The Phoenix Requiem (The Phoenix Conspiracy Series Book 7) (48 page)

BOOK: The Phoenix Requiem (The Phoenix Conspiracy Series Book 7)
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If he was right, and some dark sense of foreboding told him that he was, that meant the enemy would be coming directly at the ISS
Victory
, and, more than likely, concentrating their combined firepower at the greatest warship ever built.
They’ll light us up like a candle
, he thought,
with all those beam weapons. Hell, we might not even get an opportunity to shoot back before we’re scorched into space dust.

Still, even knowing that was his likely fate, Sir Arkwright was not one to run from it. He still believed in God. None of this evil he had witnessed today had shaken that faith. Obviously, the Divine Creator had some greater design, something far grander than what Sir Arkwright’s miniscule mortal mind could comprehend. Evil did sometimes win the day, that much he knew. And today was going to be one such day. There was no mistaking that fact. And although he had pled for Divine deliverance, the Creator had chosen in His wisdom to withhold his hand and allow the evil enemy to come after them, like wolves upon sheep.

But, just as surely as evil sometimes won the day, good always won the war. Sir Arkwright did not know how, and he did not know when, but somehow this Dread Fleet, and all its evil, would be destroyed. For such evil would not be suffered by the Creator for long. In that, Sir Arkwright trusted. And, although it appeared his time had come to rejoin the heavens, and walk with the angels among the stars, someone would come, one day, and stop this Dread Fleet.
It won’t be me
, thought Sir Arkwright.
But it will be someone
. And then it will become clear why the Creator had been wise not to spare the people who had died today, and the people who would yet die. Including Sir Arkwright himself.

But, even though he accepted his fate, and trusted in his Lord, the Creator of all the heavens and all the stars and all the worlds, that did not mean Sir Arkwright had to accept his ultimate destiny lying down. No, he would die defending the innocent—or trying his best to—while swinging the twin swords of justice and righteousness, destroying as much evil as possible before the Creator took his breath from his lungs and spirited away his soul.

For Queen and Country! But, even more, for God!
he thought, feeling his resolve return along with his determination. He tapped the transmitter.

“General Order to all allied ships. This is your commander, Sir Arkwright; the enemy is forming up to charge this position with all strength. It is up to us to stand against them. I hereby command all warships yet able to move to immediately form up on my position. Do so with all haste. Let us stand as one when the enemy is upon us. Let us make the galaxy remember this day! Not only what we have done here already, but, even more importantly, how we chose to end it! That message will be heard across thousands of worlds and remembered for thousands of years. Let us make our descendants proud and be strong until the end, my brothers and sisters! The dark tide fast approaches. Let us stand together, united, and cast the darkness back once more! The choice we make, right here and now, to stand against an overwhelming force of cruelty, malice, evil, and darkness, and say to it—with our voices and our swords—we will
not
bow! We will
not
kneel! We will
not
surrender! Resistance until death! My blood for the queen!”

He let go of the switch and the Comms board lit up with most of the commanders of the remaining starships also transmitting, as many as could get through, “My blood for the queen!”; “My blood for the queen!”; “My blood for the queen!”

It was an ancient battle cry, one that harkened back to feudal times. And yet, Sir Arkwright found it appropriate to be used again here, for one final time. Before the slaughter cast its shadow upon them all.

“All hands, stand ready,” commanded Sir Arkwright.

“All hands report ready,” said his Comms chief.

“All crews to their guns,” commanded Sir Arkwright.

“All crews report ready and standing by,” said the Defense chief.

“Shields double front, I expect a lot of beam weapon strikes.”

“Aye, sir, shields directed to double front,” said the Defense chief.

“Ops, all secondary, tertiary, and emergency power sources are to be ready to be diverted into the shields the instant they begin to fall; is that clear?”

“Sir, yes, sir,” said the Ops chief.

As he gave these commands, he watched on the tactical display as the remaining blue and green lights converged on his position. The defenders would make their final stand, together, just like he’d wanted. A few had strayed, some had even fled. It did not matter. As far as Sir Arkwright was concerned, those who fled would forever be branded traitors and cowards. While those who stayed—and fell—would forever be remembered as heroes.
For it isn’t some great attribute about a person that makes one a hero
, thought Sir Arkwright,
No one is born a hero. Heroes are forged in the fires of singular, solitary moments…moments when a choice has to be made, and often, a risk taken. When a person chooses greatness, often at their own expense, that is what makes a hero.

Once he had finished giving his commands, both to his crew and his remaining fleets, Sir Arkwright leaned forward in the command chair, against the restraints, and stared at the large red swarm of lights in a triangle shape on the tactical display. As if to say to them,
come at us, if you dare. We fear no forces of evil!

“Sir,” said his XO from where he was standing next to Sir Arkwright.

“Yes?”

“I just want to say, it’s been an honor, My Lord,” he saluted.

“Commander, the honor has all been mine,” replied Sir Arkwright, and he returned the salute.

“My blood for the queen,” said the XO, making a fist.

Sir Arkwright made the same gesture. “My blood for the queen!”

 

***

 

My blood for the queen
.

It had a certain ring to it, Raidan had to admit. A certain catchy-like quality that had probably helped stir the morale of the remaining defenders in some positive way. Sir Arkwright had been wise to use it. One of the few sparks of wisdom the battle commander had shown.

Of course, to Raidan it was merely a slogan, and not one that carried much weight with him. He had put the queen upon her throne personally, by eliminating her rival, at tremendous risk to himself, and the thanks he had gotten for it? To be branded a traitor for all time. An official
Enemy of the Empire
.

That outcome had come as no surprise. He understood that Kalila had been forced to do it for political reasons. Raidan had even predicted that outcome before making the decision to take control of the Organization and use it to attack Capital World, ultimately eliminating Caerwyn Martel. Who, had it not been for him and his damned civil war, the Empire might have had some chance to resist the Dread Fleet. Unfortunately, Raidan’s intervention had come too late, and now, though the Empire was finally united, they had an enemy at their gates for which they were entirely unprepared.

The arrival of the Dread Fleet and its strange obsession with eradicating life, planet to planet, was something he had not seen coming, nor was it something he understood. All he knew was that it had come knocking on his door, invaded his house, and was threatening to destroy everything that had ever once stood tall and great, all the glory of the Empire, the apex of human civilization, even humanity itself. All of it was straw before a fire. A hateful, wrathful, merciless fire that could not be stopped. That took no prisoners. Accepted no quarter. And, most importantly, there was nothing Raidan, nor anyone, could do about it.

The fire now burned outside the house, an inferno like never before seen, and now, little by little, it approached, accelerating, drawing ever nearer. All that stood in its way, truthfully, was time. Not the defense fleet. Not Raidan. No one could stop the Dread Fleet. In the end, it would take what it wanted and no one could do anything about it. The only master it was forced to respect, that Raidan knew of, was the cost of time. The Dread Fleet might take or destroy everything, eventfully, but it could not do so all at once.

On that point, he agreed with Sir Arkwright. Defending Capital World, at this point, was obviously futile. The intelligent thing, Raidan supposed, would be to flee the battle, any who still could, since to do otherwise would be akin to lying down before the fire, allowing it to consume you, for no purpose at all. Whether the defenders held the Dread Fleet at bay for six minutes, six hours, or six days, it made no difference. Eventually, the Dread Fleet would swarm the planet with all its vile black ships, and rain down a storm of violence and death that would sweep the planet, coast to coast, everywhere. There would be no escape.

It’s inevitable
, thought Raidan from his seat at the
Harbinger
’s command position.
There really is no stopping them…
 

Part of him had always understood that this was an adversary he could not hope to defeat. None of them could. But still, somehow, he had managed to convince himself, just enough, that it was possible to have hope.

Now, however, as he watched the swarm approaching: with its countless battleships, endless destroyers, hordes of battlecruisers, bevies of sloops, armadas of frigates, and squadrons of dreadnoughts—and whatever the hell else was packed into that tight phalanx—drawing ever nearer to the relatively small group of starships waiting to oppose them, both sides nearly within striking distance now, Raidan knew, without so much as a sliver of doubt, that the enemy would smash through the defenders with ease, and then it was on to the planet.

I give it fifteen minutes
, he thought to himself,
before the entire planet is surrounded by the Dread Fleet in orbit. This last charge, this is the end. There is no more battle after this.

Of course, some of the defending starships would survive the push, but they would be scattered and thrown into disarray. Badly beaten, bleeding, many of them slowly self-destructing as their bruised and broken hulls finally gave way.

Still, Raidan could not find it within himself to leave the system. He knew it was the smart thing to do. In fact, it was the only thing even remotely reasonable. There was no sense in dying if it accomplished nothing whatsoever. Whether he left or stayed and fought to the bitter end, it made no difference to the billions of lives down on Capital World. Because, ultimately, they would all be slaughtered. Whether the enemy had to cut down the
Harbinger
to get to them first, or not, he was nothing but a paper shield.

He stroked his chin, as he often did while in deep thought. The
Harbinger
had maneuvered somewhat near where the ISS
Victory
and its loyalist ships had gathered to make their final stand, but Raidan held the
Harbinger
back, just enough that he would not be drawn into the fight unless he wanted to be. In which case, he need only move a short distance to achieve weapon’s range.

He could see the lights of several starships through the forward window. They were too far away, and their lights too bright, for him to identify any of the individual starships—except for the
Victory,
but only because its lights were far brighter and more numerous than any of the others.

According to the tactical display, Sir Arkwright, had convinced, whether by order or rhetorical persuasion, some seven-hundred and sixty-three capital ships to hold beside the ISS
Victory
, in defensive formation, waiting, fingers on triggers, watching as the enemy approached at a seemingly gliding pace. Neither fast nor slow, showing neither caution nor carelessness, the enemy fleet simply seemed to move as though it did not even recognize that any ships blocked their path.
And why should they react?
thought Raidan.
Why should thousands of capital ships fear mere hundreds?
It was the same question why should seven men fear just one?

Sir Arkwright had described the entirety of the remaining Dread Fleet as four-thousand ships. In that, Raidan thought, Sir Arkwright had not been entirely honest. By Raidan’s estimate, it was something closer to five-and-a-half thousand. And, although there were some groups of defense ships, and lone ones, scattered about the system, some routing, some immobilized, others withdrawn from the fight but unwilling to jump system—at least not yet, and others doing…God knows what, none of them were in a position to lend any further resistance to the Dread Fleet. If humans and Rotham had the same level of discipline and respect for command that the Dread Fleet apparently had, then Sir Arkwright’s defense line would be something close to twelve-hundred capital ships. Significantly more.
Yet still not enough
.

Seconds later, the battle was joined. All Raidan could truly see was an exchange of flashes of light and the occasional, rapid firework type of explosion when a starship’s atmosphere caught fire,
very
briefly, as the remnants of the vessel were thrown across space in every direction.

He watched the number of blue and green lights blink out rapidly, along with many red lights.

BOOK: The Phoenix Requiem (The Phoenix Conspiracy Series Book 7)
11.4Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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