CH. 9 [pt.2]
With the Gorn escort gone, the Pang had gained to opportunity of watch down on her enemy with impunity. She established a geosynchronous orbit, parking directly above the colony site. Commander Kurvis took on the task of guiding the science and gunnery officers as they scoured the lands below them with visual and passive detection systems. With patience and skill, they were able to fully map the installation below and target its most critical resources. Pang now knew where the critically needed nitrates were stored.
Dath’mar had watched on in typical silence, offering a word here and there in support. Otherwise, he remained out of their way.
Time passed more swiftly now that each had their respective tasks at hand. The First Officer made repeated trips down to the assault staging area, briefing his men on the latest intelligence as it was forthcoming. The Qas Dev who remained on board were to be the leaders of the strike teams. The captain had ordered four teams to be readied for deployment. Seven warriors, including the First, would assault the reactor installation. Four men would strike each of the gunnery control towers. They would be dressed in the heaviest armor available in the armory and bear all the arms they could carry. The captain had forbidden all melee weapons save for daggers. Dath’mar knew the zeal of the warrior. The marines could not be expected to control themselves to the point of not cutting the Gorn to pieces.
Kurvis returned to the bridge after his fifth inspection of the troops below. He had already donned the heavy armor meant for pitched ground combat. The typical Klingon soldier did not favor the more bulky build of the assault gear, but its superior protection could not be argued. The First carried his rifle slung over a shoulder. Dath’mar looked him over from atop the command dais.
“The Qas Dev are at full readiness, Lord.” Kurvis reported. There was swelling pride within the commander. The captain nodded in return, his eye unblinking.
“You don’t care to take a heavier rifle, First Officer?”
Kurvis blinked and unslung the weapon from his shoulder pad. He had in his hands the standard rifle, little more than the quite powerful, venerable pistol unit with an attached stock. The stock bore additional power cells and an optical sight for long range shooting. The First looked the rifle over and shrugged. “I find the standard weapon quite satisfactory, Captain. I doubt I’ll find opportunity to fire further than one hundred qams, and while not as powerful, this weapon will shoot for a longer period of time.”
Dath’mar looked back to him with some doubt, but did not argue with the First. Kurvis waited for an objection to arise, and when none was forthcoming, he looked to the viewer at the forward bulkhead. Chetell III stood silent and still before them. Pang’s parking orbit held her aloft directly above the compound they intended to invade. The First Officer stepped off the dais and halted at I’rell’s console.
“Status of planetary defenses, science officer?”
“Gorn weapons systems remain unpowered.”
Kurvis glanced at the tactical repeater on the console’s right hand corner.
“The frigate?”
“She continues to bear for the anomaly. She has increased her speed to warp factor nine point three.” I’rell looked back at the exec with raised brows, her expression mock-aghast. Kurvis nodded in appreciation for the achievement. That escort vessel had been of a previous generation’s design. To see her moving so fast spoke well of her crew’s ingenuity.
Lieutenant Motek would be hard-pressed indeed to escape them.
The First Officer looked a few more indications over before turning his back to the science systems. He retraced his steps back to the command chair and stood silently aloft should he be needed. Dath’mar had closed his eye. His pose within the broad command throne betrayed his wakefulness. During their deployment within the Kovarn Reach, Kurvis had never known the captain to close his eye for any length of time while on the bridge. This was a new side to their commanding officer. Had he retreated into his own mind? Or was he trying to allay boredom?
“How long till the escort reaches Motek?”
The fact that Dath’mar had said the officer’s name rather than simply mentioning the shuttle told volumes. The captain held more than the average concern for the errant warrior. Kurvis made a note of this, adding it to the fact that Dath’mar had not simply killed the man already. The exec glanced to the science station once more.
“Gorn will reach the shuttle in roughly three hours, my lord. They have been traveling toward the Tres’in disturbance for sixteen hours.” The Gorn had taken a more direct route at a faster pace than had the Pang. They would meet with Motek in far less time than it had taken the Klingon cruiser to reach this world.
Dath’mar looked out to I’rell, who sat rigid at her post, watching her screens and pretending not to listen to them. “Has Motek begun to make his escape?”
“Negative as yet, Captain.”
The lieutenant’s acceleration to his ship’s maximum warp was to serve as the signal for attack. Motek was not expected to take his craft into the Tres’in. While this would take the escort out of sight of the planetary system and cut it off from communications, the tiny Klingon craft would not survive more than a few minutes of the nebula’s corrosive gasses. Raising shields was not possible amid the disturbance’s interference. Motek’s only real choice was to make a run for the border and hope the vengeful escort was more interested in rescuing the colony than on destroying a tiny interloper.
The captain glanced back to the viewer, and again to science. Kurvis watched. So, the great stone-heart had lost his patience… The First hid his amusement and stared ahead. Dath’mar seemed almost to nod, his gauntleted palm slapping the top of his armrest. “Kurvis, ready your men for transport!”
“Success, my lord!” Kurvis replied with a sharp salute. Dath’mar nodded without returning the gesture and watched his First head out the aft hatch.
Dath’mar returned his chair to facing forward, considering the sleeping colony below. It was near to midnight down there. The night would be moonless and pitch black. A perfect time to attack. And he had had more than enough waiting. It was time to move!
“Helm!” The captain projected with his battle-voice. His sharper tone seemed to snap officers out of their lethargic states. “Move us to within minimal orbital range for transport! Prepare to make evasive turns at my command!”
“Yes, Captain!”
“I’rell, watch for alertness from the enemy!”
“Battle Alert, Condition One!”
Red battle lamps lit in every corner in every compartment as the computer sounded the shrill, electronic alarm. All hands were already at their posts or near to them. The alarm served more as a wake-up call and signal of coming action. Dath’mar looked over the smaller regiment of bridge officers which sat about him. They all sat straightforward at their stations. Their hands were poised and ready. The planet on the main screen edged closer. The tactical display next to the screen came online, showing their dangerous proximity to the all-encompassing mass of the planet. They were now limiting their maneuverability in a way that made most combat commanders shrink away.
The time was coming.
Commander Kurvis passed through the final reinforced set of blast doors, entering on the starboard side of the assault transporter bay. His men awaited him in anxious, nervous rows. Their eyes were wide, glinting in the crimson light with the lust for battle. He saw here not a trace of inexperienced fear in his men. He had selected only the best of the marines and crew to come along on this mission. He swept down their ranks, giving them a final assessment. Unsatisfied, he halted before them.
“Turn and check your partners’ equipment!”
Each of them turned with parade precision, looking to each other in preassigned pairs. They began to pull at armor tabs and straps, check over weapon and equipment settings. This took only a matter of seconds. They then turned back to Kurvis and stood at attention.
“Equipment secure, Commander!” They shouted as one.
“Command requires us to stun our enemy this day, Qas Dev! Check your settings and lock weapons to setting number two!”
They took a quick glance down. None of them needed to reset their disruptors. They had already done this. Kurvis noted a wry smirk on two of his soldiers. His eyes darted over to the only member of the assault party that he bore concern for. This soldier was the only female in the group. Her sex did not cause him concern. In the Imperial Fleet, all were warriors. Her training was liken to all those who stood about her. Kurvis had personally seen to this.
The First’s concern for her did not stem from a misconception about her training or readiness. Nor did her sex bother him. He worried over the amount of equipment she carried. As the technical specialist selected for the strike, Sergeant Orna bore a modular scanner, tricorder, toolkit and a computer interface borrowed from human design meant to break into enemy security systems. All these added another forty kilos to her already cumbersome gear. She did not have to carry the portable deflector generator laying on the transport pad behind her, but her encumbrance would surely be a detriment.
Kurvis looked stolidly at her, accessing her survival chances once battle was joined. No warrior worth his mettle feared death so much that it would incapacitate them. None loathed the chances of dying a glorious, honorable death. It was, however, his duty to ensure that this honor was not laid upon his soldiers unduly.
Orna noted his scrutiny and looked back at him in quiet defiance. She was the shortest of the warriors assembled. Her eyes dared him to speak. Kurvis smiled a wolfish grin and began to pace again, bathed in red. The lights had quit flashing and now bore down on them in bloody hue.
“The Gorn are renowned for their stamina! A single stun blast will not incapacitate them! Set your weapons, now, for concentrated beams. Check your targets! Fire long bursts into them to ensure they fall!”
His teams had bent their heads, uncoupling their barrel assemblies to bypass the flow baffles that made the rifles fire bursts and closing their weapons again. Kurvis nodded to them all in satisfaction. He pointed to the leader of the second squad, meant for the northern control tower. “Group Two, portside transport quad! Group Three, next quad!”
With violent stabs of armored fingers, the First placed each of his four-man teams on their waiting transporter platforms. Then, with a nod to the sergeant he’d glared at so measuringly, he led his own squad onto the central portion of the wide, multi-facetted alcove. This bay was built to beam down hundreds of troops in very short periods of time. Doing so drained the ship’s energy reserves, but today, no such capacity was yet required. Only a couple hands-full of warriors were going to grace the alien world below. The real task for Pang’s transport handlers would be coming later. Kurvis just hoped the old transporters could handle it…
Kurvis took his place amid the forefront of his men and glowered back to the officer manning the controls inside his protected pod on the far end of the room. The officer returned the nod, saluting, fist to chest. His voice echoed into the hollow chasm about them. “Qa’pla!”
“Success!” The Qas Dev’ shouted back in unison. Kurvis tore the proud smile from his face. The transport officer keyed his comm to the bridge.
Today would be a good day to die.
The intercom panel on Dath’mar’s seat blinked yellow as the report came from below.
“The First Officer and his teams stand ready for transport, my lord!”
The captain’s hand descended slowly on the control as he took the time to relish what little he could in the moment. “Begin transport!”
A sharp, low, double-pulse alarm began to bleat in their ears as the assault transporter energized decks below and far aft of the bridge. Dath’mar could imagine that he heard the drone of the heavy subspace buffers as they hurled the disassembled atoms of his soldier kelicams out to the planet below. He could imagine their pent up anxiety, fear and lust as they began to dematerialize close to the enemy.
“Transport complete!” Came the update from below.
‘Now to get the Gorn’s attention…’
Dath’mar stood before his chair, full of energy.
“Drop the cloak! Fire disruptors!”
The space close about the battlecruiser Pang shimmered and wavered as subspace fields parted and fell away in layers. The long necked warship became a dense, substantial thing once more and swiveled a few degrees as she brought her forward weapons to bear directly on the colony below. Flanking both sides of the round, lower portion of the command hull, port and starboard primary disruptor banks lashed out with thin, emerald beams that lanced down at the unwary enemy. The twin shots angled out away from one another, aimed for different striking points.
The beams came down with the force of ages old atom bombs tearing each through tons of bedrock to hit the targets beneath. The impact points exploded violently, throwing into the air hundreds of tons of dirt and suddenly liberated stone into the sky. The plasma transfer conduits under all that protective stone severed with those direct hits. The Gorn had not had the time to raise the outpost’s deflectors.
Dath’mar narrowed his eye and looked aside as his science officer’s voice called out.
“Both energy transfer conduits destroyed, Captain.” I’rell told them. “Gorn switching to back up systems!”
Dath’mar would have normally taken the liberty to relieve the enemy of said backup systems. Such would soften them for swifter defeat. But those backups were situated amid the Gorn’s buildings and structures. Hitting them would kill possibly hundreds. La’ra’s displeasure would be paramount. Sneering in disgust, the captain refrained from ordering their destruction.
“Ensure maximum shields!”
Hekk was here, on the bridge, directing his crews from the portside console. The old Whitehair looked back to him with a proud nod. “Deflectors are at one hundred ten percent with ample reserve. We-“
The first reprisal blast struck the Pang.
The bridge officers held on to their station corners and armrests as a long line of rail gun projectiles spat up at them like tracers. The riotous cacophony of their repeating impacts assailed the ears and set off emergency alarms. Hekk almost lost his balance, his lanky limbs flailing out for support.
“Forward screens have taken a direct impact!” Lieutenant Shenna called out, the first to report. “Shield holding at sixty-seven percent!”
The second wave of the Gorn’s return-fire swept the cruiser’s defenses, causing her to sway side to side. The thunder of hundreds of meter-long projectiles impacting the outer screens was deafening. The Pang’s structure groaned from the forces she absorbed.
“Shields now fifty-two percent!” Shenna looked back, eyes wild with battle passion. “Do I return fire?”
“No!” Dath’mar felt sickened at the issue of such an order. “Helm! Prepare evasive!”
A third barrage of cannon fire rose through the atmosphere before them, bearing straight for the Klingon vessel. Dath’mar watched them come. How much more weapon power did the Gorn have left in their emergency batteries? And how long till his men secured the control positions?
Pang heaved at the abuse of further impacts.
***
Hope this does not fall short of expectations. Gimme any and all feedback, please.
--thu guv!!