Apex

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Apex Page 15

by Aer-ki Jyr


  “Get your batteries warmed up,” Riax said, walking over to an auxiliary panel that he’d reconfigured for energy distribution. Now that the ship was en route, he ran the engines up to 7% and diverted their electrical power into the makeshift power conduits that led to the four weapon systems. It was eating up fuel at an alarming rate, but it was the only way to provide sufficient power.

  Orrona and Marren slid into the turret control chairs that Riax had installed on the now cramped and cluttered bridge instead of locating them at or near the actual turret locations as most warship designs provided. They powered them up with practiced ease, with Jalia lagging behind a bit.

  Once all three lachar turrets were powered and functioning nominally, Riax shunted the remaining power to the plasma turret and took the chair that held its many controls. He was the only person he trusted to fire it, given the number of manual operations that he was going to have to make during combat. Some of the control levers and switches, in fact, had been designed for telekinetic toggling and out of arm’s reach entirely.

  “Thirty seconds,” Ella announced in Terran. “Twenty dek,” she repeated in the commerce language for Jalia’s sake.

  “Adjust shields to auxiliary setting,” Riax told her.

  The Cres altered the shield dynamics with the press of a single button, activating the recalibration required for the simultaneous operation of the plasma cannon. “Shields ready and at full power, equal distribution.”

  “Adjust as necessary,” Riax allowed as he began to pull charge from the capacitor and create plasma within the containment field.

  “In-­jump complete,” Ella continued to report, “frigate closing. Adjusting attitude to bring plasma cannon to bear.”

  On Jalia’s targeting screen the enemy ship suddenly rolled out of view. “Hey!” she complained.

  Riax smiled and took a second to find the minds of the two Kayna elsewhere in the ship and warn them that battle was imminent. “Hold fire until they close. They don’t know we’re armed yet. Give me one clear shot if you can,” he said, talking to Ella as much as the other gunners, then repeated the hold order for Jalia.

  A small orange sphere formed inside a crater atop the plasma turret. It slowly grew in size, coming to a diameter of 1.4 meters. The plasma intensified slightly, but still retained a yellow/orange coloration, held aloft within a magnetic bubble and radiating away part of its energy to open space. The cannon had to continually be adding charge to maintain equilibrium as Riax waited for the optimal moment to fire.

  The Nevax frigate closed with the Resolute, intent on boarding much as its twin had. On the sensor display it was already extending its breaching dock, the end of which matched the device still lodged in the Resolute’s hull. Either the mercs entirely missed the rad signature of the plasma cannon, which stood out like fireworks in a night sky, or they didn’t comprehend what their sensors were telling them, because they moved in on the freighter as if it was of no threat to them.

  The plasma bolt that launched towards their ship quickly corrected that problem. Once past the limited guiding range of the cannon’s magnetic fields, it began to spread out into a five meter wide blob of quickly cooling destructive power, but with the frigate so close it impacted with over 80% intensity.

  It hit on the belly of the smaller ship, washing over the shields as if it were a water balloon puncturing and expanding in all directions, draining more than half their shield strength with the single shot. One of the Resolute’s lachar batteries opened up as well, firing off less powerful red lances of energy at a rate of about one every three seconds.

  It took a painfully long moment for the frigate to respond, having been caught completely off guard. When it did, three equally red lachar batteries opened up on the freighter as the two keet long enemy ship pivoted on its bow, swinging its aft end around and presenting a smaller cross section. That brought one of its six lachar batteries out of line, but allowed two more dorsal bow-­mounted batteries to open up on the Resolute.

  Riax had the plasma cannon charging again, but waiting through the recharge was nerve-­racking. With a limited available power flow, the slower charge rate was the only way to make the more potent weapon viable. Had he wanted to, he could fire what little plasma had already gathered at any moment, but the damage would be significantly less, and consecutively less with multiple smaller blasts, because increased surface area would allow more energy to radiate off prior to impact.

  He had to wait . . . and in battle that was the last thing a gunner wanted to do.

  Fortunately Ella was on top of things and maneuvered the Resolute to bring another of its lachar batteries to bear while the plasma cannon temporarily rotated out of the line of sight. Jalia got her first opening and fired a total of twelve shots before the target rolled out of view again.

  With the damage done to the frigate’s shields by the plasma cannon, and the subsequent lachar blasts eating into the remainder, the freighter seemed to have the advantage in the shielding wars, given that by percent the mercs’ shields were losing strength at a faster rate than the freighter’s. Trouble was, even though the frigate was smaller and losing its shields faster, it was a warship, which meant armor plating and an interior design maximizing structural integrity and protecting key systems. The Resolute was a freighter, meaning it was basically an empty box with engines attached, and aside from the enhanced shields it was an easy target.

  By the time the ship had spun back around the plasma cannon reached full charge and Riax hit the frigate on the bow shields, which in this case was the same shield covering the entire ship, not segmented like most larger ship designs fielded. The plasma blast collapsed the shield and kissed the armored hull beneath, but didn’t penetrate it. The one lachar battery in range began to chip away at the armor as the frigate’s four batteries patiently brought the Resolute’s shield strength down below 50%.

  Ella rolled the ship again, while strengthening the bow shields. The freighter was equipped with two shield zones, generated by many arrays, which allowed power to be shifted proportionally between either zone, mainly to afford extra energy to the bow shields during jump travel. Most of the frigate’s lachar blasts were hitting the bow shield that covered the plasma cannon, and as a result it was down to 37% while the aft shield was sitting at 65%.

  Shield power existed in two forms, energy already deployed into the shield matrix and the recharge rate. Matrix energy could be shifted from one shield to another, with considerable loss during transfer, or the recharge energy could be allotted more to one shield than another, which was the tactic Ella employed while shifting the full recharge power into the bow shield to protect the plasma cannon. Without it, their three lachar batteries would surely lose out against the frigate’s six, given that they were of the same make and yield.

  “Ella, try to give me a shot at their engines,” Riax said as he waited through another recharge period. The Resolute was less maneuverable than the frigate, but if their pilot wasn’t up to snuff they had a chance.

  Firing the plasma engines, Ella tried to break the T-­shaped formation that the frigate was holding by circling around parallel to them. Unfortunately the frigate simply pivoted again and kept their bow firing arc solidly on the flank of the freighter.

  Ella wasn’t finished, though. She also pivoted the Resolute around so the ships squared off face to face while ever so slightly drifting upwards . . . then she slammed in the engines at 30% thrust, heading directly for the merc ship on a collision course.

  “Get ready,” she yelled, increasing the slight angle the ship was at while rolling it over at the same time. Predictably, her opposite responded out of reflex and activated their plasma engines as well, intending to scoot underneath the freighter at even greater passing speeds, giving the freighter less of an opportunity to hit their flank.

  Had the pilot been Ella’s equal, it would have been patient enough to simply pivot the
ship again while matching the angular rate to the freighter’s approach rate, keeping the frigate’s heavier bow armor in blocking position throughout the maneuver. Because it didn’t, it gave the Resolute a brief window of opportunity as the plasma cannon rotated into view and passed by the frigate’s engine bank.

  It was an opportunity that any Human gunner, let alone a level 8 naval warfare specialist, wasn’t going to miss taking advantage of. Riax timed the plasma release perfectly, firing before the frigate arrived so that the ‘water balloon’ mushroomed against the top of the ship’s engines.

  The plasma ate through the armor plating and cored through a third of the plasma engines, as well as knocking out 83% of its gravity drives, significantly reducing its maneuvering power and giving the Resolute the ability to navigate into whatever firing arc it preferred.

  “Target their engines,” Riax ordered. “Leave them dead in the water then get us out of here before they get through our shields.”

  “Why aren’t we targeting their weapons?” Jalia asked as Ella translated.

  “Later,” Ella answered, given that Riax couldn’t understand the question. “Just knock those engines out, they’re still fighting me,” she said, playing cat and mouse as the frigate twisted to and fro trying to shake the freighter out of the preferred attack zones.

  Another small internal explosion broke through the frigate’s hull.

  “Got ‘em,” Marren reported as the frigate began to list. Its plasma engines were completely offline now, though several engines remained undamaged. Their power conduits had been cut by Marren’s precision shots into the large hole that the plasma blast had cored into the ship, thus exposing vital internal components.

  “How’s it look?” Riax asked, holding off firing the cannon again.

  “They’re dead in the water,” Ella reported enthusiastically.

  “Get us out of here,” he said, shooting off the plasma into space and powering down the turret.

  Ella fired up the plasma drive and moved them away on a trajectory due aft of the frigate, taking them out of their firing arcs. Once several hundred keets away, Riax redirected engine power from the weapons back to their intended purpose and Jalia, now back at the helm, set course for Agas, the primary population center within the system and the only place where they could refuel, refurbish, and restock the ship.

  Assuming there weren’t more enemies lying in wait.

  Chapter 18

  UPON APPROACHING AGAS the Resolute had received no attention. The Concordat battleship orbited oblivious to their approach, as did the small Resari fleet that guarded the planet. The diminutive race made up 72% of Agas’s population and controlled the planet as one of four colonies while allowing a modest level of commerce and cohabitation with other races.

  Most of the commerce occurred in three surface spaceports and six orbiting stations, the latter of which Jalia took the Resolute to for refueling. The Resari station was little more than a cubic rectangle with docking pylons sticking out at various angles. Upon querying the dockmaster, the freighter was assigned a medium slip opposite a slightly larger twin. The two Zaklorn-­designed ships were docked on opposite sides of a pylon that didn’t completely eclipse the view of each other. The larger freighter also appeared to be the older, both in model and wear and tear. Pockmarked with various damaged/repaired areas to its hull, the cargo hauler was easily identifiable as the Predlock, a ship Jalia was familiar with.

  Most of the station’s docking slips were empty, and the fourth of them that were full had all been clustered around one end, maximizing transit within that area of the station. Jalia arranged for refueling through the station’s automated assembly while she and Marren left the ship for some shopping. Riax remained onboard along with the Kayna while the other two Cres slipped out on their own clandestine shopping mission. There was much they needed in way of supplies and spare parts, especially given the Human’s request list . . . with the intent being to fabricate additional equipment and defenses for the Resolute.

  Riax spent the downtime monitoring the refueling and putting the last touches on his transmitter. He ran it through several test sequences, verifying it was working as intended. Human transmitters of this kind were the size of a wristband, but given the lack of adequate technology this one massed twenty times greater than Riax. It still worked though, and that was the point.

  When he activated the transmitter and sent out the Human ‘handshake’ protocols, he wasn’t expecting a response, yet he received not one, but two return signals.

  “Hello . . .” he said appreciatively as he went a step further and attempted to access the grid. It responded instantly, as if the past 16,000 years’ lack of maintenance wasn’t even an issue. It felt good to Riax to know that something of the Empire was left besides him.

  The system’s nexus was indeed operational, and was the source of one of the handshake responses. Riax immediately dove into the system and pulled up a grid diagnostic, resulting in a galaxy-­wide hologram appearing above a small display hardwired into the crude transmitter.

  As expected, the conduit linkages had been severed, so the only realtime information available was from the local subsector of the grid. There had originally been 89 nexuses in this area linked to the Severato, Jinalla, and Erandis conduits, all of which had been disabled or destroyed. Slower, redundant nexus to nexus communication had been retained, of course, but 62 of the nexuses had also gone off-­line, creating gaps in the grid. As it was, only 12 nexuses were linked to the Veyya System’s . . . which was now called Mewlon.

  One nexus was enough to backup all the data within the grid, so Riax had a multitude of options to work with but one in particular thrust its way forward on his priority list. He delved into the grid’s history files on Earth and located the point of contact disruption.

  “308,” he echoed aloud, looking at the date. He had been wounded and put into the pod in the year 13,802,117 . . . which meant the homeworld had fallen 191 years later. That was remarkably fast, given the size of the Human Empire.

  A tight knife of pain slipped through his emotional armor as he looked through the synopsis of the fall. Having only the Cres’s word to take for it had been bad enough, but seeing it recorded here in detail made it all the more real and the weight of eventual defeat in the war he’d just been fighting pressed down on him heavily. He took a moment to steady himself and shoved the pain back inside the mental containment bottle. He had work to do. The emotion could wait.

  Riax expanded his timeline research and compiled a map of system losses coinciding with nexuses going off-­line. Fortunately, the grid had remained active for the most part, with the hubs going down in the aftermath . . . the technological ‘purge’ the Cres had spoken of.

  That was critical, because it meant he had access to war records. He could see how the enemy had beaten them and wouldn’t have to rebuild blind to the threat, wherever it was now. It was odd, very, very odd that they hadn’t remained and claimed some of the galaxy for their own . . . or had they? Maybe the Cres just weren’t aware of it because they weren’t in this slice of the galaxy?

  Riax chewed on his lip, deep in thought. There was so much at stake that he couldn’t be rash about this. He had to lay low, gather intelligence, and plan thoroughly. If the enemy could take out the Empire at its height it would take little effort on their part to swat away any attempt he could make at rebuilding unless he was shrewd about it.

  There was so much information to go through that it would take months, if not years to sort out. Riax reminded himself to be patient and focus on the moment at hand. He needed to reach either safety or anonymity, and right now that meant surviving until reaching Cres territory.

  The second handshake response returned to mind and Riax pulled up its location on the grid.

  “Interesting,” he mewed, noting that the facility was located on a planet that had since become a moon of a gas gian
t. Current status listed the clandestine outpost as inactive, with the comm system running on environmental backups. That gave it power to maintain minimal internal operations while it stored up enough energy for short transmission bursts, such as the handshake response. Backup protocol, however, was an energy-­saving mode and didn’t allow direct linkage through the grid, so Riax had no way of knowing how much of the facility was still intact.

  Even if there were just some pieces lying around it could prove invaluable in his efforts to upgrade the Resolute. The moon in question was currently uninhabited and covered with sprawling vegetation, which was odd considering that it had previously been barren desert. Whatever had prompted the gravitational catch by the gas giant must have also altered the orbit enough for considerable climate change, or maybe some form of terraforming project by the locals or previous inhabitants within the system.

  There was no way for Riax to be sure, but it was becoming clear that the galaxy had drastically changed during his ‘timeout’ in the pod. It was going to be a new game now, with new pitfalls and opportunities, but the more pieces of the past he could recover the better. How he was going to play this was the big question. Rebuilding the past was inviting a second defeat. Humans were notorious, though, for learning to adapt, which meant he had to work from a clean slate if the Empire was to survive.

  THOUGHTS TO THAT end consumed his time until the others returned from their supply run and shook him from his study. They had originally planned to leave the system as soon as the ship was refueled and hopefully jump into the next leg of their journey before more enemies manifested themselves, but Riax nixed their immediate departure and gathered the crew in cargo bay 3 as soon as Jalia had them clear of the station and on a lazy exit vector from Agas.

 

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