Read Democracy 1: Democracy's Right Online
Authors: Christopher Nuttall
“They’re saying that the drive is clearly unstable and suggest that we abandon ship,” Carola said. They shared another grin. Under Imperial Law, an abandoned ship could be declared salvage and end up the property of whoever recovered it. The Imperial Navy wouldn't want the bulk freighter, yet a
real
freighter crew would have had to pay massive bribes just to recover their ship. The big Family-owned shipping lines saw to that. “They’re even offering to send a shuttle to take us off the ship.”
“And their time is up,” Markus said. He keyed a final set of commands into the main computer. “Jump in three...two...one...
jump
!”
Admiral Walker’s idea, Markus had considered, was so simple that he'd wondered why no one had ever thought of it before. Or, perhaps, someone
had
thought of it and decided that it was far too risky to attempt even under strictly controlled conditions. When a starship flickered out, it created a twist in the fabric of time and space, a twist that could be extremely dangerous to anything nearby. Indeed, gunboat pilots were known for waiting around until a missile got close enough to be caught in the effect and flickering out, detonating the missile as they vanished. Flickering out from
inside
a mothership would cause horrific damage to the mothership, to the point where the Imperial Navy hard-coded safety systems to prevent anyone from being stupid enough to try it.
The bulk freighter, however, was expendable. Admiral Walker’s crew of Geeks had cut out almost the entire cargo bay section and replaced it with a single bay, with the gunboat positioned in the exact centre. If the freighter survived, it could be recovered and repaired; if not, it was, after all, expendable. When Markus hit the final switch, his gunboat flickered out, the signature of its disappearance being masked by the destabilising freighter drive. It might have been impossible to send a message at FTL speeds, but Admiral Walker’s tactic would allow the rebels some improved coordination – if it worked.
Markus swore as the entire gunboat shuddered so hard that he feared it would come apart. One of the dangers of the tactic had been that parts of the freighter would be sucked into the twist with them and wind up slamming against the gunboat’s hull. A second danger, a far more likely one, was that the mass of the freighter would randomly affect the jump, sending them to the wrong location or burning out the drives. Markus had used five years of experience to program the jump, along with the most sophisticated computers the Empire could produce, and even he was nervous. He would never have admitted it, of course.
“Success,” Carola proclaimed. The gunboat was tumbling wildly – the artificial gravity seemed to be fading away, suggesting that there was more damage they couldn't detect – but they were alive. “We are in the right location.”
Markus laughed as the display lit up with IFF signals. Admiral Walker’s fleet was waiting for them. “Start uploading the data,” he ordered. He checked the damage-control system, which was covered in red lights. “And then tell them that we need a pick-up.”
***
Fox blinked in surprise as the entire freighter started to disintegrate. His first response was irritation – the freighter’s spokeswoman had sounded attractive and desperate – but as he studied the sensors, he found himself puzzled. There seemed to be no valid reason for the starship to disintegrate. It wasn't unknown for a very badly tuned flicker drive to start weakening the vessel’s structure, but any freighter crew worth their salt would have known to watch for and avoid that. It looked almost as if they had tried to flicker out, only to have the drive fail spectacularly.
“Get the shuttle out there,” he ordered. His crew had, at least, responded quickly, even though they’d grumbled a great deal. He couldn't really blame them. Savaging a bulk freighter – its manifest had stated that it was carrying farming tools, rather than anything interesting – wasn’t an easy task, even if the freighter was intact. As it was, it looked as if a single misjudgement could cause a disaster. “I want...”
He broke off as new red icons spangled into existence on the display. “Holy shit!”
Chapter Fourteen
“Jump completed, sir,” the helmsman reported.
“Enemy tactical sensors are scanning us,” the tactical officer added. “I think they can't believe their eyes.”
Colin smiled. He knew how
he
would have reacted if he’d been in command of the base and had suddenly seen nine superdreadnaughts and over a hundred smaller ships bearing down on him. It was possible that the Imperial Navy crewmen would believe that they were legitimate starships on a legitimate mission, but he’d decided not to try to use the fake IFF signals. The Geeks swore blind that Colin’s fleet would be able to pretend to be either of Percival’s remaining superdreadnaught squadrons, yet Colin wanted to hide that capability until they hit a far harder target than Garstang.
The planet grew in the main display as his fleet headed towards the network of orbital weapons platforms surrounding the penal world. It didn't look
healthy
, not to Colin’s eyes, a sign of a world at war with itself. Unlike most marginally-habitable worlds, Garstang’s native ecology had proven itself able to fight the infusion of Earth-native plants and animals, creating a nightmarish environment for the unwilling colonists. Eventually, it would settle down into a balanced position – the terraforming crews had been certain of that – but for the moment it made an ideal penal world. Colin couldn't keep his eyes off it. If his rebellion failed, most of his crew would be sentenced to a penal world, although he himself would be publically executed. The Empire would never show mercy to his men.
“They’re hailing us,” the communications officer said. “They’re asking what we’re doing here.”
Colin’s lips twitched. Admiral Percival clearly hadn't warned the penal colony that nine superdreadnaughts had fallen into enemy hands, or that they might be raided by rebel forces. The Imperial Navy crew on the platforms had to know that something was wrong – the fleet bearing down on them included some very non-standard starships – yet they might not realise just how badly they were screwed. His lips tightened into a humourless smile. A single salvo of missiles from his fleet would utterly destroy the planet’s defences and allow him to recover as many of the prisoners as he could without any fear of being interrupted.
Provided, of course, that we can find that picket ship
, he thought, sourly. The superdreadnaught’s massive arrays of tactical sensors were probing space – there was no point in trying to hide – but they hadn't located the picket ship. Colin wasn't too surprised. As long as the crew was careful, they could just keep their heads down, power up their own flicker drive and jump out. The thought was bleakly amusing. Where could they go to get reinforcements capable of taking on nine superdreadnaughts? There was only one place they could go – Camelot - and that was several days away.
“Open a channel,” he ordered. “This is Admiral Walker of the Shadow Fleet.”
He smiled, knowing how the enemy crewmen would be reacting. The Shadow Fleet was a legend, even though Colin suspected that the Popular Front – or whatever they ended up calling themselves – wouldn't want to keep the name. Still...he could use it for the moment and, with any luck, it would serve to confuse the enemy.
“You are ordered to surrender at once,” he continued. “If you comply with all of our orders, you will not be harmed. Deactivate the planetary defence grid. Do not attempt to purge your computers or activate any destruct systems. You have one minute from this message to comply.”
He leaned back in his command chair and waited for the seconds to tick away. Purging a starship’s computers would make it hard to use the ship, at least until the computers could be rebooted and reprogrammed, but it was hardly fatal. The computers on the orbital platform, on the other hand, were vitally important. They contained the records of who had been sent to where on the planet’s surface. It didn't take much imagination to realise that searching an entire planet – a planet with no technology that could be detected from orbit – was not going to be an easy task. Colin knew that it would take years to accomplish and there was no way he could keep his fleet in one place that long. It would be easier to contact Percival and offer to surrender.
“Target the automated platforms,” he ordered. There were thirty seconds before they deadline ran out. “Prepare to fire.”
***
“I’m seeing things,” Lieutenant Adam burbled. He stank of alcohol and sparkle dust. It wasn't forbidd
en when off duty – and forbidding it wouldn't have been very effective in any case – but Fox felt a twinge of disgust. “They’re a figment of my imagination.”
“You have no imagination,” Fox snarled at him. He’d wondered if his sensors had been having flights of fancy when the superdreadnaughts arrived, but every sensor told the same story. The wreckage of the bulk freighter had been forgotten as the superdreadnaughts ploughed their way towards his station. Their blocky ugly image – the very picture of a blunt instrument – was now displayed on all of his consoles. Their tactical scans were so powerful that they were threatening to blind some of his more sensitive sensors. “Inject yourself with a cleanser and then take the tactical console.”
He ignored Adam’s fumbling in the compartment’s medical dispenser as he stared at the superdreadnaughts, his mind racing. What was he to do? A tactical genius like Admiral Joshua Wachter could not have pulled a victory from the jaws of defeat, not with nine superdreadnaughts bearing down on him. The defences hadn't been designed to stand up to anything heavier than an assault cruiser. If he surrendered, the Empire would not be happy with him and he might find himself the latest convict on the planet’s surface; if he fought, the results would be certain death. It didn't take a simulation to tell him that any fighting could only have one result.
“Answer them,” Adam said. Fox looked up with a snap. The seconds had been ticking away while he’d been frozen by his own thoughts. “Tell them that we surrender!”
The naked panic in his voice disgusted Fox, yet he understood; to his shame, there was nothing else they could do, but surrender. Adam might have been a coward – it was why he had been sent to the penal world’s orbiting station in the first place – yet he was right. Fox might have fought if there had been a hope of victory, but that hope was simply non-existent. A single superdreadnaught would have rolled over his station – probably without even having its paint scratched – and then liberated the prisoners anyway. Nine superdreadnaughts would just do it quicker.
He keyed the console. “This is Commander Fox,” he said, calmly. As long as they were talking, there was still a chance that he could game the outcome. “If we surrender, what guarantees do you offer for my men and me?”
There was hardly any pause before the reply, a sign of just how close the superdreadnaughts were to his station. “We will guarantee that they and you will remain alive,” the voice said. It was as cold and harsh as the winters on an icy world, one far from a warm star. “We make no other promises. Surrender now or die. There will be no further discussions.”
Fox bowed his head. At least they would live...if the speaker chose to keep his word. It was tempting to believe that he wouldn't, but he knew that if they fought, they died. There really was no other choice.
“Deactivate the defence grid,” he ordered Adam, who was already standing by the tactical console. He flicked a switch and linked back into the communications system. “We surrender; I say again, we surrender. The defence grid is deactivated.”
“Good,” the voice said. “Armed Marines are on their way. I strongly advise you to comply with their orders and do nothing to
irritate
them.”
“I understand,” Fox said, caught between fear and puzzlement. Armed
Marines
? Who
were
these people? They couldn't be the Shadow Fleet. Even at its height, the Shadow Fleet of legend had never included superdreadnaughts, or the Empire would have taken it a great deal more seriously. The only thing he could think of was that it might be a security test, yet why would they bother? It made no sense to him at all. “We will comply.”
He switched the channel again, connecting him to the other stations on his platform. “We are going to be boarded,” he said, flatly. “You are ordered to comply with their
requests
” – he didn't want to say
orders
– “as far as possible. They have promised that they will leave us alive as long as we cooperate. That is all.”
Fox sat down in his command chair and waited to see what would happen. On the display, the defence grid had gone completely off-line, but the newcomers weren’t taking any chances. They were keeping their shields up and their weapons ready to deal out death to anyone who interfered with them, while shuttles were being launched towards the station, following an evasive pattern that looked vaguely familiar. The speaker had talked about Marines, he recalled, and the shuttle pilots were flying Marine-standard flight patterns...
He just didn't know what to make of it. Who
were
these people?
***
“Ugly station,” Colonel Neil Frandsen muttered, as his shuttle flew right towards the orbital platform. The Empire hadn’t bothered to invest much love in the design; it was a boxy platform, covered with airlocks and launching tubes for transport pods. It even
looked
old, as if the workers couldn't be bothered painting it properly before completing the assembly and releasing it into orbit. But then, hardly anyone was expected to see it. No one cared about the opinions of the convicts, the Imperial Navy personnel on duty would be the dregs of the system and the rest of the Empire wouldn't be permitted in the system. “Take us right towards the VIP entrance.”
The pilot chuckled as the shuttle levelled out and arrowed towards an airlock near the top of the boxy platform. Neil watched, unconcerned, as they passed deactivated weapons stations, each one only requiring the touch of a button to bring it to life again. The station's crew could kill thirty Marines, if they opened fire, but then the fleet outside would reduce the station to flaming debris, all of which would fall into the planet’s atmosphere and probably set off another environmental change.
He keyed his suit’s radio. “Commander Fox, you will assemble your command crew in the main compartment,” he ordered. “Any officer or crewman found out of place will be unceremoniously shot.”
“We understand,” Fox’s voice said. Neil’s expression twisted with disgust at the whining sound. Fox sounded very much as if he would like to fight, yet didn't quite dare to open fire – or, for that matter, to purge the computers and trigger the self-destruct. “We will comply.”
A dull thump echoed through the shuttle as the pilot brought her in to dock with the airlock. Neil checked the computers and was relieved to discover that Marine-grade incursion software was capable of inserting itself into the station’s computers and subverting them. It was a pity that such systems couldn't be used without a physical link into the computers, but the Empire – paranoid about the Geeks and Nerds – had constructed the systems to avoid such intrusions. It wouldn't have mattered. If worst came to worst, Neil and his men could have burned right through the station’s hull and vented it into space, while they were secure in their armoured suits.
The airlock hissed open and Neil marched right in, ignoring the half-hearted protests from two of the younger Marines. Admiral Walker might be too important to risk, Neil knew, but the day a Marine became too important to risk was the day that he needed to resign. His own actions after his relief, he understood now, had been more about getting himself killed than about doing anything constructive. The Marines had understood. Few others would have been that understanding, or sympathetic.
He glanced from side to side as he moved through the corridor and into the control section. It was smaller than he had expected, but then, the Imperial Navy hadn't bothered to spend large sums on a penal planet station. There were more important places to spend money on, such as senior officers’ quarters or luxuries for the Thousand Families. Commander Fox looked exactly as Neil had pictured him, a young man with an old face. His record suggested neither competence nor political connections.
“Secure them,” he ordered. He grasped Fox’s hands himself, pulling them behind the man’s back and wrapping a pair of memory cuffs around them. The metal flowed into place; comfortable, but unbreakable. He waited until the remaining twelve crewmen were subdued before continuing. “Commander Fox; why are there other people on your station, not within this compartment?”