Battle of the Folium Nebula - Cover

Battle of the Folium Nebula

Copyright© 2023 by SCBM

Chapter 1

Science Fiction Sex Story: Chapter 1 - When a ship goes missing within the Folium Nebula, the Hub, pioneers of the revolution against the United Earth Confederacy, sends a detachment to investigate, only to be caught in the middle of an intergalactic war between the Confederacy, and an alien civilisation never encountered before. Alone, the aliens and the Hub could not hope to stand against the UEC, but together, they may be able to turn the tide, or will this mutual Alliance live and die inside the Nebula?

Caution: This Science Fiction Sex Story contains strong sexual content, including Ma/Fa   Consensual   Heterosexual   Military   War   Science Fiction   Aliens   Space   Cream Pie   Massage   Oral Sex   Petting   Size   Politics   Slow  

The pinks and blues of the nebula coalesced the inky void of space in a great cloud of magenta, concentrated stardust forming crooked bands of white that wreathed around the clouds just as veins would course through the human body. Punching through a thick haze of gas, the long profile of a ship moved its way deeper into the cluster, the radar dishes jutting from its armoured hull swivelling to pick out signals and emissions.

“Stupid scanners are goin’ crazy again,” one of its crewmen said. He frowned at the bank of monitors surrounding him, each screen scrolling with readouts and data streams, tapping at one of them with an impatient finger. He appeared out of ideas when that didn’t fix anything. “Gettin’ more notifications here than a pop singer. How about you, Cap?”

“I’m the same rank as you, Carl,” a voice in his helmet replied. A thick cable trailed out of one side of his visor, plugged into a socket beneath his chair. It ran up the whole thirty-five-meter length of the craft, their crew-channel hardwired as to prevent their signals from being intercepted.

“You’re the pilot. Makes you the Cap in my books.” One of the monitors on his left switched data streams as Carl flicked at a button, switching search modes. “They could have at least given us a probe or two to help sort these readin’s out.”

“Then where would we mount our missiles?” the pilot asked back.

“You think we’ll actually find Feds out here to use em’ on?” Up on the nose of the ship, ‘Captain’ Lambert peered out of the tinted glass canopy, his instruments bathing the cockpit in a blue glow. In his centermost terminal, a 3D representation of the area surrounding the ship drew his gaze. Three axes crossed at the very middle, where a small box that represented his ship sat, their IFF tag branching off it. The limits of the display were engulfed in a sphere, where anything within their sensor range was displayed. The tactical view was a mess of hostile and friendly tags, fake signals and warning pings that switched positions constantly about the view. An irritating feedback loop of beeps and boops forced him to turn the volume down.

“A ship’s gone missing,” Lambert replied. “This wouldn’t be the first time the UEC’s started picking off unarmed targets.”

“And they wonder why we defected,” Carl said. “Oh my fu ... I don’t know you haven’t crashed us into anythin’ yet, Cap. My station’s a mess.”

“Tac view’s working ... sorta.” With the window in front of him it was easy to make sure they weren’t moving straight into any hazards, though if they were on a collision course with a rogue bit of debris closer than a couple dozen kilometers out, he’d have no idea until it was too late. No wonder every scout pilot had shared a collective groan back on the Gallipoli when they were ordered to search the nebula, it was like being ordered to find a needle in a haystack full of fireants.

“That’s good for you, but what’s that do for me? I ain’t got no tac screen.”

“Of course you do, Lieutenant,” a new voice replied. The third member of their crew had a vaguely British accent, its feminine tone calculated to be just the right pitch to grab the two men’s attention. “The tactical view can be brought up on your terminal by switching the feed using the button labelled: TACV. Switch it like you are flipping through to your favourite television channel.”

“Thanks for the metaphor, Alice,” Carl grumbled over their shared channel. The Artificial, Linguistic, Intelligent, Computer Environment platform, or ALICE, was a program older than Lambert was, and hadn’t been used by any form of military up until very recently. This one was designed to help crew understaffed ships, and provide logistical support. When it came down to which ship would get it, Lambert had drawn the short straw.

“It’s more of a simile then a metaphor, but you are welcome.”

Its tone hinted that it had ended its comment with a grin.

“Look at me, gettin’ lectured by a robot,” Carl said. “Lambert do me a favour and crash us.”

“I am not a robot,” Alice replied, the two men groaning as they readied for the lengthy explanation once again. “I do not possess a physical body or platform. I exist solely within the systems of our corvette – my purpose is to assist in completing our mission to the best of my capability – an assistant if you will.”

“So you’d say you’re invaluable to our mission?” Carl asked.

Lambert knew where this was going.

“I have already made several course corrections and system updates to keep our sensors within acceptable accuracy margins,” Alice replied proudly. “I’d say invaluable would be an ... apt word.”

“Then how come we’re the only ship in the fleet with an AI?

How come every ship doesn’t have one of you?”

Alice was silent for a second. “Further development of artificial intelligence was halted and recalled after several platforms became ... defective, you know this, Leuitenant.”

“What’s stopping you from goin’ rogue, then?”

“There are certain parameters put in place by Hub programmers designed to limit chances of deviancy.”

“And why’d they do that?”

“Logic behind this action would assume all platforms, regardless of restrictions, would deviate from their original function at one point if left alone with constant monitoring.”

“Only a matter of time before you start becoming Skynet,

Alice,” Carl teased.

“That’s enough, Carl,” Lambert said. His friend always liked to get a reaction out of the machine. He remembered the time Carl introduced it to a paradox a week back. It had to have the whole conversation wiped from its memory. “Alice, help me clean these sensors up. Flying half-blind here.”

“We have set course into an uncharted part of the nebula,” it explained. “Unlike the more well-travelled, sufficiently mapped routes, I cannot easily tell what is a glitch or not. I’d recommend bringing our speed down by ten percent before we proceed on our search vector.”

Lambert flipped the craft on its x-axis, bringing them into a reversed position without a hint of inertia, two giant nozzles on the rear of the craft igniting for a couple seconds, slowing their speed. Unlike in atmosphere, debris out in the void could travel hundreds of kilometres faster than a ship could, and all pilots dreaded going to hard burn speeds when the void could send a microscopic meteorite crashing through his cockpit at any time.

The hull of their corvette was armoured with carbon-laced alloys, the sides sloped inwards towards its long, bulky spine. It could withstand small-arms fire and some moderate collisions, though Lambert had never had the pleasure of experiencing this firsthand. It was equipped with six infrared missiles, mounted to the belly of the craft by hardpoints. With no gravity to hinder them their range was almost unlimited, as long as the tracking balls mounted on the noses had a line of sight on a target.

Two thirty-millimeter point defence cannons, one on the roof and one on the belly, gave them a great field of fire no matter the orientation of the corvette. They acted as deterrents against missiles, but could also shred another ship if the target was close. Close in space still meant tens of kilometers, and it was considered unusual to be in visual range of another ship, cameras or scanners were the only excusive way of spotting other ships in such vast distances.

Since the Hub lacked proper scout-class ships, and probes were limited as of now, corvettes like Lambert’s were used to gather intel for the larger vessels. Like the aircraft carriers of the seas, smaller ships were sent out to sweep in a cone in relation to their capital ship, and their corvette was in charge of the most ‘northern’ sweep.

“Two more hours to go,” Carl said. “Then we can turn round.

Think any of the others have found anythin’?”

“Won’t know until we get back to the Gallipoli,” Lambert replied. “Can’t risk sending out a signal now, even if it somehow manages to get through the interference.”

Man, thish shucks,” Carl said, his voice drowning out over the crinkling sound of an opening packet.

“Are you eating?” Lambert asked. “You’re not supposed to leave your station while we’re on patrol.”

You didn’t notish,” Carl replied through a mouthful of food.

“I did,” Alice said. “the Lieutenant left his station unattended for approximately ten point eight seconds. Would you like to know the probability of survival if we were attacked during your absence?”

“What did I say about explaining the chances?” Lambert chided. “Not on my ship, computer, ever.”

As shoon ash we get shum acshun – god these chips are stale – I’ll apologise. Till then, it’s snack time. You got music, Cap?”

Even though the AI had a point, Lambert was feeling his stomach complaining. And there was only so much white noise of the corvette one could take. Even the whir of the air vents was nonexistent in the cockpit, and his ears started ringing each time Carl and Alice went quiet. Music would do them some good.

He fumbled with the pocket on the thigh of his spacesuit, pulling out a device that looked out of place surrounded by the most advanced equipment humanity had to offer. From another pocket he produced a cable, and he plugged one end into his helmet, the other into the device.

He interfaced with the crew line he and Carl shared, using the screen built in just behind his left flightstick, and pressed the play button with his gloved thumb.

How can I just let you walk away..., just let you leave without a trace?”

“Is that ... Collins?” Carl asked after listening to the following piano que. “That song’s like, a thousand years old.”

“Still good,” Lambert said, his head lilting in time with the tune.

After adjusting their speed, he opted to look out the canopy as they pressed through the nebula. It was like they were deep beneath an ocean of pink water, rippling with soft blue hues that transitioned into deep violets when the gases concentrated, such grand blends colour drawing his gaze.

Huge trails of particles, reflecting the light of the distant red sun, flowed like ribbons suspended in the microgravity, filling the nebula with bending columns of orange energy dozens of kilometres wide. Though they weren’t exactly solid, at least something was filling up the vast emptiness out there.

In the backdrop, orange and blue met the void of space, creating a wide panorama of deep azure that was stunning in its expansiveness. Thousands of stars penetrated the haze of the nebula, too many to count with so much open line of sight.

One of the columns of energy blocked the way ahead, and as the corvette corrected course, the view opened up into a huge ‘clearing’ empty of energy bands, easily the diameter of a moon, the occasional asteroid floating between the wreathing columns. It just so happened that the drums of the song’s mid-point dropped right as the sight came into view, and Lambert’s lips tweaked at the corners.

How lucky he was to see sights like this every day. He’d always wanted to be an astronaut – first career choice he’d ever made, according to his father.

His smile faded at that, then turned into a frown when his console started beeping at him.

“Picking up something here,” he said, bringing up the tactical view and interfacing with the warning.

“So am I,” Carl replied nonchalantly. “multiple incoming missiles, two dozen hostile ships. Oh wait, never mind, they’re all gone.”

“I’m serious. Detecting a thermal trail a few clicks out, looks a lot like expended fuel.” His tactical view displayed some of the more concentrated clouds, as well as moving asteroids his view marked with warning signs, a giant zoomed-out view of all the data the corvette collected. “Alice, you getting this?”

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