HDMS Accusator
Projector skulls whirred and swooped around the strategium hololith, beaming new threat cones and trajectory vectors as updates were voxed in from the warp vanes and oculus towers splaying from the cruiser’s hull. One of the skulls buzzed a warning as the dashed line ahead of the
Accusator turned a flashing red.
Captain Fayder Langsdorf indicated the line with a slender arm. He was a thin man, but the way a sword was thin; sharp, rather than frail.
“Another ground battery?”
Beside him the chief magos tilted his cowled head upwards as he consulted the invisible data-ribbons of the ship’s noosphere. “Sector two gamma two, mass driver battery. Sector enemy occupied for approximately six months.”
Langsdorf glanced at his XO, a similarly thin man with a Ventiliar campaign ribbon on his green Ixaniad uniform. “Thoughts?”
The XO also looked up, this time towards the hololith. “Ventral burn to higher orbit over the equator would take us clear, sir, but it might give the Enforcers a shot at us.”
Langsdorf bit the inside of his cheek. “Magos, I don’t suppose there’s any record of the Guard spiking the guns before they withdrew?”
The magos continued to stand in prayer to the machine spirits, the iron knuts of his rosary clicking as he thumbed through them. “No data, captain.”
Langsdorf’s XO scratched the corner of his mouth with a thumb. “And even if they did spike the guns, the Patsies could easily have got them working again in six months.”
The captain pursed his lips in reluctant agreement. “So a nasty salvo either way. But you can always put a bigger gun on a planet than a ship.” He extended a thin finger towards the sublieutenant at the dirigarium station. “Helm. Full ventral burn, keep us clear of those Patsie ground silos.”
The sublieutenant acknowledged the order with a nod. At a gesture the servitors below him began to whir into motion, winking lights of feedback data pulsing along the fibre-optics that traced from their scalps to plugs in the vaulted ceiling. “Full burn ventral manoeuvre jets, aye.”
As
Accusator zagged back towards Coseflame’s equator, the two Enforcers briefly loomed over the horizon in pursuit. Within seconds they began to pulse with malevolent light, like two angry neutron stars. Langsdorf and his bridge crew gripped columns and devotional statues for balance as killing light splash-patterned over
Accusator’s shields. One of the straining projectors must have failed; the orbiting skull drones began to chirrup, painting red bars over the ship’s ghost image that hovered above the tactical hololith. Aftershocks and secondary explosions vibrated through the grated deck.
The magos flinched, clenching his fist around his iron rosary with a clack. “Reactor 3 is breached. Enginarium coven is shutting it down.”
Langsdorf gritted his teeth. They had felt almost nothing on the bridge, but no doubt hundreds of his crew were dying in a plasma firestorm on the decks below them. The runes turning red on the ship display didn’t tell him how many; only the grim cleanup operations and after-action roll call would verify that.
“Do we still have power?” he asked, still looking at the hololith as
Accusator limped back over the horizon, out of the amber threat cones sweeping like searchlights ahead of the enemy ship icons.
The magos took a ragged breath. “Enough.”
“Make it count, magos. Flight command, get another squadron in the void. Let’s really sell
Shepherd’s ruse for them.”
* * * * * *
For the middle of a battle, it was unnervingly quiet. Back on the
Accusator there would be alarms blaring, hydraulic gun-layers screaming, crew-bosses roaring orders as the recoil of the macro batteries shuddered through the deck. For flight lieutenant Annalee Kusch there was just the steady thrum of the Fury she was piloting, and the occasional rattle against the armourglass canopy as the debris of distant explosions buffeted the interceptor.
A proximity rune began to pulse on her visor HUD as they entered the 5000 km threat zone, and blinking targeter brackets boxed in around one of the distant stars as her navigator, Vasquez, helpfully tagged the
Peregrine for her. A dashed line snaked out to intercept the Patsie transport, bending slightly off to starboard.
“Angel flight, adjust to vector one nine zero minus three zero.” Kusch voxed to the other three Furies under her supervision. Above and behind her, the distant comet tails of Bane and Chimera flights began to arc as the rest of the squadron made similar course adjustments. Squadron leader Pohl and Dagger flight were further back, sweeping the void and covering their arses.
Kusch twisted her neck to glance back over her shoulder, past the humped grav-couch apparatus ready to pump oxygen, adrenaline or morphia into her system through the spinal ports in her void suit. “Alright kids,” she hollered to the rest of her crew on the internal vox channel. “Strap in - we’re gonna start pulling combat G’s very soon.”
There were
ayes and vox pips of acknowledgement, followed by the clicking of voidsmen checking the neck joints of their auto-sealing helmets, and grunts of discomfort as spinal plugs engaged. Vasquez, a rangy young Glavian whose brown skin was splotched pale by the effects of some genetic quirk, climbed hand-over-hand round his hemisphere of navigation consoles and secured himself into the grav-couch behind Kusch’s, giving the pilot a quiet thumbs up as he did so.
“New contact over Coseflame horizon.” Mercer, the gunnery officer up in the dorsal bulge, warned.
“Friendly.” Vasquez placated, tagging it on the crew’s djinn-linked HUD with the tap of a rune. Information scrolled down the edge of Kusch’s visor, blinking around another star that was hovering low against the blue streak of Coseflame’s atmosphere.
“
Shepherd of Light.” Amsted, the gunner in the nose turret, read off his screen, slowly sounding his way through the unfamiliar high gothic words. “What’s a
Shepherd?”
“Some kind of grox-minder I think.” Vasquez commented, no doubt casting his mind back to the smattering of High Gothic he remembered from weekly prayers in junior scholem.
“Bloody stupid name for a warship.” Mercer grumbled. “Ships should have proper names like
Revenge or
Arse Kicker or
Victory.”
“What’s an
Accusator then?” Amsted pointed out.
“Frakked if I know.”
Kusch let them have their banter. The few minutes of calm before the storm of contact were always the worst. In the far distance, some of the stars flared brighter - the visor tags that boxed in as she focused on them told her that they were the few Patsie transports that hadn’t been crippled by
Shepherd’s guns, burning hard for the safety of warp jump points.
“Go on then,” Mercer muttered over the vox link. “Off you frak.”
“This one ain’t getting away.” Amsted replied, tracing fire cones across Kusch’s HUD as he tested the pitch and yaw of the lascannon turret.
“Remember what the squadron leader said.” a deep, distant voice broke in from further back in the fuselage. “Superficial damage only.”
That was Morden, the astropath, strapped in near the medicae table with his tinted visor lowered so the crew didn’t have to see his blind, staring eyes. Many of
Accusator’s flight leaders refused to have a psyker lurking over their shoulder while they sortied, but the carrier ship’s augers were much more powerful than those that could be wedged into a Fury, and more often than not the vox masts got shot away or swamped by jammer sprites, and Kusch would rather have an astropath looming behind her than an enemy squadron that their auspex scanner had missed. Besides, Morden was decidedly one of the less
weird sanctionites in the void wing. Even if whatever he had gone through on Terra had turned his tightly-curled hair grey and brittle, although he couldn’t have been more than thirty standard. And, barracks rumour claimed, that didn’t stop flight lieutenant Kellerman from having her wicked way with him when they were on long-haul picket flights, far from the eyes of the AAT handlers back on ship.
“Superficial damage only?” the gunnery officer repeated, his lip curling slightly beneath his open visor. “What gives? What a crappy war this’ll be if we’re not even allowed to blow up heretics.”
“Maybe they want it boarded for intel.” Kusch interjected. “Either way, any plasma ruptures and you can explain yourself to Pohl.”
The pilot paused as overhead, from her cockpit perspective, the void lit up with white flashes and streamers of sunfire. The world-ending salvoes slashed back and forth between the much larger ships as
Accusator finally turned to fight its two pursuers, the odds evened by the approaching
Shepherd.
Lets hope she’s a damn good grox-minder. ’Cause those two bulls chasing the carrier are pissed.
“Four thousand kilometres.” Mercer reported. “Arming seekers.”
“Seeker one only.” Kusch ordered, and twisted the vox dial from
Internal to
Flight. “Angel flight, one missile each, repeat one missile only, confirm.”
The replies came back scratchy, distorted by EM waves scattering back from shield impacts, and by the feuding jam and counter-jam of the distant capital ships.
“Eighth squadron.” squadron leader Pohl’s voice broke in through Kusch’s helmet earpieces. “Initiate full burn - engage, engage!”
“Hang on.” Kusch voxed her crew, before slamming back the acceleration lever. The Fury kicked her back into her seat and kept pressing, like a huge hand. The G-forces squeezed tears from the corners of her eyes.
“Range two thousand.” Vasquez reported.
“Seeker one auspex locked!” Mercer shouted back. “Firing one.” The Fury kicked slightly beneath them, and a long black dart trailing flame briefly crossed Kusch’s field of view before fireworking away into the black. Her vox roared with voices and feedback.
“Angel Two. seeker away!”
“Angel Four, seeker away!”
“Eighth squadron, break!”
“Angel flight, break vector zero one zero plus sixty!” Kusch added her voice to the coordinated chaos and hauled back on her flight stick. The Fury reared back with far more G’s than the human body was meant to withstand, and Kusch heard the vascular pumps in her grav couch kick in, followed by a painful bulging sensation in her neck as the system forced blood back up into her head to keep her conscious. A second later and the pressure against her eyes and chest returned to a tolerable level as they accelerated clear.
“Missile impacts on
Peregrine dorsal bow.” Mercer reported, his disappointment evident even though they had carried out their orders to the letter. “No significant damage. Target maintaining course and speed.”
“
Accusator choir warns bats incoming.” Morden coughed out from behind them. “Vector one one zero plus forty.”
“I see them.” Vasquez confirmed a few moments later. “Patsie Fury squadron, nine…maybe ten bats, range ten thousand.”
Kusch nodded and clicked round the vox frequency dial. “Eighth squadron, Angel One, be advised ten bats incoming from one one zero plus forty, range ten thousand.”
“Copy Angel One.” squadron leader Pohl’s voice rasped through the interference. “All flights maintain burn back to
Accusator, we’re not here to tangle with Patsie Furies.”
Gunnery officer Mercer groaned his frustration. “Crappiest war ever.”
“If you want to dive out the airlock and headbutt those Patsie bats into oblivion, be my guest.” Kusch responded coolly. “Speaking of, where are they now?”
“Falling behind, moving to screen the
Peregrine. Probably think they’ve scared us off.
Peregrine is taking cover behind
Watcher.”
Kusch craned her neck, icons sliding across her HUD to tag the Patriot transport as it broke forward between the brawling cruisers and dived under
Watcher’s guns, like a whale pup ducking under the protective fin of its mother.
“He’s got away.” Vasquez sighed, and Kusch detected some of the gunnery officer’s pessimism infecting the young Glavian as the sun-reflecting star of the
Peregrine dimmed, moving into shadow behind the lead Enforcer where it was shielded from imperial guns. “The frakker’s…woah!”
A tremendous flash filled the void, lighting up the Fury’s cockpit like a spotlight. Kusch’s helmet lenses polarised just in time to save her eyes, while around her warning alarms began to shrill as the auger scopes went haywire.
The
Peregrine was gone, and the ventral hull of the
Watcher was sagged and broken, steel towers melting and running like wax. Running lights flickered and died all along the ship’s flank as it began to heel out of line, trailing debris.
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