Star Dust to Star Dust
[tab]The call came in the middle of his sleep cycle. He snapped awake as was his way, but waited a moment before picking up the receiver to convey his irritation. “Speak,” he said.
[tab]“Space Traffic Control has reported multiple unknown FTL signatures emerging in system.”
[tab]His attention was now focused on the piece of plastic in his hand with laser intensity. “Do we have electromagnetic confirmation?”
[tab]“Optical is tracking main drive flares which are matching velocity; emission-line analysis indicates D-D fusion torches. Radar and lidar sweeps match optical and confirm 34 vehicles of varying sizes: weapon hardpoints have been identified on most. Microwave reveals encrypted comm-chatter; analysts are working on it but they don’t expect much soon. We have identified active electromagnetic emissions—they’re scanning us.”
[tab]He was already in the shower with the receiver, waterproof as it was. “Have they responded to hails?”
[tab]“Not yet.”
[tab]“Bring us to REDCON-0. Lift the guns and get our people moving.”
[tab]“The AIB isn’t going to be happy.”
[tab]He adjusted his collar and allowed himself a modest frown. He’d never liked the Atmospheric Integrity Bureaucracy. “Frak the AIB. Inform them of what we’re doing, and they can do whatever it is they need to as long as they don’t get in our way. I’ll be right there.”
[tab]“Yes, sir.”
[tab]Roland Tatenda Marius, Director of the System Security Bureaucracy, clicked the receiver back into place and made his way rapidly out of his domicile. It sealed itself up behind him in recognition of his hurry. He had an invasion to deal with, after all.
#
[tab]She inspected the number of flechette cartridges in the magazine box before slapping it into place, and slid a hand soothingly over the embossed “Kalashnikov AK-616” logo before checking the gun’s loading status. Kalashnikov as a brand was—of course—long gone, but upstairs had never seen fit to tinker with the contents of the digital fabrication rights. She liked to imagine it was out of respect. She herself had a fond appreciation for ETC pulse guns—less bulky than electrocasters and more reliable.
[tab]A siren continued plaintively wailing in the background to the roll of red emergency lights. “Tafari,” she said, “can you make that thing shut the frak up?”
[tab]“You know REDCON-0 alerts can’t be disabled locally, Lena,” said Tafari.
[tab]“That’s Lieutenant Azhar today, Tafari,” she said absently, releasing the safety on the weapon.
[tab]“Yes, ma’am.”
[tab]“Alright, platoon, form up and check gear!” Her 42 charges assembled into formation before her, checking and double-checking one another’s armor. “We move in 30 seconds to make sure AIB has this place sealed up and get onto the surface!” she said, “We don’t know what’s coming in and if the guns don’t get it we’re here to put it down! You read me?”
[tab]“Hooah!” they shouted in response.
[tab]“Are you ready to kick some ass?”
[tab]“Hooah!” yet louder than before. She couldn’t see their skins flicker with excitement, but she could practically smell it coming off them.
[tab]“Are you ready to take some motherfrakin’ pirate skulls?”
[tab]“Hooah!” almost deafening now. They were all so young.
[tab]She punched Armory 1819’s door release and started to wave them through “All right, you apes, let’s move! Go, go, go!”
[tab]They filed out enthusiastically into the pleasant white hallway. Lieutenant Lena Faina Azhar was the last to go and the door sealed behind her, leaving the room flickering red.
#
[tab]Roland breezed past security into the SSB’s Main Control without a pause—his biometrics had checked out 50 meters earlier and they knew him by sight. His assistant, Melantha, was waiting for him. “What have you got for me?” he patterned.
[tab]“Still no response from the inbound fleet,” she said.
[tab]He surveyed the displays in the room at a glance: orbital plots of the system, visuals in various spectrums of the transgressor fleet, remote feeds of the massive electrocaster Defguns oriented to target on the surface, interior security progress plots. AIB was doing a decent enough job of sealing the place up. He let something equivalent to “Tell me you’ve got more than that,” flash across his face.
[tab]She concealed her annoyance rather well and vocalized: “Analysis of FTL comms traffic provided by the ‘Apeilic Iris’ has been difficult to decrypt but based on scattered open chatter Intel has told us they reason to believe that this fleet matches descriptions of the ‘Standard Confederacy’. They’re citing what appear to be military comms out of Abell, Buxe, SAF2, and SAF10.”
[tab]Roland had never liked Intel either. “What kind of military comms?” he asked.
[tab]“Best guess is chatter about ground invasions.”
[tab]So it was a migrant wave that was now invading everything within reach. “How coordinated are these invasions?”
[tab]“No coordination discernable,” Melantha patterned.
[tab]If this had only been a vanguard, that might’ve been serious trouble. But if it was an isolated splinter fleet, they had options. “What’s the status of our Aerospace Wings?”
[tab]“They’re either breaking atmosphere or on the flight lines queuing up to do so.”
[tab]“And the light-lag on radio to this ‘Standard’ fleet?” he asked.
[tab]“96 seconds and closing. Sir, we could use FTL—”
[tab]“It’s best to keep information of upcoming events in-house, I think. Someone else could listen in on us just as easily as we can on them. Inform me when our fighters are in position and set up a link from here to our tight-band transmitters.”
#
[tab]Lena’s platoon had been set up in commandeered civilian transports near Defgun 6. Predicted standard operating procedure by the OpFor if they got through the screen put up by the guns was predicted to be a ground campaign to neutralize said guns. Nobody had ever gotten that far, but that didn’t stop SSB from endlessly fantasizing about the worst. Her men were more jittery than advisable but she felt a lesson in the tedium of war to be prudent, so she hadn’t ordered them to dial it down.
[tab]They had all been kept in the dark as to what exactly had brought them out into the surface, herself included, so she spent her time admiring the Defgun while waiting for orders. It had been a long time since she’d gotten to see one on the surface. It dominated the flat expanse’s horizon: a wicked, angular dagger of a thing, jutting out of an articulated pedestal. Beneath it sat a massive elevator, recessed several meters into the ground below great the housings for vast, camouflaged doors, now retracted. Defgun 6 was lean, mean, and very keen, slowly tracking a particular point in the night sky with lethal precision. She followed its gaze, and found she could see nothing.
[tab]She busied herself with diagnostics on her Kalashnikov.
#
[tab]“Sir, all fighters are breaking orbit and en route, ETA 4 minutes. We have this hooked up to tightband, light lag is now estimated at 57 seconds” said Melantha. She held out a wireless headset to him.
[tab]Roland looked up from the console he was studying to her and took it, slipping it on. He turned to the main orbital display and leaned against a console. “Unidentified fleet, what is your intention here?”
[tab]The delay was mind-numbing. At last it came: “This is Commodore Davik representing the Standard Confederacy. We are here to seek land for our people on SAF6 I. With whom am I speaking?”
[tab]“I’m afraid that’s not possible. I would advise you depart immediately.”
[tab]“Sir, I have 112,000 souls on board this flotilla in need of a world capable of supporting human life. Now I do not know who you are, but I am not going to let some voice on the end of a radio ostensibly on such a world to deny them that right. I suggest you identify yourself.”
[tab]Roland clicked the mute button the headset. “Fire all guns. I want that fleet holed,” he said with cool intent.
[tab]“Sir—” started Melantha.
[tab]“AIB and the rest can launch an inquiry later. If they get close enough we have a ground war on our hands. Now fire the damn guns!” he shouted, skin flashing angrily with shades of command.
[tab]The sudden silence of Main Control erupted into intense, professional chatter as commands flowed outward over the networks: “fire for effect, repeat, fire for effect.”
[tab]Roland clicked the headset back on, saying smoothly “I’m Director Marius. Maybe we can work out some kind of deal.”
[tab]He turned to see Melantha patterning “Exo-orbital delivery confirmed.”
#
[tab]Lena found herself stirred from ministrations to her gun by the thunderous roar and bright skyward plasma lance that signaled Defgun 6 going hot. Despite the sound and the fury that issued forth from its maw it neither recoiled nor visibly cycled, idling for only a few moments before once more searing the darkness with its hyper-velocity warheads.
[tab]“Looks like the party just started, boys!” she exclaimed between shots. There was wild cheering at the spectacle.
#
[tab]“Overlord-Actual, Fenrir, I have target visual, over” he said. The light lag at this distance eliminated any actual communication of orders, but communication was maintained for cohesion purposes regardless. Their positions were easily calculable and orders were issued taking such matters into account.
[tab]His headsets sudden squawked to life and his controls lit up in lurid fluorescent colors: “Fenrir, Overlord-Actual, you are weapons free. Initial SOG strike package is inbound, ETA 15 seconds. Updating your telemetry. Beware fratricide. Good hunting.”
[tab]“Alright, everybody, this is it, we’re hot and on the clock! Shoot to kill and watch out for the radiation bursts! Break and engage, two-by-two!” said Fenrir.
[tab]“Affirmative,” “Wilco,” and “Roger,” spilled in from all directions. He broke off with his wingman and made for the rapidly approaching cluster of burning dots. They were growing in size alarmingly as the first spherical ivory blossoms lit up their ranks. His data screens autocorrected for the optical flash. In instants the nuclear pulses dissipated to show hulls glowing in evil reds from thermal ablation and gaping caverns in sensor displays. As he dove on one of the bigger ships a second wave of shells came in, this time kinetics, going straight through these enemy ships, passages marked by the crystalline puffs of frozen air or water, and once or twice by the plasma glow of a conduit or reactor breached.
[tab]Sora “Fenrir” Petrovich pulled his trigger and did his duty.
#
[tab]Roland had committed. He absorbed the chatter passively.
[tab]“Watch the spread pattern—stay sharp,” from one console.
[tab]“Delivery confirmed,” from another.
[tab]“All targets acquired,” from the right.
[tab]“Multiple impacts confirmed,” from the left.
[tab]“Hot Rod is down,” from behind him.
[tab]“Estimated immediate casualties: 86%,” from before him.
[tab]“This is Scarface, recon pass, seeing a lot of bodies floating out here,” from one side of the room.
[tab]“Estimated casualties 99%,” from the other.
[tab]“We are bingo primary air, requesting clearance to RTB.”
[tab]“Picking up general SOS on a lifeboat.”
[tab]“Clearance granted.”
[tab]“Light it up.”
[tab]“Belay that,” shouted Roland suddenly. “Belay that order immediately.” The console tech immediately began passing down orders to cease fire.
[tab]“Get something up there to bring that lifeboat in,” said Roland, before he made his way back to where he’d been leaning.
[tab]“Primary directive achieved,” he heard.
#
[tab]“Main Control is asking for you—ma’am,” said Tafari.
[tab]“What does SSB Main Control want with me?” asked Lena. She had a feeling she already knew what it was and she didn’t like it.
[tab]“Don’t know, say they’ve got something for you to do. All it says is “Lieutenant Azhar: your specialties are required by System Security Bureaucracy Main Control ASAP.”
[tab]“You gotta love politicians, huh?” she patterned.
[tab]“Yes ma’am, as much as I love the flyboys getting all the action,” he said with a laugh.
#
[tab]“Lieutenant Azhar,” said Roland, applying a great deal of formality into it.
[tab]“Director,” she said, “To what do I owe this courtesy?” It was respectful but her skin showed the caution and ice in it.
[tab]Roland smiled. “Come now, we both know you’ve been off world. We have need of your talents at the moment.”
[tab]She looked askance “That was a long time ago.”
[tab]“It still makes you uniquely qualified,” he said. He held out a small, thumb-sized container split into two screwed-top cylinders. “Your eyes,” he offered, with a sly smile and some irony on his skin.
[tab]She took it and twisted them open to reveal a pair of contacts. She knew the type. Roland converted a nearby display into a mirrored mode for her. She turned to look at herself and held down one eyelid, slipping the blue-irised, black-pupiled contact over her all-black counterparts. A half-formed HUD presented itself to her. She repeated the process with the other eye and blinked a few times.
[tab]Roland regarded her for a moment and nodded with approval. “We picked up some survivors. We need to know who exactly it is we took apart up there and what they were doing here—we suspect it was a rogue splinter group of a polity known as the ‘Standard Confederacy’ but we’re not sure of the particulars. Unfortunately they’re not very cooperative after this incident and you can imagine how they’d react to seeing us without armor on.”
[tab]“So you want me to go in there and talk to some traumatized mothers and children who survived their families being spaced.”
[tab]“There’s only a few. And not all at once. It’s not like it’d be the first time,” he offered.
[tab]She conveyed her lack of approval to him purely through narrowing her eyes and turned to stare at the door. “Tell me it’s a matter of state security.”
[tab]“It’s a matter of state security,” he said, in a very matter-of-fact way.
[tab]“Why did you hole a fleet with civilians?” she whispered, her voice ragged, skin cycling angrily.
[tab]“Because it was also a fleet with an army,” he said, sounding almost bored.
[tab]He gestured to someone unseen down the hall, and then held out a gun in front of her. “See this? Does it look familiar to you?”
[tab]She took it and studied it. It was like nothing they had. She couldn’t even tell what kind of projectile it fired—or if it fired one at all. “We found a tank floating around out there too. Now, I know you were out there with 42 young bucks eager to wade in pirate blood, but I know and you know those were no pirates, and that gun and thousands like it would have gotten a lot of them killed if these people had ever touched down here. So why don’t you drop the holier-than-thou attitude and do your damn duty?”
[tab]She turned to look at him with indignation by felt it whither before his implacable patterning and smoldering gaze. She mentally fixed her skin to a light olive and loosed her hair.
[tab]“Don’t get too sentimental in there, they’re liable to try and kill you if you let them get close,” he said, turning and walking down the hall.
[tab]He heard her cracking her knuckles before the door in front of her opened, and the one behind him sealed shut.
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