Amethyst

11


Between the Jupiter Line and the Belt.


“It’s definitely hotter in here.” Able Spaceman Bill Carver rotated his spoon in the tasteless soup positioned in front of him. “You’ve noticed?”
“I’ve noticed.” His fellow crew member Simon Price agreed. “It’s supposed to be twenty degrees, twenty two some days. For the last week it’s been twenty seven and rising.”
“Like a summer day.” Carver grumbled. “Except with stale air.”
“Purifiers are running at forty percent to preserve the filters.” Price recalled. “The Chief is trying to make them last so we don’t all suffocate before getting home.”
“Asphyxiate.”
“Whatever.”
“Point is Simon, things have been getting worse. You know why the temperature is going up?”
“Something to do with the holes shot in us?”
“In part.” Carver accepted. “But we’ve also got too many people on board.”
“Oh, this again.”
“We shouldn’t have stopped to pick up those Yanks. They’re going to break the life support system.”
“Come on Bill…”
“No, I’m right on this.” Carver raised his voice. “It was a dumb thing to do!”

The two men were alone in the Galley, the rows of tables deserted as most of the off duty crew caught some sleep. Keeping the Amethyst running ad become a rather intensive job thanks to the damage she had taken in her brief but painful duel with the Chinese Navy. With several automated systems off line her crew had to perform a number of tasks manually, from wiring checks to turbine purges. It took a great deal of work to keep such high performance machinery working, and if nothing else it had given the crew a greater appreciation for the designers who build in so many labour saving devices.
“If we’d have turned away they’d be dead.” Simon exhaled.
“So what?”
“So that’s a bad thing Bill.”
“Come on, not like they’re not bringing it on themselves.”
“Who brings getting murdered while they drift in a space suit down on themselves Bill? How did you work that one out?”
“The Yanks and the Reds have been building up to each other forever, at least the last twenty years, hell more like the last hundred and twenty. They won’t be happy until they fight, everyone knows it.”
“There are rules.”
“Like anybody except us cares!” Carver spat. “Maybe the Oceanics, but do you think the Yanks or Reds are going to be waving white flags if it gets too much? Did the Russkies play fair in the Central war? Or the Indians when they went for Pakistan? Or the African Rebirth? No, they went in there and fucked everyone over.”

“Most of those wars were a long time ago.” Simon pointed out.
“Yeah, but the guys who fought them are now running half the world.” Bill countered. “Half the US cabinet fought in Mexico and I bet they’re still pissed they lost.”
“More of a draw.”
Bill snorted. “How is failing miserably a draw? They backed one side in the Mexican civil war, the Latin powers backed the other side, and it was their side that won.”
“Mexico joined the Latin League instead of the United States.” Simon recalled. “Which everyone predicted anyway, even with all that US influence they’re still a Latin country. It was obvious where the people wanted to go.”
“Didn’t stop them trying to bomb them into changing their minds.” Bill growled.
“That was then.”
“Yeah, things are far worse now.” The other sailor huffed. “At least in Mexico the Government didn’t pull that last trigger. Sure they bombed cities and blockaded ports, they even sent a few divisions over the border, but the President withdrew them when it looked like it would lead to all out war with the entire continent of South America.”

Simon nodded, the story was a familiar one and considered one of the crucial moments of the last century. It had only happened thirty years earlier, the closest humanity had come to a full scale war since the mid twentieth century.
“Most people think the US would have won, even with the huge growth of the South.”
“I couldn’t care less, Brazil and Chile would have nuked the US, and the US would have nuked the whole of Latin America.” Carver shook his head. “You know why?”
“I can guess I’m about to find out.” Simon offered reluctantly.
“Greed.” Bill jabbed a finger accusingly. “Pure greed, they wanted Mexico and managed to kill thirty thousand people for it!”
“I don’t believe those figures for a second.”
“Believe what you want, but Americans have great lives, all sorts of luxury and gizmos. What the hell is capturing Mexico going to do to make that better? How do you make a perfect easy life more perfect or easier?”
“Maybe they wanted to give Mexico the same standard of living?”
Bill blinked. “I refuse to believe you are that naive. You’re what, eighteen?”
“Yeah.”
“You should still know better.” Bill scoffed. “No one goes to war to make people happy. Greed mate, just greed.”

He sipped the soup with a hint of distaste. “And our food is starting to go off, this heat again.”
“So they didn’t take Mexico.” Simon steered the topic back.
“Right, and that pissed off a whole generation, because they guessed that if their President had more balls they could have just stomped their enemies flat. They had those M2 battle tanks that were immune to everything back then, they had first generation power armour, Air Drones, space gunships, they had everything. If they had committed to a full invasion they’d have won.”
“And when the Latin armies get squashed their leaders start throwing nukes.”
“Probably, but people never get that far, they just get to the part where they stomp the enemy flat.” Bill related. “But the President stood down, he called the army back hours before it would have mounted a real invasion, not some glorified peacekeeping.”
“So I guess it’s a ‘What if’ question?”
“More than that, it was an embarrassment.” Bill continued. “It was a slap in the face, someone took a boot to American pride, the Latinos made them look foolish across the globe. After Mexico nobody respected the US anymore, until five or six years ago everyone thought the US was a wuss, that they didn’t have the stones anymore, that their wealth had made them soft.”
“But not today.” Simon realised.

“The war that never happened still had its casualties, the President didn’t last long and there hasn’t been a Republican in anything near power since. The Democrats ran things for a while but people got tired of them too, the whole country was a laughing stock and nobody was trying to stop it. That’s where the Freedom Party came from, people were sick of the old parties and created this new one. Took them a while, but they’re in charge now, with good old John Brook fanning the fire.”
“He made a big deal about putting America back together didn’t he?”
“Yeah, that was his thing.” Bill forced down more soup. “To make people stop laughing at America, and he did this by building a fucking giant military.”
“Looks like it worked.”
“In a way, people are too busy hiding under their beds to laugh.” Bill shrugged. “He promised a return to the good old days when America was top dog, before Mexico when the States did pretty much whatever they wanted. Nice idea, but never going to happen.”
“The world got smaller.”
“The US isn’t the one big power anymore, now there are six global powers, and they’re not about to get pushed around. Most of us just get on with life, but the Chinese, well they’ve got something to prove too.”
“They’re both pushing at each other.”
“Right, and it all comes back to greed.”

Simon paused. “I thought you said it was because they had something to prove?”
“That’s why the average guy on the street is for it.” Bill said. “No American wants to back down twice in one life time, and no Chinese guy is going to let some imperialist nut in a White House tell them how far their own country can expand. But that isn’t why they’ll fight. You heard of Cyrus Errol right?”
“Oh. Him.”
“You probably heard all about his competition with the Chinese so I won’t repeat it. Point is their greed will trigger a war, and there are three billion Reds and six hundred million Yanks ready to roll up their sleeves and start chopping.”
“These countries have changed a lot.”
“They’ve been pushed into hate, into believing everyone is against them, mocking them.” Bill spoke darkly. “Everyday they get told they are being pushed around by outsiders, that now is the time to stand up, that they have the tools to fight back and restore their national pride that weakness threw away in the past. A dangerous dose of nationalism mixed with a generation long inferiority complex. The Americans are dangerous, don’t let the fact we share a similar culture fool you, they are dangerous and if there is a war with China it’s their own fault.”

“Where did you get all this?” Simon asked. “Last I checked you spliced wires for the Navy, not studied political sciences at Oxford.”
“I’ve had a lot of time to read out here, history and stuff.”
“Did you read two or three books to get a balance of ideas, or just the one?”
Bill frowned. “Shut up, I’m right.”
“I’d just prefer to get a few opinions and make up my own mind, that’s all.”
“You go ahead, everyone back home knows what I know, that’s why we’re staying the hell out of this pissing match.”
“We ain’t done a good job staying out of it so far.”
“See, that is exactly my point!” Bill slammed his hand on the table. “Our mission was Neptune! If we’d have avoided Saturn, kept away from where we knew there was an American base and just carried on, we wouldn’t be up shit creek!”
“How could we know…”
“We should have played it safe!” Bill snapped, his bottled frustration boiling into anger. “We should have left those bastards to kill each other and not us! We should have stayed away and Mike would still be alive! And Angus, and Georgy, and Raj, and I can’t even remember all their names!”
Simon tried to keep very calm and cool, hoping his example would bring his older friend back down, not in the least sure how he could deal with this.
“Come on Bill, finish that soup.”
With a swing of his arm he knocked the half full bowl to the floor.
“Fuck soup! Fuck everything! We are dead, and it’s all thanks to those fucking Yanks!”

A man cleared his throat, his arrival unnoticed amid the outburst. He waited until both sailors to turn and acknowledge him.
“Okay, I think I missed most of that.” Pete bobbed his head from left to right. “But if you think April and I are going to get you killed…”
“What? No.” Bill dismissed irritably. “This is nothing to do with you two.”
“Just when you said ‘Fucking Yanks’ I thought you meant us two, because, well, you know…”
“I don’t care what you two do, you’re alright.” Bill accepted. “You’re more like us.”
“More like you? More like you than what?”
“More like Europeans than Yanks.”
Pete blinked, his face hardening. “Excuse me?”
“Right then!” Simon clapped his hands and stood up. “Time we were going.”
“You said it yourself.” Bill continued regardless. “You want to bring down that dick in charge, you think he’s a war crazy idiot.”
“And you think I’m the only American who wants that?” Pete reacted angrily. “Ask any of the Nashville crew, they’ll say the same thing!”
“Nah, I’ve had enough of them whining about how they don’t have a ship.” Bill sneered. “They’re lucky to be alive, especially as we fucked ourselves saving them.”

“You haven’t been paying attention have you?” Pete grimaced harshly. “The Chinese are nowhere near us, they’re half way to Mars!”
“So you’re a psychic now then?” Bill accused. “How about you tell me the lottery numbers then?”
“We’re not dead are we?”
“Party isn’t over yet.” Bill retaliated. “Hot in here isn’t it?”
“Hot?”
“Isn’t it?” Bill pressed.
“Yeah, guess it is.”
“That’s because we took on the American crew, with our damage we can’t support them, so the ship is getting hotter.”
Pete suddenly broke into a laugh. “You’re pissed at America because we made it uncomfortably warm in here? Shit man, I thought you had a point!”
“I’m pissed at America because we’re stuck in the middle of a war you started!” Bill yelled back. “I’m pissed at America because it got my friends killed for nothing! But mostly I’m pissed at America because out here those extra degrees of heat in the hull will radiate outwards. Know what that means Pete?”
“Yeah.” Pete’s face sank.
“Good, you’ve been here long enough to know the score. It means we’re going to light up every thermal scanner that can see us, it means we can’t play hide and seek, and it means that if there is a Chinese Destroyer out there we’re dead. Thanks to your buddies from back home.”
Bill stood, glaring at Pete.
“For a while I forgot where you were from, we were almost mates. Almost.”

The two sailors walked away, Bill with his shoulders squared while Simon followed, shrugging apologetically. It wasn’t the first time Pete had over heard negative comments from the crew, especially Chief Engineer Kendle who was famous for speaking his mind, but this incident had carried more venom than usually. It was also the truth.
The cooling sleeve around the ship had been shot to pieces and working at a much reduced level, and with their sensor damage it was not impossible that a Chinese ship could be stalking them and they would never know until it revealed itself. They’d gone through a lot, but right now as they moved towards the belt was probably the most dangerous time.
“Who was shouting.” April wandered into the mess room, looking left and right to see only Pete and some spilt soup beside the usual tables and chairs.
“Just Bill Carver.”
“Oh, Mr Conspiracy Theory?”
“Yeah.” Pete nodded. “Doesn’t mean he’s wrong though.”
“It’s not a conspiracy, it’s too obvious to be a hidden plot. Errol and Brook, beginning and end of story.”
He nodded in agreement with his colleague and lover. “But they wouldn’t have gotten this far without the public backing their policies.”
“See how far they get when we reveal the truth.”

Pete shook his head, releasing a long exhalation that spoke of his troubles.
“I don’t think they like us anymore.”
“Bill?”
“Everyone.” Pete returned. “Don’t tell me you haven’t noticed the tension onboard, you could cut it with a knife.”
“It hasn’t escaped my attention.” She nodded. “But what do you expect? This ship is like family, very close knit, it took us a while to fit in.”
“Yeah, but…”
“And now they’ve had thirty complete strangers dropped on them.” April pushed on. “It’s going to take time, the Nashville folks just have to earn their place like we did.”
“I dunno, remember we were just along for a ride, these guys are taking the place of men and women who have died. They’re helping maintain the ship, run damage control, they’re even more integrated then us but there’s still tension.”
April arched an eyebrow. “I know you’ve got a theory and you’re waiting to tell me.”
“Like I said this ship was a family, and they’ve lost twenty dead on this mission, a quarter of the crew. I think they blame us.”
“When you say us…”
“I mean Americans.”

“Well too bad, we didn’t pull the trigger.” April shrugged. “Besides, almost a third of the crew s American now, they need to get on with it.”
“But can they? I mean…”
“Enough Pete, the worst that could happen is we get keel hauled. Accept that and move on.”
For a moment Pete was speechless.
“When did you become the rational one? I’m the one who always says ‘get over it’ in this partnership.”
“Someone has to wear the pants, and right now it ain’t you.” She giggled.
“It’s a perfectly rational concern!”
“Mallory and Lantree are best buddies, if there was a problem they’d sort it out.”
“Well maybe no one’s told them.”
“Well maybe you should?” April suggested. “Come on, stop worrying, Diego isn’t worried.”
“Oh how is he?” Pete asked weakly. “Just pretend I actually care.”
She smiled widely. “Jealous?”
“Does it show?” Pete admitted with some bashfulness. “He spends a lot of time with you, I think he likes you.”
“Course he does, but your position is safe.” She assured. “Stop worrying, it’ll give you wrinkles.”
“There’s a lot to worry about!” He defended.
“But not here, and not right now.” She soothed. “Worrying makes no difference, just relax and let me take care of you.”
“Again, that’s supposed to be my job.”
She smiled. “Shut up and find a quiet corner.”




Commander Mallory was fixated, stood in the gloom stiffly with his arms folded over the front of his pressure suit, a stance he had maintained for longer than most people had noticed. He remained poised like a frowning statue, glaring at the large holographic display that buzzed and sometimes flickered as it hovered in thin air over the plotting table, the instability a result of the pounding the ship had taken.
“How long now?”
“Almost six hours.” Lieutenant Cheyo responded to his question.
“It looks like it’s growing more intense, the range must by within twenty or thirty thousand klicks by now.”
“A good guess sir, it’s hard to tell but the computer predicts twenty thousand kilometres between the core of both clusters.”
The Amethyst was having a difficult time searching the path before it, her sensor arrays had been heavily damaged in battle greatly reducing the power and sensitivity of her systems, blurring her electronic eyes. The problem was compounded by the excessive jamming that only grew more and more impenetrable as she approached the core of the Solar System, the interference resting over the Belt like a fuzzy blanket impeding her senses.
Fortunately the Amethyst still had one reliable method of viewing the universe, her optical sensors which ranged from precision telescopes to wide angle holographic cameras to open doors with heads peering out. It was very hard to block visual detection gear, the normal method being a spot light shone towards the offending vessel. Happily for the Amethyst nobody seemed to know where she was, and as such her observations went unmarked.

Right now as her cameras viewed space around her the several telescopes that had survived this far were focused inwards, looking with computer assisted precision deep into space seeking even the barest hint that there could be danger ahead. They had already spotted an uncharted asteroid cluster directly in their path that would need to be threaded, but worse had then unfolded.
In the far distance the telescopes had picked up movement, a formation of warships accelerating from over six AU’s away, their ion trails the only indication they existed. From so far away it was impossible to see the ships themselves unless they were caught in direct sunlight, even mile long super carriers and dreadnoughts simply faded into the background.
The ion trails they could see were like tiny wisps of blue and white light, like scratches on the lens, yet in reality they were jets of energy hundreds, even thousands of metres long propelling immense vessels at ever increasing speed. The computer had calculated at least four hundred tracks moving from the approximate direction of Mars, the spectral analysis of the ion trails suggesting they were American built engines. It was a very sizeable fleet, built around about a hundred and twenty capital ships ranging from heavy cruisers right up to a handful of supercarriers, at least that was what the ion trail analysis concluded.
They had watched the fleet move for over four days, their acceleration sometimes varying but usually averaging three G’s which was unusual for such big ships. The reason eventually revealed itself, on the fifth day of observation they spotted a second cluster of ion trails moving in from a separate vector. The American ships were accelerating vigourously to match relative speeds with this new fleet, reducing the speed difference between target and attacker to give the guns a better chance of actually hitting something.
Inevitably the sensors predicted the opposing fleet was Chinese, and were more than happy to allow the Americans to catch up and initiate combat.

The initial salvoes had been fired from extreme long range, over eight light seconds distance offering very little probability of a hit. It wasn’t until the two forces closed to within two light seconds that things began to heat up, with American and Chinese forces engaging each other with massive salvoes of rail gun fire and missile barrages. The battle had lasted six hours so far, the two sides largely keeping their distance and trying to score hits from range with very little success. Eventually the Chinese force had broken position first and moved to close the range, the closer they came the more accurate their fire becoming. Of course it tended to work both ways, and the fleets on either side of the battle began to take hits.
It had been difficult to work out how the battle was going at first, only the odd gunflash indicating that the two sides were even engaging, the fleets lined up on the same course a light second apart exchanging broadsides like ancient ships of the line. It was a tactic most naval theorists believed would work well in large scale combat, imagining their line of ships could effortlessly demolish the enemy with accurate concentrated fire before the same happened to them.
The reality had ultimately turned out to be different, and as no one had actually fought a full scale fleet battle in space before it appeared the opposing Admirals were inventing new tactics and strategy on the spur of the moment. It was fascinating to observe from a distance, watching the ion trails re arrange from two opposing walls of ships into a myriad of different formations as the battle dragged on and commanders experimented, but on board those duelling leviathans the experience was unlikely to be anything over then desperation and nerve shredding fear.

The two sides were clearly very well trained and drilled, the speed and precision with which they altered formation was commendable, all the time maintaining a steady rate of fire, correcting for drift and movement, and attempting to put themselves into a superior gunnery position. None of it had worked, the impressive levels of ECM making accurate gunfire at range a matter of insane luck while missile swarms met their end at the hands of massed point defence weapons long before they became a threat. It was stalemate.
The Chinese fleet had two main advantages over the US fleet, advantages the Chinese Admiral was wise enough to try and exploit. First he had six hundred ships as opposed to the four hundred of his adversary, and while these numbers hadn’t helped the long ranged gunnery duel they would help him maintain a potent striking force even if he lost units while closing in on his enemy. The other advantage was that virtually all the Chinese ships were built as ship killers, armed to the teeth with guns and missiles, while a decent portion of the US fleet were Carriers with only limit direct combat potential.
On balance the Chinese fleet should do better in a close range fight, something their commander was eager to explore. He formed his ships into a three dimensional wedge, placed his heaviest ships at the front, and charged.
In response the US fleet had broken up, dissolving its wall of capital ships and assembling into battlegroups and task forces, small knots of firepower that angled themselves to surround the incoming Chinese force and catch them in a cross fire.
It had been an intricate ballet to watch, a game of move and counter move, both Admirals playing their cards exceptionally well hiding weaknesses and exploiting strengths. That had now come to an end, and the grace of deployment had been superseded by the brutal reality of killing as many people as possible before they killed you.

The battle, the first true battle fought between space going warships, had now descended into a brutal hammering match, a contest of strength and stamina fought with thousand ton rail gun shells and super dense hull armour. Finally the world could see what happened when immovable objects met unstoppable forces, when battleships slammed multi thousand ton darts into each other at a few thousand kilometres, when ships massing tens of millions of tons were torn and sheared like plywood, when proud capital ships were forced to limp away from the front line gutted and burning, trickles of blood leaking from their hulls and freezing in the harsh environment beyond.
Beside the guns were the missiles, now finally able to be used effectively, leaping the distance in mere seconds. The Chinese unloaded their magazines, the silver spikes battering the American ships while in turn tens of thousands of Attack Drones burst forth from the hanger decks of the Carrier groups, dodging and weaving with impossible agility as they made their bombing runs.
The violence was unbelievable, over half a million souls trapped in steel cans trying to puncture or vaporise each other. The armour on their vessels was immense, strong enough to resist megaton level impacts in the case of the larger battleships, but even they would be defenceless against a five thousand ton round striking them at high speed. There was nowhere to hide in space, no way to accelerate fast enough to outrun pursuit, no guaranteed way of surviving a direct hit from a cannon or a neutron warhead. The only option was to defeat the enemy or surrender, a narrowness of choice which motivated crews to fight even harder. A few ships seemed likely to escape, too smashed up to justify wasting fuel or ammunition chasing, but at least one crippled battleship that tried to withdraw was swarmed by destroyers and nuked into oblivion.
It was man’s greatest scientific achievements applied to the task of killing, the science of slaughter, death by numbers.


“Hard to see which side is winning.” Jane watched the same display with avid interest, trying to follow the lines of engine trails and flashes of fire. “The amount of firepower in there is astonishing.”
“Like a cauldron.” Mallory remarked grimly. “Any one of those capital ships could wipe out a country, some of them could do a damn good job depopulating the whole of the Earth, and here we have hundreds of them letting loose with all they have. I never thought I’d see it.”
The entire display was sparkling, tiny sprinkles of light that lived for a brief instant before vanishing, like moonlight glittering on waves rolling up a beach. Each white or blue spark was a nuclear explosion, the result of the missile or shell casing vaporising during detonation. Dozens, sometimes hundreds detonated every second, the intense burst of radiation visible to the Amethyst scanners despite the distance, the jamming and the battle damage.
“This battle has unleashed more destruction in the last half hour then has ever been released in the long sad history of mankind.” He continued. “Every war, every accident, every test, every act of violence and provocation. Add it all up and it is still less then what we have seen today, far less.”
“Their guns are firing on semi automatic.” Jane considered. “They’re lobbing nukes like confetti. I didn’t think there were so many warheads in the world.”
“Chinese ships are packed with missiles, and those American Attack Drones pack six nukes as standard armament.” Mallory maintained his gaze, his arms still crossed. “Lot of firepower.”
“And these are just portions of the main forces, there are at least five thousand ships out here between the US and Chinese commands.” Jane spoke with a hint of apprehension. “Even more around the Earth and Venus lines.”
“Thank Heaven they’re fighting well away from any stations or planets.” The Commander mentioned with relief. “You could lose civilisation itself in the crossfire here, accidental Armageddon.”

They watched the battle continuing to unfold, nothing but coloured specks of light dozens of light minutes away, real ships with real people on board often meeting a violent and swift end. Now and again the blue lights were joined by red ones, tiny specks representing mile wide balls of fire erupting from catastrophic direct hits. Each blink marked the ends of hundreds if not thousands of lives. There one moment, then gone back to darkness the next.
“That was a big one.” Jane noted, a glimmer of red lasting for several seconds on the display, a hint of the titanic fireball burning through oxygen and combustibles on an enormous scale. “Dreadnought or Supercarrier.”
It seemed absurdly morbid to speculate like this, trying to guess who or what had just gone up in flames, yet with the detachment of distance and anonymity it appeared almost normal and acceptable. Perhaps they had become jaded by the deaths of friends on board, Mallory considered quietly, or maybe it was just always the way in war.
“They’re still fighting.” He observed with a nod of grudging respect. “They haven’t tried to surrender yet, and there aren’t many left.”
“I wonder if they know what happened out here, with the Nashville?” His First Officer wondered. “If they knew about the execution of survivors I doubt either side would surrender willingly.”
“Maybe.” Mallory agreed. “Though I think if they’d seen it they would have spotted us, and we should have been intercepted by now, preferably by our own side.”
“There should be a cruiser patrol near this sector, out beyond the belt in unclaimed space.” Jane remembered. “One of ours.”
“Captain Rossellini of the Semovente.” Mallory smiled. “Good man, and a good ship, he usually has a heavy escort. We could use him right about now.”
“Could have used him two months ago.”

The distant battle drew even more intense, a great concentration of lights in its centre while individual trails still fell away like sparks from a welding force, damaged and lame ships trying to get some distance before somebody tried to pursue them. The escorting destroyers and frigates of both sides were eager to pounce on the wounded, circling in like wolves stalking a bloodied tiger. Often friendly destroyer groups moved to help their limping comrades, sparking a much smaller but no less violent confrontation at the periphery of the main battle, drawing a few showers of nukes and gunfire before the smaller ships either broke off or quickly annihilated one side or the other.
“It’s still going on.”
Steve Lantree walked steadily up to the plotting table, arriving between the two Royal navy Officers and sharing their concerned expressions. While the Amethyst staff could sympathise with the horror unfolding for their fellow sailors all that distance away, for Lantree half of those people were his countrymen, his brothers and sisters of the flag, quite possibly his friends. They all knew full well there was nothing they could do, no influence they could exert. Even if they had been among the combatants they would merely have been stepped on without achieving anything. It was a battle beyond their capacity to fight.

“Six hours now.” Mallory informed the American. “You should be getting some rest Captain, you’re off duty.”
“Couldn’t sleep, not with this happening.” Lantree responded honestly. “Any new forces?”
“Nothing.” Jane returned. “Hard to see how it’s going.”
“But it doesn’t take a genius to work out the odds.” Lantree allowed. “The Chinese are going to win this one, whoever was running the US fleet should have turned and broken off the fight when he saw them forming to close up.”
“Wouldn’t be easy to outrun them.” Mallory commented.
“No, probably not, but our ships have better acceleration than Chinese ones, and better a long range stern chase for a few hours than this sort of close in gunnery duel. We just don’t have the numbers.”
He shook his head in exasperation, the flickering battle gradually drawing to a close, the lights concentrating into ever smaller groups.
“Good ships and good people, but our fleet isn’t built for wall to wall gunnery like the Chinese, or hell, like almost everyone else. We’re supposed to stand off and let the drones do the work from long range.”
“Perhaps whoever was in charge got carried away, thought his battleships could handle it.” Jane presumed.
“Maybe he did.” Lantree nodded. “Then he better hope the Chinese kill him here and now, because he’s gonna get lynched by his own men if he makes it back to Reagan or Ike.”

There was a final flurry of red flashes before it ended, the sudden emptiness looking surprising despite it being the backdrop for the entire mission, as if the blackness of space was the change and the glittering battle the norm.
“I can still see some ion trails that match American parameters.” Cheyo reported. “It looks like they’ve surrendered.”
“And the Chinese have allowed it?” Lantree checked. “No shooting the ships after they stand down?”
“Doesn’t look like it.”
“That’s a mercy.” The American officer exhaled.
“They’ll probably rescue survivors too.” Mallory theorised. “I’m afraid the Nashville was unlucky in its enemies Captain, closer to civilisation things might have been different.”
“I’ve met Chinese Admirals in the past, in better days.” Lantree recalled. “Some were assholes, but there were enough who seemed like decent people, honourable. Guess this fleet was commanded by one of them.”
“As you say Captain, a mercy.”

“What about survivors?” Jane asked. “How many ships broke away?”
“Looking at the tracks quite a few destroyer sized ships have made it, they’re burning for home hard, I doubt the Chinese will catch them.” Cheyo flicked through a series of computer images, stills from the battle. “Maybe a few cruisers too, the ones that broke off early, they’ve probably got enough of a head start to evade any pursuit.”
She grimaced, looking toward Lantree apologetically.
“Most of the capital ships aren’t going to make it, Chinese heavy destroyers and light cruisers I’d guess are being sent to round up stragglers.”
“They’ll demand a surrender.” Mallory said. “And if they are refused they’ll either nuke the ship then and there, or disable engines and weapons before boarding.”
“Boarding a battleship?” Jane hissed through her teeth. “That’s going to get really nasty.”
“No offence Captain.” Mallory nodded to Lantree. “But if they’re smart they’ll surrender. I can understand taking on tall odds for a reason, to buy time or inflict disproportionate losses on an enemy, but resisting in these circumstances would be foolish. Let them take the ship.”
“On that I’d disagree Commander.” Lantree replied. “There’s a lot of pride tied up in a ship. It’s one of the earliest battle cries of the US Navy, Don’t give up the ship.”
“And look how that ended.” Mallory pushed carefully. “The Chinese aren’t monsters. Usually.”
“Let me ask you Captain, would you give up this ship?”
Mallory had to pause for a moment before answering. “I would surrender, yes, I would get my crew off and ensure they were safe.”
Lantree raised an eyebrow. “And…?”
Mallory chuckled. “Then I’d blow her to pieces before I let someone take her. Point made Captain, but there’s a difference between losing a ship and losing a crew. I’d surrender for the sake of the lives onboard before anything else.”

Lantree nodded in acceptance of the answer. “If we run into a Chinese patrol before we cross the belt you might have to make that choice.”
“Well I know I’d prefer being given an option instead of just being shot at without any warning like last time.” He grunted back. “Last I heard there were rules in war.”
“Like in Cricket.” Jane agreed.
“And if you didn’t obey the rules you were tried by a tribunal of international judges and thrown in jail forever.”
“Like in Cricket.”
“And if you were lucky you were kept in isolation until you died, rather than having to deal with your fellow inmates who would happily bite your face off or shove sharpened fingernails in your eyes.”
“Like in Crick…”
“Has that ever actually happened in Cricket?” Mallory cut her off. “Or is this just one of those weekly themes you have?”
Jane raised an innocent eyebrow. “My Grandfather was an England international in the sixties, toured the world, played in countries where Cricket is like a religion. Some people take it really seriously. Really seriously.”
“There are some days when I honestly don’t know if you are making this stuff up on the spot or not.”
“Oh. Good.” Jane smiled. “Then I’m fulfilling my New Year resolution.”
“To annoy me?”
“That’s just a pleasant side effect.”
 
Mallory turned aside, finally relaxing his pose with a smile. “Imagine what will happen when you get your own ship.”
“I’m sure it will be the most cheerfully pessimistic ship in the fleet.” She planned proudly. “My philosophy is we’re all probably going to die out here, so why not have a bit of fun with it? Like kicking Death in the balls because what’s the worst that can happen?”
“I still think Death is a girl.” Mallory returned. “Which makes sense.”
“How does that make sense?” Jane widened her eyes. “Be warned though, your next words might lead to me getting my own command early after the senior officer on this ship may be about to accidentally brutally hack off his own head with a coat hanger.”
Lantree coughed. “So… are you two always like this?”
“Yes.” They replied in unison.
“Is that because you two have, you know, in private, done…err…”
“No!” Came two equally vehement replies.
“You just sound like you’ve been married for the last forty years.”
“Everyone says that.” Jane exclaimed. “As XO I’m supposed to know exactly how you think, how you will act, and what you will say or do at any given time.”
“And you have achieved that goal with the sort of determination most stalkers and serial killers would applaud.” Mallory inclined his head in a short bow. “You actually scare me sometimes.”
Jane beamed widely. “New Year’s resolution number two achieved.”

“Sorry to interrupt.” Lieutenant Fisher broke through the conversation. “But I’ve finished my analysis of the asteroid cluster, the one in our path not on the charts?”
“Right.” Mallory acknowledged. “Anything we should be aware of.”
“Yes sir, they aren’t rocks.” Fisher stated. “It’s a debris field.”
The mood within the Conn returned once again to dour, the brief levity evaporating like mercury in a desert.
“Great, more woe.” Jane sighed heavily.
“Can you tell anything else?” Mallory wondered intensely. “Who they were, what happened, was it recent?”
“It’ll be easier to see when we move closer sir, but I estimate the debris field is less than a week old, There are still some weak power sources.” Fisher answered.
“Confirmed.” Cheyo nodded, running what was left of her more concise sensors over the scene. “Very high concentration of refined alloys, I’ll try work up a spectrograph, see if I can tell where they were made.”
“See if you can compile a map of the field.” Mallory requested. “Maybe we can find some distinguishing features in the wreckage.”
“Very high chance they’re more American and Chinese ships.” Jane deduced. “More victims of this conflict.”
“I’m quite worried we didn’t spot them shooting each other directly ahead of us.” Mallory frowned. “Especially at these sort of ranges, I knew the sensors were reduced but not by that much.”
“Possible blind spot sir?” Jane suggested.
“It could be, and if so we’re going to have to implement a new search protocol to cover it.”

The plotting display shifted from the now silent battle front to the more immediate presence, displaying green blobs that represented each of the clusters of debris ahead of the Amethyst. Over the course of several minutes the blobs began to shape into harder edged pieces of wreckage, the sensors and main computer building an accurate picture of the obstruction across their path.
“Not pretty.” Mallory grimaced. “Looks like a dozen ships.”
“Scattered in a corridor fifty thousand kilometres long, but four hundred wide and six hundred deep.” Fisher mapped out the dimensions.
“Very small battlefield really.” Jane considered. “Especially as most of the wrecks are concentrated in a ten thousand kilometre cube.”
“Like they blundered into each other.” Lantree extrapolated. “Or one side ambushed the other.”
“Still a risk to engage that close.” Mallory considered. “If it was a stealth ship ambush most units can be detected within twenty thousand klicks or so, to hide at that range you’d have to shut down virtually everything, life support included.”
“Give you a hell of a first strike though.” Lantree mused. “We used to run drills hunting for ships like yours, real cat and mouse business.”
“We once made it within two thousand klicks of a battleship in an exercise.” Jane added. “It can happen.”
Mallory returned his gaze to the display. “I suppose it was what ships like ours were built for, but who was on the sharp end? Americans, Chinese, or the Semovente squadron.”

Jane tightened her lips into a harsh grimace. “If that is the Semovente and her escorts, if someone attacked Captain Rossellini…”
“It means Europe is also probably at war.” Mallory finished her thought. “They could have covered up our failure to return home, we were too far away to be watched, behind Saturn, nobody would know.”
“But destroying an EU Heavy cruiser in open space, no way to hide that.” Jane followed on the train of thought. “Even if it was stealth ships, they’d be detected when they fired.”
“It isn’t one of yours.” Lantree joined the discussion. “Look at that, it’s a gun turret.”
He picked out one of the resolving pieces of debris floating holographically in thin air.
“That’s an Eight Inch twin turret, model forty nine, sixty five calibres.” He shook his head slowly. “Main armament on a Brooklyn class heavy cruiser.”
“An American ship then.” Jane acknowledged.
“More than one.” Lantree examined. “There aren’t any battleships out this far, all this debris has to be from cruisers. There’s only one cruiser squadron likely to be in this sector, the Fourteenth. The unit I was serving with.”
“I see.” Mallory offered a sympathetic glance. “My condolences Captain, if these were people you knew I can’t imagine it being easy.”
“More casualties of war Commander.” The American said bleakly. “Not the first we’ve seen today.”

Cheyo finished her analysis, working with enviable efficiency and skill through the reams of data, building a mental picture of the scene before the sensors had fully resolved the cold battlespace.
“Sir, looking at the direction of drift and relative locations of the wrecks I’d guess four American cruisers were lost and six destroy sized vessels.”
“Four?” Lantree addressed her. “You’re sure?”
“Yes Captain, positive.”
“We left six ships behind when the Nashville was detached.” Lantree turned back to Mallory. “Two of those ships are still out there, plus at least four more destroyers.”
“What about the Chinese?” The Commander asked.
“It looks like three wrecks, mass and material suggests stealth ships, but more than I’d expect. They look like two or three stealth cruisers, maybe a full sized battlecruiser.”
Lantree squinted at the enemy debris. “I didn’t thing the Chinese had stealth ships that big.”
“Neither did we.” Mallory agreed. “Only the Oceanics and us are supposed to use battlecruisers.”
“Something else the Chinese slipped under the radar.” Jane snorted. “What else have they built without us knowing about it? Orbital plasma beams? An Emerald City? Perhaps a gigantic catapult that launches rabid Panda bears at people?”
“Whatever the truth it seems they have a Battlecruiser now, and a good one.” Mallory noted with concern. “Effective enough to get this close and powerful enough to blast four well made cruisers into scrap.”
“But not survive the mission.” Lantree added.
“Something to be grateful for.” The British officer agreed. “Battlecruisers still have that glass jaw.”

“I’m pretty worried we didn’t see this happen.” Jane took a few paces around the table. “Four cruisers and a capital ship blow each other to hell and we never spotted it?”
“Look at the positions, the American ships were pointing away from the battlecruiser.” Mallory examined. “They didn’t even get a chance to turn around, all four of them must have been destroyed in the opening salvo.”
“And the battlecruiser wreckage is still astern of them, like it was destroyed before it could power up and move away.” Lantree added his brush to the painting. “I’d guess by the two surviving cruisers and their escorts.”
“The whole thing probably took less than a minute, and there’s no radiological traces, neither side used nukes.” Mallory finished putting the pieces together. “Just guns.”
“Less than a minute.” Lantree repeated sombrely. “Hard to believe with all the training we put in as a squadron we could suffer so many losses so quickly. Here, the battle we saw, this isn’t the war we’re trained to fight.”
“I don’t think anybody is really prepared for what is happening.” Mallory agreed. “We just watched a thousand ships getting into what amounts to a brawl. I don’t think this is going to go well for any side.”

“Commander, I’ve mapped our course through the field.” Fisher relayed across from her station. “We don’t need to make any adjustments, our path is clear, though we do pass quite close to the American cluster.”
“How close?”
“Straight between all four wrecks.” She replied. “The closest we come to one is half a kilometre.”
Jane whistled. “Little close for comfort.”
“What’s our relative speed?” Mallory asked.
“About a hundred metres a second.” The Navigator answered. “The American ships seem to be on the exact same course we are, pretty similar speed too.”
“Curious that.” Jane frowned.
“There are some small pieces of debris, but at such low speeds any collisions will be insignificant.” Fisher ended. “The larger pieces are out of the way.”
“Carry on lieutenant.” Mallory confirmed the course, then returned to the plot. “What are you thinking XO?”
“Same thing you are I suspect.” Jane replied, a strain of pale hair hanging down from her temple as her blue eyes skimmed the data. “No coincidence.”
“No coincidence.” Mallory smiled slightly. “Now I know why I keep you around.”
“That and my amazing singing voice.” Jane mentioned in passing.
Mallory paused. “Let us never speak of that again.”

“I think I see where you are going.” Lantree voiced his own analysis. “All the space in the system, all the possible vectors, courses and velocities imaginable, and yet somehow my fleet was on your exact course at almost your exact speed.”
“Precisely.” Mallory straightened up. “No coincidence, the odds against it are astronomical.”
“They knew we were coming this way.” Jane confirmed the theory. “They knew our course and speed, and they were waiting for us.”
“The Nashville. Had to be the Nashville.”
Jane agreed with her Commander. “She wasn’t running silent, even from here this squadron would have seen her fight the Chinese ships.”
“I can almost guarantee it.” Lantree contributed. “They wouldn’t ignore one of their friends in trouble, even if they couldn’t help they’d watch.”
“Which means they would have seen us when we altered course to pick up survivors.” Mallory reasoned out. “And would be aware of our adjusted course and speed. Elementary.”
“An escort.” Lantree felt himself sinking inside. “They were here to meet us, bring us back home.”
“Or shoot us down.” Jane offered an alternative. “Remember we’ve got enough dirt to put Cyrus Errol in jail forever, and he’s got buddies in the Joint Chiefs.”
“No way, Commodore Merrill was a man of honour, even if he was given an order like that he’d never carry it out.” Lantree defended fiercely. “No way in hell, not after you guys took a risk bringing us back.”
“Just offering the pessimistic alternative.” Jane accepted. “Call it a theme.”

“They must have been an escort.” Mallory agreed with Lantree’s conclusion. “So the Americans know we’re on our way and want to make sure we get back safe.”
“They might not know the truth about what we’ve found.” Jane mentioned. “Maybe just that we have Nashville survivors onboard.”
“It’d be enough to guarantee an escort.” Lantree nodded.
“Unfortunately we can deduce some bad news from this.” Mallory continued, rubbing his chin. “It was an American escort, no European ships. If the US Navy had told EU command Admiral Bradford or Admiral West on De Ruyter would have sent a representative. Probably the Semovente.”
“No sign of EU wreckage.” Jane winced. “So it’s not likely our own people know where we are.”
“Which is a problem, but not the biggest one.” The Commander pointed to the Chinese wreckage. “The Chinese also know our course and speed.”
“I doubt they sent that battlecruiser for us.” Jane shook her head in disagreement. “It was probably stalking the American cruisers, when they lined up on this course it probably just seized the moment and attacked.”
“I expect so, but it would still have reported the location of the American ships, and it wouldn’t take a genius to put two ant two together, the American course and speed and our last known position.” Mallory explained. “By now they know exactly when and where we’ll be entering the belt, and they know we’ll be transiting through Chinese space.”

“Well then.” Jane rubbed her hands together. “We’re pretty boned aren’t we?”
“Our gamble was that we could cross Chinese space unnoticed, that they would be looking for us near EU or American sectors of the Belt, that we’d never be dumb enough to cross their territory.” Mallory slammed his hand down on the table with a dull bump. “Bollocks.”
“If they find us they can shoot us down and pretend it was legal, that we were in their space without a permit and lie about us firing on them or something.” Jane spoke plainly. “It plays right into their hand.”
“Except for one thing.” Lantree brought up. “They still need a ship to find us, and not only is there a lot of space out there but the Chinese are going to need every spare ship to confront the US Navy. They might have won this last battle, but there’s a lot more ships in the Navy than those.”
“I’d like to be positive about that Captain, but there is another issue.” Mallory went on. “Your two remaining cruisers, where are they?”
“I don’t know, but not destroyed.”
“Not destroyed, but not here.” Mallory nodded. “If they had won the battle they would have still being here waiting for us, the fact they are not suggests they had to withdraw, perhaps forced away by an incoming Chinese taskforce.”
“Or maybe they just received orders which superseded their ones to meet us.” Lantree countered. “Like linking up with the fleet to strengthen the main battle line.”
“It’s impossible to know for sure.” The Commander contemplated. “There could be a Chinese task force waiting somewhere ahead, an American escort, maybe the Semovente, maybe nothing at all.”

“So do we have a plan sir?” Jane asked.
“Avoid being killed.”
“Admirable.” Lantree supported. “Straight to the point.”
“It’s too late to start second guessing ourselves snow.” The Commander relented. “If we change course someone will definitely see us, I wouldn’t be surprised if that Chinese battlefleet heads back this way to refuel and rearm at one of their bases. We’ll continue on until we’re sure something has changed, then make a decision based on new facts.”
“We’re still pretty stealthy, even if they cross our path I doubt the fleet will spot us.” Jane half stated, half hoped her point was true. “But if they really do know our course and speed, we could be invisible and it wouldn’t matter. One lump of metal in front of us moving the wrong way at the wrong speed and its goodnight Vienna.”
“We’re going to have to keep a damn good watch ahead of us, try to spot these problems before they happen.” Mallory agreed. “Use the gun directors, they’re the most powerful sensors we still have operational.”
“”The directors are very narrow sir, we’ll have to sweep them back and forth across our path. It’s possible something could get past the sweeps.”
“We don’t have much choice, our regular forward sensors are in a worse state then we imagined if they failed to spot these ships until now. Better make sure the telescopes are manned around the clock too. Rotate the people watching them every hour, we need fresh eyes on those things.”
“Yes sir.” Jane obeyed.
“It would be nice to find your ships.” Mallory mentioned to Lantree. “But I don’t think they would have headed into Chinese space by themselves.”
“No, I guess not.” The American agreed reluctantly. “Suppose that means we’re all alone out here.”
Mallory exhaled through his teeth. “I certainly bloody hope so.”



“We’re moving into the centre of the debris field now.” Lieutenant Fisher reported. “Nothing suspicious in our path.”
“Sensors, stay alert.” Mallory warned. “There could be mines or Attack Drones nesting in the wreckage.”
“Understood sir.”
“Mr Cross, weapons?”
“Everything is on hot standby.” The Gunnery officer stated confidently. “Point defences will open fire the millisecond something shows up.”
“All this metal around us isn’t helping passive sensors.” Jane grimaced. “Lot of frozen atmosphere and fuel too, if we cross a dense enough pocket we’re going to leave a nice pretty trail for someone to follow.”
“Better hope fate treats us well then XO.”
Jane arched her left eyebrow scathingly. “Usually fate treats us in the same way a dog treats a lamp post. I remain unimpressed by our chances.”
“Our luck has been good so far, better hope it holds.”
“Last time I trusted to luck my car ended up in a swimming pool.” Jane grunted. “Don’t ask.”
Mallory chuckled. “One of these days you have to write an autobiography.”

The Amethyst moved slowly between the wrecks, the similar relative speeds making it appear as if she were carefully and patiently cruising through the obstructed region, rather than moving at her true velocity of several thousand metres per second. The wrecks were scattered over a few thousand miles, but they were close enough to reveal details of their fate to the quietly watchful crew of the Frigate.
“That was Merrill’s ship.” Lantree advised flatly. “The Oakland, heavy cruiser. She was an ugly ship, and never looked clean, she always seemed to pick up dust faster than the rest of us.”
“Looks like she was hit the hardest.” Cheyo informed quietly. “Multiple impacts, I’d guess eighteen inch rail guns.”
“Eighteen inch.” Mallory repeated with apprehension. “Whoever designed that ship wasn’t messing around.”
“She was the most powerful ship, and the flagship.” Lantree accepted. “Against a battlecruiser those eight inch guns would have been murder. He never stood a chance against that sort of firepower.”
“There isn’t much radiation.” Jane spoke up helpfully. “There were probably plenty of survivors, and I can’t find any beacons. The remaining ships probably had time to rescue people before they left.”
“Yeah, yeah I guess they did.” Lantree managed a weak smile. “Thanks.”
“They probably picked up Chinese survivors too.” Mallory commented. “No pods or beacons over by their wreck either.”
“Hope they make it back.” Lantree gave a quick nod. “Both groups.”

“Might have something ahead Commander.” Cheyo reported. “Sensors are showing a transmitter.”
“Captor mine?”
“No sir, more like a data recorder.” She deduced. “Black box from one of the ships.”
“Ah.” Mallory smiled. “Now that might be worth something.”
“I appreciate the idea Commander, but the other ships probably took a recorder from each ship when they stopped for survivors.” Lantree remarked. “Their families will already know what’s happened, we don’t need to take the risk.”
“No risk Captain.” Mallory returned. “At these speeds we can try and grapple it as we go past.”
“No need to fire thrusters?”
“No need Captain.” The Officer confirmed. “And I don’t know about you, but after so long in the dark that recorder could give us answers to what the hell happened while we were gone.”
Lantree’s mood lightened slightly. “Got a point there Commander.”
“Do we still have a grapple at the upper air lock XO?”
“Last I heard, yes sir.” Jane confirmed. “Chief Broome is fully qualified to use the snare, I’ll have him report up there at once.”
“Chief Broome.” Mallory recited. “Is there anything he isn’t qualified on?”
“He can’t get past level three on Demon Slayer Virtuality.”
“The hologame?” Lantree searched his memory. “My youngest completed that game in a day.”
“Better not mention that.” Jane advised with a wink. “He still gets tetchy over it.”

The snare was nothing more than a metal claw that could be attached to the end of the winch situated within the Amethyst’s airlocks. It turned the winch into a grapple with one easy click and allowed it to snag and reel in small items. Most of the time these items were data recorders or message drops, for more delicate operations like recovering living people or sensitive equipment from space a team of suited up specialists were used.
The claw itself was remote controlled utilising small thrusters similar to those on a space suit manoeuvring pack. The idea was that an operator positioned it using the thrusters as the target drifted by, and simply closed the claws around it at the right moment. Very easy at a relative stop, but considerably trickier if the target is moving at a different speed on a different course.
Luckily Chief Petty Officer Broome was up to the task, an expert in all fields of EVA techniques he launched the grapple and lined it up perfectly, matching the freefall of the data recorder by eye alone.
“We have it.” Jane received the report through her earpiece. “Broome is reeling it in now.”
“Good show.” Mallory approved. “Have it brought down here as soon as the air lock clears.”
“Commander, I think you’ll need a bit of help here.” Lantree mentioned. “You could skim some of the information yourselves, but because you aren’t part of the US Navy you won’t have access to the core recordings.”
“Things like orders received, sensor logs, that sort of thing?” Mallory presumed. “Same as our own systems.”
“If you’ve got a portable terminal I’ll unlock it with my codes.” Lantree offered. “I’m as anxious for some answers as the rest of you, more even, that box has the last moments of one of my comrades on it.”
“Of course Captain, I’ll get you a terminal.”
“I could use some help too, Lieutenant Tom Adams, he was my Computer specialist on the Nashville. If the data is corrupted in any way he has the skill to sift it.”

It took a few more minutes for the box to make it down from the airlock, stripped of its protective shell it was a simple grey box with the inscription ‘Property of the United States Navy’ stencilled on the sides. It was otherwise featureless save for one data port in the centre of the topmost panel. In the time it took for the box to be delivered, still cold to the touch, Lantree had called up Lieutenant Adams, a large framed man in his early twenties who had picked up a limp after breaking his thigh during the battle with the Chinese cruiser.
“What do you make of it?” Lantree asked his crewmate.
“Standard data recorder, looks in fine condition.” Adams rattled off. “Nobody used nukes so it should be perfect inside, none of that pesky EMP to jiggle things up.”
Jane provided a portable terminal, a fold out computer the size of a shoe box which Adams swiftly connected to the recorder.
“Shouldn’t take a minute now.”
Lantree smiled in approval. “Mr Adams is something of a rarity in the Navy, an actual certified genius.”
“Must come in handy.” Jane guessed.
“An IQ of two hundred and something I think, he doesn’t like to talk about it.” Lantree spoke like a proud father. “We never could figure out why he wasn’t a millionaire or working as a consultant to a major company.”
“Why did you pick the Navy Lieutenant?” Mallory asked curiously.
“Easy Commander, adventure.” Adams replied without looking away. “Can’t get that sat behind a desk. Where else could I see the rings of Saturn up close, or examine astrological phenomena up close? I wanted some wonder and some excitement, and I guess I got both. I’m the current embodiment of being careful what one wishes for.”

The console issued a stern beep.
“I’ll need your command authority to go further sir.” He glanced to Lantree. “I could break it in a couple of minutes of course, but my fingers are a little tired to type.”
“He probably could too.” Lantree inputted his serial numbers, the keys sampling his DNA as he typed to confirm it was him. “Voice recognition, Lantree, Steven, Captain United States Navy.”
The system checked its memory banks, then confirmed he was in fact who he claimed to be. One of the more subtle layers of security involved a voice stress analyser, a system which could theoretically tell if Lantree had been captured and was being forced to access the data in the recorder. Satisfied with the checks it unlocked the terminal and brought up the full records of its parent ship.
“The USS San Antonio, Captain Barclay.” Lantree read with sombre respect. “He was new, this ship was his first command.”
“Not much of a career.” Jane remarked absently.
“What can you tell us from these records?” Mallory pushed them back on topic. “Ideally we need to know if they spotted other Chinese ships in the region.”

“I’ll try and call up the sensor logs.” Adams set to work. “Let’s see, here’s the last entry.”
“It registers a sudden energy surge.” Lantree read. “Probably the Chinese ship lighting them up with targeting scanners, then it cuts out.”
“Quick kill.” Mallory noted. “Exactly by the book for a stealth ship.”
“It seems to be just a localised surge, probably just one ship.” Adams analysed carefully. “If there were any escorts they didn’t open fire in the initial volley.”
“If they were there they would have done.” Mallory informed. “They would have engaged the two separate cruisers, the ones that survived.”
“So at least it tells us there weren’t any other Chinese in the area back then.” Jane said. “Course there might be now.”
“Thank you Miss Sunshine.” Mallory smirked. “What about earlier contacts?”
“Plenty flagged, but doesn’t look like much nearby.” Lantree shook his head. “But there are a lot of warships out here, more than we’ve seen so far.”
“Bigger than the fleet?”
“Two or three times as many.” Adams replied. “I’d guess two full Chinese fleets, Green fleet and Blue fleet according to the notes here.”
“We have the Fifth and Sixth fleets out here.” Lantree added. “But the average US fleet is smaller than the Chinese groups, we’re going to be outnumbered until help arrives from the Earth line.”
“If they can be spared.” Mallory spoke cautiously. “There are three more Chinese fleets out there, Red Gold and White I believe.”
“That we know of.” Jane pointed out. “At least one hidden task force at Saturn, could be more.”
“Not the best odds.” Lantree agreed with the consensus. “Especially after some fool threw away a couple of hundred ships this morning.”

“That’s it for sensors.” Adams finished. “Nothing stands out, but there are enough ships out there to cross our path if they wanted to.”
“Question is do they want to.” Mallory concluded. “What about the current situation?”
“I think we can take a leap of faith and say things aren’t going well.” Jane intoned.
“Bring up the communication logs.” Lantree ordered. “See what they say.”
“Yes sir.” Adams worked his controls, selecting a different menu on the screen. “Here’s the order detaching us from the Squadron, and one setting DefCon Three.”
“Those were the last orders we received before the jamming cut in.” Lantree informed the other two officers.
“Looks like the Squadron was still in contact with home, close enough to the booster relays to cut through jamming.” Adams presumed. “This one is sending the fleet to a new patrol sector, ah, this one’s interesting.”
“It orders all US ships to hunt down Heng registered Security ships. Mercs.” Lantree read out. “Including permission to chase them over the Chinese border. That’s pretty bad.”
“Almost provocative.” Mallory agreed. “But after they nuked that trade hub I can’t see anyone disagreeing with it. They were out of control.”
“Status report here says the Mercenaries have withdrawn deep into Chinese space, dated a week after the last order.” Adams reported. “It also says talks mediated by the Australian Federation have broken down.”
“I bet they bloody did.” Jane snorted.
“This one you should probably read for yourselves.” Lantree gestured for them to come over. “Second to last order she ever received from home.”
He brought up the decrypted text message, the unfeeling writing still capable of delivering the hammer blow of the content.

+++++

Priority- Urgent, Immediate

Received- 0016hrs

Date- April Second, 2113

From- Admiral Clarence Ryder, CinC United States Outer Sphere Forces.

To- All ships, US Fifth Fleet, Sixth fleet, and attendant formations.

Subject- Emergency uprating of alert status

Classified- Confidential


1- At 2346 yesterday, April First, A Chinese force of unknown strength and capability assaulted United States facilities including Space Fortress Reagan and approximately eight smaller supply bases and outposts.

2- No warning was given, no ultimatum made, and no declaration of war stated

3 -Damage is unclear at this time, but predicted to be heavy.

4 -Consequently all United States armed forces are to set DefCon One effective immediately.

5- All Chinese registered vessels are classified hostile, all officers are ordered to engage any Chinese registered ship or facility in your sector. Further orders will be forthcoming.

6 -Fleet Commanders are ordered to prepare Plan Orange for immediate implementation.

7- At this time an emergency session has been called at the Capitol Building. A formal declaration of war against China is expected before the end of the day. To all intents and purposes we are already at war.

8- I repeat, we are at war with China.

9- Conduct yourselves professionally, with honour and courage, and we’ll bleed these bastards dry.

Signed- Admiral Clarence ‘Bulldozer’ Ryder, USN.

End Message

+++

All three officers dwelt on the text for a long moment, absorbing the implications of this dramatic bombshell. The world had changed during their absence, and it was far from an ideal homecoming.
“We kind of guessed this already.” Jane broke the silence with customary insight. “With all the shooting, explosions and nuclear ping pong going on out there.”
“At least we know why.” Lantree mentioned. “A Chinese pre-emptive strike. Sneak attack.”
“So it appears.” Mallory read through the text again. “This was two months ago, before the Nashville was destroyed.”
“But probably not before the Saturn Station was nuked.” Jane countered. “That was still undeniably murder.”
“Very much so.” Her Commander nodded.
“I wonder how they made it to Reagan?” Adams raised a question. “Even if they were stealth ships we would have seen them burn, plotted their course even if it was on the far side of the system.”
“What if they used a planet to mask their engines?” Jane asked. “Build up speed out of sight and then slingshot? Something we’ve tried in the past.”
“We’ve got satellites everywhere.” Lantree shook his head. “We can see the far side of Mars, Venus, Jupiter, the Sun…”
“But not Saturn.” Mallory looked up, his mind yelling as it pieced together the jigsaw of events. “You only had the Space Station at Saturn, the one they blew up.”
“So it couldn’t report seeing Stealth ships burning their engines behind Saturn for a sling shot towards the inner system.” Lantree exhaled. “Pointing right at our main outer core bases.”
“That fleet in the rings, they must have been support for the Stealth ships.” Jane reasoned. “They weren’t the main strike force themselves, they were just guarding the main Chinese attack.”
“Those Stealth ships must have set off before we arrived.” Mallory worked out. “Once they set off they couldn’t be recalled, not without giving away the Chinese capabilities, they’d be fully committed to war.”
“Which means they initiated this sneak attack months before hand.” Lantree growled in building fury. “Before this Merc situation even started!”

“It’s something we considered earlier.” Mallory nodded in agreement. “The Chinese look like they are responding to American provocation, the Mercenaries, the intrusion into Chinese space, the seizing of disputed territory. America looks like the aggressor, yet all this time they were playing the game, putting their pieces onto the chess board and moving in for the kill.”
“Check mate.” Jane sighed.
“But not entirely, we have the proof they had this whole thing planned from the beginning.” Mallory crossed his arms. “This is just the final piece, the last bit of mystery cleared up.”
“Very bold plan.” Jane admitted. “And it’s working so far, the Chinese seem to have the initiative, US forces are in trouble.”
“For now.” Lantree resolved. “We’re still mobilising, by the looks of it our main forces haven’t engaged yet, they’re still arming near Mars.”
“Nor have the Chinese main fleets.” Mallory countered. “It seems a grand battle is on the cards.”
“And you just know it’ll happen when we’re passing by.” Jane grimaced. “That’s just exactly how our luck works.”
“There’s something else here.” Adams offered. “Another transmission, audio only, but I think it’s worth listening to.”
“The Presidential Address.” Lantree raised an eyebrow. “Do you mind Commander?”
“Not at all, I’m curious to hear this myself.” Mallory allowed. “Matter of fact, pipe it through the ship, the crew has a right to know exactly what has happened here, from both nations.”








“Ladies and Gentlemen, we interrupt our schedule to bring you an announcement from the President addressing the Capitol Building, Washington.”


“My fellow Americans, many of you will have heard rumours by now, dark whispers and fears of destruction in the far reaches of space. I must inform you all, sadly, that the rumours are true.

Yesterday, Our military facilities were suddenly and deliberately attacked by the Republic of China. Our brave servicemen, surprised as they slept were swift to fight off this attack, but not before great damage was done. I fear many thousands of our servicemen and women have died over the last few hours, a loss we bear with grief and righteous anger.

“December the Seventh, September the Eleventh, August the Fourth, add now to that list April the Second, all of them days which will live in infamy for as long as our nation endures. And endure it will.

These cowardly attacks have not achieved their objectives, few of our ships were defenceless in dock at the time and while material losses are expected to be great, our fleet remains strong, it remains viable, and it remains ready to fight for each and every inch of American Soil and her citizens.

We stand at the summit of a great decision, we have been attacked, humbled by our enemies. We must now decide whether or not we accept this and fade away, whether we accept our imposed limits and shy away from the challenge laid before us, or do we decide to fight, to sacrifice, but ultimately not to yield and rise to new heights.

I propose that this honourable house ratify an immediate Declaration of War against the Republic of China and her allies. I propose that every voice in this nation declare as one that we will not be beaten and bullied by anyone! I propose that the American People stand up, straight and proud in the face of this aggression, and that we meet it with the full fury this mightiest of nations can summon. That the American People in their righteous might will win through to absolute victory.

For a generation we have been weak and timid, the world has grown to see the United States as a toothless former power. We must not allow them to be right. The future of this nation is at stake, to majestically rise or feebly collapse before this defining moment of our history.

This is our chance to answer the call. This is OUR moment.

This is now our time to reclaim the American Spirit, to prove the cynicism, doubt, and mistrust of the world is unfounded. To reaffirm that we the American People out of any other upon this Earth are truly summed up by this creed; Yes we can.

The eyes of the world are upon us, all our ancestors are watching. In the Spirit of Washington, Lincoln and Roosevelt I ask every man woman and child not to fail before the darkness, but to stand and be counted among the great generations of this nation. Today, your country truly needs you. Thank you, and God Bless."
 
12


Crossing the Asteroid Belt


“I don’t know.” April said heavily. “I just don’t know.”
“Nobody does.” Pete joined her. “We haven’t heard anything, there was nothing else in the records according to Captain Lantree.”
Diego shook his head, deep in apparent worry with his almost black eyes unable to focus on anything for long.
“I got a lot of family back home, little ones too down in Texas.” He spoke quickly and anxiously. “What if the Latin league decides to even some old scores while we’re fighting China? They’re right on the border! They wouldn’t have time to escape!”
He leaned against a bulkhead, overcome with turmoil as he thoughts ran rampant.
“They might already be dead!”
“Or they might not be!” April leaned in close to him, bobbing her head to try and catch his darting eyes. “The League isn’t dumb, they know our ground forces won’t be needed in space and can easily stop any invasion. It’s all fine.”
“There haven’t been any flashes from Earth.” Pete added supportively. “No sign that there’s fighting on the surface, it’s all in space.”
“Deep space.” April added with a smile. “Well away from civilian centres. Don’t worry about them.”
Diego was breathing deeply, verging on hyper ventilation, the young man seemingly fighting for control. Despite the generally low opinion of him the navy crew felt he didn’t fit the stereotype of a mercenary. He wasn’t intimidating in appearance, didn’t have much confidence and made little impact when he entered a room. He looked like what he claimed to be, a civilian who took the job for more money.
Yet even so he was tarnished by his association with Cyrus Errol, the Royal navy crew considering him little better than pond scum while, to April’s initial surprise, the US Sailors from the Nashville actually considered him even less valuable to the human race. His time on the ship had been lonely, with only April and Pete neutral enough to treat him more like a human being than a faceless criminal. It generated sympathy from them, but their attempts to change attitudes on the Frigate had failed.

“You’re going to give yourself a heart attack.” April rested a hand on his shoulder. “Seriously, you have to stop worrying, it’ll be alright.”
“Nah, I doubt it.” A voice sneered from beside them, rich with malice.
April rolled her eyes. “Great.”
William Carver strolled up to the trio of civilians with a smirk, Simon Price following more hesitantly behind. The two Ratings were on security detail, a formality in the circumstances but still part of the duties required of the crew and therefore still enforced. Both men had sidearms, something April noted carefully.
“Bill, this is not a good time.” Pete tried to step in, but met only a harsh stare.
“You’re right, it isn’t a good time.” He snarled. “Not for yanks.”
“Bill…” April began.
“How are you Dago? That’s your name isn’t it?”
Diego looked away.
“Little shy are we? Well it’s no surprise, you fucking mercs are all pussies, haven’t got the balls to deal with the real Navy.”
“Bill, come on.” Pete tried again. “Just back off.”
The Rating raised a finger. “How about you back off?”
“Come on Bill.” Simon joined in. “Let’s not do this.”

“Why don’t you grow a pair Price?” Bill snapped. “I wanna know why little Dago is so jumpy. Got something to hide?”
“He’s worried about his family.” April said sternly. “Now get lost!”
“Aw, poor little pussy.” Carver stuck out his lower lip in mockery. “You wanna cry? Go on, cry.”
Diego refused to take the bait.
“I said cry fucker!”
“Alright, enough of this shit.” Pete advanced, only to have Bill turn on him and push him away forcefully enough so Pete stumbled backwards and hit the deck.
“Fucks sake Bill!” April yapped. “Get a grip!”
“I have a grip.” He seethed with disgust. “Americans, see I never really liked you lot, too sanctimonious. Even know what that means Dago? But you had your country, we had ours, and that was fine. But now you’re in my face, fucking up our chances of living. I didn’t mind these two.” He waved at April who was helping Pete up. “Hell, if we weren’t buggered up I wouldn’t mind the Yank navy on here, at least they are in uniform. But you, you little shit, you’re worse than nothing. You suck our air, eat our food, and its worth more than you are.”
He smiled. “Whose gonna miss you, eh? What if you died right now?”

“Bill, please.” Simon repeated.
“Shut up.” He grunted back. “Come on Dago, why are you still alive?”
“I…I…”
“Don’t make me laugh! Talk!”
“I want to go home!”
“Home?” Bill laughed. “Too fucking bad! It’s probably a nuclear crater by now!”
“No!” Diego bared his teeth, the words touching a nerve. “My family…”
“If they’re lucky they’re dead, if not, hey, I hear those Latin types are very considerate in the sack.”
It was enough, with a yell Diego lashed out, swinging his arms and leaping for Carver. It was a spirited attack, but uncoordinated, going wide as the Rating stepped back and then lunged with a punch into the Mercenary’s gut, doubling him over. With a blur of motion Carver drew his hand gun, the black squared off weapon clicking as he dragged back the hammer.
“Up!”
He yanked Diego upright and hurled him against the steel wall, pushing the gun up against his forehead.
“You fucking wop bastard! I’m going to empty your face against this wall!”
“What the fuck Bill!” Pete stormed forward, coming face to face with the muzzle of the hand gun as Bill snapped it around.
“Back off or join him!” He yelled. “You know I’ll do it, I don’t want to Pete, you ain’t that bad, but I will!”
“You’re fucking crazy!” April screeched, completely losing control. “Simon, please, for fuck sake please!”
The younger naval rating swallowed, his face pale and skin prickling with sweat.
“Bill…”
“Shut up Price!”
“Bill.” There was a click as a second pistol was cocked. “Put it down.”

Carver turned, keeping his pistol pressed against Diego’s head as he glared mockingly at his friend. “Oh please, don’t be a tosser Price, put it down before you look stupid.”
Simon was petrified, the gun shaking as he held it inches away from his comrade, but it didn’t lower.
“You need to drop the gun Bill.” Simon squeaked, his voice barely above a whisper.
“What? This gun?” Bill smiled, pushing it harder into Diego’s head, the young Merc whimpering quietly. “No.”
“Bill, don’t make me…”
“Like you could, you pansy.”
Very slowly, almost beyond his control, Simon’s finger squeezed the trigger, the slip of metal moving backwards tiny bit by tiny bit. Bill didn’t flinch or blink, staring straight at Simon with supreme confidence.
“What in the name of flying fuckery is going on here?!”
Every single person snapped their heads toward the airtight door that was standing open at the end of the corridor, finding stood there the small but decidedly larger than life figure of First Officer Jane Rhodes so hot with anger she was about to melt through the deck. Nobody moved, not even to speak, which didn’t help.
“Lower those weapons.” She ordered, not shouting but with enough projection to be heard clearly several hundred yards away. “Both of you.”
“Co…Commander, Ma’am…” Simon began to try and offer an explanation.
“Now!” She bellowed, loud enough to rattle fillings.

Both side arms were lowered and safetied, the two ratings standing stiff to attention as Diego slid down to the floor sobbing. April rushed to his side at once.
“Holster the weapons.”
There was no argument.
“Speak, and by Odin’s scraggly hair brush the explanation I’m about to hear had better be so spectacularly good Shakespeare’s zombie itself rises from the grave, hops out here and shakes both of you by the hand.”
“Ma’am, we had reason to believe the Merc was a threat to the ship.” Bill spoke swiftly and calmly.
“You lying sack of…” Pete roared.
“Stop!” Jane snarled back. “Why was Able Spaceman Price aiming his weapon at you and not Mr Chavez?”
“He’s a very bad shot Ma’am.”
“Bullshit, he was going to execute Diego!” April shouted, on the brink of tears. “Simon was trying to stop him.”
“Well Mr Price?” Jane asked.
Simon blinked over at Carver, his old friend, and he did not recognise the man stood beside him.
“That is correct Ma’am.”
“Carver, surrender your weapon to Price.”
“But, Ma’am, it isn’t what it looked like.”
“If you do not surrender your weapon, I’m going to have you shot for mutiny.” Jane spoke in cold clarity. “And do not test me William, don’t even pretend to think I won’t do it.”
He paused for a second longer, then carefully removed the weapon and gave it to Price, who almost dropped it thanks to the amount of sweat on his palms.
“You’re under arrest. Mr Price, escort Mr Carver to the brig.”

She was not joking, the dark look on her face at odds with the fair features she possessed, the blue eyes now filled with a mix of horror and pure anger.
“You’ve shamed this ship Mr Carver, you’ve shamed the Navy and the Country.” Jane stated evenly but with such force of belief each word landed with a hammer blow. “You better hope the courts declare you mad, because if not I will personally find you and feed you acid. And this time Mr Carver, I’m not joking. Get out of my sight.”
Carver went without another word, Simon tottering nervously behind him.
“Thank you.” April stood. “You saved a life today, maybe two.”
“I don’t want to hear it.” Jane replied flatly. “Carver was a good sailor, I don’t know what pushed him over the edge but I can guess.”
“Whoa!” Pete exclaimed. “You’re not blaming us because one of your guys goes wacko?”
“If you weren’t here would he have done this?”
“He was a ticking timebomb!”
“Perhaps, or maybe…”
Without warning the ship lurched hard to the left, throwing them off balance and forcing them to reach out a steadying hand towards the nearest wall. Even the experienced Commander was taken by surprise, bending her knees to keep upright.
“Now what?” April despaired.
“Evasive action.” Jane looked across as if she could see through the walls to the source of the problem. “There’s no way we’d fire thrusters unless it was really bad.” She announced. “Give away our position.”
Almost precisely on cue the alarm sounded.
“Action stations!” They heard Mallory call down the speakers. “Close up for Action!”
“Shit.” Jane swore. “Go hide somewhere, stay out of the way!”
“We can help, we can….” Pete countered.
“Find somewhere out of the way!” Jane turned for the door. “Don’t argue, just go!”
She bolted away, leaving the three Americans stood in the blaring noisy corridor.
“Guess they found us.” April spoke with deep apprehension. “Where do we go?”
“This way.” Diego announced. “I know a safe place.”


+

“Oh look, glad you could make it XO.” Commander Mallory twinkled as Jane skidded into the conn. “Take a wrong turn at Albuquerque?”
“Trying to prevent a third American Revolution.” She announced, latching her lifeline to the rail around the tactical table display.
“Nothing too serious I hope, not in this mess?” Captain Lantree added a concerned frown.
“Not to put too fine a point on it but some of us are starting to crack.” Jane admitted glumly. “We’ve been dodging death and disaster for too long, and this constant heat…”
“We’ll deal with it later.” Mallory severed the topic of conversation. “We have more immediate problems, something scanned us.”
“Any idea what?” Jane asked.
“Working on it.” The Commander tilted his head towards Cheyo on sensors. “Whatever it was its right on top of us, less than half a light second, and we had no idea it was there until it went active.”
“Another stealth ship?” Lantree guessed.
“Might be, or might just be that our sensors are so shot up we just never saw it coming.” Mallory grimaced. “We’ve got some fat blind spots, especially astern, for all we know that could be a Chinese battleship flotilla out there.”
“Sir, telescopes have a fix.” Cheyo called over. “Filtering image through the computer, changing contrast…”
“Punch it up over here.” Mallory ordered. “I never imagined I’d say this but I’m praying it’s a Yank.”
“Not the Semovente?” Jane questioned.
“Captain Rossellini would have hailed us by now, in fact he’d still be bloody talking.” Mallory grunted a brief chuckle. “No, it’s either one of Lantree’s unit, or one of the Chinese ships that hit them.”
The image gradually began to appear, a tiny dot that was magnified, the ship computers refining the image, picking out light and shadow to give it definition.
“One ship.” Lantree noted. “A small one too, Destroyer I’d guess.”
“Chinese Destroyer.” Jane felt her heart sink. “But we might still be able to get through, if they haven’t been ordered to look for us, if they don’t know the situation, I mean Europe is still neutral.”



Mallory squinted, watching as more detail revealed itself, the characteristic catamaran hulls by now obvious, along with the fuzzy spikes of guns.
“It’d take some fast talking, but you could do it.” Lantree agreed.
“No.” Mallory shook his head. “It’s him.”
The other two officers stared across at the Commander.
“Him?” Jane asked. “Him who?”
“The ship from Saturn. The Destroyer who put that hole through the hull. It’s him.”
“It can’t be!” Jane gushed in utter bewilderment. “It has to be a different one, a different Hunter Class!”
“No, it’s him.” Mallory repeated with assuredness. “Look at the hull damage, the buckling and rad count. It’s the same guy we nuked, I know it is.”
The image became clear enough for a 3D render, a sensor extrapolation which showed the vessel in maximum detail. The model hovered in mid air, turning as the holographic elements rolled and flipped it, showing the ragged hole the Amethyst rail guns had burrowed through its hull and the slight bending of the two long hulls where close range nukes had sublimated a portion of the ships skin, pushing and twisting the internal skeleton into its new shape.
“It is the Saturn ship.” Jane said faintly, her voice losing much of its gravity. “Fuck.”
“She’s scanning us again.” Cheyo warned. “It’s from her main arrays, directed right at us.”
“She wouldn’t go active unless she was ready to take us.” Mallory shook his head. “I need distance and speed!”
“Enemy ship dead astern, matching our course exactly!” Cheyo reported. “She’s closing at five hundred kilometres a second, estimate range one hundred fifty thousand klicks!”



“So much for hide and seek.” Mallory exhaled, looking over his shoulder. “Helm, activate main engines, five G acceleration.”
“Aye sir!”
The Frigate lurched as the engines growled to life, the hull creaking and groaning as the supports were compressed by the force pushing the tens of thousands of tons of metal forward. Firing the engine was like sending up a flare, but at this point it was redundant. Stealth wasn’t going to save them.
Mallory leaned into the acceleration, straightening up as the artificial gravity fields changed shape to compensate.
“They’re not gaining so fast sir.” Cheyo reported. “But they’re accelerating too, they are still closing the range.”
“How did they get this close without us spotting them?” Jane tried to workout. “Even with sensor damage we should have spotted their engine burns!”
“They must have sling shotted like us, predicted our destination.” Mallory guessed. “They’ve been right behind us all this time, matching our every movement. Damn those guys are good.”
“Can we outrun them?” Lantree asked.
“Can we Miss Fisher?” Mallory asked the Helm officer.
“I don’t think so, not unless they’ve ruptured a fuel tank.” She shook her head. “We’re down to a quarter of our reactant, doesn’t matter if we run at maximum burn or minimum, we’re going to run out of fuel long before we reach EU space.”
“And if we coast he catches up to us in a few minutes and blows us to shiny chunks.” Jane said through her teeth. “A ship like that has twice our thrust to weight ratio and tens of thousands of tons more fuel.”
“So we can’t run, and we can’t hide.” Mallory stated simply. “There’s no debris, no friendly forces, no terrain to act as cover. Just him and us in wide open space. We have exactly one option.”
“Please say surrender.” Jane raised both eyebrows. “Please.”
“Unfortunately XO if we did give up given what we know we’d probably end up with a 10mm lobotomy.”
“I hate my life.” Jane winced. “But at least we can share some of that misery.”
“What are we going to do?” Lantree asked. “What can we do?”
Mallory made his choice, it didn’t take him a long time, the decision was almost instant which surprised him on some level He always expected such a monumental moment to be fraught with point and counterpoint. It wasn’t.
“We’re going to come about. We’re going to load rail guns. We’re going to throw down the gauntlet and then hopefully kick him in the balls when he bends over to pick it up.”
Lantree said nothing for several heartbeats, weighing up his own options if he had been in Mallory’s position.
“Sounds like a plan. Lets do it.”
“For the record that is still a Hunter out there, it can swat us like a fly.” Jane reminded. “There’s no way we’re going to win.”
“No reason not to try.” Mallory replied with building confidence. “If we fall today, we fall like heroes.”
“Five hundred years of tradition.” Jane closed her eyes and filled her lungs, savouring the air as she cleared her mind. “Nobody will ever know what happened to us.”
“Probably not.” Mallory agreed. “Miss Fisher, hard to Starboard, ninety degrees about! Mr Cross, load armour piercing rounds, no more dicking about! We might not win this fight but we can make the bastard bleed.”
“Aye sir, plotting firing solution!”
“Let’s make them sorry they ever laid eyes on us.”



Mallory smiled briefly, brimming with pride in his crew, then tapped his headset, connecting shipwide.
“Attention crew of the Amethyst, we have an enemy warship approaching our position. They’ve spotted us and we can’t outrun them, so we’re going to turn and fight. After six weeks of running I’m sure Amethyst was getting a little tired anyway. I don’t have time for a stirring speech so I’ll just say keep your faith, in this ship, in this crew, in the men and women beside you, and we can work miracles. Standby your battle stations, we have a tradition to uphold.”
“Good speech.” Jane said. “Though considering the last HMS Amethyst was burnt to a crisp off Somalia, and the one before was turned into Swiss Cheese on the Yangtze this may be one tradition we’d be better off skipping.”
“I was thinking more of the Nelson tradition.”
“Sir, if Nelson was in our position he’d already be kissing his second in command goodbye.” Jane retorted. “And no thank you sir.”
“I’m in no mood for suicide today.” Mallory offered a brief smile. “We just need to escape, put a hole in his fuel tank, take out an engine cluster, whatever lets us get home before he gets us.”
“Going to be a bugger hitting him from this range.”
“On the plus side I suspect the range will be decreasing fast.” Mallory stated. “On the negative side the range will be decreasing fast. Works both ways.”
“We’re the smaller ship, a third his size.” Jane pointed. “We’re harder to hit.”
“But he has more guns and so more chances.” Lantree dropped in. “Evens out.”
“He can also suck up more damage.” Mallory added. “We’ll be lucky to live through two or three hits. If he hits us dead on one will probably kill us.”
“This is why I transferred to Cruisers.” Lantree grinned awkwardly. “Not half as depressing.”
“Only depressing if we lose Captain.” Mallory returned the grin. “Mr Cross, ready main batteries, prepare torpedo tubes.”
“Aye sir, main weapons coming online!”
“Cut thrust to one quarter!” The Commander continued. “Starboard forty, mark twenty. Let’s put every gun to him.”



The Amethyst halted her flight, drawing herself up to the inevitable with no complaint or hesitation, the heart of the ship pounding energy through her veins, the sinews of her engines, the tendons of her weapons, the matter and muscle of her being all tensing beneath the metal skin. The distant sun caught her briefly, a glint of white picking out panel lines, scuffed armour and the myriad of holes both small and large that had wounded the Frigate. Out matched but never outclassed her four gun turrets swung out to point backwards at the small speck of light floating behind her, a tiny dot that was barely beheld.
“Another active scan!” Cheyo called. “Energy spike!”
The holographic image of the Chinese ship altered slightly, one of the gun turrets turning a little before it released a single round.
“Incoming!” Cheyo barked the warning. “Calculating plot!”
“Helm, evasive course correction.” Mallory ordered calmly, maintaining focus. “Watch the plot and stay clear.”
The long range gave them plenty of time to avoid the incoming projectile, at such speed the ship barely altered course but even the tiny change was enough to cause the Chinese shot to miss by dozens of miles. As it passed over head the proximity fuse triggered a bright explosion, a flash of intense white light that glowed for a few seconds before fading.
“Marker shell, trying to silhouette any other stealth units.” Jane reported. “Or mines. He’s learning.”
“Also judging our range, timing how long until the shell exploded.”
“Why bother?” Jane frowned. “Surely they can just get our range from their gun directors by now? We’re not running silent anymore.”



All at once the tactical plot lit up with traces, a salvo of missiles and rail gun shots sprouting from the Chinese ship.
“Multiple incoming, fourteen rounds, sixteen missiles!” Sensors reported.
“Point defences, fire at will!” Mallory barked. “Helm, take whatever action you need!”
The deck rumbled as the Amethyst dropped her bow, turning and twisting to throw off the aim of the unguided shells. The missiles were much harder to avoid, swinging in and changing course to keep the warship in their sights. They were met instead by a steady flash of laser fire, the invisible beams coring into the delicate tubes and frying them from the inside out.
“Second salvo inbound!” Cheyo warned. “And a third!”
“Alright, give them some return fire guns. Single salvo, we’ll hold fire until they are closer. Just show them we’ve got teeth.”
Lieutenant Cross brought up his crosshairs, the armoured gun directors mounted on the ship feeding him precise data on the enemy vessel, its speed, range, course and size before anticipating what evasive action it could take. The end result was a cone with its point on the Amethyst and it’s wide circular base showing where the Chinese ship could be by the time the rounds arrived. It was a lot of space to cover with just eight guns, so Cross used his best guess and a little instinct before firing. As the range grew less and the reaction times shorter that cone would grow narrower giving the enemy less places to go, slowly increasing the chances of a hit. Hopefully he’d still be here to take the shot.
The guns fired in pairs, the long darts flashing in the sun as they left the barrels in a poof of burning gas and air, red tracer lights burning at their bases. Even at their immense speed it took almost two minutes for them to reach the enemy ship, by which time the Chinese helm officer had plotted a course between the spread of darts.



“No hits sir.” Cross reported.
“No surprise at this range.” Mallory nodded. “We came close though, within five miles.”
“Nearest enemy shot has been eighty miles.” Jane returned. “They must have a blind monk aiming their main batteries, it’s appalling.”
“I know first year cadets do better.” Lantree commented. “I’m pretty surprised.”
Mallory tapped his fingers on the desk. “Very surprised, the last time we met they were exceptionally good.”
“Now they’re terrible.” Jane saw his thoughts. “What changed? Did we kill their gunners at Saturn?”
“Even if we did and they had to use cooks to direct fire it would still be more accurate.” Mallory shook his head. “We must have buggered their targeting systems.”
“We pick up an active scan before each salvo.” Jane said. “From their main sensors.”
“Not their targeting sensors.” Mallory broke into a wide grin. “We must have nuked their gun directors, they’re having to use regular radar scans for their fire control! No wonder they keep missing, that data would be far less accurate.”
“That is shit hot.” Jane laughed a little. “That’s a massive advantage!”
“Until it gets down to close range, if she closes within ten thousand klicks it won’t matter much at all, local controls will be enough to hit us.” Mallory cautioned. “We have to cripple that ship before it gets close enough to blow us to hell.”
“Commander,” Cross called over, “if it’s lost gun directors there’s a good chance its point defences will be below par.”
Mallory grinned. “Test the theory guns.”



The torpedo bay doors opened at the front of the Amethyst, a few slivers of ice and detritus floating away in the process, the four twenty metre long missiles detaching from the tube walls, held in suspension by electro magnets.
“Tubes one through four answering ready!” Cross called.
“Launch them all.”
The magnetic rails threw the missiles out like slow motion rail gun rounds, the weapons waiting until they were a mile clear before activating their extremely powerful engines and accelerating with blinding speed at the enemy ship. The bright engines made them very clear targets but they were also very small and bringing them down required either a precise hit or filling space in front of them with tons of debris. In its current condition Mallory was gambling the Chinese ship couldn’t do either.
“She’s firing lasers.” Cheyo commented. “No hits yet, following up with flak bursts.”
Small calibre rail guns fired in front of the missiles, exploding shells filling the sky with tiny pieces of razor sharp metal moving fast enough to smash the incoming weapons. The main guns joined in, firing flak and net rounds, wire webs designed to envelope and slice through incoming weapons. Two missiles were brought down, their armoured noses not strong enough to save them, but two more kept coming.
“Enemy ship fully defensive.” Jane watched the coloured tactical plot. “She’s breaking off, that’ll buy us a few extra minutes.”
“Missiles one and four on target, thirty seconds.” Cross reported. “Missile four is taking damage, she’s drifting.”
There was a flash as a laser burned through the named missile, turning it into harmless debris that just bounced off the thick Destroyer’s hull.
“Missile one still on target! She’s inside effective range!”
A 20mm rail gun round prevented the missile from achieving a contact detonation, the missile’s internal sensors detecting the hit, realised it was all over, and detonating the warhead anyway all within a millionth of a second. The ten megaton warhead exploded with a brief flash, far less spectacular than terrestrial detonations but still deadly. A contact hit would have probably finished the destroyer, at this range the ship survived but still took heavy damage as the burst of energy vaporised segments of the hull that in turn twisted and shattered inner structures as the entire ship flexed and cracked.



“Proximity hit!” Cross cheered like a schoolboy. “Reading multiple hull breaches on her starboard side, she’s been pushed out of control!”
“She’s not dead yet.” Jane warned. “More incoming rounds.”
“Sir, it looks like almost all her point defences are down on the starboard side!” Cheyo shouted over.
“Confirm that.” Mallory demanded.
“Confirmed sir, we’ve melted her guns to her fucking deck!” Cross yelled. “She’s defenceless to starboard!”
“Get four more missiles in the tube right now!” Mallory called. “Do we have any crackers?”
“A pair of two hundred megaton strategic warheads sir.”
“Use them, even a proximity detonation with those will do it.” The Commander ordered. “They’re slow bastards but if he’s lost point defences they might just make it through.”
“Commander, multiple salvoes inbound!” Jane warned. “She’s firing a close spread, sixty, correction eighty rounds!”
“Helm, do what you have to do!”
“Evasive port, hang on!”
The two helmsmen threw the ship into another turn, much tighter than previous ones as the ship fought to avoid the weight of fire heading its way. The tactical plot showed the criss cross of the projected enemy rounds and they were all in the Amethyst’s path.
“We’re not going to dodge all of them.” Mallory stated their fears. “Helm, take whatever course minimises damage.”
“Aye sir.”
“Collision alarm.”
The ship rang with the harsh crowing of electronic noise, telling the crew to grab on to something solid.
“Estimate contact, forward hull, ten seconds!”
Mallory gripped the rail around the table.
“Shit.”



Deep in the hull April was tossed into a wall as the ship made a sharp turn, the centripetal force of the turn tugging her off balance and forcing her to half walk and half drag herself along the harsh corridor. Her two companions were faring no better, even Diego who should have had sturdier legs than the two civilians was struggling to make his way through the Frigate.
There was a deep rumble from somewhere ahead, followed by loud clanks of metal clashing and the hum of high power systems invisibly fulfilling their tasks within the ship.
“That’s the guns firing.” Diego presumed their question. “You can hear the rounds being brought up from below.”
“From the magazines right?” Pete checked.
“Only the nuclear ones, most are just inert lumps of metal.” Diego answered. “No need to put those in an armoured room, nothing will happen if they take a hit.”
“Guess that makes sense.” Pete agreed, the ship stabilising its course again allowing them to move freely. “We need to get somewhere safe fast, this is only going to get worse.”
“Damn right, my face has only just recovered from hitting that steel wall at Saturn!” April huffed. “I can’t take again!”
“We’re almost at a safe place.” Diego assured them. “Best place on the ship.”
“Right.” Pete frowned. “Where are you taking us anyway?”
“The Brig.”
“You mean the jail?” April asked.
“Yeah, think about it.” Diego offered his observation. “Where better than armoured rooms with thick metal doors designed to resist all attempts to get in?”
“Or out.” Pete mentioned hesitantly.
“We just won’t lock the doors.” Diego dismissed the counter point. “Any better ideas?”
“None that don’t involve divine intervention.” April sighed. “Okay, jail time.”

The Brig was sandwiched between the main guns in the forward third of the ship, near the living quarters which in the Amethyst’s current condition translated as near the big hole in the side. It was a self contained complex with ten cells arranged opposite each other in twin lines of five with a security room at the front end. It did have the capacity to serve as an emergency room, a gathering place isolated from the rest of the ship capable of sustaining life in the event of disaster overtaking the vessel, an event which right now was not impossible to imagine. Like anywhere else on the ship it wouldn’t survive a direct hit, but it was better than standing like fools in a corridor.
“The Brig.” Pete announced, entering the security room with a stumble as the Frigate wobbled again under his feet. “Uh oh.”
“What?” April followed. “What’s the Uh oh?” She followed his gaze to see there were of course two other people in the room already. “Oh. Uh oh.”
“What are you doing here?” Spaceman Price asked. “Don’t you think you’ve done enough today?”
“Simon.” April smiled nervously. “Right, it’s not that, we, well we need somewhere to hide.”
From the first cell Bill Carver watched them with wry amusement. “Here to gloat? Poke your noses through the cage and sneer at the animal?”
“This is supposed to be a shelter, right?” Diego snapped. “A safe haven, so here we are.”
“Yeah, it’s a good hiding place for cowards like you.” Carver leaned on the bars. “Pull up a cell, find a nice corner and cry.”
“Can we drop the bullshit?” April hissed. “You got a problem with us Bill? With my people? Fine, you enjoy yourself with that, but if I hear one more snipe outta you I swear I will kick you in the balls so hard you’ll be sneezing piss!”
Pete grinned like a loon, radiating pride. “That’s my girl.”
“And we aren’t cowards, we aren’t hiding! Where the hell do you hide on a ship this size in a battle? If the ship buys it we all buy it, so I’m ready to help. We all are, right?”
“Damn straight.” Pete answered without hesitation.
“Well, I guess…” Diego began.
April whirled on him, fixing the Mercenary with a fiery stare. “I said ‘Right?’”
“Right.” He replied with notably less enthusiasm.
“Then it’s settled. Now what?”

Price could only shrug. “I don’t know, I mean, do you know first aid?”
“No.” April answered quickly and concisely. “What else?”
“Electrical wiring?”
“No. Keep going.”
“Spot welding?”
“Simon, I’m a fuckin’ Reporter. Give me something an idiot could do.”
Carver spat out a laugh. “You’re asking the right guy.”
“Shut it Bill.” Simon shot back. “Okay, I’m supposed to be on damage control in this section. You can help me.”
“Damage control, okay.” April nodded. “What do you need?”
“Easy, every section on every deck has a damage control locker, it has a glue gun inside and two extinguishers. You use the glue gun to shoot a polymer paste at any cracks in the hull to seal breaches, and the extinguishers are for minor fires.”
“So just point and shoot?” Pete asked.
“Point and shoot.” Simon confirmed.
“Okay, we can handle that.” April accepted with singular determination. “Let’s stop this lady from falling apart around us.”
“Glad to be helping.” Pete affirmed. “Not a fan of the whole dying thing.”
“Well you all have your suits on.” Simon noted with approval. “If we take a hit seal your hoods and just do what I do. It’ll be fine.”
“Yeah, absolutely spiffy.” Bill mocked. “Have fun out there.”
“Ignore him.” Simon dismissed. “I’m glad you’re helping.”
“It’s appreciated, but we’ve been here so long, this old bird is like our home.” Pete smiled. “We need to help.”
“Then maybe you are one of us.” Simon grinned widely. “Follow me, the nearest locker is in the corridor a few metres down.”
The three civilians headed towards the exit, April and Pete at the back.
“I’m sorry for what happened Bill.” She said over her shoulder. “Really I am.”
“I don’t need your pity, just get the fuck out.”
She was about to say something else conciliatory when there was a deafening crack, much sharper than the loud but dull clunks of the warship machinery. The sudden noise made her jump, her hands slapping close over her ears as she snapped around looking for the source of the noise. What she saw simply failed to register.
Diego was holding a gun, smoke wisping from the barrel as Simon Price fell to the deck, a clean bullet hole in his back. With no expression on his face Diego then turned and pointed his gun at Bill Carver’s cell, the weapon apparently lifted from Simon’s holster, and pulled the trigger three times striking the man in the cell cleanly in the chest, flecks of blood touching the walls and ceiling.
Diego’s face remained a total blank mask, and when he spoke his voice was dead and mechanical.
“Nobody puts a gun in my face.”

April and Pete were frozen motionless, the female reporter still with her hands clasped over her ears looking at the scene. Bill muttered something unintelligible, then folded and dropped to the floor with a quiet thump. Everything seemed incredibly quiet, even with the creak of compressing hull beams and the rumble of the nearby gun mechanisms the room itself seemed utterly deathly quiet like a cemetery at night.
April moved her mouth, taking a moment to remember that speaking involved more than that. She had forgotten to breathe in, meaning her voice was more a short breathless squeak than a real utterance.
“Ho…” Was about all she managed. Fortunately Pete was able to finish off.
“…ly shit!”
Diego remained unmoved. “I guess you’re going to both have a lot of questions. Who am I kidding? You’re reporters, of course you have a lot of questions! More questions than sense, more than is healthy.”
“You shot two guys!” Pete half yelled, April still unable to speak, her hands still over her ears, her face still expressing shock.
“Not the first.” Diego shrugged. “Not the last.”
“The Commander is going to throw you out of a fucking airlock! You stupid bastard!” Pete roared. “What the fuck was that?”
“Like I said.” Diego answered calmly. “I don’t like guns in my face.”
“You have lost it, you are out of your mind!” Pete accused. “You stay the fuck away from us!”
“Wasn’t easy playing a Chicken.” Diego exhaled. “Taking abuse for all these months, living with the superior attitude people on this ship have. But it was necessary.”
“What do you mean playing?” Pete began to step back. “Who are you?”
“All a lie.” April started to feel her brain working, her inquisitive mind putting together evidence, extrapolating theories, doing what a good reporter should. “So why would you hide who you are?”

“That’s easy.” Diego smiled, breaking his mask. “If they knew who I really was, they’d have thrown me back when they rescued me.”
“I’m thinking that would have been a pretty damn good idea!” Pete snarled.
“So you pretend to be some nobody crew man from that Merc ship.” April nodded. “So who are you really? Captain of that ship?”
“No, I was just a passenger, sort of.” He answered. “The Merc crew was on a job for me.”
“You were employing them?”
“Not really, sort of a middle man making sure they did what I told them, what my employer told me.”
She could feel her mouth becoming incredibly dry. “And what did your employer tell you to do?”
He maintained his demonic smile. “To make sure this ship never returned home, and to make sure there were no survivors.”
“Fuck.” Pete exclaimed. “You’re dead. You are fucking dog meat!”
“Didn’t go to plan though did it?” April said. “The Chinese blew your ship away before you could turn on us.”
“Yeah, trust them to start World War Three right now.” He scoffed. “They could have waited a month or two. Still, they nearly did my job for me, the still might do yet.”
“Course you’ll die too.” April pointed out. “Even if the ship survives, the crew will execute you on the spot for this.”
“Maybe, but I’m a professional, these risks come with the job.”
“But why?” Pete asked. “Why destroy this ship? Why blow up a European warship?”
“Isn’t it obvious?” Diego frowned.
“It is.” April replied. “You work for Cyrus Errol, and he wants the two of us dead at any cost.”

Diego managed a harsh chuckle. “That’s pretty much it. All falling into place now?”
“He gets us off Earth, sends us on a long journey into the middle of nowhere, too far from any help, too far to deliver our story before we die. He doesn’t care what we find out here because he knows the truth dies with us.”
“What was the plan? Make it look like an accident?” Pete accused.
“Actually we were going to leave evidence the Chinese did it.” Diego tilted his head. “Not everyday you can blow up a European ship, might as well try gain some advantage from it. Turn the world against China even more. Course I didn’t expect the Chinese to actually shoot at us.”
“If we die nobody will know the Chinese fired first.” April said. “Errol loses any points he could have scored against China.”
“It was a bonus, but the primary mission was a good old fashioned assassination. That’s what I’m getting paid for.”
“Hard to spend that money when Mallory hangs you from the yard arm.”
“My next of kin will be rich.” Diego countered. “Which is acceptable.”
“This doesn’t make sense.” Pete reached out his hand. “You’re going to die for money? Give me the gun.”
“No, you’re going to die for money.” Diego responded. “That’s the transaction. Nothing personal.”
“Errol will kill you too.” He stepped closer, hand still out. “You know his plan, even if by some miracle you live to see Earth again you are still a dead man.”
“I accepted that. The amount of money he’s paying will keep my family rich for generations. You two really pissed him off.”
“You can ask for sanctuary in Europe, claim asylum, this doesn’t have to end in a bloodbath.”
“It doesn’t.” Diego said. “But it will. Get in the cells.”
“You can’t get away with this.” Pete said, not moving.
“If I kill you, then dump your bodies I can.” The assassin smiled back. “I just need one round to hit this ship, then I can just claim you were in the damaged section. Atomised by the Chinese, nothing left to bring home for burial. So sad.”
“You’re wrong.” Pete said. “I’ll tell you why, it’s because…”
As Diego listened Pete made his move, slapping the gun aside and launching himself at the Mercenary, slamming his shoulder into the man’s body and driving him violently against the hard steel wall.
“Pete!” April started over.
“Run!” He yelled back. “Get out of here! Get help!”
He crunched a knee into Diego’s stomach, exploiting the surprise of his attack.
“We passed a squad two sections back, they were armed! Get them down here! Fast!”

She wanted to stay and help, to do something physical, but she knew she couldn’t. She wasn’t strong enough and she cursed herself for it. But she was fast, and she did remember the four armed sailors from the Nashville further up the corridor. They could do something, they could deal with this piece of scum and foil Errol’s plan. She did not hesitate for a second longer, darting out as Pete head butted Diego, breaking his nose in a splat of thick blood.
She ran out of the door so fast she skidded, sprawling with hands and feet to stay upright and on the move, her legs pumping like a sprinter as she ran for the closed door at the end of the corridor, mentally adding up how long it would take to unlock it and bolt through. She was five yards clear when she heard a gunshot, followed by a second.
She didn’t want to stop, her instincts told her to run, but she was rooted down, her feet refusing to move, her entire frame trembling in a mix of hope and horror. She could hear the footsteps behind her, perfectly clear, perfectly crisp. She turned her head and tilted her shoulders, looking back the way she came to see who was behind her, hoping and praying it was Pete.
Diego locked her with dead eyes.
“One to go.”
She did not scream as she imagined she would, nor did she break down and panic. Her mind remarked absently on that, expressing internal surprise at how well she was dealing with this adverse situation. A few months ago she would have lost her temper over a broken suit case, now she was staring at a man intent on murdering her, gun in hand, who had just executed her oldest friend and latest lover.
She didn’t even blink.
“I have an offer for you.” April said as if she were reading the evening news. “I suggest you accept it.”
“Going to throw yourself at me?” He enquired. “Give yourself in exchange for life?”
“You will never touch me.” She replied flatly. “Put the gun down, and you will still live through this.”
“Credit where due, I respect someone who faces death without fear. I’ll make it quick for you, call it a personal favour.”
She was out of options, she knew it and unfortunately so did Diego. She wasn’t going to be able to bluff him or reason with him, and she didn’t have anything to counter his weapon. She could see a few escape routes, side rooms, but she wouldn’t make it before he shot her down.
Diego raised the hand gun. “Been a fun trip.”
April didn’t avert her eyes, looking straight at him. “Go to hell.”
Beneath her feet the deck moved again, rising as the ship climbed relative to direction, a siren blurted out a brief warning before Commander Mallory crackled on speakers.
“Brace for impact! All hands, brace, brace, brace!”
Without a word she quickly hooked her waist belt to the rail that ran through every corridor of the ship, anchoring her to the wall, something Diego wasn’t going to have time to do. She suddenly smiled at the Assassin, and it was not a pleasant Evening News smile.
“Fuck you Diego.”
 
Only one round managed to hit the wildly rolling ship, the massive salvo giving the Frigate precisely no options. It struck the front quarter of the ship almost exactly where the torpedo tubes were located, passing through the hull and across the main forward bulkhead, the armoured wall separating the torpedo room from the missile magazines. It was one of the strongest parts of the ship yet the solid round made a complete mockery of it, unzipping the bulkhead like wet silk and passing out the far side of the hull in a tiny fraction of a second, ripping out several hundred tons of metal and machinery in the process, along with sixteen completely unprepared souls.
It also happened to be one of the worst possible places to hit. The impact completely shredded both the missiles in the tubes and the half dozen still in their racks, spraying fuel and chemicals into the confines of hull while simultaneously melting tons of the armoured skin through friction. It was a disastrous combination, the aerosol fuel igniting the second the round left in a fearsome internal explosion.
The front quarter of the ship was torn to ribbons, everything forward of the magazines including the long range sensors was turned to scrap and then catapulted through the hull into nothingness. Behind the magazines the ship was saved by the aft bulkhead which deflected the blast away from the habitable areas, but the force still twisted the bones of the Amethyst and crushed several rooms flat, ripped up floors and sliced power and air cables.
The bow was smothered in fire, streaks of burning liquid running down the side of the ship like glowing rivers while white hot shards of metal flipped through space rapidly cooling to red before black. The sharp nose itself emerged from the flames like the Hindenburg, a skeleton of twisted girders and a few stubborn scraps of hull plating that had somehow held on.
Inside the crew was pushed violently to the side, their seatbelts and lifelines protecting them from the worst injuries, their survival suits cushioning the bumps and scrapes. Some crew were not lucky, breaking bones as they were tossed casually into walls or the roof, but in the conn at least they were able to recover fast.
“Missile room is gone!” Jane shouted, the entire ship screaming as its hull and gravity systems fought to stay intact under the stress. “Fuck, everything in front of A turret is gone!”
Mallory cursed violently. “Can we still shoot?”
“Yes sir!” Cross yelled back.
“So Fucking do it!”



The gnarled ship passed through the fireball of its own making, burned and twisted but still alive, her guns retorting with a well judged salvo. The fires slowly faded as the fuel burnt itself out and hard vacuum extinguished any secondary blazes but several sections of the hull still glowed dull red with retained heat.
The British rounds passed the next set of Chinese ones, these ones going wider due to the jolt the Amethyst had taken, the violent effects pushing the ship on a much more radical course and ironically saving her from further damage, this time at least. The Hunter also turned to avoid the incoming rounds, but too slowly, her heavily damaged hull unable to survive any more tight turns without cracking and splitting. Two of the Krupp alloy rounds hit the Chinese ship, one of them taking out an entire gun turret while the second sliced laterally through the connecting structure between the two catamaran hulls, further weakening its integrity.
The Destroyer was hurting, the massive structural damage greatly limiting its ability to manoeuvre, but she was still the more powerful of the two combatants, she was still gaining, and she was still fighting.
“She’s firing canister!” Cheyo warned.
“Dirty bastard.” Jane braced, thousands of small fast moving balls bracketing the thinly armoured ship, often passing through with a plink or echo of a ricochet.
“Return the favour! Keep firing!” Mallory yelled. “Range?”
“Twenty thousand and still gaining!”
“We should be close enough to try pick off his engines directly, make that your main target!”
“Commander, missiles inbound!” Cross warned. “Lasers still operational, responding!”
“Try and aim for his weak side, pound the bastard!” Jane snarled. “Pound him ‘til he spits brain!”
Mallory couldn’t help but raise an eyebrow despite the circumstances.
“Where do you get those metaphors from?”
“What? They just come to me.”
“I thank all that is holy that I cannot see into that twisted mind of yours.” Mallory winked. “Stay alert helm, we’ve got very little reaction time, don’t wait for them to shoot, just throw her in whatever random spiral you want!”



+


She could taste blood in her mouth, the tangy metallic substance tickling her tongue and clogging in her throat. She hung suspended on what she guessed was her side, gravity being the only sensation she could feel beside taste, spitting out the gory mixture triggering a few seconds of hard coughing, setting fire to the back of her throat.
Every inch of April’s body was numb, a numbness she knew was due to turn into pain any second now. She was stunned, her head swimming and it took her several long moments to open her eyes and examine the world around her. Everything had changed, the walls, the floor, the roof, it had all been bent and twisted. Smooth panels hung loosely on their torn bolts or dangled on wires, swinging to and fro lazily. Oddly there was no sound, just her own breathing and the strokes of her speedily contracting heart. The world was dark, most of the lights smashed or shorted, just a handful surviving to cast a mucky grey illumination.
It was a few more moments before her spatial awareness came back, before she translated the sights and sounds into a realistic picture of the world around her and exactly how she fitted into it. She was hanging from her lifeline, dangling by the waist from a rail which had remained fixed to the wall, sliding back and forth slightly as the ship continued to turn under power. Inside her skull her brain began to race, from groggy consciousness it began to accelerate, reminding her of the dire situation she was in and the need to escape.
Slowly she extended her right hand, hesitantly wrapping her fingers around the rail, taking the weight of her battered body and pulling. A dull pain began to throb in her muscles as she hauled herself up, her knees trembling like jelly as she scraped her feet across to support her weight, gingerly pressing down and rising to her full height.
There was a lot going through her mind, a flood of images, thoughts and feelings, but amid them all one presented itself louder than the rest. She had to escape.



The door wasn’t far away, a few steps over fallen roof beams and bent panels. It was such a challenge to move, such an exertion the short journey might as well have been a marathon. It took every ounce of willpower April had to let go of the rail, unclip her lifeline and put one foot in front of the other. She stumbled, wobbled, fought to stay balanced as her head continued to swim as an after affect of concussion, but she forced herself forward, forced herself to move through the dizziness and alien sensations. She felt sometimes as if she were light as a feather, other times as heavy as iron, her legs constantly threatening to collapse beneath her and pitch her onto the deck with its jumble of hard and often sharp metal.
Finally she fell against the door with a slap, breathing rapidly and shallowly in her victory, gripping the handles to keep her upright. With great effort she turned both of the locking handles on the airtight door, each retracting with a secure clunk, before pushing it open. It moved barely an inch.
“No, no…” She whispered breathlessly. “Come on! Open!”
She pushed hard against it, putting all her weight behind it, her feet squeaking on the floor as she used her legs to try and budge the stubborn door.
“Open!”
She began to throw herself against it, jamming her shoulder into the unyielding metal, drawing on energy born of deep desire. It hurt, her shoulder screamed in agony but she refused to be beaten, gritting her teeth and pressing even harder. In spite of her best efforts it remained unmoved.
April couldn’t take this anymore, the fighting, the loss, the constant threat of destruction, months of living on the edge and now finally being pushed over. Hope was being constantly held before her, placed in her grasp and then snatched away. She had made it so far, survived so much, now at this last hurdle it was unravelling cruelly before her eyes.
“Please just open.” She fell again against the door, her forehead lying on the cold metal, her emotions flooding over her defences. “Please.” She began to sob. “Just let me go.”



A groan made her spin, eyes wide as she focused her senses on pinpointing the sound. She wasn’t the only survivor, she had hoped but yet again that hope was dashed before her eyes. A blood covered hand pushed away a scatter of pipes and metal sheets, dropping them to the deck with a series of clanks and scuffs, the noise of moving junk joined by coughing.
Diego had also survived. He had been catapulted into the furthermost bulkhead and pelted with debris but it hadn’t killed him. He sat himself upright, drenched in blood from multiple cuts but still breathing. April tried the door again, jerking it, kicking it, throwing herself into it with renewed energy.
“Anyone! Anyone out there, help!” She yelled, forcing her voice out. “Anyone! Get me out!”
“There’s nobody… out there.” Diego spoke hesitantly, using the wall to stand himself up. “Just you and me.”
She ignored him. “Help!”
“This ship is getting torn apart, I think they’ve got bigger problems.” He snickered. “Come on, don’t make me come over there.”
She glared back at Diego, calming herself, feeling a coldness rushing suddenly through her veins. It was the oldest choice there was, fight or flight, and with the door jammed it rather narrowed her options. Her mind came to a simple decision, she had to kill Diego. In fact more than that she actually wanted to kill him, she could think of nothing more satisfying than hitting his skull until his brains oozed out. Everything else just stopped, all the other priorities, restrictions, morals, the fabric of civilisation itself evaporated like morning mist. She was going to kill another human being, or he was going to kill her.
Diego was badly injured, worse than her. His right arm and right leg were limp and bent which meant they were probably broken, that would slow him down and make him less able to fight. It looked like he was in pain and his head injuries might be enough to slow his reaction times, make him as groggy as she had been moments ago. She picked out his flaws and failings with clinical precision, her mind had been honed to find weaknesses in her interviewees and exploit them mercilessly for her own benefit. This was exactly the same thing, only instead of walking away with a prize winning story she would be walking away with her life.



She stepped away from the door, reaching down to pick up a jagged piece of metal piping a couple of feet long, taking satisfaction in its weight and the sharp ends at either side, plotting whether or not to bash him first or go straight for impalement.
“Come and get me you son of a bitch.”
Diego grinned. “Now that’s the spirit! I love a girl with fire!” He raised his left hand, the pistol gripped firmly in it. “At least you get to go out on your feet.”
April didn’t wait for him to finish his gloating, instead diving into an adjoining room as a single round thunked against the far bulkhead.
“If I have to chase you I swear I’ll make it fucking hurt!”
April ignored him, glancing around her new surroundings, eyes darting like a cornered animal. She was in a spare parts room, what had once been a stockroom filled with shelves of small parts was now another chaotic mess, the floor so covered in oddly shaped metal and with every stack of shelves toppled it looked like an overgrown jungle floor. There were two ways in, the one she had used and a second one leading from a smaller store room sandwiched between the brig.
“Here I come, ready or not!” Diego called, a clattering of metal following his movements. The corridor wasn’t long, even injured she had just moments to act. She considered ambushing him in the doorway but quickly discounted it, it was far too obvious. She headed deeper into the room, stepping over the fallen shelves and treacherous footing, knowing that if Diego followed her the obstacles would slow him down further and grant her more time to think.
“There’s nowhere to run!” The assassin shouted to her. “Do us both a favour and stop these games!”
She couldn’t hide in here or seal herself in, there was no easy way to do this, no help coming.



She had made it to the far side of the room when Diego finally showed up, swinging around the doorway.
“Hold it!”
April bolted through the second door, Diego firing off two more rounds with poor accuracy. The damage to his dominant right arm meant he was firing left handed which impacted his accuracy and only served to increase his rage.
“Get the fuck back here!”
He leaned back out in the hallway just in time to catch a glimpse of April running around into the Brig, too fast for him to try for a shot. He didn’t overly mind, breaking into a loathsome smile. There was only one way out of the Brig.
“Rat in a trap!” He laughed after her. “What you gonna do now?”
He dragged himself along the corridor once again back the way he had come, his leg sending jolts of pain through his body with every pulse. He wasn’t a great assassin, this was only his third assignment as a contract killer, but he could feel the glee bubbling up as he neared his target. When it was done he’d take an escape pod and wait for pickup by some of Errol’s people. He knew too much to be left out here unattended, there was nothing stopping him broadcasting all he knew if Errol decided to leave him high and dry. It was excellent leverage. Despite all his talk of accepting death Diego wanted to live.
“Hmm, what could you be doing right now?” Diego grinned, inching closer. “Looking for a gun maybe?”
There was an audible intake of breath from the reporter, it made him tingle.
“Sorry April, I already took care of that. Now you could try and stab me with that pipe, but you know what they say about bringing sticks to gunfights.”
He paused at the doorway, expecting her to be close by, listening for her breathing. She would rush him, it was her only choice and he was ready for it.
“Honestly, I quite enjoyed your company.” He admitted. “I’ll do it quick anyway, for old time’s sake.”


Diego braced himself and hurled himself around the corner, ignoring the pain from his broken bones from such a movement. He had his arm raised ready to fend off a strike from April’s pipe, his gun held back ready to make a counter attack, but it did not come. April was stood a couple of feet away, the pipe discarded, holding in her hands instead a wide metal tube linked by a pipe to a pressurised tank. For a moment he had no idea what it was.
“Like I said.” April met his gaze squarely, no trace of fear in her eyes, just triumph. “Fuck you.”
It wasn’t meant to be a weapon, it was meant to seal hull breaches by spraying a sticky instantly setting stream of thick glue that filled in cracks like instant putty. Never the less in the moment April pulled the trigger it became just as deadly as the pistol Diego had in his hands, shooting out a tube of sticky polymer that splatted against Diego’s body and pushed him back. He fought for balance but found his legs responding too slowly, the combination of broken bones and sticky material underfoot conspiring against him. He tried to raise his gun but couldn’t, his arm weighed down with a blanket of glue and still more poured on. He stumbled backwards against the far wall of the corridor and stayed there, most of his body smothered in glue, enough to literally stick him to the wall.
“This…no!” He spluttered, only the extremities of his body free of the already hardening stickiness, the gun still in his hand but completely useless.
“You shot Pete.” April dragged the hull sealant with her, her voice bereft of any feeling at all.
“It’s just business!”
“To you. Not to me.”
“Look, you got me, but I can help you!”
“Really?” She pointed the nozzle at his head.
“I have proof! Proof Errol ordered this! It would make your story! You could bring him down with my help!”
April tilted her head, looking at the roof. “Hmm, that is a tempting offer.” She toyed with him. “But I’d rather spend the next three minutes watching you suffocate to death.”
“I have a family!”
“Boo.” April flicked the activation switch. “Hoo.”
It took less than two seconds to cover his head in glue, flattened against the wall with the rest of his body. A few bubbles surfaced through the mixture, tiny pockets of escaping air, but the substance proved as air tight as its designers intended.
The last few minutes of Diego’s life were also the longest.



The device fell to the deck as her fingers went limp, hanging as though all strength had gone from them. She didn’t know how long she just stood there looking at the body, maybe seconds, maybe hours. A gelatinous mass of rubber surfaced material with two hands and two feet emerging from it. It looked ridiculous, like a cartoon, almost funny in a different context.
She had treated this man like a friend, stood up for him, protected him, and in turn he had murdered her lover and almost finished her too. She’d been betrayed before, by her colleagues and superiors, by past boyfriends and confidants, but those betrayals had never brought such a price tag before. People were dead, and one of them was down to her.
She knew it was self defence, but it didn’t make the vomit she violently brought up taste any better.
All her strength left her, as if the physical action of being sick had also expelled the cold determination to survive. She wasn’t in command anymore, she was again just a passenger crashing out of control through life. The ship was still yawing violently, still rumbling as it fired, still tried to prolong the inevitable. She had bought herself maybe a few more minutes of life, but her fate was tied up with this ship. She hurt when it hurt, bled as it bled, wept for loss as it wept. She could have been as much a part of the Amethyst as the deck she walked on, linked in grief, but also in resolve.
April didn’t feel strong, she didn’t feel like there was anything left, but as she stared again at the body of Diego she could at least feel there was some small measure of justice in the universe. Even if she died she had at least had her retribution before the end, and that was something.
She turned her back and weakly staggered back into the Brig, sat down on the floor amid the puddles of blood and carpet of debris, and tried to weep.
No tears came.


+


Cross kept the directors moving, the armoured boxes filled with optical, thermal and radar detection devices constantly keeping a fix on the Chinese destroyer, the four gun turrets slaved to its movements turning and raising their barrels as appropriate.
“Range seven thousand and still closing!” He shouted over to the Commanding officers.
“Very well guns.” Mallory made reply. “If they get much closer we’ll flush the waste tanks at them.”
Several Chinese darts flickered past, the range by now close enough to make dodging the incoming shots increasingly difficult. Both vessels were maintaining a measured rate of fire, one round every minute or two per gun, waiting until it was clear they had missed before firing again. Both ships could fire much faster, but given their limited ammo stocks they would empty their magazines in short order for no great effect.
Cross sent a few more rounds down range, the firing cone narrow enough for him to be confident of at least one hit per salvo. The Chinese ship was still fast but was barely manoeuvring after its beating. He could actually see the hulls bending as it tried particularly stressful evasive turns, small gouts of icy air spraying out where seams and welds suddenly split open. He added another note to its list of woes, smashing a round through the already weakening hull to great effect, this one passing clean through in a spout of flame.
The Destroyer painfully came about, wobbling slightly as it compensated for the damage, then fired its own guns in a return salvo, each one flashing in a carefully timed sequence. The computer rapidly calculated the plots and advised the helm how to best evade the rounds, unfortunately those paths were often beyond the capabilities of the engines.
“Incoming! Contact in ten seconds!”
“Here we go again.” Jane rolled her eyes, too full of adrenaline to despair.
Mallory flicked on the collision alarm again. “Brace, brace, brace!”



Two rounds caught the Frigate this time, the only measure of fortune being they struck at the far extremities of the ship away from any supporting structures. One went clean through the main engine manifold in a spray of ions, the sudden obstructions and new holes directing jets of thrust out to the side for a few instants before the engine safeties cut the fuel lines. It was enough to violently tilt the ship off course, the sudden twist yet again catapulting the crew crossways within the ship although luckily for most they had been paying special attention to the brace order.
The second round entered at an angle just beneath A turret, passing up through the hull and out the top of the turret taking the multi thousand ton armoured roof and walls with it in a shower of metallic chunks, like a shotgun suicide.
The remains of the turret were driven down into the top of the hull, bending and snapping the area around them, collapsing two decks around them and splitting a fifty metre gash in the hull behind it. One of the twisted beams was hammered down with such force it exploded through the roof of the Control room in a massive deafening crash, slicing through the middle of the room with a tooth loosening squeal. It wedged itself inches above the command table, causing the three senior officers to dart back as light fittings exploded, bent roof panels bounced off consoles and the deck, and cables snapped like angry snakes from the long ragged hole torn through the roof.
“Fuck me!” Lantree issued an uncharacteristic expletive as the sudden roar of chaotic violence faded. “Another foot closer and that would have cut me in two!”
“Me too.” Jane tried to swallow, her throat completely dry, her eyes staring widely at the hissing, smoking beam of twisted metal bisecting the room. “I need new pants.”
“Damage report!” Mallory picked himself up, the entire side of his head numb to the touch. He noted a growing patch of red on his shoulder and guessed he probably had several inches if steel in his scalp. It was how his luck worked.
“Main engines offline!” Cheyo yelled. Back, herself visibly shaken by the violent intrusion. “We’ve lost A turret!”
“That leaves us three! Keep shooting!”
As soon as he said it the deck rumbled, the six surviving guns showing they hadn’t been put out of the fight yet.
“You look like hell sir.” Jane offered. “Still with us?”
Mallory touched the side of his head, feeling the inevitable slick of blood running down his face.
“I’m fine, but if I do faint from blood loss…”
“I’ve got it sir.” Jane assured. “For what it’s worth.”
“It’s worth everything.”



The bridge again sparked as a sudden scatter of canister bolts stormed through leaving hissing holes in their wake. One bounced off the severed beam that now dominated the room, ricocheting off the heavy metal and passing by Jane’s head close enough the tug her hair.
Two of the ball bearings managed to do their job, hitting two of the bridge crew through pure random chance. One of the sensor officers took a glancing hit to the shoulder, screeching as the projectile dug a deep groove through her upper torso. It was a horrible wound, but survivable. The communications officer wasn’t so lucky, his entire chest erupting as the tiny lump of metal pierced his body at extreme speed. It was a bloody, but mercifully instant end for the young man.
“Jake is dead!” Cheyo screamed, drenched in the blood of the lifeless officer sat beside her. “He’s dead! Fuck he’s dead!”
“Hold it together Lieutenant!” Mallory barked. “Range to target!”
“Jake…” Cheyo began to sob.
“Lieutenant Cheyo! Eyes on your screen! Range to enemy ship!”
She forced herself to answer, pushed her voice through her throat, past the lump developing there. “Range three thousand!”
“With the main engine gone they’ll catch up much faster now.” Jane stated. “She’ll probably stand off at a thousand klicks and pick us apart.”
“No, not my ship.” Mallory snarled. “I need a comms officer, Captain Lantree, can you fill in?”
“I got it.” The American officer confirmed. “How hard can it be?”
He ducked under the severed beam and rushed to the comms station, Dragging Jake’s chair back with a very noticeable hole through its metal back. With a wince he unhitched the chair seat belts from around the bloody tangle of the former Lieutenant Thomas and hefted the body aside, dropping it to the floor beside him. He felt sympathy but didn’t have time to give the man his due respect, sitting down quickly and using his sleeve to wipe the red sticky mess from the Lieutenant’s console.
“Comms up!” He called over. “Getting lots of damage reports!”



The damaged holographic display was flickering but still gave the Commander a reasonable enough view of the battleground, showing up a pair of sabot rounds blasting chunks from their opponent. His guns had certainly scored more hits and the Destroyer was crippled, in far worse condition than he would have expected given the disparity of force, but it still had him. For all the damage he had inflicted the Amethyst was still in a worse shape, barely clinging on as the Chinese gunners drew nearer and nearer.
“We’re not going to do this with guns.” He suddenly announced. “Even if we shoot out his engines we don’t have the thrust to get clear anymore, we’re too badly hit.”
He watched as the point defences chewed up another Chinese missile volley, pleased to see the defences were still operating at full capacity despite the hits.
He raised his eyes. “We’re going to have to kill him.”
“Simple as that.” Jane offered.
“We must have something, what about mines?”
“We can try sir, but he’s keeping slightly off axis, he won’t be fool enough to fly into them a second time and if we use the rails to deploy them he’ll pick up the power spike.”
Mallory bit his lip in frustration. “What about other weapons? Anything?”
“The shuttle has two nukes, for bombing ground targets.” Jane said. “But launching an attack in a manned aircraft would be suicide.”
“Screw the shuttle, but we can use the bombs.”
Jane frowned. “How sir, I already thought about it, but we can’t fire them from the guns, drop them from the hangar or shoot them out of the missile tubes.”
Mallory grinned, white teeth against his blood soaked face. “Buoy launcher.”
Jane blinked. “You are completely insane.” She tapped her headset. “Chief Broome, report to Hangar stores with one volunteer and acquire the shuttle tactical nukes immediately!”
“This is the last crazy plan I can think of.” Mallory told her. “if it fails we’re fucked.”



Chief Petty Officer Clive Broom dropped his plasma cutter and ran for the nearest stair well, grabbing a fellow member of his damage control party on the way. He slid down two decks to the store rooms and landed in a foot of ice cold water sloshing across the deck.
“What the hell?” His American companion yelled in surprise as he hit the water. “Are we sinking?”
“Something smashed a fresh water tank.” Broome replied as he waded to the large doors. “Count yourself lucky it wasn’t the sewage pipes.”
The store room was like a miniature support bay for the two shuttles the Frigate owned, a mix of spare parts, two large reactant fuel tanks and at the far end an armoured box which contained a pair of nuclear missiles. Broome made straight for them, unlocking the lid and lifting it off with the aid of magnetic hinges. Inside were two ten foot long missiles each with a fat egg shaped nose.
“We need to move these?”
“Just the warheads.” Broome swiftly disconnected the bands between the nose and the body of the missile, his ally following his instructions to free the second one. The warheads themselves were relatively small, about the size of a bread bin and moveable by hand, if rather heavy. They each found a kitbag and put the warheads inside, slinging them on their backs for ease of handling.
“Conn, Broome here. We have the warheads!”
“Understood, get topside and load them into the Buoy launcher.”
“Confirm that was Buoy launcher?” Broome checked back.
“Confirmed Chief, we know you can do it.”
“Roger, on my way.”
He gave the American a brief look, sizing him up before grunting acceptance.
“Alright lad, come with me. We’ve got a ship to save.”



“Range fifteen hundred!”
“Just makes him easier to hit.” Jane returned.
“Sir, we’re down to twenty rounds of armour piercing per gun!”
“Keep firing.” Mallory ordered.
“If we run out of ammunition…”
“Then we load anything magnetic into the guns and shoot that!” The Commander growled. “Debris, biscuit tins, beer cans! Hurl it hard enough and fast enough and it will fuck them up!”
The deck suddenly pitched as the helm pulled the bow of the Amethyst up, the engines groaning, the entire hull creaking, cracking and often banging as the ship fought to remain in one piece.
“Incoming round! It’s going for our midships!”
Jane could sense sweat forming on her brow. “We can take hits at the front and back, but in the heart of the ship…”
Mallory took a breath. “All hands, brace yourselves again!”
The violent course change wasn’t enough, the five inch round pummelling through the secondary reactor room cracking open one of the smaller reactor spheres and releasing a jet of plasma that melted into the main reactor room beside it. The entire side of the room was opened up, dumping three of the six secondary spheres out into space along with gantries, generators and long streaming coils of cabling that dragged behind the ship like the tendrils of a jelly fish.
The impact and jet of plasma also tore a hole in the walls surrounding the main reactor exposing it to space. Two crew members were sucked out through the rent, the armoured glass of the engineering control room cracking and leaking air into the sudden vacuum before it.
“Hoods on!” Chief engineer Kendle snapped. “We’ll be in vacuum in seconds, check your seals!”
“Radiation leak from the main reactor, its’ fluctuating!”
“Stay at your posts! It’s only a thousand rads, won’t burn your balls off yet!” The brusque engineer grunted. “Keep it going as long as you can! Conn, this is engineering, secondary reactors are gone! Main power failing, I can promise you a couple of minutes before it melts down!”



“Do what you can!” Mallory called back. “Chief Broome, status?”
“Almost there Commander, we need a few more minutes!”
“We don’t have minutes! I need those nukes prepped now!”
The ship tilted again, this time there was a loud crack as a section of the deck split open beneath his feet, an inch wide gash opening from one side of the conn to the other.
“Looks like we’re losing structural integrity.” Jane observed the obvious. “That last hit must have taken half our main braces with it.”
“Enemy range one thousand! She’s decelerating, matching velocity!”
“We need to throw them off, buy a few more minutes.” Mallory seethed, his anger beginning to boil through. “We have not survived this far to die now! Hard about! Put the bow to the enemy!”
“Aye sir!” Fisher confirmed.
“Commander…” Jane began to wonder.
“They’ll have their guns ranged for a thousand klicks, it’ll take time to reset them for closer range.” Mallory reasoned. “It’s not much but it’s all we’ve got.”
“Yes sir.” She straightened. “At least we’ll be eye to eye with the noodle quaffing bastards.”
“Damn right! Guns, set for close range rapid fire, empty the magazines!”
“Engaging now!” Cross yelled.
“Take us under the enemy ship, within ten clicks!” Mallory demanded. “Full power to engines!”
The lights dimmed and gravity slackened as the dying reactor fed its remaining life into guns and engines, pushing the ship on one last desperate attack run. She turned around, shot up engines blazing blue behind her as the guns spoke, blasting maximum powered shots out every couple of seconds, smashing into the destroyer more often than not at this range but still not killing the beast.
“Mr Lantree, prepare to drop the ship’s log and data recorders. Even if we don’t survive we need people to hear our story.”



Broome bounced off a wall as the ship turned, grabbing out for a railing and dragging himself on. The walls were running with water from broken lines, in some places electrical cables dangled dangerously near puddles and water flows presenting just one more hazard to survival. The walls were dented and ripped, razor sharp fragments were bent out from the wall and the scent of smoke stung their noses as fires burned elsewhere in the ship.
“One more deck!” He called to his American colleague. “Hood on!”
Both men sealed their clear hoods, forming an airtight seal and automatically activating their internal life support systems. Neither would have time to don a full space suit, their basic pressure gear would have to do for this highly stressful space walk.
“Where are we going anyway?”
“Outside!” Broome shouted as he ran up the ladder to the superstructure. “We set the nukes for contact detonation, drop them in the buoy launcher, then get the hell back inside before the Commander shoots them! The hull will protect us from the radiation when those things blow, these flimsy suits won’t!”
They scrambled to the airlock, opening the inner door and dragging it shut behind them.
“Where is the launcher?” The younger of the two asked.
“Rear superstructure, just a quick hop away!” Broome evacuated the air, not even waiting for the lights to change before cranking the outer door. “And a quick hop back!”
He grabbed a wire from one of the winches above the opening door, clipping it to his suit.
“Grab this lifeline, when we’re done it’ll just reel us in, like a fish on a hook!”
The instant the American grabbed the line the entire ship lurched with massive suddenness and force, catapulting both men through the open doorway. Before he even registered what had happened Broome could see only space, his feet treading the infinite nothingness, the wire of his lifeline uncoiling in front of him. It suddenly pulled taut, halting his freefall and snapping his body around in an arc as the ship he was attached to fell out of control, pulling him along with it. He had no idea where his American Colleague was, thrown out of the ship into the vastness of space. Hopefully they could pick him up later.



Inside the command crew were jammed in their seats or hanging on to their lifelines for dear life. The ship was rolling completely out of control, a Chinese shell having opened up one of the main fuel tanks. Pressurised reactant sprayed out into space, the effect like a giant uncontrolled lateral thruster blasting the ship in a completely random path.
“Purge the tanks!” Jane yelled into her headset as her feet stretched out in front of her. “Fucking do something!”
“Fuel transfer is down!” A report yelled back from engineering. “Working to bypass!”
“Enemy ship one hundred klicks!” Cheyo managed to say over the four or five gravities pushing against her. “Seventy! We’re going to hit!”
“Fuel transfer engaging!” A voice called, probably Lantree.
Everything was sound and fury, the violent twists throwing off the Chinese aim but stressing the heavily damaged ship beyond its tolerances. A few rounds passed by at virtually zero range but the Amethyst could not respond, even with a perfect target the autoloaders failed, their power feed dying as the reactor shut itself down to avoid melt down.
Walls collapsed or split apart, floors rose to meet the roof, the entire hull twisting a few degrees out of alignment tearing free of hull plates and support beams. One side of the conn found itself half a metre higher than the other side, the rip in the floor growing as the ruptured roof split even further apart, snapping cables and opening up a sliver of light showing the deck above them.
The Amethyst was breaking in two, but the sudden release of air from several hull breaches provided enough of a push to avert its collision course. In that small way fate offered a tiny favour nudging her so she passed within a couple of miles of her enemy. The fuel tanks were growing empty, one way or another the tumble would end soon, but when it did the Chinese ship would have a perfect shot at the flailing warship as it passed by, and there was little they could do to stop it.
At least little the people inside could do.



Broome could see the state of his ship clearer than anyone else, suspended a quarter kilometre away on his wire, pulled through space in an arc with his body screaming in pain, several of his ribs probably smashed and his vision clouding. He could see the hull twisting, the massive holes torn in the side, the gutted forward compartments, the gush of spraying fuel and the hundreds of small air leaks showing where the hull was separating.
He could also see the Chinese destroyer getting closer and closer, its pitted hull almost as ruined as the Amethyst, great rips lined with jagged metal running along its flanks, the central connecting structure between the twin hulls pierced by at least five wide holes from the Frigate’s gunnery. It was barely holding together, but that’s all it needed.
There was no way he could get to the buoy launcher, and by now the Amethyst was so far out of position it would be an almost impossible shot to make anyway. He had exactly one option left.
Broome was not a hero, not in his mind. He had served the navy, done his job admirable and kept his record spotless. He knew people considered him overly officious, too by the book, but he didn’t care. He was a man of the rules, of perfect adherence, and probably the greatest of those rules were the unwritten ones. The nuke on his back was rigged for contact detonation, all he had to do was make contact.
He watched as the ship rolled, judged how long it took, when he should make his move. It was simple physics, like a medieval trebuchet, all he had to do was release his line at the right moment and he would be flung at the Chinese ship, and the nuke beside him. He couldn’t just let the nuke go alone, without a sophisticated computer prediction he couldn’t guarantee a hit under these circumstances even at close range. It needed a guidance system.
He acted without fear, perfectly calm as he accepted his final destiny. He released the cable attaching him to the ship, leaving it behind as it passed at its closest to the Chinese ship, rushing underneath it within a few miles. It grew as he hurtled towards it, an alarming large vessel but easy to miss in the immensity of space. He had no thrusters, just his personal oxygen supply which he now released, the jet of air pushing him just the right amount to put the centre of the ship directly in his path.
It took only seconds to cross the distance, not long enough for any last words, but it didn’t matter. Words were not so important as deeds.



The five megaton bomb was small by current standards, but detonating right against the hull it was more than enough to do its job. The intense energy released vaporised hundreds of square metres of the hull, slicing through the central structure of the Chinese Destroyer like a knife made of pure light. The inner hulls were bathed in radiation, swathes of their armour boiling away under a barrage of X-Rays as holes were widened and interior spaces subjected to hard radiation.
The central structure was completely severed, cutting the catamaran in half with the two torn hulls very gently rolling outwards in opposite directions, often leaking air and fragments from their shattered sides, the panels bulging outwards as the force of the nuclear explosion slammed through the Destroyer.
No sooner had it detonated did it fade, no fire or tumult to mark its location, just the rather anti-climactic sight of the Chinese Destroyer breaking gradually in two. It hardly seemed enough of an end given the fury and desperation of the fight. Behind her the Amethyst slowly regained control, the remaining thrusters firing to stabilise the roll and bring the ship to a relative stop.
“We got him.” Jane shook her head in abject surprise. “I don’t know how, but he’s dead, we nuked him.”
“We actually did.” Mallory exhaled. “But we can’t relax, not yet. Every ship in the system probably saw that nuke go off, we need to secure our damage and do all we can to get our girl home, preferably with no more bits shot off her.”
“I don’t think we’ve got anything left to be shot off.”
“Just our arses.” The Commander huffed.
“I really thought we were done for, look at the state of us.” Jane whistled, looking around the smashed control room.
“Of the two ships here, raise your hand if you’re alive.”
“Point.” She agreed. “Of course the night is young.”
“All the more reason to get our shit together.” Mallory spoke honestly.
“Speaking of you should see the Doctor, if you bleed anymore you’re going to be as grey as a techno Goth.”
“I will when we’re secure.”
“That could take hours, I’ll handle it.” Jane replied sternly. “Go on sir, shoo.”
“Aye aye Admiral.” Mallory offered a casual salute. “Damn me if we didn’t just kill a first rate destroyer.”
“That we did sir.” His First Officer confirmed. “Now we just need to get home to brag about it.”
 
13


The beeping was the first thing she recognised, the rhythmic chimes repeating at steady intervals again and again. It was a reassuring sound, a constant in a reality that had been shifting like sand caught in a tide beneath her feet. Lots of things went beep on a warship, some good and some bad. She could remember the alarmed pulses of radar returns as the ship’s sensors tracked inbound weapons, or the hoarse chorus of warning warbles from systems on the brink of overload. These beeps seemed far more relaxed, not joined by cries and shouts, nor the scream of ripping metal and thump of heavy objects hitting the skin of the vessel. They were isolated, constant, steadying.

She opened her eyes, blinking in the bright light until her pupils adjusted after their long inactivity, drawing in the world that surrounded her head. She was quick to locate the source of the sound, as expected it was a heart monitor pulsing with every beat of her chest muscle. She’d seen enough medical shows on TV to be aware of the ever present sound, that near constant companion to hospital dramas and shows invariably featuring the love lives of good looking doctors who didn’t look old enough to be out of med school. It was a timeless formula.
Reality was a little different, and while the Doctor aboard the Amethyst wasn’t bad looking he certainly had no time for romance.

“Sleeping beauty awakens.” He announced tersely as he strolled over, expertly extracting a pen light from his top pocket. “Look at me.”
She obeyed, the light invading her eyes and casting the shadows of veins and arteries across her vision. She endured for a few moments before the doctor deemed himself content.
“Responses are good, I don’t think you have to worry, no sign of concussion.” He raised an eyebrow. “Considering how often you’ve been whacked in the head I’d call that divine intervention.”
“I have to speak with the Commander.” April stated, her voice barely a whisper. “Right now.”
“You may not have noticed, but we’re in a bit of a predicament.”
“Right now George!” She demanded, in absolutely no mood to be messed around. “I’m serious!”



The Doctor gave her a stern look and April could already hear the words forming in his head, telling her to lay down, shut the hell up and rest, but to her mild surprise he didn’t embark on a lecture.
“He’s just over here.” He acquiesced. “Don’t get up, I’ll bring him over.”
April released a breath, drying to blow away the tension she could feel winding up her insides like a clock spring. She wasn’t sure how long she had been down, but the memory was still clear in her mind. Diego, the battle, those two gunshots, finding Pete in a pool of blood. She couldn’t recall anything after that, no thoughts or emotions, her entire being feeling like it was padded in cotton wool and unable to touch or feel any sensation around her.
“Miss Conroy.”
Mallory crouched down beside her, obviously lacking a chair to sit on. He was looking pale himself, a thick bandage wrapped around his head with a dark blood stain on one temple. He was smiling but his eyes were distracted, glancing around the sick bay fleetingly, keeping his mind up to date on everything within his surroundings.
“For the millionth time, just call me April.” She managed a weak smile. “Look, Commander, if you found me then you know some serious shit went down and…”
“It’s alright, we know.” He informed her. “Pete told us.”
Her mind locked up solid, frozen in motion, the gears of her thought processes seizing up like someone had just launched a bag of spanners into them.
“He… He’s dead…”
“No, not dead.” Mallory smiled genuinely, glad to be delivering some good news. “He’s in bad shape, don’t think he isn’t, but the gun shot wounds weren’t instantly fatal. We managed to stabilise him, remove the bullets, and he’s strengthening according to the Doc.”



“I don’t believe it.” She gasped in empty shock. “I thought he was gone, I thought I’d lost him!”
“Cyrus Errol should have invested a few more dollars in a better assassin.”
The words were Earth shaking, electric, a current of surprise and extraordinary relief that shot through her like a burst of sudden warmth. It wasn’t something she could quantify or control, and April dearly wanted to just surrender to it and let herself drift into the bliss of it all, but she knew she couldn’t. It was indulgent, and while she may have earned it she could feel instinctively that they weren’t free of danger, that right now she was probably the only person who was experiencing a wave of relief.
“Can I speak with him?”
“The Doc has him sedated right now, he refused to get some sleep so George stuffed him full of drugs. Got to hand it to him, he doesn’t understand the meaning of the word no.”
“Doctors always know best.” April grunted a slight laugh. “I could kiss him.”
“Try not to, his head is already swollen enough as it is.” Mallory grinned.
“What about Simon?”
Mallory shook his head.
“I’m sorry.” April sighed. “I’m sorry I didn’t listen, I should have known there was something wrong about Diego, I should have guessed!”
“He fooled us all, myself included.”
“This is supposed to be what I do, it’s supposed to be my job!” She snapped, furious with herself. “I’m supposed to see through lies and find the truth!”
“Nobody is perfect.”
“If I was half the reporter I think I am, if I’d spent more time learning my job instead of fixating on useless things…”
“Enough.” Mallory cut her off. “You’re not helping anyone by ripping into the past. Get some rest, Doctors orders.”



She sighed again, the expulsion of breath sucking the energy from her, the tiredness building up behind her eyes like a wall. She had come here with a purpose, a role to play in digging away at the dark heart of the corporate machine. She had no idea she would succeed so spectacularly and so horrifically. She had not only discovered evidence that the mega corporations were murdering each other, they were also more than willing to kill random third parties who stumbled on the evidence too.
“Quite a poor assassin really.” Mallory considered. “He told you who employed him and what his mission was. Clearly he had seen too much TV. There’s no need for villains to explain their plans in intricate detail to the heroes. A real assassin wouldn’t have said a word.”
“Yippee for theatrics.” She managed with a gentle smile.
“Get some rest, we still have a long trip home.” The Commander straightened up. “We beat the Destroyer that was tailing us, there’s no other ships nearby.”
“So we’ve got a clear run home now?”
“More or less.” He returned. “Get some rest now.”
“When you say more or less…”
“Rest.” He ordered. “I think your enquiring mind has enquired enough for one day. We’re going to be out here for at least another week or two, just relax for a while.”
“Commander.” She said, speaking as clearly as she could. “Thank you.”
“You can but me a drink when we get home.” He grinned. “Double Brandy.”
“I thought sailors drank rum?”
“Only the ones with eye patches and parrots on their shoulder. You did well Miss Conroy. You did very well.”
He rested his hand on her shoulder for an instant, a rare tactile expression from the officer, then he stepped away and returned to his tasks.



Nothing was the same, not one aspect of her life could claim to have escaped unscathed from this journey. Her perspective had fundamentally shifted, her views on the government, on society, the media, her colleagues and most profoundly of all her image of herself. The things she had deemed important before this voyage had receded greatly in her estimation and other things had risen to take their place. It felt like a plot to a show, one of those conquest of adversity things that reality TV so loved, but there was no fakery here. She had changed.
Whether she was a better person or not was a judgement for another time, for other people, but she did feel more real, more connected to life and the big events. It mattered to her, and that was a revelation of such fundamental power it was intimidating to even consider it. She had saved a life, and she had taken a life. Neither of those decisions was ever going to leave her.
 
“I’m constantly amazed by how not dead we are.” Jane shared with moderate enthusiasm. “I might actually go to Church when we get home, first time since I was a kid.”
“You went to Church?” Mallory glanced at her. “And you didn’t get turned into a pillar of salt or struck by a lightning bolt?”
“I wasn’t always this loveable yet pessimistic officer who graces your company.”
“Why did you stop going to Church?”
“They kicked me out for stealing from the collection.” She grunted in regret. “Shame, that was great source of income for sweet treats and magazines.”
“I feel that I should be shocked you’d steal from a charity collection, and yet this does not surprise me in any way at all.”
“The poor wouldn’t have appreciated it, and I was eleven at the time.” She justified. “I had needs, chocolate needs.”
“It’s like stealing food from a starving man.”
“Only if it was chocolate.”
“That isn’t really helping your point.”
She shrugged. “We’re all damaged.”
“I’m not.” Mallory defended. “Except for that delusion I had when I was talking to death.”
“What, what and what?”
“I’ll tell you later.”
The two officers arrived at the ward room, the door fixed open and wedged with a twisted bar of metal. Inside the room was largely untouched, the pictures still hanging from the walls and the wooden table completely intact. It was probably the only part of the ship not to look like it had been put through a spin cycle on a tumble dryer.
Inside the rest of the Ship’s officers waited, representing a significant portion of the remaining crew. Each of them was dirty and tired, some nursing injuries as they sat wearily at the table, slouched in their chairs and looking uniformly dejected.



“Stay seated please.” Mallory announced as he entered, guessing it was even money whether or not they would have stood up anyway. They had all worked a solid thirty hours bringing damage under control, the massive pounding the Frigate had endured pushing both human and machine to the edge of their tolerance. Both should have folded long ago, but the determination of the crew to survive had apparently seeped into the bones of the ship too. They had survived an unthinkable gauntlet, but they were cracking and one didn’t need years of training to see they were barely holding on by a thread.
“Let’s do this quick, I know we all have jobs to oversee.” He began as professionally as he could, hoping the familiarity of his manner would help ground his officers. “Mr Kendle?”
“It’d be quicker for me to list the things that do work sir.” The obtuse Chief Engineer remarked. “We got roasted. The main reactor casing is cracked, I’ve patched it but if we run it over thirty percent it’ll split and melt us all into puddles of smouldering goo. The secondary reactors are mainly off line, a Chinese round went clean through the chamber. I can probably bring two of them online giving us another ten percent of possible power.”

“So we have forty percent of our power capacity?”
“Yes sir, with reactant enough to keep it going for a few weeks, depending on how often we use it. Life support and gravity can run on just the secondaries, as long as we don’t need engines or weapons I can run the main reactor on minimum power, extend our reactant stores for as long as possible.”
“What about the engines?”
“There’s good news and bad news. Good news is I can fix them, have them running at seventy or eighty percent capacity. Bad news is we have nothing to run them on.”
“That shot that punctured the fuel tanks.”
“We’ve got a fraction of a percent of our fuel left. Basically we’re running on fumes, I can give you full burn for at best thirty minutes.”
“Not nearly enough to change course by more than a degree.” Lieutenant Fisher informed. “Not at our current velocity.”



“What about the hull?”
“I can tell you we’re about one third lighter than we used to be.” He scoffed a bitter laugh. “They blasted away so much of the ship it’s improved our thrust to weight ratio by getting rid of a lot of our mass. Unfortunately as I said, we have so little fuel we can’t really do much about it.”
“Everything forward of the missile room is gone, it’s just those hull struts and main braces that were too tough to melt.” Jane said. “Empty skeleton.”
“A big chunk of engineering is gone, our hangar bay is gone, A-Turret is mostly gone.” Kendle shrugged. “We just don’t really have a whole lot of ship left.”
“Casualties?”
“Twenty one crew members are active.” Jane informed. “Plus fifteen American survivors.”
“We’re nearly outnumbered by American sailors on our own ship.” Kendle grinned. “It just keeps getting better and better.”
“We left dock with nearly eighty souls aboard.” Mallory remembered solemnly. “Can we run the ship with twenty?”
“Not if we have to fight.” Jane replied honestly. “A lot of our automation has been shot to hell and we don’t have the time and parts to fix it. If we run into trouble we’ll need the Americans to run certain departments. I’m thinking sensors and communications, keep weaponry and engineering under our control.”
“I’m against it.” Kendle shook his head slowly. “They’ve already seen too much of this ship, letting them check out our sensors and stuff gives them too much insight into our tech.”
“We don’t have much of a choice. I’ll talk to Captain Lantree, see if we can give his people a crash course.” Mallory decided. “Besides, we’re so smashed up all the good stuff is already floating in pieces towards Mars.”



“You’re the boss.” Kendle shrugged. “The inhabited parts of the ship are solid, we patched any leaks and as long as we don’t make any sharp turns we should be alright. But a sudden impact or jolt is going to start popping welds across the ship. We’re right at our limits Commander, she wasn’t built for this level of punishment. An enemy round to our centre of mass or a proximity nuke will probably disintegrate us, she’ll just fall apart sir.”
“Our outer hull is almost completely compromised.” Jane explained. “And the inner hull just can’t take anything more.”
“That means we’ve lost our stealth coating doesn’t it?”
“Almost completely.” She confirmed grimly. “Nothing to hide us from enemy radar or infrared scans.”
“So we’re falling apart, have no means of hiding, and no ability to change course or slow down, that about right?” The Commander asked.
“And we’re still crossing Chinese space.” Fisher added.
“And we’re running out of air.” Kendle added. “We haven’t got enough to make De Ruyter, we need to get picked up before then. Within a week preferably.”
“Also sir I regret to inform you a piece of shrapnel destroyed both our remaining barrels of German beer.” Jane said sombrely. “We only have one keg of American beer.”
The entire room looked at her.
“I’ve kept this a secret to preserve crew morale, but the smell of spilt beer is already in the air filters, it’s only a matter of time before they find out the beer is gone.”



Mallory held her gaze for a long second before his lips split into a stifled splutter of a laugh. He fought to control it but failed entirely, his expression breaking into a full bodied peel of laughter. He laughed for the sheer absurdity of it, the rest of the officers gradually following suit, caught in the contagion. It was no time for hysterics, which is exactly why it was so hard to stop.
They laughed almost continuously for a solid couple of minutes before Mallory restrained himself enough to speak, his face bright red.
“XO, exactly why do we have a keg of American beer onboard?”
“It was a joke gift from when we were anchored at Yokohama, the Asuka gave us it after we beat them at cards.” She said between shallow breaths. “We were going to give it to the Australians…” She spluttered. “… Show them a real beer!”
They laughed again, acutely aware of how inappropriate it was but unable to stop.
“The Aussies would have beaten us with boomerangs!” Cross suggested gleefully.
“Have you tried Aussie lager?” Kendle asked. “American beer is a favour!”
“It’s a trick!” Cheyo yelled. “The Aussies only export weak piss lager, they keep the good stuff for themselves!”
“Cheeky bastards!” Kendle exhaled. “Why are we laughing?”
“Because we’re going to die and we only have shit beer!” Jane hollered. “Oh crap we’re all going insane!”
They forced themselves to calm down, closing their eyes and breathing steadily.
“So the whole ship is going to smell like German beer?”
It took another three minutes for the hilarity to fade.



“This is what happens when you don’t sleep enough.” Mallory rubbed his eyes. “Well I hope that woke us up a bit.”
“Yes sir, I feel so much sharper.” Jane replied simply. “And positive that we’ve all got battle fatigue.”
“We’ll have to handle it for another week yet.” The Commander resolved. “On the plus side if we have seven days before the air becomes toxic, and we only have another five until we’re through Chinese space, that gives us two days to launch beacons and begin sending distress signals.”
“That is true sir, but there is one final complication.” Jane informed carefully.
“What is it this time?”
“You’ll love this, it’s just the best thing that has ever happened to us.” She enthused. “I mean you couldn’t make it up.”
“I’ve been watching the space ahead of us.” Cheyo picked up. “Our sensors are spotty at best, but there was no way we could miss all the activity crossing our path.”
Mallory rolled his eyes. “What’s the bad news?”
“Well sir, the main Chinese fleet in this sector is due to cross our path exactly when we’re supposed to be there.” She informed. “And, well sir, it looks like the main American fleet will also be in the same sector of space. Both sides are deploying for battle in about five days.”
He resisted the urge to smash his head into the table again and again and again.



“It’s not actually as bad as it sounds sir.” Jane offered, pre-empting the incoming self harm. “We won’t be passing between the two fleets in the cross fire, matter of fact we’ll probably avoid the combat zone entirely.”
“Yes sir.” Cheyo confirmed. “We’re going to be danger close, but we’ll probably cross behind the Chinese fleet. If they deploy in the same formation as we witnessed last time we’ll skirt their rear right flank.”
“It’ll be very close.” Jane continued. “But if our predictions are right we’ll drift past right in the middle of a full scale pitched battle. In theory the Chinese will be too busy with the Americans to spare ships to intercept us.”
“In theory.” Mallory repeated.
“Yes sir, no guarantees.”
He exhaled. “Normally this wouldn’t be a problem, we’re designed to do this, but we have no stealth systems left so we can’t just sneak past. They will see us.”
“Yes sir, they probably will.” Jane agreed. “We just have to hope the US fleet is higher on their priority list. Attack us or risk being microwaved in a thermonuclear hell storm.”
“It’s quite a compelling choice.” He allowed, his attitude suddenly brightening. “No, no this is actually a good thing.”
“It is?”
“It’s perfect.” He smiled. “Not only will the Chinese be distracted but this is happening directly on the EU border. It’s almost guaranteed the fleet will have a squadron of ships on the border in the same region watching the battle and making sure it doesn’t spill into our space. That means there are friendly vessels close enough to rescue us as soon as we cross the border!”
“That’ll be handy then.” Cross acknowledged. “Saves us worrying about running out of air.”
“It’d be much better if we were crossing behind the US fleet though.” Mallory mused. “Can we make that course change?”
“Not on our fuel, no sir.”
Mallory smiled. “What about on somebody else’s fuel?”



Jane picked up his meaning. “The Chinese destroyer?”
“It’s right next to us, same velocity. We were using its wreckage to shield us from long range radar.” He proposed. “Does it still have fuel in its tanks?”
“Sorry boss, we already ran that idea.” Kendle punctured the optimism. “She’s dry, the nuke split her main tanks and her reserves were already empty. She was probably out there a lot longer than us, we’ve got nothing.”
“Well that’s a bit of a downer.” Jane grunted.
“Have you checked the destroyer out, is there anything we can salvage?” Mallory asked.
“She’s more burnt out than a forty year old Spanish hooker.” Kendle eloquently related. “Her hull is ripped open, there’s no air pockets, no heat signature, no survivors. The entire ship is ticking hot with radiation, I thought about using their air filters to give us more air, but if we brought them inside the radiation would melt our eyeballs.”
“Arse.” Jane gave her opinion.
“Annoying, but at least it died so violently in never got a chance to send a warning.” Mallory considered. “Every ship for five AU’s probably saw that nuke go off, but nobody knows who won. They won’t be able to distinguish between us at long range, it’ll just look like one sensor blob. They won’t know who is going to show when we close the range, a Chinese ship or us.”
“Sooner or later they’ll see it’s us.” Kendle spoke. “We can hide for a while, but not forever. When we cross close to the Chinese fleet, even if they’re fighting Yanks, they’ll know it’s us. Only take them one round to end us, and we can’t dodge without breaking in half.”
With no warning Jane slammed her fists down on the table in triumph.
“The Martian Mauler!”
For a few heartbeats everyone just looked at her.
“The Martian Mauler.” Kendle repeated. “It’s so obvious now, why didn’t I think of that, the Martian Mauler!”
He slammed his own fists down.
“What the fuck does that mean?!”



“The Martian Mauler, he was a serial killer!” Jane enthused. “Don’t you get it?”
“A serial killer on, and I’m guessing here, Mars?” Mallory raised an eyebrow. “I’m not sure where you’re going XO.”
“It was a big thing six or seven years ago, this guy used to kill his victims and skin them, no one could ever figure out how he could get away with it.” Jane explained, talking fast. “How did he get past all those security cameras in a sealed domed city? Well turns out he was a security operator and he just altered the records he appeared on.”
“And that helps us…?”
“Because we should do what he did!”
“Altering records to hide ourselves or skinning people?” Mallory asked. “Because while I like the idea of changing…”
“No, I meant the skinning.”
“Oh. Right.” The Commander said blankly. “Your big idea is for us to kill and flay each other?”
“I know who I’m starting with.” Kendle winked at the excited First Officer.
“No, no, not us.” She back tracked. “He used to wear the skins. And yes, he was that freaky.”
“Still not getting it.”
“We do what he did, we wear the skins of our victims. The Destroyer!” She jabbed her finger at the wall and the ship beyond. “We bolt its wreckage to the hull, alter our radar profile! We pretend to be a Chinese ship and sail right past them!”



The officers were quiet for a long moment.
“We can’t fix several million tons of metal to the hull, we’d need shipyard grade plasma welders.” Kendle said.
“It doesn’t need to be welded, how about we use the tow cables to tie it to us?”
“It’s a battle destroyer! Not a pair of shoes!”
“She’s right.” Mallory interjected. “We’re not making any turns, we’re not accelerating, it doesn’t have to move when we move, it just has to drift alongside us. It’s already heading on our course at our speed, all we’re doing is tying them closer together.”
“You really think it’s going to stand up to inspection sir?” The Engineer demanded.
“She’s a catamaran design, we tie the two hull booms on either side like a sandwich, we hide between the two halves.” The Commander took up the idea. “Given how small we are even a visual inspection should miss us unless they’re looking at us head on or dead astern.”
“Radar will be easy to fool.” Jane added. “And she was running without a transponder, no IFF codes, so we don’t need to fake them.”
“They’ll probably hail us.” Cheyo pointed out. “We’ll have to answer, we’ll need their code book.”
“I need an EVA team on the Chinese bridge, full anti radiation suits.” Mallory ordered. “Get me their codebook, in fact, get me their black box too.”
“Sir?”
“It’ll have a record of all the orders they’ve received this deployment.”
Jane nodded in recognition. “Including the order to blow us away.”
“And to kill the civilian station to protect their first strike fleet, proof that China was mobilised and engineering this war.” Mallory finished. “That’s going to sink their international support like a torpedo made of STD’s.”
“This is a crazy idea.” Kendle stated formally. “But I’ll get to work if those are the orders.”
“They are.” Mallory confirmed. “And fast, we only have three days before the Chinese fleet will be close enough for a higher resolution scan. This is our only hope.”
“Might be a fool’s hope sir.”
“So was everything we’ve done in the last two months. Hasn’t stopped us yet. Dismiss, we’ve got a lot of hard work ahead.”
 
The work over the next two days was intense, every single member of the crew who was fit enough to don a spacesuit and pick up a tool was sent outside to help patch the hull. Both the British and American crews were trained in damage control as standard, they could use spot welders and patching polymers, but the sheer volume of work that needed doing coupled to the limits imposed by only having hand held tools made the work arduous.
The worked lengthy shifts both inside and outside the hull, doing what they could to reinforce the battered ship. Debris was fixed over weak areas, jury rigged struts and supports designed to take the loads off damaged internal braces and ribs. Crews worked on the reactor and engine systems, filling in any cracks and splits, replacing fuel lines and power conduits with components stripped from elsewhere on the ship.

She was beginning to have something of a Frankenstein look t o her, a rough mismatch of pieces relocated from their natural locations. He once smooth hull was by now ragged and torn, its uniform matt black exterior speckled with a myriad of colours and textures. It had none of the precision or elegance of a professional job, but it did keep the ship functional as it drifted on its way. She might not have looked especially pretty, but the Amethyst was still alive.
The crew worked three eight hour shifts, one shift outside, one shift inside, and one shift sleeping. Even the officers were not exempt, each of them doing their part with a hand welder and some sheet metal. Only the two civilians and the medical staff were exempt, but while they may not have been doing heavy construction they were still kept busy looking after the ever more tired crew.



“Shift change.” Jane checked the flickering clock in the conn. It was one of the few sources of light in the dimly lit room, given the damage to the ceiling and the inactivity of most of the console screens and displays.
“We should be nearly ready to draw in the Chinese wreckage.” Mallory looked through the status reports. “We’ve got enough cable and we’ve stabilised the hull fragments so they’re not rolling relative to us. Just a case now of bringing everything together.”
“This is going to be the hardest part, moving the hull pieces.” His XO narrowed her lips as she visualised the operation. “Getting them going isn’t too hard, getting them to stop…”
“We’ll just have to pray Kendle ran the numbers right.” Mallory offered with a not entirely convincing smile. “Because if he didn’t we’re all going to be a lot thinner.”
“Crushed flat between a couple of million tons of ship. Of dead ship.”
“That Destroyer might kill us yet.” Remarked the Commander with a brief exhalation of breath. He was tired, but in that he was no different to anyone else on the ship and he wasn’t about to complain. “Anyway, you have the Conn XO, I’m going for a walk.”
“What, outside?”
“Outside.” Mallory nodded. “We haven’t sent a team to the Chinese ship yet, been too busy, so I’m going.”
“Alone? With respect sir…”
“There’s no one alive over there, the entire ship is an ice cold radioactive vacuum. We don’t need a full salvage crew.”
“Walking alone around a derelict ship is never a good idea. I’ve seen this film! It’s a classic!”
“If I come back with an alien octopus stuck to my face I promise I’ll never doubt you again.” Mallory grinned widely. “Until then we need our people working on the final stage of the disguise.”
“Alright sir, try to be careful. I’d prefer not to have to take command.”
“I thought you’d jump at the chance?”
“My job is to stand behind you offering sarcastic comments and critique. I’m great at delivering, less good at receiving. If I had to deal with me I’d probably slap me. Somehow.”
“Well when you put it like that I’ll definitely come back alive. Let me know if something else breaks, falls off or otherwise spontaneously bursts into flames.”
“You’ll be the first.” Jane confirmed. “Try not to bring any monsters back from the spooky dead ship.”



Mallory made his way up to the airlock in the superstructure, encountering no one on the short journey. The Amethyst didn’t have a big crew even when fully operational, but she was small enough that you would usually encounter a few souls no matter where you went. Finding her empty was a little surreal, a sombre example of how few people were left on the broken warship.
The corridors themselves were in a poor condition, large sections were dark where both the main lighting and emergency illumination had failed. Most of the bulkheads were bent or pitted from shrapnel, the overhead cables were patched and bypassed, the floors uneven. He had to take a lengthy detour to avoid an area of the ship that was open to space, too badly damaged and not vital enough to waste resources repairing.
It was like that across large portions of the ship, they had simply been abandoned. With resources finite and few people aboard Kendle had cut power to the unused sectors. It was logical decision, but also a sad one, like watching a critically ill patient slowly dying bit by bit. Gradually losing themselves.

Mallory was in no doubt his vessel was on its final journey, the damage was such that even if they miraculously made it home the Amethyst would be scrapped on sight. She had no future beyond the next week whatever happened, and he had to accept this object, this home he and his closest friends had shared, this vessel which had somehow kept them alive against all the odds had no hope left for herself. She was already ravaged and unrecognisable, but what mattered was the lives stillcontained within and getting them home. The mission, the information they had, what they knew could save millions of lives and weighed against that everything they had sacrificed and everything that remained was a tiny price to pay.



He made it up to the superstructure, stepping over lumps of metal and twisted beams until he reached a space suit locker. Most of the crew just used their normal pressure suits when they stepped out to work on the hull, but because Mallory was heading over to the Chinese ship he needed some extra protection from the high radiation levels and razor sharp fragments likely floating around inside. He picked one of the more combat orientated outfits, one with a reinforced mesh woven into its material, and began the process of wrapping it around his regular pressure suit.
“You look like you could use some company.”
Lantree popped open the locker beside him, picking a similar suit.
“You should be sleeping Captain, we’ve still got a lot to do.”
“I’m fine, I can catch up once we get finished, before we reach the front.” Lantree reassured. “Your XO wanted to make sure you had back up.”
“You may have noticed she isn’t one to not get her own way.”
“Oh I noticed alright.” Lantree chuckled, bonding the suit seals together. “She also said if you get attacked by a space octopus I’m supposed to just shoot you in the back of the head.”
“I have no idea how she got past the psyche tests, I really don’t.”
“Still, she had a good idea about disguising the ship.” Lantree selected a helmet. “She’s crazy, but a good kind of crazy.”
“I wouldn’t change her for anyone.” Mallory admitted. “She sort of grows on you, like a bad tempered cat.”
He took a pair of high powered hand guns from the cabinet, offering one to Lantree.
“Just in case that ship isn’t as empty as we think it is.”
“Works for me.” Lantree took the weapon and holstered it on the side of his suit. “Should I be worried about space octopus attacks then?”
“Do you even need me to answer that?” The Commander arched an amused eyebrow. “Personally I’d be more worried about radioactive Chinese space zombies, but that’s just me.”



The two men locked their helmets onto the suit neck rings, then walked through the airlock, cycling it behind them. They had to open the outer door manually, pushing it open to reveal the sparkling stars beyond.
“That never gets any less breathtaking.” Lantree admired.
They walked out onto the upper hull, using the twisted hand holds to clear the airlock, closing the door and moving down the side of the superstructure. They proceeded slowly, carefully navigating the thistles of twisted metal and brambles of razor sharp shards, the hull of the ship resembling a petrified nightmare forest of folded metal petals and blossoming rents.
As they cleared they shattered observation room they were treated to an amazing vista, the front of the warship laying before them with a dozen white clad figures latched to it at a variety of angles all making final preparations for the combination sequence. Kendle had loosely attached as many beams and girders as he could find cross wise on the hull, the metal fingers stretching out on either side of the ship. These girders would act as buffers for when the two halves of the Chinese ship were pulled together over the Amethyst, absorbing the momentum of the moving hulks and hopefully halting the hull pieces before they touched the fragile warship herself.
It was of course a gamble, but that was nothing new. Under normal circumstances this manoeuvre would have been far too dangerous to try, but after all that had happened it seemed pretty tame. It relied on estimations and a lot of luck, the girders they were using as buffers were wreckage, they had no way to know whether they were still strong enough to hold up under the immense stress they were about to be put under. They were simply out of alternatives.



“There’s a large gap in the connecting hull.” Mallory pointed across to the right hand half of the Chinese ship. “It’s probably easiest to enter there, the airlocks are probably sealed shut and we don’t have the time to burn through.”
“I’ll follow your lead.” Lantree was content with the choice. “Always wanted to take a look inside a Chinese ship.”
“Likewise.” Mallory stepped to the edge of his ship, feeling the artificial gravity under his boots lessen as he moved further from the internal generators. “Stepping off.”
He jumped awkwardly over the edge of the ship, rising clear and continuing slowly to elevate in relation to the frigate. Lantree was a few seconds behind, slightly more graceful though the heavy duty suits didn’t allow much freedom.
“I’m going to fire a quick burst from the thrusters.” Mallory warned.
“I’m clear, go ahead.” The American officer responded, preparing to do the same.
Mallory fired a couple of bursts, each releasing a one second duration puff of compressed air. It gave him the little boost he needed to travel the couple of hundred metres to the enemy ship. It was an impressive piece of architecture, even with its hull heavily blackened and with large parts of its surface armour melted or torn. It showed traces of its dark red paint, the colour quite common to Chinese ships that did not need to blend in. Most vessels were painted in various shades of grey or sometimes white as much due to tradition as anything else. Early vessels had tried to use the same IR absorbing paint that atmospheric aircraft had used, but the system didn’t work nearly as well in space resulting in most vessels being painted in any colour the owners wished. Recently ships had returned to dull colours, but there were still some older generation ships painted in bright heraldry with amazingly intricate designs over their hulls. An echo of a more innocent time.



The two officers fired braking thrusters, slowing their approach as they neared their destination. The gap was an open area of deck, some sort of large room that was probably a mess hall before it had been incinerated ad blasted clean. There was nothing inside now, the walls were bulged and bent due to the immense stress the ship had suffered, the furniture long since emptied into space or burnt to ashes. Some small pieces of debris still spun lazily nearby, but most of the smaller pieces had since dispersed leaving just the bigger hull fragments coasting beside the Amethyst.
Mallory carefully timed his approach, easing past the torn deck plates and folded beams into the empty room. He was a little rusty, it had been years since he had performed his zero gravity refresher course, but he managed to land with just a minor stumble, quickly correcting his balance. Conversely Lantree put down with the perfection of a man stepping off a low step.
“Show off.” Mallory accused.
“Years of practice.” Lantree chuckled back.
“Zero grav manoeuvring?”
“Mixed martial arts.” Lantree replied. “Back in the day I was Tennessee state champion. I like to keep in practice, good way to stay fit.”
“So you’re some sort of Kung Fu wizard?”
“Something like that.” The American laughed back. “Not sure about the wizard bit.”
“Maybe you should go first then, you can Judo Chop anyone who survived.”
“Better I stay in reserve, then I can swoop into action and save the day.”
“Typical American, always getting into a fight after it’s already started.”



Both men adjusted their helmet lights for maximum effect then walked into the interior of the ship. There were no other sources of power or illumination, just what they had brought with them.
“Mallory to Amethyst, can you hear me over there?” He checked his communications.
“We have you Commander.” Jane replied. “Your locator beacons are on our scopes. If something goes wrong we’ll know exactly which part of the ship to nuke.”
“Reassuring XO.” Mallory responded dryly. “How’s local radiation?”
“Not good, I’d suggest you stay there for about an hour, certainly no more than two.” She cautioned. “Even those high grade suits won’t keep it out forever.”
“So noted. We’ll keep this channel open.”
They moved gradually into a corridor, each step slow and deliberate thanks to the magnetic soles on their boots. They had no problem walking inside the deceased vessel, the Chinese requiring their decks were as compatible with magnetic boots as any other ship for simple practicality.
“It’s funny.” Mallory remarked over his shoulder. “This corridor is in better condition than half the ones back on Amethyst.”
“Lucky we managed to rupture the outer hull in so many places.” Lantree responded, constantly looking from side to side, examining the ship. “We must have sucked all the air out before the crew could react.”
“None of this air tight doors sealed themselves.” Mallory noted as he walked through a doorway. “We must have cut some of the internal electrics. Doesn’t look like the overrides were used.”
“Probably too busy manning weapons to break off and wind the doors down.” Lantree guessed. “Especially if you damaged the electrics in your first encounter.”
“Very lucky hit then.” Mallory accepted. “For us anyway.”



They climbed a ladder up to a different deck, this corridor showing more signs of damage.
“Any idea where the bridge is?”
“On your deck.” Jane answered from the Amethyst. “There’s an armoured room three sections forward of your position. I’d guess that was the CiC.”
“We’ll check it out.”
“Kendle says he’s about ready to start the winches by the way.”
“Start when ready, we’ll be fine over here.”
“Alright then sir, might be a bit bumpy.”
“We’ll handle it.”
They continued through the ship, appreciating the clean design and simple layout of systems. Both men were aware of the design philosophies employed by their own nations, it was interesting to compare them to a foreign and seldom seen vessel. Annoyingly some of the choices seemed to work better than on European and American ships.
“These corridors are pretty wide.” Lantree noticed. “Easy to move in full combat gear side by side, make it faster to move from section to section.”
“Some of these wall sections look like they’re designed to fold out too.” Mallory pointed. “Ready made cover to repel boarding teams.”
“Simple but effective.” Lantree approved. “Something we should copy.”
They finally came to a large door ahead of them, cranked partially open.
“At least it isn’t locked.” Lantree remarked. “I’ll crank it, you take a look inside.”



The American pulled down the hand crank, a basic ratchet design that he began to turn, slowly and silently widening the gap between door and doorway. It wasn’t easy work in a bulky suit with no gravity, but Lantree kept an even rhythm going until the door fully retracted into its alcove.
“No signs of power.” Mallory peered in. “Wow, half the ceiling is missing.”
Lantree joined him, craning his neck within the helmet to look into the Chinese control room.
It was a similar layout to most warships, circular with the command staff in the centre and department heads assembled around. Unlike the Amethyst where the consoles were built into the walls and the crew faced outwards the Chinese ship was big enough to have free standing consoles letting the officers face inward toward the commander improving their ability to relay information. Most larger ships used a similar layout, in some cases with multiple concentric rings passing information down to the centre, but on a ship as small as Amethyst it couldn’t be made to fit.
In this instance however the most noticeable feature was a huge gash in the roof through which the visitors could see open space. Given that the bridge was deep inside the hull and well protected the force necessary to open a rent so deep in the Destroyer must have been titanic. The floor was also bulged upwards with a few smaller rips, indicating the damage was caused by the nuclear detonation that tore the ship apart.
They noticed something else ensconced within the brain of the ship.



“Bodies.” Mallory shined his light back and forth. “Six or seven strapped into their chairs.”
“Not many bridge crew for a ship this size.” Lantree looked back up at the roof. “Think the rest were sucked out when she split apart?”
“Probably.” The Englishman agreed. “No sign of wounds, I’d guess the radiation killed these guys.”
Like the RN and USN crews the Chinese were in sealed pressure suits which would have protected them from vacuum, but only offered basic protection from radiation. Usually it was enough to survive in the case of reactor problems or exposure to cosmic radiation, but could do little against the extreme radiation released by nuclear blasts. It wasn’t commonly advertised but most nuclear weapons were designed to release a lot of radiation, sacrificing some of their other effects for increased Gamma ray bursts. It offered a better chance of killing a crew than physically blasting the hull.
“We better try and find the data recorders.” Lantree suggested. “At least one should be here.”
“Check the left side, I’ll check the right.”
They moved carefully, both keeping aware of the time and the increasing radiation exposure they were enduring. The bodies helped to keep the issue at the forefront of their minds, neither wishing to share their fate. Mallory finished his search first, finding no data cards or removable devices. He left the edges of the conn and made for the centre, to the single chair in the middle of the room occupied by an unmoving figure.



The Chinese Captain still commanded an air of authority even in death. He sat solidly in his chair, arms still on their rests despite the lack of gravity, head held straight within the small helmet he must have crammed on when battle begun. Mallory couldn’t see his face within the helmet, the face plate was iced over suggesting the power had failed or cut out. It wouldn’t have mattered, but if he was frozen solid inside the suit it would explain why he was sat so motionless.
“Got something.” Lantree said. “Not good, looks like the recorder had a self destruct.”
He extracted a shattered box with a tangle of wires floating free behind it.
“There goes our smoking gun.” Mallory sighed. “Never mind, we still have our own records.”
The American strode over clunking across the deck, walking up beside the central post.
“I wonder where the First Officer sits?” Mallory commented. “On European ships we tend to face each other over a table. Good for quick discussions.”
“So do we, maybe the Chinese don’t put as much emphasis on the job.” Lantree guessed. “The Captain makes the final decision by himself, sole responsibility.”
The both looked at their Chinese equivalent.
“The buck stops here.”
“This man chased us all the way from Saturn.” Mallory spoke quietly, reverently. “He guessed every trick we pulled, must have calculated our course perfectly to trail us so far. Wouldn’t surprise me if he tipped off his friends as to our course so they intercepted you friends sent to escort us home. This man is responsible for everything that happened to us.”
He stood quietly for a moment, contemplating his words.
“And yet I don’t hate him. He ruined my ship, killed a lot of my crew, and seeing him dead brings me no pleasure. I despise what he did, he blew up the Saturn station and ensured there were no survivors, and would likely have wiped out any of us who lived, but I don’t hate him.”



“You should.” Lantree countered. “He was good, but he still fired on unarmed people, so did his fleet mates. Doesn’t matter what skills you have, nothing excuses murder.”
“He was probably under orders from higher up to maintain the secret of his deployment. No witnesses.”
“Doesn’t matter. I wouldn’t do it, and I bet you wouldn’t do it.”
“Probably not, but I can name ten officers who would.” Mallory responded. “And I’m sure you can.”
He looked back at the body.
“None of us can claim to be saints. If roles were reversed I wouldn’t be shocked to see a European officer wiping out Chinese escape pods, or an American shooting down a Chinese civilian station. We like to think everyone obeys the rules, that only the enemy are degenerate enough to commit these sort of outrages. It’s not true.”
“Best we can do is make it true for us then.” Lantree picked up. “Personal honour.”
“Not much of that around out here.” Mallory exhaled. “Maybe I’m just jaded.”
“After these last few months my faith in humanity would be pretty low too.” Lantree huffed. “Out of the three of us, I guess he was the unlucky one.”
“That could easily have been one of us, and maybe he’d be stood in my Conn wondering who I used to be. You could get really depressed thinking about this stuff.”
“He’s dead, we’re not.” Lantree shrugged. “That’s enough for me. The trick is making sure we keep that arrangement.”
Mallory picked up a red book attached to the side of the chair, a binder filled with laminated sheets covered in Chinese writing.
“What is that?”
“Back up code book.” Mallory frowned. “I recognise a few symbols, your operations fellow knows Chinese doesn’t he?”
“Like a native.”
“If the Chinese are anything like us they keep a book of communication codes and recognition signals, a back up in case they can’t call them up on a computer. We’ll take it with us, it’ll be out of date in a few months but it might help us give the correct answer if we’re challenged.”
“Nice find.” Lantree nodded. “Better decontaminate it first, this thing is giving me face cancer just looking at it.”



He stuffed the book into a pouch, sealing it away to be fed into the decon chamber in the Amethyst airlock.
“We should head back.” Lantree suggested. “Nothing else here.”
“This man was smarter than us.” Mallory concluded, observing the Chinese Captain. “He should have won.”
“Smarter doesn’t always mean better. He didn’t see your man Broome coming, he let the range get too close. He wasn’t that good.”
Mallory turned off the link to the Amethyst, limiting his voice just to Lantree.
“I don’t think we’re going to make it back.”
“We will.” Lantree said simply. “We made it this far.”
“That’s what I mean, we should have been dead a long time ago. We’re running on pure luck and luck doesn’t last forever. The odds have been growing with every fight, now we’re facing an entire fleet at battle readiness? This isn’t some heroic film, I want you to copy your records and put them in a life pod. We have a handful left. We’ll shoot them into EU space and hope they make it through.”
“I’ll have some records ready, but I plan to hand them over to Admiral Ryder in person.” Lantree said confidently.
“You believe that?”
“I believe it.” Lantree confirmed. “And I’m going to make others believe it. You’ve kept your crew together, made them keep their hopes up, they need that now more than ever before. This last leg is the hardest, but we’re nearly there.”
“If we get through this, I owe you a beer.” Mallory broke a smile. “A German Beer.”
“I hear Dutch beer is pretty good.”
“Don’t say that near a German, he will kick you in the nuts without you being able to say anything else. I’ve seen it, trust me.”
“Valuable information there.” Lantree confirmed. “Come on, let’s get off this ship before I grow a third eye.”



They retraced their steps, emerging from the Chinese wreck back into open space, moving away from the jagged rips in the hull.
“Amethyst, we’re clear of the Chinese ship.”
“Commander, good to hear from you.” Jane retorted. “I was going to send a rescue party.”
“Sorry, I must have accidentally turned off my transmitter.”
“Space Octopus, that’s all I’m saying.” Jane shot back. “It was like every bad film I’ve seen suddenly became real.”
“Are we ready to try and attach the hulls?” Mallory brought them back on topic.
“We’re ready, do you want to come aboard first?”
“We can wait a little longer.” Mallory answered. “Go ahead, we’ve got a great view out here.”
“And if it goes wrong a nice slow death in the bleak emptiness of space.” Lantree added. “Man, I’ve been out here so long I’m starting to sound like you guys.”
“Optimism is for the weak Captain.” Jane returned. “Kendle is activating the winch, you should be seeing some motion.”
“I see it.” Mallory confirmed. “The hull halves are moving.”
From their vantage point they could see the cables sliding over the Chinese hull, tightening like a knot as the towing winch inside what was left of the hanger bay drew the line in. they had used as much grease and lubricant as they had to make sure the cables moved smoothly over the three separate elements in this equation, but even then nobody expected it to be perfect.
“Some buckling on the port side hull.” Lantree noted. “The cable is cutting into it.”
“Not much we can do now.” Mallory shook his head. “Fingers crossed it doesn’t slice through or snap.”
The two massive hulks inched closer together, it was a very slow and very precise action, a slow motion constriction that inevitably drew the two ships into one single block.
“Coming up on the buffers.” Mallory relayed. “Be careful with my ship XO.”
“I’ll treat it as if she was my own sir.”
“That’s what I mean, I’ve seen what you do to your stuff. Most of them die in a fire.”
“I prefer the term ‘Viking Funeral’ sir.”
“Arson might be closer.”
“Better than leaving them to charity.” She retorted. “Watching fire in zero gravity is so much more fulfilling.”

The two Chinese hulls touched the buffers, the motley assortment of salvaged beams mainly from the Chinese ship itself took the stain, the multi million ton lumps of metal crunching into the one and only method they had for stopping the motion.
“Contact.” Mallory reported from his vantage point. “Is it working? Are the pieces slowing?”
“In a word, no.” Jane replied from within the Amethyst. “I’m starting to feel a tingle of religion.”
“Don’t reverse the heresy of a lifetime just yet, the buffers are still…”
There was no sound in space, so when the first two buffers bent suddenly and then snapped his mind had to provide a suitable imagined ripping noise.
“..oh.”
“Don’t say that, don’t say oh!” Jane shot back. “What happened?”
“We just lost the first two beams.”
“Fuck sticks!”
“Yes, that’s a much better exclamation.” Mallory adjusted his position. “Plenty more to go.”
One after the other the welded on beams began either twisting, arching or in the case of the stronger ones piercing the side of the Chinese hulls.
“How does it look out there Captain?”
“Good, it all looks good.”
“You’re lying! I can tell you are lying!”
“…No I’m not.”
“I’m a woman, I can tell.”

Over the radio Mallory could hear the creak of metal as the welded on beams broke loose, in some cases taking a bit of the outer hull with them. From outside the two hull halves were barely moving, but even at such low velocities the sheer mass of the wreckage was giving it a lot of energy, perhaps more than they expected.
“It is starting to work.” Jane reported more calmly. “They’re slowing down.”
“It’ll work.” Mallory promised. “It has to work.”
“If anyone asks this wasn’t my idea.” Jane added. “Pretend I didn’t die trying something stupid.”
“I presumed you probably would at some point, so I already have plenty of heroic lies to select from.”
“You thought I’d die stupidly?”
“Seemed inevitable.”
“You’re just trying to distract me aren’t you?”
“Yes.” Mallory answered. “Actually no, after that motorbike thing…”
Two more buffers snapped in a sparkle of metal fragments, the two Chinese hulls finally touching the Amethyst. At once the screech of metal grew louder within the ship, the two sides of her hull compressed by the immense force, the decks shifting and the walls flexing.
“Shit I hope we slowed it down enough.” Mallory gritted his teeth, actually seeing his ship contorting, changing shape like a balloon being squeezed between a vice. For an eternity he waited until, very gradually at first the Amethyst bounced back, the hull filling out to its original shape as the two hulls stopped and began to drift outwards again.

“We stopped them!” Jane shouted in obvious glee over the radio. “We did it!”
The tightening cables arrested the two hull halves, the winch taking up the slack and leaving them tied in position on either side of the Frigate. Up close it looked terrible, but from a distance from the right angle, it was going to be completely unexpected.
“It’s looking great from out here, nice work XO!” Mallory beamed. “Tell the crew they’ve moved a mountain today. This is going to work.”
“Yes sir, we’re all set.” Jane related joyfully. “Next stop, home space.”
“We’re coming back aboard, make sure the decon team is ready to clean these suits and a few trinkets we’re bringing back.”
“Aye sir, they’re on their way. Amethyst out.”
“Still think we’re going to die?” Lantree picked up.
“More than ever.” Mallory returned. “Bt we might just have a chance. This plan is so ridiculously insane it might work. Nobody would believe we’d be mad enough to fly through a fleet that’s hunting us wearing the carcass of one of their brothers.”
“If they find out they’re going to be really, really pissed at us.”
“They can pick a number and get in line.” Mallory scoffed. “Just out of spite I’d like to survive this, and completely ruin a lot of people’s day.”
He activated thrusters, heading back to his battered ship and her exhausted crew.
“Just out of petty bitterness I’m going to make sure we get through this.” He promised, to himself as much as anyone else. “At least we can is piss off all the people trying to kill us.”
 
14



He couldn’t sleep. He knew he should, that rest would be beneficial, but it wasn’t happening. Even on the plush chairs of the wardroom with his copy of Nelson’s biography over his face blotting out the noticeably dimmed lighting it just wasn’t going to happen. He was tempted to pick up some pills from the sickbay, but that would be unseemly for a commanding officer.

“Got a minute boss?”

Mallory lifted the book from over his face and sat up straight in the chair, making a minor attempt to straighten his ruffled hair. Jane waited for him to arrange himself, her expression more pensive than usual.

“Everything alright XO?”

“Relatively speaking.” She answered with a tiny shrug. “If you ignore the fact we’re in half a ship surrounded by another half of a ship crewed by dead guys on our way…”

“Yes XO, I vaguely recall.”

“Yes sir, sorry sir.” She exhaled. “Nelson?”

He closed the well worn book, the reproduced painting of the man still considered Britain’s greatest Naval Officer looking back with oblivious serenity from the cover.

“I wish I could say I was looking for inspiration, some trick I could pull out of thin air. Unfortunately it was just the closest book on the shelf to cover my eyes with.” Mallory frowned. “I don’t have print on my face do I?”

“Print free.” Jane grinned widely back.

“While I don’t object to the crew reading Nelson’s speeches I’d rather they weren’t stuck on my forehead at the time.” He grunted with a brief smile. “I was thinking of giving a speech, a little comment to inspire the ship, but I just can’t think of anything. My brain is just solid, I can’t really make it work anymore.”

“I know that feeling.” Jane slid into another of the chairs in the ward room, looking every inch as tired as her commander. “I can’t even remember what being relaxed felt like. I swear if we make it back I’m going to just spend an entire month on some sort of drugs.”



“If I’ve learned anything from watching the net it’s that drugs are bad.” Mallory remarked emptily.

“And if I’ve learned anything from drugs it’s that they are groovy.”

Mallory smiled. “I don’t know why I’m surprised, I should have expected you were an experimenter in your youth.”

“Life is there to be sampled.” She returned with a genuine smile. “I’ll be quite annoyed if I don’t get to finish my list of things to do before I die.”

“What’s on there?”

“The usual, visit the bottom of the sea on Earth, stand on Olympus Mons, do at least one orbit of the sun, kick Julian Groves in the crotch.”

“Who’s Julian Groves?”

“Long story.”

“Well whoever he is I pity him.”

Mallory looked at the book again, flicking through the pages with his thumb.

“What do you think Nelson would do in our position?”

Jane raised an eyebrow. “What would Nelson do if he was in charge of a spaceship? Get drunk and wonder why he was here and all his friends died four hundred years ago.”

“After that.”

“I have no idea at all. I am done with ideas, at this point we’re all running on empty.”

“Do you think he’d give up?”

“How do you mean?”

“Do you think he’d imagine that we were just prolonging the inevitable, that we were living in false hope and we should just end our misery?”

Jane gave him a hard look.

“No, he wouldn’t, and neither would I. Commander, if you’re having doubts…”



“Just tired.” Mallory smiled back. “Don’t pretend you haven’t imagined it. I’ll put money on everyone aboard this ship has had the same thought. Are we just fooling ourselves?”

“We didn’t fool ourselves when we escaped a full sized fleet. We didn’t fool ourselves when we killed a Destroyer. We didn’t fool ourselves when we arrive within hours of making it to friendly space.” Jane listed. “This isn’t make believe, we are here, we are making it. Maybe it’s fate, maybe it’s luck, maybe we are just unbelievably awesome. Don’t know, don’t care. I want to get home and go to Amsterdam and not resurface for at least a month.”

“Do you believe in a higher power?”

“Only when I want something.”

“Good answer.”

“I once prayed for a pony, and when I didn’t get one I became an Atheist.” She explained. “But then I discovered sex and decided the human body was definitely designed by a very intelligent higher being. Nothing that good happens by random chance.”

“Might have been aliens pretending to be gods, like those documentaries on the Horizon Channel?”

“Interfering with evolution so we have tinglies between our legs?” Jane considered. “Remind me to thank them.”

“I mean more than that, playing with evolution, visiting us, guiding our development.” Mallory perked up. “What if they were behind the pyramids, and philosophy, and the ice ages? People still think there is an ancient civilisation buried under Antarctica. We still can’t scan beneath all that ice. What if it’s real?”

“Is this something you think about a lot sir?”

“Oh yeah, definitely.” He answered earnestly. “You don’t?”

“Only when I’m in Amsterdam.”



“I think they’re out there.” Mallory concluded. “Real honest aliens, and they are observing us. Maybe even helping us.”

“Generally or specifically?” Jane answered. “because right now we are just helping ourselves. This is all us, we got this far, not little green men giving us a push. I’ll be damned if Marvin the Martian is stealing my credit.”

“I was thinking bigger picture. You know what it’s like out here, especially deep range when there is literally nothing for hundreds of millions of miles in any direction. No planets, no ships, no stations, but every so often you get that little echo in the sensors, that ghost on the display. Just fleeting, but every ship I know has seen them.”

“That’s because the sensors on every ship are made by the lowest bidder. Just cycling the bands Boss.”

“Maybe, but I think there’s definitely more. And I don’t mean the Europan Sea Serpent.”

“That I think is real, because a mile long swimming worm is nightmarish enough to be a little memo from Mother Nature laughing in our faces and mauling our dreams for the rest of our lives.”

“Think you’d like to meet an alien?” Mallory asked with genuine interest. “Not the worm type.”

“Well for a start I’d thank them for inventing multiple orgasms.”

“Goes without saying.”

“Beyond that, depends if they wanted to enslave and eat us, or just buy us a round of drinks at the interstellar version of a Pub.”

“Thank you XO.” Mallory smiled.

“For what?”

“Nice just to have a chat about nothing, something that didn’t involve life or death decisions or how much of us will be left for them to bury.”

“If you want to talk about nonsense you came to the right place.” Jane chuckled. “Shall I explain the finer points of French Manicures? Or how about that guy who hacked the central download site for all those Japanese Fem-bots and made them all start speaking like Russian weightlifters.”

“Maybe we can…. He did what exactly?”

“He reprogrammed their voice files so they spoke like a Russian weightlifter, a male one.” Jane grinned. “So instead of whispering sweet phrases they bellowed threats in a thick Russian accent. ‘I must break you’ and things like that. Bit of a passion killer.”

“That’s one of those things I can’t decide if it’s scary or brilliant.”

“I’m going with brilliant.”

“You would.”

“I’d have loved to have seen that happen.”

“You should have met my first girlfriend, pretty, dainty, had a voice like a giant blender filled with farm animals.”

“Well done sir, you’re still number one for the mental imagery.”



They were interrupted by a whistle on the intercom.

“Command staff to the Conn, Command staff to the Conn.”

Mallory exhaled. “Ask not for whom the bell tolls…”

“We must be in sensor range of the Chinese fleet.”

“Showtime, as our American cousins would say.”

Mallory rose from the chair stiffly, stretching his muscles and putting the biography down on the table.

“Never finished that book you know. Had it twenty years, never got to the end.”

“Would you like some help with the long words?” Jane asked with a restrained smile. “Joke.”

“If we make it through I’ll finish it.”

“I won’t spoil the end then, good twist.”

“Thank you so much.”

He opened one of the drawers at the edge of the room, retrieving his formal head gear, the white topped peaked cap with its gleaming black leather visor and gold embroided crown and anchor. He gave it a quick dust with his sleeve before placing it on his head.

“Expecting rain sir?”

“It just feels like something I should do.” He tried to find the words. “Make me feel more commanding, more like an officer of the crown and less like a tired, depressed lost little man in the middle of nowhere.”

“Is it working?”

“Actually, yes, yes it is.”

“We still have time for you to change into your dress uniform.”

“I think this is sufficient.”

“Eyepatch sir?”

“Don’t push it.”

“In that case I think it is time.” She stood up herself, taking a deep breath and making sure her hair was neatly tied back out of her eyes. “I’ll perform a final check of all sections personally, inspire or terrify each department to maximum efficiency.”

“The perfect Executive Officer.”

“I embrace the cruelty and intimidation required of the job.” She smiled. “I will see you on the Conn sir.”

“Don’t be late, this should be an interesting journey.”

“Wouldn’t miss it for anything sir.” She held out a hand, rigidly and formally. “All things considered, there is still no other ship I would rather be serving on.”

He straightened and accepted her hand, locking eyes with the sardonic but unshakeable officer.

“Thank you.” He replied simply, his eyes conveying any message his words were inadequate for. “Shall we?”

“We shall.” She affirmed with all her confidence. “Time to go home.”





The Control Room was nothing like its former self. Most of the panels had jagged holes ripped by shrapnel, half the display screens and holographic projectors were in pieces, the lighting was provided by disaster lamps placed at key locations and to crown it all the room was still bisected by a support beam that had crashed through the roof as the Frigate had buckled and bent massively out of shape. The damage control teams had cleaned up as best they could, collecting the fragments of metal, tying up dangling cables and wiping away any pools of blood.

The important thing though was that the ship was still working, if only just. The much thinned out crew were at their stations, their clothes covered in grime and sweat, their eyes sunken and surrounded by grey, their frames gaunt from reduced rations and stress. Despite all that they were still entirely focused on the task at hand, looking into their holographic eye pieces and trying to glean every scrap of information from the ruined sensor systems still clinging to the hull.

“Captain Lantree.” Mallory greeted his American counterpart, as much a crew man as any other man or woman on the ship. Lantree knew they were all in this together and had been nothing but helpful and committed to the safety of the ship and those aboard.

“Commander Mallory.” The American replied with a nod, noting the hat but saying nothing. They stood side by side looking over the central table, a flickering but readable holographic image revealing all they knew of local space.

“I had one of my people try to clear up the projectors a little, I think we bust your warranty.”

“Don’t worry, we’ll lie on the insurance form.” Mallory grinned. “Imagine the poor sod filling out a claim for all this.”

He looked over the map of the area, the image dominated by the two clusters of warships moving toward each other. One in blue, one in red.

“Let me guess, the red ones are Chinese?”

“We were going to make them purple, but I’ve always been a traditionalist.” Lantree broke a grin. “The border is just beyond the two fleets, green line here.”

“Miss Fisher, project our course please.”

The helm officer complied, a yellow line skirting behind the Chinese fleet.

“No obvious contacts in our path.” Mallory noted. “If nothing changes it’s a clear run for the border.”

“If we do run into trouble I have Lieutenant Adams ready on Comms, I guessed you wouldn’t mind.”

“Not at all.” Mallory nodded to the American officer. “Can he speak Chinese?”

“He can, Mandarin and Cantonese.” Lantree affirmed. “He also managed to break the communication codes we recovered from the Chinese destroyer. If we are hailed we can give the correct response.”

“Very useful indeed.”



He glanced back at the map, the two sides deploying carefully, the US fleet concentrating its mass in the centre while the Chinese were more evenly dispersed.

“They’re taking their time.” Lantree caught Mallory’s gaze. “Not rushing into battle this time. Must have seen what happened to the other fleet.”

“Do you recognise any of the ships?”

“A few, that’s the flagship.” He pointed to a particularly well armed battleship. “The Constellation, Admiral Clarence Ryder.”

“He’s the fellow they call Bulldozer isn’t he?”

“The same.” Lantree nodded. “Very aggressive commander, I’d say he’s going to use his fleet like a battering ram, smash clean through the enemy centre then roll up the flanks.”

“While the Chinese look like they’re weighting their flanks, putting their big ships out at the edges. Creating a bit of a crossfire, a kill zone in the middle.” Mallory appraised.

“So the question is can Ryder smash the enemy fleet before they rip him to pieces.” Lantree pointed to the middle of the fleet. “And there’s this.”

Mallory looked at the image, a simple box shape surrounded by cruisers.

“What is that?”

“I have no idea, its putting out a lot of ECM. I’d guess a bulk cargo ship jammed with nukes or drone fighters, but it’s a new one to me.”

“Especially as you already have ten super carriers deployed, that’s a lot of drones.”

“You can never have too many drones.” Lantree smiled.



“Well we’re ready.” He heard Jane’s voice announce, his XO ducking under the bisecting beam. “Mr Kendle says he’ll do all he can to keep the reactors running, and he can give us a bit more thrust by throwing bits of the ship into the ion drives.”

“Is he serious?”

“Yes sir. It won’t by very efficient, but he says the magnetic rings can handle a few bumps.”

“Very well.” Mallory glanced up, noticing his XO had changed her uniform.

She smiled a little as she slightly adjusted her dress uniform cap, making sure the white crown was straight and the gold badge on the front level.

“Expecting rain XO?” he asked, his voice flowing with warmth.

“Seemed the right thing to do sir.” She returned in kind. “As an officer of the crown.”

“I feel under dressed all of a sudden.” Lantree complained.

“I have a spare eyepatch.” Jane suggested. “it might help.”

“Exactly how did you end up with an eyepatch?”

“Long story involving a parrot, two kegs of beer and the entire population of Switzerland. I’ll tell you later.”

Lantree couldn’t help but laugh.

“I will never understand you guys. Never.”

“These people are our main worry.” Jane pointed. “Single Chinese battlegroup. This is the force we’ll be closest to, depending on their rate of advance we could cross within a hundred thousand klicks.”

“Little too close for comfort.” Mallory grimaced at the prospect. “Composition?”

“One battleship, four destroyers.” Jane read. “Very nasty little combat group.”

“Anything with a battleship attached will be getting plenty of attention from my folks.” Lantree mentioned. “She’ll probably be neck deep in drones.”

“Hope it keeps them distracted.” The Commander expressed. “Any attempts at communication?”

“None sir.” Adams answered. “There’s a lot of signals, based on a few samples they’re fully committed to the fleet.”

“Miss Cheyo, any sign of movement over the border?”

“No sir, but our long range scans are patchy at best.”

“Wing and a prayer then.” Mallory settled beside the table, Jane and Lantree flanking him, their faces lit up by the flickering lights.

“Looking at the increase in communications I’d say this is about to kick off.” Adams reported. “Chinese fleet command is ordering all ships to arm long range weapons and prepare ranging shots.”



“Both sides are pretty evenly matched.” Mallory watched. “The Chinese have more battleships, but those Supercarriers on the US back line carry ten thousand drones each.”

“And a good chunk of those drones will probably have one or two nukes.” Lantree added. “It’s going to turn into a real hellstorm.”

“Movement in the US lines.” Cheyo spoke. “Their main battleship group is dispersing.”

“Dispersing?” Lantree asked. “Are you sure?”

“Confirmed with narrowband sensors, they are moving apart.”

“Why would they do that? They were concentrated their strength. Why disperse it?” Mallory questioned.

“I don’t know.” Lantree shook his head. “Honestly Commander, this isn’t in the books.”

One vessel did not move. The massive rectangular ship in the heart of the fleet held steady, the vessels around it getting some distance. It cut its engines, coasting in the middle of the US line.

“I have activity on the unidentified vessel, looks like she’s blowing her cargo doors.” Cheyo mentioned. “Panels are moving aside.”

The big panels creating the rectangle detached, drifting away to reveal something different inside. The vessel was big, about a mile long and like no other ship in the fleet. It was built around three giant spheres each three hundred metres in diameter arranged end to end with a large blocky structure at the back containing rows of reactors and the vessels engines. It appeared to be unarmed and unarmoured, it’s design completely out of place next to the utilitarian blocky US fleet warships.

“Okay.” Jane focused in on the ship, bringing up a closer image on the holo table. “Still don’t get it.”

“I do.” Lantree said quietly. “It’s the MacArthur.”

“I don’t remember reading the name.” Mallory frowned. “Experimental?”

“Very, she wasn’t due for trials for another five years, she was a secret weapon.” Lantree explained. “Not secret anymore I guess.”

“Good, so you can tell us what she is.” Jane pressed.

“She’s a laser ship.” Lantree informed. “A single mobile capital grade laser.”



Both European officers looked back at the display and the odd ship.

“Impossible.” Mallory shook his head. “Capital grade lasers are too energy intensive, only space fortresses have the power to operate them. Not to mention the cooling requirements on a weapon that big. The heat generated alone is insane.”

“You’re talking a laser equal to a hundred kiloton nuke.” Jane carried on. “You can’t radiate that sort of heat without the sheer surface area of a multi mile base. We tried it ourselves, everyone’s tried it, it never worked.”

“Looks like it finally did.” Lantree answered simply. “And ahead of schedule.”

“Sir, MacArthur is changing orientation.” Cheyo interrupted. “I’m getting a lot of radiation, she’s powering up to do something.”

“Plot her facing, what is ahead of her?” Mallory ordered.

“Chinese heavy cruiser.”

“If this works, if they have got a mobile capital grade laser…” Jane curled her lips. “They can melt every capital ship in that fleet before they can return fire, from beyond effective gun range, and at the speed of light.”

“No way to dodge, no way to intercept.” Mallory agreed. “A decisive weapon.”

“Major power surge.” Cheyo called. “She’s firing.”

There was no visual cue, no great beam of light, but the amount of radiation lit up every sensor for hundreds of millions of miles in every direction. The invisible laser beam crossed the void almost instantly, impacting the bow of the Chinese cruiser with a sudden massive burst of melting metal.

The beam was narrow, no wider than ten centimetres despite the massive bulk of the firing platform, but concentrated in that beam was energy equal to a sizeable rail gun round hitting every second. It vaporised the dense metal in clouds of steam where it touched, the heat melting the area around the weapon like wax, the steam blasting globules of molten alloy into space. It cored through the armour in a few seconds as the ship tried to alter course with little effect, effortlessly slicing through the unarmoured interior bulkheads. It was elemental, like some sort of volcano belching liquid fire and gas, ripping the ship apart from the inside with invisible force. The crew were dead as soon as the armour breached, the inside of the ship turning into a furnace as the hull broke apart, the laser shutting down and letting fire and exploding munitions finish the job.

“Secondary explosions registering through the cruiser, internal temperature over eleven thousand degrees.”

“Shit that’s a bad way to go.” Mallory kept his eyes fixed on the Chinese cruiser, the hull breaking up as hundreds of explosions detonated in the intense heat. “At least it’s quick.”

“Six seconds.” Jane said. “She killed a cruiser in six seconds with one shot.”

“I think we’ve just witnessed a new era of warfare.”



“The Chinese are moving.” Jane drew attention to the larger picture. “Accelerating hard, they’re going for the MacArthur.”

“Naturally enough. That ship is the most dangerous vessel in space.”

“US forces are deploying to intercept. Battleships forming up to meet the Chinese, drones launching.” Cheyo rattled off. “MacArthur is arming again, she’s going for a dreadnought this time.”

“The cruiser was just a test.” Lantree figured.

“The Chinese are abandoning their formation.” Mallory noted. “It’s an all out rush to kill that laser gun before they get picked off at range.”

“They don’t have much of a choice.” Lantree nodded. “They need to get into range fast, and Ryder is going to take them head on while they’re advancing.”

“He’s got them right where he wants them. It’s going to be a massacre.” Jane set her jaw. “Makes them even for all those US ships wiped out in the last battle.”

“Radiation spike, MacArthur is firing!”



The cruiser was a good test, but a Dreadnought was something altogether more challenging carrying much thicker armour and a hell of a lot more raw mass. The Dreadnought was a dark red, lacking the decoration that many of her sisters carried. She maintained the standard Chinese design of a large main hull with a flattened hexagonal cross section bristling with weapons flanked by in this instance six large nacelles attached to the rear quarter of the ship. Each nacelle was about a third the total length of the main hull and was mostly occupied by an extremely powerful engine assembly. The outrigged engines ensured even a ship as big as a dreadnought could manoeuvre with surprising speed, which was about to come in very handy.

The warship was moving too fast to dodge or turn, the laser was going to hit no matter what, but while the MacArthur was new the concept of fighting against weapons of this power was not. The Dreadnought began to roll, cutting its forward thrust and letting momentum carry it along a straight line towards the Americans. She focused her engine power and making the multi million ton vessel spin on all three axis’, rotating the ship in a seemingly random and out of control manner as it hurtled through space.

It looked like panic but was instead carefully calculated. The capital grade laser could burn through dreadnought armour but only if it struck the same spot for several seconds. By throwing the ship into a three dimensional spin the Chinese Captain was making sure no single part of his hull was exposed for long enough to allow a breach. He couldn’t stop the hit, but he could try to mitigate the damage enough to keep his ship in one piece.



The laser fired again, its impact marked with glowing white light and the familiar eruption of vapour and molten metal. The spin meant the beam did not burn clean through, instead it cut a long groove across the forward hull, the US gunners trying to predict the motion of the Chinese helmsman and keep their massive cannon on target.

It was a spectacular display to watch, the rotating ship spraying fire as the laser immolated a white hot channel which rapidly cooled to a dull glowing red. Both sides corrected, adjusted, the dreadnought absorbing a ferocious amount of energy but spreading it out enough to prevent catastrophe. Its hull grew more and more scarred and torn, the laser detonating one of the turrets as it cored through a weaker section of armour. Sensor masts were sliced clean off, the weakly armoured superstructure was turned into a hollowed out pool of shapeless metal, the engine nacelles exploded one after the other as they felt the full force of the US barrage. Yet the core of the Dreadnought remained, a spiral of black lines crossing its ravaged form.

“Reading massive external damage.” Cheyo kept up a commentary. “Secondary engines are gone, most of its main weapons are down, its sensors are destroyed. Outer hull temperature is rising.”

“She’s still changing course.” Lantree pointed out. “Her crew is still in control.”

“MacArthur just ceased fire.” Cheyo read her sensor report. “She switching targets.”

“She didn’t kill the Dreadnought.” Jane watched the torn up vessel still spinning. “Still, she doesn’t have to, look at the mess.”

The ship had been torn ragged, its neat angular hull ripped and melted, globules of molten alloy scarring its surface like welts. The entire ship looked in pain, mortally wounded, but despite the ferocity of the attack it had at least achieved its ultimate purpose and kept most of its crew alive.

“Total mission kill.” Mallory agreed with a little awe. “Even if they recover her it’ll take years to fix that damage. I’m fairly intimidated.”



The Chinese fleet began launching long range missiles in puffs of gas, the larger vessels trying a few shots from their rail guns to test the range. The US fleet handled the few ranging shots without concern, setting themselves up to screen the laser armed capital ship as it selected another target, a slightly smaller battleship.

“MacArthur is locking on again.”

“Chinese fleet is passing in front of us.” Jane added, looking at the big picture. “Ahead of schedule, by accelerating like that it’s going to give us a wider margin to clear them by.”

“Still a lot of metal out there.” Mallory maintained a dour outlook.

“She’s firing again.” The sensor officer reported sharply. “Wait, she’s stopped.”

The Chinese battleship took a few seconds of damage, the laser cutting a spiral groove into its rotating hull when the energy beam suddenly cut out. The battleship continued rolling, its Captain not quite sure what to make of the situation and erring on caution.

“What happened, why did she stop?” Mallory demanded.

“I’m picking up a lot of radiation from the MacArthur, her reactors are escalating.”

“She’s venting coolant.” Jane pointed. “No, wait, its atmosphere. She’s venting air from the outerdecks.”

“It’s a cooling mechanism.” Lantree spoke. “The laser must be overheating, they fired it for too long against that dreadnought.”

“She’s dumping reactant now, emptying her fuel tanks.” Cheyo narrated. “She must have reactor problems, they aren’t closing down.”

The MacArthur glittered as she sat surrounded by venting gas, the particles turning instantly to ice, a glittering cloud that twinkled brilliantly in the distant sunlight. It made the ship look like something from a children’s book, an entirely out of place image as the ship began to melt from the inside out.

“So she’s venting fuel to suffocate the reaction.” Mallory nodded. “Standard procedure for emergencies. Is it working?”

A flash of light answered his question. One after another the reactors exploded, ripping the rear half of the MacArthur to pieces, the hull peeling apart like blossom falling away in springtime. The laser assembly cracked releasing cryogenic coolant into space in a massive cloud of crystal and vapour, the cooling spheres around the barrel of the weapon shattering silently as the experimental ship broke apart in slow motion. It was an eerie sight, the disconnection of distance and a lack of sound making the horror seem surreal.



“I knew it was too early.” Lantree shook his head.

“MacArthur has broken up.” Jane zoomed the image out. “The radiation… I don’t think anyone is getting out of that.”

“A waste of life.” Lantree exhaled. “They never had a chance to get out.”

“Maybe not a total waste.” Mallory offered sympathetically. “She did knock out a dreadnought and a cruiser, and more importantly she forced the Chinese out of formation.”

“Looks like they are slowing down, trying to redress their lines.” Jane squinted, picking out patterns in the disrupted Chinese fleet. “It’s a mess.”

“And your Admiral is exploiting it.”

If the American fleet was shocked by the loss of their secret weapon they didn’t show it, slipping quickly into their back up plan. Instead of standing off and picking away with their long range laser cannon they powered their engines and advanced. The US fleet was still heavily concentrated, a shield for the MacArthur which now altered into a hammer aimed at the morass of Chinese vessels.

“She might just have won this battle for you anyway.” Mallory smiled a little. “Even if it wasn’t entirely as expected.”

“Plots indicate no immediate danger to us.” The XO calculated. “The main battle is going to be well toward the centre. We don’t have to worry about crossfire or stray rounds.”

“A small mercy. How long until we are clear?”

“About three hours.”

“Better keep a watch for any stragglers then.” Mallory ordered. “Mean time it looks like we have a ring side seat.”





The Amethyst crawled along the edge of the battle for the next few hours, watching as the two sides advanced on each other. While the Chinese still had numerical superiority the US fleet was better concentrated robbing the Chinese of their chance to simply overwhelm the Americans. Instead Admiral Ryder took apart the enemy piecemeal, knocking out one enemy task force at a time before their comrades could cross the vast gulf of the battlefield fast enough to help.

The Chinese Admiral accepted he had been caught out of position but wasn’t about to let the Americans dictate the battle. He made the hard choice to leave his forward and centre elements unsupported, leaving them to face the US forces alone in what was a simple death sentence. He couldn’t help them but he could use their demise to buy time to mass his two flanking groups into an organised combat group. It was a cold decision, but those leading ships were going to be shot down no matter what he did, this way at least he could gain an advantage from their loss.

It had taken a while but the Chinese managed to drag three distinct but small fleets out of the morass, one group on the right flank, one on the upper flank, and a rear guard ahead of the American advance. The rest of the Chinese fleet was overwhelmed but it did not fall easily and it did not fall alone.



The Chinese fleet had a strong position, it could hit the US group with enfilade fire from three directions but they were still spread out. While the three groups combined were roughly equal in numbers to the US fleet they were still divided and still unable to adequately support each other. The Chinese Admiral ordered them to converge on the upper flank, and naturally Admiral Ryder ordered his own fleet to prevent this and hammer each enemy groups individually.

It set the scene for the decisive act, both fleets rushing towards the same area of space hoping to achieve local superiority. Where most of the battle had been fought at long range the two sides were now closing too fast to decelerate and stand off. It was going to turn into a melee, or at least the closest thing to one you could get with multi million ton battleships. The screening forces were already heavily engaged, the destroyers and cruisers battling each other in a desperate fore taste of the grander duel to come as they cleared the way for the capital ships to engage each other exclusively.



“This is going to be brutal.” Jane commented, crunching her way through a nutrient stick which only barely qualified as food.

“Battleships are designed to engage from about twenty thousand kilometres out.” Mallory watched the displays. “Less than five thousand is considered close range, looking at this the lead ships are going to pass within a hundred kilometres.”

“It’ll be impossible to dodge gunfire at that range.” Jane agreed. “You just have to hope you kill the enemy before he kills you. This is why I applied for stealth ships, it’s all about subtlety.” She crunched another mouthful of nutrient stick. “We are the Silent Service, our battles are games of chess planned dozens of moves in advance. Fleet battles are more like games of whack-a-mole.”

“Whack-a-mole?” Mallory raised his eyes.

“Exactly, where your best tactic is just to spaz out and flail your arms as much as possible.”

“Spaz out? What does that mean exactly?”

“You need to read more twentieth century literature.” She finished the stick. “Either those rations have no taste or somewhere along the line my taste buds abandoned ship in despair and evacuated my mouth.”

“Given the venom which usually lives in there I’d say the latter.” Mallory presented a knowing smile prompting an absurdly fake grin from his XO.

“Commander.” Lieutenant Cheyo patched through the sensor feeds to the main display table. “The main bodies have begun engaging.”

“Ah, the main event.” Mallory diverted his attention. “Captain Lantree, what do you think?”



The American officer in residence took a few moments to examine the set up before offering his opinion.

“It’s a risk, leading with battleships and taking them into a close range duel like this. We tend to see battleships as support elements, not our primary weapons, but I understand Admiral Ryder trained his people for exactly this type of battle. A close range brawl.”

“So this is the Admiral’s strategy, not official US Navy doctrine?”

“Kind of.” Lantree confirmed. “We’re taught to be aggressive, to take the fight to the enemy, but Bulldozer Ryder is the kind of guy to take aggression to a whole new level. He hand picked his fleet officers for their aggression in simulations and their willingness to operate individually and not wait for orders. They’re creative to the point of insubordination, no other Admiral would take them. Maybe they’re the kind of people we want in a battle like this.”

As he finished his sentence the two fleets entered optimum firing range and engaged, Ryder angling between the converging enemy groups and focusing on the closest elements. The initial salvos mainly missed, but that would change as both sides continued to hurtle towards each other, unleashing massive volleys with increasing frequency.

“He’ll hold them together until they get to about a thousand klicks, then he’ll take the leash off.” Lantree reasoned. “Then it’ll be a free for all, ship to ship where training and initiative count. The perfect sort of battle for Captains like this.”


“Sounds almost Nelsonic.” Mallory remarked. “Closing the range and relying on quality and aggression to defeat numbers.”

“Ryder studied the old masters, Nelson, Togo, De Ruyter, Nimitz.” Lantree shrugged. “Probably a big influence.”

“Make sure we keep a copy of this for Miss Conroy.” Mallory added to his XO. “Be a nice way to cap off her story.”



The ferocity of the fighting escalated immensely as more ships weighed in, the battleship groups loosing thousand ton rounds at each other in vast quantity. Most missed as was expected, but those that struck inflicted massive damage. Tens of thousands of tons of metals, alloys and polymers were smashed from the immense hulls, holes the size of tower blocks burst apart in petals of twisting metal and the blossom of bent metal plates. Even those shots which didn’t pierce the armour caused heavy internal damage, bulging the hull and crushing anything adjacent on the interior.

“The drones are moving in.” Jane pointed. “Just look at them all.”

“A hundred thousand at least. Absolutely incredible.” Mallory observed with a shallow breath. “You Americans certainly know how to throw money at things.”

“If it works it wasn’t money wasted.” Lantree offered a smile. “Now he’s engaging their main forces they can’t easily escape, so he’s dropping the hammer. If they keep engaging his battleships the drone waves will swamp them. If they turn to take on the drones Bulldozer’s battleships will shred them with close range gunfire. Classic rock and a hard place.”

“I have a transmission from the Chinese flagship, he’s calling in all his reserves.”

“What does he have left?”

“A few battlegroups covering his line of retreat.” Cheyo responded. “They’re beginning to move, including one unit very close to us.”

“When you say ‘very close’ lieutenant…”

“Looking at the plot we’ll still pass behind them, but the new estimate is fifteen thousand kilometres rather than eighty thousand plus.”

“That’s a little too close for comfort.” Mallory gritted his teeth.

“We can try a minor course correction?” Jane suggested. “A gentle nudge?”

“I don’t think it will help. We’re just going to have to brass it out and hope for the best.”

“In all honesty it’s worked so far.” Jane accepted. “Fingers crossed.”

“Lieutenant Adams, any further communication?”

“Nothing specific for us sir.”

“Very well, keep your ears wide open, you might turn into our best hope for not dying.”

“Yes sir, no pressure then.”

“Seems to be a theme.” The Commander offered dryly. “Let me know the second anything changes.”





The Amethyst cruised on silently wrapped in her disguise, hoping nobody was paying her attention, attempting to be as inconspicuous as a battered space going warship could be in the midst of a full scale war. Far to her left the main battle was in full flow, a constant flicker of light as guns fired and explosions blossomed. Moving points of illumination showed engine glare or burning ships, while the infrequent but brilliant sparks showed nuclear detonations. Most of the work however seemed to be done by guns, the immense weapons smashing their way through even battleship armour and completely demolishing any smaller ships that wandered into their sights.

Wisely the cruisers and destroyers were keeping away from the battleships, allowing the titans to duel without distraction. Now and then a smaller ship attempted an attack with nukes but given the growing confusion as the two sides mingled and ranges closed they became less and less frequent. Instead the US Drone waves, unmanned and expendable, flung themselves into the battle uncaring for losses and unimportant enough so the US warships didn’t bother holding fire for fear of hitting them. The drones weaved through the crossfire, brought down by friend and foe alike, but present in such numbers it didn’t matter. They launched missiles and nukes into the Chinese fleet, adding their power to the concentrated battleships of Admiral Ryder, eroding the Chinese power one ship at a time.



“I think the Americans are starting to swing it their way.”

“Maybe so.” Mallory maintained his watch. “Maybe those drones aren’t as wasteful as our folks believed.”

“Quantity has a quality all to itself.” Lantree quoted. “According to Stalin.”

“I thought it was Brezzle the Wizard who said that, in Fantastic Quest?” Jane prompted.

“He did, but Stalin got their first.”

“Oh.” She absorbed the information. “Well both did have amazing facial hair.”

“How about that Chinese battlegroup?” Mallory drew the focus back. “Where are they?”

“They’ve already crossed ahead of us, they are moving away, twenty thousand klicks.” Cheyo said. “We’ll be at our closest approach in a few minutes.”

“They can definitely see us.” Jane offered her opinion. “Those ships are fully operational, one Province class battleship and four Lake class destroyers.”

“I’m not too worried about the battleship, even at this range it’ll have a hard time hitting a ship as small as us with its main batteries.” Mallory considered. “And she won’t break off, not in the middle of a hell storm like this.”

“But she could send a destroyer after us.” Lantree reasoned. “And we’re in no condition to take on one of them.”

“The Lake class are a lot less scary than the Hunter class ship we’re wearing.” Jane informed. “But at this point I’d be worried about facing a guy with a hammer and a loud voice, a fleet destroyer is just overkill.”

“We’re definitely being tracked sir.” Cheyo reported. “Their scanners have lit us up three times now.”

“But they’re still holding course, probably trying to decide what to make of us.”

“Commander, I am receiving a signal.” Adams tuned the radio. “It’s from the battleship on a secure channel.”

The three command officers shared a look, their eyes hardening with their expressions as the last obstacle presented itself.

“Showtime.”



Mallory and Lantree headed for the communication console, ducking under hanging inert cables that hadn’t been fixed, leaving Jane to keep an eye on the big picture at the plotting table. Adams filtered the signal, the US Navy Lieutenant already an expert on the European equipment.

“Can you decode the signal?” Lantree asked.

“Yes sir, it’s working through now.” He reported. “I’m using the codes recovered from the Destroyer we killed.”

“What do they want?” Mallory questioned.

“It’s an automatic signal, because we’re running without a transponder they want our recognition codes.”

“Tell me we have them.”

“We do sir, I’m sending them back on their frequency now.”

He tapped a few keys and sent the information captured from the enemy ship, the incoming signal stopped.

“The codes are changed regularly sir.” Adams warned. “Hopefully they are still up to date, if they aren’t…well.”

“We get the idea.” Mallory kept his eyes fixed on the screen, the channel remaining open, the console screen waiting in standby, a cursor flashing on and off, on and off, a ticking blinking clock that kept building the tension in his chest, each flash edging them closer to salvation or destruction with no way to guess which. It was absolutely unbearable, he craved an answer, any answer, just to end the uncertainty.

Suddenly something came through, a jumble of words that Adams sent through the filter.

“At least they’re talking, that’s a good sign.” He continued to hold his breath. “Lieutenant?”

“One moment sir.”

“Any time Lieutenant.”

Adams checked the data, then broke a grin.

“They confirm our identity! They bought it!”



The atmosphere crackled and released, for a moment the entire conn whistling as half a dozen people released their breath at once.

“Hold on.” Adams raised his hand.

“What? Don’t do that! Don’t let us relax then set us all up again!”

“She’s transmitting again, she’s ordering us to join her group and to engage US forces.”

“Well we can’t, send back, tell them we’re heavily damaged and almost out of fuel.”

“Sir, they’re requesting voice communication.”

Mallory cleared his throat, nodding slightly.

“I understand you speak Chinese Lieutenant.”

“Mandarin and Cantonese sir.” Adams confirmed. “I have a bit of an accent, but I usually say I was raised on the Chinese Mars territory.”

“You’re going to have to pretend to be the Captain, are you up for this?”

“Not much option is there sir.” Adams sighed. “I’m ready, I can do this sir.”

“Just relax.” Lantree rested a hand on his shoulder. “You love pressure remember? No day is complete without a challenge, that’s what you told me.”

“I’m currently rethinking my philosophy sir.”

“Rethink it tomorrow.” Lantree assured. “Make it natural.”

“Open a line when you’re ready.” Mallory advised. “Translate, then we’ll figure out what to say back.”



Adams opened the voice line, a female Chinese officer at once filling the air with noise. Mallory didn’t get any of it, he’d never had much of an ear for language, but fortunately Adams seemed to be on top of events.

“She says while all the general ECM is clouding detailed scans, her sensors show we have guns and enough mass to show we must be carrying sufficient fuel for this battle.”

“Of course we are, the mass of the Amethyst, they think its fuel.” Mallory exhaled. “Great.”

“At least we’re still hidden, our cover isn’t blown yet.” Lantree pointed out.

“Adams, tell them we have orders direct from the top to hold our course.”

The officer relayed the message and received a response.

“She said fall into formation sir, except she was a lot less polite this time.”

“Alright, let’s try something else. Tell her we’re detached from the Saturn Strike group hunting down a straggler with vital intelligence regarding our build up in the outer system.”

“Which is technically true.” Lantree nodded. “We just have to gamble an officer in command of a battlegroup is senior enough to know about the Saturn fleet.”

“And intimidated enough not to ask any further questions.”

“Commander, I don’t think she’s going for it.” Adams winced. “She says the Saturn fleet is already decimated and if we don’t come about we’ll be boarded and arrested for desertion.”

“At least we know where those ships went.” Lantree shrugged.

“One of the destroyers is changing course.” Cheyo warned. “It’s coming about.”

“Think the wreckage we’re covered in can soak up a few rounds?” Mallory asked openly.

“It’s damaged, but still thick armour. As long as they don’t engage from a different angle it might be enough to get us over the border.” Adams theorised. “But it’s quite a risk.”



“Speaking of risk.” Jane called from the table. “Take a look at this.”

“What is it?”

“In a word, drones.” Jane replied. “Or more specifically, a fucking shitload of drones.”

“That’s the technical term?” Lantree cocked a mildly amused eyebrow.

“Actually yes, it means about a thousand.” Mallory returned. “A shitload is a hundred, and the term fucking means increase it by ten.”

“Oh. Alright then.”

“If you ever hear anything described as the mother of all fucking bastard-o-matics, then you know we’re in real trouble.”

“That makes absolutely no sense.”

“Making it less likely anyone listening into our communications will know what we’re reporting.” Mallory grinned. “Keep stalling them on the radio Captain as best you can, I’ll see what this next crisis is.”

Mallory made his way back to the table, Lantree continuing to over see communications as Adams sent increasingly irate replies back to the Chinese task force.

“Enemy destroyer is still inbound.” Jane put a flashing ring around the specific vessel. “But I think it’s going to have bigger problems. Someone designated this task force as a primary target, it’s too far out to be engaged by warships but our American friends are going to shower them with drones.”

“How many exactly?”

“One thousand, one hundred and twelve.”

“That’s a lot of metal. Can they handle it?”

“Maybe, Chinese warships have the same level of point defences as anyone else, they can generate a lot of hurt, but that is a literal shit ton of drones, and its good money a lot of them will be packing nukes.”

“If nothing else it’ll keep them busy and preoccupied. Estimated time to contact?”

“Three to four minutes, they’re coming in fast.”



“Commander, Chinese task force is ordering we fall in and engage the drones at once or we will be fired upon.” Adams reported swiftly. “They sound pretty serious sir.”

“I’m picking up targeting scanners, the nearest destroyer is preparing to engage.” Cheyo confirmed. “Possible air release, I’d say they just opened their torpedo tubes.”

“Drones?” Mallory checked.

“Estimate two minutes, if they fire at this range they can hurt us before they have to defend themselves.”

“And if they launch nukes they might just finish us off.” Jane cautioned. “The drones are unmanned, we can shoot them down with no loss to American life and buy ourselves a little time.”

“I wouldn’t advise it.” Lantree countered. “If we open fire the drones will mark us as hostile and automatically engage. I don’t think we want that.”

“Yet another rock and a hard place sandwich.” Mallory exhaled. “We spend so much time between them we should get our address changed.”

“We can’t really engage anyway sir.” Cross called from the weapons station. “Most of our guns are masked by the disguise, if we want to engage we’ll have to jettison the hull of the ship we are wearing.”

“Actually, speaking of that.” Jane raised a hand. “If we have the profile of a Chinese warship, won’t the drones identify us as an enemy and attack us anyway?”

There was a long moment of silence punctuated succinctly by Mallory

“Fuck.”

“Keep the disguise and the drones kill us, drop it ant the Chinese kill us.” Jane considered. “I was just beginning to forget what it felt like to be trapped between two hopeless options, thanks fate, thanks for the reminder!”

“We can handle this.” Mallory forced some evenness into his voice, exerting as much calm as he could. “We keep the disguise until the Chinese come under fire, then drop it once they’re too busy to try and kill us.”

“Going to take careful timing.” Lantree warned. “Those drones can switch targets in a micro second.”

“Get ready to activate the transponder and show them we are not an enemy.” Mallory ordered. “Mr Cross, just in case the Chinese do get a missile or two off, bring point defence to active status.”

“Aye sir.” He answered. “The laser cannons should be fine, but we have very limited ammunition for main and secondary rail guns.”

“How limited?”

“About three rounds per gun.”

“Well then, better make the most of them.” Mallory exhaled. “Once we break cover we’ll need to run for the border. Miss Fisher, get the most out of our very limited fuel if you please.”

“Aye sir.”

“Chinese destroyer less than three thousand klicks sir.” Cheyo updated. “Well within effective firing range.”

“Drones?”

“Any second now.”

“Alright then, looks like we’re about to take our final gamble.” The Commander exhaled briefly, focusing his senses, breathing out his doubts and concerns and symbolically cleansing his mind for the final challenge. “Positions, prepare main engine burst, standby all remaining weapons.”

“Drones in range.” Jane spoke clearly. “Engaging task force.”
 
The US Navy had invested heavily in its drone wing, creating by far the largest automated combat force in existence. Every ship carried them, and while most forces used them for scouting dangerous locations or long duration missions where humans would be a draw back, the USN used them as their primary means of offence. They were force multipliers, a means of delivering a large amount of ordnance in a short amount of time, the very definition of US combat doctrine.

There were several different types of drone in service optimised for different roles, interception, recon, strike, early warning, electronic warfare and more. All of them had two basic control modes, either receiving orders direct from a parent ship or operating independently following a set of pre-programmed objectives. Given the sheer amount of jamming most drones tended to act independently. While the computers in drone weapons were not true thinking intelligences, they were still remarkably sophisticated and capable of creating their own attack patterns and tactics in conjunction with each other. A swarm of drones would almost instinctively gather together to engage a large target, mimicking the behaviour of insects, of shoals of fish. It was often a disconcerting sight for apparently dumb machines to behave in such a way, seeking out their mechanical brothers for security in defence and extra mass in attack. It was also highly effective.

The basic drone was designed like a five or six pointed star depending on the manufacturer and role. Each point had a multi directional thruster which gave the drone its manoeuvrability and allowed it to perform the sharp and violent moves they relied on for survival. With no pilot the only limit to their agility was the amount of stress the alloy hull could take, and with modern science it could take a lot of strain.

The incoming drones were a mix of heavy and lighter models, the heavier strike ones carrying anti ship missiles while the smaller ones carried dual purpose kinetic missiles used to kill other drones or damage less armoured warships. Both designs also carried either a laser cannon or a 20millimetre rail gun or two to give flexibility to their attacks.



The drones raced in at extreme speed, immediately breaking into a series of violent and unpredictable evasive jinks and twists. The onboard computers co-ordinated their evasive moves so there were no collisions, no vulnerable clusters with several drones in one spot making them a tempting target for shrapnel rounds. They worked as if they were a single entity broken into many parts, a literal hive mind, and from the Conn of the Amethyst it was equal parts beautiful and terrifying to watch.

The Chinese were prepared for this. They had known for years that they would have to face drone swarms and had armed their ships appropriately. Every vessel bristled with point defence guns, with lasers, light railguns and medium artillery. The Chinese vessels also boasted an intense sensor array with plenty of redundancy to co-ordinate and control their arsenals with equal precision, the various ships in the task force linking their fire control computers to deliver a co-ordinated and massive barrage. Hundreds of guns whirred into action, from the sixteen inch main guns of the battleship to the ten millimetre laser cannons of the escorting destroyers.

A wall of gunfire burst out from the task force to meet the attack, flashes of briefly burning gas and metal fragments announcing rail gun salvoes while puffs of glittering ice crystals showed missile launches. Explosions silently flashed white in the darkness as Chinese rounds exploded, showering the drones with high density metal fragments that effortlessly shredded them, despite the physical strength of their construction.

The volume of fire was immense, and for every rail gun burst there were a dozen laser cannons who’s beams could not be seen, only the glow as they struck their targets and melted through their vital internal components. The violent manoeuvres saved many of the robotic strike craft, and their design allowed them to function despite heavy damage, but even so scores were lost on approach, shattered and scattered into nothingness.

Such losses were expected, the US Navy knew that in a major fight it would probably lose thousands of drones, which was why they deployed tens of thousands. It was pure attrition, simple weight of numbers, no matter how many were destroyed more would take their place like an ocean eroding a cliff. Eventually they would get through.



The distance between the task force and the drones shrank rapidly, the moving wall of bright explosions showing the wave front of the swarm, the orange tracer fire becoming increasingly foreshortened as the gap was squeezed shut. The first wave of drones did not fire until they were at point blank range. For a warship that was a few thousand kilometres, for a drone it was about three or four hundred metres. At that range it was impossible to react fast enough to intercept their payload, only blind luck would prevent an impact and in most cases fate was not particularly giving.

One Destroyer vanished in an expanding ball of glowing light as a nuclear missile vaporised half its mass in a titanic explosion, the light fading swiftly as the energy expended itself in vacuum. The bow of the ship rotated slowly away, its severed and molten edges glowing hot while its surfaces pulsed with absorbed radiation. The second destroyer in line did little better, a dozen kinetic missiles punching through its hull and ripping through its softer interior. Bulkheads burst, decks were severed, ripped and flattened, slamming against each other like a closing trap, crushing anything held between. The ship itself survived, most of its crew did not.

With the nearest escorts down the remaining drones of the first wave struck the battleship itself, the mighty vessel laying down a ferocious point blank flak barrage filling the space beside it with a constant cloud of bursting metal. It simply wasn’t enough, and though the battleship killed hundreds of drones more followed them, used their mechanical brethren to cover their approach, then unleashed their deadly stings.

The much stronger hull of the battleship shrugged off the smaller kinetic impactors, the dart like missiles embedding in the red hull like spines on a porcupine. It even handled the few drones that rammed the ship, having fired their missiles and choosing to turn themselves into a kinetic weapon of sorts possessing more mass than the average missile. However the rearmost craft in the initial wave were the strike drones, shielded by their colleagues to give them this opportunity to strike freely. Their anti ship missiles were much larger and possessed a powerful short burst rocket engine that accelerated it to an extreme velocity, enough to punch through even battleship armour.

Two dozen hammered the battleship, crashing into the alloy armour and piercing through. Some remained embedded, others disappeared into the ship depending on their angle and exact speed of impact. As an added twist of the knife these missiles had an intense explosive charge held deep within which was fuzed to explode within an enemy hull, sowing further damage.

The Battleship shuddered noticeably as the force of the missile strikes pushed its immense mass sideways, internal explosions jetting through holes in the armour in several locations, smoke from fires burning within emerging as a grey mist from the ruptured hull.

The drones began to turn for another strike while the second wave raced in, the wounded battleship opening fire again, weakened but still in action.



“Enemy destroyer is coming about.” Cheyo smiled. “She’s leaving us, making best speed for the battleship.”

“They’re still demanding we follow, but we are no longer being targeted.” Jane added. “She’s firing on the drones now.”

“Picking up a distress signal from the battleship, they’re calling in all local forces to assist.” Adams stated.

“Any answer?”

“Just a cruiser patrol, I doubt they’ll make it in time.”

“At least it focuses local Chinese attention on this battleship.” Mallory wiped his brow. “It’s already behind us and range is increasing.”

“Second drone wave is going in fast, with the escorts down more of them are getting through.”

“What about the other escorts?”

“The destroyer that was bothering us is about to be engaged.” Jane watched. “A hundred drones, they’re history.”

The destroyer opened up with all it had, canister shot spraying ball bearings and fletchettes at the incoming drones, the loose formation evading heavy losses. Lasers scored the most hits, but the drones were more durable than missiles and took longer to bring down, limiting the number of targets that could be engaged. There was no way it could kill enough to make a difference.

The ship was taken out by a handful of missiles and a stick of dumb kinetic bombs, literal blocks of metal with no guidance or explosives, simply relying on the velocity of the launching craft to give them their impact. They were cheap to use and not as effective as missiles, but in this instance against the relatively weak hull of the destroyer they did their job.

“She’s down, heavy internal damage.” Cheyo viewed. “Reactors are shutting down, engines dead. Drones are leaving her.”

“That removes our main threat.” Mallory recognised. “Alright, time to drop the disguise before an over zealous robot puts a nuke into us.”

“Engine room, Conn.” Jane tapped the intercom. “Drop the disguise, standby for main engine burn.”

“Alright, cutting the cables now.” Chief Kendle replied. “Engines ready, but we only have fuel for a few minutes.”

“Understood Chief.” Mallory confirmed. “Just give me ten seconds to get clear of the husk.”



The battleship jolted again as more missiles slammed into it, bulging the hull as internal explosions bent and distorted the metal, split seams and threw jets of fire into space. The ship twisted and contorted, its massive frame beginning to succumb to the heat of internal fires and the force of external impact. The drones concentrated their attacks on the weakening areas, hastening the demise of the vessel, the warship still defiantly firing its cannons at the hundreds of swarming robots and smashing more out of the sky.

A pair of nukes melted two giant glowing craters in the hull and stripped away most of the sensors and light guns, but remarkably the warship did not die. It continued to resist, its hull bent and folding by now, twisting more and more out of shape as the vessel turned and physics acted on the structure. Several more missiles hit the weakest part of the hull, already holed a dozen times and spewing flame. Finally the ship spilt, the hull opening as joists and girders gave way separating the ship into two halves. The reactors died, replaced by emergency battery power that kept the ship habitable for the surviving crew at least.

“Enemy battleship down.” Jane advised. “I read about three hundred drones left and they’re looking for new targets.”

“Drop this disguise.” Mallory ordered.

“Detonating charges now, might get a bit bumpy.”

Outside several demolition charges went off, wrapped around the cables which in turn were binding the two catamaran hulls of the defeated Chinese destroyer on either side of the Frigate. The taut wires whipped clear, floating loose as the stresses placed on them vanished and the hundreds of thousands of tons worth of debris became governed only by itself and the insights of Sir Isaac Newton.

“Ten second engine burst.” Fisher announced from the helm. “Executing.”

The strained and exhausted engines managed a brief resurgence, a brief stream of ions nudging the ship to a slightly higher velocity than the debris around it. Gradually the Amethyst emerged from her cocoon, the shot up frigate not looking a whole lot healthier than the wreck from who’s cover she left behind. Even in such a damaged state though there was still some elegance to the Amethyst, the remnants of her raked sensor masts and slender hull continuing to hold some wounded grace and pride.



“We’re clear.” Fisher announced with a brief smile. “Back in open space sir.”

“Chinese task force is destroyed or disabled sir.” Cheyo added. “They can’t do anything to us now.”

“What about the drones?”

“I have three tracks heading our way, scouts.” Jane informed. “They’ve definitely seen us, likely coming in for a closer look.”

“Let them, if the US Navy is looking for us we might get a little help for a change.”

“It’s almost guaranteed.” Lantree affirmed. “My cruiser squadron seemed like it was trying to escort us home before it was ambushed, when the drones report back we’re here we might get an escort.”

“It looks like the battle is going Admiral Ryder’s way.” Jane agreed. “Chinese forces are beginning to collapse back with the USN in pursuit, I don’ think this is going to last another half hour.”

“He could probably spare the ships.” Lantree smiled. “Maybe even my old squadron, at least two of them survived.”

“Better switch the transponder on.” Mallory ordered. “Just in case they don’t recognise our silhouette, given how we probably don’t look like a frigate anymore.”

“Transponder on, general frequency.” Adams reported, activating the beacon which announced the Amethyst’s name and allegiance.

“Drones are slowing down, scanning us.” Cheyo spoke.

“Probably relaying the information to the parent ship.” Lantree explained. “Be a few moments until the information is confirmed.”

“We might be wanting that escort.” Jane raised her voice. “I have a little bit of bad news.”

“Is there any other kind?”

“Three Chinese light cruisers astern, they’re altering course.” She brought up the image on the holographic plot. “Be a few minutes until they can bleed off velocity and make the turn.”

“Must have been the squadron that answered the battleship’s distress call.” Adams guessed. “Closer than I thought.”

“US ships are faster than Chinese ones, if we can keep ahead of them we can get help down here to catch them.” Lantree promised. “We just need to get confirmation through…”

“Drones are going active!” Cheyo yelled. “Weapons lock!”

“What?” All three command staff bellowed together.

“They’re firing!”



The three scout drones fortunately did not have any significant weapons, their light rail guns peppering the Amethyst with dozens of rounds. Even so several pierced the weakened hull, springing leaks where the self sealing layer was over extended.

“What the hell Steve?” Mallory shouted.

“I don’t know!” Lantree yelled back. “It’s not my fault!”

Three rounds went through the bridge, one missing Jane by an inch.

“Fuck sake!” She exclaimed. “Permission to fire back!”

“If we do we’ll be tagged as hostile.” Lantree reminded.

“They must already think we’re hostile.” Mallory winced. “We’ve got enough holes in this ship, take them out!”

The laser batteries snapped into action, making short work of a mere three drones, burning through to detonate their fuel or kill their electronics. A few thousand miles away, almost in perfect unison, the three hundred remaining drones slowly and deliberately rotated to point at the Amethyst.

“Okay, that’s pretty intimidating.” Mallory admitted. “I’m fairly intimidated right now.”

“That’s not a sign of impending joy is it?” Jane cleared her throat.

“Captain Lantree.” Mallory spoke absently, his eyes watching the threat warnings light up as every drone lit up his ship with targeting sensors. “Why do your drones want me dead?”

“I don’t know, I mean there’s no reason.”

“It’s automatic.” Adams cut in. “They aren’t receiving a control signal, I’m guessing the ship that launched them got taken out.”

“Right, without a signal they just run on autopilot, attacking any hostile target they come across until the recall order is sent from an authorised commander.”

“That’s all well and good, but why did they shoot at us? We’re not Chinese?”

“We’re not American either.” Adams sighed. “Well, I mean the ship. We’re not sending an American recognition signal.”

“We’re sending a British one, as far as I know Europe isn’t fighting the US!”

It doesn’t matter, it’s the programming. They’ll attack any non-US ship unless told not to. I guess no one took the precaution of telling them not to engage neutral ships either. Anything in the battle space that isn’t US registered will be engaged, its standard.”

“I just want to say that I hate everything right now.” Mallory informed them. “Every single thing.”

“Thought it had a control signal, I thought we could get in touch with the fleet!” Lantree grimaced.

“Well I think we need a new plan.”



“Movement!” Cheyo called with clear anxiety. “Drones are on their way, coming in on an attack vector!”

“Those Chinese cruisers are also closing.” Jane warned. “Drones are ignoring them, too far away for now.”

“Well, I’m open to suggestions.” Mallory prompted. “How do we not get killed by your own robots?”

“We make them believe we’re American.” Lantree said simply, realisation dawning in his eyes. “Any American ship can take over orphaned drones. All we need is my command codes and a US Navy frequency.”

“Can you do it from here?”

“Yes, I mean we’ll have to…”

“Less explaining, more doing.”

“On it.” Lantree spun to the communication console. “Okay Adams, time to prove you are as smart as I keep bragging to the other Captains you are.”

“First drone group will engage in thirty seconds!” Cheyo warned.

“Steve?” Mallory called back.

“At least a minute!”

“Guns, I need one minute!” The Commander barked. “Whatever you have, now is the time!”

“All systems active, loading web shells. We only have two sir.” Cross informed.

“Wait until their final attack run to use them. Point defences engage when ready.”

“Engaging now.”

The Amethyst opened fire with her weakened defences, time and wear having diminished their number and strength. Never the less the laser energy struck true and the aft facing autocannons chugged out rounds for a good eight seconds before they ran dry, robbing the Amethyst of its best drone killer.

“Aft railguns dry sir, it’s just the lasers and main battery now!”

“Lantree?”

“Forty seconds!”

“Enemy locking weapons!” Cheyo yelled. “Missiles free!”

“Fire main guns!”



One of the Amethyst’s surviving bow turrets snapped around for an over the shoulder shot, the guns belching a flash of burning air that was quickly extinguished, the magnetic pulse of the gun barrels sending two shells across the back of the ship. It was a last second move, the US missiles were already almost touching the hull when the guns spoke, each missile more than capable of passing clean through the Amethyst stern to bow with catastrophic results.

The shells broke apart, submunitions blasting out long interlinked wires, a mesh of thin super strong material that rapidly expanded into a razor sharp net meeting both the missiles and the nearest drones at immense closing speed. The net was designed to catch of shred incoming missiles, they were expensive than canister rounds but also much more effective. It either sliced the incoming weapons and craft into tiny pieces, or snared them in hundreds of metres of netting, pulling them wildly off course and away from the Amethyst.

The conn echoed with impacts as debris beat upon the outer surface, in several instances hitting with enough force to penetrate and rattle around the interior bulk heads anyway despite being shredded by the web rounds. Fortunately though the special rounds largely did their job and the frigate gained a brief reprieve.

“Twelve kills.” Jane reported. “Two hundred and eighty seven to go.”

“At least six drones are packing nukes.” Cheyo mentioned. “Not that they’ll need them.”

“At this point all they need is harsh language and rude gestures.” Mallory inhaled. “Time to range?”

“Twenty seconds.”

“Captain Lantree?”

“Almost got it.”

“Guns?”

“We’re out of anti fighter ordnance, just the lasers.”

“Ten seconds sir.”

The drone waves broke to engage, jinking wildly to throw off the battered targeting sensors, thrusters flaring in staccato bursts.

“Do what you can Mr Cross.”

“Aye sir beginning attack.”

“Wait, wait!” Lantree yelled, hitting the transmit button. “Voice recognition, Lantree, Steven, Captain United States Navy, confirm.”



There was silence, just the warning tones of enemy targeting sensors.

“Enemy in range, shall I engage sir?” Cross asked.

“Just wait.” Lantree asked. “We’re nearly there.”

“Hold for now.” Mallory nodded.

“The longer we wait, the fewer we’ll have time to kill sir.”

“I don’t think it’s going to make a huge difference.”

“Signal return.” Adams leaned in, eyes barely millimetres from his console. “Code accepted!”

“Break off the attack!” Lantree yelled down the radio. “Abort immediately!”

The drone swarm peeled away, like a horizontal fountain they curved away and bled off velocity, circling back around to match speed with the Frigate taking up position around it.

“Well, wow.” Jane grinned. “That turned out pretty good.”

“They’ll take my orders now.” Lantree was beaming a grin that stretched from ear to ear. “We got ourselves an escort, what do we want to do with them?”

“XO, those three Chinese cruisers, still on our tail?”

“Yes sir, and closing.” She paused for a smile. “Are we thinking the same thing?”

“For once XO your devious and sadistic thoughts do match mine.” Mallory smiled. “Captain Lantree, perhaps you can assign your little fleet three new targets?”

“With pleasure.”

With a few commands the drones broke away, flowing into an attack formation and back tracking, heading for the Chinese cruiser squadron and expanding into attack formations.

“I feel tingly.” Jane shared gleefully. “It’s nice to be dishing out the hurt for a change.”

“Don’t get too happy, Chinese Light Cruisers are built specifically to shield heavy units from drone attacks.” Mallory noted. “They’ll kill those drones without much effort, but they will however have to take evasive action while they do it, buying us enough time to get across the border and then make fun of their sexual prowess.”

“My specialist subject.”

“I never doubted it.”



A series of flashes and energy readings showed the battle beginning behind them, and sure enough he cruisers had to cut forward thrust to engage, turning to present their maximum weight of fire.

“That did it.” Cheyo smiled. “Based on my calculations we’ll be over the border before they can build up enough velocity to catch us.”

“Anything else in the area?”

“No sir, just the RA Six asteroid cluster.”

“What’s that?” Lantree asked.

“Resource Adminstration Group Six.” Mallory answered. “A bunch of asteroids one of the European companies collected and then tied together to make them more efficient to mine. It’s on our side of the border, and beyond that De Ruyter station.”

“Your drones are performing pretty well.” Jane remarked, watching the tactical plot. “They’ve put quite a few holes in those cruisers. Better than I expected.”

“Icing on the cake.” Mallory nodded. “A little payback for the times we got almost killed. I was getting pretty sick of that.”

“Looks like they’re done with the drones.” She continued. “They’re turning back on course, chasing us.”

“Makes no difference, time to border?”

“We’re crossing it right now.” Cheyo announced. “That’s it, we’re back in European space!”

A round of cheers went up, none of them lacklustre or betraying the extreme tiredness of the bridge crew. It had been a long time coming, but finally they were back where they belonged.

“About damn time.” Mallory felt his weariness gaining on him, now the adrenaline was beginning to retreat and give way to exhaustion. “Maybe we can bounce a signal off RA Six’s transmitter, get a message through to De Ruyter?”

“Something I can try sir.” Adams affirmed.

“The air filters aren’t going to last much longer, we need to meet a friendly ship soon, one sent from the base maybe.” Mallory considered. “Otherwise we might be in a bit of bother.”

“As in suffocating to death?” Jane enquired.

“Asphyxiation.” Mallory corrected. “Same basic result.”

“Right.” She cleared a throat. “Is this a good time to mention we have another problem?”

“No, but you better do it anyway.”

“Remember those Chinese cruisers?”

He sighed heavily.

“They didn’t stop at the border did they?”

“No.”

“How long?”

“Four minutes to optimum firing range.”

“Of course. I should have predicted this, all I had to do was think of the worst thing that could happen to us and take it as inevitable.”

“Do we have some sort of plan sir?” She asked pointedly. “Some amazing off the cuff incredibly unlikely death defying strategy?”

“The last four or five weren’t enough?”

“Apparently not sir.”



“We can’t outfight them, can’t outrun them.” Mallory listed. “They’re a lot bigger than us… which means we’re a lot smaller than them.”

He strode to the table, snapping his fingers.

“Helm, One point starboard, ten second engine burst!”

“Aye sir.” Fisher obeyed, the ship groaning as it laboriously altered course. Fortunately it was only a tiny course change, less than a degree.

“Commander, what are we doing?” Jane asked. “I’m excited to know.”

“RA Six.” Mallory jabbed. “The Asteroid cluster.”

“I like the idea of hiding there sir, plenty of dust and gas, but we don’t have nearly enough fuel to slow us down and achieve a converging course.”

“We’re not going to hide, we’re going to fly right through it.”

“Between the asteroids?”

“Yes.”

“The asteroids tied together with dozens of cables criss crossing the space between them?”

“The same.”

“Generally speaking I admire your plans sir, but I think we’re stretching it this time.”

“It’s our best option, we’re small enough to fit through the gaps, agile enough to weave through. Those cruisers will have to go around, they’ll have to decelerate and turn, and that will give us all the head start we need.”

“And if they do follow us?”

“Their ship won’t survive, not that big moving that fast. The cables will cut them to ribbons.”

“And maybe us too?”

“Maybe, but I don’t think so. We can do this.”

Jane sighed. “Why are you so inappropriately optimistic?”

“I think it’s got to do with dopamine levels in my brain.”

“Not really anything witty I can say to that sir.”

“Then I suggest you try and find power for active scans forward, try to plot any obstacles in our path.”



The crew were tired, their hopes raised and then reduced again when it turned out their ordeal was not yet over. They had been through a lot, too much, but they still held it together for just that little bit longer, fulfilling their roles on this final stretch before they could truly consider themselves safe.

“Asteroid cluster is five hundred kilometres distant.” Jane reported. “Estimate closing speed of a thousand metres a second.”

“Going to be a few more minutes then.” Mallory frowned. “Can we increase velocity, use a bit more fuel?”

“We can try sir.” Fisher said. “But we’re already moving very fast relative to the target, our reaction times and ability to dodge around obstacles is already pretty tight. The faster we go, the harder that will be.”

“And if we don’t the enemy ships could burn us down before we get there.”

“There’s a lot of dust and particles in front of us sir.” Jane pointed out. “Moving through at this speed is going to be like wiping our arses on sandpaper, any faster and it’ll be like, well, I can’t think of a more colourful metaphor at the moment but you get the idea.”

“Clearly XO, thank you.”

“Commander, enemy ships are moving into range.” Cheyo reported.

“I have targeting scanners lighting us up.” Cross warned.

“Possible torpedo doors opening.” Jane added to the chorus of warnings.

“Time to cluster?”

“Three minutes.”

“Enemy has lock!” Cheyo hollered. “Missiles inbound!”

Each cruiser fired four nuclear tipped missiles, the weapons pushed out of the tubes and sprang forward on their engines, rolling and twisting toward the fleeing frigate. At the same time the forward rail guns opened up, laying down a coordinated pattern of gunfire to try and catch the Amethyst.

“We’re jamming their sensors but it won’t take them long to find us.” Jane frowned.

“The Asteroid cluster is helping, it’s creating a lot of radiation and distortion.” Cheyo added. “But if we can’t alter course, they’ll eventually hit us through trial and error.”

“Fingers crossed it takes them a while to figure that out.”



The laser cannons opened up on the missiles, drawing power from the inactive weapon systems. They managed to bring down the inbound missiles, proving the frigate still had some teeth. However there was little they could do against the enemy gun rounds, the solid shots getting closer with each volley.

“Asteroid cluster ahead sir.” Fisher called. “I’ve lined us up on the biggest gap I could find.”

“Very good Lieutenant, time to contact?”

“Less than a minute.”

“Sensors will be shrouded in there, and we should expect damage from hull ablation.” Jane remarked. “I recommend evacuating outer decks.”

“Do so.” Mallory ordered. “Is the enemy slowing down?”

“No sir, looks like they are following us in.”

“And I thought it was insane trying this in a frigate.”

“What? Really?” Jane perked up. “But you were optimistic!”

A pair of railgun rounds whizzed past with feet to spare, impacting an asteroid ahead in a shower of powdery dust.

“No more time to debate ideas, eyes on your screens ladies and gentlemen, call out any obstacle. Miss Fisher, act as you see fit, don’t wait for orders.”

“Aye sir.”

“It’d be a shame to be splattered against a giant rock.” Mallory smiled. “No pressure, just saying.”

“Yes sir, I’ll see what I can do.”



The Amethyst slipped into the cloud of particles emitted from the mining process, glittering a verdant green with traces of orange announcing the types of minerals embedded in the rock. Distant sunlight made the gas and dust glow like an illuminated mist, an effect that helped shield the frigate from visual targeting. She left a wake behind her, a cone like bow wave parting the dust and leaving a clear trail to be followed. It was unavoidable.

“We’re in the dust cloud, density increasing.” Cheyo loosened her top button, suddenly feeling very warm. “We’re starting to lose velocity.”

“Helm?”

“It won’t make much difference sir.” Fisher reported. “Mix of friction and extra mass.”

“Are we picking up weight?” Mallory frowned.

“Dust particles building up in the bow.” Jane informed. “The front of the ship is wide open, we’re scooping up dirt like a flying shovel.”

“I’m compensating for the shift in our centre of gravity.” Fisher informed. “Making first course correction.”

The Amethyst burned its engine briefly, igniting a brief flame as she burned up some gas near the highly charged ion streams funnelled from the stern.

“We’re moving too fast to make serious course changes.” Mallory watched the displays like a hawk. “If a giant rock shows up dead ahead, there’s no way we can go around it.”

“And no way to slam on the brakes.” Jane continued. “So we’re playthings of blind luck, again.”

“Again.”

“Commander, energy readings astern.” The sensor console flashed information. “It must be the Chinese ships, they’re slowing down as they hit the dust cloud.”

“At least they have a little common sense. They’re still foolish for following us in here.”

“Someone must really, really not like us.”

A large rock emerged from the green gloom beside them, like some sea monster rising from a murky ocean it displayed a tantalising glimpse of its amorphous bulk before receding again as the ship passed by, the cloud obscuring it once more.

“We’re in the heart of it now.” Lantree joined them by the tactical plot. “How big is this cluster?”

“I have no idea.” Mallory shook his head. “I’ll tell you when we’re through.”



More objects emerged from the cloud, more rocks and the cables holding them together. Freight containers floated motionless relative to the surroundings, filled with extracted ores on the way to refineries. Automated ships, bases and warehouses rested either in space or on the rocks themselves, gradually devouring the balls of mineral in search of profit. The cluster was remote enough to be left to automated mining, only the mines and refineries in disputed areas tended to have human occupants to discourage theft and enforce a claim.

“Internal sensors show several dozen minor hull breaches.” Jane pointed out on an image of the ship. “The self sealing hull is at its limits, pretty surprised it lasted this long.”

“Make sure those bulkheads are secure, we can’t spare damage control teams for non essential systems.”

“The hull isn’t essential sir?”

“Not the outer bits.”

“Alright then.” Jane accepted, over ruling her misgivings. “Possible engine readings astern, we’re opening the gap sir.”

“Good.”

“And an explosion.” She raised an eyebrow. “I think they shot down one of the automated mining ships. Likely thought it was us.”

“Which means they don’t have accurate information on where we are.” Mallory nodded. “This is a good thing.”

“I’m positively joyous sir.” Jane said flatly. “I may actually smile if we get out of here.”



“Cable emerging beside us sir, parallel course.” Cheyo adjusted her sensor resolution. “Correction sir, converging course.”

Beside them one of the immense cables emerged from the green morass, about a third the width of the Amethyst herself it was designed to hold the various rocks together, tensed to keep the billions of tons of potentially valuable material in one easily exploited grouping. It gradually grew closer, the frigate running along the same path.

“You know it’s probably got something big at the end of it.” Jane observed pointedly. “We may want to adjust course.”

“Also the cable itself sir,” Cheyo added. “We’ll collide with it in about thirty seconds.”

“Two persuasive arguments, Miss Fisher?”

“Already plotting course sir, there’s a lot of obstacles, I don’t want to avoid one just to fly into another.”

“That would be somewhat anticlimactic.”

“Initiating course change.”

The Frigate began to rise and turn toward the cable, aiming to pass over the top of it. Fisher turned towards rather than away on the assumption there was something big tethered to the far side of the cable and she did not want to risk turning into its path.

“I don’t think we’re going to clear the cable sir.” She grimaced. “It’s too close.””

“Suggestions Lieutenant?”

“Hold onto something and grit your teeth?”

“I’ve heard that one before.” Jane commented, knotting her brow an instant later. “That’s one of those things you told me never to tell you about isn’t it?”

“If they ever made a film of your life it would be banned everywhere except Phobos, Amsterdam and Thailand.”

“I’m actually quite proud of that idea.” She broke a smile. “Nice to achieve something.”



The bow cleared the cable, but the lower hull skidded across it, running along the length at a shallow angle with an ear-splitting squeal that filled the ship on every deck. The entire vessel shuddered as the thick wires of the cable dragged pieces of hull from the frigate, cutting like a saw into the lower decks and carving a long laceration through the battered vessel. Fortunately the affected area had long since been abandoned, gutted by fire and left open to space. The cable smashed through the abandoned and ruined hanger under the belly of the ship and then neatly snapped off what was left of the lower sensor mast before the Amethyst passed by, leaving the obstacle behind it.

“Damage?”

“Lot of damage to the lower hull, happily it had already been shot to hell so no further loss of capability.” Jane checked. “It just gave us another scar for the collection.”

“Well at least were rugged.” Mallory grunted a laugh. “So we’ve reached the point where we’re so badly beaten up we’re now just inflicting damage on our damage?”

“Pretty much sir.”

“I admit it has a certain symmetry, a poetry of it’s…”

“Contact, dead ahead!” Cheyo suddenly screeched. “Cable in our path!”

“Taking evasive action!” Fisher called back, the ship suddenly lurching. “Emergency starboard!”

The murk parted ahead of them to reveal another massive cable rising vertically, the poor sensor performance meaning they didn’t see it until the last second.

“We’re not turning fast enough.” Jane shook her head. “It won’t be a glancing blow, we’ll hit it head on. At this speed in this condition, game over.”

“Like hell!” Mallory snapped. “Mister Cross, main guns, open fire!”

It wasn’t a difficult shot, the cable was quite wide and very close, the difficulty was in aiming and firing fast enough and accurately enough to hit the cable before it hit them. The surviving turrets turned, only three guns having armour piercing shells. Cross had no idea if it would even work, the cables weren’t armoured but they were made of very high quality alloy. They might just bend and bounce back like a guitar string.

He pushed the firing control, the first round shooting out with a massive blast of Rainbow coloured flame, the dust cloud vaporising around the muzzle in a spectacular display unseen in vacuum. The round flew wreathed in flame as its outer surface ablated with friction, flakes of molten fire trailing behind like embers. Fortunately the range was so close the friction had no chance to really hurt the solid shot, it struck the cable with full force slightly off centre, passing through and taking two thirds of its width with it. The cable bent, shifted, but the remaining third of its width kept it in one piece, kept it in front of the frigate.

“Hit it again!”

Cross lined up the second shot, making a snap shot before he had a proper firing solution, the naval equivalent of shooting from the hip. He had no time, the cable was just metres away, he barely had time to push the firing control before the Amethyst was sliced in half lengthways by the stubborn obstruction in her path.

The blast of flame reached right to the cable, the broken bow of the Amethyst almost touching it as the round made contact and severed the stubborn strand holding the cable taut. With the line broken the energy inside the cable was released, the severed ends vanishing into the cloud above and below the ship so quickly they achieved greater velocity than a battleship broadside. At least on of them whipped across something manufactured, ripping apart a warehouse which erupted in multicoloured flame.



“Quite pretty.” Jane brought up a view of the fires. “Burning metals, each one a different colour. Sodium, Magnesium, I didn’t pay much attention in school but I always paid attention when we set fire to things. Both officially and unofficially.”

The holographic depiction suddenly brightened as more explosions erupted, increasingly greatly in frequency and intensity. While it was impossible to see exactly what was exploding, the details hidden in the thick pulsating dust cloud that rippled with each shockwave, whatever it was it was big.

The Amethyst shook as the force of the distant explosions were transmitted through the gas and dust, the particles and molecules acting as a sort of thin atmosphere, the particulate matter bouncing off the hull and adding to the erosion of the outer surfaces of the ship. The explosions continued to spiral, a chain reaction as storage and supplies detonated, leading finally to an explosion of virtual nuclear ferocity. The Amethyst jolted sharply as the spherical blast wave buffeted it, a diminishing ring of fire expanding and fading from a distant point above them.

“Wow, that was unexpected.” Jane remarked simply. “Reactor explosion?”

“Or several thousand tons of mining explosives.” Mallory reasoned. “Good thing this place is automated.”

A huge mass emerged above and behind them, a two mile wide slab of rock trailing coloured flame from several locations on its surface. It passed behind them, slow and stately, pulverising a smaller rock and vanishing into the green haze, it’s glowing fires lingering for a few longer moments until they faded into the distance too.

“That was our fault wasn’t it?” Mallory shifted his weight awkwardly.

“I hope they’re not going to bill us.” Lantree added.

“Admit nothing.” Jane advised. “We’ll blame the Chinese, stick to that story even if we get questioned separately.”

There was a final massive explosion from the direction the broken asteroid had been heading.

“Admit,” Jane emphasised her words, “nothing.”



“I have some more engine readings sir, sensors show the Chinese are slowing down.”

“Is that confirmed?”

“Yes sir.” Cheyo double checked the information. “Definite braking action.”

“Those explosions probably got them worried.” Lantree suggested. “They’re wondering whether they’re about to walk into an ambush.”

“This is our chance then.” Mallory took a long breath. “Are we nearly out of here?”

“Based on how the dust cloud is thinning, I’d say so.” Jane affirmed. “Minute or two.”

“Alright then, Miss Fisher, get ready for a full burn. Use up every ounce of fuel we have left to give us a solid head start.”

“We’ll be ready sir.”

He tapped a control on the table, opening a line to the engine room.

“Mr Kendle, I want all power to engines. Transfer energy from the main guns, communications, even gravity and life support.”

“I can do that Commander, but given our power systems are held together with tape and blind faith I wouldn’t expect more than half a G of acceleration.”

“It’ll do Mr Kendle, transfer power and standby for main engine burn.”

The cloud thinned around the ship, the murkiness growing less and less pronounced, paler as the darkness beyond began to show through. The last few asteroids loomed past, immense dark shadows in the middle distance.

“Clearing dust cloud.” Cheyo announced with evident relief. “No sign of pursuit, enemy cruisers must still be deep in the… wait, I have them on screen, closing!”

“So much for them showing caution.”

The three cruisers were ploughing through the dust cloud at full burn, a prominent wave of dust parting over their bows explicitly heralding their arrival. Friction and ablation were taking their toll, but the thicker armour and intact condition of the ships allowed them to largely shrug off the affects to everything except their exposed sensors.

“Enthusiastic aren’t they?” Mallory sighed. “Alright Miss Fisher, for what it’s worth begin main engine burn, let’s see if it’s enough.”

“Wait!” Jane called out loud enough to ring Mallory’s ears. “Asteroid ahead!”

“Where did that come from?” He demanded. “I thought we were clear?”

“We were, it’s not tethered, it’s drifting in front of us!”

“Approximately one mile long, mass is…” Cheyo broke of. “That’s not right.”

“Get me a clear reading, go active if you need to!” Mallory ordered briskly. “Helm, prepare to evade the second you get the information.”

“It’s not an asteroid.” Cheyo swallowed. “It’s mass is too high, it’s a ship.”

“At that size, that means…” Jane tailed off.

“Battleship.” Lantree finished. “Any European ships in the area?”

“Nothing that big is assigned this far out.” Mallory shook his head.

“So we have two options, American or Chinese.” The XO spoke very quietly.

“Miss Cheyo, I need a profile right this second.”



The immense bulk of the warship emerged from the edges of the Asteroid cluster, leaving its hiding place among the ice and minerals and moving into open space broadside on to the Amethyst. The vessel was absolutely gigantic, one of the heaviest and most powerful constructs ever created by the hand of humanity, outmassed only by the larger space stations and orbital colonies. Dozens of cannons rotated and elevated to train on the Frigate, each gun as heavy as the Amethyst herself , the angled flat lines of the hull reflecting light from the ice crystals pushed out of the way by it’s passage.

“Active scans sir, she’s lighting us up like a Christmas tree.” Cheyo warned. “Making it hard to get a clear reading, ECM is off the scale.”

“Use the cameras, get a visual identification.”

“Enemy cruisers closing, they’re scanning us too.” Jane added. “If that’s a Yankee ship it had better do something fast.”

One of the massive guns elevated slightly, and in a display of power few could match fired a shell towards the cluster.

“Incoming!” Cheyo shouted. “Plot is very close!”

The round flashed past, exploding a few miles behind the Amethyst in a boiling tumult of light and radiation, burning metals feeding their own fires in the vacuum blinding the Frigate.

“I’ve lost contact with the enemy cruisers, sensors are blind!”

“But that means they’ve lost contact with us too.” Mallory looked to both his senior officers. “That star shell is blocking their scans of us.”

“Commander.” Adams flicked a switch on the communications console. “You need to hear this.”

The battered speakers crackled, Adams feeding the signal into the Amethyst tannoy system so it would be clearly heard regardless of location.

“…I say again,” A thickly accented voice spoke in respectable English. “This is the Polish Republic Dreadnought Piorun, you are in violation of European Union space in pursuit of a European Union warship. If you do not begin braking manoeuvres in thirty seconds we will destroy you.”



“Polish?” Lantree’s jaw dropped. “I thought you guys didn’t have ship’s out this far?”

“We don’t!” Mallory shook his head in disbelief. “Well, I suppose we do now.”

The heavy warship, now identified as an EU Dreadnought, cruised ahead of the Amethyst, cutting its engines so not to harm the Frigate with its ion wash. The battered little ship passed behind its vast relative with a few thousand metres distance, the Dreadnought now effectively between the Chinese and the Amethyst. More ships began to show up on sensors leaving the dust cloud, a pair of heavy cruisers leading a half dozen destroyers, all of them standardised EU manufactured hulls.

“This is your final warning.” The heavy voice gave the words plenty of edge. “Withdraw or we will respond with deadly force.”

For a heartbeat longer the three Chinese light cruisers held their course, and then as one cut their forward thrust and began to rotate, pointing their engines coreward and turning their bows towards the nearest Chinese base. It would take more than an hour for them to change course, bleed off momentum and begin to drive themselves sin a new direction, but it was enough. Within five minutes they would have lost enough velocity so that they had no chance of catching Amethyst even if they wanted to before she reached home. It was done. Finally it was done.

“That’s it, we’re clear.” Jane beamed. “Enemy vessels turning and braking, allied ships are moving to support us.”

“We actually just made it didn’t we sir?” Cross piped up.

“I actually think we just did.” Mallory failed to suppress a smile.

“Signal for us Commander.” Adams reported in.

“Patch it through, all stations.” Mallory opened the intercom.

“Amethyst, this is Vice Admiral Kiewiecz of the Piorun battlegroup, do you receive?”

“Admiral, this is Commander Edward Mallory, HMS Amethyst. On behalf of the entire crew I’d like to compliment your sense of timing sir, and offer our thanks.”



“Our pleasure Commander.” Kiewiecz replied with a smile in his voice. “We’ve been trying to reach you for weeks, Captain Rosselini has been combing the border and neutral space looking for traces of you since we lost contact. I expect he’ll be annoyed you made it back alone.”

“Not quite alone sir, we have some American crew aboard, survivors of the Cruiser Nashville.”

“The American naval attaché will be very pleased to hear that, they’ve had ships looking for you too.” The Polish Admiral related. “We were monitoring the battle when we picked up your transponder, by the time we changed course you were already inside the cluster, I guess the gas cloud obscured line of sight between us.”

“And our sensors are less effective than a ouija board and reading tea leaves at this point sir.” Mallory returned, drawing a laugh from the senior officer.

“In that case Commander I can tell you there are no other ships in the area beside our own. You have a clear run to De Ruyter.”

“That’s one of the best bits of news we’ve had in a long, long time sir.” Mallory replied. “We’re going to need some supplies to get there Admiral, if you can spare them.”

“Just name it Commander.”

“Three or four replacement air scrubbers and a few hundred tons of fuel and reactant would be quite helpful Admiral.”

Jane pointedly cleared her throat, drawing a puzzled frown from Mallory. She widened her eyes, faking another cough with more vigour until Mallory’s mind caught.

“And also, if at all possible, some German beer.”

“Sorry Commander, we don’t carry that German flavourless water!” Kiewiecz chuckled back. “But we can set you up with a Keg of Royal Danish?”

Jane gave two thumbs up.

“That will suit us very well Admiral, thank you.”

“I’m detaching the Sosobowski to transfer supplies and escort you half way home, then ships from the station will take you on the last stretch.” The Admiral informed. “We’ll keep an eye on the border and make sure no one tries to follow you.”

“Thank you sir, very much appreciated.”

“Least we can do after your odyssey Commander.” Kiewiecz returned sincerely. “You can relax now Commander, you’re in good hands.”

“I certainly agree with that Admiral, thank you again.”

“You are welcome Commander, most welcome.” Kiewiecz concluded. “Welcome home Commander.”



The frigate continued to coast away from the cluster, passing through the battlegroup, the immense ship and its escort fleet, and finding open space at her bow again. This time it came not with uncertainty, not with the fear of not knowing what was waiting ahead of them, but the peace and certainty that they were at long last safe, and that only home awaited them.

“We actually made it, our luck held.” Jane tapped her fingers on the table. “I’m waiting for something to happen, something to screw it all up.”

“Danish beer?” Mallory suggested.

“There is that.” She grunted. “Damn Poles, they sure know how to hold a grudge.”

“At this point I’d drink American beer if it meant we could relax.” Mallory exhaled. “No offence Captain.”

“None taken.” Lantree chuckled. “I think this counts as an adventure.”

“It’s going to make an excellent chapter in my memoirs.” Jane grinned widely. “Action, excitement, tension, danger!”

“Yes, it’ll make a nice break from all the debauchery and crime that’ll fill the rest of the book.” Mallory arched an eyebrow.

“As soon as we get back I’m going to celebrate by raising the bar in debauchery so high it’ll make Caligula look like a Monk. A dead Monk.”

“It’s nice to have goals in life.”

“I’m alive, and I intend to celebrate by filling my body with as many mind altering chemicals as physically possible.”

“I hear that’s illegal.”

“Not on Phobos.”

“Touche.”



Beside them the heavy cruiser Sosobowski matched course and speed, the powerful and elegant warship with its long stiletto hull and raked masts looking like it was touching light speed even when standing still. It stood in stark contrast to the much smaller frigate with its ripped and worn hull, the massive holes shot through, destroyed sections and skeleton bow built of nothing but empty scorched girders and struts. They cruised side by side, weary traveller and alert protector, responsibility for the safety of the Amethyst and her crew no transferred to another ship and another fresh crew.

“Amethyst, this is Sosobowski.” The cruiser made contact. “We’re making ready to rig some fuel lines and let you tank some reactant.”

“Sosobowski, you have our gratitude.”

“An EVA team will head over with air filters in a few minutes.” The cruiser continued. “My Captain has asked if you wished to transfer your crew aboard, he has made available soft beds and will take your ship in tow until we reach the transfer point.”

Mallory smiled, he didn’t even have to think of his answer.

“I respectfully decline thank you. I would like to transfer my wounded over so they may be made more comfortable, but I think the rest of us want to stay aboard. Make De Ruyter under our own power.”

“My Captain believed that would be your answer Commander, and he respects your choice. We will transfer supplies, take off your wounded, then hold station beside you.”

“My continued thanks to your Captain, and your crew Sosobowski.”

“We just look forward to hearing your story. We’ll co-ordinate with your Chief Engineer Commander.”

“I’ll patch you through now.” He nodded to Adams, who transferred the signal across.

“I suppose that is that.” Jane exhaled.

“I think we can trust the Polish ratings to hook up a few pipes without our help.” Mallory noted. “All stations, stand down action stations. Put systems on automatic and go get some sleep.”

“Yes sir, with pleasure.”

“We’ve done what we needed to do, and quite a bit more besides. We made it home, it doesn’t sound like much, but we made it home. Stand down ladies and gentlemen, I think we’ve earned a break.”
 
15


The arms of Space Fortress De Ruyter appeared almost to open in embrace of them, preparing for some sort of hearty welcome home hug from the expansive docks and jetties angling outward from the central core of the station. Like most bases De Ruyter was built to spread out in all three dimensions, maximising its use of space and making for a more efficient if at first intimidating arrangement of facilities. It stood in empty space away from any planets, a point of light marking the last major European waystation before the outer system. While much smaller than the bases over Earth, Mars and Luna De Ruyter was still a huge complex and an immovable safe haven in the cruel sky.

A few cruisers were patrolling the station perimeter, with corvettes and frigates in closer checking the region for stealth vessels. While not at war the EU forces were still set on a war alert, the chances of getting caught up in a cross fire an ever present concern. The small ship that crept towards the station highlighted more clearly than any words the dangers that had grown in the last few months, and dispelled the idea that neutrality was a guarantee of safety.

The Amethyst lined up on her final approach, nestled within the protective sphere of a cruiser squadron headed by the Castille, a heavy cruiser of the Spanish Royal Navy. They had relieved the Sosobowski a few days earlier, releasing the Polish warship to join its sisters watching the border and deterring incursion. The trip had been blissfully uneventful, the Spanish vessels had brought plenty of food and fresh supplies including ripe fruit from De Ruyter’s gardens which had gone down very well. After the eventful journey from Saturn this final leg was rather boring, which was embraced by the weary crew.



“Our final approach is plotted sir.” Lieutenant Fisher inputted the final set of directions into the navigational computer, the frigate ever so slightly shifting its course. “Approach at a relative speed of one hundred metres per second. Braking thrusters will fire in five minutes for docking manoeuvres.”

“Very good Miss Fisher.” Commander Mallory received the information, observing the fresh plot on the crackling and flickering holographic tactical display. “Mr Adams, De Ruyter control if you please.”

“Patching through now.”

“Control this is Amethyst, requesting final docking clearance.”

“We have you on the board Amethyst.” A cool clear voice returned, the annunciated tones of a traffic controller for whom clarity was critical. “Proceed on current course for approach to dock sixty one, dock teams are standing by to secure your ship and provide any emergency attention you need.”

“Thank you De Ruyter, at this time we have no emergency situations.” Mallory returned. “Which makes a refreshing change.”

“Roger that Amethyst. Be aware Admiral West is waiting to meet you personally at the dock for debriefing.”

“Thanks for the warning.” Mallory broke a smile. “Look forward to your hospitality De Ruyter, Amethyst out.”

Adams closed the channel, Fisher already lining up the required dock for the last step of the journey.

“Debriefing from a full Admiral.” Jane folder her hands behind her back. “I suppose that makes us celebrities.”

“I’m sure we can cash in with a book and movie deal.”

“I was thinking of a pop song myself.” Jane suggested. “The ballad of getting constantly fucked up by total bastards in bigger ships.”

“I think the title sells it.”

“I even have my own group set up, Pain Jane and the Jewels. Because Amethyst is a jewel you see.”

“Pain Jane?” Mallory considered. “So appropriate I’m shocked I didn’t see it earlier.”

“I thought so too, got a whole album lined up based on our journey including such songs as ‘ Saturn, Saturn, fuck you Saturn’ and ‘Is that a nuclear missile in your pocket or just a badly timed erection?’ to pad out the main single.”

“You’ve given this a lot of thought XO, a borderline obsessive amount of thought.”

“It’s been a quiet week.” She returned. “I’d gotten so used to people trying to turn me into red paste I find myself at a bit of a loose end now I’m not terrified every second of the day. I don’t feel special anymore. I rather liked the attention.”

“Well at least you can build a music career on our nearly getting killed experiences.”

“The almost getting killed element reels them in, but it’s the inappropriate song titles that make them stay.” She decreed with mild enthusiasm. “That and the barely dressed dancers.”



The warship began to decelerate, firing a few bursts from its retro thrusters. The battered engines didn’t have much power left in them, but were fortunately more than adequate for the gentle pace of the docking procedure. Beside her the cruiser escort began to break away, heading for their own berths and refuelling sites elsewhere on the station, leaving the Amethyst to end her journey as she began it.

“Compliments from Captain Mendez of the Castille sir,” Adams reported from the communication console. “He says it was an honour to fly beside such a stubborn ship.”

Mallory grinned. “Please inform the Captain it has been our pleasure to fly in company with such a chivalrous one.”

Within a few minutes the Amethyst was left in her own company once again, as it was always meant to be. As a stealth ship she was supposed to be alone, isolated with no friendly vessels for millions of miles in any direction. It was in her blood, and in her crew. Their role was a unique and dangerous one in modern warfare, one where survival relied almost exclusively on not being seen. The Amethyst had overcome circumstances she was never designed to encounter, and never expected to survive. The lonely frigate lined up on the lights of the station, gliding past the gigantic shapes of capital ships and bulk freighters.

“They’ve given us a slot on Battleship row.” Mallory observed. “I feel special.”

“We’ll be masked from a casual scan by the bulk of the ships around us.” Jane remarked by way of analysis. “Stop people asking awkward questions, like where’s the other half of your ship.”

The Amethyst was cast in shadow as she passed between two titans, first rate super dreadnoughts drinking up astronomical amounts of fuel and reactant for their equally number heavy power and propulsion systems. The two vessels were the most powerful type in the EU space fleets, in terms of firepower and protection they were the second most potent ships in space, second only to the Oceanic Monash class super dreadnoughts, which included the flagship of the Japanese Space Defence Force inevitably named Yamato.

To the left of Amethyst was the Napoleon I, flagship of the French Space Navy while to the right was the Wilhelm Canaris, named for one of the old heroes of the German Navy. Both ships were ridiculously huge, a single gun in their main battery was bigger in scale than the frigate herself, the disparity in power truly breathtaking. Yet even as the battered ship made its way between the giants she had no cause to be humble, for small as she was Amethyst at least had seen action and earned her victories while the dreadnoughts remained untested and unblooded.



The Amethyst could hold her metaphorical head high as she glided between the landing lights and harbour markers, repair and refit crews pausing from their tasks to watch the ruined ship sail past, the torn metal and ragged shapes blasted out of the hull casting eerie moving shadows on the larger ships beside.

She let the magnetic fields of the docking pier handle the very last part of the journey, the concentric magnets lining the dock acting against the hull to slow the ship down, gradually bleeding off the last of its relative velocity until it came to an elegant gliding stop. Peacefully her momentum was arrested, the scorched and scarred hull embraced by the invisible bonds of the dock and eased gently into her place. Metal docking clamps extended from the walls of the dock, carefully latching onto the ship and holding her securely in place and steady.

“Docking complete sir.” Fisher reported.

“Shut down engines, place reactor in cold standby mode.” Mallory went down the checklist. Despite their perilous adventure he was determined to make sure the procedure was done properly and the Amethyst was safely handed over to the dock teams despite her ravaged hull. “Ship Status XO?”

“Report by station.” Jane ordered.

“Helm systems switching to stand by mode.” Fisher announced.

“Sensors transitioning to standby Commander.” Lieutenant Cheyo chimed.

“All weapons answering safe, going to standby.” Cross confirmed.

“Communications switched to short range receive only.” Adams stated finally.

“Mr Kendle, reactor status?”

“Reactor is shutting down safely, main and secondaries are in standby mode.” The engineer answered over the internal radio system. “Fuel and reactant system locked down.”

“Understood.” She raised her eyes. “Sir, all stations report secure. Docking operations are complete.”

“Very good XO.” Mallory nodded. “All hands will remain at their stations until officially relieved. Have Captain Lantree report to me at airlock number two. I’m sure Admiral West would like to talk to us before we do anything else.”





It took a couple of minutes for Mallory to make his way into the superstructure of the ship, the unarmoured collection of airlocks, fuel valves and observation spaces almost entirely ripped apart and open to space. Only one airlock remained operational, and it was there that the boarding tube reached across to, melding over the flecked hull to form a solid air tight seal over the doorway.

Lantree was already there when he arrived, the dark eyed American having made an effort to ensure his uniform was presentable. He had only his duty clothes, the rest were lost when the Nashville fell, but pride dictated a certain effort at least be attempted. In the same light Mallory had retrieved his hat and stood with it held under his arm.

“So an Admiral is waiting to welcome us home?” Lantree enquired.

“Not sure if it’ll be a welcome home or a court martial. Probably both.” Malory half smiled. “These ships aren’t cheap.”

“This one wasn’t.” Lantree smiled. “This one is worth its weight in gold.”

The airlock screeched horribly as it forced itself open, the tortuous noise halting as the door made it halfway across and then stuck solid. After a brief moment of waiting to see if it moved again a figure in full uniform eventually ducked around the obstinate door, removing his white topped cap and giving the door a distasteful look. He waved to the dock master waiting behind him, gesturing at the portal.

“Have one of the rescue robots cut that thing off.” He ordered.

Admiral West straightened and walked on, the two junior officers standing to attention as the Commander of the EU base and sector fleet came to a halt before them. West was a relatively tall man of average build and advancing years but he possessed a pair of cool tempered eyes which rarely betrayed his true intentions. West had a reputation for being very careful with information and taking very little on faith. He rarely took action on a whim, making sure he had the maximum information before committing to action, but once moving he was both tenacious and aggressive as fitted an officer of his rank.



“Commander Mallory, good to have you home.” He extended a hand, the tone of his voice indicating he probably was glad to have them back.

“Thank you sir.” Mallory shook the Admiral’s hand firmly. “I’d like to introduce Captain Steven Lantree of the United States Navy.”

“Captain.” West shook the American officer’s hand with equal respect. “From what I have heard the Amethyst was lucky to have you aboard.”

“I was lucky to be aboard sir.” Lantree returned. “This ship saved my life, and more lives among my crew.”

“And caused a bit of a diplomatic incident in the process.” West hinted at events in heir absence. “But I think it turned out well enough. See to your ship Commander, relieve your crew and have them report for rest and debriefing.”

“Yes sir.”

“I want to see yourself and your XO in my office within the hour, I realise you are tired but this cannot wait. Your crew can head for the bunks immediately and that includes the American crews Captain Lantree. Warm food and good beds with our compliments.”

“Right now that’s worth more than medals to us sir.” Lantree grinned back.

“I’ll let you get on with your duties.” West nodded. “Within the hour Commander.”

The Admiral twisted past the partially open door again, gesturing to the dock workers to get started and take over maintenance of the Amethyst from her crew.

“Sounds like he really wants a chat.” Lantree raised an eyebrow. “Think we might be in trouble?”

“Maybe a little.” Mallory nodded. “They tend to frown on us nuking things.”

“Not keen on you lobbing warheads around?”

“They are surprisingly strict on that issue.”

“Why don’t you let me coordinate the dock workers, I’ll make sure the relief crew gets it right and our people get a good shower and plenty of food.”

“That would be incredibly helpful.” Mallory grinned. “Thank you Captain.”

“It’s completely selfish, nobody has showered on this tub since we got hit by that destroyer, its getting a little awkward.”

“You may have a point Captain, none the less, thank you.”

“No problem, now you better get going. If you’re lucky he might just have you shot.”

“We can but hope.”



He made the difficult journey back to the Conn, the lifts were still down and most of the corridors were mazes of razor sharp metal hanging from the walls and ceiling, mixed in with loose cables dangling like jungle vines and the occasional support beam that had popped loose, or in one case bent so much it formed a ‘V’ shape suspended in the middle of his path. The straight corridors were now bent and bulged, the floor lumpy and cracked, the walls often squeezing in. Few corridors were entirely passable; normally a crew member had to head to a lower deck to pass an obstruction before back tracking to his destination. It continued to amaze him that the ship was still holding together.

He eventually arrived at the control room, almost all of the screens blank and empty, the holographic displays turned off, the lighting still provided by emergency lamps after the ceiling was smashed beyond its ability to support its own lighting. Every face turned to him, expectation in their eyes, a need for some sort of release etched on their brows. They were dirty, tired, pushed to their limit and beyond for weeks and months without help or much hope, but they still did not leave their posts until ordered. They waited for his word, for his permission, for him to tell them it was done.

He walked to the tactical table, a place as familiar to him a ship childhood home by now, and tapped into the ship wide intercom.

“Crew of the Amethyst, this is the Commander. All stations stand down and relinquish control to the relief crews. Captain Lantree will coordinate the exchange of duties. Once your post is relieved there’s a hot shower and a big dinner waiting for you on the station. Heaven only knows we’ve earned it this time. This has been the most difficult journey any of us could imagine, but we’re here now. We made it. We will remember those that did not, but today we appreciate what we have, and what we’ve done. Stand down Amethyst, mission complete.”



There were no great sighs of relief or cheers of joy at his words, it was just quiet. The various command staff took off their headsets and just unwound in their chairs, weeks of tension uncoiling in that moment, months of weariness and stress finally crashing through their defences. The entire crew aged before his eyes, time itself growing languid and lazy within the walls of the ship.

“Grab a hat XO, Admiral wants to see us in his office.” Mallory directed at Jane.

“Oh, that sounds ominous.”

“Let’s just go get it over with, it’s the last thing standing between me and a hot shower, followed by at least a week of sleeping.”

“I think I can fake looking perky for another hour or so.” She inhaled. “But if my eyes suddenly glaze over it’s because my brain has gone to sleep without waiting for the rest of me.”

“So noted, see you on the station.”

Both officers foraged about for their more presentable uniforms, Jane managing to dress in her full dress uniform which had somehow survived the trip, Mallory’s having left the ship at Saturn under rather explosive circumstances. They struggled out of the broken ship and onto the clean and wide corridors of the station, well lit, pleasant and busy with uniformed personnel. After months in the confines of a frigate with just the small crew for company it always took a little adjustment to get used to the bustle of humanity again.

Both officers made their way up to the senior officers section, passing several EU officers in immaculate uniforms on the way, highlighting Mallory’s own torn and grimy clothes, streaked with dirt, soot and blood. Jane on the other hand managed to look well turned out and neat as if she had just walked out of Portsmouth harbour and not a half smashed frigate after months barely surviving in space.

They didn’t even have to check in with the secretary, Admiral West’s aide waving them straight through to the senior officer’s study before quickly closing the door behind them, leaving the three of them isolated in the well furnished and surprisingly large room.



“Sit down.” West ordered, not pausing while the two officers took their places on the opposite side of his desk.

“I’ve read your logs and reports sent on from the Sosobowski.” He began. “Your patrol was frankly incredible, most of this stuff I wouldn’t have believed if I hadn’t seen corroborating evidence. The fact you two brought your vessel home in the face of such opposition and in such incredible circumstances is in the finest traditions of the Royal Navy.”

“Thank you sir.” Mallory replied.

“I’m not finished.” The Admiral snapped. “Getting home was an impressive achievement, destroying two Chinese vessels triggered a diplomatic crisis of epic proportions.”

“With all respect sir, they fired first.”

“That is the saving grace of your logs.” West exhaled. “Before we made contact all we had were sketchy reports from the Chinese and American governments that you had engaged some Chinese assets. We had no idea why or whether or not it was you, and I can tell you we were under a lot of pressure to justify your actions. Admiral Bradford personally had to vouch for you in front of Parliament. This was a rather large incident Captain.”

“Yes sir, it certainly felt like it when people were putting main gun rounds through my ship.”

“You can turn down the witticisms Commander, they mean nothing in this room.” West chided. “Nobody likes a smart alec.”

“Sir.” Mallory affirmed.

“However after reviewing the data and finding the truth, we immediately took the evidence to the Chinese embassy and demanded an explanation in full. After a day they informed us you had been engaged by an over zealous Captain, and the attack on your vessel was not sanctioned by high command.”

“Frankly sir that is a complete lie.”

“Yes it is, but do you have evidence to the contrary?”

Mallory exhaled. “No sir, the data logs on the enemy destroyer had been wiped, there were no records of any orders coming in.”

“Then you see where we are. The Chinese say they would have court martialled and imprisoned the Destroyer Captain, but as he’s dead that is not an issue. They claim it was a simple misunderstanding exasperated by the fact they are involved in a major war with the US.”

“You don’t believe them then sir?”

“Nobody does.” West shook his head. “But there’s not much we can do about it. Even if we had cast iron evidence, what could we do? Impose sanctions? Lodge a protest?”

He shook his head.

“No one in government is going to go to war over the loss of one frigate, even if it was deliberate. The EU will not get involved directly in this war unless we are invaded or unless there is a major loss of life. I’m sorry to say Commander that even if the Amethyst had never made it back, and we knew why, we would not have engaged China in war over you.”



“Simple numbers I suppose sir.” Jane spoke quietly. “Eighty of us, or possibly millions if the Chinese start nuking our bases and cities.”

“The right thing to do would be to strike back, attacking you was an act of war.” West agreed. “But we are not ready for war, and very few are willing to face China in the open. Europe will remain neutral in this conflict.”

“So all that we discovered, did it mean anything?”

“Of course it did.” West frowned. “Commander, don’t assume that you didn’t make a difference. As a matter of fact your survival has probably altered the course of the war.”

Mallory and Jane glanced at each other.

“I’m not sure I understand sir, if we aren’t going to strike back…”

“We will not act directly, but that does not mean we will not act.” West explained. “When this war began it was largely seen as America’s fault. All the evidence pointed to the US provoking China, forcing an escalation based on their own belligerent foreign policy, their hot head President, and the commercial greed of Cyrus Errol. China was seen as responding to these acts, initiating war to defend its interests after months and years of restraint. There was a lot of global sympathy for China, they were seen as the wronged party, fighting back against intolerable US belligerence. At the start of this war China had by far the most international support.”

West tapped his fingers on the table.

“Then we got your report a couple of weeks ago. You showed that the Chinese were massing a fleet, that they had been building up a strike force for months at Saturn, long before the current tensions, and you showed they had been secretly building up warships in the outer regions of the system in preparation for war. The Chinese had been planning and preparing for this war for at least a few years, and had been actively deploying their forces for months before hand. In fact they must have already given the go orders for their initial attack groups before these latest escalations even materialised. The Chinese mobilised and initiated this war before they were given a convenient excuse, rather than been a result of American provocation this war was a product of the Chinese government manipulating events in the asteroid belt to provide caussus belli for a war they had already decided on starting years ago.”



“This sounds incredibly convoluted.” Jane winced. “With respect sir, I haven’t really had full use of my faculties for at least two months.”

“Basically the Chinese set the US up to look like it started the war, and that moron President of theirs walked right into it.” West clarified. “But the data you brought home proves China initiated this conflict, and the effect that has had on global opinion is profound.”

“How so sir?”

“After the level of deceit was established support for China dried up almost at once. Turns out world leaders don’t like being lied to or played for fools. Support for the US has increased as a result, though again no one is likely to involve directly.” West paused. “Except perhaps President Murphy of the Australian Federation. Apparently he threw a chair at the Chinese Ambassador.”

“That’s quite impressive.”

“From the opposite side of the UN General Assembly.”

“Must have been propelled by pure rage and raw hatred.” Jane considered. “I hope somebody recorded that for me.”

“It was exceptionally well timed, China had requested large scale imports of raw materials and strategic fuels, we almost agreed.” West informed. “But after the truth came out, well as you can imagine that idea went down like a lead zeppelin.”

“So that means they are running low on strategic materials?”

“Both sides have been fighting an all out war since April, the intensity is shocking, even to us old wardogs. Luckily the combat has been restricted to space for the most part, with some action on Mars and Luna. The UN forced both sides to agree not to wage war on Earth, I’m sure I don’t need to explain how bad it would be for everyone if they started dropping thousand ton rail rounds and nukes on the planet.”

“Wouldn’t be pretty sir.”

“We’re working with the other main space powers to set up joint naval patrols in Earth and Mars orbit to make sure no US or Chinese warships engage too close to the planets, Operation Umbrella. Yes, it does sound dumb.”



West opened his draw and fished out a data disk.

“I suggest you read up on this, make copies for your crew, it’s a full briefing on events so far and the European position.”

“Thank you sir.” Mallory pocketed the disk.

“Save you trawling the net.” West remarked. “Your intelligence report prevented the EU from making a massive mistake in aiding the aggressor of this conflict, indeed you prevented the rest of the planet supporting the wrong side in this war. I cannot stress how potentially decisive that may be. We’ve already offered those same strategic supplies to the US instead, and they have been readily accepted. Probably the only bit of good news the US has had in this war.”

“What about the battle we witnessed a couple of weeks ago?” Mallory asked. “The Americans seemed to be winning.”

“They were, a great tactical victory.” West nodded. “Unfortunately it was just a diversion. While the US fleet was engaging the Chinese forces, lighter Chinese units bypassed the battle and attacked the American supply stations. To meet the Chinese the USN had to strip every base of its defence squadrons, left them wide open to attack.”

“How badly hit were they?” Jane asked.

“Completely destroyed. Every base, station, supply point and storehouse, military or civilian, is gone.” West informed. “We knew the Chinese fleet was big, but the secret build up you found evidence of was apparently extremely successful. The only major US base left outside of Luna is at Phobos, and our last reports indicated the Chinese were massing to hit it hard.”

“With no way to resupply their fuel or ammunition, there’s no way the USN can support a fleet this far out.”

“Worse Commander, unless the USN ships you saw fighting can get to Phobos before the Chinese they won’t have the fuel to make it back to Earth either. Right now both sides are racing for Mars with a decisive battle shaping up over Phobos.”

“Who is likely to get their first sir?”

“We estimate the US fleet, but only by a few hours, not long enough to really rearm.” West said. “They’ll be going into battle with depleted ammunition, tired crews and relatively few attack drones. We expect the Chinese to destroy the base, defeat the fleet and begin reducing American colonies on Mars. Within a month we believe the US will have no presence beyond the Earth line.”

“And after that sir?”

“So far the US Luna fleet has been holding its own, but with the US outer fleet gone the Chinese can recall all their ships and mass for a major battle over Luna. Once that’s done the US has no real chance of victory and will be blockaded and forced to surrender. Current estimate is three to four months for a complete Chinese victory.”

“Is there anything the US can do to win?”

“At this point, not really. The Chinese have cut their supply lines and left them without the means to mass produce warships. The materials we’re going to sell the US will give them a boost, help them replace many of their losses, but they won’t have the new batch of ships built in time to help. Unless they can find a way to prolong the war until their new build vessels come online, they haven’t got a chance.”



“Seems sir the bad news just keeps following us around.” Mallory exhaled. “I doubt a Chinese victory would be welcome news for us.”

“Not particularly, but there’s no way to prevent it without direct military intervention, and nobody is going to risk that.” West stated simply. “We’ve increased the military budget and submitted proposals for more warships which seem likely to be accepted. Otherwise all we can do is sell the US supplies and hope they grind the Chinese down enough so they collapse or at least are no threat to us for generations to come.”

“Not a great plan sir.”

“No it isn’t, but this is reality Commander. The Chinese started this but the US isn’t exactly blameless either. Neither side has enough public support to risk intervention, so we’ll sit to one side, help as we can, and mind our own business.”

The Admiral exhaled.

“It’s all on the disk Commander, I suggest you read it after you have slept.”

“Yes sir.”

“I won’t keep you much longer, just two more formalities to go through. I’d prefer to wait but you know regulations.”

“Understood sir.” Mallory raised his head. “As Commander I naturally assume full responsibility for my ship and crew and will answer for their actions.”

“Oh you certainly will Commander.” West opened his desk drawer again, dropping two pieces of thick paper on the desk.

“Obviously this level of damage requires a Court Martial to determine…”

“We already had one in your absence, it reported three days ago.”

“Oh, well sir…”

“We used your log records and sensor data, it was quite conclusive.” He pointed at the paper. “Those were the recommendations.”

“I reserve the right to appeal sir.”

“I would if I had those results.” West grunted. “Cruel and unusual in my opinion.”

Mallory gingerly picked up the report, only making it past the first line.

“Admiral…?”

“The board recommended you for promotion, both of you.”

“What me?” Jane grabbed her own copy.

“After seeing the tone of your reports I was just as surprised.” West allowed a rare smile. “Congratulations.”



Mallory read the front page twice, confirming it was in fact genuine. It was quite an achievement, and one he dearly wanted, but he didn’t really feel much as he read the words. His emotions were tapped, all he could ask himself was whether or not he had really done enough to earn this.

“There’s also plenty of talk about awarding a small bushel of medals for this.” West added. “All in the air right now, but I wouldn’t be surprised to see a Victoria Cross for your Chief Broome. The level of courage, dedication and outright stubbornness impresses me greatly Commander, sorry, Captain. We’ve arranged four months leave for yourselves and your crew, when you return to duty you will report to Plymouth for reassignment.”

“Reassignment sir?”

“The Admiralty is giving you the Arethusa, a Persephone class medium cruiser.”

“That’s a fine ship Admiral, but I think we would better serve the Admiralty on the Amethyst. We’ve managed to hone our skills and our stealth techniques to a point where…”

“Captain, you need to look at this realistically.” West cut him off. “I watched your ship come in, there’s no way she’s returning to service. It’d be uneconomical to repair her, she’ll be towed to Mars and recycled.”

“You mean scrapped sir?”

“I mean recycled Captain, her useable components transferred to new builds, everything else melted down and used in future construction. In a way she’ll continue on in the next generation of ships, as will you.”

“Sir, the Amethyst…”

“Is finished Captain, I understand you can get attached to a ship, heaven knows I almost passed up a promotion to this job when it meant losing the Collingwood, but the Admiralty knows what it is doing by assigning the best suited people to the best suited ships. The Arethusa is superior in every way.”

“Not every way sir.”

West grunted in acknowledgement. “Most officers your age with your skills would kill to be a cruiser Captain, in a way I suppose that’s exactly what’s happened. Go relax Captain, you have four months before your new assignment, and several more running your new command on a shake down. Any other questions can wait until tomorrow. Get some sleep and relax Captain, Commander. Dismiss.”





The two officers left the office, closing the door behind them. They stood in silence for a while, the gears in their heads slowly processing the information they had been given.

“That went better than expected.” Jane observed. “I mean we didn’t get drummed out of the service, we didn’t start a war, we even got some shiny new gold braid.”

“This is all true.” Mallory nodded. “So why don’t I feel like celebrating?”

“Well for one thing, you’re boring.” Jane replied. “And for another you haven’t slept properly since February.”

“Is it May now? Or are we in June yet?”

“I honestly don’t remember.” Jane chuckled. “You’d think I’d remember something that important.”

“How did we manage to make life or death decisions in this condition?”

“Pure liquid awesome?”

“Probably the best explanation.” He sighed lightly. “I’m going to check on the crew, make sure everyone is settled down. Go hit the rack XO.”

“No sir, you go get some sleep first.”

“Jane…”

“I’m the XO, looking after the crew is my job, commanding the ship is yours. As the ship is now switched off you’re out of a job.”

“I have a responsibility here.”

“And so do I.” She answered firmly. “You’re not going to win this argument, I never, never lose an argument when I’m right.”

“Yes you do, you are always losing arguments and resorting to violence and intimidation.”

“If it works I didn’t lose.” She corrected. “Do I have to intimidate you into giving up?”

“You’re doing a pretty good job just by existing.”

“Good, I declare victory, go sleep sir, we can sort anything else out in the morning.”

“Thank you XO. I don’t think I mention enough how much I need you.”

Both of them stood in awkward silence.

“That sounded better in my head.” Mallory admitted.

“Yeah, it did sound a bit like we were going to kiss or something.”

“Which would be uncomfortable given your forked tongue.”

“But you are right though, you do need me.” She nodded with a grin. “Behind every great man there is a great woman with an icy stare and a whip.”

“I can very easily believe you own a whip.”

“More than one. Sweet dreams Captain.”

“After chatting with you XO my thoughts are rarely sweet, usually they are worried and afraid.”

“Then my work here is done. Get some rest sir.”

“You too XO, don’t leave it too long.”

“Guaranteed.”





Mallory made it to the shower before collapsing onto the bed in the provided officer’s quarters and sleeping for a solid sixteen hours. Nobody bothered to wake him, they would all have quite happily left him there for days if required. Eventually he woke up in his own time, stumbling out of bed and making his way to the sink as if he weighed half a ton, stomping in an ungainly fashion until his senses became fully aware. He splashed cold water on his face to wake up, finally catching a good look at himself in the mirror and freezing.

The man looking back was different from the one who had left Mars those months ago. He was paler, almost a shade of grey, with drawn cheeks and dark smudges around his eyes like some sort of gothic eye shadow. Weeks of stress and no sleep coupled with reduced rations had altered him as much physically as mentally. The scale of what had happened finally began to make itself known to him at that moment. He both looked and felt like he had aged ten years, not exactly the dashing officer look he had been going for when he joined up.

Mallory shaved and dressed, opening the wardrobe to find someone had left him a new uniform jacket hanging in preparation. Its dark sleeves already held the four golden stripes of a Captain, that long coveted strip of braid suddenly seeming an empty reward for all he had endured before today. He took the jacket, tailored perfectly to his frame, and with a final look at the stranger in the mirror to ensure he was at least presentable he left his quarters and resumed his duties.





The Amethyst had been left more or less as she arrived, the docking clamps gently grasping the torn hull and holding her close to the station, secluded by the dock walls and the shadows of nearby dreadnoughts. Normally the dock would be busy, filled with workers shifting crates of supplies onto a waiting ship, unloading waste and recyclables, performing the myriad of minor maintenance jobs every ship needed after a patrol to bring it back up to full capacity.

But not here. The large warehouse like space overlooking the Frigate was empty, no workers, no crates of supplies, no activity, just wide open space. It felt like a wake, some silent sombre ceremony said over the remains of a once living breathing vessel before committing her body to eternity never to be seen again.

The edges of the docking jetty were lined with large windows to give a suitably panoramic view of space, a little piece of wonder amid the functionality of a working space station. Many off duty personnel took their breaks here, eating meal wraps or sandwiches in front of the field of stars or overlooking one of the European nations latest ships of the line.

Mallory found himself inexorably drawn to them, diverting him from his path to take a look at the valiant little warship. He walked with quiet reverence to the windows, feeling a melancholy pang as the Amethyst commanded his view, tiny compared to her neighbours but still very large from the perspective of a single human being. She still had internal power, her remaining formation and docking lights were still shining as she awaited her fate, the final journey of her short career.



“We thought you’d be here.”

Lantree and Jane materialised beside him, Mallory too fixated on the ship outside to have heard them crossing the dock.

“She doesn’t look so bad from this angle.” Mallory remarked. “Apart from the huge ragged holes. And the missing bow. And the perforated hull.” He exhaled heavily. “Poor old girl.”

“I took a look over the dock master report.” Jane peered out of the window, speaking in an unusually quiet tone as if she didn’t want to be overheard. “They did a full structure test on her, even if they stripped the hull plating off and replaced it the force of the impacts have twisted and cracked her main load bearing elements at her core. Not much they can do about it sir, it would be cheaper just to build a new ship.”

They stood in silent thought for a few moments before Lantree spoke.

“She was a good ship, a survivor. She got her people home despite it all, and that’s the best epitaph you could wish for.”

“Bit like losing your home.” Mallory remarked.

“I’ve been there.” Lantree advised with a bit of a smile.

“They’re renaming a new frigate for her.” Jane mentioned. “Not sure what idiots they’ll get to serve on her though, still trying to figure out if she was incredibly lucky or cursed.”

“I’ll go with lucky.” Lantree offered. “And fortunate in her crew.”

“How are the boys and girls?”

“Getting bored.” Jane smiled. “They’re eager to go on out again and look to even the score.”

“We won’t be going to war XO, not according to the Admiral.”

“No, but we could all move to Canada, then volunteer for the USN.”

“You’d be more than welcome.” Lantree grinned. “Hell, I’d make sure you got a heavy cruiser at least, we could use people as crazy lucky as you.”

“Tempting, but the Admiralty has already set aside a ship for us. It would be rude to say no, and the paperwork…”

“I heard.” Lantree nodded. “And congratulations, you earned that fourth stripe.”

Jane coughed pointedly.

“And you earned that full third one.” Lantree remembered to add. “Through merit rather than intimidation, I’m a little surprised.”

“I’m multi faceted.”



“So then Captain.” Mallory dragged himself from the window. “What’s next for you?”

“I’m going home.” Lantree said with undisguised glee. “Your folks have laid on a transport to take us all back to Earth under neutral colours, nobody would dare take a shot at us, not after this whole business we’ve just showed the world.”

“Never underestimate the stupidity of people.” Jane cautioned. “It’s a mantra I live by.”

“That makes a lot of sense.” Lantree considered. “I mean a lot of sense.”

“I think the Chinese fleet is more focused on Mars, I doubt you’ll run into anything.” Mallory shared. “Sounds like all hell is breaking loose out there.”

“I managed to speak to Admiral Ryan in person, after he got through being amazed we were alive he said we were massing for a major fight over Phobos.” Lantree exhaled. “He’s calling in every ship, going to be the biggest concentration of firepower, well, ever.”

“Are you going to be there?”

“I’m going to try, but I don’t think I’ll get turned around in time.” Lantree answered. “I’ve got a new assignment too, the Tennessee lost her commander in the last battle so they’re giving her to me.”

“Battleship?”

“Less then three months old. She needs a little patching up but she’s a solid ship.” Lantree confirmed. “She probably won’t be ready for the Phobos fight but we’ll be there to exploit our success. Or pick up the pieces.”

“The world changed when we weren’t looking didn’t it?” Mallory observed quietly.

“At least we had a part in making sure that change wasn’t all bad.” Lantree replied. “Call me old fashioned, but I think we made a difference here, and in the long run I think we saved a lot of lives.”



“Well Captain I can honestly say you’ve helped change some opinions I’ve held.” Mallory extended his hand. “Been a pleasure and a privilege to travel with you.”

“Glad you stopped to pick us up.” Lantree shook the hand with a smile.

“As hitch hikers you were adequate.” Jane grinned, holding out her own hand. “I think we owe you Captain.”

“Not so much as we owe you.”

“Team effort, as they say.” Mallory compromised. “Try to avoid getting killed Captain, I hear it’s uncomfortable.”

“And it will ruin our reunion plans.” Jane added. “Where we get together and remember how much all of this scarred us mentally and physically, and then laugh about it. Like mad people laugh at grass.”

“Slightly too specific there XO.”

“I’m an observer of human nature.” She returned. “Mainly from a mocking perspective, granted.”

“Every ship needs an XO like you.” Lantree chuckled. “Keep the crew honest by terrifying them half to death.”

“All part of the service.”

Lantree glanced back out at the Amethyst, the torn ship quiet now.

“I learned a lot too.” He said simply. “For one thing I learned joining the battle fleet instead of the scout fleet was a great choice. This whole sneaking around stuff is way too tense for me.”

“Hard to argue with that.” Mallory nodded.

“Guess I should be heading out.” The American concluded. “If you ever visit Nashville after the war I know this great place, traditional little bar serves the best Bourbon you’ll ever drink.”

“Nashville, where country music comes from?” Jane raised an eyebrow. “Do I have to wear sequins and a hat? Because I have this thing against sequins. The hat I can work.”

“Sequins optional, though they do bring out my eyes.” Lantree laughed. “But the first round will be on me.”

“You had me at free booze.” Jane nodded with a smile. “All the best Captain, it’s been fun. Okay it’s mostly been a living nightmare but for those parts when I was too tired to recognise the danger and horror, it was quite fun in a spaced out way.”

“I think thanks.”

“Best of luck Captain.” Mallory echoed. “You officially owe me a drink, which is all the reason you need to survive this war.”

“I think our paths will cross again.” Lantree predicted confidently. “Enjoy your new command, and I’ll see you both later.”



Lantree saluted formally, a gesture the two Royal Navy officers returned, before he headed for the neighbouring dock, taking a final look at the Amethyst as he departed and shaking his head in continued wonder.

“We are three lucky bastards, you know that right?” He called over his shoulder.

“It’s a theme.” Mallory replied with a grin. “Remember that drink! You don’t want to know what the XO did to the last man who stood her up in a bar!”

“I’m terrified!” Lantree called back. “And I’m not being sarcastic, I actually am genuinely a little bit scared.”

“Just doing my bit for trans-atlantic relations.” Jane shrugged.

Lantree opened the doors to the lift, stepping inside with a final wave.

“That was one hell of a ride.”

The doors slid shut, and with a whirr the lift departed for the transport leaving the two officers behind.

“Certainly was.” Mallory agreed quietly. He looked back out of the window to his ship, his former ship. “How long does she have?”

“The dock workers have already sealed access. They’ll strip her down here, then tow the hulk to Mars for breaking up.” Jane said.

“So we can’t go aboard?”

“That would be wrong and involve bribing the dock foreman.” Jane answered seriously, a thin smile breaking across her features. “Which I already did.”

“You bribed someone? With what?”

“Their own kneecaps.” She grinned happily. “Which he will now get to keep by doing whatever I tell him to do.”

“That’s a new and interesting take on bribery you have their XO.”

“Highly cost effective.” She responded with glee. “But I can’t do much to stop her being taken apart, my aura of terror only goes so far.” She sighed.

“Pity you can’t scare people into changing policy.”

“I’m working on it.”



The two officers headed to the docking tube which opened for them as instructed. There were no workers here for the moment, the dock off limits for any other personnel until the salvage crews went to work. Quietly they crossed the bridge to the vessel, stepping through the forced open battered airlock and feeling the slightly reduced artificial gravity of the broken warship.

They made their way to the control room, the consoles dark and dormant, only a few standby lights showing the ship was still running at minimal power, enough for basic life support and not much else. As if by instinct the two officers stood themselves on opposite sides of the tactical table, currently dim and unlit, its holographic displays inactive.

They both stood for a long minute in silence, absorbing the atmosphere, the still present hint of ozone in the air, the higher than average temperature and stuffy air. It was only after spending time on the station they appreciated the difference, that they saw how different it had been as the Amethyst had struggled home.

“We survived.” Mallory announced. “How exactly did that happen?”

“Pure liquid awesome.” Jane gave her stock answer. “At least that’s what my memoirs will say. I’m expecting a film deal.”

“I’ll be sorry to see this old girl go.”

“We’ll still have our memories sir.” Jane noted. “And also anything we can steal in the next hour.”

Mallory raised an eyebrow. “Something you want to tell me?”

“Just part of my ‘no kneecaps’ deal with the foreman. We’ll get to keep all the furniture from the ward room.” She informed. “Well, all the furniture that isn’t either matchwood or in the process of boldly going where no armchair has gone before.”

“I’m in awe of your planning and resourcefulness.”

“Speaking of I should go hire some bodies to lift the stuff.”

“By hire you mean threaten don’t you?”

“Yes sir, yes I do.”

“Then I won’t keep you.”

She grinned slightly, then made for the door.

“XO?” Mallory called after her, making her pause.

“Sir?”

“Never change XO.”

She beamed a wide smile.

“Promise.”



And with that he was alone, just the ship and her Captain. He took his time, walking around the Conn, memorising every station, every small detail. This was where his people had sat, and fought and died, and he owed it to them to not forget one tiny detail of their sacrifice to make sure the ship and her crew returned home.

He walked from the bow to the stern and back again, every compartment still accessible, every deck and bay. There weren’t many, damage had rendered more than half the ship inaccessible, but he made the effort. It was a pilgrimage, an experience, something he felt he had to do for the good of his soul. There was blood in this ship, lives tied into its decks and bulkheads, voices echoing from one side to the other. It was a product of all those who had served within, and a memorial to those who had not left alive.

He found himself in the wardroom, seemingly the only unscathed part of the ship. It’s rich wooden table and chairs still intact and thanks to Jane soon to become centrepieces on his new warship. A worthy reminder of their origin and the discussions that had taken place around it. The officers of the ship had formed a company around this table, they had clashed and argued, laughed and occasionally sung, in addition to planning their final journey home. For him this was the heart of the ship.

On the wall behind the table were a few pictures of previous ships that had carried the name. They had been specially commissioned by the Admiralty from some unknown painter, an art student if Mallory recalled who had actually done rather a good job. There were four in total, one was a sailing ship resplendid in full sail with the iconic chequered gun decks, one was a steamship, and two others were frigates from the twentieth and twenty first centuries.



“I suppose they’ll need another one now.” A voice remarked. “A painting of this ship to go with them.”

“Miss Conroy.” Mallory grinned, turning to greet the reporter. “How did you manage to get on board?”

“I’m an investigative Journalist, I’d be no good if I couldn’t sneak into a restricted area once in a while.” She returned with a knowing wink. “I heard they were going to send her to the scrap yard. It’s an insult.”

“Sadly she’s too badly damaged to repair, and most of her technology is still too classified to make her a memorial or museum.” Mallory tilted his head heavily in an admission he was powerless in this matter. “At least the bits that still work will be used in other ships, like people used to give blood and organs before we grew synthetics.”

April stepped around the desk, standing beside the newly minted Captain to regard the pictures more closely.

“All painted by the same person. Not bad talent.” She appreciated. “You going to keep them?”

“Souvenirs.” He confirmed. “While the XO lifts everything else that isn’t bolted down.”

“She’s a unique one.” April smiled. “Not two of her in the world.”

“Be glad, if she did have a double and they came within a hundred miles of each other they’d probably create a gigantic swirling whirlpool of sarcasm and sardonic remarks that would consume the sun.”

“Are you crew staying with you?”

“So I understand yes.” Mallory nodded. “We’re all going to form the core of a new crew for the Arethusa, assuming no one requests a transfer. I wouldn’t blame them.”

“I would, after all this you should stick together.”

“Hmm.” Mallory replied. “How’s Pete? Doc Farrah said he was making a recovery?”

“He’ll be fine.” She informed with clear joy and relief. “Still confined to his bed for a while longer until the wound knits, but he’ll be good in a few weeks. The Surgeons say Doctor Farrah saved his life.”

“He does that a lot.” Mallory confirmed with obvious pride. “And yet still has the bedside manner of a Rottweiler.”

“I hear its tradition.”

“I suspect he’s still bitter at modern medicine, he’d fit in perfectly back in Nelson’s time in the age of sail where the usual treatment for any wound was to chop off the offending limb or pour mercury on it.”

“I think your XO might relish those simpler times too.”

“Well she did write an essay advocating the return of the cat-o-nine tails. I daren’t read it.”



“When you get a painting done.” April looked back at the wall. “Can you get one for me?”

“Of this ship?”

“Yeah.” She affirmed. “Just you know, for sentimental reasons.”

“I’d have thought this was a memory you’d want to bury so deep even psychiatrists wouldn’t find it without drawing pentagrams and sacrificing goats.”

“There is that.” She admitted. “But I think I’m a different person today, a better one. Sure it was deadly, and I got beaten up a lot. I mean really a lot. But it changed me, made me see there was more than just my career, there was my responsibility.”

“Responsibility to what?”

“To the truth.” She answered. “To tell people about Cyrus Errol and this whole build up to war. What we learned out here, it’s the biggest story in generations, it’s going to change the way people see the world, make them realise just how far these puppet masters go to get what they want. People are going to understand that they are being used, even killed, by a powerful few, and now it’s going to change.”

She fixed Mallory with an intense look, a fiery look that a few months ago was entirely absent in her eyes.

“We did that. We bled for it and we suffered for it, but in the end we were the stone that kicked off the avalanche. We’re going to change the way the world works, and I actually think all of this was worth it.”

“I noticed on the News Errol Corps share price had taken a huge hit.” Mallory smiled a little. “You cost him five hundred billion dollars. That makes me quite happy.”

“I’m making it my mission to put that son of a bitch in jail.” April said with complete resolve. “He tried to kill me, I take that personally.”

“Seems you’re doing a good job.” Mallory remarked. “On that note, are you heading back home?”



“Not straight away.” She answered. “I think I’m too well known to just vanish now or have an accident, but I’m not going to risk it until Errol is gone.”

“Planning on staying with us?”

“Australia actually.” She replied, forming a smile. “Nice beaches I hear.”

“And staunch defenders of free speech.”

“President Murphy does like speaking his mind.” April agreed readily. “Did you see what he did in the UN?”

“Yeah, good throwing arm.”

“Pete and I will be safe there. We’ll go free lance for a while, the Sydney Post has already offered us a job reporting on the war and investigating Corporate scandals. Perfect job.”

“Sounds like you’ve found your niche.”

“All this reminded me why I got into Journalism in the first place. You kinda reawakened my idealism. Never thought it’d happen but hey, it only took nearly getting killed. Five or six times.”

“If it happens again I can have the XO come around and beat the joy back into you? Save us all a lot of time and effort?”

“What a generous offer.” April laughed lightly. “I don’t think I’ll lose my way again, not after this. It changes you on a fundamental level. After something like this you’re never the same.”

“On that I agree entirely.”

“I’m going to miss this little ship.” April spoke with deep sincerity. “I’m glad we didn’t end up on a battleship on some safe little patrol. If we had, well, who knows?”

“For one I would not have had such good company.” Mallory held out his hand. “I hope you succeed on your quest Miss Conroy.”

“Enjoy your new ship Captain, and the pay cheque from your promotion.” She smiled. “And for goodness sake Captain, just call me April!”

“I look forward to your next article.”

“I’m going to write a book about this journey, everything that happened, all the people.”

“So is the XO, though I suspect in her book she’ll simply eradicate our enemies with her fiery eyebeams before ending with a guitar solo.”

“Damn, that was going to be my ending.” The Reported laughed genuinely. “Keep in touch Captain.”

“Planning a follow up story? Where are they now?”

“Planning on staying friends.” She smiled. “Take care Edward, make sure everyone stays alive.”

“That’s my job.” He nodded. “And if you do get into trouble I’ll make sure a nuke accidentally hits Errol’s house in the country. Or I’ll just deploy the XO.”

“You’re good people.” April said simply. “Maybe after this we all are.”

“Maybe we are. Goodbye April, all the best.”



Mallory found his second in command waiting at the airlock, rounding up a group of dockworkers and a few ratings from the crew. They began to enter the ship to secure anything of value that wasn’t considered a state secret.

“Sir.” She greeted. “I saw Miss Conroy, she looked serene and fulfilled.”

“Yes, we had a chat in the wardroom.”

“By chat, do you mean goodbye sex?”

“No XO, I certainly do not.” He gave her a look. “She apparently rediscovered her purpose in life thanks to us.”

“You weren’t tempted?” She raised an eyebrow. “Even a little? I mean she is famous.”

“No.”

“Be a nice final act to perform before we say goodbye to the old girl.”

“Miss Conroy?”

“The Amethyst sir.” She corrected. “I plan to do it on the Wardroom table before this hour is up.”

“The same table we’re going to have dinner on in our new ship?”

“I’ll put a tea towel down or something.” She shrugged. “Not the first time.”

“Not helping, besides I didn’t think you were that close to anybody here?”

“I’m not. Yet.” She surveyed the docking crew. “But I still have forty minutes to decide.”

“I often wonder what it would be like just to follow you around for a week off duty, go to all these places you go.”

“Oh I don’t think you could handle that much fun sir.”

“What? I’m fun, I can have fun.”

“The important thing is you believe that.”



They both stepped aside a desk was carried past.

“That’s mine.” Jane tagged, noticing Mallory had the four paintings of previous ships under his arms. “Getting a bit of early looting in sir?”

“I prefer souvenir hunting, and yes, thought I’d rescue these myself.”

“Well now we can add one more ship called Amethyst to the list of vessels that went before their time.” She cocked her head. “Ironic how one of our predecessors was shot up and sunk by the Chinese while apparently neutral.”

“Actually she survived.” The Captain replied. “She was sunk making a film about how she wasn’t sunk by the Chinese.”

“Hmm.” She considered. “Fate really does have my sense of humour.”

“April was going to write a book on our adventures.”

“Like me?”

“I imagine it won’t be anything like yours.”

“Does it have Ninjas and space dragons?”

“I’m quite sure it won’t.”

“Then I’m going to win.”

“It’s not about winning XO.”

“Only losers say it’s not about winning. It is about winning, and I’m going to.”

He laughed slightly. “Do you think we’ve changed XO? Something Miss Conroy mentioned.”

“Probably.” Jane reasoned. “And for the better. We knocked out two enemy warships, evaded dozens of others, made it home without revealing our presence to the enemy, well much. That is what we were meant to do, what we were trained for. We proved something to ourselves and I think that makes us better people.”

“That was deeply profound XO.”

“Not everything I say has to end in a knob joke.”

“No, but it is something of a tradition.”



He took a deep breath, clutching the paintings under his arm, reaching a decision.

“I think I’m done here XO.”

“You’re not going to stay and watch them tow our ship away?”

“I don’t think so. I’ll just let her fade away, I don’t want my last image of her to be at the end of a tow cable being taken to the breakers.”

“Understood sir.” Jane nodded. “I think I’ll stay myself, I think I’m feeling something which might be sentimentality.”

“It’ll pass.”

“I hope so, it’s discombobulating and disconcerting.”

“Discombobulating? Did you make that up?”

“Real word sir, been waiting four months to find a scenario to use it.”

“Glad I was here to witness it.”

“The crew are excited about our new ship, they are uncommonly optimistic.”

“Given our track record we’ll launch and immediately get sucked into a black hole only to emerge in Ancient Greece where we’ll be mistaken for gods and thereby create modern society.”

“You’ve given this a lot of thought sir haven’t you?”

“I have, and I assure you that was the most realistic situation which presented itself.”

“I look good in a toga.” Jane related. “So I’m told.”

“I’ve known you for years, how do you keep coming up with stories and anecdotes I haven’t heard yet?”

“I’ve led a rich and varied life.” She smiled devilishly. “I look forward to telling all these stories to my Grandchildren, probably by the fire while I’m smoking a pipe, and I’m reading from an actual book rather than a data pad.”

“So are we going to go and celebrate tonight?” Mallory asked. “The whole crew, now we’ve slept I get the feeling we should go and have a drink or two.”

“I like booze, therefore I am broadly in favour of this proposal.”

“We might be between ships, but we’re still the same crew.” Mallory announced. “And that demands celebration.”

“The sort of celebration you stagger away from feeling all warm and content.” Jane approved. “Anything in particular we’re celebrating beside our common bond of suffering?”

“Just the one thing.” Mallory gave his XO a look of growing merriment. “Being alive.”

“Certainly my favourite excuse for killing some brain cells with alcohol.”

“When I was a child all I wanted was a good ship and a good crew and something heroic to do.” Mallory smiled slightly. “I think I was a little naïve, but in the end that’s exactly what I ended up with.”

“I can say without any sarcasm at all that we were the right people in the right place at the right time.”

“I agree.” Mallory smiled. “And next time someone else can bloody well do it.”

“Damn right sir.”

“Report to the Tavern at nineteen hundred for drunken debauchery XO.”

“Well sir, if you’re going to make in order…” She broke up into a laugh. “I’m going to drink you under the table, in a respectful way sir.”

“I might surprise you XO, in my student days I could knock back quite a few.”

“If you manage more than three Jagermeisters without losing your pants I’ll resign my commission and join the circus.”

“Done.” Mallory grinned.

They both walked to the dock, looking back through the windows at the Amethyst, both feeling lighter. While the ship could not continue on, her legacy always would. He saluted the ship, Jane noticing and doing the same thing, before as one they turned and headed into the dock.

“I need to find a place to stow all this loot.” She remarked. “Then I’ve got an appointment with that table.”

“Try not to be onboard when she gets towed away, it will be difficult to explain your absence.” Mallory considered. “Well actually very easy to explain, just incredibly awkward.”

“I might make that the tagline for my book.”

“Did I mention how much I enjoy these completely random conversations?”

“Yes sir, but you still haven’t offered me financial rewards.”

“Maybe I will now I’m a Captain.”

“Really?”

“No, not really.”

“As Commanding officers go you’re quite adequate.” Jane remarked.

“I consider that high praise.”

“But as a friend I don’t think I’ve ever known better.”

He paused, breaking a smile.

“Thank you.”

“Of course I only have one friend.”

“That sort of ruined the moment.

“I get told that a lot.”

“Why don’t we just drink until everyone looks like Unicorns?”

She nodded in approval.

“That sir is I think the perfect place to end my book.”
 

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