The Lost Fleet: Beyond the Frontier: Dreadnaught (25 page)

BOOK: The Lost Fleet: Beyond the Frontier: Dreadnaught
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There weren’t, though after he ended the conference, Jane Geary gave him a long look before her image vanished. He hadn’t expected many questions, not from this fleet. The hard questions would have come if he had chosen not to employ force under these circumstances.
The vast majority of the captains departed in a flurry of disappearing images, both political emissaries going as well, until only Captains Badaya and Duellos remained with Geary and Desjani.
Badaya beamed approval at Geary. “I could tell how little those politicians liked your decision. This operation will help keep the Syndics in line, but it’s also worthwhile as a reminder to them of who’s in charge.”
“Hopefully,” Geary agreed, projecting general agreement with Badaya but keeping his own words as vague as possible. Such political behavior irked him, but given Badaya’s potential as a loose cannon, he had no alternative.
With another broad smile and a wink at Desjani, Badaya saluted and also vanished.
Looking annoyed, Desjani glared at Duellos. “I hope you’re not also going to imply anything.”
“Me? Imply anything?” Duellos raised one eyebrow at Desjani. “I just want to know how you did it.”
She gave him a guiltless look in return. “I had nothing to do with it. The admiral reached the appropriate conclusions on his own.”

Completely
on his own?”
“Yes,” Desjani replied. “Mostly.”
“Mostly?” Duellos nodded and spread his hands. “I’m not thirsty for blood, Admiral, but I do think you reached the right conclusions, mostly completely on your own, about the required course of action.”
“I take advice from all quarters,” Geary replied. “But since I value your experience and judgment, I particularly appreciate your agreement.”
Duellos stood and made a mock bow toward him. “We are wasting time here,” Duellos said. “A distraction and a diversion. Why did the government insist upon it when learning more about the aliens seems a far more urgent priority?”
“If you figure that one out, be sure to let me know.”
Duellos made a move as if to leave, then paused. “How ironic. We spent long months getting home, trying to guess the motivations and thinking of the alien race we suspected existed. Now we’re devoting our time to trying to guess the motivations and thinking of our government. That reminds me, you are going to keep a close eye on the Marines, aren’t you? Those rules of engagement could too easily be interpreted as a license to kill anything that strikes them as hostile.”
“Carabali can be trusted to keep them in line, but I’ll make doubly sure she knows that we need to be able to justify every use of firepower.”
“That’s probably wise, as was your admonition to my fellow commanders.” Duellos seemed to be looking at something distant for a moment. “A lifetime of shooting at anything Syndic is not easily overcome,” he added, his voice shading into sadness.
After Duellos had left, Geary spent a while just looking at the space vacated by Duellos’s image.
A distraction. Yes. And Duellos just pointed out how big a distraction it could be even once we’re done with liberating those prisoners.
“Tanya, make sure I stay focused on the aliens once we’re out of this star system.”
She gave him a puzzled look. “You’re worried about that?”
“I don’t know what’s in that prison, or rather
who’s
in that prison camp, but we can’t afford for me to be dealing with issues from that when I need to be thinking about what’s ahead. If something we find there is a major distraction, help me keep my focus.”
“I wish you’d mentioned that before Roberto Duellos left. Your head is so hard sometimes that I might have to borrow a brick from him.”
 
 
A
number of Syndic satellites once orbiting the planet, satellites that had been part of the command and control for Syndic defenses or held sensors employed by the defense forces, were now dead objects tumbling into catastrophic reentries of the atmosphere. Four orbiting platforms that had held missiles were also gone.
As the fleet itself swung into orbit about Dunai’s primary world, Geary took one more look at Rione, who continued to reveal no sign of what she thought about his course of action. “Still nothing from the Syndic CEO?”
“No. Just a litany of complaints about your ‘unprovoked’ destruction of some of their satellites.”
He called up a comm window to his left. “General Carabali, how’s it look?”
Carabali, her eyes on another part of her own display so that she was looking to one side of Geary, gave him a respectful nod. “It’s a fine day for a nonpermissive personnel extraction operation, Admiral.”
“They’re still prepared to resist?” Geary asked her.
“Ground forces are dispersed in combat formations around the prison camp,” Carabali replied. A window popped up for Geary, zooming down to the area around the main prison camp. “But we haven’t seen any attempt to bring the prisoners out of their barracks and make them human shields. The Syndics have grounded all of their aircraft, but there are numerous artillery and missile assets within range of the prison camp.”
“Do you think they’ll fight?”
“I think, Admiral, that they’re still expecting you to hold back at the last moment. That would explain why they’re not using the prisoners as outright hostages, which could really piss us off. If that’s the case, they may fold when we come in. But they could also have orders to resist to the best of their ability if we actually start sending Marines down.”
Geary pressed one hand against his forehead, thinking. “Madam Emissary, I would appreciate your assessment of what that CEO is thinking right now.”
He wondered for a moment if she would reply, but finally Rione began speaking. “He has staked his authority and judgment on the idea that you would give in. Your refusal to give in and his continued insistence on his chosen course of action have increasingly backed him into a corner. If he now offers no resistance when you strike, it will make him look very weak and very foolish. If he fights, it will make him look foolish in his judgments, but not weak. A leader thought to be foolish might survive, especially if he is seen as willing to fight to the end, but a leader believed to be weak and foolish has the chance of a snowball in hell. That is what I would assume he is thinking.”
Desjani frowned, glanced back toward Rione, then shrugged in an annoyed manner. “I agree,” she whispered to Geary.
“Then I’ve only got one option.” He activated the bombardment command, the clock on the time-to-launch running steadily down toward zero, then tapped approve and confirmed the order. A few minutes later the countdown spiraled to zero, and warships began spitting out kinetic bombardment rounds.
The barrage came down through the planet’s atmosphere like a fall of deadly hail, each solid piece of metal dropping at tremendous speed, gaining energy as it plummeted to the surface, until at impact, that energy was released in a burst of destruction. The people on Dunai could see the rounds coming, could determine their targets pretty closely, but had no means of stopping the projectiles and, with the fleet’s warships in high orbit, had only minutes in which to react. Personnel could be seen fleeing targeted facilities and fortifications in vehicles and on foot. Other vehicles with the military units near the prison camp frantically tried to scoot out of danger.
The bombardment had been timed for every round to hit home as close to simultaneously as possible in order to enhance the psychological impact of the blows. There wasn’t any need to enhance the physical impact as the kinetic projectiles struck their targets. Weapon sites became craters, buildings holding sensors or command and control facilities were blown apart, and roads and bridges disappeared where the rounds hit. In a wide area along the path down which the shuttles would bring the Alliance Marines, and in an extended perimeter outside the prison camp itself, organized planetary defenses ceased to exist within less than a minute.
“Launch the recovery force,” Geary ordered.
Shuttles dropped from all four assault transports and from several battleships and battle cruisers as well. Carabali had decided on overwhelming force within the prison camp, and Geary hadn’t hesitated to approve that choice, memories of the fight on Heradao still far too vivid.
As the Alliance shuttles penetrated the atmosphere and dove for the prison camp, Geary noticed that Desjani was watching them with a bleak expression. “Are you all right?”
“Just remembering.” She said nothing else, and he left it at that, knowing that Desjani was not yet ready, perhaps never would be ready, to share some of the memories that haunted her.
The Syndic defenses seemed to be in total confusion as a result of the bombardment. Aside from disrupted ground forces milling about outside the prison camp, nothing else had gone active. “Twenty-five minutes to first shuttle landings,” Carabali reported to Geary. She was on one of those shuttles but would be among the last to land. “No resistance noted.”
“We have missile launches from the surface,” the combat systems watch announced at the same time alerts blared on Geary’s display. “Medium-range ballistic missiles from an installation to the northwest of the camp, and low-level cruise missiles from some place to the east.”
It took three taps of commands to get recommendations from the combat systems. “
Fearless
,
Resolution
, and
Redoubtable
, make sure those ballistic missiles are stopped.
Leviathan
and
Dragon
, eliminate the launch site with kinetic bombardment.”
But the cruise missiles were another matter. Their flight path was taking them at low altitude over a sprawling metropolis with extended suburbs. Hitting them from high up without also striking the civilians below would not be easy. “
Colossus
and
Encroach
, destroy the cruise missile launch sites now but wait to engage the cruise missiles until they clear those suburbs, then take them out.”
“Those suburbs come close to the prison camp,” Desjani pointed out. “You didn’t give them much of a window for engaging those cruise missiles.”
“We can’t just punch hell lances through civilian dwellings.”
“They’re forcing you to make that choice!” Desjani insisted, as hell lances from
Fearless
,
Resolution
, and
Redoubtable
tore apart the ballistic missiles at the peak of their trajectories, and the rocks from
Leviathan
and
Dragon
headed downward for the place that had launched the missiles. It might be a case of slamming the barn door after the horses escaped, but that particular barn wouldn’t be letting any more horses go after it was turned into a field of craters.
“I know, but—” Geary broke off speaking as something caught his eye on the display. “What’s
Dreadnaught
doing?” The battleship was veering downward, leaving high orbit to skim the upper reaches of atmosphere. He hit the comm control viciously. “
Dreadnaught
. What are you doing?”
Jane Geary seemed preoccupied as she answered, her attention focused to one side. “
Dreadnaught
is engaging threats against the landing force and the prisoners, Admiral.”
The only threats
Dreadnaught
was moving to engage were the cruise missiles. “
Colossus
and
Encroach
are assigned those targets,
Dreadnaught
. Return to station now.”
“If we missed hitting any planet-based particle beams,
Dreadnaught
could get speared by one in that low an orbit,” Desjani said.
“I know!”
Dreadnaught
hadn’t altered her vector. “Captain Geary, get back into higher orbit and return your ship to her assigned station
now
.”
Jane Geary’s expression didn’t alter, intense concentration visible there, and she didn’t answer immediately.

Dreadnaught
is firing hell lances,” the combat systems watch reported.
There were ten cruise missiles.
Dreadnaught
fired ten hell-lance shots. Geary, his display cranked to high magnification, watched as each particle beam ripped through a cruise missile as the missile crossed open areas like streets or narrow strips of woodland.
“Targets destroyed,” Jane Geary reported. “No collateral damage.
Dreadnaught
is returning to station.”
“Very well.” That was all he trusted himself to say as Jane Geary’s image vanished.
Desjani cleared her throat. “You’ll have to decide whether to give her a medal or relieve her of command.”
“Tanya, damn it to hell, I don’t need—”
“And in this fleet,” she continued, “you know which action will be regarded as justified.”
“She went against my explicit orders—”
“She got the job done.” Desjani gestured toward the planet. “And she did it aggressively and with style. Think before you act on this one. Sir.”
He took a deep breath, then nodded. “All right.”
What the hell is Jane thinking? She’s thinking that she’s Black Jack, that she has to be him. And, dammit, she did a good job just like Tanya said. But what will happen next time she disregards orders to demonstrate her status as a “real” Geary? Maybe disaster, like the sort of brainless courage that cost us
Paladin
at Lakota. But I have to deal with that later. Focus. I’ve got Marines about to land. Is anyone else acting up?

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