Act Two: The Song of War
“You will never have a greater or lesser dominion than that over yourself...the height of a man's success is gauged by his self-mastery; the depth of his failure by his self-abandonment. ...And this law is the expression of eternal justice. He who cannot establish dominion over himself will have no dominion over others.”
― Leonardo da Vinci
Audentes Fortuna Iuvat
“You will never have a greater or lesser dominion than that over yourself...the height of a man's success is gauged by his self-mastery; the depth of his failure by his self-abandonment. ...And this law is the expression of eternal justice. He who cannot establish dominion over himself will have no dominion over others.”
― Leonardo da Vinci
Audentes Fortuna Iuvat
Kashan
The man looked at his reflection in ultrachrome gauntlet seeing not the aged visage that had weathered the decades but a young man’s face, full of promise, inspiration and hope. It was strange, as he turned the silver shell around in his hand, how the piece had retained its luster and shine despite seeing scores of fights and being a part of battles and wars. How many times had this piece and others like it protected him and yet they looked as if he had just returned from purchasing them brand-new.
If only people were so fortunate.
His reflection came back and the young face still stared back at him even though he knew that a scar marred his cheek and his hair had turned white.
The body ages far more quickly than the mind, he thought a bit morosely. And it was true, even as he struggled to recollect images of his youth, he still felt, inside, young. He still “felt” as if here were a man of twenty-five…. Thirty.. Certainly not the seventy-three his wife had reminded him he was this morning.
The thought of her brought a smile to his lips knowing that she too hated that the youth inside her mind could not transform her body as well by sheer will.
And if anyone could, it would be her!
With images of his wife flooding his mind, the reflection in the armored gauntlet blurred. A lifetime ran though his mind as the bed creaked under his shifting weight. It was a simple bed, the frame hand-made by their daughter out of wood from the nearby trees that surrounded their tranquil abode. Their house was rather isolated and the glassy surface of a rather large pond could be seen from their back porch. Reaching their house was no easy task for ground vehicles but most used flitters nowadays anyway.
It was his birthday and he knew the morning and afternoon would bring a variety of family and friends invading his home. The families of all three of their children would be coming in, grandchildren and even a great-grand child.
Even Micah’s family.
The man’s thoughts turned to his middle son, dead for nearly fifteen years past and while the pain had dulled it had not vanished. Knowing that seeing his son’s wife and children would warm him even as it brought the old pain to the fore, he would have to make sure the pain did not make it to his features. Nothing would hurt his poor daughter-in-law more than knowing her mere presence brought back the stabbing ache of the loss of his son, her husband, and such gatherings were not to be dedicated to memories of pain.
“Reliving old glories?” a soft voice intruded and the man turned to see his wife standing in the doorway. She had recently cut her hair shorter which seemed to sharpen her gaze and he wondered if that was the intent.
Then again, it gives her a youthful look too so perhaps that was the intent..
“Another year,” he sighed, putting the silver gauntlet back in the storage truck. Standing up, his back straightening, “and despite everything...despite Micah, I miss it. Damn me, I miss it!”
His wife’s eyes told him that she knew what he was talking about. They also told him that she sympathized.
“I guess I am damned too because I miss it as well,” she declared, almost defiantly.
“It’s just..” the man started when their front door slammed violently and irreverently.
“Gamma!” cried a young voice and both of their lips grinned ruefully and they both turned to greet the arrival of their eldest son and his family.
At the sight of him in the doorway, wearing an off-duty uniform that would cause his mother to fuss over him, the man felt a wash of pride overcome his thoughts.
He looks tired..
“She’s a handful,” his son replied to the unspoken observation. “I thought green ensigns were bad but she puts them all to shame..”
“You were no different,” the elder man replied grinning coming forward to give his son and daughter-in-law a hug. After the embrace, she held out a package to him and the elder looked at both of them in confusion.
“What’s this?”
His son smiled cryptically, “We found it floating about on a training exercise.”
The elder man opened up the bag and pulled out the object. “What is this? It looks like… a … a railgun round?”
The cylindrical object tapered to a cracked point. “I don’t understand..” the old man started when he flipped the tail end of the round up and noted the name on the bottom.
Syagani
“Happy birthday, dad.”
The elder’s voice constricted with the emotion the name called to mind and the scar on his cheek began to itch.
“Syagani..” he whispered hoarsely.
DOMINION
Krel’Thran’k’adar, Krel to his crèche-group, walked with a slight limp as his mechanical leg clicked across the floor of the warship echoing throughout the empty corridor. For twenty cycles, the fleet had gathered, its strength coiled as if to strike at a moment’s notice and, for twenty cycles, the order had not been issued.
Except the order to remain at the ready.
The world formerly known as Imperial Center to the denizens of this galaxy had been subdued and the Cree’Ar Declaration had been sent to the four corners of the galaxy.
For years, Cree’Ar spies had infiltrated the galaxy watching and learning and the more they saw, the more they realized that its fate hinged on the activities of those considered to be “Force Users”.
They also learned that not everyone was a force user.
Two castes.
Indistinguishable from each other save for an ability that, in and of itself, could not be seen only experienced. One limited in number but powerful in ability and, the other, numerous yet weak. It did not seem to matter (except to some ethereal sense of morality) so much about how those with the abilities used their powers for it was always those without the ability who ended up suffering for them.
It was as if one caste, over the eons of history, had become resigned to the fact that they were not really masters of their own lives. At least not when there were force-users about.
Of course, this neglected caste would come up with politically correct terms to placate the resentment in their minds over the unfairness of it all by advertising this ruling caste as “force sensitive”. But there was nothing sensitive at all about their usage of the force for the lower caste either suffered due to force user activities, as in the case of the Sith, or force user inactivity, as in the case of the Jedi. The only question to those of this lower caste was: on which side of the spectrum of use they would eventually die?
Yet, for all the passage of history and the great galactic conflicts between sects of force users, while those of the ruled class were, more or less, resigned to their fates, their resentment of that fact had hardened deep within their consciousness.
And it was this deep reservoir that Artanis, the Cree’Ar Warmaster, recognized knowing the fires of destruction that could be brought forth from this wellspring.
When those without the ability would rise up and bring down those of the ruling caste…
…to end the eons-old reign of the Force Users.
All that was required for the spark to take flame was to prove to this galaxy that even the most powerful of these force users were nothing when set against the might of the Dominion.
Imperial Center, the capital of the most powerful organization in this galaxy, had to fall.
And so it did.
Now, it was time for that wellspring to bubble forth and catch fire…
*
Krel entered the room completing the circuit and the familiar harmonic began to prevail as he took his place in the Conductor’s position.
“Arc,” he called out as a shiny sliver of energy appeared between two towering braces solidifying into a holographic lattice-like frame where the sensor readings would be assigned.
The composition of Artanis was proceeding exactly as orchestrated and Krel found that even the enemy would be hard-pressed to follow up with an accompaniment of their own that was anything but (ultimately) cooperative to the convention and structure set forth.
Still, accidental notations did occur which could conceivably, if left untended, alter the progression as designed for something more…free-form; chaotic.
Such stylized constructs without the structure of overall harmony was irritating to Krel and the very thought of ‘free form’ an anathema for disharmony led to discord. Or so Krel had been taught.
Sometimes “free-form” found expression in ways that staggered the imagination and, invariably, conflicted with the Dominion.
The silvery band before him began to sing.
Krel frowned in thought as the vibrations slivered up and down his nerve-endings, the fine hairs on his skin feeling as if someone’s lips were blowing across his hair.
It was disconcerting and as well it should have been.
The people of the target system had taken their “free-form” idea to a level that threatened the symphony of war that the Cree’Ar had enacted. This brewing situation was not part of the original composition and it required a finesse that only few composers possessed.
Fortunately, Krel was one such conductor.
The people had attempted to bridge the divide that separated those that could sing the song (the force-users) and those that were tone-deaf (non-force users).
But not everyone who uttered sound could sing and not every song could be a grand composition.
Such was reality.
Rather than subject themselves to such realities, however, these people had simply tried to shout louder which only made them more annoying, as if quantity made up for quality.
It was not ignorance, though.
No, it was defiance.
…defiance of the great orchestral procession that was the Dominion itself.
“Dissonance,” Krel muttered sadly.
Kashan
Far Outer Orbit, Seraph Mk III-class Medium Cruiser, Syagani
”Captain on the bridge,” chirped the Officer-of-the-Watch as Captain Garrett entered into view.
“Status,” the graying newcomer asked his Exec as the latter discharged his duty station.
“We are in an extreme orbit, Captain, moving at 5 MGLT. All sweeps are clean thought solar cartography is noting some unusual surface storm activity.”
“Hmm…” the Captain remarked by way of a response. “Not unusual for this time of year,” he clarified reading over the ship-wide update. “Three crewmen down with fever?”
The Exec shrugged. “The doctor prescribed bed rest,” and the Captain grunted.
“The good doctor is getting me back for the drop-ship tests,” he murmured and the Exec grinned in response.
“He did not like accompanying the troops to the surface?” he inquired innocently.
“Threw up all over the drop shuttle and it was raining at the drop location,” the Captain explained. The Exec nodded at the explanation and, to an extent, understood the doctor’s discomfort. However, he also knew why the fleet was enacting random drills of varying activities.
The alien attack on Kashan had jarred Command awake into rethinking their defensive posture and response tactics. Investigation services were still trying to figure out how these aliens were able to land ground soldiers on the surface without their space-approach being detected.
With the fleet on alert after the Sojourn decided to take a sojourn from the Confederation itself and the Galactic Coalition making themselves a general nuisance, it was anyone’s guess what would happen next. And so the fleet was on alert which helped, if not calm things down, put soldiers and citizens at ease.
“Sir,” called out the Scanning Officer in a confused voice, “sensors are detecting a rippling effect outside—“ he was interrupted as klaxons automatically started blaring out.
“Correction!” the officer shouted over the noise, “Unidentified vessel passing off our port bow!”
The Kashan Battle Computer had automatically responded to the sensor readings by putting the Syagani on alert status and the Captain could already see in his mind’s eye the multiple-turreted weaponry turning to track the passing unidentified vessel. The Battle Computer, however, would not simply automatically fire on an unidentified vessel or even a vessel hailing from a political enemy of the Confederation unless combat had already been initiated.
It took the crew, notably the Captain, of the Syagani to initiate such action and, at that moment, Captain Garrett was leaning towards calling the vessel an enemy based on his gut. He had seen the holo-footage of the creatures that attacked the graduating class on the planet below and their simply “appearing out of thin-air” had the same sudden quality as the intruding vessel’s appearance.
As it was, this vessel, roughly twice the size of the Syagani, was merely ignoring their hails but the Captain knew he could not let the intruder closer to Kashan without challenge. Otherwise, what was the fleet there for?
“Helm, swing us about to get in front of them. Weapons, I want two warning shots fired across their bow. Comms, continue trying to hail them,” he barked out sensing the tension rising on the bridge.
He knew even as the vessel increased speed to its maximum sub-ight capacity and altered their course to intercept, the battle computer would rotate the Syagani’s turrets to ensure maximum tracking. As their bow swung around, two IX-9 turbolaser batteries opened up, putting a pattern of fire in front of the intruder’s approach vector.
“Sir,” if we do not alter our course, their ship is going to ram us..” the Helm Officer reported nervously.
Garrett’s eyes narrowed and he turned to the weapons officers, “Have the Quads target that ship and open fire.”
He could not allow the intruder to enter near orbit but he was not about to simply attempt to obliterate the vessel because they could not raise communications. Ion fire could, conceivably, disable the ship without destroying it allowing for the Syagani to send over a boarding party.
With the targeting of the ship, rather than firing warning shots, the battle computer went into combat mode checking system junctions noting that shields were being raised and was the first to realize that all sensor data had stopped. The lack of data would have thrown off the targeting systems had the intruder initiated some sort of evasive maneuver. Since the intruder had not, the weapons turrets were in their fixed firing positions.
The immediate problem was the helm for without sensor data, there was no way to maneuver the Syagani in relation to the intruder since the helm could no longer “see” the intruder. It was not practical or efficient for the helm officers to run to the bridge window to try to eyeball the intruder and then relay new coordinates to those actually helming the ship. In this, the battle computer too was impractical due to the lack of optical interfaces as well as software flexibility, if such optics were able to view the approaching ship, to classify the object in optic view to relay an appropriate response. Unfortunately, software and AI could only do so much.
Still, the Syagani would have been in much more danger had the intruder tried an evasive maneuver but, since the crew who could ‘see’ the intruder from their prospective windows and see that the intruder had, in fact, remained on its course the Captain could, reasonably, assume the speed had also remained constant.
Even in the scant seconds the Captain had come to this conclusion, seeing the intruder through the plexiglass viewports, there was not enough time to react. The sensor pit, helm crew and every other station that relied on the data provided by sensors and scans that had suddenly gone dark had emitted a cry of surprise and panic.
Garrett was opening his mouth to give the firing order when the Syagani shifted violently under his feet throwing him and everyone else who was standing to the floor. The bridge became a cacophony of sirens, klaxons and screams as their world went dark.
*
Kashan
Inner Orbit, Seraph Mk III-class Medium Cruiser, Nova
Captain Nevreau gasped as the Syagani seemed to be knocked aside and away from the intruding vessel. The intruder itself could no longer be seen as an immediate envelopment, spherical in nature, simply appeared.
The Syagani had encountered the edge of the sphere when it simply appeared, the force of that encounter causing the warship to be repelled away with multiple explosions littering its damaged hull.
“Was that some sort of shielding the Syagani bounced off of?” Nevreau’s Exec wondered out loud even as emergency actions were being ordered to aid their damaged sister-ship.
“Ma’am, you need to see this!” the Sensor Officer replied and both Captain and Exec were soon standing over his shoulder. On the screen, it seemed all sensor data died (or went dark) at the boundary of the sphere. As if a solid wall of “something sensors could not penetrate much less read” were moving towards them.
“Blanket sensors are picking up stellar debris in front and behind the sphere but we get nothing but a large empty nothing where the sphere should be reading.”
“Have our weapons target the void and open fire,” Nevreau ordered. “I want everything we’ve got shooting ten seconds ago!”
She turned to the Comm Officer, “Contact Kashan and have all forces in this sector recalled. We may need help!”
The intruder, now much larger since it was presumed that it was encased in the sensor-blackout sphere, was still approaching along the same vector and at the same speed which, according to Nevreau’s internal calculations, would give the Nova time for several firing rounds. And she wanted everything fired: Turbolaser batteries, Ion Quads, missiles …even the railguns.
“Transmit all firing data to Kashan Command as soon as we receive it,” she ordered the Comms knowing that the more information she was able to get out to the military, the better prepared follow-up responses could be if, for some reason, she happened to fail to stop the intruder.
The vibrations were felt all along the hull as multiple turreted weapons ejected their energy payloads at the approaching sphere.
Optical visuals were magnified and the sphere appeared on nearby monitors.
“Doesn’t look solid but gaseous,” murmured a nearby Lieutenant.
The energy based weapons as well as projectile weapons seemed to disappear in the “cloudy” sphere.
As the monitor still displayed the spherical blackout approaching their position, the Exec murmured, “Well, that was anticlimactic.”
“We don’t know if we are doing damage or if our fire is being deflected after it disappears into that cloud!” complained a nearby crewman on a weapons consol.
Far Outer Orbit, Seraph Mk III-class Medium Cruiser, Syagani
Captain Garrett quickly inspected the wrappings he applied to the injured crewman using the bridge’s portable first-aid kit. It wasn’t pretty but it got the job done. He stood to survey the battered bridge noting too few stations were even active when the ship shook again.
“Another damned shield generator..” murmured the scanning officer who had been pressed into medical service since his scanning station was also dark.
Garrett was not sure what had happened since the damage to the Syagani was as quick as it was absolute but he knew they were in a bad way if the view out their ports was any indication. He had seen the moon of Kashan several times noting that the Syagani was in an uncontrolled spin.
The hull had been compromised, that much had been certain and devastatingly so for the shield generators built into the hull had been affected as some overloaded blowing the Syagani’s plating to hell and gone.
He hoped the damage control crew could stem the tide of cascading failures and prevent further domino effects further damaging the ship, especially if one shield generator blew affecting others down the hull as damaged continued to spread.
But on a Mark III?
The damage control functions had taken a hit in the new “upgrade” as all effort was made to ensure the Seraph’s hull could not be cracked very easily. And it was true. Seraph’s were tough nuts to crack but once they were cracked, the vessel’s usefulness was lost. It was a vessel designed for short bursts…the quick, lightning victory. In a protracted fight, the ship’s shell would wear and eventually crack. It was inevitable with every warship but this time?
The Syagani hadn’t even started to fight when it was unceremoniously knocked out of the battle to come. Garrett could only hope that what happened to them was spread to the fleet so precautions could be implemented.
The ship shuddered again and the Captain wondered if more shield generators were exploding when a shout announced the arrival of the engineering team he had given authority to conscript any and all crewman to find out the status of his ship and report back. With internal systems down all over the vessel, they were left with runners. It was odd that even the portable comm units did not seem to work.
He turned his gaze to the rather tall Paladin who had wedged itself into the doorway of the lift to ensure the doors remained open allowing for crew to come and go through the maintenance ladders with the lift itself inoperable. Command had rescinded its standing order removing all Paladins from the bridges of various vessels due to the Trojan Incident before the year of Cataclysm. However, the discovery of the Reaver Threat and the Confederation’s subsequent dealings with that threat saw that order turn into more of a suggestion which most Captains, especially those working in and around Reaver Space, ignored. Garrett was glad that he did as well as the second Paladin’s internal power generator was cannibalized to allow them to manually close the armored plating over the viewports. The last thing they needed as some exploding shield generator cracking the seals around the plexiglass venting them all into space.
“Report?” Garrett ordered, once the newcomers had caught their breath. The ladder climb was not an easy one, especially with the spin straining the inertia dampeners. He was glad the artificial gravity plating still functioned.
The Chief sighed, running a hand over his bald head. “We’ve got decompression issues and now I know why.”
The two moved over to the center of the room, the Captain’s command crew moving closer to hear the details.
The engineer took out a pad and a hologram of the ship appeared. “This was us before…and,” he clicked a button and the hologram shifted showing almost a quarter of the front hull missing. “..this is us after.”
Someone gasped and Garrett had trouble not doing the same. It was worse than he thought. Than he hoped.
“All levels in this section have been exposed to vacuum,” the Chief continued. “If those blastdoors were unlocked and opened,” he gestured to the plating they had manually activated, “you would have seen the damage.”
“Those shudders we have been feeling?” a Comm Specialist asked.
“The vacuum was not limited to the missing chunk of ship,” the Chief explained, “that vacuum traveled down corridors throughout the ship before containment protocols could be enacted. The shock to our automation system was overwhelming. “
“What, the AI couldn’t figure out to shut the damned doors?” growled a crewman.
“The AI used the vacuum to put out fires that were spreading. Some shudders were decompression explosions where containment protocols failed but others were the shield generators embedded in our hull. Rather than the force of the explosion blowing out into space, our damned plating contained it and turned that destruction inward. It is hell on some levels. The AI saved the ship and our lives.”
“Can the AI get an emergency signal out to the fleet?” the Captain asked.
The Chief shook his head, “That’s the other part of story. I still do not have a full report on the ship’s condition until I hear back from quite few of our people running around. They have to be careful since comms are down and they do not want to open a door and suddenly find themselves in vacuum compromising the level. Sensors are down as well..”
“So how does the AI know about the fires and vacuum?” asked a crewman in confusion. The Captain was thinking the same thing. He wanted to tap into whatever system the AI was using to use that.
“The portable thermostats found in every corridor, believe it or not.” The Chief replied. “The AI is in shock and there is only so much it can do with no sensors, scanners or comms. However,” and the bridge held its collective breath hoping for some good news, “some of our runners have gone EVA to check our weapon mounts. Our main concern is secondary munitions detonations. That would finish us. But what I was going to say was that our people found this..”
The hologram changed to focus on a section of outer hull and Garrett saw a protruding piece of…. Well, he did not know what it was.
“What is that?”
“Not Confederation standard, I can assure you of that. Whatever it is, it is attached to the hull and it is emitting a dampening field that is preventing any type of communications, internal and external and is killing our scanners and sensors.”
“So, if we can get that off the ship..”
The Chief’s lips formed a tired grin, “We may get our eyes and ears back.”
Inner Orbit, Seraph Mk III-class Medium Cruiser, Nova
Captain Nevreau stared silently as the wave of sensor darkness the sphere represented on their monitors drew closer. The Nova was still firing even as the ship began to move away to ensure what happened to the Syagani did not happen to her.
CCDF had assured her that more ships were enroute and that was welcome news. The bad news was that there was not very many ships in the Kashan System. It was a hidden system and so, inevitably, with the creation of the Confederation and the CCDF, most shipping had been diverted to ensure the system’s secrecy remained. Couple that with the CCDF on alert and stationed at possible Confederation “hotspots” like Genon and Metalorn and other worlds closer to the Coalition. The CCDF was not sure what the Coalition and, by extension, the Cooperative was doing but the political fallout from every politician’s mutual hardheadedness left enough of a question mark that they were not taking any chances.
“A strange design for a warship,” her Engineer murmured as Nevreau turned her attention back from the monitor to the holographic projection of the alien vessel. At least the alien vessel as it appeared prior to being enveloped in a sphere of gaseous something or other that seemed to absorb everything, including scans, that was aimed at it.
The vessel looked like a tear drop laid on its side with the pointed end facing aft. From that basic design sprang up all sorts of “spikes” the nature of which remained unknown. Some spikes were longer than others but they were in no discernable pattern.
“Looks almost like one of those fishes that puffs up if a predator tries to eat it,” the Engineer continued.
“Captain! We are detecting another rippling effect similar to what the Syagani—“..
“I see it!” barked out Nevreau halting the verbal update in mid-sentence. Some people spoke paragraphs when a single word would do.
“All weapons, track that rippling effect and fire!!”
The Captain knew, with the intruder designated as hostile, the battle computer AI was already moving some weapons to track the rippling effect but Nevreau wanted everything aimed at the rift as they were getting nowhere with the sphere.
Sure enough, a tear-drop shaped intruder appeared into the hail-fire of the railguns, turbolasers and ion cannons. The weaponry from the Nova struck the intruder before a shielding sphere could be erected causing damage to the vessel’s superstructure.
As the monitors showed the spikes breaking apart against the continuous onslaught, a cheer went up throughout the Nova’s bridge.
“So they can be hurt,” the Engineer remarked.
Captain Nevreau eyes narrowed at monitor’s optics showing the damage they were inflicting.
“Another rippling effect!” a Sensor Officer shouted to be heard over the dying cheers.
“Target secondary weapons and fire!” the Captain barked out but the Weapons crew looked about in confusion.
“The rippling effect is on the far side of the planet, Captain!” the Sensor Officer clarified. “They are out of range of planetary batteries as well..”
Nevreau turned to her Engineer, “It seems they can learn from their mistakes as well.”