"You absolute bastard!" Lou snarled, stepping forward -- but a pair of Federal marines in power armor were there to grab him and slam him back down into a chair. Their metal gauntlets were shockingly gentle, considering their enhanced strength, but Lou still felt terribly impotent in their grip. His hands tightened into fists and he glared at Admiral Bosch, who shook his head slowly, looking sad.
"That is the problem with you Neopolitans. You're so sentimental. Embracing tradition for aesthetic reasons, without understanding their true value. You think you can defang our past -- remove everything that made it sharp and hard and power. But humanity is not a coddled pet that you could render impotent. We are built on generations of struggle, conflict, the Manichean battle between good and between evil..." He spread his hands wide. "Between good, honest, Aryan people, and the corruptive forces of Marxism, anarchism, decadence..."
"Sir."
"You think that a petty monarchy can stand against such forces? You, yourself, are already corrupted by it! You have fallen in love with a mass murdering
bug
! A roach!" Bosch's hands came together before his chest as he walked towards Lou, glaring down at him wildly. "An inhuman creature! And you didn't merely consort to a fiction, to control it, to lull it into a false sense of security. You
love
it."
"...sir!"
"And that," Bosch hissed, leaning in close enough that his breath warmed Lou's face. "That is why you failed, my Prince. And that is why the Neopolitan Star Empire will bend the knee to the Federated States as the United Human Polities are reshaped into-"
"SIR!"
Bosch turned -- and didn't see Lou's smirk.
On the force projection maps that were being used to plot out the arrayed forces of the Federated States navy, the singular blip that was the lighthugger bearing the diplomatic envoys from Alpha Centauri had continued to draw closer -- but there was a tiny glyph on it designating that it had ceased firing its stabdrive. "The lighthugger is on an intercept vector with our L2 fleet. They're not responding to laser pings or radio coms." The woman who was speaking sounded steely and confident -- the picture of a fascist officer. "Lieutenant Admiral Langston is asking for permission to open fire."
"The king and queen of Venus are on that ship," Bosch said, frowning. "They need to surrender...have you sent the image of their son? And said that his life is forfeit unless they surrender?"
"Yes, sir. The lighthugger is still on an attack vector."
"It can't be on an attack vector. It's unarmed!" Bosch said, his lip curling. "Prep marine pods."
"Yes sir."
Lou chuckled.
Bosch turned, his eyes narrowing. "Soon, I will have your parents in custody as well, princeling."
Lou leaned his head back slightly. "Admiral..." he paused, then glanced out the window, at the buzzing pyramid that was the quantum interference device that the Admiral hoped would kill his wife. Beatrice's hive mind depended on quantum communications to function -- signaling from mind to mind in her trillions of bioforms faster than the speed of light. But there was something more powerful even than the ability of quantum wave-forms to interact at superluminal speeds -- something that Lou relied upon, right now, when hope should have been lost.
His wife.
Not her powers, not her billions of bodies, not her alien nature.
Her
.
"What? Spit it out," Bosch snarled. "Did you build some weapons on that tub? Some defenses?"
"No, actually," Lou said, chuckling. "It's just before we left, before I decided to spend the trip out of cryogenic storage, my wife said that to be alone for a year would be several million eternities. Each entity, a second." His eyes flickered as he looked up at Bosch. "You left my wife alone on a starship, with the entire history of the human race at her fingertips, a fabricator, and three trillion minds spread across three solar systems...and you gave her nearly thirty million seconds. Thirty million eternities. With. One. Goal."
Bosch's face was reddening.
"Me," Lou said, casually. "And, if the pain in my chest is any indication, you only yanked the communication grub I had in me out when I was thawing. So she knows
exactly
where I am."
Lou did not grin.
He showed his
teeth
.
"To borrow a phrase my friend Godfucker might use...you
done fucked up
."
Bosch turned back and screamed at the top of his lungs -- his face red, his voice cracking: "FIRE ON THAT LIGHTHUGGER!"
It was already too late.
***
A lighthugger approaches a solar system rear first. Normally, it spends only the last few hours of its flight into the system decelerating, using its stabdrive to put out crushing levels of force to snap its speed down from near light to something approximating normal, Newtonian velocities. This is done at the edge of the system, to minimize the chances of slamming into any small chunk of matter that might slip past the magnetic deflection screens.
For the lighthugger bearing Beatrice Benoit and the rest of the diplomatic envoy team and the cargo recovered from Charon, the modifications made to their flight had required some changes. The ship hadn't used the full power of the stabdrive, it had accelerated at one gravity for half the trip, then decelerated for the other half. This meant that, as it approached Mars, it did so with its drive still burning.
Until the light went out.
Every astrogation program in the Federal fleets instantly changed their projected ETAs for the lighthugger. In one of the counter intuitive parts of interstellar warfare, by turning off their engine, the lighthugger was now going to arrive sooner. It was going at such a clip, in fact, that the crews onboard the various ships in the L2 fleet all began to hastily make ready for a fast pass battle. It would require less actual human involvement than a more standard slugging match. Instead of battery and counter battery fire, interception missiles and chaff clouds, the entire battle would take place over several seconds as the two 'fleets' passed through one another.
It was likened by some to a bullet firing past another bullet, and both bullets then trying to shoot one another with more bullets.
"Our forward laser arrays are locked in and coilguns are primed, sir!" the gunnery control officer aboard the flagship of the L2 fleet, the
Bismark IV,
said, looking towards Lieutenant Admiral Langston, who sat in the acceleration couch of the bridge, glowering.
"Damn bastards couldn't even give us the satisfaction of a proper fight." He shook his head. "Give things over to the SIs."
"Sir, the
Bismark
III and IX are reporting that there are strange energy signatures coming from the lightthugger," the coms officer says.
For not the first time in his storied carrier, Lt. Admiral Langston wished that the naval registry of acceptable ship names drawn from the glorious history of their people was a tiny bit longer. Would it
really
hurt to include, say, Yamato? The Musashi? They weren't really properly white names, but...still, it had to be better than having, in the list of Thor class battleships, nine different Bismarks. Honestly. Langston looked ahead, to the forward screens of his bridge -- which showed the telescopically magnified view of the lighthugger. He didn't need a comptech to tell him something strange was happening -- tiny flashes were sparkling along the edges of the lighthugger, in spreading, triangular patterns.
"They're firing the deicing charges!"
"Fools," Langston chuckled. "That ice armor was their best chance at-"
A star-bright drive flare exploded from the expanding mass of ice chunks and mist that had once been the lighthugger. A single scout ship -- a two seater rocket with more telescopes than sense -- situated at the edge of the fleet's orbital path managed to snap a single, blurry shot of what was the life support containment and stabdrive of the former lighthugger, accelerating towards a stable orbit around Earth. It carried every sleeper berth and what was left of the cargo hold, and nothing else. The remaining superstructure of the lighthugger was spreading among that mist of ice and dust -- and the confusion that the cloud of particulates wrought on the fleet's sensor suite could not be overestimated.
In battles that take seconds, moments of confusion and indecision could cost the war.
"Sir, should we loose the fire control SIs?"
"No," Langston growled. "If we fire into that mess, we'll hit mostly vacuum! The cowards are running and think that we can't track them back to wherever that drive structure went. Trace it, n-"
The cloud of debris rippled.
And from it came horrors.
They were each different. Each unique, in its own cleverly sadistic way. Covered with glowing chunks of carapace that acted as radiators for biologies designed to operate at chemical temperatures beyond anything seen in normal life, their bodies studded with crystalline growths that mimicked agrav generators and unified field focusing lenses, the bioforms that spilled into space each looked like a neon glow nightmare. The commonality was grasping tentacles, dripping maws, and eyes. A whole hell of a lot of eyes.