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The Spartan Chronicles - Continued

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  • “Go.”

    Kurt held back. Not from any fear of jumping, but it was so irrevocable. There was no going back if he jumped. Maybe this would lose him Shauna forever.

    But it was for a greater good, of that he was convinced.

    'Into the lion’s mouth,' he thought.

    “Go. Go” asserted the crewman.

    Kurt launched himself.

    The needlejet had come in low at the 2000 meter level, just clearing the canyon ridge, and as the ground fell away into the canyon bottom spread out before him the crewman had ordered the jump.

    Now Kurt floated gently down into the bowels of Nessus Canyon, to the secret headquarters of the Circle of Ashaandi.

    As he descended, he focussed his senses and shaped them into a probe as his training had taught. A tight, hard beam. He swept the canyon floor and walls.

    They’re good, he thought. His probe was met with absolute blankness. Not even chittering mindworms lived here in this harsh environment. He increased his power, and swept again. Faint wisps of sentience emanating from the gently swaying fungus stalks rippling in the breezes caressing the canyon sides. But that was all.

    As his feet touched the canyon floor he rolled to one side, standing up in one movement and deftly pulling his chute in towards him as he did so.

    “Cover your tracks,” Sand had said. “Anyone flying over your landing area five minutes later must be totally unaware that the surface has been even touched.”

    He stuffed the chute into the almost empty backpack he wore. A bottle of water and a handful of boiled detoxed fungus stalks was his provisions – “live off the land,” Sand had said. He had a handful of water purification tablets, but didn’t reckon he’d need them. He hadn’t seen any water.

    “Your mission is to find the ops center. If you succeed, you will find it. If you fail, you will die in the canyon. It’s as simple as that,” Sand had said ominously.

    “Will they be making it easy for me?” he’d asked, naively.

    “On the contrary,” Sand had responded. “They have orders to kill you. We’ve alerted them that a Spartan operative has broken our code and has infiltrated the Circle. You will succeed if you can convince them that you are genuine. If you cannot, you will die.”

    'Good job I flunked math,' Kurt thought. 'There’s a lot of death possibility on one side and only wits and good planning on the other.'

    Well, he was a survivor.


    He adjusted his breather. It had been so long since he’d used one constantly that it now felt uncomfortable. Around the bases, where every building had piped oxygen, nowhere was more than five minutes form clean breathable air. Even outside the base perimeters, in the forests and the farms, the air was regenerating with a healthy to humans mix, as it was around the sea and ocean shores. After 125 years on Planet some healthy rainforests had developed and were now oxygen generators.

    But here, in the stifling heat of the floor of Nessus Canyon, the natural air was almost unbreatheable for all but the shortest spell.

    Kurt took stock of his surroundings.

    He’d snuck a peek at the pilot’s map, and although he couldn’t read the aviation map, he could read the pilot’s mind. “Use every advantage you have,” Sand had said. “There’s no such thing as ‘cheating’ in this test. You are gambling with your life.”

    So he had read the map through the pilot’s eyes.

    He was at co-ordinate 4/100.

    Immediately to the south was a fungal field.

    In a sweep from the northeast to due west was arid desert soil, forming the barrier that protected the canyon floor.

    To the southwest, southeast, east and northeast was desert scrub, warmed by the sun, but protected in the shadow of the dunes to the north and west.

    ‘If I were building a base where would I site it?’ Kurt thought.

    ‘In the fungus!’

    He headed south.


    Kurt wandered for days in the fungus. It felt, looked and even smelt different here. Kurt wondered about that.

    Most of the fungus he’d encountered had been Planet’s equivalent of ‘lush.’ It had been by ocean or close to ocean, and certainly flourished under rainfall just as well as terran plants. But this was different. It looked almost burnt, almost dead.

    He took off a mitt, and reached out to touch one of the brittle looking tendrils.

    earthkurt…join us in our sorrow…yet rejoice with us in the joining of planet and earthkind.

    Disorientation……..

    Dissonance…….

    Kurt sat down heavily in the fungus and let the waves of sorrow wash over him.

    The needless loss of life.

    The wasting of young lives, cut off before they could contribute much to the collective consciousness…of old, complete lives yet with still so much to offer…tinged with exhuberance that they had joined in the collective consciousness in their death…that they were finally complete.

    Kurt stretched his neural perception, and as he reached, scanning, he began to pick up wisps of consciousnesses, of personalities. Those that were strongest seemed to have an almost lifelike pattern whereas the weaker ones were more dissonant, more disjointed.

    One in particular stood out, attracting Kurt’s thought tendrils as they roamed over the collective sentience.

    earthkurt, beware….all is not what it seems…..

    voice….are you planet?

    earthkurt….we are with planet now …we are one with planet…but once I walked on planet….

    Voice, …who are you…what can you tell me?

    earthkurt…I was once known as earthburge …a mighty general with the spartans

    but you can’t be dead…..you are still commanding their armies…

    an imposter,,,earthkurt…ashaandi impersonating me…all is not what it seems….trust not earthsand…he spells deceit….I thought him dead, but he is not here…nor his accomplice…earthangel…beware her beauty..there is a beast within…

    Field Marshall Burge…I will be joining you soon if I cannot find my way around here…can you help?

    …we cannot see…only experience earthkurt through planet…you are close…we sense that…beware…


    Kurt woke up with a start, shivering. The suns were long since down, and Nessus' pale, reflected light had no warmth. The valley floor was cold, yet the fungus strangely warm and comforting.

    ‘What a dream,’ Kurt thought. ‘Imagining I was speaking to the dead. Harrumph.’

    He sat up in the fungal bed, and started, as he was staring down the barrel of a shard pistolette.

    Behind the shard gun was a beautiful, classically sculpted face, framed by short cropped blond hair that cupped down to her ears on either side.

    “Don’t move,” said the apparition. “you have some talking to do.”

    As she spoke, she was motioning with the pistol for Kurt to get up.

    He was mesmerized by the pistol.

    Or more correctly by the hand holding it.

    Wearing a glove.

    Encrusted with flecks of diamonds.


    [This message has been edited by Googlie (edited November 12, 1999).]

    Comment


    • Chairman Sheng-Ji Yang slowly let his gaze wander round the room. His entire war cabinet, esconsed in their warroom deep in the underground bunker below The Hive.

      General Seng, of Eastern Command, still smarting after the loss of Plex Anthill and the four mainland bases. He fully expected demotion.

      General Ng, of Western Command. He was smugly satisfied. This was the moment he was waiting for. Serene in the knowledge that he was a winner following the successful conquest of Morgan Pharaceuticals, just renamed this morning as Communal Conquest.

      Admiral Hy. Unscathed. Not yet bloodied by the battle as the expected Spartan invasion fleet had not as yet materialized. Had successfully brought the naval units out from the rebel bases before any damage could be done to the ships, he was serene in the knowledge that he was, for the present, untouchable.

      Air Marshall Lew. His aircraft had taken a pounding, but his pilots had acquitted themselves well. He was somewhat smug in the knowledge that a good airforce was the key in the struggle, and fully a third of the Hive‘s seventeen bases were now rushing the production of Tactical Needlejets with both air-to-ground and air-to-air capability. The ground attack penalty would be partially offset by the inclusion of the recently developed plasma shard weapons in the ordnance kits.

      Colonel (formerly Captain) Masterton, Home Base Commander – something of an oddity as an ethnic Euro being promoted through the Hive’s military structure. But his credentials, like those of his family, were sound. His grandfather, one of the original Landers, had been the military brains behind the old terran Peoples’ Republic of Botswana, until ousted by the wealth-backed mercenaries of Morgan Mining Corp.

      Chief Science Officer Shimoda. Outwardly calm, yet Yang could detect the inward tension. He focussed on the face and let his gaze linger on Shimoda’s countenance. No fear. Good news then, for a change. He moved on.

      Ota Kyi. A major disappointment with the mindworm episode. Some damage was inflicted on Morgan Industries, that was for sure, but the general outcome was a vast strengthening of the Gaian military.

      The Base Governors. The criteria for being invited to join the war Cabinet was population. Grow your base to 80,000 plus, and the invite was automatic.

      There were 6 present:

      Manshan Chow, representing The Hive itself
      Virgil, representing Deep Passages (no-one knew of any other name – he was simply Virgil)
      Academicienne Pauline Sy, representing Socialism Tunnel (she chaired the research university there)
      Madame Hsui, representing Great Clustering
      Colonel Cyrus Peake, Military Commander, Communal Conquest (formerly Morgan Pharmaceuticals)
      Vice Admiral Javed Miandad, representing Sea Hive.

      Chairman Yang finished his sweep.

      Resting his elbows on the table, he steepled his fingers together – a favorite posture that denoted relaxation and control. His audience knew that this morning was not going to be one of ranting.

      “Logistics first, then we will proceed with sector reports.

      The following appointments are effective immediately.

      Firstly, General Ng is promoted to Marshall of the Armed Forces and Supreme Military Commander. All, repeat all, military forces will now report to me through Marshall Ng.

      Next, Colonel Peake is appointed General, and will assume responsibility for all army offensive units.

      Colonel Masterton is appointed General, and will assume responsibility for all base defensive units.

      Air Marshall Lew and Admiral Hy will see little change except in their reporting relationship to Supreme Military Commander Marshall Ng.

      General Seng. You will assume the rank of Colonel and take over the military Governorship of Great Clustering.

      Madame Hsui, as one of our ablest administrators, you will assume responsibility for our newest base of Communal Conquest. You will also join me and Marshall Ng as the Chief Civilian Officer and will have the title of Civilian Marshall. We three will from today form the inner core of the Cabinet.

      Madame Kyi, after the fiasco that you led at Morgan Industries, resulting in the Gaians overnight becoming one of the more powerful factions on Planet, you are dismissed from the war cabinet. You may return to Labor Network where the scientists there are having some success in breeding mindworms in captivity. You will assume their command, and once you have redeemed yourself we may see fit to invite you to join our council again. You may leave now.

      Ota Kyi stood up and bowed graciously to all around the table, backing out towards the door. She was secretly relieved to be spared her life, having feared the worst.

      Chairman Yang then swept his gaze lightly over the civilian contingent.

      “Sang Shimoda, you are now our Minister of Applied Science, and you will have the title of Civilian General, reporting to Civilian Marshall Hsui”

      Shimoda bowed his head to Yang and Hsui in acknowledgement.

      Yang continued:

      “Governor Chow. You have proved adept at bringing the most out of our workers. You will be our Minister of Production and will also assume the rank of Civilian General, reporting to me through Civilian Marshall Hsui.”

      Manshan Chow likewise bowed to acknowledge the appointment.

      “Virgil,” said Yang. The shaven black head inclined gracefully towards the head of the table.

      “You have proven yourself a master at managing the economy of your base, and I know that others have sought your help repeatedly. I see a broader role, as energy is the key to our realizing our dream. You will be our Finance Minister with the equal rank of Civilian general, reporting to Marhsall Hsui.”
      Virgil nodded agreement, then spoke.

      “Mr Chairman.”

      A collective gasp ran round the table. No-one interrupted the Chairman at these promotion/demotion seances.

      Yang looked annoyed, yet an appreciative twinkle appeared in his eyes. ‘Someone with guts’ he thought to himself.

      “Yes? You have a point to make?”

      Virgil began:

      “If I am to be Minister of Finance then I will have control over the energy allocations of each base, input into the production being undertaken at each base….” Virgil inclined his head to Manshan Chow, who nodded, “and into the research efforts and special projects…” with as nod to Shimoda and Academicienne Sy, who both acknowledged his comment…”and a veto on expenditures?”

      “Absolutely,” said the Chairman, somewhat disappointed that this was the extent of Virgil’s contribution, and about to resume.

      “Including the Circle of Ashaandi?”

      There was a pregnant pause.

      Every eye turned to Chairman Yang. This was a defining moment.

      Sheng-Ji Yang quietened the turmoil in his mind, reaching for the center again.

      Haraan Ashaandi had to be contained, controlled. Sand had been eliminated, at the hands of Madame Hsui’s guard. He was used to dealing with Ashaandi alone. Help would be welcome.

      He made his decision.

      “You will be their paymaster. Those expenditures will be off books. You will report directly to me on these matters.”

      Virgil nodded.

      Civilian Marshall Hsui frowned.

      The seeds of future dissent had been sown

      Yang turned back to the table.

      “Report,” he said, turning to Marshall Ng.

      Marshall Ng began his report.

      [This message has been edited by Googlie (edited November 12, 1999).]

      Comment


      • Marshall Ng began his report.

        “I must first apologize for the absence of Marshal Barklow. He is occupied at present in the command of the Peoples’ Army’s defense of our homeland. Although we are under attack on our own continent for the first time since we drove out the Stepdaughters of Gaia, our position does remain strong.

        “While it is true that our troops took a mauling at Plex Anthill, with the loss of thousands, the survivors are regrouping at Deep Passages. They first fell back to Laborers’ Throng, but were somewhat exposed there, so they were pulled inland. This was just as well as they would have fallen prey to the massive assault launched by the Spartans. We are collapsing the various units into a single fast response armored brigade whose component troops have named it Brigade of The Return. As soon as Virgil”…with an inclination of his head to the bald black pate of the new Minister of Finance, who nodded in acknowledgement… “ has examined the state of our finances I will be recommending that we re-equip this brigade with the new shard weaponry that our indefatigable research scientists have developed”…this with a nod to Shimoda and Sy… “which will make them almost unstoppable.”

        Chairman Yang lifted one eyebrow. He had other plans for the Hive’s meager reserves of credits, which only he and Barklow shared so far.

        Ng continued:

        “On the good news front, we have been highly successful in our training program for our new garrison troops. All but one of our bases now have AAA certified Plasma garrisons in place – the remaining one is even now engaged in a vigorous training and equipment program.

        “Our invasion force in Communal Conquest is now well established and has been reorganized under the capable command of Colonel Peake – oh, I beg pardon – General Peake …” this with a self-conscious nod to the newly appointed General sitting by his side, who smiled and muttered ‘s all right’ to the Marshall, who continued “…Has been re-organized into a sound defensive garrison and two offensive units that have reached Commando status. They are itching for action, and I think that we can turn them loose imminently.

        The balance of our troops comprise the police garrisons in each base and one or two floater units that had lost the bulk of their divisions and have been loosely assimilated into other units.

        The good news is that I think we will be able, with our perimeter defenses, to withstand a ground attack, and our AAA garrisons, bolstered in those bases with aerospace infrastructures, will be a formidable match for any air assault.

        And to crown the news, our second planetbuster is only a week or so away from completion – an injection of funds will surely hasten the subcontractors’ work.

        Meanwhile I am working closely with General Peake to plan an invasion of Morgan Bank.

        Air Marshal Lew will now give his status report.

        Marshal Ng sat down.

        Lew stood up.

        “I will make no false promises or give inflated figures.

        “Our air forces have taken a hammering. First Wing is relatively unscathed, at Communal Conquest, but that is almost all the good news. Second Wing was badly mauled at Plex Anthill, and is reduced to mere skirmish capacity. Marshal Barklow has requisitioned all the penetrators of Second Wing and they are undergoing refit, presumably as close support aircraft. He is cagey on that subject, and simply says to take the matter up with you, Mr. Chairman. I assume that he is under your – or Marshal Ng’s – orders.

        “Fourth Wing is in reserve, and it may be time to commit them to the battle. We have three penetrator squadrons and one supporting interceptor squadron, all stationed at Unity Lair. They are all older fission powered missile needlejets, and form our strategic reserve. If we had the funds we could initiate a conversion to clean fusion drives, with shard weaponry, but alas we do not. So they may have to go into battle as is.

        “As Marshall Ng has mentioned, our second Planetbuster missile is only days away from being operational.

        “And our participation in the space program is proceeding. We will have many claimants for the reserves released when the Unity core is retrieved, I’m sure.”

        Marshal Lew sat down.

        Ng looked at Admiral Hy, who rose to his feet.

        “Our naval power is unmatched on Planet,” he began, at which the former General, now Colonel Seng, interrupted:

        “Unscratched, you mean.”

        Ignoring the interruption, Hy continued…. “and the morale of the sailors is high. The Northern Navy, operating out of The Leaders Horde, has two AAA destroyer flotillas that were the guinea pigs – so to speak – for the installation of shard weaponry.”

        The uproar was immediate, from Lew and from Ng. Chairman Yang had to intervene.

        “Gentlemen, we are more passionate in turf protecting than we are on Base protecting. I authorized the expenditure. They were not in action, the refit was not rushed, and we are the stronger for it. So desist this unseemly bickering.”

        Hy resumed.

        “The Southern Fleet is split between Sea Collective, where we have two Missile Cruiser squadrons and a plasma AAA Gunboat flotilla, and Deep Passages, with one Missile Cruiser flotilla. Neither navy has seen much action in this war.”

        “You’re telling me,” said Chen, unable to resist the barb.

        Admiral Hy glowered at him.

        “Unfortunately we lack transport ships – although with our retrenchment into our home continent they are not vital, except perhaps for reinforcing the push into further Morgan territory. And we do have a transport flotilla at Communal Conquest.”

        Admiral Hy sat down.

        Chairman Yang resumed speaking.

        “We are weakest on the ground, in defense of our home bases. I have calculated that at their present rate of advance, the Spartan forces will be overrunning this very bunker in less than a week. Accordingly Marshal Barklow, Commandant of The People’s Army that is taking the brunt of the invasion recommended to me the release and refitting of our troops with nerve gas pods. Reluctantly, and after much soul searching as the ethics of the situation, I concurred.

        “Better free, and vilified, that enslaved and vilified was my overarching thought. Earlier today we unleashed the first salvo on the unsuspecting Spartans. Unfortunately their local air superiority allowed them to destroy our attack units utterly. And they pressed home their advantage by siezing and occupying The Drone Mound a few hours ago."

        A gasp went up from some of the assembled gathering, whoi were unaware that The Drone Mound had fallen.

        Yang continued:

        “To survive we must do three things:

        “Halt the Spartan advancement in its tracks. Our conversion to chemical weapons is but a first step in this direction;

        “Open a second front, to divide their efforts. To this end the assault on Morgan bank will commence immediately;

        “Maximize our use of the Hunter-Seeker Algorithm that we captured from Morgan. Today I have authorized the formation of a Special Operations Division whose mission will be to sow confusion and dissent on our enemies, drain their energy reserves, foment rebellion in their ranks and steal or sabotage their technology. Pauline Sy will command that unit and will be accountable to me and to me alone. If she asks for assistance, you will provide it, no questions asked. Is that clear?”

        They all nodded their assent.

        “Now we will hear the Governors’ reports.”


        [This message has been edited by Googlie (edited November 12, 1999).]

        Comment


        • Priscilla Hsui took the lead role. She was the Chairperson of the Council of Twenty Two, as it had been called at the beginning of Chiron year 2225. Seven bases had been lost, and one added, so rightly it should now be known as the Council of Sixteen.

          “Chairman Yang. Let us start with The Hive itself, where as has been mentioned, the second of our intercontinental Nuclear missiles is almost complete. The expenditure of a mere 4 energy credits would be sufficient to pay for the contractors’ overtime costs and the missile would be operational within the next day or so. But we realize that there are other calls on our meager reserves,

          “Two Special Projects are underway.

          “At The leaders Horde we are just weeks away from the completion of The Maritime Control Center, which as most of you are aware will confer substantial benefits on our Naval units.”

          This drew the expected “harrumph” from Seng.

          Continuing, Priscilla said:

          “The other Special Project is being constructed at Deep Passages where work has commenced on The Neural Amplifier. Prior to this meeting, however, Virgil received a report from his research team that the work undertaken so far could more profitably be converted to the construction of a project that they have code-named The Living Refinery. It promises returns of greater efficiency and reduced maintenance costs for our armed forces. And while the eventual introduction of clean reactors into all our vehicles will make our support costs almost zero, rendering this project to be of dubious value, we believe that keeping it from the hands of our enemies is as important as using its benefits ourselves. And if we are strapped for credits and cannot afford the conversion of all our units to clean reactors, then the project will have paid for itself in reduced upkeep costs.

          “Clean Shard interceptor squadrons are being built in various stages of completion at:

          Manufacturing Warrens
          Fecundity Tower
          Social Engineering Den, and
          Deep Community

          “And a Shard Penetrator wing is almost ready for commission at Great Clustering.

          “Trained shard rover battalions are being assembled at:

          Unity Lair, and
          Seat of Proper Thought

          “You know of course that we are breeding Mindworms at Labor Network and again this morning the full resources of Socialism tunnel was entrusted to Pauline Sy and her Special Operations Brigade.

          “That leaves four bases uncounted for, and their production is currently as follows:

          “Fellowship City is our final base without an AAA Plasma garrison, and that is what they are concentrating on;

          “Communal Conquest is in the process of building a clean shard invader squad;

          “Sea Hive is constructing An AAA Shard destroyer flotilla, and finally, with little mineral production to assist, Sea Collective is investing in our maritime transport capability.

          “Our major concern is funding, or more precisely, the lack thereof. The sooner we can avail ourselves of the fruits of the Unity Core Recovery joint venture the better, or if our plans for conquest of Morgan bank can speedily be brought to fruition. Any energy credits, however few, would help.

          “It goes without saying, of course, that any cessation of hostilities, for even a short while, would be of enormous benefit to our production.”

          With that, Madam Hsui sat down.

          Chairman Yang observed the group, then spoke:

          “As you have described it, our position is far from hopeless, but we need time. Need time for us to finish some key constructs, and need time to avail ourselves of the fruits of the Unity.

          “Yet time is not what we have. Inexorably the Spartans are advancing. Morgan is a non-factor, and the Gaians have not yet unleashed their full potential on us.

          “We must stall the Spartan advance while at the same time trying to drive a wedge between the Lady Deirdre and the Junta. And I admit to underestimating CEO Morgan. He has my grudging respect.

          “I think it time that I talked to the faction leaders again."



          [This message has been edited by Googlie (edited November 12, 1999).]
          [This message has been edited by Googlie (edited November 12, 1999).]

          Comment


          • SPARTA COMMAND
            VICNITY OF COMMAND CENTRE

            The Spartan Air Regiment was formed in order to provide personnel for ground protection and support. They were equipped with a variety of vehicles and weapons, typical of a special operations unit. Policing existing bases as well as landing ahead of arriving aircraft to secure captured airfields were but two of their roles. Another of their more common roles was providing escort duties to various SAC envoys and critical personnel.

            This was why Slats sat strapped into a passenger seat in the rear of a rover command compartment. The veteran Air Regiment missile rover careened through the streets of Sparta Command, civilian traffic scattering out of the way. The commander of the Regiment detachment at Sparta Command Aerospace Complex had insisted that Slats take an escort into the volatile inner city. Despite transfer of control back to ‘loyal’ Spartan forces, it was still verging on chaos around the Command Centre where the latest reports still had many troops milling about.

            A last turn put the big rover onto the wide road that accessed the Command Centre. Murmurs from the crew told Slats something was wrong. He strained to see out of a viewport and just caught a glimpse of military personnel surrounding the entrance to the building. The rover commander stood up and led Slats back down to the rover’s hatchway which was just opening as the accompanying eight man squad of troopers piled out into the street. Before Slats exits, the rover commander informs him that there are troops in position hidden all around the area.

            Slats stepped onto the plascrete surface of the road and stopped dead. At least fifty or so very tough and professional looking soldiers had fortified the entrance to the Command Centre. Slats paused only for a moment or two and began walking determinedly towards them. The sound of weapons beginning readied on both sides filled the air and Ben caught a glimpse of the rover’s missile turret swinging round to point at the strange troops. Despite the stalwart courage of the Air Regiment troopers, Slats had a feeling that before any of them could pull a trigger they would all be dead.

            As Slats neared the cordon, a soldier moved a few steps forward and asked for identification. Slats presented his ID card and was led inside for a retinal and DNA check. A hard-faced soldier, who Slats presumed was the commander, addressed him after the tests:

            “You’re NOT expected, but we’ve been told to let you in since you’re here. The Colonel would appreciate your report”.

            Slats awarded the man a raised eyebrow but had to stop himself from grinning out of control when he saw Ashaandi in the foyer surrounded by rifle wielding troops. Ahead, guards opened the synthwood doors and allowed entrance to the council chambers.

            ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

            At heart Slats was a soldier and not a politician. Still there were times when public speaking just had to be done, and this was one of them.

            A slim and lithe looking Santiago spoke from her seat on the far side of the council table.

            “Ah, Air Marshal Miller, I believe you wish to address the council on behalf of our junior officer cadre”.

            I took a deep breath and began.

            “That is indeed correct ma’am. I am here because of the inactivity of this council in leading the Spartan people.”

            Several of the council members have begun staring at Slats in disbelieving rage, Santiago just smiles that knowing smile of hers. Slats went on:

            “Upon the bombing of the old command centre and the confusion from that point till now I believe that this council should consider itself disgraceful in the way that it has acted. Yes, there has been an infiltrator present, but this man actually aided in our military efforts for some time.”

            “At the moment we are currently fighting a war on foreign soil, against our most long hated enemy. The Hive. Now when we are at the verge of breaching the Hive’s interior, now when we need a decisive leadership, where are you?”

            “I have also come to tell the freshest news from the front. Our forces there have just captured the Hive city of Drone Mound after a short but furious battle. This is indeed a victory but further action is needed quickly as the large majority of the Hive units there managed to withdraw to Manufacturing Warrens, a counter attack could be imminent. Need I tell you that earlier, nerve gas weapons systems were used by Hive troops near the outskirts of Drone Mound? No, I think not.”

            “I know that you have debated our response to such actions. Any action taken should not be considered lightly, that is true. But I tell you this now! Yang was broken the U.N charter all factions swore they would adhere to. His use of extensive nerve stapling beforehand tested the boundary of this agreement, but now he has broke it! He used nerve gas once and killed Spartans. He will use it again! I promise you that.”

            “If we continue to fight conventionally, we may win but it will take a terrible toll of our young men and women. Therefore I put to you that we should propose the temporary suspension of the U.N charter to the Planetary Council. If we are successful in this, immediate use of tactical thermo-nuclear warheads, nerve gas and genetic Anti Personnel Viruses are my recommendation. I do not want Doomsday, but I do want justice!”

            “Sparta is in disarray. No one knows where to turn for guidance. For the first time in years, rioters fill our streets! I plead with you all now, show us the way….”

            Less than three minutes later Slats was on his way back to SAC HQ, heart set in stony silence.
            ********

            What lies ahead of us & what lies behind us are tiny matters compared to what lies within us.

            Comment


            • Kurt rose ever so slowly from the fungus, eyes never wavering from the shard pistolette pointed at him.

              The face cooed at him:

              “They said someone was coming. A Spartan operative. A man. I like men. Especially young ones. New ones. You are always so eager.

              “I specialize in the in-between, you know. In between pain and pleasure. That part of the human make up that welcomes pain for the pleasure it brings. Are you like that, Mr. Spartan? We’ll find out, won’t we?

              “They told us to kill you after we’d interrogated you, to find out how you knew our location. But I don’t think so. We’re going to have some fun together, aren’t we, my pretty?”

              Kurt shrugged.

              He deduced that the woman was part of the Circle and that somehow she’d stumbled on to him. No matter. If she would lead him to the base he’d have accomplished half his mission. Finding them. The other half – convincing them of who he was – might be more difficult.

              “Lead on,” he said.

              “Oh, good try,” she purred. “I didn’t get to where I am now by letting young Spartan soldiers walk behind me. Oh no. You lead, I’ll tell you where to go, and I’ll have this pointed at you at all times.”

              Kurt shrugged again. He couldn’t tell her that he’d do nothing if walking behind her – he needed her to lead him to the base. He’d have enjoyed watching her sashay in front of him, but it was not to be.

              He walked.

              She followed.

              For four hours they went deeper into the fungus, and as they progressed the fungus grew taller and eventually intertwined above their heads in a canopy, helped in a couple of places, Kurt noticed, by synthsteel wires.

              They came to a clearing and as they approached Kurt felt the sense of a relatively clumsy mindsweep. He drained his mind of everything but the woman now alongside him, and allowed himself a lascivious thought or two, chuckling inwardly at the projection that this would give.

              “****, Angel…all he wants to do is screw you” came a girlish voice as a teenager appeared from the shelter of one of the huts.

              “Angelica, How many times have told you to stop that?” Angel scolded the teenager.

              “Excuse my sister,” Angel said. “She’s recently learned that she has empath skills and is in training. She uses it on every occasion.”

              Turning to Angelica, she said “Sis, he’s not one of us. He’s Spartan.”

              She was still in the fringes of Kurt’s mind. He decided to give Angelica a show.

              He turned to Angel:

              “She’s right, you know. It’s all I’ve been thinking about these past few hours.”

              He looked at her.

              He mentally undressed her, starting with the velcro pull tabs that secured her top, he mentally unfastened them one by one.

              As the jacket fell open in his mind, he imagined her reaching up to take it off. She wore a black turtleneck synthsilk blouse underneath that molded to her body. She ran her hands seductively down her body, from the neck past the swell of her breasts to her waist where she uncinched the cuffbelt she wore with her equipment pouches. She pulled down her camouflage trousers and stepped out of them.

              Angel was looking at Kurt speculatively, and glancing now and then at Angelica, who was standing goggle-eyed looking at him. Angel knew something was going on, but just couldn’t fathom it.

              She reached up to her neck and ran her fingers into the neck of her blouse and pulled it over her head. Her breasts spilled free from the slight inbuilt moulding in the synthsilk, and the soft evening breeze ruffled her nipples to hardness.

              She reached down and took off her panties until she was standing, naked, in front of Kurt.

              Statuesque.

              Perfect.

              Rebuilt completely after the blast at Great Clustering.

              Ravishingly beautiful.

              Angelica broke the spell with a shriek as she ran off red-faced into the enclosure.

              Kurt looked at Angel, standing fully clothed still pointing the pistolette at him.

              In spite of himself, he was aroused. ‘Too vivid an imagination, I guess,’ he thought to himself.

              “Let’s go meet the team, “ she said.

              “Then I’ll claim my prize.”

              Comment


              • Temple of Sol

                Wolfie was sound asleep after our lovemaking of the evening.

                I gently untangled myself from his arms and slipped out of bed, naked, and padded into the adjoining washroom where my overnight bag was. Everything I needed was in it.

                I emptied the bag and turned it inside out, then opened the hidden compartment and extracted my suit.

                It rolled on from the toes upward, a black sheath that formed itself around my body as it unrolled. I pulled the internal thong into place then finished the dressing. The hood was next, an as I slipped it over my head I was careful to put on the eye protectors, ear plugs and mouthguard first before activating the seal. The neck of the hood and that of the suit bonded seamlessly.

                I attached the cuffbelt with the various pods – power, weapons and supplies, then finally pulled on the gloves. The cuffs again bonded seamlessly with the sleeves of the suit.

                University technology was so wonderful, I thought. Thank God it hadn’t been snuffed out entirely by the Spartan overlords.

                I was ready.

                I reassembled my bag and put it back on the nightstand.

                I looked at myself in the mirror.

                I was tall, at five foot ten, well proportioned and solid, after my training in the resistance. High, firm breasts, and enough muscle tone to suggest aggressive athleticism. The suit fit closer than a body glove, following every contour, every crevice in my body. I was dressed completely in black.

                Watching myself in the mirror, I activated the power.

                There was an almost imperceptible hum, then the image shimmered in the mirror. I felt the tension inwardly, and the hairs on my arms and neck would have stood up had they not been confined by the suit.

                The shimmering intensified, then there was no reflection at all. I wasn’t seeing the reflection of what was behind me, just a mishmash of slight distortion of the surrounds of the washroom.

                The scientist called it a PCD, or personal cloaking device. They were years away from developing it for military usage, as it worked best on molecular image distortion with animal matter rather than metallic or plasteel substances. I called it my chameleon suit.

                Satisfied, I went out on my mission.

                ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ ++++++++

                I came back into the bedroom of the suite, and Wolfie stirred just a little.

                I ignored him, and went out into the corridor.

                When she had been checking in, and Wolfie was getting out arrangements, I had attuned my aural node to her voice, and had the suite number memorized.

                The corridor was lit, and I was aghast to see my shadow.

                They hadn’t explained this aspect of the suit. This called for a rethink.

                I came back into the suite, and made for the balcony.

                I opened the balcony doors, and the breeze ruffled the drapes, causing Wolfie to murmur in his sleep again.

                I padded over, and put a finger on his lips:

                “Shhh,” I whispered.

                He grunted and turned over on his side, his back to the windows. Good.

                I slipped out and drew the doors behind me.

                The drop to the ocean beach below was about 100 feet, and a quick inspection showed me that that route was particularly inhospitable.

                It would have to be from balcony to balcony, then.

                Her suite was six doors away from ours, in a convex semicircle, with each balcony about twelve feet from the next

                ‘OK,’ I thought. ‘I’ve done this in training before.’

                I opened my equipment pouch and selected the grapple fleschette. Peeling back the cloaking sheath from the muzzle, I aimed for a point above the balcony three rooms away, about two hundred feet in the air, where the S on Morgan Temple of Sol Resort was secured. I had to make allowance for the wind, as well as gravity. I secured the slave to my cuffbelt, took aim and fired.

                Thwock…

                I had misjudged a little, and had too much line, but the weighted end wrapped it round the strut and as I felt the tension in the slave I launched myself for the adjacent balcony.

                Pushing off with my feet as I made contact, I swung on to the next, and so on down the line for six balconies.

                Arriving on hers, I unhitched the slave and secured it on the balcony railings. And took stock.

                Her balcony door was slightly ajar to allow for the ocean breeze to blow gently through.

                I slid them open, and entered, pulling them closed, but leaving just enough space for my hasty exit if needed.

                ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ ++++++

                She was lying asleep.

                I fished in my equipment bag until I found what I needed, then ,made my move.

                Using the same technique as I had surprised Wolfie with earlier, I found the nervepoint, and pressed.

                She awoke suddenly, unable to move, fighting to see what was happening.

                I pushed the capsule into the holder, and placed the point of the syringe on her neck adjacent to my finger, and activated it.

                Phhtt…

                Although she could see nothing, her training was such that she knew immediately what was happening. Her eyes widened in disbelief, then she relaxed as the drug permeated her system.

                I waited the recommended thirty seconds, then relaxed my hold, fully alert in case she somehow had immunity.

                I needn’t have worried. The drug took effect, maintaining the paralysis but freeing the face muscles and vocal chords. I was relying on her not screaming.

                She didn’t.

                “Who’s there?” she asked. “Come into the light where I can see you.”

                Rather dramatically, I said:

                “I am the spirit of Marlo Hollis. And of Scott Allardyce. You are now going to tell me who you are working for, and why you assassinated them."

                She spat at me.

                Part of me was amused to feel the spit hit the suit, but part was horrified to see the spittle, as if suspended in thin air, slowly slide down and finally spatter on her bed cover.

                “Ah, a cloaking device,’ she said. “I’ve heard rumors of them.”

                I was pleased that the drug was still working. But I needed to extract the information fast.

                “I’ll make it easy,” I said, switching syringes.

                “Tell me, and I’ll leave you unconscious for three days. Refuse, and I’ll blind you. It’s that simple.”

                She spat again.

                I’d moved positions, though, and it flew harmlessly over my shoulder.

                “Have it your way, then,” I hissed.

                I brought the syringe above her left eye, and pressed.

                Phtttt.

                The discharge was immediate.

                She had tried to close her eye, but wasn’t in time.

                Her cornea clouded over as the fungal extract concentrate went to work.

                My hand was already over her mouth to stifle the scream that I knew was coming.

                The eye slowly dissolved as the acid leached into the membrane.

                “One down and one to go,” I said dispassionately. “Your choice.”

                She nodded weakly.

                “Then talk,” I snapped.

                ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ ++++++++++

                She told me everything.

                When she had finished, I said:

                “Thanks. That was smart of you. I’m going to fulfil my part of the bargain. So you will be unconscious for three days or so.”

                She nodded.

                I changed syringes again, and gave her an injection.

                She drifted off.

                I opened a small vial, and carefully positioned it over her empty eye socket, and tipped it up.

                The tiny mindworm larva wriggled just once, as if to say thank you, as it burrowed into her brain.

                “Rest in peace, Marlo,” I whispered.



                [This message has been edited by Rynn (edited November 13, 1999).]

                Comment


                • “It’s Einstein. It’s a go.”

                  Commander Chuli and her Weapons Officer, Lieutenant Commander Pang ran toward their Penetrator. The armourers were already scurrying around it loading their ordnance, and Sing, their mechanic, had the new fusion engines warming up.

                  Across the airfield the whole wing was in motion.

                  As they got to the plane, Sing handed each a small packet.

                  “What’s this?” Chulki asked.

                  “In case you get shot down,” he replied.

                  “What is it? A new kind of homing beacon transmitter?” she asked, examining the small red capsule inside the packet.

                  “No, Ma’am’, Sing replied, his face grave. “It’s a suicide pill.”

                  “Whatever for?” asked Pang. “It’s the Morganites we’re fighting. Not some cannibal tribe. Why would we need a suicide pill?”

                  “Because you are dropping nerve gas,” Sing replied. “You won’t want to be alive if you’re captured.”

                  Chuli and Pang looked at each other.

                  “Bloody hell,” Pang said.

                  ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

                  Seng Hsui hoisted his missile launcher over his head and waded upstream against the current, bracing himself to keep his feet as he climbed the sections where the waterfall poured over the hillside.

                  Around him the other members of the Deaths Head Brigade swarmed up the river bed. They were falling behind, Seng knew. And in an operation of this nature timing was everything.

                  A ragtag army of cooks and bottle washers had donned uniforms and were trying to look like an army as they moved up the road to where the tunnel bombs had severed it. The intent was to draw the defenders’ attention while the marine corps moved up on a parallel path on the river bed.

                  “About the only thing remotely ‘marine-like’ about this is the cascade of water’, Seng thought ironically as he ploughed forward. Being the son of the second most powerful official in the Hive conferred no benefit. He was still a grunt.

                  He looked over to his left, and was relieved to see the huge hydroponoic domes of the farm come into view. About this point the river came from the right, down a shallower incline, but now they could get back on dry land, as they had passed the ruined road and the hastily erected Morgan fortifications.

                  They could expect to come under fire any time now, unless the pens had done their work. He had heard them constantly for the past few hours.

                  ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

                  The advantages that elevation gave Morgan Bank were indeed awesome, as evidenced by the might arrays of echelon mirrors and solar collectors.

                  Bank itself sat on an almost 1500 meter peak, surrounded by solar generating and collecting stations just slightly lower in elevation. With its population of just over1.2 million and its energy generation totaling 133, magnified by its engineering corps and its energy bank to total 193 energy credits every year, the single base was generating more than the whole Hive economy.

                  Its disadvantage was that with its elevation, and without look-down radar, aircraft breasting the summit of the hills to the south were on the city before defenders had time to react.

                  And they were using stand-off missiles.

                  Chuli brought the huge Penetrator from behind the banks of echelon mirrors, suddenly limned against the evening sky, but blinding to anyone in the base who was looking south east. The setting suns were dazzling in their reflections from the mirrors rendering her flight of pens almost invisible.

                  “Hold that line…steady….gone” Pang announced in satisfaction.

                  The silvery-blue contrails of the four missiles could be seen arcing over the energy collectors towards the city. Unguided – there was no need. To the left and right of her could be seen the rest of the First Wing’s first wave of Penetrators, as they lazily turned for home.

                  High above them the EWACS penetrator picked up the tell-tale launches of the Morgan Interceptors. Metagenics had one flight, as had Transport, and both launched. Interestingly, nothing came from Industries or Ruby Ridge.

                  “Bogies airborne” the operator announced to the First Wing.

                  Jeff Maxwell stiffened in anticipation. His flight of Interceptors had the task of defending the Penetrators, and he was expecting to be facing both the older Morgan Fission Tacticals as well as the new Spartan Indigos. His flight was fission chaos interceptors, but he was flying the new prototype. A fusion shard interceptor.

                  ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

                  Naomi was hurrying home from work when the sirens went. They’d lived for the past few weeks in the expectation that yang would attack – those first few days had been nerve wracking. Those with relatives further from the front line had left, but Naomi and Morris, her husband, had nowhere else to go.

                  Naomi worked the afternoons at the Energy Bank, and Morris was a scaler at the Tree Farm. Tonight was going to be their one evening out this week, and they were going to the Holotheater to see a new science fiction holovid called “The Caretakers”, about imaginary denizens of Chiron many years before who were returning to claim their planet back.

                  She looked up at the early evening sky and saw, before she heard, faint puffs of white, like fireworks going off in daytime. Then she heard the whoop, whoop, whoop of the explosives.

                  A sparse cloud of fine white ash descended, and Naomi clutched her breather more tightly to her mouth and started running for her Hab Complex.

                  She didn’t know why.

                  She just knew that she had to get home and indoors before that cloud touched down.

                  The building was within view.

                  She entered the grounds of the complex.

                  Almost there.

                  But she didn’t make it.

                  The ash descended around her, and she felt the flecks touch her skin. She brushed them off with her hand, then felt a tingling in her scalp.

                  She scratched her head in frustration as the ash began to cover her, then felt the pain in her hand.

                  She looked at it.

                  The skin on her fingers was lacerated in a thousand places and the blood was beginning to seep out of the tiny pinprick wounds.

                  She imagined – or was it imagination? – that she could feel the capillaries burst up her arms and was horrified when she looked to see that she was seeping blood from her arms as well.

                  And her strength was failing, but she was so close to home.

                  She saw Morris come out of the Complex rec room.

                  “MORRIS, NOOooo” she shouted.

                  He heard her, and came loping over, angrily brushing the ash from his torso.

                  Naomi was having difficulty breathing now, and was coughing up blood as she gasped for oxygen from the breather.

                  Morris reached her, and tried to lift her to carry her in, but looked puzzledly at the blood on her arms and hands.

                  Then he looked at his own, and was surprised to see the lacerations in his skin.

                  He looked up at the remnants of the cloud wafting down and, like Naomi before him, thought of daylight fireworks as he saw the puffs from the second wave, and heard the soft whoop, whoop, whoop of the explosions.

                  It was the last he heard.

                  +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

                  Trooper Patterson was the first to realize the implications of what he was seeing.

                  “Chemical Missiles mirving,” he yelled. “Sarge – break out our chemical gear.”

                  “What gear?” Sarge asked. “We’ve got none here. We got some radiation suits – that’s all.”

                  “Anything. Even ponchos,” yelled Patterson. “Just keep the skin and the head covered. Issue the order.”

                  Sergeant Mendoza looked speculatively at Patterson. They were always joshing him about how much time he spent with the holovid goggles on, reliving some science fiction fantasy or other, but the kid was on to something. That man and woman had just erupted into blood covered corpses in front of the garrison’s eyes.

                  He jumped to it.

                  “Everybody covered from head to toe – no bare skin,” he commanded. “Their troops will be here soon.”

                  The squad rushed to collect what gear they could.

                  +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

                  Seng halted his squad under the dome of a giant solar collector. Closeby was the hydroponic farm that shared the same acreage as the energy collector. They were on the outskirts of the city.

                  “Suit up,” he said.

                  They reached into their backpacks and pulled out their crudely fashioned chemprot suits.

                  Bulky, but serviceable.

                  Seng slapped the helmet on.

                  “Ready?” his muffled voice rang out.

                  “Roger,” came his squad’s equally muffled reply.

                  “Let’s go get’em, then,” he said.

                  The squad entered Morgan Bank from the SouthEast highway.

                  ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

                  “Angels ten, seventeen seventyseven, repeat angels ten seventeen seventyseven.”

                  “Roger, EWACS,” said Maxwell, as he looked at the map co-ordinates.

                  ‘Coming in form the northeast, fairly low to get the low-flying Pens, he thought.’

                  “Got ‘em”. Pips, his weapons officer had them on their long range radar.

                  “Blue and red, switch to visual, follow me down,” he commanded as he put the nose of his interceptor down , letting Pips fend for himself for target acquisition.

                  The two flights followed him down.

                  Ground control must have alerted the Morgan flight of their presence, as Pips said:

                  “They’ve changed trajectory – coming to meet us.”

                  “Action stations,” he said to his flight.

                  “Launch detected,” came Pips’ laconic voice. “Must be missile fissions. We’re still out of our range. Activating CEMs.”

                  “Flight, pepare for counter electronic measures,” Maxwell told his wingmen. They’ve only got four apiece and at least a third have launched.

                  “I can engage at 16 klicks, you need at least eleven, so don’t fire when you see me do.

                  “EWACS, do you have a number?”

                  “Affirmative. Six. Signature all fission. Three from each base. They joined up three minutes ago. Six incoming your way, range 60 clicks.”

                  “Damn,” Pips said. “We should scatter. We’re blazing our IR signature halfway across the sky.”

                  “Can’t, said Maxwell. “They need us to guide them in until visual. It’s too fast for the EWACS to control an actual dogfight.”

                  KABOOM

                  A blinding flash to the right and the little interceptor bucked violently as the shock wave hit it.

                  “Mandela,” Maxwell yelled into the commlink. “Eject, eject.”

                  Spiralling past them was the hulk of the Interceptor, one wing completely sheared off, trailing a fireball of debris as it plummeted groundwards.

                  “Not a chance, Sir,” Pips said somberly. “No time to react.”

                  A series of Kabooms in the distance signaled the end of the other five missiles as the ECM defense performed as advertised.

                  “Targeting,’ said Pips.

                  The charged particle beam locked on to a Morgan Fissionjet.

                  Pips sat back – the whole weapons system was automatic, with manual override if necessary.

                  “Come on, damn you, fire,” he said through clenched teeth. They could see the tiny silhouette of the Morgan plane in the distance.

                  Pips fingers hovered over the controls.

                  Maxwell felt the discharge, as did Pips, registering on their consciousness as though a wave of nausea had washed over them.

                  The Morgan Fissionjet disappeared.

                  “****,” said Maxwell. “What is Plasma Shard anyway?”

                  “Dunno the details, but it’s a mass/energy shell we fire. I guess we just converted the mass of the needlejet into pure energy – no explosion. Nothing.”

                  ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ +++

                  From the ground, Seng could see the fight unfolding above him. Of course he had no way of telling which exploding aircraft were Hive or which were Morgan.

                  But it did keep the interceptors away from the pens.

                  And they needed the Penetrators to keep on coming.

                  His squad was pinned down just inside the city. He’d been approaching the massive complex of the research hospital when his squad had come under fire. And they were good. Rarely showing themselves as they moved from building to building, just stopping long enough to unleash a volley and then move on.

                  They were simple garrison troops, but were well trained. His missile squad, with their ground unit tactical missiles, relied, as did the Morgan aircraft, on the IR signature of the enemy. And these Morgan garrison troops were good at leaving their signature in places they no linger were when Seng’s unit fired.

                  They seemed impervious to the chemical ash, so Seng surmised that they must be protected.

                  “I’m calling in a strike,” he said to his squad. “We should have secured the Energy Bank by now and we’re holed up here.”

                  He flicked his commlink on.

                  “Deaths Head Alpha, we’re pinned down. Any chance of an aerial?” he asked.

                  “EWACS here. We have two incoming. Any chance of a signature?”

                  “What? I don’t understand”

                  “Have you laser painting capability?”

                  “Oh. Sure. When?”

                  “Now would be good.”

                  “Cover me,” said Seng as he unhitched his laser rifle. He set the beam to wide, and wriggled forward until he had the side of the hospital building in sight, and fired, keeping his finger on the trigger.

                  ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ +++

                  “Got it,” said Pang laconically as he picked up the paint.

                  “Activating”

                  “Gone”

                  Chuli banked the Pen away and headed back on course for Morgan Metagenics, where her mission was to distract the Morgan defenders into thinking there was a simultaneous attack imminent there.

                  ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ ++

                  Seng never actually saw the cruise missile hit, but heard it momentarily before the west wing of the research hospital collapsed under the explosion.

                  Within seconds he was on his feet and sprinting towards the debris.

                  There were no survivors.

                  They moved on to the Bank Tower.

                  He glanced up at the sky and gave a silent thanks to the penetrator crew whose plane he had never seen.

                  And noted that the dogfight had finished, and that there did seem to be a winner, in that a flight of three, one of whom was trailing smoke, came in low towards Communal Conquest.

                  As he approached the center of the base, he became increasingly horrified at scene unfolding before him.

                  Bodies strewn over the streets, yet buildings still intact, with weeping and angrily gesticulating inhabitants.

                  And the bodies. Covered in weeping lacerations, lying at awkwardly disjointed angles as they fought for their last breaths amid the capillary bursting pain of their final moments.

                  Pockets of sporadic resistance, as a lone trooper opened fire, or as a body jerked to life long enough to loose a volley at the advancing Hive troops.

                  But eventually the base was secured.

                  By the Deaths Head Brigade.

                  Aptly Named.

                  Comment


                  • HIGH CHIRON ORBIT
                    ABOARD SPARTAN AEROSPACE VEHICLE ATLAS

                    From his console position on the command deck of the Atlas Forster watched the holoprojection of the spaceplane’s orbital trajectory as it rose to match tracks with the U.N.S Redemption. Forster looked at the spaceplane’s pilot, Kelso, who was hard at work, plotting the complicated docking manoeuvres. Kelso looked up for a moment:

                    “Two minutes”, he said.

                    Forster nodded and tapped his wrist comm, opening a channel to his new crew seated on the mission deck, one compartment below.

                    “Captain to crew, if you’d like to unbuckle and come up here, we’ll have a visual on the Redemption shortly”.

                    He leaned back and forced himself to relax as one by one his crew drifted onto the bridge, uniform in their powder blue UN jumpsuits. They hovered about the deck, gripping various handholds, watching the forward viewport as the heat shield outside retracted back to reveal the glittering emptiness of space. Then, from the top of the viewport, the Redemption drifted into sight.

                    Now complete the Redemption existed as a long scaffold like spine with a drum-like cylinder topping one end, this is the command and living section. Attached to the middle of the spine were utility modules holding mission specific equipment and secondary systems. Adorned like beads were spherical fuel and coolant tanks. The opposite end of the spine held four pulse engines and like shark fins, curved vanes protruded smoothly, moving damaging heat energy away from the engines themselves.

                    The two vessels were now falling parallel beside each other. Then the Atlas turned so that it pointed towards the larger ship and begin to nudge towards it, still falling with alongside, thrusters neatly ejecting squirts of mass. The Atlas’s nose cone peeled back to reveal a previously hidden nose airlock, useful for head on docking to a target.

                    “Docking programs activated, beginning approach now”, said Kelso softly.

                    Up ahead, the ever growing image of the Redemption grew closer and was now swivelling on it’s vertical axis. Having confirmed the identification of the Atlasas a Spartan vessel, the Redemption’s onboard computer was adjusting the ship’s position to enable easier docking. The Redemption’s spin eased, then stopped. A circular black apparatus on the bottom of the command/living section slowly halted in front of the Atlas’s nose airlock.

                    Kelso’s brow furrowed as he inched the spaceplane closer. He visibly relaxed when the apparatus of the Redemption’s universal docking collar reached out and grabbed the Atlas by the nose, a central shaft injecting outwards from the collar, snapping itself onto the airlock.

                    Kelso turned around in his seat to face them all and grinned. No need for words at this point.

                    A round of handshakes and hugs as well as loading personal effects and equipment through the airlock occupied the next few minutes. Eventually they all stood in the Redemption’s airlock chamber, facing a slightly saddened Kelso through the hatchway, with shouts of goodbye and luck, the big airlock door rotated closed and locked shut.

                    ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

                    Two hours of inspection and checklists later and the crew assembles, all stripped naked, in the white, clean and starkly lit hibernation chamber. The very core of the command section. The Atlas has long since left, diving back towards Chiron, aiming to pick up the construction crews from the hydroponics satellite before returning back to Communal Nexus.

                    The crew cannot stay awake and active for their journey to meet with the Unity, the Redemption will accelerate to nearly 0.4 of lightspeed, and at times endure terrible stress and g-force as it speeds up and then decelerates. Even the mindworm, Ehm, has been placed in a cryocell and rests peacefully, unmoving.

                    As one, they lower themselves into their own cryocells, nodding or whispering final goodbye’s to each other, the drowsiness of the newly administered cryogenic serum setting in. As his cell closes and cold mist swirls up to cover him, Forster cannot shake the feeling that the cryocells feel oddly like coffins…

                    ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

                    Hundreds of kilometers below, night has fallen over a portion of Chiron and many eyes and instruments watch the long, blue, comet-like tail of thrust from the departing craft gradually fade away into the starry sky.
                    ********

                    What lies ahead of us & what lies behind us are tiny matters compared to what lies within us.

                    Comment


                    • Colonel Corazon Santiago rose to speak, and the Junta officers around the conference table subsided after the commotion that had greeted Ben miller’s departure.

                      “Fellow Officers,” she began, just as her commlink beeped.

                      “Excuse me,” she said, and activated the link.

                      The face of Mwabudike Morgan filled her small screen.

                      “Young lady, patch me through to the junta,” he said preromptarily.

                      “Why, of course,” she said sweetly, patching the link through to the huge screen on one wall.

                      “I believe that CEO Morgan would like to talk to you,” she said. Go ahead Mwabudike.

                      He was momentarily nonplussed by the familiarity being shown by this young upstart – probably a recently promoted captain at her first junta meeting – yes, that was it, and delegated to answer the commlink . He put the thought aside and launched into his prepared speech.

                      “Gentlemen. Pact Brothers – and Pact Sisters” with a deferential all inclusive nod to his audience… “Minutes ago I learned that Morgan Bank fell to the onslaught of the Monster Yang and his minions. Through the use of nervegas and chemical weapons that decimated fully half of the population there.”

                      A gasp went up around the room.

                      “But there’s more. We scrambled our entire Air Force to defend the city, and were decimated. Two flights of three fission needlejets each. Utterly destroyed. We did inflict some damage on his airforce, but it was insufficient to stem his advance.

                      “And I’ve still to give you the worst news.”

                      The murmuring in the council chamber ceased. What could be worse?

                      “Morgan Bank was the jewel in our economic crown. Fully half of our energy reserves were flowing through there. Yang has successfully tapped into these and has availed himself of over 600 credits.”

                      The murmuring reached a crescendo…

                      “Good God, man …
                      “Holy mackerel…It would mean that…
                      “We’re doomed, within days…

                      “Exactly,” Morgan said. Within days he’ll have re-equipped every trooper and every needlejet with shard weaponry. He’ll be unstoppable.”

                      The hubbub was loud and sustained .

                      Suddenly a shot rang out.

                      An old, percussion projectile weapon shot.

                      The bullet ricoched harmlessly before embedding itself in the wall.

                      All eyes turned to the man holding the gun with a wisp of smoke emerging from the barrel.

                      Xavier Bisset said:

                      “Gentlemen, CEO Morgan. The Colonel would like to speak.

                      “Thank you, Xavier,” Santiago said.

                      Morgan gasped, then blanched. Just how rude had he been? Yes, now he could see the resemblance, as a long forgotten memory returned. And he had heard rumours that she had been his guest in the rejuvenation tanks.

                      He listened.

                      “CEO Morgan, Fellow Officers of the Spartan Federation Junta. There is a way to stop him. And we are indebted to Air Marshal Miller for pointing it out to us.

                      “We must use the ultimate sanction.

                      “Tactical nuclear weapons.”

                      A gasp went up.

                      “”I know that you were discussing that very possibility. I shall convene council and request that the UN Charter be temporarily repealed. CEO Morgan, do I have your vote on this?”

                      Every eye turned to the screen.

                      “Absolutely, my dear Colonel. And may I say what a pleasure – and a relief – it is to have you back at the helm.”

                      Colonel Santiago picked up her commlink and dialed the other faction leaders.

                      ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ +

                      “Deirdre here. Ah, yes. Corrie. You always were rather ravishing when you were younger. I approve. Oh, sorry. I didn’t realize we had company. Good evening Mwabudike. And members of the Junta, too, I see. I don’t see Scotty there – he is well, I hope? But excuse me for prattling on like this – it’s been a long day here – oh, and CEO Morgan, my condolences – I just heard that Morgan Bank has fallen to the evil Yang. He must be stopped. How can I help?”

                      “Immeasurably,” cut in Santiago. ‘Is this what happens when you let yourself get old and run down,’ she thought to herself. ‘I must talk to Deirdre about going into the rejuv tanks.’

                      “If you can stay commlinked, I’ll patch in the other faction leaders. I’m calling an emergency Council meeting to propose the temporary suspension of the UN Charter.”

                      “Oh, isn’t that a bit rash?” Deirdre asked. “That would just give legitimacy to Yang’s nervegas attacks.”

                      “But it would also legitimize our use of tactical nukes,” Santiago answered. “Can I count on your vote?”

                      “Corrie, Mwabudike, much as I would like to, I cannot condone the further despoiling of planet. Nuclear weapons could significantly alter the delicate ecological balance we have within Planet right now. I am afraid I will have to oppose.”

                      “I’m disappointed, Dee. I hope you will change your mind at the actual voting.

                      “I’ll hook up the other two now.”

                      ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

                      “Colonel, I must protest. It is well into the middle of the night here at UN Headquarters – or pehaps you had forgotten the time differential during your long absence?”

                      “Pravin, I’m sorry, but this is an emergency, and I am using the authority vested in me as Planetary Governor to convene this emergency meeting of the Planetary Council. Please stay on your commlink. The others are all here, with the exception of the Chairman, whom I will call now.

                      ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

                      “Colonel. To what do I owe the pleasure? You are surely not calling me to congratulate me on my successful conquest of Morgan Bank, now, are you?”

                      “No, Mr Chairman, I am not. I am using the authority vested in me as Planetary Governor to convene this emergency meeting of the Planetary Council.

                      “The full council is now present.

                      “The motion is before this Council that we repeal the provisions of the U.N. charter until further notice.

                      “How do you vote?

                      “Lady Deirdre?”

                      “I am utterly opposed to its repeal. If we cannot live together under the principles of the Charter then we have betrayed humankind’s trust in us. I vote NAY.”

                      “CEO Morgan?”

                      “The time has come for drastic measures. I vote YEA.”

                      “Commissioner Lal?”

                      “Lady Deirdre, your love for Planet is well known, and I am gratified to hear you espouse the ideals of the Charter so emphatically. My hat is off to you. Colonel Santiago, esteemed Planetary Governor, I vote NAY.”

                      “Chairman Yang?”

                      “I vote YEA. But, be warned that I have developed an ultimate weapon oflast resort--the PLANET BUSTER!”

                      “So we have two YEA’s and two NAY’s. I have the deciding vote.

                      “I vote YEA.

                      “The United Nations Charter is hereby repealed until further notice.

                      “Council dismissed.”

                      The commlinks snapped off with an awful finality.

                      Comment


                      • Lady Deirdre turned back from the commlink, deeply troubled.

                        This could kill Planet. Tactical nuclear weapons unleashed on the Hive, and undoubtedly Yang would strike back with his PlanetBusters – how many exactly did he have?

                        And what an apt name. That’s exactly what they would do. Bust Planet.

                        Oh Voice, what are we to do? We earthbeings have brought with us all our old petty ways. Have we learned nothing over the centuries? Is this what we are coming to? Having destroyed one Planet, Earth, are we about to destroy another, Chiron? Is this humankind’s legacy to the infinty? Planetbusters?

                        Then she heard it. Softly, at first, like an evening’s breeze through the leaves and branches of the old majestic pine she sat under when first they arrived on Planet.

                        Then she was aware of the rhythm to the rustling, the muted note that kept repeating, hauntingly, eerily, impinging on her consciousness and driving through her being until her very bones resonated with tone.

                        earthdeirdre…earthdeirdre…music make we…..you like earthdeirdre?

                        Deirdre sobbed.

                        This Planet was sentient.

                        And we were slowly strangling it.

                        The final blow was about to fall.

                        Another nuclear winter.

                        And PlanetVoice was asking her if she liked its music.

                        Such naivety.

                        Such childish innocence.

                        Delighting in its newfound sentience, and asking humans if we liked its music while we were plotting to rip its heart asunder and poison its atmosphere.

                        PlanetVoice was singing to her.

                        She listened.

                        And as she listened, the haunting notes floated through her, calming her spirit and easing her mind, reaching to her very soul, and giving her the vision that she needed. Showing her just what she had to do.


                        [This message has been edited by Googlie (edited November 13, 1999).]

                        Comment


                        • Shauna had watched the launch from the viewing ports at the Aerospace Center.

                          She was envious.

                          To be among the stars.

                          Away from this sordid mess that Planet had become.

                          Reliving the dream of humanity those many years ago – “reach for the stars.”

                          To start a new life with the new life inside her.

                          Instead of starting an old life in the past.

                          ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ ++

                          Mommy, when will Daddy be back.

                          Sshhh Pet, Daddy’s not coming back.

                          Why not?

                          Daddy doesn’t belong with us. Don’t cry, Shauna, there’s a good girl.

                          But I want Daddy back.

                          You’re too young to understand, Pet.

                          Mommy, I want to understand.

                          You’re only six.

                          So where’s Daddy gone? I want to go with him.

                          Shauna, come here Pet.

                          Daddy is not one of us. He doesn’t have it in his heart to believe in our Saviour. Sister Miriam has talked to him, and his heart and mind are closed to the Redeemer. So he can’t continue to live here any more. He would be a bad influence on you – might cause you to question your faith – my faith even. It’s too great a risk. So Sister Miriam asked him to leave – to go to another base. I don’t know where.

                          Mommy, don’t you love Daddy any more?

                          Pet, I wish it were as simple as that. Of course I love Daddy, as you should. And he loves you too. But we have a greater love. The love of our Saviour for us, and ours for him. Daddy couldn’t share that, and he couldn’t compete. So he followed Sister Miriam’s advice, and left.

                          Mommy, will I ever see Daddy again?

                          I don’t know, Pet. I don’t know.


                          ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

                          Shauna sat morosely in the little needlejet taking her and a few other passengers to The Leaders Horde.

                          There to be reunited with a man she hadn’t seen for seventeen years, who had walked out on her, and whom Sand said was going to live with her as her father and her child’s grandfather for the next few years until her child had assimilated everything she could of this strange power Sand said her father possessed.

                          She was going to meet and live with a complete stranger.

                          Shauna slept, her mind racing.

                          As the needlejet raced across the continent to a rendezvous with a man who essentially was a stranger.



                          [This message has been edited by Rynn (edited November 14, 1999).]

                          Comment


                          • Pravin Lal was engaged in his morning rituals when his commlink beeped.

                            He ignored it, but it’s attention grabbing beep was insistent.

                            Frustratedly, he snapped out of his meditation and flicked it open. He was surprised to see the face of Lady Deirdre Skye staring dolefully at him.

                            ‘My dear Lady, you look haggard,” he blurted out, immediately wanting to retract the ungallant statement but not thinking of a graceful was to extricate himself. Instead, he hurried on:

                            “But what can I do for you?”

                            “Pravin, we must stop this madness before it starts. We might have repealed the UN Charter temporarily, but that doesn’t condone throwing nukes at each other. You heard Yang’s boast about his PlanetBuster, and the Colonel has privately advised me that her Generals want the Charter suspended in order to deploy tactical nukes. Pravin, we cannot stand idly by and watch the wanton destruction of Planet nor lightly let the ideals we all subscribed to be wantonly destroyed by power-hungry Generals.”

                            “Indeed we cannot, Deirdre. And I say again how impressed I am at your strong belief in the Charter and in your regard for the eco-systems of Planet. My hat is off to you for your unwavering consistency in both these matters. But what would you have me do?”

                            “Pravin, I have given this great thought, and have communed with Planet. The likely targets of a nuclear strike would be the Hive itself, by the Spartans, and Sparta Command by Yang.

                            “We shall place human shields in both bases.”

                            “Deirdre, I couldn’t possibly ask any of my people to expose themselves in this way. They are….”

                            “Pravin, I’m not talking our people, I’m talking us. You and me. You must immediately fly to Sparta Command and me to the Human Hive where we shall place ourselves at the mercy of the respective faction leaders and dare them to commit atrocities against us.

                            “I will truce with Chairman Yang before departing, and shall let Corazon and Mwabudike know that and also that I am going there, and you must do the same with Chairman yang – let him know that you are in Sparta Command.

                            “If they continue with their nuclear madness, then our respective peoples must Vendetta against the guilty parties.

                            “And you and I must swear a pact, Pravin. It is the only way.”

                            “Deirdre, that is rather drastic, is it not?”

                            “Drastic it may be, Pravin, but these times call for drastic responses. I owe Corazon much, from the early days, but this time she has gone too far. Last night, Pravin, Planet sang to me. In its innocence, barely sentient, but learning from us.. Pravin, it sang. And we are going to turn it into a nuclear waste. There is drastic and then there is drastic, my dear Pravin, and putting ourselves in the way of danger to save Planet and to uphold the sanctity of the UN Charter can hardly be called drastic, now can it?”

                            “Well, Deirdre, put that way…”

                            “What other way is there? Are we together on this?”

                            “Yes. I’ll do it”

                            “Then, Commissioner Lal, I formally greet you as a Pact Brother. Long may our friendship endure and may it be to the lasting benefit of Planet and lead to the imminent restoration of the United Nations Charter.”

                            “And I you, Pact Sister Deirdre. I will leave for Sparta Command within the hour.

                            “What say you meanwhile that we affirm this pact with an exchange of technologies?”

                            “And what did you have in mind?”

                            “You have recently been gifted by the Spartans with the secrets to Fusion Power. Upload your data to us and we will reciprocate with the secrets to monopole magnetism.”

                            “That seems reasonable. I have given the signal to our research team to commence uplink now.”

                            “Splendid. I have likewise so ordered our scientists to commence transmitting now.”

                            ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ ++++++++++++++++++++++++

                            Chairman Sheng-Ji Yang was awakened from his slumber by his aide, handing him his commlink:

                            “It’s the Lady Deirdre Skye, Mr. Chairman. She was quite insistent she talk to you.”

                            “Oh, very well.

                            “Lady Skye. I see that your faction is now a force to be reckoned with, and perhaps I was wrong to so hastily dismiss you. Your empathy with Planet is legendary, as is the army of mindworms you have accumulated. This Vendetta is draining for both our factions, do you not agree? I propose that we sign a truce and save further destruction of both our peoples.”

                            “A splendid sentiment, Chairman Yang, and one with which I heartily concur. That in fact is the reason for my call. I am on my way as we speak to meet with you in the Hive itself – in fact I should even now be visible to your radar operatives as I approach. I would like to parlay with you in person before this planetary war escalates into a nuclear war. My Pact Brother, Commissioner Lal is even now en route to Sparta Command to meet with Colonel Santiago to try and talk similar sense into her.”

                            “Your Pact Brother, you say? Since when have the Stepdaughters of Gaia been pacted with the Peacekeepers?”

                            “Since this morning. Our Generals are even now exchanging co-ordinates and preparing for joint exercises of our respective militaries.”

                            “Lady Skye, my aide informs me that you have indeed been detected on our radar. Make your approach and I will have you met at the Aerospace Complex.”

                            ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ ++++++++++++++++++++++++++

                            “Colonel Santiago, It’s Commissioner Lal. He demands to speak to you in person.”

                            “Oh, the old gasbag. Wants to prattle on some more about his precious charter I’ll bet, then he’ll take his hat off to someone. What a pile of cliches he can spout when he has a mind.”

                            “Colonel, please…”

                            “Oh, very well. Give me him.

                            “Commissioner Lal, what a pleasure. And while I have you let me express my concern about your apparent expansion on the continent we claim as the Spartan Federation. My satellite overflights indicate that you are about to establish three more bases at the eastern end of my continent in addition to the two you already have. Be advised that I will not tolerate violation of our territory, so make your expansion plans accordingly.

                            “So what do you have to say for yourself, Commissioner Lal?”

                            “My dear Colonel. I am on my way to meet with you in person to discuss this very matter. And to see if I can prevail on you to refrain from deploying nuclear weapons against the Hive. I have advised Chairman Yang that I am visiting you in Sparta Command, and my Pact Sister, Lady Deirdre Skye will by now be meeting face to face with Chairman Yang himself in the Hive.

                            “Your deep penetration radar should have picked up my needlejet – I am just approaching the mine above Janissary Rock. I should be in Sparta Command within the hour.”

                            “Hmmm. You and Deirdre have pacted, eh? Well I welcome that, Pravin. It means that you will now join us in our war against Yang?”

                            “No, I will not be doing that, Colonel. Not unless he unleashes his nuclear PlanetBusters, notwithstanding the repeal of the Charter. I still cannot believe that you did not use your power as Planetary Governor to veto the proposal. You do not serve us well, Colonel.”

                            “You cannot mean, Pravin, that you will stand idly by while the monster Yang tortures your Pact Sister?”

                            “Oh, he won’t do that, I think. The Human Hive and The Stepdaughters of Gaia have just declared truce. They have much to discuss.”

                            “Hmmm. I see,” Was the Colonel’s response.

                            ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ ++++++++++++++++++++++++

                            CEO Morgan was furious.

                            An aide had just brought him an intercepted message, in plain English, not even encrypted, that the Human Hive and the Stepdaughters of Gaia had declared Truce, and that Lady Deirdre Skye was meeting in person with Chairman Yang.

                            Further, that Deirdre and Lal had signed a pact of Brotherhood/Sisterhood, and that Lal was at this moment just minutes away from landing at Sparta Command to talk with Santiago.

                            Why was he always the last to know anything?

                            Mwabudike. We haven’t forgotten you. You will not feel Yang’s nuclear breath – it is directed at Corazon. That is why Pravin has gone there. And I have come to Sheng-Ji’s headquarters for the same reason. Neither Santiago nor Yang can afford a war against a foe that includes both the Gaian army and the Peacekeeper army. Planet has told me that they must not use nuclear weapons, regardless of the repeal of the Charter. I sense that you are a friend of Planet too, Mwabudike. Open your mind. Let Planet sing to you. Then tell me that you are prepared to condemn this infantile sentience to a nuclear winter.

                            Join us, Mwabudike. Isolate the Chairman and the Colonel. If the price is the return of our two Gaian bases to the Hive in exchange of the two Morgan bases back to you, it is a price I am willing to pay. The original Gaians are few, and are willing to relocate to my Place of Dreams in the northwest of the Emerald Isle.

                            Think this over, Mwabudike, for today is the reckoning



                            Comment


                            • Laborer’s Throng

                              “Sir, report just in from Morganland. Morgan Bank has fallen, and the Hive pilots were using nerve gas! And a new weapon that is almost twice as effective as our chaos guns!”

                              Captain Mel Cassaroni stood calmly in her makeshift command center in Laborer’s Throng. She was examining the holomap of the northeastern quarter of Yang’s empire. Or what remained of it. Of the eight cities in this quarter, five were in allied hands: Worker’s Nest/Gaia’s Landing and Hole of Aspiration/Nessus Shining had been returned to Gaian control, Paradise Swarming was controlled by Morgan forces, and Laborer’s Throng and Drone Mound were under firm Spartan Control. The remaining Hive cities were Manufacturing Warrens, Deep Passage, and The Hive itself.

                              With the exception of the almost suicide attack by the obsolete gas rovers at the bunker by Drone Mound, there had been no Spartan losses and little damage. Slat’s flyers had pasted the defense of Drone Mound and the Lightning Strike rovers had just walzed in.

                              Mel’s brow furrowed. Yang was apparently prepared to pull all the stops. He now had superior weapons with the acquisition of fusion power and his new shard weapons. All he needed was time. And Yang had undoubtedly taken a huge windfall of credits from Morgan with the fall of Morgan Bank.

                              She also realized that attack was now infinitely better than relying on defense. A credible defense against missile weapons was probably, chaos weapons possible, but against shard weapons it was impossible.

                              Her eyes drifted to the bunker between Laborer’s Throng and Manufacturing Warrens, then to Deep Passage and The Hive.

                              “Tacs, what intelligence do we have on Warrens, Passage, and Hive?”

                              Lieutenant Griggs stepped forward into the holo light, which illuminated the front of his face. The only other present as the Ops officer, who went only by the code name Raven. “No significant change since several days ago. Warrens has a new fusion plasma garrison, the old garrison, and an old style interceptor. Passage has the same. An extra garrison has shown up at The Hive. It seems most of the remaining Hive cities are retooling for their new weaponry in the form of penetrators and interceptors. Their new units will be ready within weeks, sir.”

                              “Well then, that ties it. It is now or never. Have the rest of Lightning Strike and Amphib secured the bunker between Throng and Warrens?”

                              “Yes, sir. There was no opposition. It seems their heavy guns were stripped for their operations against Morgan.”

                              “So, our assets are four armor brigades, two elite infantry, and one elite armor. And 3 upgraded Aardvark chaos fusion pens. Are any of Slat’s interceptors available?”

                              “Affirmative, sir. We may have to beg, though,” Griggs replied with a grin. Mel grinned back at him. Of all the new blood Spartan officers, Ben ‘Slats’ Miller was seemingly the most clear-headed of the bunch. He would do what had to be done, as long as it made sense. In short, he could be trusted, if not counted on.

                              “Very well, then. I will place a call to Slats. We have to take out the interceptor at Warrens, then the Aardies will take out the rest. Warrens and Passage don’t have an aerospace complex that is worth anything, so for now our attack will be easy. Like Drone’s Mound, we will be able to walk in. The Hive does have an aerospace complex. Then, however, we will have a problem.”

                              Mel pointed toward Deep Passage, which lay within a stone’s throw of Warrens, and The Hive, which was twice again as far away.

                              “Our firepower is becoming dangerously thin. We will have to rely on Morgan reinforcements, now that the Gaians have truced with Yang. Have we had any yet?”

                              Griggs made a sour face, which was accentuated by the holo lighting to look like deep furrows in his brow and near his mouth. “We’ve heard nothing from the Morganites at Swarming. They’re apparently having drone riot problems, and don’t have any assets worth mentioning anyway. The Gaians have a half dozen really big mindworms, but they are all staying put, apparently.”

                              “We can’t wait. Gentlemen, Manufacturing Warrens will ours within the day. The next stop is Deep Passage and The Hive!”

                              *****

                              The Raven left the meeting alone. Tall and dark, he walked with an inconspicuous grace. Although he had contributed nothing, he had also gleaned nothing. He had merely confirmed his assessment of the tactical situation, and the threat to Spartan security.

                              In the rush to attack the security of the operations were being given short shrift. This was nothing new, but it was tiring. Tactics and firepower may overwhelm an opponent, but they could be turned against you with a well-placed enemy spy. Morgan had proven that so well in his co-opting of four Hive cities.

                              Raven’s two Ops teams were now separated; one at Drone Mound and the other with Amphib on the way to Warrens. In short order they would be spread far too thin. It was time to call in some favors from some more than willing friends. He and his associates at Morgan Industries had frequently matched wits but respected each other professionally. He knew of two teams at Swarming. He was sure they would be happy to help secure Spartan holdings, if for no other reason than it would assure their safety.

                              But beyond security there was opportunity. New cities, enemy cities, had venues for secrets, if only there were those who could ferret them out.

                              The Raven was known for being able to pick through the glitter to reach the gem. And in this case, the gem was technology.

                              Hive technology.

                              Comment


                              • Bunker Near Manufacturing Warrens

                                “Recharge complete, sir. Orders are confirmed. It’s a go!”

                                The captain simply nodded to acknowledge his comm officer’s pronouncement. As commander of the combined Amphib and Lightning Strike detachment he had no doubt of his ability, or those of the Amphib. Strike men and women also had a good reputation: well trained, disciplined, loyal. But none of them were brilliant.

                                His forces were. He led the Elites. The only other Elites were the 469th Airborne, and they had duty elsewhere.

                                Picking up his headset, he opened a channel.

                                “Amphib Rover 1 to detachment. I just received an update confirming the use of nerve gas by Hive forces against elements of Lightning Strike near Drone Mound, and the slaughter of almost 50,000 Morgan civilians by the use of nerve gas during the attack and capture of Morgan Bank by the Hive. We have the opportunity to right these wrongs, and punish the Mad Chairman for his folly.

                                By the authority invested in me by Coronal Santiago and the Spartan Corps, I hereby name this detachment Retribution in honor of those Spartans solders and Morgan citizens who have died in these attacks.

                                Honor demands that they be avenged! And Retribution is an apt name!

                                Onward to victory!”

                                *****

                                Over fifty rovers from five brigades poured out the plasmasteel-reinforced bunker, and the power-assisted mech infantry followed them. Strangely, the two infantry brigades were able to easily keep up, and the solders of the infantry seemed to be floating in mid air on their personal air jump skids. Arrayed between the hundreds of men and women of the Amphib Elites were the great Chaos guns, which were designed for breaching fortifications. It, too, floated above the ground.

                                The wave of Spartans leapt south toward Manufacturing Warrens, which could be seen in the distance. It was a low mound, and was only discernable by the small forest of sensor arrays and low plasticrete domes that pierced the surface.

                                Gradually, a low rumble built up. It quickly waxed to a roar, and four Spartan aircraft streaked south toward Manufacturing Warrens. In moments they had become dots, with a smaller aircraft taking the lead.

                                In the distance another dot could be seen rising from the low mound that was Manufacturing Warrens. It seemed to climb with desperate haste. The three larger Spartan needles, Aardvarks recently refitted as fusion chaos bombers, peeled away to let the smaller interceptor do it’s work. The two little dots met and performed an intricate dance of death. Faster and more maneuverable, the Spartan interceptor pulled a short outside loop and charged straight at the now exposed belly of the Hive interceptor. The Spartan chaos guns let rip, sundering the air with blossoms of light, heat and force. From the bedlam the Hive interceptor emerged, but it was trailing black smoke. Going into evasive, it fired its missiles forward. These immediately pulled a U-turn and angled back for the Spartan interceptor. Thrown off balance, the Spartan interceptor pulled away, and spraying gattling defensive fire at the homing missiles. Some missile proximity detonated, hulling the Spartan craft.

                                However, the Hive interceptor continued to lose altitude and stopped evasive maneuvers as the stream of black smoke increased. With the last of the Hive missiles eliminated, the Spartan craft banked and homed in on the crippled Hive aircraft. A short burst of chaos fire blossomed in a sphere in front of the unresponsive Hive ship.

                                Trying to angle away, the sphere grew and the small aircraft entered. Nanoseconds later the chaos brightened, and a fan of pieces erupted out of the other side. These small chunks soon vanished as they arced to Planet surface.

                                The defender gone, the three Aardvark bombers formed up into a V and went into an attack run. Screaming in, the planes glowed with an iridescent aura as chaos energy was channeled through the useless stone and plasmasteel defenses of Manufacturing Warrens. The planes pulled off, and a series of low booms were heard, which rumbled through the rock to the atmosphere like an echo.

                                The bombers made another attack run, unleashing more chaos. This time one of the chaos spheres erupted at ground surface, spraying light, energy, and stone high into the air. Some of this debris struck the undercarriage of the attacking planes causing slight damage.

                                Undeterred and with no active defense the Aardvarks went into a third bombing run. This time the low booms were accompanied by the crack of sympathetic explosions in the subsurface. At Manufacturing Warrens, huge rents appeared in the ground, and these cracks widened to fissures. Areas hundreds of meters across fractured and formed a concave dome, indicating massive collapse and destruction.

                                Finally, the three bombers peeled away. Two executed belly rolls, indicating they were expended. The ‘spare’ Aardvark went into a holding pattern, just in case.

                                As the airshow ended the seven infantry and rover brigades of Retribution appeared over the ridge, traveling quickly along the former fused roads.

                                Ahead of them the great blast-hardened doors of Manufacturing Warrens were thrown open and thousands of Hive drones fled in panic, like ants in a stirred nest. There was collapse below! No air, and no way out for some!

                                When the Spartan rovers and infantry appeared the drones scattered to each side like leaves fleeing with the wind.

                                Taking no chances, the rovers fired chaos bursts at 1/100th power in their advance. Hundreds of the slow were pulverized, as were drone resisters and those behind makeshift barricades. No chances were being taken.

                                Mere flesh and bone can not stand up to chaos, and resistance melted away.

                                Within 30 minutes Manufacturing Warrens had fallen to the blitzkrieg.

                                Lightning had struck again.

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