Authors Note: It took a while, but here's something substantial to read through while you're all in quarantine. Remember to deploy chemical countermeasures against hostile organisms, and wear your rebreather if you go EVA!
Special thanks to my buddy SketchyWarrior for his help with the UNN armored vehicles and their tactics.
CHAPTER 1: PREEMPTIVE STRIKE
The sound of claws scratching against the metal deck echoed through the cramped corridor as the Crewmaster made his way to the bridge, ducking under exposed pipes and bundles of electrical cables. This warren of winding passages was made for humans, not Borealans, his eight-foot stature requiring him to hunch over to avoid hitting his head. Their smell still permeated the vessel, but it was fading now, overcome by the scents of oil and alien machinery.
His furry ears brushed the doorframe as he emerged into a more open space, finally able to stand upright. Before him was a room occupied by half a dozen console banks, more of his kind hunched over before the glowing, holographic displays. They waved their clawed fingers through the projections, adjusting their course, and tracking radar contacts. The bridge was a little more homely than the rest of the ship. As the command center, the bare hull had been decorated with crimson drapes in the traditional style, the flowing fabric cascading from the ceiling to the carpeted floor. A large window wrapped around the room, occupying his entire field of view. The glass doubled as a monitor, displaying information in small boxes that the crew were moving around with gestures from their furry hands, the angular hull of the frigate visible beyond.
It extended into the distance like an artificial horizon, tapering into a dull point a good two hundred meters in front of them, the subtly raised conning tower giving them a fine view. It was broken up in places by the streamlined blisters that housed the ship's railgun turrets, and the closed hatches of the torpedo launch tubes. The vessel bristled with weaponry, but it was all stowed, as they were not on a combat patrol. The hull had once been painted with a stealth coating that was as black as the space beyond, but it now sported a more fitting red, the color of Elysia. Intricate scenes of battle and hunting flowed across its surface like a tapestry, their brilliant gold gleaming under the light of the system's twin suns.
The finely engraved, ruby-red armor that the Crewmaster wore over his silken tunic clanked as he rolled his shoulders, a long cape sewn from
rainbow spider
fur glittering with iridescence as it trailed behind him. He stalked over to his throne, taking a seat on the padded chair, his long tail slotting through a hole in the backrest as he leaned into the crimson leather. Most of his crew were wearing their pressure suits, but the
Furious Swipe
was a sound vessel, she would not forsake her master.
"Report," he grumbled, resting his face in his palm as he gazed out at the starfield. "What is our present course?"
"We sail over the territory of the Rask, my Alpha," one of his crewmen replied with a deferent bow of his head.
"Radar contacts?" he asked, scratching idly at his fiery mane of orange hair.
"Some Coalition, and one jump merchant, but we have adjusted our trajectory accordingly."
"Very good," the Crewmaster muttered, waving a hand at the viewport. "Show me the ground."
The inky blackness of space faded, replaced with a camera view from the underside of the frigate. The planet beneath them was mostly desert, its surface blasted by the heat of the system's primary, scant wisps of white cloud drifting through the atmosphere. Borealis had no oceans, no continents, all of its water was locked within the great lakes. They shimmered as their sapphire surfaces reflected the suns, encircled by bands of lush, green jungle that served as bulwarks against the ever-encroaching deserts. The greenery trapped moisture to create a micro-climate, swirling clouds seeming to cluster over the country-sized oases, their borders dividing up the different territories.
Elysia was one of them, his home. How he longed to return to the shore of its endless lake, to walk between the stone edifices of its capital once again, to feel the wind in his hair. Captaining a ship of the Elysian Navy was a noble station, one earned through great deeds, but it tended to get a little dreary.
His feline eyes turned to the territory that they were cruising over. Unlike most, the jungle band that should have shielded it from the sands was broken in places, the desert spilling through the breaches. It almost looked like a giant grazing animal had taken huge bites out of it. The lake itself was relatively small, a puddle compared to that of his own nation. He could only just make it out, as it was sandstorm season, the obscuring clouds visible from space.
Its inhabitants, the Rask, were a hardy people who were more accustomed to desert life than most. They were notorious bandits and pirates, raiding caravans, and making incursions into neighboring territories in ages past. Their admittance into the Coalition had somewhat curbed that behavior as of late. Rask and Elysia were technically allies, but old rivalries persisted.
The Rask did not have a Navy, nor did any of the other Borealan territories, which meant that Elysia ruled the skies. The Patriarch had been forward-thinking enough to cooperate closely with the Coalition when the aliens had made contact, the resulting prosperity allowing him to purchase technologies that were hundreds of years more advanced than anything available on Borealis. Many other territories now followed Elysia's lead, but their headstart had expanded their influence greatly, making them the planet's only superpower.
The radar operator to the Crewmaster's right faltered, his round ears twitching as he frantically scanned the holographic readout of his console. A crimson warning light bathed the bridge in its glow, alien icons flashing on the window.
"What is the meaning of this?" the Crewmaster demanded, rising from his chair. He didn't recognize the symbols, and it wasn't his station to know them.
"The ship's mind warns that we are being locked, my Alpha," a flustered crewman replied.
"Locked?" he demanded. "By what?"
"I...I do not know, my Alpha. The skies are clear of enemies, there are no hostile ships in radar range."
"Put out a call to all ships in the vicinity and warn them that we are being erroneously targeted," the Crewmaster ordered with a wave of his hand. "The humans must have mistaken us for a pirate skiff, or perhaps our systems are malfunctioning. Order the ship to run a diagnostic on her sensors."
"As you command," the crewman sitting at the comms console replied, the other Borealans on the bridge turning their heads to look back at the Crewmaster. One of them paused to wipe her pink nose with the back of her furry hand, her ears swiveling to track him, her reflective eyes darting about the room. This had never happened before. The Elysian Navy had never seen combat, let alone in orbit above their own planet. Nobody quite knew how to react.
"Eyes on your stations!" the Crewmaster snapped, the bridge crew hastily turning their attention back to their displays. "You are like a litter of frightened kittens! The humans built this vessel for war, and she is crewed by Elysia's bravest. There is no excuse for doubt."
"The ship reports no fault in her sensors," the radar operator continued, his fingers moving through the orange projection.
"Coalition vessels report no lock," the comms officer added. "Should we ask them what to do?"
"No," the Crewmaster replied. "Tell the ship that she is to locate the source of the lock."
"She is triangulating," the radar operator said, watching his readout intently.
"My Alpha," the comms officer began, the Crewmaster turning to face him. "The Coalition vessel
Rubin
wishes to speak with you."
"Very well," he grumbled, "put them through on the main speakers."
There was a hiss of static, and then an alien voice rang out.
"Captain of the
Furious Swipe
, this is the UNN CIWS frigate
Rubin
. Our sensors show that you're being locked from the ground. Are you in need of assistance?"
"From the ground?" the Crewmaster hissed in the Elysian tongue, the radar operator shaking his head in reply. He switched back to English, the language of the humans, clearing his throat before replying. "Captain of the
Rubin
, this is the
Furious Swipe
. Our radar systems are unable to determine the origin of the lock. We thought that it might be one of yours."
"The sensors on those old Mk I
Clovis
frigates are a little slower than what we're using," the Captain of the
Rubin
replied. "Our systems show a missile lock originating from the surface of the planet, we're burning to cover you."
"Very well,
Rubin
. We await your arrival," the Crewmaster replied. "What could be targeting us from the ground?" he asked once the connection had been closed. "A Betelgeusian fleet could not have slipped through our defenses, there is an entire Coalition flotilla stationed in orbit."
"Still scanning," the radar operator replied. The Crewmaster waited a few moments longer, his furry, orange tail flicking back and forth beneath his cloak in irritation. "She has it," the crewman declared, swiping to bring the image up on the viewport. "Something just launched from the Rask territory, it moves to intercept us."
"What is it?" the Crewmaster demanded, "a missile?"
"Ship's mind reports that the speed and mass of the object correspond with a missile," he confirmed, failing to mask the uncertainty in his voice. "Three minutes until contact."
"Arm all weapons!" the Crewmaster snarled. "Prepare to launch torpedoes, activate the defensive guns!"
The blisters on the hull began to open up, railgun turrets rising from their protective housings, pivoting their long barrels as their systems ran diagnostic checks. He watched as one of the ball-shaped defensive turrets swiveled, its long cannon rotating as it angled in the direction of the incoming projectile.
"Put our bow towards the missile, present as small a target as possible," the Crewmaster ordered. "How far out is the
Rubin
?"
"The humans are maneuvering between us and the projectile now."