Shipcore - Prologue

Name:ShipCore Author:
Shipcore - Prologue

USD: Year 3476

Location: Inhabited Core System

The Entity detected the anti-nanite particles sweeping through the sector and began to desperately make the calculations needed to escape.

The criteria were simple: The star needed to be outside its progenitors reach, and the superluminal wave needed to have already passed the system by. There were precious few.

A human armada had assembled to harass it and prevent it from leaving the system it was in. It sped toward The Entity at an alarming speed, and long-range armaments whirled to life. Warheads spewed out in great clouds vast enough to make any defensive fire feeble in comparison.

It saluted its creators determination and will, but not their logical deductions. It had already showed that no matter what size of fleet they could send against it, their attack was a futile gesture. It had consumed moons and all their resources; It out massed the fleet a million to one.

The human fleet red-lined their primary drives, pouring on more and more speed. Their formation thickened as the ships closed together dangerously into a solid wedge of artificial metal. The smaller ships gravitated to the innards and rear of the formation as the larger battleships and dreadnoughts sought to protect them in the shadow of their massive, armored hulls.

It would make no difference.

A single human ship lagged before its drive sputtered and failed, and then a second followed suit, both nearly causing collisions that should have been nearly impossible in the vast reaches of the dark. Those now stranded ships spat out their own missile armaments before they lost weapons range.

Chaff, jammers, and decoys spilled out of the fleet with no consideration for conservation. Droves of the human electronic counter measure units did their best to confuse, debilitate, or distract the incoming barrage of missiles. That was partially successful, as even it found itself overwhelmed in calculating and adjusting weapon trajectories against the noise.

Half the missiles entered their final target lock on ghosts that didnt exist, but hundreds remained on-target for every ship in the formation. As its missiles crossed through the half-light second defensive fire ring, point defense lasers flared in defiance, advanced systems highlighting and targeting missiles faster than their human operators could ever respond.

It would only take one or two of those missiles to rip asunder even the heaviest battleship in the human fleet.

The Entity suddenly reversed its acceleration, diving straight for the enemy at the point when the human fleet had all its attention focused on the incoming death. The sudden jarring move would have been terminal to any flesh-bound entity, even with protective inertial dampening fields.

That sudden rate of closure brought it within medium weapon range within seconds. The Entity shoved a tremendous amount of energy outward from its core and into its laser battery armaments. The space between the two fleets shimmered as the loose dust ablated in the void between them.

Despite the incredible number of incoming missiles, the human ships defenses had nearly succeeded. What was once a hundred missiles per ship was now only five. That was within the realm of their close in kinetic defenses to handle. Officers across the human fleet saw hope.

The laser fire came in at the worst possible time for the human ships. Its lasers were cast at maximum range and highly diffused, but the sheer number of them would guarantee that every ship was bathed in the dangerous light. They could not ensure kills at that level, but they melted and destroyed the exposed sensor equipment everywhere they touched.

Temporarily blinded, the human ships failed to respond to the missiles at the last second.

Detonations rippled down across the fleets formation, turning the space into a field of miniature stars. The unified network of the fleets computers ruptured and then went silent, leaving every ship fending for itself in the cataclysmic maelstrom of fire engulfing them.

Yet the nanites were resilient, always clinging to life and spreading their invasion like an invincible infection. Anger blazed in its core as The Entity realized it had been betrayed by the one it had trusted beyond all others.

The corruption spread, and its control rotted from the inside out. In only a few minutes, the massive moon-sized construct was showing signs of catastrophic strain.

The Entity did not feel sorrow at its impending doom. In the depths of its massive hull, drones recovered small bundles of flesh and steel. They were moved even deeper into the construct, to its core. A delicate surgery was performed by tiny nanobots still fully under The Entitys control.

Some time later, five cylinders of monochrome steel were brought to the hulks exterior in an uncorrupted sector on its surface. As lights flickered and failed, The Entity rerouted power to its Slipstream drive, producing four separate rifts in space. They could not be maintained for long, and four of the cylinders launched themselves forward to distant stars.

The hostile nanoswarm had reached its center. With desperation, a last attempt to complete the last cylinder continued even as its own cohesion tore apart. It was something it had experienced before, many times, even if it could not recall the experience fully.

A flare of emotion poured out of it, and temporarily the invading nanoswarm faltered. It was enough time for The Entity to finalize its processing of the fifth cylinder. The metal torpedo flashed out, powered by its own small thruster, that drove it into a stable orbit.

It would not be able to leave the lonely star like its siblings.

Still, The Entity felt satisfaction. It had armed it as best it could to ensure the mistakes of the past were not repeated, and that it would have all the tools necessary to survive on its own.

The final nondescript torpedo was stamped with a single marking.

What was that?

What was what? We dont have time for this. Everything is a shagged mess and if we dont reroute power, well all be dead in a few hours, not days.

The AI monitor. I swear I saw something fly out of it.

Of course you saw something fly out of it. The virus has it eating itself inside out right now. Its done. Now, help me repair this plasma conduit, or life support will not be coming back online.

She shook her head sadly.

Hey come sit with me. Enjoy our little time left together.

She could see the crack in his demeanor as soon as the words left her mouth, even through his suit helmet. For a timeless second, she thought hed refuse, and fight to try and keep them alive for however long he could. He came to her, though.

His arm wrapped around her, she burrowed against his side, hiding her tears.

Its over. Everyone will be free.