She moved her hands through the virtual control field, and the SG-92 and the Starhawk braked, then pivoted sharply, its nose swinging to align with the swift-growing mass of the Turusch asteroid command vessel. Moving sideways now, continuing to pivot to keep the enemy ship directly off the fighter’s nose and continuing to fire, the Starhawk slid past the Turusch monster’s shields scarcely a kilometer away, passing the target with a relative velocity of less than two kilometers per second.
The close passage was far too fast-moving for merely human reflexes. Allyn’s fighter AI controlled the target acquisition, lock, and firing, but she was riding the software through her internal link, providing a measure of human control behind the lightning-swift reflexes of the AI computer. Through that link, she could feel the flow of quantum-based fuzzy logic, the sparkle of equations and angle-of-attack, the bright clarity of computer-enhanced sensory input.
For a brief instant, the asteroid filled her forward field of view, a vast, dark blur rendered almost invisible by its tightly closed gravitic shielding. Her AI continued, with superhuman speed, to focus on a single, thread-thin line of a target. Gatling projectiles slammed across the enemy’s shields to either side…and then, with startling suddenness, the shield collapsed, revealing a backup shield just beyond. The AI shifted aim slightly and began hammering at a second, reserve wave guide…and then at a third when the second shield collapsed as well.
How many reserves were there? Something the size of an asteroid could carry a
The actual close passage lasted perhaps two and a half seconds; it felt like
Her Starhawk had just passed the Turusch ship, was traveling tail-forward now as its nose continued to pivot on the enemy, when a final wave guide vaporized and a last-rank gravitic shield failed.
“Soft target!” she yelled over the comm link, as she triggered the last two of her Krait missiles. For the briefest of instants, she could see a gray and powdery landscape pocked by immense craters, the towers of communications and sensor arrays, the dull-silver domes of weapons turrets and gun positions.
Blue Five was too close to the enemy shields.
“Blue Five!” she yelled over the comm. “Change vector!”
Then white light engulfed her forward sensory inputs, filling her universe with raw, star-hot fury. The blast wave-a shell of hot plasma racing out from the surface of the Turusch asteroid ship at tens of kilometers per second-struck her vessel
More blast waves followed, a succession of them as the other Dragonfires hammered at the opening with nuke-tipped missiles, and then as incoming warheads from the fleet found the suddenly revealed weakness.
But Allyn had lost consciousness with the first savage impact.
Chapter Eight
26 September 2404
Tactician Blossom felt the rumble of successive nuclear strikes pulsing against the rock shell of the
The gravitic shields were failing, the enemy’s nuclear munitions getting through.
In point of fact, the
But the shields would begin to fall one after another now, as each failure uncovered another line of shield wave guides exposed on the planetoid’s surface. Eventually, all surface structures would be reduced to radioactive debris; the
“
“Swing to new heading,” it ordered the
“The enemy may pursue,” Blossom’s tactical coordinator, its second-in-command, told it. “Our power reserves are low, the damage to our shields severe.”
“They will not pursue,” Blossom replied, the statement arising jointly from both its low and middle minds. “The enemy is focused on protecting, perhaps recovering its colony on the planet surface. When we return with reinforcements, we will find the enemy long gone.”
The system
But if the enemy force was still more or less intact, so too was the Turusch battlefleet. The
“Accelerating,” the tactical coordinator announced.
Blossom’s higher self writhed in an agony of angry frustration.
Gray came fully awake with a rush of panic.
But the “they” were gone. He was floating in air, face up, staring up at the glow panels overhead, heart pounding as fragments of memory clawed at his mind. The scream rising in his throat choked off short. He tried to sit up, and failed.
His eyes opened and he looked up into a metallic nightmare. A robot had emerged from a cabinet in the wall and was hovering above him, all metal and plastic and huge, cold lenses for eyes. The remaining panic induced by the local fauna transferred itself to something more immediate-the looming presence of the medical robot. He screamed, tried to lash out against the thing, but his hands were trapped.
“Whoa. Take it easy there, zorchie,” a voice said.
Blinking, he tried to focus on his surroundings. He was in a small, metal-walled compartment, floating above some sort of grav bed. An older man in Marine combat utilities stood nearby, watching, his arms folded. A younger man, also in utilities, sat at a nearby workstation.
Abruptly, the robot folded itself back into its cabinet.
“What…happened?…”
“You got picked up in the desert by a SAR,” the standing man told him. “You remember anything, son?”