intelligences of the other Venerian ships reached the same navigational result as their Federation prey by virtue of knowing the precise instant at which the Fed fleet transited.
The Fed formation looked like a melon rupturing at the impact of a high-velocity bullet. Some ships had scattered a considerable distance from the defensive array while others clumped too closely together for safety.
Transit
Stephen's guts tightened for another transit. The Feds remained in normal space. Had Pleyal's forces not been under pressure by the Venerian fleet, they might have extended the series farther, but already the outlying ships were in danger of being enveloped by their enemy.
A large vessel could accept a great deal of hull damage and remain a fighting unit, but a bolt or two in the thruster nozzles would leave it helpless. The Feds had to reform their defensive array, or the more maneuverable Venerian ships would attack from 'below' and disable them one by one.
'Mister Stampfer?' Piet's voice demanded through the excited shouts cluttering the intercom system.
'Gunners, load your fucking tubes!' Stampfer roared. 'And if they fucking blow, it's too fucking bad! Load your tubes!'
The loader of the bridge crew handed his shell into the breech with his captain watching intently. The munition's narrow flats fit the bore with a mirror's precision. The captain closed and locked the breechblock home.
'Prepare for action!'
A pair of Federation vessels collided. Stephen didn't notice the vectors merge, but Piet keyed in a series of quick left-handed commands. An image of the collision filled half of his display.
The ships were both of spherical plan. One was good-sized but the other was much larger-easily 1,200 tonnes. The
The contact had been glancing, but considerable debris sprayed from the point of intersection. The smaller vessel had torn away at least half of the
Piet switched back to a full navigational display. With the control yoke he varied the angle and, very slightly, the amount of thrust from the
Stephen half expected the
'Mister Stampfer,' Piet ordered, 'fire as you-'
A plasma bolt struck the
'— bear.'
The 20-cm guns rumbled forward on their tracks, then recoiled in quick succession. The slam of the
Three iridescent flashes lit the hull of the Fed vessel. One round may have penetrated: in addition to the plumes of hull metal, Stephen thought he saw light flicker simultaneously from a line of gunports shocked open by a 20-cm bolt. The Fed vessel continued under power, rotating slowly as it drew away.
'Attitude jet S14's running thirty percent down!' reported a voice Stephen didn't recognize. 'I think the throat's choked by trash, not damaged. Do you want us to clear it?'
'Absolutely not!' Piet snapped in reply. 'No one is to go out onto the hull unless I tell you that the safety of the ship depends on it!'
Piet adjusted his intercom's filter to narrow his next words to a single recipient. 'Stephen,' he said without turning his armored body to face his friend, 'what do you think of the battle?'
Stephen eyed the navigation display as he coded his IR sender to Piet alone. Lines marking the course of Venerian ships curved toward and away from the stolid Federation fleet. For all that, the Feds were reforming the globe from which they'd begun their transit series. In a little while, an hour or so, their AIs would have calculated the next series; then the next, and the next.
The present Venerian attack was less frantic than the first. The most aggressive captains had fired all their heavy guns on the first pass. Gas cooling could speed the recovery of half the battery, albeit at the risk of cracked tubes, but the rate of fire even in the best-conducted vessels was relatively low.
The only Federation ship in serious difficulties was the
'They can't hurt us, Piet,' Stephen said. Piet switched the left half of his display to a close-up of the
Stephen shrugged inside his hard suit and continued, 'There isn't much better of a chance that we'll hurt them bad enough that they'll really feel. Not if they hold their formation, and especially not if we stand off the way we're doing.'
'I'm concerned somewhat about morale,' Piet said. 'Ours and theirs both, if we're seen to be unable to destroy their ships.'
'Can you put the
On the display, the ragged Venerian attacks had almost ceased while ships cooled their guns. The Fed formation was nearly perfect again. At this rate of travel it would take them a month to reach Venus; but they
'Yes,' said Piet. 'That was my thought also. Both broadsides at very short range might be enough. With the help of God I can transit the
'No, not that,' said Stephen with a faint smile. His mind stared at alternate futures, events that might or might not happen. 'They've got their hatches open for repair crews. Get me close enough with fifty men and we'll board and take her.'
'That's. .' Piet said. 'Very risky.'
'The risk's in getting close, Piet,' Stephen said. 'I don't know what twenty rounds will do to a ship that big. Remember, we don't have an atmosphere to ignite the interior even if the hull's pierced. I do know what me and a close-combat team will do.'
He laughed harshly. 'It's all I'm good for, Piet,' he added. 'You may as well use me.'
'It's not all you're good for, Stephen,' Piet said. 'But God gave us all skills to use in His service, and no one could question your skills. I'll program the transit.'
Stephen rotated the dial of his intercom to the