Svenk Blackscale was not a heroic member of House Bryaugh's space force. That would have been a remarkable trick for a kobold – even one that had the one tenth dragon blood that was required by the stern admirals and generals that led House Bryaugh's military forces. But as Svenk wasn't even a
willing
member of the space force, heroism felt like it was asking just far too much of his skinny body. His hands shook as he tugged on the flimsy flight helmet and strapped it into place, while goblin technicians swarmed over his fighter craft.
Svenk didn't know what other noble houses of the Five Tal- er, the Chromatic Dominion used. He knew that he had been trained on the ASP-1011. It was named for its primary armament: A pair of alternating maximized wands that were loaded with the Melf's acid dart and searing rays spells. They were fairly powerful spells, requiring a class three wizard to enchant them. Thus, most of the ASP-1011s cost was sunk into those two wands and their power source, leaving only a fraction for, say...
"Here," a female goblin who had had half her face replaced by cosmetic bioplasm after a close call with an exploding reaction thrust a breather into Svenk's claws. He took it and stuck it to his muzzle, trying to breathe slowly and carefully.
Life support. Shields. Armor. By a dragon's tits, the only thing that the ASP-1011 had on top of its armament was its speed. And that was because it had
nothing
else. A frame of aluminum and cloned dragon bone around cockpit, reactor, engine and guns. The goblin workers sang a cheery work song as they screwed and then welded his cockpit shut.
"Please save me, Tiamat..." Svenk whispered. "Please, please save me."
"This is General Omadon Bryaugh," a snarling voice growled through his helmet mics. "Wings 12 and 10 are to flank our bombers as they go after the spelljammers that form the centerpiece of the human armada. Their vessels are primitive, relying on only the most simple magic to keep them aloft. Designed for the sea, they will surely fall easy prey. Fighters, you are to focus on the enemy strike craft, if any are launched."
Svenk nodded.
He could do that. Primitive. He could handle primitive. He had flown four combat missions against pirates, and several of them had used spelljammers. Spelljammers were when you combined a sailing ship with a mystical spelljammer helm. He pictured belling sails falling to pieces under streams of acid and beams of fire. He
liked
that image. It was an image to make even a kobold less of a cowards. But still not a hero. This was why, as the fighters prepped for launch, he closed his eyes.
He could never bear to watch the launch.
He felt the gravitic catapult take hold, then heard the faint
thump thump thump
of a goblin slapping his fuselage. That meant he had-
Gravity smashed Svenk into his seat and dragged his mouth open as he screeched at the top of his lungs, even as his ASP-1011 shot out of the launch tube that made up a good chunk of the mid-section of the battleship he had served on ever since an impressor came to his hole and forced all the fighting aged males out with morph gas and shock-prods. Then his eyes snapped open and he swung his head around.
And...
It was moments like this when Svenk did not regret his inability to hide when the impressors came. For all the fear and the horror and the killing and the eventuality of dying, he had to admit that space – especially space at war – was utterly beautiful. The space between stars was a black richer and deeper than the most powerful black dragon, and the stars shone with a harsh purity that had no twinkling, no winking, no softening. The curve of the planet and the moon that they were fighting over shone in the distance, and between him and the planet, there was the human armada. And what an armada.
There had to be
thousands
of ships there. None had thrust plumes or contrails, but each retained a stately beauty about them. There were flat topped ships that cut forward through space, pushed forward by immense columns of propellers that ground and spun behind them. Svenk didn't know how propellers worked in space, but he figured that the spelljammers had something to do with it. There were narrow ships that were studded with turrets, cylindrical ones that bore only a single sparse looking conning tower, but still cruised forward with a predators hunting grace. Peppered among them were the more familiar designs of his supposedly hated rivals: Metallic dragons tended towards elegance and beauty...but that didn't mean the destroyers and battleships and torpedo boats he saw intermixed with the human formation weren't exceptionally deadly.
"This is Talon Leader," the sneering voice of Talon Leader Gigzor, the preening, brown nosing, power grabbing, butt kissing schemer, filled his ears. "The scaleless fools have not even launched their fighters! Follow me, Blackscales! Let us show the humans how kobolds die!"
How kobolds
kill
, you idiot,
Svenk thought. Then, gulping, he realized that Gigzor might have meant exactly what he said. After all, Gigzor knew who was listening in on their coms.
Maybe it was stuff like that that got him promoted?
Either way, Svenk sighed and throttled his engine up.
***
"We should send in the B-suits!" Emperor Xosh snarled.
Admiral Thresh did not bridle. It was clear she wished to do more than bridle to Gimtesh. But no, Admiral Thresh instead forced herself to take a deep, calming breath, then said: "My lord Emperor, that would be unwise. We do not know the capacity of the enemies. There are a great deal of them and if we lose here today, that will give the Metallics time to organize and come here to the human's defense. If we give them a foothold, then this civil war may last decades, rather than months."
Xosh's tail lashed. "All the more reason we should commit now!"
Gimtesh could see the eagerness in Xosh's eyes. The thirst to see this end, and end quickly. She gulped and focused on adding – cell by cell – slightly more length to her left foot. She made sure to do it slowly. Carefully. And only when people weren't looking at her.
She'd only have one shot.
"If we send in the kobblers..." General Bryaugh said, not looking up from the scrying pit – where glowing icons indicating the first waves of kobold fighters approaching the combined enemy armada. "They can see what the weak points are."
Thresh gestured to Bryaugh, as if to say:
See?
Xosh's tail lashed. He looked as if he was considering, deeply. But Gimtesh could hear the quiet grinding of his teeth. He slid his arms behind his back and nodded.
"Very well. Carry on." He spoke the words through gritted teeth. And as he took his seat at the command throne, Gimtesh grew her foot out
just
a little bit more. Just a little bit more.
***
Merton Miles stood in the airlock, looking at Princess Relix. Relix smiled, shyly, at him. "Come home safe, okay?" she whispered.
"Promise," Merton said. The weirdest thing about wearing a B-suit (I.E, a transformed dragon that was genetically engineered to be used as a suit of power armor) was that you didn't actually feel like you were
in
a suit. Rather, you felt the wind on your scaled balls and had a hard time remmebering that normally, you were a squishy human. He grinned slightly as Brash hummed cheerfully in his head. "Now, I gotta get out there."
"You could stay here. Protect me." Relix muttered, looking aside.
Merton reached out. He cupped her cheek and murmured. "I have a duty to you and to Julia. Both require me out there. Besides..." He cocked his head. "I have Brash watching my back. Right, little buddy?"
Yup!
Brash said, cheerfully – his voice echoing inside of Merton's head.
Relix muttered something under her breath. It sounded an awful lot like: 'Stupid noble human jerk bag going off and being heroic.' She shook her head, then put her clawed palm on his chest and shoved him back into the airlock. The inner doors slammed shut and Merton let himself get blown out of the airlock and into the space above the USS Theodore Roosevelt. Or, as Merton immediately started thinking of it as, the Teddy. The aircraft carrier was one of the fifty or so that humanity had launched into space using spelljammer helms. And one might have thought that an aircraft carrier would be uniquely useless in space.
One would be wrong.
Spelljammer helms functioned by mystically enchanting an entire naval ship to operate in space. The key word being
entire
. A magical shell of atmosphere surrounded the Teddy, allowing crew to operate on the flight deck without space suits or breathers or even sun hats.
The first of the F-15 and F-16s and F-35s and F-22As and whatever other Fs that they had crammed onto the Teddy launched into space with a scream of jet engines. Yes, an audible scream. As the jet roared past Merton, he could see the glowing field of mystical atmosphere surrounding the fighter, even as it started to loop around, waiting for more fighters to launch. And launch. And launch. And launch. A Russian aircraft carrier – about fifty or so kilometers off – was launching their MIGs. A French and Japanese carrier were launching behind them. South Korea and India both had one carrier each, and even they were launching.
Spain
had an aircraft carrier up here.
And, yes.
She was launching.
Fighter planes roared upwards and formed into formations – sorted and organized by languages spoken and objectives assigned. Merton felt a swelling of pride.
Just a few weeks ago, some of those pilots had been ready to shoot one another down. Now, they were flying in formation towards the hazing swarm of incoming dragon fighters. Well, kobold fighters, if what Relix had said was accurate. He grinned and thought to Brash:
Ready to show them what we can do, buddy?
Vroom vroom! Senketsu Shippu!
Brash called out. His back shifted and grew, fanning his wings out to their full length and growing a double set of jet engines. His wings beat and the engines kicked on and Merton thrust his hands before him. Mostly to keep them from being ripped back behind his back. He whooped as he shot forward and then matched, then exceeded the speed of the jet fighters. He flew up beside one of the leading fighters – an Indian MIG. Yeah, the Indians flew MIGs. Who knew?
The indian pilot – inhuman behind flight mask and helmet – sent him a Namaste. At least, Merton thought it was.
Merton waggled his wings and Brash laughed.
But Merton's joy at the sheer speed of the moment bled away as he saw the onrushing enemy force. He gulped – and tried to focus. This was the plan. And soon, things were going to get real dicey. He gritted his teeth, then put on an extra burst and focused. He and Brash both grew larger and larger, until they were in full dragon form, jet-pack roaring brightly enough to match a torpedo ship in terms of engine plume and thrust contrail.
If that didn't scream 'pay attention to me!', Merton wasn't sure what would.
***
"Activate PWSs!" Talon Leader Gigzor snarled.