Unavoidable Casualties
‘What do you think our chances are?’ his aide asked.
‘The same as usual,’ he replied wryly. ‘I doubt you’d be able to get these seven people to agree on anything at all, even if their lives depended on it. Pride goeth before the fall.’
He around to see a dark skinned man striding towards him up the corridor, followed by several underlings scurrying in order to keep up.
‘Ah, Morgan –’ He was cut off with an angry swipe of Nwabudike’s hand.
‘This situation is intolerable, Lal! I am a key member of the global council, and I demand action now,’ said Morgan. His underlings nodded furiously to themselves.
‘Morgan, you know perfectly well that we are doing everything we can,’ replied Lal, quietly.
‘Everything you can? Pah! Perhaps then this council is useless? I will tell you now that the ramifications of this fungal attack are of a global scale. Countless amounts of energy lost, a knock-on effect to the economy and years, years of work destroyed. Do you understand how important that organochemicals plant was?’
Evidently it was very important, thought Lal, but what about the workers who were killed? Does Morgan even care about their deaths?
‘Of course I do, Morgan. Now, if you would just let me –’
‘I expect your full co-operation in this matter, Lal. Your vote must be behind me.’
‘If you would let me finish, Morgan, the council meeting is just about to start. You will be able to talk to all the factions then. It will save you repeating what you just said to me six times, after all,’ smiled Lal.
Morgan’s brow furrowed in anger. ‘Very amusing, Lal, very amusing.’ He abruptly walked back down the corridor towards the council chambers.
Some said that it was an autonomic reaction to the various nitrates and phosphates from the Morganochem Industrial plants, others claimed that it was instead due to a rudimentary threat-detection by the fungus neural net to the toxic chemicals that came with the plants’ emissions. A derided minority maintained that it was part of the Planet-wide neural net’s ‘greater plan’.
Whatever it was, the fungus had appeared the night before on the horizon. In the morning, a swarm of worms had burrowed through the soil under the perimeter defence and killed the Morganochem workers. Immediately afterwards, they retreated back to the fungus and simply stopped.
Deirdre gazed at the occupants of the room in silent contempt. She quickly chided herself for this thinking. Everything will be made good in the end, she reassured herself. Although it was hard to believe, what with the scene unfolding at the moment.
‘Anyone with the monumental gall to name all of their cities after himself deserves such misfortune,’ shouted the Spartan delegate.
“Affairs of the council do not warrant the attention of Colonel Santiago, although she will be happy to send one of her assistants who is not currently involved with our on-going military exercises,” read Deirdre off her palmtop. Santiago’s sneering message belied her concern in this council meeting – almost certainly she was being updated of the situation continuously.
‘Corporate identity, you musclebound fool. But I wouldn’t expect one of Santiago’s bloodhounds to understand anything other than fighting,’ rejoined Morgan.
Sheng-Ji Yang, seated beside Deirdre, cleared his throat. The attention gained by this small action was greater than could be gained by shouting, after all, the scarcity of Yang’s contributions to any discussion meant that anything he said was listened to by all.
‘Whatever you say, it seems clear to me that we are all under threat from the fungus. I have received reports that fungal blooms are occurring in close proximity to all our bases. Even Lady Deirdre’s,’ he said, glancing to his right. Deirdre inclined her head in acknowledgement.
All the factions leaders knew this, but none of them had been prepared to disclose what they knew in front of the other council members. Typical, thought Deirdre.
‘They, however, are only attacking the bases which are the source of significant industrial pollution,” continued Yang.
‘That’s not true – all Morganochem factories stay below the stipulated pollution limit as agreed by this council. To say otherwise is simply ridic…’ said one of Morgan’s assistants, trailing off after a level stare from all the faction leaders.
‘There is no need to pretend otherwise – we all know that Morgan factories routinely exceed pollution levels. That’s a moot point, though. What I want to know is what we’re going to do about the fungus,” thundered Zakharov. ‘Simply flaming the fungus does no good – it regrows in a matter of days and the worms only attack harder. Perhaps our only option is to cut down on industrial pollution,’ he finished.
‘No!’ Morgan stood up. ‘I will not be dictated to by non-sentient worms! We have to do something about this.’
‘I agree with you, Morgan, but you must, for now, see that all you can do is to cut down on emissions. Our Lord willing, we will be able to discover a solution soon enough,’ said Sister Miriam calmly. Miriam was wearing a simple jumper, as were the rest of the Believers contingent. They presented a united front, but Deirdre had heard from her sources that there was rising dissent within her faction. Anyone who spoke out against the Believer’s doctrine was nerve-jammed. A simpler solution, in Deirdre’s eyes, would be to simply kick them out, but Miriam was always claiming that all the Believers in Christ were joined together in harmony, and booting out hundreds of protestors would hardly reinforce that line. A flawed policy created by a flawed personality. But one thing you couldn’t accuse Miriam of was of not believing – Miriam had an intense faith that she was always right. As a result, she exuded a certain amount of charisma, incredible though it may be.
‘For Christ’s sake, woman, open your eyes. These damn worms are destroying my bases, and yours will be next. Don’t think that you’re somehow immune to this plague,” said Morgan, ignoring Miriam’s glare. ‘This council has the power to wipe out these worms permanently – if we pooled our military resources –’
The whole room erupted in uproar, as it normally did when the word ‘military’ or ‘resources’ was mentioned. Morgan had to know that would happen, pondered Deirdre. Maybe he wanted to split the council – that way he could join the side willing to attack the worms and clean up his problem, while it would give his allies the excuse to rove around Planet through factional borders, claiming they were part of a ‘humanitarian force’ trying to stop worms from killing ‘innocent’ civilians. Morgan’s plan was neither particularly clever nor opaque, but he’d probably succeed.
Deirdre sighed, and concentrated her mind, sending out a… confirmation.
~We are ready~
[This message has been edited by Elemental (edited July 14, 1999).]
‘What do you think our chances are?’ his aide asked.
‘The same as usual,’ he replied wryly. ‘I doubt you’d be able to get these seven people to agree on anything at all, even if their lives depended on it. Pride goeth before the fall.’
He around to see a dark skinned man striding towards him up the corridor, followed by several underlings scurrying in order to keep up.
‘Ah, Morgan –’ He was cut off with an angry swipe of Nwabudike’s hand.
‘This situation is intolerable, Lal! I am a key member of the global council, and I demand action now,’ said Morgan. His underlings nodded furiously to themselves.
‘Morgan, you know perfectly well that we are doing everything we can,’ replied Lal, quietly.
‘Everything you can? Pah! Perhaps then this council is useless? I will tell you now that the ramifications of this fungal attack are of a global scale. Countless amounts of energy lost, a knock-on effect to the economy and years, years of work destroyed. Do you understand how important that organochemicals plant was?’
Evidently it was very important, thought Lal, but what about the workers who were killed? Does Morgan even care about their deaths?
‘Of course I do, Morgan. Now, if you would just let me –’
‘I expect your full co-operation in this matter, Lal. Your vote must be behind me.’
‘If you would let me finish, Morgan, the council meeting is just about to start. You will be able to talk to all the factions then. It will save you repeating what you just said to me six times, after all,’ smiled Lal.
Morgan’s brow furrowed in anger. ‘Very amusing, Lal, very amusing.’ He abruptly walked back down the corridor towards the council chambers.
Some said that it was an autonomic reaction to the various nitrates and phosphates from the Morganochem Industrial plants, others claimed that it was instead due to a rudimentary threat-detection by the fungus neural net to the toxic chemicals that came with the plants’ emissions. A derided minority maintained that it was part of the Planet-wide neural net’s ‘greater plan’.
Whatever it was, the fungus had appeared the night before on the horizon. In the morning, a swarm of worms had burrowed through the soil under the perimeter defence and killed the Morganochem workers. Immediately afterwards, they retreated back to the fungus and simply stopped.
Deirdre gazed at the occupants of the room in silent contempt. She quickly chided herself for this thinking. Everything will be made good in the end, she reassured herself. Although it was hard to believe, what with the scene unfolding at the moment.
‘Anyone with the monumental gall to name all of their cities after himself deserves such misfortune,’ shouted the Spartan delegate.
“Affairs of the council do not warrant the attention of Colonel Santiago, although she will be happy to send one of her assistants who is not currently involved with our on-going military exercises,” read Deirdre off her palmtop. Santiago’s sneering message belied her concern in this council meeting – almost certainly she was being updated of the situation continuously.
‘Corporate identity, you musclebound fool. But I wouldn’t expect one of Santiago’s bloodhounds to understand anything other than fighting,’ rejoined Morgan.
Sheng-Ji Yang, seated beside Deirdre, cleared his throat. The attention gained by this small action was greater than could be gained by shouting, after all, the scarcity of Yang’s contributions to any discussion meant that anything he said was listened to by all.
‘Whatever you say, it seems clear to me that we are all under threat from the fungus. I have received reports that fungal blooms are occurring in close proximity to all our bases. Even Lady Deirdre’s,’ he said, glancing to his right. Deirdre inclined her head in acknowledgement.
All the factions leaders knew this, but none of them had been prepared to disclose what they knew in front of the other council members. Typical, thought Deirdre.
‘They, however, are only attacking the bases which are the source of significant industrial pollution,” continued Yang.
‘That’s not true – all Morganochem factories stay below the stipulated pollution limit as agreed by this council. To say otherwise is simply ridic…’ said one of Morgan’s assistants, trailing off after a level stare from all the faction leaders.
‘There is no need to pretend otherwise – we all know that Morgan factories routinely exceed pollution levels. That’s a moot point, though. What I want to know is what we’re going to do about the fungus,” thundered Zakharov. ‘Simply flaming the fungus does no good – it regrows in a matter of days and the worms only attack harder. Perhaps our only option is to cut down on industrial pollution,’ he finished.
‘No!’ Morgan stood up. ‘I will not be dictated to by non-sentient worms! We have to do something about this.’
‘I agree with you, Morgan, but you must, for now, see that all you can do is to cut down on emissions. Our Lord willing, we will be able to discover a solution soon enough,’ said Sister Miriam calmly. Miriam was wearing a simple jumper, as were the rest of the Believers contingent. They presented a united front, but Deirdre had heard from her sources that there was rising dissent within her faction. Anyone who spoke out against the Believer’s doctrine was nerve-jammed. A simpler solution, in Deirdre’s eyes, would be to simply kick them out, but Miriam was always claiming that all the Believers in Christ were joined together in harmony, and booting out hundreds of protestors would hardly reinforce that line. A flawed policy created by a flawed personality. But one thing you couldn’t accuse Miriam of was of not believing – Miriam had an intense faith that she was always right. As a result, she exuded a certain amount of charisma, incredible though it may be.
‘For Christ’s sake, woman, open your eyes. These damn worms are destroying my bases, and yours will be next. Don’t think that you’re somehow immune to this plague,” said Morgan, ignoring Miriam’s glare. ‘This council has the power to wipe out these worms permanently – if we pooled our military resources –’
The whole room erupted in uproar, as it normally did when the word ‘military’ or ‘resources’ was mentioned. Morgan had to know that would happen, pondered Deirdre. Maybe he wanted to split the council – that way he could join the side willing to attack the worms and clean up his problem, while it would give his allies the excuse to rove around Planet through factional borders, claiming they were part of a ‘humanitarian force’ trying to stop worms from killing ‘innocent’ civilians. Morgan’s plan was neither particularly clever nor opaque, but he’d probably succeed.
Deirdre sighed, and concentrated her mind, sending out a… confirmation.
~We are ready~
[This message has been edited by Elemental (edited July 14, 1999).]
Comment