
Attack Pattern Blast Three
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Strike Battleship Argent BBV 740
Rho Theta Frontier
CPT Jason Hunter Commanding
Mission Time 3888.22 Tango Zulu
“Threat board!”
It wasn’t the raised voice. It was the phrase that jolted everyone on the Argent bridge out of their routine. While the Rho Theta system was closer to enemy sectors than the inner Core systems, there were no credible hostile forces within several light years of Argent’s current patrol station.
“Designate new contact Aquarian Ten. Bearing four six mark twelve range 56 megaclicks. On approach course moderate velocity. Estimated time to outer weapons perimeter eight minutes.”
Commander Cochrane O’Malley’s mind was less concerned with the position of the contact and more concerned with why it had tripped his ship’s early warning systems. DSS Argent was equipped with some of the most sophisticated defensive tracking systems in the fleet. Absent an extraordinary cloaking device, it was almost impossible to maneuver close enough to engage Captain Hunter’s ship without having been tracked for a full minute or longer. This distant defensive envelope was only extended and enhanced if Argent had electronic warfare corvettes launched.
“Any reason the battle comp thinks its hostile?” O’Malley asked as he checked off fuel consumption reports on his tablet.
“Most likely issue is Aquarian Ten has no transponder signature. LRS picked it up off emissions only. Based on course, speed and field configuration I’d say we’re looking at a small civilian spacecraft. Perhaps two to five thousand tons. No EM profile,” the tac officer replied.
“Force command who is on ready alert?”
“Bongo and Meerkat, commander,” Deputy Star Wing Commander Shaw replied. “Jacks off Flight Three.”
“Very well,” O’Malley said, turning his attention to the main viewer, where Aquarian Ten was pinpointed on its approach from an out-system position into Rho Theta space. Argent had roughly 28 degrees of the outer orbit inside its own LRS range. Anything approaching from the direction of El Rey would likely be picked up before crossing the orbit of the Proximan Listening Post at system’s edge. This was a vital patrol vector, since El Rey was one potential origin for inbound Imperial warships or probes. “Launch the ready alert. Vector four six. Commit spacecraft. I want an ID pass on unident Aquarian Ten.”
“Affirmative.” Lieutenant Desiree Shaw turned to the force command station and switched all four command nets. “Skywatch, this is force command. Launch Bongo and Meerkat off alert five. Your signal is commit. Vector four six for bogey.”
The controller high above Argent’s dorsal armor plates calmly shifted into action, turning to the enormous flight console where the ship’s entire launch apparatus was displayed with real time information on the status of every active spacecraft aboard. The two rail tunnels on the starboard lateral edge of the third of Argent’s three enormous flight decks were highlighted. “Acknowledged. The board is green. Flight three is cleared controls. Signal launch.”
Lieutenant JGs Alfred “Bongo” Mors and Eileen “Meerkat” Walsh had been harness-closed and idling in their rail tunnels for several minutes by the time the order finally released control to their fighters. The accelerator currents went active and both 2G Yellowjacket spacecraft screamed through their respective rail tunnels and rocketed into space at close to four miles per second velocity. They rapidly banked into their courses and moved into a follow quarter-formation before activating their drive fields and vanishing into the blackness at 0.3c
Bongo activated his commlink. “Skywatch. Ready alert is in space. Designate patrol Cavalier Three. We have the unident on our scope. Estimated time to intercept four minutes.”
To an inexperienced observer, one might wonder why Argent didn’t simply hail the unidentified ship and order it to identify itself and state the reason for the deactivated transponder. Civilian spacelane regulations were as clear as they could be. There were no circumstances, emergency or otherwise, why any spacecraft, absent a military vessel with appropriate authorization, would navigate in-system without an active transponder. There were only two situations where a “dark contact” was tolerated, and those were specific equipment failure or a mayday signal. Since it would almost certainly take a close range rifle shot to cause a bog-standard civilian transponder device to malfunction, and a second shot to disable its backup, the only possibility here was some kind of emergency. The commander had already advised the DSCOM a Tranquility might be needed. Everything was standing by no matter what the problem was.
In the meantime, the reason for the radio silence was well understood. Ordering a ready alert to intercept the contact was far less risky than broadcasting a challenge, especially at this range. Fighters could be coming from anywhere. Once Argent transmitted on an open hailing frequency, O’Malley would be giving away his position. Unlike the civilian contact, Argent was always protected by at least one layer of low-grade electronic counter-measures which made it extremely difficult to pick the ship up at ranges of more than three to five megaclicks. An open transmission would defeat those precautions.
Normally this would be a situation that would warrant a heads-up for the captain. However, Jason Hunter was just starting his fifth hour of rack time having stayed on for half of third watch the night before to cover for the doctor who had spent the night before that treating two galley crewmen who pulled the wrong stack of equipment on a shelf and learned a valuable lesson about gravity and momentum in exchange for a rotator cuff strain, a contusion and two broken fingers. Senior officers needed down time. If they were roused every time the ship encountered a routine series of operations, none would ever sleep. Only two other department chiefs were awake, but both Commander Tixia and Colonel Moody were off duty and likely unconscious as well. It was up to O’Malley and second watch to solve the gripping mystery of the missing transponder on their own.
TO BE CONTINUED
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