and heartbeats of this ship and her crew have not
stopped, regardless of where we are in space or what the next
few weeks and months may bring.
I turn and walk across the threshold, toward the
passageway that will lead me back to my duty station.
CHAPTER 25
A SLINGSHOT IN THE
DARKNESS
“It is darker than shit out here.”
It’s quiet in the Blackfly’s cargo hold except for the low
whispering of the environmental controls, and we aren’t
wearing helmets, so I can hear Master Sergeant Drentlaw’s
softly muttered assessment clearly as he cycles through the
feeds on his screens. We’re in one of the coasting stages of our
dash-and-coast trajectory profile, and the engines have been
silent for almost an hour. Every sixty minutes, the pilots burn
the engines for five minutes to build up more velocity, and
then we coast ballistically for another sixty minutes so we’re a
black hole in space most of the time, with no thermal bloom to
give us away or interfere with the reconnaissance sensors.
“Like sneaking through a dark cellar at midnight,” I say.
“It’s funny,” the master sergeant says. “Fifteen years in
the job, and I don’t think I’ve ever really appreciated just how
fucking empty it is out here.”
I check my own screens, which show the current feed
from the passive sensor pods mounted on the drop ship’s wing
pylons. The mission clock shows that we’re seventy-nine
hours into the scouting run, and so far there’s nothing at all on
our sensors except for a hot spot on infrared, now less than
fifty million kilometers ahead. The planet that is our mission
objective is looming in the darkness of deep space, huge and
silent.
“We’re further away from Earth than anyone has ever
been,” I say.
“I don’t think the Fleet gives out an achievement badge
for that,” Drentlaw replies. “But I guess there’s one good thing
about it. It means I am also as far away from my ex-wife as I’ll
ever get.”
I chuckle at the joke, even though it’s a reminder that I am
now as far away from Halley as I’ve ever been. The carrier is
nine hundred light-years from Earth, an almost unfathomable
gulf in space and time. Our Blackfly drop ship is a hundred
million kilometers farther out, coasting across the space
between the carrier and the nearby rogue planet, with nothing
but vacuum all around us for trillions of cubic kilometers.
Right now, the six of us on this ship are the most isolated
human beings in the entire universe.
I check the mission timer again, where the countdown bar
for the watch cycle has almost reached the end of its run.
“Ten minutes until watch change,” I say. “Do you want to
rest first?”
Drentlaw considers my question and shakes his head
curtly.
“I’m still riding out the last dose of go pills, sir. If it’s all
the same to you, I’ll let you take the first rest and clock out
when you’re done in four hours.”
“It’s all the same to me,” I confirm.
The cargo hold of a Blackfly is usually big enough for a
whole platoon of troops: forty personnel and all their gear. The
inside of this particular bird is a lot more cramped, but I don’t
mind the tighter quarters because it almost feels cozy now. We
have mission modules that can be set up in the cargo hold for
various tasks, and half the hold is taken up by additional fuel
and water tanks. The other half is configured for a high-
endurance recon mission, a pair of surveillance workstations
on the front bulkhead flanked by a galley and a separate rest
module for the off-duty team members. Master Sergeant
Drentlaw and I are at the controls, and Staff Sergeant Murray
and the off-duty pilot are sleeping in the rest module. Looking
at screens and data readouts is tiring, so we rotate the duty
stations every four hours.
Drentlaw swivels his chair and unbuckles his harness.
“I’m going to warm up chow. Do you want me to throw in
some for you before you hit the rack, sir?”
“Sure,” I reply.
“Any preference?” he asks.
“Just pull one at random. They all taste like crap anyway.”
“Truth,” Drentlaw says and gets up to make his way to the
tiny galley space where we can heat food and refill our water
bladders from the ship’s supply.
When he comes back a minute later, he puts a little food
tray on the console in front of me and sits down with his own.
“Thank you, Master Sergeant.” I peel the lid off the tray
and inspect the contents. “Beef lasagna,” I say and pry the
plastic utensil off the bottom of the lid. “I’ve never found any
beef in there.”
“You know what I hate about the mission chow the
most?” Drentlaw asks. “Every time I crack one open, I get
pissed off at the thought that this may be the last thing I’ll eat
in my life.”
We may be fighting each other over the scraps from these
things in a few months if we don’t find a way out of this place,
I think. But I keep the thought to myself because I am the
officer in charge of this mission, and fatalism is terrible for
troop morale.
“Next burn in five minutes,” the pilot on duty sends from
the flight deck.
“Copy that,” I reply.
I push my meal tray out of the way and check the sensors
again. In a few minutes, the pilot will light the engines for our
next five-minute acceleration phase, and then the heat and
electromagnetic noise from the drop ship’s main thrusters will
interfere with the sensors and make them less accurate. Trying
to get a picture from only the passive systems is time-
consuming and tedious. Using radar would let us map out this
galactic neighborhood a lot more efficiently, but it would light
us up with electromagnetic energy that would give our
presence away because Lankies can sniff out EM emissions
like sharks can smell blood in the water.
Ahead of us, the rogue planet is getting more distinct on
infrared with every passing minute as we hurtle toward it. I
cycle through the software filters on the sensors to verify the
results with a pair of imperfect human eyes. Even the highly
advanced recon pods have no software that can replicate good
old-fashioned gut feeling. But on this sensor pass, it’s the
software that catches a change in the image, something so
slight that I wouldn’t have spotted it with my eyes.
“Huh,” I say. “Look at this for a second, Master
Sergeant.”
Drentlaw drops his utensil into his meal tray and puts his
food aside, then he leans over to see my console screens.
“Bring up the infrared image from the planet and check
the latest refresh,” I say.
“Uh-oh,” Drentlaw says. He returns his attention to his
own screens and cycles through the modes until he is looking
at the same data.
“Sector D6 to E8,” he says. “I see it. Twenty-five degrees
off the equatorial horizon.”
“And another one at thirty-seven degrees,” I say and mark
the spots on the screen with a light pen.
“Think it’s our friends?”
I magnify the view on the infrared sensor as far as it will
let me, but the two dark blobs that have shown up in front of
the rogue planet are too indistinct to make out precise shapes.
“Maybe,” I say. “Doesn’t really look like a seed ship to
me, though.”
“Computer assessment says they’re different sizes.”
Drentlaw flicks through a few data fields and arranges them to
get a better view of the values. “Anomaly One is estimated
between thirty-four hundred and forty-one hundred kilometers
in size. Anomaly Two is”—he whistles softly—“between
fifty-five hundred and sixty-three hundred kilometers in size.”
“Probably not Lanky ships, then,” I say.
“Or they’re just really big ones.”
“Now that’s a cheerful thought.” I suppress a shudder at
the idea of seed ships that are a thousand times larger than the
ones we have seen before.
We study the heavily pixelated images on our screens for
a little while and watch as the computer tries to make sense of
them. We are still too far away to make out the anomalies with
any degree of detail. They’re just faintly different patches of
color, only visible to the sensors because they block a tiny
amount of infrared radiation from the rogue planet as they pass
in front of it. But the indistinct shapes and large sizes don’t
point to seed ships.
“Those aren’t Lankies,” I say. “They’re moons. That thing
has satellites.”
Drentlaw chews on his lower lip as he ponders my
assessment.
“I think you’re right. Course, we won’t know for sure
until we get a little closer.”
I toggle the button for the intercom with the flight deck.
“Flight, are we still on track for a slingshot maneuver
around that planet?”
“Affirmative, sir,” the pilot replies. “We are on track for a
powered flyby. Unless you spot something that suggests we
shouldn’t. Just remember that we’ll triple our mission time and
fuel expense if we have to wave off the approach and go
wide.”
I look at the infrared screen, where the two slightly darker
blotches in front of the planet are slowly moving across the
magnified display section.
“Confirm we’re staying on track for the flyby, Flight.
That’s why we came all the way out here after all.”