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Black Pearl Base, Sudeten Tamar March, Lyran Commonwealth 11 July 3050
A thrill went up Victoria’s spine as she and Kai entered the base’s Mechbays. She couldn’t believe how much better she felt after sleeping the day through, waking only intermittantly to watch Kai for a while as he sat at her desk doing his own paperwork for the Strategy Board. She hadn’t even realised, the last few times she’d been in the ‘Mechbay that the experience had lacked the old excitement she remembered from playing in the Royal Guards’ mechbays before (and after) her aunt Nondi had told her off for doing so.
Most of the units gathered on Sudeten had left their BattleMechs aboard their dropships, removing only those that could benefit from repairs impossible aboard ships. As a result the majority of the ‘Mechs that towered over the two young officers were painted in the colours of the famous Gray Death Legion, who had held the landhold on Sudeten for almost two decades. Threading their way through the ranks, the pair made their way towards two of the exceptions, ‘Mechs sporting the ceremonial white and blue of the Lyran Guards.
This corner of the barn-like structure was relatively quiet – a technican on a cherry-picker was loading rounds into the back of Yen-lo-Wang, no doubt feeding the magazine for the massive Pontiac 100 that dominated the right arm. Even if Victoria hadn’t known the famous ‘Mech’s history from the Solaris arenas, she was well familiar with the weapon from her old Victor. A second man was examining her own ‘Mech and in the shadows it took her a moment to recognise him.
“Colonel Carlyle,” she greeted him, saluting briskly.
The commander of the Gray Death Legion returned the salute briskly. “Good morning, Kommandant, Leftenant,” he said. “You’re… up early.”
What was that pause for? Victoria wondered. Why wouldn’t we be… She and Kai exchanged sharp, half-guilty looks as they came to the same realisation. They’d both been out of sight for a whole day. All it would take would be one off-colour joke and half the Base would be convinced they’d been off in a honeymoon suite the whole time. “Well it’s the German blood in me,” Victoria brazened. “Always got to be first out there on the sunbed.” And even if it was true, we’re both adults so it would be no one else’s business, she rationalised, knowing that it wasn’t true.
Carlyle chuckled. “I know it’s hard to believe,” he told them, “But I was young once myself. I used to pilot one of those back then -” he jerked his thumb up towards Victoria’s new Marauder “– although I see you’ve customised yours a bit.”
“Just a bit,” Victoria told him. “It was a bit of an experiment – you can probably see where the torso needed to be rebuilt around the new heatsinks.”
“Yes,” Carlyle agreed. “And the improved armour around the torso ring and the weapon mount is a good design, I had mine modified in much the same way, although without the freezers, of course.”
“Naturally,” Victoria agreed and reached for the collar of her uniform jacket. “Excuse me, we really need to get up and going if we’re going to have first crack at the gunnery course.”
The Colonel nodded. “Go right ahead. I’ll watch you from Course Central, if you don’t mind.” He leant forwards. “Actually, there are going to be quite a few people there this morning. There’s some money riding on how well your new ‘Mech does. Don’t let your supporters down.”
Victoria choked indignantly and before she could come up with a response, Carlyle was striding away from them, crossing the Mechbay swiftly. Stupid… tall… old man! And who’s got the nerve to bet against me!? she fumed as she stripped off her jacket and shirt, leaving her with only an undershirt between her skin and the goretex lining of the cooling vest that Kai offered her before pulling his own out of the bag he had insisted on carrying for her out from the accomodation block.
Loosening her belt, she snuck a look at Kai while his shirt was off and then sat on the fender of the cherrypicker to slip off the uniform pants she was wearing over her mechwarrior shorts, a pleased smile on her face after that guilty indulgence. “Are you done loading his ‘Mech?” she called up to the technican.
“Just sealing the ammo bins up, your highness,” the man called down to her.
“That’s Kommandant,” Victoria snapped and then sighed. “Besides, you’re the one higher up than me at the moment,” she joked, slapping the cherrypicker’s tyre with one hand as she stood up and started folding her uniform into a convenient bundle. “Kai, since Yen-lo-Wang’s just about ready for you, I’ll go mount up myself.”
Victoria scrambled up the rope ladder dangling from the side of her Marauder’s tapering torso, her bundled uniform thrust inside her half-open cooling vest. The heavy Mech’s hatch was on top, more than six times higher than Victoria’s head when she stood on the ground. She had to laugh at some infantrymen who groused about ‘layabout mechjocks’ – it was a rare day that one of them had to climb that far, and even once in the cockpit piloting a Mech was physically demanding. The rope ladder waved around as she climbed but she was used to that – having someone secure the bottom wasn’t always possible – and less than a minute later she scrambled up on to the top of the Marauder and clambered into the open hatch, slapping the control to retract the rope ladder into its small compartment. The electric motor rattled behind her, only to mute suddenly as Victoria closed the hatch above her and the airtight seal formed.
The cockpit of the Marauder was spacious enough for even large men, so Victoria had no difficulty reaching around the command couch to drop her clothes into the locker set aside from them. While checking the contents of the other lockers – survival gear under the ejection seat, emergency rations in their locker, toilet roll and a small medical kit in their places – she felt her ears pop as the cockpit over-pressurized. Tumbing the power switch for the reactor, Victoria rebuckled her cooling vest, this time drawing it close around her where it would do most good, and strapped herself into the couch. On disadvantage of the size of the cockpit was that if she got bounced out of the chair, a Mechwarrior would likely wind up with broken bones so Victoria double-checked every strap before plugging the power cord of her cooling vest into the coupling on the left side of the couch.
Opposite that coupling was a small compartment with four medical sensors and Victoria peeled them from the adhesive strip and placed them on her thighs and upper arms with the ease of long experience. The same compartment also gave up cables she threaded through loops on the cooling vest and then plugged into the sensors, leaving the loose ends dangling near her throat. Reaching up her, Victoria lifted the neurohelmet from the shelf above and behind the command couch, pleased that she had accustomed herself to the Marauder to the point that she could do so without looking. Lowering it over her head, she let it rest on her shoulders and plugged the cables in before moving working it from side to side a little until the neurosensors inside the helmet sat correctly and she could see clearly out of the clear faceplate, then used velcro tabs to secure the helmet.
The reactor was running smoothly now, a steady vibration in the frame of the Marauder, and Victoria could feel warm air currents around her legs. The ‘Mech was ready, but there was another step to take before she could take the controls. Like all ‘Mechs, the Marauder had a security system that would prevent any of the controls from functioning unless it received the proper voiceprint: its designated pilot voicing the preset codewords. Victoria pressed a glowing yellow button on her command console.
“Identify yourself,” a harsh, female voice demanded from inside Victoria’s neurohelmet. She smiled involuntarily at the sound of Nondi Steiner’s voice. Her great-aunt had been touched when Victoria had asked permission to use recordings of her voice for the Marauder’s computer.
“Victoria Katrina Steiner-Davion,” she responded, letting the computer chew over whether or not it would believe her.
“Landgrave,” Nondi’s voice responded, using Victoria’s Lyran title. “Confirm your authority.”
Victoria smiled tightly. She’d read extensively as a child and selected her code phrase accordingly. “‘He never claimed to be a god’,” she recited. “‘But then, he never claimed not to be a god’.” The yellow button ceased to glow as the interlocks disconnected and the holographic display came to life, compacting a 360 degree view of the Marauder’s surroundings into the 160 degree arc in front of her but still Victoria waited. She had asked Nondi Steiner to give her voice to the security… but she had asked her father for his double interlock, with a second code that seperately would reserve control of the weapon systems. The next lines of the book she had quoted from referred to silence and there was a built in delay that must be endured, only a few seconds but long enough to feel unnatural, long enough that she could have read those lines (which was a convenient way to measure it). Then: “Your prayers and your curses come to the same,” she told the Marauder and the yellow light blinked twice in response, confirming that the weapons were now unlocked.
Off to one side, Yen-lo-Wang was already taking it’s first step out of postion, strongly suggesting that Kai didn’t have such an elaborate security set up. Or at least such a lengthy one. Victoria hadn’t asked – such enquiries were, for obvious reasons, considered highly inappropriate among Mechwarriors. She took her own controls and began a steady, careful walk out of the ‘Mech Hanger, not wanting to inadvertantly damage any of the Gray Death Legion’s equipment by walking over, or into it. She could see them out of her cockpit’s small frontal window, past the holographic display, but the distortions of height and the narrow field of vision made the primary display more useful even without the overlay of data highlighting the hanger’s navigation beacons, units recognised from the computer’s extensive memory banks and and the necessary targeting data if she decided to unleash the firepower of her Marauder upon them.
Not, of course, that she would do such a thing to a loyal Lyran mercenary unit like the Legion. With her ‘Mech and Kai’s the only active ones in the hanger, they could shatter the backbone of the unit’s BattleMech strength before anyone but the posted guards could react. That was the power placed in the hands of a Mechwarrior: that unopposed by others of their kind they could shatter fortresses and cities and even small armies. Victoria knew better than most the reasons that Inner Sphere academies had such high drop-out rates was the importance of weeding out those who might abuse that power.
“It’s good to be back in the saddle,” she told Kai, kicking the heavy ‘Mech into a lope as she followed him out of the exit and towards the beginning of the gunnery course. As the two Mechs accelerated towards sixty kilometers per hour, they left the heavy ferrocrete surface of the road and followed the trail of footprints left in the peaty soil of the glacial valley by the thousands of ‘Mechs that had followed this trail over the years. “CorCen, this is Kommandant Steiner-Davion with two BattleMechs, now entering the gunnery course. Please confirm readiness.”
“All systems report as ready, Kommandant,” a clipped voice responded. “You will enter the active range thirty seconds from my mark. All targets will be magres or infrared, not visual so don’t rely on vislight scan.” The woman paused. “Mark.”
Turning a corner in the valley, Victoria gripped the two joystick controllers that directed the crosshairs for her weapons. Mounted on the arms of the command couch, rather than configuring them to control the left and right side weapon mounts, she had opted to slave all three of the particle cannons to one of the triggers in her right hand: index and middle fingers for the arm-mounts and the thumb button firing the torso-mounted PPC. Similarly, her left hand joystick controlled the lasers in the same locations. Warning klaxons, so loud that she could hear them even in the sealed cockpit, blared as the course registered two BattleMechs crossing the start line and almost immediately the decoys scattered across the course began to pretend that they were hostile units posing a threat to Victoria and Kai.
The first targets appeared immediately, outcrops of rocks transformed into a Javelin and a Wasp standing on the hillside. Kai was first to fire, being slightly in the lead he was just within reach of his autocannon and the Pontiac roared, tracers slashing into the central chest… and tumbled shells visible exited the rear as the course computer massaged the numbers and concluded a hit there would dramatically overkill the target. Only moments later, Victoria had brought her crosshairs over the Wasp and fired her PPCs, closing each trigger deliberate succession, spacing out the cycle time and the waves of heat that went through her cockpit.
Inside the Marauder air wavered and sweat formed on her skin. Outside, three bolts of lightning tore gouges in the rock. According to the simulation, one shot missed low, but the first had struck the Wasp’s right arm, wrecking the medium laser there and blasting apart armour from the wrist up past the shoulder. Her last shot crashed into the left leg, all but vaporising it and toppling the 20-ton ‘Mech to the floor, unable to stand and missing both its weapons.
Neither of the two Mechwarriors paid it any attention, focusing on the next targets: a lance of Goblin tanks that popped into view, almost in their path.
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