Read Kris Longknife 13 - Unrelenting Online

Authors: Mike Shepherd

Tags: #Fiction, #Science Fiction, #Military, #Action & Adventure

Kris Longknife 13 - Unrelenting (31 page)

BOOK: Kris Longknife 13 - Unrelenting
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Nor was there much Smart Metal
TM
for hull-strength members. Someone did a workup of what would happen if the ships tried to make 3.5 gees, the normal fleet speed.

The computer simulation collapsed in upon itself like a tin can.

But, for a ship moored with two others and on constant guard for some suicidal maniac, it was good enough. Three of them had just proven it.

The extremely fast mover had shot through the jump going close to one and a half million kilometers an hour and adding to that with a 3.24-gee acceleration. It took it a second to locate Alwa but had started to swerve around to head straight at it.

That was the firing solution presented to the
Turkey
.

Kris had accepted
Ostrich
for the first one.
Cock o’ the Walk
had been the best suggestion out of many for the second ship.
Eagle
and
Falcon
had gone to the next ones.

But
Turkey
had shown up repeatedly in Kris’s suggestion box.

After repeated rejections, Kris relented, and
Turkey
was commissioned right along with
Egret
.

So, of course, it fell to the
Turkey
to have its forward battery pointed at the jump when the speedster shot through, intent on his death and millions of others.

Turkey
got its first shot off within a second of the ship’s
appearance. It was a miss. The gunnery computer hadn’t made allowances for the target’s speed.

The officer with the conn, a colonial, wasn’t about to let that first miss be
Turkey
’s only shot. She broke her ship out of mooring, sending the other two ships spinning off and wrecking their firing solution as she honked her ship around to follow the shooting star. They held their fire until they had a solid solution, then slashed at it with first one laser, then the next, finally the third.

All three hit although the last was firing on scattered chunks of hot metal. The reactor didn’t turn it to gas, so all three ships bent to the task of making what was heading for Alwa into smaller, if speedy, bits of debris. In minutes, they had the wreckage sliced and diced into truly tiny portions.

Kris sent the division praise for a job well-done and breathed a sigh of relief. The Bird class had the best possible fire control computers for just this kind of fast mover. The aliens were nothing if not persistent.

And they were getting more persistent at faster speeds. This latest test showed that humans still had the upper hand. They had to. One slip, and there would be hell to pay.

Kris kept a division of ships at Cannopus Station always ready to get under way on an hour’s notice. If a leaker got through the jump guards, they’d have to do their best to shoot them down close in. It would be harder, but it had to be tried.

Kris looked at what they had done today and found it good. Still, the birds would be a problem in a serious fight. Unarmored, they’d vanish at a single hit.

Kris shook her head and studied the sites that were launching against her. Eighteen of them.

If each had sixteen warships then that made for . . . too many. Say 272 ships in seventeen launch sites and the mother ship with a few more at the last one.

“Nelly, what launch site is it that the crew of the
Challenger
are so eager to check on?”

“The two in the middle. They figure one of those must have the mother ship.”

“I’m looking at 272 ships at seventeen sites. You throw in sixty-plus with the base ship, and you’ve got over three hundred. Has a mother ship ever had three hundred warships?”

“The one that came at us in the Battle of Alwa had over two hundred, but some of those were survivors from the first wolf pack we took down.”

“Yeah. Nelly, get a message to Commander Hanson. Tell him I’ll bet him a case of Alwan whiskey that he doesn’t find a mother ship behind either of those two middle jumps.”

“Kris, he says he’s sworn off the booze. He does stupid things when he drinks, and besides, that whiskey is undrinkable unless you’re already drunk, but he’ll take the bet. What two systems do you think he should check out?”

“There are eighteen nests. I’d pick the fifth in from each edge.”

“Kris, I checked the jumps to all four of them, and the quickest jump sequence is to one of yours. He says he’ll check it first.”

“Tell him to pick what he wants to bet, and I’ll see if I can match him.”

“He says that’s the problem with trying to bet around here. No one has anything decent to lose. He expects to be under way in less than four hours.”

“Tell him I’ll see him and his crew off. Nelly, remind me when it’s time.”

46

 

Kris
missed wishing the
Challenger
off; it got away in three hours. “We’ll find you those two base ships, Admiral. No need to see us off, we didn’t use up all your luck from last time.”

“I can’t even get respect from guys I’ve keelhauled and given a second chance,” Kris muttered, but she liked that spirit.

And she did want to know what was threatening her other flank.

She eyed her star map. Winning a battle depended on good ground and making better use of it than your enemy. If three base ships formed up at System X, they would be twelve normal jumps from Alwa.

Do I fight them at every jump? If I do, will they outflank me?

Kris studied the “ground” the jump points gave her and saw swirling battles as alien ships and her squadrons turned and twisted, each driving to catch the other overextended.

She’d lose that battle.

What if two more swooped in from a different flank? Kris shook her head.

“Do I defend here, defend forward, or damn it all and attack them now? Worse, is this battle plan coming out of my dreams about standing up to my mom and dad?”

Kris paused; she found herself smiling. It had always been mother and father before, never a familiar mom and dad like other kids. She patted the top of her belly. “Well, little one, there’s not enough room in here for two kids. It looks like mom may just have to grow up. But does that make it the right way to fight this battle?”

Kris slept on her idea; her night was dreamless. She and baby slept soundly curled up against Jack’s strong chest. Six million years of evolution trumped the reality of her situation. She was grateful for the comfort.

Next morning, Nelly passed the word to her admirals that there would be an 0900 meeting. To the fleet went out the preliminary order “Prepare to Sortie.”

The admirals arrived looking cheerful. Kris pulled no punches.

“Betsy, I want you to take the rest of Third Fleet out to support Shoalter. Miyoshi, you’ll take Second to support Zingi.”

The Musashi admiral’s face stayed unreadable, but Kris was pretty sure the idea of having half his forces made up of Yi and his questionable obedience did not make him jump with joy. “I’m pulling Yi’s task force out of your fleet and replacing it with Cochrane’s,” she quickly added.

Now he gave her a feral smile. “A fight. Bonzai!”

Kris turned to her last fleet commander. “Amber, I’ve kept you back tending the home fires while I’ve gallivanted around having fun.”

“I wouldn’t call it fun, but you do have more miles on you than I do.”

“Can you get the
Princess Royal
away from the pier today?”

“In four hours, I’m told.”

“Then those are your orders. Take First Fleet out to support Admiral L’Estock. You can have Commodore Suluc’s
Saladin
and the rest of BatRon 14 to bring you up to strength.”

Kris paused to eye the grinning admirals she’d just given sailing orders. “Your orders are to delay the enemy by any means possible. In doing that, you are to be governed by the principal of calculated risk. You will inflict the maximum amount of casualties on the aliens while incurring the minimum amount yourself. I am sending you to bleed them, but to retain your forces intact for the coming battle, which will determine the fate of Alwa and all who live on it. Anything you can do to make them backtrack and look for another series of jumps to flank you is to be counted as a victory.”

“We’re playing for time,” Admiral Kitano said.

“Exactly. They can afford to lose a hundred ships if it takes out one of your fleets. We can’t trade them three ships to one. Thirty ships to one will still be a high price. We can never know when one ship will be the difference between the survival of Alwa and its destruction.”

“You want no casualties?” Miyoshi asked.

“I can’t expect that. The enemy has a vote,” Kris said. “Bleed them. Delay them. Withdraw in good order. I expect they intend to concentrate in System X. When they do, withdraw to overwatch positions in the next system. Keep me informed by courier. I’ll see about spinning out more couriers, but I want the yards to make me more frigates.”

“Who gets to name them?” Betsy asked, sparkle in her eyes.

“Me,” Kris snapped. “I’m tired of mythical beasts or dead men you have to research to see who they are and likely won’t care much for what they fought for. I want something fitting like
Tenacious
or
Relentless
backing me up.”

“You won’t have much here,” Miyoshi said, maybe a bit guilty for who he was and wasn’t taking into battle.

“I’ve got what’s left of Yi’s task force. We’ve reorganized the Helvetican division, and I’ve got the trusty old
Wasp
. Or the new one. If the yards can get me another squadron, I’ll have three at full strength, plus the Birds guarding the jumps.”

“Good luck,” Kitano said.

“And good luck to all of you,” Kris answered them. “Godspeed and good hunting.”

“The same to you,” Kitano said.

“I hope not. I’m going to sit myself down and hold in place,” Kris said with a chuckle. “I’m not going anywhere.”

“I’ll believe that when I see it,” Betsy said as she took her leave.

“You can believe it. Someone has to hold the fort.”

Quickly, they were gone, busy to get their fleets away from the piers. Kris headed off to see Benson in his yard superintendent’s office.

“How’s it coming?”

“I hear you’re sending my ships out to fight aliens with us not in them,” was his rejoinder.

“Yep, three fleets sortie today. We’ll see how good a fleet
of thirty ships is at slowing down a wolf pack. They were getting too good at dodging around a squadron of eight.”

“Well, what do we get to fight?” he demanded, but not all that forcefully. His feet were still up on his desk, and his eyes were flitting to the ship being spun out in the dock below.

“The next one you make after that one.”

“Damn you, woman. I don’t get the
Steadfast
. What am I going to end up fighting this time?”

“Well, I was thinking the next class might be the
Inflexible
. Doesn’t that fit you?”

“Let’s see, the
Inflexible
,
Indomitable
,
Invincible
,
Indefatigable
,” he rattled off from memory. “It beats the
Fairy Princess
and
Mischievous Pixie
. But we need eight names. Tirpitz and her folks want a chance to fight for their lives.
Valiant
,
Vanguard
, and might I add
Vindictive
and
Victorious
.”

Kris was none too happy to have him taking her naming prerogative, but she had to give him credit for some rather distinctive fighting names. “Don’t you think
Invincible
is a bit optimistic?” she sallied.

“It did get blown up, but”—he shrugged—“sometimes you win, sometimes the dragon does.”

“So, do I have to visit all the yards to find out how things are coming, or can I just ask you?”

“Tirpitz did very good. She managed to respin the Bird class while keeping her four main docks reserved for the
Tenacious
,
Persistent
,
Steadfast
, and
Relentless
. I’ve got the kernel of
Vigilant
started here, and the other yards attached to Cannopus Station have the
Insistent
,
Stonewall
, and
Unrelenting
coming along, too. Now that the new Earth squadron has cleared the yards, these are all we’ve got to work on. If you give me the go-ahead, we can start the Inflexible class as second priorities and put the Tenacious class into high gear.”

Kris made a face. “What do you say we lay down the
Victorious
first and let that be the name ship for the class?”

“Only if I get to lay it down here and command it when we’re done.”

“You drive a hard bargain, Admiral.”

“I’m stuck serving under a slave driver,” he shot back.

They shook.

“I’ll see if I’ve got any scraps lying around the yard I can call a keel.”

“Why do I suspect you’ve been plotting this next class for at least two, three days?”

“Because I have. I can count the odds as well as you. I can also count the number of Sailors we have around here. You have yet to tap the crews of the repair ships. They got stuck dirtside last fight. They really want a chance to kill a few bastards this time.”

“Thanks for reminding me. Now I’ve got to do some scraping and scrimping to put together crews.”

“Go have fun. I understand Yi is really pissed about the officers, chiefs, and petty officers Pedro shanghaied out of his task force.”

Kris grinned. “I signed the orders. I know everyone he lost. Hard to tell a man he can’t accept a promotion, XO to CO, gunnery to XO, chief to Warrant, petty officer to chief. Admiral Cochrane didn’t ask for a single lateral.”

“He must have been dog robber to a really sleazy admiral back in his early days.”

“No doubt,” Kris said, and left Admiral Benson to work on his next miracle. Ahead of her was her second-most-difficult leadership challenge, right behind Sampson.

Admiral Yi was on his flag, the
George Washington
. He’d been none too happy when Kris ordered him to join Admiral Miyoshi’s Second Fleet tied up to Cannopus Station. However, removing him from Gosport Station had given both Admiral Bethea and Admiral Tirpitz a chance to operate outside the poison he exuded. Not surprisingly, both flourished.

BOOK: Kris Longknife 13 - Unrelenting
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