Twenty-Three
“They knew,” Admiral Skougaard said, staring fixedly at the identification of the enemy ships. “They had to know. There is no other explanation for the presence of that force to be there at this time.”
“Thurgood-Smythe?” Jan said.
“You tell me.” There was no warmth or humanity left in Skougaard’s voice now. “You brought me the plan.”
“I also said that I wasn’t sure if it could be trusted or not.”
“And so you did. We’ll all pay with our lives for that mistake. At least we can see what is happening. I’m sorrier for the troops jammed into that transport.”
“We can still fight, can’t we? We’re not giving in?”
Cold anger was replaced by a wintery smile on the Admiral’s face. “We’ll not give in. But I’m afraid we have no chance at all of winning. We are up against three times as many missiles as we can launch, probably more. They’ll just overload our defenses then come through. About all we can do is separate from the transport, fight a holding action for as long as we can in the hopes that they will survive.”
“Won’t that work?”
“No. But we do it anyway. Orbital mechanics is too rigid a discipline for there to be any doubts. They will meet us, we will fight. We might injure them, probably not. They’ll take us out. Then follow the transport and pick it off at their ease.”
“We can change course.”
“So can they. We cannot get away, only prolong the end. If you have any personal messages put them through to the radio room for transmission for the second squadron to pass on…“It seems so unfair! After coming this far, after the battles for the planets, everything!”
“Since when has fairness had anything to do with winning battles? Armies and navies used to travel with priests — on both sides — each assuring the fighting men that God was on their particular side. One general said that God was on the side of the biggest battalions, which is nearer to the truth.”
There was little to add to that. Three fighting ships against one. The outcome of this encounter could not be in doubt. Under the Admiral’s direction their orbits were altered slightly and the two spacers began to drift apart; there was no change in the enemy’s orbit. Skougaard pointed to one of the screens.
“They are risking nothing — and leaving nothing to chance. If we hit the atmosphere at this speed we will burn up. They know we must brake, and just how much, and they will be there to meet us just when we are most vulnerable, when our speed is lowest, just outside the atmosphere.”
As the hours dragged by rage gave way to apathy; the numbness of the condemned man in his cell, waiting for the wardens. Jan thought about the road that he had followed, that had led him to this spot, at this particular time. Although he had no desire to die, he could not see how he could have done anything differently, could have followed any other path, taken any different decisions. His life was what it was, he had no regrets, other than that it was just being terminated a little earlier than he had planned.
“And now the last act begins,” Skougaard said with grim Scandinavian fatalism as sudden explosions flared in space ahead. “They send their first missiles even though it is extreme range, knowing they can’t hit us — but knowing that we have no choice, that we must expend our anti-missile defenses. Attrition.”
The steady attack by the enemy missiles continued relentlessly — then stopped as suddenly as it had begun.
“Our reserves are down to twenty percent,” Skougaard said. “What kind of cat and mouse game are they playing at?”
“Radio contact is clear,” the operator said. “On our frequency, but emanating from the Earth ships. They want to talk to you, Admiral.”
Skougaard hesitated a moment, then shrugged. “Put them through.”
A communication screen flicked on with the image of a full-bearded man in full dress Space Force uniform.
“I thought it might be you, Ryzard,” the Admiral said. “Why are you calling?”
“To offer you terms, Skougaard.”
“Surrender? I don’t think I like that. You’ll only kill us all in the end anyway.”
“Of course. But you’ll get a few more weeks of life. A trial, a military execution.”
“Sounds charming but not very attractive. And just what arrangements have you made for my ships to surrender?”
“Ship. Singular. They want you and your Dannebrog as a memorial to the failed rebellion. The other ship with you, which I assume is a troop carrier, we are blowing up. That is another kind of memorial for the rebellion.”
“You can go to hell, Ryzard, you and the rest of your murderers.”
“I thought you might say that. You always were stubborn…”
“One question, Ryzard, a last favor for an old classmate. You were informed of our plans, weren’t you?”
Ryzard brushed his fingers slowly through his beard before answering. “It can do no harm now to tell you. We knew exactly what you were going to do. You never stood a chance. Our information came right from the top…”
Skougaard broke the connection with a slap of his hand. “Thurgood-Smythe. The galaxy would have been a better place if he had been smothered as an infant…”
A buzzer sounded stridently for attention, a red light began pulsing on one of the screens at the same time. Skougaard swung about to look at it.
“Earth-launched missiles,” he said. “They are going to a lot of trouble to make certain of their kill. Those big ones have multiple atomic warheads. Can’t be stopped by anything that we can put in front of them now. Must be a dozen of them. Launched in counter orbit, they’ll be here in seconds… but no! That can’t be possible!”
“What?” Jan asked. “What do you mean?”
The Admiral was struck speechless, could only point at the screen. Jan looked, seeing the plotted course of the new attack, the three enemy ships.
Distant explosions flared in space as the missiles pressed home their attack. But not at the rebels, not at all.
It was the three attacking ships had been destroyed.
The missiles had been aimed at them, not the two rebel ships, had punched through their defenses, had vaporized them utterly in the instant hell of atomic explosions.
It was unbelievable — but it had happened. In a single instant defeat had been turned to victory. In the stunned silence that followed the Admiral’s voice bellowed out clearly.
“Make a signal,” he said, an uncontrollable tremor in his voice. “Secure for retrofiring. And prepare for landing. Enemy forces destroyed. We’re going in!”
Twenty-Four
Down out of the clear blue sky the two great spaceships fell. There was no ground control, no contact with Spaceconcent control, so they were not being guided into the landing pits. They were aimed instead for the wide stretches of concrete of the airfield. Well clear of the transport planes, they dropped down on thundering spires of flame in a crushing five-G landing. Strapped to their bunks, fighting for breath where an 80-kilo man suddenly weighed 400 kilos, the crews and the soldiers waited. As the landing legs touched the engines were cut — and they were on the ground. The reinforced concrete buckled and cracked under their weight, but the computers compensated instantly for the difference and the ships remained upright.
As the engines shut down aboard the Dannebrog the shields snapped away from the outside cameras and the scene appeared on every screen inside the ship. The troop carrier, with smoke still billowing up around it, suddenly changed shape as all of its cargo doors and hatches were blown out at the same instant. Landing ramps reached out and crashed down into place, while folding ladders rattled down from the open ports. The attack was on. Light tanks hurtled down the ramps and out through the smoke while soldiers swarmed like ants down the ladders. There was no sign of opposition and the attackers spread out as quickly as they could, racing toward the buildings at the edge of the field.