PROLOGUE
"Got
a problem here, Skipper."
"What is it, Chris?" Captain Harold Sukowski,
master of the Hauptman Lines freighter Bonaventure, looked
up quickly at his executive officer's taut announcement, for
"problems" had a way of turning deadly with very little
warning in the Silesian Confederacy. That had always been true,
but the situation had become even more dangerous in the past
year, and he felt the rest of Bonaventure's bridge watch
freeze about him even as his own heart began to pump hard and
fast. To have come so close to their destination without problems
only made the sudden, adrenaline-bitter tension worse, for Bonaventure
had completed her translation back into n-space barely ten
minutes before, and the Telmach System's G0 primary lay just
twenty-two light-minutes ahead. But that was also twenty-two
minutes's com time, and the Silesian Navy's Telmach
detachment was a joke. For that matter, the Confederacy's entire navy
was a joke, and even if Sukowski could have contacted the
detachment commander in time, it was virtually certain there was
nothing in position to intervene.
"We've
got somebody coming up fast from astern, Skip." Commander
Hurlman never looked up from her display. "Looks fairly
small-maybe seventy, eighty k-tons-but whoever it is has a
military-grade compensator. He's eighteen-point-three
light-seconds back, but he's got an overtake of two thousand KPS
and he's pulling about five-ten gees."
The
captain nodded, and his expression was grim. Harold Sukowski had
earned his master's certificate over thirty T-years before. He
was also a commander in the Royal Manticoran Naval Reserve, and
he didn't need Chris to paint him any pictures. At six million
tons and with commercial-grade impellers and inertial
compensator, Bonaventure was a sitting duck for any
warship. Her maximum possible acceleration was scarcely 201 g,
and her commercial particle screening held her max velocity to
only .7 c. If her pursuer had military-grade particle
shields to match the rest of his drive, he could not only
out-accelerate her but pull a sustained velocity of eighty
percent light-speed.
Which
meant, of course, that there was no possible way for Sukowski to
outrun him.
"How
long to overhaul?" he asked.
"I make it roughly twenty-two and a half minutes to
a zero-range intercept even if we go to max accel," Hurlman
said flatly. "We'll be up to roughly twelve thousand seven
hundred KPS, but he'll be hitting almost nineteen
thousand. Whoever he is, we aren't going to shake him."
Sukowski
gave a choppy nod. Chris Hurlman was less than half his age, but
like him, she was one of Bonaventure's keel plate owners.
She'd been the freighter's original fourth officer, and while he
would never have admitted it, Sukowski and his wife regarded her
very much as one of the daughters they'd never had. Deep inside
he'd always hoped she and his second oldest son would someday
settle down together, but however young she might be for her
rank, she was very good at her job, and her appraisal of the
situation matched his own perfectly.
Of
course, her estimate was for a least-time intercept, and the
bogey wouldn't go for that. He was almost certain to decelerate
in order to kill his overtake velocity once he was certain he had Bonaventure
nailed, but that wouldn't make any difference to the fate of
Sukowski's ship. All it would do was delay the inevitable . . .
slightly.
He
tried desperately to think of a way-any way-to save his
ship, but there wasn't one. On the face of things, the
possibility of piracy as a paying occupation shouldn't have
existed. Even the hugest freighter was less than a dust mote on
the scale of interstellar space, but like the ancient ocean-borne
vessels of Old Earth, the ships which plied the stars followed
predictable routes. They had to, for the grav waves which twisted
through hyper space dictated those routes much as Old Terra's
prevailing winds had dictated the square-riggers'. No pirate
could predict exactly where any given starship would make her
alpha translation back into n-space, but he knew the general
volume in which all ships would do so. If he lurked long
enough, some poor, unlucky son-of-a-bitch would sail right into
his clutches, and this time it was Sukowski's turn.
The
captain swore with silent venom. If only the Silesian Navy was
worth a fart in a vac suit, it wouldn't matter. Two or three
cruisers-hell, even a single destroyer!-deployed to cover the
same volume would cause any pirate to seek safer pastures. But
the Silesian Confederacy was more of a perpetually ongoing
meltdown than a star nation. The feeble central government-such
as it was-was forever plagued by breakaway secessionist
movements. What ships it had were always desperately needed
somewhere, and the raiders who infested its space always knew
where that somewhere was and took themselves somewhere else.
That had always been true; what had changed was that the Royal
Manticoran Navy units which had traditionally protected the Star
Kingdom's commerce in Silesia had been withdrawn for Manticore's
war against the People's Republic of Haven, and there was no one
at all to whom Harold Sukowski could turn for help.
"Challenge
him, Jack," he said. "Demand his identity and
intentions."
"Yes,
Sir." His com officer keyed his mike and spoke clearly.
"Unknown starship, this is the Manticoran merchant vessel Bonaventure.
State your identity and intentions." Forty endless seconds
ticked past while the red blip in Hurlman's display closed with
ever increasing speed, and the com officer shrugged. "No
reply, Skipper."
"I
didn't really expect one," Sukowski sighed. He sat staring
at the star he'd almost reached for another moment, then
shrugged. "All right, people. You know the drill.
Genda," he looked at his chief engineer, "slave your
department to my console before you clear out. Chris, you're in
charge of the bail out. I want a headcount, and I want it
confirmed before you undock."
"But,
Skip-" Hurlman began, and Sukowski shook his head fiercely.
"I
said you know the drill! Now get the hell out of here while we're
still beyond effective missile range!"
Hurlman
hesitated, face torn with indecision. She'd served with Sukowski
for over eight T-years, almost a quarter of her entire life. Bonaventure
was the only true home she'd known in all those years, and
abandoning her skipper and her ship went hard with her. Sukowski
knew that, and because he did, he gave her a cold, savage glare.
"The
people are your job now, so get your ass in gear, goddamn
it!"
Still
Hurlman hesitated, and then she gave a choppy nod and whirled for
the bridge lift.
"You
heard the Skipper!" Her voice was harsh, harrowed by grief
and guilt. "Move, damn it!"
Sukowski
watched them go, then turned back to his console. Lieutenant
Kuriko had already slaved Engineering to his panel; now Sukowski
punched in more commands, taking over the helm, as well. He felt
the sick, hollow emptiness in his belly and longed desperately to
follow Chris and the others. But Bonaventure was his ship,
his responsibility, and so was her cargo. The chance that he
could do anything to preserve that cargo was vanishingly small,
but it did exist, especially if the raider was a privateer and
not an outright pirate. And if there was any chance at all, it
was Harold Sukowski's job to do what he could. That was one of
the duties which came with his rank, and-
A
tone beeped, and he pressed a com key.
"Talk
to me," he said shortly.
"Headcount
confirmed, Skip," Hurlman's voice replied. "I've got
'em all in Bay Seven."
"Then
get them out of here, Chris . . . and good luck." Sukowski's
voice was much softer.
"Aye,
aye, Skipper." He heard the hesitation in her voice, tasted
her need to say something more, but there was nothing she could
say, and the circuit clicked as she cut the link.
Sukowski
watched his display and let a long sigh of relief ooze from his
lungs as a small, green dot appeared upon it. The shuttle was one
of Bonaventure's big, primary cargo haulers, with a drive
as powerful as most light attack craft's. Unlike a LAC, it was
totally unarmed, but it shot away at over four hundred gravities,
slower than its pursuer but twice as fast as its mother ship. The
pirates must be pissed to see the crew they'd hoped to make man
their prize for them escaping, but Bonaventure and her
shuttle were still outside their powered missile envelope, and
there was no way they'd go chasing after a mere shuttle with a
six-million-ton freighter to snap up. Besides, Sukowski thought
bitterly, they'd no doubt planned for exactly this contingency.
They'd have their own engineers aboard to manage Bonaventure's
systems.
He
let himself lean back in the comfortable command chair which
would be his for another half hour or so and hoped these people
were ready to believe Mr. Hauptman's offer to ransom any of his
people who fell into pirates' hands. It wasn't much, and Sukowski
knew Hauptman had hated making it, but it was all he could do
with the Navy withdrawn from Silesian space. And however arrogant
and hard the old bastard was, Sukowski knew better than most that
Klaus Hauptman stood by the people in his employ. It was a
Hauptman tradition to-
Sukowski's
thoughts broke off with a snap as the lift doors hissed open. He
whirled his command chair in shock, and then his eyes lit with
fury as Chris Hurlman stepped onto the bridge.
"What
the hell are you doing here?" he barked.
"I gave you an order, Hurlman!"
"Oh,
screw your orders!" She matched him glare for glare, then
stalked across the bridge to her own station. "This isn't
the frigging Navy, and you aren't Edward Saganami!"
"I'm
still master of this ship, damn it, and I want you the hell off
her right now!"
"Well
isn't that just too bad," Hurlman said much more mildly as
she sank back into her own bridge chair and adjusted the com set
over her black hair. "The only problem with what you want,
Skipper, is that I fight lots dirtier than you. You try to throw
me off my ship, and it might just happen that you
get tossed off instead."
"And
what about our people?" Sukowski countered. "You were
in charge of them, and you're responsible for them."
"Genda
and I flipped a coin, and he lost." Hurlman shrugged.
"Don't worry. He'll get them to Telmach in one piece."
"Damn
it, Chris, I don't want you here," Sukowski's voice
was much softer. "There's no need for you to risk
getting yourself killed-or worse."
Hurlman
looked down at her console for a moment, then turned to meet his
eyes squarely.
"There's
just as much need for me to risk it as there is for you,
Skip," she said quietly, "and I will be damned to Hell
before I let you face these bastards alone. Besides," she
smiled with true affection, "an old fart like you needs
someone younger and nastier to look out for him. Jane would kick
my butt if I went off and left you out here on your own."
Sukowski
opened his mouth, then closed it. A fist of anguish seemed to be
locked about his heart, but he recognized the total intransigence
behind that smile. She wouldn't go, and she was right; she was
a dirtier fighter than he was. A part of him was desperately glad
to see her, to know he wouldn't face whatever happened alone, but
it was a selfish part he loathed. He wanted to argue, plead-beg,
if that was what it took-yet he knew she wouldn't go without him,
and he couldn't turn his own back on a lifetime of responsibility
and obligation.
"All
right, goddamn it," he muttered instead. "You're an
idiot and a mutineer, and if we get out of this alive I'll see to
it you never find a billet again. But if you're determined to
defy your lawful superior, I don't see how I can stop you."
"Now
you're being reasonable," Hurlman said almost cheerfully.
She studied her display a moment longer, then rose and crossed to
the coffee dispenser against the after bulkhead. She poured
herself a cup and dropped in her normal two sugars, then raised
an eyebrow at the man whose orders she'd just ignored.
"Like
a cup, Skip?" she asked gently.