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Song Of Obsidian
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Post by Song Of Obsidian »

Just wait until you see the op I actually planned ;)


Chapter 54 - Questions and More Questions


I took all possible caution with the Titan. It went immediately to the fleet, and I cannibalized software and hardware alike from other ships, which I then sent to equipment docks for replacements. Wolfhound had enough weaponry to make it dangerous, but I didn't have the right shields for it yet. Soon. Very soon. I put the 1 GJ shields in it for the time being.

Once all was said and done I made a comm call. Chianna's dark-skinned face came up on the screen.

"You're looking like you're ready for a year's sleep."

"Thanks," I said drily. "Maybe you can help with that though. Our people just did an exceptionally fine day's work and I want to let them celebrate." I smiled faintly. "And I hear that our 'procurement agent' has very ably procured whiskey for them in the past."

"I'll have to figure out who has a loose tongue and tie it in a knot," she said with a sweet smile. "But I should be able to send something on one of the transports. And you better be careful with my ship, mister."

I smirked right back at the teasing glare she had fixed on me. "Oh, I'll take good care of MY ship. But I'd rather you came back on it, if it's all the same to you."

She looked genuinely surprised. But then, so was I. I did need to talk to her, so maybe this would be a good time, but asking her to come had been pure impulse. My impulses were going to start getting me into trouble. As if almost getting killed by a Titan destroyer wasn't trouble.

"I'll see you all soon, then," she said in a slightly mystified tone, and then she was gone.

I set down the commlink and picked up my datapad. Figuring out impulses was ever a fruitless venture. I had more important things to do. Such as...

A notification came up. Something had triggered one of the advanced satellites to send it to me, and I never even noticed. I checked the timestamp...ah. It was during the battle.

I played back the recording, and it showed a freight drone entering President's End from the east gate and heading northeast. Eventually it left satellite range. Freight drones are slow, so it took close to an hour for the drone to finally return. It flew back through the east gate into Elena's Fortune, where, as it happened, the satellites I had placed for hunting Paranid still survived.

The drone made the long trek to the south gate, into Split Fire. I had another satellite there, so I was able to follow its path a while longer. It went south...and kept going, through the south gate into Priest's Pity. Even if I had been able to jump in and follow it, Paranid space was off-limits to me. I did note that Yaki space could be easily reached from that path. Going the other way, cutting through Argon space to Cloudbase South West, then through to Paranid Prime and Empire's Edge might have been faster, but still.

It was guesswork at best though, and had a high probability of being disinformation. So I still knew nothing.
Song Of Obsidian
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Post by Song Of Obsidian »

Chapter 55 - Acceptance


"Please, sit down."

Aron Silsarna nodded and turned around a chair a few paces from mine, then sat obediently. We were alone in a room whose intended function I would never know. There were tables arranged in two rows, with two chairs to a table. A training or debriefing room for the Marines who would have been stationed on a missile frigate, perhaps.

This meeting was neither, though. I studied Aron, who returned my regard without curiosity. Only patience. Shorter than the average Argon, and powerful-looking but not burly. Sandy hair, kept a bit long with no style that I could discern - but, being bald, hairstyle wasn't something I often paid attention to. Good posture without being stiff, no visible scars, a way of moving that suggested careful control and awareness.

"I wanted to ask you a few questions, if you would oblige me."

"Of course, Commander." As if I would refuse, his tone said.

I was silent for a few moments. Sometimes this level of compliance could be unnerving. "How long were you at the facility I hired you from?"

"Ten months, Commander." That was it. No elaboration. This man I was used to...and so very unlike they man I had seen when he welcomed Nyota Braks.

"And before that?"

"I don't remember." If Aron felt any remorse or longing for his lost past, he hid it well. Unsurprising, that lack as well as the absence of memory, given the molding methods of the pirates. Effective, yes, but not necessarily kind. At the time, effective had been all I wanted.

"Do you know why I ask you to fight?" I asked, even though I knew well enough that he wouldn't really think of my sending him into battle as a request.

At that he hesitated. Aron might have accepted some brutal things in life - not that he was given much opportunity to resist them - but he was no simpleton. "You have your reasons, Commander. You have some beef with the Paranid, and you're looking for help from the Argon. But the details don't interest me. The others chose me to lead them, so their lives are my first and only concern. As long as you don't send us on suicide runs, you have your fighters. The why is just a distraction."

I mulled that over for a moment before asking one final question. "And your comrades? Do they have similar outlooks?"

He shrugged. "I am not unique."

That was either the exceptionally clear-sighted or exceptionally myopic. I didn't feel qualified to pick one over the other. "Thank you, Aron. You may rejoin the others. And," I smiled faintly as he started to stand. "send our procurement agent to see me if you see her first when she arrives."

"She's already here." My brows rose, and it was his turn to smile. "She brought us the good news, and your gift. She'll be along shortly to bring you the bill." He came to attention smartly and thumped his chest with his fist, as Gu had once done, then returned his chair to its place and left.

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

Chianna arrived a few minutes later, with a gift for me as well. "Visiting the grunts before the commanding officer?" I said as she moved the chair Aron had used to the opposite side of the table from me. "If this was the military I'd be offended."

"Pleasure before business," she said with an impish little smile. She set down two cups, then broke the seal on the bottle she had brought and began to pour while I stared at the bottle itself.

"That's not whiskey."

"Mhm. Ale. Might not seem like it, but whiskey's a thinking man's drink. And you think too much already." With both cups filled, she slid the bottle across the table, put a hand around her cup, and looked at me expectantly.

I didn't make a move for mine, or the bottle. "And what would be a thinking woman's drink?"

Her smile twisted wickedly. "Water. Alcohol makes us just want to do evil things."

"Not fun things?"

"Same thing by a different name. Now shut up and drink."

"Insubordinate, too." I took up my cup and saluted her with it before taking a couple swallows. I was having fun, in spite of...well, myself.

"Could just as easily be me in your position," she said after setting down her own cup. "But you're the one with a vision. I'm just along for the ride right now."

That sentiment put me in mind of my latest interrogation. "Most of the people in my employ would say the same thing."

"Is that what you pulled out of the talk with Aron?" There was something in her tone I couldn't quite place, but she was making it perfectly clear that I was wrong. Aron had obviously told her about the conversation.

We sat in silence for a few moments. Me to think, and her probably to give me time to mentally kick myself. Kicking myself didn't change anything though. At last I said, quietly, while staring at my cup, "I wanted to understand him. Them."

"Then let me ask you a question." Stern gentleness was the only way I could describe what I heard in her voice. "What do you think they would do if you gave them leave and sent them planet-side somewhere?"

What would any soldier do on leave? Party, drink, forget about the plotting and combat far above, find some semblance of normality even though it would only last a few days...oh.

She must have readily understood the comprehension on my face. "They wouldn't know what to do. Their view of life is limited. Believe me, I've been the cause of that. They work, they fight, they celebrate. That's their routine, and no matter how much danger you send them into, it feels safe to them. They'd be terrified if they had to deal with regular people."

It made sense, and made me feel like a fool for not seeing it. "I feel fear, too," I said quietly. "Every time I send them out to fight. I-"

"People will follow another for a lot of reasons," Chianna interrupted in an authoritative tone that silenced me immediately. "Fear. Respect. Mutual cause. Practicality. A paycheck. We might have trained a lot of things out of them, but they knew the outlook whenever they got hired out. To be hired by someone and find he thinks of their fates as more than just a good or bad investment? That someone actually cares? That they'll be mourned?"

She was talking about me, but instead of being reassuring it only made me feel outraged. "I didn't want this!" I growled. "I wanted revenge, not a damned war and a damned army to wage it with! They-"

"Welcome to leadership," she said, totally unaffected by my outburst. "Some people choose it, some are chosen. You could always walk away."

The sentiment, and the challenge behind it, deflated me. I slouched back in the chair and sighed, then shook my head. "No, I can't. If I do, a lot of Argon will have died for no reason at all. And my people..."

"Shut up and drink," she said, not unkindly. I looked up and saw her smiling. There was trust there. Or maybe trust was the wrong word. Faith.

I smiled wanly and did as I was told.
Last edited by Song Of Obsidian on Fri, 12. Jul 13, 06:05, edited 1 time in total.
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Poseidon
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Post by Poseidon »

Good chapter. Great chapter, really. Very difficult conversation. It's amazing how far a little vision can take you, especially if you have morals.
Idleking
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Post by Idleking »

Gnah, after 3 days on-and-off reading I finally hit the last chapter...
...so I can actually stop reading for now...

This stuff is highly addictive - some Mods should probably put a warning in the thread's title :!:

That leaves the addict with the only viable thing to say to his dealer:
More... MOAR! :D
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Song Of Obsidian
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Post by Song Of Obsidian »

Woooo, new reader! Glad you've enjoyed it so far, and I promise to be careful in the game so I don't die just yet. But if you believe that promise, more the fool you. Reckless as I've been, that death is probably gonna come sooner rather than later.

I expected that conversation to come out really cheesy or forced, Poseidon. I had a definite purpose and wasn't sure if I could do it justice, but I'm reasonably happy with the way it turned out.

This post is a little long and I took some liberties with it that I'll explain at the end.


Chapter 56 - Fruits of Labor


I woke feeling refreshed, but impatient. I made a mental list of all the things I wanted to do with my day while I saw to food and hygiene concerns, and was grateful the ale hadn't hit me as hard as the whiskey would have.

Once I was ready to actually work, I sat down with the enmeshed datapad. I had a target in mind for my mysterious assassin friend. It was Chianna who had inspired the choice, though she would never know it. I entered enough information to make sure they had the right person in mind before they started killing.

Sai t'Snt. Place of residence, Tharka's Sun sector. Job title, Acquisitions Specialist. I placed a large 'X' under the 'Public' and 'Accident' boxes. I wanted to be able to hear about it and get details without arousing too much suspicion, for me or the killer. Yet.

I packed everything up and made my way toward the bridge. While I walked, I took out my commlink for a quick conversation.

"Yes, sir?"

"How would you like some high-risk flight time?"

Nyota smiled eagerly. "Where do I sign?"

"No signature necessary. Just get your Nova, my Eclipse, and the Magnetar all loaded up with energy for jump operations. If all goes well, we'll leave within the hour."

"Yes, sir!" Once the connection was dead and I was alone again, I found myself grinning. It was a good day to be alive. And to make others feel just as alive.

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

Savage Spur was still as cluttered as ever. I wove through asteroids in the Tenjin as if I belonged there as much as any Yaki pilot. I had to bring a faster fighter for this part of my day, but I really wasn't looking forward to this task. Preparing for it was much more fun.

I found a Deimos on the opposite side of the asteroid field. It was engaged with a number of Yaki fighters, and as I watched the last Paranid escort craft, a Perseus, exploded in the middle of a crossfire. With the frigate decisively distracted, I brought in the Demeter Hauler from Kingdom End, where I had removed the chip and stowed it in a crate for the drop. I entered the coordinates provided on the chip and had to trust the freighter's autopilot, which made me nervous. But not as nervous as a Deimos frigate.

The frigate took a fair amount of punishment, but the outcome was never in doubt. When there were only two Yaki left I started toward the battle, angled to the south of it while the freighter went north. Eight kilometers out and only one fighter remained. It was a Tonbo, an interceptor, which was very impressive. A shame the pilot threw away his life for nothing, but once he was gone the frigate turned to follow me. Which was exactly what I wanted.

I broke away to the left and headed for the south gate. The Deimos didn't chase me very far, but I didn't need it to. The Demeter was fast enough that the lead it opened up with a short head start would be enough. I flew through the south gate and toward the middle of Ocracoke's Storm, then stopped to begin a very necessary transmission while I monitored the Demeter's progress.

The freighter's sensors picked up three asteroids at the chosen coordinates. I flew it right in between them, then ejected the chip and two units of Nividium - the ore being the reason I had to bring a freighter at all. With the target and payment delivered and nothing more to do with the situation but wait, I jumped both ships back to the fleet.

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

-> Date: 768-05-21 07:25
-> Communication Request Denied
-> Security Matrix Activated
-> Intrusion Alert
->
-> Countermeasure Deployed
-> Tracing Program Initiated
->
->
->
-> Virus Upload Aborted
->
-> Security Override Authorized
->
->
-> Failsafe Procedure Aborted
->
->
->
->
->
->
-> Transmission Origin Detected
->
->
->
-> Broadwave Communication Protocols Accessed
-> Incoming Message
->
->
->
-> IN THE PARANID-OWNED SECTOR OF CLARITY'S END, WE SOUGHT TO CAPTURE A PARANID SHIP.
-> WE WERE SUCCESSFUL.
-> BUT IN THE MIDDLE OF THE OPERATION, WE WERE AMBUSHED BY ARGON FORCES, LED BY A TITAN-CLASS DESTROYER.
-> RATHER THAN HELPING US AGAINST OUR COMMON FOE, OR LETTING US FINISH THE BATTLE, THEY ATTACKED.
-> MORE ARGON LIVES WERE LOST UNNECESSARILY.
-> THIS WE CANNOT FORGIVE.
-> FOR THOSE WEARY OF LETTING THE PARANID RUN ROUGHSHOD OVER ARGON SETTLEMENTS, NOW IS THE TIME TO CHOOSE.
-> OUR GOVERNMENT WILL NOT HELP YOU.
-> YOU MUST HELP YOURSELVES.
-> WHEN YOU SEE US, DO NOT FIGHT US.
-> JOIN US.
-> NO MATTER WHERE YOU ARE, YOU WILL SEE US SOON.
->
-> SIGNED, GUNNE'S HEIRS

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

"Standby for undocking," I said over the comms from Sprite's cockpit when the Magnetar came out at the north gate of Gunne's Crusade.

"Ready when you are, sir." Nyota had been a little disappointed when I told her I wasn't expecting combat on this run, but only a little. She was getting a chance to fly, and for an actual purpose. It wasn't going to be in enemy territory, but it might as well be, all things considered.

Once the transport was a short distance from gate and we weren't going to risk colliding with its pylons, I gave the order and we flew out independently, then looped around to fly north and went through the gate into Rolk's Legacy. On the other side we continued north. Nyota dropped back on my right side and slowed to match the Eclipse's speed while I ordered the Magnetar to dock at the solar plant in Light Water.

We were returning to Montalaar. It was risky. Very risky. But one of the problems we had was the very thing that kept us safe: anonymity. People couldn't reach out to us. People couldn't join us. And impressive as our accomplishments had been thus far, a bunch of autopilot-controlled ships wouldn't be nearly as effective as they could be with veteran crews. This run would be the first of many, and I would be flying in a ship with a bounty on it through mostly with heavy military presences for all of them.

Montalaar was becoming very familiar. Wheat farms and mines and cattle ranches populated the southern half of the sector, near the gate. There were more asteroids further north, but none owned. And I could see both of the sector's capital ships. The Colossus was to the northeast in scanner range, barely, while the Titan was dead ahead but quite a ways off. I noted that the carrier still only had five fighters.

"Come to try my champagne?" The words might have sounded like banter, but the man's face was eloquent in its honesty.

"That depends, Admiral Keswen. Are you ready to fight our mutual foe?"

"Dealing with insurrections? Not surprised you don't inspire loyalty."

"Unkind, Admiral, but hollow. No, I'm just looking for people with certain traits and lacking certain others. Short-sightedness and cowardice belonging to the latter category." I saw rage in Keswen's eyes; I knew I was twisting a viper's tail, but playing it safe wasn't going to win any friends either.

"I won't even accept the bounty on you. Ending your vile existence will be satisfaction en-"

Someone shouted behind him, and looking at the large ship I could see why. Pieces of it broke off, or seemed to. Sabotage? I wondered, but Nyota was a little quicker to understand.

"Life-pods ejecting from the Colossus, sir." Life-pods. Defectors? I felt excitement rising and forced it down. I expected the Novas to scramble as well, but as yet there was nothing.

Keswen focused on me again. "I'll make you a deal, Split. Return those traitorous bastards to us and I'll let you leave today." Sure you will.

I killed the connection without answering and brought up another comm channel. "Minotaur, acknowledge." As I spoke the Colossus began a slow turn toward us.

"Acknowledging." It sounded like Nu t'Nnk, an unusually quiet and unassuming Split warrior.

"Prepare for a jump. You will be receiving passengers in the cargo hold by transport. Treat them with courtesy but assume them unfriendly for now. You have one minute to get set up." Nu nodded and then was gone.

"Heirs pilots, this is Marine Captain Brent Jorwan. Please respond."

"Are you on one of those life-pods, Marine?"

"Yes sir. We want to fight with you, sir." I couldn't necessarily trust them, but I wasn't about to turn them down either. I started the jump sequence on the Minotaur remotely. The life-pods were flying toward us, fast, but still several kilometers distant. A good thing they couldn't serve as boarding pods with their construction. It was also impossible to steer them; they had been lucky, ejecting them while the Colossus was oriented with its underside facing us. Or maybe they had planned it that way.

"How many?"

"We number twelve, sir."

I nodded. "Are you armed?"

"Of course, sir."

"Very well. I'm bringing in a ship to transport you out, but you'll need to surrender your weapons to my people for the time being." The Minotaur came through behind me right about then and I ordered it forward. I had to calculate trajectories to make sure we wouldn't have to go chasing after any pods, though thankfully they were beginning to slow down.

Jorwan's lips pressed into a thin line, but he nodded. "Understood, sir."

"Stand by." Jorwan nodded again, and then I switched comms to talk to Nyota. "Pilot, I'm transferring control of the Magnetar to you. Send it home and get ready to jump back."

Nyota's face showed her surprise, but I didn't have time to wait even for an acknowledgement. I handled the transports from the decelerating life-pods to the Minotaur as each came within range.

I received a comm from another source; it was Aron. "Twelve passengers secured," was all he said. It was all that needed saying.

The Colossus was still fourteen kilometers away when we all jumped out.

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

Author's Note: At the time of writing I have 85 marines. I didn't want all of them to just be pirate acquisitions, but 'hiring' from Argon military bases was out of the question too, from the story's standpoint. I did hire them, and not all with magnificent stats, but wanted to bring them into the story in a unique way. So I took a few liberties, as I said before. Hope no one minds.
Idleking
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Post by Idleking »

Heh, nice catch.. literally ;)

I think it's perfectly fine to take some 'liberties' in writing. If you only wrote what you can actually do in the game your story would be kinda boring.
You can't 'sleep', you can't interact with your marines (despite sending them to their most-certain doom sooner or later :P), every ship you don't control yourself is being autopillocked, etc...

Taking such liberties is what gives your story its edge, so keep going 8)
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Post by Poseidon »

That was a pretty minor liberty to take, but thanks for calling it out. I think we're going to enjoy tormenting the poor Admiral.
Song Of Obsidian
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Post by Song Of Obsidian »

Oh yes, the Admiral will be around for a while. I hope to flesh him out a bit eventually, but yes, torment is on the menu.


Chapter 57 - Evolution


"But I just left!"

"I know, but I need you to come back anyway," I said wearily. It was still early in the day, not even really mid-morning, but I felt drained. I was too busy at the time to really notice, but it all happened so FAST. I talked to five different people within the span of a couple minutes. Little wonder it all felt so rushed, nevermind the surprise factor. The defections had come unexpectedly, and the location was just as unexpected. I had anticipated a pretty edgy flight through three sectors with a substantial and consistent military presence. But trained Marines abandoning their ship right after we showed up? No matter how thrilled I wanted to be, I couldn't help but be wary.

That wariness prompted me to comm Chianna. While I did want to give the Marines many different faces at once to keep them somewhat off-balance, I also wanted to see how she would handle the situation I had in mind. I had some idea, but I could be wrong.

"Do I at least get to know why?" she asked in a huff.

"Call it an opportunity to expand your horizons."

"I'm not giving you ale ever again."

"I'll live. Just come back. And who knows, being grumpy might even make things easier for you." She glowered at me and I smiled, then cut the connection so she wouldn't have the satisfaction of seeing me flinch.

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

"You wanted to see me," Chianna said acidly from behind me. I had never really given her a direct order before, and she evidently didn't like being bossed around. Which, oddly enough, made me feel a bit encouraged. Her comment about the ale in the previous conversation had sounded like a grumbly sort of joke, but that humor was absent now.

"Come. You should see our newest...acquisitions." I glanced back at her, then tilted my head toward the scene below us. She came forward, scowling, and looked down.

The Marines were standing at attention in the landing bay of the Cerberus, with the Minotaur's full complement of twenty commandos surrounding them. We were on the observation deck overlooking the scene, while they waited for someone in charge to see to their disposition.

"If you're gonna hire more people on your own, you don't really need me."

I shook my head and smiled faintly. "I didn't hire them. I flew through a sector and they decided to abandon their Colossus in life-pods to join us. These are Marines." Mild disbelief crossed her features. "I know what you're thinking. And that's why you're here."

"What? You want me to play concierge?"

"Of course not. I want you to figure out their skill sets, then begin their training and integration."

"Training?" She sounded more confused that angry. "I've never trained. I've managed. They're not the same thing."

"Be that as it may, the fact of the matter is that our warriors and Marines come from completely different backgrounds, with different training methods, different goals, different...everything. You said it yourself last night. Aron and the rest of our people would be uncomfortable trying to work with them. But they'll need to, on some level." I faced Chianna fully, though she was staring out at the Marines with a thoughtful expression. "And I trust the methods our people use to fight more than I would trust theirs. They need to be integrated, blended in, re-trained, not the other way around.

Chianna nodded slowly. "I'll need to talk to Aron first. I can't promise anything though. This isn't something I've done before."

"I have faith in you. And turn on your commlink. I want to hear everything."

She spun on her heel and started for the steep staircase leading down. "I lied. I can keep a promise," she snarled back at me as she walked. "No more ale for you."

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

'Everything' ended up not being quite everything. Chianna did speak with Aron, but they did so too quietly for me to understand. When she finally stepped forward to address the Marines, however, every word came through clearly. And loudly.

"Captain Jorwan."

One of the men took a step forward and saluted smartly. I wished I could see Chianna's face.

"What were the details of your assignment on the Colossus?"

"It was a defensive deployment to prevent the ship's capture by enemy forces, sir." He sounded a bit hesitant; maybe he anticipated what was coming.

"Do I look like a 'sir' to you, Captain?" I could hear the sneer in her voice and chuckled silently. The captain shook his head once. "Good. You can call me Judge, because I'll be evaluating you. What I say goes, and I'm never wrong. Do you understand?"

"Yes, Judge."

"That was directed at all of you."

"Yes, Judge!" twelve voices shouted out in relative unison. Crisp.

"Good. Now, we have no use for defensive soldiers-"

"Marines, Judge," Jorwan broke in.

Chianna stopped cold and stared at the man. I had been on the receiving end of that stare before and pitied him this one. He tensed and held his head up a little higher, trying a little too hard to maintain his dignity. And it worked for perhaps seven seconds before his jaw started to bunch. His head slowly drooped and I could tell that all of his muscles were taut. Their contest lasted half a minute before he said softly, but clearly, "Apologies, Judge."

"Accepted. As I was saying, we have no use for defensive soldiers. Our operations are largely, for the time being, hit-and-run strikes. Those hits usually involve the capture of a vessel. Do you have any experience with boarding operations?"

Jorwan straightened, some confidence returning. "Yes, Judge. I have participated in forty-seven successful boarding attempts."

"Oh? And what types of ships did you capture?"

His confidence wavered. "I didn't, sir. Judge. They were training ops."

There was silence between them again for a few seconds. "But you're proud of your training victories."

"Yes, Judge. I logged one hundred sixty-three enemy kills on the successful operations."

"I see. And how many were unsuccessful?"

Jorwan paused, struggling to maintain composure. "Seventy-four."

Chianna let that hang in the air for a moment. "Marshal Silsarna." Marshal? Aron stepped forward without a word and she continued. "How many enemies have you killed in operations with us?"

"I don't know, Judge."

Again she paused. She knew how to play a crowd, I had to give her that. "Why not?"

"Because if you start counting bodies during a fight, you die."

"Mm. How many successful boarding operations have you participated in?"

"Six."

"And how many unsuccessful?"

"None."

Chianna nodded, then advanced and came to a halt less than three paces from Jorwan. "If that last number ever becomes 'one', Aron will most likely be dead," she said softly. "In real combat, you don't log kills. You count the bodies after the battle is over. Your personal success means nothing. If you help achieve your squad's mission, you succeed, even if you die in the process." She paused again. "Marshal, how many ships have been boarded by our soldiers so far?"

"Eight."

"And how many casualties have we sustained?"

"Three."

"Three." She stepped past Jorwan and walked along the line of eleven behind him, once, twice, as she spoke. "You only die once in the field. So you will be training. Much of what you think you know, you will discard. I don't care what your specialties are, because you will try everything. Your skills will improve. You will become competent and able to work with any unit in our command. You may be kept together as a unit, you may not, but there will always be others with you. Boarding parties for capital ships consist of twenty for us. And no matter what you may be thinking right now, we do everything possible to try to keep you alive. If that means sacrificing your pride now, I will do so. I don't want to look down on your corpses in a month."

By the time Chianna returned to her original position our new soldiers were standing straighter but more relaxed. Assured. If they were planning to betray us before, that plan might not have survived Chianna.

"Marshal Silsarna will see to your arrangements. Training will begin tomorrow. For the time being you will be broken up and dispersed to train with our squads of five. Three veterans will take on two recruits. Make no mistake, that is what you are right now. Raw recruits. I hope that you will learn quickly. Our people trained for six to nine months before they ever fought for real. You won't have that luxury."

I stepped back and turned around to face the stairwell, feeling quite pleased. I had worried that Chianna might have been broken, but evidently that worry was unfounded. I couldn't really count on the new people yet, but their test would come.

A minute later Chianna bounded up the stairs, eyes bright and lips curved in a delighted smile that I couldn't help but mimic. "Most fun I've had in weeks," she said.

"That was part of the idea." I winked at her, then grew slightly more serious. "They're yours now, you know. You decide when they're ready and let me know. I won't throw their lives away either. But we can't train them at pirate bases."

Chianna nodded, her smile fading as she stepped up to the observation screen to look down on her people. "I'll still be able to, but I'll have to keep them quarantined. And I'll need Aron and all of his men if I'm to get them ready any time soon. I know that might slow you down-"

"No, it won't." I stepped up beside her, still smiling. "There are other things I need to be doing as well, and this gives me the opportunity to work on them. But I do still need you to hire more people from the pirates. The Boron quota I gave you is essential." She pursed her lips and nodded. I hadn't let her in on the other side of my planned operations, but then, I hadn't let anyone in on them. "But good news. You can hire a few Paranid and count them in that quota."

"That should help."

I simply nodded. The Heirs might be my primary concern now, but they weren't my ONLY concern. The Split, my kin, owed me a debt in blood too.
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Post by Sabrina Bergin »

Interesting:

this tale is expanding in multiple directions, I've bought into it so far but now I am truly intrigued.

excellent post looking forward to the next.
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Post by Song Of Obsidian »

Wish I could say it will always be that exciting, but I feel like I'm about to hit a lull. There was something I wanted to do but I found an even better reason for delaying it. I'll try not to linger on the boring stuff.

Speaking of which...I am in the process of completing the Hub plot, but I am SO not making the ridiculous amount of tedium involved in collecting even more ridiculous amounts of resources a focal point of my story. So I'll be interjecting Hub moments now and then just to keep it moving. Most of my original intentions for this story have evolved as it's progressed, so I'm unfortunately breaking some of my rules because they no longer feel relevant. One of them is going to involve seeking the player HQ.

I might sort out some new rules, but I kinda think letting my character change and adapt to circumstances makes it more realistic than setting many rules in stone. As you so shrewdly pointed out, the story is expanding in multiple directions in spite of the original plan to keep the aims somewhat singular. Maybe my rules were just too rigid to begin with, since I walked into this without any experience on this board or even with creating a genuine X story. But some things won't change...like not being able to buy ships or repair them with the repair laser. I'm trying to keep it as honest as possible, so hopefully you all don't get lost in wild inconsistencies.


Chapter 58 - Necessary Boredom


Much as I would have liked to take a nap, there were too many hours left in this already full day.

I did allow myself something of a break from responsibility though. There were still sectors I had yet to map. Most of them belonged to my own race, so I set out to scout a small portion of it.

With the demise of my Jaguar, the fastest ship I owned with anything resembling firepower was a Mamba. I still had Nyota's Discoverer, but the ship left too much to be desired even for a scout craft. So I took the Mamba back to Contorted Dominion and made a brief run to Thyn's Abyss that I hoped never to repeat. Then I was off to and through Patriarch's Conclusion, where I had to avoid a Python destroyer and suffer a few death threats by the sector's on-duty controller.

To my surprise, there was no hostility directed my way in Heaven's Assertion. I flew south enough to find a gate I knew to be there, then went north, pulled by curiosity.

Pontifex' Seclusion similarly offered no threat to me. I had to know just how much had changed...or if this was, in fact, a clever trap. So I headed northeast and entered Duke's Citadel.

Still no aggression.

I took advantage of the opportunity and mapped out Perpetual Sin to the north, with a full asteroid scan of the empty sector. It was registered under Paranid ownership but they had yet to make anything of the place, despite several rich asteroids. The yields were remarkably similar to those of the Unknown Sector where I had my missile complex. If I could effectively blockade the gate, this would be the perfect place for a stronghold.

I left a satellite behind to track Paranid fleet activity and filled in the holes in my navigation data for this segment of Paranid space. The fact that they left me alone was perplexing, and I decided not to try my luck with any suicide runs through Split territory until I figured out why the people I had been spying on suddenly lost interest in skinning my hide.

Instead I decided to visit Hohindras in-person for what seemed like the first time since I hired him. Then again, maybe it WOULD be the first time since I hired him...
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Post by Song Of Obsidian »

Chapter 59 - Completing Work Creates More Work

My missile complex looked mostly as it had before, but there was a noticeable difference. Very noticeable. One of the silicon mines on the west side had moved, and I observed the towing of the other. By a Hyperion. Where had he found one of my captured corvettes?

I flew in close to the Hercules, which was in front of and above the gate, to avoid distracting the Teladi. Towing an asteroid might require a certain brute force to wrangle the thing into the right position, but keeping it from colliding with another asteroid, especially in a crowded area such as this one, required complete focus. It would for me, at least.

Hohindras made it look effortless, though. He triggered the beam to break the connection and accelerated toward the last mine, and I let him go unmolested. He had to be eager to get the them all in place and connected to the hub so a freighter was no longer required to keep the complex production going. It truly was a waste of his talents, but there had been no other choice at the time. I was glad he found the means to complete the complex.

Towing the last mine took a while; it was quite a ways away. I waited patiently until the towing connection was severed, then brought him up on the comms. "Want me to handle linking them up?"

"And let you take part of my pay? I think not." I grinned at him, and after a couple seconds he grinned back.

"Fine, fine. I'll meet you on the Hercules."

"Bring your datapad. I expect my pay now."

Damned Teladi.

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

"Alright, you greedy green-skin," I said after arranging for a credit transfer from the 'company' account to Hohindras' personal one. "So you're no longer needed to keep my complex running. How long will I have to wait for you to draw up plans for its expansion?"

The greedy green-skin, as I called him, ignored me while he checked his account. He sat back in the captain's chair of the Hercules with a dreamy half-smile. It was fairly disgusting. "You know, saving your life is getting more and more expensive to me."

He hissed at me and rolled his eyes. "Yess yesssss, great ssavior. You chose a fine time to arrive." He started tapping on his datapad. "I have worked up some planss. I will sssend them to you now."

"How have you had time?"

"The flightss were long," he said distastefully.

That gave me at least a little satisfaction, which felt wrong. But there it was. "At least you kept busy," I mumbled as the documents came up on my pad. I opened the first one. It showed the current complex, with both a diagram of the sector and a listing of stations. The proposed new stations were in italics. I looked at the number totals at the bottom. The complete complex, now, had twenty-four stations. His new plan had sixty-one, and an additional price tag of 226 million. Ouch.

"Ion cannons, ion pulse generators, 200 MJ and 1 GJ shields, tempest missiles."

"Yeesss. I was able to include everything we can acquire from the Boron, but it requiress ussing three low-yield ore miness."

"So I see." Aside from the 200 MJ shields and tempest missiles though, none of them were high priorities. Especially with that cost. So I opened up the other file. A quick glance told me that it was incomplete, but that wasn't his fault. Until I gave him a sector to put it in he couldn't plan the mines, and without those production totals, he couldn't give definite numbers on any of the factories. I looked over the list anyway. "How long would it take you to configure this listing if I gave you a location with scans of the asteroids?"

"Three to five minutess, depending on the ssector." Smug bastard.

I continued scanning the list. "There are some things missing," I said, frowning.

"That iss because only the Split or Paranid make the stationss."

"That does make things more difficult." I sighed. Some of those included 2 GJ shields, ion shard railguns, and pulsed beam emitters. That meant buying from friendly sources or getting their traders to dump cargo. The former was more reliable, at least for the shields. "Concussion impulse generators, flak artillery arrays, gauss cannons and ammo, high energy plasma throwers, photon pulse cannons." Something else was missing, but I couldn't put my finger on it. "I'll give you a sector to work with, but something tells me the cost is going to be out of my range for a while."

Hohindras nodded. "You need more income."

"Yes, and places for me to find work are becoming rarer." I sat back and looked up to find the Teladi staring at me. "Any ideas?"

He smiled. "Thiss complex makes a surpluss of many thingss."

I should have known. I thought it over for a few moments. "Alright, but I'm still not getting you a Vulture."

He shrugged. "I'll try to find more opportunities in the coming week."

"Good. I'll contact you in three days to see if you have anything. But before you get to trading, I need one more thing."

"Oh? How can I be of service?"

"I need some more Nividium."

Hohindras grinned broadly. He would probably be wealthier than me tomorrow.
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Post by Idleking »

Song Of Obsidian wrote:[..]Damned Teladi.[..]
He would probably be wealthier than me tomorrow.
:lol:
Making profitsss is part of their genetic memory heh :D
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Post by Song Of Obsidian »

Something like that. Oh well. He works hard, at least. But maybe I should start taking a percentage of his percentage...


Chapter 60 - Upping the Stakes


A small form was moving slowly between the ships when I returned to the fleet. It had to be Kyota Braks...she was the only pilot I had, after all. As I brought the Mamba closer, my scanners picked up the fighter she had chosen for whatever exercise was going on in her head: an Eclipse. I grinned and brought her up on the comms. "Fun little tank, isn't it?"

She shrugged. "I wanted to see what you like about it so much. I'd rather have a Buster."

"I always seem to go against the grain. You're bored, I take it?"

"Course, sir. I'm the only person here."

Oh, right. I had forgotten that everyone else was seeing to the training of our former Marines. "Well, we'll have to do something about that. How would you like to fly on my wing for a different sort of op?"

She perked up and gave me a curious look. "Sure thing! Where are we going, sir?"

"Nowhere, yet. But it'll require some training. That is, if you think you can handle a missile frigate."

Her eyes went wide. "I don't know, sir," she said uncertainly. "They're so...so..."

"Big?" I offered.

"Yes sir." She smiled sheepishly.

"Don't worry. The only thing you'll have to worry about ramming is me. I'm considering an op that will require two of them, and forty commandos. I can manage it by myself if need be, but..."

"Oh, no! Count me in, sir!"

I grinned at her. "We'll pull the Ares out of formation so you can get a feel for its steering without worrying ab-"

"One of your ships is under attack - Hatikvah's Faith," the computer announced. I shouldn't have any ships there, though.

"What's that, sir?"

I had four satellites in the sector, so I punched up the map. I immediately saw the blank section in what had once been a sector with full satellite coverage; the northeastern satellite was missing. "Might be nothing. Don't run into anything." I heard her grumble while I waited. A couple minutes passed before I saw anything out of the ordinary. It was a Split Military Tiger with a fighter escort, and it was moving toward the southeastern satellite.

I brought the Mamba back up to maximum speed and scanned the fleet for a ship. "That training will have to wait. I need the Ares now. You can fly the Minotaur around for a few circuits, but get my Mamba somewhere safe first. Understood?"

"Yes, sir." There was a question in her voice, but I wasn't going to answer it. Nor was I going to tell her that I was transferring missiles from the Argon missile frigate to the Paranid one.

I didn't board the Ares, though. I transported to the small cockpit of the Iguana passenger transport, checked to make sure I had energy cells, and jumped to Veil of Delusion.

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

"I have some people training at your facility. I'd like to speak with one of them, a Paranid named Elmanckardet."

"As ye please."

A couple minutes passed before the Paranid warrior's face came up. "Is it time?" he asked calmly.

"It is. I'll be there within three minutes. I can only take ten at a time, but I'll need twenty. Time's short."

"We will be ready." Then he was gone.

He was in the docking bay when I landed, with a horde of Boron at his back. All of them were fully armed and outfitted, as far as I could tell. I didn't have to say a word; as soon as the outer hatch was open, he and all of the Boron piled in. The Paranid himself came forward to the cockpit.

"This thing isn't made for that many people."

He sat down in the navigator's chair. "We are warriors. There will be no complaints."

With that sort of certainty, I wasn't going to question him. I threw a quick wave to some random pirate ahead of us and took us back out, heading for the gate.

While we flew I looked at the vid feed from the cargo bay and did a head count. Twenty-one. "I said twenty."

"None would stay behind."

"One may not get to fight."

"Find a way." I shot him a glance at that, but he was staring straight ahead. Find a way. Right.

"One of your ships is under attack - Hatikvah's Faith." Three satellites gone. Fast as the Tiger was, this might be chancy.

"Our battle?"

"Yes," I replied, and the Paranid smiled grimly.

At six kilometers from the gate I ordered the Ares in. Elmanckardet bared his teeth when he saw it, but I could only guess at his thoughts and those guesses probably weren't very good ones. I intended to minimize the time the frigate spent in this sector, and hoped no pirates would notice it. I probably should have warned my people before transporting them, but I didn't. Besides, they wouldn't complain. Elmanckardet promised.

I started the jump sequence to Hatikvah's east gate, then ordered the Iguana to follow a few seconds later with the last straggling Boron. Find a way...

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

As soon as we were in-sector, I began strafing upward to give me a clear line of fire above the asteroids. A glance at the map showed the Tiger nearing firing range of my last satellite, so I only had a small window to get its attention. Once that satellite was gone I would be blind from this distance, and the north and east gates were far too close to it for comfort.

So I started targeting each of the fighters and sent three Flails at as many as I could to say hello.

My vision of the battle group disappeared before I got through all of them; some of the escorting Mambas would still be left, and all of the interceptors. I also didn't have video enhancement to see what the Tiger was doing, but I had a view of one of the last Flails I fired on the left monitor. It was the best I had to work with for the time being.

Flails are faster than almost any fighter, but even at those speeds it took some time to cross forty kilometers. I saw some explosions ahead, but they were closer; some of the missiles had plowed into asteroids. But I didn't wait idly for my kin to die. I had planned for this assault for some time. Not necessarily this one, but a first strike against a Split military force. So I started a program on my datapad. I had more than passing familiarity with the communication routing systems utilized by my own people. I didn't block out their transmissions, but I did create interference so only maybe one word in ten would go through. Let them wonder.

Less than two minutes after the first launch I saw more explosions, and these were bigger. This was my first major attack against my own people, and it felt cleaner than the business with the Paranid. I couldn't say why.

The explosions faded and I lost the feed from the last missile with its detonation against the Tiger's shields. Three Flails was too much for most Split fighters, I should have realized, with their proclivity for speed at the expense of shielding. I would remember when they came within targeting range again though. If they came within targeting range.

And they did.

The Tiger's thin, dagger-like profile was ominous enough when pointed at me, but the distance gave me every advantage I would need. While I was launching torpedoes at the Tiger itself I noted that the reload time seemed longer than that of the Minotaur. I would have to take that into account every time I used it.

I flicked on the intercom to the launch chamber, where my people were gathered, as I sought to thin out the fighter cloud further. "Less than three minutes until launch," I announced. It was the only warning they would get for this. Six of the Boron had been on my very first op to capture the Minotaur, but for all the others this would be their first blooding.

I wondered if I would be mourning again in a few minutes. Then again, I wasn't very familiar with any of them. So maybe not.

Alert. Missile closing.

Not much of a surprise. I targeted the missile from the Tiger. It was a firestorm torpedo. Nasty, but a missile barrage should take care of the slow-moving missile without trouble.

Alert. Missile closing.

I stared at the Tiger frigate, but didn't see any other missiles coming from it. Nor from its fighters, which were even then beginning to vanish. I scanned the periphery...

Alert. Missile closing.

I spotted them at last, toward the south at maximum scanning range. It was a second Split battle group, led by a Cobra missile frigate. One of the missiles flying toward me was a Hammer Heavy Torpedo, exactly like the ones I used. The other two were Tomahawks, launched by escorting Viper bombers. Every time, now, someone has to rain on my parade.

I launched a Flail at each missile, then started targeting the Cobra's escorts too. There was a chance I could take both ships; I had plenty of practice at it. However, I had always done so with commandos who had combat experience. I might have to just destroy one, depending on how many of my people survived the first attempt.

My Hammers pounded against the Tiger; it would take a little work to keep the shields low because it had a fairly strong generator, but I wasn't worried about that part. I glanced at the vid feed from the launch bay, and saw my people were already in their pods. Good. I waited until the Tiger's shields dropped to one percent under a few Flail barrages, then launched, transported my last Boron straight into a pod, and launched him after a couple seconds behind.

The missiles targeting me began to explode, one after another. I saw another Tomahawk though, which must have been homing in on my transport. I jumped the Iguana out to Light of Heart and sent it to the equipment dock, then looked at the range indicator for the Tiger. Nine kilometers. Still safe, but I throttled up and started to turn left, to put the gate between me and it. And then, with the boarding pods near to the target, I keyed in the second phase of my comm disruption program, which fed my boarding team's comms to the Tiger's comm systems, and then on to a relay station.

"Target hull reached," Elmanckardet said slowly. There was some quality to his voice that just made the Paranid seem inexorable. Little wonder if the Boron followed him out of fear. I probably would too.

Both the Tiger and the Cobra were faster than my Ares; I didn't have long before the Tiger would be able to take shots at me, if it had incendiary bomb launchers. Which it most likely did, despite the fact that they were pirate-made weapons. There had to be some secret arrangement between the pirates and militaries. Had to be.

"Hull opening. Take firing positions."

If I was going to have a chance at the Cobra, I needed to be close to the Tiger when my people captured it. A very optimistic thought, perhaps but I decided to swing around behind the gate and stay there, rather than getting ahead of the Tiger. I would have to try to evade some weapons fire...

"They cannot stop us."

Apparently I wasn't the only optimist. The Cobra's escorts were dying a bit over fifteen kilometers away, and the Tiger had started firing at me. It was, indeed, equipped with IBLs. The rounds were coming through the gate itself, but they were slow enough to avoid. Only, not for that poor Teladi freighter that came through right in the middle of our battle. It disintegrated instantly.

"Hacking computer core."

I blinked. Already? I checked on the Cobra; seventeen kilometers. Did my people RUN through the Tiger's decks?

I started back around the gate, optimistic yet again. My optimism was rewarded when a Boron commando went spacewalking. I didn't take the time to talk to my people; I transported the remaining warriors back to the Ares, sent my jumpdrive to the Tiger, and jumped it to safety as I punched up the intercom. "I have another job opportunity, if you're all keen."

"We are ready," Elmanckardet said without hesitation, and I started launching torpedoes.

The twenty-first now-blooded warrior was almost a minute late, but the second assault went as smoothly as the first. Whatever he had been doing proved effective, and I didn't have anything to mourn except for the boarding pods. I used the last on the Cobra. For shame.
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Post by Idleking »

Flawless op, gratz ;)
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Post by Poseidon »

Excellent chapter. I can very much relate to the 'where are all the missile warnings coming from this time?' moment. I've also given up on double ops... the risk is too great for a DiD... for me anyway. you make it look easy.

Overall, nice job maintaining a strong narrative despite the gameplay. Well done.
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Post by Song Of Obsidian »

What makes it easy is the distances involved. I almost never come under direct attack, and I'm getting something of a knack for the timing involved, especially with the Flails. I'm looking forward to a time when I use my missile frigates for more than just capturing ships, but I'm slowly increasing my personal challenges on my operations. I imagine what I'm doing would be more difficult in AP because of the AI changes. One thing at a time...


Chapter 61 - Aftermath


I wasn't as prepared for this success as I thought; I had to babysit the Cobra for far too long while the Boa collected a couple Mambas and bought spare jumpdrives. I moved the Ares to the northeast and set the Cobra to follow while we waited. The Boa could certainly catch up.

The two captured ships came through unscathed, and both still had cargo intact. The Cobra didn't need quite so much attention as it might have in most circumstances because one of the 1 GJ shields survived, as well as 111 Flails. The Tiger had a better haul though, with eight ion shard railguns and another eight of the precious IBLs. Equipping the Tiger for combat duty would be a breeze with those weapons still aboard. I decided it would serve as a defensive ship for my missile complex, for the time being.

I sent both ships to Queen's Retribution for upgrades, with most of the commandos still aboard the Cobra. Elmanckardet stayed with me, though I fully intended to take him back to his team.

"How did they do?" I was in the process of refueling, since most of my jump energy had gone to the captured ships.

"Fair. Gaga Di's squad was slow to blow a hatch on the Cobra. Galala No led her squad into an ambush. Gaga Di and Trali Fo flanked and saved her. Gaga Di took too long breaching the Tiger's hull. And Gaga Di tried to take a prisoner. That will not happen again."

"Sounds like a lot of things to improve on, but they all survived and both missions were successful."

"Yes. That is why they did fair. But Gaga Di and Gaga Di will be disciplined."

I blinked. "Wait. What?"

"I said-"

"I heard what you said. You said Gaga Di twice."

"We have two warriors named Gaga Di."

"And you made them both squad leaders?" I asked incredulously. "Doesn't that get confusing, especially in combat?"

He bared his teeth, then shrugged. "Perhaps. But it amuses me."

Mental note: Avoid incidental humor around Elmackardet at all costs. Potential for threat to life: unacceptably high.

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

I returned to the fleet alone with a to-do list but no energy to get anything started. Tension had remained high for too many hours on this short day.

The Minotaur was off to the south, moving very slowly. Then again, even its maximum speed would seem slow at a distance.

"Welcome back, sir! You had me worried."

I smiled when I saw Nyota's face with unmasked relief on my comm screen. Such a rare gift...

"Nothing to worry about. I lost some satellites, is all. But I'm dead tired. Think I'll take a nap on the Express."

"Of course, sir. Should I try out the Ares while you rest?"

"By all means. I'd also appreciate it if you could take a less conspicuous ship around to some military bases and buy up some boarding pods. We'll need more all too soon."

"Anything you need, sir."

After listening to Elmanckardet's...unique...way of speaking, Nyota's calm acquiescence was a balm to my nerves. I barely made it to one of the Express' beds before I fell asleep, fully clothed.
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Post by Poseidon »

Alright, now you've got me laughing. I like Elmackardet a lot. It's a little disturbing to think we might get along.

I don't know if things are harder or easier in AP, but I've gone *mod, so at this point it's irrelevant. You're making good on a difficult situation, and flail timings require quite a bit of skill.

Patience. Once you start moving in earnest, things are going to get complicated. May as well enjoy the solid foundation while you can. :-p
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Post by jorganos »

Another reader unlurking to confess addiction.

Great way to create a storyline (or rather three of them - Gunne's Heirs, the Boron anti-Split pps and basically getting your operation running) out of the game events.

Now you're starting to develop your henchmen as talking characters, great dialogue, too. You're awfully tempered for a Split character, but I guess that's what it takes to survive in intelligence service. Too bad the game doesn't offer the various Split families as separate groups to court or feud with, getting a divided reaction from the Split would be great for your story.

Would you be interested in (in-universe) third party reactions to your exploits, maybe in the form of news magazines reporting on the disappearances, and on your Gunne's Heirs news bullets?
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Post by Song Of Obsidian »

I have a lot of fun writing Elmanckardet too :P

I admit my character talks more like a human than a Split too, but there aren't really enough examples of Split dialect for me to realistically portray it. So the character is colored by me in some regards, but yes, I definitely took the intelligence background into strong consideration when I was choosing how he would behave. Not sure how many people would remember it from the very start, but I included a mention of a previous very successful operation to hint at the fact that he knows what he's doing in at least a certain spectrum.

I'm also disappointed that a lot of the game's nuances aren't fleshed out...the Split families, Argon command structure, Paranid religious hierarchy, etc. But as far as actual gameplay goes none of that would have even the slightest impact. X isn't very story-driven, you have to admit.

I'm certainly open to your suggestion. In fact, doing it as news reports would introduce a whole new sort of reality into the situation, since people form all kinds of opinions and theories about events, most of them are usually wrong. Since they're usually wrong, I couldn't even tell whoever wrote it that they got it all wrong...because that would be what made it realistic to begin with. Various small-time, independent media outlets throwing out a new take on events that I might have to actually respond to could prove interesting. And it would give poor Nyota Braks more to do...and maybe give me more opportunities to introduce new characters.

The only thing I worry about is whether or not the reader understands how public these attacks are or aren't. The attacks on the Split, for example, I'm putting into the shadows for the most part, so I wouldn't expect news attention there...yet. But anything done to the Argon or Paranid is certainly fair game.

If you want to do something like that, you can run it by me via private message if you like. Otherwise, feel free. My character doesn't have nearly enough headaches yet.


Chapter 62 - Blitzkrieg


"Are you sure about this, sir?"

You're going to make me less sure of it if you keep questioning me, I thought but didn't say. "Practice only goes so far. It's only been a few days, but we're controlling the battlefield. If this goes bad I have backup ready to support you, and all you have to do is use the jumpdrive to escape. Your shields will last more than long enough to get out. Don't worry. You'll lose the nerves once everything starts."

"I hope you're right, sir."

"I'm always right. Now enough chatter. The target is coming through the gate." I could swear I heard Nyota gulp on the other end.

I had woken a few days previously with a dire sort of realization: with the opening gambit against the Split, I needed more missile frigates. I had an operation planned that would require two, a Minotaur and an Ares, but I also needed a distinct second force for my attacks against the Split. That meant at least two missile frigates, if I could find them. I didn't want to use the Cobra, because I wanted it to appear as if the regular Paranid military was making the strikes rather than some scavenging party. All of my Split captures would be put on defensive duties.

But I couldn't only target missile frigates. If I captured a pair of Ares frigates and then a pair started attacking the Split, someone might put two and two together. It was still a possibility, but less likely if I went on a full-out offensive against the Paranid. Plus it might take some heat off of me from the Argon if I left them alone.

Three straight days of scouting and attacks was starting to wear me down, and probably my commandos too. Some of Chianna's hired warriors were cycled in and out for combat experience, though the former Marines still weren't ready. We had a long string of successes, with only one man killed in action. A Split, of course. I barely had any left.

The list of captures was extensive. Some were fighters; a Pericles, a trio of Perseus', and another Medusa had all been abandoned by their pilots. We took a Nemesis on two separate occasions, a Deimos frigate, and an Ares, which was the real target. We also had a lucky break in Split Fire, and I was able to seize not one but two Zeus carriers. One had come in support of the other and scared me half to death, especially with how small that sector is, but we pulled it off. After that I promised my people a well-earned rest if we could find one last target. Another Ares. And find it we did.

My satellites in the Boron sector of Lucky Planets detected it first, heading east. I jumped into Rolk's Legacy in Sprite to track its movements; when I saw it make the turn to the south, I ordered Nyota Braks to Gunne's Crusade in an Ares, and to get set up among the asteroids. It would be the first time she flew the frigate solo, so her nerves were understandable, if inconvenient.

"Do you have them on scanners?"

"No, sir. I'm too far away from the gate."

"Good. I'm going to jump to the south gate and come toward you. Wait until it's within twenty clicks before you start taking out the escorts, and hit the Ares with Hammers only after the Flails have all hit a target so we can avoid hull damage."

"Y-yes sir," she said shakily. Showing trust was going to give me an ulcer.

Gunne's Crusade, an apt name for an attack but Gunne's supposed Heirs, was a very long sector. I was still over forty kilometers from Nyota when she whispered, "Here goes nothing," and started her attack. I left her to it without comment, criticism or advice. I had access to her scanner data, so I could see the end results. The fighters all dropped pretty quickly...and so did the shields on the Ares. She had probably sent far more Flails than were necessary. She'd learn.

"Make sure you re-calc how many torps you need with the shields damaged." I couldn't hold silent this time.

"Thank you, sir. Launching now." I targeted her Ares and counted the torpedoes as I saw them leave the tubes. Once she stopped firing I switched to her target and checked the shields. She would need to send some Flails still, but the target was far enough away that I waited to see if she would figure it out herself, or how long it would take her to realize it, rather.

I was pleasantly surprised when I saw a few flights of smaller missiles corkscrewing through the space between them. Maybe she had been paying attention during the previous ops after all.

The target's shields were at 2% when the last Hammer struck. "Sending the boys and girls to play!" And, true to her word, I saw four broad white exhaust streams being chased by a few more Flail barrages. This might just work out nicely.

"Shit, sir, he's launching too." I could see it for myself. There was a fair chance those Flails might take out at least one boarding pod, even if they were launched at Nyota. My heart leapt into my throat as the distance between missiles and pods dwindled.

"Strafe up and to the right, now. It'll pull those missiles out of line with the pods if the pods aren't the targets." Maybe the explanation was unnecessary; Nyota did as she was told before I offered it. Sure enough, the oncoming missiles angled upward and I let out a quiet sigh of relief.

"Contact with the hull! Break it down!" Who was that?

The shields were still low enough that I doubted it would need any more munitions. Nyota decided to play it safe and launched three more Flails, which I couldn't fault her for. Maybe it would make the commandos feel better too.

"Almost open, prepare for entry. We go in heavy. No mistakes, people!" Whoever that man was, he was trying way too hard. He was more likely to get his people killed than the enemy if he didn't learn to shut his mouth. I suddenly had a few misgivings about the operation, but interrupting would probably do even more harm. I gritted my teeth and just listened to the battle unfolding in that huge metal coffin.

My misgivings proved both justified and unjustified. We took the frigate and suffered six casualties, but they were all wounded, not killed. I still intended to find out who led the op and sit him down with Chianna and Aron for a heart-to-heart. Overbearing leaders either get their people killed, or get killed by their people. I didn't want either.

Some people choose it, some are chosen...
Song Of Obsidian
Posts: 305
Joined: Wed, 19. Jun 13, 19:46
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Post by Song Of Obsidian »

Assets Update:

Personal Ships:
Eclipse - Sprite
Medusa Prototype
Tenjin

Specialist: The Mule
Caiman Super Freighter XL - Wolfhound
{1} Hammerhead Missile
{13} Ion Disruptors
{4} Phased Shockwave Generators
{14} Tempest Missiles
{20} Thunderbolt Missiles

Passenger transports: {4}
Toucan Hauler - Gull
Toucan Hauler - Gall
Iguana - Gambler's Delight
Express Hauler

Military transports: {3}
Boa
Chokaro
Magnetar

Freighters: {9}
Caiman - Siren's Hips - Ore Mine IZ
Caiman Hauler - - BoFu Complex Montalaar
Caiman Super Freighter XL
Demeter Hauler
Demeter Hauler - Silversteel - Ore Mine CBSE
Demeter Hauler - Wooden Horse - Teladianium Foundry TW
Demeter Super Freighter - Buster Minor - Missile Complex US
Demeter Super Freighter XL - Daisyclaw - Xenon Hub
Demeter Super Freighter XL

Large Transports: {2}
Hercules
Ryu

Fighters: {27}
M5
* Discoverer Raider
M4
* Pericles
* Pericles Vanguard
* Scorpion Sentinel
* Pike
M3
* L
* Mamba {4}
* Nova Prototype
* Perseus {5}
M3+
* Chimera
* Eclipse {6}
* Kea
* Medusa x3

Capital ships: {20}
M6
* Hydra
* Nemesis x3
M6+
* Heavy Nemesis
* Heavy Centaur Prototype
* Hyperion Vanguard {2}
M7
* Cerberus
* Deimos
* Tiger
M7M
* Ares x3
* Cobra
* Minotaur
M2
* Odysseus
* Titan
M1
* Zeus x2

Stations:
Cloudbase South East
* Ore Mine L
Ianamus Zura
* Ore Mine L
Montalaar
* BoFu Chemical Lab L Complex - 2 stations
Three Worlds
* Teladianium Foundry L
Unknown 18:16
* Hammer Torpedo and Flail Barrage Missile Complex - 24 stations - Self-sufficient



Credits: 104,773,285

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