Purge of Prometheus (44 page)

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Authors: Jon Messenger

BOOK: Purge of Prometheus
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“Did you see that?” Gregario asked, the awe evident in his voice.

“Yes, I did,” Yen replied, activating his radio, “and now I want to go blow it up.”

“Commander?” Iana asked, stupefied.

“I want to blow it up,” Yen repeated more sternly.
 
Already, his psychic power responded to his desire for more violence and destruction.
 
“They just launched over half their entire arsenal just to make a showy display of firepower.
 
That means that they honestly believe we’ll all throw down our weapons and surrender at just an impressive show of force.
 
All it did for me, however, was piss me off.
 
And now I want to go blow it up.”

Switching channel, Yen called across the ships internal communication network.
 
“I need the position of the closest
Revolution
weapons platform.”

A voice quickly answered his call.
 
“This is Warrant Kilkurt of Platform Three, currently located behind the ruins of the Terran Destroyer twenty degrees off the port of the
Revolution
.”

Yen turned toward the floating wreckage of the Terran Destroyer.
 
He wasn’t surprised to find one of the platforms hiding amongst the floating debris.
 
The weapons platforms were capable of firing massive amounts of rockets per volley, but very few volleys.
 
An exposed platform would only be able to defend itself for a very short time before running out of rockets and being destroyed.

“Kilkurt, I need you to maneuver toward the
Revolution
.
 
Team Six will move to you and prepare to pick up your first volley.”

“Sir,” Kilkurt replied hesitantly, “I’ll move into position, but my radar is showing only four members of your team remaining.
 
You can’t maintain positive control over the full dozen rocket volley.”

“If there’s one thing everyone will very quickly learn, Kilkurt,” Yen said as he and his team began flying into the space between the Alliance flagship and the ruined Destroyer, “it’s that I should never be underestimated.”

The large weapons platform disengaged from the wreckage and drifted into position, its large rocket tubes pointed at the Terran flagship.
 
Yen led his team directly in front of the platform, their ships weaving in front of the launch path of the missiles.
 
Yen threw the switch and activated the communications channel for his Team.

“When the rockets launch, each of you pick up two missiles.
 
Leave the other six for me.”

Yen changed his channel back to speak to Kilkurt.
 
“Platform Three, fire on my mark.
 
Three… two… one… mark.”

Missiles roared out the tubes, billowing smoke in their wake.
 
The automated computers in the fighters automatically started tracking their launch, synching their systems with the rockets’ onboard computers.
 
Within seconds, the fighters had made contact and assumed control of the flight paths of two rockets each.
 
Yen, however, reached out into space, letting the wavering tendrils wrap around the other approaching six rockets, pulling them toward him.
 
As they approached, the six missiles took up position around his ship, floating and rotating like orbital rings around his fighter.
 
The missiles dipped and wove, narrowly avoiding one another, all under Yen’s command.
 
With all the rockets under the control of Team Six, the fighters began accelerating toward the massive Terran flagship.
 

The path between Team Six and the Terran flagship was relatively clear.
 
The battle had progressed, leaving hundreds of fighters destroyed.
 
The rest were loosely clustered in intense dogfights, leaving numerous clear paths of space, occupied only by the debris of those that had already been destroyed.
 
Only a couple of rogue Terran fighters engaged them as they approached the flagship.
 
Team Six quickly destroyed each in turn before continuing toward their target.
 
As the Team approached, the Terran flagship grew larger, its white hull gleaming dangerously as its weapon systems turned toward the approaching threat.

“The ship’s getting ready to launch,” Gregario called over the radio.

“Prepare for evasive maneuvers,” Yen replied.

The four ships split from one another, taking different approaches toward the swollen ship, splitting the targeting of the weapon systems four different ways.
 
As they continued diving toward the ship, warning sirens sounded in all their cabins.
 
On the radar, dozens of silent projectiles soared toward them.
 
The black metal slugs of the rail guns were nearly invisible to the naked eye as they raced forward, blanketing the area in a deadly protective screen.

“Slugs in the air!” Iana yelled as her ship spun as she avoided the first few projectiles.

“Stay out of their way, but make sure your rockets stay safe,” Yen ordered, his focus now entirely on bringing their destructive force down on the Terran flagship.
 
On his radar, Yen could see the other three ships flying as he was: seemingly haphazardly as they avoided the dozens of metal slugs that continued to launch from the flagship.
 
Suddenly, Wallace’s fighter stopped maneuvering and began a lazy spin in space.

“Wallace,” Yen called, “what’s your status.”

“The last one clipped my wing,” he called, the fear evident in his voice.
 
“I’m dead in the water.
 
I need someone to dock with me and pull me out of here.”

Yen’s vision narrowed as he stared at the Terran flagship, images of the white vessel exploding under their barrage flashed through his thoughts.
 
Being so close to destroying so great an opponent, Yen refused to fail.
 
“Are your rockets still secured?” Yen asked.

“What?” Wallace asked.
 
“They’re targeting me.
 
I need someone to get me out of here now.”

Yen wanted to scream to his Team until they understood his vision.
 
He yearned for such grand scale destruction.
 
He refused to stop until his desire was satiated.
 
Anger crept into Yen’s voice as he repeated the question.
 
“Are your rockets still secured?”

“Yes, for God’s sake, yes!” Wallace cried into the radio.
 
“They’ve got a lock on me.
 
Get over here.”

“Commander, I’m moving now to…” Iana began before Yen cut her off.

“No, Iana.
 
You stay where you are.
 
Wallace, listen to me,” Yen said, his voice quivering with anticipation, his bloodlust driving him forward.
 
“I need you to fire your rockets at the flagship.
 
Afterward, we can talk about getting you out of there.
 
Complete your mission first.”

“You crazy son of a…” Wallace didn’t finish his sentence.
 
Instead, the two rockets under his control launched from his ship and barreled toward the flagship at high speeds.

“It’s done, Yen,” Iana called over the radio, pleading with him.
 
“I’m moving now to get Wallace out of there.”

“I can’t allow that,” Yen said, his voice taking a dangerous edge.
 
“You have a mission too, Iana.
 
Everyone completes their mission.”

“You can’t leave me here!” Wallace yelled, horrified.
 
“You have to…”

Yen flipped the switch that cut Wallace out of the channel all together.
 
Though Wallace yelled into the radio, no one on the Team was able to hear him.

“Have you lost your mind?” Gregario asked.
 
“We don’t leave our teammates to die.”

“We also don’t disobey orders,” Yen snapped back.
 
“Our mission is to destroy the flagship and we will succeed.
 
This conversation is over!
 
Everyone prepare to launch your missiles.”
 
Flipping a second switch, Yen turned off the radio completely, cutting off any potential cries of protest.

As he prepared his own rockets for launch, Yen watched Wallace’s two rockets dive toward the flagship.
 
In response, the ship launched a salvo of metal slugs, which filled the space between the missiles and the vessel.
 
The onboard computers took control of the rockets’ trajectories and they maneuvered to avoid the hail of defensive fire.
 
As they moved, one of the slugs struck the first of the rockets, which exploded harmlessly above the flagship.
 
From within the blossoming plasma, the second rocket broke through the defensive fire and dropped onto the hull of the Terran vessel.
 
The resulting explosion rippled along the surface of the hull, fusing rail gun ports and tearing a hole into the weapons bay beneath.
 
Though the rocket did damage, it was barely noticeable against the shear mass of the flagship.

With Yen’s focus entirely on the rocket attack, he didn’t notice as one of the metal slugs soared up into space, locked onto a drifted and helpless fighter.
 
With Wallace severed from the Team’s channel, no one heard him scream as the metal slug drew invariably closer.
 
They didn’t hear as it crashed into the cabin of his fighter, tearing through the alloy and glass, smashing into his body, and barely slowing as it ripped a hole in the bottom of his ship.
 
Carrying only kinetic energy, the metal slug didn’t cause an explosion.
 
Instead, Wallace’s ship, and the small amount of physical remains of his body, simply drifted deeper into space, sent off on a new course by the collision.

The three remaining members of Team Six had concerns of their own, beyond the worries of another lost pilot.
 
With a number of their rail guns destroyed, the Terran flagship began firing more and more slugs toward the three fighters and their deadly collection of rockets.
 
With their flying reserved now for defense and reactionary maneuvering only, they had no time at all to calculate the trajectories of their missile payload.

Yen threw the switch, reentering the Team’s channel.
 
“I know it’s not easy right now, but we need to get a fix on the flagship’s weapons and engines.
 
Those are the areas where we stand to do the most damage with our rockets.”

“I’d love to help you, but we’re a little busy right now,” Gregario replied angrily.
 
“Or are you not worried whether or not we die too?”

“That’s enough, Gregario,” Iana called, emotions welling in her voice.
 
“Yen, be reasonable.
 
We can’t get through their rail gun fire.
 
It’s suicide to continue.
 
We’ll all wind up dead like Wallace if we try to push forward.”

“Wallace is dead?” Yen asked, checking his radar for the signal that was no longer there.

“Where have you been?” Gregario yelled, rage swelling into an ear-splitting volume.

Yen wanted to reply, but couldn’t find the words.
 
His lust for destruction had overwhelmed his senses as a Commander to the point that he hadn’t even noticed when one of his pilots, one of his friends, was killed.
 
Jerking out of his self-remorse, Yen pulled hard on the controls as he avoided yet another metal slug.

“You’re right,” Yen conceded.
 
“We need to…”

“Commander!” Iana cried out.

Yen checked the radar.
 
His jaw dropped as he saw a Terran Destroyer maneuvering from behind the flagship.
 
Team Six didn’t stand a chance against two large Terran vessels.

“We need to get out of here now!” Iana yelled.

“We are so screwed,” Gregario added.

CHAPTER 32:

 

 

“They’re hailing us,” Adam yelled from the communications console on the bridge of the
Ballistae
.
 
“They’re looking for a friendly identification code from us.”

“Then find a polite way to tell them to go to hell,” Keryn replied as she continued making calculations on the tactician’s console in front of her.

The
Ballistae
had raced through space in an attempt to reach the embattled Alliance Fleet.
 
They had been unprepared, however, for the scope of the battle that awaited their arrival in the galaxy.
 
The debris of hundreds of ships wreaked havoc on the radars, leaving the crew unsure of how many ships on each side still fought.
 
Though rockets were still being fired from a half dozen of the Terran Destroyers, all the ships seemed damaged and were limping weakly from the battle.
 
The Alliance had fared well, but none of their large Cruisers remained undamaged.
 
Keryn grew concerned for their chances against the remainder of the Terran Fleet, who remained undamaged and fully stocked with ammunition.

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