Read What Distant Deeps Online

Authors: David Drake

Tags: #Science Fiction - Adventure, #Science Fiction - Space Opera, #Fiction - Science Fiction, #American Science Fiction And Fantasy, #Space warfare, #Science Fiction & Fantasy, #Leary; Daniel (Fictitious character), #Space Opera, #Fiction, #Science Fiction, #Science Fiction - General, #Adventure, #Mundy; Adele (Fictitious character), #General

What Distant Deeps (41 page)

BOOK: What Distant Deeps
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“Chief Woetjans was wounded,” Cory said. “You saw that, right? Belachik killed and the chief got maybe a dozen holes in her legs. Her suit sealed the punctures and they must’ve all been little, but she’s not going to be jumping around. There needs to be an officer out there and it should’ve been me!”

Woetjans was wounded? Yes, of course: the arms of her suit have blue chevrons.

“Shouldn’t—” Adele said before she caught herself. “Oh, I’m sorry, yes.”

Of course Woetjans should have been brought inside and hooked to the Medicomp immediately: rigging suits were self-sealing, but human bodies were not. The bosun might very well be bleeding to death right now.

But there was no chance that Woetjans would leave her post of duty so long as she was conscious. Only if she fainted would it be possible to deal with her injuries—assuming she didn’t simply drift off into the Matrix, unnoticed until her body was lost forever.

“Six would’ve sent me,” Cory said bitterly. “You know that. But Six gave maneuver control to Vesey, and she sent Rene out instead of me.”

Adele didn’t know that Daniel would have sent Cory instead of Cazelet, and she had even less notion of why Cory thought that Vesey would keep him in a place of safety and instead send her close friend—

Adele grimaced. Give a thing its right name.

Send her lover, Rene Cazelet, into a place of obvious danger. But Cory did believe both those things, and he was wretched because he wasn’t being allowed to risk his life on the hull.

She smiled faintly, because she’d long since learned that human behavior didn’t make any sense at all. “Well, Lieutenant,” she said. “Given what we’re about to do, there’s an excellent chance that you won’t survive Midshipman Cazelet by even a fraction of a second. Think positively, my good man.”

“Extracting!” Vesey warned. The Princess Cecile began sliding into normal space—and into the midst of her enemies.


Daniel’s system was so charged with adrenaline that the confusion of extracting from the Matrix didn’t bother him—except that he had to pause for a moment while the right and left halves of his body realigned. When they locked together, he was able to view the Palmyrene vessels and to adjust the attack plan based on the locations he’d predicted for them.

There hadn’t been a great deal of difference, but a tiny error multiplied by 89,000 miles would mean the Princess Cecile’s two missiles—a pitiful salvo to begin with—wouldn’t come anywhere close to the target. In all likelihood, no amount of tweaking the missile courses would bring them close at this range. The Turgut would be deep in Zenobia’s atmosphere by the time they arrived, so the missiles’ High Drive motors would be devouring themselves.

“Missiles, you are clear to launch!” Daniel said. Not so very long ago, he would have taken over the attack himself. That he didn’t do so now was partly maturity and the realization that other people really might be as good as he was, especially if they’d had longer to plan.

Besides that, Daniel had a great deal on his plate as captain of an RCN ship going into action as the junior member of a Fleet squadron. He was nearly as concerned about what the Alliance vessels were going to do as he was about the Palmyrenes.

“Launching two!” Chazanoff said. The whang! of steam driving out a five-ton missile truncated his final syllable. The second whang! came a minimal two seconds later, so close that there was a risk that the hull’s whipping might bind the later missile in its tube.

Reloads began rumbling along the rollerways carrying them from the missile magazines to the launch tubes. Daniel had given strict orders that Chazanoff not start the reloads moving until the initial salvo was out of its tubes. That delayed the second salvo considerably, but it avoided the ratfuck which was certain if one or more missiles didn’t launch and several reloads were already in motion.

Besides, this was a hit-and-run attack. The Princess Cecile wasn’t making a sustained effort involving multiple launches.

The target was Daniel’s first priority, but the Horde’s defensive response was a close second. He had extracted the Princess Cecile not only beyond the effective range of the cruiser’s plasma cannon but with the bulk of the planet between them. Even at 93,000 miles—the distance between the Piri Reis and the Sissie—a 15-cm bolt could charge the corvette’s hull sufficiently to prevent her from reentering the Matrix. If that happened, the cutters would have as long as they needed to chew the Sissie apart.

It was unlikely that the Palmyrenes had enough big-ship experience to attempt such a move: they were used to dealing in free-flight rockets, not plasma cannon. But underestimating your enemy’s skill was about as good a way to get killed in battle as Daniel could think of.

Because the cutters were grouped closely on the Piri Reis, the Sissie had a comfortable margin of separation from them as well. The closest was at 33,000 miles, too far to be dangerous or for the corvette’s 4-inch guns to do any dam—

Whang. Whang. Whang. Whang.

“Gunners, cease fire!” Daniel shouted. “Acknowledge my orders, you bloody fools, over!”

They’re wasting ammunition—which didn’t matter—and burning out their barrels—which did. Had watching the Z 46’s trigger-happy gunner caused Sun and Rocker to lose the fire discipline he’d spent years trying to teach them?

“Sorry, Six,” Sun said, glancing sideways toward the command console. He looked and sounded contrite. “Won’t happen—”

Bloody hell! A dimensional anomaly began to form so close ahead of the Princess Cecile that Daniel thought he could hit it with a shotgun if he’d been standing on the hull.

“Target, target, target!” Rocker shouted, but his ventral turret didn’t have an angle on the cutter, if it was a cutter and not one of the Alliance destroyers extracting in just about the worst place possi—

It was a Palmyrene cutter, congealing into empty space like a poisonous insect. Its rocket pod was already aligned with the Princess Cecile. Its salvo would rake—

Whang!

The cutter disintegrated. It was a perfect shot, so centered that the four antennas flew out from the gas cloud in precise symmetry. Perhaps to prove that he wasn’t an out-of-control wacko, Sun didn’t spend the usual—but here unnecessary—second round on the target.

“Cease fire!” Daniel ordered. “Ship, prepare to insert presently, over.”

He pressed the Execute button, leaving his right index and middle fingers in place. The Sissie would transition as soon as the bath of ions which sprayed from her own gun muzzles had dissipated sufficiently. That wouldn’t be as soon as Daniel wanted, but almost nothing happened as soon as he wanted it to.

He grinned despite the present situation. Almost nothing. He’d met a few girls who were nearly as eager as he was.

Daniel had hoped the Alliance destroyers would extract at the same moment as the Princess Cecile, splitting the Palmyrenes’ attention and defensive efforts. He hadn’t expected that to happen, of course. Synchronized maneuvers in the Matrix were difficult, and it would have taken incredibly good luck for three ships which hadn’t operated together before to launch an unplanned attack with perfect precision.

The Princess Cecile hadn’t been unlucky during this engagement—the fact that she’d survived proved that. But neither had things worked out quite that well.

The Alliance destroyers extracted within seconds of one another, however, though they were widely separated in space. The Z 42 appeared 38,000 miles from Zenobia and over 50,000 miles from the Palmyrene cruiser. She had four missile tubes. She launched a missile from each pair simultaneously, then launched the two remaining missiles after a textbook five-second interval.

Pursued by rockets fired from hopelessly too far out, the destroyer faded back into the Matrix. She was able to make the immediate transition because she hadn’t used her plasma cannon, even though several cutters had been within the effective range of the 13-cm weapons.

Von Gleuck brought his Z 46 in close—within a hundred miles of the Turgut and as a result close above Zenobia, deeper into the atmosphere than Daniel thought it was safe to extract. Mind, sometimes you have to do things that aren’t safe, but this struck him as being pointlessly risky.

To protect the planet, Force Posy had to survive. Scarring the throats of your High Drive motors could lead to very bad results when battle required full power.

The Palmyrene destroyer didn’t launch when its sensors registered the disruption of a ship extracting from the Matrix. That made sense when Daniel thought about it: the Palmyrene captain would expect the anomaly to be a friendly cutter, not an Alliance destroyer.

Even so, the Turgut’s guns shouldn’t have remained locked in landing position. The buffeting a ship endured on entering an atmosphere from orbit stressed everything which projected from the hull. The Palmyrenes should nonetheless have trained on the anomaly and accepted the strain on their turret mechanisms and elevation screws, just in case it was hostile.

The Z 46 rippled her four missiles with little more than a heartbeat separating one from the next. The third missile came out tumbling and didn’t ignite. Daniel suspected that the destroyer’s hull had twisted during ejection so that the mouth of the launch tube had nipped the High Drive motors.

More haste, less speed

.

.

.

but Daniel understood better than most the balancing act that any combat maneuver entailed. Von Gleuck had made a series of reasoned decisions which were different from those Daniel Leary had made, but that didn’t mean either captain was wrong.

Four cutters had been keeping close company with the Turgut. One Palmyrene, then two more, fired their rockets as the Z 46 was launching her missiles.

The last image Daniel saw before the Princess Cecile finally inserted into the Matrix was the destroyer’s rigging flying apart. Warheads were bursting into puffs of filthy smoke, shot through with orange fangs.


CHAPTER 24

Zenobia System

Adele could see clearly again, though her eyes continued to switch between purple and orange as a result of the Sissie’s insertion. That would pass, she was sure. More worrisome was the realization that she faced a gap in coverage.

“Master Cory!” she said.

She should have called him Lieutenant Cory or perhaps Six-One, but neither of those naval titles felt proper to her. Simply saying “Cory” would have been adequate to cue a two-way link and wouldn’t have bothered Cory himself, but it seemed to Adele to be discourteous. She was punctilious about her honor and would not hesitate to kill someone who treated her with disrespect. It therefore behooved her to be polite to others.

“Mistress?” said Cory, speaking to her image on the astrogation display. He’d begun doing that recently, just as Adele always had.

“When we return to normal space,” Adele said, “we’ll be one light-minute from where we inserted, won’t we?”

“Yes, mistress,” said Cory. He didn’t ask why she wanted to know or even imply a question in his tone. “We’ll be at Rally Point Three, according to the Course Pack.”

“But the time elapsed in the Matrix will be longer than a minute, won’t it?” she said. “That means that we won’t actually be able to see what happened immediately after we inserted. Unless we go farther out later and pick it up then

.

.

.”

As Adele spoke, she considered trying again to access the video log of the Piri Reis. It hadn’t been working when she tried to enter it before, but perhaps the cruiser’s technicians had repaired the problem by now.

And perhaps pigs will fly.

It infuriated Adele when she was balked because other people were incompetent. If the Palmyrenes had demonstrated foolproof security, she would have been rather pleased: it would have given her a goal to strive for, possibly unattainable but worthy of her effort nonetheless.

Instead the Palmyrenes, the wogs, were unable to perform basic maintenance. She couldn’t read their records because they weren’t capable of keeping records!

“Oh, I’ll—” Cory said. Then he licked his lips and resumed in a careful tone, “That is, if you’ll let me take control of your console for a moment, mistress, I can set it up. We’ll be in transit a calculated three minutes, seventeen seconds, but I think it may be longer by as much as a minute because of the damage our rig took before we inserted.”

He wants to take control of my console! Adele thought. She felt her muscles tense; her right hand closed on the second wand to free her left hand to reach for her pocket.

Then, very deliberately, she said, “Yes, all right, Cory. That appears to be the most practical method.”

She smiled with a touch of wry humor. Intellect didn’t prevent you from being afraid or even paranoid to the edge of psychosis. But intellect permitted you to act as though you were not afraid

.

.

.

and it might even permit a borderline psychotic to counterfeit sanity, much as Tovera had learned to act as though she had a conscience.

Adele deliberately disconnected her wands, though she continued to hold them. Cory, using the virtual touch pad he favored, set up a series of links among functions on the signals console.

As he worked, he said, “We won’t have the actual visuals, mistress, but if we take imagery of the two and a half minutes we were engaging the enemy, and we then couple that to

.

.

.”

Cory punched Execute. He wasn’t smiling—he didn’t smile any more often than Adele herself did, she suddenly realized—but his face had a look of earnest satisfaction. He’d always been an earnest youth, even when she’d first met him and learned that he could be expected to bungle even the most basic computations.

“To what we see as soon as we extract again,” Cory went on, entering a new set of parameters. “That gives us both ends of each course, you see. For as short a gap as we’ll have, say three minutes and a half at worst, well, there’s probably only one way they can get from before to after. And the computer will calculate it, you see?”

BOOK: What Distant Deeps
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