Monday, December 26, 2011

Barbarians at the Gate

Excerpted from Clouds of Darkness by Jeffrey Caminsky, available directly from the Publisher, or from Amazon, or a bookstore near you.

(Readers from the United Kingdom and abroad can also find Clouds of Darkness on Amazon.co.uk )



Chapter 16


“WE HAVE REPORTS of rioting in the streets, Lord Commander.”

“Enough.”

“And the Convoy groupleader is still pressing for details. All he hears over the radio—”

“Enough, I said!” hissed Ga’Glish. Fury in his eyes, he turned to face Dra’Lengish.

“Surely some word of encouragement or comfort— ”

“Silence!”

“I am sorry, my Lord, but— ”

“Sorry?” Ga’Glish thundered imperially. “With less regret and more outrage at Terran banditry, perhaps the Empire would not be teetering on the brink of ruin. Go—!”

Ga’Glish stretched his arm toward the Monitorium.

“Go and do something useful, Dra’Lengish. Find us something to erase this latest Terran trick.”

“My Lord— ”

“Go discover some bit of magic to send the longnoses scurrying for home. And if such alchemy eludes you, my fine Chief of Tactics, then return to your models and your simulators and stay there until you find me a way to explain to the People exactly how the Imperator is going to make the Terrans disappear.”

“But, my Lord— ”

“Begone! – or I’ll send you home in chains.”

Leaving his anguished Chief of Tactics on the verge of tears, Ga’Glish stormed down the broad Common Corridor, heading toward his morning briefing in the Analysis Section. The Flagship was buzzing with rumors and on the verge of panic. Ga’Glish stepped quickly down the corridor, keenly aware that all eyes followed him as he passed. As miserable as his life had become, the past few days had been the worst. Each day brought new word of another attack by the Terran bandits; each day pushed his homeland further toward the madness of animals. He had no doubt that inflicting such horrors had been the Beast’s purpose: terror was an effective means of disarming one’s enemies. Yet Ga’Glish could not comprehend a creature like the Terran monster—one who could inflict such torment upon those who had once offered him friendship.

In the back of his mind lurked the same dark fear that haunted everyone: the Convoy. Alone in skies infested by the Terrans, the Convoy was now at the mercy of one who had shown himself merciless. Whether the One Called Khu’ukh would destroy it outright or hold it hostage was barely a thought to those below. The panic gripping the planet came from the same horror that had seized the High Command. From the moment Khu’ukh had made civilians his targets, Gr’Shuna became expendable.

Ga’Glish took refuge from the prying eyes of outsiders behind a large, brass door that shielded the Analysis Section from the rest of the Flagship. He leaned against the wall, his forehead resting upon a blinking direction indicator, his soul aching with each flash of light.

It was his own incompetence at work, he told himself. Whether through negligence or wishful thinking, it had been his incompetence that forced the choice upon them. Now his own ruthless objectivity made him feel just how painful a choice they confronted.

They could try to defend Gr’Shuna, or they could move to protect the Convoy. They could stand fast, fighting to deny Gr’Shuna to the enemy; or they could move to insulate their children and females from the Terran Beast who lurked like death in the unprotected skies of the Empire.

Ga’Glish harbored no illusions that they could do both. Though it would mean sacrificing his homeland, there was no doubt about the course they would pursue. Yet it grieved him to give such an order. His mind filled with visions of the millions he would be condemning to slaughter at the hands of barbarians. As he had many times in the past few days, he found himself weeping like a doddering old grandmother.

It would never do for his subordinates to see their leader in such a state, he kept telling himself, until at last anger at his own weakness was enough to overcome his shame and despair. Composing himself, he rose to his full height and headed down the hallway toward the Room of Information, hate and fury flooding every fiber of his being.

* * *

“NEXT GROUP, stand at the ready.”

The words sounded harshly in the earphones of Shl’Lanasha. Stepping up to the loading platform, he looked up, through the airless sky. The stars glowed like bright embers, filling the heavens with a dusting of light. He looked eastward, along the rocky horizon of the moon he was about to leave forever, and thought of the son he might never see again. Shl’Glisen, now the sole pride of his heart, was still living in nightmares, thought Lanash. For all he knew, the poor boy would never outlive the terror of his dreams, or the horror of seeing his mother butchered before his eyes by the Terrans. He still remembered the spot among the stars where the Convoy had faded into nothingness, and it drew his eyes now. He grew sick with the knowledge that he would not be there to ease his troubled son toward manhood and that, if something dreadful happened along the way to safety, he would not be there to ease his passage into eternity.

The shuttle door opened, and Lanash stepped inside, moving quickly to take a seat by the window. The vessel was crowded, and soon every seat was taken. He looked in vain for the rest of his company, but the hold was wide and his view of the interior was limited. Though it would have been nice to have a friendly shoulder beside him, there would be time to rejoin his friends when they reached the planet.

The warning signal sounded, and the shuttle shuddered under the weight of its thrusters. Shl’Lanasha gazed silently outside as they rose from the ground, heading for the transmission station that would send them down to Gr’Shuna. As his vantage of the moon increased, he saw the fortifications and massive blasters radiating in all directions from the launch station. He saw for the last time the gleam from the tiny, fragile pressure suits of those who would be left behind, assembled in formation to salute those like Lanash who were leaving to join Lord Glishek in defense of their homeland.

Lanash felt his eyes growing weak as he watched them wave at the last shuttle. Those remaining on the moon would man the large guns and massive fortifications built as the planet’s first line of defense. Though it passed unspoken, everyone knew that these outer fortifications would be the first line of defense shattered by the Terrans when they finally attacked.

Like everyone around him, Shl’Lanash tried to avoid the thought that those staying behind were doomed. But as the shuttle rose higher and higher in the airless sky, the fortifications began to look smaller and smaller. And Lanash knew what they all knew. The defenders on Gr’Shuna’s moon would only be the first to die in defense of the planet; it was beyond hope that they would be the last. Like Lord Glishek, all viewed surrender as unthinkable. They had each heard the stories of the Terran death camps. And they were resolved to die, rather than see Gr’Shuna suffer the shame of Terran atrocities.

© 2011 by Jeffrey Caminsky

Tuesday, December 13, 2011

The Great Blockade

Excerpted from Clouds of Darkness by Jeffrey Caminsky, available directly from the Publisher, or from Amazon, or a bookstore near you.

(Readers from the United Kingdom and abroad can also find Clouds of Darkness on Amazon.co.uk )


 
Chapter 15

“GEYAAAAAA—!!!”

Her mate’s scream of terror ringing in her ears, Segusha raced to the controls. She arrived in time to see portly ts’Segu rise from the floor, the color drained from his neck and eyes.

“Segu— !” she began.

“Terrans!!—Terrans!!” screamed Segu, suddenly reanimated. His jowls fluttering wildly in terror, he pointed at the central monitor. Segusha ran to the viewer, where her own heart nearly failed her.

There she saw three ships, closing at speeds beyond their own instruments’ capacity to discern. A quarter-unit distant, the power readings surged past all scales known to the merchant vessels of the Empire.

Segusha turned to her mate, who paled and fainted once again. She willed herself to signal their companion vessel and learned that they had also seen the demons lurking in the skies of home. And they were fighting the effects of panic, as well.

“Mother— ”

Segusha turned to see Seguila and Sargai, her small ones, peering into the control room.

“Is something wrong? What is the matter, Mother?”

“Silence. Back to your cabins, both of you.” Segusha started toward them, clapping her hands loudly as she walked.

“But— ”

“No arguments. Return to your cabins! At once, do you hear?”

As the small ones scurried back toward the living compartments of their vessel, Segusha turned the radio to the emergency setting. Small and slender as she was, she suddenly felt the strength of a bull saurus rising within her. Behind her, ts’Segu rose to his elbows, then to his feet once more, then staggered toward the forward control panel.

“Distress—distress,” Segusha called into the speaker, on the emergency channel. “Three Terran vessels, reading Twelve-zero-twelve-nine-seven. Please acknowledge.”

As Segusha repeated her message, over and over, she began to feel quite ill. Life on a merchant vessel had never been easy for her. The cramped quarters made her long for the blue skies and warm shores of her native land, and she constantly regretted mating herself to the simple fool who shared her bed and enjoyed her favors. She never tired of reminding him of the pleasant life she abandoned the summer she lost her senses to love, and succumbed to her own fancifully romantic notions of life among the stars.

Of course, that was when ts’Segu was a handsome, dashing star pilot, long before his growing girth made her forget her fanciful notions of being carried off like a heroine in a children’s myth. Now her mate’s livelihood threatened to kill them all. Now the Terrans were upon them!

“What shall we— ”

“We are changing course,” hissed Segusha, her eyes fixed upon the three images growing ever stronger on the monitor screens. “We must lose them somehow, and hide until they are gone.”

“But we cannot...it is impossible....”

“Tell me nothing of impossibilities, Fool. It is impossible for the ships of the longnoses to be where they are. They are a hundred units to the East, you told me. We shall easily have a safe passage, you told me. To bring delicacies and knickknacks to the Forces and return with pockets filled with riches, you told me. But our instruments do not lie. The Terrans are all but upon us. If we do not act quickly, we are lost.”

“Give me the wheel.”

“I shall keep the wheel. You can barely navigate through the center of a door well, let alone bring us safely to harbor. Confer with your friends in our brother vessel. Perhaps you imbeciles can devise the means to save us. I am too busy trying to change our course setting.”

“Permit me to— ”

“You have locked the controls! How are we to— ?”

“My Pet—a minor adjustment—permit me— ”

“Fool! How are we to escape if you have disabled the controls?”

As Segusha flailed at his hands, Segu reached over his mate’s shoulders and unblocked the computer. Soon, the vessel returned to manual controls. Placing his hands on the wheel, he began a steeply banked turn, narrowly missing their companion ship, whose pilot had similar notions.

“They are upon us!” screamed Segusha, pointing to the observing panel behind and to her right.

Clearly visible in the darkness through the viewing window, three bright balls loomed in the darkness like glowing apparitions. To her left, a small flicker from their companion’s weapons briefly glimmered in the heavens, followed by a brilliant flash of light from one of the Terran pursuers. In a heartbeat, the fiery remains of a dying ship lighted the sky, as the Terrans destroyed the other ship in the small merchant convoy.

“Aiyee—we are lost!” Segusha screamed, her voice crackling with animal terror.

From behind her came a dull thump, where her mate had fallen into a heap on the floor.

* * *

“MORNING STAR REPORTS that they have moved to seal off the lane of retreat,” reported Mathison. “Captain Ashton says that the enemy vessel is holding course. And Captain Fitzgerald wants to know why— ”

“I don’t care what he wants to know,” Cook fumed. “The order is to hold fire. That goes for everyone—including the Magellan.”

“Incoming message...it’s the Magellan.”

Cook sighed harshly. He didn’t notice the small smile of pride dancing across his helmsman’s lips. He only knew that things were not going at all as he’d planned. In fact, this first operation was turning into an altogether Isitian hash. Perhaps it was better to have it out now.

Actually, he thought, there was no real alternative to having it out now. Besides, his best ideas often rose from the flames of some disaster or other.

“Put it on the screen, Lieutenant, and hail the Morning Star as well. We may as well get everyone’s perspective on this.

“Aye, sir.”

Soon, a glaring Captain Fitzgerald filled half of the main communications screen. The other half showed a fidgeting Jeremy Ashton, who looked very uncomfortable.

“Opinions, gentlemen?”

Jeremy opened his mouth, but it was Fitz’s voice that filled the d’Artagnan’s bridge.

“Have you lost your bloody mind, Cook?”

“Settle down, Fitz,” Cook snapped. Too late, he realized that putting this discussion on the main screens had been a blunder of the first magnitude. He should have adjourned the conference to his office, where they could have it out in private. His bridge crew, eyes wide in amazement, looked embarrassed and worried as the commanders tore into each other. Cook figured that the effect was the same on the other ships. This was probably exactly how they’d do it on Isis, he mused, but it was too late to do anything about it now.

“Settle down?” Fitz hollered. “Settle down? The devil to settling down. Do you have any idea of the risks we’re taking, this far inside Lizardland? You brought us all this way—through bloody clouds—circling dead hunks of rock until we’re dizzy as a Demetrian gold-digger. Now you want us to hold fire while you consult your bloody Isitian navel? I mean—my God! What are we doing here, if not trying to cut their bloody supply lines?”

“That’s enough, Captain,” Cook said angrily.

“No that’s not enough.”

“That’s enough—unless you want to be relieved of your command here and now.”

After a few more seconds of grumbling, Fitz had calmed himself enough for Cook to have his say.

“I think it only fair to tell you,” said the commodore, his eyes narrowed, anticipating the eruption he was sure would follow, “that I have serious reservations about firing on civilian vessels.”

“Oh, for the love of tripe!” Fitz groaned.

“Commodore.” Jeremy’s face was weary, almost resigned. He’d seen Cook in this mood before, and knew just how little good arguing would do. “With all due respect....”

“Good God, Cook!” Fitz shouted, his face starting to redden. “What the Hell are we doing out here?”

“We are disrupting enemy shipping.” Cook said through his teeth.

“Then we damn well better kill something! I mean, my God—how disruptive can we be if all we do is jump out from behind an asteroid and yell ‘Boo!’ every now and then?”

“Just let them man their lifeboats before we fire,” said a voice of reason from the d’Artagnan’s helm station. The ship commanders were all too busy discussing the matter to pay any attention.

“We already have a rather embarrassing advantage in forces,” Cook said, coldly, “I do not intend to sink to the level of a cutthroat like Chadborne Wilkes. Besides, we don’t need three starships to overpower unarmed civilian freight haulers.”

“Unarmed??!” Fitz protested. “I took a bloody shot right to my Number Two shield!”

Cook glowered menacingly at the screen.

“Not much of one, granted. But it was still a shot.”

“I will not let us degenerate into a band of pirates— ”

“Then let them take to their lifeboats,” Janet grumbled. Her impatience was growing by the minute. She found that whatever vicarious thrill she felt at her commander’s civility was being crushed by the weight of his thoughtlessness.

“And as long as we’re still half-way through our first raid,” Cook continued, his eyes narrowing fiercely, “it’s as good a time as any for us to set some rules of engagement.”

“Rules of—? This is a bloody war, Cook! Or have you quite forgotten?”

“Lifeboats— , ” Janet snarled.

“Nevertheless, there’s no need to kill civilians.” Seeing Fitz’s eyes bulge in fury, Cook was quick to add: “Not unless we have to—not unless they fire on us first. We can make that clear right here and now, to this ship and to any that follow. If they fire on us, we destroy them—quickly, and without reservation. But if they surrender immediately, we will....”

“We’ll what?”

“We’ll...well...we’ll let them escape in their lifeboats. Or whatever damn emergency facilities they have in Crutchtan ships…and let them go on their way. After destroying their cargo, of course. Then we can fade into space to await another day, striking terror into the hearts of the enemy and landing another blow for the good guys.”

Fitz and Jeremy winced in tandem. Obviously, further arguments would be useless, but both had deep misgivings about what they were about to do.

Janet was livid.

“Well, gentlemen, any last comments?”

Seeing Fitz open his mouth, Cook was quick to close the discussion.

“Good! Glad it’s settled. That’s why I wanted all this talk out in the open. Air out our differences and all that. Work out our goals with a feeling of camaraderie. Team spirit and all. Good for morale.”

Ignoring the exasperated looks on the faces of those around him, Cook ordered Mathison to clear a hailing channel to the Crutchtan ship now surrounded by the three starships.

“Hailing frequencies open, Skipper.”

“All right,” Cook said, pounding his armrest for emphasis. “Helm, hold her steady.”

“Gee, sir,” came the reply from the helm station. “Wherever do you get all these clever ideas? Or is that where they come from on Isis, as well?”

“Miss Mathison, let’s see who we’ve got on the other line.”

“Aye, sir.”

“And Mendelson, let’s not be quite so snippy, shall we?”

* * *


HER MOUTH DRY as desert sand, Segusha helped her mate to his feet and fought the urge to panic. The paleness of her mate’s eyes told her that she could expect little help from him. Until he steadied, it would be all he could do to keep his balance.

“Mother....”

Segusha spun around, her voice trumpeting urgency.

“Back to the cabins.”

“But— ”

“Back to the cabins.”

“Mother!!” screamed Sargai, her eldest. “Look! The screen!!”

Segusha turned to face the main viewer and nearly fainted herself.

The screen bore the hideous image of a long-nosed simian. Its face was the scowling countenance of a nightmare, its eyes the glowing embers of a demon. Her own eyes widened in fear. She felt the color drain from her face, and her last meal started rumbling ominously in her belly.

Behind her, she heard the dull thud of her mate, falling to the floor once again.

“Help your father to his feet,” she whispered softly. “And then return to your cabins.”

“Mother— !” Sargai called, his voice trembling with fright.

“At once!” she hissed, hoping that the firmness in her voice would give her courage enough to face the longnose.

* * *

“MATHISON?”

“The translator is engaged, Commodore. They should be receiving.”

Cook cleared his throat, preparing to have a go at establishing contact. The two Crutchtan images on the screen stared back dumbly, like stone statues. He smiled and nodded his head. Pushing the translator button, he spoke slowly and deliberately into the translator, as he had once done in the Governor’s Palace on Girshoona.

“Hello.”

The console lights glared from all sides like spotlights on a stage. The Crutchtans simply stared silently from the screen. Undaunted, Cook pressed ahead. He knew that the other ships were monitoring his transmission. He hoped he wouldn’t sound as foolish as he felt.

“This is Commodore Roscoe Cook of the Terran Cosmic Guard, commanding the Starship d’Artagnan.” The Crutchtans made no reply, but Cook noticed that the green slits on either side of their necks had paled considerably.

“As you know,” Cook went on, “our people are at war—which, I’m sure you agree, is a tragedy of cosmic proportions, but....”

Janet coughed loudly, and shot him a look that would have soured a ton of sweetener. Outwardly undaunted, Cook changed the thrust of his remarks.

“In any event, our mission is to interdict enemy shipping. I am afraid this means that we will have to destroy your vessel.”

With a dull thump, one of the Crutchtans fell out of sight, toward the bottom of Cook’s screen.

“We regret this inconvenience— ”

“Oh, for crying out loud,” Janet muttered; Cook frowned at his first officer and pressed on.

“But we do not wish to cause unnecessary civilian casualties. As we have the time needed to avoid needless killing, we will permit you to evacuate your ship before we open fire. We would have afforded the same opportunity to your companion ship,” he continued, struggling to find the coherence in what was still a rather shaky affair, “but they chose to fight, rather than surrender.”

The impenetrable stare from the lone remaining Crutchtan made Cook uncomfortable. He swallowed, wondering whether it had been a mistake to undertake visual contact, but quickly dismissed the thought. He hated the thought of scuttling the vessel like a common pirate. And it was too late for second-guessing, anyway.

“Even so,” he continued, staring directly into the eyes of the remaining enemy civilian, “we cannot permit you to delay leaving your ship. We expect your people to come with reinforcements soon, and we must not dawdle ourselves, in getting on with our mission. We can give you only five of our minutes to gather your belongings and abandon your ship. I suggest that you hurry.”

Suddenly the screen went dark; the Crutchtans had broken contact. Cook had no idea whether they had understood him, or what they meant to do. All in all, he thought, this was turning into rather a sloppy operation. Disjointed. Out of focus. And altogether too Isitian.

But Cook couldn’t indulge his own doubts for long, for the communications monitor didn’t remain dark. The electronic ghost of the Crutch¬tan’s image had barely faded from the screen when Fitz flashed onto the viewer.

“All right, Commodore—!”

Cook cut him off.

“We have five minutes,” the commodore said coldly, the steel returning to his voice. “If you want to discuss the matter, we’ll do it in private.”

Before Fitz could utter a word in protest, Cook rose from his seat and bounded toward the door.

“Mendelson—with me. Dexter—take the chair.”

* * *

ONE OF THE lighting panels flickered on the ceiling. It was a common defect in starships, caused by a wiring robot somewhere in Eastern Terra that had been running short of conducting fiber at the time of manufacture. Janet had seen it the last two times she’d been in Cook’s office; she wondered how long it would take him to notice.

She settled into the plush visitor’s chair, beyond the line of sight of the communications viewers, and listened to the three commanders haranguing one another. She was coming to regret her impatience with the Skipper. Not that he didn’t deserve it. If he ever bothered asking her opinion, there were a thousand things he should be doing differently. But for all his other faults, and however painful it might be for himself or those around him, he really did try to do the right thing. After seeing the fire in his eyes when he took a stand for something he believed in, she found herself fighting against a flood of old feelings.

“So what do you think, Jeremy? Is he completely crazy, or has he just misplaced his mind again?”

“Well....”

“Look,” sighed Cook. “This is our first interdiction. I want us to do it right.”

“Then don’t go getting squeamish on us. Right, Jeremy?”

“Well....”

“And I want us to settle on a policy for handling civilian vessels. Eventually, I’ll want us to separate. We can disrupt a larger area if we’re not clumped together. But I won’t have us losing the discipline or cohesion that comes with fighting as a unit.”

“You know what I think?” Fitz squinted. “I mean, no disrespect intended—but you know what I think, Cook?”

Cook leaned back in his chair. Janet caught his eye, and he smiled as he winked at her. “Not that I could really stop you from telling me,” he said, turning his attention back to the screen.

“You’ve just got too much to worry about in that head of yours to think straight. There’s so much bouncing around up there that your brain fritzes out on us, every so often. Like an overloaded computer.”

“I suppose that’s more flattering than many other explanations I’ve heard, Fitz.”

Janet heard the sound of Captain Fitzgerald’s rough laughter coming over the monitor.

“Really, I’m serious Cook. You’ve too much on your mind, and your head is already filled with all that trivia. You just have trouble pulling it together, sometimes. You can’t keep it all from crashing. That’s why you go daft on us, every now and again.”

Cook chuckled amiably. For now, he would play the diplomat, he decided. It was not the time to pull rank. “Well, Fitz, practicalities do throw me, sometimes, I suppose.”

“And now that you’ve seen the error of your ways....”

“Well, not quite,” Cook said, looking Fitz straight in the eye. “For the time being, we’ll just muddle along without killing any more civilians than we need to, and see whether that slows down the war effort.”

“You’re a stubborn man, Cook. I wish you’d listen to reason.”

“Reason’s singing us the same tune, Fitz,” Cook said, his eyes twinkling mischievously. “But as long as I’m in command, we’ll use the Isitian version of the lyrics.”

“Come again?”

“We’ll do it my way.”

“I want the record clear— ”

“I’ll note our difference of opinion in my log, Fitz. If you like, I’ll even draft a formal order outlining our engagement policies on civilian merchant vessels.”

“I’d appreciate it, Maestro.”

“D’Artagnan out.”

As the teleconference ended, Cook sighed and rose to his feet, stretching his arms and yawning. Janet thought he looked tired. But since the war start¬ed, he rarely looked well-rested. He walked to the large star map in the anteroom; Janet stood and followed.

The anteroom was dark, except for the illuminated, spherical map, now set for the local skies. Cook stared intently at the points of light, each denoting a nearby star. Around the edge of the sphere, dominating the western edge, the Cloud glowed like burning embers. Janet approached until she was beside him, but said nothing. After a few minutes of silence, she turned to leave.

“Don’t go.”

Janet stopped and turned to face him. “I wasn’t sure you wanted company.”

“I wasn’t sure you cared what I wanted.”

The frosty look on her face told Cook he’d said the wrong thing.

“Sorry. That was a thoughtless thing to say.”

He returned his gaze to the star map, his brow furrowed deeply. Janet came to stand beside him.

“It’s been a long time since I’ve had anyone to talk to. Not since Jeremy left. And not for a few weeks before then.”

She stared straight ahead, afraid that he was about to open all the old wounds again. But his next words were in a soft tone of voice that she’d almost forgotten.

“What do you make of this, Janet?”

She noticed that he used her first name; he hadn’t done that very often. Since their last days aboard the Constantine, she could count the times on the fingers of both hands. And she remembered all of them.

“What do you mean?”

He stared straight ahead, his thoughts buried under a facade of intense concentration. She could tell that something was deeply troubling him. He might be an enigma, and a particularly mulish one at that, but she still knew him better than anyone else. Perhaps, at times, even better than he knew himself.

“We have them at our mercy, you know,” he said at last. “We can blast the poor devils to kingdom come. And Lord knows, whether they live or die makes no real difference to us, or to the war.”

“But we were once in the same spot, weren’t we? And the Crutchtans were civilized enough to let us return home.”

Cook turned to face her. She saw the troubled eyes of a gentle philosopher who once captured her soul and captivated her mind.

“You agree with Fitz and Jeremy?” he asked softly. “You think we should just blast away, then vanish into the blackness? It makes more sense tactically, I suppose. Exposes us to less danger. And it would probably cause a good deal of panic among the natives, at that.”

Janet took a deep breath, and felt the years melt away like dew before the sun. “A friend once told me never to be ashamed of my own sense of humanity,” she said.

Cook turned to face the glowing lights of the star map. Janet felt the full weight of the past crushing down on her shoulders, and wanted to cry. She looked at Cook’s face—the brow furrowed in thought, the distant eyes that could see through everything—and wondered what new mysteries she would find, if times were different, and she were given the chance again.

It was several moments before he spoke. “That friend was very young,” he said at last. “And the times were very, very different.”

Suddenly, the page signal sounded. In an instant, Cook was at his desk, pressing the intercom.

“Cook here.”

“We have movement from the target, Commodore.” It was Mathi¬son, from the bridge. “They’ve separated from the cargo bins, moving away at flank speed. Captain Fitzgerald wants to know if he can do the honors.”

“That vulture,” laughed Cook. “Tell him that it’s my mission, and he’s already had the first kill.”

“Aye sir.”

“Tell Dexter to stand by; Mendelson and I will join you right away. Out.”

“Before we go,” Janet said, stopping Cook as he began his dash to the bridge, “answer me one question.”

“Sure.”

“I can’t believe that you would have given no thought to the prospect of blasting civilian ships to kingdom come.”

Cook started laughing, a lusty laugh of the sort she’d missed for longer than she cared to remember. It was good to see, she smiled—though after a second or two she thought it would be nicer to have him take her question seriously.

“And I don’t think for an instant that you could have sold this mission to the brass if you told them you were going to let any Crutchtan spacers go, whether they fired first or not.”

“Now that you mention it,” Cook smiled mysteriously, “I suppose it does seem a bit odd, doesn’t it?”

“Well?”

“Well, what?”

“Don’t get cute with me, Skipper.”

“The truth?”

Janet nodded.

“Well, cutting the enemy’s supply lines was always an objective. It was—and it is—a worthy mission. Well worth the risk, even by itself.”

“But?”

“I suppose I did lose a few details to hazy thinking while concentrating on my other plan. This is Plan B, after all.”

“And?”

“And the original plan called for ten starships.”

“Skipper!”

Janet’s flaming eyes told him that she was in no mood for further teasing. Cook squinted and scratched his ear, but decided he was having too much fun to stop.

“So?” she demanded at last.

“So?” Cook stiffened his back proudly, as if the explanation were self-explanatory. “I was hoping to find the Cloud pretty much as we found it, tailing off just past Girshoona, providing a clear shot into the heart of Crutchta. And I thought that, once past the front, we’d find that the Crutchtans are without reserves to speak of. I guess we’ll never really know for sure. At least, not for a while. Though, of course you know that— ”

Janet’s eyes narrowed angrily. “Skipper—!”

“Well, sailing ten starships into the middle of Crutchta would have carried the war right into the enemy’s homeland. It would have forced them to choose between calling their fleet back from the front to meet us, or letting us roam freely in their home skies. Or so it seemed to me, anyway. Unmolested, we could lay siege to five or ten of their planets, until they sued for peace. If attacked, we’d destroy whatever forces they sent to meet us—at least, within reason; ten massed starships would let us deal with quite a lot of bother before we ran into serious trouble, you know. And it would open up the front to attack by our main fleet. But whatever we found, we’d have forced them into a strategic crisis. And it would have ended the war within a matter of weeks.”

Cook pounded his fist into his open hand for emphasis.

“At least I think it would have. I guess we’ll never know for sure.”

Janet paled, her eyes wide with amazement.

“You mean...”

Cook laughed roguishly. “Well, it was just a thought.”

“But— ”

“And you know, regulations do give the line commander the discretion to take the initiative, so I really wouldn’t have been disobeying any orders. Not technically, anyway—though I suppose making a hash of things might have gotten me into a spot of trouble, even with Admiral Clay. But when we finally got here it seemed that three ships gave us too small a margin for error, so I just trashed the whole thing and moved on. Except, of course, there were still a few details to sort out. Things should go more smoothly next time.”

Her wits still reeling, Janet shook her head in disbelief. She was about to say something when the page signaled once again.

“On our way,” Cook said into the speaker. Hurrying off at once, he paused just outside the door to the bridge.

“Coming?”

The door caught Janet on her way out of the office. Startled, she waited for it to open again before racing after Cook onto the bridge.


© 2011 by Jeffrey Caminsky

Wednesday, November 16, 2011

Understanding the Enemy

Excerpted from Clouds of Darkness by Jeffrey Caminsky, available directly from the Publisher, or from Amazon, or a bookstore near you.

(Readers from the United Kingdom and abroad can also find Clouds of Darkness on Amazon.co.uk )


From Chapter 11

* * *

The entrance to the Command Center opened, revealing a great central chamber and a host of anterooms around the periphery. Shyly, fa’Shenali stepped through the doorway into the arching, cavernous nerve center of the Forces of His Worthiness. The Great Room was nearly deserted, its dimmed lights making him pause to let his eyes adjust. Yet the screens brightly displayed the Universe around them, as the Flagship’s automated sensors continued their work undeterred by the lack of an audience, searching the heavens for the faintest trace of the enemy. The subaltern could hear muted and random voices as technicians went about their work, but could see nobody. Slowly, he walked toward the center of the room.

Beneath the arching canopy and endless bands of monitors, fa’Shenali felt the humbling lack of his own worth. Within these walls, he mused, the future of his people would be decided, by the dedication and energy of those who served the Lord Commander. He felt lost and bewildered, like a small child who had wandered into a Chamber of Solitude and had no notion of what Meditation really meant for the soul. If he had come to the Great Room for solace or inspiration, it was not working.

Continuing down the walkway, toward the far bank of computers, he stepped onto the grating that separated the command floor from the service area below. He stopped in front of the main tactical display screen. It was silent now, showing the stars beyond to the west. Somewhere, he thought—somewhere out there lurked the Beast, the One Most Hated. He knew that one day he would see the Beast’s ship in battle. He hoped he would be ready.

As he mused to himself, he slowly became conscious of a bitter, acrid aroma filling the air, wafting up from below, carried on currents of circulating air.

“By your leave,” called a voice. Fa’Shenali looked about, but saw none about him.

“By your leave, Subaltern.”

Looking down, Shenali saw movement in the darkness below, underneath the grating. Curious about its source, he peered intently until he discerned its shape. It was a menial, a technician, assigned to attend the machinery. The menial sighed sharply, making no effort to hide his temper.

“By your leave, your Subalternness!”

“Yes, Menial…what do you require?”

“Pffff!” sniffed the menial.

Taken aback by the breach of manners, fa’Shenali undertook to repeat himself.

“I said— ”

“If it is not too much trouble, Your Grand Lordship might try moving himself so that I am not trapped down here with the fumes.”

Looking about to find himself standing on the hatch opening, fa’Shenali stepped aside. The grating opened and a technician climbed up to the main floor. The menial’s face was darkened with soot, and his body reeked of smoke. He coughed to clear his throat, and took a deep breath.

“If you wished me to move...”

“Many thanks, Subaltern.”

“If you will pardon the question...”

“My name is lash’Hanna,” the menial replied with a bow of politeness.

“If you pardon the question, One Called Hanna,” repeated fa’Shenali, returning the bow formally, “but what were you— ”

“The machines and augmentors need constant monitoring and adjustment,” Hanna interrupted. Fa’Shenali stiffened at the interruption by one of his inferiors, but his show of rank went outwardly unnoticed. “My task is to keep them operating efficiently.” Wryness danced across his lips, and he permitted fa’Shenali to sense his amusement.

“Or perhaps, Your Exaltedness thought that all this equipment maintained itself.”

For a moment, fa’Shenali hesitated, unsure how to react to such a showing of familiarity. In the end, mindful of his own roots, he permitted himself an uncertain smile.

“Perhaps we are all too well insulated from the lives of others,” he replied.

“You are the commoner,” said the menial, wiping his hands on a rag hanging from his utility belt. “The One Called fa’Shenali?”

The young subaltern nodded.

“Your arrival has not gone unnoticed, fa’Shenali,” smiled Hanna. “Many here rejoice at your good fortune.”

“I am gratified. If only my work gave others similar cause— ”

“Pfff— ” scoffed Hanna. “Snooties are snooties, and it matters not how well you perform. To some, you will always be of the rabble. It has ever been, and will ever be.”

Fa’Shenali lowered his eyes and bowed, acknowledging the truth in what the menial said.

“But what of it?” the menial smiled warmly. “Royalty is mostly pomp and little substance, a thinness of sugar on the excrement of worms. You are better off without most of them. As for Ga’Glish and his reformist breed—well, we shall see what happens once the Terrans are no longer baying outside their bedchambers.”

“I see our mothers breed cynics like purebreds breed leeches.”

Lash’Hanna laughed heartily. “Well said, fa’Shenali. I see our betters have not snuffed out your wit.”

Shenali shook his head. “I wish it were so, though often I wonder. I make little progress on my work, and fear it will reflect poorly on the Lord Commander. But the task itself is impossible.”

“And what task is that?”

Fa’Shenali looked toward the large viewer on the west facing of the arching canopy overhead. “It is the One Called Khu’ukh. He is my field of study, his mind and all its workings. I try to understand him, to help us find a better way to fight him, but my work is of no use. He remains a mystery to me, as to all others.”

“Oh, the Beast is a clever one,” Hanna nodded, his words carrying a conviction that fa’Shenali found surprising. “He soars far above our own simpletons—like an eagle soars above the vermin in the field. I fear your task may well be impossible, my friend. His art is like music from a troubadour’s lute, but his bite is deadly as a viper’s.”

“How come you to talk so glowingly about an enemy you have never seen?” Fa’Shenali was astonished that a menial would dare talk of such things. He was even more astonished that his rebuke was met by the laughter of derision.

“Oh we have seen more than you might imagine,” the menial replied good-naturedly. He stepped toward the control panel on the nearby wall. Pressing a few buttons, he turned to face his new acquaintance, a wry smile upon his lips. Soon, the remaining lights dimmed, and all around them was darkness, lit only by the dancing lights on the viewscreen above them.

“Attend.”

At first he saw nothing but dots of light, darting about the screen like evening bugs on a warm summer night. To his amazement, he soon found himself recognizing the patterns, and realized that he was watching a replay of the Battle of Geroulanash. To the left were the doomed ships of Lord Grena, moving against a badly outnumbered Terran attack wing. To the right, the longnose ships moved along a broad front, slipping closer and closer to the g’Khruushtani until the Terran flank suddenly turned to strike at the heart of the oncoming forces of His Worthiness, the center pivoting sharply to shatter the g’Khruushtani battle lines, and splintering the fleet beyond recognition. Then, the Terrans turned upon and destroyed the helpless squadrons as they struggled to regroup. As fa’Shenali watched, he saw the dots forming together like the brushstrokes of an artist, arching and flowing their ballet of death into a beauty as cold as space. For an instant, he was floating among the stars, wondering at the regal grace and artistry that was filling his mind as stars filled the heavens.

Soon, the screen went dark, and light returned to the Command Center.

“How came you to make such a thing?”

“Such things are far beyond my capacity, Subaltern,” Hanna smiled; fa’Shenali could sense the bitter irony in the menial’s words. “ I only work the machines. The computers do the rest.”

“But why has no one told me? Why have we not...?”

Hanna’s irony ripened into anguished laughter.

“Why? You may as well ask why our betters see only themselves when they look into a crowd, One Called fa’Shenali. Few bother to see a battle replayed in this matter, and no one uses it for study. Our leaders are mated to graphs and maps and wishful reports. They cannot see their own noses, much less remember that they have other senses with which to enjoy the Universe. And of course, none would condescend to listen to the rabble. Such a fall would admit that knowledge is not a prerogative limited to Royalty. But I am hardly the first menial to notice their limitations. Nor am I the only one who has seen the mastery of the Beast with his own eyes.”

Fa’Shenali breathed deeply, and raised his eyes toward the giant screen looming above him. Lash’Hanna was right of course. They were incredibly stupid—all of them, himself included. After millennia of pursuing knowledge, it seemed that civilization had bred all the sense out of them. They could reach the highest pinnacles of attainment known to the Galaxy, only to be beaten bloody by a race of savages, too proud or too ignorant to know their own limitations. And if the Terrans knew no such constraints, who could truly call them savages?

Fa’Shenali harbored no doubt that the Terrans would use anything that would help them destroy an enemy. He also hoped that Fate would smile upon the g’Khruushtani at least once during this ordeal—that the Terran’s primitive science would make machines such as the one he had just discovered beyond their capacity, and that they would be permitted at least this one small advantage in their struggle for survival.


© 2011 by Jeffrey Caminsky

Saturday, June 11, 2011

The Press of Battle

Excerpted from Clouds of Darkness by Jeffrey Caminsky, available directly from the Publisher, or from Amazon, or a bookstore near you.

(Readers from the United Kingdom and abroad can also find Clouds of Darkness on Amazon.co.uk )


From Chapter 7

TWO DAYS PASSED, AS THE g’Khruushtani battalions scoured the heavens for signs of their enemies. Each day brought news from the rest of the Empire, news of the approaching fleet, and of the parades and rallies in honor of the brave warriors at Gr’Lusshe. But on the third day, tension and concern seized everyone in the Monitorium.


“Screen Six shows enemy movement, Centurion.”

Khla’Chenga moved to look at the brightly colored dots that disclosed the Terran positions on the motion screen. Many days had passed since the longnoses had stirred. Sh’Alani, his deputy com¬mander, thought it likely that they were nursing their wounds until the time came for another assault. Khla’Chenga worried that the hiatus carried more sinister overtones.

“Transmit Terran movements to Tactics for analysis,” the Centurion said. “I wish to know of any change in the movement patterns we have observed…and whether there is anything new for us to take into account.”

“I understand,” said the monitor. “You wish to know if they have changed commanders.”

Khla’Chenga smiled. Though from a lowly station, this monitor had a keen mind and sharp powers of observation. “Let us hope that I am worrying like a grandmother,” he patted the monitor affectionately on his shoulder. “But I am worried, nonetheless.”

Leaving the monitor station, Khla’Chenga strode down the hall toward the Tactical Center. From there he would control the defense of the planet. The large room arched above and below, like the expanse in which the fighting would loom. Holographic projections would display the contours of battle. And in the center, suspended over the transparent flooring that his subordinates would share with him, was a blue globe, suspended in the darkened room, spinning in the blackness like the real Gr’Lusshe circled the heavens.

Technicians and assistants swarmed about the Center like summer insects, tending to the endless details that would help their commanders repel the invaders. Khla’Chen¬ga looked at the mass of activity. Like the planet below them, the great room was crowded with refugees. Only here they were refugees from fear, and their refuge was their work, rather than the warmth of a friendly world. The Centurion felt the weight of creation pressing upon him, for the fate of all on the planet below—on the Defense Station—even in the ships that had beaten back the longnoses for the past hundred days—rested upon him. Yet in a few days it would be over: the relief force was but two days away. If they could hold out until then, he could draw his first relaxed breath in what seemed like a lifetime.

Khla’Chen¬ga strode proudly into the Center.

“The High Commander comes,” called the Tactics Controller. The command staff stopped their tasks to stand stiffly in place, a gesture of respect for the one who had replaced their darkest fears with hope and pride.

“The Terrans are shifting their line of attack,” reported the Chief Monitor. “They are moving into Sector Twelve, and forming a broadened front for their assault.”

“I do not like this,” added Sh’Alani.

“You do not like the fact that they are moving between ourselves and our approaching relief force,” Khla’Chenga said wryly, “or the fact that they are trying something different this time?”

Sh’Alani fell into an embarrassed silence. At once, Khla’Chenga felt a sense of shame. Alani’s enthusiasm had proved a valuable asset during the long ordeal. The Centurion knew that it was wrong to use his rank to mock one who had performed so admirably.

“I apologize for my tactlessness,” smiled Khla’Chenga. “But we must forget our likes and dislikes. We must concentrate only on living through the next few days.”

“Their tactics are changing,” said his deputy. “I pray that it does not mean— ”

“We gain nothing by assuming the worst, Son of Gralani, except a paralyzing sense of fear,” said Khla’Chenga, strengthening his voice so that all could hear. “Yet we have all known that it could well come to this, that the Terrans might one day send their best into battle against us. And if it is truly the Beast himself who now seeks our destruction, then we owe our people, and our Imperator—and everyone huddling in fear on the planet we are guarding—all the courage and daring we can muster for the struggle before us.

“We have won a great battle, just by staying alive. In two days—three, at the most—the forces of His Worthiness will arrive to break the siege and bring us the rest we have not known for ages. Surely a few days more can be as nothing, for those who have already accomplished so much.”

A deafening cheer rose through from the throats of those assembled, and cries of “Victory!” soon filled the Center. Yet as they returned to their tasks, each felt the first twinge of despair start gnawing within.

They were within days of denying the longnoses the first contested planet of the war. Victory, however transitory it might prove to be, was within their grasp.

Yet each knew that the most hated Terran was out there, somewhere, looming in the blackness like death.

And each knew that the One Called Khu’ukh had yet to lose in battle.

* * *

“WITH ALL DUE respect, Commodore... ”

“Get to the point, Forestall. I don’t want to keep the Crutchtans waiting.”

“Setting your people off to the side…and splitting the troop landers like that. I don’t understand— ”

“We went over it all at the briefing, Captain. This is not a debate, and I’m not conducting a tactics seminar.”

“But— ”

“If you have any questions, I’ll be happy to discuss the matter afterwards. If we both live through this. And if I’m not called away as soon as it’s over. Right now, I don’t have the time.”

“But why— ”

“That is all, Captain. You have a squadron to tend to.”

“Yes, sir.”

“D’Artagnan out.”

“Over and out—sir.”

* * *

SLOWLY, THE ENEMY forces drew closer. The Terrans advanced along a broad front, the Crutchtans moved cautiously, approaching in a single, tight formation aimed at the Terran midsection. Just beyond the solar limits of Gr’Lusshe, the Terran left flank raced forward and pivoted forty-five degrees, seeking to engage the Crutch¬tan flank at an angle to soften them for the bulk of the Terran attack. It was a maneuver that Khla’Chenga had seen before, though only in briefings and study sessions, and he countered by sending a small detachment to engage and deflect the Terran charge.

But concern rippled throughout the Crutchtan defenders. Few Terran commanders dared to split their forces at the onset of battle, and the One Called OOH-eh’thr¬li lacked both the wit and the vision to begin a battle with such a maneuver. This concern soon matured into worry, as the Terrans followed their opening slant by pivoting the main body of their forces and slicing toward the besieged Crutchtan flank, isolating the Crutch¬tan wing and positioning the bulk of the Terran force to lunge directly toward the besieged planet.

It was a thrust both daring and simple, and bore the dreaded hallmarks of Crutch¬ta’s deadliest enemy. As it became apparent that the longnoses had changed commanders for a last attempt to take the planet, a cold fear spread among the Crutch¬tan defenders.



“CHANDLER REPORTS the bulk of the main Crutchtan body moving past Squadron Four to engage him.”

“Already noted.”

“Forestall reports enemy reinforcements moving toward our left flank.”

“Commodore, a trailing enemy squadron has engaged Squadron Four. Captain Drake reports stiffening resistance.”

Cook looked up from his star map. In his command room, adjacent to his office, he kept the lights dimmed, better to see the movements on the screens. As his tactical aides kept their eyes glued to their computer screens, his own eyes narrowed in fierce concentration, the monitor lights casting a soft glow across his face.

“Tell Tanana to move into position to support Chandler’s squadron, and await the order to engage. I expect the fighting will be rather intense, and he’ll need all the help he can get.”

“Aye aye.”

“In the meantime, I want to know the instant the Crutchtans begin moving their second wave into position.”

“Yes, Commodore.”

“And Calloway— ”

“Sir?”

“Page the bridge, and tell Commander Mendelson to have the first team stand down. They shouldn’t be needed for the next hour or so. Tell her not to start worrying until I show up there.”

“Aye aye, sir.”



KHLA’CHENGA LOOKED anxiously at the monitor screen. Grimly, he paced the Center, his eyes never moving from the center of the battle.

“Report,” he commanded.

“Engagement proceeding. Detachment Six reports heavy losses.”

“Detachment Five reports their lines under attack.”

“Detachment Two reports their lines are holding, but the Terrans are intensifying their attack.”

Khla’Chenga felt his mind under siege. Khu’ukh pressed upon them from every corner of the battle, giving them not a moment’s reflection. Forcing himself to remain calm, he called for Sh’Alani. His voice was dispassionate and controlled, but Alani could sense the growing anxiety of his commander.

“Analysis?”

“Our reserves remain uncommitted.”

“As are those of the Terrans.”

“They are directing their thrust toward the middle of our forces. Perhaps a counterthrust along the peripheries... ”

“Our peripheries are barely holding their own. Without reinforcements, they cannot attack. And if we commit ourselves there, the Terrans will press their central attack and overrun our main force.”

“Help is less than two days away. If we can last— ”

“We must first fight the Terrans to a draw. We cannot do so if our lines collapse around us.”

As Sh’Alani pondered the problem, Khla’Chenga glanced again at the battle projector. Khu’ukh was a more daring commander than he had ever encountered, with a quick, adaptable mind and a stunning sense of timing. So far, the Terran had anticipated and countered his every movement, pressing the attack closer and more furiously with each turn of battle.

And yet with each passing moment, the Terran line was arching forward at the peripheries, leaving a bulge in the center of battle where the fighting was most intense and resistance by the g’Khruushtani was the fiercest.

Suddenly, it struck him; coldly, he mulled it over in his mind until he was certain. Soon a grim smile danced over his lips, and those closest to him felt their own spirits lifting with the growing hopes of their commander.

Khu’ukh could be beaten.

Now.

There!

And Khla’Chen¬ga knew exactly how to do it. It had been so simple that it nearly escaped his notice.

“Order two squadrons of the reserves forward,” he said, his voice carrying echoes of his own confidence. “The remainder shall await my order.”

“And they are— ”

“They are to attack,” said Khla’Chenga. “Let the longnoses feel the lash of defeat. Today, let their ashes light the skies, and let the Imperator’s Medallion go to the defender who destroys the One Called Khu’ukh.

“They are to attack! They are to push at the center of the Terran positions and not let the longnoses shake loose until the battle is won. They are to attack!”



“WHAT?”

“I said— ”

“He’s ordering us to do what?”

“We are ordered to disengage and retreat, and reestablish our lines one-hundred klicks due east of— ”

“Get him on the line.”

“I beg your par— ”

“Get our esteemed commodore on the line, Lieutenant. Right now.”

“But— ”

“Don’t give me ‘buts’ — or I’ll kick yours myself. Just do it!”

As the radio officer hastily tried to raise the d’Artagnan on the emergency channel, Captain Chandler fumed in his command chair. Outside, just beyond the range of his visual sensors, a furious battle was raging. His tactical screens told him that his ships were starting to turn the battle. Though the toll was high on both sides, the enemy was starting to give way. If they kept up the pressure, they might well break through the enemy line, though how long it would take was anyone’s guess.

But now, if this latest scheme wasn’t countermanded....he just didn’t want to think of the consequences. A stern voice on the communications screen jolted him back to grim reality.

“All right, Chandler, what is it? And why are you still holding your position?” It was Cook; his angry eyes told Chandler that he was in more trouble with the commodore than he was with the Crutchtans. But Chandler was hardly in a defensive mood. Having his own commander angry at him was the least of his worries.

“I wanted to confirm— ” he began.

“Retreat order is confirmed,” Cook said sharply. “Reestablish your position one-hundred astrokilometers due east of McGregor’s Star. You may make your retreat as orderly as possible, but you are ordered to withdraw, immediately.”

“But that means that Drake— ”

“Immediately.”

“They’ll have to slug their way back, Commodore. And there’s no telling— ”

“You have your orders, Captain.”

“Dammit, Cook! You’re cutting off our own people!”

“Those are your orders, Captain.”

Chandler signed off angrily, and nodded to his radio officer to relay the order to the rest of his squadron. He tried to ignore the twisting, gnarled feeling in the pit of his stomach. He knew that the battle would soon come hurling toward him in its full fury. But his own squadron would hardly know the worst of it. Already, Drake’s people were in the thick of the battle. Chandler realized that if he retreated, the front around them would collapse, letting lizards pour through the breach and cutting Drake off from any help from the rest of the attack wing.

It was almost as if Cook was dooming his point squadron to a pointless death.

Chandler felt fear gnaw at his belly. All around them, the Terran battle lines were collapsing. It seemed clear that Cook had finally met his match.

Either that, or the man had finally lost his mind.

* * *


© 2011 by Jeffrey Caminsky

Friday, April 22, 2011

The Looming Battle

Excerpted from Clouds of Darkness by Jeffrey Caminsky, available directly from the Publisher, or from Amazon, or a bookstore near you.

(Readers from the United Kingdom and abroad can also find Clouds of Darkness on Amazon.co.uk )


from Chapter 6

* * *
A FEW DAYS LATER, a shuttle hatch lock opened and a slightly disheveled blueshirt stepped into the hangar deck of the Cosmic Guard’s most famous ship.
“Permission to come aboard?”

“Permission granted, Captain Fitzgerald. Welcome to the d’Artagnan.”

Fitz smiled at his pretty young escort, a lieutenant who, as he recalled, was a member of Cook’s bridge crew. His ruddy skin crinkled around his eyes, and he wished that he’d taken the time to change into a clean uniform before leaving the Magellan. After the time spent cooped up on his own ship, he needed a change of scenery, and she was a lass after his own heart—a touch of sauce, ripe for a saucy touch. It never occurred to him that the young lady had her own views in the matter, and an entirely different opinion of him.

“Skipper’s still an hour away,” Mary Mathison said, as pleasantly as she could manage. “They would’ve been back yesterday, but they changed the rendezvous point again.”

Fitz laughed roguishly.

“They had to deliver some briefing papers to him,” Mary continued, a trace of haughtiness creeping into her voice. “By express courier, no less. The rest of the group is already here, now, so I guess the delay won’t really mean much. I mean, the Skipper can attend long-distance, if he wants to.”

Fitz nodded absently, paying less attention to what the young lieutenant was saying than how she was saying it. As they neared the officer’s lounge, he reflected that the d’Artagnan was really little different than any of the other starships in the fleet. The flooring might be a different color, but the corridors were the same hexagons, and the walls were the same standard beige. Passing them in the hallways, the crew looked much the same, though the missies always looked better on somebody else’s ship.

But being on this ship—Cook’s ship—felt different. Whether it was the bearing of the crew, the jaunty pride even the lowliest crewman showed at helping to man the grandest ship in the Cosmic Guard, or something as minor as the slightly subnormal gravitation the ship kept to remind her skipper of home, he couldn’t really tell. But he felt it every time he came aboard. Something about the d’Artagnan set it apart from the rest of the fleet.

Entering the lounge, Fitz smiled to greet many of his old comrades: Tanana; Blake; even Forestall, the group’s senior wing commander. Some he’d known for years, and some he hadn’t seen for ages, since shortly after the war started. But lifetimes passed quickly in war, and he had many friends he would never see again.

“Fitz—!!”

It was Chandler, his old friend from his DemCom days. Chandler looked tired, almost worn out. When Fitz looked at the others, they all had the same haggard, gaunt look. He wondered if he looked any different himself.

“You crafty old bastard! How the hell are you?”

“Same as always,” Fitz shrugged. “How’s life been treating you under Old Blunderbutt? Keeping your backsides safe from harm, I hope. From what we hear, the slimy bugger keeps dropping load after load. And now you groundtoads need help cleaning up the mess.”

Rough laughter filled the room. The warmth of friendship was easy enough to rekindle, Fitz thought. Besides, Admiral Weatherlee was nobody’s favorite commander. All along the front lines, the potshots at him were as thick as the bloodgnats on a Demetrian summer night.

“Those who’re still here can’t complain,” said Drake. “Leastways, not so long as Winnie’s in earshot.”

“Well, you can all rest easy now,” returned Fitz. “Cookie’s a-coming to the rescue—again. But by God, seems it’s bloody well getting to be a habit, don’t you know.”

“This time, Cookie’s got his work cut out for him,” said Forestall, his face turning serious. “The lizards are getting tougher every day. We lost Goddard in the last attack— ”

Fitz nodded sadly. Goddard had been part of the old gang at DemCom for longer than any of them could remember, as free with his money as with his jokes. Willing to do anything for a laugh, or for one of the good old boys. Now, like so many others Fitz knew, he was gone forever.

“— and he’s just the latest.”

“What’s the problem? I thought— ”

“They’re getting smarter, Fitz. We’ve kicked their slimy tails from the Neutral Zone half-way to the end of creation, but they’re starting to pull things together.”

“Cookie’s never put much stock in just bulling past’em,” Tanana interjected, “so you might not have a sense of how dicey things are getting. But they’ve started holding their forces back—pulling in their lines, shoring up their flanks.”

“Most of all,” continued Chandler, “now that their backs are against the wall they’re starting to press the attack.”

“And jumping all over us,” added Forestall, “when we make the slightest mistake.”

As his friends continued bringing him up to date on the enemy’s strengths and tactics, Fitz felt his insides twisting into hard, tight knots. Once again, now that they were set up for the kill, the lizards were fighting like demons. And after the Terran brush with disaster early in the war, they each knew better than to take the lizards lightly. Especially when it seemed like the battle was all but won.

Surrounded by buddies from the old days, Fitz poured a cup of coffee and took a seat. Soft, soothing music sounded over the speakers, and the plush, cushioned chairs in the officers’ lounge did wonders for his stern. It had been ages since he’d taken the time to sit and relax. On the Magellan, he found himself constantly besieged by a million things that demanded his attention. Here, on another ship, his mind could drift like a tramp schooner. He reveled in the freedom it gave him. But even here, he couldn’t escape forever; soon, the war came crashing back into his brain. He found himself caught by the stories of old friends meeting death, or heroics that were passing unsung in the darkness, so far away from civilization. He wondered when it would ever end.

More to the point, he began to wonder when his own com¬mander’s magic would run out, and whether this time Cookie would have any more luck than Old Blunder¬butt.


* * *

“LORD COMMANDER?”

The footfalls of a thousand souls thundered through the Flagship concourse, each proceeding toward the execution of duty. Lost in a cloud of his own concerns, Ga’Glish did not hear his Chief of Tactics calling. Soon, out of breath, Dra’Lengish had overtaken him.

“Lord Commander!” panted the Dralanvengi.

“Perhaps we should reconsider the advice of some of our junior officers,” smiled Ga’Glish, pausing to wait for Dra’Lengish to recover his wind. “Perhaps the conditioning we require of our young soldiers would be of benefit to my command staff, Lengish.”

“It would thin our ranks—appreciably, Lordship,” the Chief of Tactics nodded between gasps, “if only through—accelerating—the mortality tables. Whether that would benefit the Empire remains an unanswered question, I suppose.”

Turning to proceed toward the briefing area, Ga’Glish laughed without cheer.

“You have news?”

“Yes, Lordship. Good news, this time.”

“I am listening.”

“They have waited too long. The Terrans have delayed their offensive for too many days. Our relief force reports clear skies, and has made remarkable progress. Now they are but a few days away. The longnoses no longer have time to secure the planet before the arrival of Ra’Danli. They must retreat or perish.”

“Your confidence is most heartwarming,” Ga’Glish observed wryly. “Of course, it is easy to be confident when we are so far away from the battle, but let us not speak of trifles.”

“Speaking of trifles,” Dra’Lengish said; Ga’Glish sensed his Deputy’s mood shift to one of disdain. “I note that our newest arrival has yet to produce anything of value. He prefers to mouth only drivel and tripe, unbecoming a staff aide to the High Command.”

“Fa’Shenali has barely had chance to unpack, Lengish. Give him time. I am sure that the first time you spoke her name, your mother did not chide you for the paucity of your wit. Besides, he comes highly regarded, and he does seem to learn rather quickly.”

“But he is a—a commoner,” Dra’Lengish whispered. “Worse, his pedigree would offend even the rabble! Oh, Lordship, let us see reason together. This—boy, if you wish to be gracious about his appellation— ”

Stopping to face Dra’Lengish, Ga’Glish held out his hand to silence his Chief of Tactics. “This is a new age, Lengish,” the Lord Commander smiled wearily. “The exigencies of our era demand certain…well, concessions.”

Dra’Lengish kept his face impassive, but Ga’Glish could feel the frustration welling within his subordinate’s breast.

“Besides, the old Castes never did us much good. The philosophers have denounced them for eons.”

“Empty-headed rubbish!” rejoined Dra’Lengish. “They gave us order. And discipline. We knew who we were and what we were. And they never were very rigid, you know. At least, not among— ”

“Not among the masses. I know, Son of the Dralanvengi. But the Oligarchy itself must occasionally admit new blood, or die of its own inbreeding. And truth be known, we have been slowly dying for millennia, Lengish. We simply did not perceive it. For that perception—whatever other crimes they have committed along the way—we must thank the longnoses.”

Dra’Lengish recoiled in horror. “Such talk sounds of—of treason, Lordship.”

Ga’Glish watched in amusement as the color fairly drained from the eyes and gill slits of his tactical chieftain. Reformists like his uncle were long considered mad, he mused, and he was coming to doubt his own sanity, as well. Perhaps a civilization without its madmen simply lacked the energy to thrive. But he had long passed the point of caring about such things.

“Treason or not, the Terrans have made it all quite irrelevant,” he replied. “For the time being, the Empire needs all her sons, from all her daughters, if we are going to survive.”

“Have we really sunk so low as this?” Dra’Lengish breathed deeply; his voice quavered as he spoke. “So low as to need every harlot’s son to beat back the barbarians?”

Ga’Glish patted his subordinate on the shoulder, his smile belying the fire Dra’Lengish felt in the Lord Commander’s soul. “Bigotry ill becomes you, Lengish.”

“But— ”

“I shall hear no more of such things,” Ga’Glish commanded regally. His eyes narrowied fiercely, enough to make his subordinate fear for his liberty. “I have made my decision, and so has the First Minister. We are a common People. And the Terrans are a common enemy, dedicated to our destruction. If we cannot put aside our differences now, in the face of such dangers, then we do not deserve to call ourselves civilized.”

They continued down the hall, heading toward the Flagship’s Grand Hall of Congregation, for the weekly assembly of Thanks¬giving. To ones observing, they passed as if related by blood—Ga’¬Glish walking like a family lord, with proud eyes and defiant heart; his tactical chief shaking his head and pursing his lips like a sour old aunt.

* * *

“THEY’RE ASSEMBLED IN your office. The senior line officers from Task Force Alpha, I mean. One of ours has already arrived, so he’s there with them.”

“Who?”

“Captain Fitzgerald.”

Cook shook his head as he and Dexter hurried into the hangar deck lift. They headed toward the Conning Deck, and programmed the lift control for “Express.” The metal grids on the side-panels gave a passing view of the ship’s insides. A small light flashed each time they passed a different deck.

“I might have known,” Cook smiled. “If any of our own people could make it here ahead of us, it would be Fitz.”

“As for current status on the ship—well, aside from the new apprentice navigator....”

Cook raised his hand to interrupt. “Lieutenant,” he said with a weary sigh. “I’ve had a long trip, and I have a lot to think about in the next few days.”

Dexter looked crestfallen. “I only thought.. .”

Cook laughed, more in pity than anything else. “Don’t misunderstand me. I am impressed, Mr. Dexter. You have performed admirably. I have never seen handrails glisten like that, or floor tiles sparkle so brightly. And your initiative in winning certification at the remaining two bridge stations in my absence certainly does not give me any regrets—except that since you’re now eligible to command your own ship, you may be taken away from me just as you’re starting to become indispensable. But you’ve a lot to learn about your commanding officer’s quirks, as our executive officer can tell you. And you can tell Miss Mendelson and me all about it later, after I find out what we’ll be up against.”

Dexter’s eyes bulged. “Mendelson!” he exclaimed. “Oh, Jesus! She’s still— ”

“Don’t worry, Mr. Dexter,” Cook said, looking up at the floor indicator. “She’s a big girl. I’m sure she can find her way back to her room by herself.”

“But we just left her— ”

“As for protocol,” Cook began.

The door opened, and Cook stepped out into the Conning Deck corridor. Concerned about what the Book would describe as a minor breach of manners, Dexter stared ahead dumbly, his mouth open.

“Just tell her you’re sorry, and that it won’t ever happen again. And pray that she’s roped a redshirt into carrying all her bags. She did a lot of shopping on Looking Glass, and I’ll tell you quite honestly that being her valet is no fun at all.”

The elevator door closed, and Cook started down the hallway toward his office. He wondered whether the tactic of apologizing to the ship’s Executive Officer would work better for Dexter than it did for himself. Without fanfare, he entered his office and strode to the seat behind his desk, ignoring the startled animation that greeted his arrival.

“As you were; everyone be seated,” he began. He frowned to see that his desk had been tidied in his absence, and made a mental note to talk to his new executive aide about the pitfalls of mindless efficiency. “We don’t have time to bother with introductions. Besides, I’m sure we all know everyone here.

“I’ve read the status reports and battle manifests on the trip over here. At least, enough of them to give me an idea of what we’re up against.”

“And we’ve got wind of some of your zingers to the brass,” interrupted Chandler. “Must say you’re none too complimentary of our late Leader. Not that he might not be deserving it.”

Cook silenced the growing chorus of chortles with an acid smile.

“My personal opinions are not for public consumption,” he said coldly. “And as far as the past is concerned, I’ve read enough of your own reports, Captain Chandler, to know that there’s plenty of blame to go around. If all this good cheer at the change in commanders reflects the level of support Admiral Weather¬lee received from his subordinates, I may have overestimated what he had to work with—and may well owe him an apology.”

The entire group fell silent.

“As for where we go from here,” Cook continued, “I’ve sent for some of my own people to help us take the planet.”

“It’s about time we got some help,” ventured Forestall. The others nodded.

“Who’s coming to help us?”

“Captain Fitzgerald is already here,” Cook said, nodding toward Fitz. “Captains Ebling and McKinnon should be here in a day or two. We attack the day after they arrive.”

“Three ships? Three bloody ships? The lizards have been beating our butts for nearly a month and you think— ”

“Captain Forestall,” Cook said, his eyebrows arching regally. “I’ve got troubles enough, without any that your rudeness and mouth might add to the pile. Three additional starships—plus my own—should be quite sufficient for our needs. Given our time constraints, and the enemy’s tactical position, anything more would be a waste of resources. In fact, I doubt we really needed any additional help at all, but Admiral Weatherlee had already committed all his starships to the battle. I was afraid that what I have bouncing around my head might not work if the enemy realized that some of you were missing.

“Besides,” Cook smiled coldly, “ I didn’t really want to embarrass Admiral Weatherlee, or the lot of you, any more than necessary.”

“But— ”

“As for our precise plan of attack...,” stifling a yawn, Cook leaned back in his chair. He fought off the drowsiness that tried to intrude into his routine from time to time. Wing commanders had little enough time as it was. Weariness simply had no place on his duty schedule.

“I need to give things a bit more thought. I’ll have something in writing for you by tomorrow. I trust you’ll all have it mastered by the end of the day.”

“But— ”

“You’re all free to return to your ships, or to stay on board here, as our guests. But be back here—in my office—tomorrow at 200 Hours, sharp.”

“But— ”

“Dismissed.”

The squadron leaders filed out the door. Their shuffling feet dragged noiselessly on the carpet, and they each kept a sullen silence. Cook watched them carefully as they left. He suddenly realized that he’d worked with very few of them. From what he could see, they were hardly the sort to inspire innovation in a commanding officer. As the last of them neared the exit, he spoke again.

“Captain Fitzgerald, I’d like to speak to you.”

Fitz made his apologies to his friends, and promised to meet them in the officer’s lounge. When the door closed, Cook motioned for Fitz to take a seat.

“Well, Maestro,” Fitz laughed, plopping onto the overstuffed guest chair to Cook’s right, “looks like you’ve got your work cut out for you. The lizards—sorry, the Crutchtans—are giving our people fits here. And you’re sure as hell not making any friends with the locals. In fact, I’d say you’ve taken it upon yourself to prove to the rest of the Fleet that Weatherlee can’t even beat you when it comes to driving people crazy.”

Cook leaned back in his chair and laughed. “Ah, Fitz, honest to a fault. You’d fail completely as a diplomat, you know.”

“In this room, I think I have the market on tact cornered right now. What’s on your mind?”

Cook changed the programming on the overhead speakers, filling the room with the ancient, spritely music he used to help forget his troubles. He smiled wanly as Fitz winced at the change in programming. Clasping his hands behind his head, he leaned back in his chair and closed his eyes, savoring each ebb and billow of the string section for the next several moments.

“You know these guys, Fitz,” he said at last. “Tell me about them.”

“Well, I— ”

“And not the stuff I’ll find in their service records.” Cook sat up in his chair, laughing softly at his own private joke. “I mean—who’s sailed with whom; who discovered what; who’s gotten which medal. That’s about as helpful as finding rocks in a rockpile.”

“Well, if I knew— ”

“I need to know what’s inside them.” Cook pointed to his heart. “How much can I trust them to do exactly as I say? And how much fight do they have in their bellies?”

“They’re all fine officers,” Fitz interjected hotly, as annoyed at having to defend his friends as at having to fight his way into the conversation. “Among the best I’ve served with.”

“You’ve seen none of them in battle, though? I mean—lately.”

Fitz shook his head warily. “Not since the First Battle of Lagrush. Forestall was in the next squadron over during the ambush. The others? I served with them all at DemCom. They’re all first class officers. I’ve never had reason to think that any of them are—you know—squeamish.”

Cook smirked, the same Isitian smirk that had made enemies all along the front lines. Cook’s smugness was annoying enough in the past, and Fitz often got sick and tired of defending him. Now, even Fitz was reaching the end of his patience.

“Never mind, ” Cook sighed. “Go join your buddies, Fitz. They’re probably half drunk by now, and I’m sure you don’t want to be left behind. Not this close to a battle.”

“Dammit Cook! I’m not a bloody mind reader. And I don’t much care for being laughed at. It might help if you told people what the hell you wanted to know, every once in a while.”

Cook lifted his head to look at the ceiling. He took a deep breath and chuckled mirthlessly to himself. When he spoke at last, there was a note of sadness in his voice that Fitz recognized, one that never failed to send a shiver down his spine. He’d heard it often enough. Always just before a battle. Just before Cook sent people off to die.

“If you had to pick one of them for a mission you had just doomed to fail—one that may kill thousands, on the chance that it might save thousands more,” Cook looked Fitz straight in the eye. “Which of them is most likely to come back alive? And who would bring the largest number of his people back with him?”

Fitz swallowed hard. His stomach tightened like a steel drum, and his gaze dropped to the floor. When he looked up, he saw Cook smiling the loneliest, weakest smile Fitz had ever seen.

“Not easy being a commodore these days, is it?”

Fitz said nothing; his face turned a deep crimson.

“Don’t worry, Fitz,” Cook said at last. “I’d never make you choose between your friends.”

© 2011 by Jeffrey Caminsky

Tuesday, April 19, 2011

Excerpts from Clouds of Darkness by Jeffrey Caminsky

Excerpted from Clouds of Darknessby Jeffrey Caminsky, available directly from the Publisher, or from Amazon, or a bookstore near you.

(Readers from the United Kingdom and abroad can also find Clouds of Darkness on Amazon.co.uk )


from Chapter 5

THE NEXT DAY, COOK found himself staring down a dim corridor, feeling the gentle vibrations of the small ship’s engines beneath his feet. He’d looked forward to the trip to Looking Glass. It was a welcome break from the grim routine of command in wartime. But beginning the journey back to his ship he felt more worn and tired than when he’d left her, and they still had a long sail ahead of them.

Clearly, the old Mulligan-class escorts were not built for luxury. The narrow corridor ran the length of the ship from the air lock aft, over the engine room and past the upper crew quarters all the way to the bridge. Four feet wide, only the shortest crewmen could walk its entire forty-meter length without hunching over. The handholds along the side, installed to give the crew quicker movement along the spine when the gravity was cut, were green with tarnish. The blandness of the walls was broken only by the occasional discoloration of a past water leak. Cracking floor tiles carried the full burden of nine decades of service and two decades of neglect. The Mulligans were once the scourge of pirates everywhere. Now resurrected for use as couriers, they ferried Terra’s military elite from one theater to another, and from the command centers eastward to the Front.

The escort’s control room was a mess. Charts littered the auxiliary controls, and the pilot’s station was covered with the half-eaten remnants of dinner. Eight feet across, the bridge barely had room for the two stations placed at the controls. The accumulated clutter nearly sealed the two control officers into their station seats, and stood in marked contrast to the meticulous trim her commander kept on the rest of his ship. From his vantage just aft of the entry ramp, Cook took a deep breath and smiled. His first command had been an escort, a newer and sleeker model than this one, to be sure, but an escort just the same. And his own control room would have failed the inspection of a blind old pirate, much less a Cozzie blueshirt. It was good for him to see how the rest of the fleet lived, he thought. Perspective was always healthy. And right now, he could use a hearty dose of nostalgia, as well. Looking toward the bridge, he smiled to see the small ship’s two officers busily engaged in navigating the escort back toward the front, and began walking down the corridor toward the bridge.


“HEADING STEADY,” THE navigator reported, checking his instruments. “Guide-beacon constant at 050; ‘lights-out’ beam still active.”

“Roger,” responded the pilot. “Holding steady as she goes.”

“Hear anything from our VIP’s, Steve?”

“Not a thing. Both were sacked out, last I checked. Near as I can tell, You-Know-Who got his tail rearranged by some of the Brass. Probably took the fight out of him, for a while.”

“Goddamn,” grinned the navigator. “Bet the lizards would be sliming down their chins to hear that. Hope he doesn’t stay down like that for too long.”

“His traveling companion would probably second the motion, don’t you think?” The two young blueshirts laughed roguishly, and turned their attention back to their instruments.


COOK STEPPED ONTO the entry ramp and paused. In the midst of chaos, routine and training would hold even the creakiest ship together. But the pride an officer took in his command could make even the smallest ship sparkle. The evidence of this young lieutenant’s promise was apparent even through the aging fixtures and superficial clutter. Though cracked, the floor tiles gleamed; even the tarnish-stained hand holds shined as if ready for inspection. Upon first coming aboard, Cook had wondered if the last bits of spit and polish were for his benefit; if so, it would not have been the first time a junior officer had gussied up his ship to impress a visitor. But the routine on board was too fixed, too well ordered, to be anything but standard. Besides, he’d picked the ship at random. No young blueshirt could have trimmed his ship this well in just a few short hours. Smiling at the memory of simpler days, he turned his attention to the two young officers at the controls.

THE NAVIGATOR SEARCHED the mass of star charts and pulled a broad vista on the console in front of him. An intense round of calculations on the computer left him scratching his head.

“Charts say we’ve got shoals ahead, composition unknown. Rocks and ice, most likely. Pretty big patch, too.”

“Give ’em a wide berth, don’t you think?”

“Well, charts also say we just passed through the middle of binary star system—Class Double-G,” replied the navigator. He looked from one side of the forward viewing window to the other, then turned his head to peer out the portside porthole.

“I sure as hell don’t see any star system,” continued the navigator, exhaling loudly. “So either we’re lost, or the charts are fucked to high heaven again.”

“Mike, don’t do this to me. Not again. And not now, for God’s sake!”

“Sure beats the hell out of me what we’re going to do, Steve. Go round the shoals, we’re likely to wind up in the middle. Plow straight ahead, and bam! And if something happens with You-Know-Who on board, it’ll mean our hides. Assuming, of course, that we actually live through the encounter with that maverick herd of asteroids out there...somewhere.”

“Oh, Christ— ”

“Problems?” Cook stepped out from the shadows, and walked toward the small bridge. After a brief flash of panic at the prospect of having a senior line commander snooping around their bridge, relief flooded the faces of the young officers.

“Commodore Cook— !” gasped the navigator, an ensign on his first duty.

“We have a problem with the charts,” the pilot interrupted. Cook gave him a quick sizing glance. The lieutenant had a lone, dark blue duty stripe on his sleeve, showing a single tour of duty on a starship; his dark brown eyes were intelligent and intense. Though obviously concerned about his ship, he showed no signs of the numbing fear that often gripped junior officers when confronting a navigation problem alone, in the vastness of space.

“Nature and extent?” Cook’s commanding voice and gruff scowl immediately set the young blueshirts on the edge of their seats, concerned that the smallest mistake would become an indelible blot on their service records.

“The chart doesn’t conform to the observable cosmography,” the pilot replied, in his most objectively analytical tones. “Specifically, we seem to have missed a binary star system that’s on the map, directly on our course line. At present we can’t be certain where we are. The extent of the failure is unknown—and to be honest, Commodore, I cannot rule out human error as a contributing factor. But our orders are to maintain radio silence until the next checkpoint, so we can’t call and ask for directions.”

Cook moved some clutter from the auxiliary station and took a seat on the edge of the console, pretending not to notice the embarrassed glances exchanged by his young companions.

“Please...” The navigator started to rise from his station. Cook stopped him with a wave of his hand. The commodore glanced over the chart of the surrounding skies before bending over to look outside the ship through the forward window bay.

“You can’t really trust charts, you know,” he said absently, looking first ahead to port, then toward starboard, his brow furrowed in concentration. “At least not these charts. Actually, not the first charts of any new skies. They’re usually made in a hurry by some junior mapmaker and rushed to print before anyone checks them again.”

Cook stood and eased his way behind the station seats to the starboard side of the ship, where he peered through the porthole.

“Problem is,” he continued, “we need accurate charts, and we need them all yesterday. That’s an impossible order to fill, so don’t blame the chartmaker. Just don’t trust his work. Leastways, don’t bet your life on it.”

Cook turned and smiled wryly. “That’s why the Crutchtans will always have an advantage fighting in their own skies. They’ve had a millennium or two to iron out the wrinkles in their maps, while we’re left plodding through the heavens, hoping we don’t run into anything solid along our way. It may not prove decisive, but then a strategic advantage in war is often nothing but an accumulation of little edges, all added together.”

The navigator and pilot both nodded attentively. They both hoped that the Commodore would eventually get around to solving their navigation problem for them, but were too well disciplined to interrupt a senior officer in the middle of a lecture.

Especially this senior officer.

“Well then,” Cook said, his mood changing from philosophical to business-like. “I think I have this little muddle figured out.”

The pilot’s eyes widened; his navigator’s mouth opened, then closed in disbelief. Cook squinted as he looked out the forward observation window.

“Whoever scouted this sector obviously did so from that general direction,” the commodore pointed ahead and to port, “coming from Cosmic West. Probably made most of his readings visually, instead of relying on instruments.” He sat back down on the console.

“How do you know..., ” the pilot began.

“Comparing the chart with what we can see from here,” Cook continued, briefly scanning the chart again, “there seems to be a marked bias toward Galactic Center, toward our starboard beam. It’s variable, but definitely there. So as far as the missing star system is concerned— ”

He pointed over his shoulder. “There’s a single G-class star astern to starboard, another single-G ahead to port. Since Central Command has never lifted the standing order to note the location of all uncharted G-class star systems, this sort of sighting would have caught the eye of the dullest scout in the fleet. I suspect our chartmaker took a visual sighting from a few parsecs anticenter-east, mistook them for a single system, and took their mean distance for his positional reading.”

“But how— ”

“As far as our particular problem is concerned—and as a rule of thumb on any chart of unsettled skies, for that matter—I’d trust a hazard indicator before I’d trust the marked position of any star system. Since they rarely appear on your screens until it’s too late to avoid trouble, shoals are a menace to any ship in the vicinity, and a survey scout would place the shoals properly if he did anything right at all. So I suspect that the chart’s anticenter plottings are accurate enough. And if you ask my advice,” Cook smiled inwardly, knowing full well that anything he said would be taken for divine truth by his two young companions, “I’d assume that the shoals are right where the map says they are, but I’d still bear a tad to port and give them a wide berth, even if it does make our route a little less direct. Twelve points over 155 should do quite nicely, I would think. Just hold the course until the shoals show on your instruments, then make whatever adjustments you need.”

Both junior officers kept a stunned silence; Cook scratched his head and smiled sheepishly, trying his best not to look smug.

“Of course,” he said at last, “it’s not my ship, so it’s not really my decision.” He rose to his feet; the younger officers were too startled to move.

“Well, it’s been a long day, and I won’t trouble you any more. Maybe tomorrow, after we’ve passed the shoals, you can show me what this old escort can really do.” He chuckled gently, and started toward the ramp.

The lieutenant was the first to regain his wits.

“May I escort you back to your cabin, Commodore?”

Cook shook his head as he walked. “Achh—couldn’t get lost here if I tried. And I do have rather a lot on my mind. Thanks anyway.”

“Thank you, Commodore.”

Turning at the entrance ramp, Cook smiled wearily and nodded.

“Carry on, Mr. ....?”

“Cavanaugh, sir.”

“You run a fine ship, Mr. Cavanaugh. Carry on. Call, if I can be of any help. I used to run one of these ships, you know. But that was a long time ago.”

“Yes, sir. Thank you, sir.”

Cook disappeared into the shadows, heading back to the interior of the ship. The two young control officers said nothing until they heard the commodore’s footsteps echo past the forward hold, heading aft toward the mess room. The instant they were sure he’d gone, Cavanaugh craned his neck looking out the forward observation window while his navigator ran a quick positional check on a half-dozen nearby stars.

“My God—all a point or two off…or three or four. Every one off to starboard, just like he said.

“Looks like a damn bunch of stars to me. Can’t tell one from another. Not without a map.”

“All that, from one glance. Didn’t even look at an instrument. Not a single fucking one.”

“Mike— ”

“I know – come to port— ”

“Heading 155, north 12 degrees.”

“Aye aye.”

“Christ.”

“You know, I’d heard stories...but I didn’t— ”

“Me neither.”


* * *

© 2011 by Jeffrey Caminsky