FARNHAMS LEGEND: Chapter 13 - February 2005

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KiwiNZ
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FARNHAMS LEGEND: Chapter 13 - February 2005

Post by KiwiNZ » Sat, 12. Feb 05, 21:41

Hello everybody.

Sorry or the delay, I have been working more than the doctor prescribes thus had little time to do anything else.

My last chat with Helge revealed that they are still sorting out who is going to publish the English version the story and there is a motion to translate it to Russian. Any takers?

Anyway, here is your monthly feast :D

Chapter 13 of Farnhams Legend, by HelgeK and rewritten by SteveMill.

---------------------------------

But they must be hiding somewhere! If not on Taurus or Aldrin, then why not at least on Momang, Joyce-B, New Larnaca – or whatever you want to call them! We could start to think that someone is playing a game of interstellar hide-and-seek with us. Where are they, all these good and evil Aliens?

Extract from a commentary on the
10th anniversary of the launch of the Winterblossom

Pha t'Phnn had made every possible effort to bring the Bonescout’s shields back to a state of perfection following the destroyer’s ignominious encounter with the ugly Teladi ship at the High Profit Trading Station. No Split could have anticipated that the outlandish flying egg could mount shields and engines that would honour a carrier.
The Bonescout was a very special ship, and as ship engineer t'Phnn was determined to do his utmost to maintain the integrity of the destroyer. Cho t'Nnt was not just a good commanding officer; he was the best. Since he had taken over the command there had been no more arbitrary executions – apart from one or two inevitable incidents. In fact it could generally be said that under the leadership of high ranking members of the Family Zein and favourites of the Patriarch, good work would be rewarded with the granting of real honour and not merely the opportunity to stay alive.
Pha t'Phnn was more than satisfied with his position. He belonged to a modest family, but some day he would work his way far enough up the hierarchy to face the Patriarch himself. He didn’t yet know the means, but he had no doubt that his own ingenuity would eventually see him succeed. Then he would find himself a wife that would bear him a son, and perhaps also a daughter, and establish a shipyard – the biggest and most advanced in this part of the universe!
The ship’s engineer glanced over at Cho t'Nnt who had come into the engine room specifically to oversee the progress of the repairs. Another difficult mission lay before the Bonescout, and no-one knew how long the ship would have to manage without the facilities of a spacedock.
"You have performed outstanding work, Pha. I am exceedingly pleased with you,"
Inwardly, however, the Patriarch’s young Special Envoy seethed over the unnecessary waste of time and squandering of resources! But didn’t he only have himself to blame? The Patriarch had, not for the first time, urged him to deal sensitively with non-Split when on critical missions. And had he always done that? Too infrequently! Would it have cost him much to let the loathsome Nyana’s Chance go on its way unmolested? No! But what had he done instead of this? No wonder the Patriarch hated him and entrusted him only with assignments that were not worthy of him!
Of course it made no sense to vent his anger on the crew - as his predecessor in command of the Bonescout had been in the habit of doing until the then first officer had thrown him out an airlock without a space suit while intoxicated with spaceweed. Pha was a talented engineer and there was no point in dampening his enthusiasm with the concerns of his commanding officer – and also not appropriate for a direct blood relative of Zein t'Nnt, the future Patriarch of all Split.
Cho made the gesture for moderate praise for the hard-working engineer and made his way back to the bridge of the destroyer. Of the sixteen-person crew of the ship, Pha t'Phnn was surely the one whose hundred percent reliability Cho could least do without, particularly on long missions in which extensive enemy contact was anticipated.
Shortly afterwards, the Bonescout passed through the star gate that connecting the Teladi home sector of Company Pride to Thuruk’s Beard, the forward outpost of the Split clans. Thuruk t'Mhhg had been the first and only Patriarch of the Split to succeed in immortalising his family name forever; a star system irrevocably and permanently named after his legendary beard, which was only right. He succeeded in uniting the rival clans into the current, sometimes fractious but relatively stable, state entity that played such an important role in the Commonwealth of Planets.
However, Cho had little time to pay his proper respects to the system’s central star because, according to the information delivered by the Patriarch’s message drone, the alien spaceship from the far reaches of the universe lurked somewhere here, in this very sector, at this exact moment.
It took a bare fraction of a Sezura for the gravidar to adjust following the jump through the gate and begin operating. Cho t'Nnt let out a curse. A veritable constellation of different ships, guided missiles and space debris lay scattered along the length of the route between the jump gates of a sector Cho had considered quiet and secluded. Some of the featureless blips on the gravitational radar screen were ships attempting dangerous swing-by manoeuvres past Gho-Czman, the ninth planet of the system, which was in the direct path between the two gates. As Cho watched, one of these blips merged with the large dot of the gas planet and did not emerge from the other side. Only ten sezuras later, the light of the turbulent event reached the Bonescout and Cho and the crew of his destroyer could also see what the gravidar could not show: countless tongues of energy flaring across space, blossoming explosions whose clouds expanded to nothingness or were dispersed by ships snaking through them, burning space wrecks lumbering out of control. He had difficulty to judge who was shooting at who. With a quick glance Cho satisfied himself that the shields were at maximum; the ship’s engineer had got them back into full working order in the nick of time.
A tiny ship that Cho could only make out with the aid of visual enhancers scurried through the chaos. The Bonescout’s computer immediately and definitively identified it as the unknown spacecraft that the Patriarch had made it Cho’s mission to follow. It was clear that the tiny ship could not have been designed for space battle because it looked more like an aircraft, or at best a small orbiter. Equally obvious was its rapid acceleration as it left all pursuers in its flaming wake. But whose ships were these, what were they doing here, what was the nature of the space battle and why were people shooting at each other rather than forming a line to face the alien craft?
"Computer, I’d like a summary of all the ships in this sector, including all wrecks that are still identifiable. I don’t need stations. Execute."
"Understood", said the computer and instantly flashed up a large viewfield, divided up into several rectangles, in which all the located spaceships were itemised with pictures and significant data annotated. In total, the computer counted 19 ships in this system; every one of them was located on the route between the jump gates that linked the Split sector with Xenon territory.
Cho decided against getting involved in any combat operations; his instructions were as clear as glass, follow the alien ship until he could corner it. Normally the Patriarch’s special envoy would have jumped excitedly into the fray, but this time his mind remained absolutely cold.
"Avoid any kind of conflict and follow the target ship," he instructed the pilot. Uchan t'Scct acknowledged and Cho examined the ships that the computer had identified. Seven were Split destroyers, defending themselves against three Boron battleships. It did not actually need a particular reason to fight Boron, but Cho would nonetheless have liked to know why. Four black Xenon fighters had evidently just come through the jump gate at high speed, overshot the alien ship and were now pulling a loop in order to turn around. They were also violating a hundreds-of-years-old pact by entering Split jurisdiction, Cho reminded himself. A Paranid freighter trying to escape the battle zone with its hull intact was heading for the gate from which the Bonescout emerged, while another middle-sized ship of Argon construction was performing a swing-by of the gas giant and would probably meet a couple of Hornet-class missiles in a few Sezuras. The seventeenth and eighteenth identified ships were the alien and Cho’s own Python. The nineteenth, however, was on a completely impossible flight path, at such a high speed that it shone blue as it approached the Bonescout from behind and above, on course for the battle. The ship cooled towards the red end of the spectrum as it passed the destroyer. It was a cylinder the size of a carrier and neither Cho nor the onboard computer could classify by means of its silhouette or construction characteristics. In spite of its size, the gravidar did not report it, as it had no mass!
A ghost ship.
"Computer, record!" Cho cried unnecessarily, as the computer was fully documenting the unusual events anyway. Ghost ships were perhaps the most mysterious phenomena, yet common to all space-faring species of the community. Since ancient times, pilots had reported rare instances of these gigantic, unidentifiable ships, which never came through jump gates, instead plunging quietly in an almost straight line and at enormous speeds, across star systems and out of the other side, far beyond the orbit of the outermost planets and vanishing again into the nothingness. For a long time, people had put these visions down to overuse of spaceweed; particularly as it was rumoured that the eerie ghost ships only appeared shortly before disastrous catastrophes such as wars, the eruption of a supernova in an inhabited star system, the destruction of a jump gate or other similar events. Many attributed the cylindrical ships to the unknown builders of the star gates, the "Ancients" as they were also known, but that was just a theory and no one knew their actual origin, their mission, or the timings of their appearances.
Cho barely got the chance to grab a closer look at this remarkable flying object before it shot beyond visual range at a speed that defeated the vision enhancer’s ability to track it. A blue flicker on the rear camera monitor indicated that the jump gate had activated once again. Two more ships, Teladi cruisers, appeared with retro thrusters blazing as the lizards reacted with their customary spirit to the raging battle.
"Cowardly creatures!" mumbled Cho, as they reversed course.
The Bonescout approached the Xenon jump gate at high speed and would be in the approach corridor in less than a Stazura. The ships coming from the direction of the gas giant and the Split gate would reach there at about the same time - and they had obviously noticed the Bonescout because one of the three Boron battleships had adjusted its course to intercept Cho’s destroyer in a few Mizuras, a slim missile preceding it on a tail of flame.
The computer sounded the combat alarm.
"Maintain course," ordered Cho. Evading the missile would mean wasting valuable Sezuras; it could be the acid test of the newly repaired shield generators.
The crew watched the approach of the missile tensely. In the mean time the Xenon had completed their doubleback manoeuvre and raced after the small alien ship, which at that moment was approaching the jump gate.
"Battle stations, controls to me," ordered the Patriarch’s special envoy. He scanned the readouts, calculated the approximate vectors in his head and ripple-fired three interceptor missiles towards the Boron battleship. He fired three more salvoes, spacing each out carefully. Then Cho activated the lasers and with a single pulse destroyed the approaching missile before it could even get close to the Bonescout’s energy shields.
The Boron battleship attempted to evade Cho’s missiles, narrowly dodging the first salvo. However, Cho had correctly predicted the course change and the second salvo smashed into the energy field protecting the Boron destroyer. The three missiles exploded in a star-like blazing ball of atomic destruction without penetrating the adversary’s shields. The Boron managed to get off a few shots from its plasma throwers, which bounced off the Bonescout’s screen, before the third salvo pounded the Boron battleship’s shield. It flickered and surged back up, flickered again, and then the fourth salvo hit. This time the fireball was blinding and the Bonescout plunged through the small star that had been a Boron destroyer, with blazing shields.
Cho t'Nnt grimaced with deep satisfaction; one Boron less. How terribly stupid of these revolting creatures to assault him, he had not sought combat, just as ordered – but a direct attack could only be answered with immediate retaliation!
The other two Boron ships veered away. They had certainly not expected such a fierce and effective reaction from a lone Split ship, having previously dealt with seven other destroyers without any difficulty. However, the Bonescout’s weaponry went far beyond what a Python-class battleship would normally mount.
Out of the corner of his eye, Cho caught the admiring glance from his first officer but he did not allow himself to be affected by it. He can pay homage to me later!
The brown gas giant now loomed before the destroyer. The gravity of Gho-Czman grabbed at the Bonescout as the pilot used its pull to slingshot the ship towards the jump gate with a fuel-saving speed boost.
Cho glanced at the tactical screen. With the Boron disengaging the battle disintegrated. The Xenon sped in typically single minded pursuit of the alien ship, the Teladi had scurried out of the system with the Paranid freighter lumbering behind and a lightly damaged Argon ship hung in high orbit over the gas giant. A single Hornet would be enough and Cho wrestled with the urge to finish it off. It would be enjoyable but not so diplomatic, given the uncertainties and he reluctantly took his hand off the launch control.
"Establish a connection to all Split ships in this system," he ordered. The computer acknowledged and seven faces appeared alongside one another on the communications screen.
"This is the Special Envoy of the Chin Patriarch. All units must return to their home bases. By the orders of the Patriarch, the pursuit of the target ship will be..." Cho hesitated for a moment. Perhaps it wouldn’t be such a bad idea to take one or two of the destroyers with him as escorts? On the other hand – he would probably end up protecting them, and anyway, it was already difficult enough to keep control of his own impulses without having to stop a collection of less well-trained Split from shooting everything in range to pieces with their cannons. "...undertaken by me personally, unaccompanied. Identification follows." He ordered the computer to transmit the Patriarch’s authorisation code and ended the transmission without waiting for any replies, arguments or queries. He observed the gravidar with satisfaction as the destroyers turned away.
The system was now almost as peaceful as it had been in his memory. No mysterious spacecraft of the "Ancients", no Xenon, no Boron and no battles. But Cho knew that this could only be the calm before the storm. It was not for nothing that little was known about the sectors dominated by the Xenon; it was more than just risky to venture there. Many of those who had done so had never returned.
But Cho was confident; in fact he felt a certain thrill of anticipation. The Xenon were honest and able foes in their own way, silent and determined. They would engage him in battle and would not give him any opportunity to avoid them - good! Perhaps the Patriarch loved him after all?
Cho prepared a message regarding the events and also added a full report on the Ancients’ ship. The message drone was not programmed to return and would remain with its recipient. Cho watched the retreating blip on the gravidar, which, after only a few Sezuras, was already so fast that the tracking system could no longer follow it.


The destroyer had only just emerged from the jump gate, and the gravidar had not yet fully re-adjusted after the dimensional exchange when the computer sounded a warning.
"Collision alarm!"
Before it finished the phrase a sharp black object with glowing red edges smashed against the Bonescout shields. Cho had braced himself against the back of the command seat in anticipation of a major impact, but the minor shock was a testament to the calibration of the inertial dampers. The shield energy dropped briefly down to half and but quickly regenerated. The glowing debris sputtered around the destroyer and cooled into invisibility.
"What was that?"
"It looked like the wing and fuselage of a Xenon fighter sir," replied Uchan t'Scct, the pilot of the Bonescout.
As the gravitational radar resumed operation, Cho began to get an idea of why the wreckage of destroyed ships should be swirling around the entrance to the enemy star system: it looked as though two naval formations had met one another at a distance of about half an astronomical unit and were throwing themselves into a fierce battle; the fragment had presumably belonged to one of the Xenon that Cho had seen shortly before on the other side of the jump gate.
Someone had destroyed it.
With its featureless blips, the gravidar could provide no information about who had been fighting whom; only from the configuration and positions of the ships could anything be read. The target spacecraft was clearly recognisable in the middle of a group of points which were very obviously holding open a kind of corridor for it which they sealed after it had flown through. A whole wing of attackers fought to penetrate this screen but had so far failed to do so. Cho was certain that the attackers were Xenon. But who were the "saviours" of this unknown spacecraft? The Teladi and Boron could be ruled out from the start since they had never been known to undertake missions here, far out in Xenon territory; that left just the Argon or the Paranid. Cho hoped that it wasn’t the Argon, because that would spell the end of his mission and the Patriarch would hold him to account for it.
After another four mizuras the optical telescopes were able to zoom in on the widely spaced battle fleets.
A large formation of Paranid carriers, fighters and destroyers were battling through a cloud of Xenon. Weapon discharges flared continuously; explosions and burning ships bathed the scene in flickering light. But why were there no more Xenon coming to help their falling comrades? After several Mizuras, as the Bonescout came closer to the events, Cho could finally make sense of it. The alien space ship was going through the jump gate in the middle of its Paranid entourage; all of the Paranid craft apart from two ultra-heavy destroyers followed him. The two ships that remained behind held the Xenon off with ease and withdrew through the gate unscathed, following the battle formation.
"Very astute, our allies," said Cho to Uchan, "guarding each jump gate with heavy units to cut off the machines from their own territory. I would like to bet that they have secured the whole route, gate by gate, from here to Priest’s Pity the same way."
The pilot agreed with his master. "Yes sir. The three-eyed ones must have detached an enormous battle group for this mission."
"Their entire fleet, more than likely," replied Cho. Uchan nodded. "Evidently."
"One can snatch the prize away from even the largest battle group if its commanders are religious fanatics who, despite their three eyes, cannot see further than the front of their bony skulls."
"A Teladi saying that always proves true, sir."
Cho got up from the command seat and drew up close to his pilot.
"An Argon saying, Uchan. Do you know what the real difference is between the Argon and us?"
The target of the question did not allow himself be unsettled by his commander and held on to the controls and steering units with increased determination. "No Sir", he replied.
"Just one thing – they have their hate under better control than us, Uchan. That is their greatest advantage – and at the same time, their greatest failing! Do you understand?"
"Yes Sir."
Cho made a gesture of genuine scepticism; Uchan t'Scct was intelligent and competent, but he would surely not be able to comprehend offhand the profound thoughts of his master. Relenting, Cho made the sign for "unexpected opportunity" with four fingers towards the cockpit window.
"Good. We will follow the Paranid fleet on their way through the enemy sectors at a sensible distance. They will clear the way for us and draw the attention of the machines towards themselves."

They would get their chance...
Last edited by KiwiNZ on Wed, 16. Feb 05, 15:42, edited 1 time in total.

Al
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Post by Al » Mon, 14. Feb 05, 13:41

Nice one folks. I noticed that there are a lot of hyphenated words which obviously shouldn't be. I'm presuming this is just a formatting issue from wherever it was copied and pasted?

Search for pil-ot and fam-ily if you want a couple of examples.

Al
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KiwiNZ
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Post by KiwiNZ » Mon, 14. Feb 05, 13:52

oops, I shall have a look at that. Thanks

KiwiNZ
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Post by KiwiNZ » Wed, 16. Feb 05, 15:43

ok, fixed. I hopw I found all of them. Did not realise the hyphenation has gone totally havoc :oops:

Thanks for the note.

(/\)arped
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Post by (/\)arped » Wed, 16. Feb 05, 23:48

Thanks guys!

Can't wait for the next part! :D :thumb_up:

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Darcikon
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Post by Darcikon » Thu, 17. Feb 05, 17:22

Excellent stuff. Can't wait for the next chapter!!
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therjw
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Post by therjw » Thu, 17. Feb 05, 19:24

Nice one, cannot wait for the next chapter :D

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Post by Urashima Keitaro » Thu, 17. Feb 05, 20:35

Me neither. Quite gripping.

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Post by VincentTH » Fri, 18. Feb 05, 23:26

I thought a condense translation of Farnharm Legends was posted here a long time ago. Either way, It is still fascinating reading those chapters, and may I echo others: Cant way for next month.

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