Lucas slowly opened his eyes -- his body throbbing with fatigue -- and the first thing he saw was the headless corpse, drifting slowly by. The blood that still globbed from the severed neckstump was floating in a glittering trail of wobbling, spherical stars. They were a medtech, and they were otherwise unharmed. It was almost cartoonish -- save for the hideous stink of it. Lucas wriggled in the life support webbing he was caught in and started to hear the other sounds: The alert bleets, the...the siren...the klaxon. The unmistakable klaxon of an breach.
He looked around the room and saw that he was in the medical bay. Several beds had people strapped in, people with far worse injuries than him. Their life support webbing flared orange and green, with some sliding towards red as their indicators flatlined. They were the lucky ones. Three beds had been turned into a fine spray of scrap metal by a single railgun slug that had gone through one wall and out the other. That had been what had taken off the head of the meditech and...if he didn't miss his guess, had aresolized the other.
These thoughts, these rational and semi-coherent thoughts, did not come to him at first.
They came later, after he pieced together the hacking, sobbing, coughing, vomiting mess he became as he wriggled out of the life support webbing and swam through the air, fumbling and grasping for the brightly lit emergency patch kits on the walls. The lights around them strobed green in the dimness of the room, and his long training -- even on the moon, in his comfortable apartments, he had been trained hard on decompression drills -- guided him to the kits. Then the kits to the two holes. The
Enterprise
was, at the end of the day, a warship. The skin had been penetrated, but the backup webbing had deployed, and the air that escaped was only a slow hiss, not the furious roar that the full railgun shot would have left behind on a civilian ship.
Lucas slapped the patch down after a few moments of desperate fumbling, fumbling accomplished as he slowly rotoated on three axii. Once the patch was down, he looked up -- across -- the room to the other hole. It meant he'd have to get close to the slowly expanding
cloud
that had been the other medtech. Lucas, who had already vomited, clenched his jaw and kicked off hard on the wall. His nose flared as he breathed in short, shallow pants. He didn't want to. But he had to.
When the second patch slapped down, the klaxon ceased and Lucas could think of something other than his drill. Unfortuantely, that
something
was the fact that his face was now smeared with blood, and a tiny chip of bone had caught in his short, kinky hair. His clothing was soaked with his own vomit and he had snorted up something that left his nostrils stinging. He coughed and scrambled along the wall until he was in a part of the room that was near the emergency vents. One of the canned air tanks blew fresh oxygen into his face and he started to think halfway clearly.
They had gotten through the battle. But the
Enterprise
had taken hits.
"Okay," he whispered. "Okay, okay, okay, uh...check the wounded."
He carefully finger walked along the wall until he came to the main console in the room. Punching in the activation key, he was able to bring up a simple daignostic system, and saw that the two people who were redlining had been hit by the flucuation in pressure -- they were already sliding back from the red to the orange. Everyone else seemed stable, save for those unlucky bastards who had gotten mashed by the railgun slug. But as he started hunting around for some kind of a communication system, a small text box popped up in the center of the screen.
BRIDGE:
Medbay, come in.
Lucas breathed out a sigh he hadn't realized he had been holding. There had been a part -- a tiny part -- of his brain that had been idly wondering if he was the last person in the last room of the ship. There were more than a few nightmare inducing horror survival movies about a striken starship and the only passengers being left in a single pressurized room, surrounded by the vacuum tomb of their ship. Hell, he didn't even need to look to
films
for that. The good Glorious Prince of Heaven or whatever the fuck he was called these days had been stuck in that exact situation when the Chinese ship had blown halfway to Arcadia.
Lucas shook himself and typed back a response.
MEDOPS 1:
This is Lucas Sibusiso, Logistics Officer. Both medtechs are dead, we have a patch, but it's fixed. Three other KIA, the rest of the wounded are stable. What's the situation in the rest of the ship?
He punched down the enter key.
BRIDGE:
This is Captain DuBois, Lucas. Sorry to break it to you, but we're in a bad way and we need your help.
Lucas clenched his hands. Great. Just great. He typed back.
MEDOPS 1:
What's the sitch, DuBois?
Hey,
he thought.
We've been through so much shit, if he can call me Lucas, I can leave off the captain. Right? Right?
He stated to get nervous as no response came -- whatever hacked together communication system they were using didn't have any 'person is typing indicator.' Lucas was still trying to kick himself for feeling awkward in a ship that was riddled with railgun impacts when the wall of text arrived.
BRIDGE:
We took fifty eight railgun shots, most of them through the habitation sections and the fore. Our lasers are down, most of the tubes are smashed, the reactor has a breach, our remass tanks are holed, two of our three radiators are so much paste, and the only thing that's keeping the ship together is her supersturcture. We're currently following Ceres out of the SOL system and unless we get a rescue boat in the next few days, the surviving crew is fucked. But none of that matters because the enemy has a laser frigate in orbit around Stark -- and they're firing on our ground forces every other hour. Our forward telescope is still working and we got a shot of them -- they're angling towards the ground and getting remass from the other ships in the enemy fleet. My astrogator and I agree: They're preparing for a ship drop. If that ship drops onto Europe, it'll add another fifty million people to the casualties and that's not going to happen on my watch. We have one missile tube left, but the firing control from the bridge to it is down. With our marines on Stark, we're down to whatever we can scrounge: You are within two corridors of an emergency vac suit. From there, you can reach the secondary firing control systems, program in the launch trajectory, and blow that frigate out of orbit before it kills half of Germany and wipes our invasion off the planet. No presure :)
Lucas read all of that with mounting horror. A laser frigate was between ten to twenty thousand tons. If it hit an arcology even a galancing blow, especially if accelerated to max speed...then he realized that it was far worse than it normally would have been. The laser frigate wasn't just a
ship
. It was an undead ship, raised by