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“Understood,” James said. He changed the subject, slightly. “The drive modifications have been completed, at least.”

He winced at the thought. It would be hard for the aliens to burn through Ark Royal’s armour, but they would have no difficulty shooting off the modified drive systems which would allow the carrier to use the alien tramlines. Once they were gone, Ark Royal would be stranded deep within alien-controlled territory, dependent on searching out human-usable tramlines to escape. Somehow, he doubted the aliens would let them escape a second time.

“Let us hope that some of the promise really comes true,” Smith agreed. “If they do, the universe will change completely.”

James smiled. The human race had never really realised that the tramlines could be manipulated, but the aliens had developed their own systems for doing just that. Now that an alien drive system was in human hands, they were already talking about ways to improve on the alien tech, even perhaps manipulating a tramline so anyone coming down it arrived at a preset point. That alone, he knew, would change the face of modern warfare. Knowing precisely where the enemy would materialise would be a colossal advantage.

“I could use some of those promises,” he said. If they came up with something the aliens had missed, it would give them a very bloody nose. “But, for the moment, we have to play with what we have right now.”

The Admiral nodded, then walked towards the hatch and slipped out of the cabin. James felt an odd mix of wistfulness and guilt; once, his cabin had belonged to the Admiral. And he, like Prince Henry, had tried to get into Smith’s position through family connections. But the Prince had tried to hide his identity. It spoke well of him. James hadn’t come to realise the dangers in having so many connection until he was much older.

Poor bastard, he thought. He was honestly unsure which of the two he meant; himself… or Prince Henry. But at least he’s trying more than I ever did.

With that, he picked up the terminal and went back to his paperwork.

Chapter Eleven

“So you’re ready to depart,” the First Space Lord said.

“More or less,” Ted agreed, trying to project confidence. A week of intensive exercises had managed to get the new pilots into fighting trim, although they were still a little rough around the edges. Ted still dreaded the first encounter with the aliens, knowing that they would slaughter hundreds of his pilots, along with the capital ships if they got too close. “We should be ready to go now.”

He sighed. He’d known there was a great deal of organising in any fleet deployment, but Ark Royal’s cruise to New Russia had been simplicity itself, compared to deploying six carriers, assorted smaller frigates, Marine transports and fifty freighters. Ted was uncomfortably aware that losing more than a handful of the freighters could doom their mission, or leave them helplessly exposed to alien attack. If the aliens realised their weakness and targeted the freighters specifically, Ted would have no choice but to withdraw.

“The politicians are keen for you to depart now,” the First Space Lord said. His image flickered slightly as he spoke. “They keep looking at the latest reports from New Russia and fretting about what’s likely to be coming straight at Earth.”

“Maybe we should launch a spoiling attack,” Ted said.

“It would be right into the teeth of a large enemy fleet,” the First Space Lord reminded him. Ted guessed there had been hundreds of arguments over the last few weeks, discussing the wisdom of each and every plan to launch a counterattack. “And even if it succeeded, it would be very costly.”

“True,” Ted agreed. If the aliens attacked Earth, they would be in for a series of unpleasant surprises. There were thousands of starfighters guarding the planet, along with mass drives, orbital weapons stations and nearly half of humanity’s remaining carriers and frigates. And, the longer the aliens delayed, the stronger the defenders would become. “But letting them pick the time and place of attack is also dangerous.”

The First Space Lord nodded. “I expect you to succeed, Ted,” he said, suddenly. “The human race needs another victory, desperately.”

“I understand,” Ted said. “We won’t let you down.”

“Just consider yourself lucky you don’t have any reporters on your ship,” the First Space Lord reminded him. “At least that’s one hassle you won’t have to handle.”

“I know,” Ted said. He knew the importance of good relations with the media — the PR officers had beaten it into his head more than once — but he preferred to have relations with them at a distance. Having reporters on the flagship was a recipe for trouble, if not outright disaster. “The Americans are welcome to them.”

“They’ll also take all the credit,” the First Space Lord countered. “Not, in the end, that it will matter if we lose the war. The alien historians will probably sneer at how poorly we organised our defence.”

Ted nodded. At least military officers had enough in common that they could work together, despite serving different nations. Politicians seemed torn between supporting the common defence and weakening it, depending on who was assigned to hold command. And then there were the politicians who were more interested in their own advancement than defending the human race. Some of them even saw the unified defence command as a chance to claw even more power for themselves out of their governments.

“Good luck, Ted,” the First Space Lord concluded. “And watch your back. The aliens won’t hesitate to stick a knife in it.”

“Yes, sir,” Ted said. They’d be passing though uncharted and unsurveyed space, space that could play host to alien fleets or defence stations that would be completely undetectable as long as the aliens took a few basic precautions. An alien fleet could pick them up, shadow them and attack from the rear when they were entering the alien star system. “We will be very careful.”

“And some officers might stab your back too,” the First Space Lord added. “You do have political enemies, Ted.”

“Idiots,” Ted muttered. He’d lucked into command, first of the one starship that could actually stand up to the aliens and then of the deep strike fleet. Quite a few officers, in and out of the Royal Navy, were already muttering that he’d been promoted too far, too fast. But then, he’d spent enough time in grade to be automatically promoted to Commodore when the time came, even though he’d spent all his time on one ship. “Don’t they know there’s a war on?”

“And you have the most prestigious command in the navy,” the First Space Lord said. “To glory you steer — if you return, alive.”

He shrugged. “Try not to fuck up too obviously,” he added. “Goodbye.”

The image vanished. Ted let out a sigh, wishing he dared take a drink, then stood and walked towards the hatch. Like the Captain’s Ready Room, the Admiral’s private office was positioned right next to his post, the Combat Information Centre. Outside, he nodded to the pair of Marines on guard duty and stepped through the hatch into the CIC. It had been frantically reconfigured in the wake of Ark Royal’s return to Earth, with a handful of newer systems coexisting oddly with the older systems that made up the bulk of the carrier’s network. Getting everything to work together had been a major chore.

At least we had all the assistance we needed this time, Ted thought, as he stepped up to the holographic display. The last time we did any major refit, we had to bribe civilian contractors to help us.