But if you don’t get out of this system, he reminded himself, there’s no hope of ever returning to a shipyard.
The hours ticked by slowly. Ted occupied himself with studying the reports from the long-range probes as they neared the planet, picking up and reporting the presence of alien ships keeping their distance from the ground-based plasma weapons. There was an odd moment of Déjà Vu as he looked at their formation, something that puzzled him until he realised that it was the exact same formation his forces had used, after they’d battered their way into the system and attacked the planet’s defences. The aliens, it seemed, thought along similar lines to humanity. It made him wonder why they just couldn’t or wouldn’t talk.
“They haven’t cleared the space junk,” Lopez said, in some surprise. “It’s still in orbit.”
“There isn’t really time to clear it all,” Ted pointed out. “They’d need weeks to get most of it headed out of orbit or swept up into a mobile factory. As long as the bigger pieces are smashed they might not be immediately worried about the rest of it.”
He leaned back in his command chair as they neared the enemy fleet. Oddly, there were no carriers, merely seven frigate-sized craft and two battlecruisers. Ted smiled to himself; the aliens might have extremely good point defence, but without fighters of their own they’d have no real cover against his starfighters. They were about to get thoroughly smashed without even a chance to fight back.
“Launch starfighters at Point Trafalgar,” he ordered, keying the display. “The CSP is to cover the carriers; the remaining starfighters and bombers are to target the alien ships and take them out as rapidly as possible.”
“Understood,” the CAG said. “They’ll see us coming the moment we launch starfighters.”
“By then, it shouldn’t matter,” Ted said. He briefly considered trying to engage with mass drivers instead — it should be possible to aim at the alien craft without threatening the planet itself — then dismissed the thought. They’d need the mass drivers if — when — Force Two arrived in the system. “Launch starfighters at Point Trafalgar.”
He smiled to himself, tiredly. The aliens had hammered humanity in a curbstomp battle more than once. It was time to return the favour.
“Launch fighters,” a voice barked. “I say again; launch fighters!”
Kurt smiled to himself as he blasted out into the darkness of space, then glanced down at his display. Thankfully, everyone was following orders, despite the addition of foreign pilots to their squadrons. The CSP fell back to cover the carriers — the aliens would know they were there, now — while the bombers and the remaining starfighters advanced towards the alien ships. It became clear, very quickly, that the aliens hadn’t had the slightest idea the humans were anywhere near until it was far too late.
“They’re bringing up their drives and weapons,” the sensor tech noted. “But I think they’re having to flash-wake some of their systems.”
“Good,” Kurt said. He felt his lips draw back into a cold smile as he contemplated blowing his way through unprepared alien craft. “Unless it’s a trap, of course.”
The alien commanders clearly seemed to think that discretion was the better part of valour. As soon as their drives were online, they turned and started to head away from the planet, pouring on all the motive power they could muster. It would have allowed them to avoid engagement if they’d been facing human starships, but not when facing starfighters. No starship could match a starfighter for sheer rate of acceleration.
“Target the battlecruisers first,” Kurt ordered, as they closed in on the alien craft. Their point defence was already firing, although the odds were staggeringly against hitting any of the human craft at extreme range. On the other hand, it did make holding a steady formation almost impossible. “Aim for their drive sections.”
See if we can take another ship intact, he thought, coldly. He smiled, remembering how Molly had spent almost all of his share of the reward from the last battlecruiser they’d captured. It would definitely bring in more prize money.
“Locked on,” the bomber CO said. “Torpedoes away.”
As always, the enemy craft switched their point defence to target the torpedoes, giving the bombers a chance to break free. It wasn’t enough to swat down all of the missiles; five of them detonated, four targeted on a single ship. Riddled with laser beams, the alien craft staggered, then exploded violently. Her counterpart lost speed rapidly — her drive section must have been badly damaged, but not destroyed — and fell out of formation. It didn’t stop her from firing at the human starfighters as they regrouped and prepared for another attack.
“We could try to board her,” Rose suggested. “She’s the same class as the last ship we took.”
Kurt considered it for a long moment, then shook his head. “No,” he said, out loud. “We don’t have the deployable Marines to board her right now — and we couldn’t guarantee getting her home.”
The remaining alien frigates left their comrade behind as they raced for the tramline. Kurt wasn’t sure if he was looking at a display of contemptible cowardice or cold common sense, but it didn’t really matter. Ignoring the damaged battlecruiser — the mass drivers could pick her off — he led his squadrons after the other alien craft. Two American bomber squadrons and one Japanese squadron took out four of them, while the British and French killed the remaining three. Moments later, a mass driver shot from Ark Royal shattered the damaged alien battlecruiser.
“I’m picking up lifepods, sir,” Rose reported. “Do you want to detail a SAR team to pick them up?”
“Boot the question up to the Admiral,” Kurt said. “I don’t know if it’s worth the risk.”
He scowled. If they’d been fighting humans — at least one of the other interstellar powers — there would be a shared understanding of what to do with prisoners. No French or Russian crew, picked up from a lifepod, would try to fight as soon as they were bought onto a British ship or vice versa. Indeed, there was an agreement among such powers that POWs were to be treated well. But the aliens hadn’t signed any of the agreements. Who knew how they would react to seeing humans trying to take them captive?
Rose had a more practical question. “Can they survive long enough to reach the planet or be recovered by other aliens?”
“I don’t know,” Kurt confessed. “I just don’t know.”
Lopez turned to face Ted. “Admiral?”
Ted hesitated. They’d taken alien captives before, on Alien-1, but that had been on the ground. Too much could go wrong in space, starting with the aliens overloading their power cells rather than risk falling into human hands. But what sort of message would it send to the aliens if humans didn’t pick up their stranded personnel?
He looked down at the display. “Can they make it to the planet without assistance?”
There was a pause. “Unknown,” Lopez said, after checking the records. “Alien escape pods are not comparable to ours, it would seem.”
Ted ground his teeth. “Assign a pair of frigates to pick up the lifepods, one by one,” he said. “Once taken onboard, the aliens are to remain in custody until they can be transferred to the holding facility on Luna.” He briefly considered dropping the aliens on Target One, but knew it might be condemning them to death. “They are to be treated with respect, as far as reasonably possible.”