The Prisoner of Eldaron: Crimson Worlds Successors II (45 page)

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Authors: Jay Allan

Tags: #Science Fiction & Fantasy, #Science Fiction, #Colonization, #First Contact, #Galactic Empire, #Military, #Space Marine, #Space Opera

BOOK: The Prisoner of Eldaron: Crimson Worlds Successors II
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“Yes, sir,” Allegre replied. “We’ll have Kuragina’s people ready to launch in thirty minutes. With your permission, I will expedite the landing operation. I’d like to ensure we have enough time to build some thrust before we engage the enemy fleet.”

“Very well, Gaston. Handle the op however you feel is best. Just get Kuragina and some reserve supplies down here before you leave orbit.”

“Yes, sir.”

“And, Gaston…”

“Yes, Colonel?”

“Fortune go with you and your people. And remember, you are all Black Eagles.”

 

*  *  *  *  *

 

Albrecht Trax sat still for a moment, smiling. He’d finally gotten the message he’d been expecting. He had held back his forces, waiting for the Eldari army to do its job. He hadn’t looked to them to defeat the Eagles…or even hurt them very badly. But he had hoped a defending force that outnumbered the attackers six to one could at least compel the commitment of the Eagles’ entire strength. But the Eldari were disorganized, and much of their equipment had been destroyed by the preliminary cyber and EMP assaults. In the end, the Eagles had only committed two of their four regiments. And that had tied his own hands.

Trax’s deployment of his tanks had forced the Eagles to land a third regiment, but they still had one in reserve aboard their ships…and the Eldari had been pushed back to the outskirts of their capital. Trax wanted to release his warriors, to sweep out from their hidden bunkers and overwhelm the engaged Eagles. But his orders were clear. Not until all four regiments were on the ground. None of the Black Eagles could escape from this trap.

Now that had finally happened. The last of the Eagle ground forces were on the way down. His info was sketchy…the Eldari scanning network was still disabled, its satellites and dishes destroyed. But he had a few hidden scanners of his own, enough at least to tell him the skies were full of Eagle landers.

He knew immediately it was nothing on Eldaron that had provoked the action. His tanks had been destroyed, and the rest of his forces were still in their hidden bases. And the Eldari were in wholesale retreat, fleeing back to their last line of defense outside the capital. That could mean only one thing. The fleet had arrived.

Eldaron was a trap for the Eagles…everyone knew that, even Darius Cain’s warriors. They hadn’t been fooled, he reminded himself, they had come willingly. Honor had left them no option. Their devotion to their commander had compelled them to brave whatever dangers awaited them. And their confidence fed their belief that, whatever they found on Eldaron, they could defeat it. He suspected they had come expecting a hard and costly fight…but he doubted anyone in the Eagles’ ranks had truly feared defeat. They had been so dominant for so long, he suspected the concept of actually losing a fight had been all but lost to them.

But the trap was more complex than anyone on Eldaron knew…even the Tyrant. For when his people sallied forth to the surface, they would outnumber the Eagles six to one. And unlike the pathetic Eldari levies, his troops were all fully-powered infantry, just like the Eagles. Their equipment was a match for that of Cain’s soldiers...and they were well-trained. He’d read the reports from Lysandria—the scant intelligence that had made it back from that defeat—and he knew the Eagles outmatched his people man for man. But not one for six.

He smiled as he considered the scope of the plan. His army was only part of the great trap the Triumvirate had laid for Darius Cain and his mercenaries. Indeed, there were forces in motion in multiple locations. While the Eagle powered infantry was wiped out on the ground, their fleet would be destroyed in space. And far away, the fortified moon they called home would also be destroyed, their reserves and support forces wiped away. When the fighting was over, there would be nothing left of Cain’s forces. Nothing at all, save legend.

The plan was magnificent, perfect. The final and complete annihilation of the Black Eagles. And the rewards for those who led in this great victory would be enormous. Albrecht Trax would be the man who had directed the destruction of the greatest fighting force in Occupied Space. He would present Darius Cain’s broken body to the Triumvirate himself…and when he did, he would be named supreme military commander of the Conquest…and he would lead the massive forces of the Triumvirate forward to conquer all of Occupied Space.

He turned slowly, staring over his communications officer. “All units are ordered to full alert, Captain,” he said, his voice charged with excitement. “The attack begins in one hour.”

 

Chapter 31

Eta Cassiopeiae VII Outer System

Near the Second Moon of Eos, “The Nest”

Earthdate: 2318 AD (34 Years After the Fall)

 

A battle raged fiercely, vessels thrusting all around the frozen moon the Black Eagles called home. Waves of missiles detonated across the cold, empty battleground, the fury of nuclear fusion creating hundreds of short-lived miniature suns. Most exhausted their energy harmlessly, too far from target vessels to cause serious damage. But a few came close enough, and ships died as their hulls melted, and as radiation fried internal systems and killed crew.

The invading fleet had been a large force, but the Nest’s defenses and Christos Caravalla’s relentless fighter attacks had worn it down. His fighters sliced between the enemy formations again and again, blasting away with their laser cannons. With their plasma torpedoes expended, the fighters were reduced to carrion work, seeking out and destroying already-damaged ships…and they embraced this role with abandon, swinging around behind incoming missile volleys and completing the jobs begun by the heavy warheads.

Caravalla stared at his display, his eyes fixed on the sixteen icons representing his surviving ships. He had launched with forty, but he pushed that thought aside. It wasn’t the moment to mourn those lost. There would be time for that later. Now, there was a battle to fight…and victory still hung in the balance.

When the Columbian fleet entered energy weapons range, the final struggle began in earnest. Jarrod Tyler had long maintained one of the most powerful fleets in Occupied Space, and he had dispatched all of it to the aid of his neighbors. Now his cruisers opened fire with their x-ray laser batteries, the deadly bursts of focused light slicing into their targets, blasting enemy ships into twisted wreckage.

The enemy’s fire was no less deadly, and as the battle continued, Columbian ships began to die. It began with a light frigate, a small vessel positioned on the flank of the formation, but soon there were heavy cruisers in the center bleeding atmosphere and shaking with internal explosions, their own fire lessening as their turrets were knocked out one by one.

Caravalla was a veteran who had seen many battles, and he knew this one would be close. The enemy fleet, as it had first arrived, would almost certainly have overwhelmed the Columbians. But the Nest’s deadly defenses had claimed their price before they were destroyed, and it was a crippled force that stood against Tyler’s navy.

“Okay,” Caravalla said into the com, “form up on me for another run.” His fighters were worn down. The crews were exhausted, their fuel supplies quickly running out. But before Tyler’s people had arrived they’d consigned themselves to death. No matter what losses they suffered now, if even one of them survived, their situation had improved. As long as the battle was won. And to a man, they were determined to do whatever had to be done to make that a reality.

There are thousands of Eagles down there
, he thought,
trapped five klicks underground, and their survival depends on this fight…

Caravalla pushed on the throttle, feeding power to the engine. He felt the pressure building as he increased his acceleration to 3g. He didn’t go any farther, though his ship could handle well over 10g and his crew could survive that as well, at least for a brief period. But his fuel supply couldn’t. When his reaction mass was gone, his fighter was helpless. His reserve batteries could maintain life support for a while, but the battle would be effectively over. And he was determined to stay in this fight until the bitter end.

“Same as last time…follow me to 50,000 kilometers then break and pick your targets.” His eyes focused on the display, on one of the big enemy ships. It was almost dead center in the formation, and that meant he would have to pilot his ship through 100,000 klicks of enemy defensive zone to close. But the target was spewing out air and fluids from a dozen great wounds in its hull…and Caravalla could feel that one good strafing run would finish the giant. He could feel it, the need to kill that ship, the raw energy of a feral predator. These people had attacked his home, killed his fellow Black Eagles. Now it was time to send them to hell.

He stared straight ahead, nudging the throttle to the side, changing his vector to a direct line toward his prey…

 

*  *  *  *  *

 

“The enemy fire is weakening, General Tyler.”

Jarrod Tyler stood on
Lucia’s
flag bridge, gripping the handhold next to his chair and staring at the main display. There wasn’t a hint of emotion evident, not elation, not the slightest discomfort for the thousands his people had just killed.

“The center division is to close and maintain full fire. The flanks are to accelerate and move around the enemy formation.” His voice was cold. “None of them are to escape. Not one. We must send a message to anyone who would dare send warships to Eta Cassiopeiae.”

“Yes, General.” The response was crisp, sharp. The men and women who served Jarrod Tyler knew quite well what their leader expected of them, and for all his coldness and the brutal side of his rule, they loved him and gave him their unfaltering loyalty.

Lucia
shook hard as an enemy laser blast took her amidships. Tyler’s flagship was barely a heavy cruiser by pre-Fall standards, but it was a large and powerful vessel relative to current fleets. The Columbian navy wasn’t the strongest in Occupied Space, but it was in the top tier. Its weapons and equipment were modern, its crews well-trained career military. And it was led by Jarrod Tyler.

Tyler had been the commander of Columbia’s military during the Shadow War, when the planet had been invaded and devastated by the Gavin Stark’s Shadow Legions. He had assumed dictatorial powers during that emergency, in accordance with Columbia’s constitution, and when the crisis had passed, he dutifully surrendered them back to the duly-elected government.

The young Tyler had no interest in governing and no stomach for politics, despite the fact that his wife, Lucia, had been the planet’s president for almost fifteen years. But as the years slipped by, he saw the fickleness of the electorate, the way they finally cast Lucia and her compatriots aside for the empty promises of political rivals. The new government dismantled Columbia’s strong military, and they channeled the funds that had gone to support it into a series of programs designed to increase their hold on power. They ushered in a period of heavy regulation and corruption the likes of which the politically naïve Columbians had never seen. And then the Second Incursion began…and Columbia was invaded yet again, this time by the robot legions of the First Imperium.

The planet, which had once been almost fanatical in its approach to self-defense, was caught utterly unprepared. Tyler came out of retirement, called his veterans back to the colors, and they held the invaders at bay, at enormous cost, until Erik Cain arrived with the Marines. The fighting was desperate, and thousands were killed…including Lucia Collins. Columbia’s castoff president had taken to the battlefields, rifle in hand, and rallied the people everywhere she went. She organized militia battalions, led desperate defenses of towns and cities…and she died in the final battle, holding the line while the Marines landed behind the enemy’s flank.

Jarrod Tyler changed at that moment, his soul freezing in an instant like liquid expelled into deep space. He was devastated by the loss of his wife…and he blamed the people of Columbia. For those they had elected, for their shortsightedness. They were too foolish to make their own decisions, he decided, too unwilling to educate themselves to make wise choices at the polls. They had to be led…controlled. Prevented from allowing their folly to ever again cause such suffering as the planet had endured in the war just concluded.

Tyler was again the hero, the savior of the planet, and the remnants of the army were fanatically loyal to him. Once he’d decided to seize absolute power, the actual coup itself proved almost comically easy. His soldiers were devoted, and after the losses they had suffered, they had their own resentments toward those who had left them so unprepared for the terrible conflict.

The battered population had no will to resist, and Tyler quickly disbanded the entire apparatus of democratic government, installing himself as the absolute and unquestioned ruler, with a small band of military officers as aides. He made no effort to disguise the fact that he was a dictator, established no ineffectual assemblies or congresses, no rigged votes or plebiscites. He ruled with a naked fist, and his justice was swift and merciless.

Yet that justice was, for the most part, just as well. Tyler was an anomaly, a strongman not driven by ego and lust for power. He viewed his position as an obligation, a duty…and while his growing paranoia caused him to look at almost everyone with a certain degree of suspicion, he interfered little in the day to day affairs of his people. The planet quickly recovered its economic prosperity. Corruption, at least in government, virtually ceased to exist. Tyler was a zealot, with no interest in securing personal gain from his position…and those who pursued corrupt paths soon found themselves mounting a scaffold or shot against some dull gray wall in a non-descript cellar.

Columbia’s dictator was popular too, and resistance to his rule was almost non-existent. Some said, quietly and in small groups, that even though they were prosperous and well-protected, the loss of freedom was too high a price to pay. But the vast majority of the population looked at the rapid rebuilding since the war, the economic boom that had continued for over a decade, and they barely thought of the liberty they had once possessed.

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