SF Books by Vaughn Heppner
DOOM STAR SERIES:
Star Soldier
Bio-Weapon
Battle Pod
Cyborg Assault
Planet Wrecker
Star Fortress
Task Force 7 (Novella)
EXTINCTION WARS SERIES:
Assault Troopers
Planet Strike
Star Viking
LOST STARSHIP SERIES:
The Lost Starship
The Lost Command
The Lost Destroyer
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The Lost Destroyer
(Lost Starship Series 3)
by Vaughn Heppner
Copyright © 2015 by the author.
This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents are either products of the author’s imagination or used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental. All rights reserved. No part of this publication can be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, without permission in writing from the author.
-1-
A purple bolt of ionized magnetic force struck Starship Victory. The deflectors didn’t stop the attack because the shield was down. The collapsium armor darkened where the strand hit. Then a plate blew off the hull, tumbling into space.
On the starship’s bridge, Captain Maddox rocked in his command chair.
“Hard to starboard,” he said.
“The ship isn’t responding, sir,” Lieutenant Noonan shouted from the pilot’s chair.
“Galyan,” Maddox said.
The holographic image of the alien AI said nothing.
Maddox swiveled his chair to see what was wrong with the AI. The holoimage stood at its favorite spot on the bridge, but everything inside the shape’s outline was fuzzy.
The captain swiveled back so he could see the main screen and the lieutenant at the same time. “Jump,” he told Valerie. “Get us out of here.”
“The magnetic storm is shutting down our systems, sir. A jump under these conditions could destroy us.”
Another bolt of ionized magnetic force surged out of the twisting mass. An indicator told Maddox the storm was over ten thousand kilometers in width, making it larger than most terrestrial planets. The bolt struck their vessel. Metal groaned ominously, and the bridge around the captain shuddered.
“I may be able to use cold propulsion to move us,” Valerie said.
“Do it,” Maddox told her.
Valerie’s fingers played across the pilot board.
A rear viewer showed Maddox that cold propellant ejected from the thrusters. Slowly, the starship turned away from the ion storm and began to gain separation.
Another ion strand lashed out. Maddox tensed. This one missed the hull armor. A surge of electrical power must have struck, though. A bridge panel went dark. There was too much of that.
Maddox swiveled around to check on Galyan again. The holoimage was still fuzzy. As the captain watched, part of the holo-outline faded away.
What if they lost the ancient AI? “Will the storm damage be permanent?” Maddox asked.
“There’s no way to tell yet, sir,” the lieutenant said.
“I want greater acceleration,” Maddox said, raising his voice.
“I understand, sir. When the engines come back online, I can do that. Until then, cold propulsion is all we have.”
Maddox noted the strain in Valerie’s face, the tightness in her shoulders. The cold propulsion had been a good idea. Maddox knew he wouldn’t have thought of it.
“You’re doing well, Lieutenant.”
Valerie shot him a glance. A tremulous smile appeared and then a nod of appreciation.
Just then, something caught Maddox’s eye. He stood, amazed and then perplexed as the faint image of a ship passed through the ion storm like the ghost of a gigantic vessel.
Maddox checked the indicator. The vessel was a fraction of the size of the magnetic storm. Even so, whatever that was out there was huge, bigger than anything Star Watch owned, bigger than a Cestus hauler or a Spacer home-ship. The indicator showed the ghost measured an easy fifty kilometers in length and thirty at its widest. That dwarfed Starship Victory, which was considerably less than a kilometer in length.
“Lieutenant, what do you see out there?”
Valerie looked up at the main screen. Her head swayed back before she glanced at him. “T-The same thing you see, sir.” It was clear she didn’t want to commit to seeing something so strange.
“Describe the sight to me,” Maddox told her.
Valerie licked her lips. “I-I don’t know what I’m seeing, sir.”
“It has a teardrop shape,” he said. “It’s faint, though, like a bad holoimage.”
“Yes, sir.”
“You see that, too?”
“I don’t believe in ghosts, sir.”
“We’re Star Watch officers,” he said. “We must make an objective analysis of whatever we see without referring to superstitions.” Something caught Maddox’s eye on her pilot board. “Lieutenant, what’s that blinking light on your panel mean?”
Valerie looked down and tapped her board. “Sir, someone has opened Hangar Bay Three’s outer door.”
Why would anyone do that during an ion storm? Maddox immediately distrusted this news. It smacked of subterfuge.
“Sir,” Valerie said, looking up in dismay. “The jumpfighter has cold-launched from the hangar bay.”
“Someone launched our jumpfighter?”
“Yes, sir,” Valerie said. “It’s now outside the starship.”
Maddox still considered himself an Intelligence officer more than a Line officer. Odd events stirred his curiosity and made him suspicious of motives. An ion storm, a giant ghost vessel inside it and someone launching Victory’s only jumpfighter, these things weren’t coincidences.
“Hail the jumpfighter,” he said. It was time to find the underlying cause of this action.
Valerie opened channels. Harsh static was the only response.
Maddox’s face became bland.
The captain was a handsome man with angled features, considered by some as the best Intelligence officer in Star Watch. He had his skeletons in the closest, more than most, in fact. He was half New Man and half human, a hybrid that too few people on his side trusted fully. When his features took on a distant, seemingly disinterested cast as it did now, it meant his mind whirled at high speed.
The storm, ghost ship and launched jumpfighter—had the pilot chosen this time for that reason? The captain didn’t like mysteries when it came to his starship and crew.
Victory had just jumped into an unpopulated star system in order to use one of the Laumer-Points. A few terrestrial planets made up the inner system where they were now. None of the rock worlds here had an Earthlike atmosphere. There weren’t any mining colonies either. Where would the jumpfighter go in order to reach safety? The craft had a limited range. It couldn’t travel to another star system.
“I’ve got it on the main screen, sir,” Valerie said.
Maddox turned his attention back to the screen. The jumpfighter was a tiny vessel, a modified strikefighter. At the beginning of the voyage, Victory had carried two jumpfighters. One had wrecked on Wolf Prime several months ago. The unofficial name for the vehicle was a “tin can” because that’s what the experimental craft resembled. Jumpfighters could fold space for a limited distance, and Star Watch hoped to use them against the New Men to initiate close range attacks and then quickly jump out of harm’s way.
As he watched, the jumpfighter folded space and engaged its engine, disappearing into the fold.