Operation Medusa (Castle Federation Book 6)

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Operation Medusa (Castle Federation Book 6) Page 29

by Glynn Stewart


  “We have no command-and-control loop. No ability to acquire intelligence. Admirals, we don’t even have real-time sensor data in this system. If we make war on the Alliance now, we will face an enemy who has all of those things.”

  He shook his head.

  “What information we have suggests that Home Fleet and Terra Fortress Command are either shattered or just plain gone. Tau Ceti Sector Command is gone; every ship was debris by the time the Alliance fired on the q-com station.

  “Most systems are somewhere in between. The Alliance just did to the Commonwealth what we were planning to do to them at Via Somnia: the Commonwealth no longer has the ship strength to reasonably support offensive action.”

  Tasker looked tired.

  “So, what, do we take our fleets back to Sol? Help hold the Commonwealth together from the center?”

  James shook his head again. From Gabor’s expression, he knew what his Marshal was thinking, even if Tasker hadn’t caught up.

  “I am a Marshal of the Commonwealth, Lindsay,” he told her. “I have a very clear and distinct area of responsibility—and if I leave that area without direct authorization from the Senate, I am legally deserting my post.”

  He chuckled.

  “And if I were to bring a fleet with me to Sol, my commission would make that treason, regardless of my intent,” he admitted. “My own personal Rubicon. What I give up for the Marshal’s mace, Admiral Tasker, is my general authority over the Commonwealth Navy.

  “I have absolute authority in the Rimward Marches…and am legally forbidden to command Commonwealth forces outside the Marches.”

  “We can’t just let the Commonwealth burn!” she objected.

  “No, we can’t,” he agreed. “However, it seems that all of our plans and schemes to thwart this exact kind of attack failed. We need to consider what the final orders we sent to our people were.”

  “Gather at Niagara,” Gabor replied, after that slight but all-too-noticeable delay. “All of our secondary forces were heading there.”

  “And that is where the Senate will expect to find us as well, if they do have new orders for us,” James reminded them. “For now, we will return to Niagara.”

  “What were our plans for this kind of attack?” Tasker asked. “My people have checked. Every entangled-particle block in the fleet is dead, spewing garbage radiation data if they’re receiving anything at all.”

  “The Uranus facility was our emergency continuity-of-government facility,” the Marshal replied. “Officially, it didn’t exist, and only current or former designated flagships even had entangled blocks for it.

  “But the Alliance knew where it was. It was the first one they took out,” he noted grimly.

  “We only had one secret facility?” Gabor asked.

  James chuckled.

  “We were supposed to have three. One in Sol, one in Tau Ceti and one in Sirius.”

  “There’s nothing in Sirius,” Gabor objected.

  “That was the point.” James’s chuckled turned bitter. “The program was canceled after the Uranus platform because we discovered the Federation was building eighty-million-cubic warships. The budget was put into building the Ambrosias.

  “Not that those seemed to help.”

  The destruction of both superbattleships in the defense of Ceres was one of the confirmed losses from the Battle of Sol.

  “We fall back to Niagara and get our prisoners off our warships,” he continued. Niagara had proper POW facilities in orbit, thankfully. “There’s too many people with potential access to them while they’re aboard our ships.”

  “You don’t trust our people?” Gabor demanded.

  “Our prisoners wear the same uniforms as the people who just attacked Sol, Mihai,” James said flatly. “Some people are not going to be thinking rationally. We have obligations to our POWs, and we will see them respected.”

  Even if, in the back of his head, James Walkingstick suspected that Kyle Roberts had more than a little to do with the chaos that had just been unleashed upon the galaxy.

  KYLE WAS AMUSED that the man with quite literally life-or-death authority over him still asked permission to enter the tiny quarters they’d locked him in. Unless he missed his guess, the room they’d put him was normally shared by two Lieutenants or similarly larval officers, but they’d scooped out a bed in favor of a couch when they’d decided to put an Admiral in there.

  Even as a prisoner of war, rank had its privileges. They didn’t, he expected, actually extend to refusing Walkingstick entry to his quarters—but at least the Marshal asked.

  “Well?” Walkingstick demanded as the door closed behind him, looking at Kyle like he wanted to ask a longer question.

  Or, potentially, like the Terran officer wanted to strangle him with his bare hands. Given what it sounded like the events of the last twelve or so hours had entailed, that was also quite possible.

  “Well what?” he asked.

  “Don’t you want to know how your Alliance’s grand offensive, the plan I can see your fingerprints all over, went off?” Walkingstick asked.

  Kyle sighed and leaned back in the couch, gesturing around him.

  “Marshal, I have a datapad that is linked to an entertainment library that has nothing less than ten years old in it, and four walls that make for a somewhat comfortable prison,” he pointed out. “At this point, unless an Alliance fleet has arrived and forced you to surrender, the result of the war isn’t going to change my fate.”

  He did want to know. But he also…didn’t. If Medusa had failed, he had doomed his nation and her allies to the dustbin of history.

  The Terran officer chuckled bitterly.

  “That hasn’t happened. So far as I know, but since I no longer have real-time sensor data…” He shrugged.

  “Your people did it,” Walkingstick concluded. “You may have singlehandedly wrecked the largest human civilization in history, Admiral Roberts. The entire Commonwealth q-com network is down. Do you have any idea of how many people this will kill?”

  “The Commonwealth requires all of their systems to be self-sufficient in food and basic industry,” Kyle replied, pushing down a momentary desire to gloat. “I think your civilization will survive just fine.”

  “You saw what happened in Presley,” the Marshal told him. “A dozen systems will go up in flames now. Maybe two dozen. Ships will mutiny; the Commonwealth will tear itself apart.

  “Millions are going to die, Admiral Roberts. You can argue everything you destroyed was a legitimate military target, but the blood of those innocents is on your people’s hands.”

  “And whose hands is the blood of the Kematians on?” Kyle asked. He’d watched a Terran battleship sear that world with antimatter fire. He’d hunted the ship responsible down and destroyed it, and he’d admit the Captain had gone rogue, but without Walkingstick’s war…

  “Ours,” Walkingstick admitted without flinching. “Mine, even. It shouldn’t have happened, Admiral Roberts. Unification, bringing all of humanity together, is how we stop things like that.

  “And now…now you’ve set more of those flames in motion.”

  “You give me a bit too much credit,” Kyle replied. He’d drafted Medusa, but he’d been one of over thirty officers in the Joint Strategic Options Command. And hundreds of thousands of spacers, starfighter crew and officers had carried out the mission.

  “Speed, aggression and shock used as psychological weapons?” Walkingstick said drily. “I can see the mind behind Tranquility and Hui Xing in this strike, Admiral. Other hands may have carried it out, but I know the fingerprints of the architect.”

  The Terran shook his head.

  “You remind me of myself, though with a poorer luck in birthplaces, I suppose,” he told Kyle.

  “What do you expect?” Kyle told him. “I quite like where I was born, Marshal, but someone wrote ‘A Treatise on Aggression and Calculated Risk as Psychological Warfare in Modern Carrier Combat’ as a Military Strategy Theory thesis…
and it wasn’t me.”

  Walkingstick stared at him for a long, long moment.

  “That should never have left the Commonwealth,” he said.

  “Apparently, it ended up in the Castle Federation’s Academy library,” Kyle replied. “If I remind you of yourself, Marshal, it’s because I read your damn book.”

  They glared at each other for several moments, then Walkingstick sighed and shook his head.

  “You realize that I can no longer trust my people to take proper care of yours,” he admitted. “We are returning to the Niagara System, where I will be turning your people over to a civilian prison authority. I believe I can rely on their restraint more than my own people’s.”

  He sighed.

  “If nothing else, they have a smaller proportion of people actually from Sol,” he noted. “Attacking the home system has made your Alliance no friends, Admiral.”

  “You came for our homes,” Kyle told him fiercely. “You came for our independence, our freedom, our right to live as we chose. You burned our worlds and killed our brothers and sisters, and you tell me that we have ourselves no friends?

  “Every drop of blood shed in this war and whatever consequences this unleashes come back not only to the Commonwealth but to the man who set this in motion,” he snapped, watching Walkingstick recoil in surprise.

  “Your choice, Walkingstick. Your war. You want to blame us for it? Look in a Gods-cursed mirror.”

  For a seemingly eternal moment, their gazes locked again, and then Walkingstick inclined his head in a single sharp nod—and turned sharply on his heel, leaving Kyle alone in his cell.

  His Operation Medusa had succeeded. The tide of the war changing.

  If only he knew what the price was going to be for himself.

  44

  Castle System

  15:00 October 12, 2737 Earth Standard Meridian Date/Time

  New Cardiff

  ALL THAT MIRA SOLACE really wanted to do was take Jacob and Lisa Kerensky, along with Daniel Kellers, and bury them all in a bubble of soft blankets and armored Marines a million kilometers from anything from importance or weight.

  Since Rear Admiral Mira Solace had a job to do, however, she was in a small briefing room deep beneath Castle Federation Joint Command as Fleet Admiral Meredith Blake personally briefed the flag officers actively in charge of Castle’s defense on the events of the last few days.

  “All of you are aware that we have spent the last six weeks under an unprecedented communications lockdown,” Blake told them. “That lockdown lifts at zero hundred hours tomorrow. By that point, all of the Medusa strike fleets will have returned to FTL and be on their way home.

  “Most of those fleets have already withdrawn. What’s left of Seventh Fleet, for example, held undisputed possession of the Sol System for less than two hours before they got the hell out of Dodge.”

  The mutters around the table were soft, but the words Sol System were repeated too much to not be audible.

  “Yes, Admirals, you heard me correctly,” Blake noted with a smile. “Some of you have heard the name Operation Medusa. Few of you in this room were aware of more than fringe elements of it, but I can now brief you on what it involved.

  “We just threw fifteen major fleets totalling over two hundred warships deep into Commonwealth space to attack the key foundations of their communications network. We succeeded.”

  The briefing room was silent as that sank in.

  “Succeeded how?” Mira asked.

  “As of approximately nine hundred hours on October tenth, the Terran Commonwealth no longer possesses any functioning q-com switchboard stations,” Blake explained. “Their faster-than-light communication network has been destroyed.

  “Along the way, a number of key systems—including the Sol System—at least temporarily fell to our fleets, though most of our attacks were more on the order of raids.”

  The Federation’s Chief of Naval Operations shook her head.

  “The Battle of Sol should have remained a raid, but it became necessary for the entire fleet to deploy against Terra Fortress Command to extract a portion of Admiral Rothenberg’s forces. As of our last update from Sol, TFC and the Commonwealth Home Fleet have been completely destroyed.”

  She shrugged delicately.

  “We have reason to believe that a minimum of twenty other capital ships are now headed to Sol and fully support Admiral Rothenberg’s decision to withdraw as soon as possible rather than remain to facilitate, say, cease-fire negotiations.”

  An astrographic chart filled the room.

  “All fifteen strike fleets are being directed to the Via Somnia fleet base, where they will rendezvous with Forty-First Fleet,” Blake noted. “Given the damage and losses all of these fleets—including Forty-First—have taken, Alliance Joint Command is hesitant to commit to further offensive action.

  “If nothing else, it will be six weeks before all of the fleets have returned, and damage may force additional ships to be abandoned en route.”

  “How many did we lose?” another Admiral asked.

  Blake sighed.

  “Including the loss of Elysium—as Admiral Roberts’s endeavors along the frontier were a related operation—we have confirmed the loss of sixty-eight Alliance capital ships.”

  The room was now very quiet.

  “None of our major allies escaped unscathed, and many of the smaller powers committed everything they could spare…and lost it.

  “In exchange, however, we may have destroyed the Commonwealth,” Blake pointed out. “We have confirmed the destruction of ninety-six Commonwealth starships, at least five hundred Commonwealth defensive platforms, and approximately twenty thousand starfighters.

  “Reports are vague, especially in situations where subordinate task forces were badly damaged or destroyed, but we may be looking at as many as fifteen to twenty additional Commonwealth starships destroyed, and possibly as many as forty sufficiently damaged as to be incapable of offensive operations.”

  Mira joined the rest of the table in inhaling sharply. That was…crippling. The Alliance losses were crushing, a brutal loss that would take years to recover from, but the Commonwealth Navy had just been gutted.

  “While this may seem like the perfect time to launch a new offensive, I must note that we know Walkingstick has accumulated a striking force of sixty-plus capital ships,” Blake continued grimly. “Admiral Roberts bought us that knowledge at the highest possible price.

  “There are too few ships currently in Alliance space for us to prepare a counter-operation. It will be three weeks before the first Medusa fleets return home. Six before the last ones do.”

  She paused.

  “We expect to hear from the Commonwealth Star Chamber in approximately four to five weeks. At that point, whether or not the war will continue will be a political decision.

  “Until then, however, we must act on the assumption that Walkingstick may resume his offensives at any time. He lacks many of the tools we rely on in combat these days, but we would be fools to write him off,” Blake said grimly.

  “We have every reason to believe this war may be soon be over, but until it is, we must all stand ready to defend our homes!”

  NORMALLY, Mira was driven around by Marines or used an override on the usual transit-car network to get around. Today, however, she walked from the towers of the Joint Command to her apartment. Being a flag officer of the Castle Federation Space Navy, that meant that at least two Marines had to walk with her.

  They hung back, though, letting her wander silently through the crowds in Castle’s second-largest city. The people around her didn’t have the news she’d had. That Operation Medusa had even occurred, let alone been a complete success, was still restricted to the military.

  That their hero, her fiancé, was dead had been leaked. If the story of the war was impacting the lives of the people around her, that was the one they knew. There were still newsreels feeding what little footage had been given; someone was adver
tising a plan to do a documentary on the life of the Stellar Fox…

  It was all the tasteless garbage she would expect around a hero who’d lived large and died in defeat…except they hadn’t even held a funeral, because no one was even certain that Kyle was dead.

  And explaining that to a twelve-year-old had been one of the worst tasks Mira Solace had ever taken on.

  It sounded like they’d won the war, but no one could be sure yet. There were still shadows and possibilities that could bring everything down in chaos, but Mira Solace had now read the classified psychological profile that had underwritten Operation Medusa.

  Without the q-com network, the Commonwealth couldn’t prosecute a war. They might not even be able to hold together as a nation.

  And if the largest human civilization in history came down in flames and apocalypse after killing her lover, Mira Solace couldn’t bring herself to cry for them.

  45

  Via Somnia System

  14:00 October 13, 2737 Earth Standard Meridian Date/Time

  Alliance Forty-First Fleet

  IT WAS a strange sensation to be back aboard Avalon for Michelle. It was an even stranger sensation to be, without question, Avalon’s acting CAG.

  Every Castle Federation Space Force officer senior to her was dead, though, so that didn’t leave them many options. Hell, she was the only CFSF Vice Commodore left, Wirt having died in the Leopold System along with so many others.

  Michelle wasn’t even sure how or why she was still alive—but she was. With their losses, most of their starfighters fit on Avalon. Enough had landed on the battlecruisers and the Imperial ships that the big carrier’s flight deck seemed empty. Unfilled.

  If Flight Control felt strange as she watched the countdown to emergence click down on her implant, it wasn’t because the room was different. Avalon and Elysium shared a lot of structure and design, and the primary flight control center looked identical.

 

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