The first Cowboys flew nothing but Avengers. We added Nemesis drones to the mix after a while to improve our firepower. When we started to expand our numbers though, many pilots brought their Hellcats. We could have retrained them all on Avengers, but that would have taken time we didn’t have. So the Peloran worked their technical magic on the Hellcats too, and those upgraded fighters matched us move for move. It was magic, the way we fought. Magic.
Juliet was the first cyber to join the Cowboys on Alpha Centauri. She was not the last. She wasn’t even the last NASA cyber, but the others came later. By the time we left Alpha Centauri, we were many, and the fighters we flew were more. When The War ended, only a few Peloran pilots remained to screen Aneerin’s squadron. We were almost all Terran. American, German, French, British, and more, we all served. We all brought home the lessons of The War.
Hello, my name is Jack. In 2170, NASA sent the first of dozens of Vulcan Missions, their last grand gesture. Those Astronauts probed The Wall that enclosed us, seeking a way out. A single rocket ship, the Independence Seven flew through the worst gravitic interference we’d ever seen and made it through The Wall. They arrived in the Tau Aurigae System, landed on a Goldilocks World and named it Independence. And there, to this day, the crew claims they made Contact with the Peloran first.
Independence Seven
The Hellcat cut through New Earth’s bright blue sky, engine exhaust painting white contrails of water vapor through it. Maneuvering thrusters flared, flaps lifted, and she banked to the side, lines of ice crystals shimmering off the tips of her wings. She pulled away from the last Hellcat she’d faced in trial combat, and Jack smiled in approval.
The Hellcat really was a good fighter, even if it wasn’t an Avenger. He really liked the missile racks. In a way, that made them better hyperspace fighters since they wouldn’t suffer the backlash of grav cannons, but they didn’t have the power to get their on their own. And the Avengers hadn’t been designed to fight in hyperspace, just to travel through it on their way to hit the enemy. It made sense. With all the space taken up by the capacitors, they didn’t have the magazine space for dedicated missile packs like the Hellcat had, and capacitors that could push a ship into hyper could power grav cannons without working up a sweat.
Jack frowned in thought. “Betty?”
Betty cocked her head at his tone, smiling over the yellow sundress she loved so much. “Yeah, Jack?”
“I’ve got an idea.”
“I thought I smelled something burning.”
“Har, har,” Jack said with a shake of his head. “Seriously, what do you think of these missile racks?”
Betty shrugged. “Well, they’re certainly effective, though I miss the focused fire of a grav cannon.”
Jack nodded. “True. What if we could have both?”
Betty blinked and cocked her head to the side again. “Oh,” she whispered. “That’s…”
“I know…something to think about,” Jack finished for her. “Hellcats don’t have enough power to twist gravity for movement, deflection, and weapons fire.”
“While Avengers have more power than we can use in combat, but never had the room for missile racks.”
“Until now,” Jack said with a smile. The Peloran tech was so much smaller than Terran tech that placing it in a Terran hull left lots of empty space. “We could fill those big empty wings with missiles now. Imagine what a missile swarm would do to an enemy? We could even fill the nose with missiles now that the turret isn’t there anymore.”
Betty shook her head. “No, I’d rather use the power we have access to with the Peloran generators. Besides, you don’t want missile exhaust flying over your cockpit do you?”
“Not especially. What do you have in mind?”
Betty smiled. “A third gravitic cannon of course. We could make it bigger than the others. And while we’re at it, we could move the other two out to the ends of the wings so if they overload they won’t blow us to kingdom come.”
“And what if that one blows up?” Jack asked with a wave of his hand towards the nose. “I rather like my feet where they are.”
Betty crossed her arms and bestowed on him a raised eyebrow. “Jack. How many times have you seen an Avenger lose a nose and keep fighting?”
“Oh,” Jack answered in a subdued tone. “True.”
“Besides, we’ll put it on the tip of the nose so there’s lots of room for you to see the pretty colors of an overloading gravitic cannon.”
“Thanks,” Jack muttered. “I always have loved light shows.”
Betty gave him a sweet smile. “I know.” She shifted her head in thought and Jack held off on a response. “The next fighting is incoming,” she said in an odd tone.
“What’s up?” Jack asked.
She shook her head. “She’s coming down from orbit, not from the base.”
“Interesting,” Jack whispered. “Well, patch me in then,” he added with a shrug. “This is Cowboy Five to…” Jack trailed off as he read the screen showing its IFF signal and looked at Betty with questioning eyes. That couldn’t be right. She nodded to say it was. He shook his head. “To Independence Seven. You must think you’re a good pilot to use that name.”
“I do actually.”
“Well, then hurry up and kill me. We’ve got some pretty stringent qualifications requirements.” And if this guy thought taking the name of that ship would help, he had another thing coming.
“I’ve heard,” the other pilot said, banked his Hellcat to the side and dove towards Jack faster than anyone he’d seen yet, missiles rippling out to engulf the fighter.
Jack jerked to the side as the missiles exploded all around on the sim screen, followed by lasers strobing up and down the Hellcat, racking up hundreds of points. Jack laughed, brought the fighter around, and nodded at Betty. “Well, if he wants it like that, let’s do this. Give him the full treatment.”
“Full treatment, aye,” Betty answered with a mock salute and began to ripple missiles back at their target in a steady stream of a few at a time.
Jack dropped them in behind the other Hellcat, but it shot off to port before the missiles could track it. Jack pulled to starboard on a whim, despite his wish to follow, and a swarm of missiles boiled up where he would have been. “Ooooohhhh…tricky,” Jack whispered as alarms went off. The man was behind and above them, firing another salvo. Jack pulled up this time and brought the Hellcat around in a tight loop the missiles couldn’t follow. They came out of the loop above and behind the other fighter.
Betty fired a full salvo of missiles and Jack pushed the throttle forward, cutting the pilot off from replicating his tactic. The fighter pulled to port again and Jack frowned in thought. The other pilot seemed to prefer portside maneuvers. He might be able to take advantage of that.
His hand swung right and the fighter rolled to starboard a split second before another few missiles passed through their previous location, trying desperately to claw their way back into his fighter. They were going too fast to turn though and sailed off into the blue sky.
“Betty, do some soft launches to his port side whenever you get the chance,” he ordered and dropped into a valley, buzzing over some trees.
“Got it,” Betty answered with a smile as the other Hellcat latched onto their tail.
“And cold launch above him now,” he added.
Missiles tumbled out of the racks, pushed out by the small magnetic rails in the wings, and fell behind the fighter as atmosphere clawed at the powerless hunks of metal. They tumbled until their tiny minds picked up the target behind them, and then their drives exploded to life, throwing the swarm of missiles at the enemy Hellcat.
Jack pulled the throttle all the way back and the engine pods ceased their burn for a moment, before filling the air in front of him with fire. The Jack’s Hellcat slowed to a halt as the other Hellcat accelerated through the swarm of missiles, managing to avoid most of them. The other Hellcat flew straight into his sights and Betty fired another volley of missiles straight into his engine flare.
Jack began to twitch to port, but had a bad feeling about that again. He shifted starboard instead and found himself on his enemy’s tail, Betty sending a salvo of lasers into the denuded rear deflection grid. Points rolled up on the simulation screen, showing direct hit after direct hit.
The enemy fighter pulled to port and Jack tried to follow, but once again Jack lost him and a salvo of missiles rained into their flank. More points ran up the screen for the other guy, keeping him in the lead, and Jack swallowed. He was really going to have to take this seriously. The guy was good.
Jack flicked the stick to the side, took a deep breath, and stopped trying to plan anything. He opened his eyes wide, relaxed into his seat, and let his hands move whenever he felt the need. His sense of time faded away, and he became only dimly aware of the outside world, while at the same time hyper aware of everything. He didn’t take time to consider anything, to think about anything, or to let what he saw affect his mind in any way. He simply reacted to what he saw, taking no time or energy to ponder it.
An alarm sounded and he came back to full awareness. He blinked dry eyes and pulled stiff fingers away from the throttle and stick, working his fingers back and forth to restore circulation. He looked at one screen to see that half an hour had passed since the trial started, kicking in the automatic alarm to end it. He cleared his throat, feeling phlegm break loose, and licked his dry mouth. He glanced down on the sim screen to see he’d lost, by a few hundred points. The score was higher than he’d seen in any sim before. Of course, it had gone longer than the others too. He blinked, looked again, and shook his head as he turned to look at the Hellcat flying next to him.
“Congratulations, Independence Seven,” he said with a smile and cleared his throat again. “You beat me with that first strike. You are a dirty and underhanded fighter.”
The other pilot laughed. “I was beating you the whole time.”
Jack chewed his lip and shook his head. “Yes, but some would say you cheated to take the lead.”
“True,” the other pilot said in an amused tone. “But if you ain’t cheatin’, you ain’t winnin’.”
Jack chuckled and shook his head again. “Truer words have never been spoken,” he said and cleared his throat one more time. He needed a drink after this. “I think it’s time to return to base.”
“Roger, that, Cowboy Five. I need a drink.” Independence Seven banked away, lines of ice crystals flaring off her wingtips, and accelerated towards Leif Erikson Spacebase.
Jack followed with a flick of his wrist. “Betty, keep on his six and follow him back to base. And patch me through to the Chief.”
Betty smiled, crossed her arms, and nodded. “He’s on the line.”
“Chief here,” the commander’s voice said over the comm. system. “What’s up, Jester?”
Jack worked his jaw back and forth several times. His whole body felt sore. He really needed to get up and walk around to work the acid out of his muscles. “Have you been following the trials?”
“No…I’ve been doing paperwork. Give me a second to…holy frak! Who is that guy?”
Jack smiled at the confusion in the other man’s voice. “I have no idea. But he came in from orbit, not the base, and given the name of his ship, he thinks he’s as good as he is.”
“Yeah. Look, I’ll get Bull and we’ll meet you at the landing strip. This needs face to face.”
Jack nodded in approval. “Agreed, Chief.”
“Chief out,” Charles finished and the comm. line cut out.
Jack looked outside the cockpit to see the other Hellcat dropping towards the spacebase and relaxed, working his legs and toes against the lethargy in them. He watched as they came down to a landing and his jaw dropped as he saw the crowd ringing the landing area.
“Frak. People were watching, weren’t they?”
“Yup,” Betty said in a proud voice. “You two did really good.”
Jack looked at her with a raised eyebrow. “I lost in front of them all.”
Betty still gave him a proud look. “Yeah, but you lost going all out and big.”
“True.” Jack shook his head. “I just don’t like losing.”
Betty smiled. “None of us do, Jack. But sometimes we do, and that’s due to no failing of our own. That is simply life.”
Jack sighed as the fighter settled down for a soft landing and the canopy began to open. “Thanks for the fortune cookie.” He unbuckled his restraints, stood up, and saw the other pilot vault out of his fighter to land with a shoulder roll. “Damn. He’s good,” he added with another shake of his head.
“Jack,” Betty said in a warning tone and shook her head.
“What?” Jack asked in an innocent tone and mentally measured the distance to the ground as the other pilot rose to his feet and brushed something off the shoulder of his blue uniform.
“Don’t do it,” she said and he turned to see her plant both fists on her waist.
“You don’t think I can do it?” he asked with a smile.
Betty sighed. “I think you haven’t practiced it, and it’s stupid to do something in front of an audience you’ve not practiced before.”
Jack cocked his head to the side and nodded. “Good point.” He measured the distance again. “Can you do the grav slide that Hal did for me?”
Betty smiled. “Yeah, I can replicate that.”
“Good,” Jack said, stepped forward, and slid down to the pavement on an imaginary surfboard down a slope made of controlled gravity waves. He came to a stop and adjusted the tie that matched the khaki shirt and green slacks of his service uniform. The other pilot gave him a nod of approval and ambled forward to meet Jack as his cyber jumped out of the fighter to land beside her pilot.
“I’m Juliet,” she said and held out her hand to Jack.
Jack took her feather touch hand in his and raised it to his lips. “And I’m charmed.”
Juliet smiled and looked at her partner. “See? He knows how to treat a lady.”
The new pilot shook his head at Jack with a wry smile.
Betty stepped up, dressed in a uniform that matched Jacks, and held her hand out as well. “My name is Betty.”
The man took her hand with an elaborate bow and kissed it. “And I’m Major Tom Rogers, and it is a very great pleasure to meet you.”
Jack blinked in confusion as the name registered.
“Wait…are you…the Astronaut?” he asked, the shock driving introductions from his mind.
Tom smiled and spread both arms out wide. “In the flesh.”
Jack shook his head in wonder. “The…NASA Astronaut?” He glanced over at the fighter. “Independence Seven’s actual pilot?”
Tom chuckled and nodded his head. “Yes.”
Charles and Jay walked through the crowd, ties of their service uniforms flapping in the slight wind, Dorothy and Winona at their sides.
Tom glanced at them and smiled at Jack. “Looks like you ordered up a committee.”
Jack shrugged and shook his head. “Well, you’re pretty good.” He glanced at Tom’s fighter again. “And now I know why.”
Tom chuckled one more time before the other Cowboys stopped in front of them. Dorothy held out her hand and introductions and handshakes passed back and forth. “And yes, I’m that Major Tom Rogers,” Tom finished and tapped the NASA patch on his uniform. Jack recognized it from his history classes, but had never expected to see someone actually wearing one.
Charles appraised the man for a second before nodding. “It is an honor to meet you, Major. Might I ask what you are doing here?”
Tom smiled and raised a black leather briefcase cuffed to his wrist for all to see. “Someone decided they were going to ruin my retirement by starting up a war, so the President asked me to come here with new orders for you.”
Charles examined him again, with an upraised eyebrow that showed he was running through all their permutations of what that meant. “You talked to her?”
Tom smiled and spread his arms out wide. “Well, I am the official representative of a star system.” He brought his arms back down and looked around at the crowd of watchers. “Do you have a secure office here we can speak in?”
“Of course I do,” Charles said and waved a hand in the way he’d come from. “Please follow me.”
“Lead the way,” Tom said and followed as Jay’s hulking form took up point, clearing a way through the crowd.
“He’s a big boy,” Tom whispered as Jack slid into step next to him.
“That’s one reason we call him Bull,” Jack answered with a chuckle, feeling his composure come back.
“And the other reason?” Tom asked.
Jack chuckled again. “Don’t get him angry. You wouldn’t like him when he’s angry.”
Tom smiled. “Ah, I see now.”
“So, weren’t you born in…2140 or something?” Jack asked after a quick glance at the man’s young face.
Tom shifted his head to the side in a half shrug. “2145, but who’s counting?”
Jack whistled. “You don’t look a day over forty, Sir.”
Tom aimed an impish smile at him. “Well, you know what they say. You’re only as old as the one you feel.”
Jack chuckled. “Remind me to keep you away from my girlfriend then.” He blinked then as the realization of what he’d said sunk in. Girlfriend.
Tom laughed and patted Jack’s shoulder. “Haven’t had many girlfriends, huh?”
Jack grunted and shook his head. “Oh, I’ve had lots. I just…never…” he trailed off, lost in thought, and let out a long breath.
“Never considered her one?”
Jack focused back on the present saw Tom’s knowing smile. He sighed, knowing he couldn’t disagree. Mostly. “No I didn’t…least not up here,” he added with a tap on his temple. “But I obviously do or I wouldn’t have said it. I guess that just snuck up on me.”
Tom laughed again and slapped him on the shoulder. “One small step for man, Kid. One small step…”
“Yes, Sir,” Jack muttered, lost in thought again.
“Call me Tom, Kid,” he said in an amused tone.
“Yes, Sir…Tom,” he added with a wince after his mind caught up with his reactions.
Tom laughed once more and laid his hand on Jack’s shoulder. “The good ones always get us the worst, Kid.”
Jack shook his head in bemusement. “Ain’t that the truth?”
They entered Charles’ office behind Jay and Charles like that, and Jack had a feeling they were going to end up as friends. Charles waved for Tom to take the chair in front of his desk and Jack and Jay sat down on either side of it. Jack watched the cybers taking chairs of their own in a corner of the office. They leaned in close to each other and Jack realized they were talking to each other as only cybers could. Betty aimed a knowing smile at him and Jack nodded back.
Charles took his chair and leaned back in it. “Now what exactly is this about?” he asked in a serious tone with eyes that put the lie to his relaxed body language.
Tom opened the briefcase and pulled a sheet of paper out of. He placed it on Charles’ desk with a smile. “In brief, the President has decreed the expansion of Marine Fighter Attack Squadron 112 to whatever size the commander deems appropriate to support the Peloran. She has also decreed that the commander of this squadron has the authority to request, pursue, and accept any volunteers from any other unit, whatever service they are in.”
Charles nodded in understanding. “I see. So I assume that you have been sent here to take command of this squadron?”
Tom smiled. “Not exactly.” He pulled another sheet out of the briefcase and placed it on the desk. “In very brief, all pilots of Cowboy squadron, living or dead since Yosemite, have been awarded a permanent promotion of one pay grade above their previous permanent rank. That makes everyone but you a silver bar,” he said with a waved hand at Charles. “Your acting promotion to captain is permanent now.”
Charles nodded in acceptance. “Thank you.”
Tom shook his head. “Don’t think me. Thank the President.” He shrugged. “Assuming you still feel like thanking her when I’m done of course.”
Charles’ eyes narrowed. “What do you mean?”
Tom looked at Jack and Jay for a moment before pulling out another sheet. Jack felt a chill go down his spine at the sight of those orders, even though the Major skillfully kept it at an angle he couldn’t read. There was just something about them he knew he wouldn’t like. The man dropped the sheet on the desk with a smile. “After studying the reports of how these two marines have handled the demi-squadron commands you tasked them with, which by the way she was most pleased with, they are being granted acting commissions to captain.”
Jack shivered again. Two ranks in one day, even if one was just acting, did not sit well with him. It was too fast, and since the President ordered it, the brass would not be happy about it. And if he ever made a single mistake, they would take it away and never give him another chance to get it back. “If it’s just the same to you, Sir, I’ll pass on that acting promotion.”
Tom gave him a sad smile. He knew how hard this could be on a career. “It’s not the same to me though,” he said with a shake of his head. “I’m sorry, but once other pilots start arriving, you’ll need all the authority you can get in dealing with them. The brass won’t like it, but there won’t be many marines saying you don’t deserve the promotions after what you’ve done. Yes, they’re too early, and I’m sorry for that, but we don’t have time to do this slowly. The Cowboys need two captains, right now, and you two can do it, so we need you to do it.”
Jack and Jay exchanged glances for a second, and then turned to Charles. Charles nodded, a bitter taste in his mouth, and nodded towards the briefcase. “I gather there is another sheet there,” he bit out.
Tom smiled and pulled one out. “Yes. I’m being assigned to Cowboy squadron, with a strong suggestion that I be placed on the wing of the squadron commander. He after all will be the only member of the squadron that I don’t outrank.”
“I see,” Charles said, sounding very displeased. “So I’m going from acting Captain to acting Major?”
Tom pulled out another sheet, laid it on the desk, and nodded. “Yes.”
Charles shook his head. “This is crazy. The brass won’t like it, and if we make any mistake, they’ll take it all away and our careers will be over. I’m sorry, but I can not accept it.”
Tom sighed and let out a slow nod. “She said you might be difficult.” He pulled a small holobase out of the briefcase and laid it on the desk. “So she sent me with this,” he finished and tapped a command into it.
A holofield flickered to life and The President appeared in front of them, arms crossed in displeasure.
“Hello, Captain Hurst. If you are seeing this, it is because you are showing reluctance to accept your acting promotion to major. I understand the objections you have probably stated. The brass will not like it.” The President smirked. “The brass have been most unhappy with much that I have done in recent months. You do not feel ready for the rank. You did not volunteer to become a major within months of joining the military. It is too soon. I trust I have covered the most important objections.” The President sighed and shook her head as Charles returned a rueful smile.
“Trust me when I say that I really do understand. When I ran for election against a popular incumbent for Colorado’s junior Senate seat, I never conceived of standing in this office. I did not volunteer for it. I was not ready for it. And it was too soon.” The President gave a curt nod. “But it is our job to do the job we have to, not the job we want to.”
She waved her arms to encompass the office she was probably in. “I don’t want this job, but I am running for reelection. I am running, because there will be an election, and I’d rather have myself as President than…well…any of those that want it. There will be an election, and there will be another one after that, and the elections will continue on and on and Presidents and Senators and Representatives will come and go because there will be a United States of America to elect them. This is the oath I made to myself when I became President.”
She crossed her arms and glared at Charles. “To see that possibility through, I need Peloran military technology, and Peloran military training to use that technology. They are unlocking their tech for us, and some of it we can even build. What we can’t build is the training to use it.”
She aimed a finger at Charles. “This is what I need you for. The Cowboys. In a month of serving with you, a pilot will learn more about how to use Peloran tech than in years of study here at home. We need more Cowboys, many more Cowboys, and we need them to come home and show us what we’re doing wrong. And you will accept the acting promotion to major because the Peloran trust you and will work with you, and I need someone they trust in command.
“Do your duty, Major Hurst,” she finished and faded out.
Charles sat in his chair for several seconds as silence reigned in the office. Finally he shook his head and said “This is-”
“If you say this is crazy one more time,” The President’s disembodied voice spat out, “I will personally fly to Alpha Centauri and bitch slap you!”
Jack looked at Betty in alarm. “Are we sure that’s a recording?”
Betty gave him a wry smile. “Yes, Jack, we are. Instantaneous interstellar communications is science fiction.”
Jack pulled in a deep breath. “Right.”
“This is…not easy,” Charles said, manifestly unhappy with the situation, but he finally nodded towards Tom. “I will accept the acting command.”
Tom nodded. “Good. But for the record, while the rank is acting, the command is permanent. The President was impressed with the poise you used when speaking with her, and with the command you have shown since. The Cowboys have survived well under your command, and they are yours.” Tom smiled. “And if half of what I’ve read is true, I will be happy to fly with you.”
Charles took in a long series of breaths, looking back and forth between Jack and Jay, before finally nodding. “I understand.”
Many people say that the Chinese celebrate New Years at an odd time. Fact is, for thousands of years, New Years was based on the planting or harvesting seasons. China and ancient Rome both had New Years in spring, while the Jewish and Celtics celebrated it in fall. March 1 was New Years in Rome until Julius Caesar set it to January 1. But it wasn’t until the 1700s that all of Christendom accepted January 1 as New Years. Historically, we’re the odd ones.
Not long after me and Sam first met, she asked what I would have done if she hadn’t found me. I joked about getting a lot more sleep for one. She offered to help me out if sleep was that important. Dangerous offer there. I told her that the first thing a man says is never most important, it is a delaying tactic while he thinks of something better to say. That intrigued her, and she told me to continue. The secret of our relationship is that I never stopped.