to the Imperium—or, at least, to move any deeper into it—and still get back to Sol before the main incursion arrives. So the big question is do we go on in the hope of finding
He studied their faces and found only mirrors of his own uncertainty.
“I don’t think we can give up just yet,” he said finally. “We know we can’t win without help, and we
Jiltanith and MacMahan nodded slightly. The others were silent, then Chernikov raised his head.
“A point, sir.”
“Yes?”
“Assuming Dahak is right that Fleet units are a more likely source of information, perhaps we should concentrate on Fleet bases and ignore civilian systems for the moment.”
“My own thought exactly,” Colin agreed.
“Yet ’twould be but prudent to essay a few systems more ere we leave this space entire,” Jiltanith mused. “Methinks there doth lie another world scarce fifteen light-years hence. ’Twas not a Fleet base, yet was it not a richly peopled world, Dahak?”
“Correct, ma’am,” Dahak replied. “The Kano System lies fourteen-point-six-six-one light-years from Defram, very nearly on a direct heading to Birhat. The last census data in my records indicates a system population of some nine-point-eight-three billion.”
Colin thought. At maximum speed, the trip to Kano would require little more than a week…
“All right, ’Tanni,” he agreed. “But if we don’t find anything there, we’re in the same boat. Assuming we don’t get answers at Kano, I’m beginning to think we may have to move on to Fleet Central at Birhat itself.”
He understood the ripple of shock that ran through his officers. Birhat lay almost eight hundred light-years from Sol. If they ventured that far, even
Oh, yes, he understood. Quite possibly,
“I recognize the risks,” he said softly, “but our options are closing in, and time’s too short to scurry around from star to star. Unless we find a definite answer at Kano, it may run out on us entirely. If we’re going to Birhat at all, we can’t afford to deviate or we’ll never get back before the main incursion arrives. If we make a straight run for it from Kano, we should have some months to look around Fleet Central and still beat the real incursion home. Even assuming a worst-case scenario, assuming the entire Imperium is like Defram, we may at least find out what happened and where—if anywhere—a functional portion of the Imperium remains. I’m not definitely committing us to Birhat; I’m only saying we may not have another choice.”
He fell silent, letting them examine his logic for flaws, almost praying they would find some, but instead they nodded one by one.
“All right. Dahak, have Sarah set course for Kano immediately. We’ll go take a look before we commit to anything else.”
“Yes, Captain.”
“I think that’s everything,” Colin said heavily, and rose. “If any of you need me, I’ll be on the bridge.”
He walked out. This time Dahak did not call the others to attention, as if he sensed his captain’s mood … but they rose anyway.
“Detection at twelve light-minutes,” Dahak announced, and Colin’s eyes widened with sudden hope. The F5 star called Kano blazed in Dahak’s display, the planet Kano-III a penny-bright dot, and they’d been detected. Detected! There was a high-tech presence in the system!
But Dahak’s next words cut his elation short.
“Hostile launch,” the computer said calmly. “Multiple hostile launches. Sublight missiles closing at point- seven-eight light-speed.”
“Tactical, Red One!” Colin snapped, and Tamman’s acknowledgment flowed back through his neural feed. The tractor web snapped alive, sealing him in his couch, and
“No offensive action!” Colin ordered harshly.
“Acknowledged.” Tamman’s toneless voice was that of a man intimately wedded to his computers.
Sarah Meir was part of Tamman’s tactical net, and she took
His jammers filled space and fold-space alike with interference, and blue dots flashed out from the center of the display, each a five-hundred-ton decoy mimicking
They were moving at almost eighty percent of light-speed, but so great was the range they seemed to crawl. And why were they moving sublight at all? Why weren’t they hyper missiles? Why—
“Second salvo launch detected,” Dahak announced, and Colin cursed.
Active defenses engaged the attackers. Hyper missiles were useless, for they could not home on evading targets, so sublight counter-missiles raced to meet them, blossoming in megaton bursts as proximity fuses activated. Eye-searing flashes pocked the holographic display, and red dots began to die.
“They mount quite capable defenses of their own, Captain,” Dahak observed, and Colin felt them through his feed. ECM systems lured
“Where are they coming from, Dahak?”
“Scanners have detected twenty-four identical structures orbiting Kano-III,” Dahak replied as his close- range energy defenses opened fire and killed another dozen missiles. At least twenty were still coming. “I have detected launches from only four of them.”
Only four? Colin puzzled over that as the last dozen missiles broke past
The ancient starship lurched. For all its unimaginable mass, despite the unthinkable power of its drive, it
The display flashed back on, spalled by fading clouds of gas and heat, and a damage signal pulsed in Colin’s neural feed. A schematic of
“Minor damage in quadrants Alpha-One and Three,”