Offensive

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by A. K. DuBoff


  CHAPTER 20

  Shite, why did I ever agree to do this? Kira groaned inwardly as the Raven made its final approach into the Gaelon System.

  Jasmine said in her mind.

  Kira grumbled.

 

 

  the AI replied with a dead serious tone.

  Kira smiled.

  The plan was absurd any way Kira looked at it, but the nature of the enemy demanded an unconventional approach. She took a deep breath and went to meet her team in the galley.

  “Ready?” Sandren asked when she entered.

  Already seated at the table, the three members of her team were standing by to lend moral support.

  Kira nodded to the major. “Let’s do it.”

  “We’re still a few minutes out from the strike time, but why don’t you feel them out?” Sandren suggested. “You need to make sure you can get a solid connection.”

  “I’ll give it a shot.”

  For lack of having someone’s eyes to gaze into, Kira focused on the Gaelon dwarf planet visible through the viewport. “Hello?” she asked into the void.

  She could sense the planet and the strange, constant hum, but no sentient presence met her probe.

  “I know you’re out there. I want to talk.”

  Silence.

  “No response,” she reported with a sigh.

  “Hmm.” Sandren stroked his chin. “Hopefully, once they realize we—” He cut off when a jolt rocked the Raven.

  “Uh, what was that?” Ari asked no one in particular.

  Kira looked around outside, but none of the other ships were visible with her naked eye. She reached out to magnify the view, but another jolt rocked them, powerful enough to make her stumble against the wall.

  “That’s not good.”

  Sandren ran toward the ladder. “I need to get to the bridge.”

  Kira followed him. “Is it something I did, I wonder?” she speculated while they climbed.

  “I have no idea,” the major replied. “Obviously, they know we’re here now.”

  Once at the top of the ladder, they ran toward the bridge and were knocked sideways in the middle of the corridor.

  “That was stronger than the last,” Kira observed.

  “I don’t like that trend one bit.”

  Sandren was the first through the door. “What in the stars is going on?” he asked the captain and first officer.

  “The ship is acting like we’re caught in some sort of gravity well,” Rodrick replied while he fought with the controls. “If I didn’t know better, I’d say we were at the event horizon of a black hole.”

  Aleya shook her head. “Nothing about this makes any sense. Other ships are reporting the same thing. We’re all being pulled toward the planet.”

  “Oooooh shite,” Kira whispered.

  Sandren turned to look at her, standing behind him. “What?”

  “Remember how we said the gravity on the planet was too strong for something of its mass? What if they have some kind of massive gravity generator and they just cranked it up to the max?”

  The others’ faces drained.

  “That would explain it,” Rodrick said, “but I don’t like where it’s going.”

  “Artificial-grav at that scale is really unstable.” Aleya shook her head. “I doubt they’d be able to keep this up for long without running into problems.”

  “And what would happen then?” Sandren asked.

  “Stars if I know, but it’d be bad,” the first officer replied.

  “Pull back,” Sandren ordered.

  “We’ve tried, but navigation is, uh… not behaving,” Rodrick said.

  “Shite,” Kira whispered to herself. “Sir?” She jerked her head toward the hall and left the bridge.

  Sandren followed. “What?”

  “What if the Trols figured out a way to remotely hack our ship’s computers using the algorithms from the external processor we left behind?”

  The major got that look in his eyes that he did whenever he was in crunch time. “We need to act before they get complete control.” He ran back into the bridge. “All right, get ready to send those torpedoes. And, Kira, you’re up. Time to get their attention and keep it.”

  “Yes, sir,” she acknowledged.

  she added privately to Jasmine while she followed Sandren back to the galley area.

 

 

  Jasmine pointed out.

  Kira caught on.

 

 

  Kira reached the bottom of the ladder and then ran to the galley.

  “What’s going on?” Kyle asked.

  “Gravity generator, we think. And they may have hacked our nav system,” Kira replied. “But we’re going to take them down first.”

  She stared at the planet out the viewport, extending her mind. “No more playing. Let’s have a chat.”

  Her telepathic probe met only emptiness at first, and then a chorus of voices whispered in her mind. “You’ll still be ours.”

  Kira tapped the side of her head to let Sandren know she’d made contact.

  Sandren, in turn, pointed to the ticking clock for their synchronized strike. Kira would have to keep the Trols talking for another seventy seconds.

  “Where did you come from?” she asked as a stall tactic.

  “Far from here, and soon all will be ours,” the chorus replied.

  Another jolt shook the ship, and Kira steadied herself with her hands on the viewport’s sill. “I appreciate your ambition. In fact, I was just talking with a friend about how you need to go big or not bother. So, congrats on that.”

  The aliens retreated slightly, as though caught off-guard by the casual tone—just like Kira had intended.

  “We’d really like to stop fighting with you,” she continued when they didn’t reply. “Except you’re making that rather difficult.”

  “Submit!” the chorus said in her mind.

  Kira felt the tug of their power, but she held firm. “See, we want that the other way around.”

  “We will never work with inferior beings.”

  Feedback squealed on the ship’s comm system, breaking Kira’s focus. She covered her ears. “What was—”

  “Transmitter on the planet just activated!” Aleya announced over the comm when the squeal subsided. “Signal is fifteen times prior recorded magnitude.”

  Sandren swore under his breath. “We need to shut that thing down!”

  Shite! Kira struggled to clear her mind and restore the telepathic link. “What are you trying to do?” she asked the aliens.

  They didn’t reply, but the connection was reestablished; she could sense their satisfaction.

  Kira checked the countdown clock: five seconds. Let’s see how long that smugness lasts.

  Sandren activated a magnification overlay on the viewport. The enhanced image showed a torpedo launching from the ship nearest the Raven, forming a thin, bright streak across the black. The trail continued through the planet’s atmosphere, and then there was a moment of stillness.

  An explosive plume flashed for a second, and then a shockwave rippled through the surrounding landscape. The torpedo had hit its mark, and systems registered that the capsule carrying the chemical cocktail had disintegrated like it was supposed to.

  “I bet that go
t their attention,” Kira said without taking her eyes off the viewport.

  “Sorry,” she continued through the telepathic link, “that was rude of us to bust down the whole front door rather than knocking politely.”

  The aliens roared in her mind—blind, directionless rage.

  Kira smirked. “Oh, wait, you enslaved a bunch of our people and then said you’d do it all again. Yeah, we’re not here to play nice.”

  — — —

  “All right, it’s almost time,” Ellen said after checking the clock that had been synced with the Guard’s master time. “How are we coming with that hole?”

  “Survey puts it at a meter shy of breaking through the cavern roof. The Trols have to know we’re close,” Fiona reported.

  “But even if they know exactly what we’re doing, they have nowhere to run.” Ellen smiled to herself.

  They’d gotten lucky with many aspects of the plan. The rock was too dense to complete a geological survey ahead of time to make sure they were, in fact, positioned above the cavern and the pit it contained. At the halfway point, though, the scanning tech had been able to pick up the layers underneath. The drill’s aim had been off by five meters, but they were able to adjust the angle so the final tunnel would bore out above the center of the pit.

  While the Trols may be expecting an assault through the main tunnel—both due to the commotion on the surface, and because they were privy to the original components of the plan that Garett had known—the sonic component was a new addition, thanks to Kira’s observation in Edgar’s memories. When Ellen had suggested that Kira talk with him, she’d never dreamed such critical information would be gleaned. It was the advantage they needed to settle the score once and for all.

  With the chemical tanks already rigged up, all that remained was to punch through the final rock in the cavern ceiling and drop the distribution hoses down the shaft.

  Ellen consulted their timetable. “Okay, go!”

  She released a long breath and splayed her fingers on the desktop while the drill made its final cut.

  “We’re through!” Trisha announced after getting confirmation from the drill team over the headset. “Dropping hoses—”

  The ground rocked underneath the drill, trembling the camera.

  “What’s happening?” Ellen demanded.

  On camera, the teams scrambled to untether the drill and move it away from the shaft. The scaffolding holding the drill flexed, threatening to collapse and block the hole.

  “Shite!” Trisha exclaimed. “Is it going to cave in?”

  A shrill squeal sounded over the comms, and Trisha ripped out her earpiece. “Transmission on all frequencies,” she reported.

  Fiona’s eyes widened. “Are we too late? Was that the transmitter?”

  Ellen didn’t care to wait to find out. “Now! Release it now!”

  Trisha swiveled back to her station. “Communication band is clearing. Sending order.”

  The monitors showed the equipment around the drill site springing to life. The nebulizer activated, sending the chemical mixture through the tubes as a fine mist that would permeate the cavern walls beneath the drill site. Additional tubes, ending in spray nozzles, deployed a shower of chemicals to coat the walls of the pit.

  The shaking stopped as quickly as it had begun.

  “Is it… working?” Fiona asked cautiously.

  “I don’t know, but that ground is too unstable,” Ellen replied. “Clear the site.”

  Trisha glanced over her shoulder. “Time to blast them?”

  Ellen nodded. “As soon as everyone evacuates, activate the speakers.”

  — — —

  Kira stared down at the dwarf planet, bolstering her connection to the alien collective within. “You had your chance to live,” she told them, “but now force will be met with force.”

  “And you will be overpowered,” the aliens sneered back.

  The Guard soldiers sitting around her in the galley went rigid.

  “Sir?” she said to Sandren, hoping the situation wasn’t what it appeared.

  He took a choking breath, but remained immobilized.

  Fok! Kira’s connection to the Trols faltered as she tried to assess the state of her friends. “Stay with me!” she shouted, but they made no indication they could hear her.

 

  the AI replied.

 

 

  Kira broke eye contact with the planet to spot the auditory equipment that was set up on the galley table. As soon as she looked away from the viewport, the connection weakened.

 

 

  Jasmine’s words refocused Kira. She knew exactly what she had to do.

  She had to get angry.

  All the hurt and confusion that had been swirling inside her since her nanite exposure flooded to the surface. She let it fuel a seething rage within.

  Her nerves ignited—eyes illuminating orange as the nanites formed nails, fangs, and scaled armor. She wished there was something to slash, but telepathic destruction was in order on this particular day.

  “You want to get to know your creation? Well, here I am!” she snarled.

  Kira opened her mind to share her physical sensory experience. Her consciousness became one with the planet, integrated with the hub and carried through its tendrils, woven throughout the rest of the world. Thoughts were no longer her own, sharing everything linked through the hub.

  Pain and anger led her to her transformation—to her power—but it was the other side of the spectrum that would lead to victory.

  She drew on her sense of fulfillment in the Guard, her love for Leon, the bond she shared with her team—flooding the telepathic connection with the positive thoughts of what always gave her strength, but would be poison to the Trols.

  They tried to pull back, but Kira’s telepathic hold was complete. Sharing her happiness was just the opening volley, a ploy to catch them off-guard.

  It was time to go in for the kill.

  Kira activated the recording of the opposing soundwaves for the frequency resonating throughout the planet below.

  The Trols shrieked in Kira’s mind as she pelted them with the sound. Their pain washed over her, but nothing would stop her assault. They had done too much to her. She could take their pain, and she’d make sure they wouldn’t be able to hurt anyone else again.

  Her friends in the galley gasped as they regained control of themselves, freed from the shackles of their would-be masters.

  Kira gritted her teeth as the shrieks in her mind intensified. The Trols had nowhere to go, try as they might. They struggled desperately to force their way into her mind and use her as a host, but she held them at bay behind an invisible wall.

  “There’s no escape,” she told them. “You won’t stop yourselves, and so I must.”

  She cranked up the volume of the frequency recording. It vibrated through her, filling her body and mind until she could hear nothing else.

  In front of her, the view of the planet changed. No longer was it a peaceful orb. It trembled and seemed to glow with an inner light. Cracks formed across the surface, and giant, dark clouds billowed into space.

  “Holy shite! It’s working!” Ari exclaimed behind her, having been released from the aliens’ hold.

  “Hit it now!” Sandren ordered into the comm linked to the fleet.

  The tanker ships surrounding the planet released their secondary payload, spraying the chemical cocktail as a high-velocity mist around the debris. It was too large an area to get complete coverage, but they focused on the former location of the main transmitter, where the bulk of the valteron was concentrated.

  As the mist connected with
the rock particulates, the chorus of screams within Kira’s mind diminished. She continued pelting them with the sound until no voices remained.

  The telepathic link severed.

  Outside, the former dwarf planet was no more than a loose cloud of dust.

  “I think they’re gone,” Kira murmured. She shifted back to her normal state and turned off the recording of the sound frequency.

  Jasmine said in her mind.

  Kira asked the AI.

 

 

  Jasmine gave her a mental hug.

  The mental exchange was interrupted by Nia wrapping Kira in a tight physical embrace.

  “That was incredible!” her friend cheered.

  “The fleet is no longer under the gravity’s pull,” Sandren reported. “The generator was destroyed along with the rest of the world.”

  Ari grinned at Kira. “Standing here, it looked like you stared at a planet until it exploded.”

  Kyle laughed. “Ultimate staring contest! The planet lost.”

  Kira cracked a smile to share in her team’s enthusiasm, but she was far too drained for it to be heartfelt. “There was a little more going on behind the scenes, but I’m glad it was a good show.”

  “No one else could have done that,” Sandren said and clapped her on the shoulder. “Well done, Kira.”

  She gave a deferential nod. “All in a day’s work.”

  CHAPTER 21

  Some experiences always lingered in the mind, and Kira could tell that what she’d just been through would be one of those. As she prepared for her official debriefing with Kaen and Sandren, she found herself with an uncharacteristic feeling of irresolution, despite the mission being complete.

  she asked Jasmine.

  The AI gave a mental shrug.

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