Wolf 359
Tanker rendezvous: H – 40 hours
With her sensor masts extended in listening mode, the Manchester Star formed a telescope of mammoth proportions. Anti-collision lights strobed red at the tips of each 70 meter boom extended along 4 axis.
“Where’d that wobble on the ULF line come from?” Ajax was in zero G, anchored by hand to the sensor tech’s chair. The trace he’d noticed was nearly imperceptible.
“It’s at the bottom end of the range,” The sensor tech said. “Could be the remains of a signal that’s degraded from bouncing around the system for a few years.”
“You’re serious?”
“It happened before- Old Earth. They used to sail ships across the Atlantic. A passenger ship called the Queen Elizabeth Two. One day their radio-room copied a message for Queen Elizabeth, a ship that had sailed fifty years earlier. All that time the signal was just bouncing around in the atmosphere.”
“We're wasting time here." Ronald complained, loudly, to ensure that he was heard over the ambient noise generated by the bridge systems. Ajax pushed off from where he watched the navigator updating the plot and drifted across the bridge to the sensor station. He was unused to having room to do so.
"This is going to work." Ajax said and watched for returns on the integrated-sensor array as he spun to land feet first on the opposite bulkhead. "You just have to have a little faith. They're here somewhere.”
“How can you be so sure?”
“It’s a busy place,” Ajax said and pointed toward a group of ghostly contacts. “Do you see that? They call it the Midgard asteroid ring,” Another more solid signature appeared at the bottom of the screen. “You’d think there’s nobody here but SOLCorp. That’s their platform skimming the largest gas giant in the system.”
"It's not a matter of faith, it's a matter of percentages. We're too far out for pirates," Devolte said. "At this range, the ships coming into or out of the SOLCorp station are in transit."
"Most of them are. Just because there haven't been any reported pirate attacks doesn't mean that they aren't here." Ajax said. "You don’t want to draw attention to where you live. Half of known space is within reasonable range of this place. How many ships have been declared missing or lost over that time?"
"A few," Ronald said allowed. "The copy of Jane’s Shipping Almanac we downloaded at Horseman says the last one lost in this system was the Danube Duchess. Five years ago almost on the day,” He squinted and scrutinized his datapad display. “Maybe not exactly the day."
"There’s more than one system in easy reach," Ajax said as he examined the sensor trace of the last contact. "It'd be pretty easy to jump in, hit a ship that's accelerating or decelerating to fuel and jump out, if you’ve got no objections all that time in a pirate freezer. You don’t wake up if there’s someone on the crew you crossed before."
"The simplest answer isn't always correct." Ronald said.
"It's the only system within striking range of where there's been pirate activity reported," Ajax said. As smart as he was, Devolte often proved maddeningly blind to the big picture. "Besides, most of the other systems have already been swept. You're an engineer. You do the math."
"I did," Ronald huffed and pushed off towards the bridge hatch. "Now I'm going to go do what I'm paid for. If you need me I’ll be in engineering. I need to be with my people."
“Nothing yet,” The sensor-tech said when he noticed Ajax peering over his shoulder. “There’s some gravitic sources to port plus forty-five degrees. Just asteroids. It looks like the edge the first belt.”
Two contacts had scratched the sensors over the last two hours and the tanker rendezvous was still 40 hours away. The first contact occurred just after their arrival, a jump flare thrown from an underpowered drive, maybe ill-matched enough to be pirate-rigged. The second was a series of low-power broadcasts, encoded, from deeper in the system. The sender was unknown but the receiver had to have been on or near the SOLCorp platform. The tech flipped through other modes to examine readings. "IR and synthetic aperture are clear."
"Bring up the mass detectors." Ajax said.
"What? Why? They're useless past fifty-thousand K and we're doing full range scans with the synthetic aperture."
"Captain, please?" Ajax said calmly as he put a steadying hand on the tech's shoulder and turned to beg indulgence from Glower.
"Bring up the mass detectors, Harper." Glower said.
"Aye, sir." Harper said as he bristled and shook Ajax's hand off his shoulder. When the display cleared and started the trace from a new feed, there they were, four contacts massing a hundred tons each, closing on an approach vector with twenty seconds to intercept. Activity stopped as the proximity alarm went off.
"We didn't get them at long-range because their assault craft are RAM shielded." Ajax said to Glower who scrutinized the feed from his chair.
"Red alert!" Glower bellowed and activity resumed at a more rapid pace. "Prepare to repel boarders.” He turned to Ajax. “How did you know?"
Ajax shook his head with disgust and unsnapped his holster.
"How did I know?" He said as he checked the battery on his Blazer and adjusted the discharge level to stun. "If you don't want to be seen, you minimize your signature and convince your target to dismiss you. That's how. We're going to be having special guests."
The XO opened the weapons locker and was handing out Blazers to the few who did not carry a sidearm already.