Space Fleet Sagas Foundation Trilogy: Books One, Two, and Three in the Space Fleet Sagas
Page 27
Paré rolled the big ship, fired the sub-lights to max, taking them to an intercept position between the Mars Shipyard and Docks, and the two Zenge Primary ships.
“While we engaged the battlecruiser, they changed course for the platform,” Adams said. “First Primary at zero, forty-three, and eighteen-thousand K away. Number two directly behind. Five-thousand K behind number one.”
“Where’s that damn battleship?” Paré demanded. “It isn’t on my screen.”
“Second rod impacted their hangar doors,” Kebede answered. “They bugged out at over 200,000mph. Out of the fight.”
“AI is completely off line,” Genna informed the bridge. “All systems are now independent.”
“I have everything on my screen,” ENS Diego Castillo said. “Systems controls are operational. Whatever hit Kennedy did not infect the other computers. We are good to go across the board.”
“Primary One firing nuclear torpedoes. Six fish.” Kebede’s voice pitched higher; strain constricting her throat. “Their laser cannons have recycled, and they are preparing to fire. If those torpedoes hit, and take down the force field, the lasers will follow, ripping MSD to shreds. Firing intercept torpedoes. One through four gone. Reloading. One through four gone, again.”
The pilot drove the ship higher. She gained a position out of the line of fire, and optimal for the rail-gun to target any torpedoes missed by the 109’s interceptors.
“Four impacts. Two misses.” Kebede called the shots. The sweat from her chest beginning to stain her uniform top. “Firing rods.”
The bridge crew held a collective breath.
“One down.” Then a pause, no longer than the space between heartbeats, which seemed eternal.
Storm broke the silence. “MSD reports an impact. Exterior dock hit by nuclear torpedo. Their shield is down along the perimeter. Structural damage, and casualties. Power down to sixty-eight percent.”
“Damn, damn, damn!” The expletives firing from Kebede as quickly as she fired the ship’s two laser cannons. “Primary Two fired torpedoes at the same time as number one. They positioned themselves at an angle to use One for cover. Scans did not pick up the launch.”
With Op-Tac busy with target acquisition, as well as operating the top-mounted, and bottom-mounted laser cannons, Castillo took over the play-by-play from his console.
“Nine torpedoes fired by Primary Two. Four nuclear, and five explosive. 109 laser fire crossing their path. One hit. Two.”
Before Castillo called another number, Adams reported more bad news. “The battlecruiser is reengaging. Cruiser at forty-five degrees, minus twenty. Thirty-one thousand K away, and coming in hot.”
“Ops?” Paré asked.
“Please hold,” Kebede replied. “Five down. I need another few seconds to stop the other four.”
“Laser fire incoming from the cruiser,” Castillo called. “Primary One and Two have us bracketed. Pulse rounds heading our way.”
Kebede had no time to call for a brace. The remaining crew received no warning when two pulse bursts pounded the hull, followed by fourteen laser blasts.
“We are officially dead,” Captain Daniel Cooper said. He sat in the command chair, watching, listening, and evaluating. “Kennedy?”
“Two torpedoes with high-explosive warheads entered via the hole in MSD’s perimeter force field, impacted the hub, resulting in massive damage,” the ship’s artificial intelligence reported. “The three Zenge ships will complete the destruction of the station. They will then set troops on the surface, take over the habitats, as well as control of the Martian hangar. Following the capture of Mars, they will travel to Earth, and complete the annihilation of intelligent life in this solar system.”
“When you lost the AI, you started acting as individuals,” Coop said. “Everyone looked to someone else for answers. Communications slowed, and became useless.”
He rose, walked the short distance to the navigation-pilot console, to stand behind, and between pilot, and navigator.
“Casey, in a fight, the pilot needs the images first, not the numbers. In fact, the pilot doesn’t give a damn about navigational coordinates. Without the AI to speed the process, you have to act quicker.”
He turned to his pilot. “Rachelle, you are among the best fighter pilots on Earth. But you need more time on the controls of a space ship this size, with its limitations. When you held steady to allow Sindy more shots at the torpedoes headed for MSD, you killed everyone.”
Paré, a Space Ranger survivor, like Captain Cooper, held her anger. Never one to show any emotion in public, especially not toward her commanding officer, and not when she was really angry at herself.
“By holding our position, and not maintaining the sub-light engines at a higher rpm, the ship’s sonic force field diminished to the point lasers ripped through the hull,” Paré conceded the tactical mistake. “Trying to protect MSD, cost everybody in both locations.”
“Rachelle, what is the primary tactical weapon the 109 possesses?” He used her first name, attempting to take the sting out of the harsh assessments.
“Speed,” she answered. “I gave away our advantage.”
“You also piloted for line of sight. The guns are on swivels. Fly the ship. Let Ops worry about angles.”
He turned to Senait Kebede, the third Space Ranger currently on the bridge.
“Sindy, as Operations and Tactical Command Officer, with the Captain absent or incapacitated, you have command. You cannot get caught up in a fight to the point you lose focus on the bigger picture. Tunnel vision resulted in your order to stay on station, to defend MSD.”
“I should have placed the weapons with the Marines as soon as the AI went off-line,” she said. Coop waited. “I should have been calling targets, letting Rachelle put the 109 into position, while maintaining movement and speed. Systems could warn of incoming, and report damage assessments. Storm could relay firing instructions to the Marines, and torpedo rooms.”
“MSD?”
“Our mission is to protect the people of Earth,” she replied. “I should have protected the 109 first. Without her, Earth has limited defenses against an attack.”
“Bridge?”
“This is the bridge,” Storm answered the interior channel hail.
“This is Loba in the hangar. Is anyone going to give us the okay to launch?”
“Fuck,” Sindy and Rachelle said in unison.
“Sorry, Loba,” Cooper responded. “When the shooting started, I’m afraid we forgot we have a fighter on board. By the way, you’re currently dead.”
“No problem. I’d rather be dead, than forced to listen to the after-action report explaining what got me that way. Loba, out.”
“Drill is over, people. Kennedy will provide everyone a summary, with my notes attached. Take this for what it represents. We drill to find our weaknesses, and our strengths. We practice to improve our strengths, and minimize our failures. We will always fail. We train, and we improve to make sure failures are never lethal. Take a few minutes to clean up your systems, and ready everything for the next shift.”
Cooper departed the bridge, exiting to the Captain’s private office.
Castillo, a recent crew member, muttered, “Three against one odds, and no AI. We never had a chance.”
“Diego,” Kebede said the first name quietly, but everyone heard the steel return to her voice. “Daniel Cooper faced, and defeated three Zenge warships while in an Angel series fighter. He and Captain Casalobos took on, and took out another three, including two Mischene battlecruisers. He’s attempting to prepare us, so we damn well do stand a chance when we go into battle.”
“Yes, Ma’am. I realize the importance, Colonel. It just didn’t seem fair.”
Storm interjected, “I was on Angel 7 when we faced the Zenge. Do you know what I learned about Daniel Cooper of Earth that day?”
Everyone paid attention, as ENS Castillo asked, “What?”
“He does not fight fair. He would rather win
.”
CHAPTER 2
“Lieutenant, exactly how long does it take to plot a course from where we are to where we want to be?” the ship’s pilot, Col. Rachelle Paré, asked the ship’s navigator, Lt.JG Casey Adams. The two flight officers shared the command and control console, located directly in front of the Captain.
Captain Cooper sat in his command chair, biding time between vexation and amusement.
The ship hovered beside a pier located inside the EMS2 (Earth Moon Space Station) shipyard. The orbital platform provided docks, administrative offices for Space Fleet, and a shipyard where Fleet Engineering Division built and maintained space-flight capable vessels.
“A space station, the moon, and the sun currently stand between us and Mars Shipyard. I’m trying to make sure we don’t hit anything, or get sucked into a gravity well,” Adams replied.
During the preceding two months, the 109 divided time between EMS2 and MSD while the Captain trained, drilled, and evaluated the new crew. And repeated the process. And repeated the process.
His current orders required a return to MSD, to be followed by a patrol of the inner solar system. A final opportunity to prepare the ship and crew for the coming mission that would take them to another star system.
“You could ask Kennedy to provide the plot,” Paré suggested.
He sat in the Captain’s chair, fingers of his left hand to his forehead, and eyes closed. Fighting a headache, and the desire to yell at someone. At the same time, trying not to laugh.
“Colonel,” Coop interrupted. “The point of a crew is to have people capable of operating the ship and systems. We do not rely upon the AI. We rely on our abilities, and each other.”
The ship’s Counselor, Genna Bouvier, stood to his right. The attractive strawberry blonde wore an official Space Fleet operations uniform without rank insignia. She also wore a wry smile. The twenty-something woman, with deep blue eyes and fair complexion, was a bio-engineered human. A neural implant conjoined her with the ship’s Artificial Intelligence (AI) system. Created to prevent the 109’s AI from potential insanity as its intelligence expanded. A living Avatar, assigned an active role aboard a military vessel. Her name an anagram for Genetically Engineered Neural Network Avatar.
She gave herself the surname Bouvier, the maiden name of John F. Kennedy’s wife, Jacqueline. An attempt at appearing more human, like the bright royal blue streak of color she added to her blonde locks.
“Yessir,” Paré responded, biting off the words.
Space Fleet existed as a military branch of the United Earth Council, but crew members seldom used rank when addressing each other. Space Fleet drew from a mix of backgrounds, military and civilian. That mix now included aliens. The amalgamation resulted in a less militaristic environment aboard the ship. A chain of command existed, but with operational protocols less strict than traditional armed forces. Cooper’s number-one priority involved blending the diverse species, races, cultures, and people into a functioning team.
Following the battle with the Zenge, Cooper re-evaluated the ship’s weaknesses. He contacted Paré, asking she join his crew. The oft-decorated, extremely capable pilot, agreed. Like most battle-tested flyers who relied on their personal skills, patience with others did not come easily.
AStermalanlan (nicknamed Storm), a blue-skinned, attractive alien from the planet Fell, currently in control of communications, said, “EMS2 is asking if everything is satisfactory. The control officer confirming departure approval was conveyed over three minutes ago." Storm held in a giggle.
“Everything is fine,” Casey snapped. “Course laid in, pilot.”
“Engines remain at one-hundred percent, and prepped for flight,” said Lt. Anwar Nasser from the Engineering console, taking another playful dig at the red-headed navigator.
Coop opened his eyes. Paré maneuvered away from the interior dockage. The enclosed shipyard’s transparent ceiling separated. She coaxed the 109 into the cavity beneath the dome, cleared pier-side structures, then engaged thrusters to ease the ship into an elevator-like rise. The controlled ascent smooth and sure. They soon cleared the bubble.
The pilot engaged the primary power plant, and the PT-109 began its journey. They sailed away from EMS2, leaving the platform, Earth, and the moon to the rear. They ventured into outer space. The initial course led to a far-point where the gravitational fields of the sun and Earth would not influence a jump to space-fold. They actually traveled away from their final destination, before turning to face Mars.
Storm conveyed their goodbye to EMS2 Control, accepting good wishes in return.
Col. Paré powered down the sub-light engines, engaged the crystal-laser array, and entered space-fold. Mars ETA in fifty-eight minutes.
Space Fleet’s second commissioned PT would launch in another month. Cooper had that much time to blend the mix of cultures and personalities aboard into a functioning crew.
As if reading his mind, Genna said, “It isn’t the destination, it’s the journey.”
“It isn’t the destination, or the journey,” he replied. “It’s the confrontations I’m concerned with.”
“Confrontations are inevitable,” Genna replied. “We are a battleship.”
During PT-109’s maiden cruise, Cooper, Genna, and Kennedy operated without a crew. The purpose of the trip around the solar system: to conclude final certifications of the vessel’s systems. Certifications required before introducing a crew.
Space Fleet Command would also analyze and assess their ability to perform as a team. The combination of Captain, AI and avatar sharing responsibility for a ship’s performance, a unique experience for everyone associated with the project.
Testing ended when a wormhole gate opened near the rim of the solar system. They made first contact. A battered interstellar cruise ship emerged. The civilian transport over-flowing with refugees. Aliens desperate to escape capture by a species rampaging through the galaxy. A species called the Zenge.
When a hostile alien battle group entered the solar system, contact escalated quickly into conflict. The Zenge arrived, intent on recovering the Star Gazer (the refugee cruise ship), the quarter-million fugitives on board, and unaware of Earth’s existence.
Coop ordered Kennedy and Genna to return to MSD for supplies, and reinforcements. He remained with the Star Gazer. The Zenge ships arrived after the 109’s departure. He confronted the Zenge with his space fighter, Angel 7, and the assistance of AStermalanlan and ASkiilamentrae of Fell. They held the invaders at bay until the arrival of Elie and Mags with Demon, followed by the 109. They met the attack, and defeated the Zenge. Enemy ships either destroyed, or retreating. They saved the Star Gazer, and freed captive aliens imprisoned aboard a cargo ship.
Aliens from the Star Gazer, and the cargo vessel, now served aboard the 109.
“She’s a fine ship, and built to handle conflicts,” Coop replied. “If we confront an enemy, I have no doubt the 109 will exceed expectations. My concern is dealing with challenges inside the ship.”
“Between aliens and humans?”
“Between everyone,” he replied.
CHAPTER 3
“Captain Cooper?" Kennedy interrupted Coop’s review of status reports. Engaged in the minutia of commanding a ship, he appreciated the interruption.
“Yes, Kennedy?”
“It is inefficient for multiple people to involve themselves with systems I have under control,” She said. “I do not understand the need.”
“The need is twofold, Kennedy. If something happens to you, the crew is forced to operate the ship. Second, more importantly, and more likely, if we are in an emergency situation, I may need your full attention on one, or two systems. In either scenario, the crew becomes your backup.”
“I have unlimited processing capabilities. Even in an emergency, I can complete non-essential operations while providing directed influence on primary systems.”
“In the world we know, you are most likely correct,” Coop replied. “But what abo
ut the world’s we don’t know? Consider an artificial intelligence, aboard an alien vessel, launches a multi-faceted systems assault against the ship. You may be forced to dedicate one-hundred percent of your capabilities to defend against, and repel the attack.”
“You believe my processing capabilities insufficient to confront a challenge by another intelligence, while continuing to operate the systems required to maintain ship-wide functions?” Kennedy asked.
“It isn’t about belief, Kennedy,” Coop said. “I trust you, or I would never risk a crew going into space aboard the 109. It’s about the unknown. We don’t know what we may face out there. We do know future contacts are potentially hostile. I believe in myself in battle, but I also know having back-up is crucial. Being part of a team doesn’t take away your capabilities, it adds a level of security.”
“I should enhance the team by assisting their improvement at operating my systems, in case they must confront a situation, at a critical time, without my presence.”
“That defines leadership, Kennedy. Realizing people may face situations on their own, a good commander trains people to perform under stress, without direct supervision. Your team must think, adjust, and act accordingly to complete the mission with confidence.”
Changing the subject, Cooper asked, “How is Genna doing? And how is the bond between the two of you developing?”
“Genna is most content when we operate in space. The genetic engineering team on EMS2 kept her busy working with Adele [The avatar for the SFPT-99, under construction in the space station’s shipyard], and Roosevelt [The SFPT-99, named Franklin Delano Roosevelt]. They surmised her experiences could assist Adele to assimilate more quickly. They became friends. I found it interesting to observe the dynamic.
“The weekends she visited Earth, with you, Sky, and Storm provided positive experiences, as well. The distance between us was uncomfortable, at first. It made it impossible to remain connected. It soon became similar to the down time she experiences when we disconnect during her sleep cycles. Being fully aware, and alone proved healthy. I discovered I more fully engage internal inspections when not connected.”