by John Ringo
The bad news was, he now knew what a Dreen fleet looked like in sensor data.
Useful information, but there was no way in hell they were going to be able to show it to anyone. Not with over sixty Dreen warships in the system. Seven of the emissions were higher than any previous recorded; one of them was so immense he had to wonder if the Dreen used planetoids. It wasn’t a patch on the output of the Tree even when quiescent, but it was a huge grapping emission for a ship. And it was definitely moving, albeit slowly. Change that estimate to about an Earth day. But about thirty minutes after they arrived, every human on the space station would be dead.
One megagrapper ship. Six uberdreadnoughts. Nine Dreen production dreadnoughts. Three capital ships, emission type unknown, probably converts. Seven grapping carriers. Seven. That meant upwards of four hundred Dreen fighters. The rest were what were identified by humans and Hexosehr as cruisers, destroyers and frigates. Of course, a half dozen destroyers were considered a fair match for the Blade II. This was…
“Well, that’s a hell of a thing,” he said, nodding calmly. “Captain Zanella, kindly ask Colonel Che-chee to join us in our quarters.”
System change over seven percent. Analysis.
‹Energy has been transferred to gas giants creating out-gassing. Method and reason unknown. Emissions from small units detected. Tentatively identified as space fighters or shuttles. Species unknown. Anomaly has changed configuration. Correlation?›
Correlation data preliminary. Analysis of energy spectra indicates inability of species to have effected change. More data must be gathered. Establish communications with Sentient 754-839-847-239. Send small-unit task group to anomaly. Possibility anomaly has fallen into new species’ hands. Attach ground combat task-group.
‹We are loyal.›
“A smaller unit has broken off the main fleet,” Captain Zanella said. “Smaller being a relative term. Six destroyers and three fast units about the same size whose signature we’ve never seen before. And they’re headed here. Estimate one day away.”
“Not much else in the system to head to,” Weaver pointed out. “Are you getting that puckering feeling in your bottom that I am?”
“Fast personnel carriers?” Captain Zanella said. “A boarding party?”
“They’re probably detecting the dragonflies and the changes in the system are going to be really evident,” Weaver said, shaking his head. “Maybe playing the music was a bad idea, but it’s too late to worry about that. Colonel Che-chee.”
“Yes, Captain,” the Cheerick said. “We are prepared to fight in space or on the ground.”
“Yeah,” Weaver said. “But are you prepared to run away?”
“Where are we to run to?” the colonel asked.
“Back side of the sun from them,” Weaver said. “By the Jovian on that side. The Blade’s estimated to return in no more than four days. Could be as little as two, God help them. Your mission is to load up on consumables, pick up your drop tanks and get out into the deep system and hide. Make contact with the Blade when she returns and tell her what this thing is.”
“I would remain by your side, Captain Bill,” the Cheerick said, using the only name they could say before having the Hexosehr translators.
“That’s nice and all that,” Bill said. “But there’s really no reason for you to die, too. We don’t have a way to escape and somebody’s got to be around to explain how this all went wrong. You just drew the short straw, Colonel.”
“Rotator guns here and here,” Captain Zanella said, pointing to two of the intersections. “That closes off the last two approaches to the control cavern. First and Third Platoon will engage the enemy forward, degrading their action capability and determining their action plan. Second Platoon will remain in positional defense, holding the control cavern. Smart mines set to rhino output along all the corridors. Thirty percent on the final two corridors. If the rest bypass them, it means we’ll be able to take out up to thirty rhino-tanks at the cost of not engaging any of the dogs or throwers. Commander’s intent is to hold this position long enough for the Blade to arrive. If it gets here before the main fleet, it may be able to extract noncombat personnel and wounded. Are these orders clear?”
“Clear, sir,” Berg said. The other two lieutenants just nodded.
“Camerone, sir,” First Sergeant Powell said, grinning. “Guess you got me the wrong sign, Two-Gun.”
“I’m planning on seeing the fields, First Sergeant,” Berg said. “We’ve been in worse predicaments before.”
“Name one.”
“That has to be a Dreen brain-ship,” Bill said, looking at the sensor data.
Three of the Cheerick pilots had remained, rotating out from the docking cavern to give the units inside information on the approaching Dreen. Bill sometimes wondered if it wouldn’t be better to just not know.
But he was getting a better and better look at the approaching storm. What had to be a Dreen brain-ship was an immense organic construction, nearly as long as the Tum-Tum Tree and actually massing more. It wasn’t a planetoid, but something made entirely of organic materials. The firepower was going to be immense. Enough to destroy the Tree? Well, it probably wouldn’t have to.
They’d taken a look at Dreen destroyers, or the leftover bits anyway, after the battle at Orion. If you stripped out the weapons systems and just left the engines and life-support, you’d be able to pack quite a few Dreen combat units in one. How many? Well, a lot more than the Marines were going to be able to stop, that was for sure. And the whole task-force, which was less than twelve hours away, would be able to enter the space dock. That meant cover fire from the destroyers for the landing phase.
“The Blade’s not going to be able to engage that force, sir,” Lieutenant Ross said. He’d been acting as the away mission XO and was examining the sensor data trying to find any way out of the trap the team found itself in. “Even if they arrive while it’s still in system. Just the fighters are enough to keep them back.”
The Blade attacked by slashing in at superluminal speeds, dropping out of warp for a brief moment and firing its broadside. Based on the results from Orion, when they’d only had one of the chaos guns, it should work well on a Dreen destroyer and even on the cruisers. It would require a large number of attacks to take out one of the dreadnoughts. It might be impossible to destroy the brain-ship. And each time it dropped out of warp, it was vulnerable to fire. It was only vulnerable for a brief window, but that was generally enough time for the Dreen targeting systems to get some licks in.
But its real weakness was the fighters. They could rarely hit the Blade, but by the same token the Blade’s targeting was designed for getting in close and hitting a big target. Coming in at plus the speed of light meant it had, actually, pretty poor targeting. Sticking around to get a better shot usually meant getting holes blown all the way through it. It was a PT boat up against battleships; stick and move was the only way to survive.
Dreen fighters were too small and too nimble for the Blade to effectively target. And there were going to be a lot of fighters. By itself, there was no way that the Blade was going to be able to do a damned thing about this fleet.
“We need to figure out a way to stop them,” Bill said. “Destroy at least some of them.”
“Well, sir,” Ross said slowly, “I don’t see us being able to slip any Marines on the brain-ship this time.”
“Neither do I,” Bill replied. “But there’s got to be something we can do…”
He looked at the sensor data, then pulled up the solar system map, plugging the information into a navigational program.
“Hmmm…”
“The thing is, we can either engage the main fleet or the approaching boarders,” Weaver said, bringing up the scenarios. “Both are going to cross the beam going to the xenon gas giant. If we engage the main fleet, we’re probably only going to get part of it; most of it is going to be off the elliptic. Ditto the boarders. But we can at least cut either one down.”
> “We’re playing for time,” Captain Zanella said. “I recommend taking out the approaching boarders. Of course, that means some of my Marines might actually survive.”
“There would be a time window when we could all survive,” Bill said. “If we get most of the boarding group and the Blade gets here before the main fleet… Okay, that’s what we’ll do. Time to get the band together.”
“This is flipping nuts, sir, you know that,” Carpenter said, tapping his drum set.
“Yep,” Bill said, looking at the laptop propped in front of him. It had the estimated approach vector of the boarding task force on it and a projection of the beam that would fluoresce the xenon gas giant. The trick was going to be to get the beam to intersect the task force, before it realized it was in trouble. “But that’s what we’re gonna do.”
“ ‘Warriors of the World’?” Carpenter asked.
“ ‘Winterborn’?” Miriam suggested.
“My calculations, based on spectral data from the fluorescing planets, is that the optimum tonality is soprano vocals in the key of C,” Bill said. “Damnit.”
“And that would be…” Miriam said, grinning.
Change in emission from artifact. Change in shape of artifact. Change in solar output.
Send warning to boarding force, prepare for attack.
“I can see when you stay low nothing happens does it feel right?” Miriam sang, soft and slow to a quiet piano and muted drums.
“Late at night
things I thought I put behind me
haunt my mind.”
Long enough for the system to warm up. Long enough for the shield to stretch out, covering the star and absorbing its full energy. Then the power increased…
“I just know there’s no escape
now once it sets its eyes on you
but I won’t run, have to stare it in the eye…”
Bill looked at the readouts then over his shoulder.
“Two… three… four!”
“STAND MY GROUND, I WON’T GIVE IN!”
she sang, putting every ounce of vocal energy she could into the powerful chorus as guitar screamed and drums thundered.
“NO MORE DENYING, I GOT TO FACE IT.
WON’T CLOSE MY EYES AND HIDE THE TRUTH INSIDE.
IF I DON’T MAKE IT, SOMEONE ELSE WILL…
stand my ground…”
The window had opened up as usual but something else was happening. All of the ships in the system were now highlighted and as the beam shot out from the powerful system, one by one outlines of the oncoming fast-movers blinked and blazed, then vanished. The defenders were watching the effect of the station on the ships even as Miriam shifted back to verse:
“It’s all around
getting stronger, coming closer
into my world
I can feel
that it’s time for me to face it
can I take it?
Though this might just be the ending
of the life I held so dear
but I won’t run, there’s no turning back from here
STAND MY GROUND I WON’T GIVE IN… !”
“We got four of the destroyers, one of the possible troop-carriers and a piece of one of the other destroyers,” Bill said jubilantly. “And all through the power of music!”
“If anybody says anything about Muadib, I’m going to strangle them,” Miriam said.
“What?”
“Sorry, obscure sci-fi reference.”
“Okay, sir,” Captain Zanella said. “I appreciate you making my job a little easier. But I’ve got a question.”
“Go.”
“What are you going to do for an encore?”
“Oh,” Bill groaned. “Captain, put yourself up for punishment.”
“That was just weak, sir. You shouldn’t try to get into a pun fight a cappella.”
“Speaking of weak! At least I’m in harmony with the group.”
“I think you’re sounding a discordant note, sir.”
“Stop! Stop!” Miriam screamed. “You’re making me want to pitch you both off the station… Oh my God. Now I’m doing it…”
‹Power beams used to cause excitation of gasses in the gas-giants. Task Group encountered one of the beams, either through probability error or intent, causality unclear at this time. Purpose of excitation phenomenon not understood. Unknown species probable cause of structural change and excitation phenomenon. Sentient 475-829-467-821 destroyed. Orders?›
Order fleet to maneuver out of elliptic to avoid beam. Order non-sentients to assault station and destroy enemy infestation. Sonic anomaly analysis?
‹Gravitational waves induced sonic response in hulls of ships. Reason unknown.›
Danger?
‹Nominal. Gravitational level too low to effect damage.›
“Everything has a harmonic,” Bill said, gesturing at the station. “Even this thing does. If you get just the right harmonic, you can shake it apart.”
“And this means what?” Carpenter asked, tapping his cymbal.
“So do ships,” Bill said, gesturing at the opaque wall of the cavern. “One of Che-chee’s pilots reported that he heard sounds when they were in space. I don’t see this thing being only for the people inside. The best view is going to be from in space. But you’re going to want to hear the concert. Space doesn’t propagate sound.”
“The gravitational beams you were talking about,” Miriam said. “You think we can use those to shake the ships apart?”
“It’s worth a try,” Bill said. “And, at the very least, I don’t think they probably have our taste in music. Maybe if we annoy them enough they’ll go away.”
“ ‘Those damned kids…’ ”
“Exactly. It worked on a neighbor when I was in high school…”
“Captain Weaver has something he thinks may take out some of the other ships,” Captain Zanella said. “But that’s not our problem for now.”
“Our problem is an unknown quantity of Dreen that are about to board this station,” Lieutenant Ross said.
“Exactly,” Zanella continued with a chuckle. “But with the captain taking out some of their ships, I figure we’ve got a fighting chance. They’re maneuvering to dock at the moment. Last minute suggestions are accepted.”
“Where’d we put those hibernating spiders?” Berg said, after none of the other officers spoke up.
“Like that one. Just like that one.”
“These things give me the creeps,” Lance Corporal Moorehead said.
The Marines had gathered up the hundreds of thousands of mostly quiescent space spiders in every available container and First and Third Platoons had carried them forward, scattering them along the approach corridors. Nobody knew if they’d attack live Dreen or not, but it was worth a shot. And they were great for cleaning up the battlefield.
“Just keep scattering,” Staff Sergeant Robbins growled. “And be glad it’s not with your hands.”
Alpha First was the most forward team, scattering the spiders along the corridors that had been first explored, right down by the landing platform the Blade had used. Most of the teams were much farther back, in the corridors that were certain to be used to approach the control cavern. But enough gear had been left scattered on the platform that the Dreen might use it for entry so it was decided to leave a few presents behind.
“I’m just saying,” Moorehead replied, tossing spiders as he walked along. “These things are creepy.”
“And I’m just saying scatter them and shut your gob,” Robbins said. He was about fifty meters from the platform, in view of it in other words, when a shadow swept over the crystalline structure. “Scatter faster! Scatter faster!”
“Alpha First reports Dreen landing on the same platform we used,” Captain Zanella reported. “Numbers unknown. I’ve left sensor pods behind to try to get a count, but none on the platform.”
“Go to it, Captain,” Weaver said, looking up from his equations. “I don’t think we’re going to
be able to anticipate the harmonics; we’re just going to have to jam. I hope your troops can fight and listen to music at the same time.”
“You’d be surprised how often they do just that, sir,” Zanella said with a sigh.
“Now that Captain Weaver’s given up singing, it’s really not all that bad,” Lance Corporal Strait said. He was crouched at an intersection, peeking around the corner looking for the foe.
“Kinda strange hearing ‘Winterborn’ sung by a girl, though,” Corporal Hamilton pointed out.
“I miss the violin,” Sergeant Lyle said. “The synthetic just isn’t the same.”
“Face it, nobody does ‘Winterborn’ like — DREEN.”
“I didn’t think the Dreen played music,” Lyle said, triggering a burst of fire into an oncoming dog-demon. “I’ve never heard them play at all…”
“Third Platoon falling to secondary positions,” Captain Zanella said. “Prepare to pass them through your lines, Lieutenant.”
“Aye, aye, sir,” Berg replied. “I will not run, this is my place to stand…” he whispered. “Platoon, prepare to pass Third through the lines! And in the fury of this darkest hour…”
‹Report from non-sentient boarders. Moving forward in face of resistance from units identified as Species 27264. Ten percent casualties in boarding units. Ground Combat Level Four units entering combat. Organism 8139 detected on station. Per standard procedure, ten percent of combat units deployed to prevent infestation of ships. At least ten k units of 8139 detected. Organism has begun replication processes in unrecovered combat units. Organism infesting active combat units.›