Hegemony at dalou, p.1
Hegemony at Dalou, page 1

HEGEMONY AT DALOU
FIRST CENTURION KOSNETT, BOOK 3
BLAZE WARD
KNOTTED ROAD PRESS
CONTENTS
Prologue: Kosnett
Meerut
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Ishiokoh
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Ellariel-jo
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
Chapter 29
Chapter 30
Morninghawk
Chapter 31
Chapter 32
Chapter 33
Chapter 34
Chapter 35
Viking
Chapter 36
Chapter 37
Chapter 38
Chapter 39
Chapter 40
Chapter 41
Chapter 42
Chapter 43
Chapter 44
45. Chapter
Urumchi
Chapter 46
Chapter 47
Chapter 48
Chapter 49
Chapter 50
Chapter 51
Chapter 52
Epilogues
Chapter 53
Chapter 54
Read More
About the Author
Also by Blaze Ward
About Knotted Road Press
PROLOGUE: KOSNETT
DATE OF THE REPUBLIC NOVEMBER 1, 411 RAN URUMCHI, MEERUT ORBIT
Phil studied the plot of nearby space from his comfortable seat in his office, just off the flag bridge. Harinder sat across the desk from him with a calm smile on her face and her own mug of coffee. Outside, the flag crew would be watching screens and talking quietly with ships of the squadron, as well as the former pirate fleet that had remained at Meerut. Some had tried to flee that day, six weeks ago, and been shattered as a result.
Phil hadn’t been kidding when he ordered them to surrender or die. He wasn’t kidding now. Anyone threatening this system got to deal with him directly, in one of his less-friendly moods.
The last six weeks had been a whirlwind, and he was working his ass off even more than before, constantly juggling balls to keep things from falling. Even his birthday party this year had been a political event, falling just two weeks after he’d conquered Meerut and captured or destroyed all the pirates who had needed killing.
Craziness, piled on craziness.
Jessica Keller might have gone deep enough—crazy enough—into her contingency planning to handle a situation like this. He’d seen her do things like that.
Phil hadn’t, in his wildest imagination, come up with a scenario where he ended up Governor-General of a former pirate colony. But he was here, and he was damned well going to make the best of it.
Vilahana had come somewhat close, but he’d gone in there prepared to eventually negotiate a treaty allowing a forward RAN base from which freighters on that long sail to and from Aquitaine or Fribourg space could be protected. He might yet, too, depending on how things went in here, as Vilahana was as neutral as any former chop shop might get.
Meerut, on the other hand, was back in a pocket, closed off all the way around save for that long lateral sail through realspace to the edge of that bizarre gravity-well-lagoon effect the twin blue giants created.
“What’s the latest news?” he finally asked, reaching for his coffee mug.
Harinder would outwait him. That was why he’d hired her.
“Viking is back,” Harinder said with a cryptic smile on her face. “Popped up about an hour ago and is sailing sedately over, with a shuttle to follow. That’s why I came in, but you looked like you needed a few more minutes of meditation before the next emergency.”
“I do,” Phil replied. “But the candle is always burning. We’ve been gone for just over thirteen months now, and there is still so much to do in the two years I have left before the next First Lord decides what to do with us.”
“You think it will be anybody but Whughy?” she asked.
“Ninety-five percent sure he gets the job, based on regular updates that Pet Naoumov sends me,” Phil said. “At the end of the day, however, the Senate still makes the final call, so stranger things might happen.”
“Would they recall us?” Harinder asked.
“More concerned that they might decide to send a warfleet out here, considering some of our adventures,” Phil grimaced. “Especially when they hear about Meerut.”
“Would that be bad?”
“It threatens the extremely delicate balance of powers and personalities that make up the Balhee Cluster,” he said. “We’re already big enough, but I’ve told everyone who would listen that we’re a survey expedition, not a conquering fleet. Even if we are powerful enough to threaten anyone we want. If RAN Kongō shows up, with Raizō Tanaka in command and an Expeditionary-class battle fleet with him, we blow all that up and start from scratch, possibly unifying everyone in here against us in the process.”
“Including Aditi?” Harinder pressed.
“They probably crystallize on Aditi,” he laughed. “Like making rock candy in boiling water. Even Yaumgan would join them to keep the invaders out.”
“You’ve told the First Lord all this?” she asked.
“Every message home suggests more merchants, more Fast Clippers to haul supplies, and more ambassadors, but no warships.”
“What about Meerut?”
“That’s the wildcard.” Phil leaned back in his chair and drank more coffee. “They need forces in here to keep Ewin and Dalou at bay. If they were smart, they would take the five surviving platforms and drag them across realspace to sit on the inner edge of the lagoon as a defensive measure. Sacrifice that throat, since everybody understands now how to sail around such a thing, but those five platforms couldn’t be easily surprised or taken now, unless someone puts an entire sector fleet on the task.”
“And all the pirates?” Harinder asked. “Excuse me. Former pirates.”
“By now, the smart ones realize that this is the only home they ever get to claim,” Phil said. “They’ll become a local fleet, but those are frigate and corvette-scale ships. Even Tango and Blade of Kunke are barely light cruisers as we would weigh them. They will need us, at least until such time as Dalou and Ewin sign a treaty they intend to honor.”
“Whether they like it or not?”
“That’s why our next stop has to be Ellariel,” Phil said. “I need to have a long, personal conversation with the Shogun of Dalou about the future. Makara Omarov and that Imperial Inspector, Samnang Sobol, will factor in, but everything starts there.”
“What if he or the Dukes of Ewin don’t listen to reason?” she asked.
“There’s always Kongō,” Phil said.
MEERUT
ONE
DATE OF THE REPUBLIC NOVEMBER 1, 411 RAN URUMCHI, MEERUT ORBIT
Heather watched Barnaby Silver, Command Centurion of Viking, as the man settled. He was not a poker player, so she could see the barely-contained excitement on his face. Next to him, his Science Officer, Sunan Bunnag, was much more calm and phlegmatic, but Heather wasn’t fooled there, either.
They had news.
Phil had called them all down to a small conference room, not even his flag bridge. And limited the players. Him and Harinder. Barnaby and Sunan. Heather had brought both Iveta, her First Officer, and Leyla, her own Science Officer. Not even aides, past Markus, who went everywhere Phil did.
That was it.
“Spill, you pirate,” Phil growled at the man in a friendly voice as everyone settled.
Interestingly, Barnaby turned to Sunan and gestured for her to talk.
She scowled at her commander then sighed. Heather suspected a barely-suppressed eyeroll.
“It can be done,” Sunan announced.
Everyone made a sound, a grumble, a comment. It took Phil slamming his hand on the table to get them to shut up.
Dead silence. Phil smiled.
“So the whole Balhee Cluster, as near as anyone can guess, started as an enormous stellar nebula about a billion years ago, give or take,” Sunan continued. “Maybe a part of one of the galactic arms that got pinched off at some point and twisted in on itself. We’d need different gear and a couple of years of exploring to really understand it, and that’s not relevant to this.”
She paused, but nobody interrupted. Phil nodded again.
“Early supernovae, almost mega-nova monsters, blasted big holes in the center of the cloud,” Sunan said. “Shockwaves pushed materials outward like soap bubbles. That formed what we think of as the outer skin of the Cluster. Mostly solid.”
“Mostly,” Phil noted.
Sunan nodded now.
“Meerut was the sign, if anybody had been willing enough and maybe crazy enough to try what we did,” she said, turning back to Barnaby.
He grinned.
“There is another reef out the back,” the man said.
Again, th e explosion of noise and disbelief.
“Has anybody else found it?” Phil asked. “My conversations with Captain Omarov, that first time, suggested that thin spots in the outer walls weren’t common, but weren’t impossible, either.”
“I highly doubt that anybody other than us has ever had the patience,” Barnaby replied. “Given time, we might drop down into realspace a few times, but I have concerns about our ability to get back out again, so we haven’t, as yet.”
“Get back out again?” Heather leaned in to ask.
“We’re used to nice, clean edges of gravity wells,” Sunan spoke up. “Planets and things dimple space/time. You can navigate by them, and they also force you out of JumpSpace when you get too close. Keller used to use that as a weapon.”
“I remember,” Heather reminded them.
She’d been there with The Expedition. Not many folks here could say that.
“That space out there is a complicated swirl of smaller dimples,” Sunan said. “If your JumpDrives aren’t as good and as powerful as ours, I’m not sure you could surf that mess. But yes, there is a pathway we found that allows someone to sail directly to the outside of the Cluster from here. Eventually, you’ll want to put an outpost or base out there, but for now, I’m not worried about anybody else using it except us.”
“Can we make the sailing easier?” Phil asked.
“Dunno, First Centurion,” Sunan replied. “There are a few spots where we had to go inertial, because the scanners were just a white noise of ugliness. I suppose we could build something, but I’m not sure how.”
“Markus,” he said, gesturing the man close.
Heather watched Dunklin rise from the chair by the door, step close, and even come more or less to attention. More or less.
“This woman needs a redneck,” Phil instructed him. “Assemble a team to build a detector, based on her scan logs. I need a ship to be able to turn it on, read all that craziness, and navigate it, preferably at high speed.”
“I have some names,” Dunklin replied, just like that.
But Dunklin was extremely competent as a redneck. He was just quiet most of the time.
At the same time, Heather had served with him during The Pirate Raid. She even remembered the grenade launcher he’d designed and built for attacking enemies during a boarding action, though they’d never ended up using it.
“I can get my own coffee for a couple of days,” Phil told him. “You grab your folks and ride home with Barnaby and Sunan. Top Secret, this team only until I say otherwise.”
“All ten, First Centurion,” Markus grinned, holding up both hands.
As long as he had ten fingers, he was allowed to keep working for Phil. If he blew one off doing something stupid, he got transferred back to engineering again.
No greater threat in the galaxy for that man, than to be left out of all the fun.
Phil took a deep breath and nodded. He scanned the room.
“Our next step is the Dalou Hegemony,” he reminded them. “As that means Urumchi and most of the escorts, Viking will remain on station here while we’re gone. CM-507 can be put to use building mine fields wherever you want them. I’ve already made a few suggestions to Isabèl Pan, and she’s busy supervising a local factory to build a whole bunch.”
“Are we expecting an attack?” Heather asked.
Beside her, Iveta practically squirmed.
“Dalou already knows we’re coming to talk, so I doubt that they would do something that stupid,” Phil replied. “However, nobody has ever accused the Ewin Principalities of being bright or organized. There is a chance some Duke or Count tells the King to get stuffed and leads a squadron here to either earn some glory or maybe try to capture the system and extend their treaty boundaries.”
“Do we allow that?” Iveta asked in a cold, hard voice.
People had taken to calling her Junkyard, like they occasionally called Heather Ground Control. Junkyard Bitch was the full title, like she’d called herself during the battle for Meerut, but it was a term of respect, not a curse or an insult. After that day, she’d earned it.
“If they try, I will expect all these little Pickets and Raiders to give good testimony,” Phil replied. “Viking will as well, with 505 and 507. If I have to, I will destroy Ewin’s ability to threaten their neighbors, just to make my point. However, I will remind everyone that they are a missile-happy bunch. That worked last year. Everyone is now furiously looking to rebuild their fleets. We have a few years before new warships come on line that they think will be good enough. I would rather not make enemies here. However, I have declared Meerut independent. You folks will enforce my will if it comes to that.”
Heather nodded.
Don’t throw the first punch. Always throw the last one.
About as simple as this kind of diplomacy got.
“Questions?” Phil asked.
“How soon do you want to depart?” Heather responded.
“With Viking back, I think we can give everyone twenty-four hours’ notice from the end of this meeting,” he said. “Are they all wanting to travel with us?”
“Khandoba and her Moat escorts have departed for Aditi proper, and I don’t expect them back,” Heather said. “Aranyani will represent Aditi for now. Similarly, the Yaumgan Battleship Zhang Guolao has headed home to brief their folks, leaving the Skycruiser Li Jing to travel with us. Morninghawk remained with us, so we sent word aboard a friendly Picket boat instead. Shadowbolt ran for home like demons were chasing them, but they are back, and didn’t bring anybody else, so I think they’ve been somewhat cowed, at least for now.”
“For now,” Phil agreed. “I expect we’ll have to deal with them after Dalou, but Captain Omarov on Morninghawk gives us an opening into the Shogunate that we need to exploit while we can. Heather, let everyone know we’re departing tomorrow.”
“You got it,” she replied.
She found herself looking forward to the trip, after reading so much history of Japan’s transition from feudal to industrial in a single generation, back on Earth. She doubted that history would repeat itself, mostly because those folks had to have read some of the old books.
Or had they? The Librarian at Alexandria Station had only been rescued by Doyle Iwakuma eleven hundred years ago. Trade and communication between Aquitaine and the Cluster happened, but rarely and in small amounts, due to the distances involved.
Maybe they didn’t know about how the Shoguns had grown ossified and inward-seeking. How many of the clans, that had been on the losing side centuries before, wanted to be eligible for power.
How corrupt and mismanaged the economy had grown.
How brittle.
Urumchi was one hell of a wind out of the east, if your feet weren’t sure.
TWO
HEAVY ESCORT MORNINGHAWK
For once in his life, Captain Makara Omarov was not looking forward to returning home to Dalou.
Oh, some would treat him like a hero. That much was certain. Others, however, would wonder what the fourth son of a minor lord of a Komyo, one of the smaller clans, would do with his newfound notoriety.
Makara didn’t figure that going back to where he’d been a year ago would ever be an option again.












