Read The Landfall Campaign (The Nameless War) Online
Authors: Edmond Barrett
“
That kind of thing is not your concern Commander, not any more. Let your subordinates do their jobs and you do yours.
”
He turned away from the computer screen and towards her.
“
I do not say this as criticism Commander, for I know that you were very much thrown in at the deep end. I say this more as an observation. You have not yet made the switch from subordinate to captain. As second-in-command your duties were primarily internal to the ship. Now, the opposite is true, and you need to be concentrating on the universe beyond the hull plating. There are things Commander, which do not show up in official reports. We need to be aware of those things.
”
Willis had stiffened automatically at the Admiral
’
s mildly worded criticism, but then forced herself to relax.
“
Yes sir,
”
she replied evenly,
“
I’ll get right on it.
”
Hood’s
primary combat bridge was in the conning tower above the main hull. It was a design feature that fell out of favour shortly after the Contact War. Still, with the bridge visor open the view was certainly impressive and for Willis at least, soothing. Some things had definitely been easier as a junior officer than they were now, Willis thought to herself as she stood there in her dress uniform. Getting on board another starship for one thing. Metaphorically speaking, junior officers could just turn up at the door, but an officer commanding another ship was subject to an unwritten rule that they waited for an invitation to be issued. Although those rules didn’t forbid a certain amount of prodding and the invitation had now been graciously issued, she was just waiting for the larger cruiser to dock over on the far side of the base. It wouldn’t be long now. She could already see the ship with her naked eye. But until it did Willis was willing to enjoy these few minutes of peaceful reflection.
Her first response, hell probably her second as well, to the Admiral’s mildly worded criticism was irritation. But this time she had forced herself to take a deep breath and step back. Shibanova was good at following his own advice. He issued orders and then left people to get on with it. In contrast it was her big failing. She didn’t find it easy to delegate and by micromanaging, rubbed people up the wrong way. Just prior to the start of the war her own career had been about to hit a road bump, precisely because of those tendencies. Yet perversely they had saved her life, not a thought Willis was entirely comfortable with. So she instead focused on the base
’
s sprawling structure while she waited for
Hermes
to dock.
Hawkings Base was itself kind of interesting to look at. A mishmash of centrifuges, docking ports, repair bays and storage containers, there was no rhyme or reason to its layout. Unlike Baden or the various platforms orbiting Earth, it wasn’t a purpose-built installation and was in fact a hotchpotch of different bits and pieces designed and built at different times, connected only for the sake of convenience. Already there were chunks of the station deemed obsolete and effectively abandoned. While nominally a fleet run installation, Hawkings existed mostly to handle the commercial shipping to and from the planet’s mining operations, although currently there wasn’t much in the way of civilian transport visible. A beep from her intercom broke her reverie.
“
Skipper, the
Hermes
has completed docking manoeuvres.
”
“
Thank you Bridge, please inform Commander Horan I will be leaving the ship shortly.
”
Being piped aboard a ship as a visiting captain was certainly a novelty, Willis thought to herself, as was the status of honoured guest. But here she was in the wardroom of
Hermes
, taking questions but not being offered many chances get in ones of her own. The past few weeks had obviously not been particularly comfortable for the officers and crew, here on the sidelines and all too aware that critical battles were being fought close to home. Even as someone with a tendency to overlook subtle signs in others, Willis couldn’t the miss the mixture of apprehension and excitement exuded
by
Hermes
’
s
officers. She tried her best to explain what it had been really like but she suspected combat would be just as much of a shock to them as it had been to her. Eventually
Hermes
’
s
commander, Captain Gerry Erdely, rescued her.
“
Sorry about all that Commander,
”
Erdely said in a jovial tone as he closed the cabin hatch behind them.
“
I’m afraid we’ve all been on tenterhooks since the fleet left, and Headquarters haven’t exactly killed themselves to keep us in the loop. If I hadn’t let them get a look at you I think I would have had a mutiny on my hands. Please, sit.
”
The captain’s cabin on board
Hermes
wasn’t much bigger than Willis’s but it was totally different. Pictures, both static prints and electronic frames cycling through a series of images, decorated all the bulkheads. The pictures were a mixed bunch, some clearly of family, others of a younger Erdely and the ships Willis assumed he must have served on. Underfoot a worn strip of carpet covered the deck plating and completed the look. Her cabin on
Hood
was simply the place where she slept. Erdely’s was his home.
“
Yes sir, it’s been a busy few weeks,
”
she replied.
“
Fire-fighting doesn’t leave much time to do anything else. Particularly when people seem to be on top of things as you clearly are.
”
“
Of course, of course,
”
Erdely replied as he sat back with a sigh.
“
Problem is, things out here aren’t as simple as they might seem from a desk on Earth. I’m sure you’ve done summer manoeuvres out here.
”
“
I think the last time was three years ago. I was the gunnery officer on the
Apollo
.
”
“
Well, then you know the drill. We do manoeuvres and one or two Rizr scout cruisers sneak in at the edge of the system to watch. We know they’re there and they know we know. Headquarters always figured the benefit to us of a show of strength, outweighed the benefit to them in terms of intelligence. Well this year there were two scouts, they saw the fleet start manoeuvres then abruptly haul ass out of here.
”
“
Did the scouts report it in?
”
Willis asked.
“
Not straight away. They hung around for over a week.
”
Erdely shrugged his shoulders.
“
They probably thought we were up to something new and it only gradually dawned on them the reason they weren’t seeing the fleet, was that it wasn’t here to be seen.
”
“
You didn’t run them off, sir?
”
Willis asked, her tone carefully neutral.
“
No we didn’t,
”
he said, shaking his head.
“
Sending them packing would have just confirmed they’d seen something serious and got them home sooner. We were content to let them burn time, although if there had been only one of them, I would have been tempted to try and take it out.
”
Humanity and the Tample Star nation of Rizr had clashed over the ownership of Dryad within months of the planet
’
s original discovery back in the early forties. Dryad might not be the most hospitable place in the universe but for Rizr, whose population lived entirely in domed habitats, it was quite a prize. This was less than ten years after the end of the Contact War, a time when Battle Fleet consisted of only a handful of ships. Rizr’s government delivered an ultimatum threatening war if humanity didn’t evacuate the planet. Willis was just old enough to remember the fear that Earth was about to start its second interstellar war. For weeks it was all anyone talked about. Then the news arrived from Dryad. The Rizr had attacked and it turned into a bloody disaster for them. There was jubilation tinged with anxiety as Earth wondered what would come next. Then slowly it dawned that there was no next. Most of the Rizr fleet was short ranged and they had lost virtually all of those ships that could reach Dryad. The war simply spluttered out and their window of opportunity closed. In the years that followed humanity out-built them in both quantity and quality.
But since no ceasefire was ever signed, technically a state of war still existed between Earth and the Rizr star nation.
“
Anyhow, if they haven’t found out about the war through diplomatic sources yet, they soon will. Whatever else you say about their ruling junta, they aren’t stupid. They’re going to realise they have a brief chance, the first they’ve had in twenty odd years.
”
Willis bit her lip for a moment before replying.
“
It’s not likely to be brief, sir,
”
she replied.
“
I hardly think that Headquarters is going to leave Dryad under the sole protection of your ships, Commander.
”
There was something patronising in the Captain’s tone, inadvertent perhaps, it still rankled Willis, but she moderated her reply.
“
Respectfully sir, I don’t think you appreciate just how bad it was,
”
she replied carefully.
“
Baden was completely destroyed, we lost half the Third Fleet and the other half was badly chewed up.
Hood
was with the Home Fleet at Alpha Centauri. We only stopped them by a hair
’
s breadth.
”
Erdely paused, cup of coffee halfway to his lips.
“
We’re it, because they don’t have anyone else to spare.
”
Erdely put his cup down very gently.
“
I see,
”
he said quietly.
“
We didn’t
…
we didn’t imagine it could be that bad.
”
“
I’m afraid it was, sir. Right now the fleet is trying to put itself back together but we don
’
t know how long before the Nameless start their next campaign.
”
Erdely stared down into his cup.
“
Sir,
”
Willis asked,
“
where are
Hades
,
Athena
and the destroyers?
”
“
Hmm?
”
Erdely looked up, distracted.
“
The destroyers, the rest of your squadron, where are they?
”
“
Dotted about the solar system,
”
Erdely replied after moment.
“
Hades
is docked at the main hydrogen refinery above Dryad Five.
Athena
is at Dryad Four
’
s water plants. The destroyers are patrolling the outer edge of the system.
”
That didn
’
t sound like a great deployment. The three cruisers were isolated. True even a single Myth class cruiser was a formidable opponent for anything the Rizr possessed, but even so
…
“
Yes, I know, it
’
s not good. But when the entire system watched the Second Fleet head off like a bat out of hell, there
’
s no doubt people were a bit alarmed. Admiral Kinnear, commander of Hawkings, was left in charge. He wanted to reassure everyone and there
’
s no doubt a heavy cruiser is a reassuring sight. It would be a ballsy move for the Rizr to try to cut one of us out. Still you gave us a bit of a start when you jumped in and the computer didn
’
t recognise your engine emissions.
”
Kinnear
’
s name wasn’t one Willis was familiar with, which was unusual as the fleet didn’t run to that many admirals. Willis would have said she had at least heard of all of them.
“
He’s been out here for well over ten years,
”
Erdely continued,
“
married to a manager working for one of the mining consortiums. He’s a good administrator.
”
Even with her usual weaknesses for picking up on those kinds of subtleties, that sounded to Willis suspiciously like being damned with faint praise. But then for Erdely to say more would be skating on thin ice. Willis was a more junior officer than him, and if there was one thing you didn’t do in the military it was criticise a senior to a junior.
“
The orders we brought with us give command authority over all mobile units here to Admiral Shibanova,
”
Willis said.