The Course of Empire by Eric Flint & K. D. Wentworth. Part five. Chapter 33, 34, 35

Once done with his initial discussion with Hami, Aille turned his attention back to his informal panel of experts.

Terniary-Adjunct Chul looked up from a small rotating light-display as he approached. “We think we can damage or even destroy an Ekhat ship while it is still within the photosphere, before it has been able to form the plasma shell. We cannot use lasers or normal missiles inside the sun, of course. But using human-style kinetic energy weapons—the crude and simple projectile ones, not missiles—it may be possible to attack effectively.”

His whiskers waggled. “Very difficult, of course. The pilots would have to bring the attacking ships insanely close. Still, if that fails, we could probably destroy the Ekhat by ramming them with the refitted submersibles. The human ships are very massive. Of course, the kinetic energies involved would be so great as to destroy any of our ships also, you understand, no matter how robustly designed. That’s almost certain.”

Aille pondered the notion. “How would we retrofit the submersibles with such kinetic weapons in the time available?”

Chul gestured at Aguilera. “He has a proposal.”

The human stepped forward. “I thought about it some more. We could use the boomers, the big submarines. Just weld tanks onto the former missile hatches and use them as improvised turrets. They’d still be inside the forcefields and we could feed them a cool air supply as well as communications.” His face made one of those peculiar human grimaces. “I doubt if it would stand up for very long. Those forcefields of yours aren’t really designed to stay inside a sun, just to protect you long enough for the passage through the framepoint. For sure, there’d be some leakage. It could very well be a suicide mission for the people manning the tanks.”

Kralik nodded soberly and locked his hands behind his back, assuming a square stance that seemed to mimic focused-attention to Aille.

“None of us are eager to die,” the jinau general said. “But the alternative is to let these damned Ekhat rain fire down on our whole world and cook us to ashes for reasons that nobody will ever understand. We can either die down here, cowering, or die out there fighting. There’s not much difference in the end except if we’re successful. Then our deaths would mean something.”

“Will enough human jinau volunteer?” Aille asked. “Not many Jao can fit into those submarines, beyond the pilots. None, in the tanks you propose to attach to them. And if you simply order the soldiers aboard, they are likely to be too afraid to fight effectively. That would be true even for Jao, on such a mission.”

Kralik stiffened his shoulders in some posture Aille could not quite read. “Yes, they will. I’ll lead them onto the ships myself, and I’ll be in one of the turrets. I started off as a tanker, so why not end that way? I’m willing to bet—no, I’ll guarantee—that there’ll be more than enough volunteers to fully man every one of those boats. Twice over, in fact.”

Wrot assumed the posture of gratified-respect. An instant later, Nath and Hami and Chul mirrored it. After hesitating, and with some awkwardness, Mrat did the same.

Aille studied the postures, then exchanged glances with Yaut. His fraghta’s own posture was a rarely used one, that of truth-finally-accepted.

Yes, thought Aille. It was indeed so. The posture of gratified-respect was reserved by Jao for the recognition of expected honor. Respect, of course, that one in their midst had satisfied vithrik, but no surprise that they had done so. They could do no other, after all.

He had never seen a Jao on this planet extend that posture to a human. No one, guided by Narvo, expected honor from humans. Those postures, so quickly and easily taken, signified that, like he himself, Wrot and Chul and Nath—even Mrat—had come to recognize how badly the Jao had blundered here, misled by Narvo.

Such a waste. Aille was quite sure that, in their own quiet and uncertain way, Wrot and Nath and Hami and Chul had come to that realization before he’d even arrived on the planet—long before, in the case of Wrot, and probably Hami. No doubt there were many other Jao across the planet who had done likewise. But with Narvo’s ferocious rule, and no clear counterposition by one of sufficient status, they had kept their opinions to themselves.

Pages: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18

Leave a Reply 0

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *