Chapter 12
Star Stallion 2
Argaya System
Their plan had worked just as they’d hoped. The Mirage fled into an area of densely packed debris and the Chanok ship had pursued. But as it was, the meteoroids would make it impossible for them to manoeuvre. At which point the Stallion pounced. As Lieutenant Llewellyn-Smyth moved the shuttle out from its hiding place, Tyler had opened fire with their phasers and micro-torpedoes. For such a small ship, the Star Stallions packed a big punch.
At first, they had the element of surprise and he was able to batter their starboard shields with their barrage. But as soon as their edge was gone and the Chanok opened fire, whilst reversing back out into a more open region, he could only take shots when Llewellyn-Smyth got them into a firing position—not an easy feat when avoiding multiple phaser banks and torpedo launchers.
At the Academy, Tyler had read over what information they had on the Chanok (just as he had done on the Tholians, Romulans, Borg, Talarians and numerous other hostile races), but all of that was over a century old. He had never expected to come across the savage and unpredictable species in his lifetime, and was trying to recall what he could on their tactics. Unfortunately what they had wasn’t much, decades out of date, and didn’t include anything about how they would fight in a dense asteroid belt.
Llewellyn-Smyth slammed them into a spin as she avoided yet another torpedo, and Tyler felt his stomach sink again, quickly followed by the sense of nausea. She had kept the inertial dampeners at a low level to make the Stallion more responsive, but it meant that the crew inside felt every little movement. He breathed through the queasiness and launched another micro-torpedo at the target. He had to admit that the Lieutenant’s skill at the controls was unlike anyone’s he had ever seen—even the best pilot in his class couldn’t compare to Llewellyn-Smyth’s finesse.
She pushed the Stallion forward, towards the Chanok ship. Her movements were slight, but enough to keep them from being hit. Tyler saw on the sensors that it was close on occasion, but not enough to affect their shields. Behind them in full body armour, Commander Amorin had readied the transporters and was scanning for a beam-in site.
Tyler glanced at his readouts and saw that the Mirage had moved behind their pre-arranged shelter—a large stationary boulder, filled with dense metals which interfered with sensors.
“The Mirage is clear sir,” he reported for Amorin’s benefit, though he didn’t take his eyes away from the controls, taking several more quick shots at the Chanok vessel.
“Understood Ensign,” the Benzenite XO replied, before cursing under the hiss of the breather mask. “Their internal architecture is unlike any I’ve seen before. I can’t locate their bridge.”
Tyler felt a cold shiver creep down his spine. If they couldn’t find the bridge for the team to beam into and secure the hostile ship, their attack would useless. There was only so long they could evade the continuous disruptor blasts and torpedoes—even with someone as good as Llewellyn-Smyth at the controls.
“Do we fall back?” Tyler asked.
“We’re dead if we do Ensign,” Amorin replied. “I’m scanning for their warp core. We can beam into the engine room and seize control from their.” He worked for a moment longer before his console gave an affirmative chirp. “I’ve got a matter/antimatter power signature, and locking co-ordinates. Tyler, lock on and prepare for transport. Harriet, get us into their shield bubble,” he ordered moving to join the four security specialists.
“We’ll be within their shields in twelve seconds,” Llewellyn-Smyth stated, pitching the ship to port and accelerating.
Tyler got the transporters ready whilst also continuing their attack with the Stallions forward phasers. He locked onto the five unique lifesigns in the midship compartment, boosted power to the annular confinement beam and pattern buffer and stood ready to energise the moment they were in position.
Llewellyn-Smyth was as good as her word, and in just under twelve seconds she punched the Stallion through the shielding of the Chanok ship. It was a rough ride, with their own shields taking a beating, but they were in position and their extreme proximity to the alien ship would render their targeting array next thing to useless and would limit them to phasers only—a torpedo detonation at close range would cause as much damage to the Chanok as it would to the Stallion.
Once inside the shield perimeter, he ran a quick scan and saw that they were relatively safe for the time being. “In position Lieutenant,” he told her as she brought them in closer to the dark crimson hull.
“Drop shields and energise Ensign,” the Conn Officer ordered.
With the tap of a single control he lowered their shields, and then activated the transporters. Behind them came the familiar hum of the transporter and he monitored the process, as the boarding team dematerialised, their patterns going through the buffer and then sent along the ACB, before materialising at the co-ordinates Amorin had specified. The process took seven seconds, and as soon as he had their lifesigns on the Chanok ship he raised their shields once again. The transporters targeting scanners kept a lock on the combadges of all five members, and he stood ready to retrieve them in case anything went wrong.
He cast a sideways glance at the pilot, and saw that Harriet was biting her bottom lip, her brow furled. In the two months he’d been onboard the Silverfin he had never seen her nervous—it reinforced what he already knew; things could go very badly very quickly.
***
Engineering Section, Chanok Striker Gzek’ta
Argaya System
Their assault on the Chanok ship had gone as he had expected it, but with Llewellyn-Smyth and Tyler at the controls he hadn’t expected anything else. Now was the time for his part in the harebrained plan he had devised.
As soon as the transporter released them the first thing that registered was the heat—at least thirty degrees (but coming from a planet with little atmosphere he was used to a much cooler environment). The second thing he noticed were two humanoids half way down the corridor he stood at the end of. His phaser carbine already raised, he got off two shots in quick succession and the crewmembers crumpled to the deck. Behind he heard three other shots fired. His scans onboard the Stallion showed that the engine room itself was heavily shielded, so he had chosen a beam-in site as close to it as he could, and opted for a four-way intersection.
“Clear,” he stated. Quickly followed by the same pronouncement from Syva, Mycroft and Blue. Crewman Drim stood at the centre of the group, sweeping the area with his combat scanner—a device they all wore strapped to their forearm.
“There are four other lifesigns in close proximity,” he reported, gesturing in the direction Syva and Mycroft faced, “two in each direction. The warp core is thirty-eight-point-six meters that way,” he added, gesturing down the corridor Amorin faced.
Before he could issue any orders, a groaning klaxon filled the corridors. An intruder alert? That was faster that I’d expected, he noted. He had been relying on the element of surprise once again to get them to engineering and take control of the ship. But that wasn’t to be. He looked at Syva.
“Let’s move out Master Chief.”
She gave a curt nod. “Tactical formation Beta,” she ordered coolly, utilising the combat manoeuvres she had devised and drilled into every member of her staff, as well as all the officers and most of the long-serving non-coms on the Silverfin.
At her order, Mycroft moved ahead carbine raised and body poised, K8 Blue was close behind. Amorin followed on, with Drim behind him and Syva at the rear. They moved steadily and efficiently, staying close to alcoves and partitions they could use for cover if needed. Amorin could feel the adrenaline surge through his system, but experience and training tempered it. He noted that both Blue and Drim were doing a fine job of keeping on top of their feelings, given that they were the rookies on the team. Had Syva not been Chief of the Boat, he would have felt wary about having a couple of untried and untested crewmen on a mission such as this. But the Vulcan Master Chief drilled her people hard from the day they stepped foot onboard, making sure that they were capable of facing anything that was thrown at them.
They had only gone twelve or so meters when Amorin’s natural echolocation alerted him to the approaching soldiers, a half-second before the combat scanners registered the twenty-two lifeforms coming at them for all directions.
“Take cover,” Syva ordered, spinning back the way they had come and moving to what shelter she could find. Amorin and the others followed suit, he ducked into an alcove and aimed his weapon in the direction they had been heading. Less than five minutes onboard, they hadn’t even covered a third of the distance to their target, let alone securing the engine room and then the rest of the ship, and they now faced odds of four-to-one, against an enemy whose capabilities they didn’t know in an arena that was very alien to them.
Things were looking bad.
“Here they come,” yelled Mycroft, before the screech of phaser fire filled the corridor.
***
Tactical Centre, Chanok Striker Gzek’ta
Argaya System
“Mistress, we have a security breach in the engineering section. Five lifesigns; Human, Vulcan, Bolian and two others I cannot identify,” stated Zaks’ky from the Scanner station (from which the body of the previous operator had since been removed).
Verr’ja hit the comunit on armrest of her chair. “Sub-Jahr Than’ok, we have intruders in the engineering section. Eliminate them.”
“It shall be done Mistress,” came the Senior Guardsman’s swift reply.
She turned her attention to Vret’ez. “Ordnance Officer, what about that shuttle?”
“They are still within the perimeter of the defence grid Mistress. I cannot acquire weapons lock at this range,” he told her, his head bowed low.
Vret’ez was one of the best officers on the Gzek’ta, not an incompetent trixit like Ysot’la had been. She didn’t relish the idea of having to find another efficient gunner, but that didn’t mean that she wouldn’t dispose of him as well if he failed again.
Since the Starfleet shuttle had punched through their defence grid they hadn’t fired on them, no doubt they wanted to keep their board team safe. It was a weakness Starfleet had had before the Chanok turned its back on the fragile empire, and it looked like they hadn’t outgrown their compassion. But then again, compassionate people always had one fatal flaw.
A sinister grin spread across her bronze face. “Charge the plasma cannons again. Lock onto all the asteroids that could conceal the Mirage. Obliterate them,” she ordered calmly. She looked down at her Second-in-Command. “The Starfleet ship won’t expose itself needlessly. But if we threaten a civilian ship, they will move to take action.”
Zaks’ky bowed his head slightly. “Very cunning Mistress, using their weakness against them.”
Pleased that her Second-in-Command knew his place, she looked back at the Ordnance Officer. “Have all pulse batteries at maximum and ready the targeting array.”
“Pulse batteries online. Plasma cannons fully charged and targets acquired.”
“Fire.”
***
Star Stallion 2
Argaya System
If the Stallion were any closer to the Chanok ship she would be sitting on its hull. However, even given their extreme proximity the larger ship still took the occasional shot at them. Each one missed, her targeting systems and phaser emplacements not designed to take out a ship within its own shield geometry. But they could have had attack fighters already en route to engage them so she kept a close eye on the sensors, one hand on the joystick and the other close to the impulse power control.
As tense as Llewellyn-Smyth found it simply waiting in the eye of the hurricane, within the enemy ship the boarding team had met with considerable resistance. Amorin had ordered them only to retrieve the team if they sent an emergency signal, and so far no such signal had been sent. Tyler kept monitoring their progress—what little they had made—so she was the one that noticed the spike in energy readings.
Before she could say anything however, the ship unleashed two enormous pulses of energy from the two large emitters at the front of the ship—a design feature she had though of as deflector dishes. The Stallions sensors catalogued the energy and identified it as massive blasts of plasma, with the same destructive yield as three quantum torpedoes. Each blast slammed into a different meteoroid, the smallest on par with a Miranda-Class ship, and decimated them. According to the sensors none of the remains were larger than that of Workbee, with most of the rock being turned into dust.
“Those bastards,” she hissed. “They’re goading us, so that we’ll move out and into their targeting range.”
Tyler was now looking at the same readings she was. “It won’t take them long to find the Mirage. We have to do something Lieutenant.”
Llewellyn-Smyth looked at the readouts. They were charging for another volley. There was no telling where they would target next, but there were only so many asteroids that could hide the small transport. The hunk of rock they were hiding behind not only prevented other ships sensors from picking them up, but prevented them from picking up anything as well. The Mirage would have no way of knowing what was coming their way.
“Ensign, could you arm the micro-torpedoes but then deploy them like mines?”
“Yes sir, but we’d still have to be beyond minimum safe distance when then detonated.”
“Let me worry about that. Ready the torpedoes and charge the phasers,” she instructed, as she readied the impulse engines and familiarised herself with the design of the unsightly Chanok ship.
It took a few moments, but Tyler reported, “Torpedoes ready and phasers fully charged.”
“We’re going to take out those forward weapon ports,” she told him, powering the thrusters and moving towards the front of the ship. She made sure to stay close to the hull, so as to keep from presenting the Chanok with a target, dodging the multiple phaser emitters that adorned the warship.
As they neared the front of the ship two more bolts of plasma were released, and two more chunks of rock were reduced to little more than dust. As powerful as the plasma weapons were they appeared to need several minutes to recharge and fire again, which made what she was about to do slightly less crazy.
“Engaging attack pattern theta, release the torpedoes on my command,” she said, and then swung the Stallion down towards the two glowing weapon turrets. The Chanok opened fire on them once again, but she kept the Stallion out of the kill zone and pressed on towards the energy cannons.
She pitched the ship so that the micro-torpedo launcher was aimed at their twin targets, which glowed brighter with each passing second. “Now!” she ordered, pushing the shuttle towards the cannons—their increased momentum would help the torpedoes drift into the crimson hull of the enemy ship.
Tyler launched the eight micro-torpedoes they had left. They headed straight for the two heavy weapon ports, the Stallion only just ahead of them. Once the launchers were empty she hit the impulse control and the ship lurched forward. She ducked under the ventral hull and accelerated towards the rear of the ship, using the jutting structures across the hull to offer them a degree of protect.
Behind them the micro-torpedoes reached their target, and exploded on contact with the hull. Though the micro-torpedoes were nowhere near as powerful as their full-sized counterparts, their matter/antimatter annihilation still produced a big enough punch to take out one of the forward cannons and damage the second. Despite her best effort, the resulting shockwave caught the Stallion and buffeted them off of course.
Screaming alarms filled the cockpit.
“We’ve been thrown out of their shield grid. We are in their targeting range!” reported Tyler, his voice tight.
“Impulse engines are offline, switching to full thrusters,” she stated just as the first volley of torpedoes were incoming.
***