A Simple Financial Decision HFY - 1/3
Aboard the Command Ship Mother of Invention
>>> BEGINNING SYSTEM SURVEY
>>> ANALYZING INTERFERENCE
>>> CHEMICAL AND FISSION EMISSIONS DETECTED
>>> ERROR. PARAMETER âuninhabitedâ NOT MET
Junior Commander Waâl Hildnid was not having a good first night on duty. Despite serving on the bridge crew several times, tonight - or what passed for it in the carefully controlled light system meant to match their circadian rhythm - was the first night that Hildnid had command of the bridge. Which of course meant that the first (and hopefully only) unexpected problem came up on his shift. Although perhaps the Celestials were playing a joke on him - after all, the fierce and ruthless Foreman Waâl Sonogth in charge of this operation, was his uncle.Â
After a firm rapt on the door and announcing his presence, the door was opened from the other side. Already - or perhaps still - awake, he was hunched over with one of his three eye stalks on a different display. âReport,â he said simply.
âCapt-â He cringed, reminding himself he was no longer in the Navy, âMaster Foreman, - one of our long range probes has encountered an error.â
The question hung for a moment - Sonogth turned one eye towards his nephew. âAnd?â he asked dryly.
âOh! Apologies uncl- sir. The system-â
âWhich system, Junior Captain?â Foreman Sonogth interrupted, crossing his bulky arms over his chest and foremenâs pin. âOur charter is to strip mine any system within a hundred square parsec region. So far, we have sent out four hundred drones and most have already reached their secondary target.â
âOf course, sir, sorry sir.âÂ
âMake sure it doesnât happen again - which system?â
Grimacing at failing to answer with his apology, Hildnid was pleased the correct screen was ready. âThe star has been codenamed as ZN0-52081, sir, and the error was unexpected life form contact.â Songothâs eyestalk returned to its central monitor at that.
âTwo ice giants and gas giants, an asteroid belt, a habitable planet, and a deathworld, on top of a few dozen barren moonsâŚâ his uncle thought aloud, his voice sonorous as he dropped into a contemplative tone. âToo remote for pirates, too much work for colonizers, and not near anyone who couldâve taken itâŚâÂ
The eyestalk came back up. âWere the life signature Bioforms?â
âNo, no sir.â He knew that one, at the very least. There were several ways to tell if one of the Old Oneâs children was lurking, and none had been present. âWhat little evidence we have at the moment suggests the usage of traditional, albeit old, spacecraft. No psionic resonance or evidence of interstellar gas manipulation.â
The eyestalk bobbed a nod. âGood, at least we wonât need to deal with any damned Citay.â Waâl Sonogth sighed, leaning back in his chair and finally turning all three of his eyes to his nephew. âTheyâre either smugglers or political dissidents illegally occupying our territory. If itâs smugglers, we can pay them off and give them one of our empty systems, if theyâre rebellious colonistsâŚâ
Waâl Hildnid swallowed so hard that it seemed to travel through his neck and into his shoulders and chest.Â
At that, his uncle laughed. âDonât get squeamish on me, boy! Your mother told me about what a brave military man you are, donât tell me you never killed before?â The black of his sclera seemed to grow even darker, âif itâs easier on your soul, Iâll make it an order. Itâs a simple financial decision.âÂ
âYes, Master Foreman.â
âGood. Send the probe to its next target, andâŚâ The left eye moved back towards its screen, âorder ED-3 to move in. Clan Gis also were a gang of firebreathersâŚâ
âIf that will be all, sir?â
Aboard Mining Ship Salinonk
Captain Ghis Halnfur was looking forward to an extremely profitable day.Â
In charge of âED-3â - Excavation and Demolitions Team 3 - and the seven ships that made up that command. Two of them were traditional deep space mining ships, barely a hundred meters long, three more were of the wide bowed transport ships that would carry full loads for processing, two hundred and twenty meters long and capable of safely transporting its precious cargo without additional protection. And of course, his flagship, half again the size of the transports and the most heavily armed, was to act as the command and operations hub for the mining operation, as well as transporting any workers or engineers to ground-based projects - in this case, a legion of Galfrei-class combat units and a platoon of enhanced mining equipment retrofitted into combat-ready suits. And of course, the final ship, and Halnfurâs personal addition to ED-3 - the screening ship.
Taken from his days in the Navy, the idea of point defense protection against fightercrafts and gunships would also work when it came to asteroid mining. Halnfur himself captained the first one deployed, and saw to his immense delight that it could cut through those asteroid fields like air⌠it simply made it harder to collect them afterward - so instead his poor Liiâlya had been reduced to operations like this, where collateral damage was expected.Â
Blinking out the white that always came from leaving faster than light, he kept his eyes on the stellar horizon while his communications officer began a survey. âNear distance, clear. Middle distance, clear. Far distance⌠occupied.â
âOccupied?â Ghis Halnfurâs second in command, Akâno Jel, asked as he moved to take a better look at the display.
âYes maâam,â comms responded. âBy⌠a battle, it looks like,â she paused, another bright flash of light from the viewport, this time significantly smaller and at range. âYes, itâs a battle, maâam. The fission signature we just picked up was equivalent to one of our class-4 explosives.â
âWhoâs fighting?â Halnfur felt obligated to ask, if no one else would.
âItâs hard to tell from this range, sir, but Iâm seeing two distinct ship design styles, maybe three.â
âAre you ready to go in, Captain?â Jel asked, back behind his command chair.
He surveyed the scene for a moment longer, tapping his chin dramatically. âYes⌠I believe we shall. Navigations, plot me a skip-jump, pull back a hundred fifty kilometers from the plotted edge of the battle. I want them to know weâre there, but donât fire yet.â Heâd never believed Sonogthâs predictions - and he knew who was behind this whole damn thing - the Citayans. If he could get proof, solid evidentiary proof, that they had not only moved into the Celestia Republica Castelleum, and that they fired first, it would be the airtight justification they needed to finally wipe the Citayans off the galactic map, then their unevolved Citay vermin, and then all the other Bioforms. At least the Citayans didnât use bloody animals for space-craft.
The flash was proportionally weaker this time - but the battle was not what he expected.
Aboard the War Ship Antioch
Aleksandrya Sokolov-Meyer of the United Nations of Terra and Venus Navy, and captain of the Zeus-class Antioch, was having a terrible day. âStatus!â she barked, leaning over the massive command table and wincing at each new red mark on her ships. And they werenât even supposed to be her ships! âI need those torpedo tubes unjammed!â she yelled to no one in particular.
âTorpedos still down, maâam, repairs underway!â
âRioâs Pride is requesting additional firing support!â
âAcknowledged, patch me over to the captain.â It wasnât looking good for Rioâs Pride. The only destroyer she still had on her left flank, Rio was built for capital ship combat, and the swarm of Jovian Stinger and Biter drones that had just polished off her support ship. âCaptain Holt,â Meyer said when she saw a flicker in her periphery.Â
âDamn, Meyer, its a bloody mess that Gilly left us, isnât it?â Despite herself, she let out a low chuckle, glancing up through the loose strands of red hair to look at her friendâs face on the screen. He wasnât looking good, behind him the devastation of his ship was obvious, lights flickering and a disturbingly loud shudder. She was tempted to pretend that this was a simulation again, that this wasnât real and she had enough time for a clever comeback.
But it was real this time. And with the death of Commodore Gilroy Faux and High Captain Tsoss, Aleksandrya was in command.
And she was about to kill a friend.
âHolt, we canât send anyone to rescue you,â she said solemnly, turning back to her display and drawing her intentions. âIf you yaw fifty degrees starboard and a few clicks further out-â
âI can hit the damn nest.â
âWeâll cover you for as long as we can.â
âYes maâam, over and out.â And just like that, exposing itself to more fire and making the battered destroyer even more of a target, Rioâs Pride followed orders. The swarm of drones saw that and gave chase, their hive programming convincing their fellows of better prey than the main battle group. No doubt some kid would notice and correct the mistake eventually, but it wouldnât be immediate and every second counted.
âComms Officer Henri, order picket group one to chase those fuckers, then patch me into the rest of the fleet.â The situation had already changed radically from the last time she checked - the enemy formation, surrounding them in a rough U, had begun to collapse inward on the port side as they moved in for the kill, while the automated Jovian ships - primarily their smaller ships though there were two cruisers in there. The Caliphate of Mars was stubbornly holding the rear line as a firing position, uncharacteristically cautious - especially compared to the Jovian Brillenschlangen, of all people - and the ship they were chasing, the only damn reason they were here, the Samel-Class Man of War Big Tex which shouldâve been on deathâs door, had yet to make an appearance. The only benefit to the situation was that another Jovian carrier had gotten speared through by a CAT-7 coilgun.
Again, the flicker in her periphery, again she began to speak. âTighten up, those drones are going brainless in a few minutes and I donât want any of them flying blind in between my ships, you hear? Good - keep your CAT-1s well-oiled, I want you all to coordinate on deflecting incoming projectilesâ She glanced up, looking at the faces on her screen. Only thirty-three of the seventy-four ships that came out to Jupiter were still active, and soon it would be thirty-two. âLetâs see Rio be proud one last time and on my mark, I want complete offensive saturation on these targets,â Meyer selected them on her display for them.
Holtâs face popped up, his ship even more damaged with only the emergency lights active and a nasty gash on the side of Holtâs face. Meyer wondered how he got it - she figured that sheâd never know. âOn your orders, Admiral.â
Despite herself, she smirked. If she could manage to salvage this⌠but now was not the time to think of her career. Not when she was staring at the one who would give it to her. âGive âem hell.â And with a triumphant final firing of its massive primary canon, Rioâs Pride unleashed a two-hundred-ton rod of tungsten-depleted uranium alloy shell at a low, but not insignificant, percentage of the speed of light. The Nest - the hangar and control point for all the drones in the ether - was there one moment. The next, there was a blinding streak of white-yellow fire cutting straight through the thing, and then it began a cascade of errors as things meant to be held securely were suddenly and violently released.
Even knowing it was coming, she braced herself for the violent jerk of the main cannon. âFire!â a second streak of light emerged, then another and another as dozens of missiles and high-category coil guns were launched at once - not targetting the battleships closest to them, but the undamaged secondary line. Expecting the luxury of a near-endless supply of drones the Jovians had programmed to make suicide rushes to intercept traditional and nuclear ordinance, the Martians were caught off guard by this sudden weakness in their defenses. Already, Aleksandrya could see their CAT-1s and teslogats ready for dealing with this, but not all at once and not nearly fast enough. And every second mattered.
And then, emerging off her starboard side, was a fleet of seven, massive ships. She had a moment of absolute shock and surprise. What? How did they move like that? But that quickly faded when the lead ship, a massive thing as long as her Zeus but much, much larger and heavier, rammed directly into Rioâs Pride.
Aboard Mining Ship Salinonk
âBlasted!â Captain Ghis Halnfur shouted, standing to his full two-meter height, his eyestalks pulled in tight to the skull. âJel, I want to know what the hell is going on, Comms, tell the flotilla to open fire.â
âThey set a trap for us, Jel. I donât know how, but they knew we were there...â
âA damn trap, and Sonogth sent us-â
âCaptain!â Jel said it forcefully enough that others stared - only for a moment before they risked one of her eyestalks finding them. âNone of those ships exist in our records.â
âTheyâre unknown configuration,â Jel repeated.
âI know what unknown configuration means, commander, what I meant was-â One of the five ships closest, and turned directly to face Halnfurâs force, exploded as a few shots lanced from one of his transports. And at that, he grinned. âAh, nevermind. We seem more familiar with their configuration now. No shields? How did they even make it through FTL?â
The Captain and Commander watched the battle for a moment, before Halnfur finally sat down in his chair, watching as the ships - and there were indeed three distinct designs, began to create a new line of battle. Clearly, whatever battle they had been fighting seemed to be forgotten against a superior enemy. A feral smile colored his face before Jel said something that made his heart stop.
âWhat if this is their home system and we made first contact?â
Aboard the War Ship Antioch
âI donât care what you say, but that arschloch on this line, now!â Aleksandrya looked up just in time to see another CAT-9 shot get mostly disintegrated before whatever melted slag could be reformed in the coldness of space. âCome on you martian bastard, come onâŚâ
âI assure you, maâam, that Jamil MacCready is not here!â High General Sakira Morrison of the Jovian Coalition said. At least the fotze had picked up, which was more than could be said for that Martian Coward. âBut the Martian troops have been placed under my temporary command while they recieve humanitarian repairs, as-"
âHumanitarian? Heâs a murderer!â
âAs we were given the right to by treaty. It was your forces under Commodore Faux that an illegal-â
âHalst den Mund! - Euphrates, Flaming Sword,â the two captains flickered on screen and this time, she did look at them. One clearly favored more of the Arab side of the âTexArabâ people of Mars, while the other was more ambiguous - both were men, and oh what she wouldnât give to hear them complain about being subordinate to two women. âOne of those energy balls is coming at you both, nadir-starboard. I want to see how big of a coil shot it takes to defuse. General Morrison, are your crews in formation ready for a massed volley?â
âThe battleships, yes, but itâll take the drones-â
âComms, patch me into all ships,â Aleksandrya said with certainty she didnât have. Removing her officerâs cap to fix her hair, she instead tossed the damn thing away, pulled out her pins, and shook out her hair. If she was gonna die fighting an unknown evil from beyond God knows what, she wasnât going to do it by regulation. âThis is acting Admiral Aleksandrya Solokov-Meyer of the Antioch - on my first mark, coordinate Coil fire onto this target,â she tapped it on her display, âUpon my second mark, fire traditional ordinance - third fire nuclear. Ready⌠mark.â
There was the familiar lunge backward as the gun fired, joined in a loose arrowhead formation with the broken hulk of the Nest acting as their anchoring point. While not all ships could fire given the angle, the effect was all that she couldâve hoped for. As the first rounds made contact, they began to superheat, melt, and vaporize as before⌠but then the second, third, and fourth were all landing in the same spot too. And then, that etheric blue bubble that surrounded those ships began to bend inwards with a burning red fury⌠until it couldnât bend anymore. The rounds hadnât even all made their target before she called âMark!âÂ
This motion was more subdued, as the still working torpedo bays launched too - straight into the hole they had just created in the shield, and not just the shield - somehow in that stream of light, theyâd cracked the hull. Meyer imagined that the follow up missiles didnât do much for the shipâs internals either, and this wouldnât be much better. âMark!â The barrier was already starting to close up, the cruiser was still opening fire⌠and then the nuclear missiles got inside the ship. Several dozen missiles exploded on the exterior of the shield in massive shows of light, but the dozen or two that made it underneath the shields before detonating?
For a brief moment, Jupiter had its own sun. And then the shield burst like an overfilled balloon.
âI want confirmation the second your guns are ready for another volley, weâre hitting him next.â She looked back at her display of Captains⌠having more faces with proportionally even more empty spots didnât thrill her, but she knew the bastards could die. And that was good enough. âHigh General, I want an update on those drones, and for the love of God, someone get Jamil MacCready - or at least his ship!â
Aboard Mining Ship Salinonk
His flotilla was sent to pacify the whole system, Ghis Halfnur thought ruefully as he watched his last transport ship get destroyed. It was just him and the Screener left. âJel?â
The woman had been trying to help coordinate fire with the weaponâs commander but came at his command. âCaptain?â
âWe never managed to do our full recon,â he said moreosely. It was his own fault, his own overconfidence. Removing his captainâs lapel from his uniform, he handed it to Jel. âTake one of our shuttles, take as much non essential personnel as possible, and then complete a survey of this system before reporting to your commanding officer.â
âForeman Waâl Sonogth will want to know about this. And if youâre right about this being their native systemâŚâ Halfnur shook his head. They were doomed. No way about it now. Even if he could still win this fight - and given the numbers against him, he didnât like those odds - as the commander on the scene who had belligerently initiated contact with a pre-uplift species, his life was forfeit. The Celestial Tribunal would ring him dry, probably most of his crew and commanding officer. âIn your logs, write how you argued against my course of action, and wanted to file a report to the Castelleum and I countermanded you. Now go!â
Always a good sailor, Akâno Jel did as she was told. He had confirmation that she and the evacuees made it on the ship, and waited another five minutes to make sure they were gone before he gave what would be his last, most bitter order. âWeâre going in.â
Aboard the War Ship Antioch
The battlecruiser and spindly ships were the only two left - and for a moment, Aleksandrya had thought she had won. Or at the very least, was winning. For that act of pride, God decided that the placid, so far only supporting ships with its long-range fire. That seemed to be over now, now it was going to be a broadside.Â
âAdmira Meyer, the drones are online,â a both familiar and unfamiliar voice said over comms, the signal shakey and broken.Â
âI want them running picket, sofort! If any fucking plasma gets through, itâs your ass!â Meyer was already turning to the weapons board, seeing that it was only at 90% charge⌠and the battlecruiser was getting closer with only missiles harmlessly bouncing off to show for it. But her secondary weapons⌠âLower caliber until your main gun is fully charged, heâs not getting an inch without steel,â she ended that call, already having Comms initiating her second, âAdmiral Meyer, do you read me Virgo I?â
âLoud and clear maâam,â the voice sounded winded on the other side, the tight confines of a cockpit not allowing a view. âWhat can me and my jockeys do for you today?â
âThat smaller ship, I want you to poke at it. Bring two squadrons with youâŚâ she paused, thinking. With only teslogats and missiles, the hundreds of fighters wouldnât do anything to the big ship. Short of just ramming it, she couldnât see what the rest of the fighters would be doing. âTake as many as want to come.â
âYes maâam - think your Comms get can get me over to their jockeys?â
âSheâs already on it - Henriette is very skilled.â
âWhy thank you, Commander Henriette, over and out!âÂ
Meyer looked back at the display of the field - already she was down two of her bigger ships (a part of her wanted to add âthankfully, Martiansâ but she restrained herself) and a dozen smaller ones. And her firing predictions still had it a click out from its maximum range. If those drones didnât show up -
âFighters pull back! Repeat, pull back!â It was a laser show over there. While having never taken a shot at any other vessels so far, it became abundantly clear why - it didn't have the range. The powerful plasma jets burned through any fighter unfortunate enough to get too close. âGeneral, where are my drones? Fuck it, drones, this is your new primary target. Are all cannons ready? Good, on my mark - mark!â
Only this time, this time the brilliant display of light didnât end with a hole. When the light cleared, it was the imposing blue of the shield bursting out through the debris cloud with only a few minor red spots, its impish friend chasing after her fighters untouched. âPrepare a second volley! Reroute power, shut down gravity for all I care, just get those damn guns ready or weâre all dead!â
âDonât be so certain of it, Admiral,â the same voice from before, only far, far clearer now. And without the static and fuzz⌠she knew that voice. Thousands of drone ships came rushing by the viewport, creating a cloud of grey and blinking lights that covered the horizon before passing. âI apologize for arriving late but, my father always did teach me ladies first.â
âMacCready,â she snarled under her breath.
âAh, so you remember me? As you can tell, my ship doesnât remember either of ours from our most recent or first dance.âÂ
âMaâam, a new signature just appeared as⌠leaving Jupiterâs upper atmosphere,â Henriette said hesitantly. âSamael-Class, and moving quickly. Designation-â
âIf you hadnât done such a wonderful job damaging her, I mightâve been able to help from the beginning,â the manâs cocky voice echoed in the bridge speakers, Meyerâs face turning as red as her hair as his ship quickly advanced towards the enemy. She was going to kill that man. For his crimes, for the Moscow and her old crew, and for stealing her fucking victory! Already, she was watching as the drones broke against the enemy ship like the sea, dozens dying but always being just a few too many to get them all. And the shield was turning red. âGanymede Spaceworks also added something new, I was hoping to surprise you at our next dance but⌠well, a Prince must make sacrifices for the good of the people, even if it scorns his lady love.â
All it took was a glance, and Henriette had cut off his comm. âFucking prick,â she added for good measure.
Drifting into formation above the battered and broken Hive was a Samael-Class Man Of War. Over a kilometer long and with more than enough firepower to match three Zeus classes, the massive primary gun was its primary characteristic⌠only now it was even more massive, with two isosceles triangles coming from what shouldâve been the barrel. And then, in a single shot, a massive round moved in an instant - she barely had time to see it before it had punched straight through the shield, the ship, and then out the other side of the shield.Â
Not wanting him to get the last laugh, âMain gun on the spindly.â
A rod of Tungsten later and Aleksandrya was mollified enough to call her query. The man she and all of Task Force Chancellor had been sent to capture in the first fucking place. âJamil MacCready.â
âItâs customary to use my title when greeting me.â
âAh, you like my new tachyon-enhanced coilgun? Itâs brand new! Honestly worked better then I couldâve-â Aleksandrya ended the call herself.Â
âHelm, take us to Venus Blue Dock. Weâre going home.â To fix my ship, reconstitute my numbers, and figure out what the hell weâre going to do next.Â