FLIPSPACE
FLIGHT
OF THE MOCKINGBIRD
John
Steiner
© Copyright
John Steiner, 2014, 2025
Introduction
Chapter 1 - Always the Last Minute
A car with the black and silver colors of Aerospace
Defense Response rolled along a vast parkway near the airstrip. Instead of
wheels, it glided on four Mat Treads. The smart material enveloped, shifted,
softened, and hardened according to terrain and driver intent. The machine came
to a smooth halt in front of Wing Command Headquarters.
A gull wing door opened to allow two black uniformed
people to step out. The first was a tall lean woman of dark complexion, hair
cropped short on the back and sides, with an enrapturing face and silver
irises. On the right side of her collar shone an eagle and the left carried an
equally glistening pin depicting three upward shooting stars. The man walking
in step to her left had brown hair, brown eyes. His light toned face looked as
if it might have taken a few punches, but otherwise everything remained in
place. The gold leaf cluster on his right collar distinguished him as a major
to the woman’s colonel rank. He opened one of the front doors for his superior officer
to enter and followed her.
Inside, a ceiling mounted display fixture stood in place
of a front desk. It lit up with an image of a man appearing to be mid-twenties
in age and matching ADR uniform. The two dimensional projection looked the same
when viewed from any direction. The man wasn’t human, but an approximation of
Self-Ware inhabiting the building’s quantum computer. The AI exhibited
good-natured amicability.
“Good morning, Colonel Sumitra Ramachandra and Major
Lamarr Fitch.” Its excessive warmth came with an over-appeasing grin.
“Brigadier General Chaffee is in a net meeting at the moment.
However, you’re more than welcome to wait outside his office, ma’am and sir.”
“Good. Thank you, Yani,” Sumitra acknowledged with more
subdued cordiality.
“With all the training we’re doing, you wouldn’t think
he’d have us wait,” Lamarr muttered.
Studying the door, as if she might see through it,
Sumitra speculated on the reason for the summons. “We’re most likely being
activated early for a rescue op. The Pan-American Combine has been nagging NATO
to help with Golden Fist of Pacifica for years. The GFP taking hostages in
international jurisdiction would serve as a trigger for NATO involvement.”
Lamarr looked to say something disparaging about the
government presiding over American nations, one of which he hailed from, when
the door opened on its own, and cut his retort short.
“Yes, come in Rama and Fitch,” the general instructed
without military formality.
In a moment of weakness, Sumitra caught herself eyeing
the generous interior. Her office and personal quarters on the ISV-71 Raven she’d soon command for real
would fit in here twice over. However, General Chaffee’s laid-back approach to
command vanished before either of them entered the room, causing her to snap to
attention. Lamarr matched her disciplined stance.
Chaffee’s deep brown-toned skin varied a little. His
hair would’ve curled tight if it hadn’t been buzzed. In this era, being seventy
years old didn’t mean gray hair or many wrinkles thanks to better medical
understanding of DNA repair and the gene therapy that resulted.
“I realize you have been working your crew double-duty
to get up to speed, but we’ll have to scrub the last two weeks,” General
Chaffee announced. Rama felt as if he was warning her for the pending sucker
punch.
She knew it. Always
pull the plug at the last goddamn minute.
“We’ve got a serious situation with the FTLV Astraeus,” the general continued.
“I wasn’t aware they’d returned to the solar system,”
Sumitra said, in double disbelief.
“They haven’t. You’re going to them.”
The two officers exchanged incredulous faces before
Lamarr almost coughed out a protest.
However, Sumitra quickly stayed him with her own more
carefully worded complaint. “Sir, we’ve spent just over the last year training
on the ISV-71 Raven. A sudden reassignment to an entirely different ship is
ill-advised. Besides, of the FTLV’s planned, or in production, none are meant
for military command.”
“Actually, several are,” General Chaffee corrected her.
“You’re not being reassigned. You weren’t even going to be notified about the Raven
upgrades until after certification, but you will in fact be FTL capable. I’ve
also updated your crew roster. You can look over their files on the way.”
“On the way to where?” Lamarr asked.
“The ISS Mockingbird,
of course,” Chaffee revealed at last, standing up to escort them out of his
office. “I’ve scrambled your crews already. They should be assembling by the
time you arrive.”
Chaffee led the other two at a brisk pace to another car
pulling up with a single star on rectangular red banners above the front Mat
Treads. The general’s car sped off under computer control at over forty
kilometers an hour above the recommended speeds on or near airstrips. A larger
military personnel bus on six treads pulled in as well. Colonel Ramachandra
busied herself with the new crewmember files displaying inside of her own eyes.
“Now with Mister Ash there,” Chaffee explained, having
anticipated Sumitra’s next shock. “He’s on an E-four pay grade as a specialist,
but he gets none of the rank privileges or authority over other enlisted
personnel. Just make damn sure you know exactly what he’s doing.”
“You recruited a convicted bioterrorist for my crew?”
Sumitra stared at him.
“Jesus Christ,” Lamarr exclaimed in a strained sigh with
wide eyes. “I heard of this guy.”
“Convicted, yes,” Chaffee said with a finger raised to
them. “However, the Pan-American government couldn’t build a solid case outside
secret tribunals. If he had decided to go that way, I don’t think they could
catch him. They needed a big arrest for their media, and he drew the lucky
number. Once public outrage grew, and a governing party was ousted, his
incarceration became a blemish the incoming party refused to tolerate. NATO
needed someone with his talents as a contingency plan if anything happened to
the Astraeus mission.”
“Anything else I should know,” Sumitra asked.
“Everything’s in their files. The other notable
additions shouldn’t be much trouble.”
‘Much, he says’, Sumitra wanted to say, but restrained herself.
The car pulled up near an aircraft ninety meters long
that, at present, was blue and white with a broad one hundred fifty meter wingspan.
Not far away and also ready to taxi onto a runway, was
the Mockingbird’s sister ISV, the Magpie.
Sumitra heard talk that the Aerospace Defense Response was going to allow
mission commanders to name the ships themselves. They scrubbed the idea at the
last moment, fearing a plethora of girlfriends or wives names on the sides of
the craft or worse. Sumitra didn’t mind, so long as the bird was hers to
command.
Another car pulled up as General Chaffee, Sumitra, and Lamarr
got out. Two men emerged from it, one of whom carried an external computer and
a nanotube armored suitcase.
“Okay, so your Spectre II firing authorization has
arrived,” the general observed.
ISV-71 Raven had four launch bays among its modulated
components, which could deploy strategic and tactical weapons, allow the ship
to do ground attacks and bombing or go nose-on with smaller fighter jets and
UCAVs. The Synthesized Particle Emitter Combination Tactical Railgun or SPECTR
made the sizeable aerospace craft punch well above its weight class, at least
for a few shots anyway.
General Chaffee returned to his car, as Sumitra and
Lamarr took formation control from Chief Master Sergeant Carl Anders.
“Mission!
Aten-huh,” Anders ordered.
Then the man did a left face and saluted Colonel
Ramachandra, who returned it as crisply as received. She then turned toward the
gathered formation with Major Fitch e’er at her shoulder.
“Crew of the ISS Mockingbird,” Colonel Ramachandra began, a
truncated speech thrown together in the last thirty seconds in her head. “Your
first flight isn’t going to be celebrated with any fanfare. Your friends and
family aren’t seeing you off to the flight line. No bottles of wine smashed
against the nose in christening. It would dirty my ship, and I don’t like
that.”
That got a couple chuckles and several more grins.
“We’re going up and away in the manner on which we
drilled together for a year.” Ramachandra went on in more motivational tone.
“Train like you fly, and you’ll fly like you trained. Let’s go show those civie
and corporate astronauts how it’s done. What’s our registry number?”
“I S S Four Five Four,” the crew sounded off with
perfect unison, and added. “Click–BANG.”
“Dismissed.” Ramachandra handed the crew off to the
Chief.
“Mission. As-sume launch positions… Fallout,” Chief Anders ordered.
Each flight operation crew broke out toward the
debarkation and loading bay in smart order, with the mission officers and the
Chief following. Men and women pounded up the ramp to the back where an airlock
waited in ‘Double Open’ status. Entering after everyone else, Colonel
Ramachandra made a note of the mission-specific modules the Raven Intra-Solar
Vessel had been prepped with. She scrolled the inventory for the launch bays.
Four configurations of pylons, each laid out for different situations. However,
nothing about the ship indicated a Flipspace Device.
From the outside, there would appear, to the casual
observer, two crew cabins, one where a cockpit would be expected, and the other
facing the rear of the main body. Yet, twenty-second century air and space
flight did away with the need to for a window to fly in most cases. The true
brains of the Mockingbird’s piloting
was an AI named Maggie located just forward of the Combat Information Center in
the heart of this aerospace marvel. Several backup systems existed for the
Self-Ware program, Maggie to take refuge, or she could transmit herself off the
ship.
Ramachandra climbed to the third deck of five and made
her way to the CIC; a place more cramped than old nuclear submarines of the
last century. With two extra people not part of the crew, the room felt like a
broom closet.
“Colonel, if you’re ready,” one of the Protocol
Authentication Code Technicians said over their shoulder, “we’re a go on ident
update.”
“Carry on,” she replied.
Multiple unseen systems checked both Colonel Ramachandra
and Major Fitch over to verify they were indeed biometrically as they appeared.
Most people benefitted from artificial gene importation and medical augments.
Those working in space or other hazardous environs obtained licensing for
additional augmentation requiring stricter regulation. Military service people
received even more.
“Okay, you’re good, Colonel,” the PACT officer affirmed.
“We’re ‘Feet Up’ in ten minutes,” Ramachandra announced.
“So, unless you two want to take ride….”
“Roger that, Ma’am,” the PACT officer acknowledged as
the two departed.
Ramachandra took the acceleration couch designated as
the Operational Command Station, as her CIC crew went through preflight checks
with Maggie’s assistance. Decades ago preflight took much longer and errors in
rushing it cost lives.
“Frankfurt Tower to ISS Mockingbird,” a voice with a slight German accent said over comms.
“Launch authorization ist a go. Transmitting launch window und flight corridor.
Good luck und Gott speed.”
“Thank you, Frankfurt Tower,” Ramachandra acknowledged,
then cut transmission. “We’ll be going a hell of a lot faster than any god
would allow. Maggie, light this candle.”
“Affirm,” a mid-twenty-year old voice answered. “Laser
ignition in Planck engines One through Four. Taxiing to runway Bravo.”
Thrust from the Planck engines, Pulse Laser Nitrogen
Capture Kinetic Engine, pushed the ISV-71 out from its boarding space onto the
strip. The ship then accelerated to takeoff speed. Two sets of two-by-six,
heavy-duty Mat Treads on each major landing strut rolled with the circular
motion of wheels. The nose strut rested on four more treads. Most aircraft and
ground vehicles no longer used wheels. The nose gear lost contact with the
runway, and moments later, the main gear did the same.
“ISS Mockingbird
is ‘Feet Up’,” Maggie declared.
Ramachandra switched her medically augmented eyes to see
outside the Mockingbird. Superimposed
on the real-time view appeared a successive series of squares larger than the
ship passing through them. Maggie kept to the flight plan better than most
humans could right to the edge of space. Just before Mach one, the Mockingbird’s wings swept back, turning its outline into an equilateral
triangle. It pulled away from the curvature of the Earth while accelerating to
hypersonic speeds. Next to kick in was the fifth engine, which used fusion
pulse-detonation propulsion.
From there, the Mockingbird
made for the Fifth Lagrangian Point, one of five orbital points where
gravitational forces from the Earth and moon canceled each other. The ISS Magpie
had taken off minutes after and would make its own trajectory to the station.
Launches bound for deep space were best from here, as it put them in a position
trailing the moon.
At a reduced burn of one g from the nuclear fusion
engine, the flight would take four hours.