Raymond Prescott scrubbed a hand across exhaustion-sore eyes. The battle had raged for almost two days, and losses were heavy on both sides. Heavier for the Bugs, but losses were always heavier for the Bugs... and never seemed to stop them. So far, TF 37 had destroyed sixty-three cruisers and battlecruisers and eleven superdreadnoughts - but that left twenty-seven superdreadnoughts, including those d.a.m.ned Archers. TF 37"s fighters had been too weakened to get through to them, and even if they hadn"t, killing them at this point would do little good. The whole point in killing Archers was to clear the way for Allied capital missiles and SBMs, and of TF 37"s missile ships, only two Gorm Bolzuchas were still combat capable. Their strike groups had suffered too heavily to take more losses trying for the Archers now, anyway, for their original three hundred and forty fighters had been reduced to eighty-eight, only fifty of them Terran.
He checked the time display again. Eleven more hours. The Fleet Base"s fighters were already en route, and in about eleven hours, the Bugs were going to get a surprise when a hundred and fifty fresh fighters exploded into their faces.
It was time. The enemy"s attack craft strikes had all but ceased. His strength must be nearly exhausted, and the order went out.
For just a moment, the exhausted plotting officers didn"t believe their own instruments. But they had to, and frantic orders crackled as two hundred and thirty Bug gunboats and small craft screamed towards the Allied starships. Scratch-built squadrons, a.s.sembled out of the remnants of TF 37"s original strike groups, launched to meet them, but the attack roared in, and only Zhaarnak"s order to maintain a reserve gave TF 37 a chance. The strength of his carefully husbanded fighters took the Bugs by surprise, and gunboats and kamikazes which had been targeted on battleships were diverted to the carriers lest still more fighters launch from them.
The Allied pilots were exhausted, their original squadron organizations long since wrecked. Pilots flew with whatever wingmen they could find, and Terrans and Orions streaked into the enemy together, flushing missiles into the gunboats, then closed with their lasers. They carved a river of fire through their enemies, but the Bugs outnumbered them more than three-to-one. Half died in the first pa.s.s, and even as they looped back, the remaining gunboats abandoned the slower antimatter-loaded cutters to streak ahead under maximum power.
Zhaarnak saw it coming, and there was nothing he could do. The Human carriers were better protected, for their smaller fighter groups and more advanced shields let them build in twice the defensive firepower of an Orion CVL, and Prescott"s task group included a dozen CLEs and DDEs. But those escorts could not datalink with the Orion carriers. They did their best to protect their allies, yet good as it was, their best was not enough.
Defensive fire killed dozens of gunboats, but others tore through the formation, ignoring its battleships. More than half went after the Terran Shokakus, but only a handful of those got through. Four of the TFN carriers were damaged, yet none were hurt critically.
Not so the KON. The Bugs broke through their lighter defenses in strength, salvoing their close-attack weapons and following their missiles in to ram. Bhutnothin, Burkhan and Falkyrk were destroyed outright, and Bathyr and Firmiak took heavy damage. Every Orion carrier was. .h.i.t, most badly, and engine rooms became infernos as kamikazes sent power surges ripping through abused drive fields. They fell out of formation while frantic engineers fought their damage, and Zhaarnak stared at the ruin of his carriers. His own task group had been gutted. Only its light cruisers and three battlecruisers remained combat capable, and that was far too little to stave off the Juggernaut rolling down on his lamed carriers. The surviving fighters - all thirty of them - finished off the kamikazes before they completed the CVLs" destruction, yet he knew what he must do. He fought against it, but he had no choice, and he opened his mouth to order Prescott to abandon the doomed carriers and take his own command to meet the Fleet Base"s fighters.
"The Tabby carriers are hurt bad, Sir." Alec LaFroye"s fingers pressed his earbug as if to screw it bodily inside his head, and he grimaced. "Damage control"s on it, but they need at least twenty minutes to get back enough drive rooms to stay away from the Bugs."
Prescott stared into his plot, eyes hard as the mind behind them whirred. Only eighteen Terran fighters survived, and his carriers hadn"t gotten off unscathed. They had about eighty bays left, but over a hundred and fifty fighters were coming in from the Fleet Base. More to the point, those fighters were Orion, and, despite the transfers, his carriers were desperately short of Tabby ordnance after two exhausting days of battle. If they lost the surviving Orion fighter platforms, they wouldn"t have the weapons to arm the Fleet Base"s fighters once they got here.
"We"ve got to buy those ships some time," he said flatly.
"Sir, we don"t have any orders from the Flag," Sosa pointed out. Prescott glanced at him, and the chief of staff looked back. The ex-fighter jock didn"t like saying that, but it was his job to serve as his admiral"s tactical conscience.
"I realize that, Zulu," Prescott said softly.
"Sir! Great Claw! The Humans!"
Zhaarnak"s head snapped around at the semi-coherent shout, and his jaw dropped in disbelief. TG 37.2 was moving - not to break off as he had intended to order, but to interpose between the Bugs and his carriers!
It was insane! Prescott"s battleships mounted only a single capital missile launcher each, and that only to deploy defensive missiles. He could engage the enemy only from within the Bugs" own weapons envelope, and he had battleships, not superdreadnoughts!
Even as he watched, the first missiles roared out, and capital force beams began to fire. The Humans" datalinked point defense blunted the missile salvos, but it could do nothing about energy weapons, and shields flashed and died as the suicidal pounding match began.
"Juaahr! Order Pressscott to break off!"
"Yes, Great Claw!" The com officer spoke urgently into his pickup, then stiffened. "Sir, Ahhhdmiraal Pressscott refuses!"
"Give me a direct link!" Prescott"s face appeared on Zhaarnak"s com screen instantly, and the great claw forced his voice to come out flat and level. "Break off, Ahhhdmiraal."
"I must respectfully decline, Sir," Prescott replied, and actually smiled as Zhaarnak"s ears flattened in consternation. The image flickered as missiles and beams pounded the admiral"s flagship, and Prescott shook his head in the Human gesture of negation. "You need those carriers. My own have too few weapons to support the Fleet Base"s fighters."
"This is madness! You sacrifice your ships for nothing!"
""My claws are yours, and your cause is just,"" the Human said softly. "There is no dishonor in death - and no honor in flight."
Zhaarnak could not hide his shock as Prescott quoted the Warrior"s Way. They were the final words of Shaasaal"hirtalkin, he who first formalized the Farshalah"kiah, second only to Craana"tolnatha among the fathers in honor of the Zheeerlikou"valkhannaieee, and even as Zhaarnak stared at him, the Human cut the circuit.
The great claw dropped his eyes to the plot, and his fists clenched as the outnumbered, outgunned Humans engaged their foes. Shields flashed and died, warheads and beams ripped at hull plating. Prescott"s battle-line was trapped in the heart of a furnace, and still it held its ground, drawing the enemy"s fury down upon itself while the carrier crews fought to repair their drives.
A battleship died, then another. A battlecruiser followed them, and Prescott"s flagship shuddered as her own shields went down. Armor shattered under the pounding beams, yet no Human ship turned away. They stood and died at their admiral"s side, thundering back at their ma.s.sive enemies for five minutes, eight, ten.... For twelve endless, terrible minutes they held alone, until the surviving Orion carriers were able to get back underway.
Then, and only then, they, too, began to pull away from the enemy once more, but four battleships and three more battlecruisers of the Terran Federation Navy had died. Every surviving ship was damaged, some critically, yet Raymond Prescott had done what he set out to do... and Zhaarnak"diaano would never think of Humans in the same way again.
The Fleet continued its pursuit until a sudden infusion of fresh attack craft a.s.sailed it. The enemy battleships had inflicted damage out of all proportion to their relatively small size, and the fresh attack craft struck at the worst possible moment. There were few gunboats left, and the Fleet - busy reorganizing its crippled data-groups - was caught unprepared. Six already damaged superdreadnoughts succ.u.mbed to a blizzard of FRAMs, several of those which survived were badly wounded, and the Fleet called off the pursuit. It knew where the enemy was headed, after all... and it also knew reinforcements were en route.
"The scanner buoys confirm it, Great Claw," Least Claw Daarsaahl said wearily. "Twenty-four additional superdreadnoughts have joined the enemy. At present rate or advance, they will enter range of the Twins in seventy-one hours."
"Escorts?" Zhaarnak"diaano asked.
"Thirty battlecruisers and approximately fifty light cruisers," Daarsaahl said flatly. "They appear to be accompanied by many additional gunboats, as well."
"I see." Zhaarnak drew a deep breath, and closed his eyes. Five days had pa.s.sed since the first attack withdrew, and he"d let himself hope. Now that hope died.
"Has Ahhhdmiraal Pressscott been informed?"
"They were his sensor buoys, Sir," Daarsaahl said with a flicker of weary humor, and Zhaarnak"s own ears twitched in bittersweet amus.e.m.e.nt. Human technology, he thought. Must they always be better than we?
"Your orders, Great Claw?" his flag captain asked, and Zhaarnak shrugged.
"There will be no retreat this time," he said. "Lord Khiniak will not arrive for another month. If Great Claw Eaarnaah"s fortresses can hold Sak until he arrives, his force should be powerful enough to retake Alowan. But if the Bugs can take Sak first, or even mount a warp point defense of Alowan in strength, he will pay heavily to break in. I know only one way to weaken them for him, and I doubt the enemy realizes how powerful the fixed defenses are. Between us, the bases and our ships can cripple this force before we are destroyed - perhaps even inflict sufficient delay to prevent an invasion of the Twins before Lord Khiniak relieves them."
"And the Humans?" Daarsaahl pressed in a gentle voice.
"I will not insult their honor," Zhaarnak said softly. The flag captain gazed at him a moment longer, then nodded, saluted, and withdrew without another word.
Zhaarnak returned to his terminal, staring sightlessly at the reports which had just become so meaningless, then cleared the screen and brought up a visual of TF 37"s battered remnants.
Eleven wounded light carriers, only three of them Orion, hung in orbit about the twin planets, supported by six damaged battleships - all Human - and eleven battlecruisers - three of them Human. With the missile batteries of the Fleet Base and the PDCs, they would give a good account of themselves, yet they were doomed. Zhaarnak knew it, and he knew Prescott knew it, but the Human had not even suggested the withdrawal of his units. Horned Viper had been hit hard in her stand against the enemy battle-line. Commander Sosa was dead, Commander Kmak was badly wounded, and Prescott himself had suffered minor wounds to the head and leg. Many of his other ships had been damaged, as well, and unlike Zhaarnak"s ships, none of them could tie into the ma.s.sive point defense nets provided by the PDCs.
It did not matter. The Human support ships had not yet arrived, yet Prescott"s exhausted crews had torn into their repairs with what limited help the Fleet Base technicians could provide. Most of their shields had been restored, many of their weapons had been put back online, and the munitions Prescott had off-loaded earlier had sufficed to refill their surviving magazines. Yet their armor was riddled, and their repairs were fragile. It would take little fresh pounding to put them back out of action, but Raymond Prescott would not abandon the Pairsag Twins. As Zhaarnak, he knew relief could not arrive in time... but that every enemy ship destroyed killing his own vessels would be one less to bombard the Twins or contest Lord Khiniak"s entry into Alowan.
And, like me, he cannot abandon still more civilians. A warrior could do worse than die with such "chofaki," the great claw thought wearily. And as Prescott himself said, "There is no dishonor in death - and no honor in flight."
"Here they come, Sir," Jason Pitnarau said softly, and Prescott nodded. His flag bridge was a shambles, but his only other command battleship had been destroyed outright, so he"d moved himself and Alec LaFroye onto Horned Viper"s command deck.
Now he rubbed the bandage on the shaved half of his skull, watching the master plot"s ominous icons, and pictured the civil defense plans springing into purposeful - and ultimately futile - action on the Pairsag Twins. He doubted the Bugs even began to suspect how powerful the local defenses were, but when they found out, it was going to be ugly.
No doubt the PDCs would draw a heavy bombardment, which was why the Federation seldom mounted offensive weapons on inhabited worlds, and once the Bugs realized what they faced, they would abandon any plan to come in piecemeal and throw everything they had straight at the huge, heavily armed Fleet Base... and what was left of TF 37.
Glad you weren"t here after all, Andy, he thought, then smiled crookedly at Dashyr"s icon. For a bigot, you"re not too shabby, Zhaarnak"diaano. I suppose a man could do worse.
"How long, Alec?" he asked.
"Seven hours," LaFroye replied, and Prescott astonished himself with a chuckle.
"Right on our original projection," he observed. "Remind me to congratulate CIC."
"Of course, Sir," Pitnarau said with a small smile of his own, and they returned their attention to the plot as the minutes leaked away. The Bugs slid closer and closer, inching towards engagement range - and then, suddenly, they stopped.
Prescott straightened in his chair. He hissed as his wounded leg protested the movement, but it was a distant pain. There was no reason for them to stop. They"d advanced across the system for days, and the one thing Bugs didn"t do was hesitate about committing to action!
But they were hesitating. And then, as abruptly as they"d stopped advancing, they turned away! All of them turned away - gunboats, cruisers, superdreadnoughts, the entire fleet!
"What the h.e.l.l?" Pitnarau was staring into the plot in disbelief, and Prescott shook his head. A part of him was actually angry at the Bugs for stopping when he"d made up his mind to die. Get in here and get it over with, you b.a.s.t.a.r.ds! Isn"t it enough for you to kill us without s.c.r.e.w.i.n.g around this way?!
But they were still moving away - moving away at maximum speed. They- "Sir! The buoys are picking up - My G.o.d, Sir!"
"What?" Prescott snarled, taking out some of his confusion on the hapless lieutenant who"d just spoken. The young woman shook herself and punched commands into her console.
"Look at your repeater, Sir," she said, and Prescott dropped his gaze to the display.
"Holy Mother of G.o.d!" he whispered.
Thirty-four fresh Orion ships were headed in from the Sak warp point. And not just ships. Over a hundred fighters led the way, a combat s.p.a.ce patrol sweeping the way for twenty fleet carriers and fourteen superdreadnoughts!
"It can"t be," he said softly. "Koraaza"s still over a month out, and he doesn"t have anywhere near that much firepower to begin with! Those people can"t be there!"
"Well, for people who don"t exist, they look mighty good to me!" Pitnarau said jubilantly ***
In fact, Prescott was right. That huge relief fleet not only couldn"t be there, it wasn"t. Or, rather, it wasn"t what it looked like. The ma.s.sive task force was actually only three battleships, five CVs - not twenty - and five CVLs, and twenty-one battlecruisers and heavy cruisers. They weren"t part of Lord Khiniak"s force. Indeed, many weren"t even combat ready. They were simply everything the Tabbies could sc.r.a.pe up - convoy escorts, training ships, vessels s.n.a.t.c.hed out of the Bureau of Repair"s hands, anything. None of the CVLs had any fighters, the battlecruisers" magazines were less than two-thirds filled, and two battleships still had repair techs aboard, but they all mounted third-generation ECM, and the Tabbies had it on-line in deception mode.
A bluff, Prescott thought two days later as he stood in Horned Viper"s boat bay. The whole thing was a colossal bluff! I don"t think I"ll ever play poker with a Tabby.
He smiled at the thought, then straightened, leaning heavily on his cane, as the Orion cutter settled into its cradle and the side party came to attention.
Great Claw Zhaarnak"diaano stepped out into the twitter of bosun"s pipes. He saluted sharply, and Prescott ignored the pain in his leg as he came to attention and returned the courtesy.
"Permission to come aboard, Sir?" the Tabby yowled to Captain Pitnarau.
"Granted, Sir," Pitnarau replied, and Zhaarnak stepped over the line on the deck.
The pipes fell silent, and deafening quiet filled the bay as Zhaarnak crossed to Prescott. He stopped and gazed into the admiral"s eyes for a moment, then drew his defargo, the honor dirk of an Orion warrior. The wickedly keen blade gleamed in his hand, and he spoke quietly.
"When I was told Human ships had arrived to support me, Ahhhdmiraal Pressscott, I accepted them only because I had no choice, for such aid was an insult to my honor and that of my clan. Any allies were better than none, yet I swore to my clan fathers that the day I no longer needed your a.s.sistance I would spit upon your shadow. I would not challenge you as I would one of the Zheeerlikou"valkhannaieee, for I knew you would not accept challenge if I offered it, and it would only insult my honor further if you had."
Prescott"s mouth tightened, but he said nothing. He simply stared into Zhaarnak"s slit-pupilled eyes, waiting, and the Orion moved his ears slowly back and forth.
"Humans are cowards and chofaki, Fang Pressscott. I did not think they are; I knew they are, as surely as I know my own name... but what I knew to be true was a lie, and black dishonor to your people." He flipped the defargo to extend its hilt to the Terran, the formal gesture of a liege man to his lord, and his eyes met Prescott"s unflinchingly. "There are no chofaki here, Clan Brother. There are only farshatok. Your honor is our honor, and if ever Clan Diaano can serve you or yours with treasure or blood, we are yours to command."
Chapter Twenty-seven.
"It is about honor."
The command balcony of the great orbital station looked out over an expanse of control consoles and computer terminals. Beyond them was a great, curving transparency showing the sun of Idnahk, its glare suitably stepped down. It was by the reflected light of that sun that Tenth Great Fang of the Khan Koraaza"khiniak, Khanhaku Khiniak, could see with naked eyes the ships of his command - that which was to be the Grand Alliance"s Third Fleet.
Those ships had been straggling in since shortly after the ships of the enemy the Humans called Bugs had entered the Kliean System with their cargo of nightmare. The Navy had begun a.s.sembling all available ships here at the sector capital immediately after Zhaarnak"diaano sent forth the alarm. Then, with the delay built into all interstellar communications, had come the response of the Grand Allied Joint Chiefs of Staff. They"d recognized at once that the war had acquired a second front even more squarely within the domain of the Zheeerlikou"valkhannaieee than the original one was within Human s.p.a.ce. So a new Fleet - a fleet of the Khanate, just as Admiral Murak.u.ma"s was a fleet of the Federation - had been added to the Alliance"s organizational structure, and the Khan had honored Koraaza by entrusting him with its command.
Still, he reflected, it would have been nice if Third Fleet had been anything more than an organization chart when he arrived here. The ancient Terran military theorist Sun Tzu - who had finally won acceptance in Koraaza"s service despite the seeming contradictions between his precepts and Farshalah"kiah - had observed that numbers alone confer no advantage in war, and the ever-increasing number of ships whose flanks reflected the light of Idnahk"s sun had built up to an impressive total - essentially everything in the sector capable of movement - but had never functioned as a fleet before. His hastily a.s.sembled staff would have been lucky to get all of them moving in the same direction on the same day, and any sort of coordinated maneuvers would have been impossible without the merciless exercises Koraaza had laid on. But those indispensable exercises had required still more time, and time was precisely what Zhaarnak"diaano - and, to an even greater extent, the civilians of Hairnow and any surviving Telmasans - did not have.
It was, thought Koraaza, who was something of a military history enthusiast, a lesson the Terrans had taught the Zheeerlikou"valkhannaieee in the Wars of Shame. His people, too long accustomed to expanding at the expense of unworthy opponents and therefore inclined to take the old hero-sagas literally, had thought of ships as individual swords to be wielded by the champions who commanded them. They had forgotten the long-term coordinated training necessary to provide the fleet and squadron organization which was to a navy as tempering was to a blade.
The thought of Terrans brought a smile to Koraaza"s lips. He knew Zhaarnak"diaano, and when he"d heard that the first, crucial reinforcements that could be gotten to the great claw were Terran units, he"d seen disaster looming. Zhaarnak might not be quite so reactionary as his father in most things, but he seemed determined not to excel the old Khanhaku Diaano in unreasoning hatred of Humans - which would have been impossible - but to equal him. Koraaza had known, with a horrible sinking certainty, that Zhaarnak would not only bring about military calamity but also dishonor the Khan by insulting an ally. The latter had worried the great fang almost as much as the former, for however much he consciously rejected the narrow and rigid Farshalah"kiah of his ancestors in favor of modern rationalism, he could no more free himself of it than he could free himself of those ancestors" genetic legacy.
So it had been with incredulous relief that Koraaza had read Zhaarnak"s last few reports, with their steady change in tone. He was looking forward to meeting this Human great claw (or rear admiral as they called it in their unp.r.o.nounceable tongue) who had brought about that which he would once have unhesitatingly declared impossible, and in little more than three local days, he and Third Fleet would set out to do just that.
The communications officer broke in on Koraaza"a thoughts. "Your pardon, Great Fang," said the young son of the khan (lieutenant commander, Koraaza thought, his mind continuing to crank out t.i.tle equivalencies in the outlandish Terran rank structure), "but Governor Kaarsaahn requests a moment of your time."
Koraaza"s whiskers twitched with annoyance. As long as Third Fleet was located within the Idnahk Sector, and most especially while it was a.s.sembling at the sectors capital, a degree of jurisdictional friction between the fleet commander and the sector governor was inevitable. In this case, differences in temperament made the situation worse than it had to be. He turned resignedly to face the holo imager, and moved within the pickup, "Put him on," he ordered, and the governor of the Idnahk Sector seemed to flash into existence.
"Governor Kaarsaahn," Koraaza greeted, touching clenched fist to chest in salute.
The huge orbital station could accommodate the bulky holo imager for which warships had too little s.p.a.ce to spare, but it was in geostationary orbit around Idnahk. About a quarter of a second pa.s.sed while the message came and went, imposing a delay which was barely noticeable, yet spoiled the illusion that Kaarsaahn was here on the command balcony rather than in his palace on the surface. He responded to Koraaza"s salute with a courtesy that verged on unctuousness.
"Greetings, Great Fang. I have no wish to disrupt your busy schedule, but I have not yet received confirmation that you have dispatched to Great Claw Zhaarnak the orders we agreed on. I"m sure you have done so... as we agreed," he added with pointed repet.i.tion. "But I felt obliged to confirm it personally."
Koraaza sighed inwardly. He had agreed, albeit with a reluctance that had caused him to put off actually keeping his promise. "Your pardon, Governor, but the press of my duties has prevented me from actually sending the dispatch. I have, however, prepared the necessary orders to Great Claw Zhaarnak: stand on the defensive in Alowan, attempting no counteroffensive before I arrive." He drew a breath. "Governor, I will of course send the orders if you insist on holding me to my promise. But perhaps we should reconsider. Remember, every day the enemy is left undisturbed in Telmasa is another opportunity for him to discover the Hairnow warp point. Some aggressive raiding, at Zhaarnak"s discretion, might distract the enemy from survey activities."
Kaarsaahn"s habitual blandness was beginning to look a little frayed around the edges. "As I argued at our previous discussion, Great Fang, we have no way of knowing that the enemy has not already discovered the Hairnow System. More to the point, until Third Fleet arrives in Alowan, Great Claw Zhaarnak"s force is the sector"s only defense. It cannot be hazarded on premature adventures. And, while I have hesitated to raise this point before, I fear Zhaarnak"s "discretion" cannot be relied on in this matter." He hastily raised a clawed hand. "Yes, I know you are honor-bound to defend a fellow officer. It does you credit. But consider: his withdrawal from Kliean and Telmasa flew in the face of his temperament as well as Farshalah"kiah. The fact that he had no choice cannot possibly compensate in his own mind. He is bound to be biased towards reckless displays of courage, seeking to wipe out the stain - however illusory - on his honor. Under the circ.u.mstances, the knowledge that your command will soon depart Idnahk may well goad him into such an action - independently - rather than encourage him to hold fast."
Koraaza opened his mouth to hotly declare that Zhaarnak, like all officers of the Khan, was well aware of his paramount duty to defend the race"s inhabited worlds... then snapped it shut. For Kaarsaahn, d.a.m.n him, had a point. Zhaarnak was aggressive by nature, and any imagined disgrace would make him even more so. He might not do anything culpably stupid, but he might well overestimate his own strength in order to rationalize his need for action. And according to the latest reports, that strength was insufficient for any serious attempt on Telmasa.
No, Zharnaak"s guilt over the worlds he had been forced to leave to their deaths could not be allowed to imperil still more worlds. It was a truth to which the Zheeerlikou"valkhannaieee had never really become reconciled: the higher one climbed on the ladder of rank, the more often honor had to be sacrificed on the altar of duty. Koraaza himself had yet to accept it gracefully.
"Your points are well taken, Governor," he said leadenly. "I will send the orders."