THE HELMSMAN: Director's Cut Edition (29 page)

Read THE HELMSMAN: Director's Cut Edition Online

Authors: Bill Baldwin

Tags: #Fiction : Science Fiction - Adventure

After a squat, gruff-looking woman with Mechanic's blazes on her collar took charge of Barbousse and his ratings, the officers followed Blue into a narrow companionway. This ended in a severe cubicle containing a few display cabinets and a circle of uninviting field chairs, clearly some sort of conference room. Before they could sit, a door opened at the rear. “Gentlemen,” Blue announced, “Colonel Dark.”

Long-legged, slim, and graceful, Colonel Dark was dressed in the sleek blue coveralls of Lord Wyrood's Imperial Intelligence Service. On her, the tight uniform revealed a great deal more than it concealed. Her complexion was almost chalky white and she wore long jet-black hair in a braid that coiled all the way to her knees. Her eyes were large, almond shaped, intelligent, and hard. As she spoke, she fingered a curiously shaped obsidian fragment that could only be a splinter of hullmetal: Some grim personal reminder, Brim considered, and decided he wanted to know nothing more about it — ever.

“Special-duty crew from I.F.S.
Truculent
reporting, Colonel,” Amherst began importantly. “I am Lieutenant….”

“We are aware of everyone's identity, Lieutenant Amherst,” Dark interrupted in a soft, husky voice, nearly ignoring his salute. “While you are here on Red Rock 9, we shall have little time for amenities of any kind.” She bit her lip as she unconsciously worked the hullmetal fragment between long, well-manicured fingers. “Sit down and listen carefully;' she said. “You have approximately two days to qualify for the mission. “

As he took his seat, Brim glanced quickly at Amherst. An ill-concealed look of astonishment had taken root on the First Lieutenant's face. He was clearly unprepared for military conduct outside the strict rules of Fleet protocol.

“If you prove to us you can master an astroplane, the operation's 'go' and you'll have all the details you want. If you can't, we'll simply scrub the whole thing and send you back home with our thanks for making the try. But…” She paused significantly in midsentence to look each officer squarely in the eye.

Brim felt his eyebrows rise.

“But,” Dark repeated, “a surprise attack mounted by the Leaguers on another starbase — it doesn't matter which one — deprived us last night of your backup crew. So if
you
don't make it, the mission won't happen at all, and a very important person will probably die.
Additionally,
the Empire will lose a lot of information it vitally needs for its survival.”

Amherst suddenly looked concerned, almost frightened. He opened his mouth as if he were about to speak.

Dark held up a warning hand. “Don't ask questions, Lieutenant, until
after
your crew masters operation of the Leaguer astroplane. Before you have accomplished that, I have nothing more to say.”

* * * *

 

Brim and Theada spent the next half day buried in a captured astroplane simulator while the others learned what they could about the astroplane’s systems makeup from Imperial data bases. Brim had never flown anything like the little starship, but was immediately impressed with its possibilities. Following a short rest, the entire team donned battle suits and pulled themselves along zero-grav lifelines to the little ships themselves.

“Apparently, they want us to use the one marked 'E607;” Amherst said on the suit circuit, pointing to the rightmost of the three docked starships. “They say they keep the others here for spare parts.”

Closer inspection proved this to be true. Two of the astroplanes were clearly missing important components, with hatches opened to the emptiness of space and holes yawning blindly in the control cabins in place of Hyperscreen panels.

E-607, however, was ready to fly: A deadly wedge of raw destructive power. Overall, its sharply angular sixty irals described nothing so much as a narrow, single-edged ax head turned on its side with a small control cabin located midway along the length of its upper surface. On either beam, angular outriggers extended forward from the squared-off stem, each virtually filled with a powerful Klaipper-Hiss type—41 antigravity generator. The ship's wide, keen-edged bow was deeply notched on port and starboard extremes to accommodate torpedo-tube doors in the beam-ends of the hull. Between these, a squat, dome-shaped turret housed a 6O-mmi rapid-fire disruptor. Aft of the rakish control cabin, a spacious well deck extended to the stem, bounded on port and starboard by the breech ends of the torpedo launch tubes and storage for the single reload carried for each. Offset a few irals from the center of the well deck, a row of twelve repulsion rings ran over the stem from a squat autoloader. These marked the little ship's limited capability to strew star mines in its path. Her flat bottom was clear from bow to stem except for an oversized weapons dome housing a powerful 91-mmi disruptor. Within the crowded hull, a single Drive crystal provided thrust for HyperLight dashes and occasional long-distance cruising.

Inside, the cramped control cabin was laid out in a conventional half circle with the two Helmsman's positions facing the forward Hyperscreens. Along the starboard side, a systems console extended to the air lock in the aft bulkhead, and, curiously, included activators for firing the big 91-mmi in the ship's belly turret. Miscellaneous controls, including those for the torpedo tubes and repulsion rings, were built into a neatly organized collection of panels that made up the port control array. The rapid-firing disruptor forward was operated directly from either of the Helmsman's consoles.

Once Ursis stabilized the ship's power, Brim doffed his battle helmet and sniffed the cabin's thin, stale air, taking stock of the uncomfortable seats and drab, strictly functional decor around him. “Grim” was probably a good characterization, he thought. Leaguers built fighting ships with only three real abilities: flying, fighting, and surviving. Everything else was sacrificed to the minimum necessary for operational reliability — including crew facilities. One small cabin composed the single acquiescence to living occupancy. Crammed under the forward deck between the torpedo tubes, it wasn't merely uncomfortable, it was xaxtdamned near to being unacceptable. He shrugged. Clearly, only tough, dedicated Leaguers survived on these grim little ships. “Fire up the generators, Nik,” he said, nodding to the Bear as he perched his bulk atop an undersized recliner. “Let's get this bucket out in space.”

Ursis nodded, checked the immediate area outside, then hit the start sequencer. Moments later, the big generators shuddered into life, filling the crowded cabin with a savage, uneven thunder that shook the hull with brutish power. The Bear busied himself with various displays and controls for a few moments until the uneven tumult quieted to a steady rumble and the deck ceased to tremble. “Both generators standing by, Wilf,” he announced with a thumb in the air. The hull rang with vents clanging shut, and the air lock rattled.

Brim checked his own readouts, then looked at Amherst from the left Helmsman's seat. “The ship is ready when you are, Lieutenant,” he announced.

“You may proceed,” the First Lieutenant sniffed, nodding conspicuously down his nose. But his manner failed to hide the sweat standing out on his forehead — in the coolness of a battle helmet he had yet to remove.

“Aye, sir,” Brim said, squelching one more flash of anger. As the power director came up on forward thrust, he nodded to Barbousse. “Cast off, fore and aft,” he ordered.

“Aye, sir,” the big rating said, and spoke into a small personal communicator.

Outside, balanced on the decks, four of
Truculent's
borrowed ratings wearing huge reflective mittens to protect their hands raced up to extinguish the ship's mooring beams, then dogged down protective hatches over the optical cleats and jogged across the deck to the control cabin. He waited until the men were inside, then watched for his signal from the bubble house aft. Presently, a ruby-colored beacon began to strobe in the darkness at the far end of the asteroid.

“Safe takeoff vector dead ahead,” Theada reported.

“Got it,” Brim acknowledged. He entered the course manually on the flight director (astroplanes were too new for Chairman systems), then called for full military power and stood on the gravity brakes. Again, the cabin filled with the brutish sound of surging generators, and the deck began to vibrate beneath his feet. He glanced at Ursis, who grinned and yanked his thumb in the air.

“Let's go, Wilf Ansor,” the Bear growled in a huge voice.

Brim winked and returned his attention to the controls. He’d no sooner released the gravity brakes when the beacon — and all of Red Rock 9 — instantly vanished astern in a bellowing surge of power from the generators. Zero-gravity takeoffs all tended to be rapid, but the captured Leaguer astroplane was in a class by itself! He grinned; he hadn't had so much fun since he'd flown the little JD-981s at the Academy—but they were toy-like in comparison.

During their next two watches, the team worked tirelessly, exercising each of the ship's flight systems at high speeds, first in free space, then through a crowded asteroid reef orbiting the gas giant at a slightly lower altitude. After two close brushes with disaster (the last of which badly pitted a quadrant of the ship's unprotected Hyperscreens), Brim began to get the hang of things.

“Voof!” Ursis exclaimed admiringly as the Carescrian completed a particularly complex course. “'Wind and cold seek lakes and trees, but Bears claim only wolves,' as they say on the Mother Planets. Wilf Ansor, my friend, you exceed yourself!”

Brim laughed and cranked the skittish little ship into a vertical turn across the reef, huge rock clusters scorching past on the port side in an avalanche of riotous color. “Once you do something like that on a Carescrian ore barge,” he yelled over the thundering generators, “it seems pretty easy in something like this.”

“You will concentrate on flying, not talking, Lieutenant Brim,” Amherst warned through tight lips. “Have you forgotten so quickly what you did to the Hyperscreens?”

Brim glanced up at the pockmarked screens. “I haven't forgotten, Lieutenant,” he acknowledged, biting his lip to control his voice. At the same time, he noticed that sweat was now running freely from Amherst's face. The man
was
afraid!

On his way back to Red Rock 9, he fairly skimmed the surface of a particularly jagged asteroid — and smiled with satisfaction as he watched Amherst squeeze his eyes shut. The Universe kindly provided more than one way of extracting life's little dollops of revenge, he noted with silent satisfaction.

* * * *

 

The eleven Truculents passed a second set of watches exercising the astroplane’s weapons systems (during which, Barbousse accurately torpedoed a ship-sized asteroid), then invested a short period in HyperSpace running on the Drive crystal. When they finally returned to Red Rock 9, an abrupt message recalled them to a meeting with Colonel Dark — immediately.

“Welcome, gentlemen,” the almond-eyed woman said as the tired crew clambered into the conference room still dressed in battle suits. “It seems my call for assistance from the Fleet was answered this time with reasonably competent Blue Capes.” She smiled for the first time that Brim could recall. “Sometimes we get the best,” she continued, “often the worst. It depends on the captains involved, I suppose. Regula Collingswood seems to have done us proud.”

“You mean we qualify for the mission?” Amherst asked, a genuine look of concern on his face.

“The team has indeed qualified, Lieutenant,” Dark answered, “but only in the merest nick of time. At that, I have been forced to delay your departure until commencement of the second watch tomorrow — my ground crew needs additional time to replace Hyperscreen panels damaged by the initial sloppiness of your Helmsman, Lieutenant Brim,” she said pointedly.

The Carescrian felt color rise in his cheeks as he mentally braced for more criticism. Instead, for the second time he watched Dark's face break into a smile as she turned to face him. “Don't take my 'sloppiness' too much to heart, Brim,” she laughed suddenly. “No one expected you could do what you've done at all — and you've
triumphed
.” Then her face darkened. “But it
also
means you now have the actual job to accomplish. And when your crewmates hear all the details, they may wish your Helmsman's talents ran more toward singing or sculpting, perhaps, than piloting a small starship.”

At that moment, Brim noticed Theada and Ursis glance uneasily toward Amherst; he followed their gaze. The First Lieutenant had again broken into profuse sweating, though Dark kept temperatures low in her conference room. The Carescrian winced to himself. Somehow, trouble was coming, and he was reasonably sure the
least
of it would be with the League. But before he could fret about the situation, Dark began her final briefing, and no time remained for anything but concentrating on the mission.

During the remainder of that watch and well into the next, Dark described their task in detail: flying the astroplane to the very heart of Triannic's League — almost within sight of the great capital planet of Tarrott itself — executing a tricky landfall on Typro, a barren mining planet, retrieving an important Imperial spy, then retracing their steps to a rendezvous with an Imperial warship. “On the surface, it sounds simple,” she said. “We've set up three time windows for the pickup. You will determine which one to use after you arrive on the basis of safety: Yours and the operative's.” She fingered her hullmetal fragment absently and frowned, staring bleakly across the room. “Unfortunately,” she continued, “I have only described the
easy
part — your mission as originally planned was quite straightforward and relatively free from risk. However, recent developments have made the job somewhat more symmetrical in that it now involves a
difficult
part, too.”

Brim looked at Ursis and grinned in spite of himself. The Bear silently rolled his eyes to the bubble ceiling.

“First, you must be travel to Typro
and
return in a little more than three Standard days' time,” Dark continued. “That's when the Leaguers will discover these astroplanes of ours are missing from their inventory.” She paused a moment, then shrugged. “We acquired them in a rather unusual fashion we'd rather you didn't know about,” she added. “Just in case you find yourselves guests of our black-suited friends, the Controllers.”

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