I totally forgot to put sitreps up! Grr, argth! Ulrich just thumped me to remind me!
Goodlifeguide.com has the manuscript. As soon as I get it, I'll publish the book. In the meantime:
NOTE: Some of the font won't change to white! I don't know why, it's being a butthead over it. Some may appear gray, others blacked out. Sorry.
Act I
Chapter 1
Everything came
to a screeching halt when the ansible came alive with a report from Second
Fleet.
The Admiralty received the flash warning, summary and then
prepared for the download. Sprite received the flash notification and then
briefed Admiral Irons, clearing his schedule as she did so.
Admiral Irons in turn immediately issued orders to Admiral
Pashenkov to move everything within range to Second Fleet as quickly as
possible.
Admiral Pashenkov didn't argue. Nor did he allow any
argument from Admiral Champion as he issued orders for Sun Tzu, her
division mate Sky Titan,
and their escorts to expedite their movements to the jump chain to Protodon. It
seemed like Second Fleet would be forever poaching First Fleet's capital ships,
specifically her largest ship squadron. Bismark
and her division mate Quirinus were already in the hands of Admiral
White. Now, two of their squadron mates would have to join them to shore
up his forces once more.
Second Division was the only capital ship unit immediately
available, having just left dock after a resupply before another round of
exercises a day before. Technically they were still months away from
deployment. Sun Tzu had started a series of shock trials and was six
months away from her IOC certifications, but that no longer mattered. Needs
must drive when reality and the enemy struck back. Both ships were going to get
a stress test as they raced to Second Fleet's aide. The crews were also going
to have fun setting in and dealing with anything that cropped up along the way.
While the Neowolf did that, Admiral Irons ordered all
loading on the four carriers—the CFV Vishal and three CVs Lexington,
Essex, and Stinger—to be expedited. They were to take on all
available antimatter ordinance as well.
One battle cruiser
squadron, one CruRon, two DesRons, two additional CLVs, as well as a host of
support ships raced to complete their own loading and get underway. Orders
flashed out through the ansible to all ships in transit to speed up and
redeploy to the war front if possible. All crew leaves were canceled.
Like ripples in a pond the orders sent out shockwaves
through the fleet. The deployment was roughly a third of First Fleet's ships.
Everyone knew something was up, but they were too busy to spend much time
asking questions. They also knew better than to say anything publicly.
Orders were dispatched through the ansible to others to
prepare for expeditious movement.
While he did that, Admiral Sienkov and ONI began pouring
over the latest ansible data, in some cases pulling it from the buffers as the
information came in.
~~~^~~~
Once the
Admiralty had the initial report from Second Fleet, Admiral Irons called a
cabinet meeting to brief the cabinet about the latest turn of battle. “Not
again,” Emily sighed in resignation.
“Just when we
think we've got them on the ropes …,” Iab agreed, flashing his simian teeth for
a moment in disgust.
“The enemy is
going to fight to survive just like us. We never promised it would be easy. But
it will get done,” Admiral Irons said firmly, letting a little command voice
leach in for effect. He noted those in the room sat up straighter for it. “It
is going to be this way, a see-saw battle over every star system until one side
or the other commits enough forces and force multipliers to break the stalemate.
At the moment, we're attritioning each other,” Admiral Irons stated. “I hate
it. This isn't what I'd planned, but it is the reality we are in. No plan
survives contact with the enemy, obviously," the admiral said bitterly as
if to himself. He shook himself and then shrugged. "We'll deal with it.”
Iab paused and
then turned to wrinkle his nose in question at the admiral. “Sir?”
Admiral Irons
shot a look at Sprite who was giving him a reproving look at the distraction.
He shrugged it off. She crossed her arms, but he dove in anyway. “At the time
we started in on Antigua, I had thought we'd have some time. That there would
be a delay, quite possibly years. I have a tendency to turtle. To fight
defensively. My original plan was to sit and build up a massive fleet, a
onetime knockout punch. It would have surrendered the initiative, but I was
confident we could have absorbed their attacks. But then I went to Lemnos and
plans changed.”
“And things
changed, sir?” George Custard prodded when the admiral fell silent. A few of
the people in the room grew restive, looking at the admiral.
“Yes,” Admiral
Irons said, staring at the window. It was a simulation of a rain storm on the
ground. “Admirals White and Subert wanted to kick off early. They weren't the
only ones. Amadeus wanted to get in, hit them hard, throw them off balance, and
fight them as far away from our population centers as possible. To take the
battle to them, not fight defensively. To free everyone we could while
we could.”
His expression
worked again and then he shrugged. “As I said, I'm a turtle; I tend to think in
engineering and defensive terms.” He smiled and looked back at them. “I would
have set up heavy defenses, let them come to us, and then break their teeth on
our fortresses and stuff. But there was the chance they'd get in to too many
places.”
“I see, sir,”
Moira said quietly.
Admiral Irons
shook himself. “There are arguments for and against both approaches. It doesn't
matter. We're committed now,” Admiral Irons stated, looking at Yorgi and the
other officers in the room. Sprite nodded.
“Exactly. We
have to remember the enemy wishes to win and live just as we do. They will keep
committing forces, reacting as we do. As it is, we have some edges, but it is
hard to effectively use them since we can't build up enough quantity to have an
overwhelming advantage,” Sprite stated.
“But Bek will
make up some of the difference, right?” Iab asked hopefully, looking at the two
flag officers in the room and then Moira and Sprite.
“Some. We still
do not know what the enemy has in reserve, not fully,” Yorgi cautioned. “We're
getting dribs and drabs from Bek. They are also far away from the front line.
Horath is a few jumps away from the front so they can reinforce faster.”
“What are the
Horathians producing? I remember reading something about they're now building
ships? How is that possible?” Sandra'kall asked. The Centaurian's tentacles
waved, briefly distorting her image but drawing attention to her.
Yorgi nodded.
“I'll send you the brief again since you are the Secretary of Industry.
Briefly, a lot of what we have is second and third hand information. It is also
out of date,” he stressed. More than one person grimaced at that qualifier. “We
don't know how their building rates have changed. For instance, we do know they
are producing Apollo class corvettes
as of ten years ago. That has been repeatedly confirmed. They were also working
on Arboth class destroyers as well as
unknown classes of cruisers, CEVs, and even battle cruisers. Now?” He shook his
head. “We don't know. We don't have assets in there to find out.”
“How?”
Sandra'kall asked.
He blinked in
confusion. “How what?” he asked cautiously. Was she asking him how she knew
this or how would they find out? He wasn't certain.
“How can they do
that when no one could before? When they couldn't even do it before?”
Iab demanded.
"Exactly,"
the Centaurian agreed.
Yorgi turned to
Admiral Irons and lifted an eyebrow to him as if to ask the engineer in the
group.
Admiral Irons
drummed his fingers once and then came to a decision. It was easier than he'd
thought. “El Dorado,” Admiral Irons replied.
“This is
classified Level Deep Blue,” Sprite interjected.
Iab blinked
brown eyes, apparently lost. “Sorry, what?”
Yorgi looked at
Admiral Irons. Admiral Irons nodded once. “Read them in,” Admiral Irons said,
sitting back.
“El Dorado
is a code name, one meaning city of gold. In this case, a place where
everything you want is. A place of untold riches, in this case keys and the
means to build ships and technology that had been up until now, locked,” Yorgi
stated. “We have several confirmations that they have found a damaged derelict
battle moon in Sigma somewhere.”
There were gasps
around the room, none of them feigned.
“Obviously this
is classified. We don't want a panic. What we know about it is sketchy at best.
It has been repeatedly confirmed though.”
“What he means
is, we have confirmed that they have found something,” Admiral Irons
stated firmly. “We are looking into where and exactly what it is. We doubt they
can move it, but they can strip it of resources. Resources they can use as a
turnkey upgrade to their existing industry. It levels the playing field
significantly.”
“Oh, that's just
peachy!” Emily said in despair. “So, they can get around the lockouts?! How?
How is that even possible??”
“It appears so,
but we don't know at what level. Coercion of any survivors might be involved.”
Emily winced at that. “And remember, they've been pirates for centuries.
Their ill-gotten gains have been funneled to Horath for that entire time period
and quite possibly before it during the Xeno war. We know they have hefty
stockpiles, entire orbital warehouse districts and bases chock filled with
stuff from across the galaxy. Plus, a bone yard of ships they stole or
salvaged,” Yorgi stated.
“In other words,
they can build ships just from the components and ships they've got on hand.
They can use civilian grade hyperdrives and nodes for instance,” Sprite stated.
“We've noted that in the past several decades they've invested heavily in their
industrial capacity, working on reverse engineering what they can and building
and stockpiling those components. Nuts, bolts, basic parts, any little bit they
can do without the need of a replicator.”
The Centaurian's
holographic image gave a human style nod. As head of Industry, she well
understood what Sprite was talking about.
“They have quite
a stockpile. And we know they have captured planets. Some of them had industry.
Not quite up to Antigua's level, but close enough to easily update them to make
parts they need,” Yorgi stated, picking up the narrative again.
“Oh.”
“So, you are
saying they are on par with us?” Emily asked carefully. “Thousands of
ships?” she asked very carefully. “Capital ships?”
“As Yorgi
pointed out, they've only just begun to produce Apollo class corvettes
and releasing them for use on the war front. But small escort ships have no
place in the wall of battle. They can act as scouts, pickets, and do other
missions, but in fleet combat, it is the big boys that matter,” Admiral Irons
stated. “We know they've been salvaging warships for centuries, but we don't
know how many are ready for combat. Obviously, they've made an effort to
rebuild them. Before though, those ships had no hyperdrives. They used a
temporary one to get them to Horath and then pulled it to install in the next
ship they found.”
Emily's image
grimaced. “Oh. So, a sublight fleet up until this El Dorado? You were
counting on their big boys staying at home until now?”
“Yes. They've
become a lot more dangerous in a short period of time,” Sprite stated.
“So, what do we
do?” Moira asked.
“We're going to
have to commit more of our forces. We were building them up to a Sunday punch,
a heavy force they wouldn't see coming. We were also keeping them in reserve
here to train and to cover this star system. But, we can't wait. Not if we want
to recapture the initiative. If we wait they could push Second Fleet all the
way back. Quite possibly to Protodon and we'd have to fight for that territory
all over again,” Admiral Irons stated flatly.
“Not to mention
the people we've got invested in Nuevo Madrid. We have the time to pull them out,
but we've liberated that world. We have a commitment to protect the people
there,” Moira pointed out. She had just launched a state department mission
there now that the Marines had cleared the way for them. “Our reputation is on
the line. If we walk away now we would be destroying it.”
A few of the
cabinet members hesitated before nodding in agreement.
“And they could
choose to not do a direct assault but go around to Senka. We can't be strong
everywhere,” Sprite stated. “The picket forces there can't handle a capital
ship attack.”
Moira winced.
She could already envision enduring calls from concerned Senka delegates, senators,
and the governor. All demanding she do something and get the military to
reinforce their star system to make it impregnable. Finding a way to explain
the Admiralty's logic wasn't going to be easy. No, scratch that, explaining
it wouldn't be hard. Getting them to accept it would be, she thought.
“So, if we get
the ships moving now, you are saying they can cut them off and go back to a
stalemate along the way?”
“Yes. Based on
Admiral White's report the enemy has a lot of capital ships, but his carriers
pounded two into debris with antimatter weapons. That might make them
cautious,” Sprite stated.
“Might,”
Emily stated, voice flat.
“Yes, might. I
realize it is a qualifier, but it is all we have now,” Admiral Irons said with
a pointed look at Emily to quell any more
outbursts.
“If the carriers are what
are needed, why not send them more?” Moira asked, looking from Yorgi to the
other two officers.
“We intend to along with the
capital ships. In fact, we already sent those that are available as some of you
might know.” A few heads nodded around the table. “But it was antimatter
weapons that got Second Fleet out of Dead Drop and made the enemy hesitate. And
let's remember, the enemy committed one of their premier units, their vaunted
Skull Squadron. They did a number on our people who weren't exactly fresh to
begin with when the enemy reinforcements showed up,” Yorgi stated. “It's
fighters and bombers that carry the antimatter to the enemy. Those have been
torn up. No doubt they have taken the time to reforge themselves during the
retreat transit time. We'll see what Admiral White has to say about committing
them to further action.”
“It boils down to we're
going to send whatever we can as quickly as we can. Anything in Protodon will
be moving forward right off less a small picket. They'll have to move
cautiously in case Second Fleet is bounced out,” Sprite stated. She was well
aware that Admiral Pashenkov had already issued the orders to the forces in
Protodon as well as left orders to each ansible for any passing military unit
to expedite their movements.
“What about the enemy
getting behind the lines and harassing shipping again?” Iab asked carefully. He
looked around the room. “I mean, it's a real threat now, right?”
“It can't happen with Second
Fleet in the way,” Yorgi stated. “We're now aware of that trick of bypassing
the normal route by going through B-97b so Admiral White is setting up pickets
to watch for it.”
“Okay, but what about coming
in from the north through Sigma sector through Finagle and then up and around
through Pi? Or hell, didn't we read about how they stole water dwellers from
ET? What about a straight jump?” Iab persisted.
More than one person
flinched around the table. There was a long brooding silence. Yorgi tapped his
fingers on the table as he looked down and then over to Admiral Irons.
“All nasty thoughts that
we're aware of,” Admiral Irons said carefully. “We have
a small picket in star systems linking to Sigma and Pi. We also have a picket
in Protodon. There is a carrier force, the Kittyhawk, moving to
reinforce Second Fleet. They'll be watching for ships as well.”
“We don't know
if they've put the surviving water dwellers to use or how many survived. We
have some tentative numbers on the missing persons, and we know a few that are
accounted for, but we don't know how many that got to Horath—if they
even got there. Any sort of mischief could have happened along the way,” Yorgi
stated.
“If they got
there yet. Remember, water dwellers push a ship hard. If the ship isn't
up to the demand, it can fail. And no matter how good your engineers and helm
team are, if you break something you can't fix you are SOL. Or, if you do
manage to salvage something, you are stuck at a slow pace,” the T'clock captain
interjected in support.
“But we can't
count on any of that, can we?” Emily asked.
“No,” Admiral
Irons said. “We have to assume they got through. We don't know what they are
doing with those people. Obviously, nothing good. But, remember, they'll only
have a few, which means only a few ships can raid if they try it. And blind
jumps are not for the faint of heart. It is a good way to throw away assets.
Their recent experience with Fourth Fleet's retreat will remind them of that.
You don't gamble a fleet like that.”
“But it was done
before. Before the Xeno war. During the founding of the Federation …,” Lawrence
Martindale said, sounding exasperated.
“That was as you
said, before the war,” Captain Broken Antenna interjected before anyone
else could. Captain Herschel nodded in agreement. “Now there are all sorts of
problems. Hyper mines are one thing to contend with. The energy from destroyed
stars and such, the changes to hyperspace, it's a mess. There is a reason
people stick to the safe known travel routes,” the T'clock stated, waving her
remaining antenna.
“Oh.”
“But you did it
before. And we all take risks. Can they take the risk? Blaze a fresh trail?”
Emily asked.
Admiral Irons
spread his hands apart. “Anything is possible given the right navigation and
helm team. We're working on it on our end. We know the enemy is now trying to
do it too with their assault on ET,” he stated. There was a fresh round of
grimaces at that reminder. “So, I think we need a break. But, to recap, we're
going to stop the enemy. We're going to fight a fighting withdrawal if
necessary, but the goal is to stop them cold before B-95a3.” Moira nodded in
agreement. “Can I say without reservation that I have your support on this?”
Heads nodded
around the table.
He waited a
moment and then nodded once himself. “Good. Let's adjourn for a moment and
stretch. I need another cup of coffee and we all need to check on things in our
domains anyway.” Emily chuckled but nodded.
~~~^~~~
Thx your books are a fun read
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