IMPRINT
by Andy Redman
"It was a time of wonder. The Divergence of the 27th Century
recaptured discovery as an ideal. The realms of adventure into
the unknown were represented to a race that had grown intensive
in stagnation. In a short span of generations, the Human Race was
exciting once more and they came forward, revitalised; ready to
make an imprint upon the Universe." Excerpt from Hahris
Moersven's proposal speech at the passing of the Galactic
Co-operative of Worlds'' Charter, Tibionis 2696 A. T.
Debris dulled on the scanner; glowing embers lifted on a night
breeze. Quiet entropy was met by elation inside the Boa.
"That's a registered kill. We're at Condition
Yellow."Whaahoo !"
"Nice shoot, Ino."
The bridge was still operating under Combat Reserve Conditions,
dull orange lighting creating its own colour spectrum, catching
the scene like a sepia-tinted photograph. Relieved bodies fell
back into the bucket seats, arranged in a chevron forward from
the command recess. The figure there was gripped by an
involuntary spasm and he glanced around to see if anyone had
noticed, sweat running in rivulets down his creased features, a
couple of drops shaken loose and now seeping into his jacket
below his chin. Commander Vanirrens knew he wasn't getting any
younger and inter-system trade routes certainly weren't getting
any friendlier. He was approaching 74 and although he'd managed
to secure one regime of Bio-Assertion Therapy in a Ceesxe centre,
he wasn't sure his body or his credit rating would stand another.
He returned his gaze to the astrogation console, aware that his
mind had wandered.
"Realign for Lave approach: Ino, can you check price data
and confirm cargo secure. Meridian, take over at cannon."
Two figures moved whilst others carried out a flurry of system
checks on their monitor boards. Lave, cool and comfortingly
close, rotated enigmatically into the main scanner view.
"Cargo safe and secure. Prices are good, Commander.
Excellent margins on the run", said Ino, "We might just
make a killing here."
Bad timing. The brief "Condition Red" warning sounded.
"3 right lateral; 20:40. No comm return. No IR confirmation.
Definite intercept."
"Hear you Warniss", said Meridian, turning to the
armaments board. Ino looked at Commander Vanirrens; should he
take cannon ? Vanirrens shook his head, gesturing towards
Meridian's back that she would keep the laser system controls.
Meridian was scrutinising the co-ordinates fed across from the
navigation boards.
"Too far out to run", said Vanirrens, "Prepare for
combat: Wiv, you have navigation."
Wiv dumped velocity and brought the Boa around. The three raiders
were closing,
identified as two Kraits and a Sidewinder, all in-system craft,
waiting for prey.
There was still no structural definition on the Main Scanner,
just dots amongst the stars. Meridian nominated the Sidewinder as
Target One, aiming to cut the opposing firepower at the weakest
link. Wiv rotated the craft right and climbed slightly.
Target confirmation. Meridian opened up with the Pulse Laser. The
Sidewinder maintained trajectory.
Its shields voided and the craft erupted.
"Yes", Vanirrens seethed between clenched teeth.
The two Kraits were now inside their designated approach zone and
banked; one high and one to the left. Wiv kicked the drive
looking for an elliptical to counter the pincer movement. Rolling
to the right and banking suddenly, the Boa was beginning to come
to bear on the climber. Meridian was resetting the laser controls
and readying relative projected co-ordinates as the Main Scanner
skewed across space and the system star briefly lit the bridge.
"Tend", came the spacer exclamation from one of the
system boards, running tracking, "three's cutting back in,
we're vulnerable; side-on !"
Wiv made a decision to continue for a shot, maintaining velocity
and curve. The target Krait was slowing to clear the intercept
and the 'live' Krait, out to the left, had anticipated the follow
through; its run uncompromised, it opened fire.
Distilled tracking data was fed to Wiv and Meridian. Wiv tried to
flux speed, a bluff on the live Krait whose first rod had just
spent wide.
Meridian got one bolt away in return. Accurate, a crack on comm
from the target Krait's shields.
Second shot from the live Krait: the fuzz of shield interference.
They'd taken a hit. Wiv sacrificed speed and tried to climb but
the live Krait held them on intercept and a second blast wracked
the Boa. Energy levels had never picked up to optimum after their
last sortie.
"We've got a malfunction. Shields are compressed. Hull's
vulnerable to secondary", said Warniss.
He was right. Another bolt brought the shock of hull damage with
the white-noise of shield stress.
"Oh no", groaned Wiv, his voice wavering on the edge of
real terror, "we've got motor damage. Sixty down after
compensation."
The target Krait, perceiving advantage, dared a head-to-head
bearing and another bolt impacted, nobody aware of Meridian's
accurate ripostes tearing the Krait apart as all navigation
systems crashed. Wiv's console went dark and he turned to
Vanirrens, his face half apologetic and half apoplectic at the
implications.
"Abandon ship", said Vanirrens, already moving from the
command section, to the left of two corridors receding into the
ship from the bridge chevron. Bodies left seats and were carried
across the bridge by another blast from the remaining Krait.
Shields had failed: the Main Scanner and surrounding astrogation
instrumentation exploded, slinging cleon shards and metal past
and through bodies. Ino landed in the command recess, crumpled,
in ribbons. Vanirrens bounced off the corridor wall, crushed
against a seal. Meridian hadn't left armaments and the rear of
her seat bore the brunt of the blast. She moved to follow
Warniss, his shoulder and neck torn open.
Warniss opened the capsule door and Meridian stooped to pull
Vanirrens in with her. No one else followed up the corridor. The
capsule sealed and disruptors tore it away from the hull.
Warniss fumbled for the support systems and the scanner came
alive; the Krait passing over them to finish the stricken Boa.
Eight friends and family lost inside. Vanirrens opened his eyes,
his breathing shallow and his chest burning. He looked up at
Meridian who was rifling through the medical locker, her face
set; only concern showing through. The cousin of his nephew, Ino,
she had been on ship with them for over four years now, since the
Commander had returned briefly to Diedar on a trade run and she
had talked her way onto the "Land", fresh back from
Lave with her licence.
"Ino, the others ?", He forced his lungs to give him
the words and they bubbled in his throat. She looked down at him.
Fixing him with her pale grey eyes, obviously surprised by the
extent of his injuries. He knew the answer and Meridian said
nothing, mopping at the blood he was breathing over his lips.
"Say a prayer", he hissed.
Warniss looked across at her, holding a pad to his shoulder. They
knew that the Krait was out there and they were hanging on its
decision; cargo or the capsule. As Meridian gave the Commander a
pain- killer, one of his old spacer rhymes came to mind:
"Against the odds, a foe in tow,
That's the way we all go. "
CHAPTER 2
As the indicator in the Translocator settled on the requested
level and the slight pressure of deceleration set itself against
his body, Hood stood up from the smooth grey seat and felt a
three joint click. Aware of his body again he caught the tension
gripping his back, the taut curve from his neck to his shoulders.
A conscious effort to relax left a ghastly ache in his muscles,
now malleable in a lingering mould of stiffness that had set as
he had made his way towards GalCop licensing.
The complex was in the anterior of Station 3 orbiting Lave. Each
Lavean Station had a perpetual stream of would-be pilots and,
currently, a waiting-list for appointments. He was renting a
small resunit and, apart from a brief visit to Ashoria, Lave's
primary colonial city, on the shuttle, he had been on the Station
for two weeks; ten whole days, passing the time. The wait had
been made all the worse by the knowledge that he had a Mark 111
Cobra berthed in the Station, waiting for him whilst he awaited
his licence.
The doors opened and he gazed out across jade floor tiles to the
cleon foyer doors. Aligned vertically at their centre, and
spreading up and across the access in a sweep of majesty, was the
Golden GalCop symbol; RA the Robotic Avian, fixing him with a
benign and impregnable stare from holocast eyes. Above its
feathered helm, across the lintel, was the complex title; 'GalCop
Space Licensing Authority'.
Hood stepped out, amongst the green pools under soft pillars of
light falling from the ceiling, light- headed from the adrenaline
coursing in response to the furious pounding of his heart. He
could feel this moment, a turning point in his life as sure as
the Station pivoted in geostationary above the green world below.
Today was the culmination of his life thus far, the effort he had
put in at an Anlama ground Station, 15 light years and a
life-style away.
In the foyer beyond he could see numbers of people; their only
common bond the Space and Interstellar Pilot Exam, waiting for
the doors to the Issuing Hall to open for Licence Registration.
As Hood approached, the foyer doors responded in silence. RA
parted, a shimmering shedding of skin, for the image was
replicated, emblazoned behind the reception desk, just beyond.
There was no accounting for the ingenuity of the GalCop Design
Section when it came down to their perceived integrity of the
GalCop mantle, corporate wholeness unblemished.
"Card"; demanded the figure behind the desk. Paying
more attention to his surroundings than the officer, Hood held
out his GCID card and waited whilst his appointment was
confirmed. "Wait in the foyer until you are called
please". It seemed something of a understatement, but whilst
Rif Hood felt a pang of annoyance that his moment of achievement
was a passing occupational chore to the figure before him, who
was already turning back to a comm screen, it could not deflate
his anticipation.
"Thanks", he retorted as he began to head in the
direction of the foyer. He almost laughed out loud as a
gold-plated cliche popped into his head and he wondered if anyone
had ever said to the officious reception staff; 'Remember my
name, I'll be famous one day'.
It turned out to be a sobering thought. The vastness of space was
peppered with the remains of pilots with stars in their eyes. You
didn't need to be told that trade was tougher these days. The
figures from IR signature transmissions spoke for themselves at
the dockside system data monitors.
Plenty of spacers passed dock time with rented message boxes
filed under IR codes and maintained by Orbital Space Authorities.
It was indicative of the strange lives spacers led, especially
inter- system runners. "Meet me at Xexeti", as one
spacer saying went. A downpayment would open a box for ten years
with additional fees for access time. Unused boxes were generally
archived and there were probably uncounted self scribed epitaphs
in data storage throughout the eight galaxies.
Some attempt had been made to arrange the seating into small,
sociable, areas. Soft uplighters glowed from behind lush Lavean
planting, with Station comma-units to hand. No connection made,
the screen that Hood sat next to operated a free-space run of
adverts between general Station announcements. 'Celebrate as a
licensee at the Balcony Complex' was followed by 'The Lave Orbit
Space Authority: Trading Profile Seminar. Call on C43-97T28 for
your competitive advantage'. Hood watched for a while, unwilling
to make eye contact and possibly have to engage in conversation
with the eight people in his seating enclave. He reasoned his
reluctance, as the screen proceeded through a panoply of bluster,
and pinpointed a fear that the people surrounding him might share
his dreams, diluting their essence.
His reverie was cut short. A short, stocky, man, apparently in
his late forties, leant forward intruding into the communal space
to begin a lacklustre conversation. Hood winced as a question was
directed at a woman to his left. "So where are you from
then?"
CHAPTER THREE
"Concern has been mounting for some years now at the
alarming increase in pirating activities and the proportion of
trading casualties in many systems.
Lobbying by the GalCop Trade Bureau hinges upon three main
proposals, for a reform of the IR signature registration system,
an increase in bounty payments and a mid-system deployment of
GalCop Police Stations to patrol system space trade routes.
The ruling Decemvirate in Galaxy One have indicated that careful
consideration would be given to the forthcoming Trade Bureau
Report".
Quote from Station News item. Lave.
The Station docks ran in levels behind the free-space at
station-core. Beyond and below the Station egress gaped
planetwards, powerful shields operating a safety vortex both for,
and against, traffic in the tubes. In a honeycomb of wedges
behind the dockside were the cargo warehouses where a specialised
transport network supported the auto-trading system. Autoscam
modules plied their intermediary trade along these routes. The
life-cycle of the Station was a peculiar one. The docks never
grew still and the Station authorities were active even when
sections of the Station with something approaching a diurnal
routine fell quiet as they moved darkside.
Rif Hood headed towards his berth. Registration had dragged on
and on: with the time it took to process, no wonder a licence
cost so much. Still, rumour had it that once the l's and T's had
been dotted and crossed, bureaucracy lost interest in just about
everything but your Credit Rating. Regardless, he was now,
legally, a pilot, Commander of a new Mark 111 Cobra. He was on
the GalCop computer network, linked to his ship's IR signature
and the actions of his ship would assume a legal character of
their own as a counterpoint to his legal status as a GalCop
civilian. For active spacers, the ship's record was the dominant
party. Depending on a search by IR signature, he could be legally
shot at by any bounty-hunter or have-a-go trader in the business.
There was a commotion further ahead on Dock 4. A mea-unit mobile
arrived to stand-by at a berth not far along from Hood's Cobra,
and he paused to check the information on incoming flights on the
dockside system data screens. The berth was designated for an
escape capsule being tracked through the safety zone. Judging by
the equipment being prepared at the berth the occupants were
travelling under suspendedan. Curiosity got the better of him and
Hood wandered on past his berth to get a closer look. Few other
people were showing any interest; the reality of the commonplace
danger for spacers began to come home to him. The berth matrix
came alive, indicating imminent arrival of the capsule. Station
systems brought it to dock and a crew moved in to access the
berth for the mea-unit, preliminary scans drawing out the seconds
such that Hood nearly forgot to breathe. The mea-unit went in and
shortly after, a body was brought forth from the capsule, still
rigged into a suspended-an sack. Inside the grey spacer overalls
were shredded and red with blood at the shoulder. Hood could see
a green ships insignia on the breast of the figure but he was too
far away to make out any detail. He moved forward, again,
standing against the perimeter barrier wall and flush with the
capsule entrance. One of the dock crew cast him a disdainful look
and mumbled something under his breath; Hood was oblivious to the
insult, a second S-A sack was being moved out towards the mobile.
This body was a young woman, pale and twisted in the rig. Blood
was splattered across her suit giving it a mottled ground
camouflage effect . Her hair was matted with the same dark-red
substance but under the cloak of S-A, her condition was
indeterminate. The green insignia depicted a star over a valley,
a natural symbol which seemed anomalous to these broken lives in
the vast metallic dockside. "Life signs for both", he
heard a voice comment inside the mobile whilst a third form was
brought out of the capsule, an old man with a large stain of
blood across and around his front. How long had he been a spacer?
Hood wondered how any spacer eventually made the decision to give
the life up and whether the decision was inevitably decided
vicariously. He recalled his mother's enforced separation from
her ship, left recovering on an Anlama Station from a blasted leg
and he imagined a similar dockside scene as that Python limped in
to be met by a mea-unit. Had she looked as pale and fragile as
the women in the mobile? Hood tried to catch a glimpse of her as
the mobile side slid shut. He doubted it. His mother had never
said but he'd lay money on her having walked unaided from the
berth.
So that was all. Three people from a complement probably six or
seven times that. Hood's mood swung considerably blacker as he
turned to board his vessel, for the first time as Commander. He
had a sudden vision of GalCop Licensing acting as a cosmic
arbitrator, working registration on the principle one out, one
in, awaiting confirmed fatalities before opening up the Issuing
Hall.
Card and key at the berth matrix got Hood into his Cobra, moving
through the compact quarters section to the gravity well which
would take him up to the bridge.
He rose and the bridge grew around and before him. He could sense
his ship waiting, waiting as eager as he was to break berth and
shoot through the tubes, the egress and the curtain rotating
behind, Lave looming before on the main scanner. The hypnotic
swirls of atmospherics contracting with the regular flux patterns
of the Station and, in-between, Hood, set free to tackle the
heights of his ambition.
Hood moved over to the pilot's seat and lowered himself gently,
like fitting into place as a fulcrum, potential all around,
latent in the consoles, scanners and systems; all to hand.
As yet, all of the vocal controls remained unset. On a
single-pilot ship they were a valuable tool for exercising
support functions whilst flight and fire remained as a
concentrated hands-on activity.
There were a number of available security checks which the pilot
could use in the activation process. Hood had a basic palm scan
and code-entry at present, which quickly brought the array of
instrumentation alive. He brought up the Orbital Space Authority
Data Link on the Comms Console and left the latest flight and
docking information running on the local view screen. A matrix
showed Hood's Cobra in perspective of the docked complement at
Dock 4 where standard information would show berthed time,
whether loading or unloading, ship to ship contact data and
various local statistics. Watching the data flow, Hood felt
insecurity knawing at his thoughts again, fear of trying and
finding mediocrity, the burden of insignificance, he looked at
the small code for his berth, tangled in the midst of 400 berths
on Dock 4.
He reasoned that everything he wanted now, he had to get for
himself. No-one was going to contact him, nobody could be
expected to take an interest. Rif, he warned himself, assert
yourself.
He recalled the Technical Modules of the Space and Interstellar
Pilot's Exams and prepared to run a comprehensive systems check,
to get back to basics on a specific set task, a pattern to settle
his nerves. Then, he decided, it was time to consider cargo.
CHAPTER FOUR
"The matrix of the GalCop Trading System envisages
distinctive roles for in- and inter-system traders....the
inter-system trader is a facilitator.... [and] the uniform cargo
doctrine recognises this, providing benefits through locating
commodities rather than concerning itself with comparative
specifics. The intention is to prevent the inter-system trader
being caught up unnecessarily in the socio-economic details of a
system. "
Excerpt from the Report accompanying proposals on a GalCop
Trading System. 2715 G.C.T
The Faulcon de Lacy proprietary trade systems supplied with the
Cobra were well respected, and designed in accordance with GalCop
Trade Bureau standards. Few traders had cause to install
replacement or upgraded units. A Transrelations Database
structure was fully integrated with the ship's Financial Systems.
Each IR signature constituted a corporate identity providing a
distinction between trading activities and the personal
Credit-Rating of a pilot. Escape capsules took a critical data
dump with a straight financial transfer to a 'crisis' account to
be re-established under a new IR signature.
Hood looked over the price data on the CorCom Trade System. With
78.6 Credits in the Trade Account he began to work margins on his
first run. He reckoned on a run to Leesti as the nearest
complimentary trade system where the massive TLK Conglomerate was
the dominant political force on a physically unsettled and
inhospitable world. Lave's rich and fertile plains were a
renowned source of protein extract and trading food would allow
him to maximise cargo space. CorCom advertised 16 tonnes at a
unit rate of 3.4 Cr. Hood bought the available stock and was able
to purchase a tonne of Liquors at 23.4 Cr. As the AutoScam
modules delivered the CT's to his cargo bay, Hood began to select
Leesti co-ordinates at the Astrogation Console. In a short time
there would be nothing keeping him at Lave. Nerves and excitement
pushed against his temples and an adrenergic momentum suffocated
his inertia. Rif was eager to go. Go and get. A thought came from
nowhere and he called up informatic on admissions to the Station
Hospital. He found the three people from the escape capsule and,
remembering how he had been struck by the lack of concern on the
docks, he left a message for them: "Thinking of your
recovery". At the same time he took out a message box. He
got screen confirmation of secure cargo and called the Orbit
Space Authority Control for clearance to break berth. Whilst he
waited for an automatic launch schedule the faces came back to
him, trussed and helpless in the web of suspended An- rigging, an
old spacer, pale young woman, torn uniforms.
His launch slot arrived and he cleared Dock 4. Station systems
took over and, for a brief moment, the main scanner showed the
gaping tube until a sudden acceleration thrust him into the
segmented rictus, screaming towards the egress and suddenly into
space where a tone indicated that Rif Hood was now in command.
The strain of Station exit was soothed by a listless air passing
over his body, and he stretched himself in a series of fluid
manoeuvres, like a tiger pacing his cage. Starlight cascaded
across his scanner and Lave, with swirling storm systems
embracing the bright continents below in a clean, cathartic dawn.
If anyone asked, in times to come not when Hood grew up, but when
he first remembered feeling truly alive, he would recall this
moment. Next stop Leesti.
CHAPTER 5
Coming out of Hyperspace was like emerging from underwater,
changing elements with all the associated sensory disorientation.
Hood's ears were ringing, his mouth and throat felt parched and
his head was fuzzed. Taking lungfuls of air he concentrated his
mind to assess his surroundings. His Cobra was moving at velocity
in a vaguely systemorbital drift. Comm was taking instructions on
Leesti relative time, showing over two hours as elapsed since
leaving Lave. Working on compass indicators, Hood increased to
Space Skip velocity and reorientated to Leesti, not wanting to
prolong the inward journey any longer than was necessary. The
phrase, 'minimise risk', came to him from some part of the
Pilot's training that he didn't bother to try and recall. Instead
Rif ran the words through his mind as a litany whilst he aligned
a course and kicked into Space Skip. The pull of an in-system
Skip was a lot greater than regular Hyperspace; interference and
conflicts of forces were more apparent, something that normal
spatial awareness recognised and reacted to. Hood didn't mind the
sensation. For him it was a momentary relief, a second where he
had relinquished control. Associated interference registered and
Hood fell back in to regular velocity, bridge systems switching
to combat mode and the Condition Red lighting casting its
contrasts across the consoles, focussing attention on the main
scanner. 'Minimise risk'. The phrase took on a new edge and cut
through the remnants of jump lag in an instant.
Moving swiftly, Hood activated ship identification and dampened
velocity, checking the flight grid scanner for the hostile craft.
Comms confirmed that reciprocal identification had been ignored
and the scanner showed the approaching ship high and behind. Rif
pulled the Mk. 111 up and over in a tight arc, keeping an eye on
the main scanner for a visual as he negotiated rolls to get a
forward bearing on the flight grid. Rotate and compensate. He
pulled a distant speck into the targetting area. Identification;
Boa Class Cruiser.
Hood's stomach turned. The escape capsule back on Lave had been
all that remained of one Boa. He had presumed that they had been
innocent traders, victims, but now here he was with a Boa bearing
down on an intercept course, getting close to the dangerous early
engagement distances where skillful flying could not guarantee
safety from the cross-thread of an enemy cannon. Rif felt a tide
of panic rolling towards him, threatening to sweep his
consciousness into turmoil, he saw the incoming craft on the
scanner and blood on an old man's chest. Fumbling for the
armaments console he felt the superstructure of the Cobra,
envisaging it twisting around him ready to entangle and choke.
Minimise risk. He pulled at the words, latched onto them and
tried to fit himself into the events unfolding around him. The
Boa slid across the targetting area. He fired a bolt. Nothing. He
rotated to realign and the Boa curled back into the sights;
another bolt with the tell-tale crack on the combat comm. probe.
A hit ! It brought everything rushing back to him, a flood of
control. Certitude. He had the ability, at the pivot of events,
to survive. His first true hit was an assurance of that. He fired
again and again, pulse laser blasts raking at the Boa's shields.
Fire was returned. One blast and systems data erupted on his
monitors, quantifying energy loss in an outrage of information.
An exchange of hits; Hood recoiled. Wrapped up in attack he
realised that he was still waiting, almost motionless. Cursing
himself he wrenched the Cobra into acceleration.
Now there was definition on the scanner and the after-image of
another bolt. Front shield was almost depleted. Hood banked
50:80, intending to break out of the punishing head-to-head but
he was in the danger zone, where the Boa pilot could easily
compensate for Hood's trajectory with a simple realignment. Hood
span 30 anticlockwise, dumped velocity and dropped on a vertical
to the Boa, across and below the enemy's intercept path, at
contrast to its existing climb.
It was enough to close the distance and the rules changed. Hood
reasoned that combat by the book would give him the edge now with
a vastly superior manoeuvrability and he decided to open with a
gamble on the Boa's expectations to give him some room. Surely
they would be expecting him to try and work a curve behind them
and surely that would mean they would try to anticipate that with
a turn. Banking on that, Hood killed velocity and waited, and
succeeded. The main scanner showed the reacting bandit at 340:20.
With the slightest rotation, the Mk 111 picked up the Boa which
was already intent on correcting its mistake, but Hood followed
the climb and fired four bolts into the exposed upper reaches of
the target. The Boa swung round recklessly, trying to buy some
time out of the line of fire, and Hood hit with two further bolts
before he had to move in pursuit. Rolling quickly in acceleration
he intended to keep the Boa close and maintain his curve factor
advantage. It was better than that, against the odds he had
managed to run right back onto a target intercept and he fired
again; the crack of his pulse bolt almost instantaneous as the
Boa loomed close and an escape capsule veered away just as the
next pulse battered through the depleted shields and split the
Boa's drive sector. The explosion sent a ripple of detonations
along the equipment level and laid waste to the entire cargo
sector. For a split second, the bridge of the cruiser floated on
an expanding cloud of fire before being engulfed, debris marking
the trajectory before fluxing slightly against Hood's already
weakened front shields, biting into his primary energy bank.
The escape capsule registered on the flight grid, and, burning
with success, Hood brought the Cobra around, dipping into the
path of the capsule so that it floated into his sights on its
slow voyage to the Leesti safety zone.
Energy reports appeared dutifully on the console. Hood glanced to
check his foreshield wave strength and requested a systems check.
Confirmations scrolling on the systems console display, Hood
turned his attentions back to the capsule. How many of the Boa's
crew had made it ? Rif suspected that it would have been
relatively few. His fingers danced compulsively about the
armaments panel but his thoughts were caught in confusion. He
tried to imagine the people in the capsule, now fearing for their
lives. They would be following the drifting remnants of their
cargo and see that the Mk. 111 had ignored the pickings and had
settled into a tactical position in their wake; preparing for
their wake. Would he celebrate their deaths tonight ?
How many people had they killed, Rif wondered. Would they have
enough of an account to buy a new vessel and stalk the lanes
again ?
Minimise risks. Fate could throw them together again and next
time the outcome might be different. Rif brought the Ingram laser
system to life and dealt swift, arbitrary justice to the pirates.
GalCop justice, since his comms. screen was monitoring TS
ComDirect and a reference from the Bank Federation Monitoring
Authority as to bounty was imminent. Despite the administrative
approval of the Boa kill and the tacit acceptance of the
follow-up on the capsule, the iaKer had chilled Rif's spine.
There was
a difference between defending yourself from obvious hostile
intent on a trade run and a clinical decision on an option to
destroy. 6.4 Credits were allocated by the GBFMA for the Boa; the
last official word on the incident. For Hood it went beyond that
to the capacity he now had to influence events. He had power and
he was responsible for the way it was exerted; for the impact it
could have on people's lives. He felt that he needed to change
the distinction he knew was there, that it could be important to
him as a spacer as much as a person but there were more pressing
practical matters to attend to. The front shield had recovered
and was now almost at optimum. Rif felt about as secure as was
possible under the circumstances, and manoeuvred for Space Skip.
Leesti grew on the scanner until the planetary mass made too much
interference and the Cobra fell back into normal velocity.
Ignoring two asteroids that appeared on the fringes of the flight
grid scanner, Rif headed doggedly for the safety zone. The
assuasive indicator appeared on the Astrogation Console,
promising Orbital Space Authority assistance, and, more
pertinently, Viper support should anyone be attacked.
The compass reset to the co-ordinates of the local Station,
reminding Rif that he had yet to dock. For the inexperienced
pilot, there was no substitute for Galactic Navy procedure and
Rif manouevred roughly into the orbital plane at a point between
the Station and Leesti. From there a short run towards the planet
and about face at standstill brought him on to the accepted
approach run. The moment that terrified Rif was trying to
maintain equivalent Station rotation without any visual reference
as the egress loomed out of scanner and the shield curtain had
yet to be breached so that automatic docking might take over in
the tube. He held his breath as if passing air through his lungs
might throw his Cobra against Station orbit and bring the raking
of the shields which was a death knell for all spacers.
The curtain parted and before Hood, Leesti docks wrapped around
the free-space core of the Station. He laughed out loud as
Station comms. spat docking information across his systems,
reassuring everyday chatter after the dark and the danger.
Suddenly it came home to Rif why stations had such thriving
leisure activities. Spacers had a lot of unwinding to do.
CHAPTER SIX
Just about everywhere you looked on Leesti Station 5, the
imperial purple TLK logo would intrude your line of vision. The
corporation sponsored, monitored, administered and generally
wished you well whenever they received your money. Evolving out
of a Leesti System Federation which governed by economic interest
groups, the Technology Sector had thrived on early runs by newly
licenced pilots from Lave and had subsumed other sectors into one
mammoth corporation. Aggressive commercial policies and
specialisation in agrotechnology, both planetary and Station
bound meant that Leesti had a powerful presence in the local
galactic area, with interests on Orrere and Ra as well as a
Corporate arm on Zaonce. The TLK delegates to the GalCop Senate
on Aruszati were often in the the news for their fractious
run-ins with other GalCop groups. Hood followed GalCop politics
on the most superficial level. Traders skimmed the news for
potential profit and rumours circulated around dockside
facilities across the galaxies of crop failures, accidents at
processing plants, consumer booms. Anything that might
speculatively affect supply and demand.
Hood had sold his cargo at attractive margins, showing a gross
CorCom profit of 55.9 Cr on his first run. He felt that he had
good reason to be pleased with himself as he sought out and sat
at a small table in "Turbulence", a slightly more
upmarket bar than he had expected. Consequently, Rif also felt
uncomfortable; economically and physically; the former was
entirely due to the cost of the thin glass of mixed-density
liquids that he cradled in hand, still swirling slowly since
being stirred into consort at the bar; the latter was due to him
not being able to fit his legs under the immovable table which
bore a, possibly intentional, resemblance to an upside-down egg
in a vice.
There was a TLK Leisure Pad in a pocket of the seat, and Rif
scanned through the list of Station activities. The various
descriptions of sports and pastimes on offer,and the accompanying
prices, were an entertainment in themselves. As Rif sipped at his
Bifurcation, which had lapsed into uneasy entropic equilibria,
the house lighting dimmed and the lower level of the amphitheatre
split and moved into three cleongridded dance floors.
Holo-effects lit the grids with cries-crosses of flame as a
lava-flow cascaded under the floors, and customers were invited
to have fun at the scene of one of Leesti's premier tourist
traps. "Show me your fluid dynamics", encouraged a
voice over the speakers. The screen to the leisure pad flicked to
an ad; "Now at the Turbulence. Set your lavalite". It
beamed to nobody in particular from the table top. Rif certainly
didn't notice. He'd spotting a young woman in a flame dress slide
away from the bar and sidle in his direction. Rif knocked back
his cocktail, winced, and left.
Rif came out of the gravity well on the Cobra bridge and sat
down, intent on replenishing his supply of quirium. He felt a lot
more comfortable slipping into the pilot's seat than he had done
back on Lave. For one thing, his Cobra was a refuge after the
imminent excesses of turbulence. He called up the supplier
section for equipment on Corcom. Quirium was available at 1.3 cr.
Its prices and supply were carefully regulated by a complex set
of Trade Bureau regulations. As Hood understood it there were
several tariff filters on Quirium. A cut went to registered
inter-system craft manufacturers to offset against their
loss-leading prices for basic ship designs.
To make spacing affordable, basic models tended to be spartan,
utilitarian creatures. Manufacturers made their profits on
development and expansion, as well as from areas like Quirium
tariffs. The market for inter-system jumpers was a second
generation one. The first generation had been epitomised by the
Starseekers and Founds that left old Earth in the 25th century in
Earth time. The second generation of ships were available with
fly-by-wire systems for jump. Hood had the GalCop Galaxy One
approved plateau of systems already installed in his navigation
units when he had bought his Cobra. Once GalCop had reconnoitred
Galaxy One and began to colonise throughout the systems, they
realised that by using the available knowledge of the galaxy they
could introduce a bespoke jump map of GalCop worlds. It had been
an important phase in GalCop history. Drives with the kick but
not the brains reduced the expensive navigational processing
equipment needed to plot and control jumps. There were numerous
associated benefits. Nearly all spacers were now limited to
activity inside GalCop boundaries which conveniently reduced
interaction with other planetary federations or general
over-expansion which GalCop might be unable to consolidate.
Planets that were not designated as inter-system reception worlds
were left off the jump map, as were a number of 'secret systems'
and systems which were still undergoing monitoring and
exploration under GalCop's after-the-fact conscience policies.
Rif had opened a message box at Leesti shortly after he had sold
the cargo. He was surprised to see a message waiting, having left
the link active unintentionally before he had left the ship. The
respondent was given as Gisburn:
"We might have been licensed together but you got the jump
on me for cargos. I had to wait another hour after you cleaned up
on food supplies and then I was quoted 3.7 Crh. I'd like to meet
my rival and let him buy me a drink. Squeeze your margins at
Lave."
After that followed a box reference. Gisburn, the name seemed
familiar and Rif put a face to it from licensing at Lave. A tall
young man with a fast smile and faster eyes which gave you the
impression that he was being pulled along by time at a slightly
more frenetic pace than everyone around him. The cost of that to
his composure was balanced by his dark and swarthy stature. He
had taken his licence medical at a Lave Station and he had been
delayed whilst they confirmed the results of his GeneScan on an
overworked inter-station link. All prospective pilots had their
DNA analysed to test for a number of prescribed conditions,
sanctioned in the schedules to the Licencing Regulations. There
had been some disturbing consequences to the post-Divergence
colonisation of the eight galaxies.
Some local genepools had been muddied by both in breeding and the
environmental effects of the strange new lands.
Rif confirmed a meeting at Lave for Gisburn and closed the
message box. 'Somebody else to keep in touch with', he thought as
he sank back into the seat and closed his eyes, a smile breaking
on his face which he checked almost immediately when he realised
exactly what he had just framed in his thoughts. He recalled the
three spacers in the capsule. They'd never met but Rif had made a
subconscious assumption that they might keep in touch. It was a
satisfying and, more pertinently, reassuring thread to hang on to
when you were just starting out. They did have his message box
reference, after all.
Rif flicked through the OSA news service for traders as a
precaution against anything which might have a bearing on his
next trade run. He had intended to return to Lave anyway; wanting
to build up his confidence on a familiar run, and his trade
account as well, come to think of it. Now he was fortunate enough
to have other motives to draw
him, should he choose. His morale soared momentarily as he felt
that he almost had a grasp on the threads of his future. That
tangible things were already happening to him, and were waiting
to happen when he got to Lave. Rif imagined seizing those
strands; consolidating along the way.
As with many of his flights of fancy of the past few days, it was
short lived. The lead item on Comm. was an incoming report of a
skirmish above Alaxide, one of the Leesti system worlds were
there was a mining operation and several construction plants.
Several in-system haulers had been destroyed along the standard
flight route. A pirate incursion from Riedquat was suspected.
Local TLK outsiders and a viper unit had engaged the force but no
more recent information was available. The bulletin analysis
already laid the blame on the Knights Templars, a terrorist force
across the galaxies which seemed far better organised in recent
years and was committed to destabilizing GalCop. A mention in the
analysis of growing tensions at the diplomatic convention between
Galcop and the Interstellar Sanction implied, even to Rif's
politically naive eye, that there could be a possible connection
between the Sanction and the Templars. The item was more shocking
from a travel than from a trade perspective; piracy on the jump
routes was far less sinister than an orchestrated act of
destruction. The trade effects that Rif could envisage did little
to his choice of outbound cargo. If a sizeable cargo of ore had
been lost at Alaxide, minerals might be a worthwhile
consideration at Lave.
CHAPTER SEVEN
"Out there, a lot of speeding masses devoid of intelligence
are not asteroids, not wrecks or debris, but active
spacers."
Quote from "Psychosocialisation and the single spacer",
P. Trewathas (3rd ea., 3064)
Witchspace washed away leaving a wash of untangible scree stacked
against Hood. In his hurry to take a breath, Rif nearly choked.
When he turned his attentions to the bridge systems it was
through tear-filled eyes and in between grating coughs. Lave
space stretched out before him and he eased the Cobra through a
dump and rotate. He must have come to take the worldscape for
granted at the Station because Lave was a beautiful planet. It
looked now as it had when he first left the Station, bright and
alert. Rif negotiated a short Space Skip into Lave - relative
with an incoming non-response on the flight grid and the
Condition Red lighting swamping the bridge. Constant deceleration
and a manoeuvre towards 110:95 brought the Cobra to bear; data
suggested that the craft was an Adder class. Rif pulled the
cannon console back and took aim; distance was good. Bolts kept
hitting the pirate, which, in turn, kept coming.
"Void those shields. Come on,..void,..void". Rif spat
the words as his ship spat substance. The Adder commander lost
his nerve, still outside a suitable engage distance for whatever
style of attack he practiced. The pirate began to climb but the
craft was locked in the danger zone, a lethal principle of
moments where the torque was a killer blow. Pelted simply and
steadily by Hood, the Adder Commander realised that their role
was that of prey; probably his last thought. The main scanner lit
and Hood's flight-grid cleared.
"Gotcha".
Checking on his cargo, a tonne of computing equipment from the
TLK agro-labs and a tonne of machinery of similar origin, Hood
brought himself back to a course for Lave. The return on TS
ComDirect was for a 12 Cr. allocation.
Another Skip fell short of planet waves and Hood found himself
back in the Red. This time the pirate was confirmed as a Wolf Mk.
Il, approaching fast on a 195:15 bearing.
"Tend", swore Rif. He knew he would be in range very
soon. There was no time for idle pot- shots. Rif arched into a
head-to-head-and-hit velocity. He had to close the distance
against the Wolf's superior fire-power, or his shields would be
pulled apart swiftly and clinically. Hood got off three accurate
bolts and watched almost helplessly as his shields fluxed wildly
under heavy onslaught. His leg twitched violently as he counted
down both distance and his fore shield status. Suddenly the first
round was over. The Wolf climbed and rotated, an experienced
Commander without a doubt. Hood killed velocity and set up a
missile. He anticipated right, using the flight grid for clues as
the Wolf lurched, looking for some space, preferably to Hood's
rear. Locked on and off, the LF glistened and burst. Enemy ECM.
In a flash, Hood's heart sank and his attention wavered. He
suddenly found that he had lost positioning. By the time he had
come round on the Wolf it was turning for a strike-run. Rif hit
the velocity and glanced anxiously at the shields. He fired and
tried to pitch and yaw into a vortex that might take him out of
the intercept trajectories. The Wolf hit him twice before bearing
off to the right. Killing velocity, Rif imagined the Wolf's last
arc transposed, and anticipated its path. Diligently the Wolf
swept into Rif's sights and turned. He had the measure of it on
this run and curved into a predatory dive. This time the cracks
on comm were his own bolts punishing the Wolf's shields, and when
the Wolf whipped over, Hood managed to keep pursuit without
leaving any distance for a counter- attack. On the Wolf's next
climb, three good hits sent it on its way in pieces, which dashed
against Rif's shields like a hollow curse from beyond the grave.
In the spacer world of combat systems Hood's eyes were ablaze and
it was several moments before he began to extract himself from
the combat mind-set, and the armaments console. Resetting for
Lave, Rif felt his skin burning from the nervous tension. All of
his responses were still on edge.
Lave grew in Space-Skip and Rif calculated that he was close to
the safety zone. His attention was snapped back from Lave's
powerful atmospherics as condition Red flashed again. Low and
behind at 205. Rif could almost feel a pulse from the blood
pressure in his fingers. He rode over the adrenal instincts and
held down a course for the safety zone.
"Minimise risks", he told himself. It didn't take long.
The pirate had settled into a
straight pursuit trajectory when comm. confirmed he was in the
Orbital Space Authority protection zone. He moved with the
compass and the glistening speck of Lave Station 2 appeared on
the main scanner. Watching the flight grid for the pirate to
break off, Hood was shocked to see the ship adopt a diagonal
intercept across his docking approach route. Suddenly worried,
Rif ran short for a swift ID scan: Thargoid. "Oh
shit...", Rif turned the Cobra and made a run towards
Station. The Thargoid was closing. Where were the Vipers? There
was nothing on the flight grid yet, Station was still outside
monitor range.
Then it came, a torrent of fire that sliced through the
aft-shield bank and struck deep into an energy bank. Rif knew he
had to make some space and some time, he turned back on himself,
dropping velocity only at the relative apex and diving with full
velocity, waiting for the Thargoid to react. It didn't, not
perceptively. There was little visual way of gauging where a
Thargoid intercept trajectory or even how many, lay. Rif waited
until he hoped that the Thargoid was ready to react and then
dumped to assume the Station run again. It seemed to have had
some effect and as Station grew on the scanner, Rif could see
pinpricks emerge like wind scattered seeds from a pod. The
Thargoid reacted similarly, obviously intent on some sort of
stand. Thargon spores materialised on the flight grid. On a rear
view, Rif could see them, still in launch phase, preparing an
attack run. He had never felt so vulnerable, and in placing his
trust in the Police Vipers he stripped away his confidence;
became engrossed in fleeing to behind the battle lines.
Another strike by the Thargoid or one of its satellite hunters.
Rif managed to rotate and climb out of the laser stream and then
the Vipers were in range and fire was returned. The Thargoid let
him go, keen to entertain an active opponent.
CHAPTER EIGHT
"I heard that we might be in real trouble with the Thargoids
soon, "said Gisburn, placing his third glass of light back
down on the tabletop.
"Somebody leaked a Navy report that reckons, unless GalCop
and the other Federations team up to target Thargoid galactic
space, that they've got a better military resource gearing ratio.
That means they breed fast and have dedicated warrior caste. The
way I see it though, Lave just lost one pilot out there and the
bug-eyes lost a hundred or so. Sounds like good odds to me".
Gisburn talked as fast as he drank, and all the time it seemed
his attention was elsewhere. His eyes flicked to cover the
slightest noise or distraction. He finished his drink and gazed
down at the empty glass.
"Good odds", he reiterated before turning his attention
to the bar menu screen.
Rif fingered his glass, pushing it backwards and forwards across
a small patch of spilt liquid, drawing a crossroads of parted
spirits. Even though he was sitting comfortably, letting
Gisburn's chatter wash over him, in the bar of the Sans Serif
Leisure Complex on Station One, he kept getting flashbacks that
sent his stomach cascading down and thrust his heart against his
chest. They came not only of the Thargoid, but also the Adder and
the Wolf. He rationalised that the Thargoid attack had given him
a bad post-traumatic shock.
It was during one of those flashes, where he imagined the
Thargons blistering the image on the flight- grid indicator, that
his body had physically convulsed and provided the spilt drink to
tease.
Since docking Rif had been forced to amend his view of people's
indifference to the small passion plays in system space. Once you
got into the safety zone and Vipers got involved there was plenty
of interest; two hours worth of waiting, forms and questions from
the GalCop Police.
"Where y' going next?". Gisburn repeated the question.
"I'm not sure yet. Leesti maybe, with a mineral cargo. I
want to build up some flying time on one route," said Hood
absently. Unexpectedly, it seemed to touch a nerve with Gisburn,
who nearly choked, having been unable to compromise between
swallowing and speaking.
"Got to be sure"; Gisburn literally covered the
tabletop with gobs of light.
"S' too easy to drift 'tween systems, n' cultivate a trade
mentality. S'not the life for us".
Gisburn warmed to his theme with an enthusiasm that was only
matched by his consumption of light. Rif realised that it no
longer mattered to Tom Gisburn where he was heading next; a
lecture loomed on the horizon.
"Credits are like quirium h-fuel", continued Gisburn.
"They're something to use. Means to'n end. I'm sure what
that end is. You got to be too".
Gisburn pushed against Rif's shoulder with his glass, spilling
light down his spacer overalls, to make sure his audience
appreciated the point.
"If you wanna' be Elite you got to be sure. All those
systems out there. They're all stepping stones. We use them as a
path, n' that path's more than jus' trade routes. S'bout
reputation n' action. S'bout bein'the best. Becomin' n' Elite
transcends all that routine".
Rif was listening now. Some of the people at the Pilots' courses
told stories about Elite pilots; some had even got a licence and
a craft to get out and become an Elite. There was a glistening
hook in Gisburn's conversation which Rif could almost see
reproduced now in Tom's unusually fixed stare, tempting
repudiation of an implacable truth. When it failed to emerge from
Rif's bemused face, Gisburn took it as a sign to continue and he
hunched forward conspiratorially. Around them the Sans Serif
balcony was filling up with spacers, coursing through their
strange social lives, extrovert after the intense pressure of
space. Gisburn's eyes flicked around, taking in anything new and
seeming to check that their conversation could continue
uninterrupted.
"If you don't cut through it, see, then you get swallowed
up. Eight galaxies, a thousand light years, five thousand billion
GalCop citizens. There could be a million people floating 'round
this planet. To get recognised we need friction. To make our mark
we gotta avoid congealing in the mould. I tell you who we
remember now. We 'member the Elite. They're the people with the
power. GalCop moves around Elites. We can be new gods".
Gisburn paused, froze just in front of Rif's face.
"But y' gotta be sure", he hissed before crashing back
into his seat and draining his
glass. "The unbeatable heights".
Rif gazed across the table. He could feel something in Gisburn's
dream but it seemed to be tied in knots, or to have a hidden face
where perhaps something unnatural writhed in the shadows. Gisburn
looked elated. He had released his manifests into the air and he
twitched as though he his very vocalisation made it real.
"Think we should find some company", said Gisburn after
scanning the bar menu. "i could use some".
He turned, watched the passing figures for a moment and then lent
out and caught a woman by the wrist. She turned in a flash of
green and gold. Gisburn leered and pointed to a seat at the
table. The woman sat down, a GalCop official of some sort, RA
burst in gold across the front of her suit and wrapped his wings
around her shoulders. Gisburn seem oblivious.
"My friend and l're lookin' for some fun".
"I don't think....", the woman began.
"Don't think, jus' tell me how much". said Gisburn,
leaning forward to feel her knee, which was moving, and he fell
slightly.
Rif leant over and took Gisburn's shoulder; "I think we
should go".
"If you're not interested, go and find your own", spat
Gisburn shaking his hold free. The woman stood and turned to
leave. Gisburn grabbed her arm again, Rif grabbed Gisburn's and
suddenly Rif found himself hoisted to his feet and swung out from
behind the table. He was being propelled, off balance, towards
the bar.
"Shouldn't interfere Hood, not with me". Gisburn's face
was burning and as he moved Rif back, the physical exertion
seemed to strip his mental faculties.
As Hood backed against a stool and teetered, trying to get his
legs back under his body, the struggle for balance became
academic.
"Gis", was all Rif got out before the punch followed
through.
He felt a full pressure and a searing pain and heard, which
somehow seemed to concentrate his thoughts, his teeth grind. His
back hit the bar then he lost his sense of direction in a fall,
with the stool and away from it. His hand flailed along the bar,
knocking a drink flying and failing to find any purchase.
Rif crashed to the floor, his shoulders taking much of the
impact, but his head cracked back against the ground. Sickened,
Rif's muscles slackened and refused to respond. All around was
uproar and then the kick came, twisting his upper body, his legs
caught against the bar. He felt his stomach spasm, his knees
trying to push his body into a ball, but failing on the slippery
floor.
Shouts and laughter. It was all unreal, distant; no sooner was he
a pilot, successful, with dreams of Elite stirring him, then he
was humiliated, hurt, and in danger.
"Don't let it go to your head sonny, or you'll lose your
ass". Rif heard the voice and turned his head to try and
focus, his cheek dragging back along the tiles, pulling his lip
away from his teeth and allowing a trickle of warmness to slide
out. Whoever was talking had stopped Gisburn from continuing the
battering.
Then Gisburn's voice, shrill, unchecked: "Don't patronise
me!"
The noise increased. Hood saw a pair of blue spacer leggings
beyond Gisburn who tensed and moved to the right, ready to thrust
forward. One of the blue legs lifted and Gisburn bent double,
coughing, before truculently moving forward again. He threw a
punch, a block returned his arm wide and defenceless a crack
whipped his head backwards and his body followed, landing close
to Hood.
"Your ass to lose, ... sonny", said the voice, and the
legs moved past the prostrate Gisburn to reach a hand down in
front of Hood.
Rif allowed himself to be helped to his feet, and was led, his
head sagging, through the crowd of spacers. Another person took
one of his arms and he was led towards one of the tables in a
corner of the bar complex.
He heard Gisburn rasp: "We'll keep in touch huh!".
Propelled into a seat, Hood flopped down and pulled his head up
to look at his rescuers. His head felt the weight of a planet.
The first thing that caught his eye was a green insignia, a star
over a valley. Rif's mind reeled and he saw the faces. His
bewildered stare was caught briefly by a pair of concerned pale
grey eyes. It was the younger man and the woman from the capsule.
"Meridian", she said and then nodded across. "He's
Warniss".
"Hood, thanks".
Meridian punched for three drinks. It was her, the voice and
presumably the body that had laid Gisburn out.
"You ought to learn to look after yourself", one said
with a wry smile. Rif had a feeling that he was beginning to lose
touch with reality.
"I know you", he ventured.
"I think you're concussed", replied Warniss, taking
three glasses from the waiter and placing one in front of Rif.
"I'd like to talk", said Rif, "but I'm not sure my
head can cope at the moment. Can I buy you both a drink in about
6 or 7 hours. I don't want to keep you from a run or
anything".
"You won't", said Warniss absently.
"We're due a credit ruling from GLC Probate tomorrow",
added Meridian.
"Ah, yes, of course. I'm sorry", Rif felt embarrassed.
"How is the other man?"
The two faces across the table looked surprised.
"He they couldn't help", said Meridian in a broken
voice.
"Maybe we can talk later", said Warniss laying a hand
over Meridian's.
CHAPTER NINE
Rif was sitting on the bridge of his Cobra, CorCom active on the
comms console at his side. Below him in the hold, the Station
Autoscam Modules were ferrying a cargo: 19 tonnes of food with a
balance of minerals for a Leesti run. He paid their activities
little attention, his thoughts instead on the meet with Meridian
and Warniss. On grey eyes that alternated between sadness and
steel. Once he'd had a chance to sleep off his beating from
Gisburn they had met up in another bar of the Sans Serif complex
next to a pool, separated by a screen of cleon that curved up and
partly over the seating area so that a variety of Lavean fish
swam in front of, and above them.
Meridian and Warniss had come to the GalCop Law Centre on Station
One to confirm allocation of the trade accounts from the capsule,
and whilst Rif had slept, they had completed the formalities and
both had confirmed purchases of Cobra Mk IlI's. Warniss was a
slight man, tousled dark hair receding and flecked heavily with
grey. With a RevPad around his right shoulder and neck he moved
carefully and used his offhand where possible, irritated at the
lessened dexterity. He had only been with the 'Vanirrens Land'for
a few months before the last battle of Lave.
Meridian was an imposing figure, tall and broad-shouldered,
striking features and haunting eyes. She wore her hair in one of
the latest spacer fashions, bobbed short to the left and shaved
to the right where it was dyed blue. Obviously some years younger
than Warniss it was difficult to guess her age; her features were
tired and drawn. Both now wore standard blue space overalls but
had kept the green insignia from the Boa.
Rif had explained about the dockside scene back on Station Three
and how he had sent the message to the hospital. Warniss briefly
covered the end of the Boa, 'Vanirrens Land' and Rif still felt a
pang of guilt for considering that they too might have been
pirates after his own first combat experience. Now though, even
after his short spacing career, his confused feelings about
destroying the capsule seemed like a distant piece of history.
Spacing tempered spacers with a speed appropriate to the way they
lived their lives. He knew that next time there would be no
second thoughts and if he could help it, no second chances for
pirates.
They had spoken about Gisburn and Rif had listened carefully when
it brought about an unexpected openess in Meridian. She was
vehement in her dismissal of his doctrine
but, to Rif, Meridian's opinion seemed less of a different path
than a more complete understanding. At least, it was one he could
relate to and it crystallised and merged with his own undeveloped
ambition.
Where Gisburn saw 'Elites' as being at odds with the existing
structures, where antagonism was the superlative that let you
break free and achieve, Meridian sought a pattern where the key
players faced change with a belief in their own abilities.
"Everything you need to use you already have, inside",
she had said, and it seemed to have as much relevance to her own
resurrection as a spacer.
There was a pirate Krait somewhere in the Lave system that had
shaken Meridian from a trading career and rekindled her ambition.
For a while at that table they had experienced a catching swell
of excitement. Talking of the possibilities, Rif had felt more
complete, more sure of himself than he had ever done before, his
flesh had tingled with the spirit of Elite.
"Forget the odds; they're weighed heavily against us. We
make our own possibilities and we believe in ourselves".
Meridian had invoked what had seemed like the one truth, her face
had come alive and she looked young and whole.
It was a look that reminded him of his mother's stories when he
was little, where she would weave a tale of magic and adventure
and Rif would imagine that she was famous throughout the galaxy.
Then he had seen Warniss, gazing at the two of them with a
tolerant, humouring, smile and the spell had been broken again as
he'd eventually come to be disillusioned when his mother's tales
were tarnished with spiteful relish by other children at a Delta
East CareCentre on Anloma.
Meridian spoke as if she had read his mind, gently castigating
Warniss;
"We're not little children any more Warniss. You are just a
jaded old spacer".
"Less of the 'just' please. I'm proud to be a jaded old
spacer", laughed Warniss, his face creased into a map of
laughter lines.
The exchange had gone some way to exorcising Rif's memories of
childhood betrayal. There was an honesty and rapport between the
two spacers that he appreciated. It fed the occasion and kept Rif
at ease, enjoying their company. They had laughed, drank and
watched some of Lave's more peculiar forms of aquatic life
scuttle
around the tank.
CorCom bleeped. The screen on the bridge confirmed that the
Autoscam's had completed loading and systems confirmed a secure
cargo. Rif snapped out of his reverie and sighed. They had all
agreed to keep in touch via the message box systems. Warniss was
staying on Station One to recuperate, Meridian was going to run
down her trade account and build up her Cobra before she
considered a run. Rif decided he would miss them both, but, as RA
lit the Comms screen and he logged out of CorCom, he felt that
there was a message in those golden wings, a new dawn spreading
out across a galaxy of possibilities. Rif could choose what mark
to make; Elite's were allowed to wear the RA symbol as an
insignia. He could imagine that through the corridors of time he
would return to Lave again to register as an Elite licensee, a
nexus in the great pattern that RA rose above.
CHAPTER TEN
When you start out, every situation is life or death. Small
mistakes have big consequences. It seemed to Rif as he set the
course for Leoned that these days big consequences were looking
for small mistakes. It had been over two years now since he first
came rushing out the tubes at Lave, wonderstruck, mixed-up and
naive. If that was the birth of a spacer, no one had warned him
how difficult life was. Rif smiled; perhaps they had and he
hadn't listened. Before he could pick-up velocity for a
Space-Ship the flight-grid indicator warned of incoming raiders.
Concentrating in the red glow, Rif brought 'Katharos' around
working for an ID on Target One: Sidewinder. It took little of
the battering Rif could administer with the LF9lA military laser.
The second target, a Krait, never even made definition on the
scanner.
Head-to-head with the remaining Wolf Mk 11, Rif impacted its
shields before he needed to pitch out of intercept. His shields
took a light rapping but the extra energy unit installed in the
Cobra would soon right that. He paid scant attention to the TS
Com Direct confirmations of viable kills and credit allocations,
turning already, through the debris, towards Leoned.
Coming in towards the safety zone, Rif scanned through the OSA
news bulletins from the local station. The war in Galaxy Three
with the Interstellar Sanction was a major drain on Galactic Navy
resources. The Treaty of Texeonis had collapsed after last year's
talks on Enata had ended with an impasse. Shortly afterwards
sanction forces had overcome the GalCop administration in the Rea
System which was currently being used as the launchpad for the
conflict. Rumours abounded that their standard navel hunter
craft, the Excelsior Mk Vl was infiltrating various pirate haunts
throughout the galaxies. Only one kill had been confirmed outside
the war zone, in Galaxy Four. Local agents said it had hit like
an earthquake.
The effect of the war on Galaxy One had been to place most of the
responsibility for dealing with the Knights Templar's on local
system clusters, and further, to allow considerably more Thargoid
invasion craft through to GalCop space.
Rif curled into orbital space, intending to complete a good
proportion of the run to Station before switching to docking
computers. He called up Meridian's file from TRD, an accumulation
of over thirty message box dumps; her last message at Ordima had
been that they would meet at Ceesxe if he was around. Rif hadn't
seen her for eight months now and he intended to be around.
They'd kept in touch, paths cries-crossing occasionally, and had
met when coincidence struck initially, then when it was
convenient. Now Rif wanted to see her again; he'd long ago given
up Iying to himself. It was a pointless exercise when you spend a
deal of time on your own and spacer myths abounded with stories
that twisted around self-deception and eventual madness.
Rif had seen Warniss more recently. Once he was fit again he had
taken to developing trade runs; getting to know places. Rif
appreciated his level-headed advice, his intuitive trading
analysis and his wicked sense of humour. He hadn't heard from
Warniss since then, apart from picking up one old message at
Maxeedso. Those messages that you collected out of date and out
of synch with time always got to Riff. Snippits of history
waiting to be picked up, there was a certain mystique to them
because the converse train of thought was that you were living in
the future.
Slightly less savoury were the messages from Gisburn, who, true
to his word, left little pockets of venom and kept in touch with
relish. He had been a fugitive for over six months now and still
promised that they would meet again; "Drinks and
Revenge", most messages began, much like an invitation.
Rif handed over the controls to the docking computer and called
up CorCom to check price data on his cargo of medical supplies.
The OSA flashed a message to make sure he read the Leoned OSA
Station Regulations on the conduct of affairs with the Atch 'Ruk,
a sapient reptilian life-form on Leoned that, unusually, were
employed by the local OSA on-station and were allowed GalCop
citizenship, should they so desire. It was an indication of the
influence wielded by the Ceesxe Corporation, which also dominated
the Leoned System and funded the dictators of Veis. Ceesxe was
renowned for being the white-heat of technological developments,
and similarly had a long history in GalCop pol itics.
'Katharos' came in to berth on Dock Two and Hood sold the medical
supplies, moving to his living quarters whilst the AutoScam's
scuttled beneath the hull. He reckoned on hitting a Relaxapad
before getting straight back to Ceesxe; Meridian could
arrive at any time. As he lay back and fumbled blind for the
Neurowebbing, he smiled.
'You fool', he told himself. 'You're hooked and dangling; as
obvious as a fish out of water'.
That was when the Emergency Signal came on comm. Rif didn't
bother to go to the bridge, he leapt across the section from the
Relaxapad to a slave comms station he'd had installed. He'd
intended it to allow mixing business with pleasure, or leisure
anyway, but it proved useful in several circumstances.
The link was direct from the Galactic Naval complex on-station.
It was an urgent request to all combat-proficient pilots for
seconded duty in the Arazaes system. Rif knew that the
hard-pressed Navy were prone to seek paid assistance at hot-spots
these days, but he'd never been in the wrong place at the wrong
time. He opened comm and notified Galactic Navy admin. that he
was available and to provide data including conditions. It wasn't
a hard decision. GalCop was perhaps currently facing its most
difficult test yet with major trouble on several fronts, and if
GalCop foundered, a lot of people would be drowning in a sea of
chaos.
The conditions came back. "Secondment of temporary navel
roster: actions subject to allocated command orders: data dump on
mission brief: 500 cr. subject to fulfiling mission criteria:
immediate response required".
Rif responded with an affirmative and his TRD received a relayed
data pack. There was a major Templar incursion in the Arazaes
system. A Navy Cobra Commander was leading the seconded unit from
Leoned, all Pilots were to clear Station for jump immediately.
Rif swung out of the living quarters and threw himself up the
gravity well. Bridge systems were active and station control had
flashed him a prioritised berth clearance warning. As the
forerunners cleared the tube, Rif left a quick message in a
Leoned box, in case Meridian, Warniss or any of the other spacers
he kept in touch with came out here to the outer reaches of
Galaxy One.
"Keeping busy. See you at Ceesxe via Arazaes. Rif".
Comm handled the box groups, shortly before Rif handed over to
automatic Launch and the Cobra burst like a worm from an apple
into orbit space. A jump group was gathering beyond the Station.
Rif pulled 'Katharos' over above the Station and negotiated to
join the pack. The mission brief had included a comms network for
the seconded unit and a message came
through from Commander P. Forth to accept incoming jump
co-ordinates and over-ride the standard Arazaes navigational
data.
"Gods know", thought Rif, " that spacers have
enough problems taking orders"; but to ask a spacer to
accept a strange set of jump-nay. co-ordinates had more to do
with blind faith. Trust was short on the ground at many docks and
it remained to be seen how many of this scrambled unit actually
appeared at their jump destination. Everything was hurried. The
jump directive was implemented in the minimum time you could
feasibly allow spacers to perform an override they had probably
never had cause to do before. A motley assembly of craft
glittered out of all scanner views; Cobras, Pythons and Star
Boats alike began to blink into witch-space and away to somewhere
in the Arazaes system.
"That's the way we all go", said Rif, engaging drive.
CHAPTER ELEVEN
'Katharos' dropped out of witch-space. Rif tried to match the
rhythm of his breathing to the extended interference waves in
time and space. If he managed it, he could usually pull out of
jump without a thick head and spiralling blood pressure. P. Forth
was obviously already through, data was pouring across the
screens on the mission link. They were dropping into the outer
orbital reaches of Malthea, the third planet in the Arazaes
system. The Knights Templar forces had emerged in the standard
reception zone and had headed this way. The objective was to seek
and destroy, and protect planetary and orbital installations.
Ominously, further details were to follow.
They didn't need to come over the mission link, the in-system
comms were in turmoil. Rif listened to snatches from relayed and
delayed conversations whilst his comms station desperately
attempted to sort out the mass of data into some sort of
chronological, intelligible order. Forth obviously had a single
source of data, the mission link pinpointed a number of Arazaes
Vipers and in-system defenders, embroiled in combat with a mass
of Templar ships on a trajectory to Malthea. Rif was stunned to
see an early estimate of 140 attackers. This must rate as the
largest Templar mobilisation to date; they could only have come
from Ususor. A skirmish in Arazaes had to be seen as provocation
by the Ceesxe Corporation.
Whilst he awaited an order to move, Rif pondered the logic of the
move, if there was any. There had to be a sane tactical motive
for the Templars. Perhaps they intended to sun skim and launch an
attack in a Ceesxe supported system; possible but unlikely.
Maybe; now this made more sense to Rif; maybe they hoped to rouse
the sleeping political giant of the Ceesxe Corporation in a
particular area. Rif reasoned that if the Templars wanted to
provoke moves for retaliation then Ceesxe might lobby at senate
for a reallocation of naval resources or possibly even a
settlement with the sanction. That was guaranteed to cause
discontent between most of the galaxies in GalCop, stresses and
confused priorities.
Forth assumed that all who intended to jump had arrived and the
call came through, a straight run to engage the Templars in
Malthea orbit space. The Naval Cobra, with the latest'lightfast'
drive technology probably occupying a good proportion of the
redundant cargo space, lead the unit. Rif fell in with three
other Mk IlI's, the Codec, Hermes and
Mani, where he knew they would be able to operate with comparable
manoeuvrability.
Malthea was a small planet where, from what Rif could remember,
ten years of work had detoxified the atmosphere to allow
forestation. Fruit was one of Arazaes' staple exports and Malthea
had orbital Agro-Research Labs that were lauded throughout the
galaxies for their Botanical Resource Centres. They were
approaching from its darkside, bearing in-system and the
planetary image dominated Rif's main scanner like an ebony
shield.
The news on comm was bad. The Templar incursion was driving a
wedge through the ragged Arazaen defence forces; skilled
outriders hunting down the scattered Vipers. Desperately
outnumbered they were no more than a distraction to the wave of
offensive forces.
A seconded unit from Ceesxe was currently in system fall, further
out from the Leoned unit's jump location. Rif's group was fast
approaching an intercept distance and he glanced frequently at
the flight grid waiting for scanner recognition. As the first
Templar outriders appeared on the grid, the familiar red cloak
swept over the bridge and Rif tried to focus his thoughts around
the 'Katharos' and combat. The ability of the Templar pilots was
an unknown quantity, a flight from the main group had been drawn
off and were beginning to appear on the grid. Rif opened normal
comms to the three Mk IlI's with the Katharos:
"No need to get reckless here in a head-to-head. Can we pick
off a few from standstill?" He didn't wait for a response
and began to dump velocity, accompanied by the Hermes and Mani.
The Codex grouped back into the main pack where Forth was leading
a section on a climb, leaving a wing arrangement behind out to
Rif's left. Rif tried to visualise the line, there was no time to
try and set the tactical systems to cope with mass melee
manoeuvres. He worked on targetting one of the outriders.
ID was confirmed as an Adder. No IR confirmation on standard or
mission link channels. LF laser strands tore through Target One.
No smile broke the concentration on Rif's face, his eyes ignored
the blasted Adder and checked Targetting and the Flight Grid for
the next outrider in. The Hermes took one, a Sidewinder which
briefly flicked with an ID on the console before decomposing in a
blaze of light.
The Templars avoided a run at the standing wing and swept up to
confront Forth's breakaway arm, seeking scanner cover from the
Danger Zone in a myriad of dogfights playing across the grid.
There was little point in maintaining a distance combat position;
Rif considered long spiral roll and flashed a rough to Mani and
Hermes before breaking into a high-speed run. They led the way
for a cluster of 12 from the wing, flying wide into an extended
barrel roll that brought them towards what appeared visually as
an upside-down conflict; Templar craft with bellies exposed.
"Lets cut some guts", hollered Rif, his hand darting
over the familiar territory of the armaments console.
The run wrought devastation amongst the Templar force, but the
cost had already been high. Forth's group had suffered severe
losses in the close to dogfighting and Rif's cluster numbered
only five after a run across the theatre where wide shots were as
dangerous as targeted fire. 'Kathoros" shields had voided
from shield bank to main energy store on the run and he'd come
within a cosmic string's width of colliding with a Mamba, which,
Rif had no doubt would have seen him on his way. His flight grid
was next to useless; it appeared that most of the Templars were
loaded with empty cargo canisters. As Rif turned, they drifted
like leaves in the storm of combat.
Before Rif could make any decisions on returning to the fray, a
distress call was transferred through to the mission link:
"A-G Research Station MT3: Attack imminent: Please
Assist".
The call was on a dumb cycle. No hard information from MT3. No
comm hoping that the Ceesxe secondment would make this melee
shortly, Rif decided to leave Forth's group and run to back-up
the last of the in-system defenders against the main Templar
wedge. Breaking to velocity he took Hermes, Mani and the
remaining two ships from the cluster and headed toward MT3.
The situation was bad, you could count down the defenders with
the seconds, and there weren't many left. Taut voices left the
channels, one by one. A martyr in an escape capsule rammed an
incoming Mamba but would never tell the tale. There was still
nothing ahead on the flight grid.
Suddenly the rear of the wedge appeared, and talk on comm cleared
up exactly
where the front-runners were. The Research Station was under
attack. Rif felt helpless. To leapfrog the attackers and try and
pick-off the craft from the station-side would leave him
vunerable. It was a stupid move that would just add to the
death-toll. To wade in from behind would risk the lives on the
Station: Civilian Scientists and Botonists with generations of
research around them. Gardens of trees and plants from Old Earth
and a wealth of specimens from the new worlds. They were all at
risk and nearly defenceless. Rif fought the frustration and the
sense of futility. You needed some odds to work with; even Elites
didn't perform miracles and Rif had some way to go in that
department.
They did the only thing they could, struck at the rear until they
brought some attention on themselves; then dumped velocity to
pick the Templars off as a large contingent closed over the
danger zone. Mamba, Adder, Krait, Krait. Rif counted them off
until his laser banks overheated and they were still faced with
incoming raiders.
The five closed to dogfight. Rif span 'Katharos' towards the
Templars whilst over the comms. Channel came the panicked call
and then the screams of a technician called Seronnay. There were
still at least forty craft in the forward wave, pounding at MT3's
shields, which at no time during design had been expected to
require the protection of a Coriolis.
Rif knew that Seronnay and all of her colleagues were dead at
about the same time they did. A wash of light that you only
normally got from sun-skimming turned the scanner and most of the
other astrogation systems blind. Blotches of colour blooming at
Rif's retina hampered him as he tried to place Target One in his
mind, waiting for systems to pick up again: "I hope some of
you bought it badly", he seethed at the Templar forces.
"Rot in hell".
The light fronts dimmed and a Krait hung just out of intercept.
Pitch and yaw saw Target One to eternity. Target Two was moving
fast in a cunning spin through the canisters from the Krait,
blurring grid definition, and was lost behind the debris from a
fill by Hermes. Rif's laser temperature was still dangerously
high. The flight grid was beginning to register well over a score
of craft, returning from the Station attack to join the group
engaging Rif and his small cluster. Rif urgently tried to raise
Forth on the mission link. No success.
"We've got to run them back to the Ceesxe unit", he
yelled across comm to the cluster. It was their only realistic
chance at survival. They turned and fled. Inside range for
distance shooting, Rif hoped that the Cobra's speed might reduce
the number of incoming bolts. He opened comm to the Asp in their
cluster, to ask Commander Irinus, with his superior speed, to try
and lead a group off, but Irinus link died with him, leaving four
Cobra's at the crest of a tsunami of fury and hate.
Forth came through. They were there, the Ceesxe force and a small
contingent from Veis. Possibly sixty strong but with nearly as
many Templars being led by Rif towards them.
Bolts cracked across Rif's shields and momentarily he was plunged
into the past. A young pilot running from the destructive power
of a Thargoid invasion ship, towards the defensive line of vipers
who had come to help and one of whom would die; nameless to the
life they saved.
Rif knew that the oncoming conflict couldn't be straight
head-to-head, there was too much chance involved, and chance,
left to itself, dealt some fierce shocks.
Rif broke the run without a lead message to the other Cobras.
'Katharos' soared above the darkening plain, a distracting bait
glowing temptingly on every Templar grid. 'Hermes' and 'Man)'
swept to follow. The fourth Cobra, 'Ascension', broke relatively
low.
It was enough for some of the Templars. As they peeled high and
low, the Ceesxe unit was able to pound into them with the force
of a sledgehammer, and they broke, like a fragmentation bomb, in
all directions. Rif was lost for a response. The three Cobras
were facing twenty or so Templar craft in fractured trajectories.
'Hermes' was caught in a double intercept and 'Mani', diving to
assist, couldn't break the pounding that tore the Hermes apart.
Then 'Man)' was in the thick of the Templar forces and Rif killed
velocity to turn on a splinter and dive into the fray. No sooner
had the 'Man)' thanked Rif for the back-up than the pieces of his
ally danced across his fore shields and Rif found 'Katharos'
enmeshed in a Templar onslaught with the Ceesxe force still
turning from the last pass.
A Fer De Lance ID'ed and swept over 'Katharos'; there were still
four Templars in the immediate frontal vicinity. Rif picked a
Krait to try and sweep through and out of the
net. Cracks on comm metered the strikes of laser strands but the
Krait cleared intercept and a rogue Cobra appeared, to take its
place, cannons tearing at Rif's shields. Suddenly the Cobra was
gone and Rif could break the 3D noose.
"That's the punchline", came the message from a Cobra
that passed close over his hull; Warniss. Warniss was here.
"Em's back in the pack", he heard Warniss say, and he
turned.
If Warniss had flown into the fray, Rif was sure as hell going to
support him. As he asked, the Fer de lance passed close. ID
queried and Rif could see the fake cladding across the hull. A
chill crawled under the sweat on his skin, he thought he had
caught a glimpse of a Interstellar sanction insignia.
"Warniss; I think the FL's an Excelsior Vl. Watch your
back".
Rif picked off a Krait that was bearing down on Warniss and by
then they were in the middle of a colossal clash as the Ceesxe
force met the Templars. The chill ran deep to Rif's bones as he
realised that somewhere, in the conflagration of bolts and laser
streams, missiles and canisters like mines, was Meridian.
Warniss hadn't managed to shake the Fer de Lance, the disguised
Excelsior. He was bearing down beneath the conflict towards
Malthea. Rif began to turn to follow. A message flashed to his
screen: "Drinks and Revenge".
Shortly afterwards a Cobra bore down on him from above; a
smattering on the shields before he could react and pull
'Katharos' wide. Gisburn, of all people, was in the Templar
force. If ever Rif had needed a personal reason for this fight,
it was now a need fulfiled.
There was no way for Rif to suppress his IR response and Gisburn
had picked him out. As Rif spun an avoid pattern he could imagine
those eyes, frenetically following him on the scanner, and that
lethal smile, a harbinger of destruction.
Rif had Gisburn at a straight 30: 80 course but clearing
intercept took him away from Warniss and merged that chase into
the madness on his grid. With one hand he called a fix on
Warniss' trajectory and put a blind call out to the New
Vanirrens' channel, hoping that Meridian could pick off the
Excelsior. At the same time he cut across Gisburn and banked up
over him. Rif called for Gisburn's comm. Channel from
TRD and screamed:
"Lets just call it revenge, freak".
They corkscrewed and burst into curves that took them across each
other's bows, playing for advantage. Gisburn got off a missile,
almost too close for Rif to react, but he hit the ECM and the
shards coruscated across his fore shields.
"I think I'd rather toast your soul", came Gisburn's
manic voice in reply. In the cut and thrust for position, Gisburn
got several good strikes on Rif's aft shields. They coiled like
two snakes. One's recurve preventing the other's strike run. Each
pass was lengthening the odds for Rif; increasing the chances for
Gisburn to break and scald 'Katharos' with a deadly chrysalis of
laser strands. Rif dumped velocity early on Gisburn's next pass,
turning in anticipation of Gisburn's trajectory, and accelerated
with everything 'Katharos' had, blazing laser strands. The
strands weakened Gisburn's aft shields and Rif let the full
weight of 'Katharos' follow in behind. Shields stripped in
parallel but Hood had weakened Gisburn's critically. His shield
flux bore at velocity into Gisburn's Cobra, which discharged over
his hull like a foul miasmic blast.
"Call it friction, Tom", said Rif. 'Katharos' bore on,
through the dwindling relics of Gisburn's being, into a climb and
swift about face.
Warniss was all that filled Rif's thoughts. Gisburn was a
distraction he could afford to dwell on later. Rif charged down
towards Malthea, hoping to get a clear fix on the grid, and
hoping that Warniss had kept the fight local. He called, channel
specific, to Warniss, asking for a briefing on his situation.
"I'm in trouble Rif," was what he got back.
"Hang in there Warniss, I'm coming in. Bring him back this
way if you can". Rif had the two craft on the grid, looming
up into mid-distance; he twisted 'Katharos'for all it was worth,
caught the Excelsior on targetting and opened fire, hoping to buy
Warniss some time.
"Thanks Rif, I owe you one".
It was the last thing he heard from Warniss before a killer blow
from the Excelsior's heavy laser battery ripped Warniss's Cobra
from the grid, a small light against a dark planet.
"Oh no. No please. Warniss, where's your capsule". A
lifetime's wait in a second's
time span.
But Rif knew, from the suddenness of that blast, that there
wasn't going to be a capsule. He didn't want to believe it.
People died. Friends died, but not in front of you. Not in the
same battle. That wasn't message box rules. It wasn't right.
Rif had his hands against his head, crushing his hair in fistfuls
when a Mamba struck from above. The reactions of
self-preservation drove 'Katharos' up to meet the Templar. Hate
destroyed it, seconds later and Rif watched the scanner for the
Excelsior.
It was at 310: 120, a fleck on Malthea. Rif slowed and tried for
targetting; foiled by another raider descending from the clashes
above, a Krait screaming towards him. Rif turned to face the
immediate enemy and lost the Excelsior Vl; it turned, moving at
pace back towards the main battle. The Krait pilot was a skilled
spacer and put Rif back on his guard, stripping away his emotions
to where he could rely on reflexes and his experience to cut the
impasse in speed and manoeuvrability.
Handling 'Katharos' at peak performance he caught the Krait's
upper hull and followed it with fire to oblivion. With a moment
to collect his thoughts, Rif rifled through the comms and link
data trying to get a grasp on events around him. Forth was dead.
Each group was still evenly matched, skill sacrificed against
skill, whittling down numbers rather than odds.
He scanned for the 'New Vanirrens Land', which was caught inside
the combat zone against possibly three active opponents. Rif
moved to intercept, willing 'Katharos' forwards, weaving between
canisters and debris. To his horror the ID scan showed the
Excelsior was one of the craft pursuing Meridian.
An Asp coursed down against him and Rif knew there was no way to
outrun it. Manic, Rif cut to a stop, pulling round, straining to
bring the Cobra onto an intercept with the Templar, watching
desperately out of the corner of his eye as Meridian and her
pursuers moved further off the grid. The whole battle was curving
down into Malthea's orbit. Fatigued and frantic, Rif tore into
close combat with the Asp.
It took time he couldn't spare to beat the Asp, and when it was
dispatched to cosmic wind his shields were shredded. Despite the
chronic condition of the Cobra's defences, Rif forced 'Katharos'
after Meridian and the Excelsior, ploughing desperately through
several melees, praying not to suffer wild or wide hits.
The lower edges of the battle were dangerously close to the outer
atmosphere of Malthea when Rif located Meridian again, in a belt
of cargo canisters and enemy craft. Bearing down on the scene,
Rif began targetting on the Excelsior which was turning back to
stage another strafing run on the 'New Vanirrens Land'. Meridian
destroyed a Krait as it passed close over her hull, foolishly
baring a vulnerable shield to her military lasers.
"Watch the FL, Em. It's sanction", Rif called
wretchedly across comm.
He could see that it had good range and positioning on her. He
brought the Excelsior into intercept and fired a continuous
torrent of laser strands at the sanction craft. Two cargo
canisters drifted across his path in a scissors movement.
Reckless, Rif rolled 90 and careered through the dwindling space
between them, unsure whether his shields would take the impact of
either.
'You've got a sidewinder on your butt, sonny", said
Meridian's voice over comm.
Rif felt his heart sour and realised that his tension was
bordering on tears. He kept his teeth set and the Excelsior in
his sights. It was increasing power and compensating for
Meridian's run towards, and beyond, 'Katharos'.
Rif hoped that Meridian had some shield cover left; the Excelsior
must have given her a lashing before Rif had, in turn, given it
something else to consider.
The sanction craft climbed assuredly, intent on passing out of
Rif's intercept and over, in pursuit of Meridian. Straining
velocity up and down, Rif kept the Excelsior in his sights for an
extra few seconds by timing his flip-over to perfection, guns
blazing. It was all he needed, as the Excelsior broke into its
component parts and opened the bridge to the relentless cold of
space.
As Rif exhaled with relief, he saw a motionless blip on the grid
kick into an ambush on Meridian from amongst the mass of flotsam.
He watched helpless as Meridian's run against the Sidewinder left
her in a pincer attack and the 'New Vanirrens Land' winked off
the grid. The Excelsior's destruction had killed his adrenaline
for a moment and in that time Meridian's life was taken before
him.
This time Rif couldn't stop the tears or the pain that gripped
his throat like a vice.
There was nothing, no signal from Meridian on comms. He was
paralysed at the helm. Malthea loomed on the scanner, an ancient
goddess of death presiding over the harvest of souls. Occasional
shards and pods swept towards her dark continents, burning up in
re-entry. It was all somewhere else, some else's reality. Rif sat
slumped in the red shadows on board a motionless 'Katharos',
paying no attention to the comm., unconcerned and empty.
The shouts and cries of victory eventually managed to reach
across the void and touch his senses. The Templar force had
jumped.
The delighted and spent voices quickly died down to a subdued
calm as the devastation around hit home. The few remaining
seconded units found themselves in a vast graveyard, signposting
the course of the battles from the chunks of wreckage from MT3
through a maze of littered flight corridors to the saturated
orbital space of Malthea, a miniature spiral nebula.
In that microcosm, the survivors could have felt outsized. A
pantheon of gods in a swirl of new heavenly bodies after a
titanic battle for domination. But no one did.
Somebody was answering the flood of questions and requests for
information from Arazaes OSA, the local authorities on Malthea,
and its remaining orbital stations.
CHAPTER TWELVE
"Forget the odds; they're weighted heavily against us. We
make our own possibilities
and we believe in ourselves."
Tahrissa "Meridian" Laundrestoarn
Lave Station One: 320 G.C.T.
The seventeen surviving craft from the Naval secondments were
brought into a hurriedly cleared berth-set on Dock Three of
Station Two at Arazaes.
They had made the cross-system voyage completely unhindered;
pirates and traders alike knew who they were. All channels buzzed
with the news. Terrible losses but decisive victory. A commanding
advantage. A heroic stand that must mark the turning of the tide
in the struggle against Templar terrorism.
Rif was numbed by the stream of hyperbole. Docking computer on,
he methodically sifted through channels in the vain hope of
finding news of additional survivors. A naval Battleship had
arrived in- system, too late to join the battle, but now scouring
the scene of the conflict. Rif's comments across the link about
the presence of an Excelsior had been picked-up and had spread
like wildfire from spacers to station and by now the news was
probably travelling with trade-runners to nearby systems. The
Station Egress loomed and 'Katharos' systems brought rotation
into step, easing towards the tube.
Ahead of him, Rif envisaged a lengthy debriefing and he had to
clench his fists to prevent himself taking 'Katharos' away,
running for the sun to skim plasma and put lightyears between
himself and this place. As he pushed himself back against his
seat the decisions were taken out of his hands. Now there was no
longer the relief he used to feel, when he used to fall back and
rely on someone else. Now Rif just felt trapped, cornered with a
dockside party of GalCop authorities waiting for him ahead.
Unwelcome strangers who would want him to put aside his grief for
the sake of the important information he might be able to
provide.
It was no less than he anticipated. A GalCop mobile was waiting
to usher him the length of the dockside, past the unprecedented
crowds, to a Translocator in Dock Reception. From there the lift
moved on over-ride until Rif was huddled out into the
Galactic Navel Complex. RA glowed again across cleon foyer doors.
A flashback to the excitement of registration at Lave combined
with the tension and exertion Hood already felt and as the doors
slid open his thoughts were washed with confusion. He felt in his
pockets for his GCID card; he wouldn't be able to register
without it.
No, he had to get a grip. Rif hoped that his tunnel vision might
pass. It didn't. He felt light-headed and thought he might
blackout. Rif stumbled and was caught.
'I'm OK; I could use a drink and a seat. Is that OK?", he
told anybody who was listening. "Glueneuran booster. Get one
here quick", he heard a voice say and a figure to his left
dashed off.
Instead of being taken to the reception area he could see ahead,
where, he presumed, the seated figures were the other seconded
spacers who had docked so far, they led him to a side corridor.
"We're just going to get you a biobooster to wake you
up", a voice said.
Rif nodded lamely. Helpful hands and voices told his subconscious
that he could let go. That people would look after him. A
child-like faith that things would be all right. He fought it.
Tried to shock himself back to reality.
"We've got an incoming capsule from the battle-zone".
He heard the voice and slowly separated it as something that
someone else had said.
It was the kick he needed. One of the medical suits that had been
accompanying him down the corridor was running down towards the
lobby again. There were three people with him. They were taken by
surprise when he looked up, eyes focused and suddenly broke free
from the guiding arms, diving backwards.
Rif had almost thrown himself off balance. Turning he tripped
over his feet and nearly fell, carried after the medic more by
momentum than independent action. He could feel the adrenaline
rush, the noise behind him.
"He's freaked. Get him under control."
"Somebody, sedation. We need sedation".
Rif ran, throwing himself through a door that was still closing
after the med. who had left. The door stopped, confused, and Rif
was gone before it could decide that it had to open again. The
Translocator door was sliding shut, forcing Rif to dive again,
and he
crashed into four bodies.
"I'm sorry. I've got to come downPlease". Faces,
anxious, angry and surprised
looked at him.
"Its OK", said the medic; naval officer wings on his
uniform.
At the dock there was a mobile waiting. Nobody said anything. The
five of them clambered in and they were off again. Rif had time
to take in his fellow passengers. Two from the lift wore the
claret and silver uniforms of the Galactic Navy, the other two
were naval medics. They pulled up by berth 3:40, where a
detachment of Police were waiting, forming a semi-circle around
the zone, against the dock wall. Rif stood, watching the tracking
on the berth matrix screens. There was no comm from the incoming
capsule but it had an ID as a Cobra fitting; a Xeeslan LSC 7.
"Its coming in"' said one of the naval medics and they
turned to pull equipment from the mobile.
Rif waited, hardly able to breathe. The capsule came through the
tube and automatic station docking took forever. Another mobile
arrived; standard capsulereception mea-unit. There was a
conversation in hushed, emphatic tones between the naval and
station teams.
The matrix flashed through the docking sequence. Rif hoped, he
prayed, he knew it was Meridian. If it wasn't, he would be
destroyed.
"The capsules' damaged", said a naval officer.
"That doesn't mean anything", shouted Rif, stopping
himself and holding his hands up, palms out, to show he wasn't
going to cause trouble.
Preliminary scans were carried out. Stage One externally, Stage
Two accessed the capsule. "God there's been a fire in
there", said a medic, breaking procedure and rushing
forwards into the darkness around the blackened entrance.
Rif wanted to rush forward, but he knew that after one breach of
docking rules, the police were unlikely to suffer a second.
"I've got one body. Suspended-An. Life-signs
registered", said the medic from inside the capsule.
"Go", said one of the Naval Officers, and the rest of
the stand-by meds went to help.
"Burns unit on stand-by please, bringing out a figure in a
suspended-an sack."
Through the cover and rigging, Rif could see the blue spacer
overalls, the green insignia; valley and star, and the spacer
bob. The relief cracked as a half-laugh in his throat and he
could do nothing as he fell to his knees and blackness swirled
across his view.
CHAPTER THIRTEEN
"The last club in the known Universe where money won't buy
you a place".
Elite Epithet.
The burns weren't beyond repair. The capsule almost had been. As
he had waited in the Hospital Complex, people kept telling Rif
that it was incredible she had stabilised the environment, let
alone for the capsule to have returned safely.
"We make our own possibilities", he had said to one
medic, who had shot him a look that clearly defined Rif's comment
as mystical bullshit.
"As you like it", he had laughed after the departing
figure.
When she came round after the E-D-fits that redeveloped the
damaged areas on her arms, Rif was able to tell her that in the
midst of the battle of Malthea, Meridian had taken her kills into
Elite territory. The Navy wanted to make the registration as
Elite into a special presentation.
Rif held her for what seemed like light-years.
"I knew what you were worth even before I nearly lost
you", he managed.
"Please", Meridian replied in mock disgust.
As one of the Arazaen Senators, OSA, GalCop and Naval authorities
gathered fo the presentation, Meridian drew Rif away from the
purple uniforms to a corner near the RA symbol in the main Naval
Briefing room.
"I've still got to go to Lave if I want to register
officially. Can you believe it?', Meridian's grey eyes danced.
"Somehow, " said Rif, "I'm not surprised. Still,
its good publicity for Arazaes".
"I've been offered an Elite commission", said Meridian,
her face falling serious again.
"A third generation ship. Special operations. I get
retrained in full jump navigation and a fully fitted Constrictor
Mk.ll".
Rif was desolated. "That's great", he managed.
Meridian smiled and took his hand in hers. "I've told them I
need a co-pilot".
"I love you. I want you. I need you. But..." Rif's lips
were touched by Meridian's
finger, silencing him.
"I know what you're thinking. Here's my offer, partnerI'll
give you a month to
do it. You'll need no more than a week. You made it a
possibility. Now make it a
real ity."
Rif let a smile of disbelief play on his lips. "You'll wait
a month for a co-pilot ?"
"No, I'll wait a month for an Elite co-pilot. Elite plus
Elite. Good, huh ?"