5 Days Later
– Isdia, Solith 25, 8034 –
“Less
than half an hour until arrival, sir.”
“Alright,”
Chief Captain Peter Krick nodded in response. “This is it, folks. We don’t know
what to expect when we reach the system, but that’s why we’re here – to find
out! The moment we exit Subspace I want full power to all battle systems –
shields, weapons, engines. All weapon systems prepped and prepared to retaliate
immediately; all fighters prepped for launch, prepared to launch immediately!
The moment we’ve secured our ground, boost power to the sensors and begin
scanning for the Riaxen ship profile in the logs! Understood?”
The
bridge crew of the Earthian battlecruiser Genesis
responded with a resounding “yes, sir!”, to which Krick smiled proudly. “This
could be our first battle, both for the ship, and for SERRCom! Don’t let me
down!”
Standing
in the back of the bridge, Hero Machina looked on in mild fascination.
“They
don’t even know what they’re getting into,” Kaoné remarked, “but… they’re so excited!”
“Don’t
underestimate us Earthians,” Krick replied, standing up from his captain’s
chair and approaching the eight passengers of the ship. He looked each in the
eye briefly, his gaze passing over Hero Machina and then lingering momentarily
on the huge form of Master General Brennon Greant, who stood against the back
wall. “We won’t let you down!”
”I can
appreciate enthusiasm, Captain,” Greant replied, “In fact I’m very much a fan
of it myself! But you’d still do well to be careful.”
“I’m
aware, but thanks for the warning,” Krick nodded.
“What
exactly are we doing here, anyways?” Davídrius scowled, “Why do we need to be here?”
Kevérin
sighed wearily. “Where have you been
these past five days?”
“Wonderin’
the same thing the whole time.”
“We’re
here ‘cause we’re the only ones the Earthians would let on their ship,”
Christeané snorted.
“We’re actually here because we lost contact
with Tyrnaus,” Rebehka interjected, shaking her head disapprovingly, “We can’t
contact the system… and we can’t connect to its Transpace.”
“The
situation is worse than that,” Kievkenalis added, “The loss of contact was
preceded by two full days of Riaxen siege on the system. We need to learn what
happened to the defending fleet, and we need to investigate this Riaxen supership
that was reported to have appeared. I mean, it’s a Deathnought-class ship,
augmented by a Chaos Ayas. That’s pretty serious.”
“And that’s why we’re here,” Kevérin
remarked.
“…Are
we just the Ayas retrieval squad now?” Davídrius deadpanned, “Everywhere we go,
there’s an Ayas!”
“Ahahaha,
that’s hardly anything to complain about!” Greant guffawed, “Would only the
Black Suns be so lucky!”
“That’s…
not why you’re here?” Kevérin responded uneasily.
“No…
no, the Black Suns have little use for the Ayas. Don’t have the right tech, and
assigning them to individuals is a waste. I’m here to confirm what happened to
the Black Suns portion of the defending fleet,” the General’s expression
quickly turned solemn, “Supreme Commander Jeran and Master General Regek were
both with the fleet. If Jeran were to die now, it could mean… interesting things for us. ‘Us’ being
the Black Suns, of course.”
“I’m
surprised no one’s asked the obvious question, already,” Christeané spoke up,
“but… if the Ayas is on a Deathnought, then what the hell are we supposed to
do about it?!”
“We’ll
address that on arrival,” Captain Krick remarked, “Our mission is only to
investigate the fate of the system. If there’s something we can do about the
Ayas, then we’ll do it, otherwise we’re in and out within a day. All of the prepping I just ordered is for the
worst case scenario where we’re forced to engage; this ship is the only
ship in existence with a Subspace Drive, so if we fail here, then the rest of
the galaxy has no choice but to assume the worst and prepare for Riaxen
attack.”
“Watch
your claims, there, Captain!” Greant countered, “The Drakkars have had
similarly speedy FTL drives for ages.”
“…You
know what I meant,” Krick responded flatly, “Transpace-to-Transpace in two
days. Two days! No CSA, Nimalian, Black Suns, or even Syraus ship can come
close to that!”
“Your
enthusiasm is turning into pride,” Greant replied, his voice low. “It is true
that your ship is the fastest in allied space, but if I’m to understand
correctly it’s not by your own doing. This ship was created by the Master Ayas,
was it not?”
“Well…
yes.”
“Wait,
this is the ship from Sunova?” Davídrius questioned, to which Kevérin responded
with a facepalm.
“You
really haven’t been paying attention
at all, have you,” the Pyrotechnic replied flatly.
“…Alright,
no, I haven’t,” Davídrius admitted, “But I think I got it. We’re here to… uh…
steal the Ayas from the Riaxen. Right?”
Kevérin
sighed irately. “Maybe. Allow me to explain…
it’s likely this all began two months ago, when the old Riaxen Great Leader
Lexin died, and his successor, Zed, took over. See, a little over a month ago,
a massive Riaxen fleet suddenly appeared at the Taizen DMZ world, Tzinck. The
fleet then used the Transpace to jump to the Syraus Transpace World of Ulinah,
where they disappeared into FTL. In response, the Syraus, CSA, RPF,
Tekdecénians, and Black Suns set up a defending fleet in the boundary system of
Tyrnaus, which is the last Transpace World in Syraus space, as well as one of
the two worlds that Nimalia’s Transpace connects to. A week ago, the Riaxen fleet appeared in Tyrnaus and battle broke
out, with their Deathnought wreaking havoc. The RPF fleet, as well as many CSA
ships, picked up energy spikes from the Deathnought that can only be described
by an Ayas, hence our belief that the Riaxen have one. Two days later, all
contact with the system was lost. That was three days before we showed up on
Rossindon. Now, we’re going to
Tyrnaus with the help of the Earthians and their super-fast new ship to check
out what happened. We might attempt
to take the Ayas from the Riaxen, but only
if their Deathnought has been adequately incapacitated. Now does that make
sense?”
“Uh…
sure. Yeah. I think.”
“If you
don’t understand that then there’s no use trying. His synopsis was completely
correct!” Greant remarked, “I don’t think I could have explained it better
myself!”
Davídrius
turned to look at the General, who towered even over the tall Introtechnic.
“…You seem really energetic for someone your age.”
“Davídrius–!”
Kaoné glared at him disapprovingly, but the General simply laughed in response.
“Lack
of energy is a choice, m’boy!” Greant replied as he stroked his massive beard,
“Just because I can’t use Chaos Energy doesn’t mean I can’t be full of life!
There’s more to the universe than fighting, after all!”
“If you
say so,” the Introtechnic crossed his arms, his expression one of disbelief. He
then turned back to Kevérin. “Oh, I got one more question.”
“What
is it?” the Pyrotechnic replied flatly.
“…What’s
a Deathnought?”
“Humongous
ship. Fifty kilometers long. Really strong. Really powerful. Impenetrable
defenses.”
“Don’t
talk like that to me.”
“Just
making sure that you understood,” Kevérin replied innocently.
“Cut
the chatter,” Captain Krick ordered as he returned to his chair at the top of
the bridge, “We’re approaching the Tyrnaus system.” He redirected his attention
to the rest of the bridge, shouting, “Ready, men? Battlestations!”
“I’m
looking forward to this,” Greant grinned.
“…You’re
looking forward to a massive space
battle?” Christeané deadpanned.
“Or
potentially a massive graveyard?” Kevérin added, “It has been a week.”
“No,
I’m interested in this vessel,” Greant replied, “Even without access to the
specs, everything I’ve seen suggests this ship is far more advanced than anything else I’ve seen! I’m interested in
seeing how it’ll hold up.”
“…While
on it?”
“Life
is never fun if you don’t take any risks!”
“…If
you don’t mind me asking,” Kevérin responded, “…How did someone like you become the Sector 1 Master General?”
The
General’s grin shrunk into a smirk. “You’d do well to learn that appearances
are everything, boy.”
“What
does that even mean–?” Kevérin began to ask, but was interrupted as the Genesis exited Subspace. Immediately,
black space replaced the grayscale gradient outside the bridge window. A planet
lay below – relative to the ship’s positioning, of course – but most noticeable
of all were the many flashes of light in the distance, as if someone were
hosting a light show in high orbit.
“It’s
the Riaxen and Syraus fleets, sir,” someone shouted, “The Syraus are a hundred
kilometers out. The Riaxen are a thousand kilometers farther back.”
“Hold
our ground. Initiate the cloaking systems and start scanning,” Krick ordered,
“Start with the Transpace. Where’s the Transpace?”
“It’s…
gone.”
“Gone–?”
Kevérin exclaimed as a holographic display appeared to the upper right of the
bridge. On it was an image of the system’s Transpace, smashed to debris.
“Someone
destroyed the Transpace?!” Kaoné gasped, “But – I thought they were supposed to
be super-durable!”
“I
suppose this supports the theory that the Riaxen have an Ayas,” Krick muttered.
“No,
that isn’t it,” Greant shook his head, “The Riaxen wouldn’t destroy the
Transpace – it’s the easiest and quickest way to access the rest of the galaxy.
It must have been the defending fleet who destroyed it.”
“Why
would they…?” Kevérin trailed off as he realized what the General was
suggesting. “You think they did it to prevent the Riaxen from jumping to
Nimalia?”
“It’s
the only answer,” Greant nodded, “Their hand must have been forced. Destroying
a Transpace is no trivial matter.”
“Still
doesn’t explain having no contact,” Krick muttered, and then ordered, “Check
our input stream. Are we receiving any data from the system’s Relay Points?”
“None,
sir.”
“Scan
the system for Relay Points. Can we find any?”
“…No,
sir. Scans aren’t picking up any Relay Points.”
“They
must’ve been destroyed, too,” Krick scowled, “Tyrnaus is almost completely
isolated from the rest of the galaxy, now…”
“And
the opposing fleets are still
fighting,” Kevérin remarked, “What happened?”
Krick
remained silent for a few moments, staring out the bridge display at the
distant battle. “…Scan the planet,” he eventually ordered, “Look for the Riaxen
Deathnought. It’s might be a wreck a this point. If the scan turns up negative,
then scan the entire system.”
“No
need, sir!” someone replied, “The scan found the ship in local space. The wreck
is on the planet below, and it seems that there are ground forces fighting over
it as we speak. The entire area is covered by orbital bombardment shielding.”
“So the
Deathnought was destroyed, then.”
“Is the
Ayas down there?” Kievkenalis questioned.
“I
guarantee it is,” Greant declared, “The Riaxen must be attempting to extract
the Ayas. It’s the only reason they wouldn’t have obliterated the wreck the
moment the ship was destroyed.”
“I
agree with your reasoning, but we still need to be sure,” Krick replied as he
turned back to the rest of the bridge. “Scan for any Chaos Energy anomalies on
the planet. Also, request access to the allied fleet’s data connection!”
“We
aren’t going to join the battle?” Siyuakén questioned.
“We’d
accomplish nothing by jumping into the battle head-first,” Kevérin replied,
“The number of ships in those fleets lies in the thousands. I don’t care if
this ship is more advanced than anything we’ve seen, there’s no way it can put
a dent in the Riaxen fleet unless we can figure out their fleet configuration
and command structure, and then get
close enough to take out the command ships.”
“The
man’s right,” Greant nodded, “The Deathnought’s out of the picture and we
didn’t come out of FTL in the middle of the fight; there’s no reason for us to
engage. Our best bet now is to go after the Ayas, which itself is sure to draw
fire.”
“Not if
we’re careful,” Krick refuted, “The Genesis
has remarkable cloaking technology – it cloaks us from every sensor we’ve
tested it against. We’re undetectable, as long as we don’t use our weapons or
launch fighters.” The Captain turned his attention back to the bridge window as
a second holographic display appeared, giving an overview of the data being
exchanged over the allied fleet’s data connection. “Looks like they haven’t actually
been fighting all week long,” Krick remarked after several moments of reading,
“The first two days were straight battles, until the CSA fleet eventually took
out the Transpace. The Riaxen took out the system’s Relay Points in
retaliation, and then their Deathnought took out the Sryaus Deathnought and
half of the CSA and RPF fleets.”. The allied fleets retreated to recoup, but
the Riaxen began chasing them around the system. So the allied fleet eventually
mounted an offensive two days ago, sending in a Black Suns infiltration team to
take down the Riaxen Deathnaught. They managed to take out the core… the
Deathnaught then crash landed on the planet below. Only some of the Black Suns
were able to make it out… those left on board include Supreme Commander Jeran
and Master General Regek.”
“So,
they both died, then…” Greant muttered.
“The
current battle has been raging since the initial strike that took down the
Deathnaught, it would seem. Riaxen casualties are estimated to be around fifty
percent, Allied casualties… seventy.”
“What
about the planet below?” Kevérin questioned, “What’s going on down there?”
“Combination
Black Suns and Syraus ground forces are trying to capture the wreck, and appear
to be putting enough stress on the Riaxen that they can’t fully investigate it
themselves. They’ve been in on-and-off fighting for the past two days, no
progress on either side…”
“Then
let us down there.”
“Wait
wait wait, what,” Davídrius interjected, “You want to go down there? In the
middle of a huge battle? Are you suicidal?!”
“We
need to get the Ayas!” Kevérin countered, “We can’t leave it in the Riaxen’s
hands! It’s the fastest way to stop the ground battle, anyways.”
“What
makes you think you can do what the entire allied force couldn’t, boy?” Greant eyed
the Pyrotechnic warily.
“It’s
not that. It’s our job to get the Ayas.”
“Shit,
man, I was just joking about the Ayas retrieval squad thing,” Davídrius
scowled.
“But we
can do it,” Kevérin insisted, “The Genesis
has cloaking tech, and they also have beaming tech. We used it back on Sunova,
remember? We just need to be beamed into the wreck, where we can search for the
Ayas, find it, and then get beamed out!”
“That’s…
that’s actually not a bad idea,” Siyuakén mused.
“Wait, beaming tech?” Christeané exclaimed
incredulously, “You’re not talkin’ about – you mean, like the Drakkars? The
teleportation stuff?”
“He’s
right,” Krick nodded, “We have beaming technology. ‘Instantaneous Subspace
Transfer’. Our sensors are strong enough to penetrate the orbital shielding,
too, so we can get precise beaming coordinates, but the wreck itself is a mess.
Sensors and comms can’t seem to get through it. So if we’re going through with
this beaming plan, I’ll have to beam you down near the wreck, rather than in
it. Can you handle that?”
“It’s
just fighting through the Riaxen,” Kevérin replied nonchalantly. “The Taizen
civilizations don’t have many Chaotics, right? That means we can take them, no
problem.”
“Alright,
this is starting to sound like a plan I can get behind,” Christeané grinned as
he cracked his knuckles in anticipation.
“Wait,
but… doesn’t this…” Kaoné spoke up warily, “…doesn’t this mean we’ll have to…
have to fight the Riaxen?”
“Is
that a problem?” Krick responded, clearly confused.
“You’re
not seriously going to throw a fit over this, are you?” Davídrius glared at the
Materiatechnic.
“W-well,
I mean…”
“We’ll
be fine,” Kevérin interjected, “Just beam the seven of us down. We can handle
it.”
Kaoné
opened her mouth to speak, but decided to remain silent. Her expression wasn’t
lost on the Earthian Captain, but he merely shook his head warily and turned
back to Kevérin.
“Alright,
I’ll give this plan the go-ahead,” Krick nodded, “…but your current armor won’t
cut it.”
“What?
Why not?” Kevérin glanced down at his Chaos Armor, and then back at the rest of
Hero Machina. “Chaos Armor is the most advanced armor we have.”
“Is it
certified for atmosphereless action?”
“…Oh,”
the Transfer Captain replied meekly as he glanced at the planet outside the
bridge window. It was a lifeless chunk of rock on the outer edge of the Tyrnaus
system; the Chaos Armor would have been perfectly fine on the planet of Tyrnaus
itself, but it wasn’t equipped to handle the extra requirements of an
atmosphereless outer planet.
“We’ll
have to see about getting appropriate armor from the allied fleet,” Krick
remarked, “They should have sets to spare; I’d be rather surprised if they
didn’t. However, depending on whether or not the host ship is willing to tag
the sets for beaming, we might have to cease cloaking in order to temporarily
dock with another ship. We can cloak again afterwards, but the Riaxen will know
we’re here then; in all likelihood, it’ll accelerate their efforts to extract
the Ayas once they realize there’s a ship they can’t track. You’ll have to act
quickly.”
“Act
quickly? No problem,” Davídrius smirked, “We can do this.”
“Hahaha!
Such self-confidence!” Greant suddenly burst into laughter, “What I wouldn’t
give to be young again! It’s a shame that I can’t join you!”
“I’ll
take that as an endorsement,” Krick replied, “Very well. I’ll get those armor
sets, and then the seven of you can suit up. Meet back here in four hours and
we’ll start the op. That sound good?”
“Perfect,”
Kevérin nodded, and then turned toward the bridge exit. “C’mon, Hero Machina.
Let’s head out!”
* * * * *
==================== End of Chapter 41 ====================
* * * * *
Data Entry: Fleet Data Connection
Information is perhaps the single most important element to successfully winning battles – and getting information as quickly as possible is paramount to outmaneuvering and winning over a foe. Information is even more important in space battles, where situations can change in the blink of an eye through the arrival of reinforcements, the destruction of key ships, or various unseen environmental factors. To ensure that all ships in a fleet are as up-to-date as possible, the Citans invented the fleet data connection – a concept which quickly spread to every other civilization in the galaxy.
The fleet data connection at its core is simply a network web, with each ship sitting on the network as its own node. Smaller ships such as Frigates and Destroyers will connect straight to the nearest several larger ships, which in turn connect to several other larger ships, creating a whole information network. At the center of the network sit the command ships, which send out commands and battle-state queries over the network. Ships throughout the network can then quickly respond to these queries, keeping the command ships up-to-date. Furthermore, sensor data is shared over the network, allowing every ship to be maximally aware of their surroundings – as well as allowing some larger ships to focus entirely on firepower, leaving the actual scanning to the smaller ships.
Because of the need for low-latency data transfer, data connections require large amounts of bandwidth, energy, and computational power. Additionally, in order to prevent enemy fleets from hacking into the connection or gleaming information from it, extra computational power is required to encrypt and decrypt outgoing and receiving data. The resource requirements add up quickly, making the data connection only a noticeable boon to large fleets in which the many different ships can share the information load. Small task forces numbering five ships or less often do not engage their data connections, simply because it isn’t worth the resource diversion.
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