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    Leviathan


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      Ace Books by Jack Campbell

      The Lost Fleet

      THE LOST FLEET: DAUNTLESS

      THE LOST FLEET: FEARLESS

      THE LOST FLEET: COURAGEOUS

      THE LOST FLEET: VALIANT

      THE LOST FLEET: RELENTLESS

      THE LOST FLEET: VICTORIOUS

      THE LOST FLEET: BEYOND THE FRONTIER: DREADNAUGHT

      THE LOST FLEET: BEYOND THE FRONTIER: INVINCIBLE

      THE LOST FLEET: BEYOND THE FRONTIER: GUARDIAN

      THE LOST FLEET: BEYOND THE FRONTIER: STEADFAST

      THE LOST FLEET: BEYOND THE FRONTIER: LEVIATHAN

      The Lost Stars

      THE LOST STARS: TARNISHED KNIGHT

      THE LOST STARS: PERILOUS SHIELD

      THE LOST STARS: IMPERFECT SWORD

      Written as John G. Hemry

      Stark’s War

      STARK’S WAR

      STARK’S COMMAND

      STARK’S CRUSADE

      Paul Sinclair

      A JUST DETERMINATION

      BURDEN OF PROOF

      RULE OF EVIDENCE

      AGAINST ALL ENEMIES

      Published by the Berkley Publishing Group

      An imprint of Penguin Random House LLC

      375 Hudson Street, New York, New York 10014

      This book is an original publication of the Berkley Publishing Group.

      Copyright © 2015 by John G. Hemry.

      Penguin supports copyright. Copyright fuels creativity, encourages diverse voices, promotes free speech, and creates a vibrant culture. Thank you for buying an authorized edition of this book and for complying with copyright laws by not reproducing, scanning, or distributing any part of it in any form without permission. You are supporting writers and allowing Penguin to continue to publish books for every reader.

      ACE and the “A” design are trademarks of Penguin Random House LLC.

      For more information about Penguin Group, visit penguin.com.

      eBook ISBN: 978-0-698-18548-7

      Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

      Campbell, Jack (Naval officer)

      The lost fleet : Beyond the frontier : Leviathan / Jack Campbell.

      pages ; cm. — (The lost fleet ; 11)

      ISBN 978-0-425-26054-8 (hardback)

      1. Space warfare—Fiction. 2. Imaginary wars and battles—Fiction. I. Title. II. Title: Leviathan.

      PS3553.A4637L667 2015

      813'.54—dc23

      2014045841

      FIRST EDITION: May 2015

      Cover art by Michael Komarck.

      Cover design by Annette Fiore DeFex.

      This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, business establishments, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.

      Version_1

      To Glenn L. Sparks, an old friend who lived a very good life and left this a better world for his having been here. There is never time enough.

      For S., as always.

      ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

      I remain indebted to my agent, Joshua Bilmes, for his ever-inspired suggestions and assistance, and to my editor, Anne Sowards, for her support and editing. Thanks also to Catherine Asaro, Robert Chase, Carolyn Ives Gilman, J. G. (Huck) Huckenpohler, Simcha Kuritzky, Michael LaViolette, Aly Parsons, Bud Sparhawk, and Constance A. Warner for their suggestions, comments, and recommendations.

      CONTENTS

      Ace Books by Jack Campbell

      Title Page

      Copyright

      Dedication

      Acknowledgments

      The First Fleet of the Alliance

      CHAPTER ONE

      CHAPTER TWO

      CHAPTER THREE

      CHAPTER FOUR

      CHAPTER FIVE

      CHAPTER SIX

      CHAPTER SEVEN

      CHAPTER EIGHT

      CHAPTER NINE

      CHAPTER TEN

      CHAPTER ELEVEN

      CHAPTER TWELVE

      CHAPTER THIRTEEN

      CHAPTER FOURTEEN

      CHAPTER FIFTEEN

      CHAPTER SIXTEEN

      THE FIRST FLEET OF THE ALLIANCE

      ADMIRAL JOHN GEARY, COMMANDING

      SECOND BATTLESHIP DIVISION

      Gallant

      Indomitable

      Glorious

      Magnificent

      THIRD BATTLESHIP DIVISION

      Dreadnaught

      Orion (lost at Sobek)

      Dependable

      Conqueror

      FOURTH BATTLESHIP DIVISION

      Warspite

      Vengeance

      Revenge

      Guardian

      FIFTH BATTLESHIP DIVISION

      Fearless

      Resolution

      Redoubtable

      SEVENTH BATTLESHIP DIVISION

      Colossus

      Encroach

      Amazon

      Spartan

      EIGHTH BATTLESHIP DIVISION

      Relentless

      Reprisal (returned to Callas Republic)

      Superb

      Splendid

      FIRST BATTLE CRUISER DIVISION

      Inspire

      Formidable

      Brilliant (lost at Honor)

      Implacable

      SECOND BATTLE CRUISER DIVISION

      Leviathan

      Dragon

      Steadfast

      Valiant

      FOURTH BATTLE CRUISER DIVISION

      Dauntless (flagship)

      Daring

      Victorious

      Intemperate

      FIFTH BATTLE CRUISER DIVISION

      Adroit (lost at Atalia)

      SIXTH BATTLE CRUISER DIVISION

      Illustrious

      Incredible

      Invincible (lost at Pandora)

      FIFTH ASSAULT TRANSPORT DIVISION

      Tsunami

      Typhoon

      Mistral

      Haboob

      FIRST AUXILIARIES DIVISION

      Titan

      Tanuki

      Kupua

      Domovoi

      SECOND AUXILIARIES DIVISION

      Witch

      Jinn

      Alchemist

      Cyclops

      THIRTY-ONE HEAVY CRUISERS IN SIX DIVISIONS

      First Heavy Cruiser Division

      Third Heavy Cruiser Division

      Fourth Heavy Cruiser Division

      Fifth Heavy Cruiser Division

      Eighth Heavy Cruiser Division

      Tenth Heavy Cruiser Division

      Emerald and Hoplon lost at Honor

      FIFTY-FIVE LIGHT CRUISERS IN TEN SQUADRONS

      First Light Cruiser Squadron

      Second Light Cruiser Squadron

      Third Light Cruiser Squadron

      Fifth Light Cruiser Squadron

      Sixth Light Cruiser Squadron

      Eighth Light Cruiser Squadron

      Ninth Light Cruiser Squadron

      Tenth Light Cruiser Squadron

      Eleventh Light Cruiser Squadron

      Fourteenth Light Cruiser Squadron

      Balestra lost at Honor

      Lancer lost at Atalia

      ONE HUNDRED SIXTY DESTROYERS IN EIGHTEEN SQUADRONS

      First Destroyer Squadron

      Second Destroyer Squadron

      Third Destroyer Squadron

      Fourth Destroyer Squadron

      Sixth Destroyer Squadron

      Seventh Destroyer S
    quadron

      Ninth Destroyer Squadron

      Tenth Destroyer Squadron

      Twelfth Destroyer Squadron

      Fourteenth Destroyer Squadron

      Sixteenth Destroyer Squadron

      Seventeenth Destroyer Squadron

      Twentieth Destroyer Squadron

      Twenty-first Destroyer Squadron

      Twenty-third Destroyer Squadron

      Twenty-seventh Destroyer Squadron

      Twenty-eighth Destroyer Squadron

      Thirty-second Destroyer Squadron

      Zaghnal lost at Pandora

      Plumbatae, Bolo, Bangalore, and Morningstar lost at Honor

      Musket lost at Midway

      Kururi and Sabar lost at Atalia

      FIRST FLEET MARINE FORCE

      Major General Carabali, commanding

      3,000 Marines on assault transports and divided into detachments on battle cruisers and battleships

      ONE

      “FIVE minutes to exit from jump space,” Captain Tanya Desjani said from her seat next to Admiral John “Black Jack” Geary on the bridge of the Alliance battle cruiser Dauntless. “All systems at maximum combat readiness.”

      The warships commanded by Geary had left the blood and fire of Atalia Star System in pursuit of the dark ships that had carried out the destruction there. Geary and the others called them “dark ships” because their hulls were a duskier shade than most warships’, perhaps because of special stealth materials. It hadn’t been the crews of the dark ships that had committed the atrocities at Atalia and at Indras Star System but the dark ships themselves. The dark ships lacked human crews who could have overridden automated systems that had developed deadly glitches or perhaps been deliberately sabotaged by any of a variety of malware. Having finally won the century-long war against the Syndicate Worlds, the Alliance government had decided not to place its faith in the men and women who had paid the price for that victory, instead placing its trust in robotic systems that had already set ablaze two star systems.

      Geary’s Task Force Dancer had left Varandal with twelve battle cruisers, eight heavy cruisers, thirteen light cruisers, and twenty-five destroyers. The battle cruiser Adroit had been lost in the fighting at Atalia, along with the light cruiser Lancer and the destroyers Kururi and Sabar. Four battle cruisers, Leviathan, Dragon, Steadfast, and Valiant, along with some heavy cruisers and destroyers, had remained at Atalia to assist damaged ships and recover wreckage from destroyed dark ships.

      Only seven battle cruisers were left in the pursuit force.

      That would be enough. If they could catch the surviving dark ships, which had fled from the destruction they had wrought at Atalia.

      —

      “ARE automatic software updates disabled for Dauntless’s systems?” Geary asked.

      “Yes, sir.” Tanya could be informal at other times, but now she was sharp, precise, and dangerous, a human weapon honed by the last decades of the brutal war with the Syndics. “My people are actively monitoring all systems, and if something tries overriding the block on updates, they have orders to shut down those systems and do a cold reboot from last-day backups.”

      “Good,” Geary said. “It’s a hell of a thing not to be able to trust our own software.”

      Desjani shook her head. “We could never completely trust our software. It wasn’t just flaws and glitches, it was also all the malware that enemy hackers could come up with to cause our software to misbehave. Humans separate from the machines are the only firewalls proven to be reliable enough. That’s why we always kept humans in the loop, for those times when the software got its artificial little brains twisted.”

      “‘Always’ until those dark ships were built,” Geary said, his tones tight with anger.

      “Yes.” She leaned closer and spoke more quietly. “If the dark ships went berserk after they arrived at Varandal, like they did at Atalia, stopping them from doing a lot of damage might be impossible for us. They were nearly two hours ahead of us when they jumped for Varandal, and if they accelerated after they left jump space, they will have opened that lead. And none of the defenses at Varandal will be able to see the dark ships at all to counter them.”

      “I know,” Geary said, trying not to let his frustration sound too clearly. “Thanks to official software updates designed to keep us blind to the dark ships. Are the software patches that fix the damage caused by those updates ready to send as soon as we arrive at Varandal?”

      “Yes, sir. The First Fleet ships still at Varandal will install the patches on your say-so because you’re the fleet commander, but other Alliance forces not directly reporting to you may not,” she reminded him. “They’ll argue that these are unauthorized modifications to official software, so they need approval from their own chain of command to install them.”

      “If they’re already getting shot up by warships that are invisible to their sensors, they may be motivated to ignore regulations concerning unauthorized software modifications.”

      “One minute to exit from jump space,” Lieutenant Castries called from her watch station at the back of the bridge.

      Geary fixed his eyes on his display. A marker to one side confirmed that Dauntless’s weapons systems, like those of the other warships in this pursuit force, were set to open fire immediately if any dark ships were within range when the Alliance warships left jump space. He didn’t think they would be, though. The artificial-intelligence routines governing the dark ships’ tactical decisions were apparently closely based on Geary’s own methods, and under these circumstances, if he had been the commander of the dark ships, he would not have attempted an ambush against a force with as much an advantage in firepower as Task Force Dancer still possessed.

      The jolt of transition from the gray nothingness of jump space back to the real universe hit Geary. He was barely aware of the sudden reappearance of the stars in the endless blackness of space, his mind dazed by the transition, but even while fighting off the effects of the exit from jump, Geary noticed that none of Dauntless’s weapons were firing.

      His display swam back into focus as Geary concentrated on it.

      Desjani was a second faster than he was in getting her mind working right again. “They’re heading for the hypernet gate.”

      “To attack it, or to use it to get away?” he wondered aloud. “At least they’re not moving into the star system to attack the ships and facilities.”

      Space had no up or down, no east or west to determine directions, so humans had made up their own. Every star system had a plane in which planets orbited. One side of that plane was labeled up, the other down. Any direction toward the star was starboard or starward, while any direction away from the star was port. The conventions were simple, but they worked to give common references for ships that might be pointed in any direction, upside down or at right angles to each other.

      The dark ships that had escaped from Atalia, two battle cruisers, one heavy cruiser, and five destroyers, were to port of Geary’s ships and diving down slightly as they moved at a steady point two light speed for the hypernet gate orbiting six light-hours from the jump point where Geary’s ships had just arrived. “They’re three hours’ travel time ahead of us. We won’t have any chance of catching them before they reach the gate,” Desjani said. “We’d better hope they’re running and that their warped artificial brains haven’t decided the gate is also an enemy target.”

      “Status signals from the gate indicate that the safe-collapse mechanism is operational,” reported Lieutenant Yuon, the weapons systems watch-stander on Dauntless’s bridge.

      “Thank you, Lieutenant. At least if the dark ships do attack it, we don’t have to worry about the gate’s setting off a nova-scale explosion when it collapses. They’ll reach the gate in another twenty-seven hours.” She ran some quick calculations. “There are two destroyers at the gate. Maybe . . . damn. The only other units already at Varandal that are p
    ositioned to be able to intercept the dark ships are several more destroyers and light cruisers.”

      “Those wouldn’t stand a chance even if they could see the dark ships,” Geary said. “We may not be able to catch the dark ships, but we can stay on their tails.” He tapped a comm control. “All units in Task Force Dancer, immediate execute accelerate to point two five light speed, come port two five degrees, down zero three degrees.”

      “Are we going to chase them through the hypernet gate?” Desjani asked.

      “If we have to,” Geary said. “We have to find their base, wherever it is.” He checked the fuel cell status on his ships and let out an angry breath. “I’ll have to leave our destroyers here if we do that. Their fuel supplies are getting too low. Now, let’s get the word out to everyone here,” Geary added, his mood and his voice grim. He could see the many defenses at Varandal, the numerous warships and installations, all at standby readiness because the war with the Syndics had at last ended. “Why aren’t they reporting peacetime readiness instead of standby?” Geary grumbled.

      “Because nobody but you remembers what peacetime readiness is,” Desjani reminded him. “And if the attack on Indras by those dark ships causes the Syndics to retaliate, this peace business may already be over with before the rest of us can figure out what it means.”

      “I hope you’re wrong about that. At least if the Syndics attack our defenses, we will be able to see them.” Even after experiencing on these ships how secret software modifications had left Alliance sensors unable to see the dark ships, it was still hard to grasp that everything else in this star system would be totally unaware of the dark ships that were passing through. Many of those defenses were too far off to have seen the dark ships yet regardless, of course, let alone the more recent arrival of Geary’s ships. Light only moved at about eighteen million kilometers a minute, so with distances inside a star system measured in hundreds of millions or billions of kilometers, even light took a while to get places.

      But other defenses, other ships closer to this edge of the star system, should have seen the dark ships by now. If their own software were not blinding them to the presence of the hostile forces.

      “What you are about to do will raise hell,” Desjani commented.

     


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