Spheres of Influence: The Space Between
The massive bulk of the Restigouche hung motionless in the fathomless depths, matched side to side, by her cohort; a pair of Colonial-class destroyers. Their escort, the equally massive reconditioned Dauntless-class transport Dream of Kashan, sat below the trio (relatively speaking) rolled hard on her port side engaged in a mid-space cargo transfer. A constant stream of shuttles and cargo crates (caught in repulsor beams) moved between the two behemoths, pouring from the starboard side of the Dream directly into the ventral bays aboard the Rusty Guts. Two squadrons of hyper-fighters swarmed between the quartet while an additional picket squadron monitored a larger defense perimeter.
The Dream of Kashan was one of two Dauntless-class starships each of which had been repurposed to suit the needs of the Confederation and Colonies alike. They had been stripped down and designated as personnel and cargo transports destined to ply the Gestalt-Kashan hyper lane. The twin starships transported everything from cargo to livestock while also providing extensive accommodations for multiple classes of personnel. Hulls painted with the emblems of both these starships were off limits to raiders due not only to their patronage but also their considerable size.
It was extremely rare that anyone traveling along the route should stop anywhere but one of the heavily garrisoned redirect points which were staggered along the corridor. That one of the joint-use transports should be delayed mid transit was unheard of. As dominant trade partners the Confederation and Colonies had benefited from one another’s success greatly even factoring in other Coalition elements and that success had meant non-stop business for their transport businesses; namely the “Dream Sisters” line. Such a stoppage would doubtless be expensive in the extreme.
From the bridge of the Restigouche Captain d'Foose oversaw the transfer. To say she was anxious would have been an understatement and she found little relief in the display of arms.
“Status, XO?”
Captain d'Foose peeled her attentive gaze away from the myriad monitors and displays tracking their progress locking on her Executive Officer instead. He, like his commander, was dressed in his casual browns though his scuffed knees and wrinkled pants were indicative of recent ‘hands-on’ intervention.
He examined his readouts, “we’re thirty five percent complete. We should be ready within the hour.”
“The sooner the better,” observed the Captain.
Like d'Foose, many of her peers in the Coalition had become increasingly wary of Imperial aggression of late. Those commanders whose responsibility it was to secure or patrol anywhere near the Imperial spheres were stepping up their precautions. Even in the vast “unclaimed” areas through which the Kashan/Gestalt corridor passed one could not be too cautious. The irony was, unfortunately, that the Coalition had brought this upon themselves with their own continued campaigns against the New Order. It was not lost on d'Foose.
“Our hyper patrols haven’t detected anything even resembling an Imp tag out there,” commented the XO in an off hand sort of way that encouraged a slight grin from his commander. The two were perpetually in sync, it seemed. “We haven’t done anything to them. No reason they should bother us, right?”
“If only it worked that way.” She countered. “The Empire doesn’t discriminate. We’re Coalition, as far as they’re concerned.”
“It’s all semantics anyway. We’re more like the Empire then anyone wants to admit. The society we’re a part of, the Vice Commodores little dream, is just as regimented as their own. If you’re not in the military then in all likelihood you’re a civilian working with or near the CDF. Humans are the dominant species, I mean… the last alien I saw was on Gestalt, six months ago, a guest of the Vice Commodore.”
“That’s enough,” put d'Foose simply. While what he said was true in some regard it could be seen as sedition. The association was common throughout the Colonies as anything but sympathetic. “Many of our people broke from the Empire at one point, XO. We are not the Empire, despite the similarities. Our officials are elected and we treasure our democratic state. The rights of the individual are assured without fear of suspension by any Colonial official…”
“The similarities are noticeable, but it’s our vast differences that set us apart.”
“But,” the XO started.
“But nothing,” she turned back to her tracking displays. “There is a delay in receiving. I’d like you to take a look”
“Aye,” he saluted and departed without further comment.
She was thankful for the excuse but in truth her Executive Officer was nearer the truth then anyone wanted to admit and he was no where near alone in his opinions. Perhaps it was inevitable. Lance Shipwright had once said that the sedimentary nature of the Colonies would not be conducive to homogenization. Though the people of the Colonies had come together out of a common desire the problems would arise when the honey-moon inevitably came upon its twilight and the people of the Colonies began to recognize their differences. Lance understood this and acted accordingly; he encouraged the Colonists to endorse an increasingly isolationist perspective that would, through the weight of their circumstance, force them to concede their differences in favor of continued prosperity within the Colonies themselves. Though he had recruited the majority of their population through careful and clever promotion of the Colonial dream within the right circles, and though he had done his best to recruit immigrants of similar heritage or lineage he could not be absolute in his efforts. It had been an arduous task. Through his contacts within the Coalition operating under the auspices of Galactic Technologies he had secured a sizable migration of skilled workers while his agents abroad had managed their own miracle in uncovering and insinuating themselves within a target group of displaced peoples from certain Core-ward regions of the Galaxy.
With only just a cursory glance around the bridge of the Restigouche one could get a feel for what the Colonies were, and had become during these, their formative stages. Men and women of similar skin tone served alongside one another with a rehearsed familiarity, they shared common familial backgrounds, they had elected to join the Colonial dream and in doing so become a defender of that vision. By and large they would have come to what equated to an upper-middle class upbringing. It was an iconic, idyllic scene to behold.
Captain d'Foose knew better, knew that the romance could last for only so long before the grim reality of the Galaxy threatened to flood in around them.
Poverty and crime were almost unheard of within the Colonies. Education, health care and pension planning were assured of every Colonial citizen regardless of status. Life in the Gestalt Colonies was like some sort of impossible utopian thing that, d'Foose suspected, could not hope to endure forever.
To that end, she was taking action.
“Captain,” called a communications technician from the crew pits. “We have an inbound from Gestalt I marked Captains Priority from the office of the VC.”
“I’ll take it in my ready room.” She replied and with that turned on her heel, stepping off of the bridge and into her private ready.
The room was slanted with the curvature of the nearest bulkhead but canted in such a way that a large ‘wall’ window had been installed to grant the Captain a view of the ships forward port side. It was not as small as those aboard the Colonial-class destroyers but at the same time was much smaller then the Imperial or Coalition (proper) variants employed. A high-backed chair sat behind the small, yet ornate desk with its back to the wall and looking out at the space around them.
Captain d'Foose slipped in to her chair and swung it around to face the communication terminal. A small red switch was flashing for attention so she flipped it.
A fraction of a second later the face of Lance Shipwright appeared in grainy, unresolved blue/grey tones. The hologram hovered in the small alcove cut out of the wall and showed the Vice Commodore from the shoulders up. He was dressed in his typical finery indicating that he had recently come from a meeting of some variety.
“Captain,” he said in a cool, flat tone.
She replied, disarmingly, “Lance, what’s up?”
The hologram of Lance Story Shipwright JR studied Captain d'Foose for only a second before saying, “The Onyxians send their well wishes.”
So that’s where he’s been, she thought. “Glad to know it, was Caleb there?”
The hologram shook its head from side to side. “The good Captain was otherwise occupied. It was little more then yet another boring discussion about the intra-Coalition stock exchange project.”
“Fun stuff,” she joked. “But you didn’t call me up Priority just to shoot the breeze, did you?”
For a moment she flirted with the idea that Lance had simply wanted to hear her voice or see her face. She knew better, of course. The Vice Commodore was something of a narcissist and their relationship, whatever it was, did not require any sort of examination. He was a great man and she was justifiably attracted to him but beyond that, she knew, there was no real hope for them to build anything real, tangible.
“No,” he conceded. “We have a problem.”
“Oh?”
“The Dream of Kashan is late,” he seemed to be looking at something off screen, or at least not in the holo-projectors perspective. “It did not check in at its most recent way point. You are in the area and I’d like you to investigate.”
“This couldn’t go through regular channels?”
Lance narrowed his eyes and leaned towards the camera’s lens. “I need you there, d'Foose. If something happened, and I think you know what I mean, then this will require careful tact and I simply cannot have someone outside the circle making a mistake where you-know-who might be involved. Are we clear?”
“Of course,” she smiled and nodded well naturedly. “It’s probably just engine trouble; I heard reports that the Dream Sisters were due in for heavy inspection and refit next week. Someone probably just pushed a motivator too far. I’ll check it out and report as soon as possible.”
“Good,” Lance winked. “I’ve missed you, d'Foose.”
“Shipwright out.”
The signal died leaving the Captain to regard the projector for a moment before checking her chronometer. It was time to go. The Captain of the Kashan Dream would bite his tongue and play his part. It was all part of the plan and HQ would not know until it was too late.
Captain d'Foose departed her ready room. Five minutes later the Dream of Kashan leapt off into hyperspace and the Colonial task-force followed fractions of a second later.
The stage was set, the pieces in motion.
Colonial Task Force Alpha – Gestalt/Kashan Route – The Battlecruiser Restigouche
The massive bulk of the Restigouche hung motionless in the fathomless depths, matched side to side, by her cohort; a pair of Colonial-class destroyers. Their escort, the equally massive reconditioned Dauntless-class transport Dream of Kashan, sat below the trio (relatively speaking) rolled hard on her port side engaged in a mid-space cargo transfer. A constant stream of shuttles and cargo crates (caught in repulsor beams) moved between the two behemoths, pouring from the starboard side of the Dream directly into the ventral bays aboard the Rusty Guts. Two squadrons of hyper-fighters swarmed between the quartet while an additional picket squadron monitored a larger defense perimeter.
The Dream of Kashan was one of two Dauntless-class starships each of which had been repurposed to suit the needs of the Confederation and Colonies alike. They had been stripped down and designated as personnel and cargo transports destined to ply the Gestalt-Kashan hyper lane. The twin starships transported everything from cargo to livestock while also providing extensive accommodations for multiple classes of personnel. Hulls painted with the emblems of both these starships were off limits to raiders due not only to their patronage but also their considerable size.
It was extremely rare that anyone traveling along the route should stop anywhere but one of the heavily garrisoned redirect points which were staggered along the corridor. That one of the joint-use transports should be delayed mid transit was unheard of. As dominant trade partners the Confederation and Colonies had benefited from one another’s success greatly even factoring in other Coalition elements and that success had meant non-stop business for their transport businesses; namely the “Dream Sisters” line. Such a stoppage would doubtless be expensive in the extreme.
From the bridge of the Restigouche Captain d'Foose oversaw the transfer. To say she was anxious would have been an understatement and she found little relief in the display of arms.
“Status, XO?”
Captain d'Foose peeled her attentive gaze away from the myriad monitors and displays tracking their progress locking on her Executive Officer instead. He, like his commander, was dressed in his casual browns though his scuffed knees and wrinkled pants were indicative of recent ‘hands-on’ intervention.
He examined his readouts, “we’re thirty five percent complete. We should be ready within the hour.”
“The sooner the better,” observed the Captain.
Like d'Foose, many of her peers in the Coalition had become increasingly wary of Imperial aggression of late. Those commanders whose responsibility it was to secure or patrol anywhere near the Imperial spheres were stepping up their precautions. Even in the vast “unclaimed” areas through which the Kashan/Gestalt corridor passed one could not be too cautious. The irony was, unfortunately, that the Coalition had brought this upon themselves with their own continued campaigns against the New Order. It was not lost on d'Foose.
“Our hyper patrols haven’t detected anything even resembling an Imp tag out there,” commented the XO in an off hand sort of way that encouraged a slight grin from his commander. The two were perpetually in sync, it seemed. “We haven’t done anything to them. No reason they should bother us, right?”
“If only it worked that way.” She countered. “The Empire doesn’t discriminate. We’re Coalition, as far as they’re concerned.”
“It’s all semantics anyway. We’re more like the Empire then anyone wants to admit. The society we’re a part of, the Vice Commodores little dream, is just as regimented as their own. If you’re not in the military then in all likelihood you’re a civilian working with or near the CDF. Humans are the dominant species, I mean… the last alien I saw was on Gestalt, six months ago, a guest of the Vice Commodore.”
“That’s enough,” put d'Foose simply. While what he said was true in some regard it could be seen as sedition. The association was common throughout the Colonies as anything but sympathetic. “Many of our people broke from the Empire at one point, XO. We are not the Empire, despite the similarities. Our officials are elected and we treasure our democratic state. The rights of the individual are assured without fear of suspension by any Colonial official…”
“The similarities are noticeable, but it’s our vast differences that set us apart.”
“But,” the XO started.
“But nothing,” she turned back to her tracking displays. “There is a delay in receiving. I’d like you to take a look”
“Aye,” he saluted and departed without further comment.
She was thankful for the excuse but in truth her Executive Officer was nearer the truth then anyone wanted to admit and he was no where near alone in his opinions. Perhaps it was inevitable. Lance Shipwright had once said that the sedimentary nature of the Colonies would not be conducive to homogenization. Though the people of the Colonies had come together out of a common desire the problems would arise when the honey-moon inevitably came upon its twilight and the people of the Colonies began to recognize their differences. Lance understood this and acted accordingly; he encouraged the Colonists to endorse an increasingly isolationist perspective that would, through the weight of their circumstance, force them to concede their differences in favor of continued prosperity within the Colonies themselves. Though he had recruited the majority of their population through careful and clever promotion of the Colonial dream within the right circles, and though he had done his best to recruit immigrants of similar heritage or lineage he could not be absolute in his efforts. It had been an arduous task. Through his contacts within the Coalition operating under the auspices of Galactic Technologies he had secured a sizable migration of skilled workers while his agents abroad had managed their own miracle in uncovering and insinuating themselves within a target group of displaced peoples from certain Core-ward regions of the Galaxy.
With only just a cursory glance around the bridge of the Restigouche one could get a feel for what the Colonies were, and had become during these, their formative stages. Men and women of similar skin tone served alongside one another with a rehearsed familiarity, they shared common familial backgrounds, they had elected to join the Colonial dream and in doing so become a defender of that vision. By and large they would have come to what equated to an upper-middle class upbringing. It was an iconic, idyllic scene to behold.
Captain d'Foose knew better, knew that the romance could last for only so long before the grim reality of the Galaxy threatened to flood in around them.
Poverty and crime were almost unheard of within the Colonies. Education, health care and pension planning were assured of every Colonial citizen regardless of status. Life in the Gestalt Colonies was like some sort of impossible utopian thing that, d'Foose suspected, could not hope to endure forever.
To that end, she was taking action.
“Captain,” called a communications technician from the crew pits. “We have an inbound from Gestalt I marked Captains Priority from the office of the VC.”
“I’ll take it in my ready room.” She replied and with that turned on her heel, stepping off of the bridge and into her private ready.
The room was slanted with the curvature of the nearest bulkhead but canted in such a way that a large ‘wall’ window had been installed to grant the Captain a view of the ships forward port side. It was not as small as those aboard the Colonial-class destroyers but at the same time was much smaller then the Imperial or Coalition (proper) variants employed. A high-backed chair sat behind the small, yet ornate desk with its back to the wall and looking out at the space around them.
Captain d'Foose slipped in to her chair and swung it around to face the communication terminal. A small red switch was flashing for attention so she flipped it.
A fraction of a second later the face of Lance Shipwright appeared in grainy, unresolved blue/grey tones. The hologram hovered in the small alcove cut out of the wall and showed the Vice Commodore from the shoulders up. He was dressed in his typical finery indicating that he had recently come from a meeting of some variety.
“Captain,” he said in a cool, flat tone.
She replied, disarmingly, “Lance, what’s up?”
The hologram of Lance Story Shipwright JR studied Captain d'Foose for only a second before saying, “The Onyxians send their well wishes.”
So that’s where he’s been, she thought. “Glad to know it, was Caleb there?”
The hologram shook its head from side to side. “The good Captain was otherwise occupied. It was little more then yet another boring discussion about the intra-Coalition stock exchange project.”
“Fun stuff,” she joked. “But you didn’t call me up Priority just to shoot the breeze, did you?”
For a moment she flirted with the idea that Lance had simply wanted to hear her voice or see her face. She knew better, of course. The Vice Commodore was something of a narcissist and their relationship, whatever it was, did not require any sort of examination. He was a great man and she was justifiably attracted to him but beyond that, she knew, there was no real hope for them to build anything real, tangible.
“No,” he conceded. “We have a problem.”
“Oh?”
“The Dream of Kashan is late,” he seemed to be looking at something off screen, or at least not in the holo-projectors perspective. “It did not check in at its most recent way point. You are in the area and I’d like you to investigate.”
“This couldn’t go through regular channels?”
Lance narrowed his eyes and leaned towards the camera’s lens. “I need you there, d'Foose. If something happened, and I think you know what I mean, then this will require careful tact and I simply cannot have someone outside the circle making a mistake where you-know-who might be involved. Are we clear?”
“Of course,” she smiled and nodded well naturedly. “It’s probably just engine trouble; I heard reports that the Dream Sisters were due in for heavy inspection and refit next week. Someone probably just pushed a motivator too far. I’ll check it out and report as soon as possible.”
“Good,” Lance winked. “I’ve missed you, d'Foose.”
“Shipwright out.”
The signal died leaving the Captain to regard the projector for a moment before checking her chronometer. It was time to go. The Captain of the Kashan Dream would bite his tongue and play his part. It was all part of the plan and HQ would not know until it was too late.
Captain d'Foose departed her ready room. Five minutes later the Dream of Kashan leapt off into hyperspace and the Colonial task-force followed fractions of a second later.
The stage was set, the pieces in motion.