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The Spartan Chronicles - Volume 3

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  • The Spartan Chronicles - Volume 3

    Laborer's Throng

    "Well gents," Mel stated, "the gloves are off again. I just got a green light to get on with Yang's spanking."

    The officers around the improvised tacs room in Laborer's Throng chuckled. Yes, indeed, Yang had been 'spanked' recently, and quite soundly. His sprawling empire of oppression and terror was down to almost third of what it had been at the beginning of the year 2225. It had been a good year for the Spartans, and a very bad one for Yang. He went from the largest faction with an awesome industrial infrastructure to a rabbit in a hole, cowering in his warrens against the light of day. Between subversion by Morgan, the huddled masses of the Hive rising and opting for a better life under Forman Domai, or brute force liberation by the Spartans, a total of 13 of his 21 cities had fallen. With the fall of his cities his ability extend his power had also collapsed, as had his ability to cause harm - and his ability to resist. Yang had nuked two of Sparta's best and most valuable cities, but by late 2225 it looked like nasty old Yang was finished. His destruction of Ironhome and Parade Grounds appeared to be his spiteful, pointless, and final act of defiance.

    That is, until the aliens showed up.

    "We're to resume the assault on the Hive immediately, as scheduled by Coronal Santiago herself. The tactics will be the same: General Korn's Chop and Drop. We will use nerve gas shard pens to eliminate defenders, then airdrop infantry and rovers in the undefended cities. Our objectives are here and here," Mel continued, pointing at the horizontal table holo Yang's continent. Most of the territory was a pleasing Spartan gray, with Gaian green at the eastern end for the restored Gaia's Landing and Nessus Shining. Two separated cities in the deep red of Forman Domai were at the western coast and in the center eastern section of the continent. Huddled in the southwestern portion of the Yang's continent were the remaining Hive bases, two of which were sea bases. Mel pointed to Social Engineering Den and Seat of Proper Thought. Social Engineering Den was the next Hive city in line in the Spartan's drive west from Unity Lair, and Seat of Proper Thought was south of the Spartan occupied Fecundity Tower.

    "But, there is a new development. You've all seen and holo of the Argonauts." Mel paused, and all her officers nodded somberly. The fact that one alien interceptor had destroyed the newly created Argonauts interceptor squadron came as a very rude shock to the Spartans. Although they had taken some losses, the Spartan attack on Hive holdings had been fairly bloodless - for the Spartans, that is, not the Hive. In the beginning of the Hive-Spartan war the Spartan had had an over 2:1 advantage due to technology. The aliens illuminated the stark technological deficiency that the Spartans, and the rest of humanity, were up against. The aliens had turned the tables, ironically and painfully, on the Spartans.

    "The aliens, these Progenitor, have weaponry that is almost 50% more powerful than ours, and it is powered by controlled singularity reactors that are twice as good as our fusion reactors. You do the math to see where that puts us. We also have reports that their armor is over twice as good as anything that we have. Put the armor and reactor together and the alien's defense is even with our offense, even with nerve gas. Luckily the alien ground defenders do not have anti aircraft ability. Also, none of Yang's remaining cities has aerospace centers to mount an effective defense except their former capitol The Hive. With the aerospace center at The Hive we'll have to take that the old fashioned way - brute force. But, for the moment we are to isolate The Hive and take out easier targets."

    Mel paused again to make sure her statement had sunk in. A few made soft comments to themselves or a neighbor, but her Aardvark pilots were silent. Up until now their job had been fairly easy, and they knew it. Shard nerve gas weaponry was more than a match for plasma fusion defenders, even if they had anti aircraft ability. Now they knew there would be casualties, which means death, particularly for pilots. Still, they had a better chance than the ground pounders who had to fight their way through Yang's perimeter defenses and singularity neutronium defenders. That would be a dirty, nasty job.

    "Our primary objective is Social Engineering Den. Intelligence tells me that each of Yang's cities each have one of those alien defenders, who have what has been dubbed 'neutronium singularity armor.' At our target cities they also have one plasma fusion anti aircraft defenders. All the rest were destroyed when they were worm raped during the fungal bloom from three weeks ago. In fact, there isn't a whole lot left of Den now, although the worms are well fed."

    Mel's attempt at humor fell flat this time. Joking about a massive mindworm attack, like the one that had happened to the three Hive cities after the Hive double planetbuster strike, was generally considered to be in bad taste, even when the calamity affected an enemy. Mel looked up. The holo glow of the tactical table highlighted her face and made the rest of her body, in its gray on gray Spartan uniform, appear to be almost ghostly. She looked intently at her commanders of her airdrop infantry and rover squads, her Aardvark squadron leader Lt. Nans Andersson, and the two interceptor pilots on loan from the 4th Wing. She detected no trace of hesitation in their faces, only steely determination. Inwardly Mel was satisfied. She had expected no less, but it was always a good idea to check the pulse of her subordinates.

    Now morale is strong, but what will happen when the aliens attack in force? Mel asked herself. She didn't know the answer to that question, but she knew that she would lose friends and colleagues. Such were the fortunes of war.

    Mel dismissed her doubt. It is the duty of a soldier to die for their faction, she reflected, and take as many of the enemy as possible with you.

    She broke the lengthening silence. "The attack on Social Engineering Den begins at 0600 tomorrow. Aardvarks 2 and 6 will lead, and 1, 3 and 4 will remain here as backup. Then the 469th will airdrop. If all goes well then remaining Aardvarks will take out Seat of Proper Thought, with 3 rover brigades from Lightning Strike to airdrop. The attack on Thought will take place only at my order."

    Still looking at her cadre of officers she finished, "Any questions?" No one spoke up.

    "Dismissed."

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

    "Channel secure Aardvark 2. I'm getting an unusual ping. Releasing a fly eye to investigate. Remaining on target to Den. ETA 16 minutes. Aardvark 6 out," Flight Leader Lieutenant Nans Andersson stated. As always, there was no unnecessary chatter, and comm silence was broken only when need required. Considering what had happened to the Argonauts, any 'ping' had to be investigated immediately. The penalty for not following up on ghosts had just gotten severe.

    A moment later the hypersonic fly eye was bouncing back data and images. It showed the enormous new fungal tower that had grown in between the Hive cities of Seat of Proper Thought, Social Engineering Den and Fellowship City, and the vast bulk of the tower dwarfed the largely subterranean Hive cities. Undoubtedly, the cities could see it much more clearly than they would like. It was vast trunk that sat in the middle of a new fungus field, which was at the center of a new 'fungal highway' that now crisscrossed this section of Hive territory. Its sinuous ropy arms waved against the wind and, at the base of the prestigious bulk of the fungal tower, movement could be seen in the land and air - which were mindworm vectors. As the spy eye got closer more mindworm 'individuals' could be parsed out from the noise, and they seemed to be moving in and out of the tower.

    The view of the spy eye changed abruptly, and it focused in on a translucent pinkish-gray blot that rose from the tower. It blot pulsed in and out, seeming to change volume at it ascended, and the Locusts of Chiron that formed the blot angled toward the spy eye. The view changed again as the spy eye took evasive action as it performed a high-energy turn and retreated the way it came. Within moments the image the spy eye was transmitting became indistinct and data transmission erratic. Seconds later the view went black.

    "Aardvark 6 to Laborer's Throng," Nans stated, activating his comm channel.

    "Throng, copy."

    "Fly eye lost and apparently destroyed by locusts from the fungal tower west of Den. Did you receive its transmission?"

    "Affirmative. Data relayed to Captain Cassaroni. I'm sure Mel will be very interested in it. Stay out of that thing's airspace and proceed to target Den."

    "Roger. Out."

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

    Margie stood, arched her back, and stretched, and was satisfied to feel her vertebrae crackle as her abused muscles and bones returned to a more normal position. Stooping all day tending errant agro bots was tiresome, and very hard on one's posture. While she was at it she adjusted her microbreather. As always, she had gotten one out of the bin as she left on her work detail for Social Engineering Den's Agricultural Cooperative Number 3, and it never quite fit. It was utilitarian and efficient, but not comfortable, since comfort beyond function was a waste of resources. Still, Margie wished it fit better. She knew she would know it had slipped when she started to feel a little giddy from the narcosis. Right now she didn't feel giddy, but a little adjustment wouldn't hurt.

    Standing above the waist-high Chironcorn she paused to look around. The corn was a deep, emerald green and seemed to undulate in the soft wind that seemed to caress her face. Just seeing the corn and its movement brought a mote of joy to her heart. Since she was a little girl Margie had loved things that grew, regardless of whether they were weeds or flowers. As she got older her love for growing things became more practical, and in that way she served her people. She knew that such love was irrational and a waste of energy, but she couldn't help it. In fact, just standing and watching and not working were punishable offenses in the Human Hive. In her mind she mentally composed an excuse in case a hostile overseer challenged her for malingering: she was scanning the skies for the Spartan Oppressors of the People. The Hive did not tolerate malingerers, and they were appropriately punished - unless they had a valid excuse. And the fact that the Spartans had subjugated the loyal workers of the Hive in nearby Unity Lair was certainly a good reason.

    Overall it was a beautiful day, and it was the height of summer in the southern hemisphere of Planet. It was never all that cold anywhere on Planet, but Social Engineering Den was half way in between the equator and the south pole and, therefore, there were seasons, even if they were muted. Some of the other ag technicians complained about the heat, the voracious Earth insects and the native insect equivalents, and about how hard they toiled in the fields with no recognition or reward. Margie privately thought that those who complained the most were generally the worst workers, and that they put their petty self-interests above the goals of the group. Covertly she thought they were, in a small way, traitors to the Hive Utopia, which would surely come when the corruption of the other misguided factions was expunged and purity of thought and deed was achieved.

    Margie took a deep breath, and even through the filters she could smell the goodness of growing things. She could feel the heat of the late morning and how it formed shimmering waves that distorted vision. More than once Margie had seen what looked like floating islands, or silvery points of light on the horizon. But these, she knew, were simply optical illusions formed by the rising heat. In fact, it was already hot enough for heat waves to rise from the good, red earth. In the distance the heat shimmered with refracted silvery light.

    Suddenly Margie, all alone in the field, had a sinking feeling in the pit of her stomach. The silvery point of light was betting bigger and had lost the etherealness so characteristic of heat mirages. It now resolved itself as two silvery points that were heading toward her from the northeast.

    Northeast was where the Spartan-occupied command center in occupied Laborer's Throng lay.

    In moments Margie's worst fears were realized. Streaking in a hundred meters above the tree line were two aircraft. She didn't know for sure that they were Spartan, but still she somehow knew. Margie didn't try to hide, and didn't cry out. With growing dread she watched the two military planes pass almost directly overhead. As the sonic boom hit her she saw on each plane the Spartan icon: an arrow inside a hexagon. Margie turned to watch the two instruments of death fly toward her home. A myriad of images passed through Margie's mind: her 5th birthday with her crèche mates after she had been removed from her parents' home - she had been sad until the cake arrived, and all her crèche mates sang to her the Song of Welcome; graduating from the Social Engineering Den's Agricultural Academy, and meeting her proud parents for the first time since she had entered the crèche; and her first lover, Myong, whose gentle hands and soft touch had shown her the meaning of love and belonging.

    In seconds Margie knew that would all pass away. The Spartans used nerve gas to kill tens of thousands, and then slaughtered thousands as they took the city from its rightful owners. Tens of thousands, her friends, family, and fellow workers, would die. She had seen the holos smuggled out of Unity Lair after the Spartan nerve gas attack. There were hallways choked with dead bodies that were all trying to claw at a door that wouldn't open. She remembered the nutrient center where the loyal workers had set up makeshift barricades against the Spartan invaders, only to be cut down by the very air they had to breathe. A holo camera had focused on a small, beautiful boy who lay as if asleep, but Margie knew he would never wake again, never laugh, never cry, never anything. The gas was cruel, and it cut down the innocent. Margie felt tears well in her eyes but refused to let them fall. She looked resolutely toward her home. Steeling her courage, she vowed she would watch the evil Spartans kill the ones she loved. In that way she would honor their memory.

    Lights flared over Social Engineering Den and Margie involuntarily gasped, and her throat tightened.

    Margie watched the end of all that she knew in a silence, which was interrupted only by the rustle of the corn. Unannounced, a traitorous tear rolled down her cheek. Margie quickly wiped it away.

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

    Nans was almost frantic.

    "Pull up! Pull up! Katie!"

    Katie had taken the first attack run at the city, and it had been perfect. She had timed to the nanosecond when to fire her shard emitter and the ultra dense packets of matter had been violently ejected from her aircraft and guided to its target on a cone of energy. The shard did not have a parabolic course like normal ordinance. It sped toward the city of Social Engineering Den in a straight line, guided by a coherent electromagnetic field not dissimilar to that of a supercollider, except that this energy field carried much more matter, and there was no supercollider.

    All was well until the shards homed in on the aliens guarding the hapless city. When the shards were mere meters from impact the ground surface seemed to shimmer. The shimmering rapidly intensified so that the few structures above ground of the Hive city grew dark and indistinct. The shards themselves seemed to slow as they entered the field emanating from the aliens, and the bright white energy cone that guided them to the surface seemed to dim. Behind the shadowy field there were a few brief bursts of light. As the shards hit their target the shards were transformed partially into energy, which would then follow the remaining super-dense mass deep into Den's rocky defenses. In response to the energy release vast chunks of rock and soil would be thrown outward.

    This time it was different. There was much less light and almost no mass ejected into the air, as was so typical of the fireworks display that shard impacts generated. Instead the energy just seemed to…dissipate. To Nans' eyes it seemed like the singularity energy field simply absorbed it. As the singularity field absorbed the energy the field grew stronger, and it pulsed outward toward the source of the energy - Katie's needlejet. The distortion field puckered and seemed to strain toward Katie. At the last moment Katie saw this and cut off her attack, and pulled off in haste. Like smoke following a vacuum, the energy field followed her and was gaining on her, even though she was going mach 4.

    "Comon' Katie!" Nans whispered, mentally giving her extra speed and agility. But the distortion field gained, and then overtook and enveloped Katie's Aardvark.

    The needlejet formed a shadow within the field. Then there was a brief flash of light and the energy field broadened, and then fell apart. As it dissipated pieces of the needlejet emerged and arced to the ground.

    Nans checked to see if Katie had ejected, but couldn't read anything through the distortion field. Worse, he knew he had a mission to complete.

    "Throng, this is Aardvark 6. Katie is down. Proceeding with attack," he stated simply. With an economical motion he activated his nerve gas pods, which would follow the shard as it lanced into the ground.

    Nans went into an attack run.

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

    Margie watched the first attacker strike. Blinding white light formed an unnatural straight line toward her city. She held her breath. Then a strange grayness formed over Social Engineering Den, and it seemed that the white energy died. There were no explosions like Margie expected. The craft, which was small at this range, pulled up and the strange grayness seemed to follow it. Arcing upward, the plane raced back toward Margie. But the grayness followed and, over Margie's fields, caught it. Margie looked up and could barely see the plane, but could see that moments after the gray caught it that it just came apart. The gray evaporated, and pieces of the plane came down. All of them were headed for Margie.

    Margie eyes widened, but she was too stunned to even move. The bright, flaming chunks of metal and ceramic hurled toward her and exploded all around, forming craters and throwing up great arcs of ruptured earth and plants. The sky seemed to darken as rich, red earth was thrown into the sky in overlapping plumes, and the smoke from the plane filled the air. Margie watched as a large piece came hurtling toward the very spot where she stood. Margie had time to throw up her arms.

    Then blackness.

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

    Heavy. It 's hard to breath, Margie thought. Cautiously Margie opened her eyes, and saw red, raw earth. She tried to take a deep breath but couldn't. She looked down and saw that she was buried up to her waist in the deep rich soil of Social Engineering Den. Following an instinctive first aid procedure drilled into all Hive citizens she performed a quick self-examination by using the A-B-Cs; airway, bleeding, circulation. First the airway - she could breathe, even if she couldn't breathe deeply. Second bleeding. She found she wasn't bleeding too badly - just a few scrapes, and that her arms worked. Lastly circulation. She could feel her legs, even if they were buried under hundreds of kilos of dirt. Margie tried to turn to look up, but a sharp pain told her that her midsection was not happy about that decision. She decided to take it slowly and felt around with her hands.

    The soil around her was loose, with some harder clods. Determined, she started to dig her way out. Cautiously, she slowly bent around so her arms could scoop away the soil. Her midsection said 'pain' - she obviously had at least one broken rib. Considering she expected to be dead, that was a good bargain. Steadily the soil was raked away.

    Twenty minutes later Margie was free. After a quick examination she knew that everything worked. Sadly she looked across her field. It looked like it had been bombed, and, indeed, it actually had been. There were great rents and scrapes where larger chunks of the Spartan aircraft had gone down, and smaller areas where the Chironcorn was simply torn away and burned.

    Margie caught her breath. The Spartan attack! She turned and looked toward her home, Social Engineering Den. Four fingers of black smoke poured from the area, and there were fires in four places around the surface by the smoke. Two of the plumes of smoke came from the city, but the two others were from the outskirts - obviously other airplane crash sites. In the far distance she could see an aircraft, high in the sky, dropping large objects that turned on jets and slowly floated to the ground. As they descended she could see that they were men and rovers. Military men and rovers. Spartan military men and rovers.

    Margie sobbed. She sat in the moist earth, the life giving soil that nurtured her plants. Now even that was destroyed. The destroyers had come. The Spartans were airdropping into her city.

    Now, what to I do? she asked herself. I can't go back. Where will I go? Margie's slight body trembled slightly.

    Without meaning to, Margie got up and started walking in what was left of her corn. The fires were mostly out now. She reached out her fingers to let the green leaves touch her fingertips as she passed. As always she was careful not to disturb the roots, damage the stalks, or bruise the leaves. Almost mechanically Margie walked away from Social Engineering Den. Thinking about it, Margie squeezed her eyes shut, imagining the death. Imagining the destruction.

    Margie neared one of the larger craters. Her cornrows lead straight for it and she didn't move to avoid it. A rampart of earth formed the edge of the crater, and it buried all the corn near it. Margie walked to the top of the crater, her feet sinking a little into the blasted and moist earth. At the base of the crater was a large chunk of metal. Without thinking Margie walked toward it, unconsciously knowing it was the central piece of the Spartan aircraft.

    Then Margie heard a faint moan, which came from the forward section.

    Margie stopped, and the glazed expression left her face. She paused to listen for the sound again and was rewarded with another groan. Margie took a deep breath, even though the air stank. Getting closer she recognized what had to be a cockpit. Bracing herself, she clambered up the dirt plowed in front and looked. A figure was slumped inside, surrounded by retraining harnesses. Dirt spilled in through the left side where the glasssteel of the canopy had been sheered away by some nameless force.

    Margie looked at the pilot and noticed a scrap of hair, which was long and auburn in color. Mentally she decided what to do. She leaned forward through the rent and crawled partially inside. She reached out and brushed the hair away from the head of the pilot. This showed a thin face, long hair, no Adam's apple: a woman. She was obviously alive but was hurt.

    Carefully Margie felt round the neck for a damaged spinal column. Finding nothing obvious she gently placed her hand on the woman's forehead and pushed her head back, showing her face. The pilot's face was covered with blood, which leaked from around her eyes, nose, ears, and mouth. Some blood even was trickling out of ruptured pores in her dusty-colored skin. At Margie's touch the woman's eyes fluttered a few times, then opened. They focused indistinctly on Margie.

    "Hurt," she whispered. "Call for…help."

    Even this effort seemed to exhaust the pilot.

    "Don't worry. I'll take care of you," Margie replied.

    Margie looked at the woman, who was helpless and hurt.

    "I'll take care of you," she repeated.

    Margie withdrew her hand from the pilot's forehead, which bobbed down. She reached down and placed both thumbs on her windpipe and pressed as hard as she could. Margie's face was transformed from one of dumbstruck grief to rage. She leaned forward, pressing all her weight into her work. The pilot struggled feebly, twitching, her head moving weakly as she tried to breathe.

    After a few minutes the feeble thrashing stopped. Margie's jaw was locked into a hard grimace, her jaw muscles throbbing as her teeth ground together. She looked down, and her hands were covered with blood, as were the lower parts of her arms. She no longer felt the pain from her ribs. She felt nothing, except a blind and generalized rage.

    Stooping, she backed out of the cockpit. As she retreated her right hand reflexively grabbed a handful of soil. Standing up, her face spasmed again, flexing between rage and inconsolable grief. She took a few ragged breaths, and she then walked to the top of the crater.

    There were figures coming toward her from her dead city. Soldiers. Margie walked toward them, ignoring her cherished corn. Her feet ripped through its delicate stalks, and the leaves were torn as she passed.

    "MURDERERS!" she screamed. Her bloody and empty left fist clenched and unclenched repeatedly, and her closed right fist clutched tightly to the earth it held.

    "Halt! On the ground, face down, hands in front! NOW!" the nearest soldier yelled, his chaos rifle aimed directly at Margie's midsection.

    Margie ignored his orders. "MURDERERS!" She raised her bloody arms and ran toward him.

    Waiting only a fraction of second, the Spartan soldier fired. The chaos ripped through Margie. The energy of the blast twirled Margie around and she was dead before she hit ground.

    The soldier advanced with his chaos rifle pointed at the threat. Margie's body lay on a crushed row of corn and her sightless eyes stared at the clear, blue sky. As her last breath escaped her body shifted and her lifeless and bloody right hand slowly unclenched. Released from its bondage, the rich, blood-soaked soil fell back to the earth from whence it came.

    [This message has been edited by Hydro (edited June 28, 2000).]

  • #2
    closure, 1.5

    Alpha Prime, main chamber.

    system uplink complete...


    Aki was in disbeleif. Zeta 2. Escaped. She could remember stories her grandmother told her before she entered the creche. About the terror... the destruction... and how her grandmother, Alice-Zeta 4, had defeated Zeta 2. Sitting on her throne, she rubbed her belly thoughfully. The biological drives could not be overridden by her implants. A minor bone of contention, but something definitely to look into in the near future. Aki then did two things, one of which she had never done, and the other she hadn't done since she was a child: First, she looked up into the cloud of smoke and water vapor that always collected in the tower. She watched the lights play off of it, and in it, almost as if it were alive. Second, Aki-Zeta 5 began to daydream...

    Picture two blonde haired boys. The one on the right is Aki's father at age seven. He and his twin brother are in the creche in Sparta Command. Their mother Alice is nearby preparing a snack for the children. Alice is an Omicron talent and Headmistress of the creche. She has shown promise in the collective, and is a candidate for the next recipient of Zeta 3. She looks up for a moment, as if concentrating on some distant object. She then goes pale and drops the knife she was holding. The front door to the creche explodes outward into the street, and fifteen men in sealed riot gear rush in. One vocalises her designation, and Alice turns to face the guard. The children are crying. The two blond haired boys attach themseves to one of their mother's legs. One of the men threatens Alice with his lasrifle. She reaches for the comm pad and presses a button before the man fires a shot at Alice. It catches her arm just below the wrist and severs her hand as a smoke fills the creche. She picks up one of the boys and flees out into the street. Alice can hear her other son screaming. She is just to the corner before she hears the sound of laser discharge. She continues to run until she reaches a consciousness freindly med facility. By this time nitrogen narcosis may have severly damaged the boy's brain. He is limp at her side.

    "yes, how illogical of your grandmother to run from me," the smoke began, "and i've been biding my time in your silly prison, waiting for the right time. and it is now."

    Comment


    • #3
      Near Pointa Sur

      Sarah stood as sentinel on top of her fungal tower. As the anointed and self-appointed Avatar of Planet Sarah felt it was her duty to view, and to see.

      To see is what Sarah called it when she harnessed the miniscule fraction of Planet's power to search for information. Planet's influence was deeply seeded all over Planet. Its fungal nets crossed the sea and land, forming highways for the semi-independent mindworm vectors and also, more importantly, acting as a neural net. Individually each mass of fungus was insignificant, but added together the mass of fungus, its virulence and adaptability, and its ubiquitous ness made the neural net's potential staggering.

      At first it was something of a trial to see using the net. There was so much out there that it was oh, so easy to be come lost, or to wander off to wherever the mindworm hosts she used were going. The net itself held some information after a fashion, and its storage was a little like a chalkboard. It would remain until something else wiped it away. The problem was that this chalkboard was truly vast, and that it contained so much information in a non- or semi-ordered state that it defied comprehension.

      Sarah despaired ever being able to get more than passive data from the net, and it fueled her understanding of why it too so long for Planet to reach a sentience spasm. With all the chaos in its always changing fungal net it would take millennia for a portion of the net to notch up a level in understanding, and then it was just as likely that the 'chalkboard' would be erased by some minor cataclysm. Of course, the most significant cataclysm was a sentience spasm, which was also called a Flowering. To Sarah this name was both poetically right and wrong. It was right in that a flower was beautiful, and it promised the seeds of new life. It was wrong in that this flower was not some fairly simple organism but an entire ecosystem that was fated, again and again, to rise to sentience, and then fail. It was so very wrong!

      After a month of searching and tuning Sarah knew she was finally getting some control over her seeing. The key was to be able to use the fungal net to find a mindworm vector host that she could use, and see through its senses. She knew she would not have control over this passive host and that it would go on its own unfathomable way. This had been her error, she knew. She had tried to control and direct the host to go where she wanted it to go. This was the wrong approach, since Sarah only had influence over the mindworm vectors in her fungal tower and the tower she caused to grow near the Hive. The correct approach was to jump to a new mindworm vector, like a neuron jumps between synapses in a brain. This is how Planet's information is collected and stored, and how it moves. All Sarah had to do was move like Planet's information did!

      Being formally human, Sarah had some understanding of the various human factions that inhabited Planet. Her former leader Coronal Santiago had been bad lately, and had been regularly using nerve gas on the Hive. While Sarah cared not one whit about the petty troubles and battles between the human factions, she did care that the nerve gas, which disrupted the delicate neural transfers in the fungal net, was used. Santiago would have to be punished. Yang of the Hive had been punished, and he had deserved it so richly after inflicting two gaping wounds on Planet with the two planetbusters and his use of nerve gas. Maybe, Sarah reflected, he had learned, since he had caused no more damage to Planet since then. Sarah smiled to herself. No, Yang had not learned. He was simply licking his wounds. Besides Morgan, he was the most deaf to Planet's call.

      Santiago and Yang could wait, though. They were known quantities. The unknown element was the Progenitor Usurper faction, and that was what Sarah was straining through Planet's fungal net to see. It was slow going but she was making progress. There were a number of isolated fungal towers away from the Progenitor's terriformers what she could operate from. The problem was that the Progenitors were almost as good as Morgan at removing all fungus from their inhabited areas. That meant that the mindworm vectors, except for locust, had very little access to the heart of their territory, and any that ventured that way were quickly dispatched. Mindworms didn't care about 'life' or 'death' in a human sense, but they had their own sense of need and reacted both automatically and rationally. Still, they didn't venture into areas without fungus without provocation. Unfortunately, the Usurpers were not given to provoking Planet, so Sarah had precious little information.

      So, as Sarah learned how to get information it was denied to her, which only increased her frustration. All she could do is stay and listen, while jumping between the mindworms proximate to the four Ursurper bases.

      Silently Sarah strained, listening and feeling.

      Then she heard a whisper, a whisper of Planetsong.

      Sarah was perplexed. How can that be? she thought. Only Planet sings Planetsong. That is what I heard at Pointa Sur, and what drew me to it. Few can even hear Planetsong, much less sing it.

      Sarah's mindworm tendrils at her temples waved in happy agitation, responding to the soft thread. It was soft and fragmented, and not at all like Planet's overwhelming presence when the Song was in full play. She closed her eyes, concentrating.

      Where? Where is it?

      Gradually an image formed. It was jumbled, with some views from the inside, some looking up toward its tan spires, and others from far away. It was a Usurper city.

      It was a city that Sarah recognized, for she had seen it through her mindworm hosts. Its name was Spires: Ascendant.

      Sarah smiled. A Progenitor that had Planetsong? Why would that be so strange? After all the Progenitors had created Planet so many hundreds of millions of years ago, so it is not out of the question that they could still communicate with Planet in its own language. But everything she had seen and knew said the Progenitors had regressed, and they seemed to be as much a refugee and an alien to Planet than the humans were. They didn't live with Planet, they lived on it. Even Deirdre, a human, was closer to Planet than the Progenitors seemed to be.

      Well. Maybe she would be able to talk to a Progenitor after all? Sarah thought.

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

      The water was cool and refreshing, even if Deirdre was up to her calves in mud. The prawn farm was her personal project, and it was one of many in her long tenure as a xenobiologist on Planet. These prawns were not only delectable to the human palate, but they could live with the native life forms and exist without decimating its ecosystem. Contrary to her initial belief, Planet's ecosystem was far from fragile and Terran species seemed to find their niche within the ecosystem, or the ecosystem unkindly exterminated them. It was strangely self-regulating. The key, from a human point of view, was to help species that man found useful to survive and thrive - hence, the prawn farm.

      Picking a prawn out of the shallows, Deirdre delicately brought it toward one of the sensors she carried. She examined the readings. Then she placed the prawn back into the water, where its lobster-like tail immediately went into action, propelling it backwards into the slightly silty water. In seconds it was gone, having successfully 'escaped' from the large, nasty predator that was Deirdre.

      Deirdre bent down to pick another, and halfway down she stopped. Puzzled, she straightened and cocked her head to the side as if listening to something, something just beyond her hearing. A look of concentration replaced the intense academic focus she had had previously. Suddenly, the prawns and their minute problems were forgotten.

      She closed her eyes and rotated her head slightly, as if to hear better.

      Voices. I hear voices, far away, Deirdre thought to herself. It was beautiful, both melodic and meaningful, while being fragmented. It had strings that were majestic and others that were pure noise. It seemed to speak, yet it spoke in a language that seemed tantalizingly close yet…unattainable.

      Could it be Planetsong? she thought. If felt like it, deep down. But it was different.

      Deirdre listened while standing in the warm, shallow pool, oblivious to the occasional swirls in the water around her. The prawns were simply going about their business of living. They didn't even notice the stationary Deirdre.

      Gradually the voice, or was it voices, dimmed.

      Deirdre opened her eyes, snapped her tools into place and paced out of the pool. Clearly, she was done for the day.

      Comment


      • #4
        PeaceKeeper Command Center Omicron
        Infantry Commander Martinez’s Office

        “Lieutenant Lancer, the commander is ready to see you.” The beautiful brunet secretary said to Frank Lancer, who was sitting down in a comfortable waiting chair, outside Martinez’s office.

        Frank slowly got up, stretching his legs out, which reminded him of how early it was.

        The doors, which separated the office from the waiting room, were very beautiful. They were made from a wood like material, and were carved elaborately with images, reminiscent of the Romantic period back on Earth. The doors eerily crackled as the rough officer moved through.

        As he walked into the room, the beautiful and elaborate furniture instantly attracted him. The sunlight, which came into the room via three large synth glass windows behind the commander’s desk, reflected off the furniture beautifully and gave the room a feeling of refinement and good living.

        Commander Martinez, who was facing the three large windows, did not turn around and acknowledge his subordinate as he walked into the room. Frank Lancer, respectfully threw up a tight and strong salute, awaiting his superior’s reception.

        Finally, after a strange wait and silence, the elderly commander turned around to view his favorite combat officer.

        “At ease, Lieutenant. How was your leave?” The old veteran asked, as he motioned for the lieutenant to have a seat across from him, at his desk.

        Frank took a seat, although the old officer remained standing, giving Frank an uneasy feeling about this so-called important meeting.

        “It was a bit to short for my tastes Sir.” Frank replied, trying to relieve some of the tension, which filled the room.

        “Well, I’m sorry for that Frank, but I need you for this assignment.” Commander Martinez said. The informal attitude was a welcome relief to both men, who both disliked the formalities of military tradition.

        “Sir, My men and I are ready for anything.” Frank straitened his body in the chair, as he attempted to evaluate the seriousness of the mission simply from the commander’s tone of voice.

        “Frank, that is what I have to talk to you about.” The commander said, then stopped abruptly as he seemed to be evaluating something in his mind. “I am reassigning you to another unit, which requires your talents.” He finished and then took a seat across from Frank.

        “Sir, but my men.” Frank protested quickly, then realized that even though informal in nature, it was disrespectful to disagree with your commanding officer.

        Frank knew the commander was distressed over the order, by the tone of his voice. Thus, the order must have came strait from Military HQ or Military Intelligence.

        “I understand your fondness for your company Lieutenant. I will make sure they will receive an officer equal to yourself, if there exists one.” Martinez tried to compliment the junior officer sitting across from him, but the acknowledgement was far from what the Lieutenant wanted to hear.

        “Thank you sir, at least I know they will be in good hands.” Frank replied, although he felt annoyed over his inability to do anything about the situation. “Sir, may I make a personal request?”

        “Certainly.” The commander said as he moved closer to desk.

        “I request that you promote and assign Sergeant Bruno, to command my … I mean … PeaceKeeper company Alpha Four. He has fought long and hard under me, and I feel he is the best man for the job.” Frank knew John would take care of them, and see to their survival.

        “I’m sorry Lieutenant, I can’t do that.” The commander replied.

        Frank felt like pleading, but he knew an honorable soldier never went against a senior officer. Yet, his heart told him to jump over the table, and force the issue. He most importantly was annoyed how stubborn his commander was being, which was unlike there past relationship.

        Commander Martinez stretched his arm across the desk to a communication display and pressed a key sequence, and waited for the computer system to respond. Then abruptly, an image of the beautiful secretary outside appeared.

        “Send the sergeant in right away, Victoria.”

        Frank, seemed a bit lost over the recent changes, and was confused why his own subordinate would be invited to the same meeting.

        The sergeant walked into the room, meeting Frank’s eyes first. They seemed to communicate a couple thousand questions and answers simply by looking at each other. Clearly, both were at a loss of what was happening. Although they both received the same message this morning, they had no idea they would both be meeting the Infantry commander together.

        “At ease Sergeant.” The commander exclaimed to the enlisted soldier and motioned for him to sit next to his own perplexed officer.

        “Like I was telling your Lieutenant. I have called you both here, to inform you both of you’re impending reassignment.” The elder officer stood strait up, adjusted his nicely pressed garment, and walked over to a small bar, which was packed full of alcoholic beverages. Both sitting men glanced again at each other.

        “As of yesterday evening, I received a command straight from Commissioner Lal, himself.”

        The older man took out a large opaque bottle which seemed to date back long before their arrival on planet. After, opening the bottle, the antiquated man brought the bottle up to his nose and seemed to saver the smell as if it was mystical in origins.

        “Commissioner Lal informed me of the alliance’s plan to create several multi-factional units in several different military fields. He asked if I had any infantry individuals capable of leading such a diverse unit.”

        Frank managed to sneak a look at John, who was captivated by the idea and the way the senior officer seemed to carry himself above others he had met. Clearly, John being an enlisted man, had not much experience with the elite military establishment.

        After a brief pause, the commander spoke again.

        “I replied that I had such a man to lead such a unique group. Frank, you have been chosen as the leader of potentially one of the most elite infantry groups on the planet. Every alliance faction will be participating by sending an individual or two to make up the squad. The Peacekeepers have been given the honor of supplying the first and second in command to the unit.” The commander waited after speaking. He was wondering what was going through his junior officer’s mind.

        “Squad Sir? Not an entire company?” Frank was still not sold on the idea, especially a smaller unit of radically different individuals.

        “Yes, a squad. Yourself, the sergeant next to you, and six others will form the unit, with you in charge Frank. I can’t stress how much the alliance is depending on units like this, to counter the power of the Hive and it’s knew friends.” The commander put the bottle back into a cabinet after pouring himself a drink, and walked over to the two soldiers. “If the squad is effective as planned, we will expand it to a company, and larger. It all depends on your leadership and the ability of your squad in combat.”

        “When will I meet the squad members and where will we be stationed.” Frank asked, showing more signs of acceptance of his new orders.

        “Your unit is being flown in tomorrow morning from all over the globe. As for your deployment area, that information is deemed classified. All that I can tell you lieutenant, is that after a brief training regiment to help the cohesiveness of the group, you will be sent into the thick of battle.” The commander stopped, and slowly took a sip out of his glass, relishing in the impulses his mouth created when the dark substance went down. “I suggest you say good bye to your old company this evening and take care of any personal matters before your initial training with the new squad begins.”

        Both men quickly stood up and threw up two iron salutes.

        “Dismissed.” The commander simply replied and turned to look outside his windows, at the beautiful Chiron morning sky.
        [This message has been edited by LightSniper (edited May 20, 2000).]
        Life is Awesome

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        • #5
          Sea Hive

          Yang entered the main labratory of the Research Hospital at Sea Hive, which had been recently converted into Provost' Zakharov's personal lab. Data sheets and sensor recorders were strewn everywhere in a chaotic mess, where the good Provost had already made himself busy with his work. Yang had put Zakharov's brilliant mind to the task of understanding the completely alien Progenitor technology.

          "My good Provost," smiled Yang warmly. Yang knew that Zakharov despised everything that Yang stood for, and delighted in making the old scientist squirm under Yang's pretense of friendship. "How goes the battle in deciphering these aliens resonance waves."

          "Quite well Chairman," replied the Provost with an equally false friendly nature. "In fact, I believe I may be on the verge of a significant breakthrough."

          "I do hope this will be more promising than your past two advances. Your theories of field modulation and biodaptive resonance, while brilliant, have provided little, if any use, to my forces. The Spartan Axis still remains a threat to my forces."

          "Chairman, I could care less what happens to you or your pathetic forces"

          "You will care," replied Yang, "when the Spartan forces not only discover you here, but that you have been conducting your old experiments to advance my technology. What they do to you will make what they did to your Anastasia seem like a walk in the park."

          The mention of Zakharov's beloved grandaughter struck home, exactly as Yang had hoped. How simple it was to manipulate the old man, with lies surrounding the death of his grandaughter. It did not matter if he ever discovered the truth, for by then it would be far to late for the Axis. Soon, with Zakharov's new weaponry and his Usurper allies, the Axis would be promptly crushed.

          "My early discoveries," said the Provost, recovering from Yang's cruel treatment, "were merely stepping stones toward this advancement. I now believe I can creat you a weapon, which will match Shard technology in power, but at the same time harness the power of the Usurper weaponry."

          "Explain Provost." Yang's curiosity was piqued.

          "I will keep it simple for you Chairman, so as not to bore you with technical details. What I believe I can create is a sentient resonance field, similar to the one that exists within the Planetary Neural Net. By tying in computer algorithms and pre-sentient AI to the resonance field, it will be possible to making the resonance field achieve a level of sentience." Yang smiled at the idea, and how Deirdre would cringe at thought of learning from Planet itself to create the weaponry that would destroy her.

          "This will allow for extreme accuracy," Zakharov continued," and the beam, probably tied to a Tachyon beam, would be able to respond to new targets and opportunities. I believe it would even be possible to adapt it for defenseive purposes, far superior to anything currently in existance anywhere."

          "How soon can I have these weapons?" queried Yang.

          "It will be neccessary to perform testing on humans before, I can be certain of the weapons usefulness. How soon can I be provided with viable subjects."

          "Within the hour," provided Yang.

          "Then you should be able to begin manufacturing of these weapons within a few days."

          The chairman simply smiled as he went to find a good source of test-subjects for the Provost. The Axis would finally be crushed.

          -Argo

          "Work like you don't need money. Love like you've never been hurt. Dance like nobody's watching. Sing like nobody's listening."

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          • #6
            Lieutenant, you have a priority message from CC Omicron.

            The elegant female sounding communication system exclaimed, breaking the serene silence of the morning. Sunlight slowly crept in from the outside, illuminating the sleeping warrior, resting on his cot.

            The exhausted officer responded by opening a single eye, disgusted at being woken up entirely to early, especially on leave.

            “Lieutenant Lancer, access code …. Baker 5 …. Alpha Tengo. Message Decode.” The agitated soldier murmured, as he slowly regained his use of his worn out body.

            The communication system displayed a short message on the forward screen, located near the entrance to his room.

            Report Immediately to Command Center Omicron, further instructions will follow when you arrive.
            Off Duty Leave is Cancelled


            As the gentlewomen voice finished articulating the message verbally, a hail storm of blaspheme followed, condemning everything from PeaceKeeper Military Command to the disgusting food issued out to soldiers at the dining hall.

            The battle hardened officer stood up from his cot and stretched out his overused arms, provoking a small stream of pain to flow throughout his upper torso. Frank Lancer, had never been seriously injured throughout his career, but the small pains and bruises had collected over the years. He had particularly hoped he would be able to use some of the leave time that had went unused over the years. But, with recent actions flaring up against the Hive forces, he was only fooling himself that he would be left alone to relieve his body.

            When most officers receive priority orders from command, they adorn full parade dress uniform, and hasten to their destination. Apparently, Frank was never one to conform to military society’s social and occupational customs.

            Instead, the warrior that stood silently in his room adorned his usually and comfortable military work uniform, which was tinted the traditional PeaceKeeper light blue.

            After slowly dressing, he walked several feet to a small kitchen, which consisted nothing more than a synthmetal water faucet and a old rusting hotplate, which had some cold coffee on top. The black curse was drunk without complaint over its hypothermic temperature.

            Just as he slowly walked over to the door, to begin the long trek to the command center on this excessively bright day, a face appeared on his forward com screen, replacing the old command message.

            “Good morning Lieutenant, I’m guessing you received the same orders I did.” A much younger man, adorned in the same military outfit, inquired over the communication system.

            “Why so formal John? I am after all, still on leave.” Frank retorted as he faced the com screen.

            “No you aren’t old man, our leave was cancelled, or did you not read the message.” The younger man responded amused over his commander’s aggravation.

            “Unfortunately the message woke me up. I’ll come to your quarters, and we can both walk to the command center.” Frank offered.

            Although John Bruno was only a sergeant, under Frank Lancer’s command, they had long been equal friends. Their close relationship, was built on the battlefield, where they both saved each other’s life frequently. Frank trusted John completely to help him command his troops and to be an example to the younger men under his command.

            “No Sir… I mean… Frank… I have to check on the troops at the barracks before I arrive at the command center. I’ll meet up with you later I guess.”

            “Well Sergeant, I will see you later, and make sure the men still hate my guts.” Frank said comically and motioned the communication system to turn off.

            Lieutenant Lancer, veteran of several campaigns, had led his infantry company through some of the harshest warfare ever faced in factional history. The soldiers under him, respected him completely and would gladly give up their lives for their commander, a quality few leaders have with their troops.

            Frank walked out of the room, after giving his muddled room one last look over. He hoped he would see it again soon.
            Life is Awesome

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            • #7
              PeaceKeeper Command Center Omicron
              Alpha Barracks
              0800 hours

              “What do you know about our squad sergeant?”

              Both Frank and John faced the entrance to the barracks in which their men had been placed into the past night. Most of the individuals had reached the base during the night, so this would be their first encounter with their new Peacekeeper lieutenant.

              “Nothing much Sir, we only received basic files on the members. I’ll have the files sent to your quarters immediately after our meeting with the troops.”

              “I would appreciate that sergeant. Shall we proceed then?”

              Frank Lancer, although concerned over the idea of a mixed unit, never let his face portray his emotions. He was a strict disciplinary and director to his troops, almost Spartan like, and expected great things out of his men.

              The Sergeant went into the building first, through a metallic blue sliding door, to marshal the troops for their first encounter with their new CO.

              Sergeant Bruno walked into the traditional barracks room; with its uncomfortable bunk beds abreast to the sidewalls and bathing areas attached to the rear wall. The building had been hastily put up the previous night, to prepare for the unit’s arrival, and many of its usual features had yet to be installed.

              Due to the sergeant’s quiet entrance, he was able to slip into the room unnoticed. The room comically seemed filled with a rainbow of colors, which consisted of all the member’s distinctly different colored uniforms and supplies. The two Spartans, dressed in dark gray, seemed to be talking up a storm with their two Morgan counterparts. Probably discussing about past victories and accomplishments against the Hive, in a vain attempt to show up their new comrades. Yet, the two other participating individuals, from the Gaian faction seemed apart and distant from the others. They talked alone across the room from the four others. They also seemed smaller and abit fragile compared to the massive soldiers across from them.

              A Spartan named, David Armitage noticed that he was being watched and turned to see the light blue dressed Sergeant standing at the entrance. He rose in one fluid motion into attention, and the others realizing what had just occurred, followed the Spartan’s lead.

              “Lieutenant Lancer, Sir, the men are ready to be viewed” Bruno called out, loud enough for the officer outside to hear. The sergeant released a bit of a half smile over his unit’s unpreparedness for their first encounter with there less than ordinary officer.

              The lieutenant walked into the room briskly and managed a single nod to his sergeant who stood at perfect attention. After the acknowledgement to his second in command, he turned to face his six other soldiers now lined up against their respective bunks.

              He initially held back from speaking, preferring to take in his surroundings and let his own mind evaluate each new soldier he viewed at the current moment. Although, the lieutenant hated giving speeches, the time called for one.

              “You have all proven that you are great warriors and if you weren’t, you would not be here. Therefore, you have nothing to prove to myself or any other individual here.” The lieutenant paused, and walked over to the other Spartan soldier, named Paul Cotroneo, and glared into his eyes.

              The Spartan impressively withstood the venomous gaze and returned the favor back to his new commander, to his lieutenant’s amusement.

              “I don’t care about your past mistakes, your victories, or your egos. All I want to see from you is that you follow my orders without question and fight with all your ability. If you choose not to fight, I will kill you myself.”

              Frank took a step back from the steadfast Spartan, and slowly walked down the room, looking into the eyes of each soldier as he passed them.

              “We are not hear for glory, we are here simply to win. I will not except anything less from each and every one of you. Get your gear together and settle into your new home, we will start training this evening at 1400.”

              Frank did an about-face and started to walk towards the door, but stopped short in front of Sergeant Bruno.

              Sergeant threw up another strong salute, which was reciprocated by his own commander. Although they were close friends, when in sight of their subordinates, they maintained the status quo of their rank and respect.

              Frank then walked out of the barracks, hoping that he had succeeded in giving his unit a good first impression of their leader.

              “You heard the Lieutenant, get your gear stowed, have a bite to eat at the mess, and report to Night training facility bravo at 1400 hours sharp.” The sergeant said and then followed his officer outside the barracks, leaving his men to talk amongst themselves about their Peacekeeper commanders.

              File Transfer: Sergeant Bruno to Lieutenant Lancer: Squad Member Records

              David Armitage
              Spartan
              Former Unit: 469th
              Race-Sex: White Male
              Rank: Private
              Training: Sniper

              Paul Cotroneo
              Spartan
              Former Unit: 469th
              Race-Sex: White Male
              Rank: Private 1st Class
              Training: Sniper

              Yuri Swerdlow
              Morgan
              Former Unit: 1st Special Opts
              Race-Sex: White Male
              Rank: Corporal
              Training: Demolitions / Heavy Assault

              Miles Dole
              Morgan
              Former Unit: 1st Special Opts
              Race-Sex: Black Male
              Rank: Private
              Training: Heavy Assault

              Robert Specht
              Gaian
              Former Unit: 4th Com Squad
              Race-Sex: Oriental Male
              Rank: Private
              Training: Communications / Light Assault

              Kristen Brookes
              Gaian
              Former Unit: 1st Native Training Unit
              Race-Sex: White Female
              Rank: Disciple
              Training: Empath
              Life is Awesome

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              • #8
                Near Seat of Proper Thought

                It was strangely silent, with only the faint whisper of creaking harnesses registering to Nans' ears. There were even no wind sounds, but that made sense to Nans since he was floating with the wind on his long free fall to Planet. Considering what had happened in the last few minutes it was downright peaceful, and the ebb of adrenaline only heightened his feeling of peace.

                Nans looked down just in time to see the shattered remnants of his faithful friend Aardvark 6 impact and explode with near Seat of Proper Thought. The long trail of smoke and lighter debris still formed a wide and unnatural downward arc, and it was only now dissipating. This high up the explosion didn't look that big, and it was likely that he wouldn't hear it at all. Overlapping blossoms of orange, red and yellow then ballooned outward as the fusion drive of the pen had an uncontrolled and final reaction. It was all very pretty, and more than a little sad. Nans thought of his Ardie as a friend, and to see it die was like losing a friend.

                It was a hard way of seeing the laws of impenetrability and gravity in action.

                Abruptly, Nans realized he was in free fall and that he would impact on the ground with a wet splat unless he started paying attention. He inspected is parachute and found that it was in good shape, and located the altitude controls and they were OK, too. Now he tapped a couple of commands in the slim remains of his jump seat, which had a small propulsion unit that could act as a short burn, low velocity jet. Good. All was in order.

                A couple more taps and he had his horizontal air speed and his rate of descent. The thick Chiron atmosphere created considerable drag and he had already reached terminal velocity, which was considerably slower due to his chute. His terminal velocity would be less than on Earth, but it would still be more than enough to splatter him on whatever he landed on without a chute.

                The reading came up on the miniature flat screen. Nans frowned. He was trapped in the lower portion of the Southern Hemisphere jet stream, which was particularly strong, and was being blown strongly toward the west. That, unfortunately, was directly into Hive territory. He knew his jump pack could influence where he landed but would be of no help at all trying to get back to Spartan-held territory.

                He tapped in some more data and estimated how far he was likely to go. In a moment the answer came up: 131 kilometers west-northwest. Nans was incredulous. That far? How could that be possible? Then he remembered that he had gunned his pen trying to escape from the singularity resonance field, and had put his pen into the quickest most direct escape trajectory, which happened to be west. He had put himself into this problem and the jet stream was only compounding it.

                A couple more taps and he determined he would be landing in 20 minutes or so.

                Well, Nans thought, I'd better start looking for a place to land.

                He scanned the projected landing area from his flat screen, and then looked up to locate it at the horizon.

                Nans found it and swallowed hard. He was headed straight toward the fungal highway and fungal tower.

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

                Damn jump jets! Nans cursed to himself. Even with the little altitude control he had with his jump pack it hadn't been enough. He had landed hard, and the left strut of the jump pack had impacted sharply in the center left portion of his back. Based on the fact that it hurt to breathe he was sure he had at least one broken rib.

                That, and the other stresses from ejecting from at Mach 2.5, had buffeting him around. His physical conditioning helped him ovoid some trauma, and deal with the pain. But that didn't help much when you simply hurt all over.

                Putting aside his pain, Nans dumped the now useless jump pack, untangled his emergency pack, checked its contents, and hiked it onto his back. Looking around, the terrain was a threatening pink. He could see the vast bulk of the fungal tower on the near horizon, which was actually just over the next hill. Even at this distance he felt distinctly uneasy. He knew the source - the fungal tower, and its nasty little minions.

                He tapped his goggles twice to activate them, and they cut out most of the glare. They would also let him see at night in infrared. Being able to see he surveyed the area. To the east was a rather thick fungal forest, with stalks as big around as a rover and branches that extended what must be 40 meters into the air. Hmm, can't go through that. East was a kind of a fungal bushland, with fungus 4 or 5 meters tall. No good there, since its almost as dangerous as the forest. Of course, north is the tower, and that's what Nans was trying to get away from.

                South was what Nans called fungal prairie, where the fungus was only a meter tall. Only half as tall as me, he thought ruefully. That was plenty tall to make travel very slow and dangerous, but it had to be better than the forest or the bushland. While the mindworms were the worst of Chiron's indigenous fauna, they were certainly not the only dangerous life forms. At least most of those wouldn't be as numerous in semi-open area. Or so Nans hoped.

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

                For the first time in his life Nans wished he were a marine ground pounder instead of a bird.

                The breather is chafing the nostrils. Every step caused a small lance of pain to shoot from his broken rib. The fibrous and rubbery fungus was slowly but surely shredding his flight suit. Strained muscles all over his body were screaming from the abuse he was heaping on them.

                Before this little adventure Nans thought he was in good shape. He always passed his physicals with flying colors, and religiously kept up his regime of daily exercise. Somehow, through, 45 minutes a day of aerobic exercise does not compare to a whole day to continuous exertion.

                But that was minor compared to his other problem: no water. His survival pack had a micro reverse osmosis filter and, with it, he knew he could drink just about anything and live through it. The experience might not be aesthetic bliss, but he would keep him alive. All day he had kept his eye pealed for any water source, but the blasted fungus was a solid mat almost all over, and there was no open water to be found! In early afternoon he had consumed the last of the meager supply of water in his survival pack. With every breath and every step he exhaled or sweated off more of his precious internal store, and he knew he needed to get more and soon.

                Maybe I can kill one of the animals?, he through, exploring his options. He wasn't a biologist, but he knew that eating the wrong native life form could be quickly fatal. There were a couple that he recalled from survival training, like a polyswimmer, whose juice form their eyes was compatible with the human metabolism, or fungalfibre, which was basically fiber with moisture thrown in. He was keeping his eyes open, but didn't see any of them. Considering there were hundreds of thousands of native species on Chiron he wasn't at all surprised he didn't see any. Worse, many looked alike. In fact, they almost all looked alike to Nans' undiscerning and untutored eyes.

                Nans dismissed the idea from his mind, figuring he was just as likely to kill himself than help.

                Right now I'd give a weeks pay for two liters of water, he thought, knowing he'd be willing to pay more as the drought continued.

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

                Nans' hands were shaking with excitement. He'd found water!

                Control. Patience. More haste, less speed, he thought as he got out his microfilter. In any other time he would have turned up his nose at the fetid pool, but not now. The little pool was in a meter-tall vase-shaped fungal growth, and the water was a dark pinkish brown from soil and Chiron's algae and who knew what else. It also had a very unpleasant odor, but Nans knew he could deal with that. He just hoped the filter could deal with the nasty stuff in the water!

                Nans had come so close to missing this find. He had been plowing through the fungus and had brushed against the bulbous end that was at chest level. He put up his arms to force his way through and the stalk reluctantly moved back a little. After he passed it snapped back into position and he heard a faint sloshing noise, and he immediately stopped in his tracks. Crawling up on the sturdier nearby stalks he peered in, and saw what had to be 5 liters of water. Glorious, wonderful water! Who cared if it was dark brown and stinky!

                Carefully reaching down Nans brushed most of the floating debris aside, then started to cup some of the water. He had to reach way down, leaning into the gigantic vase.

                Then he saw movement inside the vase. Light-colored barbs were erupting out of the wall of the fungus! And they were pointing downward!

                Instinctively Nans pulled his arm back. He watched as if in slow motion as his arm came up the barbs rose up. They were thin and almost colorless, and perfectly camouflaged against the side of the fungal vase. Each was over a 20-centimeters long, and the entire side of the vase was laced with them!

                Still in slow motion, his arm was almost out. Then, near the top, one of the barbs touched is skin. It dug in like a stiletto, causing a long rip in Nans' skin as he continued to pull his arm up. But Nans also pulled his hand away from the barb, and as it veered toward the opposite side another barb took hold and raked the other side of his arm. In a fraction of a second his entire arm was out. Nans was breathing hard and fighting back the waves of pain. His good left hand cradled his torn flesh, and blood streamed down his arm. The wound was at least a centimeter deep on both sides and Nans knew he had to stop the bleeding.

                Stumbling off the fungal vase he tore off his survival pack. In it he clumsily opened an astringent and swabbed it on his wounds. It stung painfully, and he fought back tears. Steeling himself he pulled some insti-sutures and closed the wounds. It hurt, but it had to be done. Finally, with the wound cleaned and closed, he took out his small packed of sealant and sprayed on some insti-skin.

                The astringent was deadening some of the pain and Nans could finally see straight. Still cradling his arm he tried moving his fingers to see if there had been nerve damage. With difficulty he got all of his fingers to move, even if it caused more waves of pain. Nans laughed a short, brittle laugh. At least he had his fingers, even if the arm was useless.

                It was getting toward dusk and now Nans was tired and in pain. And thirsty.

                Thirsty?

                His microfilter! He didn't have it! Hurriedly he looked around the low mat of fungus. It wasn't there.

                It must have fallen into the vase. Nans knew he had to get it. He could easily die without it!

                Slowly and carefully he climbed to the top of the fungal vase and peered down. The sight now was much different than when he first looked in. Now the whole side of the vase was lined with 20-centimeter long stilettos that were pulsing softly. And there, down at the bottom, was his microfilter barely visible through the murk.

                Nans climbed down, not putting any pressure on his wounded right arm. The vase was huge, and too solid to push over. He couldn't reach in and get his microbreather - as if he wanted to. No, more direct means were necessary.

                He smiled grimly as he got his shredder out of this survival pack. It was fully charged and would recharge in sunlight, although it would eventually run out of needle bullets. Estimating the strength of the fungus he set the shredder to its midpoint setting, which had an equal charge of energy and needles. He figured the needles would break the epidermis and the energy would shred the rest.

                Turning toward the vase, he held the shredder in his left hand. It was not a difficult weapon to use, and it would certainly be hard to miss a large, stationary object. Pointing it two-third of the way down from the top of the vase he calmly depressed the firing stud.

                The result was quite satisfactory. The needles ripped into the flesh of the rubbery fungus, and just kept on going. A small arc of energy rippled across the vase where the needle hit, vaporizing water. The resulting steam burst the remaining flesh in a rippling series of small explosions. Following, the fetid water in the bottom of the vase poured out, itself part steam.

                White vapor rose over the ruins of the fungal vase, and a stream of water still flowed out of the ruptured skin in an ever-decreasing trickle. The barbs were now all over the place, although some were now shattered or bent from the heat. Nans carefully cleared a path through the debris, studiously avoiding anything that looked like a spine. Moving aside chunks of fungus he searched the ruin looking for his microfilter.

                There! There is it! Almost forgetting himself Nans reached forward. Then he checked himself and noticed a couple barbs in the way. He pushed them aside and grabbed his microfilter and pulled it toward him and out of the crud.

                Nans stared at his filter, horrified. Only half of it was there.

                He had melted and shredded the rest.

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

                Nans jerked awake. It was bright and the suns had cleared the horizon, causing long shadows in the fungal prairie. The suns had risen just enough that Nans was now out of the shadow, facing the light of his second day in the fungal highway.

                Nans felt terrible. Between the broken rib, general abuse of ejecting and landing hard, and the two 10 centimeter gashes in his arm Nans was sure he had never felt this awful in his entire life. Add to that the fact his lips were cracked and his mouth desperately dry and it was, he reflected, his idea of pure misery.

                Cradling his arm, he put on his small backpack and sighted east. East was where the Spartans were, and toward safety. Before leaving he inspected his wound. The insti-sutures were holding, but he insti-skin was starting to detach. It automatically bonded with the existing skin, which would slowly but surely detach as the skin exfoliated. When it was gone, so was the insti-skin - that is how it was designed. Any flexing or movement only hastening the effect, so even moving around with it would eventually cause it to wear out quite fast. So far the wound wasn't infected, and would remain sterile as long as the insti-skin was intact. After that it might get bad, and get bad fast.

                Looking around it was a strange combination of bright pink from the low angle of the sunlight and dark vaguely reddish gray in the shadows. The reddish gray was somehow ominous since it reminded Nans of dried blood, just like what was still on his arm.

                Shaking off that idea Nans sighted east again. Then he crept eastward, much slower now that he had to protect his arm from abuse.

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

                Nans looked down at the muddy puddle. It was worse than the dribbles from the wrecked fungal vase. Now Nans wished he had taken his chances with that water, horrible though it was. Now he knew he was out of options. He had to have water. He was getting faint and slowing down, and felt very hot. All were symptoms of heat stroke, which is made much worse by dehydration.

                Nans crouched by the puddle and took off his pack. He took out the remains of the microfilter. Although robust, the reverse osmosis and solar power cell portion were totally fused. Still, he could use the filter to remove the particulates by gravity. Dipping his cup into the small pool, Nans slowly poured the water into the filter, making sure not to overload it. The water he was pouring in was totally opaque, and it was almost more mud than water. A few drops of water came out the bottom. The drip was steady. It was working.

                Sighing with relief, Nans took the quarter cup of water and took a sip. His face puckered and he closed his eyes. Vile! Acidic!

                Nans forced himself to swallow, having no choice now. The water did not want to go down, and it felt like it burned all the way. Or, that is how Nans imagined it. He put the cup under the filter again.

                The drip continued, and slowly the water at the top was more mud than water. Taking the top of the filter, Nans dumped the. He tapped the base of the filter to get most of the mud out, which formed a small pile by the pool.

                Something caught his eye. The mud was moving, and Nans' head snapped back toward the little pile of mud.

                The mud was teeming with little crawly creatures, which moved and writhed in the now flattening mud. Their undulations stirred up the mud, which flowed for a moment back toward the pond and then stopped. As the mud flattened more creatures were visible. And there were spheres that were not rocks. They were eggs: lots of eggs - clusters of very small eggs.

                My god, Nans thought, what have I done?

                Already he felt sick.

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

                Nans stood, barely, looking out over the small hill. He could see green! The torture of the fungal highway was finally at an end! Almost giddy, Nans stumbled on - he had felt a little better after throwing up twice. His flight uniform was now shredded below the knee, and his insti-skin had ruptured long ago and a little blood was seeping out. It couldn't be more than a kilometer or two, but it would take hours. It was almost dark, but Nans didn't care. He still had his goggles and would find his way. Plus, he knew that if he went to sleep he might not wake up.

                Angling sideways, Nans squeezed between two fungal stalks. On the other side he slipped, falling to his knees. The jolt came down hard and twisted his torso, which cause him to gasp in pain from his broken rib. He lost a few breaths as the pain spasm passed and then, mustering his courage, he got up. It was almost routine now - the pain and the drive. It was unending.

                As he rose the pain lessened, but never went away. The pain now never quite went away.

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

                "Open up! Please!" Nans said, pounding on the door of a building he had found near some agricultural fields.

                He had been pounding for five or six minutes and no one answered. Nans was leaning heavily against the doorframe; he was afraid he might just topple over.

                "Please," he said weakly, eyes closed and breathing shallow. Now every breath seemed to grate his ribs, and his arm was a mass of congealed blood.

                Focusing in the dark he saw what might be a pressure plate. He tapped it.

                The door clicked, and then opened. A smell of machinery and grain dust and filled the air. Nans stumbled in. Looking around he saw no heat signatures, only the residual daytime heat on metal and concrete surfaces from the coolness of the night.

                "Please," Nans whispered as he crumpled to the floor.

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

                "Hey! What's he doing here" Forman Constance stated. There in the middle of the floor was a tattered man, lying in the fetal position. She walked forward with a little irritation.

                "Hey, you!" she said as she turned Nans over.

                Seeing his face and his uniform her face changed from irritation to stillness.

                "It's a Spartan. They're all over now. Better call the authorities," Constance ordered. She sighed. So much has changed, she thought. Still, orders are orders, no matter who gives them.

                With efficiency she went over to a locker in the machine maintenance building, drew some water, got a first aid kit, and got to work. As she tended his wounds Nans woke up.

                "Please," he said through cracked lips.

                "Shhhh. You're all right. Here is some water," she said back. Bringing a cup to his lips he started to drink, and drink quickly. "Not so fast, Spartan. You'll get sick. Take it easy, there's plenty of water."

                She took the cup away and finished cleaning the wound. Constance frowned. It was a nasty cut, and it was likely to be infected. As she put the cup on the floor Nans could see her as an older woman with a weather-beaten face. He smiled a little.

                "Thank you," he said thinly.

                "Have another drink. Slowly this time."

                He accepted her water and her orders. Then he fell back asleep.

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

                Nans awoke as he was being picked up, and none too gently.

                "Ah. You're awake," a voice said.

                He focused generally, seeing only shapes - fairly dark shapes.

                "You are now a prisoner of the Hive, Spartan. Pilot Spartan. So nice of you to drop by," the voice said with a cruel lilt to it. It was a female voice, and it was not like the kind voice from before.

                Nans knew his thinking was slow. Finally it dawned on him.

                Good god! I'm on the wrong side of the fungal highway!

                Nans let out a groan of despair as they dragged him away. The Hive did not like the Spartans, and especially not pilots of nerve gas pens. And the UN Charter was revoked.

                Nans groaned again. In the background he heard laughter.

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

                "So, my baby is awake again," the female voice purred.

                Nans had tried to fake being asleep. Being awake meant pain. He longed for sleep.

                "I'm afraid I'm going to have to leave you. You haven't been very cooperative," the female clucked. "But I'm leaving you in good hands; the best, in fact. He takes a professional interest in cases like yours. He is much kinder than I am. You'll see that shortly. In fact, he is so kind that he said I can watch! Isn't that nice of him? He calls it cross training." Her tittering laugh cut Nans like a knife.

                Nans felt the razor fingers rake gently across his chest again. It was so light that he could feel the coolness of the metal, but not know if it was going to bite. The anticipation of not knowing was almost worse than the cuts.

                "A final gift, love. Be good. I'll be watching," the female voice said breathlessly.

                In the silence Nans could hear his heartbeat and his ragged breath, and that was all.

                Then he felt a puff of air on his cheek.

                ::Wake up Spartan Nansen Andersson. I'm your new friend. My name is Sand. You may know of me.::

                Yes, Nans thought, I do. Pain was one thing. Now Nans felt deep despair, brooding and black.

                ::I'm so glad you know me! I know you so well already. I've been getting to know you quite well while you were sleeping so blissfully. I almost feel like I'm your friend. I must say that I am a bit disappointed. You have been bad lately - all that nerve gas. Tsk tsk. Old Miriam used to scream out to her God and call his wrath upon the unrighteous when she was in the sphere. She called the sphere her penance for her sins. Do you know what penance is? Or sin? Yes, I see you do. It is atoning for wrongs. You have killed so many, and that is a sin. My friend, you have a lot of atoning to do, and I am going to help you.::

                ::Nans, did you like the ministrations of my friend Karla? She has her own talents, doesn't she? Her gift is pain. My talents are of a different sort, I'm afraid. I can give pain, but it of a different sort, and of a vastly different magnitude. It is appropriate for one such as you, who has so much to atone for. Shall we begin? Yes, I think we shall!::

                White light of pain filled every gram of Nans' being. Every memory of pain, both physical and mental, flashed through his mind. All the wrongs committed by him upon others, and wrongs committed by others onto him. Mental and physical pain merged.

                Mentally, Nans screamed.

                ::Ah, yes! And this, my friend, is only the beginning!::

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

                Low fungus, partially crushed by the impact of Nans' jump pack, lay underneath Nans inert form. In the background the fungal tower's ropy arms waved in the wind. It was near enough that the texture of the trunk was visible, as were the locust and mindworm boils that morphed in and out of it.

                Nans lay on his side with his left leg bent unnaturally to the left. His breathing was shallow, and his sightless eyes stared straight ahead. Still strapped into his ejector seat from his pen, his flight suit was almost immaculate and the breeze lightly tossed his hair.

                His only motions were breathing and blinking. His blinking was not regular, and he seemed to be reacting to what he was 'seeing'. Occasionally is eyelids would shudder or half close for a moment. Then the blinking would return to a more normal pace.

                All around Nans the fungus moved. They pulsed with every blink of Nans' eyelids, and with every breath. They were in sync with him, reading him, eating his thoughts.

                Then the pulsing changed and the mindworms surged forward. In a second the boil had engulfed Nans.

                But Nans could not see them as they descended to feast. All he could see was his nightmare, and his pain.


                [This message has been edited by Hydro (edited May 23, 2000).]
                [This message has been edited by Hydro (edited May 23, 2000).]

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                • #9
                  The air within the warehouse was stale, almost dead. The nauseating atmosphere of the enclosed room seemed to amplify the cold and dampness of the surroundings. After the long trek in knee high frigid water, most individuals would understand what misery truly felt like.

                  The dark warehouse was large and intimidating to the squad as they moved methodically through the room. Each individual scanning and searching the bleakness of the unforgiving room.

                  Each individual armed with night vision and an array of other sensors attempted to penetrate the wall of night. No longer were enemies capable of finding safety in darkness, the face of warfare had changed, and these eight individuals exemplified it.

                  Cotroneo and Armitage, both armed with focused R-1 Scouts, traveled slowly up a ladder to reach an elevated platform which overlooked the entire complex. The Scout was an interesting combination of modern technology with dependable sniper practices. Its primary weapon was in the form of a focus impact charge, although low powered, it offered the operator accuracy second to none. The combination of its inherent accuracy and stability was augmented by its onboard intelligent friend and foe system, eliminating the friendly fire instants, which plagued snipers in previous conflicts on Chiron.

                  As they reached the summit of the platform, both looked over the vastness of the room, first in thermal and then in standard night vision. The room was quiet, although a good sign, was never a signal to drop your guard.

                  Lieutenant Lancer, who was in front of the single file line, stopped near a worn cargo cylinder placed roughly in the center of the large room. He slowly rose his left hand, a signal to his two elevated snipers to cover them as they moved forward.

                  Private Armitage, who was protecting the front of the line, zoomed in with his scope and began a tedious scan of the area. A glare located several meters in front of his squad on the ground caught his eye and he slowly began to pan over in max zoom mode.

                  As he tried to clarify the object, he touched a small red button on his rifle, sending a text message to his entire squad to hold position and be alert, which was viewed on their goggle’s HUD.

                  Armitage could hardly make out the object; it seemed somehow blurry or abstract, although this was impossible due to the Scout’s enhanced scope. Then the object seemed to become clear, slowly, as if it had faded back into reality. Its another man’s rifle!

                  Armitage was flung back by the force of the blow, and his reality slowly faded out.

                  Private Cotroneo, who was only several feet away on the same platform, was startled by the blast, which had taken out his Spartan comrade. He threw down his weapon and slowly made his way to his immobile friend, while trying to keep his head down.

                  Suddenly the room erupted with energy fire of all kinds and from every direction. The six members of the squad who were on the ground floor dove for cover of any sort, as energy charges flew by them at incredible speeds. It seemed almost beautiful inside the dark room as the enigmatic lights flew over their heads, yet it seemed ironic that war can be beautiful or pleasing to anyone.

                  Lieutenant Lancer knew his unit was outgunned and in danger of being overrun. He turned to the left, trying to locate his entire squad, and all he saw were his two Morgan members lying on the floor unable to get up. In desperation Lancer looked to his right, and as he turned, Kristen, the squad’s empath was shot squarely in the chest.

                  Suddenly, his night vision goggles erupted in blinding light, as the entire complex’s ceiling lights activated catching what was left of the unit unprepared for the influx of light. Frank Lancer ripped the advanced goggles off in agony and torment over his inability to see.

                  Just as quickly as the lights activated, the weapons fire ceased. As Lancer’s eyesight slowly returned, he managed to look around his immediate surroundings. His entire unit, except the young sniper up on the platform, was lying immobile on the floor.

                  --------------------------------------------

                  “Lieutenant, I thought you would give us more of a challenge.”

                  The mocking voice came from across the room, behind several crates. Both Lancer and Private Cotroneo looked across the room where they could tell the voice was slowly coming closer to their position.

                  “Deactivate the simulated training kills, let’s see how long it takes for the sleeping beauties to wake up from their sleep.”

                  Lieutenant Lancer stood up straight and brushed off the vile grime, which he had dove into during the simulation. Several feet away, Sergeant Bruno slowly regained consciousness from the simulated hit he took in the chest. Followed by the rest of the squad, which had taken equivalent hits during the exercise.

                  The voice appeared in front of them in the form of a middle aged lieutenant named Walker. He strutted forward, confident that his own squad had with held Lancer’s incursion into their simulated base.

                  “Hello Lieutenant Walker, your men did excellent, you should be proud.” Lieutenant Lancer said, trying to be friendly, although he wanted to kick the smirk of the man’s face.

                  “I wish I could say the same Lieutenant.” Walker reciprocated, enjoying in his comrade’s defeat.

                  Lieutenant Lancer managed a small smirk, and then turned to face his squad.

                  “I’m sorry Lieutenant, I should have seen them Sir.” Armitage, who had just recovered from the simulated gunshot, said. As a Spartan, he expected more of himself, and was quite annoyed over his inability to located the enemy sniper first.

                  “No apologies needed.” The lieutenant replied, and turned back to the irritating officer standing behind him. “Shall we run the simulation again Lieutenant?”

                  “If you want to be massacred again Lieutenant.” Walker gave out a bit of a chuckle after speaking. He seemed to enjoy pushing Lancer’s nerves to the limit.

                  “Excuse me Sir, but we will have to hold off on that exercise.” Robert Specht, from the Gaian faction, said as he came running over to the two lieutenants with his communication gear. “Sir, this message just came in for the both of you.”

                  Walker stepped in front of Lancer and grabbed the communication pad from the private. Frank Lancer, clasped his hand together, but chose not to react. He could not lower himself to Walker’s childish level in front of his men.

                  “It seems we are both being deployed together. I hope your melting pot unit can cut it.” Walker joked as he handed the pad to Lancer after reading it.

                  Lancer did not even comment, fearing what he would say if he let himself have the chance.

                  Lieutenant Walker
                  Lieutenant Lancer
                  Communication Level : Gold
                  Security Clearance : Gold


                  Lieutenants, report to PeaceKeeper Headquarters with both of your Units, for armed forward deployment. A transport aircraft is waiting for you at the Omicron airbase to take you to Headquarters.

                  Commander Martinez


                  Lieutenant Lancer turned to his Sergeant at his side. He was in no mood to talk to Walker or even acknowledge his presence for that matter.

                  “Get the men together, we have a plane to catch.” Lancer said and then slowly walked out of the warehouse, with his back to the other lieutenant.

                  He hated officers who lacked integrity or honor. He understood that enlisted men viewed the integrity of their commanders above all other traits and having the respect of the bluejackets was the most important requisite to good command. A trait to many Peacekeeper officers seemed to lack recently. At heart he knew he was a Spartan officer.

                  [This message has been edited by LightSniper (edited May 30, 2000).]
                  Life is Awesome

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                  • #10
                    Somewhere in the Eastern Chiron Sea

                    “Now pull it tight. Yah. Tighter. Ah. That’s good!” Steve almost yelled, focusing on setting the tarp.

                    The wind-whipped tarp’s loose corner finally straightened, forming an almost vertical plane that covered one of the crenellated openings in the chaotic Isle of the Deep’s ‘surface’. Even with the tarp a good, stout wind whistled through the cave-like openings, but now it was a bit less than it had been. Steve pinioned another anchor into the superstructure of the Isle and attached the last edge of the tarp, which drew itself tight to form an effective seal against all but a near gale.

                    Steve turned and smiled.

                    “Ah, home sweet home. Right Jay?”

                    Jay looked up at his partner, who stood almost two meters tall, had a dark complexion, and easy features. He saw that Steve was smiling at him and seemed to be expecting an answer.

                    A rhetorical question, and therefore irrelevant, Jay’s mechanical side automatically responded. However, these last eight months in the Gaian Empath Corps had taught him a lot, not the least of which is that social situations in work and play require a certain amount of inane conversation.

                    Of course, it helped that Steve’s smile was infectious, and without really knowing it Jay smiled back.

                    “Yah. Real nice. Kind of rough, though,” Jay replied, reaching out to touch the pocked surface the formed the interior of their ‘cave’ on the Isle. At a distance it looked bumpy and irregular, like a melange of marbles glued together with a little chop suey. It wasn’t really rough, just severely undulating. Nothing was even: not the floor, the walls, or ceiling. Nothing.

                    “Well, what do you expect? We didn’t design it, the worms did. Millions and millions of worms that died and glued themselves together on a very general pattern. This isle could be hundreds or even thousands of years old. Did you know that? The radiometric dating is all screwy due to the resonance fields this thing gives off, but there is one Isle that may be a four thousand years old. Of course, that’s a real big one, almost a daemon boil.”

                    Steve paused his latest monologue and walked over by Jay. Steve stood a head higher than Jay and looked much more massive. Standing side by side the differences between Steve and Jay were apparent. Whereas Jay was slight of frame and in his early twenties, Steve was a fully filled out man in his mid twenties. Steve’s dark hair was carelessly cut to military length and Jay’s mousy brown hair was neatly combed back from a part in the middle.

                    Steve reached out and touched the wall near Jay.

                    “Kind of amazing, isn’t it? Some of the worms in the wall are alive, you know,” Steve commented. Jay abruptly pulled his hand back and gave Steve a sidelong glance. Steve continued, “Empaths can sometimes feel the resonance fields of individual worms or groups of worms deep within the walls, or the outer hull of the ship. I have no idea how they stay alive, but I bet they can harvest some of the energy of the resonance fields given off by the rest of the worms. Like broadcast power, I guess.”

                    Jay looked back at the wall and he seemed a little reflective. “Are they all like this?”

                    “Well, I wouldn’t know about all of them. I’ve been on two Isles, and they have the same general patterns. The outsides of their ‘hulls’ are streamlined and are really amazingly smooth, which they need to propel themselves through the water. The top between the hull is vaguely dome-like, and has lots of large openings and probably millions of little openings. The little openings are for the mindworms that frequently live in the Isles, and I don’t know what the bigger openings and caverns are for. Obviously they can’t be solid or the Isles would sink, but I think that the large openings and caverns exist simply because they haven’t been filled with something else yet. Parts of the Isle are always changing as it reabsorbs part of itself, and it changes especially fast when it gains mass after a kill.”

                    Steve turned away from the wall and toward Jay. “Now you know all that I know. We still have work to do, or have you forgotten?” Steve looked at Jay with a theatrically shrewd eye. “Were you purposefully distracting me? You’re not a slacker, are you? I may have to report you.”

                    Jay started at that. Then he looked at Steve, who had another big grin and decided he was probably joking, since it was a little hard to tell. During the last three weeks with Steve, Jay had decided that humor can be used to say the most delicate or unpleasant things, mainly because he had seen Steve do it all the time, and it worked.

                    “OK. What do we do now,” Jay asked.

                    “Grab a vibraknife and we’re going to cut us some furniture.”

                    Jay was alarmed. Was Steve joking again? Cut an Isle of the Deep? Was he insane?

                    Steve saw the look on Jay’s face. “Oh stop worrying. I’ve done it hundreds of times. OK, so I kind of did it once on holo. Nobody died then. Comeon’! Trust me!” Steve said as he handed Jay a vibraknife, chuckling a little.

                    Jay just stood there looking at his knife, then the wall, and then at Steve as he energetically started chopping away into a low mound on the floor. In a few seconds he had the beginnings of a stool, with small chunks of Isle flying all around. One of the small chunks hit Jay, and he was watched it as it bounced off his jersey and then to the floor. After it hit the floor it seemed to vibrate slightly, and then sag a little.

                    “Hey, kick the chunks into the hole over there. They’ll help seal it up when the refuse,” Steve said while concentrating on his work.

                    Jay kicked at the fist-sized chunk of Isle at his feet and found that it was already partially attached to the floor, and that it took a bit of effort to kick it out of the way and toward the depression in the back part of their cave.

                    The low hum of the vibraknife stopped and Steve stood, admiring his work. “There. Not bad. I should give up this psi stuff and become a worm crud artist. Now lets hurry and get the debris away before we have a bunch of pointy chunks at the base of my new chair.”

                    Steve went over and got a foam-form box and started scooping the pieces into it. Jay went over and gingerly started helping out, still a little concerned about cutting the worms.

                    Jay noticed that each piece was fairly light and was a little like solid foam. If he looked closely he could see the outlines of what had to be petrified worms, which actually were shells of the worms. The insides were hollow. Still, it was tough stuff and he couldn’t make a dent when he smashed two pieces together. That wasn’t the strangest thing, though. The pieces of Isle were warm to the touch, certainly much warmer than the ambient air.

                    “You noticed they’re warm, didn’t you? Once we get this place sealed off it will be nice and toasty, always a constant 27 degrees Celsius. Worm masses keep that temperature all the time. How they do it I don’t know since they don’t have a circulatory system in the Isle. It must all go back to the resonance field, which transfers energy like a blood stream. You know, some Sifters can actually see the resonance fields. Did you know that?” Steve said, busily scooping debris into his box.

                    Jay was confused. “What’s a Sifter?”

                    “Boy, you are green, aren’t you? There are four kinds of psi talents: Sifters, Grippers, Lifters, and Rippers. Sifters can see into people’s minds, or even into animal’s minds or the mind of a mindworm. Some sifters can even ‘read’ inanimate objects, if you can believe that. Sifters are the most common of psi talents, and it is the most easily developed since it is largely passive. Many untrained psi talents have this gift. A gripper is what you and I are. We bond with another intelligent, or even unintelligent, creature. We are what most people call empaths, since we develop a deep understanding of the other creature and develop a strong link that is more than simple two-way communication. A lifter is a master of telekinesis, and that is probably the rarest of all psi talents. The energy it takes to move an object is huge, and they either have to get it from their own reserves or be able to manipulate energy around them. Pretty delicate stuff and most lifters can only manipulate very small objects, or redirect energy. Now, a ripper is the worst of all. The Hive and the Spartans have lots of these, and most are torturers and assassins. They are able to go into other’s minds and change them, rip them. Nasty business, that. Most can sift, grip, and lift, and they are the strongest psi talents out there. Having all that power seems to change people, and they think they have the right to do what they want. The members of the Hive Circle of Ashaandi were almost all rippers, and Sand was the head assassin. Not all are nasty, though. Some have morals. I personally think that Lady Deirdre is a ripper, although I don’t know for sure. She is certainly an expert sifter and gripper.”

                    Steve finished emptying the box, and brushed the extra into the depression.

                    “Say, did you meet Deirdre when you graduated? She was there for my graduation three years ago,” Steve suddenly exclaimed.

                    For no apparent reason Jay blushed and his ears turned red. “Yes. I met the Lady,” Jay said quietly, almost reverently. “She came up to me and gave me my diploma herself and shook my hand! I looked up into her face and she smiled at me and I knew she loved me. Not in a physical way or anything, but I knew she understood me. Her face just glowed, and she was so pretty. I felt like she was looking right into my soul…”

                    Steve interrupted. “That’s because she probably was.”

                    Jay shot Steve a venomous glare. “Give me one of those knives,” he said simply.

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                    • #11
                      UN Headquarters

                      I sat in my office on the 44th floor of the Government building, and gazed out of the window to the northeast, across the small bay, looking at the 1800 meter high mountains that obscured the base of Haven City that I knew was hidden behind them. Due east, across the 1500 meter high waist of the figure-of-eight shaped island continent lay the base of High Commission, while to the southeast lay Mount Avishnu, with its secret operations testing area, the scene of so much carnage just a few short months ago.

                      I took stock of the situation, and called up the holovids that the various leaders had left me upon their departing Gaia Revered following the summit meeting. I started with the meeting itself, fast forwarding until I reached the Colonel’s decisive intervention. I smiled wryly at the memory….

                      ENOUGH!

                      I’ve heard enough of your shilly-shallying around the issues. We have a new enemy to face – and one that might just tilt the balance of power against us. I’m tired of these endless discussions about whether we can “reach an accommodation” with these aliens. For better or worse they have aligned themselves with Yang, and as such become our enemies.

                      So, Pravin, no more talk of arranging a meeting. Foreman Domai, while I appreciate your position as being in the firing line, we must end this phony war and get on the offensive. And to that end I have instructed our generals this morning to resume the offensive against Yang, and even now our troops are on the move toward Social Engineering Den.


                      I chuckled at the reminiscence of the consternation that statement had wrought. Her next comment though, was a bombshell.

                      And Lady Deirdre has consented to allow her formidable native battalions to be brought into play against the aliens. We are assembling an invasion fleet at Communal Conquest to ferry her mindworm troops across the sea to the Nessus canyon region to take on these Progenitors on their own turf. Our scientists have determined that psi-weaponry stands the best chance of getting through their somewhat unique armor.

                      But let us not delude ourselves. The task ahead is mammoth – we know that the aliens have superior weaponry – we think that their problem is lack of re-inforcements. So we will make raw numbers count. The entire economies of the axis factions will be focussing on the development and assembly of weapons and materiel, under Scott Allardyce’s chairmanship. We will also co-ordinate our scientific research efforts, each pursuing a different line and sharing the results. Singly we cannot hope to defeat this menace. Together we shall be unstoppable.


                      The summit had broken up somewhat in an uproar, with clear sides being taken, yet deep within each one of the faction leaders lay the realization that to stop Yang they had to confront and eliminate the aliens.

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

                      I keyed in the commands to activate Deirdre’s holodisc.

                      Scotty, I am dictating this from Gaia Revered.

                      In a few days I will be entering the rejuvenation tanks again, this time for a complete makeover, just as soon as Shannon Lindly reports from her stint in space. I need to be back at Velvetgrass Point to welcome her. She will take over the civil administration of the Stepdaughters of Gaia, and I’d greatly appreciate your giving her some mentoring. With the exception of Alphonse, Bambi, and the mindworm brigades, our Gaian military is almost completely assimilated into the Spartan military machine.

                      I’m wondering about changing the location of our Headquarters. Here at Gaia Revered would be a fine choice.


                      I briefly closed my eyes and remembered the fir clad mountain immediately to the south, cresting at just over 2400 meters. The head of the lake to the west being fed by the waterfalls from the 1800 meter hills just west of them. The waterfalls in turn draining the lake to the east and forming the river that would meander the 2000 kilometers to the ocean north of Assassins Redoubt. Yes, this would eventually make a wonderful location for a headquarters, but only after a substantial investment in infrastructure.

                      And CEO Morgan’s generous gesture will make its transformation possible. When I come out of the tanks we’ll make the change then.

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

                      Pravin Lal was more personal in his message:

                      Googlie: I know that you, Tazeem and Patel will run things efficiently in my absence. I expect to be gone for some four to six weeks. This proffered gift from Mwabudike – to have me enter the rejuvenation treatment center while Morgan Industries’ scientists seek to recreate my beloved Pria – I fear I will be in CEO Morgan’s debt if we are successful.

                      Googlie, you have been in love – indeed you are currently with the beautiful Anastasia. Forgive me if I seem too starry eyed at present, but I am recalling fondly my times with Pria. I am as nervous now as I was when first we met….


                      I recalled the time – I was present at a UN function – representing the Free Scotland Peacekeeping unit, and Dr. Lal was the featured speaker. I was unobtrusively observing him as the guests arrived.

                      He sat to one side of the head table, idly playing with a fork while the guests assembled. He was due to be the second speaker, and the topic was the likelihood of the Unity Passengers surviving the journey to the stars in sufficient numbers to have a serious attempt at colonizing another planet. He glanced at his notes again. Although the UN Geneva conference room had the latest in holovision technologies, allowing Pravin – and he alone – to read from a scrolling script before his eyes, and could recreate the Unity above the conference table in stunning 3Dholovision, he still preferred the old fashioned screen and projection equipment. It was over fifty years old then, but still reliable.

                      Then he looked up suddenly and stared across the room – I followed his gaze, and saw her enter the room.

                      She had an aura about her, a grace and composure that commanded attention. She walked between the tables, pausing by one to lay a hand on a friend’s shoulder, stopping at another and crouching to eye level to greet a wheelchair bound delegate.

                      Then his breathing quickened and his face flushed - she was coming to the head table.

                      Lal dropped the fork he was toying with to the table surface with a clatter, and stood up clumsily to acknowledge her presence. She approached and put out her hand.

                      I strained to hear the exchange.

                      “Dr. Lal, I presume. Pria Sharriff. Pleased to meet you.” She smiled.

                      Shyly, tongue tied and also at a loss for words themselves, he held out his hand,

                      “The pleasure is all mine,” he managed to stammer.

                      Their hands touched. The electricity between them was palpable, and I felt the hairs on the nape of my own neck stand up.

                      They looked into each others eyes.

                      They were in love.

                      But I know that you three will hold things together until I return – just remember…. While the Colonel can be an intimidating woman, you now represent the still largest faction on Chiron. Make sure that the UN voice is heard.

                      Good luck.


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

                      I played CEO Morgan’s next. He was all businesslike, as was to be expected.

                      Mwabudike Morgan rested his elbows on the conference table and steepled his fingers to his chin.

                      Yes, Allardyce, this is going well. Sure, there were interminable discussions around the ethics - as well as the effrontery – of attacking the Aliens, with several voices speaking out in favor of continued negotiations, but I am 100% behind Corazon on this one. We have a war to prosecute, against Yang, and if the Aliens were so foolish as to back the loser, so be it.

                      I have my landmass consolidated again, with Morgan Bank and Morgan Pharmaceuticals firmly back in our hands, and a massive rebuilding program going on in both. Deirdre is committed to me, witness her garrisoning each of our bases with a demon boil mindworm from Bambi’s Brigade. The Colonel advised us that the Alphonse mindworm brigade is being readied for an attack on the Alien’s homefront in Nessus Canyon. The Lady Skye has been more than obliging after my magnanimous gesture re the Unity fusion core proceeds. And really, it is no big deal. Sure, the credits would have come in handy to rush build Bank and Pharma back to their pre seizure status, but this deal with the Gaians is a long term investment.

                      As you prosecute the war, to the extent I can I will be paymaster – provided you can keep the environmental do-gooders off my back. The pursuit of energy comes with a price, and this Axis is uneasy to say the least at the convergence of wills for a common cause at the exclusion – temporarily – of discussing those differences we have. I am relying on you, Scott, to keep it this way for the duration.


                      Ah, Morgan. Ever the sentimentalist.

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

                      Then Corazon:

                      Googlie.

                      Just a word. Don’t play politics – you got burned once, with the Ashaandi mess. So stick to civilian administration.

                      And Scott, just for your ears and Anastasia….I was on the point of ordering her grandfather’s release when he was spirited away. We don’t know where – the security breaches left no clues, but we suspect Yang’s hand behind this.


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

                      Foreman Domai:

                      Representative Allardyce. We are newcomers to this game, and as such have most to lose. I fear that we cannot offer much by way of military contribution, but our bases are open and available as staging areas as needed.

                      But let me say by way of forewarning that I intend to use this opportunity to push our own agenda. At every opportunity we will be extolling the rights of the working class and calling on the faction leaders to exercise their authority in a caring and responsive manner. Just because we are locked in a war does not mean that we should neglect simple human rights.


                      Hmmm, I thought. That lad is going to be trouble.

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

                      Then finally, a short one that discomfited me somewhat….Aki Zeta-5

                      Ah, Allardyce, you who once was known as Omicron-One – I greet you.

                      Our small faction is swept into this war much against our will, as we are not a violent people. But to side with those known as
                      The Axis is the logical choice for me and my followers. We will be poor fighters, I fear. But we will bring a sense of rationality to the decision making process, and we are excellent administrators -–in fact I offer myself as an assistant to your administration in any way needed. We are not without skill.

                      Think it over


                      She’s another one we will have to watch.

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

                      With a heavy heart I fired up the last disc.

                      My lovely Anastasia shimmered before me.

                      Wolfie, darling, now don’t get mad. By the time you activate this I’ll be long gone, so just live with it.

                      I don’t want to be a distraction to your running the Axis civilian government, so I’m making myself scarce.

                      From the Colonel’s message it appears that my Grandfather has been spirited away to Yang’s cause (yes, and don’t ask how I can view your secure holovids).

                      I’m going to find him.

                      I’ve linked up with an old passing acquaintance of yours who has contacts in the Hive underground – Miles Cavenaugh, if you remember. We’re forming a deep probe team that will spring my grandfather free.

                      Take care, your Stazi loves you.


                      I sighed.

                      I racked my brains.

                      Who the hell was Miles Cavenaugh?

                      [This message has been edited by Googlie (edited June 07, 2000).]

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        oops - didn't realize that I had already posted the retrospective piece - I'll fill this blank in due course

                        G.


                        [This message has been edited by Googlie (edited June 08, 2000).]

                        Comment


                        • #13

                          Miriam Godwinson turned away from her computer and rubbed her eyes in fatigue. 
                          She supposed that she should obtain one of the new MMIs that had been developed
                          during her incarceration - but she'd never felt entirely comfortable with
                          augmentation of the body God had made for her, with artificial implants.


                          Perhaps I'm hopelessly obsolete, she thought,  but our
                          entire
                          Faith has had that same accusation leveled at it by our detractors
                          and most bitter enemies.  I choose to believe in myself, and God;
                          not Zahkarov and... Yang.



                          Instead, Miriam turned to look out the window of the modest office donated
                          for her use at Sparta Command.  The room was plain -  undecorated
                          save for a single crucifix hanging on the wall; indeed, it was appropriately...
                          Spartan.  But to Miriam, who'd spent the last century in a punishment
                          sphere, it was more comfort than she'd ever believed she'd obtain in her
                          remaining lifetime.


                          And the view outside was beautiful, for it looked down over a
                          splendid, rolling forest - a beautiful hybrid mixture of terrestial trees
                          and fungal stalks.  Something that Miriam's xenobiologists would've
                          sworn was impossible in the years when the Lord's Believers were establishing
                          their first bases.  But all things were possible with God.


                          Truly, this world is God's, Miriam thought.  Perhaps there
                          is more in common between Diedre's philosophy and mine than either of us
                          would have thought.


                          Once, I would've rejected that premise; but I have been  taught
                          a bitter lesson on the price for the sin of arrogance
                          .  Her salvation
                          and rescue had been obtained not by herself, but by God... and Corazon
                          Santiago.  She could never repay God for her physical and spiritual
                          salvation.  But I can at least help Corazon with whatever means
                          are still at my disposal, God willing.



                          An electronic chime announced the arrival of the visitor she'd been
                          expecting.  A man she hadn't seen in over a hundred years.


                          "Brother Joaquim!"  Miriam rose to greet her old friend.


                          "Sister Miriam," Joaquim smiled and returned his old mentor's embrace. 
                          Joaquim was one of the fortunate few of the Lord's Believers who'd remained
                          free when New Jerusalem fell, as he had been serving as their ambassador
                          to Pravin Lal at the time.  While Lal had been unwilling (and, truthfully,
                          unable) to intervene militarily, he had accepted the entire embassy
                          staff's plea for political asylum.  The fact that he'd obtained the
                          services of a dozen Talents was a bonous, of course.


                          "It's good to see you again, Sister.  When news of your release
                          reached us at UN Headquarters, we rejoiced at the fact that you were still
                          alive, and that God had returned you to us.  It's been so long...
                          but we never gave up the Faith that you taught us."


                          "Then God has been merciful to us both."  Miriam replied simply. 
                          And yet Joaquim was awed again by the diminuative woman before him. 
                          According to the reports and his reading between the lines of her own e-mail
                          sent to him a week previous, she'd spent an entire century screaming
                          in unbelieveable agony, humiliation, and futility before Yang's torturers. 
                          And now she said that God had been merciful to her?  Yet there
                          was no denying the sincerity of her words, and once again Joaquim was reminded
                          of the sheer charisma and strength of character in his teacher.  A
                          strength of will and faith that the mightiest telepath on Planet could
                          not claim to best.


                          Over the next few hours, Miriam listened to what Joaquim had to tell
                          her about the political and scientific progress on Planet while she'd been
                          in her punishment sphere, only occasionally interrupting to ask brief,
                          intelligent questions.  While no genius like Zakharov (but then, nobody
                          was), Miriam still had the keen mind and instinctual insights into social
                          psychology that had placed her on the Unity's officer staff, many, many
                          years ago.  And so most of her questions focused on the societal progress
                          of the human inhabitants of Planet, and the actions of their leaders. 
                          Questons that Joaquim was well-positioned to answer from his years of working
                          with Lal's staff.


                          "So... where do we go from here, Miriam?  There are at least a
                          thousand of our people scattered amongst the the Axis factions - we could
                          re-found a retreat if we wished; practically anywhere on Planet now with
                          drop pod supplies."  Joaqum asked.


                          "We will pray for guidance, of course," Miriam replied.  "Colonel
                          Santiago has also promised to turn over two of our former bases, liberated
                          from Yang.  May God bless her for her generosity."


                          Joaquim hesitated, then took a deep breath and asked a pointed question.


                          "Lal believes she means to rule Planet... do you fully trust Santiago?
                          "


                          "Yes," Miriam replied simply.  "Yang is... Yang may very well be
                          the AntiChrist.  And I have learned, to my shame, that it is not my
                          role to be humanity's champion and defender against him and his inhuman
                          allies.  Santiago is.  That much is obvious from 
                          in the purely secular perspective.  And the Spartans could not have
                          achieved what they have without God's favour - even if they haven't really
                          realized that last part themselves yet."  Miriam's mouth crooked in
                          a small smile of humour.


                          "Then how can we help her?  Our people are scattered, and the Legions
                          of the Faithful are no more.  We don't even have a base to call our
                          own, yet."  Joaquim asked, knowing that Miriam must have realized
                          this already.


                          "Moses also led his scattered people to a new homeland, with God's guidance. 
                          That will come to us in time.  But for now, I think we can help Corazon
                          best by being what we are now - a community of faith, yet scattered
                          amongst all the factions of Planet.  That represents an human information
                          network that can channel data and observations back here - a network whose
                          aggregate intuitive processing capability matches - no, exceeds
                          - the most sophisiticated supercomputers even today."  Miriam replied
                          with complete confidence.


                          "You're talking about a probe team network."  Joaquim realized. 
                          "But our people, while willing, are untrained."


                          "Yes," Miriam acknowledged.  "But they can learn.  And the
                          person I have in mind to teach them is very, very good.  In
                          fact, the best.  I can attest to his infiltration and evasion
                          capabilities through personal experience."

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Sparta Command

                            Miles Cavenaugh awoke to the insistent beeping of his commlink. He opened his eyes and stared suspiciously at it for a second or two, then checked the time.

                            “Yo,” he said, activating it.

                            “Miles, …Miles Cavenaugh. We need to meet.” The chirpy feminine voice said at the other end.

                            He glanced over to his commlink screen, but all he saw was static.

                            “You must have the wrong frequency,” he replied. “I’m Tod Linden. I used to know a Miles, but haven’t seen him for months.”

                            “Now, Miles,” the voice continued. “Don’t lie. Tod Linden is standing right next to me – I’ll put him on.”

                            “Miles, you old bastard. I heard that you were impersonating me.”

                            “Excuse me,” Tod replied, and broke the connection. Or thought he did. The static remained on his screen and the feminine voice returned.

                            “Miles. We do need to meet. Six this evening at The golden Gun bar. Be there.”

                            This time the commlink connection did cut.

                            ‘What the heck,’ he thought. ‘My cover is blown. But they didn’t threaten me – just want to meet. Well, what could be wrong with that?’

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

                            He went early, to survey the scene and to watch for them arriving.

                            He chose a corner seat, and sat sipping a synthfruit mix, watching the entrance, and psi-senses on full alert.

                            He’d scanned the room twice now, and sensed nothing extraordinary in the thought patterns of the patrons. Oh, everyone had something to hide, or that they felt guilty about, but no covert animosity towards him was detectable.

                            It was approaching six.

                            The door swung open, and he saw a threesome enter – Tod, whom he recognized immediately, a tallish auburn haired girl on one side, and on the other………. His heart leapt. Lisa Mayberry.

                            They looked over at his corner, and with an almost imperceptible nod of her head the auburn haired girl motioned upstairs, where they went. She seemed to be in control. Lisa smiled at him as they passed to the stairwell, a dazzling promise of things to come – maybe even a fond remembrance of things past. He got up and followed.

                            They entered a private room that had been reserved, and the tall girl closed the door behind them.

                            “Lis..” he began, but was swiftly cut off by the girl

                            “Quiet” she barked. He shut up.

                            She extracted a small hand held scanner from a pocket, and panned the room with it. As she pointed it to one of the glowlamps, the LED flashed. She pointed to the light, and Tod reached up and disconnected it. He examined the lamp, then pointed out a small flaw in the surface area, like a pinprick hole in the synthglass. He pulled a small shredder pistol from his belt, and fine tuned the dial, then laid the lamp on the floor and incinerated it.

                            They all heaved a sigh of relief.

                            The girl dialed another set of instructions, then placed the scanner on the bar counter at one side of the room, then turned to Miles, holding out a hand:

                            “Miles, pleased to meet you. I’m Anastasia Zakharov – yes, the Professor’s Granddaughter – and the others you know.”

                            Tod nodded to him, but Lisa came over and hugged him tightly. They whispered in each others’ ears, then disengaged themselves.

                            Just as he was about to reach out with a wisp of a mind probe, Anastasia interjected:

                            “And don’t try to exercise your psi-talents in this room – the scanner is not only a whitenoise emitter, but a psi-blocker too – you’d cripple yourself temporarily in the trying, and we need you 100% concentrating.”

                            Miles shrank back. True or false he didn’t know, but the bluff - if bluff it was – worked. He had no desire to try only to render himself catatonic.

                            Instead, he assumed the role of interrogator.

                            “Why was it so important that we meet?” he asked.

                            “Well, it’s a longish story,” Anastasia replied, “but here goes.

                            “Years ago, when the University faction was overrun by the Spartans, my grandfather, Academician Prokhor Zakharov, was captured and imprisoned by Colonel Santiago. Indeed many of us – including his own immediate family, thought him dead, as we had received communication to that effect from the Spartan authorities.

                            “However he is not dead, and was about to be released by Santiago as an earnest of her intentions to manage the Axis coalition in a more humane fashion, but was frustrated by his being sprung loose by unknown operatives, suspected of being in the employ of the Hive.

                            “I want to infiltrate the Hive homeland, meet with my grandfather, and bring him back here. Unofficially, of course. Even dear Scott Allardyce doesn’t know where I am – although he does know what I am going to do, as I have told him.

                            “And that’s where you come in. You were turned for a while, and must have made all sorts of contacts in the Hive underworld. I tracked Tod down from the records – he’d dropped out of society completely - , and he suggested that as you were impersonating him, it would be simple to just call Tod’s frequency and call your bluff.”

                            “And just where does Lisa fit in?”, Miles asked.

                            “She’ll request a routine training flight and we’ll be aboard, and she’ll drop us behind enemy lines.”

                            “And just how will we sneak aboard a Spartan penetrator?” Miles asked.

                            “Why, you will ‘persuade’ the guards that they are seeing a maintenance crew – that will get us to the aircraft. After she returns, Lisa can claim that you ‘mind-controlled’ her into the mission.”

                            Miles pondered. His contacts were all dormant, unvisited for some months. Kurt – where was he now? – and his woman…what was her name…ah, yes, Shauna.

                            “I’ll do it, but alone,” he said. “I don’t need amateurs with me, and it’s hardly the mission for one such as you.”

                            Anastasia visibly bristled.

                            “Oh yeah?” she asked.

                            “Yeah. What use would you be on a dangerous mission like this?” he replied.

                            Her reply floored him:

                            “I am of the Assassin caste, trained by the Circle of Ashaandi themselves.”

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                            • #15
                              Sparta Command Aerospace Complex, Off Duty Lounge

                              The pilots in Will’s squadron were drunk. They were loud and obnoxious and clearly intoxicated. But for that matter, so were most of the people in the room. The Off Duty Lounge was the one place in the complex where a squadron could relax and unwind in their few hours of down-time that weren’t spent sleeping.

                              Now that Axis troops were really beginning to mobilize, the place was crawling with pilots from every major faction. Morgan pilots were gambling in one corner, while Spartan officers arm wrestled in another. It seemed that every pilot that was currently stopping at Sparta Command was located in this very room, having an amazing time.

                              But Will’s thoughts could not escape the memory of Sharra. He had long given up hope that she would be found. He felt, for sure, that once the Free Drones joined the Axis, she would have found a way to get in touch with him. Still there had been nothing.

                              He had sent Commlink messages to every directory and government office in the tiny Industrial faction, but noone was registered under such a name. It was time he accepted the worst and that he would never see Sharra again.

                              Suddenly, an arm tapped him softly on the shoulder. He turned, his mind connecting him to impossible realities to see a strikingly beautiful women smiling at him. She had long brown hair and dark skin, but her lifeless eyes betrayed her cybernetic nature.

                              “Greetings,” she stated in her soft pleasant voice. Suddenly William found this strange women climbing onto his lap and wrapping her arms around his neck.

                              “Your physical stature and appearance indicates that your genes would be highly suitable for reproductive purposes. My name is Sybil Gamma Three and I would like you to be my mate. It will be necessary to mate multiple times, to ensure that fertilization occurs. Please come with me.” She grabbed his arm and began to lead him away from the bar.

                              “Woah!, Hold on a second here,” came Will’s startled response. His squad mates were all laughing hysterically as they observed the scene. “Look, I’m flattered really, but no thank you.”

                              The expression on the beautiful cyborgs face was more confused then disappointed. Suddenly a very drunk Brad arrived and put is arm casually around her.

                              “This gentlemen might not be up to it,” he said with a smile, “but I am completely at your disposal.”

                              “That will not be necessary,” she replied coldly to uproarious laughter from those watching the scene. William took the opportunity to slip out while he still could.

                              *********************************************

                              Sea Hive

                              Zakharov monitored the readings, oblivious to the screams of agony that filled the room. It was the third day of testing and Yang’s new weapon had been approved. Now, Zakharov busied himself with studying the long term affects of the weapon in order to better understand the Alien resonance field with which he was working. He wore a visually enhancing visor, enabling him to see the darkness of the laboratory and properly observe the resonance wave.

                              Suddenly, light came streaming into the room as the main door opened, causing a visual feedback that sent excruciating pain to the Provost’s optic nerves. He quickly removed the visor and threw it to the floor, cursing in Russian the foolish man who had opened the door.

                              “Computer, lights,” he bellowed as he quickly shut down the beam. He could only observe the resonance wave in the darkness and an essential part of the study was the accumulative effect over a consecutive period of time. Essentially, his entire day’s work had been ruined by someone’s carelessness. How unsurprising that the someone was Yang.

                              “How goes the study my good Provost? Any more thrilling discoveries yet?” The Chairman seemed delighted to have caught the old scientist off guard and having inflicted some small degree of pain.

                              “Unfortunately Chairman,” Zakharov replied, almost spitting the title, “Your failure to announce your presence before opening the door has ruined the entire’s day work.”

                              “Pity.” It was clear by Yang’s tone that he couldn’t care less. He had his weapon to use against the Axis, anything else would simply be a bonus. “Well, I shall have one of the drones remove your test subject and bring you a fresh one tomorrow.”

                              “No!” Zakharov’s emphatic response startled himself as much as it did Yang. Zakharov had never shown much concern for the well being of his test subjects in the past, and his sudden concern was unusual.

                              “It is necessary,” he explained, “for the subject to remain the same in order to properly complete the study. Changing subjects introduces too many random variables into the data, and makes it difficult to arrive at a definite conclusion.”

                              It was clear that Yang remained suspicious, even after the explanation. However, if he didn’t trust the professor completely, Yang was not willing to make a point of it just now.

                              “Very well Provost. You may keep your subject. I shall ensure that she receives proper medical attention for the duration of the experiments. Keep me informed,” and with that Yang exited the room and the door closed behind him.

                              Zakharov looked over at his test subject with regret. She had been a beautiful young women, long brown hair with beautifully dark skin and gorgeous blue eyes. She had refused to give in to the pain, to pass out and simply surrender. In that respect, she reminded him of his beloved Anastasia.

                              He approached her cautiously, her blue eyes staring at him with contempt. He had seen the hatred in the eyes of his subjects before, but it had never affected him like it did now.

                              “Shhh,” he whispered. “It will be okay. I promise.”

                              [This message has been edited by Argonaut (edited June 08, 2000).]
                              [This message has been edited by Argonaut (edited June 08, 2000).]
                              -Argo

                              "Work like you don't need money. Love like you've never been hurt. Dance like nobody's watching. Sing like nobody's listening."

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