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Much appreciated, although we did specifically say "if there is space" and "if there's room" :)
If there's room, sign me up.
A cryopod? At that point, she dropped what she was doing, leaned against the railing and turned to watch with great interest. A cryopod would explain the presence of the unexpected passenger. What it didn’t explain was why the Ulnar were so keen on getting her back. The unknown didn’t look like much trouble herself. Maybe it was something she knew or a skill she possessed that made her worth hounding the Monroe for three days. Perhaps the grunts would be told eventually, if her somewhat frail-looking frame survived the captain’s treatment.

She didn’t understand the fury that seemed to be seeping from the captain’s every pore. This was a successful mission, all things considered - the cargo appeared more or less intact, even though the ship was a little worse for wear, and they’ve taken out a much larger vessel, all at the cost of only one escape pod and one member of the crew. And it wasn’t like they’ve lost anyone irreplaceable, capable loadmasters were ten a credit, and almost any schmuck unfortunate enough to end up on the ship could organize and catalogue boxes. Although given the captain’s current demeanor, keeping these opinions private was probably the healthier option.

Now that the unknown was taken away, she approached the pair. “So, who’s the cargo? If you can tell, that is.” Though she didn’t expect to be told much, where was the harm in trying?
Faira”Karte, Research and development

The day has come for the big demonstration. Astra and co. have been slaving over this in any free moment of their time. If this can not punch through a Lucifers shielding, nothing ever will and we need to copy the Ring fast, because jump nodes are going to fall. Might want to sic RnD on it in either case. At least we need to figure out how to get the Hammerhead to get it moving. Astra thought, as the cannon jury-rigged to the side of the station on Artorias’ orbit was pointed at the testing target. The targets were towed about ten kilometers in front of the station and Singularity and Halcyon docks that rested to each side of it.

“As you know, the test will be twofold - the targets are the latest we developed in armor and shielding, and we will be testing them against our current generation arms as well as captured Terran and Vasudan cannons.” Astra repeated the briefing material, the short version.

The freighters hauling the captured cannons lined up. “Targets at full power, shields raised.” a technician reported, and Astra gave the order to fire. The green and yellow blobs belched by the alien cannons splashed harmlessly on the shield.

“Shield strength down .05%. That’s half of what the current generation takes. Drop the shield, proceed with the armor test.” Astra noted.

The next plasma blobs were intercepted shortly before impact by a jet of coolant, distorting it and cooling it down a little. The shot then passed through a grate of electrodes and was partially neutralized. “Shot reading as 60% less efficient as current generation armor. Continue firing until something gives.”

It took four more shots for the grates to overheat and get blown off, and then the mark II crystalline armor derived from the Hammerhead came to play, the one meter thick sheet taking ten more shots before the cannons melted through. “Looks like the Terran version is doing slightly better. Now well move to our current generation arms.”

The kinetic weaponry fared little better, efficiency scaling up with caliber. The only exception was the RHVC, which had enough speed to pass the shield unimpeded and unlike the older HYVEL, it was also fast enough to beat the CIWS targeting systems. Faira fighter-based weaponry was easily defeated by the shield, and did not have enough power to damage the active armor.

The P-5 managed slightly better than the Terran equivalent, taking quarter less shots to punch through. In beam mode, the active armor proved to be far less effective. The same repeated with the P-15, only it was adequately quicker in dispatching the target.

“Now comes the fun part.” Astra said, linking into the Halcyons fire control system. One of the forward facing mothers of all railguns belched its projectile, aimed at one of the three larger targets. Passing through its shield it lost a third of its mass to ablation, but it burrowed 80% through the five meters thick sheet of armor. “This doesn't look like a lot, but take into account that the Halcyon will have four of these and with quite a high rate of fire. Any ship that presents its broadside will be disabled within a minute, because even without penetrating hits, the armor will lose the necessary integrity to transmit the push from the engines.”

Next up in the line was the new 10m fusion beam. In essence, it was the same beam weapon previously used on the Faira ship, but with a different firing chamber and an order of magnitude more powerful containment field for the beam. “Please note that in the current state,the F-10 requires a specially trained psychokinetic to fire at full range of fifteen kliks. Unassisted, the range drops to four, but even then, the effect can not be denied.” Astra said and gave the order. The cannon mounted to the station came to life and spewed a jet of still fusing atoms that continued through the target and beyond. “As you see, at the present time, we have yet to come up with a countermeasure, but we believe this will be of great aid against the ancient vessels up to and most likely including the Lucifer class. The power demands are somewhat limiting though, and we will likely only be able to mount two single barrel cannons on a destroyer. Mounting them on a frigate would be possible, at the expense of having the same power issues as the old Comet class, unless we manage to increase the yield of the reactors. The Singularity will be able to mount three pieces.” the admiral delivered.

Finally, she tapped into the firing controls of the Singularity. The P-100”s dish lit up, a cloud of plasma as large as the ship was wide gathering in front of it, until after half a minute the mass was converted into a beam that blown the final target away, completely obliterating it. “Needless to say, if this ship can not pierce the Lucifer's shields, nothing we can build in the next fifty years will. With that in mind, with your permission, I would like to put my research team on studying the Ring.” Astra finished, turning to the Admirals present.

With the Vasudan weaponry scoring dead last, there was surely a story to be made by the NNN.

As the Halcyon’s 16m bow coilgun bit into the target, Zorea couldn’t help but smile, almost like a child about to be given a new toy. With decent ammo capacity for its size, lot of storage space and multiple on-board fabricators, a carefully calculated rate of fire could keep up the bombardment for a while.

“The problem is if something jumps behind the ships, but there’s no such thing as ‘perfect’ design now, is it?”

“That is a problem to solve by the team designing the individual ships, but as for the superdestroyers - they are meant to be on the attack. Also, they are not fleetships, so adequate frigate and corvette escort has to be provided, alongside a fighter screen. The Strike fleet has all necessary assets in place, only needing a reorganization once the Singularity is deployed. The Halcyon I am not sure about, given that it is a project that stretches before the Confederation.” Astra noted.

“Only a little restructuring will be required. These days, I only stay on the Ira because I have nowhere else to sleep. I wanted to use this time to return home for a few weeks, but with hostile Vasudans there,” he pointed to one side of the room, then to the other, “and neutral Terrans there, I stayed just in case. Funny thing, rear admiral, when the dynamic duo found the Hammerhead, admiral Lira and I asked you about the Strike Fleet’s personnel and you mentioned that you would take Narix crew to the Singularity and train them for the Halcyon. Now, it seems I’ll be training you some people for the Singularity.” he laughed. He’d already decided what positions he would like to be filled by at least one Faira shift, namely occupations where the ship’s size played a role like helm, TCs, gunnery chief and chief engineer plus other miscellaneous crew.

“Much appreciated, Admiral. Although the Singularity will be a bit easier on the crew than the average destroyer with me at the helm, the follow up class will need a crew to operate it. To finish the demonstration, we expect it should be possible to upgrade most ships to the armor specification you have seen by removing the top layer of the present armor and letting the crystalline coat grow on top. The active parts of the armor can be installed as applique on the existing hull without the need of major stay in the shipyard, so we believe this would be best done in two phases - first install the active armor on all ships, and then start applying the new material layer ship by ship. Compared to Ancient vessels, we best start with frigates, as it would allow them to stand up to Demons on their own before a destroyer arrives. If we are still dealing with the Vasudans at that point, then we estimate corvettes will be the most effective ship class due to the large area that we will need to engage in. The upgraded weapon suites would best be deployed on entire new classes of ships, I”m afraid. While some of the older destroyers can be outfitted with the F-10, we run the risk of blowing the power grid just like on the Curious, and I do not need to stress the necessity of none of our hardware falling into Vasudan hands.” Astra finished.

“The Explorer will provide you with any crew requirements you will have, Admiral Zorea. Vanguard fleet will be upgraded to Strike fleet numbers in the future, and I would like to take my crew with me when the next superdestroyer rolls off the assembly line. In the meantime, I”ll train a new crew for the Explorer. No time for it like now.” Cygnus offered.

“Very well, I’ll get you the list within the next two days, thank you.”

Antares, 8th January 2335 Terran, 18 months after the launch of Mace wing

For the past several months, the Terran plan, known as Operation Thresher, has been gaining momentum as several groups of ships, lead by the GTD Normandy and GTD Aeneas, were gathering and taking on vast quantities of supplies all throughout Antares. Now the time has come to bring the fleets together. The dice have been cast as the two Orions arrived within a minute of eachother, soon joined by Fenris and Leviathan-class cruisers and even more freighters. The mood aboard the ships was good, morale bolstered by the events that transpired in the past few months. Although the Eisenhower was in a shipyard being rebuilt almost from the ground up, the Zods managed to piss off not one, but two alien species. Granted, they haven’t done anything since the first engagements, aside from publicly executing Battlemaster HaDo by a firing squad and transmitting it live across the galaxy in Terran standard and Vasudan translations, but knowing they were no longer alone returned the life into many Terrans throughout the GTA. Even the loss of contact with Riviera station at Ross 128 three days ago, attributed to a malfunctioning relay station, couldn’t sour their day. With their heads held high, the Fleet plunged into Subspace, eager to tear into the heart of the PVE.

Only the highest echelons were aware of the Confederate operation and the true reason for the disappearance of some waste material from project Tsunami. What none of the men and women of the strike force knew was that the CNCR Ardor rang alarm bells throughout the entire Vasudan hierarchy, from pilots and crew of the ships that witnessed the event through the convoluted mess of the Vasudan nobility all the way to the Parliament. The Vasudan side of the nodes was now guarded more than ever, with most blockading ships several kilometers from the node, leaving only a few cruisers close to the nodes.

Orbit of Opportunity II

It’s been eleven years since the Mining rights to opportunity-I and Opportunity-II were signed off to the Narix Republic while the Faira took the asteroid mining operations. Since then, many valuable resources were discovered and since the completion of the Opportunity station seven years ago, Narix corporations flooded into the system, dividing up the dwarf planets among themselves and extracting the valuable minerals and ore.

For Argo Natanis, this was the opportunity of a lifetime, as his current contract ended due to the completion of habitation module ‘K’ of the New Frontier station, his small moving company was hired to move cargo between the Opportunity station and eight mining outposts in the Artorias belt. This was just another regular trip he and his co-pilot would spend leaning back in their chairs and letting the autopilot do most of the work. Load the cargo, jump to Naris, cool the drives, jump to the given outpost, dock, unload the cargo, return, dock, repeat.

Argo was just programming the navigation computer with the Naris-Opportunity jump beacon when a jump point of massive proportions formed some two thousand meters ahead of them on a near perpendicular course. The surprise was made complete when the Halcyon emerged at a 20 degree angle and in a slight starboard roll.

Aboard the superdestroyer, Commodore Langara was trying to explain their current predicament to Admiral Zorea.

“The subspace motivators have what, Tarvis?”

“Melted, admiral.” the chief engineer repeated. “So have many of the heat exchangers. We have lost all subspace capability and seven main drives. It appears the dual-stage heat sinks will require a redesign. The drives produced more heat than the heat exchangers could manage, overheating the motivators and in some cases damaging their respective sublight engines.”

“And the remaining nine will get us back to the yard in… four days. I suggest you divide your skeleton crew into shifts and start cutting apart the busted engines as soon as they stop glowing. I’ll alert the assembly that our shakedown run sadly fulfilled its role.”

“Sir? I am looking at one of the exchangers that is not a molten slag, and there is coolant everywhere. It looks like the piping broke. We’ll collect debris and try to jigsaw it back together to see where the failure originated. Can you spare some transports and combat oracles to collect what fell off and give us some hangar space to put it all in?” Casei asked, already outside and on the task, while the Narix DC crews had to wait for the IR radiation to drop a bit. “Sorry we didn’t see it, it looks like the coolant was under so much pressure it went straight to gas. It was over in half a minute.” She added, her tone adequately morose. This was the Worst failure since the Curious.

“I’ve notified the marine commander, he’s sorting the oracles. Use the free storage bays for the reconstruction. Dropships are being prepared. Chins up, everyone. Better it happened now than when we jump to Deneb.”

“Admiral!” the communications officer called, “High ups mentioned something about rear admiral Astra being able to jump us back to the yard. We can dock manually from there.”

“Which would speed up the repairs by a few days. Then the engineers help with the modifications while the rest of us get more accustomed to our new home. Before the shipwrights design this hitch out, we may even get a few days of leave.”

Sirius

“Oho! Ladies, look sharp! The Zods just started moving massive numbers out of the system!” Silver called up, her antennae downright tingling with how much traffic was headed for the node. “Counting two Typhons and at least four older destroyers heading out.”

“Their fleetnet says they are headed for Vasuda. The Terran invasion must have started. I guess that means it is time?” Shadow perked up, flexing her fingers.

“It would seem so.” Rock got up from the chess board. “Let’s ruin someone’s day! Veeeery carefully.”

Already in the cockpit, Shadow laughed. “With two years of recon I know every bolt on those docks. You work on getting us home, allow me to break stuff. I hope you downloaded your books and music, we’re going in cold. Silver, verify this gravity maneuver?”

“Physics check out. This will launch us at the yards at five thousand kliks per second, are you sure you can aim at that speed?” The leader noted.

“It’s the speed needed to beat the reaction time of the defenses. I’ll be launching three bombs almost immediately after we leave the sphere of influence aiming by RCS course corrections. Then we’ll adjust our own heading to fly just out of the blast zone - The RHVCs should allow us to engage any fighters that will try to shoot the bombs down with reasonable lead. The last bomb, assuming these three reach the target, is for getting us home in case the Halcyon isn’t fast enough. Any word from them?” the mad bomber explained.

“Good thing you know every bolt, now you can make sure you rearrange them all!” Pyxis laughed. “Nary a peep from them, I assume they’ll only let us know hours prior to deployment. Meanwhile, we’ll watch for cargo, inconvenient cruisers or other food for the cannons.”

“And fighters, and hope another battlegroup doesn’t jump us by accident. What’s along the escape trajectory? The node, or do we return here?”

“Or do we jump ourselves away as soon as the bombs hit?”

“I believe we should attempt to drift cold as long as we are not detected before we jump. First place you look for a bomber is around the ground zero, not five kilometers further every second. Remember, the Zods don’t know about the Muons and what they can do, they will look for conventional bombers. As soon as we’re clear, we head towards the Halcyon, so node it is. Worst case scenario we”ll have to fight for fifteen minutes and then break a blockade.” Silver highlighted the general idea, “Then again, in the original plan the yards should have been dust twelve months ago, so expect anything.” she snorted, turning her bomber on.

“I’m not a fan of the ‘fight for fifteen minutes’ part, can you believe it? Though I’m sure some of love the prospect.” Pyxis muttered, taking her bomber outside. “Farewell, chunk of rock in the middle of nowhere.” she waited for Silver to take off, ready to follow.

Sirius Imperial Shipyard

The bombs were launched, and Silver was tracking their progress carefully. So far they were on course, both bombs and bombers. Hopefully, with only needing to activate the engines for the course correction far away from here, their approach was undetected. Thirty minutes to go.

“Foreman! Early warning has detected three small asteroids heading for the station! They are too fast to intercept effectively with the stations defenses!” A vasudan technician warned.

“How large and where will they hit?” The foreman asked.

“They are the roughly fifty centimeters in diameter, and headed towards the control station, the PVD Hammer construction and the supply depot! No visual! Impact in under five minutes!”

“Sound the Evacuation! Inform the garrison!”

“There is no one that can intercept or launch enough fighters in time!”

“This is Shipmaster KhuFu. Pray for our souls in the afterlife. PVC Aves, signing off.”

Shadow was listening to them panic on the public channel with glee, right until the Shipmaster spoke. “Nooo, no you sand eating BASTARD! Don’t you dare!” she shrieked as the cruiser jumped in the path of the bombs and promptly went up in flames. “

“Well, so much for that plan. This is a shipyard, there has to be some way to refuel and rearm the ships. There’s a freight depot on the other side of the station. Reckon we can get a scan of some of it, see if they have some spare warheads or a fuel dump in place?”

“Wait! Wait for it!” Shadow shouted, watching the quarters the cruiser split into drift towards the shipyard that was now scrambling everything that flown to evacuate.

Not a bit of it. The hundreds of tons of cruiser debris plowed through, slowly, but surely. “Well, I am not going to complain. The shipyard is fucked, that is the biggest metal harmonica I have ever seen.” the bomber pilot snarked, seeing the pylons of the dock break and impact into each other. The control station now featured one of the Aten”s arms stuck pointy side in, also out of commission. The only target still usable was the supply depot. “Shame most of the people inside are going to live rather than burn up. What about the depot?”

“Forget it. The entire node blockade just jumped, likely to mount a rescue. We won't get a better chance to reach Vega. Keep the bomb for what's on the other side and let”s go.” Silver noted, giving Rock the jump location.

“The entire blockade?” Pyxis almost found it hard to believe. “Either they are dumber than expected, or we were wrong and our gods love us.”

“Hah! That's a thought. Or maybe the Vasudan gods love us more. Or maybe two destroyers are holding the other side of the node and will splash us like flies. In either case, looks like they noticed the bombs but not us, maybe an asteroid collision avoidance notified them, and we were not on collision course. In any case,let's not push our luck and get out of here, shall we?” Silver suggestordered and the four bombers jumped away.

Vega, CFFG Independence

“What do you mean, the Halcyon isn’t coming, ma’am? Those four are going to be hunted like animals once they make their move, if they aren’t already! We promised them a pickup!” Commander Mirai exclaimed, not at all happy with the news Rear Admiral Astra called over with.

“Calm down, commander. I agree with the sentiment, but the Assembly won’t let me commit the Warrior even if I am not on it. I asked. Not without knowing what is on the other side, and Mace is the only group that ever went there. Fortunately, they said nothing of the other ships, likely assuming we won’t be mad enough to send those. But answer me this: If you had an Ardor blow up in your face, what would be your reaction?” Astra asked, having Linsis, Mirai and Auraxis patched in to the conversation.

“Mine the node approaches. At the cost of sounding like a Vasudan: the Warrior, or any ship for that matter, is a lot of materials and many crew, whereas Mace wing are only four pilots and four bombers.” Auraxis chimed in, “We’ve picked them because of anyone available, they stood the greatest chance of not only completing their mission, but living to tell the tale. They went there voluntarily and aware the risks. And as much as I hate to say this, we don’t even what their situation is. Should the worst come to pass, is risking a ship, or several ships and their crews, worth discovering Muon debris?”

“That depends on what you consider an acceptable risk.” Mirai chimed in. If only to get a look at the Vasudan reaction to the Ardor. Give the Halcyon some intelligence for when it finally deploys. Two frigates, all power to jump drives and shields, wakejump in, let the oracles have a look, pick up Mace if we can, wakejump out.” the Faira noted, using her hands as models for the frigates absentmindedly.

“That could work, though If a cruiser bomb just blew up in my face so hard it blew the sand out from between my teeth, I’d definitely shore up the defenses, especially at the node where three different species can come from. We could find ourselves staring down four Typhons ahead and two of the older ones in our backs, alongside the aforementioned minefield.” Linsis scratched his chin, ignoring the Vasudan cruisers that would be present in such a hypothetical blockade. “But given how many lives their efforts will save in the long run, we owe them at least an extraction. If we’re going through with this, the crew of the Crossbow volunteers.”

“I suppose it all depends on whether they could identify the explosion and an antimatter bomb. You can not defend against that in any way but to space out your defenses. In either case, the frigates can, in worst case secanrio, jump back before the Vasudans even aim their guns, and we’ll at least have an image of how the other side of the node looks like.” Astra nodded.

“If the Crossbow wants to go, Independence will as well go recover it’s crew.” Mirai agreed.

Deneb

“Uuuuuh, problem, no Halcyon!” Shadow grunted as they emerged on the other side of the node. “Buggers sure got spooked by the Ardor though, look at them fanned around. Can we thread the needle between their firing spheres?”

“No. Wouldn’t matter, they noticed us, incoming fighters fifteen kliks ahead, launching from one of the typhons. We can not blaze through the fighter screen either, fanned out like this, even the Zod drives can nanojump. I don't want to become a smear on an Aten’s hull like our bombs. Looks like we'll have to punch through! Form up, Mace!” Silver ordered, plotting the course and starting a warm up cycle on the guns.

“No Halcyon, but no Narix debris either. At least some good, or not completely bad news.”

“And here I was, thinking mounting extra shields was wasted effort.” Rock rubbed her hand stogether. “Hey, ugly yellow bastards, have you seen a superdestroyer by chance?” she armed the laser guided missiles, assigning them to the four turrets closest to them to punch a hole, set her turret free on the fighters, herself targeting one of them, waiting for them to get just a little closer…

Several Vasudan fighters fell apart with no apparent reason far beyond the range of Vasudan fighter weaponry. As the Vasudans raced to close the distance to avoid being picked off like range targets, one of the specs sensors identified as an unidentified heavy bomber lit up with the trails of dumbfire rocket engines. The Vasudans scattered, avoiding the rocket barrage without problems. But when they returned to formation, the bombers were past them.

“It worked once, but I’ve only got 18 rockets left and another group is launching from the typhon.”

“We need to dispose of the destroyer, every other ship is too far for intercept, but we can’t fight off 120 pieces of strikecraft! Silver, permission to do something insane?” Shadow asked, already setting her bomber up.

“Wait! Incoming form our side!” Silver shouted.

A mindspace vortex opened at the end of the node and spat the two frigates into normal space. “Full reverse!” Mirai ordered, just in case there were any bombs present. “Mace wing, are you there, please respond! Oracles, get a lay of the land quickly!”

“Jump prep complete, standing by for jump.” the Crossbow reported. “We’ve got four destroyers, at least thirty deployed fighters and it looks like more are on their way.” It took the Vasudans a few moments shake off the surprise to do something about the two pocket destroyers in their front yard.

“Crazy bastards, what are they thinking?” Pyxis asked no one in particular at the sight of the two frigates. “Not that I’m complaining. Full burn to the closest frigate and hope they open in time?”

“The frigates won’t last that long. Get ready to scuttle your bombers.” Silver ordered, “Shadow, whatever you want to do, do it quickly. Independence, we are NO-GO for landing. Can the Marine jumpers bring aboard just us? We’ll time delay the bomber’s self destruct charges.”

“Master of Arms says you are GO fo combat extraction, activate your disaster beacons and we’ll jump you on board.” Mirai replied, having confirmed with her subordinate.

“Not yet!” Shadow said, pulling up near Pyxis who was closest to her. The cover of her ejection pod blown upwards and the mad bastard jumped onto the other bomber, maglocking herself on. “For the love of us both, don’t let your shield drop!” Shadow laughed over the comms, guiding her bomber remotely on full burn. The shield of her bomber took a beating form the escorting fighter wings, but with 5% remaining, Shadow got close enough and let the RHVC loose on the Typhon’s fighter bay doors, blasting an opening and guiding the bomber in, before promptly activating the last fusion bomb. On the outside, the bomb would have probably dropped the destroyer solid 20% hull integrity. On the inside and in a fighter bay, it made the typhon explode like a watermelon. “Ready for extraction!”

Somewhere on the Crossbow, Virgo was proud of her sister. Pyxis did as asked, having already been on an approach vector to the Independence, steered slightly off course and funneled as much power to the shields as they would allow. Once the deed was done, she turned the bomber so the top was facing the frigates and opened the hatch. “Hello! Sixteen seconds.” she waved at Shadow and launched herself away from the bomber, activating her distress beacon. In less than half a minute, her ‘Engineer’ ceased to exist. Now it was up to the marine jumpers. She did not at all like the idea of orbiting Deneb just in her suit, wondering who would find her first.

Four hops later, Mace wing appeared on the bridge, Silver spotting a new gouge in one plate of her suit when a vasudan laser grazed her, but all were alive and in one piece. “Crossbow, now!” Mirai shouted as she watched the Independence’s shield flicker and collapse under the bombardment. Moments later, the ships were on their way back to Vega, the Independence groaning ominously where some of the shots landed. Only when the rattling stopped did Mirai allow herself a breath to cool down. “Both ships all stations, report!”

“The Zods took objection to one of our turrets.” Someone reported.

“All is in order. What about our unsung heroes?” Linsis wanted to know, having been too occupied with the typhon and some of its more persistent pilots. Shame those bombers couldn’t have been brought aboard, they would’ve made nice in a museum. “Also, this marks the destruction of a second typhon class, both at the hands of the NFC.”

“Third, actually.” Taurus said in a ‘business as usual’ tone, having overheard the transmission.

“On top of an extra Aten, one station and one destroyer sized shipyard. Sadly the Zods are not new to self sacrifice and we were unable to destroy the nearby cargo depot. Full loss of strikecraft, no pilot losses. Not that I mind, Commanders, you were a starsend, but we were expecting someone else.” Silver reported.

“We’ll debrief once we’re safely in Vega, or in Transfer undergoing repairs. Well done, Mace. Go get some rest before CFN and NCN start bothering you,” Mirai smiled.

“Oh dear, I heard about Narix reporters from someone from the CFCR Durable. I’m gonna go and hide.” Pyxis shook her head.

Narix Confederate Newscast

First Confederate scouts to Vasudan systems have returned
A daring operation came to a dramatic end as four Faira pilots, inserted into Deneb two years ago, returned home in the evening hours of 8th / I. Despite the setbacks to the extraction plan, the Strike Fleet quickly adapted. The CFFG Independence and CFFG Crossbow jumped to Deneb and retrieved the four yet unnamed pilots, confirming the destruction of Vasudan Sirius shipyards and two Typhon-class destroyers! We will bring you further details as they are revealed.

Deployment of the CNSD Halcyon delayed
The Halcyon suffered an undisclosed engine-related failure during its trial runs in Naris. The spokesman for Silaris Yards stated the repairs will be complete before the end of the month.

Unraveling the Ring’s mysteries
A large science convoy arrived at the RI Ring early this morning. The Inventor Fleet has declared its study and understanding their top priority within the confines of their budget.

Confederate Fleetnet News

Operation Thresher declared a failure
Only a few hours after launch, the terrans have declared Operation Thresher a failure, having lost one entire fleet during an attempt to breach the blockade, with no Vasudan ship losses. With the Terrans failing to keep up the pressure until the Halcyon is ready and the early extraction of our black operations bomber wing, the invasion has been put on hold, new date pending.

New front?
The Terrans have, in no certain terms, notified us of one of their systems’ hub installations going dark for longer time than it would take to bring backups online in case of a comm relay failure. Whether this is a Vasudan attack through a newly discovered node or something else is yet to be confirmed.

Fleetwide Vasudan database update
With the Mace wing having actively engaged Vasudan targets, the database have been updated with both ship weak points, applicable strategies and behavioral patterns of both vasudan strikecraft and ships. All military personnel are required to review the new content within five days.
NFC command group teleconference, shortly after Mace wing”s databurst was received…

“Well, it is quite the deviation from the plan, but having had time to think on this, I think it actually suits our purposes rather well.” Cygnus said from on board of the Explorer. “ We can now pressure the Terrans to launch the invasion they want to launch anyway a few weeks before Mace”s attack. That way we are guaranteed to knock some Vasudan ships out from the fight, whether the Terrans succeed or not. What do you think, admirals?” the Faira proposed a plan.

“While I have some reservations about using the Earthers like this,” Libra grunted from the ‘Hexus, “it is as you said - They are set to throw themselves into the Vasudan blockade regardless of what we do. Like this, their sacrifice will at least have a meaning and lasting impact. All that assuming either the Singularity or the Halcyon will be ready. Will they?”

“I’m afraid the Singularity will still be far from operational readiness.” Astra chimed in from the Warrior,” Were we to devote all resources to the Halcyon, we might make the window, but I stress that the Halcyon can not stop a Lucifer class, and two years is time enough to encounter the Ancients.” The ascendant worried.

“We could use it to our advantage on more than one front.” Admiral Lindres noted from the Amare, “They are bound to suffer casualties. Any form of support or relief prior or following the attack will buy us some good will. And if not, the argument remains and it would paint them as ungrateful bastards.”

“I for one am looking for peaceful relations. Compared to any of the newly discovered races, we are a tiny nation even combined as the Confederation.” Libra argued, “Besides, goodwill gestures require something to be given, and we were concerned about material shortage.”

“Unless the help comes as intellectual property…” Astra hypothesized. “Mace wing suggested selling the block A Muon design to the terrans, and they have resources in spades anyway. They, much like us, have trouble consuming them fast enough, so we might even strike a deal for some industrial help with the Halcyon, and they should take it, because they will be able to build more firepower for the same man hours. Opinions?”

“I doubt they would agree to having their workers shipped off to an uncharted system by a race they’ve just encountered.” Zorea chimed in. “But I agree about the Muons. They should be able to build enough to be of considerable help in their attack, especially after Mace wing’s performance. What do we ask in return?”

“We can have them build components or subassemblies for the Halcyon. Keeps our systems and most of the tech secret, but helps us the most in what we don't have: Factories. The industrial might Earth has to have to keep up a war in space for 14 years has to be colossal.” Astra noted.

“Very well, Admiral Libra, please get on the exchange with Ambassador Taranis. Back to the report Mace wing got through: I am considering assigning several of our scientists to aid in project Tsunami. If we contribute, perhaps the Terrans will grant us access to their accelerator. We should also start constructing our own, perhaps at Transfer”Juno? We will eventually want to switch to antimatter power generation sooner or later.” Cygnus proposed.

“Although Transfer’Juno is well defended, it is also the first known stop should any force invade our system. The Opportunity system has several planetside sites that could be used. Placing it in the Garden system would put it close to both Garden and Naris, meaning workers wouldn’t be an issue.” Ascari noted.

“If we’re worried about invaders, we might as well put it somewhere behind the Naris-Garden node, given its unique properties, not to mention the Defender Fleet.” The respective fleet’s commander added.

“Opportunity sounds reasonable. Well defended, everything solid mined in system, gasses one jump away in the Nebula, far from population centers in case of a containment breach. Very well, shall we order this structure in the private sector? I believe they can deliver in sufficient quality and state run shipyards are better tasked with shipbuilding.” Cygnus suggested, “Anything further to discuss?”

Asteroid base ‘In Ardor clad’, 12 months later

“Good grief. The Zods are still doing absolutely nothing of interest whatsoever. Ferry the rocks in. Melt them down. Build ships. No fleets coming through, no unusual classes being built, no military exercise, hell, not even a good terrorist attack.” Shadow complained as soon as she parked, having returned to the safety of their cavernous home.

The rock they were using as a hideout was as barren as a desert, but it had a large natural cave that fit the four bombers. With some assistance from the engineer, they even carved a bit of home into the walls.

Two months ago, Shadow found a derelict Vasudan transport they stripped for parts and set up a listening post. “Anything good on the radio?”

“No hails from either the Halcyon or the Singularity, so not really. The translator is a piece of garbage, I’ve been trying to learn Sandspeak, but it makes no sense.” Silver groaned from one of the salvaged chairs they put out for recharging their bodies. “Listen to this though - Their fleetnet has some terran stuff on it - We should put this into our EW suite instead of the other stuff we used.” she said playing the track.

Dark and grim,
your fate will begin
In the fire and the pain,
God will end on this Doomsday

“If that shouldn’t be the anthem of this wing, I don’t know what is.”

“Looks like at least some Terran artists might find their way onto the Narix market after all.” Taurus grinned. “But seriously, not even a fighter sweep of the system? Someone blew up a cruiser at your blockade, the same someone that captured two dozen of your people, they have to know something is up, no? Unless sending a cruiser bomb through and then doing nothing is normal here. Maybe we should’ve set the transport on a collision course with one of the shipyards instead, take care of that terrorist attack.”

“At least they’re predictable.” Pyxis, the voice of reason in the group, tried to push the positive things into light. “Two cruisers and several fighter wings on patrol at all times, a destroyer shows up to resupply every few days. Any attack is a matter of timing. Have you by chance found the melted Typhon at any of the salvage yards? I’m kind of curious what’s become of it.” The Terrans confirmed it was a new class, and losing one in such a way could’ve been a big blow to morale. If that could apply to fanatics.

“Well, as far as they know, all of the people beyond the Vega node are dead. Besides, who knows what we did to them since. First we blew up a cruiser stuffed with antimatter in their face, and if the rear admiral stayed at the helm of planning this offensive, it probably got worse from there.” Shadow pointed out, pulling up a chair and starting to decouple the extremities of her suit to soak up some of the sun.

“Aye, and each one of the resupplied destroyers promptly turned around and went either to Alpha Centauri or Deneb. I counted four individual ships in each, and there might be more. The Halcyon’s shield better work, or they are going to bleed, even if those destroyers are starved after we hit the shipyards.” Silver said darkly. “Makes me wonder what else did our side build. Think they built more Warriors? Or perhaps a civilian ship? I’ve had enough with the lottery, I want some maternity leave after this deployment damnit. Even if I have to build a house on that wet rock the Narix like. You were there working on the block C, right? Any arid and hot places that are somewhat bearable?” The leader asked Pyxis.

“If you like sand, sure, some deserts in the lowlands. But build a houseboat, or your kids will hate your antennae. Still above comfortable humidity though. Or dig in at the mountaintops and run constant life support for your cave.”

“No doubt Lancer fleet has a few new Privateers. If we pull this off, Asking for a suite at the Opportunity station might not be out of the question. And that’s run by the Narix, so moving there wouldn’t bother our resources.”

“Think they aren’t sure where else we can come from? They didn’t know about the Vega-Transfer node until we arrived. I’d certainly be looking over my shoulder, just remember the panic search when the Ancients showed up.”

“Heh, yeah. They scrambled every oracle in the entire nation to plug those holes. Not fun times.” Silver snickered, “I don’t feel anything here though, and I don’t think the Terrans are too keen on letting us into their systems to do detailed scan, because of course they aren’t. What else might we find? And wouldn’t we claim the systems we discovered? Everyone is greedy for space. The Narix weren’t too keen on it then either.”

“If you ask me, we should just get everything we have and shove it through the Vega - Deneb node. Don’t tell me that three Meteors and a Warrior couldn’t break through. Then we would go to Vasuda prime, turn it into a ball of glass, and we can start arming for the real war to come when more ANcients show up.” Shadow grunted.

“I’d be with you, but you can only shove so many ships through a node at once. Otherwise, it’ll be chaos on the other side.” Pyxis noted. “If the Terrans let us through their systems, we could launch a two-pronged offensive to Deneb AND Vasuda. That would probably overload the Vasudan temples. So many prayers, wooh.”

“You people need to go through officer courses. When you see the logistics required for that, especially if you would like our destroyers to fire for more than two battles, you’d know why we’re waiting for the one big ship. Aside form the fact that the Singularity can wipe out life on Vasuda prime with one shot, I bet we’ve been building transports, freighters and escort fighters non-stop since this war started and it’s still not enough.” Silver snorted.

“Neither the Terrans nor the Vasudans seem to be aware of the Ancient’s existence, at least the Terrans weren’t until we warned them. Does that make it better, or worse? Either they’ve packed up and left since they wiped out the Relics, hence why they haven’t been seen, or they’re just that good at avoiding detection. They’ve hidden a small battlegroup in Transfer, can you imagine if we found that every five systems? Or worse, woke them all up at once?”

“I don’t think it’s an If, I think it’s a when. The relics were no pushovers, they could create jump nodes, and the Hammerhead is the strongest ship of it’s class we have seen so far. The Warrior is treading that line, but again, when you count with the logistics, it falls way short. And the Ancients defeated them!” Silver summarized her thoughts.

“I can’t wait to scrap with another Demon. That old cripple was no challenge at all, and the capships ate the cake. I want one for my own scoresheet!” Shadow growled hungrily.

“Eight thousand years is a lot of time. Who knows what could’ve happened to them? Maybe they’ve all died of some freak tech plague and we just finished those that were isolated from it? And don’t forget they only showed up after we entered the system. Think a species like that would ignore fourteen years of warfare, if any of the theories are correct?”

“Shadow, what the fuck is wrong with you, honestly?” Pyxis shook her head. “If I never see them again until my death I’ll die a happy Faira.”

“Let me flip this one around-” Shadows said as she got up from the chair and walked over to Pyxis, “-Why did you join the military?” she said, seemingly towering over the engineer all of the sudden. “I joined because I love the game. I came to fight! Because I love to fight!” she explained, and strangely, Pyxis would feel a chill running down her spine and the urge to drop everything and run away, as far from this creature as possible.

“Inventors, right?” Silver snickered, observing the spectacle.

Up until Shadow’s mindspace spectacle, Pyxis was stretched out in her seat in the most homely way possible, in small part to taunt the hot-headed pilot.

When her foot stopped shaking, she returned to the question. “You may like the game, I like the gear. Would I be responsible for the first atmospheric craft since the exodus if I wasn’t in the military? I don’t mind a fight, I just like to think I’m sane enough to NOT want contact with civilisation-ending aliens. We already have two and a half genocidal species on the list.”

“Alright, sit down, the enemy is out there, not in here.” Taurus interjected.

“I know I know. I’m just bored sitting on this empty rock. First the recon flights cut it, but now I see all those targets and I have to wait.” Shadow sighed, “It doesn’t help that the only recon ship we have is the Commander, and we’ve had our control interfaces and seats tailored to our preferences, so I have to make use of Silver’s insane setup. She flies by entering vectors and a whole bunch of math like it’s a capship!” she pointed an accusatory finger on the wing leader.

“What, really ma’am?” Taurus grinned, having been ‘raised’ mostly in Narix-based cockpits. “I thought better of you. Doesn’t it take all the joy of flight away and turn it into mundane work?”

“Well, at least some of our bombers are capable of flying in atmosphere, where stealth is doable. Do the Vasudans have any presence on the planets here? If done right, we could strike there without being detected to stave off boredom. And then spend months hiding, doing absolutely nothing while the Vasudans search the system.”

“Yeah not helping.” Shadow snorted. “Anybody up for a spar? Or even that terran game? I’m dying of boredom out here. Next time you brainiacs decide to launch a pet project, put a fabricator on the result, okay?” the pilot complained.

“Well, we could kill some time brainstorming a design for missions such as these. The Muon is a good frame but we had to modify it as well. There was talk of a recon sub class, although I think such a ship would be a class of it’s own…” Silver suggested.

“Hm, suit fabricators… Hmmm… Right, recon. It’s as good an entertainment as any. The Narix had a bomber that had its own crew cabin, but that’s too sluggish. Problem is: we essentially want to combine the Commander, the Engineer’s storage space, the fuel tanks from the Warhound and add a fabricator. Maybe a second seat to spread workload and allow working in shifts?”

“Definitely a two seater. Because it’s going to have to have more turrets than the Muon. Maybe even drop the fixed primary. Three turrets in a triangle setup, with similar engine setup flipped, like the Singularity? Good field of view for the turrets, full fire front and rear, two thirds anywhere else. Where to put the bombs though…” Silver thought out loud.

“If you put strong primaries on it, you might not need bombs. The RHVC is a good start, but it’s going to start struggling killing corvettes and forget about anything bigger, you are lucky to kill subsystems. Plasma might not give you too many shots for a clip, but you only need a ram scoop to resupply. That alone is a very strong argument.” Shadow chipped in.

“Either that, or you could only have primaries on the turrets and put a big internal bank in the nose. Or any big gun, really, the plasma sounds good. Do we bother with atmospheric capability? Probably not given the shape we agreed upon, yes? It would be nice if this ship could call back home once in a while, relay information back as it is discovered. Without being detected, of course. Ideas?”

“How about an AI to aid the crew? Plotting jumps, controlling turrets, electronic warfare, smart autopilot, that sort of thing.”

“Narix are useless for these kind of missions, right? If we can fit in an AI core, why not. With a gunner though, I don’t think that would be needed, and one would have to be an oracle anyway. I’d rather have a small secondary bay for TAGs and the like.” Silver suggested.

“This will have to be built around a fabricator anyway, can it possibly repair it’s own armor? The nanites are already there…” Shadow mumbled. A healing ship and a ram scoop would eliminate all need for support. “We don’t have any Intersystem comm system that is undetectable because it uses the node. But we wouldn’t need a broad range… Wasn’t there a theory about a point to point transmitter using some sort of quantum physics?”

“I think I read something like that, but don’t quote me on it. And with the fabricator serving as a self repair system, the only spare parts you have to carry around are to fix a broken fabricator. How big are we talking? Definitely bigger than the Muon, but by how much?”

“About the EW suite, what would you want there? Comm interception, maybe scrambler buoys?” Pyxis got a minor case of ‘The Casei’. “With the fabricator, you just need the resources, and you’re likely going to be hiding in an asteroid field anyway.”

“If we’re expanding on the fabricator so much, why not just coat the armor with a nano skin? The ship is already going to be expensive as a cruiser, so only a few will ever be made, might as well cram them up with the best stuff. Can a bomber sized fusion powerplant run all of that gear though? Keep in mind that with an increase in size, you also go up with the shield input.” Silver lined out the limits. “We’re doing this wrong, we’re already making plans and we didn’t even have a clear picture of what it’s supposed to do. Damn, this shit is harder than it looks. What is the mission profile for these?”

“I thought long-term recon and the occasional precision strike, you? It’s going to be big, what’s stopping us from mounting two smaller reactors rather than a big one? Then you can even perform maintenance and while the other one is still up and running. And if something goes so horribly wrong one fails, the other keeps the fabricator working.”

“A few more minutes and it’s going to need a berth rather than a hangar. We should start writing it down so we don’t get completely lost in it. It could be somewhat simplified by replacing punchout capsules with fixed cockpits. Situations like these, nobody’s coming to help and getting captured isn’t too appealing.”

“Well, occasional precision strike is not what we aim to do here, we intend to fuck their shit up, no?” Shadow shrugged. “Which means less stealth and more bombs.”

“I thought we agreed on the biggest, baddest gun the galaxy has ever seen and ditch the bombs?”

“Yes, but she’s underlying the problem, we can’T have that and stealth. Let’s agree on the specification first…”

11 months earlier - Naris system, Ignis, Armed Forces Detention Facility

Several cells in one of the detention facility’s wings were quickly retrofitted to be more accommodating to Vasudan life according to interior of the captured cruisers. If there was much to make ‘more accommodating’ about four beds, four lockers, a table, an air vent, bathroom and light. The Vasudans arrived by a wing of plunderers straight to the facility’s closed hangar, but numerous airlocks and fully-suited personnel were indicative of atmosphere that couldn’t support life. To an observant individual, it would quickly become clear that one of the cell’s walls was in fact a gate, its purpose also quite clear. The captive pilots and cruiser crews were spread across thirty cells by four, with Battlemaster HaDo and the flight leader in their own, segregated cell. Each corridor had four guards, clad in black and red riot armor, on patrol in eight hour shifts, none of whom were particularly secretive about their disdain for the Vasudans.

“What do you think about our captors, wingmaster?” One of the pilots fortunate enough to avoid the impending execution asked of his wing leader turned fellow captive with equally limited rights. “What are their intentions?”

“They are feeding us decent food and while spartan, the accommodations are closer to a boot camp bunk than a prison. Ii believe we will live. They have in fact declared the squadronmaster and battlemaster responsible. Considering how many casualties they suffered, it is merciful. As for how we will spend our remaining days, being put to work, I imagine.

“Quiet, cultists! Step away from the door, hands over your face.” A Narix guard entered, watched by another from the corridor. “You.” he tapped the wingmaster’s shoulder, “File says you’re their wing leader, yes? You’re summoned for interrogation. Get out, walk fast and no one gets hurt.

The wingmaster compiled without a word, although with not much haste. The Vasudans could probably toss these creatures around if they so desired despite their powered suits, but the weapons made that a nonsensical prospect. They all saw what their shipboard projectile weapons could do - applied on a small scale, he did not need to see them used.

The interrogation room was about four by four meters, lit dim-orange and painted battleship gray with black tiled floor. The door was in the right corner of the room. A mirror spanned the right wall near the ceiling, overlooking a metal table with one simple chair for the interrogated party and two comfortable ones on the opposite side of the table. The interrogation officers were already comfortably seated with cups of steaming liquid in their hands. Upon the Vasudan’s entrance, they set them down and woke up their tablets. The guards pointed the wingmaster at the free chair and assumed their place at the door, a click indicating it had been remotely locked. The interrogators switched on small table lamps, several magnitudes brighter than the dim ambient lighting, pointed at the vasudan.

The room was about the same as could be expected, albeit the Vasudan equivalent would be filled with hard to breathe humid air and the interrogated person would be kept in the dark to keep them sense deprived. The orange lighting was strange, the wingmaster wondered if it was an aesthetic choice.

The officer on the Vasudan’s right hand side spoke up first in a calm tone. “We want you to recount the raid on our depot, minute by minute, don’t leave anything out.” Of course, they had no way of knowing if the vasudan was or wasn’t lying, but maybe he would cooperate willingly.

“Wingmaster KheFrehm, Aries wing, Smite squadron, PVD Typhon. Service number 0101310201.” was all the Vasudan said to their inquiry.

So they trained their soldiers in a similar way. “The one we captured before the ultimatum was more useful.” The interrogator on the left shared with his comrade. “How about I just kick this thing out the airlock and see what it does? We’ve plenty more of the animals to talk with, for whatever good it will do.”

“Not yet.” the right interrogator shook his head. “Look, for the next several months at least, that is in the past. Right now, you’re V-052. There is no Smite squadron, or PVD Typhon, for that matter. You and your comrades are all that’s left, and it is up to you how many survivors of this Smite squadron will be returned home.” As right was talking, left called up gun camera footage of one of the Ira’s turret cameras from the engagement, starting about two seconds prior to the ship’s destruction, showing the Typhon’s final moments. Left continued: “Usually, the Republic does not execute prisoners, not unless our own have been mistreated first. That being said, you and your wingmen did fire upon unidentified vessels without provocation.”

“Not sure about the backwards mess you call ‘culture’, but here in the civilized space, that’s bad news for you.” right interrupted, seemingly losing his patience.

“To put things plainly, there are two ways this can go. One, you answer the questions, get sent back to your kinsmen within an hour and one day, if your leaders see it fit to talk peace instead of insults, you may even be repatriated. Certainly after the war is over. Two-”

“Two, you continue doing what you’re doing and the Inventor Fleet will receive a shipment of test subjects.”

“Given that we are at a state of war with your species, your are facing the wrath of three species over the pride of your leaders. WIthout cooperation, there is not much the intelligence corps can do to help you in your situation.”

“Yeah, bioweapons are hard to aim. Deploy too high up over a city aaaand...”

”A nasty new biological weapon would be bad for your people. Think of all the unnecessary dead on Vasuda Prime. Are their lives worth this posturing?”

“You preach of civilisation, yet you would commit mass genocide. Regarding me and my wingmen, we will be judged by higher power for our sins. We followed orders issued by the squadron leader, and that is that. Your wrath on us is just, of that there is little doubt. Do with us that did you wrong as you see fit. But threatening my homeworld will get you nowhere, and only prove you are no better than the Terrans.” The Vasudan answered. “They tried for longer and failed.”

Behind the wall, a Faira telepath that has been learning the patterns of Vasudan mind since the first specimen arrived was paying close attention, linked to the comm suites of the two interrogating Narix. “He is content with his fate, frighteningly so. I believe it is the faith responsible. According to Ambassador Taranis, their fighting men are honored in the afterlife based on the worthiness of their death, so speaking is counterproductive for him.” she noted how the Vasudans emotional state was. “He is thinking of his family… KheSu, wife. KheDo, child.” she noted the names, perhaps it would be of some use. “Get him to think of home, maybe we can get a location too, use it to pressure him?”

“Terrans? Hah!” the left officer laughed. “You’re comparing a combustion engine generator to a fusion reactor here.”

“Mass genocide, reducing the enemy’s recruitment capability, it depends on the point of view. A simple pilot such as you couldn’t possibly understand.” The interrogators disabled their translators for a moment and leaned closer to each other.

“This is the reason we didn’t try converting the Crillists all those years ago. Once the mind is corrupted at a young age, there is no going back.”

“Do we call it off? We still have a few groups left, we can try a different approach.”

“Not yet. Let’s see if we can use the family, but I’m almost skeptical.”

Reenabling the translators, right turned back to the Vasudan. “We don’t blame you and your wingmen, the order came from someone else. What I do find weird is why no one thought to ask a simple question. We’ve seen Terran ships. Our cruiser could be mistaken, but the Fiara ship? Not one of you though something was odd?”

“Or do your leaders want dumb drones instead of independently-thinking pilots?”

The Vasudan sighed. “If I could access our targeting computer, I could explain. The Faira Ship is uncannily similar to a Terran design used about seven years ago as a military transport. The squadron leader, likely acting on the belief that Terrans were the only alien species present in the system, ordered the attack believing the Terrans brought the older ships out of mothball.” the wing leader finally shared, likely somewhat reassured that his head was not on the block. What he thought also matched what the squadron leader said.

“Quite an expensive misunderstanding, considering it’s cost you four destroyers already AND thrown you into a worse war than before.” left stated almost sympathetically. Nothing compared to what lurks out there. he thought, but hasn’t said anything.

The Vasudan looked uncertain for a second. “Some on the ship were preaching the destroyers prophesied in the scrolls have arrived in the form of the Faira. I write it off to despair at seeing the best our newest ship class could throw at them being easily absorbed by the energy barrier it possessed, but the scrolls are based on decoded writings of an extinct race that visited our homeworld when our species was in its infancy. I believe that t0hey speak of something much worse. I can not tell you how our leaders would react, but from the safety of the parliament building, I have little faith that our leaders will seek peace without further losses. Now I believe I have said much more than I should have, and do not have much more to tell in either case.” the wing leader finished.

“These scrolls you speak of.” left leaned a little closer, “How old are they? Is it close or upwards of… eight thousand years?” He hoped the Faira in the observation room could get something from his reaction. After finding old Faira writing all over the Hammerhead’s systems, he had a hunch the relics might be more everpresent than they thought.

“I can not tell you. The originals are guarded better than the Emperor himself. To my knowledge, they must be older than our writing, so older than five thousand years. If they were ever dated… you would have to find a grand preacher at least, someone this high in the church might know.” the pilot said.

“He is honest.” the Faira shared, “See if you can get him to write something down, draw a likeness of the characters of the originals, something that we could match to the relic script.”

The Vasudan seemed more cooperative since being reassured of his safety, maybe it would be worth trying to reconsider their approach to fanatical ones, as threats did not seem to faze them. He’s shared more than he possibly knew. Guarding scrolls more than the emperor meant that either the emperor wasn’t that important to the empire’s function or that targeting religious sites could be a viable strategy.

“Would you recognize the symbols if you saw them?” right found a blank sheet of paper in one of the folders. “Can you draw some of them? Doesn’t matter if it’s just a few individual symbols.”

“Twelve of the ancient characters are used as heraldry of the twelve noble families.” The Vasudan said, drawing the given sigils. While slightly different, they would be a loose match for those on the Hammerhead. “How exactly we came upon them is known only by the Speaker of the Church and the Emperor. We know they were on an alien structure of some sort, but noone will be able to tell you if it was a building, ship or writing in blood on a cave wall.” The Vasudan shared.

“This is a problem.” The telepath mentioned, “If their faith is based on an actual thing, then no matter how hard we try, good luck to us getting rid of it. Every faction who wavers will be back in the fold and all they have to do is bring those artifacts out of storage and show them around.” The Faira summed, “Should we inform the Admiralty?”

While right was instructing one of the guards what to do with the Vasudan’s scribbled symbols, left responded to the telepath. “We might not have to get rid of it. We might be able to use it. After all, we are in possession of a Relic destroyer in working order, although with basic understanding of it. I’m confident in saying we know more about the Relics than the Vasudans do. But if they found Relic ruins or a derelict ship, there’s no telling what they could have learned from them. I don’t like the idea of RHVCs in Vasudan hands. Shall we wrap this up given this unexpected turn of events? At least until the high ups make their minds up about this?”

“Well, this was an interesting chat. Guard, escort the wingmaster to the transport and bring in the next one in eight minutes, we have a few new questions to ask.”
Vega system, CFFG Independence

With the course of action for the immediate future being ‘Halt in Vega’, Astra made her way on the Independence. Time came to tell them why their frigate group was organized to operate independently of both the Warrior and the Singularity. “Captain Auraxis, I was wondering if you could spare me a few hours of your time. I have a mission to discuss.” she said as she walked to the CnC.

Jumping to her feet, Auraxis gave Astra a salute. “You don’t have to ask, sir, that’s what ranks are for. Shall we go somewhere private?” she asked at the mention of ‘few hours’, expecting a two plus month patrol.

Nodding, Astra let auraxis lead the way. Once they were seated, the rear admiral started by asking a question: “Have you ever wondered, why is it that in this fleet, your group is organized to be reporting directly to me, and not operate under any of the heavy ships?”

“It’s crossed out minds, but commander Mirai and I agreed it was because we came straight from small ships with vastly different duties and you wanted us under a magnifying glass.” Auraxis answered, setting her helmet aside. “How far off were we?”

“Well, I will admit that part of it is me wanting to see what else you can do. But no, the reason is quite different.” Astra revealed, “As you may have noticed, Faira fleets are structured around a main ship, and a secondary ship or ships to act as it’s hunting dogs, so to speak. Strike is a bit different, in that both the Singularity and the Warrior will act in this capacity, having their own frigates to do the herding. Yours, however, is a different case. With the thinking and resourcefulness you and the Commander often displayed, it would be a waste of your time in this universe to have you climbing the ranks in the usual manner. The Independence group, Captain, was added to the fleet as a Black Operations group. The Commander, you, and most of the other crews were selected to be here because of your talents, be they tactical or strategic in nature. Now, I’ve come to collect on that.” she smiled, giving the Narix some time to absorb this.

“Okay, that came out of nowhere.” She said after a brief period of silence, “I’ll save that information for when we need a boost of morale. So, what is the Assembly asking of us? I assume some sort of reconnaissance, maybe seeing what there is to the Terrans?” she guessed. “Which would call for our pilots.”

“Not quite yet, Captain. While we would certainly like to see what there is to them, the Vasudans still pose credible enough threat to anger the terrans by entering their territory uninvited. Besides, the captured Vasudan cruiser was a vault of information on it’s own. What we know is enough for now. The mission concerns the Vasudans, and you are correct in assuming that it would require pilots. Please, pull up the files of your Muon pilots, Faira ones. This mission calls for my kind specifically.” the admiral shared.

“As you probably expect, the Vasudans would have fortified the other side of the node quite heavily. Even the Warrior’s shield might not last long enough under the volume of fire we expect on the other side. However, something as fast as a Muon stands a chance of getting through, and has the punch to do significant damage. This is exactly what we are going to do. One wing will slip through the node, and attack important infrastructure the Terrans have picked and scouted before while they still had beachheads in some of the Vasudan systems. They stand little chance of returning to our space, hence why I want Faira, who can, in worst case scenario, kick around on an asteroid for two years until the Halcyon is ready to be deployed and smash the Vasudan’s ugly faces in. I need you to go over the pilot files with me, and pick three best suited candidates. They will need to have someone who can determine what and where to hit, someone good with plotting jumps, and someone who can do maintenance and repairs on their craft. We will also need to install intersystem level jump drives, so their secondary capacity will be more limited than usual even for the Muon.”

“That throws volunteers out of the window.” Auraxis commented as she loaded the dossiers. “Here they are. I think I have a good candidate for the flight leader. What about senior enlistee Arcadi?” she displayed the selected pilot’s file. “Don’t think she’s ever left anything standing in her way during simulations.”

“I know her by reputation. The Explorer’s Master of Arms is her sister. Yes, her sim record was what got her into your group. Interestingly, she seemed to have no qualms taking out a city with several million lives either. Cruel even by our standards, but exactly what we might need here. We know the Vasudan government is highly centralized, and quite intertwined with their religion. Destroying their imperial palace or large temples might drive them to desperation… or to a relentless war. Is there anyone who could keep her in check, make the strategic decisions to apply her tactical ones?” Astra noted.

“Don’t know about the jumper, but I believe I have an engineer: senior enlistee Pyxis - an avatar of stoicism, played a part in the design process of the Block C Muon, knows the bombers inside out. The by-the-book type to counterbalance senior enlistee Arcadi’s bloodrage.”

“Mhmm, yes, perhaps. I imagine there aren’t that many Faira wing leaders yet, considering we are building our pilot numbers from the ground up and very slowly?” The admiral asked, pulling up the list of appropriate ranks, species and group. “Only one, actually, Leader Hydri, callsign Silver. Record says she’s a heavy fighter pilot, but it should be a mild adaptation. She is also an oracle, meaning she could plot the jumps, and with some training possibly even look for jump nodes the Vasudans and Terrans missed. If we could get an undefended entry vector, well… We wouldn’t have to wait for the Halcyon.” Astra noted. “Are they on duty? I’d like to talk with them.”

“That’s three, do we fill up the second section? That would let them pair off into two sections, leaving everyone covered.” she browsed the pilot roster, but found no one that would immediately stand out. “Let me see. Leader Hydri’s shift starts in six minutes, senior enlistee Arcadi is on a four-minute alert, senior enlistee Pyxis is off duty, maybe someone’s seen her. Wait, what about enlistee Taurus? A little hot-headed multirole pilot, but she can think outside the box. It took two wings of 242nd pilots more than ten minutes to find her in an asteroid belt. And she managed to get three of them using her surroundings to her advantage. But she only has about 400 flight hours on record, and just 120 on the Muon. Your thoughts?”

“The Terrans suggested running an exercise against some of their decommissioned hulls. Let us see what the enlistee can do. Send them an alert to meet me in the Garage-” she said, taking note on how the crews taken to calling the small hangar on the Curious class, “-we’ll have to talk customization. Explorer’s engineer’s are ready to put that assembly line to use, but they need an order. If you could let everyone finish their recharge and then tell them to meet me down there, I would much appreciate it. I think I’ll go have a look at what you’ve done with the ship in the meantime. Carry on!” Astra said with a smirk. Magnifying glass, indeed.

CFFG Independence, hangar, eight minutes later

The four pilots sat in a makeshift recreational area the Narix pilots built out of empty crates and collapsible chairs, allowing the alert pilots some degree of comfort while remaining within 60 meters of their fighters, not really sure what to expect as the captain left the message summoning them intentionally vague.

“You think we’ve screwed something up?” Taurus asked her compatriots as they waited for the rear admiral.

“Screw what up, a sim run? Unless you’re behind on your maintenance log, we should be fine. It’s probably just an inspection, maybe they even want our opinions on the crates we fly.” Shadow tried to ease up the tension, but being summoned by an admiral was, while not unheard of, rare.

“We are all classified for the tactical bomber…” Silver noted as she looked over the quartet that has gathered. “‘Think it could have something to do with that? Dice helped to build the current variant.”

“Think the Muon’s getting another upgrade? Secondary capacity, maybe?” Pyxis wondered. “Or maybe the Terrans need training so we don’t have to rescue their destroyers again?” she took a shot at the newfound aliens.

“Maybe we are selling them a Muon license to help the war effort?” Taurus offered, “It would get us a better bargaining position, too.”

“That is not a bad idea, Enlistee. Beats letting them see it and develop something similar on their own.” Astra commented, as she ended her inspection and came from behind the corner. “As you were, pilots. How are you settling in? All of you are from the first batch of trainees, correct?”

“Stars, don’t do that!” Pyxis, who had her back turned where Astra appeared yelped, turning to face her superior. “Correct, ma’am, though some more fresh than others when it comes to the Muon.” she answered, waiting eagerly to hear what this odd meeting was about.

“Yes, while I would like to send more senior people onto the mission that came up, I am afraid it calls for our kind rather than the Narix. You were all selected because of your unique talents. That said, come with me, we’ll talk more of the mission and the craft you would be flying.” Astra said, leading to the Muon racks. “As you know, the Muon is currently in the block c variant, with carousel munition bays and small delta wings to allow for atmospheric flight, with an unofficial block d for the command variant. How are you happy with this configuration?”

“It’s a sports shuttle that can put up with anything up to a frigate, but then it loses the punch. The Demon the Muons attacked in Terminus was shot up. Full strength, it seems like the HYVEL might have just bounced off.” Shadow grumbled.

“I could really use a pilot on the command version, and there have been general outcries for a two seater, so a dedicated ECM or weapons officer can accompany you, or an AI on top of the pilot.” Silver noted.

“Atmospheric performance relies solely on computer control. You don’t fly the ship, you suggest where it should go and the computer tries to turn it that way. If you drop below 480 kilometers per hour, it goes either straight or down.” Dice added, “Although I don’t expect an atmospheric deployment anytime soon.”

“Though offset by the HYVEl, secondary capacity where anti-ship topredoes are concerned leaves something to be desired. At least it can accommodate a wide variety of ordnance.” Rock shared.

“The Muon is not meant to carry a heavy load of secondaries. However, I might be able to do something for you with the cannon. We have recently reverse engineered the Relic version of the weapon, including some interesting ammunition. This mission concerns precision strikes with surprise on the enemy. Heavy load will not be necessary. In fact, some of the secondary capacity will have to go to fit an intersystem jump drive. What we need you to do, is to break the Deneb node and follow through to Sirius, where you are to hit critical yards of the Vasudan shipbuilding industry.” she finally shared.

“The four of us, ma’am? Just the four of us?” Pyxis asked somewhat uncertainly. “Are we really that close to a full invasion of Deneb?”

“Not by a long shot, Dice. Which is exactly why Faira pilots have to undertake this mission.”

“You need someone who doesn’t need much inthe way of sustenance or support…” Silver connected the dots, “Someone who can live just on sunlight for… days?” the wing leader asked, receiving a shake of the head form Astra. “The Halcyon is likely the first chance we’ll get to break through without losing quarter of our ships. And that is two years away. I do not claim this mission will be easy. Staving off boredom until you’re picked up will be the least of your worries though.” the Admiral noted.

“But… A wing of these fast ships alone… The Zods are probably still going to be collecting their mouths from the ground when we warp away form the node, and the Sirius node should be far less defended…” Shadow realized what was in play.

“We won’t be sending you in blind. The Terrans have suggested an exercise, we’ll use that to gauge whether the strategy is even plausible. Are you up for it, pilots?” Astra asked, the one and only time.

“If not us, then who? Certainly not the Terrans.” Taurus shrugged. “How much do we know about Deneb and Sirius. How many Zods are there and are there even places to hide?”

“The exercise is welcome. Do we have a date?” Pyxis asked, actually looking forward to seeing what the Muon can do against aliens.

“You will have to rely on your wits. If you park on an asteroid and shut your fighters down save for life support, even we would have hard time figuring out where you are. But you will have to work with what you have on site - there might even be a way to get back sooner - Terrans and Vasudans have even weaker node detection technology than us, you’ll have to see. Silver is an Oracle - I would train you personally to teach you what you would need. Shadow is an Inventor, so you have a good chance of not only getting out of this, but causing some major mayhem.”

Astra then looked back to the bombers. “Before we even schedule the exercise, we will need to make the modifications to the craft themselves to see what we can shoehorn in once we know how much the internal volume will be restricted. We might even need to bring the Block As for this, with the external bays. Dice, I want you to shuttle over to the Explorer and start working with Captain Casei on this as soon as we are done here. For now though, let us get to a briefing room. I will answer any detail that I can so you can start working on what loadouts and tactics you would like to use.”

Vega - Beta Aquilae node, NFC-GTA exercise

“Confederate bombers, this is the GTD Krios. Your target is the GTC Hellas, protected by Delta wing. Delta, are you ready?”

“Yes sir. Delta, let’s show them what we’re made of!”

“Mace wing, you may begin at your discretion. Your objective is to get the Hellas down to fifty percent hull integrity.”

“They were told how this cannon works, right?” Shadow smirked over Mace’s private channel. The wing was hanging safely six kilometers out from the cruiser. “In that case, you might want to bring a tougher target, so Delta even has a chance to intercept!” She spat over the public channel as she lined up her shot and let a spray out of the RHVC, selecting solid ammunition as not to annihilate the cruiser completely. The rounds sped over the distance in just half a second, the audio simulators delivering a satisfactory ‘whap’ sound on impact, followed by the armor of the cruiser shattering on impact with the shell, floating off crumpled like a bit of aluminum foil.

“What the fuck?”

“The Hellas has dropped by 16 percent!”

“At them! Don’t let them fire again and for everything you hold dear, don’t get hit!”

The Apollos took off towards the Muons at full afterburner, straining to achieve radar lock due to the small profile of the Muon. Observing on the Independence, Auraxis laughed at the Apollo’s pathetic acceleration. Maybe they could sell the Terrans the Mk. III Avems, the Marauder’s predecessor, and claim they are top-of-the-line ships, it would still be an upgrade.

The Apollos finally made it to range, giving up their attempts at radar lock, instead resorting to the IR-guided MX-50 missiles.

“Alright, Ladies, Let’s show them why mounting jump drives on Bombers is worth losing a few missiles. Coordinates are locked in, we will emerge five kliks on the other side of here. With their travel time, it will be over before they can limp back to us. Engage on my mark!” Silver gave the orders, following by the Mark as soon as the Apollos opened fire with their lasers.

“Oh no, NO!!!” Delta three screamed as the Muons sunk into white and red vortexes, appearing about eight kilometers from them on the other side of the cruiser.

“Aim for the central column, there has to be the Fusion Mortar ammo rack in there somewhere!” Shadow called up, before letting the cannon rattle again.

As Delta one desperately tried to get command to enable their drives, the Hellas was reduced to half its strength, prompting the Krios to call the Confederate victory.

“For the next exercise, the Hellas will be defending herself. We are launching a Centaur and Beta wing to assist Delta. Mace wing, pick new starting coordinates. The exercise will resume once all fighters are rearmed.”

Two Apollos and two Angels left the Krios, forming around the Hellas while the shoebox with a cockpit refilled Delta’s missiles, some pilots swapping them out for Furies.

“Exercise commencing in three… two… one… go.”

The Angels shot out towards the bombers, much more suited for this than the Apollo.

“Dice, if we go full burn, how long of a window will they have to target us, and can the shields hold before we pass them?” Silver asked, as Mace was approaching head on to the cruiser.

“They’ll be breathing down our necks as soon as they turn around. We don’t know anything about the Terran weapons, so that’s anyone’s guess.”

“Interceptors at 5k.” Rock reported.

“Alright, as soon as you see cannon signatures or missile launch, point at the Cruiser and open up the burners. Target the fighters with the practice rounds, they should knock them off course. Protect Shadow! Shadow, you just focus on delivering the bombs. Break off at three kliks.” Silver issued the order.

As soon as the Angels fired, the Muons responded with the practice shells.

“Crap, Bosch, dive!”

“One, defending!”

The scout fighters broke off, burning to slow down so they could match speed with the Muons as they passed, one targeting Silver, the other hanging several hundred meters behind him, harassing the other three to make it hard for them to aim. The Apollos formed a wall, 4 about 1000 meters from the Hellas, standing by to pounce any warheads, while the rest of Beta loitered around the cruiser itself.

“Shields are holding. Sic the turrets on the pursuing fighters, focus your main guns on those ahead!” Silver said, her plasma turret blasting away already, directed by the AI they crammed into it instead of some space occupied by the HYVEL previously mounted there.

“Mace leader, Shadow. Ten seconds till we’re within drop range. Break off on my mark!” Shadow counted, lining up the drop onto the engine pod where the Fusion bomb would cause massive secondary explosion, were it not a dummy. “Mark!” she said and pushed the button, dropping the one bomb. The bomb would be undetectable by anything the Terrans would have, even being painted black. It only gave off weak EM signature, and only the Cruiser’s massive radar dish had a hope of detecting it. The Muons scattered, splitting off in four different direction.

“Heavens, their shields aren’t taking any damage!”

“Care, they’re breaking off.”

The Angels stayed on their course, realizing what had happened and saturated the area that was in front of Shadow’s bomber before she broke off, hoping to hit the bomb as it drew further and further away from them, giving the defending fighters and the turrets on the Hellas, remotely controlled from the Krios an idea of the bomb’s general area, allowing them to try their luck by blind firing. In the meantime, Beta two kept an eye and sensors on the Confederates in case they tried to play fighter pilots.

The bomb’s engineless construction made it impossible to detect by sensors or naked eye, even the Angels couldn’t see anything against the cruiser and four fighters. At one point, one of the ML-16 bolts disappeared in a flash, indicating a successful hit, but there was no way of telling what, if anything, it did to the bomb.

“I’ve lost the bomb telemetry, drat. Looks like ‘Spray and pray’ is a valid tactic after all.” Shadow groaned. “Should we come around for another run?”

“Anyone packing something that can deal with the fighters?” Silver asked around.

“60 rockets, 30:30 APHE and practice.” Rock reported. That, and the HYVEL cannons could probably knock the light Angel over to the neighboring postcode.

“They’re still spraying the bomb.” Dice observed with great amusement. “They really can’t see it.”

“Good for us. Rock requesting permission to engage with practice munitions.”

“Granted, I’ll go cover you. Shadow, Dice, blast that cruiser out of the sky while we keep them busy please.” Silver said, turning around and heading to the cruiser’S bottom side to link up with Rock.

“I have five bombs left, I could try to drop it form further up, but if that cruiser moves…” Shadow told Dice, open to ideas.

“That would give them more time to intercept. How close are you willing to get while being able to evacuate safely?”

“Not much, it’s supposed to be a fusion bomb. The blast radius is about a kilometer. I think for the live mission, I will only take four and put something else into the freed up space.” Shadow complained. “We could put the bomb on time or proximity fuse and use it against the fighters if we can get them to bunch up…”

“Waste of ordnance. Retry the drop, I’ll follow. Once the bomb is loose, turn the HYVELs on any fighter that would try to take it down. Stay at least 1000 meters from the cruiser.”

“Alright. Silver, how are you doing, have they taken the bait?” Shadow asked, wanting to get a lay of the land. “I also have some antimatter rounds for the HVRC, but I really wouldn’t use those against a cruiser if I could help it…”

“We’re busy with four, the rest are holding near the cruiser.” Indeed, Beta wing remained on patrol, the two Angels already on their way to Dice and Shadow.

“Shadow, Dice here, if you score a hit, you’ll swat the escorts along with the cruiser. All you, I’ll give them something else to think about.” she set the turret to target one of the Angels, herself focusing on the other one. “I’ll get a bit higher along the Hellas’ Y axis to avoid that monster torpedo launcher, might want to do the same.”

“Ten four, i’ll put my turret on the one you’re attacking. If you can lure the other one into my crosshairs, we’ll splatter them both, those things are made of tissue paper!” Shadow said, going full throttle but saving the afterburner for the escape. This time, she intended to drop at the least possible moment.

“Mace, Silver. The cruiser has figured out our bomb is a dumbfire and started maneuvering. Do we need to change the plan?”

“Negative, I’m going danger close. Watch the blast, stay clear one klik of the cruiser!” Shadow answered as she picked up speed.

“Copy.” Silver acknowledged and shot away from the skirmish, her turret still engaging, turning to cover Rock’s retreat once beyond the safety line.

“I’ll try.” Dice answered Shadow, quite worried about the two extra Apollos messing things up again. Both Angels seemed to have figured out Shadow was the one responsible for the attacks, weaving past Dice and turning their attention to her. They timed their strike, the number two waiting for his leader to launch his payload of rockets before emptying his own banks, trying to bring Shadow’s shield down.

“You guys have missiles right? Let them eat dirt! The shield is starting to bleed through!” Shadow groaned, feeling the heatsinks flooding her ship with heat. The Faira was fine, the circuitry and engines not so much. She made a mental note to add some cluster bombs to their load out.

The fighters were annoying, but once the Cruiser engaged, she had to put in evasive maneuvers. “Drop in three, two one, Break break BREAK!” she shouted and flipped on the ABurn after she dropped the bomb aimed at the centre of the cruiser plus lead.

“We’re clear!” Silver reported, followed by an excited ‘YES!’ from Rock as one of the Terran pilots announced his simulated death.

Having ignored Dice proved a bad move for the Angels as she planted herself firmly at the six o’clock of Beta 2, obscuring the fighter with the practice round tracers. The turret had more luck hitting the nimble target and the fighter was forced to break off, the simulation software shutting down its starboard engine. Ignoring the stricken ship and leaving the turret to deal with it, she turned her attention to the first one, only to be hit from somewhere below and to the right. Beta 2 just did not want to give up. “Ugh, he’s actually good, Shadow, where’s the bomb?”

“I am the vanguard of your doom doom doom. I'm gonna make your world go boom boom boom…”

“Confirmed, if that hit, the Hellas AND Beta would be very crispy right now. Heck, the Krios would be pretty scorched on the outside. Mace got the best of you, Pilots. We will not proceed to the final part of the exercise. The Krios and Hellas will simulate a node blockade. Mace, you will need to survive for about ten minutes for your drives to recharge before you can jump out. How you do it is up to you. We will do everything we can to vaporize you. Well… good luck to you all.” Admiral Scott out, as the ships moved into position.

“Copy, Krios control. We’re setting up autopilot to simulate the node exit and blinding our sensors until the exit point is reached, Silver out.”

The Krios positioned itself perpendicular to the node, keeping it at its 3 o’clock, right in the path of the Moans to block the easiest escape route at the cost of being the first thing in their sights. The Hellas lumbered to the left flank while Delta flew patrol around the formation, keeping Beta on the right flank.

“Damn Greybacks are hard to crack, switch to Furies.” Beta one advised. “Ready when you are.”

“Alright, let’s try to leg it, that’s our default MO and probably best bet.” Silver noted as they travelled the simulated node, “We’ll come out shooting at maximum speed the safeties allow, transfer all power out of your guns into the engines and shield, and drain your weapons capacitor if you have to. Our task is to get through, to kill them all. Failing that, we’ll have to improvise, but I’d like to hear what everybody thinks. How are we looking with the ECM?”

“If we kill our active sensors, the jammers will make it nearly impossible to track us.” Dice noted, not talking about temperature, as that was obvious to everybody, “Do we stay in a group or separate upon exit?”

“Huddle up, turrets out.” Shadow suggested, “Leader, how are we on mindspace usage, still keeping that a secret?”

“Yes, Shadow, let’s keep an ace in the sleeve.” Silver noted, having asked Astra the same thing.

“No need to spare their computers though. We have both Terran and Vasudan comms protocols, so it would be accurate. I’ll try to get the Krios and Hellas to busy themselves with each other, let’s see if this AI is worth the space. I’ll also program some of my TAG beacons with our IFF transponders and shoot a few out.”

“Exit in thirty seconds.”

“If I may, huddling up sounds like an express ticket to whatever lies beyond.” Rock interjected. “If one ship goes, it could take the rest with it, especially Shadow’s antimatter warheads.”

“If it’s that easy to bring a Muon down, then we might as well abandon the mission. Boost your shield quadrant that is sticking out, and call a scatter if your shield power goes below 50%.” Silver said in the short time they had remaining, letting loose five TAG missiles with the fake IFF beacons in a cone in front of her. “Full gas, ladies!”

The Terrans did not have a good time when four bombers came into view, ‘exiting the corridor’, but the sensors tracked five bombers several dozen meters ahead and getting further away, thermal imaging showing just four bombers corresponding with visual. Smaller, computer controlled turrets immediately let loose on the five false blips, no doubt giving the Faira a laugh, while the fighter pilots took several seconds to even realise what was going on. Immediately after, the communication channels were filled with random gibberish and electronic warfare officers responsible for the Krios and the Hellas were swamped in firewall warnings.

The manned turrets opened fire, going by nothing but thermal signature as the fighters tried to intercept with no effective means of communication. The Muon cluster shot past, giving Beta wing their taillights and leaving the patrolling Delta only seconds to react. One of the Apollos found itself right in their path, unaware of the four bomber-sized projectiles coming at him from below where he couldn’t see.

“There is a two klik long shoebox in our waaaaaay!” Shadow squealed as the purple mass of the Krios was expanding in her view. “‘Pollo’s, twelve o clock!” She reported when she noticed the poor sod, letting a burst of the practice rounds, hitting on the chin and sending him into at least a 5G spin.

“Stern side, engine wash is better than turrets!” Silver growled, directing her craft left, popping the comms probe onto the Krios in the confusion, hoping to hear what orders the Admiral would give to hunt them down, once they defeated the plethora of awful dubstep the ECM suite was pumping into every speaker on the ship.

Poor Delta four had a bad day. Despite the worst of Terran music and the ‘Over G’ alert blasting in his ears, he could hear his fighter twisting. 5 G was an understatement.

Going around the engines befuddled the Terrans, as the engines would normally fry their unshielded ships. “Military thrust, full port.” Scott said calmly. “Idle engines are one thing, full thrust might deter them. Hellas, Climb X axis, fusion mortar facing us. Delta wing, leave a man behind and intercept while you are in range. Beta three and four, recover Delta four, you’re out of range anyway.”

The rest of Delta fared little better, the initial signs of trouble being their canopies getting smeared by bouncing practice shells, with the odd plasma bolt and missiles joining soon after. The news were not bad just for the Terrans though.

“Stars! DIVE!” Shadow screamed when she saw the engine plume belching form the engines of the Orion. “That is an MoT failure right there!”

“Helm, bow up 45 degrees.” Scott immediately gave the order to reorient the ship, hoping the Faira would pull up to evade the now descending engine plume and fly past Delta wing straight into the line of fire of the Hellas’ fusion mortar. The Beta Angels finally caught up, realizing what the Admiral was trying to do and gunning to get below and to the left of the Muons to herd them toward the Hellas. All of this assuming the Muons wouldn’t be in the next postcode by the time the Krios turned.

Unfortunately for the Admiral, that was wishful thinking. The four Faira ships zoomed past, caring not for the destroyer or the fighters, using their speed and shield to their advantage. Twenty kliks out, they slowed down and broke formation. “How are we doing?” Silver asked for status.

“My Afterburner reserves are down to twenty five per cent. We’ll need to figure out a different way to do this, I have barely enough for one attack run.” Shadow groaned. “I dunno, drop tanks maybe?”

“I need to rack up more flight hours in this thing.” Taurus gunted, having fumbled with the high-speed maneuvers a little. “Wait, incoming!”

Two groups of jump points, four each, formed around the bombers. Out came flat slabs of metal with cockpits and many secondary bays.

“Mu wing on station, let loose!”

The Athena-class bombers released a massive volley of furies, saturating the general area of the Muons with rockets.

“MACE, SCATTER!” Silver shrieked, hitting her throttle. The Furies were little puffsticks with about as much energy in it’s tiny warhead as was in it’s tiny engine, but there were many, MANY of them heading their way. Her shield dropped by full forty percent before she was out of range.

Shadow blasted out, low afterburner reserve or not, but as she reached out of range, she turned around, growling in anger. “Oh, really? Can I play?” she called to noone in particular, opening up with the RHVC on maximum setting, picking her targets and aiming for the missile bays on the Athenas as she glided backwards.

The Athenas scattered like birds, some swerving in attempts to avoid the lethal HYVEL while the others flocked to Shadow, a pair of Athenas, though under fire, unloading what remained in their banks into her ship, trying to either make her back away or draw attention to themselves away from their still-armed comrades, in turn giving them a chance to fire.

“Got your back, Two!” Silver called over, her cannons slamming into the athenas pursuing Shadow. “Dice, Rock, report!”

“Dice, tailing two, shield at 38 percent and holding.” a calm voice announced.

“Rock, spiked, vector two-six-two inc one two.” a mildly excited voice called over, the transmission carrying a little static. “Shield at 16 percent and recovering, they got through.”

“...Rock, can you fake a power failure and play dead?” Silver asked as she splashed the two Terrans pursuing Shadow. The black Faira caught on, her engines seemed to flash before her ship went dark. The only thing that would seem strange was that beforehand, she fired her thrusters to come to a relative stop.

Rock fired her thrusters to shake off the Terran’s aim and cut her engines, tempted to leave the shields up and charging, but deciding against it. One of the pursuing Terrans took off chasing after Silver, but another seemed intent on making sure, likely believing the simulation software more than his eyes. Dice, having finished one of her targets, set the turret to track the other and turned to aid the younger pilot.

“Splash two! Yeah!” One of the Mus hollered, floating close to Shadow’s Muon. “The hell? Where did she g-?” Then the training software turned his dashboard off as he looked up, gazing into Shadow’s eyes and glowing sidearm.

“Three?” Another of them came to investigate, wondering what made his craft shudder suddenly when there were no rocks to hit him.

“Four, break break, something’s on your bomber!” the flight leader almost panicked, having seen something like this for the first time in his life. Mu four turned hard 180 degrees on full afterburner, trying to remove the foreign body.

“Bomber?” Dice thought, the comm probe still doing its job. “Those things are bombers?”

“Wheeeeee!” Shadow shouted into the Terran comms frequency as she mag locked onto the fleeing Athena, climbing over the cockpit and pulling on the emergency canopy release, suddenly climbing into the pilot’s view, her sidearm pointed at his head. Switching to the secure training channel, she explained: “You’re out, pilot, Taxi me back to my ship, then simulate having your autopilot turned to ram the Cruiser.”

It understandably took the pilot upwards of five seconds to understand just what the hell was happening. “WHERE is your ship?” he finally stammered, having lost sight of it when he tried to get her off. Meanwhile, the remaining two Muons continued their dance with the Athenas, gaining the upper hand as the Terrans slowly expended their Fury banks.

Shadow pointed in the exact direction, the Terran noticing she didn’t even have to look. In a few seconds, her ship powered up again, joining the fight and bringing their number further down. Meanwhile, Delta wing who was limping close to intercept would be unexpectedly busied by Mu four gunning for the Hellas.

“That was interesting!” Mirai commented to her XO, coming to the bridge from her recharge. “How are they doing?”

“Words fail to describe what’s happening out there.” Auraxis shook her head. “One of your kinswomen just disabled one craft and sent another on a collision course with the Hellas while outside of her ship. I thought they were supposed to get away from the node and hide as soon as they could jump?”

“Mu four, what are you doing?”

“His canopy’s out!”

Realizing just what was happening, or at least what the intended end result of it was, Delta four turned around and raced to intercept the rogue Athena, leaving three undamaged Apollos to reinforce Mu wing.

Taking the time to let her shield recover, Rock pounced the trio, her multirole experience showing.

“Squad, fuel?” Dice suddenly inquired.

“20 percent of ABurn left, nevermind though, thirty seconds to jump, the Apollo scrubs will still be two kilometers gone when we jump.” Silver noted, looking at the clock. “Krios, Independence, can we call it in and head to the Garage to examine the bombers? Modifications will need to be made, I’m afraid.”

CFD Warrior, Three days later

“Hm, it needs a bit of paint.” Rock commented, looking over her modified Muon with an extra fuel tank hanging from its underside like a tumor. Another tumor took the form of a dorsal hump that housed the extended shield capacitors. “Some blue, maybe?”

“Tssk. You want to minimize visual detection, no?” Shadow said, standing next to the ‘CFB Shark’, how she was calling her customized ship.Two of the fusion bombs were gone rom the loadout, in their place an EMP Generator and a pod with six anti-fighter aspect seekers. The fixed HYVEL was also replaced by the more powerful RHVC. The ship lost it’s shark mouth to a black coat specially made to absorb radar waves and the surface was nano-treated to disperse targeting lasers.

“Give it up, the fighter pilot ego is strong with that one.” Silver smirked, her own ‘CFB Commander’ upgraded as well. One of the TAGs was gone as well as the communication taps, replaced by additional advanced EW suite and sensors.

“Ma’am, if your singing doesn’t tip them off, nothing will. Then again, maybe we could weaponize it. It wouldn’t take much effort.” the younger pilot shot back.

“Anyone thought of using their own culture against them?” Pyxis asked, “Leave a bunch of propaganda posters after a hit, maybe some excerpts from their sacred texts? Or some of their symbols on the ships? Exploit their weaknesses.” Her own bomber lost the two radar seeking missiles in favor of a storage container for small repairs and maintenance.

“I’m fairly sure Admiral Libra and ambassador Taranis would have poured over those in details, but that is something better used in a ground campaign. We’ll be operating mostly in space. On this sortie that is. I’m sure those texts must have been a good laugh though.” Silver grinned.

“Personally, I think we should just wait for the Halcyon and Singularity and do some divine smiting on our own, but the terrans are impatient. They are already planning on pushing through the node they guard, or so Virgo heard. Anyway, I am more interested in the gizmo Rear Admiral Astra is building that should give us clear pass through the node. Apparently the Terrans are calling it the ‘Next gen MOAB’, whatever that means.” Shadow grunted, finishing up loading the bombs and doing an electronics check.

“It would’ve been preferable, but who knows how many destroyers the Vasudans would gather in the meantime?” the technician shared, “Although what we’ve seen was objectively bad, they could have dozens of these against just one Halcyon. And although that thing even has torpedo tubes in multiple directions, they only reload so quickly.”

“Maybe if we wait long enough, they’ll try to break through again. Whether it’d be a good thing or not. How long do you think we’ll survive?” It wasn’t the insertion she was worried about, it was what will come after it. Being a major shipyard, Sirius would likely be filled with yellow fanatics.

“We should be fine once we get through. The Terrans had time to adapt and they still had hard time detecting us. My ship is also packing stronger scramblers than before and with the drop tanks, we can get out of range much faster. What I’m worried about is how we survive the two years of boredom we will have to endure before a pickup arrives. Anyone has even a crazy idea on how to get back home with no guns and afterburners?” Silver grunted, the prospect of camping on an asteroid not too appealing.

“Assuming the Vasudans don’t adapt and overcome the jamming. Or the Halcyon offensive fails. Or-” Pyxis nudged her in the ribs. “Ever the optimist, you’ve spent too much time with the Narix. I guess we can kill some time by looking for a node, but I wouldn’t get hopeful. Technically, we could bring a few Terabytes worth of books. Maybe even that religious hogwash.”

“Should we bring some Terran-related materials to study? Just in case.” Taurus added.

“They will have to be on guard for us in several systems and we’ll be doing hit and run attacks. Hopefully all primary objectives will be done before they manage to lock anything but heat seeker and cameras on us.” Silver thought out loud.

“What if we hijack a ship?” Shadow said suddenly. “Four of us, even lacking Marine training should be able to de-crew a cruiser, and in turn, that should be able to last before we jump it through the node…”

“Assuming we figure out how to operate it before the Vasudans catch up on our plan, even with knowledge from the one we captured earlier. But it does give us an idea of how to approach, how to board and what to expect inside.” Dice looked to the storage container on her bomber. “And we can bring some specialised equipment if we want to go through with it. You think there’s time to practice that? Last I heard, the captured cruiser is still mostly intact.”

“Pros of being an admiral’s black ops wing, ladies, is having the rear admiral on a speed dial. If the terrans give us a few pointers, this sounds reasonably well. Dice, how much space do you have? If necessary we could tear out my turret and put in a few more grenades.” Silver noted, linking to Astra.

“I’d rather keep turrets if possible. And if we run out of space we could store small things in the cockpits. The Terrans wouldn’t happen to have a neurotoxin tailored to Vasudans on hand by chance, would they?”

“If they don’t, the Narix can probably whip up something that would work. I think we’re better off stealing one that is being repaired or resupplied.” Shadow noted, “Engineers and repair crews are easier to dispose of while the Marines are on shore leave. And we have the RHVCs to create the necessity to repair one. Now I’m not the engineer, but an Aten sized applique armor should get four Muons through, no?”

“Yes, that seems feasible. Finding one that’s being repaired shouldn’t be a problem, the Terran intelligence says Sirius is full of shipyards. I’m surprised you of all people intend to leave something intact enough to be repaired, Shadow. But docks are likely to be defended, especially if we start targeting them. Are you sure ambushing a ship that’s out on a patrol or a shakedown run after being repaired wouldn’t be better? When you’re out testing a freshly patched up ship, there’s no need to bring more than skeleton crew along.”

“I intend to leave us intact for the attack on Vasuda Prime first and foremost. Our orders are to sow fear to the hearts of Vasudans, not to sacrifice ourselves in a desperate bid to stop us from losing the war.” Shadow grunted. “Sure, let’s cause mayhem if we can. I can’t wait to hear the screams on my radio. But enough Faira dies at the depot, no need to add us to the memorial wall.”

Shadow was interrupted by the buzz of a mind jump as the Admiral arrived personally. “What do you need, Black wing?”

“Ma’am, do you think it would be possible for us to receive some training on how to hijack a Vasudan cruiser?” Silver noted.

“It’s not really within the timeframe we thought up. Every day we wait the Vasudans fortify the node even more. The sooner you go the less trouble it is going to be. We are converting a decommissioned Narix cruiser into the biggest bomb you have ever seen to clear a path for you, but it won’t take out destroyers. Are you confident you can break through with the delay?”

Silver looked at the wing, silently asking for their opinions.

“That depends on the delay. Do we spend three days on the training, or do we try once or twice just to see if it’s even feasible?” Pyxis asked her wingmates. “We’ll have two years to figure out our plan of attack in detail once we’re there.”

“That could work. Get a lay of the land, so to speak, maybe a quick course by the Terrans on where to stab them for a quick kill.” Shadow nodded.

“Alright, we can spare a few hours.” Astra nodded, sending a message to Virgo and Libra to set up the exercise immediately. “How is the equipment?”

“We just painted.” Silver smirked, “They’re four of a kind now, each tailored to a role. Mine is a recon and electronics package, Shadow has a high survivability, high firepower package, Pyxis is packing half a repair shop and Rock added on some more shielding to address the weaknesses identified in the exercise. Considering Vasudan fighters are even worse than their Terran equivalents, the bombers are as ready as they’ll ever be. If you’re sending a miniature sun ahead of us, all the better.”

“Seems alright. Any further requests? We can try sending a support ship on autopilot with you. It could give you some edge in the long run. By the way, what’s the marine training for?”

“Can you rig up a few drones that would mimic the silhouette of the bombers? Give the Vasudans more targets so it’s not just the four of us they’re shooting at. Maybe load them up with a warhead on a timer. The less equipment that falls into their hands, the better. Just imagine their faces when they bring one on board to study and get half their hangar turned inside out.” Pyxis offered.

“Shadow had the idea of…how to best put this?” Taurus scratched the chin of her helmet. “Shadow thought waiting for two years is wasteful and had the idea of hijacking a Vasudan cruiser to use as additional ablative armor and break through the node back to Vega. While you’re here, admiral, thoughts?”

“I’d give you the drones, but where would you put them? Your banks are already full. Unless you’re talking full sized strikecraft drone, which would almost double your thermal signature, I’m not sure that’s wise, considering it’s one of the few sure means of detection they have on you. You may do better to just glide in with your engines cut. It’s not a problem if you decide to do so though.” Astra noted.

“Yeah, Shadow is like that. Unplanned spacewalks in the middle of a firefight and all. Hence why she’s here. It might be doable, it will depend on the situation whether you will want to hide your fighters inside the cruiser or just clamp onto the surface and point it to where the worst punishment is going to be coming from. I could certainly think of two years of work to give you on top of this. Very well, you’ll get your crash course. Get your recharge and report on the Warrior in eight hours.” Astra nodded.

“Increasing thermal signature was their intended purpose. The drones were meant for the initial insertion, bring them into the corridor with us and detach them before exit. You’re sending a cruiser-sized bomb ahead of us anyway, they will know something’s up. The idea is to give the Vasudans more targets and make it easier for us to get away from the node.”

“After the cruiser goes up, the temp in five kilometers around the node is going to be about a thousand degrees. Whatever thermal sensors they are going to have, they’re going to be very monochromatic and very bright. Fortunately that’s only mildly hot for the shields and life support you’re packing. Only the destroyers will be able to see through that, and it will take about half an hour for the cloud to disperse enough for their unshielded fighters to launch, or for the bays to open for that matter. Jumping to Sirius is going to be your main problem. The blockade should be smaller, but up and about.” Astra answered.

“Very well, then.” She deferred to the rear admiral’s judgement.

CFD Warrior

“If we don’t make it back here, well, my final days were interesting.” Shadow grunted, looking at the four ships lined up in the Warrior’s launch bay. “I hope we didn’t tell many Terrans about this, apparently there are Vasudan sympathizers among them. For whatever the reason.” the black tinted Faira huffed.

“I get being tired of the war, but betraying your own kind? What is wrong with these people?” Taurus shook her head. “Have you seen the way some of the crew look at us? Something between ‘they’re avatars of bravery’ and ‘they’ve completely lost it’.”

“Well, have you?” Captain Auraxis appeared from behind one of the bombers. “A crew for the history books. How’s the mood?”

“Apparently, if the psych evals are to be believed, I lost it a long time ago, Ma’am.” Shadow smirked.

“I can vouch for that.” Silver grunted, having the pleasure of being Shadow’s bunk mate. “We are as ready as one can be to do what no one dared to do before. Hopefully we’ll also get back to teach a few classes on what we did and let some other sods do this work.”

“We’ll bring you back a cruiser and a few corpses for souvenirs.” Shadow added, earning herself a bump on the helmet.

“I’m glad to hear you’re taking it this well. But remember: we’re not asking you to win the war. Just pave the way for the big guns and come back home safe, we’ll wait for you with dinner.” Auraxis was sure Vasuda would burn if something happened to this group, even if they had to figure out how to ignite all the sand beforehand. Then again, it might happen either way. “And if you can bring back an officer or two that are still breathing, we’re not going to complain!”

“Alright. Mace, mount up and get ot your pre-flight checks, we’re launching in ten minutes.” Silver ordered, sealing her helmet on.

“Noone will miss you - when you’re finally gone - at your conclusion - sing your swansong!” Shadow sung as she climbed into her cockpit, linking her suit to the controls. Often not appreciated by the others who favored sticks and dials, the inventor preferred to have her mind linked up to the ship, halving her response time.

“Mace wing, you are cleared for launch when ready. The CNC Ardor is ready to deploy.” The old Guardian, recognised by some to be the Erixa, had its turrets replaced with mockups and its hull was covered in messages left by the refit crew, ranging from taunts to curses.

“Command, what’s that thing packing exactly?” Shadow asked. It was Astra responding: “The Terrans came with an unexpected gift. They are starting something they call ‘project tsunami’, and the first stage included building the largest particle accelerator you have ever seen to create antimatter on large scale. They gifted us the first few batches and ‘waste’, which is any antimatter of different antiproton number than they desire. We’ve basically turned the shield to contain it on the inside. When the Vasudans offline the power grid on that ship, the shield will breach, mater will meet antimatter, at which point they are toast.” the admiral answered, the smirk apparent in her tone. “That ship packs fifty gigatons of ordnance, so make sure your safeties are on.”

“I almost, ALMOST feel sorry for them.” Taurus shared on the wing’s internal channel. “Then again, not really.”

“How long do we expect the transfer to take and how far ahead of us is the Ardor going to be?” Pyxis asked. Somehow, perhaps for security reasons, this information hasn’t been made available to them. “I think we’re ready. Mace leader?”

“Recalculating form the Terran travel time, the trek is about half an hour, quite a long one. We estimate the area will be traversable for your ships five minutes after detonation. To guarantee your survival, we’ve put a timed shutdown of the shield upon exit, just in case the Vasudans there are woefully inept. You’ll have an extra minute before you go to be on the safe side. Ardor jumping in two minutes.” Warrior’s sector controller reported. Indeed, the profane cruiser started shuffling towards the node.

On the Independence, Auraxis wondered what goes through someone’s mind when they know they might be dead in seven minutes. “Fingers crossed the Ardor doesn’t break down now like the Curious did.”

Deneb - Vega node, half an hour later

“The radio has been awfully calm, Cancer one. Usually, the controllers are curising us with divine wrath when we deviate five degrees form course. They didn’t even notice now.” cancer two mentioned.

“Command has been tight lipped about the whole incident. In any case, the response to the unknowns has gone badly. The question is, how much? Are our brothers still fighting, or are they with the creators now?” The leader noted on the wing’s private channel.

“Two battlegroups have arrived to the node, but are not proceeding any further. It is too strong a compliment for a rear guard too. I am worried we might have lost the other end of the node.” the Two shared.

“Worries will not do. If your suspicions are correct, then keep your senses sharpened, for the infidels may be through the node any minute.”

“Cancer wing, PVD Hakor. We are reading strange signals from the node. Head to the node and investigate.” the leading destroyer of the group of four spaced around the node radioed over.

The fighters broke off their patrol paths, heading to their demise as a Mindspace vortex opened near them and ripped them to shreds, spewing the CNC Ardor into normal space. “Unidentified ship, you are trespassing in Vasudan territory. You are ordered to power down and surrender.”

Meanwhile in the node…

“Hear that, Silver? They want the ship to power down. How about we comply?” Shadow burst out laughing.

Having an idea, Silver patched herself through the decommissioned cruiser’s comm link. “Understood, Vasudan. We are a diplomatic ship and are unarmed. Power down ETC five minutes. Please send a shuttle to collect our ambassador.” she radioed over, receiving a confirmation. The cruiser’s telemetry also noted the sole Typhoon class moving closer into range.

“Ohohoooo, are we really going to scratch another flat one? Can we be this lucky?” Shadow giggled.

“I am legitimately disturbed by your demeanor, Shadow.” Pyxis shook her head as she observed the readouts of Ardor’s power levels, a large dial counting down the five minutes in the corner. “Camera 6 is tracking what appears to be the shuttle.”

“The blockade is smaller than I expected.” Taurus noted. “More backup is probably waiting somewhere else in the system. The area denial aspect of the weapon might force them to jump farther away. If the blast can at least stun that destroyer, we might be gone before they can do anything about it.”

“That would be preferable to them still being on the way.” Silver noted, “We really need the least amount of ships at the next node.” the wing leader noted. “I do not expect much action anywhere but there. Then they either can’t find us and we hide, or they can and we better start learning religious chants and pray that Ambassador Taranis doesn’t haunt us when she passes. That said, the rear admiral’s orders are clear. No piece of tech and no prisoner of war is allowed to fall into the enemy hands. Are we all clear on this?”

“Good luck piecing the fine mist the reactor behind me is going to turn me into back together for interrogation, Sandmen.” Taurus scoffed.

“Given the massive losses they’ve already suffered at our hands, and the massive losses they are about to suffer, I think suicide by any means is preferable to what they’d do to us. And the Narix still haven’t executed the Vasudans in charge of the Vasudan First Contact Massacre, I imagine that will lead to a few grudges.”

“Time?”

“T minus two. The Vasudan shuttle just docked.to the Ardor, the bluff will be called sooner than we would like, Pyxis, can you detonate manually?” Silver inquired.

“Yeah, ain’t no destroyer running away form this show!” Shadow pipped up.

“Think so. Good thing these things are so old, no wonder they’re being retired.” Pyxis turned her attention to the Ardor’s power distribution system and powered up everything.

The Ardor’s power grid collapsed almost immediately after, releasing its deadly payload. The profane cruiser and everything within its general vicinity ceased to exist. The unfortunate Typhon was a little too close for its crew’s comfort, as evidenced by its now red-hot outer hull. Most turrets and one of the hangar openings have been put out of service.

“Well, now we wait. And hope by the time we arrive, it’ll still be too hot for any Vasudan to bother us.”

“If you were a Sandman and someone blew up a cruiser in your face, how long would it take for you to stop praying and get your bearings straight?” Taurus laughed.

“I kind of wish we could get a camera in there. Just to see the carnage and the looks on their faces.” Shadow noted.

At the blockade

“Hakor! Do you copy!” one of the commanders of the older class destroyers was trying to reach the commander, among the myriad of other voices on the radio, most coming from the concerned destroyer and screaming. On the display, the Hakor’s disaster beacon was blaring, displaying the internal temperature anywhere between 500 to 90 degrees. The commander estimated that 90% of the destroyer’s crew was dead, the remaining ten was crippled for life or going to die soon, even if the destroyer itself might perhaps be salvageable.

“They have cruisers to spare as bombs!” One of the fighter pilots panicked, “We are doomed.”

The screams of the Hakor’s crew were promptly replaced by eerie silence as the destroyer’s communications succumbed to the furnace temperatures. Most were unaware what the temperature in the hangar was doing to the destroyer’s fighter and bomber ordnance stores. Those who knew had no way of warning the others before several secondary explosions rocked the stricken ship.

No one would fault the Vasudans if they failed to notice four small vortexes forming in the node before dissipating, the still lingering ambient temperature masking most of the heat emitted by the confederate bombers.

Pyxis gasped in amazement, manually pointing her turret at the Hakor, her gun camera capturing the frightening, yet strangely beautiful sight. She didn’t care if she had to give an arm and a leg for it, but she was saving that footage when they get back home.

“Woah, the shields don’t exactly like this. Punch it ladies, we’re holding for now but losing about a percent every ten seconds, no time for sightseeing.” Silver shared, checking over the sensor readings.

“Strangely beautiful though.” Shadow said, her eyes glued to the hull camera, showing the hot particles impacting the shield, creating a beautiful colorful map. “Alright, moment’s over, let’s go save the Federation. Shall we take pot shots at the crippled destroyer? I’m also picking up a blob of molten metal and slag, Aten class I suppose.”

“I’d hold fire until they notice us.” Pyxis advised, “And I’m only partially sure our ordnance wouldn’t blow up in our face in this mess. Rock, can you jump us out?”

“Aye, someplace specific? Leader?”

“I sense the node, but I didn’t have much training time. There is something big around, but whether it’s a Typhon or one of the older boats I can’t tell, the node is interfering too much. Shall we target about ten klicks way and glide it down? We still have about thirteen minutes for our intersystem drives to recharge. There is an asteroid field about ten kliks form the node, can you work with that, Taurus?” the leader inquired.

“I can get us into the belt, but we may have to pull some crazy stunt flying since I don’t know what it looks like. I’d boost shields and engines if you haven’t done so already. Jump in four… three… two… one...”

The edge of the asteroid belt was mostly small chunks of ice no bigger than one meter in diameter strewn several dozen meters apart. The four bombers fit between without issues. “Whew, we’re in luck, but it’s not much cover.” with the path between her and the node clear, she cut the engines and started looking around with the turret camera, the starlight reflecting of the ice creating a spectacular light show. “This war is quite beautiful so far. Can you make out what’s at the node?”

“I can see the typhon with my eyes. That’s 120 strikecraft they could throw our ways. Minimum EM usage! Shadow thought telepathically over to her wing. Against that number, the best the Muons could do was run like hell.

”At least three wings on guard, two more on patrol routes. Massive shipping, counting twenty four cargo containers, that’s enough to supply a fleet for a couple of months. Do we take a few shots with the RHVCs while they don’t know where we are? They are quite small and quick, and we can load AP to minimize ammo signature.” Shadow noticed.

”Hold fire for now, let’s wait for the drives to charge first. Pyxis, I’m patching you to my sensor readings, can you read any weakspots on the big ships? Battle damage, armor fatigue, lower than usual power readings?” Silver asked.

”You think they’ll scramble some of the fighters to the node? If they haven’t noticed us, they might be thinking a spearhead fleet is coming through. MIGHT.” Taurus ‘thought out loud’.

”The engines seem exposed and weakly armored. The two ventral spikes and the dorsal tower are emitting a lot of EM radiation, possibly communications. The dorsal hump could be a sector control tower, or astrogation decks. Other than that, the hull armoring seems solid. It’s like the ship is new or something. So what’s the plan? Charge the drives, enter the node, silence the destroyer, whack a few containers and jump?”

”We should have brought our heavy fighters. They wouldn’t know what hit them. We[/i] still do not know what the Explorer’s chief actually built. They are not packed enough to warrant a bombing run. Let’s hit the comms array on the destroyer first when we start moving, hopefully that will make the fighters clueless for a little longer. Set your turrets on any fighter within two kliks and head to the node. If you can get pot shots on the cargo on approach, take them, but save your ammo. Our primary objective is Sirius.”[/i] Silver decided.

Meanwhile…

Two Atens came through the node, starting to circle the exit point. “GVD Sharlatan, cruiser wing Aquarius. The GVD Pharaoh is en-route, ETA two minutes. We have heard rumors that the unknowns have begun an invasion. Do they hold true?”

“Unknown, Shipmaster.” The Sharlatan’s XO answered, “The long range sensors can not penetrate the radiation cloud yet, and it is too hot to send in any recon fighters. We do not track any ships entering the system though. Perhaps they hope to simply move their defense point to this side of the corridor. In any case, the last transmissions we received spoke of a single cruiser entering the system. Then the Hakor went silent.”

Back at the asteroid belt…

”Woah! Targets!” Shadow thought out loud.

”Just two cruisers, wouldn’t even be a fair fight if it wasn’t for that destroyer-”

”Ah! There’s a destroyer on the way!” Silver recognized the node activity. ”Damn, that is so bomb worthy, but we’d have to engage before they spread, and we can’t last ten minutes out there with 240 fighters and bombers on our tail. Can we?” Silver said, admittedly thinking about it. Shadow was practically drooling at the prospect.

”It’s only 240 fighters if the destroyer is capable of launching, I’m game. Shadow, can you release one of the bombs and let it drift like you did during the training? It looks like they’re all so busy with the fireworks at the Vega node they might not notice it until it collides with the Typhon’s engines. And by that time, we’ll be almost at the node. When that blows, we can use the confusion to get out, maybe even take a few shots at the cruisers.” Pyxis suggested. ”But given the Ardor Incident, now they WILL know we’re here for sure.”

”I don’t know. We still have twelve minutes on the charge, the destroyer will be here in about two. Whatever blast residue there is should be clear by then, but the fusion bombs are no profanity cruise missiles. If we give them the time to spread, the bomb will not catch them all, and if we don’t, it is not going to take out their launching capabilities. How confident are we in our shields?” Shadow analyzed.

”Shields, I’d say yes, but I really don’t like the idea of attacking like this without charged drives. Maybe we might want to pass this up, leave them for the Halcyon in two years and make sure they have nowhere to berth and repair for a few months?”

Silver was silent for a minute, thinking. [i]”That’s an… interesting point. They are going to get their shipbuilding up after we hit it in months, the Halcyon won’t launch within two years… Ladies, what if we are going about this all wrong? Would it not be better to hide for nine months and then go on a rampage just prior to the attack, so they are at their weakest? Can we stay undetected for that long if we do recon flights in the meantime? Maybe we should give this one up and stay quiet.”

Pyxis was stunned. ”How did we not realize earlier? But it gives us the advantage! We slip into Sirius undetected now and observe, learn everything there is about the system. Think of everything we can learn: Patrol paths around our targets, previously unknown ship classes, their signatures, mindspace echoes, maybe we can even listen in on low-priority communications. We change this from a deep strike with elements of recon into recon with a grand finale. It’d make our attacks, and the entire war, much easier. Besides, if the Sirius shipyards start blowing up, the Sandmen will investigate, possibly leaving the nodes weakened after two years of inactivity.”

”My bloodlust is so not happy with you guys, but it makes sense. If we can find a large enough rock to hollow with weapons fire, we might even make a comfortable garage out of it that would help avoiding detection. I guess I’m game. Did anyone bring some of those? It’s going to be a long wait. Dice?” Shadow complained, but voted a yes anyway.

”I DID suggest books. Not a lot of materials to make anything. I heard of a Terran game that only required an eight by eight grid and two sets of colored pebbles, we might be able to make that.”

”We can repurpose my plasma turret to a foundry, if we find rocks with materials we need. I’ll be in mindspace most of the time anyway. I have twenty one months to learn every echo I will ever need in this war, I am not passing that up. In either case, just to have a space to stretch while not being tethered to the ship might be nice. Alright, Mace, let’s wait for the traffic to get low and pass through hopefully undetected. I’ll leave a time-delayed comm buoy to send a message back to command about the yield of the Ardor and about the change in plan.” Silver decided. ”Speaking of which, here it comes, Typhon number 3. Where the hell are they getting the resources for so many destroyers? If we didn’t find the Lucifer, we would have been screwed the second we poked out antennae out of the Nebula. And they could support this for fourteen years!”

”Maybe they’re finally starting to feel it now.” Taurus hoped. It would’ve been nice to jump to Sirius and find empty shipyards with no resources as far as the eye could see. ”Or we’ll find a ship the size of the Singularity shaped like a giant temple or something. In any case, any destroyer lost is good news for us, and that Typhon is number five already. Thay have to feel that.” because if losing five destroyers wasn’t a major problem for the Vasudans, what was the point in trying?

”Drives in ten.” Pyxis reported.
The strange tingle running through her head made her jump away from the terminal she was using at that moment, thinking there was a short in the keyboard. But if that was the case, her hands would hurt, not her head. Then what was that? Sleep deprivation came to mind next, but it didn’t feel like any symptom she’s ever experienced. Distracted by the unusual and mildly horrifying experience, she missed the captain’s warning of what was coming.

The sudden impact of the shockwave caught Astrid completely off guard and sent her into the nearest wall. Shockwaves? What kind of nebula was this? The density of most nebulae was, for all intents and purposes, little more than vacuum. Though she was no astrophysicist, the only way to achieve such density Astrid could think of was a relatively fresh nebula - and just as she thought of that, her head filled with all the damage the Monroe could potentially suffer in a dense cloud of hot gas. Fingers crossed the shield held on long enough for them to get out.

Speaking of failures, she dragged herself back to her feet and once more turned to the diagnostics interface, silently praying the momentary power loss was the worst of it. Aside from a few non-critical overloads, a thorough sweep turned up nothing that would impair the ship's operation. She breathed a sigh of relief and left engineering to make the rounds. No diagnostics software could tell you just how many holes there were in the ship. Judging by where the bulk of the rodent infestation was encountered, she chose the cargo bay as her first stop. She expected a species like the Ulnar to leave quite a mess.

It was as bad as could be expected. Two hull breaches, fortunately still kept sealed by the attached boarding shuttles, bodies and blood here and there, damage due to gunfire - what the Ulnar lacked in aim, they made up for in ammunition - and one or more crates that seemed to have disintegrated. The mess could be cleaned up rather easily, but the breaches were another problem. Astrid walked over to the closer one, making notes on a datapad as she did. “Plasma cut with rough edges consistent with slow cutting speed, likely due to lack of experience on the operator’s part.” she mumbled as she wrote. “Or maybe the dumb rodent simply didn’t care.” She took a few hasty steps back as soon as she was done to get away from the stench emanating from the Ulnar craft. ’Description: Two hull breaches, approx. 200x80 cm’, she filled out the appropriate protocol. Two, maybe three days in the drydock, unless the dockyard workers worked overtime. As Astrid looked around for more major damage, she could now see the damaged crate from the other side. A gleam of silvery gray caught her attention, followed by the doctor and the security officer around an unknown figure. Confident that officer Tulez could contain any possible hostile, her curiosity got the better of her and she moved to examine some projectile damage, two shotgun slugs or something of the sort, within earshot of the group.
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