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Published on September 28, 2009 By Brackard In AARs

A long, long time ago, I had wanted to try putting together the 'mother' of all AAR's.  The original intent had been to create an AAR down to an individual level and write from that perspective.  The final product came out a bit differently.  I know there aren't too many Gal Civ forum lurkers out there these days, but for those of you still out there, I hope you enjoy what I've put together.

I'll be releasing chapters over the next few weeks rather than spam the entire thing in one fell swoop.

Anyway, I hope you enjoy.

-B


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on Sep 28, 2009

Torian Chronicles

Tempting Fate

 

 

To his captors, he was known as prisoner number A56XSB.  They didn’t need to know his real name.  The branding on the inside of his right arm made sure everyone knew what he was.  He was a prisoner inside the Hellforge Prison Colony, one of the cruelest prison colonies located on Toria.  The prison was built with the sole purpose that its occupants suffer.  Prit was being moved to a new cellblock on one of the upper floors.  The heat was much more intense and was the reason the prison was given its name.

 

 The path through the compound was a concrete maze of checkpoints, catwalks, and cellblocks.  Prit stared at the empty, lost eyes of fellow prisoners as he shuffled along, his feet going only as fast as the restraints around his ankles would allow.  Prit found the entire trip quite fascinating.  Despite what the ape-like Drengin had done to him, Prit had never quite lost his sense of curiosity. 

 

As the small party was crossing a particularly high catwalk, Prit looked over the edge at the security room far below.  The shackles on his feet didn’t allow him very much freedom but he did his best to glimpse over the side.  His Drengin escort, a well cut Dren wearing the garb of the military elite, roughly shoved Prit back to the center of the catwalk.  Prit did his best to catch his balance, but the shackles prevented movement and Prit tripped, landing straight into the arms of the guard’s partner.  The surprised guard slammed back against the railing of the catwalk where he howled loudly.  Dealing with Torians was bad enough, but actually having to touch a Torian was an insult and defiling.  The second guard shoved Prit back into the center of the walkway where he teetered, trying to regain his balance.

 

Torian prisoners were given very little leniency in what was considered acceptable behavior.  Hellfire prisoners were given even less.  As Prit finally regained his balance, the first guard smiled a sly grin and pulled out his crackler.  The crackler was a  particularly nasty weapon that could brutally punish a prisoner without doing any lasting damage.  The Drengin seemed to favor their use.  With a nasty grin the first guard landed a blow across Prit’s face where he once again crashed into the other guard. 

 

Caught off guard trying to pull out his own hellish device, the second Drengin crashed back against the metal catwalk, where his knees hit the lower bar of the safety rail.  Totally unprepared, the Drengin lost his balance and slipped through the safety rail of the catwalk.  Dropping his weapon, the panicked Drengin grasped desperately for any kind of handhold only to complete his backwards summersault and flip off the catwalk. 

 

His comrade rushed to the side just in time to see the Drengin complete a three and a half flip dive onto into the security terminals far below.  The security room bust into confusion as Drengin yelled in startled incomprehension.  The short-circuiting machine could be heard as far as the catwalk above.  The Drengin turned to Prit with a lethal look in his eyes and a snarl on his lips. 

 

The Drengin slowly approached, anticipating his actions when the laser blast hit him from behind.  The look of determination turned briefly to surprise before the Drengin’s eyes rolled up and his body collapsed to the floor with a thud.  From his position on the floor of the catwalk, Prit glimpsed the security turret slowly rotate side to side before stopping.  He stayed still trying to calm his breathing.  He feared movement might trigger the security.  In the room below, Prit heard shouting and laser fire followed quickly by screams. 

 

Afterd the screams died down, all was silent.  Faint laser blasts could be heard in distant part of the complex.  Ever so slowly, Prit inched next to the Drengin and unstrapped the key ring from the guard’s belt.  He ever so slowly unlocked the shackles, grabbed the crackler, and inched his way to the archway below the turret.  He looked over the balcony and noted the Drengin there had been slaughtered.  Several Drengin looked to have been blasted and were strewn haphazardly over the area.  He slipped into the next cellblock.  Drengin had been murdered there as well.  All was silent.  Torian prisoners were at the bars trying to figure out what was going on.  It took a few minutes for Prit to find the release button.  A few minutes later, the cellblock had been freed.  In a little less than an hour, the entire colony had been freed. 

 

The Hellforge colony was located in a remote part of Toria, far away from Drengin population centers.  Loaded with weapons and supplies from the outpost, Prit led the survivors of the Hellforge Prison Colony deep into the wilderness in hopes that they would survive to see a new beginning.  For the first time in their lives, the Torians of the Hellforge Colony were allowed a taste of something they had long given up; hope.  Led by one Prit Scapth, they were free.

 

**

 

The door slid mostly open before screeching and grinding to a sudden halt.  A nearby monitor beeped noisily for a few moments before stopping.  Yugo Scrapth sighed as he squeezed through the opening and looked around.  There wasn’t much to see.  It was smaller than his old dorm room and included even less amenities.  Even the soak tub was smaller.  It seemed someone really just wanted him to suffer and school hadn’t been quite enough.  He tossed his pack onto the bed and explored a bit, opening and closing drawers, turning the faucet on and off, and looking out the window at Toria slowly spinning below. 

 

The lights in his room flickered and for the tenth time, Yugo wondered how this ship would make it through hyperspace in one piece.  Shrugging, the boy rummaged through his pack for the package his father had given him shortly before debarking.  The slightly shredded green and yellow congratulatory paper revealed a small datapad, perfect for keeping notes or a diary.  As he turned it on, there was a quick message from his father “Congratulations!  I know you worked hard, and you earned every right to be aboard that wonderful ship.  Make us proud!”

 

The boy smirked as he sat down at the small desk and listened to his father.  Mindlessly toying with his new toy, he thought about how he had gotten himself here.  There wasn’t a doubt his father had used influence to get him the assignment.  Yugo had, for all intensive purposes, failed astronomy, astro-physics, basic starship design, and most every other required course of the newly founded space academy.  The instructors allowed him to pass, but he comprehended very little, much less understood what he needed to know to get into space.  The Torian Space Program had actually created a position for him on the Dreamer – the Planet Quality Tracking Specialist.  His job was to push red, yellow, or green pins into a map to note the hospitability of planets they would encounter.

 

There wasn’t a doubt his father had high hopes for the family.  Yugo’s great-great grandfather had been a hero – the leader of a revolt from a prison colony generations ago.  His father hoped Yugo would become some sort of hero as well.  With the gift of hyperdrive, some Torians were jubilant with the thought of exploration, discovery, and peaceful coexistence with the other races.  Yugo thought they were all clinically insane.  The last time the Torians had met a space faring species, the result had ended in forced slavery for all of Toria’s meaningful history.  It wasn’t something many Torians took lightly but the potential progress from exploration was simply too great a tease for the decision makers in power.  Yugo sighed.  There wasn’t anything he could do about it.  The Torian armada, a colony ship, the flagship explorer to which he was assigned, and a mining ship, were ready to go.  He would be part of it one way or another.

 

His thoughts were interrupted by an ear-piercing shriek.  Yugo had just covered his ears when the intercom busted in, “Private Scrapth, you are wanted for kitchen duty, report immediately.”

 

Yugo sighed again.  If only his great-great grandfather could see him now.  He tossed his datapad onto the bed and made his way out of the room, his door screeching and grinding shut behind him.

 

**

 

War General Xavrs Slat made his way down the lonely corridor at a brisk pace.  The clip-clop of his boots on the marble floors echoed as he made his way to Her Grace’s ballroom.  Yes, he was late, but that wasn’t uncommon.  The General had not made his way to the top by neglecting his duties.  Frivolities and celebrations had their place of course, but not at the expense of reality.  There seemed to be far too much reality of late.  All too quickly, he came to the mahogany doors of the main ballroom.  He stood with his hand on the handle and took a deep breath.  As always, he had to be mindful and vigilant of everything.  Today was more important than most.  Today was the day of new beginnings.

 

He opened the door and entered the merriment of a celebration well into full swing.  Food was plentiful, music was in the air, and as always, Torians in various stages of undress were getting into or stepping out of the soak tubs.  The General glanced around, noting people of importance while ignoring the insignificant snobs that fed the Grace’s ego.  He noted the placement of his nondescript marines.  They were handpicked for functions such as this.  Able to protect the Grace with their life, they were handsome and just as able to carry intelligent and meaningful conversations.  More than a few tidbits of info had reached the General’s ears through nobles who’d had a bit too much to drink.  He would debrief these marines later.

 

He finally found his target and made his way through the throng.  The newly announced Director of Technology had been announced during the evening’s festivities.  Xavrs had known about the appointment some time before, but had decided to make the formal introductions tonight as protocol required.  As usual, it took forty-five minutes to make his way across the room.  The idle chit-chat and polite declines were an unfortunate, but necessary part of his job description.  As he approached the central soak tubs, a figure rose out to meet him.  It was Her Grace, the current leader of the free peoples of Toria.  Her Grace was not just a smart minded and charismatic woman; she was absolutely stunning as well.  She just might be one of the few women he would call “Your Grace” despite the position.  And she knew it.  Attendants approached and draped the traditional drying towels over her as she smiled sincerely at the General.

 

She sized the General up in his formal attire, nodding appreciatively.  “General. Dashing as always.”  She hesitated momentarily. “I have to admit, I didn’t expect to see you this evening.”

 

The General bowed respectfully.  “On a day like today, the day that the Torians make their history among the stars Your Grace?  I wouldn’t miss this for anything.” 

 

Her Grace knew how little the General enjoyed these parties.  She winked as she smiled at him seductively, “Well come then, there is time enough to sit, relax, soak a bit?  I know how much you enjoy a good soak.”  Any good General knows that favorable terrain can win the battle, and bad terrain will often lose it.  While he might really like the terrain with Her Grace in a soak, he knew he’d end up losing a battle.  He wasn’t sure which one, or even if losing the battle was a BAD thing, but he wasn’t about to find out.

 

“I’m sorry Your Grace, I must decline.  I simply came to celebrate a few minutes, wish you good luck, and congratulate the new Director.”  Understanding quickly washed across Her Grace’s features, “Oh, of course.  Well, come then, let me formally introduce you two.”

 

Her Grace hooked her arm through the General’s and the pair took a short walk though the high arches into an alcove on the outer edges of the ballroom.  A middle-aged Torian and two much younger girls were sitting in a tub, enjoying themselves in a more intimate way.  They took no notice of the uninvited guests.  The pair stood there a few moments before the General cleared his throat.  Upon seeing the pair, the Director blushed a deep purple.  “Your Grace!  I was just…”

 

“Director, come, I’d like you to meet General Slat.”  The Director embarrassingly rose out of the bath and quickly grabbed a towel provided by a nearby attendant.  The General bowed a formal greeting.  The Director awkwardly returned the gesture trying to satisfy his modesty and civility but failing at both.  The General looked over at Her Grace, “Please, don’t let our talk ruin your celebration.  I’ll only keep him for a minute.”  Her Grace smiled that perfect smile “If you change your mind about that soak, you know where I’m at.”  The General watched her saunter off.  He knew she was teasing him.  He turned his attention back to the task at hand, “Director, walk with me.”

 

The Director followed, a bit embarrassed at the congratulations on his new appointment from people he didn’t know.  He kept checking to make sure his towel was in place as he followed the General.  He wasn’t quite accustomed to the fact that power granted both responsibility and liberation.  As they exited the ballroom into the empty hallway, the General spun and turned his raptor eyes on the new Director.

 

“Director, I have a request.  I need your technology funding.  Her Grace thinks the universe is going to roll over based on her looks, her charm, and intelligence and is willing to gamble our people on it.  I happen to disagree.  And when I’m proven right, I want to have the ability to fight back.  I need your help in order to do it.”

 

The abruptness shocked the new Director.  When comprehension finally wound its way to his brain, he began to stutter, “But, I have plans for…, and you have funds for…, and…”

 

“Director, you have a litter do you not?  A couple girls in that litter, aged, what, 3, 6, 12 and 13 if not mistaken?”   The Director could only nod, slowly beginning to understand exactly how outmatched he was. 

“Do you know what those beast-like apes did to our little girls Director?”  The Director shook his head slowly.

 

The General handed over a datapad.  “These are a few records of what happened to some of the female Torian under THE regime.  This was confiscated from some security tapes during one of our liberations.  This is a bit old, but you’ll get the picture.  Remember Director, this is just a small sample.  This was done to OUR people for THOUSANDS of years.  THIS,” the General held up the datapad, “is what you are giving me funds to protect your litter against.  Think about it.  I’ll contact you soon.”  With that the General nodded and began walking back the way he had arrived.

 

The Director merely stood there, the faint sounds of the party making their way through the closed door.  This was not quite what he had expected on his first day on the job. 

 

As the General mentally checked off this item on his to do list, a sudden thought came to his mind and he turned back to the stunned Director.  “Oh, a quick word of advice Director.”  He waited to make sure he had the Director’s attention, “I suggest you not eat before you watch those accounts.”

 

**

 

Yugo sat at his station on the bridge, mindlessly fiddling with the programming of his datapad.  He had been commanded to pull a double shift for the fourth day in a row.  He’d spent his first shift washing dishes and serving meals.  He was in the middle of his second shift and was bored to tears.  The Captain didn’t actually entrust anything important to him.  Yugo thought the Captain simply wanted to make his life miserable.  So Yugo was content to while away the time unlocking the secrets of his datapad.  Their first real assignment was to investigate an asteroid field.  They were slowly making their way through when the ship shuddered violently.  Yugo looked up and waited for the ship to stop shaking.  Everyone on the bridge was silent as the captain scrambled wildly for the button to call Engineering.

 

“Status Report!”

 

“Sir, we’ve got a hull compromise in the crew quarters, I’m attempting to…

 

“We’re under attack!  BATTLE STATIONS!!”

 

The Captain hit the red alert button and blaring sirens and red lights flashed throughout the ship.  The bridge crew looked around uncertainly when the Commander spoke up.

 

“Uh, Captain, we…”

 

“I want a lock on that target.  Give me a 5 photon torpedo spread with maximum laser fire.  We are going to toast this turkey!  On my mark.”   The Captain held up his hand waiting for some internal signal.

 

“Captain, we were hit by…”

 

“NOW!!”

 

The bridge crew looked around expectantly.  Nothing happened.  A security officer in the back of the bridge had to hide a smile.

 

The Commander finally got in front of the Captain.  “If I may be direct…Sir.  One, we were ‘attacked’ by an asteroid, and two, we don’t have any weapons on this ship, we’re a survey ship….Sir.”

 

The captain looked up uncertainly, his hands searching for something to push.  “We are unprotected?”

 

“Yes Sir.”

 

“Abandon Ship!”  The Captain slammed his fist on the emergency beacon button and ran towards the corridors.  “Save yourself!”

 

An automated voice came up over the loudspeakers in a calm and refreshing voice.

 

“Your Captain has ordered all personnel to abandon ship.  All personnel are to make their way to the nearest escape pod.  Please make sure to buckle your seat belt.  No food or drinks are allowed inside the pod.  Please keep your hands and feet inside the pod at all times.  Thank you and have a nice day.  Your captain has ordered all personnel to abandon ship….”

 

A young wiry little girl who had been a prodigy in the helm simulations broke down and began to cry.  The Commander looked around at the pandemonium and began shouting orders.  Very few listened as sirens blared, people ran around, and the little girl sat at her post crying.

 

Yugo just shook his head.  He discreetly plugged his datapad into the ship’s computer system.  His datapad was much easier to interface with than the clunky operating system the Humans had sent to work the hyperdrive.  Yugo wasn’t good at astrophysics, nor astrology, physics, chemistry, or a long list of other things.  However, there was one thing in which he excelled.  He was a master at computers and their inner workings.  Quickly finding what he was looking for, Yugo performed a few commands and the computer responded.  Moments later, a voice responded over the bridge loudspeaker,  “Crew compartments 17 through 21 have been sealed.  Hull breach has been secured.”  The Commander looked around. The Captain was nowhere to be seen.  The Commander hailed Engineering.

 

“Good work Chief!”

 

There was a slight pause before “Uh, Sir, I was about to say the same thing.  We’ll get our engineers in there right away to patch the hole.”

 

The Commander looked around uncertainly when Yugo glanced up at the large view screen.  An asteroid twice the size of the Dreamer was bearing down on them.  “Uh, Commander?”  The Commander looked at Yugo, always irritated at Yugo’s useless interruptions.  Yugo nodded towards the screen.  The Commander cursed before shouting “Helm, get us out of the asteroid field, NOW!”

 

The young Torian girl looked up through her tear stained eyes and screamed covering her mouth with her hands.  The Commander, in an act of desperation, violently shoved the poor girl out of her seat and took the helm.  With a few quick commands, the ship slipped just past the rotating crater and made its way into safer space.

 

As the nonessential crew was dismissed from the bridge, Yugo made his way towards his room.  Only then did he realize he had another problem.  His room number was nineteen.

 

**

 

The security officer smiled as he made his way to his office.  The day was getting better and better.  The project he was watching was likely better than expected.  He had some security tapes to watch, and some computer logs to track down, but he fully suspected that his project was moving in the right direction.  Cool under pressure, smart, and humble, he just might be a fine addition to the fold.  The General would be pleased.

 

**

 

Torian society revolved around the concept of extended family.  Thousands of years of slavery, oppression, and death had necessitated the need for Torians to evolve from a single family unit to a multi family unit as the basic building blocks of society.  Due to the brutal lifestyle imposed by their oppressors, a twelve family den often lost multiple members of the family.  The den structure was arranged such that the losses allowed for minimal impact on the overall functioning of the family.  After freedom was regained, the Torians built upon the den structure.  Each den would associate with other dens, and the combined group of dens would work with other groups of dens, and on and on until an entire internetworked establishment had been created.  The Torian had so networked their society that if some plague had come and wiped out a quarter of the population, the overall societal lifestyle wouldn’t be touched.

 

There were a few exceptions to this rule.  The upper echelon of Torian society was controlled by a few irreplaceable members, members whose decisions would affect the lives of Torians for generations to come.  Director Tles was now one of those members. 

 

This morning, however; he was simply another Torian.  He was up early and walked into the large kitchen where a few of the girls were already awake.  They sat in a semicircle gazing out the full window into the sea.  The trio giggled at some private comment as a fish swam past.  It was a beautiful morning.  The sunlight penetrated to a perfect depth giving off the perfect blue hue you could only get from below the surface.  He decided to help out this week’s den mother and started up breakfast.  With his appointment, Tles and his den had been able to move to better quarters.  Their quarters now consisted of twenty-four under sea rooms with an additional fifteen ground based rooms, allowing the kids plenty of space to roam above water, below water, or outside.  Unlike his past quarters, the undersea view was gorgeous.  There wasn’t another dwelling in view, which was rare in the habitable parts of the sea, and he had Her Grace to thank for it. 

 

“Daddy, tell us the story about the apes leaving?”

 

Rslx paused his breakfast preparations and looked up.  The girls were still looking out the window.  “Tadpole, why would you want to hear that?”

 

“Pleeeeease?”

 

The rest of the girls joined in the chorus, “Pleeeeeeeease?”

 

Rslx just shook his head and gave in.

 

“Alrighty, you remember how the apes came to our planet.  And they were baaaaad.”  The girls giggled.  “They brought with them this magic gate and they made ALLL the Torians work for them to keep the gate going.  And ALL our people worked for the apes for a long, LOOOOONG time.  Your great-great-great-great-great-great-great-great-great-great-great-great-great-great-great-great grandparents worked for them.”  The girls giggled again. 

 

“It’s True!”  The girls laughed all the harder and Rslx sighed and continued.  “However, the longer the apes stayed, the more the Gate needed in order to keep working.  So the apes needed to do more work, and we needed to do more work.  Everyone needed to do more and more and more work to keep the Gate going.”

 

Rslx finished prepping the fish and began preparing the seaweed.   “And THEN guess what happened?!?”  The girls had all heard the story, in various incarnations before, and they all screamed in unison, “WHAT?”

 

“The apes started fighting!  Some apes wanted to stay and fix the gate.  Some apes wanted to go home!  The ones that wanted to fix the gate fought against the ones that wanted to go home.  And in the meantime, the gate started getting worse and worse and worse.  In the end, they all had to RUN to their spaceships or they would be stuck here,” Rslx paused for emphasis and in a whisper finished the story in its dramatic conclusion, “forever.”

 

The girls clapped and laughed.

 

“So the apes thought they had everything figured out, didn’t they.  But did they really?”

 

The girls chimed in, “NO!”

 

“Hmmm, then that must mean we had control right?”

 

The girls chimed in again, “NO!”

 

Rslx finished slicing the seaweed and spooned it onto the kids’ plates.  He mockingly asked the question he knew the girls wanted to hear, “Sooooo….if we weren’t in control, and the APES weren’t in control, well, who was in control?”

 

“THE GATE!!”

 

The girls all laughed for a minute and Rslx finished placing the breakfast plates down.  Very quietly and in a very serious tone, his eldest daughter spoke up, “So, daddy, the apes won’t hurt anyone else like they hurt us right?”

 

Rslx paused on his way back to the kitchen.  He paused in confusion.  Had he heard his daughter correctly? 

 

“What did you say tadpole?”

 

The girls turned around.  There was a moment of silence before Rslx dropped the bowl he was holding.  It hit the floor and shattered with a crash.

 

Rslx jumped up in a cold sweat, his thin sheets wrapped awkwardly around his legs.  He looked around quickly.  Nobody was there except his wife who stirred next to him.  The dark water outside his window indicated it was late or very early.  He wiped the sweat from his brow as he sat on the edge of the bed.  He picked up his watch and listened.  It was just past high-tide. His wife murmured something incomprehensible and he kissed her cheek whispering to her to go back to sleep.  Cursing the Drengin and the General both under his breath, he tucked his wife in and slipped out of the room.  It had been the same dream every night since reading the reports several nights before.  It seemed there was nothing he could do to get the images out of his head.

 

Now that he was up, he wondered what he should do.  He wouldn’t be going back to sleep.  It was going to be a busy day.  He might as well get to it.  As he headed down to take a quick soak, he stopped by the room his eldest daughters shared.  He leaned over and kissed their foreheads giving a mental sigh of relief.  As silly as the thought was, he was happy.

 

They still had their eyes.

 

on Sep 28, 2009

2

 

When Torians talk about numbers in terms of people, they don’t talk of it in terms of individuals.  At the smallest levels, they talk about percentages in relation to a den.  The number eleven tends to be the accepted number of measurement among the Torians.  A pair of Torian will generally have two litters in their lifetime, each litter consisting of three to five offspring.  An unrelated Torian will often come to live with a married pair, most of the time female, and will become an ‘aunt’ or ‘uncle’.  This floating Torian essentially becomes a third parent.  This familial unit averages out to be eleven individuals in a typical family.  A den consists of eleven such families, or roughly one hundred twenty people.

 

Every now and then, an oddball family will be forced out of a den, or leave of their own fruition.  Such was the case of the Letr family.  Frska was the only surviving child of the only litter of her parents.  It was odd enough to have a single litter, and even stranger to have a single surviving child.  Her brothers had died shortly after birth and the family was too small and simply didn’t fit in with the den they lived with.  Her parents spent a few years enduring the unheard sorrow of their den mates, and when Letr was old enough at the age of thirteen, the Letr family set out on their own.

 

The trio explored Old Toria, or what was left of it, and learned to live off the land.  They explored parts of Toria that hadn’t been touched in hundreds of years.  Every now and then, they would discover something noteworthy, and report it to the proper authorities, whether it be of scientific, social, or military importance.  All would pay them for their discovery, sometimes handsomely.  It was enough to allow them to resupply and be back on their way.

 

At the age of sixteen, Frska set off on her own.  Being alone was an odd sensation for a Torian.  They were a people used to being with others, whether it be eating, sleeping, or cleansing.  It was enough of a need that the law enforcement used short stints of solitary confinement to keep the populace in line.  Frska wasn’t an average Torian.  She didn’t just enjoy the solitude, she rejoiced in it. 

 

Frska loved going back in time and exploring.  She loved being the first to discover whatever there was to discover.  As she searched through old Drengin housing projects she’d found rotting clothes and food, furniture turning to dust, an occasional skeleton, and more than once, animals of various types who’d made the home their own.  On the rare occasion, she’d found something useful in these Drengin housing projects.  The true finds were discoveries such as discarded weapons or datapads.  Once, she’d found a fully armed Class V Drengin tank.  She’d been paid handsomely for that find.  What Frska had concluded was that when the apes had left Toria, they did just that.  They picked up and left.  And then Frska picked up the pieces of what was left.  There were very few Torians who knew more about the Dren than she did.

 

The sky was clear and the stars were out as Frska sat beside the fire. The rabbit she had caught was almost ready and Frska was trying to finish up her notes when she heard the sound.  Without missing a beat, she pulled out her Drengin assault rifle and trained it in the direction of the sound, somewhere in the darkness between a pair of buildings barely lit in the moonlight.  The assault rifle had been a wonderful find, and she’d had enough time to not only practice, but perfect her shot with the weapon.  The weapon itself was brutal, able to rip the flesh off bones with even a near miss.  The results of a clear hit were catastrophic.  There weren’t too many people who could match her proficiency.  She had just kneeled down to pull out a flare, when a voice came from the darkness, “Frska Letr?  I am unarmed, and I have something for you.”

 

Frska adjusted her aim slightly as she located the voice.  “Come.”

 

A figure approached out of the darkness.  His clothes were nondescript for outdoor gear, and he held a datapad in his hand.  When it was obvious that Frska wasn’t going to say anything else, he began.

 

“Your reputation precedes you Frska.  And we are in need of your services.  It’s all right there on this pad.”

 

“How did you find me?”

 

The man smiled, “We can’t be giving away any secrets until you agree to help us.”

 

Frska frowned.  “I don’t believe you’re in a position to be keeping secrets.”  She lined the man up in her sites.

 

“With all due respect Frska, we found you once.  If I don’t return, we will find you again.  And you won’t even know what hit you.  And by the time we finish with you, you will know firsthand what our ancestors experienced.  I don’t think either of us would like that.  Now take a look at what we have to offer.  There is no need to be rude.  A simple yes or no will suffice.  It’s all right here.”  The man held up his hand showing the pad, and then slowly put the pad on the ground.

 

Frska kept her sites on the man until he vanished into the darkness.  She cursed silently as she lowered her weapon and dropped to her knee to pick up the datapad.  Little did she know her life would never be the same.

 

**

 

General Slat sat at his desk with a datapad, taking notes as Sergeant Slai debriefed him over the previous evening’s happenings.  The Sergeant was Sergeant in name only.  He was one of many in the General’s private military.  The Sergeant had clearance to information that very, very few did.

 

“And then what Sergeant?”

 

“Well, she began talking about…”

 

A buzz from the intercom interrupted the conversation.  A pleasant voice quickly followed, “Someone is here to see you Sir; he doesn’t have an appointment, but says he must see you.  He….hey!  You can’t go in there, stop!  Now!  Ow!!  I said STOP!”  The door opened and the Director made one step inside before he was roughly shoved against the wall.  With a nearly cat like grace, the assistant had the Director’s arm behind him, and an Enforcer planted firmly into his back.

 

The General looked up with a surprised, and then amused expression.  “Director Tles, how nice of you to drop in.  I see you’ve met my assistant.”  The General nodded and the assistant grudgingly released the Director.  The General looked across the desk to the man seated there, “We’ll finish this conversation later.”  The man stood, saluted, and made his way to the door.  As the assistant shut the door, the General held his hand out to the now vacant chair.  “Have a seat Director.  What brings you here this fine morning?”

 

The Director glared as he retightened the yellow belt around his waist.  The gesture wasn’t lost on the General.  Yellow belts were only worn by the elite and the fact that the Director had been accosted by a rank and file member of the military could theoretically have grave consequences down the road.  “You get twenty percent of my funding for any research conducted by your group.  I don’t care what it is, but I get a full 100 percent access to your research, notes, finances, prototypes, security clearance, everything when it comes to what you’re doing.  If I want to know what your researchers ate for lunch, you will tell me.  An additional 30% will be spent on projects that you authorize, but will be conducted by my group.”  The Director slammed a datapad onto the General’s desk.  “You sign here and now, we choose your location, and we’ll begin constructing labs no later than next week. “ 

 

The General thumbed through the proposal, quickly scanning the important parts.  There wasn’t much need.  The Director was the typical trustworthy type Her Grace liked to surround herself with, but it never hurt to be too careful.  Besides, it allowed him to stall and get the Director all worked up.  Not only was it amusing, but decisions made in the heat of the moment tended to be ones that would be regretted later.  “Director, you know I can’t give you access to my projects.”

 

The Director leaned over the desk.  “I happen to know General that you need this more than I do.  After reading through your reports, whether fabricated or not, I believe that you are on some level correct on the direction Toria needs to go.  Without your help, I’m fairly sure I can lead a course that could mostly protect us.  But I’ll be DAMNED if I’m going to allow YOU to hang MY head on projects that I have no control over.  What happens if you blow up a city on some weapons project that could have been prevented had you the knowledge General?  Who gets the blame for that?  It’s my funding.  It’s my blame.  You want it?  You sign what I have here and now.  Otherwise, stop your whining and you’ll get what I think you need.  What’s it to be General?”

 

The General’s estimation of the Director rose a bit.  The Director had a bit of backbone.  The Director also understood the General’s position a bit too much.  There were times when people had to accept what was offered and make the most of it.  This could well be one of those times.

 

“Give me 25% for my personal research Director.”

 

The Director gently took the datapad from the General’s desk and instead of making the change, began walking for the door.

 

“Alright, alright.  I’ll sign.”

 

The Director turned and handed the pad back, the gloating sense of triumph almost oozing from his features.  The General reread the proposal one last time, and then signed it with a fingerprint.  The General moved quickly onto the next battle and pushed a button.  A six foot hologram of Toria appeared near the side of his desk and slowly began to rotate.  It showed Toria’s major population areas mostly along the coasts where Torians tended to congregate.  The vast central plains of Toria were still in ruins from generations before.  “Director, I want my labs right here.”  The General pointed to a remote area of the planet near the edge of the Trik-Trak mountain range.  The Director smiled, “Sorry general, plans have been approved for my facilities there.”  The Director paused before he continued, “I have to admit, your intelligence is good.”  The General couldn’t help but smile, a worthy adversary indeed.  Somewhere, the Director had learned of the rumor of Precursor artifacts there.  “Alright Director, build the labs as you see fit.”  The General had underestimated the Director and lost the battle in a rout.  It was a mistake he wouldn’t make again.

 

**

 

Lt. Yugo Scrapth sat aboard his new station on the Dreamer as they once again left dock.  In the few weeks that the Dreamer had been on its way, the Torian Navy had learned a thing or two about space travel that couldn’t be taught in simulations.  There were simply too many variables to simulate and too many unknowns to account for in the vastness of space.  It took a certain type of person to live in space. The first few weeks had proven interesting. 

 

The former Captain had a mutiny on his hands shortly after the asteroid incident.  The Commander turned Captain asked security to confine the former Captain to quarters the remainder of the trip.  Shortly thereafter, an energy anomaly was investigated.  The failure to turn off power per Yugo’s suggestion resulted in the death of one Torian, severe burns to two others, and the short circuiting of 70% of the ship’s computer systems.  Random electrical currents had used the Dreamer as a lightning rod.  It took several days to rewire the bad connections and reinitiate and reprogram the systems that had been fried.  The stress of life in space was too much for the helms girl.  She was escorted to her room where she spent the rest of the trip on sedatives.  She remained in the fetal position until she reached real ground.  She would need counseling the rest of her life.  In another situation, the Dreamer had discovered a new mineral source.  The mineral would crystallize any carbon based life source it touched.  The crew found this out after a scientist picked it up with his bare hands for a picture because it was so ‘cool’.  When all was said and done, the Dreamer had lost roughly thirty percent of its crew to death, injury, incompetence, or mental breakdown during its first tour.  It was a good thing the first tour had been a short one.

 

Fortunately, experience helps in all things, and the people in charge knew more of what they needed for the second tour.  “We’re clear of the docking bays Captain” cited the new helmsman, ironically enough, another wiry little girl.  “Orders?”

 

The Captain paused for a moment as he looked out at the stars…  “Second star to the right, straight on till…hmm….make that the third star.  NO!  The fourth star!!  Oh!  I know, that yellow star!  Right over there!  Head towards that one!”

 

Yugo sighed.  Maybe the Torians were simply destined to make the same mistake over and over again.

 

**

 

The crowded room slowly emptied and Director Tles sat down in his chair, exhausted. It had been the fourth meeting for the day and it was only early afternoon.  Nobody had mentioned this part of the job when his name had been suggested but progress had been made, and much quicker than anticipated.  Fortunately, he had some decent help.  “I’ve got your lunch ordered and on its way up.  You have another meeting in…”  The Torian put the time piece to her ear “45 minutes.”  The Director nodded his head, leaned back, and closed his eyes.

 

Doctor Tles was fairly amazed at how quickly life could return to some semblance of normalcy after generations of enslavement.  Four generations removed from thousands of years of pain, suffering, and death, the youth of Toria seemed to act as if nothing of the sort had ever happened.  Sure, to some it was burned into them through an imposed family history or through visits to Memory Temples, but to others, much like Her Grace, it was simply making the best of the current situation and living life to its fullest.  Dresda, the sweet young scientist who had jumped at the chance of being his personal assistant was one of the latter.

 

“Do you need anything else while I’m out Director?”  The Director shook his head.  “No, I’m good for now, but have those scheduling reports ready for me after this next meeting.  We need those out tonight if section 457B is going to get started tomorrow.”  She smiled sweetly, “Yes sir!” almost bouncing out of the room, making sure to shut the door on her way out.

 

The office was a temporary one, looking out over the mountain range that held mysteries unknown.  Some of the Director’s scouts had found Precursor artifacts near this location.  Nobody remembered if they’d always been there, or if the Drengin had brought them but they had the potential for a wealth of knowledge.  Most of Torian’s history had been lost.  Excerpts were found now and again, and seeing as Old Toria had been all but abandoned once freedom had been regained, there were bound to be other pieces that showed up now and again.  It would take years, but the history of Old Toria would eventually be reclaimed.

 

For now, construction had begun on a series of lab campuses.  The land he had been given to use was immense.  Billions upon billions of credits had been set aside for the construction of these campuses, and Her Grace had given him the manpower to boot.  He couldn’t even fathom how many pods he had under his control.  Hundreds?  Thousands?  Tens of thousands?  He didn’t know.  But the logistics of the operation were beyond comprehension.

 

As to the labs themselves, planning was still in progress.  Plans had been made for everything from an earthbound spaceport to build prototype spacecraft, to underground labs to handle research of the more sensitive items.  There were, of course, labs to handle research of everything in between, from advanced computer technologies to advanced entertainment.  The campus would also double as an institute for higher learning.  The future leaders of Toria, and any other worlds Torians might settle, would likely come from these campuses.

 

Seeing as to how work had progressed so far, the Director was curious as to when he’d see the General’s plans.  No work would be completed without his, or his authorized representative’s, approval.  He was pretty sure the General’s campus would double as a military installation or training ground, but wasn’t quite sure exactly what else the General had in mind.  The Director would find out soon enough.  There was plenty to do in the meantime.  There was a knock on the door and it opened.  “Ttwenty minutes before meeting time Director.  Here is your lunch, courtesy of the General.  He asked me to give you this.”  She handed over a datapad and sat down opposite the Director.

 

The Director smiled. “Speaking of the Drengin, the General’s plans.  Looks like I have some interesting reading tonight.  Dresda, I need a meeting with the General, the foreman, and construction crew leads for sections 117-124 first thing tomorrow morning.”  Dresda took quick notes and was out the door to make arrangements.  “Interesting reading indeed….”

 

**

 

Zyltra, the new Captain of the Dreamer stood in front of the staff in a small conference room aboard the ship.  A small hologram projector on the middle of the table remained black.  Yugo tried to stifle a yawn.  He’d seen all this before, and instead scanned the room for anybody that might be missing.  All the critical members seemed to be there; engineering, the tech team, most of the senior bridge staff, and also heads of a few other departments including security.  Yugo mentally shrugged.  He had only been invited because of his role to this point.  Yugo concentrated when he noted the Captain had already started speaking.

 

“….today, I know we’ve been keeping everyone in the dark in regards to our true mission, and today is the day we officially begin.”

 

“For the past few weeks, we’ve been surveying local anomalies for a variety of reasons.  We’ve been working out bugs in the ship itself, working out….”  The Captain paused to consider his words, “…issues with the staff, but most importantly, we’ve been waiting for our drones that were launched to come back with information.  The information has been received and analyzed by Lt. Scrapth, and the results are right here.”

 

The Captain hit a button, and Toria appeared in the center of the hologram, a foot high above the center of the table.  After a few moments, various other stars and orbiting planets began appearing in various positions around Toria.  Each one was shaded in a green to red.  A small depiction of the Dreamer appeared on the hologram.

 

“As everyone has surmised, since we ARE a survey ship, our main objective is to be the light bearers of the Torian race.  We have discerned a flight path that has the highest probability of returning a suitable planet to claim for Toria.  Assuming, of course, that somebody doesn’t already live there.”  The comment produced a few muted chuckles as he continued.  The holographic Dreamer began moving as the Captain began.  “We’ll begin here with the Kupe star system which has the highest likelihood with five orbiting bodies.  We move on through here to Antares with three bodies.  Past the Skowbo star, which returned nothing.  We believe the drone was malfunctioning or lost so we’ll need to pay special attention to the area.  However, it’s on the way to Tycho with a single body, through the Torus star system which returned nothing, and end up in Russom with two bodies.”

 

The Captain droned on about different threats, needed departmental coordination, and specifics about each of the different systems.  Yugo ignored them as he studied the map.  Something itched in the back of his head that something was wrong.  The more he looked the more confident he was that they were doing the route backwards.  He leaned forward to the map.  The holographic Dreamer continued in an endless loop along the projected path.  Yugo leaned forward and with his pointer finger touched the star of Russom.  He was almost disappointed when nothing happened.

 

As he looked up, he noted that the Captain had stopped speaking.  In fact, everyone was staring at him.  The security officer was giving him an extremely odd look, as if he were trying to read his mind.  The Captain was obviously irritated, “Finished playing now Lieutenant?”

 

Yugo turned purple with embarrassment, but since he was already in the spotlight, he took a deep breath and responded.  “Sir, I believe we are doing this course backwards.  I have a feeling we should head towards Russom first, and then come back in the reverse direction.”  Yugo pointed on the map the reverse course, not that anybody really needed him to do so.

 

“A feeling.”

 

“Yes Sir.”

 

“We have spent the last three days running calculations in regards to the course, based on the results of the drones that YOU programmed, and you want me to lead us to Russom based on a FEELING.”  A few members of the audience chuckled.

 

“I know it sounds silly Sir, but…”

 

“SILLY is not the word I’d be using Lieutenant!  Do you have anything else to add Lieutenant?  Let me correct that, anything USEFUL rather?”

 

Yugo opened his mouth to protest, but looked around at the sea of disbelievers.  Nobody would believe him.  He surely wouldn’t if he were in their shoes.  “No sir.”

 

“Fine Lieutenant. Thank you for wasting our time, you are dismissed.”

 

Yugo had never been more embarrassed in his life.  He knew this event would spread throughout the ship in no time, and he’d have yet another comment on his record.  He wouldn’t have cared had he a family name to live up to.  Sometimes, he had to live with what he felt regardless of the consequences.  As he passed the security officer, the man gave him the slightest of smiles and the most imperceptible of nods.  Yugo couldn’t figure out whether he imagined it or not as he left the room and the door closed behind him.

 

**

 

Frska shined her light down the dark tunnel.  The tunnel was dark, dry, and dusty.  She shone the light up on the ceiling to watch for pests.  It wasn’t any different than the other tunnels she’d been searching for the past week.  She’d received an assignment to search through a particular section of the Trik-Trak mountains for signs of Drengin or Torian settlements.  She’d thought the assignment insane, there wasn’t any way that Drengin OR Torians, even Torians running FROM Drengin, would set up camp here in this portion of the Trik-Trak.  And then she saw the money.  Frska wasn’t born in a monsoon litter.  She understood that with money came risk.  She was looking for something important.  What?  She didn’t know.  Her employer wasn’t talking either.  Actually, he wasn’t talking at all.  Her instructions simply stated that when she found something, to hit the appropriate button on the datapad, and he’d be there.  So she’d been searching through various natural caves, and valleys, and mountainsides throughout the Trik-Trak.

 

This cave went a bit deeper into the mountains than past caves, it sloped down quite severely at one point and became a bit cooler.  Frska put her beam on high and continued forward when her boot hit a rock.  She pointed down and was startled to find that it wasn’t a rock. It was a partially buried skull, a Drengin skull.  Frska shone the light all around.  She found the rest of the body, or what was left of it, ten feet away.  A hole the size of a large bird had been blasted through the Drengin’s rib cage.  The hole was clean.  Frska mused that it had to have been some kind of extremely powerful energy….something.  Weapon?  Accident?  Frska wasn’t sure.  She pulled out her side arm, what the Drengin had called a Sureshot.  Frska hated what the Drengin had done, but she definitely respected their ability to produce efficient weaponry.  She’d take a Drengin weapon over a Torian weapon any day.  She checked the ammo, released the safety, and moved forward down the corridor.  She knew it was silly, but it made her feel a bit less nervous.

 

The passage finally opened up into a large chamber.  Frska stopped at the entrance and cautiously panned the area with her light.  What she saw took her breath away.  Frska was used to explorations, used to the unknown, but the wave of nervous fear was a new sensation for her.  She stepped back into the tunnel to regain her composure.  This was just another exploration.  Outside of the beating of her heart, she couldn’t hear anything.  She didn’t see anything moving either.  She simply had to overcome her fear and get on with it.  A few minutes of a chant her father had taught her and a bit of deep breathing brought her back to her normal self.  Having overcome her temporary lapse of self-control, she once again moved into the chamber to look around.

 

Skeletons littered the ground in various poses.  All looked to have died unpleasantly as far as Frska could tell.  Limbs were missing, or found long distances away and large holes were found in existing skeletons.  Some of the Drengin had been armed.  Weapons were scattered throughout the cave.  Marks along the back of the cave still showed scorch marks of some kind of energy weapon.  Whatever had attacked either missed a few times, or had simply blown through the target and into the back of the cave.  Some kind of what she assumed to be droid or robot lay motionless on the ground.  It seemed to be in very bad shape at best.  Frska shuddered. 

 

Further into the large cavern she discovered a base of operations of sorts, an old computer terminal, old military rations, rotted sleeping bags, a few spot lights, a generator, and other various odds and ends. Frska shone her light around, nobody would mind if she turned on the lights, hopefully.  She flipped the switch.  Nothing happened.  She hadn’t expected it too, but she could always hope.  Balancing the light between her legs, Lskra toyed with the generator.  It seemed to be fueled by some kind of fuel cell.  She looked around, and found an extra that had been kicked away during some action.  She pulled it over and opened it.  All the markers showed green, which she assumed was a good thing.  She pressed the buttons on the generator until one manually kicked out the dead fuel cell.  She put the new one in and hit the only obvious button.  It started immediately and the entire cavern complex suddenly shone in a bright white light.

 

The computer terminal, the cave entrance, the skeletons and the debris, all paled in comparison to what she found on the front wall.  From ceiling to floor, from one wall to the other, was a large metallic surface.  She’d never seen anything like it.  The entire metal surface looked perfectly smooth.  Frska approached the wall and went to touch it, but thought better of it.  This, thing, whatever it was, likely had something to do with the results here.  Frska shuddered again.  She didn’t want any part of it.  She felt like someone, or something was watching her.  She’d do what she needed and get out.  She moved over to the computer terminal to turn it on, but it was missing the top half.  Frska smiled inwardly as she noted that getting into the computer would be easy enough anyway.  She located the data banks, and with some difficulty, removed them and slipped those into her pack.  She didn’t know if they’d be worth anything, but she knew better than to leave anything of worth behind.  As she finished, she looked around for anything obvious of worth she might have missed.  It was then that she remembered her contact.

 

She quickly pulled out her pad and hit the button.  Nothing happened. Frska pushed it again.  She paced back and forth nervously, wanting to leave the entire place behind.  She jumped as a voice buzzed over the datapad.  It had been so silent in the chamber that noise seemed like a violation of a sacred sanctuary, like it would alert someone or something of her presence.  “Yes Lskra?  You found something?”

 

Lskra paused momentarily, “I’ve found…something alright.  I’m in some kind of underground cavern, and found a bunch of Drengin who died of some unnatural causes, rather unpleasantly by the look of it, not that I really care and all but-“

 

“Get on with it Lskra, I’m a busy man.”

 

“But this cavern looked to be some kind of research center maybe, or excavation site?.  One wall is made of an entire metal plate.  It goes from ceiling to floor, wall to wall.  If I don’t miss my guess, I’m assuming that something is buried here, and it’s big.  Really, really, really big.”

 

There was a pause, “Forward the coordinates of your find Lskra.  I will have someone in the area shortly to assist.”

 

The late afternoon sun warmed Lskra’s face while she waited for whoever ‘he’ was.  Trying to keep from being bored, she pulled out the computer databanks and attempted to access the files by connecting it to her datapad.  Hundreds of years in a dry environment didn’t seem to make any difference to the Drengin computer banks.  Lskra was able to open the file with minimum difficulty.  However, the file itself seemed to be corrupted.  It contained pages and pages of symbols and hash marks, and incomprehensible jumble.  Lskra tried various common debugging utilities she always kept on her pad, but none had any success.  It was then she saw the dust cloud.  Pulling out her binoculars, she saw a single van heading towards her.  It was a prisoner van the Drengin used to round up additional ‘volunteers’ to projects they were working.  She tapped the Drengin Sureshot on her thigh.  She had one friend shecould always count on.

 

She met the van at the bottom of the cliff.  The entrance to the cave was 200 feet above them at a nearly vertical climb.  Lskra had secured several lines for her employers.  There were four visitors in total, all in loose fitting dark blue uniforms, black belts, and black boots.  The apparent leader came before her, looked up at the lines, and looked back at Lskra.  “Let’s go.”

 

Lskra stood where she was.  “Who ARE you guys?”

 

“Dr. Tles, Director of Technology, now let’s go.”

 

Lskra stood a moment uncertainly, then grabbed the rope and began climbing up.  The Director followed on the adjacent line, followed by two of the men.  Lskra flipped on her light as she descended into the darkness, followed closely by her employers.  It was a relatively long trek, taking ten minutes through the roughly carved tunnel.  Having been through it once already, Lskra had a much easier time. She would stop from time to time to allow here employers to catch up, or pick themselves up.  It didn’t hurt that she had the light either.  They finally reached the cavern where Lskra confidently made her way over to the generator and started it up.

 

She squinted as her eyes adjusted to the now light filled room.  The men stopped in their tracks, gazing at the monstrous metal sheet buried in the seemingly solid rock wall.  The Director creeped forward to the wall, not quite touching it.  “Amazing…”  The other two approached him, and flanked either side.  One went to touch it when the Director pulled his arm back, “Not yet, not yet.”

 

“I assume this is what you were looking for?”  The three jumped having totally forgotten about Lskra who was back near the wall, patiently watching them.  “Not quite, but this is better, much, much better.  But this poses a problem Lskra.”  The two associates began pulling out the standard Torian Peacekeeper sidearm.  Lskra quickly pulled the SureShot off her thigh holster and aimed it at the Director.

“I’m sorry Lskra, nobody can be allowed to know this location.  We need to do brain probe, it won’t hurt too much, and then a brain wipe, so you don’t remember anything.  The alternative Lskra, is for us to shoot you and hope you live so that we can do the same.”

 

Lskra assessed the situation.  She could get one of them before they shot her, but the odds were against her, unless… “Alright, alright, I understand.  I’m putting my weapon down.”  She slowly lowered the weapon and the henchmen did the same.  As she got closer to the ground, she dropped and fired.  The henchmen ducked at the perceived shot.  But Lskra hadn’t fired at her employers.  The generator exploded showering the cavern with pieces of metal.  Milliseconds later, the lights exploded from an overload, blowing out the bulbs and spraying sparks intensely in front of the lamps.  A few lingering sparks trailed downward and then fizzled out, tossing the cavern into a pitch black.  One of the men groaned in pain before the man in charge cried out, “Damn you!  Find her!  Alive or Dead, she can’t make it out of here!”

 

Lskra knew where the exit was, she also had the only light.  She heard a shot fire within the cavern and heard the Director shout.  “Stop you idiot!  You’re going to shoot one of us!”  She felt her way along the wall, slipping out of the cavern slowly and carefully by touch, doing her best to keep her breathing calm and her steps silent.  The men’s inability to find her location was the only way she was going to live.  She followed the wall for a few minutes, waiting for it to turn.  As soon as she made her way around the turn, she flipped on her light and quickly made her way to the exit.  The sun was just setting over the horizon as she exited the cave.  As she surveyed her surroundings, a bullet whizzed by her right arm.  Lskra scanned the area and found the man taking cover behind the truck.  A bullet hit the edge of the ledge and Lskra quickly dropped down.  Finding her weapon ready, she rolled, aimed and fired.  This guy had no idea the power behind the Sureshot.  The shot hit the van door, removed it from its base sending glass in all directions, and hit the man.  When the man and door stopped moving, the body was barely recognizable.

 

Lskra holstered her weapon and pulled out her hunting knife.  While looking back into the cave,  Lskra quickly cut one of the ropes.  Tossing it down to the bottom, she sheathed her knife and rappelled down the other line.  As she landed, she stepped back and looked up.  One good shot from the Sureshot and the entire ledge collapsed temporarily trapping the Director and his goons inside the cave.  Her work done for the moment, Lskra slipped behind the wheel of the van.  The keys were still in the ignition.  She started the van, tossed it into reverse, turned the van around and floored it.  Rocks and gravel spit out behind the van as she tore off towards the forgotten cities of Old Toria.  She needed a place to hide.  She was officially on the run.

 

on Sep 29, 2009

Excellent beginning... Keep it on!

on Sep 29, 2009

3

 

 

Nearly 6,500 pods had volunteered for the Mission Alpha exploration project.  It was a mere drop of the Torian population.  They were volunteer pods who would risk their lives for a new beginning on another planet.  There were no guarantees where they would end up, but enough Torians craved adventure, were unhappy on Toria itself, or were dragged along that a date was set.  One million Torians would board a single ship.  The numbers nearly defied reality.  The ship alone was absolutely enormous, but didn’t have nearly enough room for an active populace.  The only way to move people in that kind of numbers was in sleeping chambers.  A relatively small handful of Torians would handle the ship while the majority slept in a hibernating sleep.  Upon finding a suitable landing site, the ship would land, be dismantled, and then transformed into a new beginning for millions of Torians.

 

The ship was ready, the volunteers were ready, but the destination was still unknown.  Her Grace stood inside an enclosed balcony, protected from millions upon millions of tons of seawater by a thin protective shield.  “Your Grace, we are wasting time, we can send the ship to Toria IV, and build another ship in the meantime.”

 

Her Grace sighed and looked over at the minister, reiterating her position for the third time.  “No minister, I am sending out the colony ship as a second scout ship.  If they don’t find something in a reasonable amount of time, we can always bring them back to settle at Toria IV.  We aren’t in a rush, and I’d rather take the chance they land on some place fertile, and have others want to do the same, rather than send our ships out to habitable rocks, and be forced to implement a lottery system to determine who goes and who stays to the next rock.”

 

“Are you listening to me Your Grace?  Our reserves are quickly dwindling.  At the current rate, we will have to cut funding to nearly every program we have! 

 

Her Grace shifted in her revealing evening gown, “Minister, do you actually pay attention when I’m talking?  Have you seen exactly how much progress we’ve made these last few months?  Before you know it, we will be perfectly fine, and all this worrying will be for nothing.”

 

The minister frowned and was about to comment when one of Her Grace’s attendants came rushing in.  “They’ve found one Your Grace!  They’ve found one!  Come quickly.”  Her Grace smiled in triumph.  “As I said Minister, nothing to worry about, let’s see what we’ve found.”

 

The General paced back and forth in Her Grace’s formal waiting room.  The information he’d received regarding his project had mentioned the location of a suitable planet.  But he had to convince Her Grace in regards to the location without losing his secret, and with enough evidence to make it sound legitimate.  In reality, all he had received was the name of the system.  That was it.  Nothing else was received in the communication.  No backup, no comments, nothing – just the name of a system.  This was a more than a bit unusual.  But this contact was the best.  He had double duty aboard the Dreamer, and it would be foolish not to act upon the information.  He had to assume that only one thing was warranted.  As further scenarios played out in his mind, the door opened and Her Grace emerged, followed closely by the Minster of the Interior.

 

The General groaned inwardly.  The General could usually persuade Her Grace on a one to one basis, but Minister Menlka was a very stubborn and bright Torian, more so than most.  The General  wasn’t sure he would be able to convince both here and now.  He began to stall.  “Your Grace, I thank you for meeting me at this time of night.  I have just received information that I thought to bring you personally.”

 

Her Grace smiled, “But General, no time of night is too late for your visits, you know that.”

 

The Minister frowned.  The flirtations of Her Grace and the General flooded the court.  Nobody knew if any of the rumors were true, but the rumors were continuous.  Not that anyone would have issues with courting the General, he was extremely powerful, and handsome besides.  But having the ear of Her Grace made many jealous, including the Minster.  Breaking the unseen bond between the two, the Minister blurted in, “So what information do you have General?”

 

The General glanced to Menlka who stood there with a scowl on his face, and a sudden thought came to his head, something so outrageous that it might actually work.   “You know My Grace, I have just ridden in from the construction,” the General backed up to show his dusty field uniform, “and I was really hoping for a soak before telling you the news…”

 

A sparkle danced in Her Grace’s eyes for just a moment, “Why General, I don’t believe you’ve EVER accepted one of my invitations.  I would be delighted if you joined me.”  The anticipation in her voice was almost palatable.  “Won’t you join us Minister?”  The Minister was about to reply when he noted the expression on the General’s face.  The Minister was a powerful and resourceful man himself.  He understood the unseen rules of the court better than most.  He found the General to be a fair man, but didn’t always like the way he played, nor did he trust him.  The minister understood that something important was happening tonight.  It was the first time he’d seen the General, or anyone for that matter, take the initiative in regards to Her Grace.  The Minister hesitated slightly before deciding that this might not be the time to test the General.  “I’m sorry Your Grace, I’m afraid I have other commitments.  I will speak with you in the morning in regards to this matter?”

 

“Why of course Minister, arrange it with my attendant on the way out.”  Her Grace led the Minister to the door and shut it.  As soon as the door shut, the General felt more than saw her eyes on him.  The nightgown seemed to reveal even more than it normally should as she slowly made her way to him.  For the first time, he felt he knew what it felt like to be the prey.  She hooked her arm in his and almost whispered in his ear, “Shall we go soak General?” 

 

“I would like nothing better Your Grace.”

 

A few minutes later found the pair in a private soaking tub used mostly by Her Grace, and whatever lucky soul Her Grace happened to be entertaining that evening.  Tonight, it was the General.  Drying towels were placed on a rack close by.  Attendants weren’t requested or required in the inner chambers at this time of night.  The General lay his head back against the cushion placed there for comfort as the boiling water washed away days of dirt and grime.  It would have had completely relaxed him had Her Grace not been sitting next to him, her head inches beside his, her hand tracing little circles on the outside of his leg under the water.  After a few minutes of relaxing and silence, she turned her head towards his ear and whispered just over the noise of the water.  “So what’s this news General?”

 

 The General didn’t bother opening his eyes, or even moving.  His willpower was focused on the job at hand, not on the job that the current course of events was seeking.

 

“I’ve heard from the Dreamer Your Grace.  I’ve got a system for our Colony Ship.”  In the current circumstances, he felt less was more.

 

Her Grace stopped momentarily to process the news before continuing her seduction.  “What have you discovered General?  I have heard nothing.  If the Dreamer had found something, I would know.”  The General opened his eyes and turned his head.  Her Grace’s beautiful face showed confidence.  He gazed into her eyes, basking in the glory of her beauty.  He had gained more power around the court by resisting her charms than anyone else had by falling for her.  Tonight was a huge gamble.  It was the only way he could think of to get the project moving on such short notice, for the future of Toria.

 

Inches from her lips, he swallowed, “Do you trust me Your Grace?”

 

Her eyes gleamed with desire, “With everything my love.”

 

The General dropped his forehead to hers to cover his eyes.  There was a price to pay for using the ones you loved.  He didn’t have a choice but to hurt her.  Through the constricting of his throat, he managed to whisper, “If you really trust me, send your colony ship to Russom Your Grace.”  With his remaining reserves of will, the General quickly pushed away from her, and stepped out of the tub.  A stunned Grace watched as the General quickly grabbed a drying towel, and wordlessly slipped quietly out of her chambers.

 

An attendant entered the soaking room hours later, fully prepared to make the room up and prepare it for the following day’s usage.  She was brought up short when she found Her Grace sitting in the corner staring at the opposite wall.  Her Grace made no movement, and the attendant quickly rushed to her side, fearing that Her Grace had been injured, or worse.

 

The attendant bent down and hesitantly placed her hand on Her Grace’s shoulder, “Your Grace?  Are you ok?”  Her Grace stared into space for a few moments before responding, looking up into her advisor’s eyes.  “Yes, just tired.  That’s all.”  Her attendant frowned.  All her attendants knew her well enough to read her body.  “Come Your Grace, it is well past the tide, let me help you get ready for bed.”  With a grunt, the attendant pulled Her Grace to her feet, and led her the short way to her bedroom.  The attendant sat her Grace in her chair, and began to oil her back.  “Now tell me, what troubles you My Grace?”  Her Grace looked up into the mirror, into the reflection of one of her attendants, friends, and advisors.  She was one that Her Grace had trusted since she’d inherited the post years before.  Her Grace’s eyes watered as she smiled a forced smile.  “You know the games we play, that there’s always something vested in the play?”  Her attendant only nodded and listened.  “You never think it’s going to be you.  I’ve played this game for far too long, I knew I’d never come out on the wrong side.  It seems I was mistaken.”  A tear rolled down Her Grace’s cheek.

 

The attendant continued her ministrations as she talked, “The General, your Grace?” Her Grace nodded, closed her eyes and enjoyed the feeling of her companion and friend.  “We both know he has Toria’s best interests at heart Your Grace.”

 

Her Grace looked up, staring into her friend’s eyes.  She sighed as she closed her eyes and laid her head back on the chair.  “I just wonder what his vision of the New Toria looks like, and where exactly do we fit in it?”  She wiped a tear away before continuing, her voice regaining some of its authority, determination, and even anger.  “I want Mission Alpha on its way to Russom as soon as possible.  Any inquiries can come directly to me.”  The attendant finished her ministrations and led Her Grace to the bed where she covered Her Grace up, and turned down the lights.  As she slipped out of the room, the attendant turned back and whispered, “It will be done at once My Grace.”

 

**

 

The General cringed as the screech began, the signal that he had an incoming message.  He picked up and listened to his clock.  It was 2 hours past the tide, way too early for anything ordinary to be happening.  For the briefest of moments, he wondered if it were Her Grace, but hit the console without pondering it in detail, “Slat here.” 

 

“General. I’ve got a Priority X and need approval for a squad and a drophsip!”  The General opened his eyes, curiosity piqued.  If it was anyone else but Slai, he might have questioned the request.  The General found it difficult to trust people, but those he did he would trust with everything he had.  If a squad was needed, a squad he would get.   Questions in a Priority X got people killed.  “Approved.  Good luck Sergeant.”

 

Two hours later, Sergeant Slai laid in wait with the squad under his command.  These men had been handpicked over time, tested, and trained to the best of Torian ability.  They were the best at what they did, and loyal to the extreme.  These men understood they were part of the true power behind Toria.  For now, their job was simply to wait.  The Corporal buzzed into his earpiece, “I’ve got movement Sir, 400 meters to the northeast, looks like the target is running back alley behind the pits heading your way just west of your position.  Looks like she’s being chased by five, no six men Sergeant.”  The Sergeant snapped his finger for attention.  With a quick series of gestures, the squad moved wordlessly to a better position.  He wasn’t worried about being seen.  The black and green camouflage the Torians wore made them next to invisible in the night.  Finding a suitable location near where she should be coming, the Sergeant stopped the squad and they quickly found new positions.  Waiting was always the hardest part of these assignments.  “Sir, I’ve got visual, she’s just jumped the fence.”  Shots were fired and the Sergeant heard voices in the distance, “Get her!  Get her!  She went that way!”

 

“Get Ready Sergeant, twenty meters, fifteen meters….”  The Sergeant could hear the footsteps getting closer at a full sprint.  They were closer… and closer...  The Sergeant stepped out in front of the sprinting figure.  The figure collided sending the pair sprawling into a tangled heap in the wet grass.  Seconds later several men came charging into the moonlight towards them directly in between the slave pits in the street turned field.  They were met with a hail of gunfire by the Sergeant’s men.  Hidden behind corners, in bushes, nooks, and crannies around the abandoned slave quarters, the squad shred the pursuers as they stepped out of the dark and into the moonlight.  Four men dropped instantly in the initial volley.  The fifth tried to retreat to safety behind the wall but was taken down before being able to turn around.  The sixth man was nowhere to be seen.  The exercise lasted no more than thirty seconds. 

 

The sergeant struggled with the young girl trying to pin her scratching clawing hands.   His men had mostly surrounded them now in a defensive circle.  “LSKRA!  It’s me!”  The panicked Torian girl struggled more before grabbing his arm and biting.  The Sergeant screamed eliciting a chuckle from his men as they kept watch for the final assailant.  The Sergeant wasn’t amused.  He slapped the young girl, stunning her momentarily.  They were in hostile territory and he didn’t have time for protocol.  “Lskra, It’s me.  We’ve got to move, now!  Let’s go!”  Lskra stopped struggling; trying to comprehend exactly what was going on.  “You two!  Take her and move!  Now!  Blowfish, we’ve got the package, meet us at the rendezvous ASAP!”

 

Minutes later, Lskra’s head rested on Slai’s shoulder as the dropship rumbled across Old Toria.  Exhaustion, stress, panic, and fear had finally left her, leaving her empty and hollow.  Her voice was barely audible over the roar of the engines.  “I didn’t know who else to turn to.  It has been so long, and we left the den, and I didn’t know if you remembered me, and...”

 

“Shhh, you’re safe for now.”

 

Lskra was quiet for a moment, her eyes closed.  “Have you heard from my parents?”

 

“Not yet, now relax.”

 

“They aren’t going to make it are they.”

 

“Nobody knows where they are, now try to relax.”

 

Lskra snuggled up against the Sergeant.  “Thank you.”  She paused for just a second, “Sorry about your arm.”

 

The Sergeant put an arm protectively around the young girl.  “It’s ok, just relax…”

 

Shortly after low tide, several hours later, General Slat entered a small windowless room.  It was painted a strict white and was lit by a single fluorescent light overhead.  Outside the mirror on the opposite wall, the room was featureless.  Lskra slept fitfully on a cot that had been brought in, her arms wrapped protectively around her backpack.  The Sergeant rested in a fold-up chair, a Peacekeeper at the ready in his lap.  At the General’s entrance, the Sergeant immediately came to attention and saluted.  The General returned the salute and looked at Lskra who stirred, realizing something was happening.  As she groggily sat up, the General took a double take back at the Sergeant. 

 

“So what the hell happened to you?”

 

“Sir?”

 

“Have you seen your face?”   The Sergeant frowned and stepped over to the mirror.  His face had multiple scratches across it and his eye was slightly swollen and slowly turning darker shades of brown and black.  The Sergeant winced as he touched his swollen eye.  “All in the line of duty Sir.”

 

The General smiled in spite of himself, “Did she do that to your Sergeant?  Do you get beat up by a girl AGAIN?!?”  The General laughed while the Sergeant blushed.  Lskra was mostly awake now and on her feet, idly twiddling her fingers and shifting her weight from one foot to the other.

 

“Alrighty Sergeant, what do we have here?”

 

“Let me introduce you to Frska Letr.”

 

The General paused a moment, his mind working overtime as to where he’d heard the name.  It came to him in a rush.  “Ah!  You’re the one that sold us the tank!”  Frska blushed slightly, but was silent otherwise.   “So what brings you to us today, you have another tank for sale?”

 

The Sergeant interrupted, “Not quite sir, you might want to sit down, you’re going to find this rather interesting.”  The Sergeant passed over his chair and retrieved the other from across the small wooden table.  Frska sat down on her bunk, leaning back against the wall and looked pleadingly at the Sergeant.

 

“Frska, it’s ok.  Tell him everything.  Trust me on this one.”

 

Frska nodded and began the retelling of her recent life history:  From her background of exploring Old Toria to the unexpected visitor and employment.  She described her discovery, the attack, and pursuit leading up to the rescue by the Sergeant and his team.  When she was finished she was drained.

 

The two were silent for a moment soaking in the information before the Sergeant asked, “Think the Director has any idea what’s going on?” 

 

“I doubt it.  We’ll check the tapes later just to be sure it wasn’t him.”

 

Frska looked up, “But he said he was the Director.  He’s not the Director?  Who is he?”

 

The General shrugged as he rose to his feet, “Not quite sure, but I’m guessing it’s one of the Technologists.  They are always doing something kooky like this.  There’s a reason they stick to Old Toria.  As to which one, not sure, it could be one of quite a few.  You never know who’s in charge on any given day.  So you know the coordinates of this cave?”

 

Frska stood up as well.  “Yes Sir.”

 

“Good, anything else Sergeant?”  “No Sir.” 

 

“Alrighty then, good work Sergeant.”  As the General turned to leave, Frska remembered one last thing.  “Oh!  Wait, I forgot, when I was in the cavern, I was fooling with the memory banks of the computer there.  I found a few files, but I couldn’t open them.  I think they’re corrupted.  All I could make out was hashes and symbols and garble.”

 

The General slowly stopped and turned around, his eyes piercing the girl.  “Say that again?”  The Sergeant stood stock still, his eyes open in surprise.

 

Frska stepped back a step at the intensity in the General’s eyes.  She looked over at the Sergeant and saw his shocked reaction.  “This…this...isn’t a corrupted file is it.  This is what everyone is after, isn’t it….”  Frska did a quick scan of the room looking for an exit.  The Sergeant quickly regained his composure and stepped in.  “It’s ok Frska, everything will be just fine.  But we need to know.  Where are the files?”  The calmness and slowness in his voice alarmed her even more.  “You’re going to kill me too, aren’t you.  You’re all the same!  I knew I shouldn’t have said anything, I knew it!  All I want is to be left alone!”  Frska made to get up and bolt.  Slai quickly sat beside her, placing his hands on her arms for reassurance.  The General waited impatiently as the Sergeant did his best to calm the girl. 

 

When it looked like Frska had regained some of her composure, the General impatiently held out his hand, “The file?”

 

Defeated, Frska dumped out the contents of her backpack.  Carefully rolled up in a pair of socks was a fist sized memory bank of the science computer.  She slowly handed it to the General.

 

The General turned and inspected the small piece of hardware as if trying to solve the mystery inside.  “And this is the only copy?”

 

Frska snapped back, “Does it matter?”

 

The General tried to be calm but it had been a long night, apparently for everyone.  “Listen Frska, we are not going to hurt you, but you don’t know what you’re dealing with here.  If the information on these files is what we think it COULD or MIGHT be, you’ve just become a high profile target by many different organizations on Toria.  If you want to live, and no - we won’t be the ones doing the killing, you need to answer truthfully.”  He held up the memory bank again.  “Is THIS the only copy?”

 

Frska guiltily picked up her datapad and slowly handed it to the General. “I downloaded a copy of a few files to work with while waiting for the Director….errr, whatever he was.”  The General took a quick look at the datapad before dropping it.  In a single motion he pulled out his Peacekeeper and shot it.  Frska barely had time to scream before pieces of the datapad ricocheted off the walls, ceiling, and chairs.  The General looked to Frska, “NOW this is the only copy.” 

 

The General exited the room with the Sergeant in tow.  They both looked at the girl through the two-way mirror for a moment before the General spoke.  “She is a dead girl walking outside these walls.” 

 

“Yes Sir.” 

 

“I need you to explain that to her, and then I want her entered into our Network training program.  With the life skills she has, she should get what she needs to know in six months tops.  She could be an invaluable asset.  Make it happen.” 

 

“Yes Sir.”

 

 “Oh, and Sergeant?” 

 

“Sir?”

 

 “VERY good work today.  I won’t even give you any more crap about your face.”  The General smirked as he headed off to his office for the day’s trials.

 

**

 

“Planet scan complete sir, the result is negative.  Thyco I will not support life.”

 

“Are you sure you have the sensors calibrated correctly Lieutenant Scrapth?”

 

“Sir, I’m reading it right here, temperatures vary anywhere between 900 degrees and -300 degrees.  The planet is too small to maintain any kind of atmosphere.”  Yugo turned to look at the Captain directly.  “And look at it sir.  The planet looks like asteroid alley even from this altitude.  Would you like us to land so you can check it out in person?”

 

Captain Zyltra pounded his fist in frustration.  They’d been traveling for months searching systems that had the best chances of finding a planet capable of supporting life.  With one system left to go, there was little hope of bringing good news to Her Grace.  It was more than that though.  He was coming home a disgrace.

 

“What I want to know, Lieutenant, is why you sent a message to Toria without me knowing, without my approval, and without any proof whatsoever!  The fact that you were correct is beside the point, it didn’t come THROUGH ME!”

 

The bridge had come to a standstill.  The rumor that Russom had been colonized had started weeks ago.  Nobody knew exactly who, or how, or why a ship had been sent to the remote system, but people always stopped talking when Yugo entered the room.  The Captain had been increasingly agitated as each explored system came back negative.  Everyone had been waiting for the Captain to confront Yugo.  No other scenario made sense.  All eyes were on Yugo as he began his response, “Sir-“

 

A panel beeped and the security officer checked his panel, “Sir, we’ve got an incoming signature.  Sir, I think, I think it’s another ship.”

 

The Captain looked up at the security officer, “Take the Lieutenant to his quarters, he is dismissed.”  He looked at Yugo as Yugo dejectedly walked towards the passage leading to the rear of the ship, “I can’t have anyone on my bridge that I can’t trust.”  The security officer waited for Yugo to pass before following closely behind.

 

The Captain sneered as Yugo left the bridge, then looked over the controls at the incoming vessel.  They seemed to be passing, then veered to intersect quickly gaining speed.  “Helm, prepare evasion maneuver Z and begin on my mar-“

 

An explosion rocked the Dreamer sending personnel bouncing around the bridge.  The Captain flew into a console before roughly slamming to the floor.  Lights flickered throughout the ship before going out completely.  The few seconds of darkness were replaced by the soft emergency lighting. The scanning and communication consoles erupted in sparks.  The Captain scanned the bridge as he quickly slammed the button for Engineering.  “STATUS!”  A few members of the bridge made it back to their posts, but most remained where they were, shocked, injured, or worse.  “Helm, Z!  Now!”  The prodigy helms girl had just crawled back to her post and pushed a button that began the automatic evasive maneuvers.

 

The Captain touched his forehead and pulled them away to find them covered in blood.  Engineering buzzed back, “Captain!  We’ve got hull breach in Engineering, we’re leaking fuel, the sensor array is totally fried, we’re going to have to vent-

 

A buzzing on his Captain’s chair caused him to cut off Engineering.  “This is Captain Zyltra of the Free People of Toria, please identify yourselves and explain your actions!”

 

“Awww, Captain, I guess I lost the bet.  I said we could kill the Captain in one shot, my mate said you’d get lucky and it would take two.  It seems I owe him the killing shot.  You snails should have learned by now.  The universe is a dangerous place.  I guess that will be the last lesson you will learn…Captain.  Good-bye.”  Even to a person who’d never heard the actual sound, the Drengin snarling contempt was unmistakable.

 

The Captain watched on the view screen as a second identical vessel came around and casually crept towards the Dreamer.  Without hesitating, the Captain slammed the evacuation button.

 

Yugo found himself in a small room.  He groaned as he tried to get up.  He had hit his head hard on something and regretted trying to open his eyes.  The world seemed to be spinning.  He heard people rushing around, screaming orders, and attending to wounded littering the halls.  He looked at his escort who was bent over beneath him.  His escort seemed to be in bad shape.  Yugo slowly gained his feet and then helped the security officer sit down in a chair built into the wall of the small closet.  Yugo looked around.  It wasn’t a closet at all.  It was an escape pod.  Seeing that his escort was alive, Yugo started to make his way back towards the bridge when his escort held him back.  “Wait just a second Lieutenant.”  Yugo snorted back.  “For what?  Surely we are needed right now.”  The security officer looked past Yugo into the hall, but seemed to be concentrating on something else altogether.  His good wrist held tightly on Yugo’s.  “Wait for it….wait for it….”

 

Yugo rolled his eyes just as the computer voice sounded from the hall,  “Your Captain has ordered all personnel to aban-“  Yugo’s escort slammed the eject button.  Before Yugo had time to react, a metal door slammed shut and boosters ignited.  Yugo was hurled into the metal door as the escape pod escaped hurtled away from the Dreamer.  Yugo gasped at the sudden acceleration and turned back to look at the Dreamer through one of the portholes.  Explosions wracked the surveyor, randomly appearing in various sections around the ship.  Another vessel, a type he’d never seen before came creeping down on the crippled ship.  The vessel seemed to line up a perfect shot before a stream of light burst out and obliterated the bridge.  The rest of the Dreamer followed quickly thereafter.  The resulting explosion was so bright, Yugo had to shield his eyes.  When he could see again, very little remained.  The explosion had torn the Dreamer clean in half.  It was now nothing more than a derelict piece of space junk.  The pair of alien ships slowly circled the debris field once before heading off in the opposite direction.

 

Yugo looked over at his escort, speechless.  “What…how…who…..” 

 

“In a bit Lieutenant, give me a minute here.”

 

Yugo watched his escort as the injured man struggled to find a comfortable position in one of the pod’s chairs.  Yugo, feeling rather awkward in the silence, did his best to break it, “Are you ok?”

 

The escort looked at him with a pained expression, “I’ll live, if that’s what you’re asking.”

 

“Who are you?  How did you know that was going to happen?  You DID know didn’t you?  Are you one of them?  What’s going to happen to me?”

 

The escort struggled to breathe, “All in good time Lieutenant, all in good time.”

 

“But, what’s going to happen, we could be stuck out here forever!  Weeks!  Months!  We won’t survive that long!  We don’t have food, or water, or-“

 

The escort coughed, “Relax lieutenant, I’m guessing we’ll be in this thing no more than, oh, two days max.”

 

Yugo looked at the man skeptically, “Really now.  Ok, humor me.  Who is going to be out here?  There’s no way.”

 

The escort smiled, “Who?  Not sure, but I’m very curious to find out.”

 

With that, the escort lay his head back and smiled.  Yugo sat and looked out the window staring at the stars, and wondered how anyone would find them way out here.

on Oct 03, 2009

Keep it going its great.

on Oct 13, 2009

Well crud, the issue was with Firefox, not the browser...

So we can continue!

4

 

The dropship had landed within the Yellow Zone of the military facility.  The Yellow Zone consisted of the high security clearance areas including specialized training, research and development, operation planning, and a full on military prison.  The Yellow Zone was a shoot first, ask questions later area.  Outside the Yellow Zone was the Green Zone where the ‘regulars’ were trained.  The regulars consisted of the rank and file portion of the Torian military.  The Green Zone was relatively peaceful right now, but the General had been slowly increasing the numbers through the past few months.  When war came, he would have more than enough trainers on board ready to train the masses that would likely be needed to win a full-out war.  Within the Yellow Zone was the Red Zone.  Clearance to the Red Zone consisted of the General’s own personal army.  This included his staff, officers of varying ranks assigned to different tasks, scientists and his own personal security force.  A number of special projects took place within the Red Zone that were matters of Torian security.  The Red Zone was implemented to keep it that way. 

 

The door to the dropship finally opened and Yugo breathed in the cool fresh air.  It felt like a lifetime ago since he’d last been on solid ground, and he looked forward to being reacquainted.  His escort stepped out in front of him, and gingerly descended the small mobile staircase to the well lit landing pad.  A man Yugo had never seen before stood at the bottom of the staircase.  The two saluted, then embraced briefly before beginning to talk.  Yugo hurried down the staircase to listen in on the conversation.

 

“So how the was trip Commander?”

 

“Couple broken ribs and a fractured wrist, but not too bad all things considered.”

 

“How’d the translators work?”

“Surprisingly well, but they need to be localized a bit.  According to what was told to me afterwards, I called one of them a limp chicken at one point.  That conversation didn’t go too well.”

 

The General chuckled as he turned to Yugo.  “Welcome back Captain Scrapth.”

 

Yugo studied the General for a moment.  “I’m sorry, I’m lost beyond comprehension at the moment, your escort-

 

The General gleefully cut in, “He’s your new Commander.  Formal introductions are in order, Captain.  May I introduce you to your first officer, Commander Krii.  Now, as you were saying?”

 

Yugo dismissed the comment with his hand as he continued.  “Whatever.  I have no idea what you’re talking about.  Any of you.  I don’t know how you’ve pulled it out, hell, I don’t even know how I’m ALIVE.  Could SOMEONE give me some answers here?”

 

The General laughed.  “Of course Captain, of course.  Just not today.”  The General turned to the rest of his men, “Company dismissed!  Come Captain, let’s grab something to eat.”  More confused than ever, Yugo followed the pair as they headed purposefully towards the mess hall.

 

**

 

The van slowed to a stop at the solid security gates.  A pair of Torian marines walked out of the guardhouse, weapons shouldered, but ready.  “Out of the van please.  Let’s see ID and open the back.”  The driver, accustomed to such searches quickly showed his ID where it was scanned and approved.  “And you.”  Dr Tles nervously showed his ID badge.  This was the first time he’d actually been inside the Red Zone and the Torians here meant business.  The driver pulled open the doors where a pair of large cases were stacked and locked.  “Open the cases.”  The driver looked over to the Doctor.  The Doctor had the only key.  “Sorry gentlemen, the contents are classified, don’t you know who I am?”   “Don’t know, don’t care.  You either open the cases, or we’ll confiscate them and open them the old fashioned way, with a couple pounds of explosives.  We’ll also toss you into a cell where you’ll never see the light of day.  Now open the damn cases – NOW!”  One guard had his Peacekeeper pulled, the other was readying his assault rifle when a buzzing came from the booth.  “Stay here.”  The bossy guard quickly ran to the booth and spoke for just a second before returning.

 

“It’s your lucky day Director.  They’re cleared.”  The guard holstered his weapon and both returned to the booth.  The Director and his driver got back into the van and waited as the sturdy metal gate slowly slid open.  When they could, they drove to the most secure place in all of Toria.  Towards the center of the complex was a large building.  A ramp ran underground that was presumably for parking.  The Director was wrong.  It was actually the entrance to the lab structures.  It seems the plans that he was provided didn’t exactly match what was built.  The Director smiled to himself, very clever General, very clever.  The van stopped in front of an elevator.  The driver and the Director got out.  A pair of guards waited at the elevator while the cargo was unloaded.  As soon as it was, the driver returned to the van and drove away.  The pair of guards each grabbed one of the cases and walked into the elevator.  Not a sound was made, not even the traditional elevator music as the box descended. 

 

When the doors opened again, it was a quick walk to a large room, much larger that what the Director would have called normal, especially underground.  A series of targets had been setup on the far end of the room.  The walls looked to be in poor shape, abused by varying experiments.  One wall was made of a sturdy plastic behind which stood an observation area.  Sergeant Slai waited for them in the testing area.  As the Director entered, the two escorts gently laid the cases down on a pair of sturdy tables, then took positions on the inside of the door.

 

“Welcome to the Basement Director.  I heard you were coming and I look forward to seeing what you’ve got for us today.”

 

The Director smiled nervously, both at being out of his element, but also in living up to the expectations of the military man in front of him.  Working for Her Grace was one thing, but working directly for the military was something else altogether.  The Director moved to the first case.  A scanner checked his thumbprint, and a small compartment opened to a keypad.  The Director wiped his hands down on his pants before entering the ten digit key code.  The light turned green and the case clicked.  “Gentlemen, this is our first presentation today.”  The director pulled out with one hand a small assault rifle.  “This is the next generation weapon for small arms operations.”  None of the military looked impressed.  Lifting it with one hand, he handed it over to Slai.  The Sergeant began examining it as the Director continued.  “We call it the Screamer.  We’ve reverse engineered the Drengin assault weapons and modified them for our own personal use.  They are much lighter than the Drengin counterparts, and have a variable setting for the sonic vibration.  At the lowest setting, you won’t see any difference in damage from a conventional weapon, but at the highest setting, the vibration will act nearly like a concussion grenade.  The weapon does have a limited charge, so a few shots at the highest setting could drain the weapon completely.”

 

On the far end of the room a line of ganger fruits had been arranged in fairly humanoid shapes.  Ganger fruits were often used by the military due to their ability to grow anywhere.  The fact that the fruit mimicked many physiological properties of a Torian was simply an added bonus.  As Slai began setting up a test shot, the Director broke in, “Now make sure to take the safety off, and look through…”  Slai looked up and stared at the Director.  The Director blushed as he belatedly fell silent.  Adjusting the vibrations to its lowest setting Slai aimed at the center target and fired.  The weapon screeched a loud piercing noise as a bolt of energy streaked through the room and hit the ‘humanoid’ square in the ‘chest’.  The target fruit evaporated while the rest of the figure exploded in a cascade of reds and greens.  Slai nodded approvingly while he adjusted the vibrations up their highest setting.  The Director ducked his head while trying to warn the overzealous military man, “Wait!”  Slai aimed and fired.

 

The piercing of the weapon caused Slai to cringe as the shot sailed into the next target over. In an almost slow motion, the line of targets began exploding, one by one in an expanding circle.  The glass of the observation window cracked, then exploded outwards showering the rooms beyond with glass.  The floor and ceiling cracked and warped in a pattern central around the point of impact. 

 

When everything was silent, the Director lifted his head.  Melon slowly dripped from the ceiling while pieces of glass that stood hanging by a thread tinkled down onto the floor.  The Sergeant smiled.  “Nice work Director, not a bad first run.  What else you got for us?”  The Director only shook his head as he opened his next case.  He pulled out a flimsy looking vest and tossed it to the Sergeant.

 

“Body armor.  Able to withstand a direct hit from just about any weapon.  Even the one you are holding, assuming the vibrations aren’t too high.  Also very light weight, you can put it on under clothing with little to no hindrance in movement.”

 

“Very good Director, put it on, we’ll test it out.”

 

The Director paused.  A look of confusion crossed his face.  “Excuse me?”

 

“What’s wrong Director, not confident in your work?”

 

The Director struggled for words.  “But…but….”

 

The Sergeant rolled his eyes.  “Fine.”  He looked over to one of the two escorts standing guard, “Private, put this on.  Stand at the other end.”  The woman didn’t hesitate as she came forward and grabbed the material.  As she was testing the material in her hands, she looked over to the Director, “I hope this works Director, for your sake.”  A sheen of sweat covered the Director’s forehead as the woman pulled on the vest.  She muttered under her breath as she crossed to the other side.  Finding a suitable spot not covered in Granger juice, she stood impatiently.

 

“Alrighty Private, come get me.”

 

The woman began running, jumping from side to side to avoid being shot.  The Sergeant carefully aimed, and when he had the shot, pulled the trigger.  The shot rang out and took the marine in her chest.  Her momentum was reversed as the shot took her from her feet and sent her to her back.  She coughed a few times and rolled over onto her hands and knees.  “Private?”  The woman held up her hand to indicate she’d live as she coughed up a mouthful of blood.

 

The Director commented in a subdued voice, “That shot would have obliterated her without that vest.  Even with the vest, a higher vibration setting will turn the eyes, inner ears, brain, and heart to mush.  Depending on the closeness of the shot, it will break bones.”  The Sergeant spoke to the Director while watching the Private get to her feet, “This is one nasty piece of work Director.  Nice work.  How is the armament for the ship progressing Director?”

 

“One thing at a time, it’s a work in progress.”

 

The enthusiasm on the Sergeant’s face faltered as he looked back.  “If we can’t get to a planet Director, we won’t be able to use these fancy toys of yours.  In case you haven’t heard, the Dreamer was lost.  It would be nice if we could defend ourselves Director.”

 

“We’re working on it, it’s our top priority.”

 

“Any word on the artifacts Director?”

 

The Director looked surprised momentarily, before dejectedly answering.  “No, I really haven’t had any spare time to prepare a group to search for them.  As soon as I finish a few other things, I’ll be getting onto that.”

 

“We can help you out if needed Director.”

 

“Yes, I’m sure you would love that.  No, we’ve got all our work cut out for us right now, but I appreciate the offer Sergeant.”

 

The Private had finally gotten to her feet and made her way over, a strand of bloody spit still stringing from her mouth across her chin.  She looked up at the Sergeant who stood waiting.  “You,” she said, pointing a finger into his chest, “are one sadistic son of a bitch.”  The Sergeant stared at her disapprovingly.  “Sir.”  The Sergeant gave a one sided grin, “We’ll be making this mandatory for the rest.  You need to know what it feels like before it happens.  Go get yourself checked out Private.”  The Private saluted as she made her way out of the room, picking up her firearm on the way out the door.

 

**

 

General Slat came to understand the value of knowledge from a young age.  He bore scars from some of his adventures into Old Toria in his younger years, and some of the discoveries he made there helped shape him into the person he was today.  History, artifacts, and discoveries about himself were all invaluable tools in the long run.

 

As such, the General made knowledge a priority in all things.  His ability to uncover knowledge, and know when and how to use it made him one of the most respected and feared people around Her Grace’s court.  The Red Zone was his new library of knowledge, a place he could store all the tidbits he’d gathered over the years without overly worrying about discovery.  On the bottom level of the military research lab was the Vault.  Security included hand prints, voice recognition, and retinal scans.  Only four people had clearance into the Vault, the General, two trusted scientists, and Sergeant Slai.  Dr. Tles doesn’t know it existed, and the Sergeant didn’t know he had access.  That left the General and the two scientists as the sole curators of the vault.  The Vault consisted of several different chambers, each separated by a thick wall of steel and protected by security measures much like the entry.  The outer chambers included a series of large self-contained laboratories where the scientists could perform experiments that might be considered outside the standard morals of the common person.  An inner vault was a private room for the General alone.  It included documentation from old papers and maps, to artifacts such as weapons and prototypes, to an unconnected computer that held the invaluable information his inner network and personal connections had gathered over the years.

 

The two scientists had cleared out a laboratory, and filled it with a series of holoboards, a chalkboard that could be written on, corrected, moved around, and then saved and retrieved later as needed.  The two scientists had been working on their latest project off and on for weeks.  Lskra’s discovery had been the most interesting project the two had ever worked; the deciphering or decryption of an alien language.  They had argued off and on regarding whether the symbols were actually an encryption device, like a lock to keep unwanted people out, or whether it was an actual language to be deciphered and understood.  The two holoboards were covered with writing as the two continued to argue.

 

“Look, if we run a quasdraztic function on this and then apply the Krzy theory of substitution on it, we can get-

 

“Krzy Theory of what?!?

 

“I worked on it all yesterday, I’ll show you the proof, but you’ll just have to trust me on this one.”

 

The other scientist sighed as the first continued.  “Now, if you apply the Theory, watch what happens.”

 

The first scientist made some adjustments on his holoboard, and symbols and figures were replaced with new ones.  “Now see, this series here,” he pointed to the board, “matches this series here, and here.  It makes the complete circle around this set of symbols here.”

 

The second got up, “That makes no sense at all.  For all we know, the Drengin could have been toying around, just like we are, and programmed the thing to do exactly what it did, tear the tinkerers apart with who knows what.”

 

“And they also could have tripped some kind of anti-defense system that ripped them apart.  I’ve given my ideas, what do YOU have!”

 

The second was silent.  Deciphering a language out of symbols was a difficult task.  The fact that there were likely words that the Torians didn’t even know EXISTED pushed the task next to impossible.  Both scientists understood this, and the second sighed.  “Ok, we’ll try it your way.”

 

The two scientists gathered around the central computer in the room.  The two generally did their work separately in separate areas, on separate machines, with their own copy of the files.  When they wanted to try something real, they used the source databanks.  With as little as they knew, there could be items that weren’t copied over, or were ruined in translation to ‘conventional’ Torian machines.  There were simply too many unknown NOT to use the source. 

 

The first scientist copied over a large series of files that constituted his functions before looking over to the second.  It took another few minutes to input the parameters and set the scope of the project.  When he was finished, he paused and gave his partner a questioning look.  The second looked back, a drop of sweat forming over his brow.  “Yeah, do it.”

 

He nodded and pushed the button.

 

Nothing happened. 

 

The second looked over, “How long is this supposed to take?”

 

“Anywhere from thirty seconds, to a few hours, or longer.”

 

The second looked over a bit irritated.  “Well, why don’t you-“

 

“LOOK!”

 

The pair looked at the screen.  The screen had blanked for a few seconds before the symbols had reappeared along the edges.  Ever so slowly, the symbols began appearing and disappearing along the edges of the screen, one then the next, then the next.  “What’s it doing?”  The first shook his head slowly and shrugged as he watched the symbols appear then disappear.

 

The pair sat there quietly watching, minute by minute, the symbols appearing and disappearing.  Two of the most brilliant Torians alive had been completely transfixed by a screen of slowly flashing alien symbols.  Almost imperceptibly, the symbols began to increase in speed.  Hours went by with the same pattern, the two scientists sitting and staring, the computer flashing alien symbols across the screen.  Shortly before high tide, the computer screen began to increasingly brighten.  The heat from the computer itself could be felt from underneath the desk the display sat upon.  Neither scientist noticed as the screen continued its alien dance. 

 

The symbols increased their frequency over the hours until the edges of the screen were nothing more than a blur.  The blur began slowly marching its way towards the center of the screen which began increasing in intensity and cackling with electricity.  The scientists stepped back away from the desk when the first had a panicked look.

 

“Are we taping this?”

 

The second cursed as he scrambled down the hall.  By the time he had returned with a camera and a stand, the center of the screen had become a blinding white light.  Ever so slowly a snake light appendage, cackling with electric current, writhed out of the computer screen as if searching for something.  The pair of scientist sat transfixed.

 

“You’re taping now, right?”

 

The second just nodded as a crackling globe of energy slowly emerged from the now dark screen.  Snake like appendages, a few feet long slowly waved as the crackling ball floated a foot above melted piece of machinery that had once been a computer. 

 

“I think it’s about time we found a safer location to film.”

 

The second nodded as he slowly removed the camera from the tripod.  He had just about made it to the door when the floating energy sphere brightened sharply, sending out electric charges to all corners of the room.  Computers exploded, the overhead lighting brightened quickly then shattered, and wall sockets showered the room with sparks.  As the sockets showered the room, the snake like appendages dove into the wall sockets.  The form pulsed, growing larger and brighter as it drank from the military power plant.  Finally, when the ball had grown to a four foot ball of crackling energy, the attacking currents stopped.  The pair of scientists stood anxiously near the doorway, still filming.

 

The energy form pulsed once and the two scientists jumped.  It pulsed again.  The two scientists flinched.  Then suddenly without warning, the sphere of energy burst through the doorway.  The impacting rush tossed the first into the closest wall head first with such force as to make him unrecognizable.  The other was sent flying through the nearby glass observation window and into the next lab.  He didn’t get up.  The energy globe ripped upward through the elevator shaft sending the carriage and occupants plummeting five stories to their doom.  The sphere burst through the top of the building and greeted the night with a white pulsing light as it streaked upwards into the night.

 

**

 

The Red Zone barracks stood in the northern portion of the facility.  They were mostly two story buildings, with sixteen marines in a building.  The marines shared a room, with 4 suites on a floor and the entire building sharing a central kitchen, large bathroom, and soak tank.  In the Red Zone, marines were brothers and sisters to a bigger cause.  They would live and die for each other.  The General liked it this way.

 

Officers had their own smaller private quarters.  The buildings looked almost identical, but the rooms were more private having their own bedroom, kitchen, and bathroom.  The soak tank was still shared.  The General did this on purpose as well.

 

The General, of course, had his own private quarters.  He not only had his own private amenities, including his own private soak tub, but also a private waiting or meeting room.  His residence was nearest the electric wall on the northern side of the compound.  A pair of guard towers flanked the fence some ways away, and the mountains could be seen in the distance.  Neither the yellow nor the Green Zone bordered this portion of the complex.  A gate had been installed, but was rarely used.  It was an emergency only route.  Those that used it better be dying or dead or they would find themselves the same.

 

One reason the General enjoyed the location was the electric fence gave off a soothing hum during the middle of the night.  When everything was quiet and still, he could just hear it.  It was one of the small but enjoyable luxuries he could afford.  The absence of the hum was the first thing that woke him.  He opened his eyes only to squint as a bright light streamed through the windows then dimmed. The General quickly sat up and grabbed his Enforcer.  Undoing the safety, he raced to the door and stepped out.

 

He had to shield his eyes as he looked up.  Taking a look around, the power was out but it was nearly clear as day from the streaking object that shone overhead.  Slai came running up as the General looked around gathering his thoughts.  Slai waited just a moment before the General began.

 

“We are on lockdown.  Nobody goes in or out.  Shoot first, ask questions later.  I want a headcount ASAP.  I want a full-on Red Zone search.  I want to know exactly what happened here.”  “Sir, yes sir!”  The Lieutenant bounded off, shouting orders to emerging marines as he went.

 

The General quickly returned to his quarters and changed into some real clothing.  It was likely to be a long day.

 

The sun was barely rising as the General approached the Slai and the small squad of Marines.  The group stood just outside the entrance of the office building covering the Vault.  The building was in poor shape.  Half of the third floor had collapsed while the other half was missing its roof.  Every window of the place had been shattered from the ground floor to the top.  Cleanup of the glass alone would take days.  After gazing at the wreckage for a few moments, then gazing at the hovering star that, if anything, had grown bigger and brighter in the morning sun, the General finally spoke up, “Status Lieutenant?”

 

The Lieutenant struggled for words for a moment before beginning, “We’re not one hundred percent positive Sir, but the event seems to have originated inside, or very close to the Vault.  The elevator down looks to be destroyed.  We searched the upper floors of the building and found two of the five MIA.  Cause of death is uncertain.  Our medical couldn’t tell if it was burns, trauma, or blood-loss.  All were pretty severe.  As to the Vault….”  The Lieutenant paused and looked into the building.

 

The General nodded and turned to his troops.  “Alrighty men.  We are about to enter the Vault.  You all know this is beyond top secret information.  I have no idea what we’re going to find.  Whatever we do find does not come out.  Period.  Nothing besides those of us here come in or out of the Vault.  I want biohazard masks on at all times and radio contact kept to a minimum.  Primary Objective is to look for survivors.  Secondary objectives are to figure out what happened, and to make sure nothing else down there is loose.  We will take it one floor at a time.  Understood?”

 

Almost as one, the group replied, “Sir, yes sir!”

 

“Then let’s do this.”

 

The door looked no worse for wear as the General opened it.  The door was likely one of the few items that made it through the ordeal unscathed.  Moving into the building, the General clicked on his flashlight as the morning sunlight dimmed away.  The sound of boots clunking on the tile floor was much different than the standard hustle and bustle that would have been seen here on a typical day.  But this wasn’t a typical day.  Scorch marks covered walls and ceilings and glass covered the floors.  Desks had been tipped over or torn completely apart and computers were thrown from the desks.  The damage got progressively worse as they approached the elevator shaft.  Walls had been peeled away from their supports and the ceiling was missing in places allowing the General to peer into the floors above.  Water dripped onto the floor from broken pipes. 

 

The smell of burnt remains further assaulted the party’s senses as they approached the elevator shaft.  Nothing was recognizable and black soot covered everything.  Had this been one of the traditional Torian buildings, the place would have likely collapsed.  As it was, a hole had been incinerated straight up through the elevator shaft, to where a bit of sunlight fell across the General’s face as he looked up.  Nothing could be seen up or down the hallway and looking up into the morning light showed nothing but black from the current angle.  The elevator box simply ceased to exist.  There was no elevator and no elevator carriage.  The only thing proving that something had existed there at all was the nicely cut hole in the ground dropping into the darkness.  Lights targeted down the shaft couldn’t penetrate to the bottom.  The strong odor of burnt covered everything, as did the soot that came with it.

 

The squad investigated one floor at a time.  Using a rope ladder that had been bolted into the top floor, the squad slowly descended floor by floor.  The damage looked to have been confined to mostly the hallways closest to the elevators.  The Vault had been constructed with security in mind, thus the large reinforced doors kept the inner workings of the upper floors safe.  As the team progressed deeper and deeper into the Vault, the damage was spread further and further out from the elevator shaft.  The more important rooms were generally furthest from the elevator, whatever floor it happened to be on.  Meeting rooms, break rooms, a few examination, and storage rooms had been penetrated and moderately damaged, but nothing that couldn’t be replaced. 

 

As the group cleared the second to last floor, the General stopped the group.  Only the Sergeant and General had permission for the last floor.  The General and Lieutenant climbed down the last bit, and dropped to the floor, their lights slowly panning the area.  Crumpled remains of the elevator were buried under pieces of the building that had collapsed from many stories above.  As the General began panning towards the labs, where the most severe damage seemed to have originated, the Sergeant stopped him.  “Sir…”   The Sergeant bent down, brushed aside some dirt and small rubble, and found a Torian skull.   The General looked up past the squad on the floor above, “Whatever it was must have passed straight through the elevator.  Poor guy was probably doing rounds in the office building when it passed right through him.  One down, two to go.”

 

The two passed into the hallway that split the labs.  Each lab had windows where observers could view any experimentation from a safe distance.  Nearest the elevator was a lab that kept live animals for testing, some of them small primate types as well as dogs, cats, and various other animals.  The General pulled his enforcer as he entered.  The cages were silent.  The animals lay still in their cages.  The General briefly wondered what killed the most, burns, shock, blood trauma, or something else entirely.  As he looked through the cages, a burnt and scarred monkey jumped at the cage door and shrieked a high pitch shriek.  The Sergeant jumped while the General stepped back, aimed, and fired.  The shrieks ended as quickly as they began.  The gunshot echoed throughout the enclosure.  “No idea what that energy did to these things.  Not about to find out.”

 

The pair moved deeper and deeper through the labs.  Nothing moved or made a sound.  As they approached the source, the General spied a figure laying face down on the floor of an adjoining lab.  Nothing was recognizable other than it had once been a Torian.  Moving into the computer room the pair felt something different in the air.    A static electricity could still be seen sparking from the various wall circuits that had been fried long ago.  What had once been a room completely filled with state of the art computers was now little more than a room full of charcoal.  The General wasn’t quite sure what he had expected when he journeyed down here, but this wasn’t it.  An entire lifetime of accumulated information had been destroyed.  All progress that had been made on research had been destroyed as well.  The scientists were lucky.  If they had still been alive, he’d have killed them himself.  The General cursed under his breath. 

 

Taking  a deep breath, the General looked over to the Lieutenant who was on one knee, cursorily sifting through some ash, “Well Lieutenant, we just might have a problem.”

on Oct 13, 2009

5

 

 

Xavrs found himself on a dropship on the way to the Torian capitol.  He and the Director had been officially summoned by Her Grace.  He could count the number of times he’d been summoned by Her Grace on one hand.  After their last encounter several months earlier, they seemed to have avoided each other as much as possible.  The General had spent most of his time getting his military and research facilities up to speed.  Her Grace had sent inquiries, updates, and requests through her attendants.  The two of them knew their respective roles and performed them well.  It was better for both of them.  The fact that he was headed back to New Toria could only mean she was desperate about something.  That something had to be the ‘star’.

 

The star had hovered high over Old Toria for days.   Each day the star seemed to grow brighter and brighter.  Reconnaissance jets had been flown past the star to get readings, but couldn’t get close enough without the planes circuitry being fried.  They had discovered that the hard way.  There really wasn’t much left to do about it but take a wait and see attitude.  Xavrs was sure the Director had something more, but the Director seemed to be keeping it tight to his chest, not that Xavrs could blame him.

 

As far as the Red Zone was concerned, Xavrs felt he had kept the potential origin fairly under wrap.  The Vault had been sealed for the time being.  Repairs had been put on order but it would take a few weeks to get everything to a semblance of normalcy.  Electricity had been restored to the Red Zone and the entire military complex had been placed on yellow alert.  Volunteer militia had been called in from New Toria for assistance, just in case.  He still had the problem with his scientific brain trust being gone.  That would have to be dealt with eventually.  The ship landed with a jolt, knocking Xavrs out of his private thoughts.  The view outside indicated they’d arrived at Her Grace’s private dock.  The passenger door quickly opened.  That was one of the few benefits of traveling by military dropship  He didn’t need to wait long before exiting the vehicle.  A car was waiting for him, one of the small state cars.  The General grabbed the pair of datapads he had brought and quickly slipped into the rear seat.  The driver set out towards the beach.  They must be headed towards Her Grace’s beachside quarters.  Whatever was to be said would not be done publicly.  And it had something to do with the new body in the sky.  The General looked out the rear windows as the car turned.  The star hadn’t gone anywhere.  There was nothing he could do but wait and see.

 

**

 

The star hovered in the sky markedly brighter than when it had originated 5 days ago.  It really wasn’t a star in terms of size.  Rather it was simply a large globe of energy bright enough to be seen from the planet’s surface.  The star had created no loss of unrest among the Torian population.  Some believed it to be a sign from some higher power.  Others thought it was an incoming meteor that had somehow become stuck in the atmosphere.  Others believed it was nothing more than an elaborate hoax or a trick on the eyes.  But the energy was real enough.  The scorched earth directly below the star was proof.  Having reached the appropriate size, and without other warning, the star screeched back through the atmosphere and tore into the side of the Trik-Trak mountains.

 

**

 

Dresda sighed and rubbed her eyes as she leaned back in her chair.  The monitor in front of her continued its seemingly unending series of calculations.  She had been staring at numbers all day with no end in sight.  Beside her in the underground cavern, a row of scientists just like her seemed to be having the same problem.  She looked over at the Torian beside her who felt her stare and leaned back in his rickety chair.

 

 “And when did the Director say he’d be back?”

 

“Couple of days earliest.  The memo we received made it sound urgent, and it sounded like someone wasn’t exactly happy…”  Dresda smiled to herself.

 

“And he really has no idea who you are, or what we’re doing here?”

 

“Not a clue.  I keep him busy with trivial tasks that are ‘too important’ for me to handle.  Every time he gets around to setting up an exploration, something else just ‘happens’ to come up.  I’ve got enough material to keep him busy for months.  The only way this place will ever be found is if he directs the operation personally, which will never happen.  Or, unless the girl is ever found…”

 

The older Torian frowned.  “I can’t believe she got away.  Not once, but TWICE!”  The Torian shook his head in frustration.  “Damn military sticking its head where it doesn’t belong.  Next time I find them, I’ll-“

 

A sudden impact shook the cavern.  Pebbles rained from the ceiling and dust clouded the room.  The six Torians stopped and looked around uncertainly.  Only the sound of the computers’ hum could be heard.  An older Torian rose to his feet, “What the hell was that.”

 

“Sir, Look!”  The readings on the computer had spiked to an astronomical rate.

 

“What did you do?”

 

“Nothing sir, but look!”  The room of Technologists had come to a complete halt as the metallic wall in front of them had begun to resonate.  Pebbles began to shake their way across the floor.  A datapad clattered atop a computer terminal before it too fell to the floor.  The small folding chairs they’d been using were now moving in some sort of random exotic dance.  It might have been amusing had everyone been not staring at the metallic wall.

 

Nobody moved for a full two minutes before Dresda finally spoke up, uncertainly.  “Now what?”

 

As if in answer, the cavern shook sending the Torians to the ground.  Large pieces of the cavern nearest the wall began to collapse.  Several of the Torians looked at each other uneasily while one quickly made his way to the exit.  The elder Torian, obviously in charge regained his feet and waited.  Dresda waited close by. 

 

“Sir, you think we’re safe in here?” 

 

“We haven’t waited hundreds of years for this discovery only to run away at the first sign of trouble.” 

 

Dresda looked around.  The rest of the group had slowly backed away toward the exit, but still close enough to see what was going on. A few minutes of silence seemed to relax the group a bit.  A few minutes later found everyone back in the room inspecting the wall.  Just as the lead Torian was about to touch the wall, the room shook again.  Screams of panic were followed by screams of pain as the room began to collapse.  Large piles or rock caved into the room, burying computers and men.  Those that could scrambled quickly for the exit.  Those that couldn’t screamed for help.  The screams didn’t last long.  Dresda weaved her way through the passage she knew so well.  The lights flickered with every rocking of the cavern.  She heard yells, cries, and curses behind her.  She didn’t stop.  She didn’t look.  A rocking of the cavern sent her spinning violently into the side.  Her shoulder ripped into the craggy cavern wall.  She didn’t slow or even notice.  Blood seeped through her shirt but there was only one goal.  The exit.  She could see the light ahead.   She sprinted with everything she had left as the entire cavern began to lean at an angle.  Her mind curiously wondered what was going on as her body mindlessly dashed into the sunlight.

 

An explosion far above her made her duck back into the safety of the cavern as rocks and boulders rained down from the sky.  If she didn’t know better, she’d have thought a volcano had just exploded.  As the boulder shower resided she looked around.  The entrance to the cavern was gone.  She could see the hand of her superior just jutting out of tons of rubble.  Nobody else had made it.  The camp was in ruins.  She might be able to get one of the vehicles running again.  But what she really needed was some answers.  What had caused the collapse?  What had happened?

 

A shadow blocked the sun at the same time Dresda heard the grinding metal sound.  Just over a rocky ridge she saw something slowly pulling itself out of the rocks.  It seemed to have three legs and two arms and seemed extremely dextrous.  Dresda slowly climbed to a nearby outcropping of rocks and spied on it from relative safety, her shoulder momentarily forgotten.  The thing had to have been at least six stories tall, and its feet were the size of the van she drove.   It was humanoid enough, two arms ending in some kind of what she assumed was weaponry, a rounded body, and three legs.  The only exception was that there was no ‘head’ to be found.  It pulled itself further out of the rubble, rocks and boulders sliding down around it as it freed itself from its mountain prison.  Dresda watched attentively, taking mental notes on everything about it, the way it moved, the sound of it, the look of its weaponry.  After standing at its full height, the metal Titan just stood there.  Dresda had no idea how long she lay there.  Dresda held the watch to her ear, but it had been broken during her escape.  Her shoulder was now extremely sore, and Dresda was just considering her escape plan when the thing began to move.  The legs of the creature began to withdraw into the creature, as if it was crouching, and then suddenly, without warning, it sprang into the air with some kind of push.  Effortlessly, it began to soar through the sky.  There wasn’t fire as she had predicted, but rather some kind of glow out of the bottom of the creature’s feet.  Where the creature was headed, there was absolutely no telling.

 

Dresda slowly and painfully slid down the rocky face.  She only hoped that some form of communication had survived the onslaught.  There was no good in having information if you couldn’t take advantage of it.  She only hoped she had enough time.

 

**

 

It happened in an instant.  One second, the star sat there, glowing in the sky.  The next, the star streaked out of view, somewhere across the horizon.  The General had just caught the briefest of glimpses before it had disappeared.  That had happened several hours ago.  Now, the General was sitting at a small table on the balcony of her Grace’s beach house.  The wind in his face, the salt in the air, and the call of the gulls almost allowed him to pretend he was somewhere else.  The view was nothing but ocean blue over the cliff from where he sat.  He closed his eyes and pictured himself alone.  The clunking of shoes from his fellow Torian pacing back and forth broke the fantasy.

 

“Would you stop it already?”

 

“Did you see it?  I need to be there.  There’s bound to be something of interest there.  I shouldn’t be sitting here waiting for…Your Grace.”  The Director bowed sincerely.

 

The General rose and bowed his traditional greeting.  This was the first time he’d seen Her Grace in months.  She was wearing a traditional tightly wound wrap, decorated with the Tikwa flowers giving her an almost intoxicating fragrance.  Her eyes had changed.  No longer were they shining with that glowing mischief the General was accustomed.  They were now darker and more serious.  Whether that was from the occasion, or whether the stress of political life had finally taken its toll, the General wasn’t sure.  The General pushed aside the thought that maybe it was him. 

 

She quietly sat down at the table, and indicated for the two to return to their seats.  They did.  Neither made a sound.  Neither had quite seen Her Grace in this mood before and both seemed to want to tread this new territory lightly.

 

“I believe you both know why you’ve been summoned.”  The two nodded.  “Several days ago, a new ‘star’ was formed over Toria.  It has absolutely terrified the populace, something that neither of you two have seen to its full effect having left for your respective isolations.”

 

The Director chimed in, “But I was told I should…”

 

A stern look from Her Grace cut the Director off short.

 

“We’ve been doing everything we can with local enforcement to keep peace, and we’ve been mostly successful.  It’s been difficult.  The people are restless and beginning to listen to other, less enlightened groups.  Just a few hours ago, the star fell, as you well know.  And then I received this.”

 

On some silent queue, one of Her Grace’s attendants walked in and placed a portable holoscreen on the table.  She pushed the button and an image appeared of a tattered and bloodied Torian.  A backdrop of the mountains appeared behind her.   Boulders littered the area around her.  One boulder had landed on a van.  It reminded the General as if one of the mountains had eaten been sick and regurgitated over the area.  Recognition crossed the Director’s face, “Dresda?”

 

“Hello, I hope this gets to someone in time.  My name is Dresda and I work for Dr. Tles at the Technology Institute in Old Toria.  I’m sending this in hopes that someone will be saved.  Under the direction of Dr. Tles, we have been researching an ancient artifact located in the Trik-Trak Mountains.  Something happened and it was activated.”  The General slowly turned his head towards the Director who was now turning a deep shade of purple.  “We don’t know what happened, but the entire cavern collapsed.  The entire research team was buried.  I’m the only survivor.  The….”  Dresda paused as she seemed to be looking for words, “the…monstrosity thing, metal, huge, really, really big, multiple legs, and looks to be heading in a north to north-east direction.  I’m not positive, but based off the sun, that’s what direction it looked to be heading.  Please send help.  My coordinates are attached to this message.”

 

Her Grace took a strong look at the Director.  “So, what do you have to say for yourself Director?”

 

“I…..I…..I don’t know anything about this!”

 

“Oh, come on Director, her coordinates are less than 10 miles from your headquarters at the base of the mountains.  And you don’t know a THING about it?”

 

The director simply shook his head.  Her Grace sighed and sat back in her chair as the sternness of her features changed to one of sorrow.  “So you’re simply an incompetent fool.”  The Director opened his mouth to speak, then thought better of it.  She sighed again then signaled with her hands.  “Director, you are being arrested for the plotting to overthrow the Torian government through public panic.  That amounts to treason.”

 

A pair of guards appeared behind the Director, where a pair of cuffs was quickly slapped around his hands.  The fact that the cuffs were of Drengin make was not lost on the General.  As he was dragged away, the Director pleaded, “Your Grace!  Your Grace!  I didn’t do it!  I didn’t do it….”

 

Her Grace sighed and laid her head on the back of the chair.  A ray of sunlight lit her face, and the General appreciated her beauty for just a second before considering his options.  The arrest of the Director might provide opportunities for him if he played his cards right.  Having gained a bit of strength back, Her Grace sat up straight and looked at the General, a little of her former self making its way back to the surface.  The smallest smidgen of a smile shined through to her face.

 

“General.  How good to see you again.”

 

The General returned in kind, “Always a pleasure Your Grace.”  The smile slowly disappeared from the General’s face as he thought about what had just transpired.  “You didn’t have to have him arrested Your Grace.  I think we both know he wasn’t at fault for this incident.”

 

Her Grace leaned back again, closing her eyes.  She was silent a few moments before speaking.  “I don’t deny that you have a superior network General.  It’s one reason I keep you around.  But you aren’t the only one who has pieces on the board.  I chose the Director for a reason, and not simply for the fact that he was a brilliant scientist.  You have no idea what it has been like the last few days.  We have been one step away from riots in the streets over this…thing, whatever it is.  Your guard performed admirably by the way, thank you.  Despite the fact, I’ve been facing pressure from many different sides.  A sacrifice was needed.  The Director will fill that role spectacularly.  It’s unfortunate, but it’s war.  A different kind of war, no doubt, but a war nonetheless.  And speaking of war General, what do we know about this entity that now walks our planet?”

 

“Well….”

 

**

 

Sergeant Slai stepped out of the reconstruction project into the morning sunshine.  With the General out for a few more days, the Sergeant had picked up a few extra duties.  Word had reached them about the potential threat, and recon teams had been spread out across the planet.  Aerial and ground units were on alert, but the creature seemed to be untraceable.  In an effort to prevent himself getting yet another headache by staring at tracking screens, or listening to the same briefings, he figured it would be good to head down to the lab reconstruction to take a look around.  Not much was moving.  There seemed to be quite a bit of rubble that needed to be removed.  The clearing phase had been going on for days, but little actual movement had been made.  There seemed to be more people guarding the area than doing the actual work.  It was an unfortunate necessity.  The Sergeant rubbed his head.  The walk hadn’t helped.  He still had his headache.

 

As the Sergeant made his way back to the operations center, a block or so away, a shadow passed overhead.  Unlike the typical bird, military plane, or cloud, the shadow stayed for several seconds.  The Sergeant looked up and stared.  An object was blocking the sun, and looked to be heading down.  It was huge.  And getting bigger.  He ran to the nearest building, a supply depot, and just as he was yelling for a red alert to the startled Torian, the alarm began blasting. 

 

The Sergeant jumped outside as marines began forming up into their squads.  These were the best of the best.  He hoped to at least do some serious damage.  He hoped the training they had given the yellow and green squads would be enough.  They would find out sooner rather than later.

 

The Titan continued to descend.  There wasn’t a doubt that it would land somewhere pretty close, likely within the red zone.  He was amazed at how big it was.  The initial reports didn’t give the size justice.  It rivaled the size of the largest buildings in New Toria.  His communicator had been chattering consistently since the red alert had began, mostly the standard operation chatter, but he was finally beginning to pick out some pieces of importance that he would need to respond to.

 

“Trajectories show the hostile as landing near the Communications array.”

 

Slai finally chimed in.  “All squads, form up three quarters mile radius of the comms array.  Have your secondary channels open when primary goes down.  Wait to fire on my mark.  I want armored and air prepped.  I want yellow and green squads on red alert and prepped.  If we don’t take this thing down, we could be in for a rough ride.  Now go!”

 

The comms began chattering with squads performing their duties.  As the metallic creature slowed to the ground, a blinding beam of light flashed out straight down at the ground.  The beam hit the ground with such force that it rattled the ground under him, almost a mile away.   Glass from buildings rained down around him.  The comms went dead with static.

 

The Sergeant quickly switched to his backup channel where he picked up the disbelief and surprise of the squads.

 

“Did you see that!”

“What was it?!?”

“And we’re suppose to do what again!??”

 

“TO TASK marines!  TO TASK!  Form up and quit the chatter!  Anyone have confirmation on the hit?”

 

There was a moment’s silence before a response.  “Sir, Squad CGG retreating to assigned rendezvous.  We’re about a quarter mile from the impact point, and it totally cleared, as in vaporized, everything within that area.  Comms array and supply depot beta look to have been totally incinerated.  Oh hell, here it comes!  It’s about to land.  It’s coming in fast!”

 

The Sergeant, nearly a mile away could feel the impact of the machine hitting the ground.  It was the queerest feeling he had ever felt.  He tried to talk past the lump in his throat and the emptiness in his stomach.  He was rushing to the front line with another squad and talked into his communicator between breaths.

 

“Recon teams, what do you see?”

 

“Sir, I’m sitting just outside the blast site.  I have to crane my head to see it all.  Some kind of metal construction, two large arm like appendages ending in weaponry of some kind.  Never seen anything like it.  Three legs ending in some kind of claw like feet.  There is no apparent head.  Can’t see any obvious control center for this thing sir.  No movement yet.”

 

“Sit tight Recon.  Alrighty, I need unit status!”

 

“Squad 150 Ready sir!”

“160 Ready!”

“177 Ready!”

“222 Ready.”

“184 ready to go.”

“545 Armor ready at your command.

“328 Re…”

 

“RECON HERE!  The thing is doing something!  Arms are in the air, oh hell, we’ve got incoming, heading….roughly 165 degrees.”

 

Another squad commander piped in over the comms, “I SEE IT, TAKE COV….”

 

The Sergeant cringed with the static over the comms.  The explosion was almost blinding.

 

Recon piped in, “It’s firing again!”

 

“ALL SQUADS, MOVE IN AND ENGAGE, I REPEAT, MOVE IN AND ENGAGE!  FIRE AT WILL!”

 

The Sergeant ran with his adopted squad no more than a dozen feet before he saw the incoming ballistic.  With all his effort he ran as fast as he could towards a barracks.  He could feel the blinding heat as the projectile drove towards the ground.  He dove to the ground in a feeble attempt at prolonging his life.  He heard screaming and yells as he covered his face.

 

He felt the impact as the ballistic hit the ground.  He heard the windows shatter all around him.  He felt the temperature rising, and quickly.  And even through his closed eyes, he saw the light getting brighter.  There was nothing he could do about it. 

 

**

 

Private Krxt ran for her life through the gate that led to the green sectors.  Hundreds of fellow marines had the same idea.  The urging of “MOVE! MOVE! MOVE!” kept people moving.  The Titan that was closing in on their position was just as effective.  What had begun as a coordinated assault on the metallic hostile had turned ugly within minutes.  The energy artillery was able to knock out buildings with a single shot, incinerating just about anyone and everything inside.  Small arms fire had no effect on its metallic exterior, but the hostile had to turn its attention to dealing with local threats before returning to its job of leveling the military base.  It seemed to be safer to be closer to the hostile, but marines still died either way.  Within minutes, orders had been given for a full retreat.  Dropships were waiting and evacuating at a constant rate. 

 

An explosion overhead caused Krxt and several marines around her to dive to the ground.  A dropship taking off had been hit by an energy blast and came crashing down into a building in front of her.  The pounding on the ground caused her to get up and start running again when a shadow blocked the sun.  She looked up to see the monstrosity well within view.  Another ballistic shot was fired over her.  She watched helplessly as it landed right in the middle of her evacuation zone.  The dropships exploded in a cascading and expanding ring form the point of impact. 

 

Another resounding thud pushed her back into action.  The monstrosity was on the move and heading her direction.  Marines scrambled in every direction, the ordered retreat having turned to unbridled panic.  Fires ahead blocked obvious retreat points and marines were climbing fences and rubble to find alternative routes.  In desperation a few marines began firing at the machine.  Amid the commotion, the Private heard the sounds of a radio nearby.

 

“Slai?  Are you there?  Are you there?  SLAI!”

 

The Private slipped inside a mostly demolished building to find a marine half buried in rubble.  The marine’s backside was burned beyond recognition.  She rolled him aside to find his communicator and pack still intact.  The ground thundered as the machine came ever closer. 

 

“SLAI!”

 

She picked up the communicator.  “Slai is dead, get to your rendezvous point.  NOW!”

 

“But we’ve got wounded, and the thing is getting closer.  What do we do ?”

 

“If you want to live, you move NOW!  This is NOT a drill.  It’s live or die, now MOVE!”

 

She turned off the communicator as the ground thundered again.  A shadow appeared over her through several cracks in the wall.  The Private took another look at the deceased Slai.   The name sounded familiar.  She thought she’d seen him with the General once.  More than once.  She had an idea as the ground thundered harder.  The walls shook more and a piece of ceiling that was still connected fell to the ground.  She scooted closer to the wall for cover.  A few short blasts of gunfire somewhere nearby were answered with a large explosion and a quick scream of pain.  The Private ignored it.  There had always been a rumor about the general’s group.  She was about to find out if it was true.  She quickly pulled out a knife out of her leg sheath and cut through the tattered shirt of Slai.  She did a cursory glance over his shoulders.  Nothing.  She went to expecting them in earnest when she spotted it, an extremely small scar on the front of his  left shoulder. 

 

The ground pounded and the wall nearly toppled onto her.  She ignored it as she went about her work.  With a quick but careful slice, she opened the wound, trying to ignore the dead Sergeant staring at her.  It didn’t take long to find.  A small microchip was rumored to be placed in all the General’s favorites.  Nobody knew if it had actually been true, until now.  The monstrosity’s foot crashed into the structure across the street.  The occasional gunfire was repeatedly responded with by large artillery fire.  Private Krxt frantically searched through the Sergeant’s pack.  There was something she was looking for, surely he had it.  He did, the magnetic grappling hook.  It was used to climb metal structures with an automatic winding mechanism for the way up.  This was the stuff the normal military never saw. 

 

Quickly, before the monstrosity moved on, she pulled out the Sergeant’s first aid kit, pulled some tape, grabbed the chip, and wrapped it around the handle of the grappling hook.  As the foot began to move, Private Krxt quickly dove into the crumpling doorway of the dilapidated structure and fired the cable.  It caught the monstrosity about twenty feet off the ground.  Before it could rip the cord out of her hands, she hit the return button and dove back behind the structure to Sergeant Slai.  The creature didn’t react.  It simply continued on with its mission of death and destruction. 

 

As the creature moved further and further away.  The Private finally realized how much she was shaking.  She sat back against the remaining wall and took a deep breath.  She adjusted to make herself more comfortable when she realized she was sitting on the communicator.  She pulled it out from under her and turned it on.  From the frantic chatter across the comms, she theorized that most of the base had been destroyed.  Trying to get a sense of order, Slska slowly turned through the channels.  Most of the channels were chaos until she reached a channel with a group definitely in control.  She listened for just a moment.

 

“Sir, we’ve evacuated what we can out of the base, there’s not much left out there, but a solid number of survivors, for now.  Orders?”

 

“Round up the marines outside the base.  We’ll need to keep the thing busy for now so no further effort in evacuations.  We’ll take it out on our terms.”

 

The Private perked up, both at the news and at the sound of the voice.  It was no doubt the general.

   

“But sir, we can’t track it.”

 

The Private chirped in before she thought.  “Yes we can.”

 

There was silence across the channel, before the first voice chimed in, “This is a secure channel.  Who is this?”

 

Private Krxt paused, debating whether to simply turn the communicator off or not. 

 

“Who is this!”

 

“Private Krxt of the 115 th infantry.  I’m using, uh, a communicator I found on Sergeant Slai?  I was separated and….”

 

The General piped in cutting her off.  “Do you have something to add Private?  If not, leave immediately.”

 

“Yes Sir.  I knew from the talk I’d heard that we couldn’t track the thing.  It was running us down, so I dove into a building where I found your marine.  I opened him up and pulled out your tracking implant, taped it to the grappling hook, and shot it at the thing.  I think you can track him using your Sergeant’s signature….”

 

There was silence on the other end before the General spoke up.

 

“So let me get this straight.  You saw one of my marines, desecrated his corpse, stole military secrets, stole military hardware, in a half-baked attempt at being able to track this thing?”

 

The private was silent.

 

“Private!  Answer the question!”

 

“Yes Sir.”

 

“Yes Sir what?”

 

“Yes, sir, I did all those things in an attempt to be able to track the thing.”

 

“Major, see if it works.”

 

There was a short pause.  “Sir, we have Slai’s sig and it’s moving!” 

 

“Private, leave this channel immediately.”

 

“Yes Sir!”

 

Private Krxt sighed as she turned off the communicator.  Had it been appropriate, she would have found a bed to go rest in.  As it was, there was far too much to do.  The monstrosity had gone one way.  She went the other.  There were bound to be others like her that had survived its passing.  It was time to organize, regroup, tend to the wounded, and wait for orders.

 

**

 

Immediately after the Private dropped, the General and Major switched channels.  The Titan was officially being tracked, and it was a lucky break, but the General didn’t believe in luck.  Well, that wasn’t exactly true but…

 

“Major, I want the thing followed but do not engage it yet.  I want to see if it’s randomly hitting population centers or if we can discern a plan before we hit it in full force.  We’re going to hit it on our terms.”

 

“And civilians Sir?”

 

“You have your orders Major.”

 

“Yes sir!”  Suddenly, the General was alone and he set the communicator down.

 

Her Grace slipped out from behind the doorway she’d been eavesdropping behind.  “And civilians General?”

 

The quick flash of surprise was chased away by grim determination.  “We’re in a war here Your Grace.  We are going to take losses.  We don’t know exactly what we’re dealing with yet, so doesn’t it make sense to observe the enemy before throwing all your forces at it?  We’ve already tried that once.”

 

Her Grace observed the General for a moment, trying to discern the motivation behind the determined mask.  “I think you’re just trying to see what it can do before you take it out.”

 

The General shrugged before proceeding.  “It makes it easier to prepare when you know the enemy.  By the time we regroup, we should know exactly what this thing can do.  The rest is just unfortunate.  If you have orders for me,”  the General paused for emphasis, “Your Grace, then let me know, otherwise, I have a work to do.”

 

The two shared a hard look.  A look of equals.  Not many could do that, to either of them.  Her Grace finally turned and stormed away.  The General sighed and shook his head.  That was something he would have to deal with at a later date.  There were more important things to worry about now.  Shutting the door, he picked up the communicator again and began issuing orders.  It was time to show this monstrosity exactly who it was dealing with.

on Oct 30, 2009

6

 

 

Despite the organization of the General, the efficiency of his elite troops, and the technology of his military, the war against the Titan did not go well.  The attack had been going on for what seemed like months, but in reality, had only been a few days.  The machine was nothing the General had ever encountered, or even heard about.  It was immune to everything they attacked it with.  Nothing touched it.  It simply ignored nearly everything unless attacked.  Upon being attacked it would eliminate the threat and then continue on with its quest to eliminate infrastructure throughout the planet.  Upon completion of some inner objective, it would blast off and land somewhere else across the planet to begin anew.  Hundreds of thousands had died in the chaos.  Cities had been all but leveled.  The military was in disarray, and the General was pulling out his last stops.

 

**

 

“Very good Atrl, now let’s do it again, the other direction.”   Yugo and his crew had spent the last few months training in space.  While most of the crew had some experience in space through the various ships that had made their way into space over the last year, Atrl was new.  She had been handpicked by Yugo.  Yugo had enough experience with poor pilots that he wanted to make sure the pilot flying his ship was the person he wanted.  Atrl had been a surprise pick to the crew.  She didn’t have the grades, the pedigree, the training, or the typical demeanor of an ace pilot.  Even the simulations she’d prepped in hadn’t been all that good.  Yugo had felt something about her,    something that told him that Atrl would be an asset to his crew.  Skepticism had been replaced with wonder as Atrl had proven to be a natural pilot.  She could perform maneuvers the autopilot could perform, but with the ability to adjust as the situation warranted.  As Yugo reset the coordinates, a buzz interrupted his train of thought.  Looking onto his console, Yugo noticed an urgent message and confidential.

 

Yugo excused himself into the small private anteroom just off the bridge.  The room held a small desk, a few chairs, and a window open to the blackness of space.  Yugo hadn’t decorated the room yet despite his position.  He still felt that the entire situation was still half a dream and felt that making the room his own would sabotage it.  Besides, he really didn’t have all that much to decorate it with.  Yugo sat down at the personal monitor and took a deep breath.  He had been pretty much left to his own devices since being ordained the captain of the badly named Dreamfetcher.  Commander Krii was more than willing to give advice when asked, but for the most part, the run of the ship’s training program was Yugo’s.  This could potentially be his first real assignment.  Yugo wiped away a bead of sweat from his forehead before he flipped the message on.

 

A brief static was quickly followed by the image of the General.

 

“Good afternoon Captain.”

 

Yugo saluted.  “General.”

 

“I have a job for you Captain.”

 

“Yes Sir.”

 

“I’m sure you’ve heard of the, issues, we’ve had down here.  We need a bit more firepower.  I need this thing taken out, but not completely destroyed.  I don’t know how much it’s going to take, but I want as much as possible in one piece.  This thing has been rather…resistant to conventional attacks, so you might want to use the new missiles the Director sent up.  Schematics and tracking coordinates are being sent to you now.  Good luck Captain.”

 

The monitor flipped off before Yugo had been could respond.  There was no way the General could hear the nervousness in Yugo’s voice.  Whether this was the General’s mode of operation, or whether the General was giving him the benefit, Yugo wasn’t sure.  Regardless, there was a job to do.  He did a scan of the schematics.  It was a ground and aerial opponent.  Anything could happen. 

 

He was the Captain and he was in charge, regardless of the circumstances.  Yugo stood up and straightened out his uniform.  He paused momentarily before walking back onto the bridge.  It was utterly silent.  The nervous anticipation could be felt by everyone.  Without saying a word, Yugo went and sat down in his chair. 

 

“We have orders.”

 

**

 

The Dreamfetcher jostled through the lower atmosphere above Old Toria.  The ship had not been designed for traditional flying, but would work well enough for the current mission.  Yugo mentally began flipping through his options when Atrl spoke up.  “Sir, target acquired.  We will be in weapons range in 3 minutes.”

 

There was a lot of ground to cover in three minutes, but the ship would be fine.  The red alert slowly bathed the bridge in its glow, making it look like the entire bridge was bathed in blood.  Yugo shook his head.  He had other things to worry about. 

 

“Weapon status?”

 

His weapons officer paused momentarily, checking the panel, “Prepped and ready sir.”

 

“Engineering?”

 

“We’re at 100% sir.”

 

There was nothing to do but wait.

 

“2 minutes sir.”

 

And then he saw it.  It looked just a tad taller than some of the nearby buildings.  Except it moved.  And lobbed gigantic balls of energy death into the city.  As he watched, a power station was engulfed in an awe inspiring explosion.  Had he not known what it was, he might have enjoyed the show.  As it stood now, it was a rather formidable foe.

 

“30 second sir.”

 

“I want a double shot fired at the center on my mark.  Let’s see what this thing can take.”

 

“Yes, sir..”

 

10, 9, 8,….

 

The bridge crew sat silent as the monstrosity grew larger.

 

7, 6, 5…..

 

The monstrosity lobbed another globe of death into an industrial district.  Factories and warehouses were reduced to rubble in an instant.  The monstrosity grew larger before then.  It obviously didn’t seem to consider them a threat.

 

4, 3, 2….

 

The seconds ticking seemed to be an eternity.

 

1…  We are now..

 

“FIRE!”

 

A pair of Stinger missiles streaked their way across the sky.  Skimming just over several buildings, the missiles homed in on the center of the creature.  The bridge crew held their breath as the missiles closed in and struck the thing.  The explosion briefly lit the sky. When vision returned, the Titan was aiming at them.

 

“EVASIVE MANUEVERS!”

 

Ensign Nrek quickly pulled the ship starboard, but the nuances of flying a ship of this particular size, in gravity, was a bit more challenging.  The glancing shot from the Titan sent the ship tilting to a near forty-five degree angle.  Screams of pain were followed by a computer panel blowing out behind Yugo.  Officers across the bridge struggled to keep their balance or slipped downwards towards the starboard wall. 

 

As Nrek righted the ship, Yugo noted that a few posts weren’t filled, including his weaponry officer.  Yugo quickly stepped up into the slot.  As he adjusted the controls for another round, he looked up to note that the ship seemed to be gliding.

 

“Are we falling?”

 

“Sir, we’re losing altitude, we need more power!”

 

“ENGINEERING!”

 

“Sir, what the hell was that?  We’ve lost our atmospheric Nadion converter.  We’re losing power!  We need to retreat!”

 

“I need power to the engines, NOW!”

 

“Only thing we have left is life support sir, we need to retreat!”

 

“If we don’t get power to the engines, we won’t NEED life support when we are ground to bits in a mountain range, now get me power, NOW!”

 

It was a long thirty seconds before engine power was returned to full power. 

 

“Sir, we don’t have long before we…”

 

“Understood.  Ensign, turn this thing around, and let’s take another shot at this thing.”

 

The Ensign piped in, “Sir, we can’t take another hit by that thing.”

 

“Then let’s not get hit, ok?”

 

Quick, nervous laughter filled the bridge as the Ensign turned the ship around.  The monstrosity came back into view, continuing its grizzly work.  Yugo could barely see the streets below jam packed with

Torians trying to get out of the machine’s way.  They had no luck as another ball of energy landed atop a nearby building.  As the Dreamfetcher approached, the Titan stopped its attack and slowly turned to once again face the potential threat.  One of the hands seemed to charge up before firing another blast of streaming energy at the ship.

 

Nrek was prepared and fairly easily avoided the blast.  “Keep us on target and evade on my mark….”

 

Yugo prepped a four-missile salvo for firing.  It was the maximum the Dreamfetcher could fire at once.  Based on the first attack, he seriously doubted four would do the trick, but there was always the chance.  Yugo watched the charging hand grow brighter and brighter. 

 

“NOW!”

 

Nrek pulled the ship hard to port.  The streaming blast of energy streamed past the ship clipping the starboard side.  As the ship righted itself in preparation for another attack, the computer bank behind Yugo exploded.  The force sent the officer manning the station and Yugo to the floor.  Yugo grabbed for a handhold on the way down.  The missiles fired.  The bridge officers watched helplessly as the quad salvo of missiles was fired blind towards the Titan.  As Yugo slowly made his way back to his feet rubbing his head, he watched as the creature began charging up again.  They were close enough now that any real change in direction would do very little in avoiding a direct hit.  The quad missiles wound their way through the air.  The crew held their breath.  They might actually hit the thing…

 

The charging grew brighter and brighter.  The missiles we’re heading right for the hand.

 

Just before the energy band came streaking towards the Dreamfetcher, the missiles impacted.  The resulting blast seered through the Dreamfetcher as it fought to remain in one piece.  Systems began shutting down across the bridge.  “Sir!  We’re losing power!  We need to land!”

 

“Ensign!  Find a place to land!  Now!”

 

As the crew snapped back into action, Yugo returned to the view of the monstrosity.  The quad missiles had blown off its arm.  It paused momentarily, calculating what to do after the loss of an extremity before a series of explosions wracked the monstrosity’s insides.  As the Dreamfetcher descended, the creature, not more than a few blocks away seemed to stop dead in its tracks, explosions still lighting up from inside the thing.

 

The Dreamfetcher glided into a commercial parking lot more than landed.  The grinding of metal and stone was not a pleasant one.  It was better than the alternative.  When the ship finally stopped moving, the bridge looked around slowly before bursting into cheers.  Somehow, some way, they had managed the impossible.  A hand on his shoulder made Yugo turn.  A quick smile from Commander Krii let him know he’d done well.

 

**

 

Private Krxt and a fellow marine dragged another body into line.  Slska had spent the last thirty-six hours organizing and commanding the search and rescue operation through what had previously been known as the yellow zone.  They had rescued a few marines, but had mostly been dragging out bodies from the mounds of rubble that littered the area.  It would take time before the heavy machinery arrived to help clear the area, but it would be too late for any survivors still trapped.  The nightmare only seemed to have continued since the monstrosity left.  The fact that it had fallen provided only a temporary boost to the marines.

 

Slska wiped her brow with her sweat stained uniform as she watched a marine Lieutenant jogging towards her. 

 

“Sector C-10 has been cleared as best we can Slska.  Should we move to the next sector?” 

 

Slska looked up at the sky.  Night was closing in.  She looked back at the Lieutenant.  “Naw, have your squad prep camp for now.  If we have time, we can begin, but I think we’ll be cutting it close as is.  Any word on evac?”

 

“Communications are still spotty but we did manage to get a message through.  We’ve cleared a landing area about a click south of here.  The temp hospital is right next door.  We don’t have any qualified medics out here though.  We lost two marines this morning, and we’ll lose more the longer we stay out here without proper attention.  What are we going to do?”

 

Slska shrugged.  “Concentrate on what you can control Lieutenant.  That’s all we can do.  Get the camp prepped.  We’ll lose more by….”

 

The pair dropped their conversation as a pair of jeeps came driving up.  The marine in the back pointed over at Slska and the jeep stopped nearby.  Slska recognized the Torian in back as one of the marines she’d been working with over the last few hours.  However, she instantly recognized the man in the passenger seat.  It was none other than General Slat himself.

 

The Private and Lieutenant both came to attention, saluting in unison.

 

The General came to stand before the pair acknowledging their salutes with a slight nod of his head.  Inspecting the dusty, dirty, and tattered uniforms, the General’s calculating eyes finally came to rest on Slska. 

 

In a knowing tone, he questioned, “I assume you are Private Krxt?”

 

“Yes Sir.”

 

By now, a small crowd had formed at a respectable distance from the General.

 

“I’ve heard you’ve done yourself well here the last few days.  Considering the circumstances, and your training, extremely well.”

 

Slska blushed slightly but responded quickly, “Just doing my duty Sir.”

 

“Unfortunately Private, rules were broken.  You are herby under arrest.”

 

A second Torian, dressed in the uniform of the military police, quickly clasped Slska’s wrists behind her and restrained them with a pair of Dren restrainers.  Generally used on the worst offenders, the Dren restrainers clamped around the wrists with a series of barbs and jagged edges.  They were made to bleed a subject.  If the retained weren’t careful, it could easily slit veins leading to a quick death.

 

The shock left Slska with barely enough time to gasp before her tormenter pushed her towards the jeep.  The rest of the marines looked on in stunned silence as the pair of jeeps turned and drove away.  The Lieutenant looked around as eyes suddenly turned to him for direction.  There was one last order he’d been given before she’d been taken away.  He might as well follow it.

 

“Alrighty marines, let’s finish up here and prep camp.  We can start again in the morning”

 

Slowly, the marines began heading towards their designated camp sites.  The Lieutenant shook his head to himself.  He wondered how much worse it could really get.

 

**

 

Xavrs had learned quite a bit about military discipline from the Dren.  The Dren believed that order wasn’t maintained by coddling.  Occasionally, a show of force was needed to keep people in line.  Over time, Xavrs had learned to better appreciate the lesson.  Today was one of those days.  Three hundred marines stood in formation around Private Slska Prxt.  They were in the middle of a clear field in the yellow zone.  A slight wind blew through the dry grass and desert flowers that managed to grow in the drastic climate.  Slska found herself bound to a wooden “X” staked in the ground.  Her undergarments were the only clothing she wore leaving her back and legs exposed.  Her breathing came rapidly as she closed her eyes, not wanting to meet the gazes of the marines in front of her.

 

The silence was palatable.  Slska would have been able to hear a marine cough from the back row behind her.  She felt, more than heard, a marine walking up next to her.  Speaking in a loud voice, he broke the silence with her sentencing.

 

“Today, Private Slska will be punished, having been found guilty of the following crimes:  For the crime of stealing and destruction of military hardware, 5 lashes.  For the unauthorized use of a secured channel 5 lashes.  For the indiscriminate use and potential loss of military secrets, 15 lashes.”

 

Slska squirmed as the sentence was announced.  This had to be a mistake.  Surely, she had done the right thing.  Surely anyone in her position would have done the same.  She couldn’t be punished for saving other Torians.  She made one last plea to her captors.  “There has to be some mistake!  You surely can’t be doing this!”

 

The marine turned off his datapad and walked back to a small table.  A whip lie there ready and waiting.  He picked it up and tested it for its strength.  Then he turned it on.  A faint buzzing sound came from the whip.  Another relic from ages past, the vibro whip was a weapon of massive destruction.  A good stroke from the whip would be able to rip through to the bone. 

 

The executioner took his position behind Slska and without further ceremony, began the punishment.

 

The General watched Slska’s punishment from the nearby table.  He was sorry that he had to use people this way.  Word would get out about this punishment if it hadn’t already.  Slska still had extensive value.  The screams from Slska were genuine enough.  After 10 lashes, the General caught the attention of the striker.  He gave an almost imperceptible nod and the striker began anew.  The striker was a master at his art.  He needed to punish the girl, but not kill her.  The weapon he was using took extreme skill to use.  A novice would have killed her already, or himself if he were careless.

 

The final stroke came twenty minutes later.  The General wanted to prolong the punishment for the audience.  As soon as the final stroke concluded.  A pair of Torians came up to Slska.  Her back was an oozing, bleeding, mass of flesh.  She was beyond crying and beyond caring.  She just wanted to die.  The two Torians quickly untied her and caught her as she tried to collapse.  Being careful of their charge, they began dragging her through an aisle down the middle of the assembly.

 

The General stepped into the center and addressed the crowd.  “You all know the rules marines.  Nobody is exempt.  Not the highest command, nor the lowest private.  Chaos does not allow for the relaxing of the rules!  Remember this punishment next time you think about doing something you shouldn’t be doing.  Dismissed!”

 

As the assembly dispersed, the General quickly caught up with the Torians dragging Slska away. He whispered into the taller one’s ear,  “I want her treated, and taken to the chamber.  We still have business to discuss.  You two are responsible for her safety until then.”  The taller looked back at the General and nodded.

 

**

 

It was the smell of Rypquit that brought her awake.  The smell was an unmistakable bittersweet.  Slska had only known the scent twice.  Both times were from ancient healing rituals held for chronically ill elders from her pod.  Her body tingled ever so slightly with the exception of her back, which slightly throbbed.  She was sure the results of her punishment should have resulted in her unable to move for days, if not weeks.  Had she not distinctly remembered what she’d been through, she would have thought she’d simply been through a tough marine workout.  The beating of her heart was the only sound she heard.  She shifted slightly and the rustling sheets let her know she was on a bed of some type.  Wherever she was, she guessed they didn’t mean to punish her unnecessarily. 

 

She opened her eyes.  A candle was the only source of light in the small room.  Sitting on a small table a foot away, the candle’s flame flickered periodically sending dancing shadows across the far wall.  Sitting next to it was a neatly folded stack of clothes.  Next to the dresser, mounted to the wall was a full-length mirror.  A door opposite the bed stood closed.

 

Slska closed her eyes again, but sleep wouldn’t come.  Her mind was already engaged as to the next steps.  There was obviously something that was required here and the choices seemed obvious.  Was she a captive?  A guest?  Both?  Neither?  With a sigh, Slska slowly turned to her side on pulled the covers down.  It was then she realized she was naked and she’d been oiled sometime.  A slight blush covered her face as she tested her back before sitting up.  Only a dull ache let her know that something had actually happened.  She slid to her feet, ready to catch the edge of the bed, just in case.  Her body seemed whole enough.  She examined herself in the mirror.  As best she could, she traced the scars where the whip had caught her.  She remembered the blood dripping down her back, down her legs, pooling at her feet.  The thought caused her to shudder just slightly and she closed her eyes to banish the memory.  When she opened them again, she was still alone in the small room.  All that remained was a series of reddish scars across her back.  As pleased as she was, she found the circumstance unsettling. 

 

Quickly stepping to the table, she found a silk robe neatly folded on the table and quickly donned it.  The stone floor was chilly against her feet but there was nothing to be done there.  She did a quick check of the room.  There was no note, or instructions, or anything else of interest.  All she had left to do was check the door.  With a mental shrug, she tested it.  It was unlocked.

 

As quietly as she could, she opened the door and peeked outside.  A pair of marines opposite the door immediately came to attention.  Slska shrugged and smiled to herself.  There was no need trying to hide so she opened the door the whole way, blushing slightly with her underdressed appearance.  The marines seemed neither to notice nor care.

 

“If you would follow us Private Krxt.”

 

Slska nodded to indicate her acknowledgement and the pair led her through a series of hallways.  The rough cut of the hall indicated they were underground somewhere.  One marine led and the other followed.  Slska was perplexed to say the least.  A sudden pain jolted through her back bringing her up short.  It felt as if someone had jammed a red-hot poker through her right shoulder blade.  She gasped as she bent, trying to alleviate the pressure but it didn’t work.  Just as the scream left her mouth, the pain was gone.  The episode hadn’t lasted more than three seconds. 

 

The guard behind her, with a sincere look of concern on his face had both hands around her arm.  “You ok Private?”

 

Slska took a moment to bring her breathing back to normal, her hands on her knees before nodding.

 

The trio walked for just a minute before they stopped at another closed door.  The first guard opened it and led her inside.  A small table with a sampling of fruit stood in the center.  The room had no windows or other doors.  The fact confirmed to Slska that they were indeed underground.  As they ushered her inside, the second nodded, “I’ll let him know she’s here.”

 

The first nodded as he closed the door and took his spot guarding just inside.  “Please, have something to eat, you’ve had quite an ordeal.”

 

Slska sort of nodded.  “Ordeal” was an understatement.  She couldn’t help thinking the entire episode had now surpassed odd.  And then it hit her.  She was hungry.  She wondered exactly how long she’d slept, and what exactly had happened while she had slept.  Or maybe she hadn’t slept, and just didn’t remember what had happened.

 

Different scenarios crept through her brain as she sampled the variety of fruits and breads.  She noted that the meal was purposely light.  The variety of reasons that this could be quietly ate at her mind while she ate.  The marine guarding the door seemed perfectly content to watch the opposite wall.  After about twenty minutes, her imagination finally began getting the better of her, and she figured she’d at least try getting something out of her guard.

 

“So, is anyone going to tell me what’s going on?”

 

The guard answered almost instantly, as if expecting the question at some point during his stay.  “Not my place Private.”

 

She wondered if he did this often, if this were one of his roles.  Jail keeper?  Executioner?  She finished her meal with a glass of cool water and scooted back from the table.  With nothing to do, and nobody to talk to, she began to pace.  She always thought better when she paced.  The exercise helped blood to her brain allowing her to think more clearly.  At least, that’s what she always told herself.  Another jolt to her back brought her up short.  It was quicker this time, just a jolt and she waved off her guard who was about to rush to her aid.

 

“Any idea how long these are going to last?”

 

The guard was about to respond, then hesitated, as if considering whether to respond at all or not.  He finally decided, “It’s been far too long since we’ve punished someone with that particular device, and the….method we used to take care of you afterwards, well, the combination hadn’t been tried yet.  So to answer your question, no, we will just need to keep watch.”

 

Slska’s jaw dropped.  The answer opened more questions than it answered.  Just as she was about to barrage him with more questions the door opened.  Walking in behind the other guard was her tormentor, the General himself.  Her first thought was simply to slap him.  The General must have caught the recognized look of disgust as he smiled warmly and opened his hands to the pair of chairs at the table, “Come, sit, we have a few things to discuss.”

 

Slska knew she really didn’t have a choice, so she sat across from him.  “First of all Lieutenant, I’d like to apologize for your punishment.  I understand it was an… unpleasant experience, but totally necessary – on quite a few levels actually.  Sometimes you do what you have to do, regardless of the consequences.  I know you understand that.”  The ripping open of the dead Sergeant Slai flashed through Slska’s mind as the General continued.  “I do sincerely apologize for the punishment, we’ve done our best to bring you back to whole as best as possible.  There may be some lingering effects for awhile, but overall, we expect that you will be better off than as the alternative.”  Slska noted he was dancing around secrets, and then noted he KNEW she knew he was dancing around the secrets.  She couldn’t help but smile just a little at the game being played. 

 

“However, Lieutenant, we have come to the point in the conversation where you need to make a decision.”  The General passed over a small envelope to Slska.  She held the envelope as her mind processed what he had just said?  It didn’t make sense.

 

“Excuse me?”

 

“Slska, we have lost a good number of good man and women commanders the last few days.  On the other hand, we’ve been able to observe the abilities of a few incredibly talented and natural leaders.  You are one of them.  You had over two hundred marines working for you on your project.  You were a Private.  They were working for you because you had a plan, you knew what had to be done, you listened and took the good parts form other people’s ideas to incorporate into your own, and when the time came, ran over people to get things done.  After you were ‘arrested’, you know what happened?  They finished your plan of camping for the night.  The next morning, the entire operation ground to a halt, with each marine slowly finding their way to another squad with another plan.”

 

The General let it sink in for a moment before continuing.

 

“You have a choice Slska.  You can walk out the door right now as Lieutenant Slska.  You ‘broke the rules’ and paid the price for it, but you did it for the right reasons and are essentially a hero.”  The General paused.

 

“Or, you can listen to my other offer.”  The General sat back in his chair to measure her reaction.  It didn’t take long.

 

“What’s the catch?’

 

The General smiled as he leaned forward towards her, “The catch, as it were, is that if you hear my other offer, you are strongly suggested to take it.  Strongly.”

 

“You mean, you’ll kill me.”

 

“Naw, we wouldn’t do that.  Not often anyway.”

 

Slska stood up and turned towards the door. Before she reached it, she stopped.  What if the rumors were true?  There had been a number of rumors about the General’s military.  Most of them were so obnoxious they couldn’t possibly be true.  Could they?  She had personally uncovered one.  What about the rest?  Were they true?  What would they entail?  Was she really that close to finding out?

 

She turned back to the General who studied her with appraising eyes.  She knew he knew the answer already.  And then it hit her.  This wasn’t a decision.  This was a test.  She sat back down in her chair and looked the General in the eye.  “You already know the answer General.  Let’s begin.”

 

The General smiled.  “Toria is under assault by threats on a weekly basis Slksa.  There is a private group under my command that helps keeps these threats under control.  I want you to be a part of that group Slska.  The group only has power by secrecy.  The further away from me I can keep this group, the more power we have.  By punishing you the way I did, there won’t be ANY doubt by anybody who saw it or heard about it, which by now is most of the military, that you will hate me forever.  You have now become more valuable to me than you can ever imagine.”

 

The implications of what the General was saying assaulted her mind when a silly through crossed her mind.  “And I assume I’ll get an implant?”

 

The General laughed as he got up.

 

“It was implanted when we were patching you up Lieutenant, you’ll never find it.  You will be with us for at least six weeks while you heal.  Your first briefing is two hours after low tide.  These two will be your mentors while we get you up to speed.  I have a perfect spot for you.  Welcome aboard Lieutenant.”

 

With a nod to the pair of Marines guarding the door, the General slipped out.  Slska just shook her head.   None of the scenarios she had thought through had come even CLOSE to reality.  And well, that was a good thing.

on Oct 30, 2009

7

 

 

The General drove slowly through the red zone.  It had been two weeks since the destruction had ended and life was beginning to return to normal.  Fences had been erected, rubble removed, the dead buried.  There were many dead.  Far, far too many.  His own private army had been close to eradicated during the attacks.  Reports had it that close to 20% of his group in the red zone had survived.  His army would need to be replenished, and he’d already started, but it would take far too much time.  He would have to figure something else out much, much sooner.  His tour ended as it always did at the center of the compound where it all started, the scientific research facility.  It had been closed off for the time being, both for the fact that there hadn’t been enough time to repair as well as the fact that there was nobody to do the research – nobody he could trust anyway.  But the General had plans.  He always had plans.

 

As he stepped out of the jeep, a quick beep indicated a radio message.

 

“Slat here.”

 

“General, we’ve got a code 71 at your quarters sir.”

 

The General paused.  A code 71 was…unusual at best.

 

“Repeat that?”

 

“General, we have a code 71 at your quarters.  Orders sir?”

 

“Remain there solider, I’m on my way.”

 

Slipping back into the jeep, the General nodded to the Private.  The private quickly turned the jeep around and headed in the direction of the barracks.

 

The jeep stopped in front of a small house.  It was a hastily constructed shack really.  It was the best that could be done considering the circumstances.  Manpower was needed elsewhere over rebuilding the General a nice place to sleep.  A pair of soldiers flanked the doorway, not having moved upon the General’s arrival.  As he stepped forward, they both came to attention.

 

“Who is it?”

 

“We were asked not to tell, Sir.”

 

“Excuse me Soldier?”

 

The Soldier paled just the slightest before answering back.  “We were asked not to tell, Sir.”

 

There was only one person who outranked him, as it were, in the grand scheme of things, but he wondered exactly what had brought her down to the site.  The General entered his abode.  It didn’t consist of much; a small living area, a bedroom, kitchen, and bathroom.  Her Grace sat at the kitchen table, admiring a picture she’d found.  He quickly approached and bowed.

 

“To what do I owe the pleasure of your visit Your Grace?”

 

Her Grace seemed out of her element in the small house wearing traveling clothes that were obviously intended to help her ‘blend’ in with the common Torians. 

 

Her Grace ignored the question as she studied the picture she held, a picture that seemed to have been salvaged form the wreckage of his former abode.  She finally looked up at him again, studying his face.

 

“I never knew you had a daughter.”

 

The General gently took the slightly wrinkled picture out of her hands and placed it face down on the table.  “Your Grace didn’t come all this way to ask me about people that may or may not be in my family now did she?”  Her Grace sighed as she sat back in the chair.  She looked resolved about something.  The General couldn’t quite put his hand on it

 

“Come and sit General.”  She patted the chair across from her.  The General sat warily.  When he was comfortable, Her Grace began,  “General, there are going to be some changes on Toria soon.  I’m calling a cabinet meeting next week.  You will be there.”  She lifted her eyes to his to verify there would be no challenge.  There wasn’t.  “I am telling you first because, well, I need your help.”  Her Grace looked up for a reaction and got none, and then continued.  “The last few months have been difficult at best in New Toria.  You’ve been here, doing your thing and not noticing what’s been going on.  Everyone wants power General, and you know that.  And somehow, they are succeeding in getting the people behind them.  I know of at least three different people who could theoretically take my place should something…” Her Grace paused, “happen to me.”

 

The General finally responded.  “Are you in trouble?   Danger?!?”

 

“No, no, no….

 

“Your Grace, you have my best men at your disposal to do whatever needs to be done.”

 

“No, no, that’s not what I mean…”

 

For once, Her Grace seemed to be grasping for words.  She finally took a deep breath, resolved to let it out, and began, “Next week, the Interstellar Republic of Toria will be born.  I will be spokesperson and leader of the Universalists Party.  You will be leader of the War Party.  Six other party leaders will be voted upon by the people.  The people will vote and the leading party will rule for a set period of time.

 

Xavrs stared at her as if she were a chair that had just come to life.  “Your Grace, you can’t be serious…”

 

“General!  You have been stuck up here playing war games while I’ve been trying to keep this world together.  And then your little trick with this monstrosity nearly tore me apart.  I have used every favor I have to keep this world in one piece.  I knew what you were doing, and why you were doing it.  And you haven’t paid the price for it General.  I have.  But I allowed it.  Yes.  I ALLOWED you to have your way General.  I know you are studying everything about this monstrosity.  Don’t think I don’t know that you’ve been shipping pieces into the red zone since the thing went down.”

 

The General remained silent.

 

“This transfer of power will keep the political turmoil going for quite some time.  I figure it will take six months for the leaders to get themselves organized.  And then going forward, instead of always aiming at me, they will have to watch their own backs as well in order to stay on top.  Between the two of us, we should be able to organize enough support that I can remain in power for some time to come.  And this is all done for a reason General.  I’m afraid we don’t have much time.”

 

“Surely there’s another way Your Grace.  We have been through situations worse than this, we…”

 

“Two weeks ago, I had a private conversation General.”  Her Grace’s eyes shifted downwards.  “I had a conversation with the one person, if you can call him that, that I had never hoped to encounter, Lord Kona.”

 

The General’s mind reeled in a thousand directions at once and almost lost the flow of the conversation.

 

“He complemented our Russom world on its progress in a crass and sarcastic kind of way.  He mentioned that our military ships there were a fine addition to our fleet after the prior ‘accident’.  He wished us well, and could guaranty a few months of safety for a slight fee.”

 

The General thought the conversation wasn’t as pleasant as Her Grace was making it out to be.

 

“I paid the fee General.  If he comes back again with the same kind of demands, we might not be able to afford that kind of payment.  Our reserves are dwindling.  But that’s not your problem.  I just….

 

Her Grace’s eyes were downcast as she finished…

 

“I just wanted you to know before you were summoned tomorrow.  You, of all my advisors, deserve the truth.”

 

She picked herself from the chair she’d been sitting in.  The General realized he’d never sat down since the potential threat on her life.  Her Grace came close to him, and quickly, as if trying to do it before losing her nerve, gave him a quick kiss on the cheek and then brushed by out the door.

 

She was already in the jeep when the General reached the door.  He caught her eyes just as the jeep turned the corner and was lost from view behind a pile of rubble.  The General sighed as he stepped back onto the road, surveying the landscape.  There was so much work to do.

 

**

 

Her Grace sat at the table, pushing around the food on her plate rather than eating it.  She knew it wouldn’t be lost on her audience.  Those that didn’t notice wouldn’t be in power long anyway.  She was about to change the entire structure of Torian government.  You had to take note of the details if you wanted to stay in power. 

 

She looked up at her advisors around her.  The small talk amongst them was simply a front.  Her Grace smiled inwardly.  She knew it was a front.  Her advisors knew it was a front.  Her advisors knew she knew they knew it was a front.  And yet everyone continued with the dinner as if this was simply another ordinary evening.  It was anything but.

 

There was Menlka, her Minister of the Interior whose pretend smile nearly hid the nervousness underneath.  There was Dresda, the newly appointed Director of Technology, easily the youngest of her advisors and the reporter of the monstrosity from the mountains.  The General was obviously there, quiet and watchful of the party around him.  There were a handful of others she had chosen to join her tonight – others she thought would make good representatives for their respective specialties, and generally ambitious enough to want to do anything to get ahead.  United, they had nearly brought her to her knees.  She was about to send them at each other’s throats.  She had learned long ago that politics could be a nasty game.

 

Her standing was enough to bring the limited conversations to a halt.  All eyes were on Her Grace as she stood at the head of the table.  She cleared her throat, and smoothing away a wrinkle in her dress began her speech.

 

“I have called you all here tonight for a very special announcement.”  Her Grace paused to listen to the absolute silence throughout the room.  “The last few weeks have been…strenuous at best, and many here believe choices I made during this time might not have been the best for our people.  I believe you may be correct.  The time for change has come.”  Her Grace paused once again to take a breath.  Confusion and curiosity spread among her soon to be peers.  Was Her Grace resigning? The General seemed to be the only one enjoying the presentation.

 

“The people want more say in how their government is run.  What the people ask for, they shall receive.  One year from now, there will be an open election for the new leading party of Toria.”  A nearly simultaneous gasp of surprise arose from the gathering.  Nearly immediately, questions began to shouted out,

 

“But what about…”

“You don’t have…”

“Who authorized…”

 

Her Grace waved all the questions off.  “You all are front runners for your particular parties.  I suggest you woo the people as best you can.  I will continue to act as spokesperson for the Torian people, but will take direction from the ruling party.”

 

“Before I leave you to the rest of your meal, it has been a trying day, there are a few other announcements.  Reconstruction after the attack has taken a rather large toll on our planetary finances.  We will be eliminating a vast majority of the research budget for the foreseeable future.  Additionally all research will be conducted off world.  Dresda, this shouldn’t affect your group much, but General, you will conduct any further research upon your station.”

 

The General bowed his head deferentially.  Dresda jumped up nearly immediately.  “But you can’t do this!  What is our group on Toria IV supposed to do?  Sit on our hands?”

 

“It’s already done dear.  And before anyone else has any more questions, details will be sent to you personally by the end of the week.  You have three days to comment and return to me for consideration in changes.  This will be announced to the public by the end of the month.  Ladies and Gentleman, I bid you adieu.”

 

Her Grace quickly slipped out of the dining room.  The room remained silent as the group pondered the potential for newfound power.  Menlka was the first one to stand and excuse himself.  The rest, nearly in unison followed him out.  Only the General remained where he was, finishing off the rest of the wonderful meal.  The fish had cooled to a delightful temperature, and it would have been a waste to leave it.  Finishing the remains of his meal, he nodded his head to a serving girl nearly hidden in the shadows.  As much as he’d have liked some company that evening, he had things to do.

 

**

 

A pair of guards flanked the General as he clomped down the prison corridor.  It was an underground facility, used by the military for those criminals that were needed alive, but for all other purposes, considered dead.  The walls were cut out of a rough magna rock, easily able to rip a Torian to shreds if they weren’t careful.  The prison was empty for the time being with the exception of one cell at the far end.  Lying on his cot, face up, staring at the ceiling was the former Director of Technology, Dr. Tles.

 

The Doctor glanced briefly at the General before returning his stare to the fascinating geometry on the cell’s ceiling.

 

“Good evening Doctor.”

 

The General received no response.

 

“I need your help Director.  It seems I’ve lost my project leaders in an accident, and I’m looking for someone to replace them.  Know of anyone that might be interested?”  The General rubbed his thumb against the bars smeared with dirt before wiping it on his pants.  There was no response from the Doctor.

 

“That’s a shame Doctor.  I figured if you helped me, I could help your family.  But if not….”

 

The General finally got a reaction.  The Doctor bolted up in bed, concern streaking his face.  “What have you done to my family?  If you touch my family you son of a…”

 

“Doctor, doctor…  I’m trying to help here.  It seems that your pod is being evicted from your estate.  Your disgrace extends to your family, and NOBODY wants criminals living the lifestyle of a former Director, so there have been requests made to have them evicted.”

 

“You son of a bitch.”

 

“Manners my Doctor, manners.  It’s up to you.  You’ll even gain a bit of freedom.  We’re heading to the Aquatica Doctor.  Ever been in space before?”  A quick flash of surprise washed across the Doctor’s face followed quickly by suspicion. 

 

“Yes, that’s right Doctor, it seems her Grace, in her infinite wisdom, has decreed it too dangerous to research on our home planet here, so we’re heading to the station for future research.  You can’t run too far in the station, and for all intensive purposes, you’ll be out of the public eye so nobody will be the wiser.  What’s it going to be Doctor?  Rot here in this cell why your family is evicted and lives on the streets, shunned by most of Toria, or working with me on something you were born to do while your family lives the life – or almost the life – that you have provided them?”

 

“But…what about the…restrictions?”

 

It was the General’s turn to be surprised.  “Restrictions?”

 

“Aren’t you under some kind of financial restrictions or something?”

 

“Ahhh…Yes, that.  You don’t worry about that.  Where did you hear about that?”

The Doctor only smiled.

 

“Yeah, yeah doctor, keep your secrets.  Let’s get you cleaned up and briefed and we’ll head out shall we?”  One of the guards inserted the key and wrested with the lock. It finally succumbed and the door screeched open.

 

“Yes….sir.”

 

“That’s my boy.”

 

**

 

Space Station Aquatica received it’s name from it’s original purpose – the supply of water to the first space worthy vessels.  Originally built as a space construction yard, the Torians consistently added onto it rather than build a new, sleeker, and more efficient station.  It was a wonder that the station had held together as well as it had.  The general mantra had been if that something was broken, slab another plate of steel around it to strengthen it.  It had worked fairly well to date.

 

The station continued to act as a space construction yard, but had been expanded to handle additional duties:  space military training, a refueling station, and just recently, a research station.  Dr. Tles had never been to space before, and for the most part ignored the chit-chat from the ship’s occupants as the ship broke the Torian atmosphere and broke into space for the first time.  Viewing Toria from space was almost enough to make him forget the trouble that seemed to follow him.  A voice from the pilot interrupted his thoughts.

 

“Fifteen minutes till we dock General.”

 

The station slowly expanded into view.  The tangled mass of lines almost made the station look more like a hunk of debris than a station.  The fact that yellow caution lights blinked around various protrusions let the Doctor know that it was, in fact, inhabited.  The pilot confidently glided the shuttle to the preassigned docking bay.  Just before the shuttle collided, magnetic seals clamped down onto the shuttle, bringing it to a secure stop.  The General and a few others the Doctor didn’t recognize unfastened their harnesses and rose to their feet.  A little green light above the door finally blinked green and the shuttle door opened to the maze of the station.  The crew began exiting the shuttle amid various discussions when the General looked over at the still sitting Doctor.

 

“You coming?”

 

That’s all it took to snap the Doctor out of his trance.  A bit embarrassed, he quickly unsnapped his harness and followed the General into the depths of the station.

 

The Torians spent very little effort on the interior decorations of the station as far as Rslx could tell.  The General confidently led the entourage through the maze of twisted metal corridors, lined with cargo crates, scrap metal, and bins filled with junk.  They made their way to an elevator where the entourage was saluted by a pair of guards. The General dismissed the rest and led the Director alone into the elevator. 

 

“Barracks”

 

The General began briefing before the elevator even began to hum.  “This elevator is reserved for sole use by the military currently boarding on the station.  This will take us to the barracks, storage, administration, mess hall, and everything else you’ll need on your stay here.  These decks even house the docks for the military ships we have based here.  There are a variety of services outside the base here, but you won’t be allowed outside the military wing without escort – for security reasons.”

 

Rslx gave the General a look of disgust over the obvious lie.  The lift came to a stop and the door opened to reveal a rather narrow corridor – much cleaner than the ones they’d passed through earlier.  The General continued on down the hallway as he continued the briefing.

 

“This is the barracks.  Most of the military stationed here share a room, but seeing as to your unique circumstances, I figured I’d give you something for your efforts, thus, this.”

 

The General opened the door to a room and ushered the doctor in.

 

“We took the liberty of collecting a few of your personal belongings and shipping them here.  Note there is a water rationing for soaks, so use them sparingly.  You have enough water for 4-5 good soaks/month – so use them as you like.  Meals can be had nearly 24/7, but I’d be careful of anything you snag outside of peak hours if you know what I mean.  I have a few things to check up on before we begin the rounds.”

 

The words were lost on the scientist, as directly across from the entry door was a large window that opened up to the vastness of space outside.  The General allowed the doctor to soak in the view for a few moments before mentioning in a low tone, “One of the few rooms in the entire base that is not obstructed by the monstrosity itself.  I figured it might give you some inspiration from time to time.  I’ve got a few things to check on.  I’ll see you shortly.”   

 

The doctor took a few more minutes to gaze at the distant stars, glittering lights, and nearly unobstructed view of space that he had.  If he angled to the far left, he could barely see what he thought was some kind of support pylon.  There was one thing the General had not lied about.  The view was spectacular.  The doctor finally tore his eyes away from the view to take a look at his room.  The bed was the most noticeable object in the room.  A simple nightstand stood by one side.  A chair slid neatly into a desk built into one wall.  Drawers for clothing and personal items were hidden beneath the bed while a door to the bathroom stood closed on the opposite side.  A standard packing box with his name on it had been placed on top of the bed.  The accommodations were nothing spectacular to be sure, but far better than the dark cell he had previously inhabited.

 

Rslx sighed and put the watch to his ear.  He heard nothing.  Only then did it dawn on him that he was in space – the traditional timepieces would be useless up here.  He made a mental note to ask about a replacement when there was a sound from the door.  At first he thought that someone was in serious pain before he realized that the sound was actually the buzzer to his room.  As he turned to the door, it opened and the General walked in and surveyed the unpacked room.

 

“Model of efficiency I see.  Well doctor, it’s time to earn your keep.  Let’s go.”

 

And the two walked out the door.

 

**

 

Rslx had forgotten how much he enjoyed the lab.  As a director, his job had been spent managing operations, completing schedules, filling out forms, and approving orders. He missed the anticipation of a new discovery.   On the station, he did have to manage a team, but the team was very much like the rest of the military; efficient and obedient.  Rslx was finding he liked it that way.  He was recording readings of power fluxuations when the General walked in.  Rslx, looked up at his guest, and immediately picked up a datapad he had at the ready on the counter.

 

“General, you got a minute?”

 

The General paused just slightly as Rslx handed the datapad over.

 

The General glimpsed at the datapad before continuing. “Walk with me Doctor.”

 

“General, I’ve completed the list of items I need for your list of projects.  I’ve listed them out in detail.  In order to complete some of these experiments, we’re going to need to do something about space.  We don’t have nearly enough room in this area.  I’m also going to need some more staff.  And the equipment itself is rather rare.  From what I understand what was lost on the planet, in both your lab and mine, we’ll have to save for quite some time before we’ll be able to get to replace these.  And then we have the issue….”

 

The General looked at the list and interrupted the doctor.  “Let’s see here Doctor.  We’ve got this on order, check, check, check, check…in progress, in progress, check, check – hmm…you’ll need to explain this one – not sure what it is, same with this, and check, and…check.”

 

The doctor was dumbfounded.  “But….with the spending restrictions, there’s…there’s no way we could get all that stuff.”

 

“Your underestimation of me is endearing at times.  Come doctor, let’s go see how we’re going to pay for all these new fancy gadgets we need.”  Oh, and here, you might need this.  The director looked down at a small hearing aid type device.  The General smiled at the absolute confusion on the doctor’s face.

 

“It’s a diplomatic translator director.  I suppose you’ve heard of them?  Now, shall we?”  The General gestured and the doctor headed towards the door.

 

A few minutes later, they found themselves near the military docks.  A small contingent of marines had formed a defensive perimeter around the airlock as the general and doctor arrived.  A quick glimpse of the ship alarmed the doctor somewhat.  It was not a familiar design. 

 

“How long have they been here Captain?”

 

“They docked just a minute ago sir.  They should be ready.”

 

A slight ding interrupted the conversation as the light above the door turned green.  The ship was docked.  The doctor and general stepped back as the door slid open revealing its occupants.

 

Three humanoids approached.  They were of average build, similar to that of average Torians.  Hair covered their head and their skin was definitely not green like the average Torian.  Two armed escorts shadowed the leader of the group.  The leader seemed very comfortable with the welcoming party and quickly approached the General.  In a customary formal greeting, the human bowed to the General to which the General nodded his head in return.  In a return gesture, the General clasped the hands of the human and shook it, to which the doctor found quite odd.

 

“Mr.  Smath, haw gaaw ta saa yaa again.”  The doctor quickly realized he hadn’t turned on his translator and tried his best not to call attention to himself as he adjusted the device.

 

“And you too General.”

 

After the device had been adjusted, the doctor finally comprehended what had been said – again?  Again?!?  Well, this Mr. Smith had obviously been here before.  The Doctor did his best to try to hold back from both staring and gaping.

 

“Good trip here Mr. Smith?”

 

“Long and uneventful – the best kind.  I get paid to do nothing.   Worked on some vacation plans and such, you know, the usual stuff.”  Mr. Smith’s eyes roamed the party, smiling slightly at the doctor’s shock.  “And who do we have here?”

 

“May I introduce my new lead of technology, Doctor Rslx Tles.”

 

“Nice to meet you Doctor.”  The human bowed the traditional greeting to which the doctor could barely respond.

 

The General quickly moved things along.  “I’ve got a room where we can talk a bit more comfortably. Why don’t we move things in there.  As the party began to move, the doctor barely registered the comment, contemplating how similar, and yet how different Torians were from the humans.  He’d heard of them, of course, as had every other Torian who had ever heard of the hyperdrive.  As he contemplated the ramifications, one of the last marines paused.

 

“Hey, doctor, you coming?  You ok?”

 

“He’s….he’s human.”

 

“Yeah, he’s been here a few times.  Seems the humans picked up a couple of ours after the Dreamer incident, and the General has been working with them ever since.  The marine paused a second.  “Come on, you’re looking foolish enough already.  Pull yourself together and present yourself.  You’re in the military now.”

 

Rslx took a deep breath, than quickly caught up to the rest of the contingent.

 

The meeting room was more of a converted storage bay on the bottom level of the starbase.  A pair of guards for each party remained inside the large room while the rest were ordered to their respective stations.  As the doctor approached the table, he noticed various items lay out, including the vest and  rifle  he had demonstrated to the military some time before.  Other items were hidden beneath various industrial blankets.  It was just as likely to keep them clean as keep them away from prying eyes.

 

“Alrighty Mr. Smith, we’ve got quite a few interesting things here for demonstration.  You know the drill.  What would you like to see first?”

 

“Well…since we’re here, let’s take a look at the conventional weaponry.”

 

And so it began.  The demonstrations took the better part of the day.  Rslx had been up much earlier than normal trying to complete his requisitioning lists and as the General continued his sales pitch, the doctor did his best to stifle his yawns.  When the demonstrations were concluded, the general looked at the remaining occupants in the room and dismissed them.

 

The five members from the room joined the few guarding the door in the hall, both human and Torian.  Rslx stepped a few paces away and sat down in the hall, closing his eyes.  It had been a long day.  Some time later, the doctor couldn’t tell, he hadn’t gotten used to the new digital watch yet, the pair emerged from the room.  The General quickly handed a tablet to the Captain ordering him to load the noted items onto Mr. Smith’s ship. 

 

The Captain nodded, looked at the list, and he, the Torians, and the human escorts disappeared back into the storage room.  Some items were too big and had to be dismantled before moving.  A shield generator had to be transferred from outside the station itself.  Two hours later, the loading had been completed, and as quickly as they came, the Human’s were gone.

 

As the General clapped Rslx on the back, he looked over.  “Congratulations doctor.  We now have enough to buy the equipment you need and continue our research.”  As the doctor grinned, the General thought of one more thing.  “Oh, and doctor, I’m going to need the floor plans for your new lab.”

 

The doctor looked confused.

 

“Oh, come on doctor, you know, the lab on the new space station we’re going to build?”

 

Surprise again raced across the doctor’s features.

 

“It’s not good to underestimate me doctor.”  The General winked and walked down the corridor.

on Oct 30, 2009

8

 

 

The issues in the colonization of another planet were unknown at the time the colony ship Alpha had left Toria.  It wasn’t that the planet was inhospitable.  The planet had an atmosphere that would support life and a water supply that if not usable, could be made usable.  It wasn’t that the colonists were short on material based on facts that were known at the time of launch.

 

Rather it was the unknowns about the planet itself that made things difficult.  The local fauna had properties unknown to the colonists.  Which ones were poisonous, which ones were beneficial?  What of the local wildlife were dangerous?  Which weren’t?  Would the introduction of off world agriculture, disease, or stowaway animals affect the local ecosystems?  Weather patterns that were typical on Toria were completely different on Russom.  It would take years before hidden and periodic dangers would reveal themselves.  And the Torians on Russom took them all in stride.

 

The colony had to be moved after it was discovered that the erosion caused by the wind corridor they had settled in would prevent the planting of agriculture.  The bite of a common insect caused a blotchy, itchy allergy that turned the affected area brown.  Large bull like herbivores turned out to be extremely tame while small groups of vicious rodents would raid the stores at night.  With hundreds of thousands of Torians having made the trip, a day didn’t pass that the group made new discoveries and encounter new problems. 

 

Russom was a tad smaller than Toria but seemed to hold more potential.  At some time in the future, jungles would be cleared, deserts could be aerated, and swamps filled allowing for additional productive land.  As it stood, the Torians built where they could with the least amount of effort.  Housing was built alongside the emerging factories.  Canals were built from nearby rivers and streams for running water.  Slowly but surely, the settlers of Russom had plans to emerge as an equal to Toria.

 

In a second story office overlooking the landing pads of the small spaceport, a pair of Torians lay back in their chairs.  Their feet were kicked up, eyes closed as an afternoon breeze blew through the open windows.  As one began to snore, a beep softly sounded from the console.  The other Torian slowly put his feet to the ground and knocked his comrade who snorted before waking and putting his feet down as well.  The first looked to the second.  “So what’d you do, knock the controls out of whack again?”

 

The second looked down at the console and looked at the buttons, a bit puzzled before turning back.

 

“No, I think, I think we just lost a sensor.  I think I saw something out there – several somethings actually.”

 

“It’s just a malfunction.  They were never all that dependable in the first place.”

 

The now very awake Torian sat forward, pushing buttons to run diagnostics on the disappearing sensor.  “Should we, should we report it?”

 

“Just make a note in the maintenance logs.  When we get our next shipment, who knows when that’ll be, we’ll have the space cadets take a look at it while they’re out there.”

 

“You sure?  We’ve never had any issues with the sensors before.”

 

“Go back to sleep.  It’s nothing to worry about.”

 

The second Torian refused to be quieted.  “There was more there, I thought I saw the sensor picking something up.  What if we’re in trouble?  We really need to know!”

 

“Relax.  Run your diagnostics, and we’ll have the braniacs fix it next time they’re here.  Has anything ever happened before?”

 

“Well, no, but…”

 

“Exactly.  Now stop worrying.”

 

The second Torian sat back down, watching the diagnostics count down from its twenty-two minutes until completion.  As he sat there numbly watching the countdown, another console began to beep.  Both Torians jumped at the sound of the buzzer. 

 

As they squinted in, they clearly saw a number of incoming objects.  No response was incoming as the blips approached the beacon.  As the pair watched, the screen went black.  The beacon had stopped responding.

 

They both stared at the monitor for a moment before the first one spoke.  “Where was that beacon located?”

 

The second quickly scanned the readout before turning and responding, his face slightly pale.  “On the exact opposite side of the planet as the first beacon.”

 

The second one nodded and hit a console, scanning through a list of names.  “NOW it’s time to report it.”

 

**

 

Captain Plsk ran through the streets.  He had been trained, and trained well for his job.  He could naturally lead the marines under his command on Russom.  They had the job to protect the one million plus that now lived on the new planet.  Protection, in this case,  mostly meant helping clear out dangerous beasts, quarantining areas as needed based on new developments, and helping out in areas where a greater degree of secrecy, danger, or both were required. 

 

The Captain had reviewed the beacon logs.  There was no mistake that something was incoming.  In all likelihood, the something was neutral at best.  The fact that the incoming vessels had not responded to any form of communication alluded to the worst.  He was preparing for the worst as best he could.  It could be a losing battle.  He and his squads were woefully unprepared should a potential enemy arrive en masse. 

 

The Captain turned the corner onto one of the major thoroughfares through the city.  The street had been cleared, and in its place was a scene of controlled chaos.  In one line, a group of marines was distributing weapons to civilians.  The civilians were shepherded into various groups where marines were instructing how to load, aim, and fire the weapon.  With the exception of many young men who thought the experience exciting, the masses were afraid.  The Captain understood.  He was afraid as well.  They didn’t have nearly the hardware they would need to repulse an all out attack, much less the manpower.  But it was all he could do.  The General had been alerted, the population was being prepared as well as could be expected, and alternative retreat points were already under investigation.  All he could do now was watch and wait.  He hoped he would be waiting for quite some time.

 

A buzzing came over his communicator as he made his way through the crowd.  “Captain!  We’ve got incoming on the scanners.  And it’s big, REALLY big.” 

 

“How many?”

 

“Just one sir.  Hmm…make that 2, 4, 10, uh…dang sir, it looks like it’s disintegrating in orbit.”

 

A silence slowly descended over the area as those who had overheard stopped what they were doing to listen in.  Others began doing the same until the entire area was quiet, waiting on the verdict from the Captain.  Plsk stood there dejectedly for a moment before announcing the bad news, “The ship isn’t breaking apart Lieutenant.  Those are dropships.  Send the distress call to Toria, and set off the alarms.  I’ll be there shortly.”

 

Minutes later, the Captain and his squad stood outside the command tent, watching the skies.  The scene was replicated across the city.  Outside the scream of the alarms, the city was eerily quiet.  Sweat slowly dripped down the Captain’s forehead as he watched.  They heard the roar of engines before actually seeing anything.  The Torians had mobilized the few conventional aircraft they had to allow for a semblance of air defense.  It wasn’t nearly enough as the lightly armed dropships easily ripped through the armor of the conventional aircraft. A few unlucky dropships were caught in the crossfire and pummeled relentlessly to the ground.  The invaders did more damage to themselves than the Torians did. 

 

As soon as the dropships were visible, the few conventional anti-air launchers began firing.  These had been hastily constructed among the more fortified positions within the city.  The problem was the Torians had no idea as to what direction the attackers were coming from, or even if they were hostile for that matter.  Both questions were fully answered.  The sky was lined with dropships.  The Captain couldn’t even begin to count them all.  He guessed there were thousands of them.  None were very big, each looking to be able to hold 20 Torians or so.

 

The anti-air missiles managed to hit and damage a few of the dropships, but it was no better than killing single ants in a six foot ant pile.  They just kept coming.  As the dropships reached the ground – in city streets, fields outside the city, parking lots, back yards, the ships themselves began to fire to clear the landing areas.  Powerful laser bursts ripped through buildings, trees, and the hastily constructed barricades the Torians had constructed.   The Torians, those that hadn’t been killed or fled during the initial volley fired back.

 

When the doors finally opened, the Torians finally came to see the nature of their attacker.  It was the source of nightmares from ages past.  It was the past, trying to reassert itself anew.  It was the ape-like Drengin.  They stormed out of the dropships with a brutal efficiency.  It took very little time to secure their immediate area and begin their mission of reasserting dominance over their weaker foe.

 

**

 

“REPORT!”

 

“I Repeat!  Red Squad, REPORT!””  Captain Plsk could barely be heard over the laser fire emanating from one street over.  While half his military had been dispersed to lead the militia, he had kept the other half intact.  A military that was dispersed too thin, despite the numbers of the relatively untrained, would be just as good as no military.  He had kept the better equipment, including mobile armor, for himself as well.  It would be more effective that way.

 

“Red Squad here.  North side has been overrun.  It looks like they landed just north of the city and are heading towards your position.  We’re falling back.  We’ve lost a third of the squad, but managed to inflict some damage.  We are grabbing their weaponry as we can.”

 

“Red squad, use the canals to get behind them.  Lead them to Sessetrian Square and hold up.  You can get behind them and make a mess of them from the backside.  Yellow Squad will meet you there.  Coordinate with them.”

 

“On it sir, out.”

 

An explosion nearby made the Captain flinch involuntarily.  A pair of privates looked around nervously.  The Captain ignored it and continued his survey.  As best he could tell, the Dren had surrounded the city and were closing in, killing or capturing all that got into their path.  They seemed to be coming in on foot and while tough, were not impossible to take down.  The Drengin had split their forces roughly three ways with a small concentration sent right into the middle to cause confusion while the rest of the Drengin organized.  It had been a decent approach as long as the Dren didn’t mind losing the forces in the center.  They obviously didn’t.

 

A private ran in, his combat fatigues dirty and ripped, blood dripping from a wound in his forehead.  “They’re here Captain!  Time to move!”  The private ran out the way he had come.  A laser blast hit him square in the chest and he disappeared from view.  The privates guarding the Captain both gasped.  The Captain quickly shoveled his materials into a backpack and urged the two privates out the back path.  A defensive line had been established to their right as the Dren slowly made their way forward in an organized, careful, but measured pace.  They seemed wary, but unafraid of the Torian resistance. 

 

The Captain ran across the short alley to the house there.  Bursting through the door, he came across a young Torian woman and her three daughters huddled under the table in the kitchen.  He quickly looked around before retuning his gaze to them.

 

“If you want to live you need to go NOW!”

 

The group sat under the table shuddering.  The Captain continued on through his shortcut.  He couldn’t save them all.

 

“All squads, this is Command moving to Beta location, the Trough has been overrun.  Status check needed in five minutes.  Blue squad, retreat to Beta, I repeat, retreat to Beta!”

 

After moving away from the front lines, the streets were eerily quiet.  Everyone was either in hiding or on the lines.  Looking back, he could see Blue squad beginning their retreat.  It was a losing battle.  They wouldn’t be able to disengage.  However, it would allow him to create a weakness in the lines that he could exploit to get some out of the circle of death.  Many were going to die.  That was the price of freedom sometimes and from what he’d seen, there might be a chance they could win this thing.  But first, they had to do it on their terms.  And the circle of death was definitely NOT their terms.

 

**

 

The moon was well overhead as the General made his way through the maze of Her Grace’s pavilion.  Her staff had mentioned that she was enjoying the view from the south balcony.  This irritated the General.  It was a long walk.  Xavrs made the most of it by rereading the reports from Russom.  There wasn’t anything he hadn’t already committed to memory, but it was the details that he had to watch for.  Information was scarce.  He had to gleam as much information, both written and unwritten, from what had been provided.  The outlook was bleak.  The detachment was too small compared to the civilian population.  But the detachment had been well-trained.  Regardless of what happened there, action needed to be taken, one way or another.

 

He found Her Grace at the balcony, looking out over the ocean.  Gusts of wind rippled her nightgown as she remained where she was.

 

“Your Grace.”

 

“Good evening, General.” 

 

She turned around to face the general with the faintest of smiles on her face. 

 

“You received my reports Your Grace?”

 

Her grace dropped her eyes and sighed.  “I did.  I can only assume you’re here tonight for a formal declaration of war.”

 

“The power is still in your hands Your Grace.  You alone can make that decision for our people.”

 

Her Grace stepped forward and closed in on the general.  Her body pressed up against his.  It was obvious to him that she wasn’t wearing anything underneath her nightgown.  Her hand traced his cheek as her tone turned serious, “Stay with me tonight General.”

 

Xavrs stepped back.  “Your Grace, we are in the shadow of war!  We don’t have time for these games!”

 

The slight smile returned to her face.  “Do you find me that repulsive General?”  She twirled once to allow Xavrs to admire her.  The last year had been hard on her, no doubt, but the childlike delight with which she had gained office had been replaced with a mature intelligence.  He found that even more attractive. 

 

“Your Grace, this really isn’t the time or place…”

 

She stepped closer to him putting a finger to his lips as she slipped closer once again.  “Assuming you want my support General, you will be mine tonight.  Tomorrow, I lose you to your silly and likely dangerous game of war.  It’s possible, you know better than I, than I may never see you again.  The least you can do is spend the night with me.”

 

“Your Grace..”

 

“Right now General, you have the power over our people.  We can delay which will likely cost lives, or you can comply with the one simple request I ask of you.”  Her eyes sparkled and a devious smile played across her lips.

 

Xavrs groaned inwardly and sighed.  He wasn’t quite sure if she was bluffing or not.  She could be, but in all honesty, he didn’t think she was.  She knew she had him.  Pulling himself up straight, he looked almost royalty as he bowed, “It will be an experience I’ll never forget Your Grace.  Let me take care of a few things and I shall join you shortly.”

 

She smiled triumphantly as she crossed back towards the stairs.  Her had trailed across the back of his shoulders as she passed him.  “Don’t keep me waiting General….”

 

Xavrs sighed again as he dropped his datapads.  Everybody always wanted a favor.

 

**

 

Yugo jerked at the knock on his door.  As he slowly pulled on a pair of pants, he noted the knock came from the exterior door.  He moaned inwardly as he shuffled over.  Somebody had better be dying.

 

Unlike the typical marines, Yugo and his squad were stationed near the spaceport in the Red Zone.  This was one of the few buildings that had avoided destruction during the Titan attack.  Yugo was simply happy to still be in one piece. 

 

Yugo had his private room in the barracks, while the rest shared rooms throughout.  Unlike other units that rotated in and out of their stations aboard the various spacecraft, Yugo and his craft were assigned their posts until commanded otherwise.  Yugo always found that a bid odd, but didn’t question.  As such, the squad kept to themselves for the most part.  The Captain, officers, marines, engineers, and various specialists all had their part to do aboard the ship.  Outside of the ship, they simply got in the way.  So the squad did what Yugo told them to, and Yugo did what the General told him to.  Things had worked out well so far.

 

He opened up the door to see Pktri, his commander.  There was no hint of the sun and the bright lights from the spaceport were the only things that illuminated the commander’s somber face.  The commander handed over a datapad.  Yugo quickly read the expression and knew the commander wasn’t here on a social visit.

 

“That good eh?”  There was no response from the Commander.

 

Yugo quickly skimmed the datapad picking up the important parts.

 

“We’ll meet you in rank in ten.”

 

The commander simply nodded and turned.  Shutting the door, Yugo quickly turned on a light and finished dressing.  He took a quick glimpse in a mirror as he opened the door into the central common area.  Affixed to the wall was an old cowbell Yugo used to get his men’s attention.  The Dren had reportedly used something like this to announce that a meal would be served for five minutes only.  The bell resounded a good distance.  Torians either got their meals in five minutes, or they didn’t eat that day.  Yugo had found and kept it as a reminder of times past.  It was only to be used for emergencies.  It seemed even more appropriate now.

 

Yugo looked at the string hanging down from the chimes, grabbed hold, took a breath, and rang for all it was worth.  It took a few seconds before his crew began emerging from their doorways, either to curse  at the fool ringing the bell or take action as required.  As soon as a few started appearing he stopped ringing and shouted out.

 

“I NEED EVERYONE ON THE LAWN IN FIVE MINUTES!  THIS IS NOT A DRILL!  ON THE LAWN IN FIVE!  MAKE SURE YOUR MATES ARE THERE!  GO! GO!  GO!”

 

A controlled panic ensued as lights blinked on, Torians yelled at each other, and orders were followed.

 

For better or for worse, the day Yugo had long feared would come was officially here.  The Torians had begun to explore the stars, but at a cost that might be more than they could bare.  His only surprise was that it had been a bit quicker than he’d expected.

 

Five minutes later, Yugo was pacing in front of the fifty seven members of the Dreamfetcher.  So much was resting on so few, and they were part of that few.  Threatened to be consumed by the worry, he finally stopped and looked at his commander.  The commander, along with the rest of the crew, remained silent as they waited.  Distant activity could be heard on other parts of the base.  Apparently they weren’t the only ones who had received the message.  Yugo took a deep breath and began.

 

“Less than twenty-four hours ago, the Russom colony was invaded by the Dren.  Latest reports, those of a few hours ago, have the local garrisons in the process of stabilizing their position.  The attack came with no warning, and as of approximately two hours ago, the Torian and Dren are at war.”

 

Yugo expected more of a response than the few glances a few of his crew gave each other. 

 

“The next few days we will be patrolling our immediate sector while the rest of the military prepares the ground forces.  When ready, we will be escorting these ships to Russom, either as reinforcements or as rescuers.  Either way, I don’t expect the mission to be pretty.”  Yugo felt out of place giving a speech to Torians with more training than him, more experience than him, and on a subject he knew next to nothing about.  “The ship leaves at 07:00.  I don’t expect we’ll be returning anytime soon.”  The implied “if at all” hung in the air, but nobody dared say the words.  “Dismissed.”

 

**

 

Commander Pktri gave Yugo a nod of approval as he was dismissed with the rest of the crew.  Moving through the crowed, Pktri acknowledged and delayed several of the ship officers, all wanting a word with him regarding requirements for the voyage.  Pktri delayed them.  He had something else on his mind regarding their new head of security, Lieutenant Slska Krxt.  Pktri had witnessed her punishment and knew there was more to her story.  Her assignment to the crew meant she had been purposefully marked.  She just didn’t know it.  He followed her back to the barracks where she began quickly and efficiently gathering her belongings for transport back onto the ship.  He watched her for just a moment, studying her, before he approached.

 

“Lieutenant Slska, a word please.”

 

The Lieutenant looked up at the sound of her name.  “Of course Commander.”

 

The Commanders slipped into the room and shut the door.  “I’ve heard of your record Lieutenant, and while not entirely sure why you are here, and I know you haven’t been here long, but I need you to understand one thing.”

 

Slska stood and listened, a bit confused about what had been heard, and what more there could be in the situation she found herself.

 

“Our Captain could be the single most important person in this war.  He must live above ANY and ALL costs.  My life, your life, any of the lives of the marines under your command.  If we have to sacrifice the entire ship and crew for him, we will do it.  Is that understood Lieutenant?”

 

Slska stood with her mouth open for just a moment thinking through the implications.

 

“This is not a request Lieutenant, this is an order.  Unless you want to find yourself back where you came from…”  The Commander paused and lifted an eyebrow to ensure Slska understood.  “Then I suggest you see to it.”

 

Slska didn’t pause this time.  “Yes sir!”

 

The commander nodded once and opened the door.

 

“Commander?”

 

The commander turned, one hand on the lever.

 

“Why him?  He doesn’t exactly seem….”

 

The Commander paused and took a deep breath.  He hoped the General knew what he was doing with this one.  “Stick with the Captain per your orders Lieutenant, and maybe you’ll find out.”  He quickly left before she could ask another question.

 

Slska stood there a moment after the Commander left.  It had been an odd encounter.  Actually, she corrected herself, everything since the attack of the Titan had been odd.  Regardless, she had a job to do and the Commander had cut into her available time to do it.  She rushed to finish her packing and then check on the rest of her squad.  There would be hell to pay if she beat any of her squad to the rendezvous point.

 

It took a few hours to get the Dreamfetcher ready to move.  It’s not that the ship couldn’t have made it out earlier; it’s rather that necessity didn’t require it.  Yugo was to coordinate a several ship patrol a week’s travel away from the new military installation, the Dreamstake.  Military intelligence highly doubted that the Dren could coordinate a two pronged assault with any degree of precision.  Thus Yugo thought it better to spend an hour double checking supplies, repairs, and check for last minute requirements rather than hastily speed away with something they may need later.  If the hour they missed made a difference, then the Torians had a bigger problem than they realized. 

 

Yugo checked through the reports as they came in, and listened to his commanding officers.  Everything had checked out.  They had prepared well.  It was time to leave.

 

After the Titan attack, the damaged Dreamfetcher had been the subject of a major overhaul.  Armor from the Titan had been reverse engineered, as best they could anyway, and placed on the ship.  A shield generator had been lifted and integrated into the ship.  The Titan’s lasers had been neatly removed and installed to the ship, and the mortar explosives had been placed as well.  The Dreamfetcher was by far the deadliest ship in the Torian armada. 

 

Yugo ran his hands over the control console on the side of his chair.  There wasn’t a sign that the bridge had been nearly destroyed in its last encounter.  The ship restoration crew had gone above and beyond repairing the ship.  It didn’t look just new, it looked new and improved.  The bustle around him finally died down.  They were waiting for him.

 

Yugo’s index finger slowly traced its way down the control console again.  He found the button he was looking for (the restoration crew had managed to reverse the layouts), and pressed it.

 

“Engineering.  Status?”

 

“All systems go sir.”

 

Yugo turned his head to get a glimpse of Slska out of the corner of his eye.

 

“Security?”

 

“All marines on board and accounted for sir.”

 

He turned to view the young girl who had steered them to survival in the last attack. 

 

“Ensign Nrek?”

 

“Course plotted and ready sir.”

 

He looked over his left shoulder to his Commander standing there.

 

“Commander?”

 

“Stop your procrastinating and get us out of here Sir.”

 

Yugo smiled slightly and looked out the view screen one last time.  He saw the open expanse of the spaceport that ended with the Red Zone security gate.  Beyond that the wrecked buildings in the yellow and green zones dotted the landscape until the mountains grew from the horizon.  The sun was just peeking through a couple of the peaks.  It looked to be a beautiful day.

 

“Engage.”

 

With a barely noticeable motion, the Dreamfetcher rose into the air, adjusted pitch, and blasted through the Torian atmosphere and into the cold confines of space.  Whether the ship was home for the next few months or next few years would be determined soon enough.  Yugo’s brooding thoughts were interrupted by the helmsman.

 

“Course plotted sir.  We will arrive at the origin of our patrol pattern in three days sir.”

 

Three days till the beginning of patrol, another week before the military transports and escorts arrived, and a month to Russom.  Things were about to get interesting.

on Oct 30, 2009

9

 

 

On Russom, the Dren saw very little resistance from the Torians.  Despite the Torian military assistance, the Torian’s civilian militia had been routed time and time again throughout the city.  Civilians, especially Torian civilians, were simply not prepared for engaging in life and death combat with trained soldiers.  The Dren hadn’t done anything spectacular in terms of tactics, they were simply efficient.  It was only through sheer numbers and a bit of luck that the Torians had managed to inflict any significant damage at all.

 

But all was not quite as it seemed.  The Captain stood in his hastily fortified bunker reviewing the scouting reports.  It would take another few days to fully take the city at the attacker’s current pace.  However, he couldn’t quite figure out what was going on.  Based on observations from his scouts in the field, he estimated that the Dren didn’t bring enough men to take the city.  There were simply too few attacking forces to manage the entire operation.  The Dren had moved in with standard infantry in an encircling formation, but seemed thin nearly all the way around.  Outside the artillery blasts from the incoming dropships, the Torians had encountered lightly armed Drengin.  The invading force was still formidable, but it could be so much worse.  The Captain corrected himself, SHOULD have been so much worse.  The Torians had superiority in overall numbers.  The Torians had superiority in defending terrain.  The Torians even had superiority in equipment, if you didn’t account for the dropships.  The only thing the Torians seemed to be lacking was training.

 

Whereas the Dren were attacking with lightly armed infantry, the Torians had yet to unleash their limited but strong armor division.  It was enough to drive a hole through the encircling line.  And if reports were correct, the Dren line was extremely thin.  A quick thought of what the future might hold slipped into his mind before he banished the thoughts.  He had enough problems as it was without worrying about what the future might bring.  Today, it was time to strike back.  Not only would the Torians punch a hole in the line, the goal was to create a true front across the northeastern portion of the city.  When momentum was regained, the local militia would respond much better, and the apes would have not only the issues of armament, but the issues of numbers to deal with as well.

 

He stepped out of the home turned makeshift bunker and into the predawn street.  The distant sound of battle could already be heard.  Soldiers and civilian alike were bustling about trying to prepare themselves for surviving another day. 

 

Several hours later, Captain Plsk found himself kneeled below the window inside the office of a small warehouse.  Several of his men kneeled down around him.  Some were checking their weapons.  Others kneeled eyes closed in silent contemplation.  Others simply waited.  Outside, the Dren and a small Torian squad exchanged fire.  The Captain had decided to break the encirclement here.  Housed inside each of these warehouses was the mainstay of the Russom military force.  What had started off as twenty squads had been dropped to half in the early goings of the siege.  That was unfortunate but just meant the Captain had to make the most of what he had left.  What was left was the Torian armor.  Each warehouse housed several tracked vehicles cased in heavy steel and armed with heavy laser cannons.  Each vehicle’s weaponry was supplemented by smaller versions in the front and rear.  They were not extremely mobile, but they were definitely a force to be reckoned with, especially by the unsuspecting Dren.

 

The sound of laser fire grew louder.  The Captain could hear the pounding of feet as his men purposely retreated.  A blast just outside the window was followed by a grunt of pain and then the thud as a Torian collapsed outside the door.  The Captain looked quickly to his men.  Only one showed a sign of panic.  He waited till he caught eye contact and nodded.  His man nodded back.  Shadows passed through the window as the Dren walked by.  Ten shadows passed at a measured pace.  They were advancing quickly, but carefully in pursue of their prey.  It was the sign of a disciplined force.

 

Today would be the last day they caught their prey.  The Captain waited a few seconds as the last Dren passed before he spoke lowly into his communicator.  “All squads, targets in position.  Engage on my mark!”  The Captain counted to three internally, nodded to his squad, and calmly spoke into his communicator.  “Now.”

 

The Captain opened the door of the office and got into position as his men stood up and began firing through the windows.  Other Torian squads did the same up and down the street.  A squad of Torians snipers opened fire from the roof of a warehouse across the street.  A pair of tracked vehicles burst through warehouse doors down the street and opened fire.

 

A Drengin looked up to fire at the attackers from above and a beam hit him from the back.  He dropped immediately, his light armor incapable of stopping the incineration of his internal organs.  An officer barked out orders while firing into an adjacent building.  A shot from the second floor removed his left arm.  His body was flung to the side where he tried to speak before the shock overcame him.  The laser cannons from the Torian armor sent blasts screaming through the center of the street.  Several Drengin were incinerated before the blasts obliterated sides of buildings.  Drengin close to the blasts dove to the ground.  They were picked off by marines waiting for the opportunity.  The few Drengin who survived the initial onslaught turned to flee.  The sport of hunting Torians had turned into a quest for survival.  None succeeded.  The slaughter was over nearly before it began.  Roughly one hundred Drengin littered the street.

 

As the Captain checked over the dead, one of the men came up, looking around in confusion. 

 

“Excuse me, Sir…  uh… is that it?”

 

The Captain didn’t even look up.  “For now soldier.  Welcome to freedom.  Let’s go liberate the rest of the city, shall we?”  He looked up at the questioning private.  “Gather those Dren weapons, we’re going to need them.  Squad leaders!  You already have your orders.  Group up, move out!”

 

A spirited cheer went up around the force as the marines got to work.  Before the morning was over dozens of holes had been punctured through the advancing line.  Word spread quickly around the city.  The civilian militia rallied at the prospect of not just surviving the day, but of reclaiming their lives.  The Drengin advance, facing stiffer resistance, began to slow as they advanced more carefully.  By the end of the day, the Drengin advance has stalled completely.  The momentum had changed.  The Drengin clusters able to retreat did so, while those that couldn’t were methodically eliminated.

 

For the time being, Russom was secure.

 

It had been nearly four weeks since the initial invasion of Russom.  The Captain sat at the table inside a non-descript warehouse listening intently to the morning status reports.  The local areas were still being searched for any surviving Drengin.  The few dropships that hadn’t returned to orbit had been scavenged and were being dissected.  The clearing   and identification of the Torian dead was underway.  Mass graves had been dug well outside the town for the Torian dead.  The Drengin dead had been dragged to a pit outside of town and burned.  Workers of essential services had been allowed to return to work, but most others had been ‘strongly suggested’ to attend military training programs.  Thousands upon thousands had signed up for the training. Programs were underway throughout the colony.  Additional landing pads had been established for the incoming forces as well as living areas for the massive numbers of people.  Scouts had begun the preparation of additional base options around the planet.  Unmanned monitoring stations had been established around the planet for a better planet-wide view of hostiles.  Rudimentary sensor devices had been built and launched into orbit.  It would give them a few hours warning if and when the Drengin returned.  There was little doubt to the Captain that they would return.  These would be replaced by state of the art sensors when the reinforcements arrived.  The Captain checked his calendar for the umpteenth time that day.  Reinforcements would arrive in three days.  He got nervous just thinking about it.  If they were to have a chance, they needed to make it through three days.  With a little luck, they would have it. 

 

**

 

“Commander?”

 

“Nothing on sensors sir.  It seems we have a clear path to the planet.”  Yugo sat in his chair looking at the sensor readings the Commander had sent to the view screen.  The planet of Russom seemed to be clear of ships in a three day radius.  It seemed almost unnatural.  The only foreign bodies on the screen were the rudimentary satellites the current occupants had just sent into orbit.  As Yugo reviewed the screen, a discrepancy caught his eye, “Wait, what is that?”

 

The Commander stepped down to the view screen to have another look.  “Three of those look to be ours Captain…but that one, that one is not ours.”

 

“Helm, let’s take a closer look.  Everyone be ready, we never know what we’ll find out here.  Have the rest of the fleet make their way to the planet.  We’ll be along shortly.”

 

The Dreamfetcher altered course slightly allowing the three Surfer class escorts to lead the impossibly sized troop transports towards the planet.  The escorts seemed out of proportion compared to the size of the transports, but the General did the best with what he had.  There were supposedly newer and bigger war ships in the design phase.  Whether anyone would actually live to see them way anyone’s guess. 

 

It didn’t take long to reach the offending sensor.  It stood insultingly close to the existing sensor, as if in subtle defiance.  The crew stared at it through the view screen.

 

Atrl, sitting in the helm’s chair, finally broke the silence.  “Should we get closer to retrieve it?”

 

Yugo had been thinking the very thought.  “While that would make sense, I think we can go ahead and simply destroy it.”

 

Heads turned his way.

 

Yugo shrugged.  “The thing is likely rigged.  That’s what I’d do.  No reason to risk it.  They obviously know we’re already here.  We might as well deny them getting any MORE information.  Now let’s blow it up and move on.”

 

“Weapons ready sir.”

 

“And Fire.”

 

A red streak shot across the darkness of space hitting the sensor squarely on the side.  It was reduced to miscellaneous pieces of scrap metal.

 

“Ok, let’s land this thing and get ourselves ready.  I think they just might know we are here.”

 

**

 

In less than a week, the population of Russom had tripled its original size.  Nearly all of that was military and military support.  Military bases had sprung up around the planet quickly and efficiently.  Well trained marines and recruits alike had shaken off the sleep sickness.  Armor had been brought out and deployed.  Anti aircraft and heavy artillery carted in and entrenched throughout the main city and various bases.  Improved armaments including the Screamer and advanced armors had been dispersed to the troops.  Scouts had been sent out to replace the space based sensor arrays.  With the advanced sensors in place, the Torians would have a few days to prepare.

 

At the bottom of a desert mountain range, War General Slat had established his command post.  The command center itself had been setup inside a cave structure within the mountain itself.  Electricity had been brought in by generators and the base itself was rather crude. 

 

But the physical conditions did not concern him as he paced the large cavern he used as a conference room.  Looking down at a datapad, War General Slat reviewed the status of his forces.  Outside of the lack of space support, he was reasonably happy with the setup.  Additional preparations would take time of course, but for what had been accomplished in so short of period, the situation was adequate.  Unfortunately, additional space support would not come for some time.  The financial crunch the Torians were experiencing was hurting everyone.  He would simply have to make do with what he had until reinforcements arrived.  Wishing didn’t make things better. 

 

A private came busting into the conference room “General, you better come take a look at this.”  The General looked up from his thoughts.  The nervousness of the private made the subject all too easy to discern.

 

“How many private?”

 

The private had broken out into a sweat.  “You better come hear this for yourself General.”

 

Xavrs followed the Private to the communication room further inside the base.  Another reason Xavrs liked the current location was the ability to rely on sensors placed at the top of the mountain for maximum coverage.  Even if all other sensors were destroyed, he would still have reasonable coverage of the surrounding area.  Xavrs looked at the view screen.  It was empty.  He looked to the Private, rather confused.

 

“Right here General.”  The Private pushed a button and a voice recording interlaced with static began playing.

 

Xavrs listened to an obviously distressed Torian.  The Torian on the recording was breathing hard as he tried to remain calm, “Russom control, I AM UNDER ATTACK”.  The voice of the pilot was barely audible above the loud crackling of interference and background noise.  “There are a doz….” The crackling of electronics popping could be heard through the transmission.  “Fire!  Get it off, get it off!”  The sound of another laser shot could be heard followed by silence.

 

The General mused in thought.  He didn’t get much information.  A dozen ships maybe, or were there a dozen escorts with more transports on the way.  The General paced.  No, it was likely right around a dozen ships total.  Six escorts, and six troop transports were likely, but it could be anything from three to ten invading transports.  He had so very little to go on.  All he could do was prepare for the worst, and hope for the best.  Hoping didn’t keep people alive, preparation did.  If those numbers were correct, the invading force would double the defenders currently on planet. 

 

“How long had that scout been out?”

 

“About sixty hours sir.”

 

Xavrs cursed under his breath.  They weren’t fully prepared yet.  Casually, as if he were simply on his way home for the evening, Xavrs walked over to the alert button.  The big red button loomed high on the wall in an abandoned corner of the room.  His base was synchronized with bases around the planet.  When Xavrs pushed the button, bases would go on alert around the planet.  Xavrs paused just a moment then pushed the button.  Before Xavrs had turned, the Private had already begun sending instructions and information to base commanders.  Everywhere across the planet marines would be getting ready for action. 

 

**

 

“Your Grace, Your Grace…”

 

Her Grace woke from her fitful slumber with a start.  The attendant who had woken her stood a few steps away.  Her Grace rubbed her eyes trying to gather her bearings.  She had a headache.  It couldn’t be time to wake up yet.  She could still see the stars.  No, it definitely wasn’t time to wake up yet.

 

“I apologize for waking you Your Grace, but you have an incoming message.  The Drengin wish to speak with you.”

 

In the privacy of her chambers there was no need to don formal clothing.  The attendant, seeing as Her Grace was up, quickly stepped back and out of the room. Her Grace quickly wiped her eyes and splashed a bit of water on her face to help freshen and wake her.  She needed all her faculties in these conversations.  When fully awake, she quickly moved to her audience room.  A single monitor was hung on one wall which she quickly powered.  The image of a Drengin appeared, bigger than life, along the wall.  He was obviously irritated.  The translator couldn’t quite hide the deep growls of his voice.

 

“You should have listened to me and paid me, Your Grace.”  The last bit was drawn out in a sarcastic drawl.  “I was willing to leave you alone, for now, but it looks like you’ve made my choice easier.  I will kill everyone who opposes me on that backwater planet, and enslave the rest.  I will then be coming for you and the planet that is rightfully MINE.  And when I finally break down those palace doors of yours, Your Grace, you will learn what REAL public servitude is.”  The Drengin’s smile made her sick to her stomach.  She didn’t let it show.

 

“Did you contact me to gloat Lord Kona, or do you have something important to say?”

 

“Only that I simply can’t WAIT to meet you, Your Grace…”

 

“I believe we are done then.”

 

She quickly snapped off the channel and walked out of the room.  She was aware of the situation on Russom, but there wasn’t anything in this conversation that would assist in its defense.  She would simply keep it to herself, just like all the other useless Drengin conversations she had participated in over the last few weeks.  She knew Lord Kona was toying with her, trying to get her to lose her composure.  It was beginning to work. 

 

She stepped back into her bedroom and gazed at the bed.  Sleep was the last thing she wanted to do.  Her thoughts touched on the General as she dressed.  She hoped he was ok, and that she’d be able to see him again someday.  Her Grace stepped out of her chambers into the hallway.  There were always administrative matters that had to be attended, and those always helped put her to sleep.  It seemed like a good idea now.  A pair of the General’s guards flanked her as she made her way down the corridor, a constant reminder that he was watching over her.

 

**

 

Captain Pslk looked up from the street into the night.  He didn’t expect to see anything, but there was always the chance.  Other Torians were doing the same.  The Drengin had been hovering over Russom for days now.  What were they doing up there he would never know?  Organizing?  Blockading?  Spreading fear?  It was likely all the above.  It was irritating to say the least.  It was also effective. 

 

As he began to step back inside his quarters a marine cried out and pointed towards the sky.  Other shouted and suddenly the street was filled with Torians pointing as they stared at the incoming shapes.  The Captain squinted.  It didn’t look like a ship.  And there were lots of them illuminated in the moon lit night.  They began to grow larger and larger as they approached the planet’s surface.  With a sickening realization, the Captain realized what they were.  They were asteroids. 

 

The Captain didn’t have time to contemplate how the Drengin had managed to sling asteroids into the atmosphere as the first and biggest one exploded into hundreds of smaller asteroids.  The flash of light temporarily blinded the onlookers.  The seconds it took to readjust to the night were all it took for the asteroids to hit.  There was no place to hide as the asteroids pounded the immediate vicinity.  Those that hit the street dug craters ten feet deep and twenty feet wide.  Buildings collapsed around the Captain as he dove into the middle of the street.  An explosion could be heard two streets over as a fuel tank was hit.  Lights around him flashed once and then disappeared.  He could already smell the faint smell of smoke.  The sound of another explosion caused him to look up.  He was sorry he did. 

 

All across the horizon, asteroids descended on the planet.  There was no way they were going to win.  How could they defeat an opponent they couldn’t even fight?  As if an answer, there was another explosion overhead.  He didn’t move as an asteroid came streaking impossibly fast directly towards him.

 

**

 

The planetary bombardment finished just before sunrise if the sun could have been seen.  It wasn’t so much a sunrise as much as a slow increase in light over the dust choked landscape.  Visibility had been reduced, but it wasn’t enough to hide the impending invasion onto the planet.  Thousands of larger dropships slowly descended towards the planet.

 

War General Slat watched from the sensor station over the shoulder of the Private.

 

“What’s the status of our gun emplacements?”

 

“We lost about 80% of them last night General.”

 

“Order them to fire at will.”

 

“Yes, sir!”

 

It wouldn’t be enough, but it would slow the Drengin down a bit.  Against a dug in foe, the initial descent could be the most dangerous part of a mission.  One well aimed shot from the ground mounted laser cannons could bring down thousands of troops at once.  Once on the ground, the enemy had to be killed individually, but in the air, they were vulnerable to mass genocide.  The General knew that and worked his best to make sure the Drengin paid as high a price as possible for their parking fee.

 

As the sky lit up with defensive cannon fire, the dropships, almost as one, began bombarding the planet.  It seemed the dropships were simply picking up where the meteors had cut off.  The few taller buildings still standing were destroyed as well as the few anti-air guns.  The guns had managed to take down a few of the incoming dropships, but not nearly enough to make any real difference in the numbers that would be fought.  Forty to fifty dropships had been taken down.  The thought wasn’t comforting in the least.  There were thousands of them in the sky.  It was almost impossible to comprehend.

 

War General Slat watched from his screen.  Unlike the last time, the Drengin seemed to be concentrating their forces in select areas of the planet.  And while the meteor shower didn’t exactly reduce his troop numbers substantially, it did reduce the amount of working hardware he had.  Based on the number of dropships, and assuming they were similar to the dropships that had been left behind in the first phase, the Drengin outnumbered the Torians by at least a two to one margin.  And with the meteor shower, the Torians no longer held an advantage on the familiarity of terrain.  Buildings had been destroyed, bridges collapsed, landmarks wiped out, and the haze sitting in the air made it more difficult to see long distances.  Yes, the victor would earn their planet today.  The battle would come down to a good old fashioned firefight.

on Oct 30, 2009

10

 

 

Frska tried to control her breathing as she regained her breath inside the remains of a mostly bombed out residence.  Two of the walls had crumbled, but she lay up against the upright one, the one that provided her some protection from her pursuer.  Her squad’s job had been to recon the Dren locations just within the city limits.  The rest of her squad had been stunned with a concussion grenade.  It seemed the Drengin enjoyed taking prisoners as much as killing, if not more so.  The Drengin also needed information.  She had barely dodged the effects and ran as she saw more apes than she could possibly fight.  She mused.  Her months of training had prepared her physically for the task at hand, and her background had prepared her for the explorations, but the sheer emotional strain of trying to stay alive was something the marines would need to work on in the next round of preparations. 

 

“Come here little lizard….”

 

Frska stiffened.  The chip they had implanted in her had a built in translator.  She wished she could turn it off. 

 

“I know you’re out there…I can feel your fear….”

 

Frska slowly pulled out her Screamer.  She set the setting to maximum.  It seemed that this was the only way to take down these fighting Drengin.  From what she had heard of the previous assault, these Drengin were faster, stronger, and more agile Drengin than had been encountered in the first wave.  These Drengin could climb buildings with ease.  They could easily lift and throw Torians as if they were small pets.  They could plow through building walls as if they were butter.  They were preternatural.  Something was just plain wrong with these Drengin.  This was no doubt true as when they were killed, a black liquid would drain out of their eyes, ears, and nose.  These Drengin had quickly earned the nickname “Bleeders” for both reasons.   

 

“Where arrrrrre you lizzy?”

 

The Drengin was just outside the wall and through the broken windows, she could see him making his way to the burnt out doorway of her building.  Frska slid low leaning slightly on the existing rubble.  She aimed at the doorway.  The Drengin’s head slowly snaked into the room, looking away from her, and then straight at her.  She fired. 

 

As big and strong as these Dren were, they still couldn’t take a Screamer shot to the head.  Unfortunately, neither could the building, as weak as it was.  Frska leaped through the broken window as the building began to finally succumb to the effects of war and crumble in on itself.  Frska tossed the Screamer aside.  That was one bad thing about the maximum setting.  It would drain the entire battery in just a few shots.  She picked up the Sureshot from the headless corpse and began to run.  The Screamer was extremely noisy, and between the shot, and the collapsing building the apes would be here soon.  She needed to make it back to friendly territory, if such a thing still existed.

 

**

 

The battle had gone poorly.  Around the world, a new generation of Drengin warriors had been encountered.  Impossibly strong, quick, and agile, the Bleeders had quickly demolished any semblance of Torian organization in their fight to defend the planet.  After the first few days of destroying everything in sight, the Bleeders began capturing Torians once the route had begun.  Apparently they had a need for labor.  The Torians were going to provide that labor. 

 

The General examined the recon group lined up inside the small cavern.  This group was the remains of his elite recon division – his scouts and spies.  He’d lost eighty percent of his recon units in the first four days of battle.  He needed the counter to this new and advanced Drengin.  And he needed it now, as in tonight.

 

“We know the Drengin have made our former colony their base of operations.  We know approximately where the Drengin are camped within the city…”

 

“Yeah, everywhere..”  There was a slight unenthusiastic chuckle from the group.

 

“Our goal tonight is to retrieve a sample of this product.  We don’t know exactly what it is or where it is.  It might be a food.  It might be a shot.  It might be a parasite.  Whatever it is, we need to find it and bring it back so we can figure out how to counter the damn thing.”  Xavrs pushed a button on his datapad and a small holographic display appeared showing the areas of operation.  “We are going to provide you a distraction here and here.  I need the first group to get to here and cut the power they’ve restored, and I need beta to search for the product.  Easy mission.  Find the product.  Get the product.  Get out.  Questions?”

 

There were none.

 

“I need you in position in three hours.  Get some rest, study up, and good luck.”

 

It was well past dark when the scouts made their way down through the valley.  The bridge that had once spanned the dry riverbed had been destroyed in the initial bombardments.  The top of the offending asteroid had already been covered in a fine layer of sand.  As they approached the bridge overhang the first shots of laser fire could be seen in the far distance.  A general alarm had sounded and soon enough, the night erupted in activity.  The Drengin barked orders with soldiers grunting back in acknowledgment.  The motor of the Drengin armor could be recognized as it rumbled its way through the streets.  As activity died down, the group headed out from their cover into the city streets.  The group wore black shirts and pants, and painted black in patterns across their green faces to help blend into the night.  In the shadows it was nearly impossible to see them.  The group slowly began to break up, each sneaking off into the night towards their appropriate targets. 

 

Frska sneaked through the back alleys, or what once had been the back alleys.  Between the asteroid bombardment and the dropship shelling, she was actually amazed that there were structures standing for the Dren to occupy.  Frska slipped between two buildings and wrinkled her nose.  Unfortunately, the smell of death wasn’t an unusual smell anymore.  It was one of the things she had been forced to get acquainted with rather quickly.  Rats scuttled out of her way as she made her way through.  From memory, she understood she was in the middle of her assigned block.  All there was left to do now was wait, and hope.  There was always the possibility that the group failed.  Then again, these generations of Drengin still thought the Torians as little more than walking lizards, incapable of planning or intelligent thought.  It was unlikely they would consider the Torians using diversions.

 

With that thought, the few lights went out.  A few curses and growling could be heard around the area.  Frska remained where she was behind the house.  As Drengin appeared from their houses to investigate Frska marked locations.  Some went back inside.  Others stepped down the street and others barked orders to unseen lackeys to get the lights back on.

 

Frska slipped in the back window of the first occupied house.  The occupant was already back in bed when Frska approached.  Her padded shoes prevented the Drengin from noticing her until the blade of her vibroknife sliced his throat.  He thrashed for just a second before succumbing.  A quick search of the room provided nothing.  As Frska was about to exit the front door, a pair of Bleeders on patrol made their way down the street.  Frska quickly backed up against the doorframe and waited for the patrol to pass.  When they were out of earshot, she counted to thirty, and then moved on to the next house.  When constructing a new colony, the Torian had decided to forgo originality in favor of efficiency.  The houses were all the same.  This made Frska’s job much easier.  She slipped into a house, checked for occupants, removed the lives of occupants if there was occupation, checked belongings and moved on to the next house.

 

When she entered the eighth house, she immediately knew something was different.  The house was packed with six foot high cabinet type containers.  The occupant wasn’t home.  In fact, it was difficult to tell if the house was being used as a warehouse, or if the occupant was simply very neat.  Frska quickly moved over to the first container.  It was locked with a simple key lock.  It was easy enough to pick, but that would take time.  She didn’t have time.  She shed her pack and rummaged through it.  After a brief search she found what she was looking for, a small vial of acid.  She had thought the idea silly at the time, carrying around a vial of acid on hand when doing recon.  The idea didn’t seem all that amusing now.  She quickly poured the acid over the small piece of metal holding the lock to the door.  The lock couldn’t hold the door shut if the lock wasn’t ON the door.  The smell of disintegrating metal was obvious and she cringed, mentally forcing the acid to work faster.  It didn’t work.

 

With one eye on the door, and the other on the cabinet, she waited impatiently.  It took sixty-four seconds.  Frska had counted every one of them.  She ripped off the small remaining portion of the door and opened the door to the cabinet.  Filled inside was rack upon rack of syringes.  Each syringe was filled with a blue substance, faintly fluorescent.  Frska gawked for just a second before pulling out two of the syringes and turning around. 

 

The open doorway was what she expected to see.  Instead, she saw the maniacal grin of a Drengin.

 

“And what do we have here?  Lizards?  Sneaking around at night?  Stealing?  Don’t you know that stealing isn’t nice?”

 

The Drengin curled his hand around Frska’s shirt and with a force that was not unproportional to his size, threw Frska into the far wall.  Frska tried to breath, but the sudden burning in her chest prevented it.  She saw three Drengin walking towards her, and she thought she felt something warm dripping down her neck.  She didn’t know what to do.  The three Drengin slowly merged back to one, but he still wore that maniacal grin.  She looked out the door and was shocked to see one of her squad mates gawking at her.  Frska did the only thing she could think of.  She tossed the syringe to her mate.  “RUN!”

 

Her mate caught the syringe out of reflex, looked at Frska and the Dren, and then ran.  The Drengin growled loudly, and then made to catch the fleeing Torian.  Frska raised her leg and tripped him.  The Dren crashed into the door loudly taking it off its hinges where it fell on top of him.  The enraged Drengin quickly got to his feet and turned to take it out on his tormentor.  He was just in time to see Frska pull the needle out of her arm.  A quick flash of fear rushed across his face to be chased away by anger.  The Drengin rushed Frska who quickly sprang to her feet out of the way.  The Drengin couldn’t change quickly enough and went barreling into the wall.  Frska quickly bounded to the other side of the room where she picked up the cabinet of syringes as best she could given the limited ceiling.  With a grunt, she tossed it at the Bleeder.  He smashed it aside as he came towards her again.  The second cabinet slowed him down no more than the first.  Seeing that her options were limited, Frska jumped through the window into the street, right next to the patrol that had come to investigate the noise.

 

A punch to the face caused the first Drengin’s eyes to roll back and go down.  He would never get up again.  Frska wrestled with the second one for seconds before she felt herself being grabbed from behind.  She struggled to free herself, but a quick punch to her gut quickly forced most of the fight out of her.  The Dren tossed her to the street where she lay gasping for air. 

 

The enraged Dren circled her, waiting for her to regain her breath.  When the Dren was tired of waiting, he kicked her in the midsection again sending her sprawling across the street.  The Dren wasn’t quite satisfied.  He came beside her and using all his power, stomped on her knee, shattering it into an unrecoverable mess.  Her screams brought out the few Drengin that hadn’t already been out.  “Sir, don’t you want this one alive?  Like the others?”  The lead Dren stomped on her other knee and waited for Frska to stop screaming before answering in a deep low growl.  “No, I want this one to suffer.”  He circled her one more time, waiting for her to recognize her impending doom.  “Good bye lizard.”  He lifted his foot to obliterate her head. 

 

In the supernatural speed that the concoction had provided, Frska lifted out her Screamer.  Set to the maximum setting, Frska fired as the Dren’s foot came crushing down.  The shot nearly cleaved the offender in two.  The group that was watching dropped to the ground, blood and black fluid dripping from their bodies.  The impact sent Frska skidding halfway across the dirt lane where she lay sprawled at awkward angles.   The patrol that arrived an hour later could only scratch their heads as to what exactly happened.

 

**

 

Unlike the other escort ships, it was decided that the Dreamfetcher was to be hidden in a small woods pretty much in the middle of nowhere.  In one of the few small bouts of fortune, the Drengin had some control over the asteroid attacks, and had concentrated on the areas with high industrial capability, military importance, or pure population.  The secluded forest grove was none of these.  The last few days had been almost boring for Yugo and his entourage stationed there.  They were a last resort escape route for the most important messages, items, or people as deemed necessary.  They were the only way off the planet, and were kept in reserve just in case.

 

Commander Krii was on the bridge, half asleep when the intercom buzzed.  “This is Green two incoming, we’ve got priority package that needs transport, hostiles incoming from 220.  ETA four minutes.”  The Commander immediately hit the alarm button.  Yugo was first on the bridge, wiping his eyes as the Commander filled him in.  Slska came up next followed by most of the bridge crew.

 

Yugo immediately took charge.  “Slska, I need marines and AA on the south/southwestside.  We’ve got incoming that will need support.  You have three minutes.  GO!”  Slska immediately left the bridge barking out orders in her communicator as she left.

 

Nrek, get this thing fired up, we may need a quick getaway, and it might be hot.

 

“Yes Sir!”

 

Yugo switched the view screen to the sensor map.  There was silence outside of Nrek, who was busy warming up the engines.  The hum droned on around them.  The Torian ship appeared on screen followed shortly by a Red blip.

 

Yugo quickly buzzed the communicator.  “Slska, incoming hostiles, are you ready?”

 

“Just about there Captain…”

 

“We need it NOW.  You should have visual out there.”

 

A stream of laser fire appeared on the monitors.  One of them hit the Torian scout.

 

“I’m hit!  I’m hit!  Coming down, trying to land near your position…”

 

The scout landed cleanly a quarter of a mile from the edge of the glade.  Slska had her AA guns prepared as the Drengin dropship slowly circled, looking for survivors.  They were completely unprepared for the barrage of laser fire that wracked their ship.  The ship shuddered violently, began to smoke, and spiraled out of control another half mile past the scout ship.

 

Slska spoke up quickly.  “Marines!  Cover our ship.  We need the package.  GO GO GO!!”

 

With the exception of the four gunners, the marines nearly sprinted to the scout ship.  The ship wasn’t on fire, but the Torian pilot was woozy from the crash.  The marines arranged cover around the ship while Slska attempted to open the crew hatch.  It didn’t open.  A marine pulled out a laser cutter and tossed it up to her.  She immediately bent low and began working on forcing an opening.  From the direction of the downed Drengin craft, a laser blast erupted and hit the side of the downed Scout.

 

“Hold your fire until you can see!”

 

Another few blasts came from the darkness, hitting randomly around the ship.  “Slska, they can see your cutter glowing!”

 

“Well, fire back and give them something else to think about.”

 

As she said that, a small group of Drengin Bleeders came sprinting towards the group of marines.  The Torians fired quickly.  One dropped but the others continued without hesitation.  The next round of fire dropped another one, but the Drengin were quickly on top of the group.  One Drengin picked up a Torian marine and literally threw him up at Slska.  Slska barely had time to duck before the marine smashed into the cockpit window.  Slska cursed under her breath as the marines fought the fierce hand to hand battle.  Just as Slska had a cut a small hole into the side of the window, a Drengin jumped onto the top of the scout, eager and ready for some Torian blood.  Slska whipped around with the laser cutter, cleanly removing the Drengin’s leg below the knee. The shocked Drengin wobbled for a second before losing balance and falling off the top of the scout.  Slska reached into the cockpit for the emergency release, but found a small box instead.  The pilot, unconscious, didn’t have any indications.  Slska grabbed the box and pulled it out of the cockpit.  The Drengin were fully engaged, and there was no telling which way the battle would go.  Slska took the box and ran. 

 

“Package retrieved, be ready!”

 

Halfway back to the Dreamfetcher, two of the remaining Drengin came rushing into view.  The gunners, began firing.  One was taken down instantly.  The other gunners missed.

 

“Slska, we have another incoming transport.  Double-time!”

 

Slska was too winded to respond as the Bleeder closed in on her.  Grabbing a foot from behind, the Drengin tripped Slska up.  She did her best to cushion the package as she hit the ground and it scooted away.  Turning over and looking up, the Drengin had a cruel smile on his face, the face of victory.  The Dren quickly disappeared from view as a gunner’s cannon blast hit the Dren. 

 

Slska turned over, grabbed the package and started running again.  It wasn’t long until she was inside the forest.  The incoming dropship had noticed the firefight and began firing at the cannons.  Having been concentrating on the Drengin and Slska, they hadn’t noticed the new threat.  The dropship quickly ripped through the gun emplacements. 

 

As soon as Slska had entered the ship elevator, the Dreamfetcher began its ascent.  The dropship, slowly searching the ground for the remaining Torians, was not expecting a warship to suddenly appear in its sights.  Both ships hovered a second before the dropship fired.  Slska had just entered the bridge when the ship rocked.  She tripped and the package was flipped into the air.  Yugo easily caught it and looked at his security officer.

 

“Well, hit them back!”

 

She quickly got to her feet, checked coordinates, and fired.  Dropships were not made to withstand the firepower of a warship.  It exploded into a display of thousands of metal pieces.

 

“I’m sure we’ve attracted attention, it’s time to go!”

 

It took no time at all to break into orbit.  A half-dozen smaller Drengin fighters seemed to be scrambling to mobilize. 

 

Yugo leaned forward in his chair.  “Well, what do we have here.  Commander, are we faster than they are?”

 

‘We don’t have any intelligence on these fighters sir.”

 

“Armor complement?”

 

“Unknown sir.”

 

“Weapons complement?”

 

Pktri sighed.  “Unknown sir.”

 

“Well, let’s give it a shot shall we?  Helm, put us on direct course to the Toria system.  Slska, target the nearest as it comes in range and fire.”

 

“Yes Sir.”

 

The pack of fighters congregated and moved to intercept the Dreamfetcher, firing lasers as they came.  The Dreamfetcher’s shields, a technology stolen from the downed Titan, proved extremely effective in dissipating the incoming attacks.  The Dreamfetcher returned fire with a pair of missiles.  The missiles turned and tracked the closest fighter.  The fighter evaded, trying to lose the missiles to no avail.  The pair ripped through the small ship’s thin layer of protection and it exploded into a bright blue light.  The Dreamfetcher fired again as the fighters retreated to line up another shot.  By the time the fighters had lined up for their second run, half their number was gone.  A fourth shot blew the hull off another fighter.  The final two aborted their run and fled.

 

As the bridge crew watched the view screen and the fleeing fighters, Slska spoke up.  “That was almost too easy.  I guess they didn’t consider us a threat.” 

 

The Commander responded.  “Today we aren’t.  There’s nothing we could do today to change the tide.  It’s just a matter of time before they consolidate here and move on.”

 

“Anything else on radar Commander?”

 

“No sir.  We’re clear.”

 

Yugo sighed.  “Send a note to the General.  The package is en route.  We’ll see soon enough exactly what this is and how to counter it.  Have him try and stay alive long enough for us to use it.”

 

The package had been forgotten in the escape.  It lay next to the captain’s chair on the bridge.  Yugo picked it up and handed it to Slska.  “Go find someplace safe to store this.  Oh, and be careful?”  Slska blushed just a bit as she nodded, took the package, and left the bridge.  Yugo sat back and relaxed.  If he hadn’t been worrying about the people on Russom, worried about the potential for attack on Toria, worrying over a potential attack on the ship, worrying over the care of the package, and hoping to perform up to the standards of a Torian Captain, he might have actually enjoyed the moment.

 

Several days later, Yugo found himself sitting by himself on the bridge.  It was late, and he had given the rest of the crew a break.  He himself wasn’t tired, and let his mind wander over the possibilities lying before him, before all of them actually.  He heard a rustle behind him and caught a glimpse of Slska standing in the doorway.  He turned his head back and was silent a second.

 

“Couldn’t sleep?”

 

Slska came forward to the helm’s chair, sat down, and turned to face him.  “Naw.  Nightmare.  I keep dreaming about trying to get the package out of the scout ship, and the Drengin attacking.  I had one jump up there with  me you know.”  Slska leaned forward with her hands in her lap, looking down at the floor. She didn’t look him in the eyes, as if it were a confession of sorts.  “I keep dreaming that he grabs me, and throws me to the ground, and then there’s all the others, and then…”  Slska shook her head and went silent.  She turned her head away trying  to hide herself wiping a tear.  “And then there are all the ones that died.  Why I am alive and they are all dead?  There were twenty of them.  I know their names, their histories, where they live…  lived rather.  She looked up at him.  Can I…can I go to their families when we get back to Toria?”

 

Yugo looked into her sparkling brown eyes, “I’m sorry Slska, we’re only going as far as the Dreamstake.  If we needed to move quickly, we wouldn’t have that time to waste.”

 

Slska nodded in understanding.  She mentally pulled herself together and wiped her eyes, “I’m sorry Captain, I didn’t mean to bring this on you, I…”

 

Yugo interrupted her.  “Slska, we’re in a war.  People have died.  You are allowed to have a moment of weakness now and then.  I just happen to do it when nobody else can see.”  Yugo winked at her.  The gesture brought a bit of a small to her face.  She turned and they both looked out the view screen as the stars slowly passed.  Having made some kind of internal decision, she purposely turned her chair and looked intently at Yugo.

 

“Sir, may I ask you a question?”

 

Yugo looked at her suspiciously.  By the look on her face, he knew there was something coming.  He didn’t know what it was.  “Yes…”

 

“How did you become Captain?”

 

Yugo sat there confused, “What do you mean how?”

 

“How did you become Captain?  I mean, if I may speak frankly, you’re not the most, oh, how shall we say it, motivational person and…”

 

“HEY!”

 

“No offense Captain.  And you’re awfully young to be a Captain…”

 

Yugo stood up from his chair.  “HEY!!”

 

Slska held out her hand.  “No offense Captain.  And the Commander respects your decisions, but obviously fills in a LOT of what you should be doing and…

 

Yugo started to get angry, “HEY!!!!”

 

“And I’ve been personally ordered to watch your back Captain.  And I simply can’t figure out what makes you so special.”

 

“THAT WILL BE ENOUGH Lieutenant!  Slska immediately stood at attention as Pktri walked onto the bridge.  Yugo stood there somewhat embarrassed.  Pktri ignored him as he slowly walked around the offending marine.  She stood at perfect attention not wanting to further dig into the pit she was about to be tossed into. 

 

Yugo thought the intimidation had gone a bit too far.

 

“Excuse me Commander…”

 

Pktri held up a hand to Yugo, but his gaze never left Slska.  “I’m sorry Captain, I need to reiterate something to our Lieutenant here.”  There was clearly no doubting who was in charge at the moment.  “Lieutenant Krxt, did I not make your responsibilities clear when we left Toria?”

 

Slska stared straight ahead.  “Very clear sir.”

 

“Your interrogation of the Captain just now borders on complete and utter insubordination.  I could and probably SHOULD have you sent back to your cell!”

 

Outside the blush to the cheeks, there was no other movement from the girl.  “Yes sir.”

 

“I suggest you follow your orders and stop asking questions.  You know your orders.  Don’t ask questions, FOLLOW them!”

 

“Yes sir.”

 

“Dismissed soldier.”

 

Slska left the bridge without so much as a glance at anything other than the doorway.  When she was out of sight, the Commander finally relaxed a bit and turned to Yugo.  “I’m sorry Captain, she’s one I need to keep my eyes on for various reasons.  Her tone and manner were completely unacceptable.”

 

Yugo sat back down in his chair.  “But she has some good points Pktri, look at me, I’m barely out of school, no military experience, I’m not a natural leader by any means.”  Yugo looked at Pktri and shrugged questioningly.  “Do I really BELONG here?”

 

Pktri kneeled down on one knee and looked Yugo up in the eye.  “Listen to me Yugo.  You have something we all need.  Do not doubt who is in charge.  YOU make the decisions around here.  I will willingly walk into a deathtrap if you order it.  Yes, I have more experience, yes I have more training, yes I’ve led large groups before.  That just allows me to insulate you from the bureaucratic CRAP that generally falls to being Captain.  You have decisions to make.”  Pktri grabbed Yugo’s hands in earnestness.  “You CANNOT doubt yourself in this.  You are SUPPOSED to be here.”

 

The Commander returned to his feet and turned to the view screen, giving Yugo a little space.

 

“But, it doesn’t make any sense.”

 

Pktri turned earnestly.  “Trust me.  Trust the General.  You are where you need to be.”

 

Yugo thought about the implications for another few minutes, the Commander studying him, waiting.  A thought crossed his mind and he glanced to the elder Torian.

 

“Any decision I make Commander?”

 

A suspicious frown spread across Pktri’s face.  “Within reason Captain.”

 

A smile slowly spread across Yugo’s face.  “Don’t send the Lieutenant away without my approval.”

 

Pktri couldn’t help but laugh.  After composing himself, he responded with a semi mocking salute.  “Yes sir.  Now go get some sleep, we might need that mind of yours tomorrow.”  He indicated for Yugo to vacate the chair.  It wasn’t a request.  It was an order.


on Oct 30, 2009

11

 

 

The arrival at the Torian battle station Dreamstake was almost anti-climactic.  Yugo was pleased to note the new larger ships patrolling the perimeter of Torian space.  Upon arrival, the package was immediately taken by a science team who had been awaiting the arrival with an almost frantic anticipation.  Yugo and his crew were shown their quarters, and then, well, nothing.

 

Yugo explored the military station.  There wasn’t really all that much to it.  The research areas took up nearly half the station with the military barracks, training, engineering, and other operational sections of the station covering the rest.  Entertainment, of any kind, had not been a major consideration in the station’s design. 

 

They had been in the station for well over a week.  The first two days had been nice to unwind.  Since then, Yugo had been incredibly bored.  The fact that they had been uninformed continually irritated him.  Yugo decided to investigate.  After stopping a scientist walking down a corridor, Yugo followed their directions to the classified areas of the lab.  A pair of guards stood outside the entrance.  Yugo strode forward and the guards stepped in front of the door with their standard response.

 

“I’m sorry.  This is a restricted area.  Only authorized….”

 

The guard seemed to recognize who he was talking to and looked at the other guard.  The other guard looked as if in a panic and quickly stepped back.

 

“I’m sorry Sir, please continue.”

 

Yugo looked at the pair awkwardly before moving past them into a small chamber.  There was a closed door opposite him.  A bored voice over the intercom blurted out, “Put your hand on the panel.”  A small panel slid out next to the door.  Yugo did so and an electronic voice chirped out, “Yugo Scrapth.”

 

There was silence for just a moment before the voice, now quite at attention, spoke up.  “Welcome Captain.  Dr. Tles said you might show up.  After the shower, please follow the green line to the waiting area.  I’ll let him know you are here.”  Yugo stood for a second.  Shower?  What shower?  A second later, vents from the ceiling emitted a gas into the chamber that was so thick, he couldn’t see.  A vacuum sucked the gas out seconds later.  “Have a nice visit Captain.”

 

The doors opened and on the floor were lines of at least twelve different colors: red, yellow, green, white, black, brown, purple, blue, orange, and various shades in between.  He followed the green line as instructed past various windowed labs.  Some were obvious weapon testing, others included animals of various types, others he simply didn’t have a clue but found fascinating nonetheless.  He found himself more than once stopping and staring only to remember he needed to be somewhere.  He finally made it to the waiting room where Dr. Tles was already waiting.

 

Yugo didn’t even get a chance to say hello before Rslx began talking.

 

“Welcome Captain, welcome!  I’m so glad you came.  The experiments are coming along fine I tell you, just fine.  But here, let me stop talking, come, come!” Yugo could do nothing but follow along.  As Rxlx continued his babbling, Yugo tried to stop and stare at the different experiments again, but was quickly left behind the doctor.  It was a long walk down the purple line before they made their way to the restricted labs.  Rslx placed his hand on a similar panel, and the door opened to allow the two entrance.  When they entered, Yugo was actually surprised.  The lab was actually smaller than some of the others they had passed.  Rslx caught the confusion and smiled.  “I like this lab because of the view.”  He pointed to the windows in the far wall.  Looking through, Yugo caught a view of the docking stations and the space beyond.  Yugo watched as a scout completed its docking, the lights on the airlock moving from red to green.

 

Yugo turned to watch the doctor complete his preparations.  Investigating a bit, Yugo curiously stood in front a transparent field of some type.  His questioning looks made Rslx laugh.  It’s what we call a science cube. Watch this.”  As Yugo watched, the doctor placed his hands through the protective fields.  It covered his hands as if he were wearing magnetic gloves.  “It protects our hands without giving up any kind of dexterity.  And in this case, I’m glad we had them.”  Inside the cube looked to be a drop of a fluorescent blue liquid.

 

Yugo finally was able to get out a question, “So, this is what was in the package?”

 

“Yes.”

 

“And you know what it is?”

 

“Well, yes and no.  We don’t know exactly WHAT it is, or where it came from, but we know what it does.  This is nasty stuff.”  The doctor flipped a switch on a large monitor above the science cube.  “This is normal muscle tissue of a mouse.”  The doctor hit a button and the scene changed.  “THIS is the muscle tissue of a mouse on what we simply call “Blue”.”  Yugo didn’t see the difference.  The doctor went on to explain exactly how “blue” affect the physiology that completely lost Yugo.  Yugo finally interrupted him.  “Give me the high levels here doctor.  What does it do, what doesn’t it do, and how do we stop it.”

 

Rslx sighed and looked at him.

 

“Blue” makes a person stronger, faster, and more agile.  Anything the body does physically, a person on blue can do it three to four times as well.  It does not affect the brain or brain activity.  So it doesn’t make someone smarter, or remember better, nor does it dull the senses.  However, “Blue’ is EXTREMELY addictive.  One use, and you have to use it every day, or go through severe withdrawal.  The withdrawal looks to be extreme with our tests on mice.  Half the mice died outright, another quarter of them look to have gone insane.  We don’t know how many actually lived, the insane ones looked to have eaten through their cages and destroyed the entire experiment, but, well, you get my drift.”  Rslx looked a little sheepish at the final admission.

 

“And how do we counter it?  Is there anything we can do?”

 

“There is, we just don’t know what it is.”

 

Yugo looked at the doctor, confusion showing plainly in his face. “What do you mean, you don’t know what it is?”

 

“Yugo, this is something beyond anything that we have created – or even conceived of.  The Drengin didn’t create this on their own.  This is science decades, if not centuries ahead of our time.  I don’t know where they got this, or found it, or bought or what have you, but this doesn’t follow anything we’ve ever encountered.   You, of all people, should know you don’t toy with stuff you don’t understand.”  Yugo thought about his voyage mission aboard the Dreamer.  He understood.

 

“So how do you know there’s a counter to it?”

 

Rslx sighed and shrugged.  “I’ve been working on this since you’ve arrived.  I’ve been running different experiments on it with no real effect.  And yet, periodically, the sample I work with will simply harden.  Crystallize.  I have no idea why.  It’s not temperature, or pressure, or chemical reaction that I’ve discovered, although I’ve got plenty others to try.  It’s not radiation, it’s….well, I don’t know what it is.  But somehow, this compound crystallizes and I can’t recreate the reaction.”

 

Rslx huffed and sat down.  Yugo understood.  The pressure of waiting was bad enough, much less looking and knowing there WAS a counter, but being unable to find it.

 

Yugo moved back to the window.  He watched the airlock blink from green to red, and the scout slowly pulled back away from the station.  It was a shift change for the scouts.  Yugo longed to be back out there.  It was much better than being cooped up on the station.  He watched the scout increase velocity then disappear from view.  He could almost feel the hum of the engines.  Something tickled the back of his mind.  He looked around the lab.  He could almost feel the hum of the station.  He could almost feel the hum of the science cube.  He moved to the center of the room and closed his eyes.

 

Rslx gave him a weird look.  “What are you doing?”

 

Yugo ignored him.  What was he missing?  It was here.  Something was here.  It was on the tip of his tongue.  He opened his eyes and moved about the room, looking for something.  Yugo could feel his heart beat.

 

 “Doctor, you can use vibrations or sound waves to break things apart can you not?”  The doctor thought for just a second before nodding.  “Have you tried something like that on our tests here?”

 

Rslx gave him a look.  “Why?”

 

Yugo began pacing faster.  “Think about it doctor.  You said so yourself, this is something we’ve never seen before, never heard of before.  This was established on a planet, not some space station.  They are completely different environments.  We have stuff up here, variables up here that were probably not even CONSIDERED when testing in practical applications on a planet…  It’s around here somewhere doctor, you have the perfect office for it.  Something, in or around this office creates something causing “blue” here to congeal.  If you can find it doctor, we are all but there.”

 

**

 

It had been two days since Yugo had challenged the Doctor on an attempt to solving the riddle.  He hadn’t heard anything but negatives so far.  He only hoped he hadn’t sent the Doctor down some rabbit hole, never to be seen again.  He had been sitting at the table for over an hour, not having touched the seaweed omelet he had ordered.  The seaweed was entirely too dry and felt like mush in his mouth.  Military, scientists, and officers alike had come and gone and taken no notice of the young Torian.  He was staring down at his food when he heard a familiar voice, “May I sit here?”

 

He looked up to see Slska with a plate of food.  Upon recognition, she immediately retreated to military protocol.  “I’m sorry Sir, I’ll go sit somewhere else.”  She made to leave when Yugo spoke up, “Sit Slska, I’m not the Commander.”

 

Slska hesitated briefly before sitting.  She ate in silence for a few moments before she gathered the courage to speak.  “Sir, I’m sorry about my….conduct the other day.  It was inappropriate and disrespectful.  I promise I will…

 

“It’s ok Slska.  The Commander isn’t here.  He’s just rather overprotective of me, that’s all.  Your questions were legitimate, even if they were out of line.”  He smiled a tad to himself.  “And to tell you the truth, I don’t know all the answers myself.”  He shrugged a slow shrug.

 

Just then, there was a commotion at the entrance of the mess hall.  “Where is he?  WHERE IS HE?  YUGO!!  YUGO!!”  Dr. Tles came rushing up to the pair sitting at the table.  Several Torians stared as the disheveled scientist screamed at the Torians right in front of him.  “YOUR IDEA WORKED YUGO!  IT WORKED!!  THAT WAS BRILLIANT!  I don’t know how you thought of it, but it was…BRILLIANT!  Now, to just transfer that to a weapon, how can we do it, how can we do it…”

 

Everyone stared as the scientist walked circles around the small mess hall, fingers to his forehead.  “I’ve got it!  We can try and …no, how about if we….hmmm….  I’ll figure it out Yugo!”  He came rushing up again.  “BRILLIANT!”  The scientist then went rushing out of hall in a rush.

 

As the scientist departed, Slska turned her stare on Yugo.  Yugo could only shrug.

 

**

 

Yugo, Commander Krii, and several other ranking officers sat in the crowded test hall of the Dreamstake Station.  Demonstrations weren’t all uncommon, but it was rare that a demonstration had the power to alter the fate of the entire Torian race.  Expectations were high for the demonstration.  Rumors were floating regarding the results and what was going to be presented.  Dr. Tles stood patiently at the front waiting for the commotion to settle down.  When he felt he had everyone’s attention, he began.

 

“Good evening everyone.  I appreciate the late notice, but as everyone understands, time is of the essence.”  The chuckles the doctor expected were not forthcoming, so he continued.  “As you know, we’ve been working on creating something that can change the tide of the battle for survival of Russom.  The Drengin have discovered a drug of unknown origin that grants their soldiers an incredible amount of additional strength, agility, endurance, and resistance to pain.  We’ve dubbed this substance “Blue” for its translucent color.  Original, I know.  The question, of course, is how do we counter it.”

 

The audience followed in rapt attention.  “Thanks to Captain Yugo, we have an answer.”  There were a few smiles and Yugo blushed a bit as people strained to get a look at him.  The Director used the distraction to pull out a small handgun, the same size as the Torian Enforcer.  When the audience trained back onto Rslx, he continued, “This is what we call the Torian Silencer.”  The Director patted the gun.  “This firearm is absolutely harmless to anybody or anything except those taking Blue.  Watch.”  The doctor took the firearm and aimed it into the audience.  Immediately a half a dozen Enforcers were trained on the scientist.  “Whoa!  Ok, how about a volunteer, uh, Yugo, why don’t you come up…” 

 

Once again in the spotlight, Yugo blushed and was in the process of getting to his feet when there was a call from the back.  “WAIT!  I volunteer!  I volunteer!”  It was Slska.  The doctor heard her.  “Come on up, come on up!”  He was excited to have an active volunteer.  “Nice to meet you, uh….”

 

“Lieutenant Krxt.”

 

The doctor hesitated.  He looked over at a couple security guards when Yugo interrupted.  “Go ahead and continue doctor.”  The doctor looked questioningly over at Yugo.  Yugo nodded back at him.  That seemed to be all the reassurance the doctor needed and he continued.

 

“As I was saying, this firearm does no damage to anyone not on Blue.”

 

He paused and pulled the weapon back, “You’re not on blue are you?”

 

Slska shook her head nervously.

 

“Ok…”  The doctor took the weapon and aimed it at her head.  The audience watched in anticipation.  Slska cringed just a tad.  A few members in the front row turned their heads in anticipation of splattering brain fragments.  The scientist pulled the trigger.

 

Nothing happened.

 

A few in the audience chuckled nervously.  Others began murmuring to their neighbors in worry.

 

Rslx spoke over the drone.  “The weapon is silent, shoots through most materials, and will kill a being on Blue almost instantaneously.”  The doctor seemed pleased with himself and watched for a reaction about the discovery.  He received mostly blank stares.  Finally, a Torian in the back called out.  “And….and…we just take it on faith that it works?”

 

That seemed to spark the doctor out of his confusion.  “OH!  Of course!  An example!  I almost forgot!”

 

Rslx opened a side door, and wheeled out a cage.  The cage had been placed inside another cage and now sat upon a wheeled platform in the middle of the demonstration area.  A monitor dropped from the ceiling to give a better view to those in the back.  The viewers saw a small mouse.  The inner cage had been chewed through and the mouse now ran between the space between the two cages.  Blood seemed to cover the paws and mouth of the small rodent.

 

The scientist held a small section of brick.  He gave it to Slska who had become an unwilling assistant.  “What you see here is a mouse that was injected with blue this morning.  For the purposes of this demonstration, we kept the mouse in a typical mouse cage.  The mouse has eaten through the cage and is likely looking for a way out of the second.  And before you ask, yes, this happened in the lab before we reinforced the cages.  Now..”  The scientist grasped for Slska’s name for a second before moving on, “Now, my assistant here, is going to hold up this section of brick.  It’s not exact, but very similar to what you’ll be seeing on Russom.  I don’t believe the Drengin have begun buildings with steel exteriors quite yet.  Go ahead.” 

 

Slska hesitantly held up the section of brick in front of the cage.  The scientist aimed in the general direction.  “Now the shot doesn’t have to be exact at all, a very general shot will do.  Any and all Drengin within the radius of the shot will be affected.  And here we go, watch the monitor please.  One, two, three, and bang.”

 

The audience watched as the mouse shuffled for just a second, and then stopped moving.  “That’s it folks, one dead mouse.”

 

Rslx turned once again to the audience for a reaction.  Again, there was silence and a few stares.  Nobody seemed impressed.  The director frowned glumly.  “Alrighty folks, we’ll do this the real way.  Do we have any volunteers?”  Nobody raised their hand.  Nobody was amused.  The scientist picked up a nearby commlink and whispered something inaudible.  He then turned to address the crowd.  Any sense of joviality had quickly left his face.

 

“It’s unfortunate that sometimes members of society feel they do not need to follow the rules, that they are above and beyond the law, that they can take, abuse, hurt, and/or kill others without any type of repercussion.  Today, we are going to meet one of these members.  While there is nothing that can be done to the ones he has hurt, he will save many others with his debt to society.”

 

A middle-age Torian male was dragged into the presentation chamber.  Wearing only a loincloth, he was bound with his hands over his head and his mouth was gagged.  Much like the mouse, the Torian was secured inside a cage.  Two sets of steel bars surrounded him.  The Torian growled intelligibly behind the gag and he pulled violently at his restraints.  The observers rose to their feet.  This was almost unheard of and a few Torians exchanged uneasy glances.  Slska slid to the side of the room, happy to be off center stage.

 

“This afternoon, you are going to see two things here.  One, you are going to see the power of Blue to those who haven’t seen it firsthand.  And two, you’re going to see how we stop it.”

 

The scientist’s tone had changed from the nervous and jovial to the matter of fact and businesslike of someone finally in his element.  The change was eerie.  Nonchalantly the director opened a case on the demonstration table, and pulled out a syringe with a blue fluorescent liquid inside it.

 

“Blue” he announced as if he were introducing a new friend.

 

Stepping behind the cage, Rslx quickly grabbed the arm of the prisoner.  Despite the struggling, the scientist expertly inserted the needle, injected the substance, and withdrew.  Satisfied with his work, Rslx stepped back to the front of the audience, pulling the Silencer off the table as he passed.  Rslx watched as several members of the audience checked their weapons, just in case.  “Now, the effects of blue are almost instantaneous, taking somewhere between fifteen and thirty second to take effect.  And while we haven’t tried this on humanoids, until now, I can’t possibly believe the process is a pleasant one.”

 

As if on cue, the prisoner screamed into his gag while squirming and yanking on his restraints.

 

“The strength Blue gives a humanoid is at LEAST three times that of an average Torian.”  The prisoner inside the cage proceeded to yank the bolt down from the top of the cage, and begin ripping off the wrist restraints.  “Strength, agility, endurance are all enhanced.”  The prisoner in the cage looked at the scientist with hate filled eyes and began slowly pulling the bars of the cage apart.  “However, without a daily supply of Blue, the victim will be driven insane as the drug rips the cells of the body apart, looking for additional sources.”  The prisoner had pulled enough apart so that he could slip through to the second set of bars.  Seeing an opening he lunged at the scientist.  The scientist was just out of reach.  Frustrated and growling, the prisoner began pulling the second set of bars apart.  “And yet, all it takes is one shot of the Silencer to end their suffering.”  Rslx showed off the weapon to his audience, turned, aimed, and without hesitation pulled the trigger.  The prisoner had just enough time to look up before he slumped forward between the bars.

 

The Doctor went up and checked his pulse.  There was none.

 

“Shooting a Drengin with Blue in their system is like replacing the affected part with rocks.  To anything else, it’s harmless.”  A pair of marines stepped in from the side, pulled out the Torian, and dragged him into the side room. The scientist looked out at the sea of viewers, “Questions?”

 

There were no questions.  There were no doubters

on Oct 30, 2009

12

 

 

“So, what do you think?”

 

Yugo glanced over his shoulder at Pktri.  Pktri’s gaze never left the view screen where several fleets of Drengin ships sat between them and the planet Russom.  In addition to adding several small fighter ships, the Drengin had supplemented their force with several medium sized Raptor warships.  It was a bit more imposing force than the force they had left almost two months ago.

 

The two forces sat, neither moving.

 

“Do we even know where we’re landing yet Commander?”

 

“Yes sir.  I have the coordinates for our ground base rendezvous point.  It’s on the other side of the planet, which is actually a good thing.  Based on our last transmissions from the General, the Drengin were taking as many Torians alive as possible.  There were even scattered reports of Torian civilians surrendering.  I don’t think there is any kind of organized resistance.  The fact that we haven’t heard from the general means he’s been captured, or dead.  So we’ll either find him alive somewhere, or a corpse.  Either way, we need to find him.”

 

Yugo nodded.

 

It had been two weeks after the demonstration before they began the return voyage to Russom.  Additional troops had been marshaled and loaded onto the monstrous troop transports.  A small number of the prototype Silencer, Silencer-40, and Silencer explosives had been loaded onto the Dreamfetcher.  More would come as the production was completed, but the consensus was that the faster they returned to Russom with help, the better.  The fact that very little had been heard from Russom indicated the worst.

 

However, not all was bad.  Rslx and his engineers had studied the battle analysis from the various encounters the Torians had sent back, and had been developing defenses to counter the attacks.  The Dreamfetcher would be heading back with not only troop transports, but well armored troop defenders as well.  The half dozen medium sized ships alongside the Dreamfetcher should be able to at least allow the transports to make it to the planet, if not challenge for space superiority outright. 

 

Yugo looked out at the view screen again.  Nobody moved.

 

“Alrighty, let’s get this party started.”

 

Yugo hit a button on his Captain’s chair.  “All ships, you’re being sent the rendezvous point for the troop transports.  I need all ships to protect the transports.  When possible concentrate on the fighters.  The larger ships are less maneuverable and will have a more difficult time getting into position.  We will see you on the surface.  Good luck.”

 

As soon as the transports began moving, the Drengin fleet jumped into action.  The fighters zipped between the larger Torian Surfers, heading towards the troop transports.  The repeated and concentrated fire of the Surfer missiles drove them back.  One fighter broke apart and exploded.  Yugo looked at the tactical screen as Slska fired a pair of missiles at a passing fighter.  The fighters were good distractions but weren’t any kind of serious threat – to the warships at least.  Yugo was about to command an attack on another fighter when the Dreamfetcher rocked violently.  Yugo grabbed his chair for support, and several officers tumbled from their stations.

 

He looked out the view screen just in time to see a missile slam into one of the Torian Surfers.  It ripped through the hull and nearly disintegrated the rear part of the ship.  “All ships, concentrate on the medium Drengin Raptors!  Transports, it is time to MOVE!” 

 

The Torian Surfers made to intercept the Drengin Raptors while the few remaining fighters continued to weave through the chaos taking potshots with their small lasers.

 

The battle raged as the transports slowly made their way around the planet.  Yugo spent his time covering the transports.  The remaining fighters had tried to engage, but were successfully fended off, or destroyed. 

 

“Helm, How long till we begin our descent?”

 

“Two minutes Captain.  Captain!  Look!”

 

Another of the Torian ships exploded in a blinding light.  The fight looked bleak for the Torians.  Three of the five Drengin warships were still pounding away at the remaining two Torian ships.  The likelihood of those ships making it out alive were slim. 

 

One of the Drengin ships had broken away and was headed towards the remaining invaders.  Yugo began barking orders, “Transports, continue course.  Ensign, Engage the ship defensively.  Keep them occupied, but try not to give them a good shot.”

 

“Yes sir.”

 

The ship began to weave and fire its modified cannons at the Drengin ship.  The Drengin ship shuddered with each hit but managed to stay in one piece as it managed to fire a missile.  The missile sailed far wide of the Dreamfetcher and Yugo almost laughed until he received an incoming message, “This is transport 7AT, we’ve got missile incoming!”

 

The transport was just beginning its atmospheric descent when the missile hit the transports engines.  Yugo watched helplessly as the transport shuddered violently, and began to drop.

 

“Sir! Yugo!  We have multiple missiles incoming!  Two minutes till impact!”

 

Slska fired another pair of missiles at the closest Drengin Raptor.  The ship finally succumbed to the pounding and exploded in an electrical firestorm.  Yugo watched the view screen as the damaged transport began falling through the atmosphere.  “Transport 7AT, eject your dropships NOW!”

 

“But they’ll burn up in the atmosphere!”

 

“It’s the only way any of them are going to survive, you won’t have time to eject them without your engines.  It’s the only way some of you might survive!  Now do it!!”

 

“Uh, Sir, we have missiles incoming, one minute, thirty seconds…”

 

There was a brief pause from the transport. “Ejecting dropships now.”  Yugo watched as the squad sized dropships began blasting from the free falling transport.  The height and speed were already doing a number to its armor.

 

“One minute sir…”

 

Yugo watched as the armor of the dropships lit up against the speed and heat of the atmosphere.  Most seemed to be making it as far as he could tell.  It gave him an idea.

 

“Helm, take us into the atmosphere, NOW!”

 

There was the briefest of pauses, “Yes sir!”

 

With flawless precision, Ensign Nrek brought the Dreamfetcher around and blasted towards the atmosphere.  “Thirty seconds to impact sir.”

 

The planet came rushing towards the ship with frightening speed before Atrl leveled the ship out to bring the ship into the atmosphere at a sustainable angle.  “Fifteen seconds sir…”  The ship blew through the atmosphere much quicker than was advisable and set the course for the rendezvous point.  The missiles, unprepared for the extreme heat exploded harmlessly behind them.

 

The Commander nodded with a slight smirk on his face.  Below them, the damaged transport had landed hard with visible cracks of the ship even at this elevation.  Hundreds of dropships littered the area.  The other two transports were still in the process of landing when an alarm began to blare. 

 

“Sir, we’ve got incoming hostiles!”

 

“Yes, I’m sure we do, Lieutenant, I’m sure we do.  Relay to the ground, I’m sure they already know it is coming.  Find us a place to land Ensign, we have some goods to offload.”

 

“No, Sir!  From orbit!  They are preparing to fire!”

 

The two medium raptors had decided to chase the Dreamfetcher to finish the job.  The first, wanting to catch the Dreamfetcher unprepared had come speeding into the atmosphere.  The pilot, unaware of the need for caution when moving through planetary atmospheres, came ripping through the atmosphere at an extremely high speed.  Unable to level out quickly enough, the ship went careening straight into the ground.  The second, a bit more cautious had caught the Dreamfetcher in its sites, and fired as soon as possible.  Unfortunately, the missiles were still unaccustomed to the heat and exploded upon exit from the ship.  The resulting explosion set off a chain reaction of explosions on board the enemy ship.  The entire rear end exploded and the ship fell from orbit landing close to its brethren.

 

Yugo looked back to the screen as if nothing had happened, “Now, Ensign, find us a place to land, we have some goods to unload.”

 

The Commander standing behind Yugo smiled as the rest of the bridge crew stared in amazement at the events that had just taken place.

 

**

 

Slska handed the binoculars back to Yugo as the wind whipped across the plains.  She pulled her head covering back up over her mouth, muffling her somewhat.

 

“This is never going to work.”

 

Yugo took the binoculars back, adjusted the light settings, then looked back at the slave camp.  It was bigger than anything he could have imagined.  He didn’t even consider the mining pit on the far side.  During the day, they weren’t able to see the entire complex.  During the night, they only had the guard towers and spotlights to show the way.  

 

“This will work perfectly fine.  We’ve sat and watched trucks come through all day.  There’s very little rhyme or reason down there.  It will work.”

 

Pktri merely shrugged.  “We’re here and it’s the best plan we have.  The longer we’re here on the planet, the more danger we’re in.  We have to do it.”

 

Yugo looked over to Pktri, “And you’re sure the tracking device will pinpoint the General?” 

 

Pktri nodded.  “There are two people who have the General’s tracking beacon number.  I’m one of them.  I promise you, this will work.”

 

Yugo nodded.  “Let’s do this.”

 

The trio ran back to the labor truck they had liberated earlier that day.  The labor truck was in pretty good condition considering the attention it had received.  During the liberation, the truck had careened off the road, busting two of its eight tires and shattering the front windshield.  It was hoped that the windshield wouldn’t be noticed during the night.  The large cage in the back was filled with Torian military.  Each was armed with one of the Silencers.  The weapons couldn’t be seen in the back of the truck.  Additional hardware was placed under a blanket in the front of the bed of the prisoner area.  The cage was closed, but not locked.

 

The trio slipped into the front of the truck and began the short drive to the camp.  The camp was simply erected in a flat spot on the windy plains of the Russom dessert.  As additional room was required, the Drengin would build, or rather force the Torians to build additional cages.  It had worked in the past.  The Drengin figured it would work now as well.  There was no exterior wall to the camp, the elements alone were enough disincentive for anyone wanting to try to get away.  The Drengin fed and watered the Torians enough to keep them alive.  They did need slaves alive to do the work.

 

As the truck approached the outskirts of the camp, a lone guard stepped out of a crude hut.  A lone spotlight shone from just behind the hut.  As Yugo stopped the truck, the Drengin stepped up to the side to talk to the driver.  His last breath was a gasp of surprise before the Silencer crystallized his chest.  Yugo quickly got out and dragged the dead Drengin to the back where he was covered. 

 

Within a minute, they were on their way.  They wove their way through a maze of Torian detention encampments.  Each one patrolled by a few guards, most having a spotlight trained on the entrance of the pen.  None of the guards paid the truck any attention.  It was nothing special having prisoners brought in or moved although it was becoming increasingly uncommon.  Pktri looked down at his personal detector and gave directions.  Yugo was lost in the maze after the fifth turn.  Getting out could prove to be more difficult. 

 

“There, that one straight ahead.”  Yugo looked over to Pktri, “You sure?”  Pktri nodded.

 

Yugo slowed the truck down and backed up to the gate.  One of the two guards on patrol that evening slogged over to unlock the gate, not paying attention to the driver.  A single Drengin manned a spotlight in a tower a few hundred feet away.  He turned his light on the transfer of the prisoners.

 

Flipping his hood back over his head, Yugo got up and made his way to the back of the truck.  By the time he got there, the Drengin had disappeared under the blankets in the cage of the truck.  One of the men gave Yugo the key and the two quickly stepped down to the gate.  A few curious Torians watched as the gate was unlocked and the man moved inside.

 

Yugo turned his attention on the spotlight.  He watched as the Commander made his way around the spotlight and took a shot at the Drengin with the Silencer.  The light careened upwards into the sky as the Drengin fell on top of the spotlight.  The commander quickly began his ascent to correct the disturbance.

 

It took a few minutes before the military man returned with what was possibly General Slat.  The Torian’s eye was swollen shut with bad cuts around his head.  His shirtless chest was a mess of blood-crusted streaks from some sharp instrument.  His back looked to be the same.  He looked Yugo up and down for a moment before he spoke.  “Took you long enough, let’s go.”  As the General slipped outside the gates, other Torians began clamoring for release.  Yugo did his best to calm and reassure them that they would be back.  The commotion caught the attention of the other camp guard, who came looking to see what the commotion was.  When he saw the Torians talking to one another, he pulled out his Sureshot.  Before he got the shot, he was blinded by a spotlight.  He covered his eyes just long enough for Yugo to crystallize his head.  The Torians quickly dragged the body into the truck with the others.

 

In less than ten minutes, the group was on their way.  There wasn’t room for four in the cab of the truck, so Slska, against her wishes, was delegated to sitting in the prisoner section.  Commander Pktri and the General briefed each other on the status of the war.

 

“After you left, things went from bad to worse.  There were just too many Drengin for us to handle.  And with these Bleeders, they had as much, if not more ‘fun’ if you will, taking us with their bare hands.  They were just too damn quick, and too damn tough for what we had on hand.  Fortunately, I think, they expected us not to put up much of a fight, and for everything we threw at them, we really didn’t.”  The General smiled grimly.

 

“They’ve got most of us in labor camps of various types around the planet.  The one we’re in now isn’t so much a camp as a detention center.  You’ll find most of our boys here.”

 

The Commander nodded, “I’ve been monitoring locations, and that looks about right.  After we left, we made it to the station.  It took us a bit longer than expected to find a solution, but your boy here, “the Commander nodded towards Yugo, “lead the way.  This one is good too.  We brought back a few transports of soldiers, we’re holed up near your old base.  Armor, anti-air, and our surprise weapon.  We’ve had a few scouts fly-by, but nothing serious yet.  I think they’re just organizing before they attack.  I guess we’re simply not a threat yet.  Oh, and this drug, Blue, very, very addictive.  And the withdrawal looks to be pretty nasty. 

 

Xavrs nodded.  “You don’t know the half of it.  We caught a few Dren, mostly wounded ones, and had planned on interrogating them.  In less than twenty-four hours, they began going berserk.  They ripped our camp apart, including a few of my men, before we could take them down.  You could see their skin ripping open right in front of your eyes.”

 

Xavrs finally seemed to notice they were heading somewhere.  “What’s the plan now anyway?” 

 

Yugo nodded forward as he drove.  “See that brightly lit area straight ahead of us.  We’re heading there.  If I don’t miss my mark, that will be the Dren’s base of operations here.  We are going to cause a bit of a panic tomorrow when the Dren wake up.  We are going to hit their supply of Blue.”

 

The General nodded.  “But it won’t be a big deal to resupply the base.”

 

“The need for the drug is almost instantaneous at the twenty-four hour mark.  It gets progressively stronger after that.  The Drengin HAVE to know this.  The trick will be to destroy enough to make a difference, but not enough to cause the Dren to turn on the prisoners.  If done correctly, the Drengin will end up fighting themselves for survival.  When we return tomorrow to rescue our men, there should be little resistance left.  That’s the plan anyway.”

 

The General nodded.  “Why not just free what we have here and overrun the base?  We have more than enough men here.  It would be ugly, but we could do it.”

 

“We have identical operations happening around the planet.  We’re hitting seventeen different camps tonight with the one goal of destroying as much Blue as possible.  The goal is to make the Drengin think that we want to concentrate on destroying the drug.  This will do two things.  One, it will allow us to return tomorrow and free our POW’s with minimal difficulty, and two, it will force the Drengin to become a bit more defensive in terms of the drug.  We can then monitor the movements, and ultimately find out where they are storing and/or manufacturing the stuff.  They aren’t bringing it from off planet, so they have to be producing or replicating it somewhere.  If we can destroy the manufacturing plant….”

 

The General nodded as Yugo slowed the truck.  Unlike the edges of camp, the Drengin barracks area looked to be a more typical military camp.  Although there weren’t any paved roads, there were definite checkpoints through the area.  Behind the checkpoint, buildings were in various stages of erection.  Wood and stone used for construction were placed haphazardly around the area.  Large heavy tents had been erected for sleeping quarters and were laid out in rows for what seemed like miles.

 

Yugo pointed over to the far side of the encampment.  In a well lit area sectioned off from the rest was a large stone building, the first one to be put up.  A large metal door prevented entrance and was flanked by a pair of guards.  “I’m guessing it’s over there.  Unless they have some kind of underground tunnel system we don’t know about, that seems like the most obvious location.  General, you do any digging on base while you were here?”

 

“Nope, just in the mines.”

 

Yugo nodded.  “Probably the easiest way to do this is for a single person to approach the guards.  With the winds here, we can stay cloaked and not be identified until it’s too late.  The weapons we have will kill without warning, so we’ll have all kinds of surprise.  They won’t even know what hit them.  Once the guards are down, we’ll need to act quickly to get in and out.  I can’t expect we’ll have a lot of time.  So, who has the honors?”

 

Minutes later, Yugo and Slska began their trek across the deserted barracks interior.  Looking back, the truck had been parked next to the check-in post.  The guards there had been quietly eliminated and hauled inside the small booth.  The ‘prisoners’ all lay low inside the back of the truck.  The cool night wind whipped through the compound, making Yugo squint through the sand.  The cloak effectively hid the weapon at his hip but he was still more than nervous.  He sensed the same from Slska. 

 

The two guards huddled against the building for protection.  They had cobbled together some wood and brick to produce a makeshift shelter but it wasn’t enough.  The wind also prevented any kind of sleep so the guards were awake and miserable as the pair approached.  Neither of the guards seemed concerned about the approach of the two figures.  The building was much, much bigger now that Yugo could see it up close.  He slowed his approach and waited for a gust of wind to hit.  When the wind blew through, and the figures ducked for protection, Yugo fired.  The silent and invisible shot hit the first Drengin in the chest, where he crumpled to the ground.  The second, surprised by the sudden collapse, bent down to check on his fallen comrade.  Yugo fired again and the second Drengin followed his comrade to the ground.  Yugo and Slska wordlessly arranged both guards into sitting positions as if huddling up against the wind and then stepped to the door. 

 

Yugo tried opening the door.  It was locked.  Yugo cursed his stupidity, of course it was locked.  There wasn’t a keyhole, but there did seem to be a combination lock on the side.  Yugo cursed to himself again.  They didn’t bring any kind of door ramming equipment, and that would make too much noise.  A laser cutter would require a trip back to the truck.  They didn’t have the time.  Slska looked over in concern, “What now?”  Yugo looked at the lock.  The light overhead made Yugo feel extra vulnerable.  Every second they stood outside was one they could get caught.  “I’ll wing it.”  Yugo stepped to the lock.  He didn’t recognize any of the symbols.  He pushed the one with the stars on it, then the one that looked like an “X”, then the one with the wavy lines covered by what looked like a head – twice, for good measure.  The lock blinked red once and made a louder than expected buzz.  The pair cringed and looked around quickly. 

 

After watching for a few seconds, Yugo looked back at the lock again.  “You’re not going to try again are you?  Let’s just go back or kick it in, or something…”  Yugo ignored her and stared at the lock.  Something was missing.  Slska nudged him.  “Yugo, I think someone’s coming.”  Yugo ignored her.  Something was missing.  He pushed the one with the stars on it, then the one that looked like an “X”, then the one with the wavy lines covered by what looked like a head – three times.  The lock flashed green and there was an audible click.  The two ducked inside, dragging the two guards with them and shut the door.

 

They were engulfed into complete and utter darkness.  The lack of wind made the silence in the room that much more noticeable.  Yugo felt around for his flashlight.  In his nervousness, he had forgotten to bring it.  He whispered, “Do you have a light?”  Yugo was lucky he couldn’t see the look on Slska’s face.  “You can guess the combination of a six-digit combination lock, but you can’t remember a freaking flashlight?”  Yugo didn’t answer and Slska quickly produced a small but powerful flashlight.  She turned it on and slowly scanned the area.  The warehouse looked to be enormous from the inside.  There seemed to be food, tools, building supplies, vehicles, clothing, and a multitude of other equipment.  Towards one side, there was a large fenced off section with crates and cabinets inside.  “Cmon, it’s got to be in there.”

 

The two carefully approached the cage.  It was locked with a simple “U” lock.  The two looked at each other – neither of them had the key.  Slska quickly panned around.  A quick search produced a small axe that they used to smash the lock open.  They quickly slipped inside.  The large cabinets they found were actually refrigerators.  The two opened them to find exactly what they were looking for, the fluorescent blue of the drug.  It was stored in large vats – it apparently hadn’t been moved into syringes quite yet.  The situation was perfect.  It made it easier to destroy. 

 

The two stepped over to the crates.  Slska opened one to find a crate of Drengin Sureshot 140’s, the two handed heavy weapon Sureshot.  Yugo opened another crate to find it full of explosives, likely used for mining.  “Oh wow…uh…change in plans.”  Yugo quickly pulled out an explosive and timer and placed it at the bottom of the crate.  That explosion would likely take out everything within the cage, plus some.  Yugo quickly set additional charges on the back of every other refrigerator, just to be safe.  “Time to move, let’s go…”

 

The pair quickly moved back through the warehouse, opening the door just slightly, and seeing the coast clear, began walking back to the truck.  They had been gone less than ten minutes.  As they approached the truck, the General and Commander quickly started and everyone jumped inside the cab and the truck quickly made its way out of the barracks area.

 

“Slight change in plans General.  The entire warehouse is going to be a mess when we press the button.  The drug was sitting right on top of their munitions dump.  When one goes, it all goes, so I made sure that nothing wasn’t destroyed.” 

 

“You guys are lucky, you had just closed the door when a pair of guards walked around the corner.  Their tolerance for this wind must be low, they didn’t even notice the guards missing.  I think you guys could have had a full on blaster fight and nobody would’ve heard anything.  The wind was that loud most of the time.  We’ll make a note of that on future excursions.”

 

Two hours later, the party was back in their observation post.  The truck had been hidden and camouflaged as best as possible in a small dried out creek.  The tracks had long been blown over.  The men sat and watched from afar as the camp slowly came to life.

 

The General put down his binoculars and looked over at Yugo and Pktri.  “I believe it’s about time to make the Drengin’s life interesting.  What do you say?”  The two nodded.  Yugo pulled out the detonator and handed it to the General.  The General looked at it, flipped off the safety switch, hesitated for just a moment, then pushed the button.  In the distance, an explosion could be heard followed shortly by a series of smaller explosions.  The three grinned at each other as the Drengin began scrambling for cover.  Another explosion rocked the compound followed quickly by several others.  “What did you do out there Yugo?”  Yugo shrugged.  They all watched as a dropship began to take off.  A rocket inexplicably hit the dropship from below.  The dropship exploded, showering large metal debris over the tents of the Drengin captors.  “That looked like a heat seeking rocket.  Must have ignited in the process…”  After several minutes, the explosions finally ceased.

 

Xavrs looked over at Yugo, “Now THAT is a job well done.  I wonder if we have anybody left alive to worry about?”


on Oct 30, 2009

13

 

 

Similar scenes were taking place at various labor camps around the planet.  The Drengin, at first infuriated at the attack on their base by the mindless lizards, became increasingly alarmed when the realization arose that the drug stashes were destroyed.  Most Drengin commanders kept a personal supply of the drug on hand, just in case.  It was pretty common knowledge.  As soon as Drengin began feeling the withdrawal symptoms in earnest, there was mass rioting among the Drengin for the few doses of the remaining drug.  It was a do or die situation.  Many, many died.  Yugo, the General, the Commander, and Slska lay on the hill hidden among the grasses, watching the developments.  The Drengin at the guard post ran out into the middle of the road, screaming in pain.  Slska slid over next to Yugo whispering in his ear, “And why did they take this stuff again?”  Yugo shrugged as he watched the Drengin pull out his weapon, and fire.  The screaming stopped as the guard’s head was reduced to red paste.  “I guess no sacrifice is too great to win a war.”

 

The General stood up.  There had been enough waiting.  “Alright, we don’t want to do this in the dark, let’s go.”

 

The group came in on the same truck they had used the night before.  They parked at the guard post and looked down the road.  There wasn’t a live Drengin to be seen.  Several Torians ran to the nearest cages just inside the gates and busted through the locks with conventional weaponry.  The freed Torians cheered.  Available weapons were distributed, and the large Torian mass began fanning out among the camp.  The number of Torians being freed grew exponentially.  The few living Drengin were either insane with pain, nearly dead, or easily dispatched.  There simply weren’t enough Drengin to repel a force of thousands of Torian slaves.  It took several hours before the force made it to the first labor camp just outside the Drengin central tents.  The General indicated for Yugo to open the gate.  Hundreds of Torians inside cheered as Yugo slowly unbolted the gate.  As Torians began spilling into the makeshift street, the General turned to Yugo, “So, how’s it feel?”

 

Yugo looked over, “Kind of odd actually.  I didn’t really do THAT much…”  The General smiled.  “You realize, this isn’t all that much different from what your great-great ancestor did.”  Yugo pulled back in surprise and the General winked.  “Let’s go finish this.”

 

By late evening, all camp survivors had been freed.  Patrols had been sent out to scour the local area for any remaining Drengin.  The warehouse had been looted of anything of practical value including food, weapons, medical supplies, and blankets.  There wasn’t much left after the explosions.  The General followed the chatter across the Drengin communicators.  Although a few of the attacks had been thwarted, for a large part, the strikes had been successful.  And more importantly, the Torians had instilled a grain of fear and doubt into the Drengin aggressors. 

 

It turned out that there were a few other buildings that had been constructed along with the main storage house.  One of these had been the Drengin commander’s tent on the far side of the Drengin tents.  The General had the area guarded and later that day, slowly made his way through the building.  Xavrs ignored the blood on the floor, the holes in the wall, and the destroyed furniture.  He was looking for something much more useful, information. He slowly picked his way through the rubble to find maps and datapads about the Drengin.  Each strike group did the same and sent it over to the general.  By the time the General had combined the various reports, he had a very solid picture of the Drengin occupation.

 

**

 

It had been a week since the successful attacks against the labor camps.  Outside of the occasional scout, there hadn’t been any type of retaliation.  The Drengin seemed to be content with allowing the Torians to regroup and live in ‘peace’. 

 

Yugo sat with his back against a large rock, looking up at the sky.  The cloud cover from the meteor attacks had slowly begun to dissipate and he could begin seeing the sky again.  It seemed like it had been forever since they had landed when in reality, it’d been a little over a week.  A twig snapped and Yugo immediately pulled out his Enforcer.  Slska held her hands out defensively in front of her as she approached.  “Trigger happy are we?”  Yugo set his weapon down and smiled a little.  Slska returned the smile and sat down next to him.  She looked up at the stars, her head resting next to his. 

 

“We going to make out of this place Yugo?”

 

“Yes, I believe we will.”

 

“Alive?”

 

Yugo laughed.  “Yes, I believe we’ll make it out of here alive.  For the first time since these apes invaded, I think we might actually have a chance.”  The two enjoyed each other’s company as the stars disappeared back into the dusty haze.

 

“Why haven’t they attacked?.”

 

“I’ve been thinking about that as well.  I’m guessing they’re waiting for reinforcements.  If that’s the case, that means they are vulnerable.  We’ll be attacking soon I suspect.  Their reinforcements could be days to weeks away.  The General isn’t one to let an advantage slip away.”

 

Slska looked up at the sky again.  A bird chirped happily in the distance.  Slska slid her hand slowly into Yugo’s hand.  Yugo gripped it tightly.  Slska looked over and smiled.  “How did you know the combination lock at the slave camp?  There is no way you should have been able to do that.”

 

Yugo only shrugged.  “You know how some things are just easy for you?  Sometimes, I can just do things.  I don’t know why.  I can try to do some things forever, and still not get it right.  Then other times, I’ll just look at something and know the answer.  It’s kind of like explaining why some people are good athletes, or naturally smart, or have a knack of being able to tell if someone is lying.  I’ve been able to do it all my life but I never know when or where.”  Yugo looked over at Slska who sat watching him, fascinated.  She had the prettiest brown eyes.

 

Yugo’s communicator chirped.  “Yugo, you’re needed at command, ASAP.  It’s time.”

 

“Well Slska, like I said, I never know when or where.”  He winked and helped her to her feet before heading off to the Russom central command.

 

**

 

The General stood in the small cave as Yugo walked in.  A small hologram of Russom rotated on the middle of the makeshift table.  Trying not to interrupt, Yugo slid to the back of the room behind the seated members.  He shifted so he could get a good view.  Slska slid in beside him, her presence distracting him as he tried to listen.

 

“Good evening.  We have been going through the data retrieved through our advances to try to figure out exactly what the Drengin are up to.  This is what we know so far.  The apes have been using Torian slaves to mine what they are calling “Sixcelium” for something they are calling “Project Ascension”.  The little bit that has been mined has already been sent off-world.  I don’t know what it is, or where it’s going, but I’m guessing, just a hunch based on our previous experiences with the apes, that it’s not a good thing.”  There was a quick chuckle around the table.  “Our most immediate concern is two-fold:  The rescue of our fellow Torians and the removal of the drug source.  Fortunately, the second one should pretty much accomplish the first.  After reviewing the files, I’ve concluded that the production facility has to be somewhere in the city.  The apes have been pretty good at removing any reference to the production facility, however, they were sloppy and our hackers found a few references to the major storage yards within the city itself.  Instinct tells me that one will lead to the other.  I want strike teams ready to go in two hours.  I will be forwarding the relevant information.  We’ll be moving in via dropship, so make sure you and your squads are at the rendezvous points.  Dismissed.”

 

Yugo began to leave when Xavrs called him back.  “One second Yugo.  I want your ship and team ready in orbit.  I have a strong suspicion that when we attack tonight, that we’re going to frighten some people away.  I want you ready to make chase.  And since you’re the only warship on planet right now…”

 

“Yes sir.”

 

**

 

Yugo and his crew spent the rest of the night on call on board the Dreamfetcher.  After the dangerous mission to free captured military, there had been very little to do except make sure the base was secure.  It was a nice base too.  They had cleared a field for a make shift space port, a communications array had been established, the Torian armor division had been checked out and placed, guard posts had been established at regular intervals, and anti-air guns had been established all over the area.  Nothing was coming into the immediate vicinity without the Torians knowing it.  The Torians had even gone as far as salvaging everything possible from the downed transport, the 7AT.  There hadn’t been too much salvageable, but what they returned with was better than nothing at all.

 

Yugo was slumped in his Captain’s chair, half asleep, when the ship’s communicator buzzed.  “Captain Scrapth, are you there, Captain Scrapth…”

 

Yugo jolted awake, yawned, and tried to hide the tiredness in his voice, “Captain Scrapth here, go ahead.”

 

A voice he didn’t recognize came back over, “We have an unidentified ship leaving the spaceport, we need it intercepted if at all possible.  We need the destination of that ship.”

 

“Yes sir.”  Yugo shut off the commlink and quickly hit the yellow alert button.  Yellow strobe lights flashed throughout the ship.  He really didn’t want to hear the blaring sirens this early in the morning.  The remainder of the small bridge crew was there in just a minute, and Ensign Nrek brought the ship quickly into orbit.  The ship in question was a small freighter being escorted by two tiny scouts.  The scouts quickly broke away and began heading towards the Dreamfetcher.

 

“You’ve got to be kidding me.  Slska, see what you can do about the scouts.  Ensign, do not change course.”  The scouts headed straight for them.  “I think they are trying to ram us, Slska, now would be a good time to fire…”

 

The Dreamfetcher fired in quick succession, both scouts blinked out of existence in a deadly barrage of missiles.  The Dreamfetcher was faster than the small freighter, and caught up quickly.  “Disable the engines, and we’ll board.  Slska, get your men ready.” 

 

“Yes sir!”

 

It didn’t take much to disable the engines, it was actually more difficult trying not to destroy the ship.  The Dreamfetcher docked quickly enough and the marines were prepared to board.  As the doors opened a Bleeder came rushing through the airlock.  He, and his five compatriots were quickly brought down by Silencers.  Yugo followed the marines as they searched the hull of the ship and made their way to the bridge.  A lone Drengin was laughing hysterically as the marines entered.  The entire bridge computer system had been devastated.

 

“You’ll never get what you want…hahaha….”

 

A quick shot from a Silencer brought the Drengin down for good.  Yugo just shook his head.   “I seriously doubt the information was in the consoles themselves.”  Yugo opened a console panel and took a look at the innards.  Wires went in every direction, but it wasn’t all that much unlike Torian design.  “Get our engineer up here, I need some help decoding this thing.”

 

It took several hours for Yugo and the Torian engineers to pinpoint the location of the ships computer storage.  It took several more hours for Yugo to figure out how to interface with the computer.  While interfacing with the internal code, the computer had begun an automatic self-destruct sequence.  Yugo scrambled to shut it off, and succeeded with one minutes, seventeen seconds remaining.  Yugo spent another hour decrypting the computer and another few hours having the data translated.  It took him a final hour to find the information he was looking for.  By the time he found what he wanted, he was exhausted.  But they had what they needed.  A location for the Drengin homeworld, and the location of Project: Ascension.

 

He sent the information down to the general, along with all the other relevant information from the computer.  If there was one thing that Yugo had discovered was that the Xavrs liked information.  The freighter was still in pretty good shape, unfortunately, they didn’t have time to repair it.  It would be a liability to leave it out there.  There was only one thing to do.  Yugo stepped back onto the Dreamfetcher and watched the door close.  The boarding clamp was unlocked and the Torian warship slowly drifted away.  When they were a good distance away, Yugo nodded.  A missile hit the crippled ship and it was quickly destroyed.

 

There was silence on the bridge as Yugo stared at the wreckage of the destroyed freighter.  Yugo’s mind was elsewhere.  The bridge crew sat there for a minute or two, when finally, the helms girl, Atrl, turned around in her seat.

 

“Uh…Captain?”

 

Without meeting her gaze, he responded.  “I do believe it is time for us to do some investigating.  Helm, set a course for this Project: Ascension.”

 

There was a quick tapping of buttons, “Course plotted sir.”

 

“How long will it take at maximum speed?”

 

“Five weeks sir.”

 

“Get comfortable everyone, looks like we’re taking a little vacation.  Engage.”

 

**

 

“What is that?”

 

The days of anticipation and speculation as to what “Project Ascension” meant didn’t quite live up to the real thing.  The bridge crew looked at the view screen showing a starbase that had been constructed around some white nebulous pulsing anomaly.  Faint wisps fingered off from the central mass rising around, above, and below the starbase.  The sight alone was enough to take Yugo’s breath.  It was so alien. 

 

Ensign Nrek seemed to be the only one not mesmerized by the event.  “Excuse me, but we have enemy ships incoming.”

 

Yugo looked up to his Commander.  “Ever seen anything like this before?”

 

The Commander simply shook his head.  “Can’t say I have.  I can’t get any readings off this thing.  I have no idea what it is.”

 

Ensign Nrek looked back at the bridge crew.  “Uh, hello?  Is anyone listening?  We have enemy incoming?  Anyone?”

 

Slska concentrated on the view screen.  A single wisp drew out, almost caressing the Drengin starbase as the bridge crew watched.  “That is amazing.  You think it’s alive?”

 

Atrl was getting annoyed, and rather frightened.  She rose from her seat, stood in the middle of the bridge, and shouted. 

 

“INCOOOOOOMING!”  Yugo had just enough time to focus on the Ensign when the ship rocked.  Three medium size Drengin Raptors were well within range and taking the opportunity to pummel their distracted opponent.  A small swarm of fighters accompanied them.

 

“Time to move people!  We need to destroy this base!”

 

The commander spoke up, “Destroy it?  There’s no time Captain, we won’t make it through that mess.”

 

“Get as close as you can, I’ll take it out from the inside.”

 

The Commander immediately responded.  “Yes sir.  Helm, plot a course for the far side of the starbase, then get us out of here.  Captain, get into position.”

 

Yugo quickly ducked off the bridge and headed towards the escape pod.  The ground munitions were on the way where he grabbed a pack full of explosives and a pair of Enforcers.  He quickly made his way to the escape pod.  He sat down and strapped himself in.  The ship rocked violently once again and he grabbed a safety bar to keep his bearings.  When he looked up, Slska was staring at him from the doorway.  He didn’t have time to play games.  “You coming or not?”

 

“You’re crazy.”

 

“I’m pushing this button in 3 seconds, in or out.  3….”  The ship rocked again and Slska was tossed into Yugo’s lap.

 

“Decision made.”  He hit the button, the door slammed shut, and the escape pod shot out into space towards the station.  The small armada chased the lone Torian ship into the blackness.

 

Rather embarrassed, Slska untangled herself from Yugo’s lap, and strapped herself in.  Yugo tossed her a weapon and watched as the odd starbase came closer into view.  Slska couldn’t stand the silence.  “You know you ARE crazy right?”

 

“Being Captain allows me certain liberties.  Being crazy is one of them.  We could be aboard the Fetcher, trying to avoid enemy fire for no good reason, or we could try to destroy this station, whatever it is.”  Yugo corrected their course towards the station with the limited fuel the escape pod had on board.  Much like their own stations, the Drengin had installed magnetic docking rings that helped fine tune ships docking at the station.  Being such a small ‘ship’, the escape pod was easily drawn towards one of the rings where it attached with a metal clunk.  Yugo quickly unbuckled, picked up the pack and armed himself.

 

Checking to see that Slska was behind him, he opened the door, ready for the barrage of gunfire that was sure to follow.  The hallway was clear.  As they stepped into the hallway, a feeling drifted over them, a serene almost peaceful feeling of calm and tranquility.  It felt as if anything but the most pure, the most noble, the most perfect presence violated the sanctity of the area.  Even words themselves seemed to be a violation of what could only be thought of as a sanctuary.  Nothing Yugo had ever experienced could have prepared him for something like this. 

 

As they approached the end of the hallway, the feeling seemed to grow stronger.  As they emerged, they could see why.  Circling the interior of the starbase was a window that provided an unobstructed view of the source.  A translucent white floating essence seemed to ebb and flow just outside the window.  It seemed to move and flow slowly in some sort of hypnotic dance.  Occasional drifts would break away and wander before returning to the mass.

 

It startled them both when a Drengin dressed in white robes came running towards them, he shouted at them in a near whisper, “you…you…you aren’t allowed to be in here.”  Slska hesitated.  Yugo didn’t.  The Drengin fell to the floor in a bloody mess.  Yugo cringed.  He wasn’t sure what violated the sanctity more, the sound of the screamer echoing throughout the complex, or the blood now dripping from the door frame.  He quickly eased his conscience and moved on.

 

There wasn’t all that much living area within the base.  Yugo and Slska came across another two white-robed Drengin before finding themselves a computer terminal.  Slska watched the door as Yugo retrieved information about the installation.  It also held a floor plan.  It took a few minutes to find the floor panel to remove.  Quickly popping the panel up, they began the climb down into the guts of the station.

 

Down outside the view of the entity, the pair didn’t feel quite as sacrilegious for talking.  Slska tried to talk as  they climbed down the ladder.  The ladder seemed to run straight through the station.  “You think anyone knows we’re here?”

 

“Outside the crew, and assuming they’re alive, probably not.”

 

“You don’t think any of those priest guys called for reinforcements?”

 

Yugo shrugged as he continued to climb down.  A humming noise grew louder as they continued to climb.  “I honestly don’t think so.  It looked like they barely remembered their own name.”

 

Yugo pointed as they climbed down into a large open chamber.  A large crystal seemed to spark and crackle inside its protective covering.  Various tubes were attached to the chamber leading out in various directions.  “I’m assuming that’s what we’re looking for.  Let’s get these attached and get out of here.”

 

Yugo and Slska spent a few minutes attaching explosives to the outside of the crystal housing.  They attached a few to the vents as well for good measure.  When the chamber looked well armed, the pair began their ascent back up the ladder.  “Any idea how we get off this rock?”

 

“Not a clue.”  Slska stopped for a second and looked down at Yugo.  Yugo smiled sheepishly.  Slska just shook her head and began her ascent again.  It took much longer to ascend than to descend.  By the time they reached the main floor, they were both winded.  They sat down in a small alcove with a view of the white undulating force just outside the window.  The tiredness quickly left them to be replaced by a peaceful meditative state.

 

Something caught the corner of Yugo’s eye as he watched the force.  Near the top of the station, he saw a ship approaching.  It looked like one of the medium Raptors the Torian’s had fought before.  It seemed to be closing. 

 

“Hmm…that’s not good.  Look, there’s another one, it’s closing as well…”  Yugo stood up and pulled the remote detonator out of his pocket.

 

“What are you doing?”

 

“If they apprehend us, or worse, we need to make sure this place goes down…”  Yugo set the timer for ten minutes. 

 

Yugo watched the Drengin ships slowly approach.  The sharp angles and jagged front of the ships gave the ships a sinister look.  It took several minutes before the ships reached the airlock.  Yugo sat calmly while Slska looked around nervously.

 

“Should we hide?  Should we fight?”

 

Yugo simply shook his head.  “We want OFF the station remember?”  Slska nodded slowly.  A pair of Drengin ships could be heard docking almost simultaneously.  The steel on steel clang echoed throughout the base.  It announced their impending abduction. 

 

Seconds later there was a huge explosion.  The Drengin Raptors exploded outside the base and a squadron of fighters zipped past.  A distinctly alien voice came over his comms.  “I hear there are a couple of stowaways aboard this here starbase.  Care for a lift?”

 

Yugo checked his watch, there was 3:17 left.  “You’ve got 3 minutes before this base becomes nothing more than a pile of goo.”

 

“Well, I suggest you hurry then.”  The sentence ended with the docking clang from the other side of the base.  The two Torians looked at each other and began running for all they were worth.  They were lucky the base was small and simple.  Keeping the white frothy entity to their left, they ran around the edge of the starbase.  A white skinned humanoid figure ushered them down the correct hallway to a docking bay.  The three quickly jumped aboard the waiting ship, shut the door, and were on their way.  Thirty seconds away, the central pylons of the base exploded.  Without a central structure to hold the starbase in place, the base broke apart, leaving the glowing white pulsing entity unaffected.

 

While Slska and Yugo regained their breath, their benefactor introduced himself.  “Good evening folks, the name is Mr. Smith.  At least, that’s easiest for you to call me.  We received a call back from a friend of yours, some General or some such a few weeks back.  Said that you guys could really use some help.  You weren’t the only ones the ape guys started threatening.  Looks like these apes bit off a bit more than they could chew.  We stopped by their home planets on the way over.  I’m afraid their ship yards down there won’t be operational for some time.  Then we received the distress call from one of yours in the area.  We caught up with a lone vessel being chased by a small armada.  Not sure what you guys did, but wow.” 

 

The pair of Torians looked at each other anxiously.  For the first time, their savior looked down dejectedly.  “We managed to disrupt the attack but not before they destroyed your ship.”  There was a brief pause.  “I’m sorry, I really am.  After the destruction, they seemed to scatter in different directions.  We managed to follow two of them back to that starbase of yours.” 

 

Yugo and Slska shared a pained look.

 

“The Captain of the ship mentioned you two in his last breath, so we figured we’d try to find you guys.  The General told me to mention that Russom has been all but secured.  Thought it might bring you a bit of good news.”

 

The man smiled and showed them to a room.  The two weren’t really listening as he mentioned something about duties and left the two alone.  Slska looked around the small quarters.  There was a single bed and single bathroom.  Yugo simply lay back on the bed, exhausted.  Slska lay down next to him.  It was some time later that Yugo felt movement on the bed.  Yugo opened his eyes to find Slska propped up on her elbows, staring down at him.  With a twinkle in her eye she asked him, “Think they would mind if we soaked?”  Despite the weariness of his body, his grief over the loss of friends, and the worry over the unknown, Yugo smiled

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