Conquerors' Legacy

Ebook
On sale May 06, 2015 | 496 Pages | 9780804181433
Hugo Award-winner and #1 New York  Times bestselling author Timothy Zahn returns to  complete his original, acclaimed SF trilogy. As  both humans and the alien Zhirrzh prepare for all-out  galactic war, a handful of individuals from both  sides are stunned to discover that the explosive  catalyst for the impending battle is a  misunderstanding both tragic and profound. Determined to avoid  mutual extinction for both their races, this band  now becomes the focus of the subtle and dangerous  force whose goal it is to annihilate and destroy.
1
 
Directly ahead, the sky was a brilliant and cloudless blue. All around, at the distant circle of the horizon, the browns and grays and pale greens of the planetscape hazed with an odd seamlessness into the blue of the sky. Above and slightly aft, the planet’s sun was a pale, red-orange globe.
 
Directly beneath was enemy territory.
 
“Samurai, I’m picking up response activity,” the voice of the backstop Corvine’s tail man came in Commander Rafe Taoka’s ear. “Thirty-four klicks aft. Can’t tell what kind of craft yet, but I read five of them.”
 
“Tally that,” Taoka’s own tail man, Juggler, confirmed. “Also tally Talisman’s count.”
 
“Acknowledged,” Taoka said, twitching his left eyelid to call up the tactical/sensor view aft of his Catbird fighter. The image superimposed itself on the enhanced forward view racing past beneath him, and he took a moment to study the flashing circles Juggler had marked. No vehicles showing yet, but the false-color scheme definitely indicated thermal and turbulence signatures. “Gusto, give yourself another half klick up—I want Talisman to keep an eye on those signatures back there. Juggler, Argus: you two stay sharp on forward wedge scan.”
 
“Acknowledged,” Gusto said from the Corvine, his voice sounding a little strained. “Shouldn’t we go to X?”
 
“Standing Order Three, Gusto,” Crossfire said from the other Catbird, flying a dozen meters off Taoka’s wing. “We don’t go to X until bogies are actually on scope.”
 
“This isn’t a drill, Crossfire,” Gusto said, a touch of asperity cracking through his voice. “This is real.”
 
“Yes, we know,” Crossfire said patiently. “Just stay cool. We’re doing fine.”
 
“Yes, sir,” Gusto muttered. “Staying cool, sir.”
 
“Doesn’t sound happy, does he?” Juggler commented from the aft cockpit seat behind Taoka.
 
“Can’t say I blame him,” Taoka growled back. It was a stupid rule, St/Ord 3 was, and everyone from the Peacekeeper Triad on down knew it. Level X, the full Mindlink integration between the pilot, tail, and fighter craft itself, was the whole point of the Copperheads in the first place. The Level A linkage they were using right now really wasn’t much better than the baseline heads-ups the poppers who flew Axeheads or Dragonflies got.
 
But, then, St/Ord 3 hadn’t been set up by military men. It was a political order, forced on the Copperheads by the NorCoord Parliament a few years back. Their ill-considered reaction to that oversensationalized flap over Copperhead burnout. A flap led and fed by the ambitions of then-Parlimin Lord Stewart Cavanagh.
 
One expected idiotic and shortsighted ideas from politicians. What had twisted in Taoka’s gut like splintered glass was the fact that Cavanagh’s crusade had been aided and abetted by a former Copperhead. Worse, a Copperhead who had once held near-legendary status. Adam Quinn: Maestro.
 
Or, as Taoka thought of him now, Adam Quinn: Traitor.
 
It had been a hurtful and humiliating time, and Taoka had privately resolved never to forget that pain. But maybe all that bad blood had finally circled back to where it belonged. The last skitter message that had reached the Trafalgar task force before they left Commonwealth space had included a notice that Quinn had been arrested and charged with theft of Peacekeeper property. With a little luck maybe Lord Cavanagh could get dragged into it, too; Taoka had heard that Quinn was working for Cavanagh these days. Get the two of them thrown into cold storage for the next twenty years, and he might be willing to call it even.
 
Beneath the three fighters a group of Conqueror buildings shot past, built in the same linked-hexagon style the aliens used for their warships. He caught a glimpse of a courtyard area between two of the buildings—the heat signature of a single Conqueror standing out in the open, no doubt looking goggle-eyed up at them—and then they were over a vast landing field with a scattering of small air- or spacecraft clustered at one end.
 
“Got some heat signatures,” Juggler reported from behind him. “Some of those craft down there are already gearing up.”
 
“Looks like word of our arrival’s getting around,” Gusto added.
 
“Can’t fault their communications any,” Taoka said, calling up the image of the vehicles they’d just passed. “Lucky for us they’re not too swift on the uptake.”
 
“They’re swift enough,” Crossfire cut in. “Argus has two groups incoming: twenty and forty degrees, two hundred klicks range. Intercept vectors.”
 
Taoka smiled grimly. Finally: a direct enemy threat. “All right, Samurai group. You wanted it; you got it. All Copperheads, go to X.”
 

 
“Signal from Samurai group, Commodore,” the fighter commander called from across the Trafalgar’s bridge. “They have incoming bogies. Samurai’s ordered them to Level X.”
 
“Acknowledged, Schweighofer,” Commodore Lord Alexander Montgomery said, running his eyes over the outer scan displays for probably the hundredth time since launching the probe teams. Peacekeeper Command had assured him that their sudden arrival would probably catch the enemy off guard; but Peacekeeper Command’s collective hindquarters weren’t on the line here. His were, and he had no intention of losing them or his task force to the Zhirrzh. Certainly not the way Trev Dyami had lost the Jutland. “Smith, do we still have visual on the outriders?” he called across the bridge.
 
“Yes, sir,” the force coordination officer called back. “Visual and lasercom both. Still no enemy response.”
 
“That won’t last much longer,” Captain Thomas Germaine murmured from the fleet exec’s chair beside Montgomery. “They must have something in this system that can fight. Only question is where they’re hiding it.”
 
“Agreed,” Montgomery said, running a thoughtful forefinger across the deep cleft in his chin. The outriders had clear visuals on both moons and all space debris within any reasonable range. Unless the enemy had something buried away underground—
 
“Antelope reports enemy ship rising from the planet,” Smith called. “Grid Fifty-five-Delta.”
 
Germaine had already keyed the main display for the Antelope’s feed. The Zhirrzh ship rising at them was not all that big, perhaps half the size of the ships the Jutland had encountered a few light-years off Dorcas.
 
Still, considering how easily those four alien craft had ripped through the Jutland’s eight-ship task force, the presence of even one Zhirrzh warship was nothing to be taken lightly.
 
And orbiting two thousand klicks away in outrider position, the Antelope might as well have been a floating bull’s-eye for all the good the rest of the task force could do them. “Mendoza, you’d better get out of there,” he ordered the Antelope’s captain. “Mesh out, and wait for us at Point Victor.”
 
As if to underline the order, the rising conglomeration of hexagons began spitting laser fire, splashing tiny clouds of vaporized metal from the Antelope’s hull. “Acknowledged, Trafalgar,” Mendoza’s voice came back. “You want me to loop back around and run backstop?”
 
“Negative,” Montgomery said. “Just run. Bravo Sector ships: deploy defense against incoming bogie. All fighters return to their ships at once, probe teams included.”
 
“Samurai group is about to engage, sir.” Schweighofer reminded him.
 
“Tell Samurai I said now.”
 
“Acknowledged.”
 
Montgomery looked up to find Germaine frowning at him. “We’re leaving already?” the fleet exec asked. “Surely we can handle a single enemy warship.”
 
“Boldness is a useful quality in a warrior,” Montgomery told him quietly. “Brashness belongs in your quarters with your dress uniform. Our mission objectives were to gather geographic data and to test the assumption that the Zhirrzh can’t detect the tachyon wake-trails of incoming starships. We’ve accomplished both. There’s nothing to be gained by adding head-to-head combat to the mission profile.”
 
“Except possibly a reduction of the enemy threat,” Germaine countered. “Even without Antelope we’ve got a fifteen-to-one edge here, plus four wings of Adamant and Copperhead fighters. This is the kind of chance—”
 
“Second ship incoming, Commodore,” Smith interrupted. “Cascadia has it rising from Grid One-sixteen-Charlie.”
 
“Deploy defensive,” Montgomery ordered as Germaine pulled up the picture. Coming up from a group of low hills, the newcomer looked to be a bit larger than the first bogie, though given its completely different arrangement of hexagons, it was hard to tell for sure. “Any idea yet where they’re coming from?”
 
“Apparently from right under our noses, sir,” Kyun Wu said from the sensor station. “I ran a check—the probe teams had them marked as buildings. Must have one hell of a lift system to be able to bring something that size up and down a gravity well.”
 
Montgomery grimaced to himself. Lasers capable of slicing through Peacekeeper hull metal, virtually indestructible ceramic hulls; a method of instantaneous communication across interstellar distances; and now an unknown but obviously highly efficient ground-to-space lift system. Even without anything else, the level of their technology would have red-flagged these aliens as a potential threat to humanity.
 
Their use of that technology to invade the Commonwealth had turned that red flag into a red alarm. And had earned the Zhirrzh the name Conquerors.
 
“Commodore, Antelope has meshed out,” Smith reported. “First bogie changing course toward Galileo and Wolverine. Second bogie has engaged Cascadia and Nagoya.”
 
“Nagoya’s been hit!” Kyun Wu snapped. “Full round of laser fire from Bogie Two. Looks like severe damage to all forward sections.”
 
“Confirm that,” Smith said. “Damage to command structure; severe damage to sensors and forward missile ports.”
 
“Cascadia’s launched a missile attack against Bogie Two,” Kyun Wu said. “Missiles hitting…no apparent damage. Bogie is attacking Nagoya again.”
 
“Damage to Nagoya starboard flank,” Smith said. “Make that severe damage. Command center’s gone; Prasad has ordered ship-abandon. Bogie One’s engaging Wolverine.”
 
Timothy Zahn is the author of more than sixty novels, nearly ninety short stories and novelettes, and four short-fiction collections. In 1984, he won the Hugo Award for Best Novella. Zahn is best known for his Star Wars novels (Thrawn, Thrawn: Alliances, Thrawn: Treason, Thrawn Ascendancy: Chaos Rising, Thrawn Ascendancy: Greater Good, Heir to the Empire, Dark Force Rising, The Last Command, Specter of the Past, Vision of the Future, Survivor's Quest, Outbound Flight, Allegiance, Choices of One, and Scoundrels), with more than eight million copies of his books in print. Other books include StarCraft: Evolution, the Cobra series, the Quadrail series, and the young adult Dragonback series. Zahn has a BS in physics from Michigan State University and an MS from the University of Illinois. He lives with his family on the Oregon coast. View titles by Timothy Zahn

About

Hugo Award-winner and #1 New York  Times bestselling author Timothy Zahn returns to  complete his original, acclaimed SF trilogy. As  both humans and the alien Zhirrzh prepare for all-out  galactic war, a handful of individuals from both  sides are stunned to discover that the explosive  catalyst for the impending battle is a  misunderstanding both tragic and profound. Determined to avoid  mutual extinction for both their races, this band  now becomes the focus of the subtle and dangerous  force whose goal it is to annihilate and destroy.

Excerpt

1
 
Directly ahead, the sky was a brilliant and cloudless blue. All around, at the distant circle of the horizon, the browns and grays and pale greens of the planetscape hazed with an odd seamlessness into the blue of the sky. Above and slightly aft, the planet’s sun was a pale, red-orange globe.
 
Directly beneath was enemy territory.
 
“Samurai, I’m picking up response activity,” the voice of the backstop Corvine’s tail man came in Commander Rafe Taoka’s ear. “Thirty-four klicks aft. Can’t tell what kind of craft yet, but I read five of them.”
 
“Tally that,” Taoka’s own tail man, Juggler, confirmed. “Also tally Talisman’s count.”
 
“Acknowledged,” Taoka said, twitching his left eyelid to call up the tactical/sensor view aft of his Catbird fighter. The image superimposed itself on the enhanced forward view racing past beneath him, and he took a moment to study the flashing circles Juggler had marked. No vehicles showing yet, but the false-color scheme definitely indicated thermal and turbulence signatures. “Gusto, give yourself another half klick up—I want Talisman to keep an eye on those signatures back there. Juggler, Argus: you two stay sharp on forward wedge scan.”
 
“Acknowledged,” Gusto said from the Corvine, his voice sounding a little strained. “Shouldn’t we go to X?”
 
“Standing Order Three, Gusto,” Crossfire said from the other Catbird, flying a dozen meters off Taoka’s wing. “We don’t go to X until bogies are actually on scope.”
 
“This isn’t a drill, Crossfire,” Gusto said, a touch of asperity cracking through his voice. “This is real.”
 
“Yes, we know,” Crossfire said patiently. “Just stay cool. We’re doing fine.”
 
“Yes, sir,” Gusto muttered. “Staying cool, sir.”
 
“Doesn’t sound happy, does he?” Juggler commented from the aft cockpit seat behind Taoka.
 
“Can’t say I blame him,” Taoka growled back. It was a stupid rule, St/Ord 3 was, and everyone from the Peacekeeper Triad on down knew it. Level X, the full Mindlink integration between the pilot, tail, and fighter craft itself, was the whole point of the Copperheads in the first place. The Level A linkage they were using right now really wasn’t much better than the baseline heads-ups the poppers who flew Axeheads or Dragonflies got.
 
But, then, St/Ord 3 hadn’t been set up by military men. It was a political order, forced on the Copperheads by the NorCoord Parliament a few years back. Their ill-considered reaction to that oversensationalized flap over Copperhead burnout. A flap led and fed by the ambitions of then-Parlimin Lord Stewart Cavanagh.
 
One expected idiotic and shortsighted ideas from politicians. What had twisted in Taoka’s gut like splintered glass was the fact that Cavanagh’s crusade had been aided and abetted by a former Copperhead. Worse, a Copperhead who had once held near-legendary status. Adam Quinn: Maestro.
 
Or, as Taoka thought of him now, Adam Quinn: Traitor.
 
It had been a hurtful and humiliating time, and Taoka had privately resolved never to forget that pain. But maybe all that bad blood had finally circled back to where it belonged. The last skitter message that had reached the Trafalgar task force before they left Commonwealth space had included a notice that Quinn had been arrested and charged with theft of Peacekeeper property. With a little luck maybe Lord Cavanagh could get dragged into it, too; Taoka had heard that Quinn was working for Cavanagh these days. Get the two of them thrown into cold storage for the next twenty years, and he might be willing to call it even.
 
Beneath the three fighters a group of Conqueror buildings shot past, built in the same linked-hexagon style the aliens used for their warships. He caught a glimpse of a courtyard area between two of the buildings—the heat signature of a single Conqueror standing out in the open, no doubt looking goggle-eyed up at them—and then they were over a vast landing field with a scattering of small air- or spacecraft clustered at one end.
 
“Got some heat signatures,” Juggler reported from behind him. “Some of those craft down there are already gearing up.”
 
“Looks like word of our arrival’s getting around,” Gusto added.
 
“Can’t fault their communications any,” Taoka said, calling up the image of the vehicles they’d just passed. “Lucky for us they’re not too swift on the uptake.”
 
“They’re swift enough,” Crossfire cut in. “Argus has two groups incoming: twenty and forty degrees, two hundred klicks range. Intercept vectors.”
 
Taoka smiled grimly. Finally: a direct enemy threat. “All right, Samurai group. You wanted it; you got it. All Copperheads, go to X.”
 

 
“Signal from Samurai group, Commodore,” the fighter commander called from across the Trafalgar’s bridge. “They have incoming bogies. Samurai’s ordered them to Level X.”
 
“Acknowledged, Schweighofer,” Commodore Lord Alexander Montgomery said, running his eyes over the outer scan displays for probably the hundredth time since launching the probe teams. Peacekeeper Command had assured him that their sudden arrival would probably catch the enemy off guard; but Peacekeeper Command’s collective hindquarters weren’t on the line here. His were, and he had no intention of losing them or his task force to the Zhirrzh. Certainly not the way Trev Dyami had lost the Jutland. “Smith, do we still have visual on the outriders?” he called across the bridge.
 
“Yes, sir,” the force coordination officer called back. “Visual and lasercom both. Still no enemy response.”
 
“That won’t last much longer,” Captain Thomas Germaine murmured from the fleet exec’s chair beside Montgomery. “They must have something in this system that can fight. Only question is where they’re hiding it.”
 
“Agreed,” Montgomery said, running a thoughtful forefinger across the deep cleft in his chin. The outriders had clear visuals on both moons and all space debris within any reasonable range. Unless the enemy had something buried away underground—
 
“Antelope reports enemy ship rising from the planet,” Smith called. “Grid Fifty-five-Delta.”
 
Germaine had already keyed the main display for the Antelope’s feed. The Zhirrzh ship rising at them was not all that big, perhaps half the size of the ships the Jutland had encountered a few light-years off Dorcas.
 
Still, considering how easily those four alien craft had ripped through the Jutland’s eight-ship task force, the presence of even one Zhirrzh warship was nothing to be taken lightly.
 
And orbiting two thousand klicks away in outrider position, the Antelope might as well have been a floating bull’s-eye for all the good the rest of the task force could do them. “Mendoza, you’d better get out of there,” he ordered the Antelope’s captain. “Mesh out, and wait for us at Point Victor.”
 
As if to underline the order, the rising conglomeration of hexagons began spitting laser fire, splashing tiny clouds of vaporized metal from the Antelope’s hull. “Acknowledged, Trafalgar,” Mendoza’s voice came back. “You want me to loop back around and run backstop?”
 
“Negative,” Montgomery said. “Just run. Bravo Sector ships: deploy defense against incoming bogie. All fighters return to their ships at once, probe teams included.”
 
“Samurai group is about to engage, sir.” Schweighofer reminded him.
 
“Tell Samurai I said now.”
 
“Acknowledged.”
 
Montgomery looked up to find Germaine frowning at him. “We’re leaving already?” the fleet exec asked. “Surely we can handle a single enemy warship.”
 
“Boldness is a useful quality in a warrior,” Montgomery told him quietly. “Brashness belongs in your quarters with your dress uniform. Our mission objectives were to gather geographic data and to test the assumption that the Zhirrzh can’t detect the tachyon wake-trails of incoming starships. We’ve accomplished both. There’s nothing to be gained by adding head-to-head combat to the mission profile.”
 
“Except possibly a reduction of the enemy threat,” Germaine countered. “Even without Antelope we’ve got a fifteen-to-one edge here, plus four wings of Adamant and Copperhead fighters. This is the kind of chance—”
 
“Second ship incoming, Commodore,” Smith interrupted. “Cascadia has it rising from Grid One-sixteen-Charlie.”
 
“Deploy defensive,” Montgomery ordered as Germaine pulled up the picture. Coming up from a group of low hills, the newcomer looked to be a bit larger than the first bogie, though given its completely different arrangement of hexagons, it was hard to tell for sure. “Any idea yet where they’re coming from?”
 
“Apparently from right under our noses, sir,” Kyun Wu said from the sensor station. “I ran a check—the probe teams had them marked as buildings. Must have one hell of a lift system to be able to bring something that size up and down a gravity well.”
 
Montgomery grimaced to himself. Lasers capable of slicing through Peacekeeper hull metal, virtually indestructible ceramic hulls; a method of instantaneous communication across interstellar distances; and now an unknown but obviously highly efficient ground-to-space lift system. Even without anything else, the level of their technology would have red-flagged these aliens as a potential threat to humanity.
 
Their use of that technology to invade the Commonwealth had turned that red flag into a red alarm. And had earned the Zhirrzh the name Conquerors.
 
“Commodore, Antelope has meshed out,” Smith reported. “First bogie changing course toward Galileo and Wolverine. Second bogie has engaged Cascadia and Nagoya.”
 
“Nagoya’s been hit!” Kyun Wu snapped. “Full round of laser fire from Bogie Two. Looks like severe damage to all forward sections.”
 
“Confirm that,” Smith said. “Damage to command structure; severe damage to sensors and forward missile ports.”
 
“Cascadia’s launched a missile attack against Bogie Two,” Kyun Wu said. “Missiles hitting…no apparent damage. Bogie is attacking Nagoya again.”
 
“Damage to Nagoya starboard flank,” Smith said. “Make that severe damage. Command center’s gone; Prasad has ordered ship-abandon. Bogie One’s engaging Wolverine.”
 

Author

Timothy Zahn is the author of more than sixty novels, nearly ninety short stories and novelettes, and four short-fiction collections. In 1984, he won the Hugo Award for Best Novella. Zahn is best known for his Star Wars novels (Thrawn, Thrawn: Alliances, Thrawn: Treason, Thrawn Ascendancy: Chaos Rising, Thrawn Ascendancy: Greater Good, Heir to the Empire, Dark Force Rising, The Last Command, Specter of the Past, Vision of the Future, Survivor's Quest, Outbound Flight, Allegiance, Choices of One, and Scoundrels), with more than eight million copies of his books in print. Other books include StarCraft: Evolution, the Cobra series, the Quadrail series, and the young adult Dragonback series. Zahn has a BS in physics from Michigan State University and an MS from the University of Illinois. He lives with his family on the Oregon coast. View titles by Timothy Zahn