Episode 6 – Diplomatic Maneuvers, part 48

New to Other-Terrestrial? Check here! Or if you need to, jump to the beginning of the episode here!


The camera view wasn’t a good one, but it showed enough, Apollonia thought.  The Hev were armed to the teeth.

“Did I . . . lead them here?” she asked, her voice barely a whisper.

Logus looked at her, and the memory of that old, irrational fear of him rose inside her – but she wasn’t sure what she felt at the moment, not from him.  It wasn’t fear.

The man was smiling reassuringly.  “No, Ms. Nor.  They were headed here already, I’m sure.  An Armory is an important place on a ship, and if they were to set charges in here . . .”

“A lot of vital assets gone,” Squats on Sand said.  “Weapons and munitions we could have used against them.  And the boom it’d make . . .”  His sections all rotated, his tentacles flailing.  “It’s about the most damage they could hope to do to the ship, outside of attacking the bridge, a reactor, or the coilguns.  Yep, we’re an obvious target.”

He focused his eyes on her.  “Why did you come here, though?  I thought you were in a Volunteer unit!”

“I, uh . . . I wasn’t able to make it to my team,” she lied through dry lips.  “And then I got locked out of a bunker and then I remembered you worked here . . .”

“Ah, that’s a pity!  You could be out there in the excitement, but I’m afraid you’re in for a boring time.  They’re not going to break through these doors!” Squats on Sand said confidently.  His tentacles were operating a panel, though, and he seemed to deflate slightly.

“Though . . . I can’t seem to contact any other part of the ship.  I don’t know how they could have interrupted that . . .”

“The Fesha,” Logus said, the thought popping into his mind.  “We believe they were selling arms and equipment to the P’G’Maig.  This might be some of that.”

Squats on Sand was quiet for several long moments.  “In that case, it’s slightly alarming,” he admitted.  Then, quickly, he added; “But don’t worry yourselves too much!”

Apollonia didn’t find it very comforting.

Logus slid up next to her, and she leaned away.

He clearly noticed.  “I’m sorry,” he said.  “I know you don’t like to speak with me, but I have to ask again; are you hurt?”

“I’m fine,” she said, not meeting his eyes.

“Why didn’t you meet your Volunteer team?” he asked.  “We saw that you disappeared after leaving your bunker – we feared you were hurt!”

“I . . .”  She was struggling to talk.  “I got scared,” she admitted.

The shame punched her in the gut again, and she pulled her knees up to her chin, burying her head.

Logus said nothing for a long moment.

“That’s very natural,” he told her.

She didn’t raise her head.  “I’m a coward.”

He reached up, slowly, and put a hand on her shoulder.  “You aren’t a coward, Apollonia.  Fear is a perfectly normal and rational response, and . . . you are going through one of the toughest transitions a person can possibly make.”

“That’s easy for you to say.  You aren’t a coward like me.”  She looked up at him, and he saw the tears streaking down her face.  “You really came out to find me, during all this?”

Logus was caught off-guard by the question.  “Ah, yes,” he said.  “I did.  Because it was my duty, and-“

“I failed my duty,” she said.

He swallowed.  “No one knows how they will react when they first face action,” he told her.  “The bravest can turn to cowards, and the meekest turn to killers.  That you found out you could not face the dangers you thought you could . . .  I can no more judge you for it than I can judge anyone else.  But you have learned something about yourself, and in time you will be able to look at it dispassionately, and know yourself better.”

She laughed.  “I know I puke in space suits,” she told him.

He laughed.  “As do I.”

She turned to face him, her eyes meeting his.  “I never hated you, you know.”

“Ah, well that’s good to know-” he began.

“I had a reason for not talking to you.”

“You’ve said before.  But Apollonia, you don’t have to go into it now-“

But she felt like she did.  Her eyes became more intense, and Logus felt the back of his neck tingle.

“I see too much, sometimes,” she said.  “I never thought you were a bad person, but I saw . . . I just knew . . .  If I spoke to you, it would lead me – somehow – down a path I couldn’t go.”

There were many meanings he could take from her words, but something about them chilled him.  Whatever she spoke of, he could see, it terrified her.

“I saw blood and death,” she breathed.  “I saw an ocean of blood, the stars turned crimson with it, and death on a scale that I . . . I can’t even . . .”

She turned away.

And though Logus had met people who were delusional before, people who believed that they were dead historical persons reincarnated, or that they were the only real person in the universe, never before had he believed they spoke the truth.

Until now.

“We have to tell this to the Captain,” he told her softly.  “Do you . . . see this path coming as a result of our talking now?”

“No,” she admitted.  “I don’t know why, but I realized just now when we got in here that I didn’t feel the creeping dread like every other time.  And I . . .  I had to say it while I could.  Just in case-“

Logus had been absently rubbing his neck as she talked, but she was cut off, as He That Squats on Yellow Sand spoke.

His voice, usually so genial in his rumbling way, had taken on a note of perfect calmness and seriousness.

“Get down.”

Apollonia threw herself to the floor, off to the side.  But Logus did not have her reactions; instead of obeying, confusion went over his face, and his eyes went to the screen, to see what the Abmon was speaking of.

There was a terrible sound and things flew through the door.

A weapon of some kind had been discharged, something designed to breach the heaviest armor.  There were multiple projectiles, and they tore through it at critical contact points – through it, and beyond.

Through Logus, and beyond.

The man’s face was still caught in shock as he realized that it was not simply his entire arm gone – but most of his right shoulder.

And jaw.

Apollonia realized she was screaming.

Logus tried to speak, but only a spitting sound came out, and he began to fall away from the wall that his blood had painted red.

“GET HELP!” she was screaming, though she hadn’t even thought about the words.

She looked up, and saw that the door was now starting to fall inward, slowly, the door-breaching weapon having worked perfectly.

But Squats on Sand was rushing as fast as he could to catch it.  His tentacles grabbed the massive slab, and pushed.  His stout legs dug into the deck, claws grinding against metal.

“I’ll hold it!” he roared.

He stopped the door from falling; and began to push it back.

He roared out triumphantly.  “I can hold it!” he shouted.

Apollonia looked down at Logus.  He had fallen into her lap, his eyes gazing at her in shock.

Blood was everywhere.  “Medical drone!” she called out, hoping one of her words would trigger some kind of system.  There had to be a medical drone in here, right?

Right?

“Emergency!” she screamed.

Then the weapon outside fired again.

Despite his armored body, they went through Squats on Sand as easily as they had the door.  Yellowish-orange blood splattered out of him in great gouts.

He still held the door.

They fired again.  Part of Squats on Sand’s main body was blasted off.  But he didn’t drop the door.

But his legs began to give way.

“I’ll . . . hold it . . .” he said, his voice quiet.

A light seemed to fade from his eyes, and he fell.  His body still propped against the door.

She heard pounding on it, the Hev outside now trying to force it the rest of the way.  Though it was tilted inwards now, Squats on Sand’s body still blocked it, still held it.

But they’d force it eventually.  They’d manage to push his body back, or fire their fucking giant weapon until they’d shredded so much of the door that it would break apart.

And then, or perhaps even before then, she’d be dead.  She knew why, now, she hadn’t seen any danger in talking to Logus.

She’d been a coward.  But she didn’t have to die like one, at least.  And now that it was here, she remembered the feeling she’d had on New Vitriol, when she’d felt sure she was going to be executed.

That this was a good thing.  That, for her, it would be an escape from powerlessness, and an evasion of something far more terrible.

She screamed again, curses and slander, every terrible thing she could muster at the P’G’Maig.  They would pay, if not now, then someday.

Some . . . day . . .

The room swam, consciousness not so much slipping as being taken from her by something big, something powerful.

Something that was a part of her.  And she had the realization that they would not pay someday.  They would pay now.

Because something had woken up inside her.

All went red.


< Ep 6 Part 47 | Ep 6 Part 49 >

Episode 6 – Diplomatic Maneuvers, part 47

New to Other-Terrestrial? Check here! Or if you need to, jump to the beginning of the episode here!


Logus felt a stitch in his side as he ran, but he didn’t want to stop.

He’d been searching for Apollonia for, it seemed, twenty minutes.

So far, there had been nothing but dead ends – and he had little to go on.  Despite his degree, he wasn’t a wizard who could predict all facets of human behavior.

Especially for someone who had always refused to talk to him.

Christ, he hoped she wouldn’t pull that now.  What a terrible choice he was for this, yet he had to try, he was the only reasonable choice.

“Show all people who Apollonia Nor has had a conversation lasting more than one minute . . . over the last six months,” he wheezed to his system.

He gave his doctor’s authorization for such a grievous violation of her privacy, and saw a list.  It was surprisingly long, and he had to narrow it.  “Longer than five minutes!” he said.  “Include data from off the ship if possible!  Sort by duration and level of perceived intimacy.”

The system worked a little longer.  Telling it to guess at intimacy level was a shot in the dark, but the system should be able to make a guess, and all he needed was a clue.

The list popped up, and he saw now; after Dr. Y and Captain Brooks . . .  He That Squats on Yellow Sand.

She had a knack for making alien friends, didn’t she?

He tracked down the Abmon, finding that he was, currently in one of the armories.

Which wasn’t far from the bunker Apollonia had left her tablet in.

The system indicated her going there was unlikely; the armory would not, after all, open up to let civilians in.

But that didn’t mean Apollonia wouldn’t try.

His system charted him the fastest route, and he tried to increase his speed.

“Armorer!” he messaged ahead.  “This is Dr. Arn Logus, prepare to open armory doors on my signal!  Override code . . .”  He sent it.

“Acknowledged, Doctor,” the Abmon came back.  “This is a very strange request, though . . .”

“Just be ready to open the bloody doors!” he said.

The hall he was in was a very gentle curve along the inner hull, and he knew it wasn’t much further.  Coming to a junction, he skidded around the corner-

And Apollonia was standing not ten feet away.

She whipped around to look at him, eyes wide, and he let out a gasp of relief.

“Apollonia!” he said.  “Come with me, immediately!”

“What?  What are you doing here?!” she asked.

“I came to find you – we have to get you to the armory-“

“I was heading to the armory,” she said, their words jumbling over each other.  They paused.

“Move,” he said.

“Is that the right way?  I got lost!” she said.

“Yes, it’s right-“

His system blared a warning as they turned into the short, defensible hall that led to the Armory door.  Aside from that feature, it was unmarked to anyone not connected to the Craton’s system.

But something was moving behind them, and it was not a part of the crew.

Shoving Apollonia ahead of himself, he caught the barest glimpse as he moved past the corner.

An enemy drone.

It fired, and he felt something sting on his temple.

“Open doors!” he barked.

Apollonia fell through, and he jumped in.

The door slammed shut just behind him – and he heard the sound of more shots hit the reinforced metal.

He That Squats on Yellow Sand was towering over him, leaning his heavy body over to peer at him on the floor.

“That was close,” the Abmon said.  “Sorry – the doors closed on their own when they sensed the hostile drone.  You’re . . . actually pretty lucky it didn’t get you.  The door or the drone.”

Logus put a hand on the side of his face, feeling the blood.  “I . . .  I think it did,” he said softly.

The Abmon rattled.  “Even I can tell that’s a scratch, Doctor!  You just had a close call!”

He was quickly realizing that Squats on Sand was right.

“Second close call today,” he said, his neck hurting even more now.

“Let’s hope you don’t have a third!” the Abmon replied, tromping up to the door, eyeing it and him and Apollonia all at once.

“Are you okay?” Logus asked Apollonia.  She had moved away, watching him with wide eyes.

She nodded, saying nothing.

“They’re outside,” Squats on Sand said.  “But don’t worry, unless they have something really big, they can’t get through this door.”

A screen turned on, and the Abmon trundled over to it, but it only showed an error text.

“They’re knocking out the cameras,” he grumbled.  “So I guess they’re really going to want in.  Let’s see if . . . ah, they missed one!”

An image appeared.  It showed a group of Hev espatiers and their drones.  They were setting up just outside the doors to the armory.


< Ep 6 Part 46 | Ep 6 Part 48 >

Episode 6 – Diplomatic Maneuvers, part 46

New to Other-Terrestrial? Check here! Or if you need to, jump to the beginning of the episode here!


The three coilguns of the Craton fired again, one after another in a staggered barrage as the ship rotated.  The three shots took two different ships, piercing one of them twice.

“Secondary explosions,” Jaya commented.  The one they’d hit twice was breaking up.  The other one had its engines flare off and began to simply coast.

“Forty-five heavy enemy ships disabled,” Urle said.  “Six dozen more lighter vessels knocked out.  The rest are rapidly getting out of close range, Captain.  Should we save the lasers and PDC ammo?”

“Yes,” Brooks said.  “But don’t let up on the missile fire.  Go for engines; if they’re already burning away and we take those out, then they can’t come back to threaten us later.”

Kai Yong Fan was clearly listening intently to something, and Brooks looked to her.  “How are we faring with the boarding parties?”

She listened a moment longer, then looked up.

“We have successfully contained and destroyed the majority of boarding parties, but three are still unaccounted for.  Commander Pirra’s team found one who had tech that was letting them confuse the ship’s sensors somehow – it’s not something we’ve seen before.”

“Something of Fesha origin, I’d wager,” Urle said sourly.  “We were wrong to think the P’G’Maig were only getting cheap trading trash – this is some advanced tech.”

Brooks glanced at the scopes and saw that the Fesha ship was still out there, holding far beyond weapon’s range.  Watching all that unfolded.

“Pirra is re-deploying her drones to find the missing boarders,” Fan continued.  “On top of that, at least some of the Hev seem to be booby-trapped, and are releasing toxic compounds upon death.  We’ve had almost a score of casualties as a result, mostly among the Volunteer units.”

Clenching his jaw hard, he closed his eyes for a moment, holding back any rash words that wanted to come forth.

Then, taking a deep breath, he collected himself.  Too many depended on him for his blood to be anything but cold.

“Order all teams to take extra precautions, and deploy drones to counter and clean the contaminated areas-“

Warning lights flashed across the board again, and Brooks looked up.

“More Hev ships incoming,” Cenz said.  “A sizable force, at least thirty battleships and ten times that in support ships.  They are . . . ten minutes missile range out.”

Brooks felt their eyes all turn to him, looking for, hoping, expecting that he had another miracle to pull out.

He felt, for the first time, a constriction in his chest.

“Reload all missile racks, and prepare to fire,” he said.

The officers nodded, and turned back to their command consoles.

To the bitter end.


The explosions, coilgun firings, and other sounds had died down.  Apollonia had been listening to the confused din as she had sat against the wall.

Was it calm now?

Opening the door to the room, she peered out into the hall.

They had said there had been boarders, it had broadcasted as a priority into her earpiece.  But she hadn’t heard a thing since the force of impacts – which she’d seen enough movies to know were probably the boarding pods.

It had taken time for her mind to come to the realization that just because there hadn’t been fighting here . . . that it might not last.

Her heart was pounding in her chest as she went out.

In all the shows, there were squads of soldiers facing each other down long halls, explosions and drones and bullets flying, with beings dying by the score.

The last thing she wanted was to be caught in that.

Her knees were still trembling, and she knew she had to get to safety.  But where?  The bunkers were not going to open for her, she felt.  Especially since she had left her tablet in the last one.

On New Vitriol the emergency alarms had been tripped regularly, sometimes for good reasons and sometimes fake ones, but she had found out first-hand that once those doors were closed, they were not going to open for stragglers, especially those who couldn’t positively ID themselves.

Made sense on some level, she thought.  But the fact that the most helpless seemed to often be those stragglers, she felt that on some level that policy was partly intentional to help get rid of such people.

The Sapient Union wasn’t like that, right?

She thought they might not, and she didn’t want to risk going there and getting stuck out.

She didn’t have her tablet, but there were terminals in the halls.  They seemed everywhere, but she didn’t see one now that she needed it.  She began walking down the hall as fast as she could manage, having no direction but at least wanting to move, hoping luck was on her side.

She found one after what felt like minutes, and brought it up.  It scanned for her system and gave an error, and she let out a curse.  Of course everything was locked down!

A memory came to her; a code Jaya had drilled into her in their training.  It was long – actually a whole poem that, Jaya had admitted to her, she thought was rather stupid.

She didn’t even remember what it meant, and didn’t know the language.  But the words were easy to spell, and there was a mnemonic for remembering it . . .

Humming to herself, she tapped it in.  The first try failed, and she grew frustrated, but forced herself to do it again, slowly.  Her hand was shaking, but she managed.

“Basic authorization given,” she system told her.

That was all she’d get . . . even with that crazy long code.  But maybe it’d be enough.

“Are there are any open bunkers?” she asked.  They flashed up on the screen, but nearly all of them – at least those near her – were showing as closed.

“Any other secure areas?” she asked.  Some others popped up.  The medical area was a hope for her – until she saw how far it was.  And the internal rails were only being used for emergency functions.  She did not want to have to walk that far.  She’d have to skirt the command deck, and that area definitely would not let her in without her system . . .

One room was closer to her, though.  An armory.

And the officer in charge was listed as He That Squats on Yellow Sand.

Her heart beat faster.  She had to go there.

She tried to contact him, but the system only reported an error.  All non-essential communication was shut down at the moment.

She would have to walk.  But it wasn’t far.


< Ep 6 Part 45 | Ep 6 Part 47 >

Episode 6 – Diplomatic Maneuvers, part 45

New to Other-Terrestrial? Check here! Or if you need to, jump to the beginning of the episode here!


“Second boarding party accounted for,” Pirra said over her system.

It hadn’t gone as smoothly as the last, with Squad Two being caught in their pincer as the Hev had pulled back.  The fight had gotten messy, and the boarders scattered.

But none had escaped.

The Hev were in their territory, and even more than their technological edge, this was their biggest advantage.  The ship tracked everything; even if somehow they could avoid sensors, the ship would know if a door was opened or hell – even detect the movements of air where it didn’t think there were beings.

The Craton was a smart ship.

Pirra felt a swell of pride at that thought, and her mind jumped for a moment to Alexander – who she checked again and confirmed was safe deeper in the ship, in one of her many bunkers.  Short of a direct hit by a relativistic projectile, he’d be safe in there . . .

But she couldn’t spend more time on him now.  Not only because of the more important work, but because she couldn’t let her guard down.

“We have two down,” Kiseleva told her.  “Lal is injured, and Suarez is KIA.”

Pirra took a deep breath.  “Is Mwanajuma looking at Lal?”

“Yes,” Kiseleva said flatly.

“And how about you?” Pirra asked, noticing the human woman’s limp.

“I am fine.  There is no blood, is just minor sprain,” she replied.

Pirra was not convinced, and checking the woman’s vital signs, she saw that the woman’s suit was administering some decently strong painkillers to keep her going.  But nothing seemed broken or bleeding, so that was good.

“Go to Squad Three.  Send Zivai and Guoming to reinforce squad two.  Come back with Hesson.  If you still think you can fight then, you can stay.”

Kiseleva frowned severely, but nodded.

She looked to the rest of her squad.  “Najafi, LaMarr, you’re with me.  We’ve got another Hev boarding team on the scopes, and-“

A boom shook the ship.

“What the hell was that?!” LaMarr asked.

Pirra’s system flooded with new data.  “Looks like a Hev boarding pod just detonated.  On the Equator Ring . . . damn, it’s done a number on the local systems.”  She shook her head.  “We can’t account for the whole group.  We need to go check it out – make sure none of the boarders are still alive.”

They were currently holding a crossroads from the outer parts of the ship to the inner, where they’d ambushed the last Hev group.  Pirra made a chopping motion down the hall.  “Open this blast door, we can meet-“

The door began to open, too quickly, she thought.

Even before it was open more than a crack, her drones began to fire.  She hadn’t even registered what she was seeing, when a muzzle flash blinded her.

Stumbling back, she had caught only a glimpse of the Hev’s weapon as it lifted – and suddenly she was thrown back.

Shots were going off above her, and she heard voices calling out over the radio, drones whizzing by above her.

Above her?  She realized she was on her back, and moving – someone was pulling her.

Tilting her head back, she saw that it was Kiseleva, dragging her away.  Others rushed past on the flanks, firing.  Second and third squads had arrived to reinforce them.

The firefight was intense, but brief.  In only a handful of seconds, the fire stopped, and she looked back towards the now-open blast doors, seeing an entire unit of Hev on the ground.  All of her team was still standing.

“I’m all right!” she said, before she was even sure she was.  If her armor hadn’t held, she’d be dead.

Her faceplate was cracked, she could see it now.

Kiseleva stopped and looked down at her face.  “You look in one piece.”

“I think I’m fine,” she said.  “Thank the sky for armor . . .  Is anyone else hurt?”

“No,” she heard Jack Lal call.  He had bandages on his upper arm, but seemed all right.  “The one that shot you was the only one who got a shot off.  I think something was distracting them.”

“You were very lucky,” Kiseleva said to her.  “The officer only had a pistol.  If he’d had a rifle . . .”

“It was just a pistol?  It looked . . . a lot bigger than that,” Pirra said.

“I imagine so, when you’re staring down it.”

Pirra got to her feet, a little shaky, but forcing herself not to show it.  She could have nightmares later.  Right now she needed to focus.

“We didn’t know about this squad,” she realized.

Hesson leaned out of a room.  “They were using cutting frames to go through the walls and avoid chokepoints,” he said.  “Still, the ship’s systems should have known about them and been tracking them . . .”

Pirra’s stomach twisted.  She turned on her radio.  “Commander Pirra to all commands; some Hev are evading the ship’s tracking through means we’re not yet sure of.  Have everyone keep their eyes open.”

Kai Yong Fan’s voice came back to her.  “We read you, Commander.  Be advised that Hev bodies may be rigged with biological or chemical weapons that activate on death.”

Her eyes widened.  “Everyone back out of the corridor!” she called.  “The Hev-“

“Shit, I’m getting the warning!” someone called.  “Some kind of poison cocktail.  Shouldn’t be an issue unless your suit is compromised, though-“

Pirra snapped her gaze to Lal.  His eyes had gone wide.

Then hers fixed onto the cracks in her own helmet.

“Move!” she barked.

They moved, and she ran a diagnostic over herself.  Her vitals were elevated, and her system began to figure out what the hell the chemical compound was.

“Jack, are you okay?” she asked.

The man coughed.  “I think I got a whiff of something, Commander, but-”  He lurched, and began to spasm.

“We need a med unit down here,” she barked.  “Anti-tox team!”

Kiseleva put a hand on her shoulder.

“It won’t affect you,” she said calmly.  “It’s designed for humans.”

Pirra’s eyes went back to Lal, who was foaming at the mouth.  Med drones were hovering around him, and two heavier ones lifted him.

His vitals were dropping fast.

A drone was checking her, and she saw the confirmation of what Kiseleva was saying appear.  The compound had been identified, and while it was toxic to her kind in large doses, in small amounts like she’d gotten her body would detoxify it in a few hours.

Pirra watched for only a moment before tearing her eyes away.

“We have a job to do still,” she said, her voice hoarse.  “Spread out the drones to search for stealth Hev teams.  I don’t want a single one of them getting past us.  And get me a replacement helmet.”


< Ep 6 Part 44 | Ep 6 Part 46 >

Episode 6 – Diplomatic Maneuvers, part 44

New to Other-Terrestrial? Check here! Or if you need to, jump to the beginning of the episode here!


Iago knew this was not going to go well.

The Hev assault team were not well-trained or equipped, but a bullet was a bullet, and he and the others were not outfitted with the highest-end combat gear.

There were only four left with Iago, and he didn’t know the whereabouts of the rest of his squad.

The Hev pod had smashed through at the Equator ring, and he and his team had taken up defensive positions after arming themselves.  He was up high, to give flanking fire on the Hev as they advanced on the ambush spot that the others had set up down below.

When the pod door had burst open, it had been with a rush of hundreds of drones.

“EMs out!” he called.  More drones themselves than grenades, they’d suicided themselves at the burgeoning swarm, frying the drones’ brains in high numbers with great pulses of radio energy, burning themselves out in the process.

But the Hev assault drones were meant to overcome such defenses.

The Hev poured fire towards Iago’s team’s Guardian drones, overwhelming them.  Heffo took a dozen rounds that punched through her armor at extreme close range and went down.  Her cover hadn’t even slowed the rounds.

Iago couldn’t spare her a look, and continued to fire.

The Hev had overwhelming firepower, all their defenses pushed towards the front – but none of that mattered.

He had a mag rifle.

“CHARGING,” his system said.  The charge bar filled, and he let a round rip.

The gun kicked like a destrier, and the shot tore through the Hev’s armor like it was made of paper and kept on.  It pierced through another behind him, taking his leg clean off, before hitting the floor plate and punching through that.

Kynz fell down below, half his head gone.  It was only he and Kessissiin left, and the Dessei was alone at their barricade.

He also had a mag rifle; his fired, and another two Hev dropped.  They were lining up like bowling pins.

One took cover, throwing himself around the corner, but Iago’s tracking system still could project his position.

A wall wasn’t a defense.

It ripped through it, and then the Hev behind.

The rest pressed forward, but as his team had been wiped, it left more drones to guard the two of them.  The Hev drones were falling to counter-fire, and he and Kessissin were going to take them all down.

His system warned him suddenly; toxic compounds in the air.

“What the fuck,” he muttered, scanning the data.  The source . . .

Were the bodies of the Hev.  His system highlighted it, and he called to Kessissiin.

“Pull back!” he cried.  “Their bodies are rigged!”

He saw the eyes widen on the Dessei, and he began a retreat, Iago covering him, peppering the Hev with half-charged shots that might dent armor but not pierce it.  The Hev realized this and advanced, throwing grenades up at him.  One was intercepted and shot down by his drones, but his guardians were running out of ammunition themselves.  He turned to run, and saw that the grenade had landed between him and the path Kessissiin had taken.

He ripped the battery pack from his rifle, using his system to deactivate all its safeties, and hurled it at the Hev.  With as much energy as they packed into the things to power the mag rifles, it would make enough of a-

BOOM.

He threw himself through a door to one of the second-floor shops as one of the explosives – his or theirs – went off.

The door slammed shut behind him, a heavy blast door closing over it, and he lay on the floor a moment, panting.

“This is . . . Iago Caraval,” he said through his radio.  “The Hev boarders are carrying chemical and possibly biological weapons on their person that are being released upon death.  If you experience damage to your suits, get the hell away from them!”

He didn’t know if the Hev would even bother trying to come for him, but if they did it would take them precious time to break through the heavy door.

Getting up, he moved towards the other side of the room, trying to wrap his mind around his location.  He had to find a way out, find the rest of his team and-

The blast door behind him exploded.


< Ep 6 Part 43 | Ep 6 Part 45 >

Episode 6 – Diplomatic Maneuvers, part 43

New to Other-Terrestrial? Check here! Or if you need to, jump to the beginning of the episode here!


Logus felt like his neck still wasn’t quite right.

He was lucky, really, that he got to be in one of the many safety bunkers on the ship, rather than having to be out there.  And lucky that Dr. Y had given him something for the pain, after telling him to avoid strenuous neck activity and to try and sit.  But he hadn’t told him the nature of his injury, and that concerned him.

Kell had saved his life, and he wasn’t going to complain about that, but the acceleration he’d experienced when the being grabbed and pulled him had been comparable to a low-altitude flying accident.  He was, if he was being honest, lucky it hadn’t killed him.

He wondered if Kell had known that.  He felt very confident that the being had killed enough over its long life to know just the amount of force it could apply without killing a man.

But he hadn’t helped Decinus.  Perhaps he’d calculated he couldn’t have pulled him over without killing him.  Or perhaps he just hadn’t cared.

Because it certainly seemed Kell had cared very little about the man’s life.  So perhaps, he reasoned, the Shoggoth simply had something of an attachment to him and Brooks – and the latter more strongly, given that Kell mostly avoided him.

Maybe their psychologies were understandable, with enough observation, he thought.  It was a naive thought, he knew, even as he had it – but this was how he dealt with stress.

The sounds of another impact made some of the other people sheltering in the bunker scream.  For a ship the size of a Craton, to feel such an impact meant it had to be close – or very, very large.

“It’s all right, it’s all right,” Zeela Cann said loudly.  “Just a thump – if it were something bad the bunker would get ejected, and that certainly hasn’t happened.”

Her words seemed to have some effect, with a few people nodding, seeing the logic in them.

Logus was glad that he was not the only person of rank in here.  Every bunker on the ship had several designated Morale Officers, working to keep hope up and panic down.  He would have been one, but a backup had had to take his spot in another bunker, since this was the closest one to him when the alarm went out.  And there was no way in hell anyone wanted to be caught outside if something serious happened to the ship – or a firefight got near.

He shuddered, thinking of the injuries he’d seen in medical school of people caught in espatier fights.  Shredded was the word he’d use – the tiny, flying pieces of shattered bullets could be stopped by good armor, but against clothing and skin?  It wasn’t pretty.

He shuddered, and another pain wracked him.  It was good he wasn’t being morale officer, he didn’t think he could possibly have been convincing right now . . .

He wished his neck would stop hurting.

The dull ache in it felt unlike any injury he’d had before.  On some level, he had a feeling it was serious.

He’d never been seriously injured before.  Never even had surgery, beyond the basic implants and such that everyone got.

Next to him, Elliot, Iago Caraval’s son, huddled closer.  No one in here was fully panicked yet, and he certainly hoped it didn’t happen.  These bunkers were fully capable of tranquilizing them all if emotions got out of hand . . .

It helped, though, that they had one of the Space Hounds in here.  The dog was moving between individuals who seemed most frightened, and would sit stoically beside them.  People hugged or petted it, and it helped.  And the Station Terrier, Angel, was snuggled in Elliot’s arms.

“Do you think my dad is okay?” Elliot asked him, petting the dog, who seemed almost to be falling asleep.

“I think he is,” he told the boy.  “He’s not supposed to be anywhere near the action, you know.  And he’s got a lot of experience.  I’m sure he’s out there saving lives right now.”

The boy nodded, and then clammed up, just looking down at Angel.

Elliot had said very little.  He was the only child in this bunker – or on the ship right now.

He shouldn’t be here.  Iago should have left him in the Sol System, and the question of just why he hadn’t was burning in his mind.

Something was wrong there.

The ship shuddered again, and he looked up.  Elliot looked up with him, but there was a peculiar lack of fear in him that was disturbing.  Like the boy was already past that.  Even his earlier question had been . . . monotone.

“Dr. Logus,” he heard Zeela Cann call.

He looked up, and saw the woman was beckoning him over.

“I’ll be right back,” he told Elliot.

The boy nodded flatly.

“What is it?” he asked Cann as he got closer.  The Space Hound also came over, listening.

“Apollonia Nor is missing,” she told him without preamble.  “She was a volunteer, but never showed up to her assigned team.  She still hasn’t reported in to them, and left her tablet in a bunker, but hasn’t been located in any other since, or at a medical center.  Without her having her tablet on her, we cannot track her.”
That was serious, and his mind raced to find a proper response.

“Is anyone else unaccounted for?” he asked.

Cann pursed her lips.  “Ambassador Kell disappeared not long after Apollonia did.”

Another one, just as important, if not more so.  Had someone else been dispatched to find him?  Though if the Shoggoth did not want to be found, he had a feeling that no one would ever find him.  They would have to focus on who they potentially could locate.

“Try dispatching drones to some of the likely places she would go,” Logus suggested.

“I tried that,” Zeela replied.  “But right now, I’m not exactly swimming in resources, and she’s been here such a short time, with no system history, that nothing panned out.  Literally just stabs in the dark.”

“Help search?” the Space Hound, Apollo, asked.

“No, you had best stay here, you sweet boy,” Zeela told the hound, forcing a smile.  The dog cocked its head to the side, surprised.  “Unless you know her scent?” she asked.

“No,” the hound replied.

Logus wracked his mind.  “The ship should still be able to track her by doors opening, or air movement-“

“In a battle, Dr. Logus, those systems are not reliable,” Zeela said, her words alarmingly calm and knowing.  “All I can tell you for sure is that it does not seem that any of the movement out there is her.  If she is out there, she is in an area that is blacked out, outside a bunker.  Or . . . she is not moving.”

He realized just what Zeela was getting at.

And he should have realized it sooner.

This bunker had two officers in it, and they needed to find Apollonia.  She was more important than the two of them combined.  And he – at least theoretically – might have better odds of figuring out where she might have gone, if she was hiding.

Zeela didn’t want to have to give him the order, Logus thought.  And he wouldn’t make her.

“I’ll go search for her,” he said.

He saw the regret etched onto her face, how much she hated putting him into this position.

“And I’ll sit with Elliot,” she said gently.

Taking a deep breath, Logus moved to the door, overriding it.

“Don’t worry everyone,” he said, as eyes went upon him.  “Just going for a bit of a stroll.”


< Ep 6 Part 42 | Ep 6 Part 44 >

Episode 6 – Diplomatic Maneuvers, part 42

New to Other-Terrestrial? Check here! Or if you need to, jump to the beginning of the episode here!


“HOSTILE BOARDING PARTIES DETECTED!”

The words were louder even than the blaring sirens, as Iago rushed towards the armory.

His team was not meant for combat, he knew.  But they could fight – and the breaching pod had smashed into the ship near their area of operation.

Two of his people had been killed.

As soon as word had come that pods were inbound, he’d given orders to pull his team out.  But Conrad and Pavlov had been too slow, dragging between them an injured crewman.

It had been brave to try and save him.  But it had cost them their lives.

And now he was seeing red.

They had no weapons, but an armory was near, and as he reached it, he saw it was locked.  He sent his command codes – and the door did not open.

He looked at his system – the room was empty.  There was no Armorer.

“Blast your eyes!” he yelled.  “Who the hell abandons their post!?”  He pounded on the door, all his confusion, anxiety, and fear pouring into his words.

“I’m here!” he heard a rumbling voice, and turned back to see a large Abmon trundling as fast as it could.  “I’m sorry, I was helping another team-“

“Just open the fiscing doors!” Iago screamed at him.  “We have enemy espatiers boarding!”

The Abmon got the doors open, and Iago rushed in.  He tried his codes, but found that they’d been shut down, and had to wait as the Abmon unlocked the weapons safes.

Kessissiin was right behind him, and Iago tossed him a rifle.  “Pass these out to the rest of the team!”

His comm blasted in his ear.

“We have contact with enemy boarders,” the voice said.  It was Pirra.


Her breathing was so loud in her ears.

She was only aware of it in moments when she was not yelling orders or the fire was not so loud, but there was never a moment of silence.

Chemicals pumped through her veins, putting her in a state more heightened than even adrenaline in a human.  Her heart rate per minute was almost 250, high for her kind but not so high she was in danger.

It was to be expected in combat.

And she could think icily clearly.

All ordinary thoughts were gone; as alien to her as any being from another planet.

She just commanded, because that was her job.

“Fire team two left!” she barked, her throat hurting from the shouting – not even necessary through helmets connected by radio, but it was automatic.

The Hev were driving straight for Reactor Five, counting on speed to succeed.  But their moves were obvious, the goal predictable, and both her own mind and the tactical simulators did not see any significant likelihood of them altering that.

Her Fire Team One would block them.  Fire Team Two would come around from behind them.

Pincer, destroy, move on.  Fire Team Three was in reserve.

Alarms rose from her drone cloud ahead of her; contact.

It was not even combat yet, at the smallest level their drone squad were essentially just floating sensors, no intelligence or ability to fight.  They encountered the Hev advance drones seconds later.

Technologically, the P’G’Maig were so far behind them.  The had simple and crude firearms, their drones large and clunky in comparison.

But at close range a bullet could still hit a lucky spot and kill any one of them.

The firing drone lines engaged; hers fired first, quicker to get target lock.  Their drones firing back.  This was their assault wave, ready to burst through a defensive line and clear a path.  For each shot of her drones, they fired seven.  Yet hers outnumbered theirs.

They still managed to force the first wave, but it cost them valuable ammo.  Her side had more, and if they could bring it to bear, then the Hev would lose.

At least with this wave.  If there was a second, a twentieth, a two hundredth, then eventually they’d fire every single bullet on the Craton, every potential bullet would have been made, and they’d lose.

No time to think on that, and she shoved the thought aside.

“Contact!” Kiseleva yelled.  The Hev had come around a corner, firing.

Bullets were intercepted by guardian drones, their own shots intercepting those that would have killed her.  A veritable wall of fire from each side met, grinding against each other.

Small bits of shrapnel from shattered bullets pinged off her armor.  A dusting of it began to cover the walls and floor.

No one needed the order to fire.  They already were.

Her rifle was in her shoulder without a thought and she was aiming, firing.  Where the Hev drones were focused on offense, their Guardian drones were few in number.  After her first couple bursts were intercepted, she saw her next punch through the armor of the opposing squad leader, and he slumped to the floor without drama.

She took fresh aim and fired.  Another Hev, this one recklessly charging, took it and fell forward.  The third took several bursts to stop.  Others fell.

She heard “I’m hit!” from her team, but she was the point of the lance of battle and the medic drones were already indicating they were moving in.

She kept firing.  A round somehow got through her guardian fire and pinged her shoulder, but she shrugged it off.

More Hev fell.  Fire Team Two was taking them out from behind, as planned.

In a few moments her sensors were blaring an all-clear.

“Hold fire!” she ordered, raising a hand.

Her breathing was so loud in her helmet.

“Confirmed Hev vanguard down in Layer 1, Section 5,” she signalled to command.  It was acknowledged, and she received further orders.

“Regroup,” she said.  “Fire Team Two, advance to Hev breaching pod to disable and disarm.”

It was expected that when the drop pod detected all its soldiers as being down it would detonate.  It was what she would expect, at least.  Not only was it some consolation, but would rip a larger gash into the hull that further waves of boarders could exploit.

Right now she knew the Craton’s powerful computer system had probably breached their security and was mimicking that their espatiers were still alive.

Fire Team Two acknowledged and moved closer.  She gathered her fire team and moved forward, sending Team Three instructions of where to go for support.


< Ep 6 Part 41 | Ep 6 Part 43 >

Episode 6 – Diplomatic Maneuvers, part 41

New to Other-Terrestrial? Check here! Or if you need to, jump to the beginning of the episode here!


“Response teams and drones report multiple hull breaches!” Urle shouted.  “But we’ve lost no vital systems!”

“Two PDCs and three lasers disabled,” Jaya said, her voice clipped but still calm.  “They were targeting the main body of the ship, going for a disabling strike, but they did not have the numbers or penetration to cause major damage.”

“Casualties are coming in,” Y spoke, his voice remote.  “Twelve DOA, seventeen more wounded.”

Brooks heard it all, but his eyes were fixed on Ks’Kull’s flagship, looming ever closer.

“Fire anti-ship missiles at everything except his flagship,” he ordered.  “Target PDCs and lasers on their weapon systems and drives, send all combat drones to go for targets of opportunity – ours outclass theirs and we’ll shred them if we’re aggressive.  I want as many of them out of the fight as possible.  Full launch, as soon as you’re ready.”

His eyes narrowed.  “And set our course through his flagship.”

Ji-min Bin looked back at him, hesitant.  But she saw the look on his face, and then gave a clipped nod.

“Course plotted, Captain.”

“Missiles away, PDCs and laser locked,,” Jaya said.  “Firing for effect!”

The pulsing beams lashed out, striking at the speed of light into the Hev ships, leaving scorches across the hulls, piercing through the covers of missile launchers – with explosive results.

The sides of two Hev cruisers blossomed into balls of fire that spread across their hull – until they began to break apart.

From the crew cockpits below came a cheering, and while he knew it meant that many lives had just ended, he could feel nothing at the moment for those dead.

“Their missiles were armed!” Cenz said.  “Why in the stars would they-“

“We’re too close for their stand-off range, so they had manually armed them,” Brooks said.  “Keep targetting them!”

“Ks’Kull’s realized our course,” Urle said quickly.  “He’s starting an emergency jump procedure – we estimate thirty-seven seconds until his entry.”

“He feared I’d come for him after he failed to kill me,” Brooks said.  “Place our gravitational pull between us and his ship.  I want to slow him down.”

“You want to keep him trapped so we can ram him?” Cenz asked.

“Yes,” Brooks replied simply.

“We can’t counter the strength of a full-on jump field-“

“But we can slow him down.”

“It’s done,” Ji-min Bin said.  “Having some effect.  If we keep this up . . . We’ll hit him just before he jumps.”

“Then keep it up,” Brooks ordered.  The ship loomed larger, and he brought up the time to impact.  Twenty-five seconds.  Only two seconds shy of his predicted jump.

Their missiles streaked out in another volley, striking other Hev ships.  Lasers and panicked return fire came, but uncoordinated, merely scorching parts of their hull.  Where it struck the adamantine cratonic rock, it did not even leave a mark.

“Fifteen seconds!” Bin yelled.  Like all of them, Brooks felt like his head was ringing, felt the pressure.  Two ships colliding, at this speed, would spell doom for them both – not even cratonic rock would resist the energies of objects so massive, at these velocities.

He watched the numbers counting down, saw the increase of defensive fire, even more panicked, from Ks’Kull.  The ships around them began to veer away, not wanting to be close to the debris that such a collision would create.

Ji-min Bin was watching him, sweat on her brow.  He knew she was ready to drop their field the instant he ordered it.

Five seconds.

“Stop,” he said simply.

Bin hit the button, and the gravity field that was restraining Ks’Kull’s ship and pulling the Craton inexorably closer disappeared.

In a flash, Ks’Kull’s ship was gone.  With three seconds left on the clock.

Urle slumped back in his seat.

“Ks’Kull’s ship has successfully made a jump – I don’t know if he even had a destination in mind, I cannot plot his path from his entry angle . . .”

“Anywhere but here,” Jaya said.  Even she looked shaken.

“We’re not out of this yet,” Brooks said.  “They’re leaderless but not beaten.  Roll the ship, bring to bear the coilguns.  Target their comm ship!”

“Aye!”

The ship began to rotate, and their view swung.  Lasers were still striking out at them from the nearest Hev ships, but fewer and fewer, as bracketing fire from the Craton’s PDCs and missile strikes tore into the fragile weapons systems.

“Launching third wave!” Jaya cried.  More missile went out, hammering the larger cruisers, that could do little to return fire at this close range – afraid to open their missile ports, with their bow coilguns still pointed ahead.

They were a wolf among sheep.

“Coilguns locked – firing!”

The ship shuddered, and he saw the coilgun rounds fire out, highlighted on their screen as white streaks.

The Hev communications ship was pierced through her stern as she tried to turn away.  The shots tore through the ship and came out the bow, explosions bursting from all along her length.

“Good hit!” Jaya said.  “At least three reactors punctured – if she doesn’t shut down she’s going to rip herself apart.”

“Even if she does they will,” Urle said soberly.  “We broke her spine.”

Brooks could see it, and they all watched; the ship, a multi-kilometer battleship in its own right, began to break apart.  It was impossible to tell the escape pods from the debris, and Brooks knew that even those that got to such pods in time were unlikely to be rescuable.  Those not destroyed by other debris would be surrounded by it – and help would not be able to risk getting near.

It was sobering, but he hadn’t wanted or started this conflict.

“Charge for another attack – find any ship that seems like it might be in command and target.”

“Target found!” Jaya said.  “Rolling . . . locking . . . firing.”

The ship shuddered again, and the shot ripped through another battleship – this one had been trying to turn to face them, and the ship only pierced diagonally from her port to her starboard.

Objects darted away from the ship, though, veering towards them.  Too large to be missiles . . .

“Boarding pods en route!” Urle said.  “Counting fifty- no, ninety – fisc, they’re all launching, Captain.”

It was their only move left, he knew.  To board the Craton, and either seize her in a bloody fight, or destroy her – or even just keep her busy long enough for the Hev to regroup.

“Target with all defensive weaponry – but keep finding targets for the coilguns, and try to knock out as many as you can!” he ordered.  “If any line up – take the shot, we need to wreck as many ships as we can, while we can.”

They couldn’t let the pods through – the Hev numbers here would let them pour troops aboard until they were swamped.  But likewise, they could not let the Hev fleet reorganize.  For they were too numerous, and if they got even a modicum of order back-

They wouldn’t stand a chance.


< Ep 6 Part 40 | Ep 6 Part 42 >

Episode 6 – Diplomatic Maneuvers, part 40

New to Other-Terrestrial? Check here! Or if you need to, jump to the beginning of the episode here!


Apollonia stumbled down the hall, trying to shake off the effects of blacking out.

She hadn’t been the only one; most people in the room apparently had gone unconscious during the maneuver.

She had come to with the doors open and the speakers blaring out for all Response personnel to report to their action stations.

And that’s where she was going.  But she still felt dizzy, unable to even quite understand what was going on.  A drone had scanned her and told her she had no aneurysms or other health issues, that she was fit to report for duty.  That she’d be okay in a few moments.

She didn’t feel okay.

“Good luck!” the woman, Ann, who had been next to her said as she left.

Only after the door had sealed had she realized she’d left her tablet in there.

“All crew!” Brooks’s voice came through the speakers in the halls.  “Brace for impacts!”

An emergency seat popped out of the wall, and she threw herself into it, the webbing lashing itself around her-

Almost not in time.  The ship shook and she was thrown forward in her webbing.  Everything rattled – then it rattled again.  She lost count of how many impacts there were – though she couldn’t count very well in her present state.

“Hull breaches detected,” the words came.  “All civilians remain in safety bunkers.  All Response personnel, report to assigned stations and await further commands.”

She was going to need full vac gear.

Other alerts played, as the webbing released her.

They phrased things in that official sort of way, but the gist was clear, even to her.

Be prepared for dead or dying people.

Be ready to die.

Her heart was pounding in her chest, and she knew she had to finish putting on her vac suit.  Even if just for her own safety; if something punched through the ship, it was always better to have yourself covered.

Though maybe getting blasted out alive into the dark was worse than a quick death.

Her knees felt weak.

She slapped the door open panel on a room and ducked inside.  Putting her back to the wall, she slid to the floor and couldn’t make herself stand up.

She couldn’t do it.


“All but three accounted for!” the call came.

Across the ship, the Response Volunteers had gone to where they’d been assigned.  There were two reported injuries – nothing seriously, thank the stars – and one no-show.

Vakulinchuk squinted at the list to see who the no-show was, adrenaline making it hard to focus on fine details.

Apollonia Nor.

He flicked the notification away, and looked to the teams assembled before him, his image going out to every Volunteer.

“Your assignments are issued, get those breaches sealed, watch for rooms that may still have pressure and therefore people inside!  Move!”

The teams reacted, moving – if not skillfully, then at least determinedly.  One short that they should be.  But now was not the time to worry about that.  Things happened.  He just hoped she wasn’t hurt out there and no one knew.

He heard a clunking, and saw a hatch open, with the new Abmon officer who had transferred aboard.

“Sir,” he said, through his rocky grumbling.  “My post is not far from a breach, but is intact.  I’m quite strong and naturally resist vacuum.  Permission to help?”

His system came up with the relevant information; even if his last tests had been awhile ago, He That Squats on Yellow Sand was qualified for non-combat duty, without a doubt.

A short-handed team could sure use the strength of an Abmon . . .

“Accepted,” he barked, sending to the Armorer his orders.  “Get down to your assigned team and help them, they’ll be expecting you.”

Squants on Sand saluted, and began to amble away at what was – for an Abmon – rather fast.  “I will not let you down, sir!” he said sincerely.


Pirra saw the notification come up.

The fire in front of her demanded more of her attention, but her team were veterans of more than a few burning oxygen leaks.  The flames sputtered, then died.

“That’s the last one!” Kiseleva said through the comm.  Pirra could see her mouth moving, but only hear her through the radio.

To her right was open space, where the missile had torn a breach through the outer hull, leaving a ten-meter gap.  The edges were being closed rapidly by heavy drones, crawling along the inner hull, carrying small plates they fused together.  In a matter of minutes they’d have it fully sealed, even if it wouldn’t stand up to most weapons.

“All team, back to rendezvous,” she ordered.  “And good work.”

She trotted out with the others.  No one wanted to be in an open area if they got hit again, though for at least a few more seconds they were expecting silence.

She looked at her alarm again.

He That Squats on Yellow Sand had joined one of the short-handed Volunteer Response teams.

Annoyance flashed through her that the Abmon had gone around her orders, but at least it was a non-combat unit . . .

He was rated for that, at least.

She sent a priority message, to both he and Vakulinchuk, who had signed off on his joining.

“Once he helps his team with their immediate vital issues, Squats on Sand is to report back to his post without delay,” she said sharply.

She grabbed a handhold and got another warning of a high-G maneuver.  The ship was about to go into a spin.

Her team moved quickly and were strapped in.  The main computer monitored everyone it could, to determine when it could safely begin the maneuver, but it would only wait so long.

She checked the monitoring systems, saw that Alexander and Elliot were safe, in a bunker deep in the ship.  Then Iago; he, too, was reaching safety, somewhere near the equator ring.  He pinged as he strapped in, and she felt as content as she could.

“Hold on,” she said calmly to her unit.  No one looked alarmed, even as the entire ship began to spin.

Then the ‘G-SHOCK IMMINENT’ alarm went off.  The ship’s massive coilguns were warming up . . . about to fire.

Oh, they were in the shit now, she thought.


< Ep 6 Part 39 | Ep 6 Part 41 >

Episode 6 – Diplomatic Maneuvers, part 39

New to Other-Terrestrial? Check here! Or if you need to, jump to the beginning of the episode here!


“Initializing zerodrive systems . . .”  Urle said.

Warning lights covered the boards, telling them that they lacked sufficient energy needed to create a rift between realities.  Brooks had already input his override codes, and gave a final confirmation.

“Fusion reactors are stable, beginning the distortion field . . . gravity fields increasing . . . tenkionic attraction increasing . . .”

Urle’s voice was calm, but a note of alarm came into it.

“Aperture is trying to open – Fisc, I hope it doesn’t actually open . . .  No, the aperture is not stabilizing.  Repeat, it’s trying, but we are not getting an opening.”

He looked up at Brooks.  “We are accelerating towards it.”

Brooks leaned forward in his seat, crossing his hands in front of his face.  They felt nothing yet.  The pseudo-gravity of the aperture was pulling on them all equally.  Even the ship – the tenkionic matter that made up much of her hull and internal solid areas distributed the force in some way, sparing it the stress of tidal forces.

“Activating standard drive to pull us off-kilter . . .  Now we’ll feel a bump.”

Brooks leaned back, letting his chair secure him.

“System ready for switch to automatic,” Cutter said in his clipped voice.  “In case we all pass out.”

“Ah,” Kell said.  “That again.  Your kind seem to do it often.”

Brooks looked up at the ambassador, who was still standing.  “I suppose you’re not going to sit this time, either.  The forces will be different.”

He was starting to feel them already, pulling him towards the side as his body’s momentum wanted to keep moving in a straight line – but the ship began to curve its path.

“G-forces increasing, it’s gonna get worse from here,” Urle said, his voice louder.

“I do not need to sit,” Kell said, amused.  “It would not truly support me, anyway.”

Brooks felt his head now wanting to tilt, and he saw the officers each doing the same.

Urle resisted the longest, his biomechanical muscles eventually straining until even he had to let his head rest against the side of his seat.

The pressure built and he had to breathe harder.

“Five Gs . . .” Urle said.

It was pressing down on them all, enough that their chairs automatically rotated to keep the pull in the optimum direction for humans to resist it.  Despite how nearly every member of the crew had the genetic enhancements and augments that had stacked with hundreds of years of space exploration, despite their technology that was twisting and violating physics to keep the forces from being so great that it crushed them, they felt it.

They were all breathing hard, tensing, fighting the gravity.  One couldn’t just take such pressure.  They’d black out in a heartbeat if not prepared.

He and the others were fighting hard.

“Ten Gs . . .” Urle said.  His voice sounded strained.  “Countering . . . 427 Gs . . .  The ship is showing the strain . . .”

They felt it before they heard it.  The ship itself was groaning.  A deep hum, as she vibrated so intensely that each oscillation couldn’t be told from the last.

“Cenz, you holding up okay?” Brooks asked.  Such things were particularly unpleasant to him.

“I’ll survive,” the being said, his voice much calmer than his vitals suggested.  Perhaps he had set his system not to try and impart his emotional state into his words.

“Divert power from non-essential systems as necessary to spare the important ones,” Brooks ordered.  If the garden pumps had to break, they could fix them later.  “And make sure the infirmary is most protected . . .”

“Done,” Urle bit out.  “Path . . . on-screen . . .”

Brooks was nearly whited out, but he could see the path of the ship.  They were running close to the outer edge of the rift they had nearly-opened.  Too close.

“Are we going to clear it?” he managed to say.

“I . . . I don’t know,” Urle said.

Brooks saw in his alerts that 62% of the crew had blacked out.

More alarms were starting to go off.

“Outer pod broke off!  Nothing important, just some science equipment . . .”

“Turn off the zerodrive,” Brooks ordered.  “Let the aperture fade, so we don’t clip it!”

He couldn’t see now.  All was white, and he was gasping for breath.  Only a few more seconds . . .  Once they could get back into a straight path, stop trying to skirt the massive gravity of the aperture, they would stop feeling it . . .

“It’s off – aperture isn’t dissipating!  Oh shit, did we . . .  It’s shrinking, but I’m not sure . . .  This is going to be close, Captain!”

Something was rattling loudly, then he heard a crash as something broke loose and flew down the hall, banging against the bulkheads.  His ears were ringing.

Then he blacked out.

“We’re past!” he awoke to.  His vision had returned, and Kell was standing in front of him, looking him in the face from only a few inches away.

He smiled slightly.  “It is interesting to watch, no matter how often I see it,” he said.

Brooks said nothing, but looked past him.

“Report!”

“We made it past Captain!” Urle said, turning to look at him.  “Nearly skimmed the aperture, but we made it!  We’re on course for the Hev moving at . . . Fisc, .09c!”

“How long until we reach the Hev?”

“Two minutes – our velocity is dropping . . . our pseudo-momentum is fading,” Cenz said.

It violated physics for a thing to lose energy for no reason, but that was just how zerospace operated.  At least it kept the energy in the universe from actually changing . . .

“And their missiles?”

“They’re trying to correct, but we’re going to miss them,” Urle said.  “Their velocities are too high – I don’t even think they have enough reaction mass left to catch us.”

Jaya turned to look at him.  Her expression was that of a hunter closing in on prey.

“Missile racks ready, PDCs are loaded and hot.”

“Good,” Brooks said.  “Warm up the coilguns.  We’re going to give them everything we’ve got.”

“Captain!” Cenz said sharply.  “They’re launching another volley of missiles.  Not as many as the last, but a sizable amount, still counting!”

Brooks saw it appearing on the vast screen before them – boxes appearing around a horde of missiles, freshly-launched.

“They reloaded a hell of a lot faster than I expected,” Urle bit out, his hands flying over the controls.  Even with his mind directly hooked into the system, his hands worked, adding what little they could to the speed of thought.

“They’re going to be close together – launch and fire counter-missiles, everything we have!  We just have to survive this one round, and then we’ll be in among them!”

If their anti-missile weapons could take out more than one at a time, they just might make it through . . .

“Missiles incoming, less than ten seconds,” Jaya said.  “All PDCs locked and firing, but sir-“

“All crew,” Brooks said, his message resounding through the ship.  “Brace for impacts!”


< Ep 6 Part 38 | Ep 6 Part 40 >