Can they keep their edge till contact?
Johnson has enough data. We narrow the hunting zone to the size of a backyard garden. Time to go kick the rabbit out of the lettuce patch.
We jump knowing we'll meet the other firm within hours.
We drop hot on the trail. The neutrino gear sings and pops. We can't be more than a few light hours behind. Westhause and his co-conspirator confer only briefly. The computers commune. We translate again.
We almost bracket her this time. On infrared I can pick out the long, wild rapier of ions blowing behind her. Even on max enhancement I can get no image of the ship. She has her black warpaint on and is moving too damned fast.
"Jesus God in a canoe!" Berberian murmurs. "Commander! Check the size of this blip."
The target is millions of kilometers away already.
"Commander, she's started a turn," Berberian adds.
At her velocity it'll be a vast, lazy arc, and the best evasive maneuver available—especially if she keeps it irregular. There's no way we can keep her in radar range for more than a few seconds.
"Chasing after wind, eh?" The Commander is whispering to Fisherman. I barely catch it. The TD
operator nods. The Old Man notes my interest. "Silly pastime, eh?"
"We'll need luck. Or they'll have to do something stupid."
"They won't. They don't anymore. We've taught them too well."
"Here she comes!"
Startled, I look round wildly, then glare at my screen. Westhause has translated us into the fugitive's path. For an instant I catch a glimmer that must be Johnson firing.
"That the Squadron Leader?"
"It is," the Commander replies. "She'll attack. We'll observe."
"Commander!" Chief Canzoneri shouts. "That's no logistic hull. That's a goddamned Leviathan Main Battle."
Bright spider's silk spins across the black satin backdrop from spinnerets on the black widow that is Johnson's Climber. I stare, enthralled, though it lasts but an instant. We skip again. For a moment I forget to roll my visual tapes.
Skip-fire-skip-fire-skip-fire. How can we do any damage this way? Maybe we're just getting her measure.... Canzoneri says the Squadron Leader is tickling her round her bows. I'll have to take his word for it.
A nova takes life at the lase-fire's source.
The next few minutes get lost. My stomach falls out from under me. My mind goes numb. Somebody is groaning. I don't know if it's me or someone else.
Throdahl is saying, over and over, "Oh, shit. Oh, holy fuck. Brenda." His voice is soft, his words are quick. He speaks without inflection.
Fisherman begins a prayer. "Lord, have mercy on their souls." It fades into an unintelligible mumble. A moment later I realize he means the people aboard the Main Battle.
The huge warship whips off into the big dark while we remain mesmerized by our sister's destruction. How the hell did they manage that?
"Canzoneri. That was on camera. Give me an analysis."
"Aye, Commander." The Chief keys the tape from my screen to his. In a minute, "A missile. Radar transparent. I still have some numbers to run."
He figures it in minutes. The other firm outcalculated us, pure and simple. They knew where we were coming out. Where we had to come out to make the down-the-throat shot. They put missiles out there. Johnson probably never knew what hit her. They didn't take a poke at us because we were running in a trailing position.
"They aren't worried about conserving armaments," Yane-vich growls.
"A Leviathan doesn't have to," I snap back.
Leviathan is Navy's label for the enemy's biggest and meanest warship. We don't know what they call them. We have nothing comparable. They carry crews of twenty thousand, bristle with weapons, and are fleets unto themselves. They can remain in deep space indefinitely.
Our Empire Class Main Battle carries seven thousand people, is eighteen hundred meters long, and masses a fifth as much.
Now it's pretend time. We all make believe our loss doesn't hurt, doesn't make us hungry for blood. We shut one another out and concentrate on our work.
I didn't meet any of Johnson's women. Still, my revenge lust runs deep, startling me. I can't banish the face of Thro-dahl's sepia beauty. All thought of practical difficulties yields to the gale of unreason.
It doesn't matter that we came here looking for trouble. It doesn't matter that the Leviathan outguns us a thousand to one. It doesn't matter that her velocity is so ridiculous. I don't even worry about her being able to call for help while we can't. I want to attack.
"Commander, there's a drop in her neutrino emissions."
"Chief Canzoneri. What's she doing?"
Thirty seconds pass. "Looks like she's putting out a full missile screen. So she can drift along inside."
The Commander leans till his forehead almost touches the astrogator's. "Very well." He doesn't seem surprised. He whispers with Westhause.
What are they planning? We can't get near them now. We can't put a missile in, except from hyper.
Fisherman calls, "Commander, I'm getting a continuous diffuse tachyon response."
Everyone understands. The Leviathan is having a little chat with hunter-killer headquarters at Rathgeber. Help is coming. She'll stay hi contact. Fisherman is catching leakage from an instel link.
Only Nicastro has anything to say. "That tears it. All we can do is haul ass. The bastards are going to get away with it. Command will have to send the heavies."
I seem to be the only one who hears him. The others keep watching the Old Man.
Nicastro has the shakes. He's perspiring heavily. He wants out of this deathtrap.
The Commander thumbs a comm key. "Engineering, this is the Commander. Indefinite Climb alert.
Emergency Climb at any time. Mr. Varese, prepare an analysis of your drive synch. Send me the graphs when you're ready. Understood?"
"Understood, Commander."
Nicastro wilts. The others sit a little straighter. Carmon grins. The Old Man hasn't quit. He's got an angle. He's going to have a try.
Fisherman mumbles something incantatory, probably to benefit the souls of the gentlemen of the other firm. He has a faith in the Old Man almost equaling his faith in Christ.
Westhause makes a merry chase of it, stuttering in and out of hyper in little flicks almost too quick to sense. His chase baffles me. Hours pass. Still he dances round the Leviathan and her deadly brood. Not once does he hold norm long enough for a missile to target.
The quarry's tactics compel her simply to coast, watch, and wait for help.
"How far is Rathgeber?" I ask Fisherman. He shrugs. I look for someone who can tell me. The Commander, First Watch Officer, and astrogator are all busy. So are the computer and radar people.
I become more baffled. It's obvious that we can do nothing. Nothing is what we're doing. Loathsome as it seems, Nicastro's suggestion is the only viable course.
So why is everyone busy? Will the Commander get even by ambushing the first destroyer?
That wouldn't please Command. Engaging escorts is considered a waste of kill capability. That's supposed to be employed against the logistic hulls moving men and materiel toward the Inner Worlds, or against the big warships making it difficult for Navy to stand its ground.
The computer keeps humming. Rose and Canzoneri push hard, though they seem unsure what the Commander wants. Every sensor strains to accumulate more data on the Leviathan.
The Commander breaks his conference long enough to tell Carmon, "Erase the tank display."
Wide-eyed, Carmon does as he's told. This is a big departure from procedure. It leaves us flying blind. There's no other way to bring all the information in a single accessible picture.
"What the hell are they doing?"
Fisherman shrugs.
The Old Man tells Cannon, "Ready for a computer feed."
"Aye, sir."
Rose and Canzoneri pound out silent rhythms on their keyboards. The tank begins to build us a composite of the Leviathan, first using the data from the identification files, then modifying from the current harvest. If reinforcements give us time, the portrayal will reveal every wound, every hull scratch, every potential blind spot.