“Our task has often been hard and frequently thankless, but now more than ever it is essential. Shortly your ships will be taking their final positions and I need not tell you that from here, there will be no retreat. Defeat here will mean the end of Earth history. But should the worst happen, we can draw comfort from the convoy that will leave for the Confederacy. So even if it is without Earth, the human race will go on. I wish you all good luck. Admiral Wingate out.”
Crowe looked around his bridge. Officers and ratings avoid eye contact, both with him and each other.
“Well, now we know,” he said. “I expect we will shortly be receiving orders to take our position. Commander Bhudraja, I want all officers to make final checks of their sections. I will be conducting a personal inspection of all compartments. That ought to give everyone something to think about.”
The replies to his instructions were low and mumbled.
Within an hour, led by Warspite, the convoy of transports had broken orbit and were heading for the Red Line, joined by the other seven ships of the Fast Division plus three of the fleet’s fighter carriers and their escorts – all en route to their own positions out beyond the heliopause. At the outer marker the personnel transports and their thousands of hibernating colonists were handed over to the Aèllr cruiser. It was something that two years previously would have been unthinkable, but now passed almost unremarked. There was too much to do. Messages of good luck were passed back and forth as ships prepared to jump. The carriers were the first to go, and then Deimos made her jump.
“Commencing descent,” the helmsman muttered nervously as Deimos completed the turn over and began to slowly drop towards the surface of Phobos.
He wasn’t the only one who looked worried, Crowe thought to himself as he surreptitiously tightened his seat restraints. At the last minute, Headquarters had sent up a landing programme for helm. Crowe had looked it over and decided that when it came to it, he would put his faith in the crew that knew Deimos as a real ship, rather than a sterile computer simulation. A hundred kilometres to port, the cruiser Michael Collins was starting to roll as the rest of the formation came in behind. A battleship and seven cruisers, slowly dropping towards the centre of the Stickney Crater, all of them hoping the hastily welded struts would take the shock of landing. As the ship with lowest mass, Deimos would be best able to pull away at the last moment and so would lead them in.
“All hands, this is the Bridge. No crewmembers are to move until instructed by the Bridge. Everyone brace for landing,” Crowe ordered across the main intercom channel, before adding to himself: “never thought I’d say that on a starship.”
When a couple of the bridge crew briefly looked towards him he realised he’d spoken across the bridge channel.
“Never thought we’d hear you say it, sir,” someone replied.
Crowe gave a brief grin.
“Helm, be ready with the throttle,” he ordered. “If the struts give or we don’t find firm footing, then we need to go full burn. But await my order.”
“Yes, sir.”
With Phobos’s weak gravitational pull, the approach was painfully slow. As Deimos took a tail down posture, range finding lasers swept the surface of the moon below and the computer compared the readings to the charts of Phobos.
“We’re slightly off course, compensating,” said the helmsman tersely.
“We are seven minutes out from landing zone,” Colwell called out. “Radar confirms landing zone is clear and level. We are clear for final approach.”
“Thank you, Lieutenant,” Crowe replied, before switching intercom channels. “Commander Bhudraja, are your tether teams ready?”
“Confirmed, sir. Airlocks have been flushed, we are ready,” Bhudraja replied.
The bridge lapsed into silence as Deimos continued to slowly drop towards the surface. The occasional firing of the manoeuvring thrusters was enough to keep the descent under control as the computer ran through the landing programme. At twenty metres up, the main engines pulsed for a split second, enough to arrest their momentum completely and send dust billowing up from the surface. In the low gravity some of it had probably achieved escape velocity.
“Radar has lost the surface!” Colwell barked out. “Too much dust!”
“Steady!” Crowe shouted. “We still have it on visual!”
On the main holo the camera in the stern suddenly got a clear view of the surface – coming up fast!
“Thrusters, all full!” Crowe, shouted. “Brace, brace, brace!”
A shudder ran through the Deimos as she settled.
Then she shifted.
“We’re tilting!” someone shouted, but Crowe’s own senses had already told him that. The cruiser’s centrifuge had been closed down for the landing and they positioned the bridge so it had the same arbitrary ‘Up’ designation as the areas outside the centrifuge.
“Activate the jacks on Strut One!” Crowe shouted.
Deimos seemed to hesitate for a moment, then reversed the tilt and settled.
“Lieutenant?”
“We’re … zero point seven nine degrees off the vertical.”
Colwell looked up from the computer panel. Even across the bridge and through his helmet visor, Crowe could see the relief on his face.
“We’re within tolerances, Commodore,” he announced.
“Thank God for that!” Crowe said in an explosive breath. “Coms, Bridge. Activate the beacon for the rest of the squadron. Commander Bhudraja, get your teams out there.”
Outside crewmembers went shinning down the flanks of the cruiser into the dust that was still billowing around them. Others tossed down cables and soon the radio channels were crackling with voices as the landing parties began to hammer steel tethers into Phobos’s grey surface that would keep them stable. Above them, the rest of the Fast Division lined up for their own approach.
Over the next hour Crowe watched the rest of the ships slowly descend and settle on the moon’s surface. Some came down dangerously close to one another, while others, like Deimos, tottered for a moment before finding firm footing. But each made it down safely, successively throwing up more and more dust. Finally Warspite lumbered down and once again Crowe found himself holding his breath. A brief pulse of her engines threw out more dust than had any of the previous ships and completely blotted out the landing zone. Totally blinded, Crowe could only wait until Communication reported the battleship’s beacon had activated.
With the last of the warships down, an orbiting support ship released its drop pods. Threading their way through the landed ships to put down safely and with their tethers in place, crewmembers were soon hooking their ships up to the fuel supplies within the pods.
“Sir.”
“Yes Commander?” Crowe replied without turning from the main holo.
“I’ve finished the inspection of the tethers and they are all secured,” Bhudraja reported. “We are hooked up to the extra fuel tanks and the Chief reports he’ll have the lines to the heat dumps dug in within the next three hours.”
“The reactors?”
“Number One is going into shut down and will be cold within two hours. Number Two is at minimum power.”
“So that means we have up to six weeks of endurance. That’s good, Commander, that is good. I want you to pass along to the crew that they have done very well. Do you know about the rest of the Squadron?”
“According to radio transmissions they’re okay, but the dust we’ve thrown up means we can’t get a communications laser hook up,” Bhudraja replied.
“So I see,” Crowe replied. The holo in front of him was set for visual mode, but with all the dust flying around in the moon’s low gravity environment, it was like looking into a blizzard.
“It should clear…” Bhudraja started.
“I hope it doesn’t,” Crowe interrupted. “Unless the Nameless have accurate scans of the solar system, they’ll likely assume this is natural. Ground returns will mean we’re lost to radar. Once we have the lines from the radiators
dug in there won’t be a heat profile and this dust will conceal us even from visuals.
“I wonder whether the Admiral thought of this?” Bhudraja asked.
Crowe turned towards him.
“Who knows sir,” he replied. “But at least we’ve successfully completed the first step.”
20th December 2067
The intercom above Crowe’s bed buzzed.
“What is it?” he muttered as he rubbed his eyes.
“Sir, it’s the Nameless. They’re here.”
Chapter Six
Day One
How much do they know about us? Are we as much a mystery to them as they are to us? Lewis thought to himself as he stood on the bridge of Warspite following the main holo as it played again through the readings. I doubt it. This, this was too potent a show of strength to be anything other than planned. To win the psychological battle before even a single shot was fired.
None of the ships of the Fast Division could see the Nameless directly. The mass of Phobos blocked direct line of sight. Instead they were getting readings from a small observation satellite orbiting Mars and transmitting a signal via laser. It introduced an extra element of risk for the Fast Division, but Lewis had to be able to see. On the holo, row after row of Nameless ships dropped into real space. Escort ships at first, then cruisers, carriers and finally capital ships, slowly, methodically dropping into real space between the orbits of Mars and Saturn. Clouds of fighters deployed outwards into a protective sphere around the fleet. For the first time in over a quarter century, an alien fleet was entering Earth’s solar system; and no Battle Fleet ships were engaging them.
Looking around the Warspite’s bridge, Lewis could see the effect it was having. Officers and ratings were glancing over their shoulders at the holo. Their confidence was being shaken and if they were to stand a chance, he needed them sharp.
“Tactical, what’s the count?” he asked.
“Bridge, we have one hundred and thirty-three escorts, seventy-four cruisers, thirty-one capital ships and twelve carriers. Support ships are still jumping in, sir.
“Two hundred and fifty ships,” Captain Sheehan whispered, “Sweet Jesus!”
Between them, Home and Second Fleets could come up with a combined strength of under one hundred ships of all types.
“They’re light in carriers,” Lewis grunted. “So at about sixty fighters per carrier, that gives them about seven hundred and twenty, plus perhaps another sixty flying from escorts, less whatever they lose due to serviceability issues. That’s against the four hundred or so that Planetary Defence and we can come up with, so odds of less than two to one. Unless their fighters have got a lot better than they were a few weeks ago, then we have the advantage there. Interesting.”
“What do we do now, sir?” Sheehan asked.
“We, Captain? We, Captain, do nothing. The first move belongs to our colleagues and good luck to them.” Lewis turned towards Warspite’s captain. “Captain Holfe, I would like to invite you and your officers to dinner this evening.”
___________________________
Prior to jump technology interstellar space had represented the final barrier to human expansion, an empty gulf of near nothingness separating Earth’s sun from its nearest neighbour. Before first contact, science fiction writers had imagined vast colony ships setting forth on centuries’ long one-way journeys, their crews either hibernating through countless centuries or entire generations living out their lives in ships that would be the only world they knew.
Those imagined futures became obsolete the day that first alien ship force landed on Earth, the day humanity seized jump drive technology and made it their own. From that point, interstellar space changed from barrier to irrelevance. As soon as a ship cleared the mass shadow of its home planet, it could jump away, free to travel without ever passing through the great emptiness. This was no place for humanity.
Yet humanity was here.
The carrier Dauntless and her three escorting destroyers hung silent and motionless, all but invisible in the darkness. Nearby, three support ships waited in equal silence. In front of them, so distant that it was just one speck among countless others, was Earth’s sun.
Alanna took a deep breath, adjusted her grip on the bar and made the lift in a single smooth motion. As her arms locked straight, she began to count under her breath.
“One-one thousand, two-one thousand, three-one thousand…”
She continued the count to ten, then, slowly lowered the weights back down. Sitting up from the bench she frowned to herself. To be able to lift and hold that amount was acceptable, but acceptable wasn’t the same as good. Fighter crews could expect to be subject to major G loads in combat. Raven fighters might be fly-by-wire and in theory the control column could be worked with a fingertip, but in a tight turn the pilot’s hand might weight as much as his or her torso did in Earth gravity. So muscle building wasn’t so much a choice as an occupational requirement. On top of that, there was the problem that went all the way back to the earliest days of the space age: muscular dystrophy. What with everything else happening on board, she hadn’t had a chance to do as much exercise as she would have liked.
Most of the Dauntless’s flight crews were in the gym along with a few other members of the crew. But aside from heavy breathing, the room was silent. The cause was in one corner of the gym, exercising on one of the rowing machines. Even as he worked the machine, Commander Dati’s eyes swept the room and stopped on Alanna. Aware of his gaze, she wiped the back of her neck and took a very slow drink of water.
“Are you done, Miss Shermer?” Dati boomed in a sarcastic tone.
Alanna glanced around the silent room.
“Yes, sir, I am,” she replied, before getting up and walking out. She could have done with more time, but equally she could see several of her own flight crew were pushing themselves too hard. If exercise was necessary, over-exercise was dangerous. But once one person left the gym, others would quickly follow. Dati’s displeasure, however, would focus on the first one out. But she could take that.
Pausing briefly to pull on her flight suit, she climbed up and out of the centrifuge, then made her way to Dubious’s hangar. Schurenhofer was sat in the pilot seat working her way down through the checklist. The deck crew signed off on a fighter when any maintenance work was done, but Alanna hadn’t lasted this long by relying on a signature. When you were out there on your own if something broke, it was your problem. Alanna worked her way round Dubious, checking control surfaces and thruster assemblies. Satisfied she pulled herself aboard.
“Hello, Skipper,” Schurenhofer said as Alanna sat in. “Nearly done.”
“Everything okay?”
“So far: perhaps the age of miracles has not yet passed,” Schurenhofer replied. “How are things upstairs?”
“Tense,” Alanna replied.
“So everything’s normal then,” Schurenhofer grunted.
“I have to say it, but this was not what I was expecting,” Alanna said as she stretched out. “I expected to find things tough here, but not like this. I have a bunch of newbie pilots that I have to shield from their own C.O.”
“Yeah.”
There had been numerous drills since Dauntless’s hurried commissioning, some in the simulators but most in live flight. Considering the majority of the pilots were just out of training and strangers to each other, they weren’t doing badly. In fact, they’d started out pretty well. If a hanging focused the mind, then preparing for combat tempered that focus into something that could cut steel. But that wasn’t good enough for Dati. Each debriefing turned into an hour-long torrent of abuse as every tiny imperfection was put under a microscope and scorn heaped upon some unfortunate crewmember. Not yet into combat and Alanna could see morale dropping. She’d started speaking up, countering Dati and pointing out that many of the flaws he’d highlighted were irrelevant in the context of combat operations. She’d even dropped the odd clanger in simulations just to draw Dati’s wrath away f
rom other members of her flight. Much as he might rage, there was one factor Dati couldn’t either ignore or dismiss. Alanna had over a year in frontline service. The fact she was still alive proved she knew her job.
Dati wasn’t subjecting Udaltsov’s flight to the same treatment though. It wasn’t his fault really. With a couple of extra years of service on her, he seemed to have military obedience more thoroughly rooted in him and hadn’t yet managed to get his head round the idea that a superior officer was someone you had to work around.
“Heard something interesting about the good Commander,” Schurenhofer said as she ticked the last box on the checklist.
“Oh?”
“He was stationed on the Yorktown when the war started.”
“Well that’s bullshit,” Alanna said dismissively.
When the Nameless started their war on humanity it had been with a surprise attack on the Fleet base at Baden. In a day of disasters, the Yorktown was one that stood out. Caught at her mooring, the big carrier was destroyed without striking a single blow in her own defence. As far as Alanna had ever heard, there were no survivors.
“He supposedly wasn’t on her when the Nameless hit – away on compassionate leave,” Schurenhofer expanded.
Alanna made no reply. That story was sufficiently short on frills to be plausible. Being the only survivor of a ship, to be the only one to have come back was bad enough when you had been there, when you knew that you had done all that you could. How much worse could it be if you hadn’t been there? Could that anger turn outwards rather than inwards?
“Why would anyone put someone like that in charge of a squadron?”
“Why would anyone put someone like you in charge of a flight, Skipper?” Schurenhofer replied giving her a sidelong glance. “Not enough flight crews to go round.”
Before Alanna could make any reply, her intercom beeped.
“All flight crews to the briefing room, all flight crews to the briefing room,” squawked an automated message.
The Last Charge (The Nameless War Trilogy Book 3) Page 8