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Amelia leaned over. “Captain?”

“I was distracted for a moment,” James said. Amelia worried about the effects of the Prince’s affair on her career, which was understandable. James could be demoted or dismissed, but he couldn’t be stripped of his title. Amelia, on the other hand, could lose everything. In theory, there was no blame to attach to anyone, as no regulations had been broken. But in practice, James knew, the world was rarely fair. “But I won’t be distracted any longer.”

He settled back in his chair as the fleet prepared to leave orbit, checking through the reports from the damaged parts of the ship. Anderson had cleared everything as much as possible, including rerouting everything from power conduits to datanet nodes, but James had no illusions. The designers might have included a great deal of interior armour, back when everyone had expected to face nukes on a regular basis, yet it wasn’t enough to stand up to a major internal explosion. A single nuke, detonating inside the ship, would blow the Old Lady into atoms.

“The Admiral has signalled the fleet to depart,” Lightbridge said. “With your permission?”

“Granted,” James said. “And prepare to execute the mine-laying operation on the Admiral’s command.”

He looked up sharply as another alert sounded on the console. “Captain,” Farley reported, “a second alien fleet has just entered the system.”

“Understood,” James said, as new icons appeared on the display, each one representing the rough location of an alien ship. Thankfully, they were far out of engagement range for the moment. The time-delay wouldn’t matter too much. “Keep me informed of their movements.”

He nodded to Amelia. “Maybe this is the worst tight spot after all.”

* * *

“Designate this third fleet as Force Three,” Ted ordered, keeping his voice under tight control. “Do we have a breakdown on its composition?”

“Four carriers, seventeen frigates,” Lopez said, after a long moment. “There may be others, but they didn’t pass close enough to the recon platforms to be detected.”

Ted nodded, grimly. On its own, Force Three could have been handled, but with Force Two also in the system there was a very real risk of being caught between two fires. They were committed to a close engagement with Force Two while Force Three came up behind them and stuck a knife in their backs. It wouldn’t be an easy matter to evade both of the fleets…

“Keep us moving towards Force Two,” he ordered. They’d have to try to beat Force Two before Force Three caught up with them. “Are the mine preparations completed?”

“Yes, sir,” Lopez said. “But they may see the trick coming.”

“Yes, they might,” Ted agreed. “But I don’t see any other way to even the odds.”

He forced himself to relax as the fleet picked up speed, advancing on Force Two. The aliens didn’t seem inclined to get out of their way, which made sense, or launch their starfighters. Like Ted himself, the alien commander seemed to want to wait to launch until the last possible moment… something that irked him, because it suggested they were facing a capable commander. But any armchair general could have picked that tactic up from reading a book.

Shaking his head, he looked over at Lopez. “Time to Point Normandy?”

“Fifty minutes,” Lopez said. “Assuming, sir, that the enemy fleet doesn’t change position.”

Ted doubted the aliens would move at all. They had the human fleet right where they wanted it; they wouldn’t want to alter course before they had a chance to close their trap. Indeed, Ted suspected the only thing that would make them change position was his own course changes… and only insofar as they could keep themselves between humanity and the tramline. But he needed them to stay right where they were.

“Let us hope it won’t,” he said. He briefly considered touring the ship — he’d done it before on the eve of battle — but it would be irresponsible to leave his post with two enemy fleets breathing down their necks. “All we can do now is wait — and pray.”

* * *

“This is the situation,” Kurt said, glaring down at his pilots. They looked back, their faces grim. Even the least experienced of them had seen enough war now to be thoroughly sick of battle. “One enemy force is blocking our way out of this cursed system; another is coming up behind us, intending to bugger us with a rusty chainsaw. This is a sticky situation.”

He paused, then continued. “The Admiral has a plan to cripple Force Two,” he continued. “However, in order to implement that plan, we have to do something that will slow us down, giving Force Three a chance to catch up with us. We may smash one fleet only to be smashed in turn by the other. I don’t have to tell you, I suspect, that that would be very bad.”

“No, sir,” Rose called out. “No one likes being buggered with a rusty chainsaw, sir. It’s in strict defiance of Royal Navy tradition. Unless, of course, they’re overcompensating for something.”

There were some chuckles from the pilots, most of whom looked better after Rose had cracked her terrible joke. Kurt smiled, inwardly. Most of the young men and women in front of him were about to die — the discrepancy between the alien forces and his own would make sure of it — but at least they’d die with smiles on their faces.

“As soon as the Admiral’s surprise hits them, we will launch,” Kurt continued. “And then we will hammer them so badly they’ll be blown right into the next system. Aim your torpedoes carefully, watch your flanks and don’t let them slip past you. Whatever happens now will depend on you.”

He took a long breath. “To your planes, ladies and gentlemen,” he concluded, quietly. He couldn’t help wondering how many of them were going to be looking at him after the battle — and how many of them would die. “See you on the far side.”

* * *

“The alien craft are entering deployment range,” Lopez said. “The mines are ready to deploy.”

“Deploy them,” Ted ordered. “And warn the crews to be careful.”

He watched, grimly, as mine after mine was launched into space. Unlike the previous deployment, these mines would continue to follow the same ballistic trajectory as the fleet itself, heading right towards the alien craft. After a long moment, when all of the mines were in space, Ted issued the next order.

“All stop,” he commanded. “I say again, all stop.”

Ark Royal quivered violently as her drives went into reverse, cancelling the massive starship’s velocity. One by one, the fleet slowed to a halt, relative to the alien ships, but the mines kept gliding forwards. Ted braced himself, expecting the aliens to notice the trick and take countermeasures, but they did nothing. Perhaps they thought that Ted hadn’t noticed Force Three until now… or perhaps they thought he’d been trying to force them to move and only just realised that he’d failed. There was no way to know.

“Mines entering attack range in thirty seconds,” Lopez reported. “They’re drawing on our active sensors, sir, rather than using their own.”

Ted nodded. One advantage of too-powerful active sensors — they dated back to the time Ark Royal was designed and built — was that they lit up their targets for everyone to see. The mines didn’t need active of their own, not as long as their mothership was close by so they could use their passive sensors to monitor her emissions. And it helped ensure they weren’t detected.