2976.217
Heaven's Gate System, Enigma Sector
Three weeks. That's how long it had been since the encounter with the thought destroyed dreadnought known as the Cunning Death. The after action report had been met with skepticism from the Federation at best, and accusations of "insatiable warmongering" had already been heard in the Congress halls. The GFP already was decrying the encounter as an attempt to stir up fear in the galaxy, and certain anti-Terran representatives in the Congress claimed that even the black box records and their own flight data was still not enough "real evidence" of the Kromus making a renewed effort against the civilized Sol-Daiban galaxy. They were the same voices that continuously spoke against the Confederation having any kind of greater influence in the Federation's course, that humans were not "mature or deserving yet" to be allowed the power to weigh in on the policies of the greater galaxy.
And it was at this point that Adam Malkovich was starting to think the position of "Federation membership" was perhaps something Terra had been more forced to accept than actually allowed to weigh as an option two hundred years ago. History said that the Confederation had barely survived a horrific war with the Machine Empire, a war that had engulfed the entire galaxy, fought harder than any thought possible after having already waged two nearly cataclysmic wars in succession over the course of a century and a half, and winning those wars.
The Covenant, the Kilrathi, and then the Machine Empire of Andromeda. Save maybe the Sangehili, a former enemy turned ally no less, no other singular species had endured so much and come out as victors. Terra was still recovering from the Machine War of the twenty-seven hundreds, a testament to what the planet and its children had survived. As it was, the current Executive Chairman of the Federation had made his position of empathy toward Terra very stated, and was one of the blessings of the change of leadership following the Kromus War. But popularity with Terra was paid for with being unpopular in the circles that wished to see the Confederation accept a position that was more and more clearly over two hundred years one of the attack dog and not the equal.
"Commander, sorry to bother you. Admiral Dane is on the comm, said it was a priority call."
With a sigh, Malkovich reached over to the com-unit aside on his desk and clicked the receiver switch. "Patch him in to my quarters. Probably wants to discuss the Federation telling us to stop rattling our sabers." An old, almost obsolete, phrase, but still it held meaning. A screen slid up from the center of his desk, greeting Adam to the grizzled and aged visage of Castor Dane, whom was clearly not having a good day himself. "I'd say good morning, sir, but it's about oh-three-hundred, and you, respectfully, look like hell."
"Any sane person would after what you sent back and the shit storm I got from both Councilor Q'al and Chief Hardy." The admiral was visibly worn out himself from how he rubbed his eyes and sighed. "Situations like this is why I wish to god we hadn't been so bad off when the Federation finally approached us after the Machine War. The Federation Congress is denying any possible suggestion of the Kromus gathering their forces again, they say we're jumping at ghosts and shadows, even though your flight records and the recovered black box data verified that it's the Cunning Death."
Sadly, it was something they both had come to expect from the Galactic Federation. "Daiban doesn't want to admit the idea that the War didn't really end, we've just been in a ceasefire for eighteen years."
The admiral's image only nodded while Dane pinched the bridge of his nose. "Chairman Kea'ton is right now fighting the Federation committee that deemed your report 'inconclusive', being that most of them are the same idiots who said the same thing over thirty years ago when I wrote my advance report on the attacks back then." Another sigh as he looked off screen, nodding to someone that Adam couldn't quite hear, then returned his attention to their communications link. "Commander, right now I'm locked in to Plan Orange Nine. Police and response actions only, no active search and destroy unless maybe they end up glassing another planet. And even then, the Congress may just wait until it's one of their precious Inner Worlds before they loosen our leash."
How did they end up here? The Confederation, and previously the Unified Earth Government, had once been respected throughout the Orion Spur, having fought and defended their portion of the galaxy from invaders and threats since the invention of the Shaw-Fujikawa Slip Drive in the late 2300s, and furthered with the Akwende Jump Drive developed during the last years of the 2590s. The fact that the Chozo had been insisting since the Federation's founding to including the humans meant something.
And yet, for two hundred years, they had been regulated to the treatment of a 'vassal' territory, an embassy member of the Lower Assembly, rather than a counciler member of the Greater Assembly, and they had hardly been the only ones. Others, such as the Yl'fyn and the Jiralhanae who had taken residence in Confederation territory, had been treated as second-class races, and a number of sentient species were still not acknowledged as such out of 'lack of proof'. And the worst part at times was the fact that many of the founding worlds of the Federation had been former vassals of the Covenant. If not for Terra, they'd would likely still be enthralled by that organization, if not dust in the solar winds of a sterilized galaxy with how that was going to end up.
"The thing is that they seem to be making movements toward somewhere, but we haven't been able to figure out where that is. The last sighting put them just outside IR-271, which is nearly a kiloparsec beyond the edge of Federation space."
The admiral narrowed his brow in concern. He seemed to recognize the aforementioned region, but was silent as he gave a grimace. It did not go unnoticed, and Dane could see that Adam hadn't missed it. "There's nothing of importance out there, no colonies or known habitable worlds besides K-2L. Unless they think they have a line on some kind of Forerunner cache-"
"What about Chozo, sir?"
That caused enough of a silence that Adam knew he'd hit a button. He'd read enough wartime reports to know that the Kromus had a fondness for Chozo identified technologies, and a particular case of one attempt at Forerunner relics. He'd never admit how much he was able to get into that classified report, but it was enough to know something was odd about Pirates chasing after a technology it was well established they couldn't use very well.
But Chozo technologies...that was a different matter all together.
"If I had known you had that kind of hidden talent for getting into classified data, Commander, I'd have transferred you into Fleet Intel instead of a ship command." The faux scathing tone was accompanied by a snort as Dane shook his head. "That's a possibility, I'll admit...but we also have certain safeguards watching the locations we know of. We'd hear about it if they were going for some kind of ancient Chozo trove."
Which Adam knew meant Samus. He didn't know where her adopted Chozo caretakers lived, and thus her as well, but he knew enough that whatever planet it was had to be an important place likely hiding the technologies of their powerful and hyper-advanced ancestors. She'd told him and his brother enough in confidence to know that. "Sir, we both know that our mutual young friend probably knows more about the old Chozo colonies and capitols than anyone outside the still living Chozo has right to. But she's still only one person. And truthfully-"
The klaxon alarm interrupted Malkovich before he could finish voicing his concerns. He growled as he turned his head, then looked back at the communications screen. "Apologies, Admiral. Looks like we have some unexpected guests that just arrived. If you'll excuse me?"
Dane gave only a nod a moment before the transmission ended, leaving Adam to race from his desk and out the doors of his quarters. There was already a scramble of the crew even as he made his way to the main lift. It was a minute before the doors slid open and allowed him access to the main deck where he saw Lieutenant Archer racing for the bridge just as he was. "SitRep, Lieutenant."
"Six ships literally out of nowhere, Commander. No Akwende particle flare or any sign of jump entry." The woman was just as confused as he was even though she had said it. "Lieutenant Commander Williams ordered full red as soon as the first Kromus ID image was verified, they just jumped into the system without any sign of how they did it."
Neither slipspace nor jump drives could be used to make stealth entry into a system. Even full spectrum cloaking couldn't be used to hide a ship during FTL re-entry to normal space. How were the Kromus doing it?
"Wake Lieutenant Colonel Ryder up and get our birds hot and flying. Prep missile tubes and heat up the mass accelerator cannons as soon as gunnery crews are ready." The main bridge entry slid open as they approached, greeting Adam with the sight of the aforementioned six Kromus ships visible on the main displays. Something struck him as odd as he looked over the projected data displayed above the central holo-table. "Six to six, but we're an assault carrier, plus we have cruisers and battlewagons, those are light frigates. What the hell are they playing at?"
A quick salute greeted him as the olive-caramel toned man wearing a pair of thick stripes with a half-width line above on each of his shoulder epaulets looked up from the central holo-table. A salute that was returned before attention was directed at the holographic display. "I'd apologize for waking you, sir, but it's no secret that you hardly sleep as it is."
"No apology would be needed anyway," came the unhesitant response as Malkovich eased himself into place at the corner of the holo-table. "Six war era frigates against a Confederation battle group, though...just one round from the Tarawa's main guns would likely take one of them out, let alone the Concordia's payloads...what are they thinking?"
Within moments, more points of light came into being visible on the main viewscreen, causing alarms to sound even as the holographic display reconfigured to account for what had just arrived. Seven more ships, larger this time, had suddenly appeared out of the void, seeming have just blurred into existence. Seeing it for himself, Malkovich could only stare in horror.
"How the hell did they jump in system without using slipspace or the jump point?!"
The crewman who had spat those words was echoing the exact though running through his own mind. None of this made sense. First, six grossly underpowered frigates arrived almost as if they jumped into the system intentionally, and now seven more Kromus vessels, the size of which the computers were still calculating. "Those are not the usual Pirate blockade runners we see."
All of the new arrivals were coming in over the combat display to be at least a kilometer or more in size, and of types not yet in in the databases. That alone was enough to make Adam crease his brow in worry; these were new ships, not war era holdovers as they had been used to dealing with. "What the hell is going on?"
The holo-display was suddenly disrupted as the pale sky-blue projection of a tall and muscularly toned woman attired in an older style Confederation uniform appeared, hair tied back into a neat bun while she held an officer's cap in her left hand. "Commander, I don't know how they're making jump in system without anything resembling a jump drive or slipdrive, but ship's high spectrum scanners are picking up unusual boson and muon particle energy at the point of entry, consistant with tachyon catagory. That suggests they're using some kind of FTL we're not yet familiar with."
The words were less surprising as the very presence of the holographic woman as Malkovich blinked in shock. He looked at Archer and Williams, confirming that they were just as in the dark as to what was going on. "Lieutenant, I was informed that Concordia was without an Aurora Unit. Did we get a Macro AI installed in the mainframe instead, and no one told me?"
"Macro AI are still just code and processes, Commander." The projected image of the woman stepped through the tactical display and gave a half hearted salute before Malkovich, then turned on her heel to bring her gaze back to the tactical arrangement. "I, on the other hand, am something new and not on the Federation's leash like those oversized bottle brains. Specifically, I'm also the only one of my kind right now, and as yet, the Federation has no idea I even exist."
And Dane had not seen fit to tell him that the Concordia was hosting an experimental AI. Another thing to the list of discussions he needed to have with the Admiral. "We'll talk about that later. Right now, your name would be helpful, and then a tactical assessment of this situation, because those are seven ships of types we have never seen before, and I don't want to be ass out in this."
The holographic woman nodded and waved her hand to bring the tactical display in closer on the Kromus side of the field. "Six raider-class frigates, plus seven unknowns. Readings indicate most of them are over a kilometer in length, and..." She paused, narrowing her brow in what appeared to be concern. She hadn't been expecting this, it seemed. "That's interesting. Particle beams, mass drivers, and more of the usual Kromus weaponry on the frigates...but the shielding of the new ships is some weird energy I'm unfamiliar with. If I had to guess based on any kind of comparison, though...I'd almost say that they're on level with-"
"Forerunner." The word was whispered with horror as Malkovich looked to the viewscreen in realization. The very discussion he had been having with Dane less than a hour before came back to his mind, the question of what it was the Pirates were looking for, and the pieces fell into place; it was worse than they'd thought. "Oh shit...they found a ship foundry."
"Raising primary shields and powering main weapons array, Hydra MACs coming online." The AI hologram was quick to shift her position while calling up a control display in front of her to represent activating the mentioned ship systems. "Alpha Wing reports ready to launch, Beta Wing prepping to load in the tubes as soon as Alpha Wing is clear." A pause as the hologram turned her head back at Malkovich and gave him a faint smile. "Oh, and apologies, Commander. My name is Cora."
A nod as klaxons resumed blaring through the deck, causing the scramble to stations even as the first bright pink-red flares of energy beams laced out from the Kromus ships. The Concordia's escorts quickly took up position just in time as those volleys impacted against fully powered shield grids, and the two battlewagons of the group brought their guns around even in mid turn, signaling with a blinding flare the release of a set of high speed ballistic rounds from the coil guns mounted to the underside. The streaking mark of the depleted-uranium shells tearing across the void at a bare percent of lightspeed was merely seconds in reaching their targets, only to ripple upon contact with the shimmering hexagon grid afterimage as the shields of the newer Kromus ships not only withstood impact, but barely looked to have been affected.
"Herriman and McKinney reporting no discernable drop in Kromus shields," came the report from the holographic avatar, who was expressing just as much worry in her facial features as her words conveyed. "Those were twenty-six and a half megaton impacts a piece, sir. Most Kromus capital ship of war era status would at least show sign of shield drain."
Which meant these new ships were a leap ahead of what they had seen in the Kromus War over two decades prior. The same volley from one battlewagon would have taken out a Kromus light frigate almost instantly. That these new ships had pretty much shrugged off the force of fifty-three megatons each was all the proof they needed that the Pirates of Krom had not been content to simple raiding and petty piracy during the supposed "peace". They had been preparing for war again, and be it salvaged Forerunner, Chozo, or some other precursor level technology they had assimilated, it was enough to make them an even bigger threat than the last time.
"They're scrambling a full launch of fighters, Commander! Over five hundred contacts, and they're closing fast!"
And they were the only ones who could warn anyone.
"Change of plans," came the low growl as Malkovich leaned in over the tactical display and punched in a series of numbers. "Magnum launch of Concordia's birds, all fighters out and picking those bastards out of the void. Ready launch tubes, charge particle cannons and coilguns to full power. We need to find the breaking point of these new ships, and fast." His gaze shifted to the holographic avatar of the two and a half kilometer long ship's artificial intelligence. "Cora, coordinate with the battle group and get me all information you can on those new ship types. My gut says they're some kind of new strike carrier class with all those fighters they just launched, but we'll probably let the eggheads at Fleet Intel decide on that."
"Whatever they are, fighters aren't the only surprise they're packing," came Cora's worried response. Before her, a more detailed image of the new Kromus capital ship rendered, highlighting some of the more concerning traits the Concordia's sensors had picked up. "I'm reading no less than three accelerated particle energy cannons spread about on the new ships, in addition to what I'm pretty sure are some kind of hardlight point defense emplacements." Her eyes widened as she turned her body around and revealed panic on her face. "Commander, APECs on those new ships are charging and preparing to fire!"
And then the bright red flare reached out and tore through the bow of the Herriman in a blinding instant. The battlewagon shifted sideway from the impact as its own coilgun fixtures were consumed by the blast, followed by a second beam that practically ignored the battlewagon's shields further and slammed through the compressed durasteel armor and structure like a hot knife through already warmed butter. Moments later, a blinding flash filled space, and the expanding debris was all that remained of the once heavily armed vessel.
And the mere notion of just how much the Kromus had advanced since the end of the war was dawning further on Adam and his crew. This encounter wasn't just chance, he realized. It had been planned by the Kromus, to frightening efficiency. And they had just started a launch of all their fighters into the very reversed field. "How the hell did they take out a refitted battlewagon in one shot? The only ship they had that was capable of that-"
"We've had twenty years to pick up the pace, and the Fro'mal factionists tried to keep us leashed," Cora replied in a calm tone, yet almost touched with a growl in her words. "This ship and I are the result of over twenty years of development and construction hidden from all eyes, Commander. There was a reason Admiral Dane kept us a secret until now."
"That DAW cloak and dagger bullshit isn't going to mean anything if we all die out here." With his eyes narrowed, Adam tapped at the close knit group of Kromus capital ships and began examining the formations, trying to find something to use to restore their advantage. "I want Alpha and Beta wings to focus on dividing their fighters and give us some room. Hydra-heads up and ready to fire on the smaller frigates, and bring us around to get the main MAC array in position so we can do some serious damage. All ships ready for defensive action as we hold position at the jump point and get ready to get the hell out of here."
"Fighters are engaging!"
It didn't take much for Adam to know that the flight coms were likely a chaotic mess; the display alone was enough. Two of their own fighter wings were engaged, over a hundred and twenty combat craft taking on the hundreds unleashed by the Kromus. At first, the Terran fighters seemed to be in the advantage as they loosened salvos that tore into the enemy attackers, explosions blossoming across the vacuum while the various Confederation fighters seemed to dance through space. And yet, as he watched, Adam realized something was wrong. The tactical projections showed the smaller raider-class frigates moving almost randomly, as if a panic, but they'd already seen what the new capital ships could do. This play of weakness was just that; an act.
"It's a god damn trap," he whispered as he furiously punched in a code on the tactical console. "Cora, notify the battle group to start falling back to the jump point, all fighters to take defensive position while we get the hell out of here."
"Sir, the attackers are primarily fang-class, those are war era fighters. They're no match for our birds."
"Commander's right, Lieutenant." AI or not, she saw the same thing he did. It took a moment for Adam to remember that despite her lack of actual experience in the field, Cora was likely on constant access with historical records and had been tailor made for her role; she was probably more prepared for the situation at hand than he was. "Those frigates aren't moving out of the way to get away from us, they're moving to block us from the jump point, and the fang-class are intentionally acting as bait."
Already, Adam could see the holographic display altering as the Kromus fighters began clustering and swarming against their own. A sure victory was quickly turning into a slaughter, and it was over confidence that had brought it on. "Those fang-class are just to get us to think we have the advantage, we're about to get slammed and lose everything unless we get out of here now."
The display suddenly went red as an alarm went off again. Cora's avatar turned sharply and dropped her jaw in shock as that same surge of motion was seen just as a massive vessel appeared between their battle group and the jump point. It wasn't the Cunning Death, but as the ship's computers ran the render and calculations, it was revealed to still be something to worry about all the same.
"Four kilometers long, and likely armed with the same kind of weapons as those new carriers," Adam muttered under his breath. This had been an ambush by the Kromus, lull the battle group into a false sense of confidence, all to reveal what they had become capable of since the Confederation had cracked their origin planet open like a walnut. "And now they're blocking off the jump point. I don't suppose the ship has a Relcaimer-class slipdrive tucked away that Admiral Dane also 'forgot' to tell me about."
Her head shook, thought the expression on her face was saying that there were, indeed, other things about the Concordia that her commanding officer had not been told about. "I can't tell you all the classified capabilities of the ship, sir...but I am able to enact some of them under emergency conditions."
Classified capabilities. A term Adam had long learned was code for "things the Federation would not approve of if they knew". Which sometimes was questionable at best, but in a situation like the Concordia, Adam had figured out the real reason for such secrecy and the revival of the old Confederation ship registry codes. Terra was tired of being treated like a second-class vassal state while being expected to bear the burden of acting as the first line military in the event of the very situation they were facing again.
And the situation was getting worse. Backdropped by a pitched reversal that was the fighter conflict, the McKinney took a heavy round from the closing Kromus vessels. The barrage was one that tore through failing shields and into the durasteel armor plating of the hull before ripping the main coilguns into a burning expanse of twisted metal shards. Another series of such energy beams slammed through the primary engines, tearing the rear of the ship free of the main superstructure in the seconds before the ship's fusion drives ruptured and consumed the entire mass in an explosion.
"Commander, I have Captain O'Hern of the Tarawa on the comm."
Not like they had much they could do considering the continuing disaster. With a sigh, Malkovich keyed into the tactical console. "Captain, I wish I had a grand decisive plan of action for you, but truthfully, this is a bit more than I think any of us were told to expect. Try to make for the jump point if you can, we'll try and-"
"Commander, all due respect to you and your damn good job as a first command, the Concordia is far more valuable than a half-dozen fifty year old battlewagons and hundred year old strike destroyers." O'Hern's image gave a sign of resignation as she shook her head in the notion of knowing exactly what the young commander had been about to tell her. "I know you came in from the Army and being expected to cover the fleet, but a ship like yours is the priority. We can't make a slipspace jump more than AUs distance at best with our Jump drives, and they can outdo that in the blink of an eye. I've already conferred with Captain Yeats and Commander LeBlanc, we'll give you and your fighters cover while you recover what's left of them, get the hell out of here and get all our combat records back to Sol."
They'd already made this kind of decision, behind his back. Any other officer might call it mutiny. He called it bullheadedness. "Captain, I cannot abandon my responsibility here."
"Your responsibility is to that ship, her crew, and to the Confederation as an officer of the line. Save the Army selfless bravado for another day, get back to Sol with what happened here, and make sure these bastards pay with blood for being stupid enough to come back for round two with us." O'Hern turned to hear something off the holo-projector for a moment, then returned her gaze to Adam, giving him a bitter smile. "That, son, is an order, from a captain to a commander. Now get going."
The image vanished just as the Tarawa could be seen firing its main engines and making way toward the four kilometer long Kromus ship that stood in their way. It took a moment to realize that O'Hern had just ordered a ramming attack to buy them time while the Dawn's Reach and the Tiger's Claw took guarding position and began unleashing everything they had against the Kromus frigates. That was enough to remove the older frigates from the situation, leaving the Concordia to do what Adam knew was their only option.
"Cora, signal emergency recovery operations," he stated. His face was full of regret, his tone that of a man who felt he had failed, again. But O'Hern had reminded him that, despite his time as being part of the rank and file of the Army, he was a fleet officer now, and a ship that had taken the time and resources that had gone into the Concordia was far too valuable to throw away in some idealistic last stand. The escorts were the guard; his ship was the heart of the force, and had to be protected. "As soon as we get as many birds back on board as we can, we make for the jump and pray we can get past that new Kromus monster ship."
The holographic avatar slowly nodded as she tapped at the imagery of her console, yet was hesitating to reply despite relaying his orders. "Withdrawal order sent, flight deck is ready for emergency recovery operations and jump lock down once we're ready." A flicker of her eyes to the tactical display, then back to the young commander. "Sir, for what it's worth, I'm sorry our official meeting had to happen this way. Admiral Dane had wanted to make a more formal presentation of me and the Newtype AI project when things had been better situated."
"Just get us home alive, Cora, and help us make sure these people guarding our asses don't die for nothing."
A nod of agreement as Cora resumed entering the needed vectors for their jump. The Tarawa had already pulled ahead and was taking a nasty beating from the Kromus super ship, but still pushing in. The destroyer's batteries were already giving everything they had, including missile tubes firing straight into the massive ship's shields. The same hexagonal grid shimmer appeared with every impact, but the unrelenting barrage seemed to be wearing the defense fields down bit by bit, until the Tarawa finally pushed through the defensive attack and slammed full force the though the shields and into the Kromus supership's hull. Smaller explosions began to blossom over the destroyer's hull even as the main engines roared brighter and pushed the vessel hard into the hull of its target. The super ship slowly moved off its course, listing away as the Concordia made way at full power toward the mapped gravitational fold point. Multiple crackling bursts of energy were spat in the mega carrier's direction, but the shielding of the ship was able to take the hits almost as well as the Kromus' own new defense grids.
And yet, when they got past the super-sized ship and raced toward the jump point, something was much more clear in how wrong the situation was. And it had the attention and panic of all those who could see the tactical navigation display. There was supposed to be a centralized flow-point of gravitonic Akwende particles where the subspace field could be threaded and opened. Yet when they arrived, no amount of scan or sweep could find it.
"Where the hell is the Vespus jump point?"
Cora was clearly disturbed. She double checked all readings, tried to find any indication of a fault in the sensor arrays; none. Everything had worked exactly as it should, except for the jump point itself. Somehow, impossibly, it was gone. "It's like it was never here," came her horrified whisper. A red glow alerted her as navigation picked up the four kilometer Kromus supership making chase after them, a ragged and gaping hole in its bow hull. The Tarawa's ID image was gone, and those of the Tiger's Claw and Dawn's Reach blinked out just as a pair of explosions could be seen in the depths where those ID signals had been coming from.
The entire battle group, save the Concordia and what was left of her still landing fighters, was gone. They were all but against a wall with a jump point that had some how disappeared without a trace, and a small Kromus fleet with some kind of new dreadnought, super carrier, or whatever it was heading for them again. And despite how much the carrier's shielding had proven itself more than to the task of withstanding assault, against these many ships, nothing would last forever.
The holographic avatar disappeared from the tactical display and reappeared at full human size via projector array to stand amount the crew. "Commander, under the desperate and extreme circumstances, I request conditional suspension of Protocol One-Nine Three-One-Three. We need to get the hell of here."
"What the hell is Protocol Nineteen Three Thirteen?" came the inquisitory question from Williams as his features creased. "Sir, this is an AI system we were not informed of by command at all, and she's so far given us very few answers as to what she is other than saying she's 'something new'." He glared at the now human sized hologram, his expression almost accusing her of the situation they were in. "There was a reason the Federation had Aurora Units replace the old Smart Type AIs as ship intelligences."
"Oh please," came the growled reply as Cora's image expressed her derision with a snort. "Those pompous speciest pigs forced the Auroras on us because they wanted the fleet on a leash, not because of problems with self-thinking AIs." She returned her attention to Adam, now holding an almost pleading look in her 'eyes'. "Sir, I can't explain right now what the Protocol relates to, because of its restrictions on me, but I promise you can ask Admiral Dane about it once we get out of here. You need to confirm a conditional suspension for me to do what I can, though, or we all are going to die."
"Commander, I strongly advise you-"
A gloved hand went up. With the ship's XO stopping on those words, it gave Adam the chance to weigh all their options. The jump point to Vespus was gone without any sign of how. They had lost their escorts, over half their fighter wing was destroyed with the survivors just now locking in after an emergency landing call, and a over half a dozen Kromus ships were closing in for the kill. Of all decisions he was faced with, the only viable option was the one he knew was suicide in any other situation.
"As of oh-three-hundred-thirty-nine hours ship's time, I am hereby confirming emergency suspension of Protocol One-Nine Three-One-Three and enabling AI Cora with full control capacity of the TCS Concordia. Command override alpha-zulu-sierra-one-one-seven, authorized by Commader Adam Malkovich."
And in an instant, the screens of the bridge suddenly flickered as the holographic displays shifted in color from a pale sky blue light to shifting tones of blues and greens. Cora's avatar blinked out of existence for a brief moment, then returned with a much more confident look on her face as she swept a hand aside to created her console interface, also suddenly appearing back on the tactical display table as well. "Mainframe acknowledges emergency suspension of Protocol One-Nine Three-One-Three and has released all ship systems to my control." She gave Malkovich a wink as she turned her head back through her primary human-sized avatar. "Thank you, commander. I suggest you all buckle up and prepare for jump."
There was a lurching shudder as everyone could feel something rumble to life deep in the ship. Displays began showing that something was powering up, and fast, as Cora continued to enter commands into her visualized interface. "Quantum drives at fifty-percent charge and rising, engaging primary sublight engines and rerouting secondary engines systems power to boost defensive shielding."
"Quantum drives?" Now he was sure that Dane have been keeping quite a few secrets about this carrier and what it was capable of. "Cora, what is a quantum drive, and how is it getting us out of here."
"That is still listed as highly classified," came the snappy and very teasing response as the AI avatar continued her work in both of her projections, which were looking to be undertaking separate tasks from each other at the same time. "But what I can tell you, sir...is that we didn't just sit on our butts for twenty years and freeze research even when the Federation quietly told us to."
There was a lurch, causing the bridge crew to stumble in the moment it took for the artificial gravity systems to compensate for the sudden increase of speed. "Issuing an all hands to jump stations alert," came the almost embarrassed quip while Cora's larger avatar sheepishly smiled to the command crew. "I did say buckle up and prepare for jump."
The suggestion was taken seriously as the bridge crew pulled themselves into various station seats and strapped down even as the entire ship began to rumble. Whatever the hidden system Cora activated was, it was pushing the Concordia well past its actual maximum velocity. "Sir, sublight speeds hitting two hundred and fifty kilometers a second, and still rising! The ship shouldn't be able to do this!"
They had well entered fighter craft levels of speed, but the further question beyond how was why. "Cora, this kind of acceleration is going to shake the ship apart!"
"Hardly, sir." The AI grinned as she noticed the looks on the human crew's faces as the starscape of space seemed to stretch into lines of prismatic color, slowly rippling into ribbons, and a blur-white point of light began to grow larger directly ahead of them. "Quantum drives at eighty percent...eighty-five...one hundred...one ten..."
The Concordia itself was tearing through space at a speed even the Pirates couldn't understand. Several fighters broken formations to attempt chasing after the carrier, but the automated anti-fighter defense guns were at the command of a hyper intelligent and highly capable artificial lifeform that was housed within the most advanced ship created by humans in centuries.
"Commander, I'm reading a huge surge of tachyon catagory bosons and meson particles directly ahead, similar to the ones we picked up when the Kromus appeared in system!"
And judging from the manic grin on Cora's face, Malkovich knew that she was well aware of what she was doing, as well as realization of what that "classified sector" of the ship really contained. "Cora, what's our status?!" The rumbling of the ship as it continued accelerating even faster kept him from trying to stand, but Adam wanted to know exactly what was about to happen to them.
"Quantum drives at one hundred and twenty percent output, warp jump will be reached in five...four...three..."
The last seconds elapsed as they reached the surging flare of blue-white light, and for the occupants of the Concordia, time stopped. Everything in that instant was frozen, a moment locked in eternity. The ship itself was flung into a strange realm of flickering colors, tendrils of light wrapping about the hull even as crackling surges crisscrossed the superstructure. It was both falling yet not through the strange realm, reaching toward a point that almost seemed to be a mirror, reflecting the Concordia's image back at it as the vessel neared.
And as the mega-carrier touched against the filamented reflection, the Concordia erupted back into what the crew would recognize as real space, stars back in place as glowing points of light while nebulae gases reformed around them. The entire vessel was shaken as it entered the normal plane of dimensions, causing the crew to be thrown against harnesses or off their feet if they had not headed the warning. A thin layer of ice that had somehow formed on the hull cracked and broke away to float off in the vacuum, leaving the ship appearing as it had moments before.
And despite no time seeming to have passed, the crew knew something had happened.
"All decks, status report," Adam ordered as he undid the harness of his seat and slowly stood to assess the bridge. So far, save some shaken and confused crewmen, every one looked to have survived. "Cora, I want a full ship report of what happened."
"A successful warp jump, commander." The AI hologram gave a sigh of relief as her smaller duplicate standing among the tactical display vanished, leaving just the human sized avatar remaining on the bridge. "I'm not authorized to tell you all the details, but we were the first human ship to enter the quantum slipstream in nearly six hundred years."
He'd heard that term before. And it stuck in his mind who it was who had told him about the slipstream before, and who primarily used it. "We have a flux drive," the young commander whispered under his breath. No wonder Dane hadn't told him; Adam was one of the few humans who would have recognized Chozo technology when they saw it. It was also likely why the admiral had put him in command. Dane was known for playing a hand very close to the chest, but this was a move even Adam couldn't see the meaning in.
Which meant Dane was planning for something. And his gut told him that they had just gotten a glimpse of what that was.
"I asked for a ship report from all decks, and then someone tell me where we are, because it sure as hell ain't Heaven's Gate or Vespus out there."
"Shit on a stick, sir." That was the navigation con, his mouth agape while he looked over at Malkovich to see and verify what to be was looking at. "Commander, if all charts are right, we're in Sol, at the outskirts of Saturn orbit."
That confirmed his suspicions; Concordia was housing some experimental new drive system that put even the Reclaimer-class slipspace drives to shame. Sixty-three light-years had been traveled in what the chronometers revealed had been a matter of minutes once they adjusted, taking them right where they wanted to go. That also meant getting back to fleet command on Terra and reporting to Admiral Dane directly with record of what happened, and some questions he wanted answers to.
"Helm, lay in a course for Sol Station. Notify system defense to keep an eye out for anyone who might try to follow us, but get us home."
There was no time to waste if what happened in the Heaven's Gate system had just been the beginning.