Drifter's Folly (Peacekeepers of Sol Book 4) Read online




  Drifter’s Folly

  Peacekeepers of Sol Book 4

  Glynn Stewart

  Drifter’s Folly © 2021 Glynn Stewart

  Illustration © 2021 Sam Leung

  This is a work of fiction. All the characters and events portrayed in this book are fictional, and any resemblance to any persons living or dead is purely coincidental.

  Faolan's Pen Publishing logo is a trademark of Faolan's Pen Publishing Inc.

  Contents

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  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  Chapter 29

  Chapter 30

  Chapter 31

  Chapter 32

  Chapter 33

  Chapter 34

  Chapter 35

  Chapter 36

  Chapter 37

  Chapter 38

  Chapter 39

  Chapter 40

  Chapter 41

  Chapter 42

  Chapter 43

  Chapter 44

  Chapter 45

  Chapter 46

  Chapter 47

  Chapter 48

  Chapter 49

  Chapter 50

  Chapter 51

  Chapter 52

  Chapter 53

  Chapter 54

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  Preview: Conviction by Glynn Stewart

  Chapter 1

  Conviction by Glynn Stewart

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  Chapter One

  Ten years of peacetime military service. Seventeen long years of bloody interstellar conflict. Three years of the chaotic mess that was “peacekeeping” after the fall of a galactic empire.

  After all of that, Commodore Henry Wong of the United Planets had been reasonably sure he’d seen just about everything the galaxy could show him. That, of course, meant it was time for the universe to show him how wrong he was.

  “Please tell me we have the cycle of that thing locked in,” the tall Chinese-American officer asked his staff as he watched a pulsar rotate on the main screen. Paladin’s builders had chosen to keep holograms off the main working spaces of the warship as a stability concern.

  “We will have more than enough warning to adjust our course if it starts swinging toward us,” Georgina Eowyn told him with a soft chuckle. The sturdily built blonde officer ran his Operations department, which made her the senior person on Henry’s abbreviated staff.

  “And what happens if the beam actually hits one of the destroyers?” Henry asked.

  He knew the answer. His three ships were the first Cataphract-class destroyers the United Planets Alliance had ever commissioned, and the unique technology providing their propulsion augmented their defensive gravity shields.

  “If we screw up badly enough that the electromagnetic radiation beam of a pulsar is pointed at one of our ships, that ship will be vaporized instantly,” Eowyn confirmed. “But that seems unlikely. We are following a trail, after all.”

  Henry nodded his acknowledgement and returned his focus to the main screen. Over five hundred starships had made their transit through this system at some time in the past, which suggested it was reasonably safe for him to bring three ships through.

  Destroyer Squadron Twenty-Seven was badly understrength, with only three of the new Cataphracts instead of the six ships Henry should have, but older ships couldn’t keep up.

  “Anything on the scanners showing where the Convoy was?” he asked.

  “Not yet, but we’re only just getting the Very Large Array up,” Eowyn told him. “Less than ten percent of the drones are in position.”

  The Very Large Array was a standard tool for expanding their sensor view. Three destroyers could only see so much, but by deploying another dozen or so drones per ship, they could create a massive virtual telescope that would dramatically augment their vision.

  Once it was all set up, Henry Wong and his people would be able to track where the Blue Stripe Green Stripe Orange Stripe Drifter Convoy had gone—and hopefully get one step closer to bringing to justice the people who’d betrayed a peace conference.

  Paladin, Cataphract and Maharatha were something new in the galaxy, so far as Henry knew. The United Planets Alliance had developed gravity shields before they’d ever met the Kenmiri Empire that had dominated their arm of the Milky Way, but even their ships had been propelled by the age-old solution of firing high-energy particles out one end.

  Gravitic technology allowed the UPA, the Kenmiri, and the various races that had rebelled against the Kenmiri to accelerate at rates that should have liquefied their crews, but the fundamental Newtonian nature of propulsion had been fixed.

  Until now. Now Henry’s three ships slipped through the outer void of the pulsar system designated Ra-206 without so much as a flare of exhaust. Carefully controlled and manipulated gravity wells allowed the destroyers to “fall” toward their destination at up to three kilometers per second squared.

  The gravitational maneuvering system rendered Henry’s command the most maneuverable warships in space, which gave him some confidence as he watched the pulsar rotate again, its unimaginably powerful beams of radiation slicing through space like immense blades.

  “We’ve got the trail on scanners,” Eowyn reported. “It took us longer than I’d like, but the background radiation here is wonky.”

  “Is that a technical term, Commander?” Henry asked drily.

  “Very much so, Commodore,” she confirmed. “Trail is on screen.”

  He nodded and turned to the tactical display. The Drifter Convoy they were chasing consisted of hundreds of starships carrying millions of people, a nomadic interstellar nation with a powerful self-defense fleet and mobile industrial nodes.

  It was hard to conceal the passing of a flotilla of that scale, but his prey had done a good job. It was taking longer to chase them down than he’d hoped, and he was running up against hard deadlines from the laws of physics.

  The particulate trail of a fusion drive was only detectable for so long, after all.

  But it hadn’t dissipated yet. A red line, marked with the three letters BGO, crossed the tactical display.

  “I assume we don’t know where they skipped out yet,” he said. Part of the problem with following BGO was that it was impossible to estimate where someone would come out of a skip line. They knew which star system a skip line directed toward, but that still left a zone roughly a light-day long and a light-hour across in which their target could have emerged.

  “Not yet,” Eowyn confirmed. “We’ll need to follow the trail for a bit.”

  “As expected.” Henry studied the display for a moment more, then tapped a sequence of commands on the arm of his seat. His other staff officer, Commander Chan Rong, was supposed to handle his coms.

  T
hey were off-duty at the moment, however, and the tiny flag bridge squeezed into a spare corner of the small warship didn’t have much space for excess personnel. Henry’s entire staff was only eleven people—he was perfectly capable of handling his own in-squadron coms.

  “Captains,” he addressed the three officers his commands connected him to. “I presume you all have been updated on what we’re seeing of the Convoy’s trail?”

  “Yes, ser,” his Lieutenant Colonels chorused. All three of them were too young, in the considered opinion of Henry’s five decades, but that was life.

  He knew Okafor Ihejirika, Paladin’s CO, of old. The big Black African officer had served as Tactical officer on Henry’s last command, the battlecruiser Raven.

  Captain Aoife Palmer—Captain was a title instead of a rank in the UPSF, given to the commander of a starship along with the white collar on each of the three officers’ uniform turtleneck—was a native of Sandoval in the Procyon System. A tall and sparsely built redheaded woman, she seemed competent enough so far.

  Captain Nina Teunissen was a native of the Eridani colonies founded by the Russian Novaya Imperiya. Squat and dark-haired with hawk-like features, she commanded Maharatha with a strict regimen Henry wasn’t sure he agreed with—but it seemed to work for her crew.

  He’d only been in command of DesRon Twenty-Seven for a month. Even his destroyer captains were unknowns to him still. There was a lot of work before them to get the ships up to where he wanted them, even without the brand-new ships and brand-new engines.

  “We’ll set our course to follow the Convoy’s with an offset of sixty thousand kilometers to preserve the trail,” Henry ordered. “We’re scanning for the end of the line, people. You know the drill.”

  They’d been in deep space following BGO for two weeks now. They knew where the Convoy had been when the deal had been negotiated for them to provide support for the peace negotiations with the Kozun.

  It wasn’t exactly a surprise that the Convoy had made a run for it after their betrayal of those negotiations had been revealed. Henry’s command couldn’t actually fight the Convoy—three of their Guardian capital ships had been enough to wreck his battlecruiser, after all—but once he found them, there were other forces in play to deal with the Drifters.

  “One thing to note, ser,” Palmer said. “I’m comparing our position to the maps that the Kozun gave us. They didn’t include this pulsar as a skip point, but if we’re where I think we are, we’re almost in Eerdish space.”

  “I know,” Henry agreed. The Kozun Hierarchy had been allies once, members of the great Vesheron rebel alliance that had overthrown the Kenmiri Empire. Then they’d been enemies, warlords trying to force other worlds into compliance with starvation and violence.

  Now the Drifters’ betrayal made the Kozun allies again—and the Kozun were at war with an alliance of the Eerdish and the Enteni homeworlds.

  “What do we do if they fled into Eerdish space?” Palmer asked.

  “We break off the pursuit,” Henry told her bluntly. “The Eerdish and the Enteni are potential allies, even if they’re fighting the Kozun right now. In the long term, we’re more likely to get along with them than with the Hierarchy.

  “They didn’t start conquering other planets, after all.”

  The Kenmiri had structured their empire in complex systems of specialized worlds that limited the possibility of resistance, but the racial homeworlds had been allowed to continue in semi-autonomy.

  When the Kenmiri had withdrawn, those worlds with their more-balanced economies had emerged as central powers among the specialized worlds that could either feed themselves or produce modern technology.

  The Kozun had conquered another homeworld and several of the clusters of farming and industrial worlds before they’d overstretched. They’d fought the UPA over one of those clusters, and then they’d sued for peace.

  “So, we lose the trail if they went into neutral space?” Ihejirika asked.

  “Exactly,” Henry confirmed. “My orders are clear: we will not risk conflict with the Kozun’s enemies. Ambassador Todorovich, at my last communication, was attempting to convince the Kozun to accept our mediation in that conflict, but so long as we are allies with the Kozun, we are to avoid Eerdish or Enteni space.”

  “They may have anticipated that, ser,” Palmer suggested.

  “I suspect the Drifters have,” Henry admitted. “In which case the next step of our pursuit becomes political.”

  In which case it became his girlfriend’s problem—because almost five years after his divorce from his husband, Henry Wong was no longer single. And his girlfriend was Ambassador Sylvia Todorovich, the woman responsible for ending the war between the La-Tar Cluster and the Kozun Hierarchy.

  Chapter Two

  “Well, good news is that I think we’ve found the skip line and it doesn’t head into Eerdish space,” Eowyn declared at a virtual conference later that day.

  With all of the staff and captains linked in by their internal networks, the conference room was entirely virtual. Henry himself was sitting in his office with a cup of coffee in front of him, but the image of the grandiose fake conference room filled his vision.

  “Why does that not make me feel better?” Palmer asked.

  “Because nobody sane uses a pulsar as a skip point,” the Operations officer told Cataphract’s Captain. “In theory, the mass is large enough that it can shave days off a trip, but in practice, it ends up being extremely variable.”

  Henry waved Palmer to silence before the Lieutenant Colonel could reply to that.

  “Basically, if you do it right, you can skip almost half again as far using a pulsar as an anchor point than a red giant,” he told his subordinate. “But if you get it wrong, your choices are fall short or push past the twenty-four-hour line.”

  The Icosaspace Traversal System—or “skip drive”—didn’t create a particularly significant twenty-dimensional vector on its own. Bouncing along the line of gravity between two stars, however, it could cross light-years in hours.

  The bigger the stars at either end of the skip line, the farther you traveled. But it was an unpleasant experience, and every known species in the galaxy limited their ships to twenty-four hours in skip.

  “The BGO Convoy appear to have skipped to a system the Kozun have labeled as Nohtoin,” Eowyn continued. “That’s almost forty light-years away, a frankly insane skip. It took them twenty-three hours and put them on the far side of Eerdish space.”

  “So, when they entered the space of the Eerdish-Enteni Alliance, they were coming from the opposite direction of the war,” Ihejirika rumbled. “Makes sense.”

  “We’re going to duplicate the skip,” Henry said calmly, then waited for the furor to die down.

  Once his officers were quiet again, he smiled at them.

  “We can hit the skip line at a higher three-dimensional velocity than the Convoy could,” he noted. “The gravity shields protect us from some of the dangers involved in pushing the skip—and we have the data from the Drifters’ skip to refine our own calculations.

  “It’s not perfectly safe, no, but the Drifters took the entire Convoy through it,” he pointed out. “They don’t risk their civilian ships, people. They thought it was safe enough, so I feel it’s safe enough for us to follow.”

  He gestured to Eowyn.

  “Is there anything else about Nohtoin we need to consider before we get moving?” he asked. He knew most of what the woman was briefing everyone on, but there was still a degree of showmanship to all of this.

  “Nohtoin is an uninhabited system, but it was a Kenmiri paramilitary logistics facility before the Fall,” Eowyn told them. “The UPSF never visited the system, but we have reports from other Vesheron actions in the system.

  “So far as we know, it was completely abandoned when the Kenmiri withdrew, and what data we have managed to acquire on the region suggests the facility has been destroyed—either by the Kenmiri in their withdrawal or by salvagers since
.”

  “Nonetheless, the debris may well provide supplies and hiding places for the Drifters,” Henry warned his team. “While all evidence suggests that the Drifters will have moved on from Nohtoin as rapidly as they have left every other system we’ve followed them into, Nohtoin represents an opportunity for them to leave scouts or listening stations we will have difficulty detecting.

  “We keep our eyes open, people. The Drifters suspect they’re being chased, but I’d rather they not learn that with certainty—and I would be absolutely delighted, Captains, to have Drifter prisoners to interrogate.”

  While the UPA and their allies were reasonably sure they knew what the Blue Stripe Green Stripe Orange Stripe Convoy’s leadership had been thinking, he’d still love to ask them.

  “We will proceed to the Nohtoin skip line at standard accel,” Henry ordered. “We will hold position until our Navigation departments are as certain as they can be of their calculations, then we will make the skip.”

  He smiled thinly.

  “Remember, everyone. The Drifters likely went directly from Nohtoin to Eerdish space. We’re almost certainly coming back this way.”

 

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