The pirates sounded like they were high on illegal substances as they screamed crazily and rushed straight toward the fleet. They came out of the asteroid field in great numbersâ Err, well, not exactly. But there were still quite a few of them.
âSince our sensors didnât catch them, were they waiting with their power generators down the entire time?â
âI suppose. They sound like a crazy mob right now, but that was still a pretty calculating move.â
âMaybe theyâre just barely holding on to reason, and only got high enough to forget their fear? Thatâs pretty nasty.â
Even for pirates, isnât it too much of a waste to throw away their lives like this? Iâm sure there are various circumstances on the side of the pirates as well, but an attack like this was practically suicide. I wonder what kind of standing these guys held in the organization for them to be treated as sacrificial pawns like this.
ăAttention all ships. Immediately intercept the enemy ships coming in from Sector 3. Small-class ships, be careful not to enter the line of fire of the medium and large-class ships.ă
The moment Lt. Col. Serenaâs transmission was over, the secondary guns of Restalias spat out fire, or rather, highly destructive beams, and started intercepting the pirate ships that came out of the asteroid field. The other large-class ships also began firing interception barrages.
âNo matter how many times I see this stuff, itâs still damn amazing.â\n
âI definitely donât want to try plunging headfirst into a barrage like this.â
The secondary guns of a large-class ship were basically the same caliber as the main guns of medium-class ships. In other words, even Krishnaâs shield would be completely saturated after taking just a few hits. So what about pirate ships with abysmal defenses? Itâs not that hard to imagine what would become of them.
âNn, so unless itâs a perfect surprise attack, it really is no good.â
It seems like the pirates were trying to throw off the aims of the large-class ships by scattering chaff and flares, but this was simply trying to put out a raging inferno with a single bucket of water. I mean, sure, chaff and flares can be used to throw off the automatic aiming systems of starships by disrupting their sensors to some extent, but they can always aim manually. Chaff and flares are convenient, but not universally effective in each and every scenario.
âYeah. Mimi, direct the active sensors opposite of where the large-class ships are firing at. Set it to maximum range.â
âEh? U-UnderstoodâŚâŚ Huh?â
âSo somethingâs really coming from over there huh. Prepare for combat, and send the observation data to Restalias to warn them.â
âA-Aye, aye, sir!â
Itâs a common tactic. Basically, itâs like making a big swing with your right first to attract the attention of your opponent and landing the critical blow with your left fist, a weapon, or a kick. In this case, both the minefield and the earlier ambush from the asteroid field were merely used as decoys.
While listening to Mimi communicating with Restalias, I pointed Krishna in the direction of the suspicious readings and set the active sensors to maximum output.
âThereâs something there alright.â\nâYup, definitely.â
An extremely cold object was steadily approaching the fleet. Probably, after accelerating at maximum speed, they activated the emergency cooling system to drastically lower the temperature of their starship, and let it approach the fleet exclusively through the use of inertia. Itâs similar to the stunt I pulled off during the battle with the Vereverem Federation a while back. Yep. It was thermal stealth.
âIâll leave the adjustment of the FCS to you.â
âSure.â
Of course, Krishna also sported a thermal sensor among its equipped modules. Itâs not impossible to lock onto a starship using thermal stealth by simply tweaking the fire control system settings a bit.
âSettings are A-OK. Target locked. Twelve bogeys approaching. No reaction on the IFF.â
âOK. Those are enemies then.â
The opponents were still approaching us with their power generators under minimum output. Of course, that meant they donât have any shields up and they were practically blind. They probably havenât even noticed we already got a lock on them.
âHiro-sama, Lt. Col. Serena says we are permitted to freely engage.â
âRoger that. Letâs do this.â
I pulled back the control stick, squeezed the firing trigger, and launched a salvo from the four large-caliber laser cannons as I rapidly closed in on them. And, of course, once they directly hit a ship without energy shields deployedâ\n\nâKeep a record of them in our database.â
The unknown ships had a streamlined form that was unfamiliar to me. They were using ship models I havenât encountered in SOL. All their starships were painted a vivid shade of red. Thereâs a notion that red stuff is stronger and faster compared to regular stuff where Iâm from, but were these guys going to be up to snuff?
One ship endured our barrage. I fired two more salvos. I only grazed it, but the shieldâs finally down. Letâs finish it with the shot cannons⌠There we go.
âIn situations like this, having the initiative really helps a ton huh.â
When youâre up against an unknown enemy, scoping them out first was a bad idea. It would be better if you attacked relentlessly to drag the enemies into your own pace. Instead of risking being blindsided by something unexpected, itâs better for you to simply crush them from the get-go.
âThose guys probably have weapons that can be used to bring down large-class ships. Be careful.â
âI know.â
Well, they were all small-class ships. There are only a limited number of ways small-class ships can deal considerable damage to large-class ships such as battleships and heavy cruisers. And most of those methods arenât very effective when going up against a similar small-class ship. Hitting a small-class ship with an anti-ship reactive torpedo was difficult even for me after all.
But Iâm not saying I canât though.
âLetâs finish them all off before ally reinforcements come.â
These are very nice prey. Since theyâve come to us, Iâm just gonna bag âem all for ourselves.