04 Dark Space (39 page)

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Authors: Jasper T Scott

BOOK: 04 Dark Space
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“Lead . . . are you suggesting that size matters?” Gina replied.

Snickering followed that remark and Atton frowned. “Cut the chatter, Guardians.” Shaking his head, he touched a point on the grid which was above the enemy fleet and more or less in the center of their formation. A green diamond appeared on the grid. That would be the nav point for their fly by. It was 1,199 klicks out. Atton’s velocity was just over 2.5 klicks per second, but with an acceleration of 145 KAPS that speed was rising fast. A number below the icon he’d place on the grid gave an ETA in minutes and seconds—1:52.

They’d have to slow down to do a proper fly by, but Atton figured a quick glance would be good enough. Their orders were to recon the planet, not the mysteriously derelict fleet.

The comms crackled with more chatter—this time from Guardian Six, otherwise known as Ogles. “So, if these people are the Immortals, I guess that solves the old debate,” he said.

Atton frowned and keyed his own comm system. “What debate is that, Six?”

“The religious one—you know, all that existential krak. The Immortals aren’t real, so that means no Etheria and no Etherus—no gods and no God. We ended up being our own gods. Funny that—always knew I was almighty.”

“You’re an ignorant skriff, Ogles,” Ceyla replied.

“Hoi, stow that, Four!” Atton said. “No personal attacks, you copy?”

Click.

Atton couldn’t blame Ceyla for getting upset. Ogles was belittling and attacking her faith, which must have felt like a personal attack. Seeing an opportunity to redeem himself for his own prior comments about her beliefs, Atton added, “And, Og?”

“Sup, SC?”

“You might want to brush up on logic when we get back on deck. The fact that there are human immortals living here in Avilon does not mean that they are the same ones Etherians believe in. Maybe the Avilonians fixated on the idea of eternal life
because
of their belief in souls. Then, once they found a way to attain immortality in this existence, they outgrew the need to believe in life after death. Regardless, none of that has any bearing on whether or not there actually is an afterlife.”

“Well maybe it don’t disprove it, SC, but I don’t see why anyone would want to find out whether there’s a life after death if they didn’t have to. Give me the choice between living forever in this life and living forever in some other one that might not even exist, and I’ll take this one thank you very much. Immortals forgive me!” he wailed in mock repentance. “I just got too much to live for down here.”

“Like what?” Gina challenged. “Admiring your collection of holo girls? I might believe you if you had a life, Ogles.”

“Hoi, I don’t make fun of your hobbies.”

“That’s because my hobbies aren’t stupid.”

“All right, that’s enough!” Atton said, eyeing the ETA to the nav point—15 seconds. “We have a mission to perform. I don’t want to hear any more personal comments on this channel.”

“Copy that,” Ogles said.

Click,
Ceyla added.

“We’re coming up on the Avilonian fleet . . . make sure you swivel your holocorders to get a good look as we fly past.”

“I doubt we’ll see anything at this speed,” Guardian Three put in.

“Doesn’t matter. Vidcorders will catch it all the same. Control can always magnify and slow down the footage for analysis.”

“SC . . . my scopes are picking up some—
skrissrssss . . .

Ogles’ reply cut off suddenly, and a bright flash of light blossomed off Atton’s port side, followed by the distant
boom
of a simulated explosion. His head jerked toward the light in time to see the tail end of an explosion. And like that, Ogles was off to settle the debate himself and find out firsthand about all that
existential krak.

“What the frek—” Gina said. She was interrupted by another explosion which blossomed off to starboard, taking Guardian Three this time.

“Evasive action!” Atton yelled, already yanking up on his fight stick. Another explosion boomed right beneath him and his nova rocked violently, his shields hissing with shrapnel.

“Mines!” someone screamed.

“I’ve got nothing on sensors . . .” Ceyla added.

Then a stream of familiar lavender-hued lasers began stuttering by Atton’s cockpit, and the enemy contact siren screeched out a warning as Sythians suddenly appeared all over the grid.

“Skull faces!” Gina roared.

“Frek it,” Atton muttered, his eyes on the grid as hundreds of red enemy blips began appearing all around them.

“There’s a whole fleet of them!” Gina went on.

“I’ve got one on me!” Ceyla screamed over the comms.

“Keep your acceleration up and set shields to double aft,” Atton said. “We’ll pass out of range in a minute. We’re going too fast for them to catch up.”

Click.

Atton kept up a random set of maneuvers to confuse the aim of the pair of Shell Fighters on his own six o’clock. Most of their shots went wide. “Sara,” Atton began, speaking to his AI. “Set comms to the command channel and establish a connection.”

“Connection established . . .” the AI replied a moment later.

The lasers flashing by his cockpit ceased, and a quick look at the grid showed the pursuing enemy fighters had dropped out of range. Even though they had no hope of catching up, they made no move to break off their pursuit. “Control,” Atton began, “this is Guardian Leader. We have encountered a Sythian Fleet and we’ve picked up pursuit from enemy fighters. They’re following us to the planet. Please advise.”

The comm crackled with a reply. “We see them, Guardians. Do not engage. Your orders remain the same. Once you drop below the cloud layer, head for the Zenith Tower, which is marked on your navs, and report on the situation there. We’re sending ground units to that location. As soon as they arrive, you will provide air support and keep them safe.”

“Roger that,” Atton replied, wondering why he hadn’t heard about the
Zenith Tower
earlier. He decided that mission control must be bogged down with all the recent developments. Atton eyed the Avilonian fleet as he flew over top of it. Rolling his Nova to put that fleet ‘above’ rather than ‘below’ him, he set visual auto scaling to 400% in order to watch the Avilonian fleet in greater detail as he streaked by. The first thing he noticed at that level of zoom was that there were no lights shining out from those ships’ viewports.

As he flew by one of the larger cruisers, space erupted with dozens of dazzling points of bright purple light—Sythian Pirakla Missiles. They swarmed out the side of a distant Sythian cruiser and crashed into the Avilonian fleet with explosive force, hitting two different ships at once and cutting ragged black holes in their hulls. The Avilonians didn’t even try to evade, but Atton knew that was because they couldn’t.

Suddenly, his nav screamed out with a collision warning, and Atton noticed the Avilonian cruiser rushing toward him. He pulled up at the last second, roaring out close over the hull of that ship. Then a volley of Pirakla missiles hit right in front of him. Debris burst into his flight path, followed by brief jets of flame which billowed out into space, fed by escaping air from the cruiser. One of those jets engulfed Atton’s Nova and the debris pelted his shields with an angry
hiss
. Then something heavy hit his fighter with a
thunk
and sent him spinning away.

“Shields critical,” the AI warned.

“Frek!” Atton screamed as he battled with his flight stick to get back on his previous heading. “Heads-up, Guardians! Those cruisers are flying apart! Keep your distance.”

“Roger that . . .” Gina said, her voice soft with horror.

“They’re being slaughtered,” Ceyla added.

Dead ahead there were more than a dozen Avilonian ships, all of them taking heavy fire and throwing off molten debris. Sythian warships were swarming them from all sides, firing glittering purple sheets of Pirakla missiles into their listless foe. Atton watched the cruiser to his port side take two full broadsides at once from a pair of passing Sythian battleships. The Avilonian ship was at least twice their size, but with no shields and no weapons to defend itself, it was already full of gaping holes. As Atton looked on, another volley hit that warship, and it cracked into three pieces which began drifting slowly apart. At that, the pair of Sythian warships stopped firing and began turning away, already on the prowl for their next victim.

“I don’t know
what
the Avilonians problem is,” Atton said, “but if they don’t fire back soon, we’re all frekked.”

*   *   *

There was barely room to breathe aboard the
Trinity.
Everywhere Ethan went and everywhere he looked he found Avilonians in their glowing blue-white armor. He had yet to see one of these mysterious people in the flesh, and there was no way for him to tell them apart. The only way he could even tell who was in charge was by the fact that the one who periodically broke his stoic silence to bark out orders wore a shimmering blue cape and had a strange symbol etched into the breastplate of his radiant armor.

Ethan turned to that one now and said, “We’re almost there.”

The mysterious man nodded without speaking, and Ethan turned back to his controls. He shot Alara a sideways glance, which she returned with a wary look. Neither of them felt comfortable with so many strangers on board. Making matters worse, the Avilonians refused to explain what was going on, and apparently they had neither seen nor heard from Atton. Either they were lying about that or Atton had been intercepted en route. Ethan wasn’t sure which scenario would be worse. His brow dropped a dark shadow over his eyes as his thoughts took an even darker turn. How many times could a father lose his son?

He winced and pushed those thoughts from his mind.
Focus.
One crisis at a time.
As for the immediate one, the only thing the Avilonians would say about it was that the leader of their people, someone named Omnius, was in trouble. Somehow this Omnius had disabled all of their ships and weapons in order to protect Avilon against the threat of an armed rebellion.

Ethan didn’t understand why they didn’t just call Omnius up and say—
Hoi, we’re trying to help you; could you reactivate our ships, please?
At least that way they wouldn’t have to use
his
ship. He supposed he should be grateful that he’d found the Avilonians at all, and that they were taking him to Avilon. He
should
be, but he wasn’t. When he’d needed their help, they’d ignored him and refused to even show themselves for four
days
. Then, suddenly, when they
needed
his
help, they were everywhere, and impatient as frek to get what
they
wanted from
him
. He felt used, and more than a little suspicious of the Avilonians traipsing through his ship.

“You will take us straight to the planet when we arrive,” blue cape said.

“Well, I wasn’t planning to take you to the moon—unless of course you want to go to the moon. I live to serve, after all. Does this planet of yours have a moon?”

“Ethan . . .” Alara began, sending him a warning look.

She obviously thought he shouldn’t be adopting a sarcastic tone with them, and she was probably right, but he couldn’t help it.
Dumb freks,
he thought with a glance in blue cape’s direction.

“Reversion in ten,” he said a second before the ship’s computer began an audible countdown. When it reached zero, there came a flash of light as the bright streaks and star lines of SLS were replaced by stars and a mottled green and blue planet. On one side, the planet was illuminated by a red sun. Daylight painted the surface of the world in blue, green, and gray—the colors of water, vegetation, and rock. But that natural appearance on the day side was somehow deceptive, because on the night side the planet was lit up with complex patterns of light. Glowing circles, lines, and squares crisscrossed each other to form intricate patterns of light. Ethan whistled softly. “That is one
big
city!” It had been a long time since he’d seen a world so overrun with people that it shone like a glow lamp in the dark. “Where to now, boss?” Ethan asked, turning to blue cape.

“What do your sensors detect?”

Ethan took a quick look at the grid. He wasn’t sure what he’d expected to find there, but what he actually saw was the last thing he ever would have imagined. “They’re here!” he said, his eyes widening suddenly with the realization.

“Who is here?” blue cape demanded.

Ethan gaped at the grid, unable to believe what he was seeing. “The ISSF.” A quick look at the grid confirmed it—there were over a dozen Nova Fighters out there, and that meant his son likely was, too. No sign of the
Intrepid,
but Ethan supposed it could be cloaked.
They’re here,
he thought, relief flooding through him like a sudden rain in a desert.

“Your people?” blue cape asked.

“My people . . . your people . . .
Sythians!
Frek!” Ethan exclaimed, only now noticing all the other contacts on the grid. “There’s a war raging out there!” Now Ethan hoped Atton wasn’t piloting one of those Novas. The grid was teeming with neutral yellow and red enemy contacts, but only a hint of green, which were ISSF forces. As he watched, a pair of yellow contacts succumbed to enemy fire and winked off the grid.

“It’s not going well for your people. . . .” Ethan assumed the neutral yellow contacts were Avilonian ships, since none of them were firing back.

“Because we are defenseless! Get us to the planet immediately! We must get Omnius to restore control of our defenses in time to stop this sacrilege.”

Under any other circumstances, Ethan might have taken offense to the commanding tone, but he was inclined to agree—if the Avilonians didn’t get their fleet back online soon, there wouldn’t be a fleet left to activate. . . .

And there wouldn’t be an Avilon either.

*   *   *

“They’re decimating the Avilonian fleet, Captain!”

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