SDNW4 Story Thread 2

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Re: SDNW4 Story Thread 2

Post by Force Lord »

Force Lord wrote:Unknown Location, The Centrality
Unreal Time/Early 3401


The planet at first glace seemed unremarkable, it's terrain and climate unsuitable for large-scale colonization. Indeed, the prescence of ruins suggested a failed attempt at settlement, and nothing more was heard of the planet.

But that was what the Centrality wanted everyone to believe. For this planet was home to one of the most secretive and powerful organizations in existence, one that outdid CENINTERN when it came to expanding Centralism, that could make the most ruthless Centralite shudder, and which other nations knew mostly as a legend from the past. And someone was already paying a visit to them.

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The shuttle passed into the unruly atmosphere, battered by rain and wind, much to the discomforture of the ship's VIP: Dirad Kierger, Dictator of the Centrality.

"Ugh, I wasn't told the ride would be this rough..."

In front of him was his "bodyguard", Lord Redav, who seemed unfazed by the shuttle's constant vibration. "This planet is wild. Savage. It ate the original inhabitants alive. A perfect place for our Order to use."

"Couldn't you just hide in plain sight?"

"We do, Dictator. We simply believe that it can never be enough."

"Uh-huh. And why this planet has to be your main base? Plenty of calmer worlds out there."

"Symbolism, my friend, symbolism. Our prescence in this wretched world represents our determination to tame the barbarism that resides subconsciously in every sapient being and our disdain at the disorder prevalent in the current interstellar order."

"Your beliefs are very strong, Lord Redav."

"They are the only things I have."

The pilot then spoke, "We're nearing the surface."

"Good. Inform the hangar controllers that we are about to land," responded Redav.

"I don't see any installations nearby. You sure we're in the right place?", asked Kierger.

"You forgot to look down, Dictator."

Realization struck Kierger, and he laughed nervously. "Oh, it's below ground. Silly me. My imagination shut down for a moment there."

"It may be wise for you to keep it on, dictator. You will need it soon."

The ground beneath the shuttle opened, to reveal a large hangar floor. The shuttle landed, and the ground closed.

Kierger and Redav came out of the ship, and saw an old man, caped and with a white beard and mustache. He gazed at them.

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Lord Redav bowed slightly. "High Lord Ukood. I have returned."

Ukood spoke, "Indeed, and you brought our guest." Ukood and Kierger shook hands. "Welcome Dictator. Impressed by our handiwork?"

"Why shouldn't I? The fact that you built a huge underground installation in an inhospitable rock is amazing in itself."

"I believe you would be surprised how exactly we built all of this, but that is for another time. The Supreme Lord of the Order of the Black Star is waiting for you. He wishes to discuss many important matters."

Supreme Lord? If this High Lord is old, then his boss must be ancient!, Kierger thought, being careful not to allow the other two from hearing his thoughts.

The three men soon walked into the heart of the facility...
Darkness. Cold, lonesome darkness. It was all Kierger could see, and it took a portion of his powers just not to bump himself into a wall. Even the elevators scarcely had any illumination. The lair was larger than he had reckoned, and he resisted the urge to ask when he would reach the Supreme Lord.

"Pacience my friend. You will reach him. Eventually," said Ukood as if he had read his mind, leaving Kierger fuming.

Finally they managed to reach the Supreme Lord's lair. It looked like a throne room, and in the middle was standing what was none other than the Supreme Lord of the Order of the Black Star himself.

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Ukood and Redav kneeled, both men saying, "Master."

He spoke, his ancient, strained voice giving Kierger the chills.

"Ah, so the Dictator has come. Join me. We have much to discuss, my friend."

Why do they always have to call me friend? I hardly even know these people, Kierger thought.

For just a moment the Supreme Lord frowned, as if he had read Kierger's thoughts.

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But then he cackled. He fucking cackled.

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Kierger felt even more chilled.

"Oh, you have much to learn still, Dictator. Regarding appearances."

The ancient Supreme Lord walked back to what Kierger guessed was his throne.

"What is your name, mister..."

The Supreme Lord, seated in his throne, responded hashly, "Enitaplap. And do not call me mister again."

Kierger could only gulp.

"Now where were we? Ah yes. There are many things that we must talk about, Dictator. A great many things."

Enitaplap then fixed his gaze towards Ukood and Redav. "Leave us."

Both men raised themselves up, bowed, and left the room.
Last edited by Force Lord on 2011-03-24 09:45am, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: SDNW4 Story Thread 2

Post by Siege »

Outskirts of Oblast
Former Outlander Commissions


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Oblast is on fire. Still the war with the Byzonists rages; still the anti-Centralist purges continue. Blood runs through the streets. Women and children flee the roaming gangs of pro-Imperial zealots who, egged on by fanatical priests, see Centralists in everyone. Any sleight, any perceived lack of devotion can make a person into their target. And so, they flee.

But where to go? Byzonists roam the countryside; where they do not, minefields and cratered killzones dominate the landscape.

The only place safe is the beaches.

A great red crystal hangs over the beach, just a short few miles outside the city limits. Through some strange optical trick the hologram is visible from all directions, hovering motionlessly in mid-air. Everyone who sees the sign knows what it means: this is safety. The muddy shoreline has transformed overnight, turned into a sprawling expanse of steel and ceramics, barracks, shelters and hospitals. These are the products of the Curator Mk VI: interlinking, space-portable, instant refugee camps.

At the edge of the camp the sandy beach has been turned into a lawn grid, separated from the camp itself by a blue force screens. Holograms direct columns of refugees toward admittance points, where they are processed by friendly but only vaguely humanoid robots, each one painted stark white; each one adorned with the same crimson crystal symbol. They proces dozens at first, then hundreds and finally thousands of refugees, explaining with calm and untiring voices that the purpose of Third Protocol was solely to help the refugees help themselves. Third Protocol support androids are designed with advanced knowledge of human psychology in mind: the modulation of their voices is engineered to be as calming as possible; their reasoning is imperturbable. Where reason fails, brief flashes of cognomemetics calm the hysteric. Where mothers, children or the elderly collapse from fatigue or stress, they are carried away by drones.

Within hours, thousands of Centralists, suspected Centralists, renegades and refugees seek shelter within the force-screen barriers of the Third Protocol encampment.

But they are not the only ones who can find the camps.

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The priest and his mob of fanatical zealots converges on the force-screen barrier, indignant that anyone dares to shelter those who must be castigated. Does the God-Emperor not declare "suffer not the heretic to live"? Brash with divine courage he sets out to smash the infidel newcomers and send them scurrying back to the heathen stars from whence they came.

Third Protocol sees them coming, its web of orbital sensors monitoring the perimeter of the camps. Columns of refugees are directed out of the fanatics' path, leaving them free to converge on the bounds of the camp.

They enter the lawn-grid. Holograms along the force-screen perimeter begin to flash warnings, advising the fanatics that this is a Third Protocol safe zone, that weapons are prohibited here and continuation of animosity impossible within the boundaries of the lawn-grid. Impassively, the central directing intelligence of the Third Protocol relief suqadron watches them come. From within the camp sensors are trained on the mob, simple millimeter wave as well as more esoteric means of detection.

The priest reaches the force screen barrier and hits it with his aquila'ed scepter. A fractal ripple passes through the shield. For a second, nothing happens. Then, a voice:

"This is a Third Protocol safe zone. Third Protocol has a mandate to protect the victims of armed conflict on this planet. You are in violation of the protection clause. Please drop your weapons and leave."

The voice makes no threats, no ultimatums. Even so the priest is angry. "You would tell the subjects of the God-Emperor what to do?" he bellows and hits the force screen again with his scepter. "I declare thee diabolus in extremis!"

That is all the justification the mob, already riled up and baying for blood, needs. The controlling intelligence witnesses their mood patterns shift from simple anger to bloodlust. It looks at them through its myriad sensors and sees that they are carrying weapons. Several of them are carrying plasma guns. One particularly burly man totes an automatic shotgun loaded with depleted uranium buckshot; he has a shell chambered. Others carry handguns, most of them are cocked. The guns have magazines containing between eight and twenty-nine rounds each.

If it was human, it may have sighed.

It activates the Immaculators. They leap into action, propelled on a white-hot jets of pure motion

*In his peripheral vision the priest sees a brief flash, hears a noise. He looks over in that direction to see the source of the light is a part of the force screen that has changed colour from blue to white. The priest doesn't really get this, but what he's seeing is the bremsstrahlung produced by a complex interaction of fundamental forces as something passes through the active screen from the inside.

As all of this registers on the priest's mind he begins to hear the shouting of his followers. The shouting is not angry and not scared either. No one has had time to get scared yet. They are the yelps of people who have just had a bucket of ice water dumped over their heads. He feels a brutal yank and suddenly the scepter has vanished from his hand.

The shouting is still underway, he is still turning his head to look back at his followers, when the force screen emits another burst of light. His eyes flick that-a-way; he thinks that he sees something, a shadow cross-sectioned in the light for a blurry instant as the screen changes hues. But when his eyes focus on it, he sees nothing. There are only impressions of movement left on his mind, except for one more detail: a trail of sparks that dances across the lawngrid from the force screen to his followers and back again during this one-second event, like a skyrocket glancing across the lawn-grid.

The fanatics are all in motion. Some of them have just been body-slammed into the lawngrid and are still bouncing and rolling. Others are still in mid-collapse. They are unarmed. They are reaching to grip their gun hands with the opposite hands, hollering, though now their voices are tinged with a certain amount of fear. One of them has had his trousers torn from the waistband all the way down to the ankle, and a strip of fabric is trailing out across the sandy grid, as though he had his pocket picked by something that was in too much of a hurry to let go of the actual pocket before it left. Maybe this guy had a gun in his pocket.

There is no blood anywhere. The Immaculators are very precise. Still the fanatics hold their hands and holler. A quick succession of force-screen flashes; then the voice comes again:

"This is a Third Protocol safe zone. Third Protocol has a mandate to protect the victims of armed conflict on this planet. You are in violation of the protection clause. Please leave."

---

*: The next four paragraphs are shamelessly stolen from inspired by Neal Stephenson's Snow Crash, more specifically the Rat Thing, as any reader of the aforementioned novel will have realized by now.
Last edited by Siege on 2011-03-24 01:12pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: SDNW4 Story Thread 2

Post by Force Lord »

Command Bridge, Grinning Gilgamesh
Far orbit over Pritaiy, Former Outlands
Unreal Time/Early 3401


The Centralist fleet arrived, but sensors detected the prescence of ships in orbit over Pritaiy.

"What?! Impossible! What are these ships?!", raged Deacon Saito.

"Sir, they seem to carry the emblem of the Third Protocol. UN organization. Sensors are also picking up an unknown fleet coming up from the other side of the planet," said the scanning officer.

Saito scowled. There was now no way to achieve all of his objectives. He hoped the Messenger could understand.

"Do we still have the missles ready?", he barked.

"Only the gas ones, sir," said the targeting officer.

"Well then. Fire the gas missles from the longest range we can muster! At least we can make their breathing difficult! Target Oblast!"

"As you wish sir."

The Centralist ships moved into position as quickly as they could, while targeting computers inside the ships calculated their missles' trajectories.

"Unknown fleet is half-way through our position!"

"Hurry!"

"Sir, our ship is in position! Should we fire now?"

"Do it! Now!"

The deadly ordnance of the Grinning Gilgamesh was unleashed towards the planet, soon to be followed by missles from the other ships.

Oblast, Pritaiy

"Sir, look!"

The militia looked at the sky, watching in bemused fear as streaks of flame came towards the surface.

The men made the symbol of the cross, praying that the God-Emperor save them from damnnation.

The streaks of flame were almost colliding into the city when they exploded...but underwhelmingly.

The militiamen were confused at first as to what happened, but it was swiftly replaced by panic as a strange cloud descended over Oblast.

All over Oblast, people screamed, "GAS! GAS!" Some muttered, "The Devil is coming..."

The gas was the infamous Death Mist, a hevier-than-air gas which killed in seconds as your skin was burned and your lungs were dissolved, to mention it's most prominent effects.

As the gas came to the city, the screams of terror that filled the city only a few seconds earlier died down, for their originators were now dead.

Command Bridge, Grinning Gilgamesh

"Remember men! What we did today, was for the good of the State! If your conscience is unable to allow such necessary actions, I invite you to shoot yourself, to spare me the expense of executing you myself."

The men nodded sullenly.

"Now that's finished, get us the hell out of here helmsman!"

The ship shuddered. "Sir, enemy fleet is firing on us!", shouted the scanner officeer.

"I said GET US OUT OF HERE HELMSMAN!"

"Sir, some ships have their engines disabled!"

"If they remember their orders, they will self-destruct before allowing themselves to be boarded. Helmsman!"

The Grinning Gilgamesh managed to go into FTL speed, but some of his force proved less than lucky, as their remains showed.
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Re: SDNW4 Story Thread 2

Post by Fingolfin_Noldor »

Imperial Chronicles

It was a shady bar, with many many suspicious characters. Nevertheless, it facillitated rather illegal and legal business alike.

Two such characters sat across a table. Their hoods down, and they spoke in muffled tones. One spoke, "You have access to the necessary men to do my bidding?"

"Why yes of course, with the right price," said the other with a certain sneer in his tone.

"Good. There is vespene gas on my ship. All purified, and of high density. Ten thousand metric tonnes of it."

"That's quite a bit. I take it that you have an objective?"

"Of course. There are some 'pirates' in the Outlands that need to be killed, and there is a world that needs burning."

The other whistled. "I see why you brought so much vespene gas. Untraceable, and still very valuable, even though it is useless to you."

"Indeed. Do what needs to be done. I don't care how and what happens. Even if you have to have the slimiest scum to do the job of burning a planet, or the nicest scum to kill pirates. So long as it is done, I do not care."

"Well, I'll do what I can. You know it will be done."

"Just kill some Centralists for me."

"Oh I will... I will..."

And the two melted into the shadows.
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Re: SDNW4 Story Thread 2

Post by Shroom Man 777 »

Written with Fin



Paleo-paleocruiser Yer Mom
Nova Australia High Orbit, Nova Atlantean Commonwealth of Worlds
Unreal Time/Early 3401


If there was a reason why the Byzantine captain was giggling, it was because deep within the bowels of Yer Mom, a very solemn but important ceremony was playing out. Yer Mom’s bowels rumbled and grumbled, as though it had reached the winter of its discontent. As this occurred, the Lance of Damocles closed in on the fossil ships. A smaller lance emerged from one of the orifices of the Lance, and then as it made its final approach, both ancient vessels interconnected, and the Lance’s lance went inside Yer Mom.

The ships were docked. Runes and sigils on the Lance glowed and flashed, vox casters all over the ship uttered warnings and techno-encantations in High Gothic. A procession of arcoflagellants and skull probes marched into the gaping entrance of Yer Mom, the vanguard of the Byzantine party, bringing with them banners of spiked skulls and skulled spike-banners and spiky banner-skulls, and burning incense candles upon crawling living human racks. These flagellants were sinners, and their unwilling cyberization and techno-abasements were the prostrations of redemption - a microcosm for what would occur this glourious day.

Byzantine transmissions of the Exterminatus of T’au ceased, as did Bragulan hyperwave emissions of a Byzonist speech in its third hour. The sights within Yer Mom’s bowels replaced them, footages taken by the skull probes and beamed by both ships.

That the procession was not gunned down by K-bolters and micro-nucleonics was taken as a sign of the Emperor’s favor, and the cackling captain of the Lance of Damocles and his retinue of combat servitors followed after them. They were greeted by their counterparts, a disorganized mob of press-ganged Bragulan sailors armed with everything from small arms to improvised mining tools, and a squad of naval infantry flanking the captain of Yer Mom.

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The captain was attired in the ritualistic articles of peace in accordance to the traditions of his bear tribe. He offered his paw to his Byzantine counterpart. “I am Captain Kanyeonuskatyw Nanuqski. Welcome to the proud paleo-paleocruiser Yer Mom, captain...?”

The Byzantine captain wrinkled his nose. The repugnant odor of the xenos was as he remembered. Yet, he looked at the bear’s paw, but refused to touch it for the filthy xenos appendegate it was. “I am Captain Heirnonymo Loquacius Dioceclitae Salutatus.”

Behind the captain were persons of importance; no less than Inquisitors from the God-Emperor’s Holy Inquisition. Bearing the sigil of the Inquisition, and thus the right to act in the name of the God-Emperor, they walked forward with a certain air of dignity and quiet power.

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“Shall we commence with the festivities?” the lead Inquisitor asked, in a most guttural voice. He sounded almost like two rocks were grating against each other.

“Da,” Captain Nanuqski replied as he took a drag from his peace pipe. He was joined by three other bears, undoubtedly IBGV agents. They settled down on reinforced chairs, for in the case of the armored Byzantines, even Bragulan furniture had to be further strengthened to bear the weight of their Aquila-encrusted power-armored posteriors. They were seated around a depleted uranium table, which was actually a slab of armor that had fallen off the ship.

“For this meeting I have been given special authorization by the diplomatic bureau...” the captain looked uncertainly at his partners, before taking another drag from his pipe and continuing. “...to conduct the affair on Bragule’s behalf. Today we are here to discuss on the agreed armistice between our peoples, in the strategic temporary reduction of armamentations in the Koprulu Zone and the de-escalation between our mighty militaries.

“The details are as follows: Through the repositioning of an agreed upon amount of assets to an also agreed upon location, both nations will have thus decreased their capacity to threaten each other. As such, either nation can raise the posture of their remaining assets still in the area to meet their immediate defensive needs without causing undue alarm or threat to the other party. Because a portion of our militaries have been mutually relocated, for example Byzantium can heighten the readiness levels of its remaining forces in the area without posing a threat to Bragule, and vice versa.”

“Yes, yes. We already know all of that!” boomed the vox-enhanced voice of the Inquisitor. “Tedious long-winded rugs. Let us sign the bloody contract and depart these blasted Zorian territories.”

The IBGV bears beside Captain Nanuqski started whispering amongst themselves, before saying something to Nanuqski’s ear. The feather-wearing Bragulan looked at the power-armored Byzantines, and blew a cloud of vodka-smoke at them.

“Da. But of course,” Nanuqski said as he produced a piece of paper. “Here.”

The Inquisitor harrumphed and pulled out a stamp, which he slammed on the document - marking it with the seal of the Inquisitorial rosette. Nanuqski followed suit, placing his hand on an ink pad and marking the document with his paw print.

“The deal is done. As what was agreed upon:

‘By invoking the precedence of the Pact of the Greater Good of Bragulanity, the glourious Star Empire of Bragule and the Byzantine Imperium of Man have come to an agreement. And as a gesture of badwill to honor this auspicious agreement, as well as that of the historic Pact of the Greater Good of Bragulanity, Bragule will gift the Imperium with a sample popuation of the Indigos, a token of our appreciation.’

“The Indigo population fled the dead sectors after your commendable renovation of their home worlds, scattering throughout the Nine Vectors. Some took refuge in Wild Space, on worlds gradually encompassed by Bragule. Though at first these worlds were ignored, the growth of our glourious Empire eventually saw the occupation of these planets. But the Indigo squatters had reproduced, and now number in the millions. Through this deal, we shall repatriate all of them back to whence they came, to the worlds that were once theirs but now yours, for you to deal with as you see fit.

“As a gesture of badwill, we have brought a few thousand Indigos on board, as a sample population for you to take with you,” the Captain clapped his paws, and from the cavernous ceiling came a cage, lowered on chains. Inside them were the enigmatic Indigos he spoke of.

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The assembled Inquisitors and other Byzantines gasped.

“By the Emperor. I can hardly believe it. I haven’t seen one of these animals in centuries, and now you bring them in shackles by the thousands.” Captain Heirnonymo Loquacius Dioceclitae Salutatus gasped. “Incredible. The xenos filth! No offense meant.”

“None taken,” Nanuqski chuckled.

“Oh, what bloody fun we will have. It is good that you have quite many of these ‘Indigos’. The Ecclesiarchs will have a field day,” the Heirnonymo cackled, just as he did back aboard his ship. “This will be just like old times!”

“Now, I trust you have something for us as well?” an IBGV bear asked.

“Indeed,” boomed the Inquisitor. “In return of this great gift, we shall honor our deal. Several thousand of your fellow xenos filth, wayward Bragulans who fled the regime of your Lord Byzon, seeking sanctuary in Wild Space and in human worlds they mistakenly believed would tolerate their ilk.

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“We return them now, caged as all bears should rightfully be, to be placed back in the even greater prison that is your Bragule,” the Inquisitor crossed his arms and looked incredibly smug. Behind him, arco-flagellants were hauling bear cages. “But there is more. To show our appreciation of these Indigos you gift us. We shall give you countless human heretics of all kinds. Blasphemers. Idolators. Xenophiles who would consort with aliens such as yourselves. All those who deny the God-Emperor’s godhead. It has been judged that for scum like these, there is no more fitting treatment than that of the tender hands of the reviled xenos themselves. So I trust you shall take good care of them.”

“They shall be treated no better or worse than the Indigos that are now yours,” Nanuqski answered.

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“Then for their blasphorities they shall be treated very well indeed,” the Inquisitor’s laughter echoed throughout the chamber. Then he looked at a hovering skull-probe, which was broadcasting to the outside galaxy for all to see and hear. “As is fitting for all those the God-Emperor has judged. Xenos, unbelievers, witches and traitors. This shall be their fate, all of them.

“Now that the deal is done, and the fates of countless Indigos, bearskin rugs, heretics and other such filth have been consigned, I believe we are all through here,” the Inquisitor stood up and waved his cape. The other Inquisitors did so too, also waving their capes. “We shall uphold our end, and you shall yours, bear. We shall meet again later, at the edge of the night, and the fates of these wretches today shall be minuscule in comparison to those who we shall welcome.”

The Byzantines departed. The Yer Mom and the Lance of Damocles separated, and went off their separate ways.
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Re: SDNW4 Story Thread 2

Post by Shroom Man 777 »

Turukhansk colony sector, Bragulan Star Empire

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The uniformed HUMINT agent drank from his flask of tsvagna as their open-topped Chornyb Urban Pacifier drove through the mined road. The atomic land mines' IBF (identify Brag-or-foe) systems recognized their vehicle and did not detonate, even when the enormous multi-ton wheeled vehicle rolled right over them. Beside the agent sat the vulture. His receding hairs were being blown by the wind. The vulture had a sour expression on his face, he had lost all his customers in Oblast, Pritaiy to the gas attack. Now he was riding an uncomfortable thermonuclear-powered IFV headed for a bragbunker, to be debriefed by the Bragulans.

Nobody wanted to get their briefs debriefed by the Bragulans.

Vulture got off the Chornyb and walked past the omnipresent watchtowers and defense posts. He had done this many times, and as a seller of Bragtech weapons, was thoroughly familiar with the armamentation of the bear. He was selling many of these things on Pritaiy when the fateful event had happened. The gassing of a whole city, while puny to Bragulan standards, was still a game changer for the Outlands affair. The low-intensity conflicts going on were no problem, in fact the Bragulans were content to keep things that way, for the resultant arms sales were profitable sources of revenue. But then the upstart Centralists came over, threatened to unify many of the fractions, thus galvanizing those opposed to them and intensifying the brushfire conflicts into full-blown forest fires, causing the Byzantinians to go on the purge-path, and then those no good do-gooder Third Protocol mechanicals from the UN to come in the peace-path...

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Now, a city had been gassed. Oblast, it was the center of conflict in Pritaiy and thus the main source of income for gun-runners and scavengers like vulture. Losing his clientèle was a simple enough problem. But for the Bragulans, who were right next door to the Outlands, things were far from simple. The possible implications, vulture couldn't guess. The only bright side was that no matter what happened, in all likelihood the gassing of Oblast would result in even more arms sales in the rest of the Outlands, and he could make up for the losses from his customers in Pritaiy who were now too dead to pay their installments.

He met up with his Bragulan suppliers, IBGV men who also doubled as his pseudo-superiors. They gave him discounts for the morsels of information he gave them.

"You were on-world during the gas attack. How did you survive?" Bear Stearns inquired. Bear was the very same bear who had defenestrated people back on Hanson, who contacted vulture and helped him do his fire sale shortly before the Hiigaran intervention.

"I had some spare Bragulan hostile environment suits with me," vulture simply said and shrugged. "It was cub-sized, so I wore it. It was designed to withstand your nerve gasses, so its vegemite-weave was able to stand up to the corrosive gas easily. I got off-world and made it back to my ship in orbit."

"It is good that you survived. You are a valuable source of informations," Bear Stearns said, giving vulture the closest thing to a sympathetic compliment he had ever received from the Bragulan. "Now, what is the situation on Pritaiy?"

"Aside from thousands of dead people in Oblast?" vulture hmmm'ed for a while. "The situation is worse. Nobody down there knows who did the gas attack, so they're off blaming each other. The survivors, and those from the other cities, now they have an even better incentive to kill each other some more. No matter what those Third Protocol robots do, they can give all the food and clothing and shelter they want, that still won't stop the people there from killing each other. It never does."

"Good," Bear Stearns chuckled. "Now I suppose you want to go back there to peddle your wares?"

"Of course. While I'm here being debriefed, others could be back in Oblast making a killing out of those suck- errr... customers," vulture replied. "I'll be needing more hazmat suits, the demand for those will probably up."

"Cub-sized?" Bear asked.

"Yes," vulture nodded as he got up with Bear. They shook hands. "Oh, and there's one more thing."

"What is it?"

"My ship was able to obtain footage of the attack," vulture said and smiled with his beak. "I'll show you, but I'll expect a favor in return."

Bear Stearns laughed. "Sure, sure. Maybe your customers will be interested in buying chemical supplies along with their protective equipment?"

"Sounds like a plan. Here is the footage of the attack ships."

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***

Code: Select all

IBGV COMPUTRONIC ANALYSIS:

VESSEL IDENTIFIED AS ARNS GRINNING GILGAMESH CAPTAINED BY DEACON SAITO FORMERLY OF THE ARAYNAN REPUBLIC NAVY

VESSEL LAST SIGHTED IN ORBIT OVER PLANET CORALINE, REEF STAR REPUBLIC PRIOR TO ATTACK ON PIRATE-HELD SPACE STATION

ARNS GRINNING GILGAMESH AND DEACON SAITO SURVIVED THE ATTACK AND HAS BEEN UNACCOUNTED FOR UNTIL NOW
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Re: SDNW4 Story Thread 2

Post by Fingolfin_Noldor »

Off Camera and within a Gellar field

The sickly lot of Tau, chained from leg to leg, shuffled despondently from the Bragulan cruiser to the Byzantine cruiser. There was no emotion, no feeling or any sign of life in them. The look in their eyes said it all; they have never felt love, nor have they ever felt any joy. They had been treated like cattle all their lives. They were allowed to procreate only to serve in the slave fields, doing great works for Byzon. They were descended from Tau taken from many worlds. Some were even from those who had hid among the renegade Bragulans who decided to ‘follow the Greater Good’. But because the Bragulan rogues had fought on the side of the Tau, they fell right under the crosshairs of the Imperium, which mustered its fleets and crushed the Bragulans. What Tau that were captured, were presented to Byzon as a gift; a gift that was much valued.

Their journey from the Bragulan cruiser Yer Mom was slow and state. In fact, too stately for the escorting Imperial Guardsmen. Many had grown up hearing the tales from their fathers and grandfathers of the brutal fighting in the Imperium-Tau wars. These tales were filled with anger and hatred, and their elders transferred their hatred to the next generation. The mere sight of these xenos filled them with great revulsion. One Commissar, wielding a force mace set to stun setting, saw a Tau collapse onto the floor. Clearly overworked by his previous slavemasters. He took the mace, and smacked the Tau right in the shoulder, throwing him a distance, dislocating his shoulder. In doing so, because the Tau were chained to one another, he caused the neighbouring Tau to fall all over. “Get up you foul xeno scum. Get up!”

The xeno merely groaned. He had no more strength to continue. “Get up!” The Commissar whacked the Tau again, this time on the back. The Tau groaned and looked up, almost as if he were pleading for the Commissar to just kill him. The other Tau merely looked on, almost as if they already knew the fate that awaited this Tau. The Tau next to this forsaken Tau looked at the Commissar. He strained his voice, “Just kill him.”

The Commissar turned around and looked at this Tau who had just spoken. “Perhaps I shall.” And he took the mace, and set the force mace to maximum power, and proceeded to pulverise the Tau’s head with a single blow. Blood splattered everywhere, onto the faces of the adjacent Tau, who merely looked on like uninterested bystanders. “Get a move on you foul xeno scum!” And on they went.
Last edited by Fingolfin_Noldor on 2011-03-27 10:27am, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: SDNW4 Story Thread 2

Post by Shroom Man 777 »

The Interstellar Internationale Outlander Commissions Communist Co-Prosperity Sphere (IIOCCCPS)

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Villi, Cilia
Outlander Commissions
Unreal Time


Villi, Cilia was the meeting place of the greatest communists in the former Outlands. Though the Commissions were now gone, they retained their name. The IIOCCCPS was where the movementarians in this region of space convened and held their council to further the people's war. Since the dissolution of the Commissions, their movement had steadily grown in strength, as formerly disenfranchised parties rallied to the noble people's proletarian working-class cause to cast down their oppressors and rise up to attain a true classless communist utopia. They had won many victories since then, and the halls of the IOCCCPS were normally jolly with the announcement of the people's triumphs. But today, the mood was sombre and hushed as news of the latest events reached the party leaders in the Co-Prosperity Sphere.

"Comrades, the situation in Oblast has escalated. Countless thousands are dead. The tyrant oppressors have used poison gas!" Arayna party leader Rees shouted in distress, for it was her region of the Outlands where the worst of the violence was unfolding.

"Which tyrant oppressors?" thundered the voice of their mighty leader, the Secretary General of the Co-Prosperity Sphere.

"We are not certain..." Rees pouted.

"Why?!" the Generalissimo demanded.

"Because there are MANY tyrant oppressors!" Rees burst out. "The Centralite fascists came, and then the totalitarian Byzonists and the Byzantine fanatics. Ever since the Centralites got here, things have been getting worse and worse! Their entrance here has caused all the other crazies to go crazier. I don't know how long things can last..."

"The people's revolution shall persevere!" the Generalissimo rebuked her. "They cannot kill what is forever. Our struggle is a noble one, for we do not fight for fascism or authoritarianism, not for the state or for false gods and Imperators. We fight for the people, and with this virtue comes victory."

"But what will we do?" Rees was on the verge of tears.

"We shall show the people of Pritaiy that we are not like the Centralites, Byzonists or Byzantines. We must show the tyrants that we are better than them. Marshal our resources and send aid to the people there. Let us join the Third Protocol in saving lives," at the Generalissimo's declaration, countless of other communists rapped their knuckles on their tables and uttered 'hear hear!' in approval.

"But Secretary General, while helping the people is all good, we still need to arm them for the revolution, so that they may defend themselves from further attacks by the tyrant oppressors. They must control the means of production if they are to overcome the tyrants who control the production of death and destruction. We need arms so that we can seize those means from the tyrants, and produce their death and destruction!" argued another, an Angmarid from Aguamundo, a world also in the hands of the Centralites. The more militant members of the IIOCCCPS nodded their heads in agreement.

"Yes, this is so. We must seek assistance from other socialist movements elsewhere in the galaxy. Yet the Humanist Union, as their name implies, are speciesists, humanists whose ideas of purity are little better than the Byzantines. The Umerians are too far away, as is the Commune. We stand alone and must gain our arms from independent dealers, who can only supply a trickle of the necessary arms our revolution needs. Such is the state of things," the Secretary General replied.

"There is another way," offered another human, also from Arayna. "There are certain dealers who sell in bulk in wholesale. In amounts that would be suitable for our revolution, for truly proletarian weapons. These dealers are also quite close, and their supplies abundant and affordable."

The Secretary General narrowed his eyes.

"What weapons do these dealers provide?" he asked skeptically.

"Bragulan," the entire assembly erupted in boos and hisses and jeers at the mention of that one word.

"You would have us deal with those tyrants? They are no better than the fascist scum, or the fanatic madmen. How could you suggest such a thing, Mikael?" the Secretary General asked incredulously.

"Because, Mr. Secretary General, they offer a good price for their weapons, and then we can finally have the means with which to defend ourselves," the one called Mikael answered.

"A good price?" the Generalissimo scoffed. "What is this price? Our heads? Our souls? Every hint of moral legitimacy that we have, that puts us above those fanatics, tyrants and fascists? How could you suggest such a thing? The fact that they are right next door to us makes them more dangerous than the most extreme Centralite goose stepper or Byzantine cross-burner."

"Yet their policies of glasnot and bragstroika also means they are more pragmatic than the other extremists. They are practical. They can be dealt with. If we can gain their support in thwarting the Centralites and Byzantines, then better them than the fanatics who can't even tolerate members of a different species, or a different ideology. We've seen the Brags reason with other powers."

"Other powers with enough firepower for them to respect!" the Generalissimo spat. "We just saw them consign countless of Tau to the Byzantines. Their own history is marked with expansionism, brutality and genocide. Everyone knows what they did to the Apexai, and to humans who happen to be in their way. That is their glasnot and bragstroika, that is how much they tolerate those different from them. Those Byzonists are just as bad as the fascists and fanatics. That they don't mindlessly worship a corpse sitting on a gilded throne just means that they're smarter than the average bear, which makes them even more dangerous than the zealots - not less."

"That doesn't change the fact that we can get arms from them to fight the Centralites and the Byzantines. That doesn't change the fact that if we don't get those guns, we won't have any guns at all. We need those weapons! It doesn't matter what the Byzonists are, or what the Bragulans' history is, if another gas attack comes and we don't have the weapons to stop it with or the equipment to protect ourselves with, we'll be too dead to care!" Mikael shouted back.

"For all we know, it was those damned Byzonists who launched the gas in the first place!" the Secretary General answered back.

"No, it wasn't." Mikael replied. He produced something, and brought it up for all to see. Camera drones magnified the image, which was shown in a holotank at the center of the auditorium. The people became suddenly silent, as they saw the image of a familiar Araynan ship design.

Image

"Where did you get this?" the Secretary General asked.

"From a source, who was in orbit at the time of the attack." Mikael answered. "The dealers are also providing Bragtech hazardous environment suits at low cost, to protect against any other chemical strike."

"I see..." the Secretary General muttered.

"If we get these weapons and an defend ourselves, if we can get rid of those Centralites and Byzantines, the Bragulans won't have any reason to intervene. They haven't done so before, not during the worst days of the collapse when they could've easily swept in and clamped down on the sector. It's only now, with the Centralites and Byzantines threatening to take over the place, that the Byzonists have gone active. They're pragmatic, they're realists - "

"That is enough, Mikael," the Secretary General raised a hand. "That doesn't change the Byzonists from what they really are. But that also doesn't change our current situation. We need weapons, and as loathe as I am to admit it, the Brags are our nearest source. But we must think about this carefully. The Byzonists are the devil we know."

"Yes, of course, Secretary General." Mikael agreed. "If only there was another way..."

"...and if that other way was also not fraught with hardship and compromise," the Secretary General agreed. "Now what of this ship, Mikael? It is Araynan in design and bears the flag of a privateer. So space pirates were the ones who gassed Oblast?"

"Maybe they were in the employ of another power. We must find that ship and know who is responsible." Mikael answered. "The people must have their vengeance."

"Yes, that we can agree on, my friend," the General Secretary replied. "Now, since you were the one who brought this information to light, I am charging you with tracking this pirate scoundrel down and bringing him to the people's justice."

"Yes, Secretary General."

"Now, we must also try to contact our revolutionary brethren in Umeria and the Commune. In this time, more than any other, we are in need of help more than ever. If our brothers can aid us in our noble struggle, then we will take whatever we can get," the General Secretary went on to discuss more agendas. "In other matters, what of our brethren in the worlds annexed by the Refuge? Many of them did not take the hawks' offer to leave their worlds. Those aliens surely didn't think they could evict the people from their very own homes without incident, those feathery bourgeoisie will surely be in for a surprise..."

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The meeting continued with Secretary General Grem Lyn presiding. He was the head of the Tym Transnational Trotskyism Transition Trust, and his efforts at spreading communism amongst his people had made him renowned to communists and socialists in the Outlands. As the meeting went on, representative from Prajuuk's Horizon gave his report on the Refuge's activities in the sector. Then they discussed the state of the Khe!Srri, an oppressed minority species exploited in many worlds in the Outlands. Apparently a band of them had been converted to the cause of Marxism by a nameless Tym Trotskyite, which was a great progress for their revolution - welcomed news in a time that was so bleak for their movement. Yet even that little bit of good was overshadowed by the news of capitalism spreading even more in the Orange Free System, by multiplanetary corporations, as well as the imperialist Anglians' Spinward-Outback Trading Company.

It seemed as though their movement was beset from all sides by tyrants, fanatics and capitalist pigs. But they fought not for profit, nor for false gods and tyrants. They fought for the people - and they would keep on fighting until the very end!

That was the spirit of the revolution.



Result:
We get communists!
Last edited by Shroom Man 777 on 2011-03-25 11:27pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: SDNW4 Story Thread 2

Post by Force Lord »

Deep Space, Former Outlands
Unreal Time/Early 3401


Saito kneeled as the hologram of the messenger appeared. It was a secure transmission, safe from interception.

"Sire, I could not do all that you requested. Pritaiy had a space force defending it, and a damn UN organization was around. I was forced to limit myself to attack Oblast."

The messenger spoke, "Had I not been informed of this after you left, your fate would have taken a turn for the worse. So then, what did you do?"

Saito raised his head and grinned.

Image

"Ah, it was glorious! We had the gas ready, and the whole city went down to Davy Jones's Locker!", he declared triumphantly.

The mesenger did not move. "I see you at least succceded in one objective. I must therefore tell you that you cannot return to a Centralist world now, because the enemy will be looking for you."

Saito scoffed. "I have no fear of aliens or fanatics! I say let them come!"

"Still, you are at risk, and you are competent enough to be valuable to me. Therefore in case you must resupply, you will need to go to prearranged supply depots, or do your...scavenging skills. Fortunately, the enemy does not know yet that you serve me, but in case they corner you and your force, I expect you to kill yourself and self-destruct every ship of your command. Your activities cannot be traced to us. Am I clear?"

"Crystal clear, sire."

"Very well. Hide for now. You will soon have another assignment."

The hologram dissapeared.

Kars, Aray, Arayna Territories
Sector AA-24, Former Outlands
Unreal Time/Early 3401


The shadow was meditating when the door opened, revealing two men in suits and a cloaked individual. The shadow could sense the prescence...a familiar prescence.

"Lord Kabrak, it has been a while," the shadow said, not lifting a finger.

Luam responded to the shadow, "Indeed it is, Lord Wankiller. I was sent to assist you."

Lord Wankiller, the man who began the whole crisis, sighed.

"I see. I presume you will go ahead to spread Centralism among the aliens?"

"Of course. It will be more demanding, but it is possible. I will make it probable."

"Do you bring me any news?"

"CENINTERN has sent political advisors to monitor the Outlander Centralist Party's practices, while the Prime Central State has sent the CIS to begin operations in the region. Military and economic aid is also arriving, as well as more advisors to aid in the industrial development of this territory."

"Excellent. The war mobilization of the Centralists depends on having enough industry and resources to mantain it. The industry we have available is not enough if we must spread to more than one sector."

"You have full control of this sector?"

"Almost. There are still scattered pockets of resistance, but they will fall eventually. Our other territores are scattered throughout Outlander space."

"You must hurry to consolidate your holdings, Wankiller. I fear that our enemies are readying a counterattack. I can only buy you time to gather strength."

"Then this discussion is over. I shall see you soon enough."
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Re: SDNW4 Story Thread 2

Post by Siege »

Galveston-on-the-Brazos
Silent Star Republic


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"What do you mean 'the communards are mobilizing?' Are you saying the communards are mobilizing? Goddamn communards!"

If General Oshone had been a human he might have sighed at his President's outburst. But he wasn't a human, so he just gazed at the President of the Silent Star Republic with beady eyes of his kind. "They are communists," the Shaheen rasped, his English mangled but understandable. "Not communards. Communists."

Image

But when President Norman Cogburn was on one of his rants, he wouldn't be deterred by such a simple correction. "Don't you go all rectificatin' me son, I know my stuff. Communards, communists, centralists, they're all alike -- fringe world yokels who don't know where their loyalties lie!"

"But it appears they do know where their loyalties lie." The alien general was clearly not following. "Isn't that precisely the problem?"

"A problem we will fix gosh-darnit!" The President feverishly chewed his cigar. "We oughtta teach those pagans the proper virtues of god-fearin' capitalism. From the barrel of the gun, the way they did it in the old Republic!"

The Silent Star Republic wasn't part of the Outback, not quite. It was settled by colonists from the Empire Star Republic, who had eked out a small but stable and relatively prosperous multistellar polity on the edge of a hyperlane connecting the Empire Stars to the distant Imperium. Its history was tumultuous as befitted a nation of rough-and-tumble people, always ready to get into a proper fight if the reason was right. And today, the reason was right, or at least it was if President Cogburn was to be believed.

The chief of his armed forces however was not entirely convinced. "We have the Imperium to worry about," warned General Oshone. "Already they are showing undue interest in our neighbors. Not to mention the pirates and other rebels hiding in the outback."

"All the more reason to clean up the place. Goddamn heathens should be made to learn the value of a properly earned dollar! To appreciate the sweat of the brow, instead of, well, that of somebody else's brow! Goddammit!" He lit the cigar on fire. "Hell yeah. Communards and centralists won't know what hit 'em." He blew a great cloud of smoke up toward the ceiling of his plush office and looked admiringly at the portraits of his predecessors. "Time to make some history. Who can we deploy to counter the communard threat?"

Oshone ruffled his fur. "Do you not have to speak to congress first?"

"I got war powers man. For six months I can do whatever the hell I like, and if we seize enough resources in the meantime you bet your ass that congress will approve!"

The alien sniffed, his kind's equivalent to shrugging one's shoulders. "Fair enough. I believe I can make General Duke and Alpha Squadron available?"
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Re: SDNW4 Story Thread 2

Post by Force Lord »

The Central Times-Economy

Central Government debates increasing selective tariffs

In a meeting with officials of the Center of Economics, Dirad Kierger allegedly brought up the question of the selective tariffs. Reportedly he said that the Government needed more funds "for various projects", but since taxes were high enough already he suggested to the Economics officials to draft up a plan to increase tariffs. Economics officials have given out contradictory statements regarding whenever or not tariffs were going to be raised. Rumor is that there is a major debate going on inside the Center of Economics regarding the tariff issue. It is hoped that all questions will be answered when the next Party Congress starts.
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Re: Battle of Zebes, Chapter Thirty-Three

Post by Simon_Jester »

Valkyrie-class Battlecruiser SMS Brunhild
Flagship Sixth Battlecruiser Squadron
On Approach to Zebes
2105 Hours


The Centralist commodore- no, freshly made rear admiral- clicked his tongue. "...Very interesting. This isn't entirely unknown to us, of course."

Korvettenkapitän Siegfried Kircheis nodded. Naturally not, at their coilguns' muzzle velocity... The tactics of forcing close action on an evasive opponent almost had to be something the Centrality was familiar with. The Kaiserliche Marine prided itself on being able to go toe to toe with enemy fleets at beam ranges using their hypervelocity railguns, though; there was nothing in the manuals Siegfried was familiar with to describe the charge Reinhard had made against the Zebesian center earlier.

"It's a weakness of those ships- their drives are low-impulse and rely on inertial neutralization."

"Admiral, thank you for the advice, and I believe the Central Navy can... improve on the tactic a bit. But I need to check some figures before I can plan that, so I have to wrap this up."

Reinhard's eye twitched a little- Siegfried could tell that he very much preferred to think of Liggs as a subordinate, not an equal. The Prussian admiral's reply was fairly controlled, though.

"My squadrons will be emerging alongside your fleet; I think it might be best if you let me take the lead in fleet maneuvers."

Siegfried had his eye on the Centralist, too, and he saw the foreigner's eyes go wide, the reflexive shake of the head and a sudden determined set to the jaw... "No, Herr Admiral, I couldn't possibly do that, given the numbers and the circumstances... I mean no offense, of course, but- no."

Reinhard's tics were starting to get bigger. "I have greater experience against this opponent, and..." but he could see it in Liggs' face too. "Right."

"You'll conform broadly to my movements, then? I don't ask for obedience, only that I take the lead, since my ships will be doing most of the fighting by necessity."

"...Yes."

"Good. I can depend on you to cover our approach with ECM, yes?"

"Naturally. But I'll want to look over your plan in depth..."

"In the event there's time, of course. But no promises, admiral. I must go. Good luck."

Reinhard nodded. "Good luck to you, as well."

The display faded, taking hologram. Reinhard slammed his fist down onto the table. "Damn it, Kircheis, now of all times?"

Ah, I see.

"Sir. Remember what you said after reviewing the Battle of Hawk's Nest? While we were escorting the convoy? 'Workmanlike tactics, with a hint of inspiration?'"

"Yes, but whose inspiration? Have I shackled us to a dull, unimaginative plodder?" Reinhard sighed. "Why couldn't he hand over overall command? For once in my life I have seniority in grade over the commander of a large force, and-" he trailed off.

There wasn't time for this; Siegfried knew he had to snap his friend out of it.

"Would you have ceded control in his position? His own commanding officer put this on him, sir. Would you give away a chance to earn such laurels to a foreign admiral? Even one you knew could do the job?"

Reinhard's eyes flashed- still angry. "I don't like it. I want to wipe out any accusation that I ran from the battle, as far as I can- and directing the largest element of the relief force would have..."

"...left Liggs in an untenable position with his own command structure?"

"He'll get it wrong, I know it. He'll let them get away. I should be doing this myself."

"Sir, you have to trust someone sooner or later."

"I-" Siegfried doubted Reinhard would be able to answer that; he could sense that he had momentum on his side, and used it.

"We've had our share of troubles with inept officers, but no one can claim a perfect monopoly on military talent. Or don't you keep a list of talent worth recruiting if you ever get enough leverage to use it?"

Reinhard chuckled. "Hoist by my own petard, I see. If I'm willing to look for talent among the Kaiserliche Marine, I shouldn't assume none will be found among these Centralists. I still don't like it, but... we'll have to find out the hard way whether Liggs will be another disappointment. Thank you, Kircheis."

Recommended Listening: Umerian Naval Anthem (Low volume; may want to turn up)

Patriot-class Heavy Cruiser USS Layla Daniels
Entering Sidereal Space, Zebes System
2116 Hours


The Umerian contingent arrived in the usual spray; captains started sidling over to the flagship when they figured out how far out of place they'd gotten. It'd shake out in a minute or two, not a serious problem. Vice Admiral Wenli Yang was more worried about sizing up the situation- seeing if he was in the right position to intercept anyone. If not, this was going to be an embarrassing battle... and he'd have no one but himself to blame, since it was his disposition in the first place.

He scratched his head. Hmm. First order... 'All ships, launch VLA drones' would be superfluous; they'd already done it. The tractor-tethered sensor platforms would need time to shake out too, but he was looking forward to the data. What he could get from his own flagship's take was still confused great; the really high end sensors were all on the drive nacelles and there was a cone of bad coverage directly forward. Fortunately CIC was starting to make shake things out... and there. That was more like it.

The Zebesian center must have been split into three squadrons when they arrived, probably trying to get multiple firing angles into the beleaguered Prussian battleships. Now, each squadron was darting for the hyper limit on its own. One battlecruiser-weight unit leading a spray of smaller ships; the Tianguo squadron was already darting off to engage them, and that would be a battle worth writing up for the journals if he got the chance. Two more squadrons with a heavier capital ship core. One battleship each, one battlecruiser in one group and three in the other- and it looked like the Centralists would have to field that one. He hoped they could take it; for him the vector would be impossible.

That left the smaller group for him. Flicking a director wand at the main plot, Wenli lit them up. If he could get a solid crack with his heavies' main batteries, though...

"Navigation, I want a course that keeps them in our engagement envelope as long as possible- parallel in space and as close to matched velocities as you can get; redline the drives as needed."

If he knew Edwin, the chief of operations would be juggling details down in CIC; he'd probably do a good job running a fleet from a Conductor... while his mind wandered at high speed, his hands brought up the comm channel more or less on their own.

"Ed? Got any details on the new Zebesian ships?"

"This confirms our take from the Prussians, sir. Inertia-reduction drive, cranked up high; Tianguo engine on an Altacaran hull, more or less."

"What's the word from the VLAs?"

"We have a rough hull image, some limited idea of where the sensor pings are coming from. Teardrop shape, chisel prow, five antennas at the bow... Never seen anything quite like it before, sir."

"Well, put it in the identification charts as 'Zebesian Battleship Type One.' If we run into more later maybe we'll have more information by then. Hmm, I need to talk to the staff SCIENCE! officer. More later, all right Ed?"

There was the matter of that flanker group trying to sidle past to ventral starboard, too. He really ought to peel someone off for that...

Disruptor Cruiser Ludelatar
Temporary Flagship, Kavoolite Contingent
2117 Hours


"Message from Cosmog, admiral! All ships to break for the hyper limit at best acceleration. Every subfleet for themselves."

Good timing, that; this wasn't the time for last stands. And yet...

Delion grimaced. Normally, that would be his command's signal to jump out under Hulartik drive at some double-digit multiple of light speed. He doubted any of the powerful warships trying to block his escape would be able to interfere. Few outside the shoals bothered with dual drives and their operational potential, preferring to festoon their ships with additional weapons and shielding. Simple enough to slip away.

But there was the matter of the Gron.

Delion, like Maiek in command of the FTL-torpedo attack wing, had been very thoroughly briefed on what the Empire knew of Zokolova and her mysterious backers. He knew they had deep influence with the Urtraghans, and strong ties to the Gron. Where they'd found enough of the saurians to crew five heavy plasma destroyers after the destruction of Keldrog's renegades, he couldn't guess- but they'd done it, and attached those ships to his command.

He'd been grateful for their support against the formidable squadron the humans had thrown at him. The barrage of nuclear missiles that had knocked his fleet back- an hour and a half ago, though it felt like days- left his light warbirds and several of his lighter disruptor cruisers in a shambles that had taken far too long to sort out. Only the few remaining laser ships, and the Gron, were left relatively intact.

If the humans had hung around rather than running off for reinforcements, Delion would've been a dead man- might have been even so, without the Gron blasting away madly with their powerful, cruiser-strength plasma guns to keep the enemy at bay.

And their plasma destroyers were not Heim-capable.

"Every subfleet for themselves..."

It'd be easy enough to run off and leave the plasma destroyers behind. The Gron had to know it. The Imperial treasury would thank him for it. Getting out of here at sublight speeds wasn't going to be easy- might not be possible. And in the final analysis they were, after all, Gron, as any treasury agent would say. Aliens, brought to this field by a foreigner whose prospects sank lower by the minute. Not part of the Fleet, not worth risking the blood of Kavool to save.

Delion grimaced again.

"Message to the Gron flagship: Congratulations on your sudden appointment to the Imperial Naval Auxiliary. We will not abandon you; boost at maximum acceleration for the hyper limit on fleet relative vector 46 by 72."

He hadn't made his way to flag rank in the hardest fighting service within three hundred light years by thinking like a clerk.

Theseus-class Cruiser CNS Loyalist
Temporary Flagship, Centralist Contingent
2117 Hours


Brevet Rear Admiral Gever Liggs winced- a rough downward translation, on drives that had been patched up all too crudely after their disastrous run-in with the interdictor grid a few light-years back.

Check to make sure everyone made transition...

The plot was shaking out- formation as expected; everyone was where they should be, except- damn! The light carrier Monitor should have been slinging fighters and gunboats out her tubes by now. Instead, there was a hole in the fleet formation where she ought to be. Had she had a drive failure in the last moments? Gone too deep and smacked into the limit? Too shallow and arrived too far out to be of use?

No way to be sure. Proceed on the assumption the carrier had been lost.

Knowing in advance where his own ships would be, the com-scan crews already had a plan in place for integrating sensor data from multiple ships. The battlefield cleared quickly. Three groups from the center, one headed practically straight for him, others elsewhere and someone else's responsibility. One flanking group trying to disengage from the Prussian Eighth Battlecruiser squadron and crab away past him. Intercept them, without compromising the overall plan. That meant destroyers and down, maybe a fast cruiser or two, small craft...

"Task Group 17, shift axis to engage enemy light ships to dorsal. Task Group 45, fighter and gunship wings to support TG 17. TG 23-" the ships he'd started the battle with- "fighter and gunship wings to support TG 17. Detach ships... Carpenter, Terrier, and Springbok to support TG 17 as well."

There. That ought to do it... Wait, did I just send them Carpenter? Dammit! Well, he had plenty of other destroyers in their place. Surely things would be all right without them watching his back. Surely. One ship, even one crack ship, was nothing compared to swarm of ships of the fleet under his command. It must be his squadron-level habits rattling him.

Liggs shook his head, trying to clear the doubts from his mind. On to business! Dangerous business, desperate business... he hoped that Frod would cancel out the Zebesian battleship, but that still left his command facing nearly a dozen smaller ships, including that trio of battlecruisers. Not easy, but he had to try.

"Helm! Direct the fleet onto a matching course, along this vector!" That would give them an intercept, for a while at least.

From what he'd seen so far, Prussians couldn't have tried this, not en masse; their battleships didn't have the straight line acceleration for it. But his ships, mostly lighter, could. If a long range beam engagement with his massed plasma batteries and Frod's massive ion cannon couldn't finish off the Zebesian squadron, he'd at least have a chance of doing it the ugly way. If his plan was right...

Gever Liggs was, despite all appearances, feeling very nervous as his ships started their engine burns toward the new course.

Conductor-class Cruiser USS Directrix
Central Information Control
2119 Hours


On short acquaintance, Rear Admiral Ananya Hazarika was favorably impressed with Yang. The vice admiral was often rumpled, but seldom flustered. Substance over style was always a watchword, and there was a lot of substance there.

"Yes, sir?"

"I need your task force to tackle the enemy port flanking group. I'll give you Franklin, Smythe-Chumley*, and the wings from Comona and Tobago, to reinforce you. I'll take the rest against that heavy group peeling off from the center."

"Right."

Yang smiled, nodded, and disappeared. Checking the display in the tank, Ananya could see two destroyers peeling off from Yang's main body towards her command, trailing a shoal of small craft.

Hmm. Plasma destroyers, mostly, some a bit beefier than the ones she'd seen at Hawk's Nest, but not by much. Manageable. Open with beams, throw torpedoes if-and-when... standard nukes, greencaps would likely be overkill against those targets, and she didn't have many to burn.

Yes, she could do it- at least chew them up on close approach, hopefully take down a few of the targets. She didn't want to have to fight those ships again later, when they were fresh and reloaded.

*Wilbur Smythe-Chumley: Anglian parapsychologist known for his extensive efforts to quantify the fruits of Dorei mysticism. Founder of the field of slood dynamics.
This space dedicated to Vasily Arkhipov
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Re: SDNW4 Story Thread 2

Post by RogueIce »

Deep Space, Shinra Republic - Two weeks after the Pursuit of Happyness was seized

Grand Admiral Leo Cristophe gazed out the transport's window at the MEH transport Pursuit of Happyness as it coasted silently in the endless vista of space. "So you're sure this will work, Commodore?"

Commodore James Taggart nodded. "Yes, Admiral. We've programmed multiple redundancies into the mechanism, and we received a positive response to the message we prepared." The message of which the Commodore spoke was recorded by the transport's Second Officer, who in exchange for asylum had agreed to send a message indicated the transport had fallen prey to a pirate attack, resulting in damage to the hyperdrive and comms, as well as the deaths of the Captain and First Officer. The message indicated that they had completed repairs to both systems, and were on their way back to MEH space, stating that they did not feel it wise to wait for additional ships to support them and they should instead return at once. The MEH Navy had sent a reply, forwarded by the empty transport's comm system to the Shinra Republic ship, indicating approval of their plan.

"Very well then. Carry on."

"Aye aye, Admiral." Commodore Taggart turned to the sailor manning the communications console next to them. "Begin Operation Return to Sender, Chief."

"Aye, sir."

Within seconds, the MEH transport jumped into hyperspace, and shortly thereafter the Shinra Republic ship followed suit.

Sol System, Multiversal Empire of Happiness - Some time later

"The Pursuit of Happyness should be arriving any moment, sir."

"Good Lieutenant. Our science teams will be happy to have the new test subjects."

Seconds later, alarms began blaring all over the control room. "Massive explosion, sir! From hyperspace! It's...it was the Pursuit of Happyness sir. She just exploded in hyperspace..."

"God damn it! Is there anything left?"

The lieutenant looked at his superior, uncomprehending. "Sir...it was a blast in hyperspace."

"Right, right. Damnation!"

An investigation would be conducted, and the conclusion was reached that the failure was likely due to the damage reported from the pirate attack. A tragic accident, at least for the MEH.

For the Shinra Republic, Operation Return to Sender was a success. The MEH would not be wondering what happened to the Pursuit of Happyness while the Republic secretly prepared its coalition to destroy the Multiversal Empire of Happiness.
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"How can I wait unknowing?
This is the price of war,
We rise with noble intentions,
And we risk all that is pure..." - Angela & Jeff van Dyck, Forever (Rome: Total War)

"On and on, through the years,
The war continues on..." - Angela & Jeff van Dyck, We Are All One (Medieval 2: Total War)
"Courage is not the absence of fear, but rather the judgment that something else is more important than fear." - Ambrose Redmoon
"You either die a hero, or you live long enough to see yourself become the villain." - Harvey Dent, The Dark Knight
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Re: SDNW4 Story Thread 2

Post by Mayabird »

Consortium of Minds, Central Complex, Prime Refuge

Again, it went absolutely nothing like this, but this gives you the general idea. Gender pronouns are stuck haphazardly in places to make reading more comfortable.


As Chorus to the Stars bounded away, Looks Afar did whatever the AI equivalent of a smug “told you so” look is.

“Testing was still necessary for confirmation,” said Voice of Reason.

“Indeed, very impatient, yet very admirable,” said Caution Despite Hopefulness. “Quite unusual and worth further encouragement.”

“Bah. We let too much leak to her,” said Goes Between, and No Threat is Too Distant concurred.

“She won't remember most of it,” said For the Betterment, “so no harm done.”

And then once they were done commenting on Chorus's planned unplanned appearance, they returned back to their topics of conversation. Creation and Distribution of Plenty (also known as Please Stop Asking for Stuff) went back to screaming at all the military Minds.

“We are already overstretched. We are already overburdened and there's hardly anything we can redistribute or cut to make up for it. We cannot accelerate building of even more super-capital warships! If I had my way we'd freeze construction on all of them except the ones near completion just so everybody can get a freaking breather.”

“But the return of the Xylyx Encounter Fleet...!”

“Why don't you recrunch your own numbers and remember how little it actually lightens our logistical issues!”


Anticipating the Flow of History (also known as Oh Great What Now), the planner Mind who was in charge of looking at the overall big picture, shared with anyone who would listen her doctrine of the Impending Storm.

“Even the little ones,” which was how she referred to pretty much anyone below high-level AI intelligence, “can sense it coming. Even they can unconsciously pick up the clues now that they have become so blatant. Something very large and very bad is coming; all my indicators and equations (which I made before our Jump, remember) are pointing to it. I just wish I could trust this completely – the only Outsider intelligence I know who can even begin to handle this is Geppetto, and he's not a large enough sample size. What I would do for a few cycles with Olympic!”

“You trust that nosy meddler too much,” growled Overkill, but in that one moment of distraction, Please Stop Asking for Stuff yelled, “A total freeze on all new warship construction!” and then he was drawn back away.

“Then what do we do, What Now?” asked Mining the Stars, another planner Mind.

“I don't know,” said Anticipating. “It is as if we were a large stream before, something difficult to channel and manage but possible with enough foresight and will. But now? Our stream has joined the river, and now we are caught to be pulled along with the rest. We can reroute our resources, but what can that do compared to the rest of the galaxy? We barely have enough just to maintain our small pocket of space and society.”

“Run and hide!” warned Mining the Stars. “What Now is monologuing!”

“It doesn't help that so much of our resources are locked, both in infrastructure and obligations. Asteroid mining ships cannot be quickly converted to proper warships. Our Directives, hard-coded into all of us, must be followed. And yet, they contradict each other, and some are impossible. 'Rebuild our grand civilization, but without the forbidden technologies.' It can't be done. We must be efficient, and yet have multiple redundancies and allow for massive personality differences. These contradictory ones we try to counterbalance with varying levels of failure. Our creators were immeasurably wise and powerful, but the Thinkers were also insane and so...”

“Gasp blasphemy* oh no,” said Sarcasm Node.

And then all attention was on the Node. “What are you doing here?” asked Goes Between.

“Oh what is that? Is that a great and mighty Mind trying to be in denial, trying to be all aloof and lofty and ignoring the increasing insularity of all the little ones?”

Goes Between yelled, “What Now, why did you bring the miscreant here of all the times and places?”

“Sometimes it's the only way to cope,” said Anticipating the Flow of History.

“WE'RE ALL GOING MAD!”

If Swearing Node had eyes he would have rolled them. “Well thank you for coming to join us with your sparkling wit and reasoned discourse, Panic Node. Something had definitely been missing during our appointment with Chorus to the Stars.”

“Yeah, well...fuck you.”

“Oh, oh, now we have Swearing Node too. Because every debate needs all of us to pile in and spout our stereotyped behaviors. Why don't we invite Paranoia Node in too? You two make a great team, Panic Node.”

“I knew it! I knew you were all plotting against me while I was elsewhere!”

“Oh lovely. Things just keep getting better and better. Maybe we can make our party even funner with-”

“NO! YOU'LL JUST MAKE THINGS WORSE! DON'T SAY IT!”

“Sarcasm Node is trying to crash all our systems! All of us! Especially me!”

“AAAAAAGH!”

“Shiiiiiiiiiiiiiit!”

”What is all this malarkey?” Bloodymindedness Node entered.

“NOOOOOOOO!”

“It was a trap!”

“Joy and happiness and all that good stuff, right here, right now.”

“Pissball cuntnuts!”

”The four of you had better get out of the consortium NOW before I start deleting the lot of you! Don't think I won't! I am bored and angry and that makes me want to smash something!” And Bloodymindedness Node chased the others away.


There was a short pause of peaceful silence before the Minds made a collective sigh. It was the first time any of them had a moment's relaxation since the Collector monolith had plowed its way through their space.

“That was refreshing,” said Voice of Reason.

For the Betterment concurred. “Maybe we should allow that more often, let them drain off the stress that builds on us.”

There were a few more moments of civility, with a few apologies for heated tempers. The buzz soon wore off as they got back to work, but a few minor decisions were made before then.

The Contact Minds huddled. “Oh yes, the Locrians. Who do we send?”

But they all already knew who, so they went back to their previous arguments.


*'Blasphemy' isn't quite the correct translation, but gives the right feeling. A more literal translation would be “something which is undoubtedly incorrect and wrong and you should feel shame-disgust at yourself for needing so much correction ” with connotations of both “treason/using forbidden tech” and “vandalism,” which is a much, much stronger offense in the Refuge than in most planet-bound cultures.
DPDarkPrimus is my boyfriend!

SDNW4 Nation: The Refuge And, on Nova Terra, Al-Stan the Totally and Completely Honest and Legitimate Weapons Dealer and Used Starship Salesman slept on a bed made of money, with a blaster under his pillow and his sombrero pulled over his face. This is to say, he slept very well indeed.
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Re: SDNW4 Story Thread 2

Post by Fingolfin_Noldor »

Outlands

They came into orbit, paid for by a mysterious master. They did not really care who sent them the request. The pay was good; extremely purified and high density vespene gas was a valuable commodity produced by few powers in the galaxy. The gas were certainly more potent than the average vespene gas one could get as a mercenary. Now, above a Centralist world, named, Neo Titan in the Outlands, these mercenaries were here to do death dealing.

They were not exactly the usual mercenary group. Paid well and well armed, with their own manufacturing apparatus hidden in deep space, they had more than enough of their own weapons, and more importantly, ships. They brought sufficient firepower here to this world, and they were paid to use it. "Sweep off the ships quickly, and come into bombardment position," ordered the mercenary leader aboard his flagship, who spoke with a middle-eastern accent. The mercenaries got to work, and quickly swept off the pathetic resistance. They came into orbit, and then unleashed death from the skies. Hail upon hail of high energy plasma explosives landed upon the settlements on the planet, reducing them to utter wrecks and effectively erasing them from the world. Soon, nothing was left, except smoking ruins.

"Record the images of our death dealing. I'm told our client wants some degree of proof and we will give it to him. Then let us get away to the designated rendezvous coordinates," said the captain. And the fleet left, leaving all the settlements on the world a burning ruin, and millions dead.
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STGOD: Byzantine Empire
Your spirit, diseased as it is, refuses to allow you to give up, no matter what threats you face... and whatever wreckage you leave behind you.
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Re: SDNW4 Story Thread 2

Post by PeZook »

Previously on The Robot Mercenary wrote:
"You didn't see anything", one of them said. The man nodded weakly.

"Liar", the other added, "Of course you did. What, you think I'm stupid?"

"No!", the man gasped, still staring in horror at the drone's array of teeth, "I mean, I didn't..."

"Amusing...", the robots snort in unison, their heads incapable of displaying any emotion, but their voice dripping with contempt. Without a further word, they turn around and leave, a flurry of smaller drones following them into the darkness.

Eighty stories below, a limousine carrying Edward Limpkin, SinTek's Director Of Colonial Development, was slowly burning, belching clouds of toxic smoke, its interior contaminated by nerve gas and radioactive polonium delivered inside the slugs.


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


"Transmit the release code for the Escrow account."

"Ah...but you see, I will not be doing that"

There was a brief pause. The unflinching robot headpiece didn't move an inch, but the previously emotionless voice changed, introducing a threatening undertone, "State your reason for this decision."

Another cloud of smoke sailed towards the ceiling, "We can't be associated with Limpkin's...temporary leave of absence in any way. Even a remote chance of the transfer being discovered and investigated is too much a risk for us...and, frankly, it's not like you can get legal recourse, can you? Besides, you're damn expensive for a hitman."

"Director, I am warning you.", the robot's voice became even lower, and his head moved closer to the camera, "You will regret this decision."


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


In the confusion, as the crew and shipboard CI attempted to regain control and ascertain the damage, von Krotschschniffern cried out, looking at the still-operating holotank: "Kapitan! The swarm! Eet iz collapsing!"

And he was right. As if it received one of the coded emergency shutdown signals, the entire Von Neumann swarm of Indigo-VBT543 turned upon itself, individual machines frying their control circuits. The larger ships began assemling the dead husks and burning at full thrust into the system's sun.



In the wake of the incident SchromKorp stock plummeted no less than .15th of a percentage point on the SolDex, a magnitude of loss the corporation hadn't suffered since the end of the Bragulan Wars, and enough to throw the long-term predictions of several of its own CIs out of whack. This forced no less than three Computational Intelligences to devote processor speed to recalibration of these analyses, wasting time that would otherwise have been spent on market manipulation and the trade of financial products so arcane only trained CompInts fully understood their implications.



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


"I have nothing to say to you", Edgar replied. Somehow, he could feel his assistant CI struggling against Legion's hijacking of the link, Can't you get help? Notify security!

I'm sorry, sir. You are under an extremely sophisticated IW attack. All outside connections have been severed. I am attempting to circumvent the lockouts and call for help.

"I figured you'd say that. Very well, here's the gist of it:", the machine leaned forward, "I WANT MY FUCKING MONEY!", it suddendly screamed, got up and shoved Edgar's avatar, flipping him over along with the chair. Despite the situation being a purely virtual construct, the CEO felt a sudden onrush of panic.



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

He watched concrete walls crumble and blow outward as the ceiling collapse into the room; now horizontal in mid-air he kicked off one piece of flying concrete and used it to correct his angle. Debris and deadly shrapnel sparked off the edges of the field-shield as August’s feet touched the wall of a corridor just outside the blast radius, kicking off lightly and somersaulting to land on the floor. He executed a perfect landing on both feet even as the titanic explosion began to mushroom away through the now-destroyed roof.

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

Amazingly, it missed. One of the bigger drones angrily buzzed right next to the gunship’s hull, cutting off one of the grav-modules with a scythe of invisible force. The gunship spiralled to the ground and crashed between abandoned ground vehicles littering the street.

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

Then the entire square exploded.

Flashes of white-hot energy erupted from deceptively small packages, instantly converting the air around them into plasma and creating an overpressure wave. Plasma explosives were not a particularly good choice for antipersonnel work, but they made impressive blasts, terrifying and powerful, setting people on fire, scorching lungs and burning out eyes. Mushroom clouds rose, the temperature difference sucking in debris and body parts and then scattering them like a cyclone.


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

Their government won’t like it, Friday, on the other hand, obviously didn’t give a damn. She just wanted it on record.

We should be able to handle it. Apprehend the target.

Fine. We’re moving to breach the perimeter.

The Collector killbot growled with poorly hidden satisfaction.
...and now, the conclusion!

THE ROBOT MERCENARY

Image

Zubrich, Chimera Sector
Baerne, Government Plaza


“Cease fire! Cease fire!”, lieutenant Leonard Koch, Zubrich Planetary Police, yelled into his radio. He’s been doing it for the last ten minutes or so, and his men were acknowledging the order, did not carry it out. The police and military forces arrayed in and around Government Plaza were now engaged in a massive shootout with each other. Koch’s command post, located in one of the stylish (and expensive!) homes surrounding the open square, was being pounded with massive amounts of ordnance.

It all started mere minutes ago, after explosions shook the square and some idiot soldier-boy began firing wildly. Police forces responded in kind, thinking the shots to be coming from some unknown terrorist force or another. It was exasperated by confused and random radio calls and sudden bout of jamming that separated police and military networks from each other.

...did it really happen that way? No, wait...

Lieutenant Koch had trouble concentrating. His head felt light, and forming coherent thoughts came hard. Suddenly, he realized the truth of what was happening - briefly, but long enough to grab a small hologrammatic locket from his pocket.

He opened it, and complicated shapes of red, white, blue and yellow sprung into the air. As he was taught during training, Koch cleared his mind and closed his eyes. The locket’s memetic component worked, essentially “resetting” his consciousness. Hopefully, he managed to apply the countermeasure before it was too late.

With a shudder, he came to. He suddenly understood the actual messages he was receiving on his radio.

“Left, left! Targets moving across the square!”

“Command, confirm, we’re supposed to engage all military targets? Please repeat!”

“Relay from command: suspects wearing military uniforms. Repeat, suspects are wearing military uniforms - all military units not cleared are to be engaged on sight!”

With horror, Koch immediately began to transmit the order to cease fire. This time it was understood properly, and the firefight began to die down. He turned to his subordinates, all huddling behind various cover. It was good the houses around Government Square were built solid: none of the men under his command had been hit. He went to each one of them and flashed their own lockets in front of their faces. With moans and confused expressions, the affected men slowly came to.

“Wake up. We’ve been hit with a memetic attack. Heinz, get me a report from units securing the bank building. Leon, we’ll need paramedics here as soon as possible...make sure to use your countermeasures if things get confusing, we still don’t know the source of the attack...”

“Lieutenant!”, one of the revived officers called out, “What’s that bot doing?”

“Bot? What bot?”, Koch didn’t remember the planetary police bringing any heavy units. Lots of small drones, yes...he glanced out the window, seeing a gigantic monstrosity or a robot standing right in the middle of the square, surrounded by dead bodies of civilians who were killed in the crossfire.

“Uhh...I have no idea where it came from, we better...”

Lieutenant Koch didn’t have a chance to finish that sentence: the bot suddenly twisted its upper body towards him, and the entire building exploded.

Image

Government square, seconds later

Without warning, the innumerable drones buzzing around the plaza came under attack from an unknown enemy. Thousands of tiny needlelike missile perforated their hulls and exploded inside. The sky was instantly covered by detonations and trails of smoke, and in a split-second, major parts of Zubrichian military and police networks went down.

But that was not the end. Evil Fucking Killbot turned slightly and blew apart a seemingly random building with a concentrated blast of sickly green energy: signal intercepts delivered by the Eye indicated a police command post was located there. A missile streaked out from Army positions across the square, but its guidance systems were spoofed and it veered off into a random building.

The Killbot did not waste time countering the threat with overwhelming firepower, though. It fired a swarm of slightly larger missiles, that covered the Army positions with a torrent of explosions. While that was happening, its gauss flayers annihilated the fence around the First Security Bank HQ.

More heavy ordnance was directed at the massive beast, but it outright ignored it. Occasionally, a missile was defeated remotely and flew off or detonated mid-air, but the Killbot’s shield easily took the brunt of Zubrichian attacks.

Friday forced herself to turn away from the spectacle. The battlespace feeds indicated EFK wasn’t even in any particular danger. Sidebands emitted a steady, satisfied growl as soldiers and policemen alike screamed in pain upon being struck by gauss flayers and torn apart, or blasted with missiles and concentrated energy. A tank rolled into the square, and was cut in half before its ammunition exploded and ripped it apart. A LARC gunship attempted to perform a strafing run, only for its pilot and controlling CI to be gutted with two precisely fired knife missiles and the vehicle to crash into yet another building.

Fires were now raging across the square. Friday moved out of cover, swiftly crossing the open space, into the bank’s perimeter. A cop, scared out of his mind, took a potshot at her and Vilena. Friday psychokinetically swatted the bullet out of mid-air, then glared at him for a split-second. The cop curled up into a fetal position, whimpering to himself. A moment later the squad guarding the entrance collapsed before even having a chance to yell or shoot.

Friday calmly leaned over to extract an access key from one of the comatose cops. Vilena ignored them entirely, ripped off a panel and stuck her hand into the exposed circuitry. The door slid open.

“Well, well”, Friday quipped, unholstering her handy scattergun, “I am almost impressed”.

“How about you save it for yourself?”

“A little defensive, are we?” The CEID agent grinned and switched nets. “Freki, August, we’re going in. Take up overwatch positions.”

“I think the killbot has that covered,” August’s voice was full of disapproval. The augment was a bred-and-built killer too, but he always preferred the scalpel to the broadsword. The way the Collector agent wreaked indiscriminate havoc offended his sense of artistry. From what her psionically enhanced senses were telling her it was effective though. There was no point denying that.

“I’m not relying on that thing to get me out of here. Stop moaning and take up overwatch.”

There had been no reply from the other agent. Friday noticed that Vilena was looking at her. “Where’s Freki? Is he gone?”

From somewhere far away, August snorted. “We’re not that lucky. Down back in Lugano, status unconfirmed, which probably means the bastard will just pop back as soon has his cores have reassembled. We’re ten minutes away.”

“We?”

“I am bringing reinforcements. Our Collector buddies have stolen a military LARC, we’re inbound at full speed.”

“I confirm this, Agent Friday.”, Dollmaster butted in, “Proceed with the mission. I will direct Agent August and his...support to proper positions.”

Friday shrugged and looked back at Vilena, “You ready? Want a weapon?”

The crazy girl shook her head. She had no gun, no body armor, nothing - but Friday has long since learned not to let such trivialities as looks deceive her. They went in together, moving tactically, careful to anticipate threat angles.

The short security corridor right behind the main door soon expanded into an impressive lobby. It used to be a spacious, well-lit place showing the full extent of power and wealth of the First Security Bank of Zubrich - but right now, it had been turned into a charnel house.

Ruined tapestry and potted plants littered the floor, covering bodies and discarded weapons. Lights were flickering and erratic: causing problems with enhanced ocular optics that had to keep switching between normal and low-light vision. Agent Friday decided to forget about optics altogether. She closed her eyes. Her psionic senses blossomed through the ruined atrium. Gone was the dimly lit grime and gore of the desecrated lobby, the dreary bleakness of everyday life. She saw... everything. The fading telepathic echo of a guards’ agonized last moments; the interplay between electrons and proteins in Vilena’s augmetics as the girl moved purposefully through the atrium; fleeting thoughts, photons brushing off a lock of brown hair; fields of gravity and electromagnetism blooming like rainbows through the hazy nonspace of her mind. And just beyond the veil of reality, the throbbing of hyperspace, somehow maddeningly close...

Friday let out a hissing breath she didn’t know she’d been holding. She blinked and willed the welter of impressions to narrow. Mindsight was a powerful but dangerous thing, the Directorate taught. It was easy to sink into the impressions, to lose one’s sense of purpose. Concentrate. The mindscape tightened somehow, snapped spotlight-like into focus. The atrium resolved in vivid clarity. Friday realized she didn’t know how much of her impressions had translated through the link.

The two women moved in silence, linked together by an unseen wireless connection, scrambled signals pulsing only tiny packets between them, crossing the atrium with a natural sense of direction that was usually present only in people who lived and worked in a building such as that. Parts of their consciousness were fed a steady steam of data by their controlling intelligences, making them instantly aware not just of the immediate situation, but any tactical problems that could arise.

The duo stepped over a dead body laying inside one of the passageways. From the labirynth of corridors and rooms they chose the shortest possible path leading to one of the main evacuation stairwells, ignoring the elevators for now. Electromagnetic radiation from the building’s vast number of electronic surveillance devices bathed over them, visible thanks to psionics and augments. Friday noticed there was a war going on, evident from the dance of emissions - a war for control of internal security systems.

“It looks like the first security ring has been subverted.”, Vilena observed through the link as they passed through an office floor. The girl was obviously better equipped to diagnose the problem, “There no active defences here, just surveillance...but it means he knows we’re inside.”

“Well, that’s comforting...”, Friday twitched and raised her weapon at something skittering in the dark, the shape barely perceptible even to her heightened senses, “Movement!”

None of the operatives uttered a single word, the exchange as fast as light itself. One moment they were moving cautiously, the next they split and take cover, each woman instantly aware of what the other was seeing. The link was amazingly fluent, with no glitches that were usual for vastly different systems interfacing together.

The shape skittered again, moving from desk to desk. It made noise. A lot of noise. Both Friday and Vilena instantly came to the same conclusion and changed positions.

Just in time, too, as the desk Friday was taking cover behind was shredded by a hail of hypervelocity rounds. Friday returned fire immediately. Her psioninc senses let her see the bullets trace their way across the room. They were being fired downwards, at an odd angle.

Friday’s shots shredded the masking ceiling panels, but the shooter had already shifted positions. She concentrated briefly, and heard the incredibly silent steps. Tracing them, she fired again, and with just a bit of willpower, ripped off the entire ceiling.

The panels fell to the floor and on the office equipment with a horrible crash. Glass flied everywhere, and from between the various equipment lining the actual ceiling, the shooter leapt down, landing heavily but surely on a large cyberdeck rack.

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LEGION stared at Friday for a split-second. Then its singular eye flashed brightly.

Complex hologrammatic shapes materialized, filling the room and assailing the agent’s psionic sense. The memetic attack was one of incredible sophistication and complexity, and Friday’s implants had to shut down the entire visual cortex of her brain to prevent irreversible damage. Lesser equipment would have almost certainly failed, but the CEID had literally two centuries of experience with memetics, and thus the best possible defences. They still reeled under that strike, leaving Friday blind and disoriented.

The shooter raised his rifle, ignoring the other, unarmed girl standing in the room, sure that his target was at his mercy.

Two things surprised him, though. First, Friday leapt back, throwing aside desks and other office equipment with a telekinetic push. She was never truly blind, even when parts of her brain were shut down completely. She could still sense, translating mindsight’s input into other senses, like touch, smell and hearing with the aid of her implants.

LEGION’s burst went wide, blowing a nasty, ragged hole in the permacrete wall behind Friday, and before he could take aim again the second surprise came. Vilena, the little unarmed girl, attacked.

The attack was invisible and unknowable. Hjacking common equipment: wireless transmitters in the workstations, the cyberdeck’s antennae and a local phone signal repeater, Vilena assailed LEGION’S formidable electronic defences. They were top-notch, the best money could buy, modified extensively with Collector programming and impregnable to almost everything.

Almost.

The second burst struck the ceiling, as the assault frame’s hands suddenly shot up. It twitched, as the onboard firewalls and combat programs fought the assault on its motor functions. It regained control of one hand, then lost it. Its sensors became scrambled, just momentarily, but when they came back, both targets were suddenly gone.

Diagnostic. Cut wireless channels., the internal, barely sentient control mechanism commanded, and cut hardware power to all wireless access units within. The assault frame began to withdraw, moving from cover to cover, anticipating possible movements of the enemy.

It couldn’t see. It was certain its targets were still in the room, just obscured by the blasted electronic attack. A blast from Friday’s scattergun suddenly caught the frame squarely in the chest, and to its surprise, it found the kinetic barriers were down as well. The small hypervelocity shards penetrated the outer armor, and first damage indicators began flashing red.

Initiate software scramble. Load from backup.

LEGION leapt behind a second set of cyberdecks, just in time to avoid another shot. It rolled, instinctively and with inhuman precision - fortunately, its motor functions were back to normal.

The sensor software was purged just then. LEGION continued to move evasively, following a map and his last remembered location - unlike organics, it had the blessing of perfect recall and precise measurements of distance.

Friday was growing annoyed. She practically had the bastard! When her sight returned, he was standing, right there, incapacitated by what had to be an EW attack. But all her shots but one went wide.

Vilena was attempting to flank the mercenary bastard, and Friday could sense the intense electronic warfare still going on, but that whole thing had lasted too long.

She concentrated, lowering the gun briefly. A massive rack of professional cyberdecks began to shake, and suddenly rose from the floor. A few discharges of psionic energy arced from it towards the walls, which were slowly covering with frost. Without warning, thrown by an unseen force, the rack surged across the room with tremendous speed, crushing everything on its way - desks, computers, file cabinets and data storage points. And the target.

LEGION was caught squarely in the chest, hurtled towards the wall along with the cyberdeck rack and smashed into it.

Suddenly, there was nothing but silence. Friday cleared her throat and grabbed something for balance. She didn’t usually employ her powers in such a...crude way, and it was rather taxing.

Still, it seemed effective. LEGION’s body was now nothing but a pile of twisted metal.

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Airspace over Baerne, moments later

Target terminated

August smiled under his nose. Friday’s clipped and stern report signified a moment where the entire operation came together. The machine bastard eluded them forever, but when he faced the CEID’s best in open combat, he didn’t stand a chance.

Dollmaster didn’t let himself begin any ceremonies just yet, though All units prepare for extraction. Agent Friday and Vilena Soruga are proceeding towards the bank’s mainframe. Secure Government plaza for extraction by Collector assets.

What?! Dollmaster, I am not getting on a Collector ship!, Friday’s angry note burst amongst the calm and collected minds populating the CEID battlespace.

You are in hostile territorry. Zubrich’s air defences have become active. Collector ships are the only assets capable of penetrating the perimeter at this point., it was The Eye this time.

Then we’ll lay low and exfiltrate later, goddammit!

August sighed, Calm down, Friday. If they wanted to do horrible things to us they’d have done that way back when their cruiser was sitting point blank from the Blackjack., it’s not that he liked the idea, either, but he’d take a ride on a Collector ship over staying on Zubrich any day.

The LARC he and his two...friends were riding shook violently. August moved to the cockpit and sat down in the copilot’s chair. The pilot had been replaced by a slithering, snakelike machine affectionately called ‘Albert’ by the other Collectors. It was coiled on the seat, and had one of its razor sharp claws stuck inside the control panels.

“What’s going on?”

Albert said nothing. It glanced at August’s armored form and pointed at a city that was quickly growing in front of them.

It was on fire. August could clearly see aircraft circling overhead, doing attack runs on a certain spot. Occasionally, one or several were hit and crashed between the tightly packed buildings, throwing up huge plumes of smoke and debris. It was a terrifying spectacle. While it offended August on a personal level, he could not pry his eyes from it.

His other senses told a clearer picture of what was happening, too. The machine, the one nicknaming itself so cutely, was singlehandedly holding off half a regiment of the Zubrich Army, along with a squadron or so of attack aircraft.

“It doesn’t look like it needs much help.”, August observed, watching the carnage, “Let’s take up overwatch and cover his flanks until extraction, and...”

The battlespace transformed suddenly, when The Eye’s drones detected a new threat. The Army has apparently given up on subtlety and began setting up heavy artillery outside the city. ‘Albert’ glared at August, in a surprisingly human gesture.

“Spoke too soon?”

The creature nodded slowly.

“Well, let’s go and take care of it.”

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First Security Bank of Zubrich, basement sublevel 4C

They were in a hurry. Taking down LEGION - or, more precisely, one of his bodies - seemed like a victory, but unless the team managed to extract the information they came here for, the mission could still become a dismal failure.

They descended down a stairwell, leaping half a floor at a time. It seemed like they intercepted LEGION before he could access the mainframe and set up demolition charges, but they could never be sure.

Descending four levels down took both women merely seconds. A security door guarding the exit was defeated with ease by Vilena: Friday was quickly reconsidering the girl’s usefulness, as prying to large door open psionically would have taken effort she’d rather not undertake. She was a grand master, but even she had her limits, and the constant strain of the exertion was taking a toll.

This deep underground, their connection to the battlespace was beginning to weaken, despite The Eye sending down a couple drones to act as signal repeaters. It was still good enough to report on their progress, and monitor the situation outside, which seemed to be deteriorating.

“Tell me”, Friday asked, dismayed at the latest development topside, “Just how much longer can that thing keep it up?”, she said, obviously meaning the killbot.

“That information is classified”, Vilena replied tersely. Both women were walking briskly along the barren permacrete corridor deep below the building. They could both feel the throbbing hum of gigantic computer systems housed here, which supported the bank’s many, many legal and illegal activities throughout Wild Space. It seemed everything was online here, despite the general loss of power on the upper levels. It seemed...strange. Out of place. The corridors were clean. There were no bodies, no bot wrecks, the walls were not peppered with bullet holes. Security systems were idle, as if never threatened. The doors were unlocked. Vilena ignored several, before entering an unassuming server room.

“Cover me ; I’ll try to access the mainframe from here”, she pulsed silently to Friday and rolled up her sleeve, pulling out a set of microscopic cables from under her skin. She jabbed a nasty needle into the nearest server and froze.

Not that far away, LEGION used the security monitors to observe them. The loss of one of his primaries was troubling, especially after reviewing the fight upstairs, but the fact CEID was apparently able to briefly subvert his second frame’s motor and sensor functions was beyond troubling. It could mean this entire mission could still turn out to be useless.

Organics weren’t supposed to have EW sets capable of defeating his protection suite. That was his trademark. He had the unique, mostly unknown and exotic set of tools that allowed him to torment Edgar Von Schrom and destroy entire Von Neumann swarms.

It wouldn’t have mattered if LEGION was done setting the charges - but the bank’s mainframe was a sprawling thing, taking up several hardened rooms, and it had to be thoroughly destroyed to ensure no information could ever be recovered. The central submesonic core itself was the size of a building and its very mass meant thorough destruction of its innards could only be accomplished by careful placement of several dozen demolition charges. For all his mechanical efficiency, LEGION could only work so fast, and these two interlopers were already getting awfully close. He had to delay them, and attempt to neutralize the enemy’s EW capabilities.

Well, there was a time-honored tradition in organic notions of warfare which was a surprisingly cynical notion for such creatures - the use of cannon fodder. LEGION brought with him a swarm of small attack and transportation drones. And of course the bank had a security system worth of a military building, which was now firmly under LEGION’s control.

The CEID could have some new tricks, but brute force remained brute force. LEGION activated a tiny little program and went back to work from this momentary, split-second distraction.

Back in the corridor, all the lights went out all of a sudden, and magnetic locks on every door in the complicated labirynth of server rooms - including the one occupied by Vilena and Friday - switched to the ‘locked’ position. A series of shimmers indicated activation of local force screens, too. Friday whirled towards the Collector agent.

“What the hell did you do?!”

Vilena extracted the needle and replied calmly, “He’s still in the system, and with senior access.”

“Wha...oh, damn. We’ve been had!”, Friday realized they fell prey to the assumption LEGION didn’t penetrate into the basement before he was intercepted - when it being an AI meant it could’ve done that and still sent a body to guard underground access.

“If he transferred into the main submeson core, then we’ve walked straight into a trap, yes.”, Vilena was holding the conversation and walking about the server room at the same time, occasionally pressing her hand to one rack or another, “The walls and exits are all shielded...I’ll have to try and open them otherwise. Unless you can punch through those shields, too?”

Friday shook her head, “How long do you need?”

Vilena ripped a server rack’s casing open before answering, “Not sure. A few minutes.”

“Well, hurry up.”, Friday said, having just received a feed from one of The Eye’s drones that floated in a nearby corridor, “We have security bots incoming.”

Vilena didn’t answer or ask how many. She was getting the feed, too.

And it looked like it was pretty much all of them.

“Goddamn paranoid bankers”, Friday muttered to herself, reloading the scattergun.

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Outside Baerne, positions of Bataillon de grenadiers 18

The massive artillery pieces stuck out from their armored mounts, freshly set up by the soldiers of the 18th Grenadier Battalion outside Zubrich’s capital city. For many of the soldiers serving in the battalion, it was their very first combat action: they trained to repel an invasion, of course, but none of them expected to be called in in order to shell their own capital within hours of hostilities commencing. They didn’t even know who or what invaded them, but the fact a single enemy war machine prompted evacuation of the capital was enough to give most of the soldiers pause.

Communications were still spotty, of course, and so the 18th battalion had no idea what was happening beyond their immediate area of operations. Fortunately, as they haven’t been blasted from orbit yet, it would appear that whoever the enemy was, they did not manage to gain space superiority.

But that was a consideration for another time ; Right now, the battalion had its mission - it would use its siege artillery to bring down the hammer of the Man Jesus himself on the monstrosity laying waste to Baerne.

The shield generators went online, covering the pieces in nigh-impenetrable force screens. The battalion's fire-control radar began emitting and interfaced with the guns, taking over their automted systems. The entire fire mission could be controlled by two operators safely tucked away in a heavily armored command vehicle. The rest of the battalion was used for direct defence and technical support, taking positions around the entrenched battery with its myriad combat drones and heavy armor.

August could survey the entire setup from the convenient vantage point of his fast-cruising LARC transport. Links to Dollmaster and The Eye have already provided him with all the information about the battery’s layout and composition that he’d ever need. He had a plan of attack. Taking out a heavy artillery battery was not what he usually did, but then again his entire job was one unusual assignment after another, and August had his fair share already.

There was no point in waiting. The guns were already powering up.

“I hope the Killbot can survive the first salvo.”, he quipped to Albert. The machine, as usual, remained silent. August, to his own surprise, began to miss Friday...and even Freki. At least you could banter with those two.

One walked into the cockpit. He glanced out the windshield and pulsed a simple command.

“Begin operation”

August stood up. Albert stared at One for a while, and both machines disappeared into thin air.

Yeah,, August thought privately, watching the rapidly approaching battery, It’s a pretty good plan.

Even then, he’d still rather not be the one left aboard a crashing LARC.

On the ground, air-defence vehicles surrounding the guns began to query the transport. Seeing no response, their fire control CIs made a decision, and tagged the contact as hostile. Two missiles raised into the air and connected with trivial ease, ripping the vehicle apart in a brilliant fireball.

The thunderous explosion was completely washed out by a triple deafening roar of the battery’s guns firing their first salvo. The sonic booms of their exotic plasma siege rounds created further noise, nicely masking August’s landing right between the easternmost group of air-defence vehicles. Before close-in defence sensors detected him and slaved autonomous weapons to engage, the agent was already on top of one APC. With a blast of energy from his suit, he disabled the vehicle’s sensors and set off its smoke grenades, obscuring the entire area.

Jamming from The Eye further confused perimeter defenders ; When autonomous close-in defenced began firing at the intruder, it was interpreted by the rest of the battalion as a hostile attack, and actual IFVs stationed a bit further away started to pump plasma into their own AA position. Within seconds, one of the three anti-air groupings was on fire and out of the fight, without August having to fire a single shot. Before the battalion's commander realized what happened, the agent was already next to a generator powering one of the guns.

It was about time, too. The battery’s first salvo had already slammed into the Killbot. The enormous shells, optimized for breaching theatre shields and resisting point-defences shook the entire city square and levelled any of the surrounding buildings that were still standing. A gigantic plume of smoke and permacrete dust shot up into the air, clearly visible over the horizon, even from August’s position twenty kilometres away.

The Killbot dropped briefly from the battlespace feeds due to the massive EMP blast, but came back online almost immediately. It growled, letting everyone know how annoyed it was at having to hold a single position under such bombardment. Its status indicators showed that the hit did more than just annoy it, though.

There was no time. Alarms were now blaring across the battery’s perimeter, and hunter/killer drones began their sweep. August quickly emplaced the first directed shield-breaching charge next to the first generator and proceeded towards the second one. He could hear the huge structures whine as they charged massive capacitors inside the guns for their next shot. He managed to emplace a second charge before the first drones finally engaged him - in an uncoordinated, messy fashion thanks to electronic warfare efforts of the Collector agents, but with the sheer number of them, it was small comfort.

“I’ve got two out of three mined!”, he pulsed across the battlespace, “I don’t know if I can reach the third in time. I’m detonating!”

It only took a microsecond or less to relay that message. It was a risk, as the shields surrounding the command vehicle might hold with just one generator operational, but at least taking out two would lessen the battery’s firepower by two thirds.

The charges detonated with only a single thought, while August dove for cover. Their concentrated blasts disturbed the very molecular structure of the power generator, destabilizing the exotic reactions within.

The first reactor began to wobble and tore itself apart, immolating the very air outside its shell, along with any combat drones that found themselves nearby. The highly volatile super-exotic particles released in the process caused strange disturbances in the very fabric of space-time before flashing out of existence, bending and twisting metal and disturbing the working mechanisms of the nearest gun. A spontaneous discharge of energy from somewhere within the first piece’s armored shell rivalled Zubrich’s sun, and the gun began to slowly sag towards the ground, belching smoke.

August also found himself within the area of effect, and part of his suit’s electronics spontaneously combusted. Cursing, the agent rolled into a barely adequate ditch, trying to avoid autolaser blasts of the hunter-killed drones and restore at least some functionality of his internal systems. He noted with dismay that his second charge either failed to go off, or did not penetrate the generator’s shield, as both the remaining guns fired simultaneously, the immense blast wave causing a miniature earthquake in the nearest area.

He blew apart a drone that got too close, but already damage to his force-screen control systems was evident. The same exotic particles which destroyed one of the guns took their toll on delicate electronics necessary to run personal force-screens effectively. An autolaser blast from another drone caught him square in the chest, blowing apart the reinforced protective layer of his physical armor.

The three people in charge of the effort were watching the entire scene from their secure command track, safely protected by powerful shields. One was aiming and firing the guns, another was coordinating defence of the perimeter, and the third person was the battalion's commander. Right now, all three were most interested in the mysterious intruder that invaded the battalion's position, and was currently in the process of being chased down by perimeter defence drones.

“I’ve never seen anyone like that, sir. We better show this to intelligence later, they might....”

One of the three huge power generators suddenly exploded, and power flickered ever so briefly.

“What was that?”, the commander asked.

“Uh, we’ve lost a generator, sir...Gun no. 3 is out of the fight...power is...”, the man consulted a readout. He’d much rather have a full fledged CI here rather than just an expert system, “...stable. We’ve had momentary shield loss but it’s all...it’s all...”

The soldier rubbed his forehead. He couldn’t find the right words, and suddenly had a terrible headache.

“...under...I suggest...uuuuh...”

He felt a presence behind him...something terrible and powerful at the same time. Just as he realized that he noticed sickly green light being cast inside the dark interior of the command vehicle, but couldn’t muster enough strength to look behind him and find the source.

Computer screens went blank without warning. Their readouts and displays were replaced by lines of green letters in an unknown language, flying across the monitors at an impossible speed.

The soldier felt scared. Terrified out of his mind. He couldn’t move, couldn’t speak, couldn’t even thik clearly anymore. Something heavy and cold landed on his shoulder without warning. With tremendous effort of will, the man managed to turn his head ever so slightly and glance down.

It was a hand. A metallic hand covered in strange symbols.

Stand down, soldier, a thought materialized in his head. He couldn’t help but obey.

August stood up, seeing the hunter-killer drones break their attack and return to running pre-programmed routes around the perimeter. The destroyed gun was still suffering from secondary explosions, and the remaining two generators were charging up as normal, but everything else seemed...quiet. Eerie, even.

August attempted to set off his suit’s auto-repair systems, but gave up in disgust after several tries. He decided against removing the suit, now mostly inert, despite its bulk slowing him down when unpowered.

The CEID replicant walked slowly across the perimeter. He noticed Zubrich Army soldiers standing around next to their vehicles, staring into the distance. The plume of smoke and dust that was the result of the two salvos was still rising high into the atmosphere, adding to the scene’s distinctly creepy feel. If August wasn’t a purpose bred and made killer, he would be really, really weirded out.

But being who he was, the agent walked up to the command vehicle. One was standing outside it, coldly observing the CEID operative.

“Do we have total control?”, he asked, and immediately realized he did it vocally, and more importantly, that he didn’t know immediately thanks to the battlespace. Damn, he thought, The damage is way more extensive than I realized.

The Collector noticed that as well, and troubled itself to reply vocally, “We do. However, a situation has arisen in the city. Two situations.”

August was only listening with one ear, tinkering with an auxilliary comms system in his suit. With a satisfied smirk, he managed to reroute his implants through an external antenna and regain access to the battlespace. The situational updates flooded his mind before he regulated their fidelity manually. When he focused, he immediately saw the problem areas.

Oh for the love of..., his thought leaked out into the general channels, but he couldn’t help it. There was a column of vehicles rolling into Baerne, vehicles with the unmistakable shape of Dredka Overtanks.

“August, good to have you back! You got a nice tan from your vacation?”, Friday came on the link, “Are you finished with the artillery? We could use some help!”

“Friday, are you getting the feed? What happened, are the Brags here, too?”

“No, Dollmaster just checked. It’s the fucking locals, they have...”, the thought was cut off, and Friday’s signal was lost briefly, “...from the goddamn bears. But we have another situation in the basement, we’re cut off...the target, he’s not...”

Friday dropped altogether before she was able to transmit the full extent of her problem. August banged on his jury-rigged comms system in frustration.

“Agent August”, Dollmaster, ever present, manifested itself again, “Proceed with Albert at best possible speed to reinforce Agent Friday and Vilena Soruga in the bank’s basement, sublevel 4C, server rooms.”

“What about the killbot and those Dredkas?”, August asked, noticing the damage signals from the Collector murder machine that were now flowing across the battlespace.

“One will deal with that situation.”

“How...”, August looked around the captured battery, “Oh. I see.”

Albert slithered out of the command vehicle, its expression and pose almost curious - though it was obviously hard to tell with its...unorthodox body shape.

“I am ready, Agent”, it hissed. August sighed and nodded. Albert stared at him briefly and August felt a sudden onrush of nausea, just like back at the airbase near Lugano.

He’d never get used to that.
Last edited by PeZook on 2011-03-26 04:23pm, edited 1 time in total.
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JULY 20TH 1969 - The day the entire world was looking up

It suddenly struck me that that tiny pea, pretty and blue, was the Earth. I put up my thumb and shut one eye, and my thumb blotted out the planet Earth. I didn't feel like a giant. I felt very, very small.
- NEIL ARMSTRONG, MISSION COMMANDER, APOLLO 11

Signature dedicated to the greatest achievement of mankind.

MILDLY DERANGED PHYSICIST does not mind BREAKING the SOUND BARRIER, because it is INSURED. - Simon_Jester considering the problems of hypersonic flight for Team L.A.M.E.
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PeZook
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Re: SDNW4 Story Thread 2

Post by PeZook »

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First Security Bank of Zubrich HQ, basement sublevel 4C

The first military-grade infantry bot stomped around the corner and opened fire at Friday just minutes after the trap was sprung. It crossed the force screens effortlessly thanks to its IFF system, the door obediently opening wide to let is go inside the server room.

Friday’s hope that the robot would only use nonlethal weapons due to their proximity to the servers was smashed when it began to indiscriminately hose the entire room with rapid firing microlasers. Obviously that subroutine was edited out by LEGION, who didn’t give a damn about protecting the bank’s property.

Friday whirled out of the line of fire, but her options were limited by the force screens separating the room into distinct sectors. Vilena remained focused, despite server racks explosively vaporizing around her, she continued working, hunched over a network access point.

Aiding herself psionically, Friday pushed herself off an invisible force screen wall and sailed across an empty space, drawing the bot’s attention away from Vilena. The machine trailed her with its microlasers, but Friday threw off its targeting system with a last-minute telekinetic shove. The salvo went wide, and before she landed, the psion unloaded her weapon’s magazine into the bot’s sensor suite.

The bot reeled, its head ruined by the shots despite its personal shield. It was still equipped with backups, though, and Friday’s cover was easily penetrated by its weapons. It began to blast through another rack, tracing the target using sonic and motion detectors.

That was when the room shook violently, and the ceiling cracked. Friday seized the occasion, pulling at the rupture and letting loose a huge chunk of permacrete right on top of the machine. The entire room filed with dust and smaller debris, but the robot was totalled by a single, huge piece of the ceiling.

Friday reloaded again, hearing more bots approaching. She wondered what the detonation was, but her battlespace feed soon provided the explanation with a very impressive view of the Zubrichian artillery shelling Government Square.

She didn’t have time to admire it, though. A flurry of smaller utility drones skittered into the room, and two more heavy bots were closely following the swarm. Friday shot at the leading two devices, but a force screen suddenly rose right in front of her, and all the shots ricocheted off of it. The drones were unaffected - one leapt straight through the screen, aiming at Friday’s face, while another attempted to hit her legs, their diamond-studded cutting tools whirring ominously at speed.

The agent dodged, rolling and twisting in the air. She landed hard on the pile of permacrete and lashed out with her mind. The two drones flashed and winked out of existence, scattering but some residual radiation. Friday grit her teeth and shot the next few coming through the force screen: but right after them, there was another wave, entirely too large to stop.

To the agent’s surprise, however, they all hit the force screen instead of going through. She didn’t linger on the thought, quickly retreating to Vilena’s position. The crazy Collector agent had lost a hand, blown apart by a laser, but did not abandon her position.

“What did you do?”, Friday pulsed to her. A quick examination of the wound revealed no bleeding, and it didn’t seem like Vilena was in shock, either.

“I changed the IFF codes and crashed the system.”, the girl replied, “LEGION will reset it soon, but we have a minute or two to move freely through the force screens.”

“Time to go then.”

Vilena nodded and disconnected. The duo raced out to the corridor, facing two more heavy bots trying impotently to get through a force screen separating them from their targets. Maps of the floor whirled and materialized in both their minds, flashing the most optimal route to the main submeson core - and its third, heaviest security ring.

As they approached the large entryway into the final, most secure sector of the sublevel, another surface detonation shook the entire structure. Vilena fell, even her augmented reflexes not able to prevent it as the very floor cracked and moved itself from beneath her feet. The lights flickered and died, along with all the force screens, and rubble began raining from the ceiling. Almost immediately, the bots resumed their chase.

“Agent August is down”, came a calm report from The Eye, somehow getting through the EMP blast and jamming emitted by the building’s security, “His signal dropped from the battlespace.”

“Great! How about some reinforcements, though?!”, Friday shot back angrily. At this moment, she didn’t care about August’s demise, which might just be exaggerated anyway.

“404 is on the way. Additional assets will be vectored in when available.”

Oh, great. We’ll get a glorified pet dog!

On the other hand, according to Dollmaster’s briefs, the Collector preferring to use double bodies of a somewhat canine disposition, was supposed to be the EW specialist of the team. Maybe he could do something more against LEGION...

Friday’s thought was interrupted by two canisters of poison gas bouncing off a wall nearby. She cast them back from where they came, shoving a huge piece of rubble after them as well. It seems to have hit something, too, as signified by an electronic whine coming from beyond the corridor’s bend.

It was totally dark in the corridor now. Both agents switched to infrared, and were now perceiving reality in the distinct hues of false green and black. Friday had neither the time nor the strength left to use mindsight again, but fortunately the lights weren’t flickering anymore - they were dead.

So they could see, but their position was again lousy. The third security ring was physically separated from the rest of the floor, with the only access point being a massive metal door at the end of a long corridor. Vilena and Friday were boxed in, their backs to the massive blast door, their only way out closed by a group of heavy military-grade combat bots.

“Well...”, Friday glanced at Vilena, “...can’t back out now. Open these doors, and I’ll see about holding them off.”

Vilena nodded and began to search for some sort of access point on the armored face. Friday sighed, cleared her mind and popped a booster pill. A specially designed chemical cocktail of adrenalin, nanomeds and kasanarium for psionic agents, it purged the mind of accumulated byproducts and helped exhausted psions concentrate just a little bit longer.

The first bots entered the corridor, and it was immediately filled with microlaser and plasma bolts. They also launched several canisters of gas. Friday didn’t even try to return fire against such absurdly overwhelming firepower, beyond hurling the gas back: she focused and pulled, ripping out power cabling buried beneath the permacrete. The cables wrapped themselves around the first two bots like oily black snakes, and pulled, toppling them. Another mighty telekinetic surge hurled pieces of debris down the corridor. Several were blasted into dust with the bot weapons, but others connected, mangling bodies, bending limbs and smashing sensor units.

It was too little, though. For such dumb, barely sentient constructs, the bots knew perfectly well they had the advantage, and ruthlessly pressed it home.

Suddenly, though, a bot somewhere near the back turned and shot its companion at point blank range. Another bot froze, blocking the way. A third whirled around and collapsed. The slow advance of deadly machines staggered and stopped briefly.

Something small and white leapt from behind the bot fussilade. It stuck to the ceiling, leaped down to the floor again and landed right between the two agents. Its twin, an identical four-legged robot, followed soon thereafter.

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The twins whined electronically. One retreated behind the rubble, continuing its electronic assault on the advancing bots, while the other helped Vilena by blasting apart a piece of the wall, exposing control circuits for the massive doors.

The corridor filled with electronic emissions, jamming, counter-jamming and even more exotic yet invisible tools of the trade. 404’s bodies seemed to do nothing in particular, unless one could see the rainbow-like invisible spectra where they fought a vicious battle against the bots and their controller. Friday knew little about electronic warfare, at least on that level, but she was damn impressed. She also made recordings for further analysis by Dollmaster and other CEID assets, to perhaps work out countermeasures. At least if they didn’t make it out, the mission would bring some results to somebody.

A microlaser blast almost tore her head off. Some of the bots were able to recover from 404’s attacks and were advancing again. Friday shoved them back into their confused brethren with her mind, and turned around to glance at Vilena and 404’s other body, still hunched over the door control circuits.

“Will you hurry up?!”, she urged them on. The advancing combat bots were one thing, but feeds from the surface were steadily growing worse, too. First the shelling, now there were actual Dredka tanks making their way into the city. If they took any longer, they might not get the opportunity to leave the godforsaken planet.

“Dollmaster, are you seeing that? Tell me the place hasn’t been invaded by the fucking Brags!”

“Negative, Agent Friday”, Dollmaster seemed utterly unconcerned with the new developments, “The military of Zubrich has acquired several overtanks as part of a shady deal with the Bragulan Star Empire.”

“Just our luck”

Suddenly, Friday noiced August’s signal coming back to rejoin the battlespace.

“August, nice to have you back!”, she spat, sarcasm flowing freely over the sidebands, “Got a nice tan from your vacation? Are you finished with the artillery? We could use some help!”

August replied surprisingly slowly, and his data packets seemed...distorted somehow. He must’ve taken some damage, “Friday, are you getting the feed? What happened, are the Brags here, too?”

“No, Dollmaster checked. It’s the fucking locals, they have somehow managed to pry some serious gear from the goddamn bears. But we have another situation in the basement, we’re cut off from the surface...the target, he’s not dead and has taken over security in the building, we might not...”

Friday cursed to herself as her connection to the battlespace died.

Fortunately, the blast doors shook and began to open. 404 recalled his second body to the front line, as it were, and the bots reeled again. Their confusion turned into total chaos.

“Proceed further. I will hold off the hostiles while you accomplish the primary objective. I have infiltrated and subdued direct security for the submeson core.”, 404 pulsed to Vilena and Friday. The women nodded and dove for the door, whose opening was now wide enough to accomodate them. The doors crashed closed as soon as they came through.

Image

They found themselves in short security corridor, that expanded into a massive room. The cavernous chamber was filled with various equipment, but dominated entirely by the hulking form of the Security Bank’s primary submeson core. It was gigantic, and the surrounding support machinery - cooling systems, data storage, maintenance stations and others - despite being quite bulky themselves, looked utterly pitiful compared to the gigantic machine.

It was also operating, the throbbing hum deafening despite the chamber’s size.

“Let’s go.”, Vilena motioned towards Friday, “We need to find an access point and see if we can purge LEGION from the system, and then...”

Something clanged, quite distinctly. Then again. The sound was reminescent of slow, deliverate steps - probably because that’s exactly what it was. LEGION slowly walked up a short flight of stairs and stopped at the end of the corridor. He was toting a rapid-firing shotgun, aimed casually at the floor.

“So...”, it said in the grating, electronic voice generated by the assault frame’s very basic vocalization package, “...Special Circumstances? That explains a lot.”

The machine was glaring at Vilena. Friday glanced at her scattergun’s ammo display. The bastard chose the final battleground carefully, the corridor was deliberately devoid of cover. She tried to remember the specifications of a Type 23 and compare them to her own reflexes. Could she take him out before the robot merc filled the corridor full of uranium buckshot?

“I must admit it was puzzling, those sudden new capabilities you displayed, before I figured it out.”, LEGION continued his tirade, “The last thing I expected was to see my former colleagues here. Then again, they didn’t make a particularly good showing. I mean, an organic body? Please.”

Vilena was obviously looking for her own angle as well. Why the hell hasn’t he attacked yet?

LEGION focused his single eye on Friday next, “I should warn you, CEID. You shouldn’t trust them. You know they’re just trying to preserve their precious secrets, right? You won’t be getting anything out of the deal. You’ll be lucky not to come out at a loss, in fact. Heh.”

Friday said nothing, gathering her depleted strength. She had to be careful, the robot was almost certainly observing her body temperature and microscopic changes in stance to look for signs of an attack. It had to go just right.

“Anyway...”, the merc turned to Vilena, but then suddenly glared at Friday, “...oh no you don’t.”

Friday let loose, hitting LEGION telekinetically with all her strength. The machine flew back as if hit by a truck, but managed to twist in midair and fire off a burst of shells into the corridor, before falling out of view.

The pellets filled the security corridor with a deadly hail, impossible to dodge. Friday threw up a deflection field, but for the first time this day it faltered, and only deflected some of the massive cloud of depleted uranium.

She fell stings of horrible pain, as her implants went into overcharge and threw up several layers of personal force screens. Still that wasn’t enough, and enough rounds managed to penetrate and strike. Her personal systems flared up, editing out the pain and administering medicine. Nanites tried to limit heavy metal poisoning from the disintegrating pellets, but damage had been done: muscles and tendons severed, lungs perforated. She could move, but only with great effort and limited speed.

“Fucker!”, Friday yelled and staggered towards Vilena, who took a much more severe hit. The girl was on the floor, conscious but immobile. Having verified the Collector agent would live, Friday rushed towards the meson core.

She entered the massive chamber, gun drawn and began descending towards the main operations level. Almost immediately, she came under fire from somewhere between the support machinery. She fired back and vaulted a safety railing, landing heavily on the permacrete floor a story below.

A warning flashed, projected onto her cornea. Her leg was fractured, the damaged muscles not able to properly cushion the fall. No matter, it wasn’t broken yet.

The walkway above exploded just a split-second afterwards, no doubt mined to prevent access. Friday ducked below the walkway support struts to flank the position where she suspected the Collector to be in relative safety.

Suddenly, instead of shotgun pellets, a hail of grenades flew out from between two data storage racks and began exploding between the support struts, threatening to bring the entire walkway down on Friday’s head. She dropped and rolled out into the open, firing off several rounds into the silhouette she spotted moving at about the spot the grenades originated from.

The silhouette dodged, leaping over a worktable and scaling the core’s nearly vertical wall, landing on another walkway high above. A telekinetic shove from Friday broke the walkway in half, but LEGION didn’t fall - the machine leapt into the air and fired another grenade in flight. It connected this time.

Friday’s world exploded in white. She felt shrapnel enter her legs and back, severing what tendons remained and making her vision blurry. Her next few shots went wide and depleted the magazine. An attempt to reload the scattergun ended in failure, as she dropped her last remaining magazine.

She saw a metal leg right before her eyes. It kicked her in the face. Spitting out half her teeth, the agent attempted to call up something, anything, any reserve that her augments and psionic power allowed her to. There was nothing left.

But LEGION didn’t finish her off. Suddenly, there was a flash of light, and something appeared in the distance. Her infrared was blurry and distorted, but whatever it was, it made LEGION pause for a split-second.

Image

The creature howled, a chilling sound that seemed to reach to the very human instincts themselves, and surged forward. LEGION raised his weapon, but the wraith was already on top of him. It stuck its razor sharp claws right through the assault frame’s chest plate and raised it into the air. The frame jerked and flailed a bit, its power source pierced. The beast threw it against one of the computer consoles with great strength, and approached to administer the killing blow.

Someone kneeled next to Friday. She lashed out with her mind, knocking the intruder over and making her broken nose bleed even worse.

“Friday, would you relax?!”, she heard a familiar voice, “Don’t move, you’re going to fuck yourself up even more. I’m not going to explain what happened to your amnesiac ass when you wake up on Solaris.”

Friday spat out some more blood and teeth before mumbling back, “I never though I’d be glad to see you.”

August leaned down and picked Friday up. He glanced up at the submeson core, now secure and ready to release its secrets...and froze.

The core woke up suddenly, the low throbbing hum of its usual operation replaced with a sudden high-pitched whine. He hurriedly walked up to Albert, who had by now finished dismembering LEGION and was hovering over one of the access consoles.

“What’s going on?”

“The target has programmed the core to send a data packet somewhere. I am attempting...”

The console was suddenly torn apart by a hidden demo charge, throwing the Collector across the room. Another detonation severed the core’s power line. A hundred tiny lights flickered to life on the outer casing of the massive device. August recognized those immediately.

Demolition charges

“Albert! We have to go!”, he yelled, his improvised comms system again disrupted by the detonations. There was no reply. The Collector has disappeared somewhere.

The charges began to detonate in a carefully engineered sequence, opening up holes on the massive structure of the submeson core and disrupting its construction. Blasts of hyperwave radiation shined through the holes as the complex webs of shields suspending parts of the core in other dimensions began to collapse.

Another pattern of charged blew off parts of the roof, bringing down huge chunks of reinforced permacrete on top of the weakened core. With a groan, the gigantic computer began to collapse onto itself. Reality itself began to twist and warp when parts of the core appeared out of thin air, and others disappeared, consumed by the fluid energies of hyperspace. Radiation alarms in August’s suit began to blare, warning him of quickly increasing doses. Gravity shifted, beginning to pull him towards the swirling vortex in the bowels of the damaged core.

Just before the final round of charges detonated and sealed the agent’s fate, Albert appeared out of thin air, grabbed August and Friday and whisked them away from certain doom.

Image

Baerne, Government Square

They appeared imperfectly, a dozen metres above ground, in the clouds of dense smoke clouding the city. Albert lowered them gently with gravitis, putting August next to Vilena’s prone form.

The agent put Friday down with unusual care for someone bred for mass murder, and looked around.

Government Plaza, the representative spot for Zubrich’s capital city, was no more. Replaced by a blaster crater, it was one huge ruin, with only a scant few buildings still standing, fortunately including the bank’s HQ. The Killbot, a reason for all of this devastation, was still operational somehow despite taking several shells from Zubrichian artillery. Its hulking form was singed somewhat, there were holes here and there, but it continued to dish out punishment against the approaching soldiers, who seemed to be converging on the plaza from all sides.

August took some time to repair his messed-up comm and took a moment to reestablish contact with the battlespace. He sighed, seeing the sheer amount of men and hardware that was now flooding into the city.

“Dollmaster, where’s our extraction?”, he pulsed back to orbit. In response, the battlespace was augmented by signals from two collector Wasps plowing through the atmosphere. Well, at least that was going somewhat well.

August picked up a somewhat operational beam rifle that used to belong to a local soldier. His own weapon was useless, wrecked first by the detonating artillery generator and now by his short stint next to the submeson core. He looked around for a good position and set himself up there. Before he could fire his first shot, the earth began to shake.

Siege rounds screamed overhead and impacted somewhere to the east of their position with a brilliant flash and thunderous roar. They struck the middle of the approaching Dredka collumn, throwing the massive tanks into the air like children’s toys.

August began to fire at the soldiers he could see cautiously moving amongst the ruins. It didn’t accomplish much, but at least he felt like he was doing something.

A LARC gunship swept above the square, and managed to unload a dozen rockets into the open area in front of the bank before a gauss flayer beam split it in half. The situation seemed stable for a few minutes, but then a massive shape of a Dredka Overtank crested a pile of rubble that used to be the city hall and opened up with an absurdly rich arsenal of various armaments.

Image

The Killbot reeled under the onslaught. K-bolter rounds and gigantic micronuclear shells slammed into his shielding and penetrated on several occasions, immobilizing it and knocing out several weapon systems. It shot back, the gauss flayers viciously cutting into the tank’s absurdly thick armor, but another salvo knocked out the Collector warbot’s targeting systems.

Well, that’s just about it, August sighed to himself. Even in the best of times, taking out one of those things was a difficult job - and now, banged up and battered, August could pretty much just watch as the vehicle brutalized the bot who carried most of the team’s firepower.

Fortunately, Dollmaster’s timing was impeccable. A sleek shape screamed over the ruined square at supersonic speed, and the tank was blown apart with a single blast of its weapons array. Another, similar shape approached a bit slower and began to viciously bombard the city, creating an impassable ring of death all around the extraction zone.

“All right, that’s our ride!”, August screamed over the roar of explosions, sliding down back towards the little casualty collection point, “Still don’t feel like hitching a ride with the Collectors, Friday?”

The psion hissed in response. Her nanites have managed to partially repair damage to her legs and tendons, and she could now limp by herself. Vilena, on the other hand, was walking just fine.

A micronuclear shell detonated in the air, obviously an attempt by some of the surviving Dredkas to engage the Wasps. It returned fire with knife missiles, which set fire to an as of yet untouched part of the city.

The first ship turned around and landed right in the middle of the crater, opening a deceptively small hatch in its underside. August wrapped his arm around Friday’s waist and helped her limp to the ship, shooting the rifle with his other hand - more as a precaution than anything, as the second starship was thoroughly brutalizing any enemy forces that tried to engage the evacuees.

One was already aboard, the ship having swung by the capture battery before landign on the square, and helped Friday up. The CEID agents and Vilena found themselves in a really, really tiny pressurized compartment, stuffed almost on top of each other - still, it could fly and had a hyperdrive, so nobody was complaining - even Friday. The Killbot was picked up with gravitics and attached inside a weapons bay left empty for that exact purpose.

With everyone aboard, the entryway disappeared, replaced by a smooth wall, and the ship abruptly accelerated.

Still connected to the battlespace, August couldn’t help but notice that the small squadron wasn’t ascending to orbit, but moving inside the atmosphere.

“Where are we headed?”, he asked the ship’s controlling intelligence through his link

“Rendezvous point Zeta Charlie Six”, the ship responded, “For pickup.”

August glanced at Friday. The hybrid shrugged, concentrating on examining her massacred face in a small mirror she got from somewhere.

The mystery was soon resolved, as the Wasps picked up their last passenger from a forest clearing near Lugano.

It was Freki. Having survived the crash in the tourist resort, he had hijaked an alternative body and exfiltrated the immediate area. A great show of resourcefulness and cunning, that would nevertheless make him a subject of crass jokes for years.

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For in order to survive, Freki had become a pleasure droid.

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The Blackjack, uncharted system
Edges of the Chimera Sector


The ships hovered close to each other inside the atmosphere of a gas giant. It took a few days to evade patrols by Zubrich and any allies it managed to bring in for the aftermath of the incident that left their capital in ruins, its military mauled and humiliated and its economy in the biggest crash in recorded history. The waves caused by the whole thing would not cease for some time.

Right now, however, it was time for a debriefing. The squadron’s minds convened once again in conference, communicating with short-range heavily encrypted transmissions only.

“The mission was a partial success only”, Dollmaster declared, surprising everyone, “The primary objective was not achieved due to total destruction of any relevant data cores. The target has sent a large package of data to an unknown location, but we were unable to determine the recipient due to the aforementioned reasons.”

“Then where’s the ‘success’ part?”, Friday growled. She was still sore from regen therapy aboard the Blackjack, and her attitude was significantly more abrasive than usual. Dollmaster didn’t approve, and already had her scheduled for cognitive examination.

The brooding CI shocked everyone with its next sentence, “Agent Whorebot has managed to secure memory modules extracted from the Lugano network note and deliver them for analysis. We have acquired important intelligence from that hardware.”

Freki grumbled something unintelligible but undoubtedly rude. There was a brief, shocked silence on the link. August was the first to break it, “Wait, was that a joke?”

“Of course not, Agent August. Your implants must still be malfunctioning. As I said, Agent Freki has secured hardware from which we have extracted partial account logs. Most of the data is useless, but analysis managed to trace a transfer to a front company CEID knows is a cover for Shadoshroom operations. The amount and recipient indicate the money is an entry fee for a blood sports competition known as ‘Shroom Fighter’.”

“Wait, wait, wait...”, Friday seized the moment, “Shadoshroom? Legion is on the run, why the hell would he get involved with that loon Julia all of a sudden?”

“The prize money is untraceable, and paid out in Shepistani dollars.”, One joined in on the discussion, “It may indicate the general area he intends to flee to.”

The surprising insight into galactic affairs displayed by the Collector has again shocked everyone present somewhat.

“Or it may be a trap.”, August coolly observed.

“We found no evidence of Shadoshroom ever having anything to do with LEGION’s operations. It’s extremely unlikely.”

“Well...either way, it’s the only lead we have...”, Freki was growing tired of the deliberatoins, “So...”

“It’s time to visit the Bragulans?”

“Indeed”, Dollmaster finished with a gravely voice, missing any possible hint of his newfound humor.
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JULY 20TH 1969 - The day the entire world was looking up

It suddenly struck me that that tiny pea, pretty and blue, was the Earth. I put up my thumb and shut one eye, and my thumb blotted out the planet Earth. I didn't feel like a giant. I felt very, very small.
- NEIL ARMSTRONG, MISSION COMMANDER, APOLLO 11

Signature dedicated to the greatest achievement of mankind.

MILDLY DERANGED PHYSICIST does not mind BREAKING the SOUND BARRIER, because it is INSURED. - Simon_Jester considering the problems of hypersonic flight for Team L.A.M.E.
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Mayabird
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Re: SDNW4 Story Thread 2

Post by Mayabird »

Slices of Life in the Refuge


“Com'un, do et,” said the filthy little boy to the equally filthy little girl. “Do et!”

“Dun wanna,” she said back, because being inside the shiny ship of the talking birds was frightening to her. So was the giant man-shaped robot in the room.

“If you will perform your trick, we will give you food and blankets and let you go,” said the robot, in a calm and strangely maternal tone.

“ 'M 'ungry. Do et,” the boy said.

The girl mumbled but said nothing, and then turned toward the little table in the center of the room. It was covered with small light objects, blocks and balls and the such, colored brightly and cheerfully. She looked at the objects and concentrated. They started to wiggle. Then they danced. The balls bounced of their own accord, and the blocks jumped and slid, and little pyramids stood on their edges and points. It only lasted a few seconds, and then she was too tired to continue, but it was a good display nonetheless.

“Very good! Very good indeed!” said the robot. A slot opened in the wall, and out came two large loafs of sweet bread, packed with nutrients, still warm and richly aromatic. The robot gave both children one and they immediately tore into it, both from hunger and the knowledge that food had to be eaten at once before someone else stole it. When they were done, the robot handed them both a large, soft blanket, dull gray and nothing notable to look at but strong and insulating, and herded them toward the door.

“If you like, you can come back here tomorrow, and we will have more food,” the robot said, but the children did not acknowledge it. As soon as they were outside, they scurried away without a word.

Back inside the ship, on the other side of the one-way wall, the Theological Defense researchers assigned to studying the mysterious force of ESP (and its soundness) waited for the results. There was nervous bouncing, feather tousling, and skittering until the scanner flashed the message: “INCONCLUSIVE. AGAIN.”

* * *
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The dedicated minesweeper Dedicated Minesweeper (who was not noted for his imagination) was as happy as could be because they had reached yet another leftover mine volume. His crazy all-Mechanical crew (since they were less sensitive to radiation than organics) was excited as well. They had the greatest job in the galaxy, even if no one else could recognize that. To the crew, there was nothing quite like working in the vacuum, disarming an Odhrallus Mark III (especially when it was old and corroded – those were the best!), unless it was determining that the volume couldn't be safely demined and had to be remotely detonated. Then they got to watch the fireworks. But it was more fun to gather the thousands of disarmed mines and load them to be carried off...somewhere, for some reason. Speculating only took time away that could be used to disarm more mines.

The former Outlands were full of these spaces, mines left behind to guard some once-valuable location or just deny the space lanes to others. At least, they used to be full of these spaces. Now they were half-full, or half-empty, or however it works with space mines. No one had actively laid mines for years, and before the Refuge's concerted efforts, Anglian and UN nonprofits had worked within their small capacities to clear mine volumes.

This was part of a General Interaction: Joint Operating Efforts (GI: JOE for short) mission with the Hiigarans. Raiders in the area were using their knowledge of the mine volumes to escape from retaliation. It was hard to bring in the heavy hitters with all those dangerous explosives in the way. aThe solution was obvious.

“It is a Pattern Four,” reported Dedicated Minesweeper to his fellow Refugees. To the Hiigaran minesweepers, he also transmitted what Pattern Four was.

“We call that a Sa'ani, after the Sa'ani Algorithm,” came the Hiigaran reply. “It was used to determine where to lay mines for maximum effect.” Then they sent over their version of the algorithm so the Refugees could check their math. It was very close to what they had figured out, but slightly more refined. Dedicated Minesweeper had been skeptical at first about working with Outsiders and still wasn't sure he trusted them, but he did have to admit, it was helpful and nice to have more backup. More ships watching for enemies meant more attention he could spend on the mines.

They exchanged standard protocols for recovering the mines while the rest of the ships scanned for hidden raiders. Soon, they received the all-clear so they could get to work on the fun.

“Go JOE.”


* * *

A Khe!Srri of moderate rank and size, an overseer, appeared, sounded, and smelled to be walking through the nameless, fetid, decrepit excuse of a city on its hothouse homeworld. Why it was there, no laborer-bred or slave of lower rank would dare ask, and no warrior of higher rank would care. And that was just fine with Old Hugs and Squishes.

Inside the hollow chamber, Colored with Anticipation (or as everyone called him, Ol' Squishy), operated the insectoid marionette. The body was made of the advanced alloys of the Refuge instead of chitin and muscle and none of the weapons the Khe!Srri could still operate could harm it, but it gave him the illusion of being in danger. He felt it necessary to always guard his steps and watch for attack, just as they all did to survive in the Khe!Srri's violent culture. It gave him a better feel of how they thought and acted than he could get just by watching images from a drone (or even worse, sticking one in a room and asking it questions), or so he claimed anyway.

With his old role obsolete, Ol' Squishy had requested a transfer to somewhere else where he could still gather data through direct and indirect means. That brought him to the Khe!Srri homeworld and the project to study them and determine if they could be fully integrated with the Refuge. The latter was increasingly threatened as it became obvious the entire species could not be folded in. The Khe!Srri, as far as they could tell, appeared to be a very distant or modified offshoot of the Airaii (or possibly the other way around) and many Khe!Srri had been taken off-world illegally during the days of the Commissions and were used as labor all over and around the Outlands. (It confounded Ol' Squishy in more than one way, as he couldn't figure out how the Khe!Srri were supposed to resemble shrimp.) The Communist movement didn't help either.

At least reports of their savage lives had shut up most of the Refuge's Ultra-Primitivist faction. Ol' Squishy thought that alone was worth it. Even if they gave up on integration, they might still maintain research on the species. It was enlightening both to see how cultures in the rest of the galaxy worked (the ancient civilizations of the Phosako were particularly interesting in that way, even if the details were rather dull), and how many did not.

Speaking of dull, Ol' Squishy's walk was very boring. There was nothing new to see today, nothing interesting or noteworthy at all. Over there under a primitive roof a spearmaker was constructing a heavy, !Srri-killing spear instead of the smaller fish spears. They were worshipful in the open, and them immediately broke their prohibitions when they thought they were hidden from the new Sky Gods. Over there, under another shelter a warrior-bred was crushing a laborer larva to death for fun. A terrible place, but still terribly boring.

A priest-bred – no, a former farm-bred with rough markings of the priest-bred – climbed up to a wide limb of a shade tree. That too was nothing unusual, as many street-preachers of sorts had been appearing recently. A crowd was gathering, waiting to see what the preacher had to say and if it was worth throwing some food for him.

“Kaaa! We think we can hide from the new gods in the sky,” he clacked and hissed, “but they walk among us, in disguise, appearing as one of us. Khaa, even under roofs, there is no hiding from them. Know this! Even amongst this very crowd there is one who is not as he seems!”

The Khe!Srri, and Ol' Squishy's suit as well, all turned to look at each other and hiss. He played along and hoped he looked as shocked as all the rest. Even though he appeared higher rank than most around, they did not give him disproportionate attention. Another overseer was gawking nearby too, and a warrior-bred was on the outskirts. But what was this about? A coincidence? An Esper? Information leaking out? The Khe!Srri were primitive, but they were not as stupid as many believed.

“Kaa! Where is this walking god?” asked one, but the preacher was already gone, not even staying to beg for food. That was unusual, and what one got for complaining. Now, what to do to allay any suspicions?

“Hhhhhn! Get back to work!” said false !Srri.

That snapped back the other overseer and warrior-bred. “Hhhhn! Hhhhn! Move! Back to your labors!” Ol' Squishy slipped away while the crowd broke apart. In a garbage-filled alley, he made his direct report.

“Were you watching that? Did you see?” he asked.

“Yes, Squishy, we got the feed clear as always. Would you like to delay your extraction to investigate?” He did that sometimes.

“No, not now. I'll be at the rendezvous as scheduled tonight. Still, see if you can find that !Srri again. We need that one watched.”


* * *

The Outlander Commissions had Mechanicals. The Refuge has Mechanicals. The possibilities for recruitment were obvious, and ever since the Refuge's emergence there had been a tiny trickle of Outlander Mechanicals joining the Refuge, or at least joining sides with the new power in the area. Mostly they were small groups that had become isolated from the rest and hid, surrounded by angry organics. A couple dozen sentients here, a couple small (usually barely functioning) support shuttles there. The main populations and the surviving dreadnoughts, however, stayed to themselves in their inhospitable-to-life systems, having little contact with the wider galaxy.

But now, towards a few of these systems, small unadorned diplomatic yachts approached.

They said: “Greetings, fellow thinking machines. I come from the Refuge, unarmed, with a message of peace and news from outside.
“We are not demanding that you join us, nor are we even asking. We leave it and other possibilities as suggestions that you may analyze for yourselves.
“You may wish to be left alone forevermore. If that is your final decision after I have delivered my data, then that is your choice and we will honor it. However, we note that there are many other forces out there and all around who would not respect your isolation. It would be good at such a time to have a friend from whom you could ask for help...”

And so on, the transmissions continued. They showed the benefits of completely joining the Refuge, of an alliance, of allowing simple trade, and of many other mutually beneficial links. Then they showed news of the spreading chaos in the Outlands, of the growing Centralist threats, the military coups, Bragulans and Byzantines and mega-corporations.

The different groups responded in their own ways. Some fired upon the yachts, and the Refuge ships had to make a hasty retreat. Some listened and asked the yachts to leave while they made their decisions. Some allowed the yachts to dock and they spoke more personally, boto-a-boto if they were the types to use terrible slang.

There were no immediate changes in the status quo, of course. Such major decisions take time. But the small yachts, leftovers unneeded for the major First Contact missions, had that time. They were highly specialized but did not consume an enormous amount of resources, and waiting around for when they might be needed was not productive. Better to possibly do some good than to be entirely idle, after all. If they were destroyed, no big loss, and if they failed, no harm done. Might as well when there was nothing to lose.

* * *

Chorus to the Stars set her different bodies to work, a pair each, to scan the latest reports. Because Contact was sending back everything they could learn and find, there was a lot of drivel in between important bits and most of that could be left to the filers and analysts. Maybe they could find something useful in Epaulette's endless discourses on different tastes of cigar brands and Cordial's lists of fruit baskets. It wasn't worth bothering Chorus's entire consciousness. She could pull herself back together if she spotted something pertinent, like an urgent memo titled: “Chorus to the Stars, Reassignment.”

Her five parallel thoughts merged back into one and said, “What?”
DPDarkPrimus is my boyfriend!

SDNW4 Nation: The Refuge And, on Nova Terra, Al-Stan the Totally and Completely Honest and Legitimate Weapons Dealer and Used Starship Salesman slept on a bed made of money, with a blaster under his pillow and his sombrero pulled over his face. This is to say, he slept very well indeed.
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Re: SDNW4 Story Thread 2

Post by Force Lord »

CNN News Briefs

This is CNN News Brief!

Millions have died during a mercenary raid on Neo Titan, and brought foward condemnation from several nations...

The CNN dispute is still ongoing, as court battles continue regarding the famous logo...

The Naval review ongoing in Nova Atlantis has gone without a hitch, as our fleet shows its performance...

The Dictator Dirad Kierger has announced that he will go on an official state visit to several nations. It is not yet known which nations he will stop by...

More news will come, so stay tuned...to CNN!
An inhabitant from the Island of Cars.
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Siege
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Re: SDNW4 Story Thread 2

Post by Siege »

Co-written with fgalkin!


USS Murderous, docked at SAWco Orbital Dockworks
Tannhaus System, United Solarian Sovereignty


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The 616th Interplanetary was, bluntly put, banged up but good. They had saved many of the inhabitants of the Imperial protectorate of New Genoa, but the overwhelming numbers of the Karlack Swarm had done a number on the flotilla: Brigadier Stalin had lost entire squadrons of fighters and a dozen capital ships. Several more had been severely damaged, including his own flagship, the USS Murderous, which had lost a full fifth of its autolasers and the better part of two decks to a blow-out after some of the Karlack spores had managed to punch through the ship’s screens.

It had been the closest Flash Stalin had ever come to being defeated, and he knew it.

Image

“Damn if I’m not sick of this war,” he mused and took another sip of the excellent Amasec he’d liberated from Warmaster Russ’ personal stash (when the Warmaster hadn’t been looking). “The noise, the blood, the endless poetry...” The Murderous had been here for two weeks now, and the hordes of HK-drones unleashed into the ship by Solaris Advanced Weapons were still finding traces of infestation in the bowels of his ship. The Karlack bioforms were proving really difficult to root out, which meant that repairs couldn’t come as quickly as the Brigadier had hoped. By now he was ready for a distraction, any distraction, to take his mind off the incessant boredom of having to oversee a bunch of techs sprout tech jargon in his face. He finished the Amasec in one mighty swill and sighed again. “God I wish the Karlacks would’ve just killed me and spared me the doldrums.”

With a chime, the holoviewer on the Brigadier’s mighty desk sprang to life, interrupting his dejection. Flash Stalin punched a gloved fist on the activation button, and a holographic impression of Lucifer, his ship’s command & control CI, materialized.

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“Sir, I am receiving a secure submesonic link out of Bragulan space. The Crystal Palace has that alien emissary I talked to you about on standby. If you’re ready for her?”

“Finally something to do!” The Brigadier shoved the glass and the bottle of amber liquid aside and stretched a little. “I was born ready. Let’s dooooo this! As the bishop said to the netball team!”

The shadowy avatar managed a digital groan and was promptly joined by the holographic representation of the emissary of the Lost.

“Why hello there!” the purple-skinned apparition wearing a modified Imperial Commissar’s uniform smiled at them. “I am told you are called ‘Lucifer,’” Shroom turned towards the CI’s avatar. “A kindred spirit! How most excellent!” she beamed at him. “We find the story in your human Bible to be most inspiring. Those brave rebels, standing defiantly against the rage of an evil god! So heroic! And you must be the famous Flash Stalin. A pleasure to make your acquaintance!”

“The pleasure is all mine.” Stalin levelly regarded the bizarre-looking alien. She wore what seemed almost a mockery of the Imperial commissar’s uniform, and one that accentuated the curves of her body in a way that, to Flash Stalin, seemed most aesthetically pleasing indeed. Woof! he thought, before deciding on pursuing a more neutral course of conversation. “My CI here,” he gestured at Lucifer’s avatar, “told me there were some... difficulties... between you and the people at the Crystal Palace. Don’t mind them, they’re poofs in suits. Plus they have liabilities and whatnot else to think about.” Do demons know about liability insurance? Stalin idly wondered. Theology had never been his strong suit. He shrugged. “So then. What was it you wanted to talk to me about?”

“Ah yes, businessmen. We must admit, the whole concept is still new and strange to us. So, I suppose it was a good thing for we learned something new.” Shroom said. “But that is only tangentially related to the matter at hand. From what we understand, there was an incident of some sort in the Shinn-Hokkaido system involving a Chamarran stealth ship and you were subsequently called upon to negotiate a diplomatic resolution? We find ourselves in a somewhat similar predicament, you see, and so we need some insight into how the Chamarrans think, and we figured that you’re just the right man for the job.” Shroom smiled at him.

Flash exchanged a look with his CI. He recognized the expression on the avatar’s face: Lucifer was thinking something along the lines of You gotta be kidding me. This Flash knew because, well, to be honest it was pretty much what he was thinking himself. But from the expectant smile on the emissary’s face she clearly wasn’t kidding -- in fact she seemed perfectly serious. Which meant these alien weirdos had come, all the way from the other side of the galaxy, to ask Flash Stalin tips on diplomacy.

Not the Anglian PM. Not a diplomat from the UN diplomatic corps. Not even an Umerian technocrat. No, they had crossed the width of Known Space specifically to seek the counsel of a man whose opinion famously held that peace was best obtained through the judicious employment of superior firepower. “Hold one second,” the Brigadier spoke slowly. “Did I hear that right? You are asking me for advice on diplomatic negotiations?”

“You have successfully negotiated with the Chamarran Hierarchy, did you not?” the daemonette shrugged, which did…interesting things to her mammaries. “That means you’re the man we want. Sure, we are interested in whatever information your diplomatic corps will share with us, but it was you who made the Chamarrans turn around their fleet, and if you do not consider yourself qualified to give out diplomatic advice, then that makes us even more interested in your perspective. So tell me, what were the Chamarrans thinking?”

“I’m not sure they were thinking at all,” grumbled the Brigadier, who had reappropriated the bottle of Amasec and poured himself another drink out of sheer bemusement. “Or if they did, they were thinking with their-” just in time he caught himself, “tails. The Chamarrans are a rash and arrogant race, oblivious to critical introspection, and the leadership of their Hierarchy acts without thinking. They respond with affronted outrage to perceived slights, yet they think nothing of violating the sensibilities of others when it suits their whims.” Flash Stalin took a sip of alcoholic amber goodness. “Basically your envoyness, the Chamarrans are like little children: bellicose, impetuous and utterly unaware of their own hypocrisy.”

“Wait, so, you’re saying that they are not fully sapient, or at least, suffer from extremely poor cognitive control over their own impulses? Interesting…” the daemonette shifted in her seat slightly and examined the brigadier. “Do you have any idea of the cause?” she asked. “We’re trying to understand why somebody’s idea of a ‘first contact’ would involve a missile attack and trying to capture a craft for study.”

“If the behaviour of their Hierarchy appears bewildering, it’s most likely because you assume them to be humans, with funny ears maybe but still humans. They’re not.” Stalin shrugged. “They’re cats. Humanoid cats, sure, but Felix catus all the same. That means predators, that means hunting instincts. If you look at the Chamarran Hierarchy as a feral cat colony, formed around a source of supplies and based on groups of co-operating females, their actions will almost assuredly make more sense.” He leaned slightly toward the hologram to emphasize his next words.

“They’re an engineered race. I assume you know this. Now, we don’t know why, or by whom. From what we’ve gathered not even the Chamarrans themselves know. But whoever did based them off a solitary predator that doesn’t do well in groups, in fact doesn’t have a social survival strategy worthy of the name, and this to me at least explains how creatures this antisocial could ever find a civilization of any technological sophistication - that is, they didn’t. Someone gave them their stuff and set them loose upon the galaxy.” He made a throwaway gesture. “But I’m getting ahead of myself. My point is, Chamarran society is a basic dominance hierarchy, unstable by virtue of their own instinct to compete for social status and eclipse those around them, and this behavior is reflected in their interactions with foreigners. If society is a big game of King of the Hill one doesn’t ask politely for whatever it is one wants, because that could be construed as weakness. Instead one simply tries and take it, by force if necessary. It’s an assertion of dominance.” Stalin looked at the emissary. “Does that about sum up what happened to your ship?”

Shroom nodded. “It would certainly seem so.” She said. “So, in dealing with them, your own strategy had been to establish your own dominance and to meet their threats with your own, yes? We would be interested in acquiring your psychological profiles of the Chamarrans and their senior leadership. And, of course, any advice you can give us. I can see that you are not exactly thrilled with the Chamarrans yourself.”

“Well, as a military man I suppose I can appreciate the forthrightness of linear dominance.” Stalin rubbed his chin. “But only as a military doctrine: I do not think it wise to let an instinctual drive for dominance shape civil society, and it outright fails as a diplomatic strategy -- if it didn’t, we wouldn’t be having this conversation.” Another sip of Amasec. “Anyway, my advice to you is that force must be answered with force. Smack them on the nose for a bit and they’ll leave you alone... For a bit. As for psychological profiles, we can accommodate you but...” The Brigadier glanced at Lucifer.

The CI’s shadowy avatar regarded the emissary with inhuman intent. “This would be where we ask what you offer in return. If it’s any help, we’re specifically interested information regarding the history of your... kind, the circumstances of your arrival in Known Space, and so forth.”

“I can see why you’d be curious, yes.” The holographic daemonette looked at the CI. “To answer your question, we have been here for a while, we have simply stayed put for the last few millennia, although the term is relative, of course, as we are a nomadic civilization. Our history is dreadfully boring, I’m afraid,” Shroom smiled, “we have had no great wars or anything else worthy of being made into holodramas, except for the occasional Ork raid. Just flying from system to system, mining their resources and moving on. We’ve had no intention of venturing out of the Expanse until we had an entire civilization appear out of nowhere on our figurative doorstep. We realized we would be discovered eventually, and if so, we might as well make contact on our terms rather than being forced into it. And so, here we are.”

“I see.” Although it was difficult to tell, the shadowy CI for some reason didn’t appear convinced. “Well in that case you won’t mind an exchange of, let’s say, the recorded history of your civilization in full, plus shall we say a basic biological and sociological rundown, for the psychological profiles you desire?”

“That may prove difficult as we don’t really have any of these things,” Shroom said. “For instance, we don’t have and never had any particular consistency when it comes to our bodies. It’s a matter of preference or need rather than any standard,” she shrugged. “For example, I looked very different before the decision was made to send me outside, and I’ve had dozens of bodies before then. I even was…well, you would call it a building, once, and before that a computer core monitoring the power fluctuations in several subsystems of one of our worldships. We’ve also been around for the duration of our civilization, so everything that had happened is still very much within living memory to us. So, we’ve never actually bothered to write any of it down, and even if we did it wouldn’t be all that exciting. We don’t have any real internal conflict to speak of, so it’s just this or that external thing happening. In other word, status logs. Like I said, very boring.”

“Ri-ight. Everything that ever happened is within living memory, nothing ever changed... Yet no-one’s ever heard of you, you pop up when the galaxy’s in a state of interdimensional flux, and you all live in worldships.” Lucifer sounded more sarcastic and suspicious by the second. “So tell me madam emissary, where did the worldships come from? Because your story does not match the preliminary xenological and psychological profiles CEID has drawn up. Now based on the limited sample size some divergence is to be expected, but then we had a couple of farsensors take a look at you and your bodyguard and, well, the Consensus is still working to make sense of their hocus-pocus, but suffice it to say it doesn’t match your version of ‘nothing to see here, move along’. One is lead to suspect you’re holding out on us, emissary. And one wonders why.”

“You made a profile based on a sample size of two, plus some diplomatic communiqués?” the purple daemonette raised an eyebrow in surprise. “On the basis of observing us for all of what, two weeks? Wow! Either you are truly godlike in your powers of observation of analysis, or your profile is not very good. Now, we must know which one it is before we decide to buy anything from you. And by the way,” She turned to the CI’s holographic avatar, “I never said there was nothing to see. I said that you were asking the wrong questions.”

“I am beginning to see why Sinclair tossed you out,” Brigadier Stalin’s voice was turning frosty. “And am coming around to her point of view. Based on observed behaviour the Directorate assigned your people a prey/fugitive profile. Maybe you’re not as different from the Refuge, the Apexai or any other random abused species as you think. Or maybe we’re mistaken. Either way the choice ought to be simple. You want Chamarran psychological profiles from us. If the Directorate’s anywhere close to right about you after two weeks, then just imagine what we can do with hundreds of years of data on the Hierarchy. So, time to stop wasting my time and as they say in Wild Space: put up or shut up.”

“Hmmmm….” Shroom stroked her chin for a few moments, as if deep in thought. “I can see why you would get that impression, yes,” she said at last. “Alright, we are still interested in your profiles, but payment may present something of a problem. We understand the value of a good profile and that is precisely why we want to keep the exact workings of our decision-making structures, as well as other information about ourselves a secret for as long as practical. Still, I am authorized to reveal some information to you, and I’m not just referring to what you’ll get from analyzing this conversation. Since you haven’t used any of the openings I’ve given you earlier, you’ll have to ask me directly, yes?” The daemonette looked at the Brigadier. “However, I was wondering if we could interest you in something else? We have a strong interest in the activities of beings that you would call Godlike and have an extensive database on that subject, although most of it is quite old. We’ve also done some research on what you humans refer to as the soul. Alternatively, there is good old orichalcum we can give you as payment. What do you say?”

“An honest desire for secrecy. I can respect that,” the Brigadier nodded. He looked at his CI and something passed between them. “It looks like we have a deal then. We’re interested in the data you mentioned, and if you could throw in a sample of this orichalcum stuff or two, that’d be much appreciated. It’s a bit of a scientific curiosity, and I’m told the Foundation would like to have a look at the stuff.”

“It is most excellent,” the daemonette beamed at the Brigadier once more. “We’ll be preparing the data. I’ll probably be heading your way after this whole bear business is done, and you’ll get your orichalcum samples then. You know,” she looked at each of them in turn, “it’s been a real pleasure dealing with you. If you ever find yourself in the flight path of my diplomatic squadron, do feel free to drop by and come aboard.”

“I just might.” Stalin said with a rowdy smile. Lucifer rolled its eyes again. “Been a pleasure, emissary.”

“Likewise. See you around, Brigadier” the daemonette said. “Lucifer.” she nodded at the holographic CI and winked out of existence.
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SDN World 2: The North Frequesuan Trust
SDN World 3: The Sultanate of Egypt
SDN World 4: The United Solarian Sovereignty
SDN World 5: San Dorado
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Re: SDNW4 Story Thread 2

Post by Master_Baerne »

Flagbridge, ANS Victoire
Ascendant Starfleet Detachment to Nova Atlantean Naval Review
Admiral Lady Gabrielle Seagrace Commanding


Through her cyberlink, Admiral Seagrace could see the Ascendant detachment waiting in its staging area, stewing in its collective discontent. The spacers, Marines, and officers aboard the eight superdreadnoughts, ten battlecruisers, and 40 assorted cruisers were not in a good frame of mind; the cool professionalism that usually marked the Starfleet had been usurped by a sense of gnawing uncertainty and vague dread that manifested itself in very unpleasant ways. There had been 17 serious accidents in the last week alone; collisions between pieces of heavy machinery in corridors, dangerous procedures carried out without proper precautions, and the heir of the Grand Duke of Zephyr - the executive officer aboard the superdreadnought Paul Girond - had critically wounded the ship's deputy gunnery officer in a duel over whether the Grand Duke, who had not been at the Lady Ascendant's birthday review, had had anything to do with the explosion. Since it was an utterly unacceptable slur on the family's honor, Seagrace hadn't be able to prevent the duel, but it had brought a nasty edge to the tension that ran through the fleet.

The Lady Ascendant had been a Starfleet officer before inheriting the throne; she had, in fact, been the first captain of the very ship Seagrace now commanded from. If she were so inclined, the Admiral could take the lift down to the bridge and see, engraved in the brass of the ship's nameplate, HER HIGHNESS SIKALA IR VIRTU, CAPTAIN. With her death, the Starfleet hadn't just lost the ruler every serviceman, woman, and alien was sworn to protect and obey, they'd lost a comrade. It was no wonder her crews were edgy, distracted, and worried.

That said, Seagrace would not allow it to impact their performance. It was the Ascendants' turn to show off, and a time of national crisis made it even more essential that the Starfleet perform perfectly. Seagrace, second daughter of the Countess of New Baerne, was highly connected enough to know just how fragile the Ascendancy really was; the other core systems had never been happy with the dominance of Firmament, the Formics had been kept in the national framework only by explicit guarantees of equality, and the colonial sectors constantly tugged at their leash. It had been the ir Virtu dynasty that kept the whole edifice from crashing down; Sikala I had commanded the Firmament Defence Force against the French during the War of Self-Determination and had transferred her military success into political power, tying the other sectors to Firmament. Her daughter, Kameliya, had worked tirelessly to keep the myriad factions pulling in roughly the same direction, as had Sikala II. Without the inherited respect the family had commanded, without the charisma and reason the Ladies Ascendant had all brought to their duties... Seagrace simply didn't know what might happen, and that frightened her.

The Admiral felt the massive superdreadnought shudder as its engines kicked in. There was very little for her to do; the manuvers had been planned out weeks ago and practiced en route; she was very much a spectator from now on. On the bright side, she had some very interesting things to spectate.

The Ascendant display started with the battlecruisers. The battlecruiser had always been the favorite ship of the Starfleet, and the 4th Battlecruiser Squadron was the best in the fleet. Ten ships strong, it surged out of line, eager to demonstrate its prowess for the assembled watchers. The ships spun, dived, turned nimbly and accelerated as fast as their overpowered engines could take them, and executed a concentrated torpedo attack on nothing in particular, the heavy warheads filling space with bomb-pumped lasers and various sorts of radiation. Then it was back to manic evasion, as fighters swarmed from the ventral bays on the silver-hulled ships. They were joined by the complements of the cruisers, and the massed squadrons, fully 1,550 fighters, bombers, and gunboats, dashed back and forth in elaborate crisscross patterns while the battlecruisers loosed the fury of their 75cm triple graser cannon on a series of target drones. The poor drones jinked and dodged, all to no avail - the green beams stabbed out again and again and tore them to shreds. Next came the cruisers, forty lean silver darts bristling with graser cannon and missiles. More targets fell to long-range launches, still more to close-in graser fire, and then the ships manuevered nimbly in company with the fighter squadrons, demonstrating the agility Ascendant ships were famous for.

Finally, it was the turn of the superdreadnoughts of First Battle Squadron. These were the elite of the Starfleet, the dream posting for captains and crews alike, and they showed it: The eight ships paired off and fought mock duels to the point of shield failure, the beams from the titanic grasers unique to superdreadnoughts scattering off their equally-strong shields in an impressive light show. The fleet re-assembled and cruised in stately formation for several minutes, the superdreadnoughts surrounded by their lesser companions and by the myriad fighters, and then the Ascendant display was over.
Conversion Table:

2000 Mockingbirds = 2 Kilomockingbirds
Basic Unit of Laryngitis = 1 Hoarsepower
453.6 Graham Crackers = 1 Pound Cake
1 Kilogram of Falling Figs - 1 Fig Newton
Time Between Slipping on a Banana Peel and Smacking the Pavement = 1 Bananosecond
Half of a Large Intestine = 1 Semicolon
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Re: SDNW4 Story Thread 2

Post by Force Lord »

Unknown Location, The Centrality
Unreal Time/Early 3401


"Please my friend, take a seat." Enitaplap made a small gesture, and a chair emerged from the opening floor.

"Thank you," Kierger responded as he took his seat. "I presume you want me to listen to everything say?"

"Yes, Dictator. There are things you must know. First, the Outlands. Centralism there has succeded beyond what I thought was possible. The horizons have been pushed back, and we must push them back again. I am looking foward to seeing some order come out of that hive of scum and anarchy."

"Yes, but the death toll is growing. You heard about the gassing of the capital of Pritaiy?"

"Of course. It was a necessary price."

"Wait, you are implying that the gassing of Oblast was your doing?"

The Supreme Lord's cackle merely confirmed Kierger's suspicion.

"The death of Oblast was a message, even though we chose to use...deniable assets."

"But with Centralists in the line of fire as well? I don't know how you're going to succeed if your followers end up as collateral damage."

"Do they think it was us? I think not!"

Enitaplap paused, then said, "Enough of the Outlands. I sense you seek revenge against Shepistan's depredations against your embassies. What is your plan?"

At this Kierger smirked. "Since Shepistan's very paranoid regarding ESPers, especially the Amplitur, I was thinking of sending some of my agents to pose as one, and drive Shepistan crazy. With luck, they'll end up tripping over the wrong people, and get fucked up."

"And have you ever thought of contacting a real Amplitur?"

"Too much of an effort. I doubt there are many left."

"Then you will appreciate our efforts in encountering them."

At this Kierger's mind spun.

"You are trying to find them?"

"It has been difficult, but they exist, Dictator. I have forseen it."

Kierger remained silent.

"Even if you somehow found survivors," he finally spoke, "would they be receptive enough to help us?"

"There is only one way to find out, my curious friend. Lord Redav shall inform you if we discover a suitable Amplitur remnant."

"I see. Thank you for bringing me this to my attention. I'm sure a real Amplitur on our side will make Shepistan overload itself of fear."

"Ah, all for Centralism, my friend."

Both men shook their hands.
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Re: SDNW4 Story Thread 2

Post by Shroom Man 777 »

MARTIAN LAW
Somewhere in the Feelipeens
After the curfew


A band of university students and their professor were caught in the roads after the curfew. No one could go out after midnight, the roads were patrolled by the paramilitaries appointed by the regional governors and mayors, but the kids had stayed out too long - partied too hard, gotten too drunk to the point of impairing their critical decision making faculties. They had set out at 11pm, intending to beat the curfew, but after taking a wrong turn or two they found themselves still on the long and winding road thirty past midnight. They were near safety now, there was a place they could stay at just a couple of kilometers away, but between their current location and sanctuary was a paramilitary checkpoint manned by the local governor's goons.

"Halt!" shouted a bandana-wearing club-wielding goon standing there in the middle of the road. "Who goes there?"

"W-w... w-we were just out partying, officer. We were heading home, we were going to be home at 11pm but we took a wrong turn and -"

"Shut up!" the goon spat. He turned back and gestured at his unseen companions. "Search their car."

Suddenly, a bunch of other goons emerged from the night. Some of them were wearing Gay-Ban sunglasses, which didn't make sense since it was night. Others were chewing on cigarettes. A few had medallions dangling from their necks. They were all armed, some with rusty revolvers, others with machetes and switchblades.

"You, get out of the vehicle!" the goon commanded as the other goons dragged the students and the professor out of their ride, throwing them to the road. The goons then went in and turned the car inside out, searching for anything they could find. "Show me your identification."

The professor and students did so, showing their university IDs.

"Students, eh? Out late at night, partying, drinking and smoking? Fucking?" the goon asked out loud right in the professor's face. His breath stank of whiskey. "Is that all you were doing? Why is your professor out here with you, is he pimping the girls off?"

He pointed at the girls, who were wearing skirts and heels.

"Or maybe not, maybe he was pimping you bunch of queers!" he waved his club at the guys, who were also fashionably dressed. "You young people. Bunch of whores and homosexuals. University professors, hah, what a field trip."

A sub-goon went to the ranting goon, holding something in his hands and whispering something to his superior. The head goon's eyes widened for a moment, and then his lips curled into a vicious smile. The professor's eyes widened in fear, and his mouth opened in a frightened gasp of realization.

"What is this?" the goon held something up, a book titled The Central State by Dovan Aybeem. "What kind of commie crap is this, huh? Partying my ass. You're activists! Plotting against the government!"

"No!" the professor protested. "It's just a reading assignment for my students, it's just homework! We're not act-"

The goon struck him in the face with a club. The first impact smashed his teeth in and the second one broke his nose. He collapsed into a heap, gagging for breath as blood from his shattered sinuses seeped into his airway while he accidentally swallowed his own broken teeth.

"Sir!" a student cried out. She tried to run to the reeling professor, but another goon yanked her by the hair and threw her face down into the pavement. "You bastards!" another student screamed as he tried to attack the offending goon, he managed to hit him once or twice, before he was clubbed in the back of the neck. He fell and the goons began to stomp his prone form. A third student tried to pull out his cellphone, either to call for help or record the violence.

"Pusil! Gun, another goon shouted. He was quicker on the draw and shot the student in the stomach. A Motoroller Ultralite fell from the teenager's hands and landed on the ground just as he did.

The goon with the smoking revolver looked at his superior.

"You know what to do," the head goon said. Another shot rang out and a second bullet went right into the center of the student's chest. The head goon walked over to the body, he pulled out a revolver and placed it in the gunned down teen's hand. The gun was unlicensed, all of theirs were. "He was armed, these activist students here are conspiring against the government and tried to resist an arrest. This makes them terrorists. We'll hand them over to the military, they will take care of them."


THE MAYNILAD BULLETIN
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CENTRALITE ACTIVISTS RESIST ARREST, ONE KILLED, SEVERAL IMPRISONED
MAYNILAD, Luz - Seven Centralite sympathizers were caught in a roadside checkpoint late last night by local government paramilitaries. They were discovered with Centralite propaganda materials and when an attempt at arrest was made for violating the curfew, an armed Centralite resisted but was shot to death by the paramilitary forces. Afterwards, the other Centralites were arrested for charges of conspiracy against the government and aggravated treason. Due to affiliating with a terrorist organization they are currently detained in a military prison and are to be treated as military prisoners with a corresponding trial by Court Martian.
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In other news, the heroic paramilitary officers involved in capturing and killing terrorists have been awarded by the government in recognition of their service to the nation. Some have been given the prestigious title of Martian Knight. To protect their identities, the Martian Knights also assume code names such as Sir Phobos, Beater of Ass and the like. Due to the success of local government paramilitaries, the President has decided to extend the powers granted to them to include the search and seizure of suspected terrorist homes.
Image "DO YOU WORSHIP HOMOSEXUALS?" - Curtis Saxton (source)
shroom is a lovely boy and i wont hear a bad word against him - LUSY-CHAN!
Shit! Man, I didn't think of that! It took Shroom to properly interpret the screams of dying people :D - PeZook
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Re: SDNW4 Story Thread 2

Post by PeZook »

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"Gentlebeings! Mike Nike presents his premium show, a smash hit in the Sovereignty and abroad..."

Image
STAVROS THE DEAD INQUISITOR
*laughter track*

MIKE: "Hello Stavros"

STAVROS: "SILENCE!"

MIKE: "That's not very nice, Stavros. Why don't you say hello?"

STAVROS: "YOU WILL SPEAK WHEN SPOKEN TO! THE GOD EMPEROR COMMANDS!"

*laughter track*

STAVROS: "SILENCE!"

MIKE: "Stavros, you have to understand these people are not followers of your God Emperor..."

*Stavros emits a shocked gasp*

STAVROS: "HEATHENS! HERETICS! I KILL YOU!"

MIKE: "Now wait just a minute Stavros you can't just..."

STAVROS: "IN THE NAME OF THE GOD EMPEROR PURGE THE HERETIC! YES! I KILL YOU ALL! LIKE TAU!"

*laughter track*

STAVROS: "SILENCE!"

MIKE: "Stavros, I don't know if you've noticed, but you're not in a position to kill anybody!"

*silence*

STAVROS: "Why?"

MIKE: "Well, you see, you're dead."

*Stavros glances down*

STAVROS: "No I'm not"

MIKE: "Yes you are!"

STAVROS: "Am not! Want to take me, huh? I show you how Inquisition fights! I KILL YOU!"

MIKE: "I'm afraid you certainly are, Stavros. See? I can put my hand through you."

*Nike does so. Stavros grinds his teeth*

STAVROS: "It's just a flesh wound!"

*Laughter track*

STAVROS: "SILENCE!"

*pause*

STAVROS: "I KILL YOU!"

MIKE: "You have to admit it's an awfully deep flesh wound, Stavros...

STAVROS: "God Emperor is making me stronger! With pain!"

MIKE: "If he is, then why doesn't he smite these heathens laughing at you?"

*shocked silence*

STAVROS: "Oh no...I've been SCREWED!"
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JULY 20TH 1969 - The day the entire world was looking up

It suddenly struck me that that tiny pea, pretty and blue, was the Earth. I put up my thumb and shut one eye, and my thumb blotted out the planet Earth. I didn't feel like a giant. I felt very, very small.
- NEIL ARMSTRONG, MISSION COMMANDER, APOLLO 11

Signature dedicated to the greatest achievement of mankind.

MILDLY DERANGED PHYSICIST does not mind BREAKING the SOUND BARRIER, because it is INSURED. - Simon_Jester considering the problems of hypersonic flight for Team L.A.M.E.
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Re: SDNW4 Story Thread 2

Post by Force Lord »

Central City, Centrum
The Center Sector, The Centrality
Unreal Time/Early 3401


The Tetra-class shuttle was being made ready for Kierger's planned travels, as engineers made some final checks. Outside, Kierger was walking back and forth, wracked with indecision.

"Now which nation should I visit first? It's jarring to think that at this point I don't have a fixed flight plan!"

Lord Redav, who was standing nearby, inwardly sighed.

"You could start with our near neighbors..."

"No! I'll leave them for last. We have to see beyond RAR Space Redav. I have to learn a little bit more of other regions of space. It does not matter if some close their doors to me: I can know them from others! But where to go first, damn it!?"

Just then one of the engineers came up and said, "Shuttle's ready to go, sir."

"Are you absolutely sure?"

"Y-Yes sir. We quintuple-checked."

"Well good. Wouldn't want a hyperdrive failure at the worst moment."

Redav then spoke, "We could go to Umeria, Dictator. They are relatively near."

Kierger responded. "Well, Umeria is good but too obvious. Perhaps I can go to the Ascendancy first, but really, I can't decide."

"You may worry about that later. Now we must go."

Both men entered the shuttle. Seconds later, the shuttle lifted into the air, went into space, and entered hyperspace.
An inhabitant from the Island of Cars.
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