The silent war by Ben Bova. Part four

His own force consisted of only three ships. Although he by far preferred to work alone, Harbin realized that the war had escalated far beyond the point where single ships could engage in one-on-one battles. He was now the leader of a trio of ships, a Yamagata employee, working for Humphries under a contract between HSS and Yamagata.

“They’ve detected us,” the comm tech sang out. “Radar contact.”

“Turn to one-fifteen degrees azimuth, maintain constant elevation. Increase acceleration to one-quarter g.”

“They’re following.”

“Good.”

Lasers were the weapons that spacecraft used against one another. From a distance of a thousand kilometers their intense beams of energy could slash through the unprotected skin of a spacecraft’s hull in a second or less. Defensive armor was the countermove against energy weapons: Warships now spread coatings of asteroidal rubble over their hulls. Newer ships were being built at Selene of pure diamond, manufactured by nanomachines out of carbon soot.

But there was a countermeasure against armored ships, Harbin knew, as he led Astro Corporation’s armada of fourteen ships toward the trap.

HSS intelligence had provided Harbin with a very detailed knowledge of the Astro ships, their mission plan, and—most importantly—their commander. Harbin had never met Reid Gormley, but he knew that the pint-sized Astro commander liked to go into battle with a clear preponderance of numbers.

Fourteen ships against three, Harbin thought. Clearly superior. Clearly.

“Don’t let them get away!” snapped Gormley as he leaned forward tensely in the command chair of his flagship, Antares.

“We’re matching their velocity vector, sir,” said his navigation officer.

Like their quarry, Gormley’s crews had donned their individual space suits. A ship may get punctured in battle and lose air; the suits were a necessary precaution, even though they were cumbersome. Gormley didn’t like being in a suit, and he didn’t think they were really necessary. But doctrine demanded the precaution and he followed doctrine obediently.

“I want to overtake them. Increase our velocity. Pass the word to the other ships.”

“We should send a probe ahead to see if there are other enemy vessels lying outside our radar range,” said Gormley’s executive officer, a broomstick-lean, coal-black Sudanese who had never been in battle before.

“Our radar can pick up craters on the moons of Jupiter, for god’s sake,” Gormley snapped back. “Do you see anything out there except the three we’re chasing?”

“Nosir,” the Sudanese replied uneasily, his eyes on the radar screen. “Only a few small rocks.”

Gormley took a quick glance at the radar. “Pebbles,” he smirked. “Nothing to worry about.”

The Sudanese stayed silent, but he thought, Nothing to worry about unless we go sailing into them. He made a mental note to stay well clear of those pebbles, no matter where the quarry went in its effort to escape.

Wearing a one-piece miniskirted outfit with its front zipper pulled low, Victoria Ferrer had to scamper in her high-heeled softboots to keep pace with Martin Humphries as he strode briskly along the corridor between the baby’s nursery and his office.

“Send the brat to Earth,” he snapped. “I don’t want to see him again.”

Ferrer could count the number of his visits to the nursery on the fingers of one hand. She had to admit, though, that the room looked more like a hospital’s intensive care ward than an ordinary nursery. Barely more than six months old, little Van Humphries still needed a special high-pressure chamber to get enough air into his tiny lungs. The baby was scrawny, sickly, and Humphries had no patience for a weakling.

“Wouldn’t it be better to keep him here?” she asked, hurrying alongside Humphries. “We have the facilities here and we can bring in any specialists the baby needs.”

Humphries cast a cold eye on her. “You’re not fond of the runt, are you?”

“He’s only a helpless baby…”

“And you think that getting him attached to you will be a good career move? You think you’ll have better job security by mothering the runt?”

She looked genuinely shocked. “That never crossed my mind!”

“Of course not.”

Ferrer stopped dead in her tracks and planted her fists on her hips. “Mr. Humphries, sir: If you believe that I’m trying to use your son for my own gain, you’re completely wrong. I’m not that cold-blooded.”

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