alarmed, this should not incite a panic. That said, Copernicus is a significant loss. Of all the Parallax telescopes, it was the most valuable militarily, giving us the best view of the Formics.â
The word âviewâ was used loosely here, Mazer knew. We could not âseeâ the Formic fleet in the traditional sense. Copernicus was a computer. It merely spat out data. Analysts then extrapolated likely ship positions, distances, and speeds, filling in the gaps with guesswork and probabilities. Earth still didnât know how many ships were coming, for example. But the data from Copernicus, incomplete as it was, was invaluable.
Ukko continued. âTwo IF fighters tracked the Formic fighter to a small asteroid in the Kuiper Belt sixteen hours ago and terminated the threat.â
âThey blew it up?â said Rimas. âHow stupid can you get!â
Mazer agreed. We should have captured it. There were a hundred questions that would never be answered now. If the ship was that small, had it come alone? It was clearly not big enough to be an interstellar ship. It must have come from one of the warships. But how?
There were other questions as well. Did the Formics understand Copernicusâs military significance? Could they read its data? Was this a deliberate dismantling of our intelligence infrastructure in preparation for an invasion? Or were they merely targeting all artificial satellites, and they simply hit the closest one first?
Surely Ukko understood how strategically misguided it was to destroy the fighter. Was he losing his influence over the Strategos and the Polemarch? Or was this a misjudgment by them all?
Kim, if weâre led by fools, how can we possibly believe that we can win?
The Hegemon continued, rattling off specific details about the attack. Time, place, the kind of IF fighters used. He even showed a brief vid taken from the IF fighters as they attacked the lone Formic ship.
Mazer kept waiting for Ukko to explain the backup system the IF would employ to track the Formics now that Copernicus was destroyed. But no such information was offered. Ukko eventually gave the podium to one of the rear admirals to take questions, perhaps knowing that the questions would be brutal.
The rear admiral gave the usual nonanswers, trying his best to demonstrate that the IF still had matters under control. It was a weak performance, and by the time the transmission ended and the holo winked out, Mazer felt even more uneasy.
âWhy didnât they capture that fighter?â asked Rimas.
âMaybe they couldnât,â said Shambhani. âMaybe destroying it was the only option.â
âOr maybe they could have,â said Mazer, âbut they felt like they had to destroy it to put everyoneâs mind at ease. Make a show of force, reassure the world that we still have a fighting chance. Terminate the threat and win the PR game. Remember, the IF canât hide the loss of Copernicus. The press regularly receives reports from the IF on the data Copernicus gathers. If that source of intel suddenly ran dry, the press would eventually figure out why. Better for the IF to destroy the fighter and make a vid of them doing so than to let this single Formic fighter go unchallenged and seem smarter and faster than the entire International Fleet.â
âSo they blew up the fighter to save face?â asked Shambhani.
âMaybe,â said Mazer. âBut Iâm more concerned about the loss of Copernicus than I am about how the IF plays the press. Weâre essentially blind now. The one slight observational advantage we had is severely limited. The seven other Parallax satellites are so far away from the position of Copernicus that they wonât be much help in making up for what Copernicus no longer reports to us. Weâre going to have to be smarter and faster and flawless now. No casualties, no slip-ups.â
âPeople arenât stupid,â said