Centre of Gravity. Ian Douglas
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Название: Centre of Gravity

Автор: Ian Douglas

Издательство: HarperCollins

Жанр: Книги о войне

Серия:

isbn: 9780007482979

isbn:

СКАЧАТЬ once in twenty-eight seconds.

      Ahead, a rectangular hatchway had opened in the side of the carrier’s spine, illuminated by bright white lights set into the deck. From this angle, the quarterdeck accessway connecting the ship with the base docking facility seemed to drop in from directly overhead and slightly aft of the open bay.

      And then the Rutan, on AI pilot, glided silently through the opening and into the Star Carrier America.

       H’rulka Warship 434

       Cis-Lunar Space, Sol System

       1534 hours, TFT

      “We are not going to strike the vermin?” Swift Pouncer asked over the ship’s internal communications network. Speaking only in radio, without the added color and modifying overtones of its sonic speech, the words were empty of all emotion.

      But Ordered Ascent knew what the others must be feeling.

      “We have the technological advantage,” Ordered Ascent replied, knowing that all of the other All of Us were listening closely. “But that advantage is not great enough to allow us to fight an entire star system. Too many of us would fall into the Abyss. It is far more important that the Masters know of these aliens, and that they have been sending probes through System 783,451, than it is for us to destroy their ships. The destruction will happen later, be sure of that.”

      “A number of vermin ships are closing with us,” High Drifting reported. “We estimate that they will launch weapons within fifteen vu.”

      “The vermin defend their nest,” Swift Pouncer added.

      Ordered Ascent watched the unfolding tactical situation through its electronic feed from Warship 434’s tactical mind. No fewer than fourteen enemy ships were currently with range of 434’s weapons. It was tempting to destroy those fourteen before dropping into the emptiness between the stars.

      The All of Us had served the Masters for some twelves of thousands of gnyii now, ever since the Starborn had first shown the H’rulka how to extract metals from the winds of their world, how to bend gravity to their will, and how, at last, to build ships that would take them to the treasure troves of metals and other elements in orbit beyond the homeworld’s atmosphere. The H’rulka had gone from being essentially atechnic to a star-faring species themselves within the space of twelve-cubed gnyii, the twitch of a minor tentacle, so far as the Masters were concerned.

      Ordered Ascent wondered, and not for the first time, why the Masters insisted on suppressing technological advancement throughout the entourage of species they’d brought into the embrace of their feeder nets. The H’rulka had come so far; their combat advantage over these vermin would have been that of the windstorm to the foodfloater, had they been permitted to keep developing their technology.

      No matter. The advantage was sufficient.

      Ordered Ascent checked other data feeds. Ship 434 was ready to diverge, if necessary, and would be ready to enter metaspace within mere vu.

      Any damage done to the enemy was to the good. So long as combat didn’t weaken Warship 434 or threaten her mission, there was no reason not to swat the vermin before they were even close enough to engage.

      “Swift Pouncer,” Ordered Ascent said, “destroy those that we can reach.”

      “With the pleasure of gentle winds, Ordered Ascent.”

      And Warship 434 reached out into the darkness. …

      TC/USNA DD Symmons

       Cis-Lunar Space, Sol System

       1536 hours, TFT

      Captain Harry Vanderkamp, commanding the Symmons, watched the tactical display unfolding around him as the ship plunged toward the interloper. The alien ship was accelerating fast, pulling at least seven hundred gravities, and would slip beyond range soon.

      Symmons was a member of CBG–18, a fleet destroyer 576 meters long, massing just under thirty thousand tons, and armed with a variety of weapons, including thirty-six launch tubes for VG–24 Mamba smart missiles, variable-yield ship killers ranging between twenty and forty-five kilotons apiece. The H’rulka vessel was 327,000 kilometers ahead now, out of range for most guided weapons, but still within reach of the Mambas.

      The problem, though, was that Symmons did not yet have clearance to fire. The ship ahead had clearly been identified as H’rulka, an enemy combatant … but it had been twelve years since the single known encounter between them and Confederation vessels, and Vanderkamp knew he would need clearance from Fleet HQ. There might be diplomatic issues of which he was unaware, or an attempt under way to communicate with the alien.

      Symmons had burned repeated laser and radio messages to Fleet Base, only a few light seconds away, but so far with no response.

      His gut instinct was to fire. That H’rulka monster might be a recon probe in advance of a larger force.

      The enemy ship was accelerating harder now. In seconds, it would be out of range completely. Hell, it might already be too late. …

      “Sir!” Vanderkamp’s tactical officer cried over the bridge link. “Kaufman has been hit!”

      “Show me!”

      The tactical display switched to a view from one of the other destroyer’s external cameras, looking forward up the spine toward the underside of the ship’s massive shield cap. The shield, backlit by a hard blue glare, was deforming, crumpling with shocking suddenness, as though it were collapsing into …

      “Milton is hit!” A second battlegroup destroyer was folding around her own shield cap. “Target is now breaking up.”

      “Breaking up? Breaking up how?”

      “It’s just … just dividing sir. Twelve sections, moving apart from—”

      “Incoming mass!” his exec shouted. “Singularity effect! Impact in seven … in six …”

      Vanderkamp saw it, a pinpoint source of X-rays and hard gamma on the forward scanner display, a tiny, brilliant star sweeping directly toward Symmons’ prow.

      There was no time for thought or measured decision, no time for anything but immediate reaction.

      “VG–24 weapon system, all tubes, fire!” he yelled, overriding the exec’s countdown. They were under attack, and that decisively ended any need for weapons-free orders from base. “Maneuvering, hard right! Shields up full! Brace for—”

      And the H’rulka weapon struck the Symmons.

      It hit slightly off center on the destroyer’s bullet-shaped forward shield cap, causing the starboard side to pucker and collapse in a fiercely radiating instant. Water stored inside the tank burst through the rupture, freezing instantly in a cloud of frozen mist that burst into space like a miniature galaxy. The port side of the cap twisted around, collapsing into the oncoming gravitic weapon effect. Vanderkamp felt a single hard, brain-numbing jolt … and then the five-hundred meter spine of the ship whipped around the object, orbiting it with savage velocity as the entire 29,000-ton-plus СКАЧАТЬ