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Crusade chapter 7 (standard:science fiction, 2006 words) [7/11] show all parts | |||
Author: St George | Added: Mar 11 2003 | Views/Reads: 2580/1864 | Part vote: 0.00 (0 votes) |
chapter 7 | |||
Click here to read the first 75 lines of the story create something not un-akin to a singularity. Alecto's library contains no mention, but I will send this thought to the Admiralty as a possible line of inquiry, if we could create singularities at will, that would be a potent weapon. On a lighter note, earlier today the ‘Sector Seven Hawks' beat the ‘Sector Two Pirates' 16-13 in the final of the unofficial ship-wide low-grav basketball tournament which has been going on recently in one of the empty hangars, with hoops fixed at 25 feet. Under normal circumstances I would have put a stop to an event like this, but due to our situation I decided to turn a blind eye so long as it didn't interfere with the running of the ship, God knows moral needs all the help it can get right now.” The return of Broadsword and Crusader, to friendly space was welcomed by those both on board and at home. Like it or not, the news that the pride of the human fleet had destroyed her second battleship (the fact that she was part of a fleet both times didn't dull the glory) secured both Crusader and her Captain a place in the hearts of a world; this was brought home to Carver during a talk with Captain Adams. They were on the dock station which both had been protecting just a few weeks ago. “Do you know what they're calling you?” she asked Carver. Genuinely surprised that ‘they' were calling him anything Carver answered, “No.” “Richard the Lionheart” “You're joking!” “No, its in today's Express: ‘Return of Richard the Lionheart'.” Carver was aware that he was he was famous, as were all of the first six, but he had always thought of it as trivial pursuit question fame, rather than front-page fame. It seemed that no sooner had Crusader arrived in port that she was leaving again, this time bound for ES-11478, a two planet solar system that was right on the front line and a major staging area. Naval intelligence suggested there was an assault planned for the station (codenamed Heretic) there. Hunter Six became Battle Six; as well as Crusader and Broadsword, the fleet was strengthened by Broadsword's newly launched sister ship SNS Cutlass under Captain Alexis Vablatski. Not part of the fleet, but accompanying it and under its protection, was SNS Tyrant. She had no EP canon and no torpedoes but what she did have made up for it, she was a carrier and fielded 550 fighters and 100 torpedo bombers. Apparently the carrier's agenda was the reason Battle Six was dispatched so quickly: the carrier was needed at Heretic station and the fleet was the only escort available. Despite the necessity for an escort the actual danger was small; the enemy had so far failed to penetrate the border, guarded as it was by the stations, codenamed Heretic, Zealot, Infidel, Evangelist, Missionary, Acolyte, Disciple, Messiah, Prophet, Oracle, Minister, Mullah, Rabbi and Apostle (the Andurils hadn't been idle during peacetime). The stations used hypershifted graviton accelerators to close down hyperspace corridors. The stations were arranged in a giant geodesic sphere surrounding the Anduril home solar system and many of their key worlds and installations. In this way they prevented ships from coming within two light weeks (just under 225 billion miles) in hyperspace without clearance. The vulnerability of the system was the stations themselves: each had a range of sixty percent of the distance to the next station, so if one is destroyed then there is a gap in the wall; it seemed that the enemy was targeting Heretic, so a defensive force was being amassed there. The other problem with the system was that, although it lay between earth and Megaeran space, it did not encompass human territory and this is why all missions involving human spacecraft are staged from within the sphere, to keep the secret of the human home world safe. For the first time Carver found himself in command of a fleet rather than just one ship, not that this made a bigger demand on his time during the first seven days of operation, the time it took to reach Heretic. If Crusader was huge, it was nothing compared to Heretic: the station was titanic, dwarfing the ships docked with it. The reason was that it hadn't been built but excavated, it was a hollowed out asteroid nearly thirty miles from end to end. When viewed with visual sensors it looked as though the asteroid was suffering from some sort of disease the symptoms of which were virulent metallic growths on the surface of the living rock. The reason for its unusual construction was the enormous graviton accelerators necessary to impose real-space at the required range. The station was also a fortress though, equipped with 12 EP canon turrets and innumerable blasters and warhead launchers. It also was home to 768 Xetâl fighters and now, thanks to Tyrant, was strengthened by 550 of the more powerful Super Hurricanes and 100 black Widows. Despite all this, the station was not a starship and could not stand up to a concerted attack; its arms were designed only to allow it to hold out long enough for help to arrive. Evidently the Alliance considered Heretic extremely valuable. As the fleet dropped into real-space, visual and epdar sensors showed the station and surrounding space swarming with starships of every class and description: already docked with the station was the second of the three Sword class cruisers SNS Bayonet (Broadsword and Cutlass being first and third respectively), docked a (relatively) short way away was the mighty Rathporr, the newly returned Anduril flagship, she had just docked for re-supply having completed a cruise similar to the one from which Hunter Six had just returned. Regrettably she was not to be part of the defence force, battleships were too valuable to concentrate in one operation such as this. Wherever she was going after re-supply Carver didn't know, he had no reason to. The defence force was divided into four fleets comprising 15 ships in all. Its size wasn't the only thing which made the station unusual, there was also an anomaly amongst the station personnel; there were over six thousand crew, of which more than four thousand were Tisiphones. Although as a nation they had been destroyed by the Megaerans, some of their people had survived under the protection of the Anduril government. Because they were on average five feet tall they were unable to serve aboard Anduril starships, however because of the space available on the guard stations, corridors and rooms had been made large enough to accommodate them. All of the guard stations were predominantly crewed by Tisiphones and it was sometimes said that the whole race had become obsessed with revenge. They certainly made an impression on the humans who went aboard the stations. Standing five feet tall they looked very delicately built, this was a misconception though. They were almost humanoid with four limbs, but each limb split into two branches about halfway along, each branch split into seven digits, five fingers between two opposable thumbs. They walked on all four limbs except when they were carrying something, and had skin ranging from dark ochre to crimson. Their frail construction was an evolutionary adaptation to their home planet's (by human standards) heavy gravity, this meant that despite their appearance they were remarkably strong in the 0.8 G Anduril environment due to small but numerous and very efficient muscles. Tweet
This is part 7 of a total of 11 parts. | ||
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