It took a few minutes, but that was all they needed. A.F. shut them down
almost entirely, but he left a few key essential systems running. He let
them keep breathing, and stay warm, and to keep a relative sense of
down. That last one was key. He either did this so his own people
could be comfortable when they were ready to board, or when he was ordering
his people to shut all other systems down, he simply ignored that one as
irrelevant. Under normal circumstances, it was true. Internal artificial
gravity alone could not save or protect them. But all these systems were
integrated with each other, and rerouting them wasn’t all that difficult.
Séarlas, Leona, and Ramses worked together to change the
internal gravity to external. It was messy and ridiculous, but
it allowed them to move the station, and it allowed them to do it without
propulsion. This wouldn’t be useful if they wanted to fly on a particular
vector. A.F.’s fleet could always match it, so relative to each other, their
velocity would be at zero. But that wasn’t the only dimension to maneuver
in. Instead they spun themselves around. The station was basically
spherical, so they became a chaotic ball, rolling around space randomly and
unpredictably. If the bad guys wanted to board them, they were gonna have a
hell of a time getting a foothold.
They were at an impasse, because while A.F. couldn’t reach them, Team Matic
and the twins still had nowhere to escape to. Little had changed during the
interim year between August 17, 2530 and August 18, 2531. The only thing was
that, while the spin was random, the roll that it caused was fairly
consistent. The station had spent the entire time in a decaying orbit around
the host star, and it was pretty close to it now.
“Oh my God, I forgot to ask,” Marie began. “Why can’t they teleport in here?
Whoops.” She lost her grip on the corner of the table. In order to maximize
power from the internal-for-external gravity drive, they had to lose
it for themselves. This placed them in freefall, just like the ancient
astronauts had to suffer when humanity was first dipping its toes into outer
space centuries ago. “I’m gonna hold onto you instead, Matt.” She grabbed
his thigh with both hands. She could have just magnetized herself to a
surface most everyone else, but whatever.
“I have a teleportation-suppression field,” Séarlas explained. “It’s
decoupled from the main systems, and even has its own powersource, so A.F.
can’t control it.”
“Can we exploit that?” Olimpia asked. “Can we decouple other systems?”
“We did, with the gravity,” Séarlas confirmed. “Unfortunately, we can’t do
it for anything that he already has control over, like the quintessence
drive, or communications. I gave him too much tech, and too much power.”
“We need a distraction,” Angela suggested. “We can’t gain an advantage over
them,\ because they can just stay on us indefinitely. We need something that
they can chase just long enough for us to get out of range of their
equipment.”
Ramses was looking at the viewscreen. They were tumbling around aimlessly,
so trying to look through a viewport, or even a static image, would just
make them nauseated. Instead, the exterior sensors were programmed to
operate in tandem, and generate an artificial stabilized image, which would
be what they would see if they weren’t moving so quickly. “The sun. You get
me to the sun, I’ll get us out of here. They won’t be able to block our
slingdrive array with all that cosmic interference.”
“We can’t move fast enough,” Séarlas reasoned. We’re in a decaying orbit,
but it’s still gonna take us years to get close enough to break free from
their grasp.”
“Hence, the distraction,” Angela said, looking over at Leona. “Maybe make it
look like there’s a giant hammer out there that’s about to smash them to
bits?”
“Or my hubby could make a solid hammer that actually could smash them
to bits,” Olimpia offered.
“I don’t know that I have the strength for solid holograms,” Mateo
countered, “especially not at scale. I’m still trying to recover. It takes a
lot of energy to regather the dark particles, and I can’t turn that off,
even if I didn’t care about it. Which I do, because they may be our only
hope.”
“We don’t wanna kill them,” Leona argued. “Olimpia, maybe you could
replicate us? Confuse them about which space station is real?”
“I could try,” Olimpia volunteered.
Franka shook her head. “It wouldn’t matter. They have anti-holographic
technology. It uses augmented reality to delete any falsified light source.
The image might still be out there, but they won’t see it, because their AI
knows that it’s fake, and shows them what’s behind it. They probably already
have it on. They know that you’re illusionists.”
They continued to discuss options, sometimes talking over one another,
trying to come up with a workaround. Marie thought that maybe she
could teleport over to one of the other ships in the fleet, and impersonate
A.F. to give them false orders. Franka said that the anti-holographics can
be miniaturized into other forms. The crewmembers could be wearing glasses
which broke the illusions for them on an individual level. Mateo then
suggested that Olimpia, instead of creating a remote image, turn the whole
station invisible, but that wouldn’t work either, since they were still
generating waste heat. Séarlas had not thought to install a hot pocket,
since they were 28,000 light years from the stellar neighborhood, and he
didn’t expect anyone to get anywhere near them. A.F. must have had some
great intel to have gotten close enough for even the longest of long-range
sensors to be meaningful. The Dardieti were a hundred times farther away,
and even the reframe generation ship, Extremus was farther from the stellar
neighborhood at this point, but those were outliers. He found this station
because it was the only artificial structure out here. It reportedly could
have taken them up to forty decades, which was an insane commitment choice.
Either way, now that they had already been found, none of their illusions
could counteract it.
“I can help,” Romana spoke up. She said it very quietly, but that was why
her voice stood out amidst the cacophony of discussion, because until this
moment, she had been completely silent.
“You can?” her father questioned.
“I can use my own holographic specialty. It’s different than yours.” She
looked very anxious about it, perhaps even ashamed?
“I guess I hadn’t thought to ask you about it, or try to foster your
ability,” Mateo realized. He looked over at Ramses. “Actually, I’m not sure
I realized you even had that since you would have gotten your upgrade much
later than us.”
Ramses shrugged. “I gave her what I gave everyone else. She’s part of the
family.”
Franka winced.
“What can you do, dear, and when did you have time to practice?” Leona
asked.
Before she could stop herself, Romana’s gaze flickered over to Olimpia. That
was enough.
“Pia?” Mateo asked simply.
“I wanted her to think of me as another mother. I wanted her to know that
she could trust me with her secrets. She can.” Olimpia took a deliberate
step towards Romana. “You can.”
“We’re not mad,” Leona promised. “Romy, what are you so afraid of?”
“My illusions, they’re...tiny. I don’t generate images that anyone in the
room can see. I project them directly onto people’s eyes.”
“We’ve watched movies together in secret,” Olimpia admitted. “You all were
sitting right there in the room with us, and you had no idea.”
Romana sighed, relieved to be unburdened of yet another thing that she had
been keeping from the group, but not yet clear on the consequences. “You’ve
all seen my personalized illusions. I would place a knick-knack on a table
that wasn’t really there, or move the edge of the doorframe over a few
centimeters. I was testing my own limits.”
Marie massaged her shoulder. “I remember that doorframe.”
“Sorry.”
“It’s all right,” Marie said with a sincere smile.
“I can bypass any normal anti-illusory tech and make them see what I want,”
Romana went on, shaking her head, “including bad things...scary things. I
can’t get in their heads, but I can freak them out, and certainly distract
them. I could show them only darkness, and make them think they’ve gone
blind. Unless they’re using cybernetic eyes, or something, it shouldn’t be a
problem.”
“I don’t want to be negative,” Mateo began, “but there are only six of us.
There could be hundreds of crewmembers out there. That’s a tall order. I
don’t know how much practice could prepare you for that.”
“She wouldn’t need to do all of them,” Franka decided, “just enough to cause
some chaos. Ramses needs the sun. If we can regain control of the base
teleporter for only a couple of seconds, that would be enough to get us
there. It might even be enough to break us free permanently, and we won’t
need to abandon ship. Our quintessence drive needs time to spool up after a
power disruption like this, but is otherwise just as capable of traversing
the universe as yours or the Vellani Ambassador’s.”
“I can’t do it blindly,” Romana said apologetically. “I need to know who and
where, so I would need to get on the ships.”
“If I shut off the teleportation suppression field to let you jump out
there, it will allow anyone over there to jump here,” Séarlas explained.
“All or nothin’.”
“It’s a risk we’ll have to take,” Leona determined. “Olimpia, you go with
her. Make you both invisible. The rest of us will hold off any boarders.”
There were boarders, and a lot of them. They were probably trying to
teleport this entire time, waiting for the team to give them an opening, if
only via a brief power fluctuation. Leona fought them off physically, as did
Franka, who probably hadn’t trained with the Crucia Heavy on Flindekeldan,
but had apparently undergone some level of combat training. Mateo used his
solid holograms a little, having been reminded that they were a thing. He
really was pretty weak, though, and this was draining him further. If he
didn’t use it sparingly, he would collapse and pass out, which would do them
no good. Angela and Marie held their own too, but mostly relied on the
protection of their EmergentSuits, rather than offensive blows. There was
not really anywhere to hide as this station wasn’t all that large. The twins
hadn’t built it with the thought of housing any more people than were living
here now. They just kept holding them off while they waited for Romana and
Olimpia to do their things.
Romana was making her tiny retinal illusions, and besides protecting them
both with invisibility, Olimpia was trying to figure out how to sabotage the
ships themselves. She didn’t have the technical know-how to do that, though,
so Séarlas volunteered to jump over there to help. Unavoidably, when Angela
took him over, it created a second teleportation window for the bad guys,
which caused an influx in attackers that also needed to be fought off. A.F.
was still nowhere to be seen, no doubt cowering in his luxurious stateroom.
Before too long, the fleet’s hold on the station’s systems was gone, and
they were free to straighten back out, and start to move away.
They had to scream through the ruckus. “They’re integrated!” Séarlas
shouted through Angela’s comms. “The fleet’s quintessence drives! They’re all connected, so they can jump
to the same place together, even if navigation goes wonky!”
“How does that help us?” Mateo asked. He was just using his bare fists now,
punching faceless stormtroopers left and right. They had their armor too,
but it wasn’t nearly as strong, probably because their commander didn’t
really care about them. “Just get back here! Franka says your quintessence
drive is spooled up!”
“I can rig them to blow up! We can be rid of this nuisance once and for
all, the both of us!” Séarlas clarified. “We’ll be able to stay here if we want, or take the time to plot a course!
This is a future-proofing act!”
“No killing!” Leona insisted.
“You’re not really my mother!”
“It’s more complicated than that, and you know it. Besides, it wouldn’t
matter! You could be a stranger, and I would still urge you not to kill!”
“You’ve done enough, Olimpia and Romana. Go back to our station where it’s
safe,” Séarlas suggested strongly.
“I won’t let you do this!” Leona contended.
“Now that I’m over here, I can deactivate their teleporters en masse! You
won’t have to worry about any more coming over when the girls go back, but
you’ll still need to deal with the ones who are already there! I suggest
you float them! Wake Miracle up from stasis. She doesn’t mind the dirty
work!”
“No killing!” Leona repeated.
“Good on ya,” Séarlas joked. “I wish you could have taught me your values!”
A moment passed. Angela, Olimpia, and Romana reappeared on the station.
Having lost his means of interfacing with their comms network, Séarlas got
on the normal ship-to-ship radio, which meant that everyone could now hear
what he was saying. “I’m sorry you didn’t raise us! I’m sorry we couldn’t be a family! I’m
sorry I didn’t find a way to make it happen!”
“Don’t do—” Mateo started to yell back.
“Wait!” Franka interrupted. She pressed a console button, then pointed at
him.
“Don’t do this!” Mateo implored his once-son. “All we needed was to break
free, and we’ve done that now! We’re miles and miles away! You don’t have to
massacre everyone, and get yourself killed in the process!”
“I don’t have to, but I should!”
A.F. suddenly appeared before the team. “Don’t kill me! Don’t kill me!”
They didn’t have time to respond or react. Despite having managed to fly a
significant distance from the fleet, they could see the ships explode into
technicolors, mostly all at once, but not quite. And they could feel the
blast wave as it rippled into the station, and dispatched the team to
somewhere else in the universe.