They zipped out, riding agile high-bum antimatter-catalysed fusion rockets. They made Antoinette think of the mouth-cleaning parasites of some enormous underwater monster. By comparison,
The departure had been the most technically difficult she had ever known. Clavain’s surprise attack demanded that
But she had made it. Now she had clear space for hundreds of metres in any direction, and a lot more than that in most.
‘Cut in tokamak on my mark, Ship. Five… four… three… two… and
It never came.
‘Fusion burn sustained and steady. Green across the board. Three gees, Antoinette.’
She raised an eyebrow and nodded. ‘Damn, but that was smooth.’
‘You can thank Xavier for that, and perhaps Clavain. They found a glitch in one of the oldest drive- management subroutines. It was responsible for a slight mismatch in thrust during the switch between thrust modes.’
She switched to a lower-magnification view of the lighthugger, one that showed the entire length of the hull. Streams of makeshift attack craft — mostly trike-sized, but up to small shuttles — were emerging from five different bays along the hull. Many of the craft were decoys, and not all of the decoys had enough fuel to get within a light- second of
‘And you had nothing to do with it?’
‘One always tries one best.’
‘I never thought otherwise, Ship.’
‘I’m sorry about what happened, Antoinette…’
‘I’m over it, Ship.’
She couldn’t call it Beast any more. And she certainly couldn’t bring herself to call it Lyle Merrick. Ship would have to do.
She switched to an even lower magnification, calling up an overlay that boxed the numerous attack craft, tagging them with numeric codes according to type, range, crew and armament, and plotted their vectors. Some idea of the scale of the assault now became apparent. There were around a hundred ships in total. Sixty or so of the hundred were trikes, and about thirty of the trikes actually carried assault-squad members — usually one heavily armoured pig, although there were one or two tandem trikes for specialist operations. All of the crewed trikes carried some form of armament, ranging from single-use grasers to gigawatt-yield Breitenbach bosers. The crew all wore servo armour; most carried firearms, or would be able to disengage and carry their trike’s weapon when they reached the enemy ship.
There were about thirty intermediate-sized craft: two– or three-seater closed-hull shuttles. They were all of civilian design, either adapted from the ships that had already been present in
‘Little… I mean, Antoinette?’
‘Yes?’ she asked, gritting her teeth.
‘I just wanted to say… now… before it’s too late…’
She hit the switch that disabled the voice, then eased out of her seat and into her exoskeleton. ‘Later, Ship. I’ve got to inspect the troops.’
Alone, with his hands clasped tightly behind his back, Clavain stood in the stiff embrace of his exoskeleton, watching the departure of the attack ships from an observation cupola.
The drones, decoys, trikes and ships gyred and wheeled as they left
Clavain knew now that the baroque augmentations he had seen before and dismissed as phantoms added by the processing software were quite real; that something astonishing and strange had happened to Volyova’s ship. The ship had remade itself into a festering gothic caricature of what a starship ought to look like. Clavain could only speculate that the Melding Plague must have had something to do with it. The only other place he had seen transformations that even approximated what he was seeing now was in the warped, phan-tasmagorical architecture of Chasm City. He had heard of ships being infected with the plague, and he had heard that sometimes the plague reached the repair-and-redesign machinery which allowed ships to evolve, but he had never heard of a ship becoming so thoroughly
The sphere of battle would encompass the ten light-seconds between
At three gees, the sphere could be crossed in four hours; a little over two hours for the fastest ships in the fleet. A hyperfast missile would take fewer than forty minutes to span the sphere. Clavain had already dug through his memories of previous battle campaigns, searching for tactical parallels. The Battle of Britain — an obscure aerial dispute from one of the early transnational wars, fought with subsonic piston-engined aircraft — had encompassed a similar volume from the point of view of crossing times, although the three-dimensional element had been much less important. The twenty-first century’s global wars were less relevant; with sub-orbital waverider drones, no point on the planet had been more than forty minutes away from annihilation. But the solar system wars of the latter half of that century offered more useful parallels. Clavain thought of the Earth-Moon secession crisis, or the battle for Mercury, noting victories and failures and the reasons for each. He thought of Mars, too, of the battle