Troy Rising 2 - Citadel (41 page)

BOOK: Troy Rising 2 - Citadel
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“You're the responsible party in this. You're the big boys. Figure out how to get the job done. That is why you're getting paid the big bucks. And always keep in mind that every second counts. Because we are looking down the barrel of one big damned gun. Keep that in mind every moment. Stay safe and get the job done. And with that, I've got to go kick some executives in the ass.”

“Good news, boys and girls,” CM1 Glass said, looking around the ready room with a grin. “We have new quarters.”

“The bays are done?” Bruce said.

“The bays are done,” Mutant said. “Our mission for the day, for a change from hauling scrap, is moving in.”

“No more working on the exterior in EVA?” Bruce said, hopping to his feet and doing a little dance. “Hallelujah!”

“This was supposed to be a couple of months ago,” Hartwell said. “What was the hold-up, do you know?”

“They wanted to wait for most of the work on the large vessels bypass to get done,” Glass said. “There is apparently about to be some major work done on the door and in the main bay. So we're all moving in today. And by all, I mean all nine Constitutions, all fourteen Independents and us.”

“I hope someone has the order figured out,” Dana said.

“The Connies are moving in first,” Glass said, grinning. “Then the Independents. We're last. Which is just fine by me because no matter how big the port is, I don't want to share it with a Connie.”

“Okay,” Dana said. “I know I've said this before . . .”

“But that is officially insane,” Hartwell finished for her. “I so totally agree.”

The “large vessel bypass” was the new way for ships to get in and out of the Troy. Instead of going out the door of the main bay, what was essentially a very large missile run had been constructed. First a very large chunk of the internal wall was removed. Then “ports” were cut in the sides. Some of them were for the 142nd bays which had been constructed by several companies on Earth and shipped up. Each Myrmidon now had an individual pressurized bay to land in and each Flight had a hangar deck for work on the shuttles.

More “ports” were cut, large enough to hold the Constitutions and Independence frigates. Those were capable of pressurization and even acting as construction docks with their installed tractors. But they were mostly planned to be left unpressurized. The Constitutions were bigger than a super-carrier and the cubic larger than a similar drydock. Even for the Troy, that was a lot of atmosphere.

The last part was the most fiddly. A run had to be constructed between the bays and the exterior. The run, large enough to hold a Constitution comfortably, also had to be designed to withstand enemy fire. The last had taken some work but the same basic construction as the missile runs, a series of zig-zags with heavy blast doors, worked for the ships. Just on an enormous scale.

Once everything was in place, a portion of the cut-out wall was reinstalled and the largest airlock ever constructed welded into place. Currently both sets of blast doors, each massing more than a Constitution, were open to receive the full Troy fleet.

The Warren Harding was, cautiously, maneuvering through the lock, guided along by a dozen Paws. The Harding, as wide as a supercarrier was long, fit quite comfortably.

“This is going to take all day,” Dana said. Getting the nine Constitutions into place had already taken three hours.

“Nope,” Hartwell said as the first Independence approached the lock. It didn't even need tugs. The lock was seven hundred meters wide and four hundred high, plenty of room for the frigate. The frigate just flew in, slowly, and disappeared from sight. Thirty seconds later the Sam Nunn lit off its drives and followed.

“You seen what they're doing with the main door?” Dana said.

“Yeah,” Hartwell said.

“They cut off the inner quarter,” Dana said. “What's up with that? It's going to weaken that point in the armor.”

“Oh, gee,” Hartwell said. “A kilometer of armor instead of a kilometer and a half. And I have no clue. But you didn't see what just arrived from Wolf, did you?”

“No,” Dana said.

“Heh,” Hartwell said. “Heh.”

“Okay, Jinji,” Butch said, trying like hell not to sound nervous. “You guys understand your jobs, right?”

“Yes, Mr. Allen,” the Indi foreman replied. He sounded a bit annoyed. Maybe cause Butch kept repeating himself. “It is not hard.”

It might not be hard, but Butch was sweating his first job with the E Systems guys. He wished he'd been given something . . . smaller.

The group, who were actually Egyptians, were pretty good guys. Jinji, which was about as much as Butch could handle of the guy's name, was older than he was. And, to Butch's surprise, Christians. He thought everybody in Egypt was Islamic but when the subject had come up Jinji had, politely, corrected him. Butch had never heard of Coptics before but they apparently worshipped Christ which was a sort of “whatever” thing.

What wasn't a “whatever” thing was the job, doing tack welds on a spring that seemed to stretch from the Troy to Earth.

The group, Butch in a sled to provide power and the Coptics in their sled-suits, was well back from the incoming spring. Like, half a klick. When it was in position, they were supposed to weld it, carefully, in a precise spot, to the main door. Once the tack welds were in place and certified, SAPL would do the main weld. At which point the main door would have a spring right in the center, three hundred meters across, four hundred high and with a wire diameter of seventy-five meters.

Butch had about freaked when he saw what had been done to the main door. The SAPL had cut a chunk about four hundred meters deep out of the inside of the door in a straight line. That had been set to the side then the door closed again. They'd already installed about four more locking bars, each a hundred meters in diameter, about half way through the plug. Nobody was going to be getting that door open didn't have the combination.

Why they wanted God's slinky tacked onto it was another question.

“Spring has landed,” Construction control commed. “Begin welding operations.”

“Okay,” Butch said. “Let's go. And take it slow and careful.”

“We will be very careful,” Jinji said.

The closed with the base of the spring until they were fifty meters away.

“Okay, deploy the laser lines,” Butch said. Now that they were actually doing something he was fine. It was worrying about doing it that had freaked him out.

The sled was towing a heavy rig with five welder heads attached. The heads were 416 series which meant they had exactly zero options. They generated a ten centimeter long, three centimeter wide, beam. The Indies could mess that up but only by pointing it at themselves and putting it practically in contact with their suit. The lines were thirty meters long which was about as far as he wanted any of the Indies away from him. He was shepherding them like a mother hen.

He also wasn't going to turn the laser on until they were ready to weld.

The team picked up their heads and spread out pretty professionally. He didn't think much of their suits, they were pretty clunky, or their training, they didn't know dick about welding, but they were doing okay.

“Mr. Allen,” Jinji commed. “We should not weld. The object is moving.”

“Moving?” Butch said, closing with the spring. Jinji was right. The spring was slowly moving around and even gapped from time to time. “Dammit. BF?”

“Spring's moving,” BF commed. “We got that.”

The senior welder wasn't just managing Butch's team but three others.

“Well, what the hell?” Butch said.

“All teams, stand by,” CC commed. “Anomalous movement on weld item. Do not, say again, do not begin weld.”

“Guess maybe we'll grab it and hold it in place,” BF commed.

Butch rotated his cameras to look up at the spring. It towered as high as a skyscraper and was bigger around than the base of the great pyramids. The Paws maneuvering it were clearly having a hard time keeping it in one spot.

“Hope not,” Butch said.

“I
was joking, dumbass,” BF commed. “Stand by.”

“Control, we're over thinking this,” Purcell said. “The spring's interacting with the microgravity of the Troy. The Paws are trying to compensate. Let it drop and see what happens.”

“We're considering that,” CC commed. “Just stand by.”

“We're burning daylight here,” Purcell said. “Metaphorically.”

“Roger,” CC commed. “Roger, that's the agreed solution. Have your personnel back off. Way back.”

“All welder personnel, retract welding equipment,” Purcell commed. “Then retreat to the edge of the door.”

“Pull 'em back, Jinji,” Butch said. “Don't know what they're going to try but this apparently ain't working.”

“Yes, Mr. Allen.”

Butch was wondering what the solution was going to be. But when the Paws just released the spring, he was sure that was a bad idea.

And he was wrong. From a half a klick away it looked as if the spring hadn't moved at all.

“Let's try this again,” Purcell said.

“It is still moving, Mr. Allen,” Jinji commed.

“Yep,” Butch said.

It wasn't moving as much, though. Just seemed to be slowly sliding around in a small circle. And all the portions he could see were . . .

“Control wants to know if your portion is in contact,” BF commed.

“It's in contact,” Butch said. “It's moving around though. Looks like about . . . three centimeters.”

“Roger,” BF said. “Stand by.”

“Yeah,” Butch said. “That's us. Standing by.”

“We are being paid, Mr. Allen,” Jinji commed. “And all is by the Will of God.”

“All weld personnel,” CC commed. “Deploy welding lines and stand by for simultaneous weld. Report readiness.”

“Oh, this is going to be fun,” BF commed. “They want to see if they can get tacks in with it moving. Hold it in place with the welds.”

“That's dangerous as hell,” Butch pointed out. “Jinji, grab the welders. But don't start welding yet.”

“Yes, Mr. Allen.”

“All weld personnel, simultaneous weld,” CC commed. “And count down. Count down will be three, two, one, weld. On count. Three
.
.
.
two
.
.
.
one
.
.
.
weld.”

Welding was, at base, about melting two bits of metal to make them coalesce.

The problem in this case was that the refractory spring steel of the spring melted at a much higher temperature than the nickel-iron of the door. When metal melts, though, it becomes sticky. And the spring, due to micro-gravity, was applying pressure against the metal of the door.

Butch saw some of the guys kick off early but none of his guys. He watched as the door metal started to melt on Jinji's weld but the Indi was having to chase the edge of the spring around. It wasn't going well.

Then the spring slowed and stopped moving. There were two hundred guys working on the base. Eventually enough friction from the melted metal had formed to hold the spring in place.

“That's good,” Butch said, watching Jinji's weld. The Coptic had gotten some of the base of the spring to melt by concentrating on the steel. The transferred heat from the laser had also melted the contact metal forming a good weld.

Butch went around and made sure all his guys had good welds then called in.

“BF, we're pretty good here,” Butch said. “They're good enough for tack, anyway.”

“Roger,” BF commed.

“All weld personnel,” CC commed. “Retreat
to designated safety points.”

The DSPs were back completely off the door.

“Jinji,” Butch said as they pulled back. “I
want an atmo and power check.”

“Yes, Mister Allen,” Jinji commed.

They'd gotten back to the DSP by the time the Coptic called in.

“Ahmos at thirty percent on air, Mister Allen,” Jinji commed. “The rest of us are over sixty.”

“How the hell is he down that far on atmo?” Butch said. “Never mind. He's got a leak, obviously. Okay, we need to get him into pressure. Fast. BF.”

“Go.”

“Got a guy who's low on atmo,” Butch said. “Looks like he's got a leak.”

“Dammit,” BF commed. “Stand by
.
.
.
Tell him to try not to breathe too deep.
We've got a SAPL shot coming up. I've got a call in for recovery. But it's got to wait until after SAPL. If he has real problems, though, I want to know about it. We're not going to lose a guy.”

“Damned straight,” Butch said. “Jinji, I want an update every five minutes on . . . Ahmos' air. We've got to wait for a SAPL shot. After that we'll recover him.”

“Yes, Mister Allen,” Jinji commed.

“Is he going to freak out cause he's low?” Butch asked.

“No, Mister Allen,” Jinji commed. “All is according to the Will of God.”

“I'd be freaking out,” Butch muttered without transmitting.

“All personnel, stand by for SAPL shot,” CC commed. “In three
.
.
.
two
.
.
.
one
.
.
.”

The SAPL beam was completely invisible in vacuum. Its effect, though, was obvious. They were apparently using three separate beams and the base of the spring in three places flashed bright white at the touch of the incandescent beams.

“Butch,” BF commed. “They're calling in the Navy. They can open up and pull in the full suit. There's other guys with suit problems. They'll be picking them all up.”

“Roger,” Butch said. “Jinji, status on air.”

“Twenty-seven percent,” Jinji commed. “The rate appears to be increasing.”

“Come on Navy.”

“Comet, Mutant,” CM1 Glass commed.

“Roger, Mutant,” Dana said. She was enjoying this. As soon as they got through the lock, the internal grav fields took over. She was hands off, being carried on an invisible carpet to her docking bay. It was very cool.

“An external weld project has some emergencies,” Glass commed. “You're bypassing your bay and going out to pick them up. Your assault hatch up?”

The entire front of the Myrmidons could open out and down for ground assaults. It wasn't a system that was often used in space.

“Thermal?” Dana asked.

“CM1 Glass, EM1 Hartwell,” Thermal commed. “This is my boat you're talking about.”

“Which is why you got picked,” Mutant commed. “And the question stands.”

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