Seas of Venus

Seas of Venus by David Drake Read Free Book Online Page B

Book: Seas of Venus by David Drake Read Free Book Online
Authors: David Drake
Tags: Science-Fiction
channels through which L7521 would pass. Beside him, Dan dictated into a pocket workstation.
    A command overlay pulsed slowly in the upper right quadrant of the gunsight hologram, then disappeared.
    Johnnie blinked. He reached for the keyboard—and remembered he was in a gun tub, not at a control console. He slapped down his visor, manually keyed his helmet's access channel, and said to the artificial intelligence, "Review past minute's visuals."
    The helmet went eep and projected what Johnnie had seen a minute before into his visor. The visor image formed a ghost over the nearly identical view currently in the gunsight, but this time Johnnie was ready for the warning pulse.
    Dan put the pocket unit away and watched intently as his nephew worked.
    "Sir," Johnnie said, "we've been painted by radar."
    As he spoke, the pulsed overlay reappeared in the gunsight, echoing the data sent to the main unit in the cockpit.
    Dan touched his helmet keypad and said, "Twin mount to bridge. We're under radar observation. Over."
    "Bridge to twin mount," replied Ensign Samuels in a wary voice. "We're approaching the Braids. You're—"
    Samuels remembered who was on the other end of the link. "You may be seeing reflections scattered from islets. Over."
    "Negative!" Johnnie hissed, bending close to his uncle to avoid using the intercom. "That's—"
    "Bridge, that's a negative," Dan said sharply. "That's track—"
    "—track-while-scan!" Johnnie concluded, identifying the pattern of high-power and low-power pulses which swept the torpedoboat.
    "—while-scan," Dan continued. "Who the hell do you have on your EW board? Over."
    Details sharpened in the view of the islands toward which L7521 sped. Computer enhancement at long range smoothed objects into a calculated sameness. As the need for enhancement lessened, the foliage appeared in its spiky, curling multiplicity.
    There were mangroves and a breeze riffling reed tops into amber motion; but there was no sign of man.
    "Shit!" said Ensign Samuels.
    Then, in a controlled voice, the torpedoboat's commander continued, "Bridge to twin mount. Sir, the electronic warfare console was disconnected. The console is operating again now. You—"
    Operating now that it's too late, Johnnie thought.
    "—were right, of course. Over."
    "Samuels," Dan said, "ask Captain Haynes to lock into Intercom 3, please. Soonest !"
    The click of another station joining Johnnie and his uncle cut off the first syllable of Captain Haynes' voice saying, "—mander, is this some joke of yours?"
    Dan rose to his feet and looked toward the cockpit. Haynes was standing also; their eyes met. Johnnie glanced from one man to the other—and turned back to the holographic display.
    "No joke, Captain," Dan said. "If you haven't decided to lay on an escort for us—"
    " . . . f course not!" Haynes' protest was stepped on by the ongoing transmission.
    "Then we have to assume that somebody's stationed here to make sure that you and I don't get to Blackhorse Base," Dan said. "Tell Bradley to turn ten degrees to port so we're headed toward Channel 17 instead of 19. That should get us more sensor data."
    Johnnie ran a chart of the Braids on his visor. If he flexed his helmet to the tit on the gun mount, he could convert the sight into an omni-function display—
    But right at the moment, it looked as though having the gunsight working was more important.
    "I can't believe either the Warcocks or Flotilla Blanche would act so dishonorably!" Haynes said.
    L7521's front foil nosed into the turn. The port stern outrigger telescoped enough to keep the deck more or less perpendicular to the "down" of centrifugal force; the torpedoboat heeled like a motorcycle.
    The Braids were a thousand square miles of weathered pillow lava over which the sea had risen at the end of the terraforming process. The result was thousands of islands, ranging in size from specks to narrow blotches that straggled along for several miles at low water.
    None of the land

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