Admiral Yen Yen Ro walked along the corridor while Roxi floated beside him and explained everything. Well, she didn't explain the orgy, but she didn't actually have to -- the facts of the case were shocking enough for him to actually pause mid stride. His lower-body limbs clacked against the floor of the tube-tunnel leading from the outer edge of the headquarters' upper ring section to the spinal column of the station and he swung his gaze to look directly at Roxi.
"Damn."
"We need to send someone, right?" Roxi asked.
"Yes, we do -- but Gyre couldn't have picked the worst time to be alive." He lifted his palm to his face, thinking. "Damn, damn, damn -- the fleet has almost fully assembled and we're about to blow a half a dozen super-giants into stellar dust. I can't spare a single rocket or ship, not with every logistic op we have going right now. Hell, you shouldn't even be here talking with me: I have four iron bombs that need to be escorted to their systems and deployed, and you're the only ship I have who can run those missions."
"A rocket-"
"We can't risk the entire galaxy on a rocket, and any rocket squadron we send will unacceptably reduce our strength at Found," he said, shaking his head. "No. I'm sorry, but Gyre will simply have to survive being marooned on a paradise planet for another few days." He smirked. "I'm sure he can handle it."
Roxi wanted to argue. But...he had a good point. According to everything she had gotten from Gyre, he didn't have a huge chunk of his memory banks, he didn't have his crew, he didn't have any idea about the Voidbringers. But something in her gut told her that this was wrong -- that there was something important there. She shook her head. "Can you at least prep his crew? He's asking about them!"
The Admiral, who had started to walk away, paused. He looked over his shoulder, his six eyes blinking in a corkscrew pattern. He nodded. "Yes, they will be forked from storage and brought up to speed. We normally keep dead crews out of the loop until they can be rebodied -- keeping people around in digital purgatory while they're already mourning the loss of a dear friend is...just cruel. Their replacement bodies are still in the growth tanks, but...we can get them back up and tell them the good news."
Roxi nodded.
"And now you need to get to those iron bombs!" The Admiral barked.
"Yes sir!" Roxi saluted.
[[You know, you don't need to salute, right?]] Heinlein asked, his voice amused. [[We're not really a military.]]
[[Besides,]] K'iren said, her voice dripping with sarcasm. [[You're always armed.]]
Huh?
Roxi thought at the same time Hugh said: [[Huh?]]
[[Philistines, do you not know the glorious history of your own military? And I thought humans were all proud warriors,]] K'iren said, laughing. [[Saluting as a form of respect grew from showing you didn't have any laser focals attached to your combat visor -- you flip up the visor, to show you're not packing directed energy weapons. Read a history book!]]
Is that true?
Roxi thought as she flicker jumped out of the station and into the parking swarm of Concord rockets that thronged around the station.
[[She says it confidently enough to make me want to immediately check,]] Carcass said.
[[Hey!]]
The docking swarm was a lot dirtier than Roxi had expected. But rockets weren't starships. They were huge, ungainly things -- with massive reaction mass tanks and fusion torch-drives and blisters of turrets and railgun emplacements, and heavy duty armor plating, covered in thick paint. Despite the best efforts of everyone involved, they shed tiny bits of debris every second they were in orbit: Bits of paint chipped free by micrometeorite impacts became their own kind of Kessler Cascade, because they would then ping out then strike other nearby ships and cause more chipping, more spalling, more damage.
All of it was so fucking minor that the people in the rockets barely noticed. It would take more than a fleck of paint going at orbital velocities to really bother a sturdily built war-rocket. And, honestly, it wouldn't have bothered Roxi...
Save that Roxi was a starship.
Meaning she was both naked and flying through this dross. And while only an infinitesimal fraction of it actually smeared itself against her hull -- mostly her face and shoulders as she darted past the kilometer long war-rockets of some gasbag species she had never seen before -- it was still enough to make her feel like she needed a shower.
Ugh, can't you refine my kinetic barriers to block this stuff?
She thought to her officers.
[[Working on it,]] K'iren said, sounding amused. [[The issue is, we don't want to put too much strain on reflecting the small, slow stuff and burn out our emitters before we even get to being shot by petajoule kinetics or something.]]
"Bleck!" Roxi said, aloud, into the vacuum of space. Then a paint chip flew into her eye and she squalled, rubbing at her camera lens. "Ugh! Ack! I hate this!"
She finally emerged from the docking swarm, turning her orbit from a distended oval to a hyperbolic arc -- transforming it from an orbit around Found to around Found's primary, in a way that Hugh's nav-plotting claimed would intersect her with the freighters carrying the Iron Bombs, which had just arrived in-system at a comfortably safe distance from either the Primary or the docking swarm. Roxi squared her shoulders, then sighed.
Do you think we'll have any countermeasure against the E-space fuckery?
She thought.
[[No, but we don't need to have countermeasures if we manage to pull this off -- it's all a race to see who's super weapon manages to alter the course of the war first,]] Heinlein said. [[It's just like the Mars Independence movement all over again.]]
[[Or the Corevore War,]] K'iren put in.
[[Or any number of conflicts in my people's history,]] Carcass said.
Roxi frowned.
[[What are you thinking, Roxi?]] Hugh asked.
I'm thinking that when it comes to a superweapon fight, it might be a really really really bad idea to do it against an extragalactic intelligence that might be...
She paused, not wanting to put words to her worry. But they didn't need to hear her say what she was thinking.
[[Aren't you glad you signed up for the Corps now?]] K'iren asked.
Honestly? Better out here, doing something, than sitting back on my homeworld watching the news and worrying,
Roxi thought, then spread her arms as she came within easy light-speed communication of the Iron Bomb freighters. Each freighter looked like a kind of huge beetle, with a bulbous set of interlocking carapaces that were the reaction mass chambers, and a sextet of immense fusion torches as their butts. They had ramscoop capability for when they were being used for Core diving, but they also contained the minute spinal framework of E-space drives which would allow them to keep up at FTL speeds out here in the Habitable Zone.