From: Los <los@c...>
Date: Fri, 10 Jul 1998 21:12:14 -0400
Subject: FT Fiction Part One(Long)
I fought this battle last Sunday. It forms the basis of some fiction I'm writing and can be released as stand alone so here it is. enjoy! *Aboard the KRS /Moltke/ flagship of KS II/14* *Rot Hafen (LTT 1583) system* *6 July, 2184*  The dark compartment that passed as the bridge for the NSL Battlecruiser /Moltke/ was abnormally quiet. The overhead lighting was dimmed, which accentuated the eerie green and red lights projecting onto the faces of the bridge crew as they peered intently into their screens. There was only the barely perceptible hum of the ships main drive. Julius Markmann wriggled against his seat frame in a futile attempt to scratch an itch in the small of his back. /Verdammte Vacc/ suits, he thought. They werenÂt really necessary for fleet exercises such as this one, /but you train as you fight/, and he had no one to blame but himself. Markmann was commander of Kampfstaffel II/14. They were part of the famous Kriegsmarine Kampfgruppe 14. His ships were currently assisting in a test of the new Mk IX cloaking system enhancement developed by Spiegel Industries. One of his destroyers, the Kohl, was out there in the darkness, cloaked with the new technology, and Markmann was having a damned hard time finding it. His staffel of 5 ships were spread out in a combat search pattern, looking for the Kohl, which they knew to be somewhere in the general vicinity. Out in between the Kohl and II/14 sat the Spiegel-owned scientific vessel /Gussman/. Its ultra-sophisticated sensors monitored the exercise. For four hours, they had searched, but found nothing.  ÂYou see Herr Hauptmann, Spiegel Industries once again demonstrates its superiority in electronics design. Markmann cringed at the voice behind him. /Damn Ross/. The civilian technical liaison from Spiegel, stood gloating around the bridge. That arrogant bastard had been annoying the hell out of everyone on the ship for the past week. OkRF (/OberkommadoKriegsRaumFlotte/) had put a top priority into testing and rushing this system into service. Why they had to come all the way out to Rot Hafen top do the test as opposed to closer to Neu Salzburg was beyond him. Markmann had been ordered to give full cooperation to Ross and his cronies, and Ross had misconstrued that mandate in his head to convince himself that he was running this staffel. They had butted heads a number of times over the past week. Despite his knowledge of the great potential the Mark IX cloaker had, at times Markmann found himself wishing Spiegel would fail. He guessed that what it came down to was that Markmann didn't like anyone infringing upon his command.  ÂHerr Hauptman! /Von Zeiten/ is picking up vague disturbances bearing 075 range estimated at 2 light seconds. The Comm chief held his hand to his headset as if to better hear the incoming transmission from the destroyer. ÂContact is designated as Delta 01.  ÂPost it. An amber blip appeared in the holotank. Beside it was the scant information they had on it. The blip was well outside the exercise area, in fact behind the Gussman. What the hell was Peters doing out there? "Reorient, the staffel along a heading that will intercept the bogie.  Ross, grinned and checked his personal datapad. He knew that the /Kohl/ was nowhere in that area. These fools were so frustrated at their inability to uncover the hidden destroyer that they were grasping at straws. Well, he wouldnÂt say anything yet. He was enjoying MarkmannÂs frustration too much to intercede now.  KS II/14 sped across the empty vacuum for 30 minutes. Contact Delta 01 was intermittent but remained along their bearing none the less.   That confirmed in MarkmannÂs mind that he was onto /Kohl/. Their course would take them past the /Gussman/ shortly.  ÂHauptman! cried the sensor chief. ÂReading three more like-disturbances all in line with Delta 01. Posting them now. Markmann watched as three more amber dots appeared in the holotank. It appeared to be a formation in line. Markmann frowned.  ÂHerr Ross, what the hell is this? Does the Mark IX allow for deception mode ECM while cloaked? I donÂt remember reading or being briefed about this. Ross himself was confused. "No Hauptman. That is not a feature in the Mark IX. Perhaps your sensors are malfunctioning, nicht war?  ÂAbsolutely not, replied the sensor chief a little too quickly. ÂI ran a diagnostic before I reported the new contacts.  ÂNew contacts have also been confirmed by the other ships, added the communications officer.  Markmann turned to Ross. ÂWell Ross, what kind of scheisse this?  ÂHauptman!  Markmann looked back at the holotank in time to see the icon for the /Gussamn/ flare up and wink out. ÂThe /Gussman/ has just exploded.  ÂHow? What caused that?  ÂOh my God!" Shouted Ross. "What have you done? Opened fire on our ship?  ÂShut the hell up. Markmann fixed Ross with a glare.  ÂNegative, no ships firedÂ. Confirmed sensors and communications.  ÂHauptman, contacts firming up. Bogies now confirmed as ships, mass equals destroyer size. Unable to determine type, however they have definitely unmasked. Bearing 015 at just over 1 light second. Speed point 6, bearing down upon us. No visual as of yet. Perhaps by the time we close to half a light second.  ÂSound action stations, no drill." Luckily they were already at Action Stations-Drill, so it only took moments to power up for combat. "Put the staffel into formation green two. And get me some data on those contacts!"  "Matching signatures with database."  "Who are they? FSE?  "Signatures do not conform to any known human vessels." Markmann's mind was racing. No known human vessels. /Hmm/. Suddenly he felt a shiver of cold. /That means they must be/  "Kra'Vak, Herr Hauptman. Closest match in our database is with Kra'Vak." Markmann mulled over his options. What were they doing here? Obviously a raid against the colony. Could they have known what he was doing here? What they were testing? He made some quick decisions.  "Leutnant Braun, send an emergency message to the colony. Inform them that we've encountered what appears to be a Kra'Vak raiding party. Append all sensor log data to the message and keep the dump open. Warn the two system corvettes."  "Jawohl, Herr Hauptman."  "Herr Ross, where exactly is the /Kohl/?" There was no answer. He turned and looked at the civilian. The tall thin severe looking administrator had turned ashen white and was trembling, his eyes transfixed on the four red blips in the holotank. "Herr Ross! What is the position of the /Kohl/?"  Ross muttered something, his eyes wild with fear at the thought of impending real combat. Markmann jumped from his seat and landed an open handed slap to the side of Ross' head. It sent the man sprawling to the deck. The rest of the crew pretended to study their consoles and not notice. Ross let out a short yelp and held the side of his head.  "Goddammit snap out of it man! I need to know where the /Kohl/ is NOW!" Ross' eyes cleared and he looked at the pad. He punched something in and held it up to Markmann. "It, it is somewhere inside of these coordinates Herr Hauptman. It could have moved slightly but it's here."  Markmann scooped up the datapad, looked it over and tossed it over to Braun, who barely glanced up in time to catch it. "Braun, I want you to send a narrow beam secure transmission in that direction. Tell the /Kohl/ they are not to decloak under any circumstances unless I order it. Remind them not to acknowledge. Quickly."  "Captain?" Asked Kreps, the XO.  "They are just one little destroyer. My guess is that they probably can't swing the engagement one way or the other, but if they stay cloaked we'll accomplish several things. They may be able to surprise the Kra'Vak at an opportune time in the battle. Second, we'll see if the cloaking technology works against them. And third," he looked intently to Kreps, "If something happens to the staffel they'll be able to report back to fleet vital intelligence. I just hope they get the message before."  "Message sent", reported Braun.  "Open up a voice channel to the rest of the Staffel."  "Channel open."  "This is Captain Markmann. As you are aware we have encountered what appears to be four Kra'Vak vessels headed in system. We must not let these creatures into the colony. Two hundred thousand citizens are counting on you. We must buy some time. Ensure that you gather as much data on these aliens as possible and dump it back to the colony. They will get it back to headquarters. What we learn and do here today could make a vital difference in the future. Do your duty. Markmann, out."  "Range passing through one half light second Hauptman."  "Visual?"  "I'm working the enhancement filters. They're very difficult to spot. There!" One of the alien vessels appeared on the main viewing screen. The dark blue was very difficult to pick out of the backdrop of space. It was shaped like a U with the ends very pointy and shimmering purple. There were no running lights discernable.  "Is this a type in our database?"  "Negative Hauptmann. Computer classifies it as a destroyer-mass vessel. Still not getting much electronic or radiation emissions, though they've obviously turned off their cloaking."  Markmann studied the enemy formation. They came at them in line abreast with a slight stagger in their line along the X- and Z-axis. He scratched at his beard. Markmann commanded a staffel of six ships. Minus the Kohl, that left him with three destroyers, The /Balck, Mölders/ and /Von Zeiten/, one escort cruiser, the /Altenstadt/, and his ship, the /Moltke/. Under normal circumstances a powerful little force, but against these unknown ships he wasn't sure what to suspect. On his own datapad he studied some pertinent information that tactical had dug up on the mysterious Kra'Vak.  Unlike most human ships which carried and assortment of beams, lasers, pulse torpedoes and missiles, (as well as defensive screens), the Kra'Vak, relied on rail gun or mass driver technology. At first it was believed to be a crude weapon but the velocities they were hauling their projectiles could punch through most ships. Also it made defensive screen generators useless against them. In this respect the NSL tended to stand up better against the Kra'Vak because they were heavily armored. On the downside, the Kra'Vak railgun could only fire them through one arc, which the humans had discovered tended to be through the front arc. He'd have take advantage of any flank vulnerability they had.  "Put us into pattern green five."  "Green five. Jawohl. Transmitting."  II/14 approached the enemy in roughly a w shaped formation with the three destroyers three hundred kilometers out ahead in line abreast with both cruisers following. Now both flank destroyers peeled off left (/Balck/) and right (/Von Zeiten/). Markmann wanted to spread out his formation and overlap the enemy on both sides, per chance take advantage of their flank weakness.  "I want a five-minute burn from the staffel, cruisers at 100%, destroyers at 50%. I want to hit engagement range at optimal speed. All ships be prepared to open fire at maximum range."  "Jawohl Hauptman, said the helmsman. "Commencing acceleration in five four three two one mark." Markmann felt himself pushed back into his seat until the ships internal dampers could compensate for the acceleration as the sped increased by an additional 30,000 KPH. On the holotank he watched his W -shaped formation spread out as both flanking destroyers swung wide.  "Estimate maximum engagement range in three minutes."  "Thank you, tactical. Order all ships to fire at will when they hit max range." Only now, as the moments ticked down to engagement, did Markmann find himself with a moment to contemplate that they had gone from peaceful exercise to battle in the space of fifteen minutes. He shook his head. Suddenly a flush wave of anger passed over him as he thought of the destroyed /Gussman/. There had been no warning. In what little they had learned about the Kra'Vak, it was clear they had little consideration for other sentient beings. They killed at will and the fringe worlds had been thrown into a panic despite the limited number of incidents. Now they were here, deep into NSL space. What was that all about?  "Engagement range in thirty seconds, Herr Hauptman."  "Designate nominal point, Number One."  "Nominal point designated and transmitted to the staffel," replied the XO. The nominal Point was an imaginary point between both fleets, which would serve as a navigational reference for maneuver while the engagement lasted. It would help the commander judge relative velocities, courses and maneuvers as he fought his staffel. A bright pink xyz-axis cross displayed in the holotank. If he chose he could display his forces within a 3d grid should he choose.  "Tactical have targets been distributed equally?"  "Yes Sir. We're going for Delta 02, it's slightly ahead of the others."  "Very well."  "All crew members assume protective posture three and lock down shock frames", ordered the XO. All crewmembers that could would be secure in shock frames to protect them against battle damage and the event of loss of internal gravity. In protective posture three vaccsuits were worn with gloves and helmets on, though face shields could remain open.  "Range to target passing through thirty-six thousand kilometers," reported sensors. "No change in enemy course, speed or emissions posture.  Â