Nathaniel Cannon and the Schneider Trophy No. 2

“We stick with what we do best. In a few days, our target will be on the move. Macchi’s zep will head north over the water. We’ll hit them there and capture the zep. We score the racer, and a zep for the wreckers in the Australias besides.” Cannon looked around the auditorium. “We’ll patrol east of Sardinia and fly scouts down to the Sicilian coast…”

 

Four days later, the mid-afternoon sun shone brightly through scattered puffy clouds over the Tyrrhenian Sea. Inconstant ran south-southeast at full speed, just above cloud level. One of her Albatross transports, playing scout for the day, had radioed in a sighting: a zep flying the Italian flag. The Albatross had closed in, and sure enough, it was Carabiniere, flying below the clouds one hundred miles from Inconstant. Inconstant raced to meet her. They would be side-by-side in less than forty-five minutes.

Some half an hour later, four Kestrel interceptors, four Falcon fighters, and two Vulture light bombers dropped from Inconstant‘s hangar, orbiting just above the zep. Approaching above the cloud deck, Cannon hoped to bring Inconstant down through the clouds as close to Carabiniere as possible, fire a broadside or two, and go aboard before the Italians knew what had hit them.

He stood in Inconstant‘s control room, looking through a pair of binoculars. He asked the flying master, “Mr. Churchill, what’s the range?”

“Twenty miles, captain.”

“Burr, what’s the word from Choufeng?” Cannon called over his shoulder.

In the radio room two dozen yards aft, a short, trim, brown-haired woman put down the headphones she had been holding to her ear. “No good. He thinks the Italians caught sight of him.”

Cannon scowled. “Radio Joe. Tell him to attack, approaching high. Hit her radio room.”

Burr put the headphones back on, then picked up a microphone and spoke into it. Overhead, Inconstant‘s planes formed up, put on more speed, and climbed away ahead of them.

 

Joe looked out the left side of his cockpit. His wingman was right there, flying another Kestrel. The interceptors were tiny little planes, built backwards: canards with the elevators at the front, and wings with ailerons and wingtip rudders at the back. Two engines behind the cockpit drove two coaxial pusher propellers. A few hundred yards distant, Emma led the Falcon group. A little behind the fighter groups, the Vultures, ungainly machines with tailplanes nearly as large as their wings, struggled to keep up. Hidehito Takahashi flew the lead bomber.

Joe squinted through the prop disc. Ten miles ahead, four planes pushed through the clouds.

“Fighters ahead,” Emma’s voice crackled in Joe’s ear.

“I see ’em,” Joe said. “Take the bombers in. We’re on the fighters.”

Joe fit actions to words, pushing his throttles forward. The Kestrel picked up speed, leaving the rest of Inconstant‘s strike force in the dust.

 

Emma liked the Falcon. Sturdily built, with a pusher engine between the twin tail booms, and a heavy armament in the empty nose, the heavy fighter was her opposite. On the ground, she had to be evasive, ducking and dodging, striking only when she knew she could escape. In the sky, she enjoyed being able to take a hit, and dish one out in reply.

“On me, Takahashi,” she said into her microphone, as Joe’s group roared ahead. “We’ll dive from here.” Takahashi acknowledge by clicking his mic. Emma pushed her plane’s nose down, feeling the familiar rush as she picked up speed.

The Falcons and the bombers hit the cloud deck a few minutes later, breaking through a mere few miles from Carabiniere. Emma put her throttle full forward. “Robber group, follow me in. We’ll make the first attack. Bandit group, make sure we’ve done the job.”

Emma spun the elevation knob on her gunsight. Carabiniere was now only a mile away, and closing fast. She felt minute forces on the stick, little gusts of wind and the natural oscillation of the Falcon, push her sight off target. She breathed deeply, focused on Carabiniere‘s gondola through the sight, and willed the sight over the center of the gondola. Half a mile. She pushed the button atop the stick. Spiraling trails of smoke filled the space between her plane and the Italian zep. A few moments later, explosions dotted Carabiniere‘s gondola as her rockets struck home. She pulled up and banked hard left, her wingman following. Looking over her left shoulder, she could just catch sight of the second pair firing their rockets.

“Good hits,” Takahashi’s voice came over the radio. “Switch to secondary targets.”

Emma clicked her mic and let the Falcon come halfway out of the turn. Tracking the top of the Italian zep through her canopy, she rolled fully out of the turn, lined up on the machine gun positions along Carabiniere‘s topside. She let the range close, then put a burst form her own guns into each nest.

Below, the Vultures dove, then climbed toward the zep’s underside, launching rockets toward her hangar bay hatches. Emma grinned. She loved her job.

 

Joe hauled back hard on his stick, feeling the force of the turn press down on his shoulders. Clouds replaced sky in the view through the windshield, and ocean in return replaced clouds. Neck muscles straining, he put the outer ring of his gunsight on the Italian fighter ahead of him and pulled his triggers. A stream of tracers lanced out from his Kestrel’s nose. Flashes from the Italian fighter, followed by a gratifying stream of black smoke, told him he’d hit. Joe pulled out of his dive as the Italian pilot bailed out.

“You’re leaking something, Four,” came a voice over the radio.

Joe jumped in. “Go to home plate, Four. We got cleanup.”

Inconstant was now only a few miles away. The pirate zep descended through the clouds.

 

Cannon paced. The gondola windows looked out to a uniform field of white. After a few moments more, the gondola broke through the clouds. There was Carabiniere, a mile distant.

“Mr. Churchill, one starboard broadside, then bring us in.”

Inconstant swung ponderously to the left, showing Carabiniere her guns. The three-inchers popped off a volley as they came to bear. Churchill reversed the rudders, and Inconstant settled on a new course, approaching the Italian zep at about a forty-five degree angle.

“You have the bridge,” Cannon said. “Get us in close, keep us alongside. Burr, sound the boarding alarm.”

 

Five minutes later, Cannon stood in Inconstant‘s Number Four prop house, forward of midships. His trusty Mauser holstered at his side, he had chosen one of Inconstant‘s stock of machine pistols for this little outing. Through the open windows, Carabiniere loomed large ahead of them, a hundred yards away and drawing closer by the second. “Ready on the harpoon, di Giacomo?” Cannon asked.

Next to him, a tall Italian man took aim over the top of a long tube on a large tripod. A wickedly-barbed hook protruded from its front, and a coil of thick cable sat beneath it, running down the gangway and back into the zep. Di Giacomo said, “Ready.”

Cannon waited a few heartbeats more. “Fire!”

A similar scene played out in all four of Inconstant‘s starboard prop houses. Hooks and cables shot through the gap between the zeps, embedding themselves in Carabiniere‘s skin. Winches deep within Inconstant pulled the cables taut, until the zeps were running side-by-side at sixty miles per hour.

Di Giacomo’s aim proved better than average. His hook had hit one of Carabiniere‘s engine gondolas. Cannon swung a length of rope over the line and tied it to his belt. “Once we’re in, my team goes to the hangar, and di Giacomo’s joins the team from Number Two at the gondola. Clear? All right. Let’s go.”

They went across the line. Nobody was in the gondola. Cannon shot out the lock on the hatch into the zep, and they pushed down the gangway to the Italian zep’s ventral catwalk. Gas cells filled the space over their heads, close enough to touch, and framed the catwalk on both sides fore and aft of the gangway out to the engine pod. A faint whistling audible over the engines indicated that some of them were damaged and leaking. Fifty yards aft, the catwalk ended at a duralumin wall, probably the hangar. Forward, a ladder ran down to the gondola.

Cannon took six men aft, and di Giacomo took the rest forward. Gunshots rang out from the hangar, and Cannon’s team covered the rest of the distance there at a run. One pirate took the hatch’s latch in hand. Others covered him, and he threw the door open.

The hatch opened onto a catwalk near the hangar’s ceiling. The zep’s keel, right beneath Cannon’s feet, ran through it. Stairs led down to the deck level. Cannon and his team stormed in, crouching behind the railing. Ahead, seven or eight Italian guards shot it out with ten pirates. Both groups hid behind crates of equipment and spares, fighting around the Macchi, which hung from the overhead rails off to one side of the hangar. Staccato bursts from machine pistols echoed in the confined space. Cannon’s team opened fire, and the surviving Italians threw down their weapons as they realized they were surrounded.

More gunshots rang out, coming from points forward in Carabiniere, then stopped as quickly as they started. It was quiet for a moment, then di Giacomo’s voice came over the intercom, speaking first in Italian. “We have taken the zeppelin,” he repeated, in English. “Give up, and you will not be killed.”

 

The attack had gone smoothly. Four of the Long Nines had been hit by gunfire, but none were badly wounded. One Kestrel was seriously damaged, but salvageable. Another Kestrel and one Falcon had taken some fire, but the damage was cosmetic. The ferocity of the first strike had done most of their work for them: the Italian captain had been killed by a rocket to the gondola, and most of the other officers had been badly injured. Without effective command, the Italian resistance had collapsed.

Cannon still had a lot to do. More pirates came across the lines, enough of a crew to guard the prisoners and make Carabiniere ready for travel again. They cleared debris out of the hangar, freed the grapples from the Italian zep’s side, and did what they could to bring her damaged engines back to life. Eventually, six of her eight propellers were running, which would have to be enough. In the control room, Cannon gave orders to run the throttles up and head southwest. They would slip between Sicily and Sardinia, then head across the Mediterranean and over North Africa.

Di Giacomo called down the ladder. “Captain Cannon! You’ll want to see this.”

 

Cannon descended the stairs from the hangar catwalk to the deck. “We noticed as we were cleaning up from the fight,” di Giacomo said, nodding at a few blood-spattered sheets off to the starboard edge of the hangar. “The Macchi’s been hit.”

“Badly?” Cannon wondered.

Di Giacomo shrugged. “I am no mechanic.”

Cannon climbed up the stepladder someone had placed next to the racer. A line of bullet holes stitched across the engine cowling and up through the cockpit. He slid down the ladder, and looked from the other side. Only a few had exited.

“I wonder if Le Vot’s the forgiving type,” he wondered aloud. “Or…”

Voting has closed! The next entry and vote will be posted by 5:00 p.m. Eastern time.

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Nathaniel Cannon and the Schneider Trophy No. 1

Emma Foster pushed open the door to Inconstant‘s briefing room and breezed inside. She was late. This was not unusual. It always took the skipper ten minutes to get through the pointless reasoning behind any given mission and come to the details she cared about.

Nathaniel Cannon stood at the lectern at the front of the room, droning on about something or another. He broke off and watched her take her seat. “Good of you to join us,” he said.

“Are we to the interesting part yet?” Emma replied, playing up her typical Australian twang. The crew snickered. Worryingly, it seemed to her to be at her expense, rather than Cannon’s.

“Just about,” the captain said. Emma scowled. Cannon met it with a grin. “I figured we’d go over patrol schedules while we waited for you. Someone will catch you up later. On to today’s business.” He pointed at the easel next to him. “This is the Schneider Trophy, awarded to the winner of an annual race for seaplanes. No doubt you’ve read about it in the papers—this year’s running is in two weeks. Ugly as it is, the great powers think it has some prestige to it, so competition is fierce. The Brits won the last two runnings, in ’27 and ’29. If they take the win this year, they take the trophy for good—three times in five years seals it. Our employer is a Frenchman and an air racer by the name of Guillaume Le Vot, and he doesn’t want to see that happen.

“The way he figures it, the French can compete starting next year, once SPAD gets its latest design together. This year, the Italians have a winner ready, but old Benito doesn’t want the expense of running it, and won’t give it up. Le Vot wants the Italian machine for himself.” Cannon flipped the page on the easel. “This is that machine: the Aeronautica Macchi M.C. 71.”

Emma leaned closer. The Macchi bird had great lines: a massive engine compartment at the front, taking up more than half of the plane’s length, swelled smoothly into a streamlined cockpit, then faded back into a rakishly-angled tail. Its wings had an almost British sweep to them, a straight leading edge to a rounded tip, then an angled trailing edge which blended back into the fuselage. Its floats were the only strike against it, big ugly things hanging from the underside on thick bracing.

Cannon proceeded. “Right now, she’s hangared at Trapani-Chinisia, at the western tip of Sicily. No trigger men beyond what you’d expect at a sleepy little Regia Aeronautica field. Le Vot will cut us in on the purse, half-and-half, if we steal it for him.”

“How big’s the purse?” someone asked.

“Forty thousand pounds,” Cannon said. Emma whistled. That was some serious cabbage. Fuel to Europe and back wouldn’t cost more than a few hundred pounds, and if they played their cards right, the rest would be pure profit.

“Any other questions? All right.” Cannon returned to the lectern. “Le Vot has heard that Macchi’s getting ready to move the plane back to the factory, up by the Swiss border in Varese. We’ll have to move soon.”

Voting has closed! Winning choice: By piracy! Capture the Italian zep carrying the Macchi machine north. The next entry and the next choice will be posted by 2:30 pm ET.

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We Sail Off To War Release Day!

War has broken out in the Confederacy of Allied Worlds, and it falls to the brave men and women of the Naval Arm to defend their country against the Exile fleet. Over the gas giant Argo, they are losing. With few resources and little time to spare, they must find—and bring to battle—an Exile armored cruiser which has terrorized the spacelanes for too long.

We Sail Off To War, a military science fiction novella, is available now in e-book form at your favorite purveyor of fine reading material. Order it now at Amazon, Barnes and Noble, Kobo, Apple iBooks, and Smashwords, as well as all e-book stores to which Smashwords distributes.

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The Long Retreat No. 89

She hit the ground hard, bouncing and skidding through the dirt. She hit a tree, which knocked the wind out of her, and came to a stop. Falthejn didn’t waste so much as a heartbeat. He threw his sword. Without waiting to see the result, he took Alfhilde’s axe and sent it tumbling along, too.

The ontling chief batted the sword away with one arm, and the axe with its other—and its eyes widened, as Hrothgar’s hatchet embedded itself up to the haft in its forehead. Falthejn straightened. He’d taken a few running steps and put his whole body into the throw. The chief let out a keening wail, staggering backward and falling to its knees. Its guards looked between themselves nervously. The chief fell onto its back, dead, and the other ontr wavered. Falthejn walked toward them, and they took a cautious step away. He picked up his sword, and they ran. Their bridges crashed to the ground. The diviner watched them go, then wiped off his sword and sheathed it. He turned to face the others. “Quickly,” he said.

 

“Why did you go?” Sif asked. They had walked in uncomfortable silence for half an hour, and if nobody else was going to ask the obvious questions, she would.

Falthejn was quiet for some time. He must have seen her next words coming, because he held up his hand before Sif was even sure she wanted to say them. “I will take my time,” he said, “and answer your question well.”

Sif looked between Alfhilde and Hrothgar. Alfhilde’s face sank into a frown, and Hrothgar managed an indifferent look. Sif shrugged to herself.

Five minutes passed before Falthejn spoke. His shoulders fell, and his head drooped forward. “I would like to say that the ontlig poison made me do something I would not have done, were I fully in control of my wits, but I cannot.” He stopped and turned to face them. “All I can say is that I am not the man I hoped I was. For that I am sorry. I would do it differently, if I could do it again.” He turned away and kept walking.

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The Long Retreat No. 88

Sif opened her eyes. Her head throbbed. Where was she?

It all flooded back in an instant, and she sat up. Her heart sank. Something was wrong. Falthejn wouldn’t have dropped his sword on purpose. She struggled to her feet, rubbing her arms against the growing chill. She remembered something, then, and let her mind reach out.

Everything became clear. She saw tendrils of power reaching out from the biggest ontling, swooping down to envelop her friends. Falthejn struggled against it, but couldn’t gain ground on it, and Alfhilde and Hrothgar could do nothing at all. She felt the storm of power gathering around the ontlig magiker, and although she couldn’t tell what it was for, she knew she didn’t like it.

She had to do something.

She ran to Falthejn’s side, squared her shoulders, and met the ontling’s magic head-on. Falthejn’s will joined hers, and together, they fought. The war of minds ebbed and flowed, but the ontling was strong. She felt a push in her head, then a pressure growing to pain. She grimaced.

Falthejn broke free. He raised his voice in a shout of defiance, and his hand came to rest on Sif’s shoulder. They made one last effort, pushing together, and the oppressive power of the ontling’s mind snapped back. Sif looked up, and saw something like surprise on the monster’s face. It roared, swinging its arms around in a great circle.

“Run,” Falthejn urged her.

She shook her head. “I can do this.”

Falthejn might have replied, but he had run out of time. The ontling’s arms came back around to point at them, and a bolt of lightning shot from its claws. For Sif, time stopped. She watched the bolt trace its way through the space between them. She put out one hand, and felt the force of the blow push her back. She leaned in against it, and lightning wreathed her arm. She looked at it for a moment, surprised—then it began to hurt, worse than she’d imagined it might. She pointed back toward the ontling leader and let go. The force of the magic threw her backward through the air, and pushed her aim off-target. The bolt hit one of the ontlig siege bridges. It caught fire instantly, then a cloud of dirt kicked up by the impact hit it from her view.

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The Long Retreat No. 87

Two of the beasts came at him at once. He sidestepped a swing from the first and took its hand off in reply. He drove his shoulder into the second, knocking it over, and pushed his sword through the first’s chest as it stared in shock at its missing appendage. Behind him, Hrothgar shouted as he swung the hatchet. Falthejn felt ichor spatter against the back of his tunic. He glanced over his shoulder. Hrothgar pulled the hatchet free, eyes wide and teeth bared, and growled, “Which of you next?”

Falthejn dispatched the ontling he’d knocked over, and counted two more fallen.

Magical senses tingling, Falthejn ducked and pushed his sword up over his head, nearly splitting a leaping ontling in two. Three left—Alfhilde and Hrothgar could manage them. Their leader was another story.

Falthejn freed his sword with some effort. Next to him, Alfhilde swing her axe through an ontlig neck before the ontling could jump him. He nodded his thanks, and turned to face the ontling watching from atop the rise. He took a step—his feet didn’t move. His fingers loosened, and his sword dropped at his side.

One ontling, the only survivor from the skirmish, fell back up the hill toward its master. The ontlig chief looked dead at Falthejn. The diviner heard weapons clatter to the ground, but couldn’t turn his head to see if Alfhilde and Hrothgar were alright. He gritted his teeth, but some foreign presence in his head held him in place.

Cresting the rise behind the ontlig chief, a few dozen ontr—larger, armored, probably the chief’s bodyguard—pushed wooden constructions toward the river. Bridges, Falthejn realized. If they got across in numbers here, the fort would be lost.

He felt the world twist, and saw the ontlig chief raise his claws. A chill ran down his spine. This was the chief he’d seen the night before.

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The Long Retreat No. 86

Falthejn looked around the clearing. He must have missed them by minutes. Alfhilde would have taken them toward the bridge. Falthejn turned upriver, following the bank, and begged the Twelve he wasn’t too late.

Half an hour later, he thought he could hear movement through the underbrush, beyond the hedge to his left. An ontlig shout, much nearer than the noises of battle from the bridge still far upriver, rang out. No time to think it through. He drew his sword and crashed through the brush.

He saw Alfhilde standing ready to receive an ontlig charge, a dozen or so of the smaller sort, unarmored and unarmed beyond their claws, heading right for her. Up the slight rise in front of them, a large ontling stood, surveying the skirmish. Something about it seemed familiar, but Falthejn had no time to look more closely. Sif let out a strangled cry and collapsed, and Hrothgar took a few steps forward to stand next to his wife. Falthejn didn’t like their odds. Shouting back at the ontlig chief, Falthejn pounded toward the oncoming fight.

“What, so you think—” Alfhilde said.

“Rebuke me later,” Falthejn interrupted.

The ontr reached them. The diviner let Alfhilde make the first strike, then gutted an ontling swiping at her side. He rolled beneath a third ontling’s claws as Hrothgar sunk his hatchet into its skull. On his way up, he tripped another ontling, leaving Hrothgar time enough to free his hatchet.

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The Long Retreat No. 85

By midday, he felt as good as he ever did—physically, at any rate. He wondered: how much of his decision to leave did the poison account for? Some, no doubt: the poison’s effect on the mind was more severe than the army’s physicians had thought. Other patients had died too soon after showing the first signs to discuss the precise nature of the symptoms.

Ultimately, though, the answer was, “Not enough.” He had always tried to be different—to be better than others who carried the diviner’s coin. Clouded mind or not, he had failed. He had let his friends, pursuing his own peace by playing the safe bet at the expense of their peace on a longer shot. Fundamentally, he was gambling either way. He should have sought their counsel, and when they told him they wanted him to stay, he should have heeded them. Water under the bridge, as unfortunate as it was. He wondered if they might forgive him. They were, after all, better people than he.

A day’s worth of fast marching should have tired him out more than it had. Perhaps the miracle plant which brought him back from the edge of oblivion had helped. Perhaps he could find a telemancer to bring him here later in search of seeds.

The roar of the river came as a surprise, but only for a few moments. He came to the usually tranquil stretch of water where the road ended, and it confirmed his suspicions. The army had magiker with power over water, and those who could control earth and stone. Turn a tranquil river into a raging torrent, build a bridge over at the end of your new road through the wilderness, and confound any enemy who might try a crossing elsewhere.

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