The Interdiction Intercept – Part 2

The amber and vermillion mottled world of Kalamor receded in the rear view monitors of the two slowly intersecting rocket ships. Ahead of them the striped and ringed gas giant Ognom loomed ever larger. Kalamor was the closest of the major moon of Ognom. It was almost liquefied by the constant torture of travailing gravitational tides exerted on it by its sister moons. The ever shifting volcanic landscape was rich in metals wrenched from the moon’s core.  Kalamor was the major source of raw metals, including radioactives, for the entire planetary system.

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Thirty minutes before his planned perigee Brock was startled when the Connalf Minimule’s proximity alarm went off.

He got a Doppler reading off the approaching object. Its relative velocity showed it was slowly closing in. Plotting a preliminarily orbit for it showed that was going to get close, within only a couple of kilometers.  He checked the catalog of minor moons, asteroids and other assorted junk whirling about Ognom, but this object wasn’t listed. He activated a monitor. It was too bright to be a rock. It could be a bit of ice, but he didn’t think so. He wasn’t getting a transponder signal. This could be bad. He increased magnification and zoomed in. Yep. Definitely a rocket. Space was vast. Having two spacecraft within a 1000 km of each other outside of locally controlled planetary space was unusual. That suggested its appearance here was deliberate. Brock tried to think of why someone would want to intercept him but none of the reason he could think of boded well for him.

Then the message came in.

“Attention Connalf Minimule. This is Commander Yojen Krocs of the EFAR Palisor. I have been ordered to perform a search of your ship. I request your cooperation so we can complete the search as quickly and pleasantly as possible. Please stand by to initiate docking procedures.  We await your acknowledgement.”

For a moment Brock was shocked into silence. Those moments never lasted.

“What in the seven hells of eternal torment are you talking about?” he yelled.

Commander Krocs answered calmly. “I am ordered to perform an inspection of your rocket. Prepare for docking.”

“Inpection?” Questioned Brock. “An inspection in mid orbit? Why? When did that become Federation policy?”

Commander Krocks had the Comms Officer transmit the portion of his orders authorizing the inspection while he read them to Brock.

Brock protested. “Ain’t nobody authorized to do nothin’ to me. I won’t allow it. What am I supposed to have done?”

“It is suspected that you are carrying illegal radioactive materials.“ answered the Commander.

Brock snorted. “Ridiculous. Here’s my manifest. You can scan for radioactives from where you are but I not going to allow anyone to board my ship.” Look at it from my point of view Commander. You just appeared from out of nowhere. Your transponder’s turned off claiming you are going to board me. For all I know you’re a bunch of reprobate pirates intending to hijack me.”

“Now who’s being ridiculous.” Said the Commander. “There hasn’t been any space pirates active for over 20 years. This is a Federation Atomic Rocket Cruiser and you know it. I’ve already been scanning your rocket but the readings I’m getting are inconclusive so I need to do a physical inspection your ship.”

Brock decieded to call the commander’s bluff. “What are you going to do? Force your way on board?”

“Per interplanetary law and the Xalamor Act of Interdiction, Yes, If necessary I will use force to search your rocket.”

Brock was lousey at bluffing.

“Whoa there! Hang on a tick. This is a neutral registered ship out of Gramethame. Gramethame’s not a signatory to the Act of Interdiction. Besides, I’m not bloody going to Xalamor. My destination is Lair Duc Lep. If you’re looking for a rocket going to Xalamor, you’re in the wrong orbit.”

“Whether yours is the right ship or the wrong one, my orders are to inspect you and I will.”

Brock watched the Palisor on his screens as it passed ten kilometers away from the Connalf Minimule. The nose of the Palisor yawed as it passed so that it was constantly pointed at his rocket. He could see the gun turrets on the war rocket swiveled as they keep locked on target. In a few minutes it would be directly ahead. Then it would close in to seize the Brock’s rocket and dock to the bow of the Minimule.

Brock decided to try another tack. “Let’s be reasonable Commander. It obvious we’ve got off on the wrong path so let’s start over again. I’m sure we can come to an amicable arrangement. I know I haven’t done anything wrong. How about this. We can dock together at Lair Duc Lep then your crew can do the inspection in comfort while you spot me a drink at the Hive of Mucs and Anilvily Pub. Or if you and your crew are short of legal tender, I sure I can see clear to order a few rounds for you.”

Commander Krocks was getting annoyed. If this character was really smuggling radioactives, he could have at least tried to offer some real money to bribe him and his crew.

“I have noted your objections in the log and they will be reported to my superiors as well as the governments of Gramethame and Lair Duc Lep. The diplomats can work that out.  I’m sorry for the inconvenience but my orders are clear. An inspection will be carried out.”

The Palisor briefly applied a small amount of thrust to match orbit with the Minimule. When the acceleration stopped, the Caelumarines jumped.

Brock noted their change of course. He saw that something was happening. He also saw through his monitors two lines spread out from the approaching ship. At the end of each line were several dots.

“Palisor, I am contacting my rocket’s principles for instructions. Until I get a reply, hold your position and maintain your distance.”

“Acknowledged Connalf Minimule. Let us know when you get a response.” Replied Commander Krocs

But the Palisor didn’t stop. The war rocket continued to approach. The lines spreading out from the Palisor reminded Brock of the grasping pincers of a chelicer coming toward him. Brock had been stung as a child.

Brock zoomed in on the end of one of the lines. Grouped at the end of each line were several men in suits. A boarding party. The men were using their suit thrusters to deploy grappling lines to secure his ship.

At a squad of suited Caelumarines had evacuated from the ship and form up into two elements. The lead of each element connected themselves to the end of capture cables. The remaining members of the element would then take up their positions on the cable behind the leads. The squad leaped through the intervening void using their maneuvering thrusters to reach their target. Once contact was made they would secure the capture cables onto the other ship’s hull using grapples or if necessary spot welding them to the ship. Once it was secured by the cables, two members of the squad would enter the airlock to search the habitable portions of the ship while the remainder would climb around the outside with radiation detectors looking for contraband among the cargo containers.  If need the cargo ship could be hauled in and forcibly docked with the bow of the Palisor.

The commander would have preferred just seizing the ship without giving it any warning. That would have been simpler. Warning their quarry gave it the opportunity to do something stupid.

And Brock Regus was about to do something stupid.

Brock was getting mad. This was a violation of his rights as well as interplanetary law. At least it was a violation of those laws that benefited him. The motherless Federation had no jurisdiction over him or his rocket. This was nothing more than a high handed act of unilateralism by the Federation. Their overbearing efforts kept the Xans a weak second rate power among the worlds and had played havoc with interplanetary trade and diplomacy for decades. Brock wasn’t a Xan but he sympathized with underdogs of any stripe. If the Federation started do this to small shippers like himself, who knew where it would end. Brock didn’t like it. He wasn’t going to take it. No, hew wasn’t going to take it at all. He reached for the reaction control system and started his rocket to yaw about.

“Commander, have your ship maintain your distance or be accountable for the results!”

The time for a polite discussion had ended.

“Connalf Minimule!” yelled Commander Krocs. “You are ordered to secure all ships system and stand by to accept boarders. Per Caelumtime Law and the Xalamor Act of Interdiction an inspection will be made of your ship and cargo. We are prepared to use force if necessary and will fire upon you. Acknowledge this order and prepare for docking!”

Brock’s reply before he cut the connection was quite rude.

The Connalf Minimule was about 50 meters long and massed almost 100000 kilograms. As a result it turned like a sauropod wallowing in a mud flat.  It would take ten minutes to spin the ship about.

“Stop forward motion and hold position at five kilometers from the target.” ordered Commander Krocs.

The Palisor fired its forward thrusters to halt it approach. Their trajectory had been aimed directly at the docking port in the nose of the Minimule but that was moving out of alignment. Attempting to approach the Minimule in a spiral trajectory while matching their target’s rate of spin was a losing game the Commander didn’t care to play.

Adrenaline levels spiked for most of the crew.

Stuck out in the middle of the deep and black with the seven other men the missile officer queried “Orders commander?”

“Continue your approach. Attempt to make contact at their center of mass where the spin is less.”

“Yes sir.”

“Comms, continue to broadcast our demands. Let me know when they respond.”

The commander paused for a few moments in thought.

“Gunner. Load starburst shells. Blind their eyes and let them know we are serious. Also I’m sure our Caelumarines would appreciate if you could avoid shooting them.”

“Acknowledged. All hands activate flash shields. Firing in 10 seconds.”

All over the hull of the Palisor cameras either powered off or darkened as flash shields covered their lenses while the men in spacesuits reached up and lowered visors to protect their eyes.

“Three, two, one, Fire!”

The turrets of the Palisor fired a rapid volley of shells that streaked across the intervening void. All around the Minimule brilliant eye searing flashes of light exploded. Brock’s monitors were filled with white static as every external camera on the freighter was over loaded. He also heard a sound like hail rattling on a metal roof as minute fragments of the exploded shells impacted on the cargo rocket’s hull.

The gunnery officer called out “Clear.” as the starburst’s glare faded from sight.

A minute passed.

The Connalf Minimule still keep turning.

“Any reply to our commands?”

“Negative.” answered the comms officer.

“Caelumarines, get to that ship as soon as you can. You have about three minutes before you’re out of their shadow shield and exposed to the radiation from their reactor.”

“Yes sir!”

The Caelumarines used their suit thrusters and almost half of their available propellant to accelerate toward the Connalf Minimule. The two lines of men angled in sharply toward the ship. They were coming in fast. Soon they would have to decelerate to avoid slamming into the ship hard enough to rupture their spacesuits. Approaching from the bow of the freighter had allowed them to avoided the deadly cone of radiation that pourred out from the end of the unshielded fission core in the rocket’s stern. As the cargo rocket turned they lost that protection given by its sheltering bulk. That cone of radiation was creeping up on them like an invisible yet deadly spotlight. Fortunately the effects of the radiation wouldn’t be immediately fatal. They could still successfully accomplish their mission even after exposure. They would also receive posthumous commendations for their valor.

They were at five hundred meters and closing.

There was movement on the Minimule. Four cargo handling arms unfolded from the sides of the ship. Each arm was about 20 meters in length. Looking like the long thin striking arms of a hunting mantid they moved into threatening positions while the manipulators at the end of the arms made disconcertingly eager grasping motions.

“You’re almost there.” encouraged Commander Krocs. “Avoid the arms and continue your approach.”

The lead of each line waited until the last possible second before hitting their thrusters.

The Missile Officer was leading the starboard line. As he started to slow one of the arms lunged toward him. With the deceptive slowness of objects moving in free fall he watched in growing terror as it closed on him. Relief flooded through him as the open manipulator sailed past only a meter away.  He look behind but the arm also missed the other men following him. He readied himself to grab onto something. Instead he felt a sudden jerk that smashed his nose against the faceplate of his helmet. The arm had not been reaching for the men, but for the cable they were attached to. It had grabbed a hold the line and made a swinging motion that whirled the men around like stones in a sling. After being flung about in a couple of nauseating circuits, a scissor like cutter at the end of the arm snipped through the line hurling them out into space.

Watching from a distance Commander Krocs cursed.

The Caelumarine’s top non-com leading the port line had seen cargo arms approaching both groups. When the arm approaching the starboard group missed all of the men on the line he knew something was wrong. Acting on instinct he released himself from his line. He was about to order the men following him to do the same when another cargo arm grabbed the line they were still attached to and promptly threw them back into the void. With a grunt he slammed into the freighter and bounced. Swinging the space axe he wielded, he jammed it into an open structural truss. The axe came out of his hand but the automatic take up reel of its safety line pulled him back. Relying on the axe to keep him connected to the freighter he brought his carbine to the ready. The arm that had so contemptuously thrown off his men was turning now toward him. Taking careful aim he fired at the camera at the end of the arm. He figured that if whoever was directing the arms couldn’t see him, it would be a lot harder to grab him.

He felt more then heard the reassuring chatter of the carbine firing as pieces of camera and manipulators broke off the arm. Behind him pieces from the frangible reaction part of the cartridge slammed into a cargo container. The carbine when using free fall cartridges had almost no recoil. The cartridges worked fine as long as no one you cared about was in front or behind you.

The damaged arm halted and froze in position.

He looked around for other threats.

Two other arms were backing away. The one he had shot wasn’t moving. The base of the fourth arm was on the other side of the freighter and he couldn’t see it from here. He didn’t think it could reach all the way around to where he was.

He keyed his comms.

“Commander, I’m on board. I’m going to make my way to the bridge and force my way in.”

“Acknowledged Top. The rest of the boarding party is nominal and we will recover them once the ship is secured.”

The rest of the boarding party didn’t like it, but they could wait. They they had plenty of air

“Yes sir. Moving out now. “

The structural trusses making up the framework of the cargo rocket provided places to secure cargo as well as convenient hand holds to cling to.

The Top set hooks that extended in front the soles of his boots.  Slinging his carbine, he slipped the hooks under the cross pieces of the truss.  He gathered up his axe and adjusted the length of its handle. He reached out ahead and hooked on with the curved beak on the butt of the space axe. Unhooking one foot he took a step and hooked it to the truss again. He did the same to the other foot. Reaching out with his axe he then set it again. He always had at least one firmly secured point of contact to the ship as he slowly worked his way toward the bow of the cargo rocket.  He could have moved to the bow much quicker by going hand over hand, however, if he needed to use his hands for anything other than hanging on he would be in a very vulnerable position and risk drifting away from the hull.  The propellant tanks for his suit thrusters were almost empty. If that happened, he might not be able to get back.

After moving along for a few meters the Comms Officer called out “Cargo Arm moving. Behind you to your right.”

The Top spun around drawing his carbine. He took aim on the moving arm. It stopped and then moved back in a weaving motion.  He considered trying to take out the remaining arms. To do that he would have to hit the cameras or actuators and that was an iffy proposition at this distance and in this light. Most of the new batch of Caelumarines he was getting these days would have just gone ahead and use the spray and pray method of marksmanship to try and disable the cargo arm. But he was old school. He had been trained that a Caelumarines was first, last and always a rifle man. One shot one kill was what you aspired to. Besides, emptying the magazine now could leave him without any ammunition when he needed it later.

“Thanks for the warning. Keep watching my back.”

He turned and continued on his way. That old itch between his shoulder blades was back. He knew there were active threats back there. The suit’s helmet and pack restricted his ability to look behind. It made him jumpy.

Suddenly the freighter’s thrusters fired. It had almost finished yawing about it y-axis. The Top was thrown to the side but he maintained his footing.

While it was stopping its yaw the freighter also fired a rapid series of bursts from it roll thrusters. They were trying to shake him off he thought. It wasn’t going to work.  He hung on tight. The thrusters eventually stopped firing with the stern pointed toward the Palisor.

The Top resumed his march. After moving a few meters the Comms Officer shouted out again “Movement directly behind you!”

He twisted about as best he could in his suit. The cargo arm that he thought he had disabled was moving again. It had straightened itself out and this time it wasn’t trying to grab him. It was moving vertically downward trying to swat him like a bug. He fired at the arm hitting it. But it wasn’t flesh and bone but a blind, unfeeling column of metal. He might as well been shooting the main support beam of a rocket gantry with a sling shot for all the good it did him. The actuating motor was hidden back behind some angular cargo containers. It was coming down right on top of him.

In a single motion he swung up his axe and threw it down and to the left. Its head went through the thin metal side of a cargo container. He freed his boot hooks and jumped to the side just before the cargo arm smashed into the spot where he had been standing. Again the space axe’s take up reel automatically drew in the safety line, pulling him to the end of the axe’s handle. Getting his feet back on the hull he pulled out a length of the safety line then locked the take up reel so it wouldn’t start pulling until he released it. He then jumped. Sailing up several meters he fired his carbine at the cargo arm’s shoulder motor until it was riddled like a sieve. He used the remaining propellant in his jet pack to stabilize his attitude then took aim at the two remaining cargo arms that he could see.  He shot out the elbow motors in each arm freezing them in their currently bent position. His was now clear of threats from behind.

Releasing the lock on the take up reel he floated back down. He spent the next minute catching his breath and waiting for his heart to stop pounding. He circled around to make sure there was nothing else sneaking up on him. Reaching down he grabbed the edge of the rent his axe had made in the container then began to work loose the axe head.

That’s when what felt like an angry three legged burro kicked him in the back.

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Commander Krocs watched as the Top left the hull of the Connalf Minimule and flew off into the void.

Somehow they’d gotten to him.

“Demiurge take your soul.” he cursed!

Both rocket ships were caught in a political crisis not of their own making. Commander Krocs and officers like him still remembered the vicious interplanetary war with the Xans that caused the death of millions. Cities were vaporized. Orbital habitats and ships destroyed. He believed in the Federation’s continuing efforts to prevent that from happening again was worth the price. Over the years the Tepid War had waxed and waned. Both sides employed economic sanctions, espionage, political assassination, subversion and everything just short of open warfare.

In the back of Commander Krocs mind the realization that the current situation was slipping away from him started to form. This would probably cost him his career. Despite his orders authorizing him to destroy the cargo rocket if necessary, the political firestorm and subsequent official investigations would forever tarnish his record. Even if his Lords and Masters supported his decisions, and there was no guarantee that they would, he had seen other good men destroyed by circumstances beyond their control. Obey your orders and be vilified. Disobey and be cashiered.

The Interdiction Intercept – Part 1

This post is the first part of a short story I am working on. Comments and suggestions are welcome.

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Brock Regus work shift started out well.

During his previous time off shift he had finally got to spend time with that sultry voiced siren from orbital control. He had been docking at the Kalamor cargo station regularly for the past score of synodic periods and had built up a beautiful image of her in his mind just by listening to the sound of her voice. Now he had finally got to compare his dream girl with its flesh and blood counterpart. Aside from getting her height, weight, hair color and general proportions completely wrong, she did not disappoint.

While he had been enjoying the pleasure of her company, the station crew had finishing loading cargo and propellant onto his cargo rocket, the Connalf Minimule. He was now back on duty going through the pre-flight checks with a smile on his face and a song in his heart.

The docking this trip had been a very successful.

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The commander of the EFAR Palisor was off watch and asleep when the EYES ONLY message addressed to him came in. It seemed like this was the only time this type of messages was ever delivered. If it wasn’t a actual regulation to get important message when you’re asleep, he thought, it was tradition.

Grumbling he accepted the message, applied his decryption key then started to read.

He skipped the standard boilerplate to get to the important parts.

SUMMERY OF ORDERS

  1. EFAR Palisor will intercept and board S.S. Connalf Minimule after it has cleared Kalamor controlled space and before it arrives at it’s destination at Lair Duc Lep controlled space.  (See Attached Item A: Ephemeris)
  2. After interception you are to board and examine ship, crew, cargo and passengers for any and all illicit or prohibited items.  Specifically you are to search for Unregistered Radioactive Materials or Registered Radioactive Materials that are not properly listed in the ship’s manifest. (See Attached Item B: List of Illicit or Prohibited Items and Attached Item C: Manifest of  S.S. Connalf Minimule)
  3. If illicit or prohibited items ARE NOT DISCOVERED you will allow said ship, crew, cargo and passengers to proceed freely to their destination.  EFAR Palisor will then proceed with all expeditiousness to Drang base for loading of propellant and other consumables.  (See Attached Item D: Excerpt from the Third Convention on Caelumtime Law Volume 4, Section 8, Paragraph 18-45)
  4. If illicit or prohibited items ARE DISCOVERED you will seize and deliver said ship, crew, cargo and passengers with all expeditiousness to Drang base to be turned over to appropriate Federation Law Enforcement and Intelligence Ministry Agents. (See Attached Item E: Xalamor Act of Interdiction. Article 3, Section 12 Paragraph 8-12, and 31)

Policy of Escalation

  1. At time of interception you will contact the SS Connalf Minimule stating your intent to board and inspect same citing relevant sections of Caelumtime Law and the Xalamor Act of Interdiction.
  2. If by communication or by action the SS Connalf Minimule indicates its refusal to be boarded you are authorize to compel compliance using the following order of escalation:
    1. Reiterate statements of legal penalties for failure to comply.
    2. Use verbal, text based, or visual threats for failure to comply.
    3. Use weapons systems for warning shots for failure to comply.
    4. Use weapons systems to disable said ship for failure to comply.
    5. Use weapons systems to destroy said ship for failure to comply.

Commander Yojen Krocs muttered a short stream of expletives.

To intercept a spacecraft in flight required precision flying and lots of spare delta-v to successfully complete the maneuver. If the craft being intercepted didn’t want to be boarded, things got complicated real fast.

‘Smuggled radioactives’ he mused rubbing his unshaven chin. That could mean anything from freight companies trying to avoid taxes to something more serious. Like someone trying to heat up the Tepid War with the Xans.

He checked the documents for the Connalf Minimule. Neutral Registry out of Gramethame. That why he had to intercept in midflight and out of anyone’s locally controlled space.

“Politics.” he grunted with disgust.

He cursed again when he checked the ephemeris. If he didn’t break orbit in two hours he would miss his window to intercept the freighter.  His idiot Lords and Masters should have given him a little more lead time.

Commander Krocs sounded a call to stations on the intercom. He forwarded the ephemeris to the flight officer to plot their trajectory. He next contacted the 1st shift engineer to begin preflight checks. When all hands reported in at their stations, he announced to the rest of the crew that once again they had been privileged with an opportunity to bring honor to the glorious Ertran Federation Atomic Rocket Forces.

Then he put on his pants.

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Brock Regus had cast off from the Kalamor orbital cargo station. Using thrusters he maneuvered away until he had reached a safe departure distance. While waiting on clearance he watched the distant specks of darting cargo wranglers working to lasso containers that had been blown up 80 kilometers above the surface of Kalamor by the powerful geysers that dotted the volcanic plains

“Connalf Minimule, you are cleared for departure.” announced the sexy voice of Kalamor Control.

“Thank you darling.” drawled ship master Brock Regus.

“You can lose the ‘Darling’, darling. We’re on the clock now.”

As he withdrew the control rods from the rocket’s reactor he replied with a smile.

“Connalf Minimule departing Kalamor control space.“

With the neutron absorbing control rods withdrawn the reactor’s temperature climbed quickly as the number of fissioning uranium atoms shot through the roof. With a bang the reaction mass pumps kicked in. They quickly spun up to speed making an ultrasonic whine that rattle through the rocket’s framework.  Frigid liquid hydrogen was forced by the pumps into the reactor’s hot fission core. It flashed into plasma then blasted out with an exhaust velocity of 8000 meters per second, thrusting the almost 100000 kilogram, 50 meter long rocket at .5 meters per second.

Brock was busy for the duration of the burn making constant adjustments.  With these old atomic freighters balancing the propellant flow, neutron flux and exhaust velocity was more of an art than a science. You had to constantly juggle things around to stay in the sweet spot for an efficient burn at a steady acceleration as your rocket’s mass decreased.

When he could spare a moment he checked the strain gages for his cargo. Using remotely controlled wenches he made adjustments to the straps and nets that held his cargo in place. He needed to keep the freight from shifting around and upsetting his center of mass. Botching the flight angle or getting stuck in a tumble from an off axis thrust was a major pain in the glutes to correct.

The orbital insertion was going well. His flight plan called for him to depart Kalamor, make a cliff diving midcourse burn at perigee and then deliver his cargo of mail, metals and manufactured goods at Lair Duc Lep in about four hours.

After twenty minutes he stopped accelerating and shut off the propellant pumps. Brock reinserted the control rods to safe the reactor and engaged the cooling system. The fishlike radiator fins glowed in infrared as they dumped heat from the hot reactor into the near infinite heat sink of outer space.

Once the rocket’s systems were secured for cruise mode its one man crew took a deep satisfied breath and relaxed.  Now all he had to do was count his money as he coasted along. This was the big haul he had been waiting for.

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Commander Krocs had his crew finish a final practice exercise for the boarding and searching the alleged smuggler.  He had started them practicing the moment the EFAR Palisor stopped accelerating.

He had finally gotten them to settle down. In the final simulation they finally managed to complete their assignment without casualties which gave them a measure of morale boosting confidence. It remained to be seen if that confidence was justified. The previous simulation they had 30% casualties. Commander Krocs was hoping for the best but preparing for the worst.

In his mind the best case scenario would be that the boarding party would land unopposed, search the freighter, find nothing and then depart with everyone going home with a good story to tell. The worst case would be that something goes wrong and everyone dies.  This uncertainty in outcomes created a noticeable level of tension among the Palisor’s crew.

The young Caelumarines tasked for boarding the rocket felt eager and excited. They were getting a rare opportunity to actually apply the tools of their trade.  The Flight and Engineering officers were busy sweating the final approach to the target. The Gunnery officer keep checking and rechecking the status of his weapons. Since the engagement was within spitting distance astronomically speaking, the Missile officer had drawn the short straw and would lead the Caelumarines into action. The Caelumarine’s top non-com was grimly determined to keep the Missile officer from screwing things up too much. The remaining crew, each according to their nature, fidgeted, joked, paced, cursed or prayed at their damage control stations. Commander Krocs felt all of these emotions as well as the burden of responsibility.

It was time to get started.

https://retrorockets.wordpress.com/2013/06/25/the-interdiction-intercept-comments-requested/

https://retrorockets.wordpress.com/2013/06/11/the-interdiction-intercept-part-1/

https://retrorockets.wordpress.com/2013/06/17/the-interdiction-intercept-part-2/

https://retrorockets.wordpress.com/2013/06/25/the-interdiction-intercept-part-3/

Buck Rogers in the 25th Century

Armageddon 2419 A.D and the Air Lords of Han by Philip Francis Nowlan
Serialized in August 1928 issue of Amazing Stories.

Skylark of Space Amazing Stories Cover
The August 1928 issue of Amazing Stories started not just one but two classic stories.The first was the Skylark of Space.
The second was Armageddon 2419 A.D and it’s sequel the Air Lords of Han. These stories introduced the world to Anthony “Tony” Rogers.
Don’t call him Buck.
While investigating radioactive gases found in a Pennsylvania coal mine, on December 15th 1927 he was trapped in a cave-in where he lost consciousness. He awoke 492 years later in the year 2419.

From Hugo Gernsback’s forward.

Here, once more, is a real scientifiction story plus. It is a story which will make the heart of many readers leap with joy.

We have rarely printed a story in this magazine that for scientific interest, as well as suspense, could hold its own with this particular story. We prophesy that this story will become more valuable as the years go by. It certainly holds a number of interesting prophecies, of which no doubt, many will come true. For wealth of science, it will be hard to beat for some time to come. It is one of those rare stories that will bear reading and re-reading many times.

This story has impressed us so favorably, that we hope the author may be induced to write a sequel to it soon

And so he did write a sequal. “The Air Lords of Han.”

These serials were read by John F. Dille of the National Newpaper Service who convinced Nowlan to turn his story into a daily comic strip. But like Hollywood producers today, he changed the basic story and to add insult to injury changed the main character’s name from Tony to Buck.

So now you can call him Buck.

Thus Duck Dogers in the 24 1/2 century was born.

duckdodgers

Duck Dodgers: Dark Side of the Duck – Season 1

Er, excuse me.

I meant to say, thus Buck Rogers in the 25th Century was born.

Buck Rogers was a media sensation in it’s day. Comics, Movies and later Television shows were made based on these early stories

It has everything.

Disintegrator Rays

“These rays were projected from a machine not unlike a searchlight in appearance, the reflector of which, however, was not material substance, but a complicated balance of interacting electronic forces. This resulted in a terribly destructive beam. Under its influence, material substance melted into “nothingness”; i. e., into electronic vibrations. It destroyed all then known substances, from air to the most dense metals and stone.”

br005

Anti-Gravity Rocket Belts.

“Floaters” are a later development of “jumpers”—rocket motors encased in inertron blocks and strapped to the back in such a way that the wearer floats, when drifting, facing slightly downward. With his motor in operation, he moves like a diver, headforemost, controlling his direction by twisting his body and by movements of his outstretched arms and hands. Ballast weights locked in the front of the belt adjust weight and lift.

Replusor Rays

Now I could see the repellor rays that held the ship aloft, like searchlight beams faintly visible in the bright daylight (and still faintly visible to the human eye at night). Actually, I had been informed by my instructors, there were two rays; the visible one generated by the ship’s apparatus, and directed toward the ground as a beam of “carrier” impulses; and the true repellor ray, the complement of the other in one sense, induced by the action of the “carrier” and reacting in a concentrating upward direction from the mass of the earth, becoming successively electronic, atomic and finally molecular, in its nature, according to various ratios of distance between earth mass and “carrier” source, until, in the last analysis, the ship itself actually is supported on an upward rushing column of air, much like a ball continuously supported on a fountain jet.

Rocket Ships

Swoopers are one-man and two-man ships, developed by the Americans, with skeleton backbones of inertron (during the war painted green for invisibility against the green forests below) and “bellies” of clear ultron.

Remotely piloted drones

The “air balls” were simply miniature swoopers of spherical shape, ultronically controlled by operators at control boards miles away, and who saw on their viewplates whatever picture the ultronic television lens in the sphere itself picked up at the predetermined focus. The main propulsive rocket motor was diametrically opposite the lens, so that the sphere could be steered simply by keeping the picture of its objective centered on the crossed hairlines of the viewplates.

Rocket Guns

Rocket guns are very simple contrivances so far as the mechanism of launching the bullet is concerned. They are simple light tubes, closed at the rear end, with a trigger-actuated pin for piercing the thin skin at the base of the cartridge. This piercing of the skin starts the chemical and atomic reaction. The entire cartridge leaves the tube under its own power, at a very easy initial velocity, just enough to insure accuracy of aim; so the tube does not have to be of heavy construction. The bullet increases in velocity as it goes. It may be solid or explosive. It may explode on contact or on time, or a combination of these two.

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Telepresence/Telecommunting

A citizen in Lo-Tan might, if he felt so inclined, “visit” the seashore, or the lakes or the forests of any part of the country, for when such scene was thrown on the walls of an apartment, the effect was precisely the same as if one were gazing through a vast window at the scene itself.

A family in Lo-Tan, for instance, might “visit” friends in Fis-Ko (San Francisco) taking their apartment, so to speak, along with them; being to all intents and purposes separated from their “hosts” only by a big glass wall which interfered neither with vision nor conversation.

A young man, for instance, might recline at his ease in his apartment near the top of the city, and for three or four hours a day inspect, through his viewplate and certain specially installed apparatus, the output of a certain process in one of the vast automatically controlled food factories buried far underground beneath the base of the mountain, where the moan of its whirring and throbbing machinery would not disturb the peace and quiet of the citizens on the mountain top. Or he might be required simply to watch the operation of an account machine in an automatic store.

Online Shopping

Why should he leave his house? Food, wonderful synthetic concoctions of any desired flavor and consistency (and for additional fee conforming to the individual’s dietary prescription) came to him through a shaft, from which his tray slid automatically on to a convenient shelf or table.

There was even a tube system, with trunk, branch and local lines and an automagnetic switching system, by which articles within certain size limits could be despatched from any apartment to any other one in the city.

There is no denying that the economic system of the Hans was marvelous. A suit of clothes, for instance, might be delivered in a man’s apartment without a human hand having ever touched it. Having decided that he wished a suit of a given general style, he would simply tune in a visual broadcast of the display of various selections, and when he had made his choice, dial the number of the item and press the order button. Simultaneously the charge would be automatically made against his account number, and credited as a sale on the automatic records of that particular factory in the account house. And his account plate, hidden behind a little wall door, would register his new credit balance. An automatically packaged suit that had been made to style and size-standard by automatic machinery from synthetically produced material, would slip into the delivery chute, magnetically addressed, and in anywhere from a few seconds to thirty minutes or so, according to the volume of business in the chutes, and drop into the delivery basket in his room.

Dastardly villains beyond redemption

San-Lan snarled and crouched as though to spring at me with his bare hands. By a mighty convulsion of the will he regained control of himself, however, and assumed a manner of quiet dignity. He even smiled—a slow, crooked smile.

“No,” he said, answering his own thought. “I will not have you killed now. You shall live on, my honored guest, to see with your own eyes how we shall exterminate your animal-brethren in their forests. With your own ears you shall hear their dying shrieks. The cold science of Han is superior to your spurious knowledge. We have been careless. To our cost we have let you develop brains of a sort. But we are still superior. We shall go down into the forests and meet you. We shall beat you in your own element. When you have seen and heard this happen, my Council shall devise for you a death by scientific torture, such as no man in the history of the world has been honored with.”

Romance

Wilma and I had been married the day after the destruction of the ships, and spent this intervening period in a delightful honeymoon, camping high in the mountains.

Femme Fatales

San-Lan’s favorite concubine, Ngo-Lan, a creature of the most alluring beauty; young, graceful and most delicately seductive, whose skill in the arts and sciences put many of their doctors to shame. This creature, his most prized possession, San-Lan with the utmost moral callousness ordered to seduce me, urging her to apply without stint and to its fullest extent, her knowledge of evil arts.

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The occasional act of genocide.

“But I do know that there was something inhuman about these Hans. And I had many months of intimate contact with them, and with their Emperor in America. I can vouch for the fact that even in his most friendly and human moments, there was an inhumanity, or perhaps “unhumanity” about him that aroused in me that urge to kill.

But whether or not there was in these people blood from outside this planet, the fact remains that they have been exterminated, that a truly human civilization reigns once more.

It was a golden age of science fiction. That golden age being when you are thirteen.

Public domain free versions of the Armageddon 2419 A.D and the Air Lords of Han can be found here:

http://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/32530
http://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/25438

Armageddon-2419 A.D.

The Airlords of Han

It also can be purchased from Amazon.

Armageddon 2419 A.D. and Other Works by Philip Francis Nowlan (Unexpurgated Edition) (Halcyon Classics)

The Buck Rogers in the 25th Century comic series can also be purchased at Amazon.

Buck Rogers in the 25th Century: The Complete Newspaper Dailies, Vol. 1: 1929-1930

As well as the Movie Serial starring Buster Crabbe

Buck Rogers

The Television series from the 1970’s has spaceships, disco and lots of spandex. The high lights of the show being Erin Gray and Pamela Hensley.

buck-rogers-erin-gray buck-rogers-25th-century-1

Buck Rogers in the 25th Century: The Complete Epic Series

The Skylark of Space

The Skylark of Space by Edward Elmer “Doc” Smith
Written between 1915 and 1921.
Serialized in August 1928 issue of Amazing Stories.
Published in hardback in 1946

Skylark of Space Amazing Stories Cover

Skylark of Space Amazing Stories Cover

From Hugo Gernsback’s forward.

Perhaps it is a bit unethical and unusual for editors to voice their opinion of their own wares, but when such a story as “The Skylark of Space” comes along, we just feel as if we must shout from the housetops that this is the greatest interplanetarian and space flying story that has appeared this year. Indeed, it probably will rank as one of the great space flying stories for many years to come. The story is chock full, not only of excellent science, but woven through it there is also that very rare element, love and romance. This element in an interplanetarian story is often apt to be foolish, but it does not seem so in this particular story.

We know so little about intra-atomic forces, that this story, improbable as it will appear in spots, will read commonplace years hence, when we have atomic engines, and when we have solved the riddle of the atom.

You will follow the hair-raising explorations and strange ventures into far-away worlds with bated breath, and you will be fascinated, as we were, with the strangeness of it all.

This is one of the first science fictions books I ever read.  It has everything.

Faster than Light Spaceships.

“But nothing can possibly go that fast, Mart, it’s impossible. How about Einstein’s theory?”

That is a theory, this measurement of distance is a fact, as you know from our tests.”

That’s right. Another good theory gone to pot.”

Tractor beams

Seaton focused the great attractor upon the fugitive car and threw in the lever which released the full force of that mighty magnet.

Object Compasses

“the power is liberated as a similar attractive force but is focused upon the first object in line with the axis of the bar. As long as the current is applied it remains focused upon that object, no matter what comes between.”

X-plosive bullets.

The pistol cracked, and when the bullet reached its destination the great stone was obliterated in a vast ball of flame. After a moment there was a deafening report—a crash as though the world were falling to pieces. Both men were hurled violently backward, stumbling and falling flat. Picking themselves up, they looked across the valley at the place where the boulder had stood, to see only an immense cloud of dust, which slowly blew away, revealing a huge hole in the ground. They were silent a moment, awed by the frightful power they had loosed.

Well, Mart,” Seaton broke the silence, “I’ll say those one-milligram loads are plenty big enough”.

Black Holes

“Good God! It’s a dead sun, and we’re nearly onto it! It looks as large as our moon!”

Iron men in iron spaceships.

He could not move his body, which was oppressed by a sickening weight. His utmost efforts to breathe forced only a little of the life-giving oxygen into his lungs, which smarted painfully at the touch of the undiluted gas, and he felt that he could not long retain consciousness under such conditions. Nevertheless, he summoned all his strength and advanced the lever one more notch.

Dastardly villains beyond redemption

Seaton stepped impulsively toward DuQuesne with his hand outstretched.

“You’ve squared your account, Blackie. Say the word and the war’s all off.”

DuQuesne ignored the hand and glanced coldly at the group of eager, friendly faces. “Don’t be sentimental,” he remarked evenly as he turned away to his room.

Weird life forms inhabiting strange and savage worlds.

The scene, so quiet a few moments before, was instantly changed. The trees, the swamp, and the air seemed filled with monsters so hideous as to stagger the imagination. Winged lizards of prodigious size hurtled through the air, plunging to death against the armored hull. Indescribable flying monsters, with feathers like birds, but with the fangs of tigers, attacked viciously. a body ten feet in length leaped at the window in front of her, its terrible sting spraying the glass with venom. As it fell to the ground, a huge spider—if an eight-legged creature with spines instead of hair, many-faceted eyes, and a bloated, globular body weighing hundreds of pounds, may be called a spider—leaped upon it and, mighty mandibles against poisonous sting, the furious battle raged. Several twelve-foot cockroaches climbed nimbly across the fallen timber of the morass and began feeding voraciously upon the body of the dead dinosaur. But the fighters were rudely interrupted, and the earthly visitors discovered that in this primitive world it was not only animal life that was dangerous. The great tree standing on the farther edge of the island suddenly bent over, lashing out like a snake and grasping both. It transfixed them with the terrible thorns, which were now seen to be armed with needlepoints and to possess barbs like fish-hooks. It ripped at them with the long branches, which were veritable spears. The broad leaves, armed with revolting sucking disks, closed about the two animals, while the long, slender twigs, each of which was now seen to have an eye at its extremity, waved about, watching each movement of the captives from a safe distance.

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Romance
“Oh, Dicky!”

Disembodied Super Intelligences

“I see you’re surprised at my knowing your language. You’re a very inferior race of animals—don’t even understand telepathy, don’t understand the luminiferous ether, or the relation between time and space. Your greatest things, such as the Skylark and your object-compass, are merely toys. All of you are extremely low in the scale. Such animals have not been known in our universe for ten million years, which is as far back as I can remember. You have millions of years to go before you will amount to anything; before you will even rise above death and its attendant necessity, sex.”

Engineering over kill.

She saw a spherical shell of hardened steel armor-plate, fully forty feet in diameter; though its true shape was not readily apparent from the inside, as it was divided into several compartments by horizontal floors or decks. In the exact center of the huge shell was a spherical network of enormous steel beams. Inside this structure could be seen a similar network which, mounted upon universal bearings, was free to revolve in any direction. This inner network was filled with machinery, surrounding a shining copper cylinder. From the outer network radiated six mighty supporting columns. These, branching as they neared the hull of the vessel, supported the power-plant and steering apparatus in the center and so strengthened the shell that the whole structure was nearly as strong as a solid steel ball.

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 Fur covered spacesuits.

With unerring precision, the two ships were brought into place and held together by the attractor. As the doors were opened, there was a screaming hiss as the air of the vessels escaped through the narrow crack between them. The passengers saw the moisture in the air turn into snow, and saw the air itself first liquefy and then freeze into a solid coating upon the metal around the orifices at the touch of the frightful cold outside—the absolute zero of interstellar space, about four hundred sixty degrees below zero in the every-day scale of temperature. The moisture of their breath condensed upon the inside of the double glasses of their helmets, rendering sight useless.

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The occasional act of genocide.

“Thanks to you, the Mardonalian forces, instead of wiping us out, are themselves destroyed, while only a handful of our vessels have been lost, since the grand fleet could not arrive until the battle was over, and since the vessels that would have thrown themselves away were saved by your orders, which I heard. Thanks to you, we are not even crippled, though our capital is destroyed and the lives of some unfortunates, who could not reach the pits in time, have probably been lost. Thanks to you,” he continued in a ringing voice, “and to the salt and the new source of power you have given us, Mardonale shall now be destroyed utterly!”

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Doc Smith threw in everything including the kitchen sink. I mean that literally. He even describes the kitchen arrangements aboard the Skylark.

It was a golden age of science fiction. That golden age being when you are thirteen.

Public domain free versions of the Skylark of Space can be found here: http://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/20869

It also can be purchased from Amazon.

THE SKYLARK OF SPACE Masterpieces of Sience Fiction Easton Press