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Incoming Part Two (standard:science fiction, 6790 words) [2/6] show all parts | |||
Author: James J Martin | Added: Aug 18 2003 | Views/Reads: 2725/1979 | Part vote: 0.00 (0 votes) |
More intrigue, political shadow movements, troop deployments and startling discoveries. More characters introduced, suspense, action and much more. | |||
Click here to read the first 75 lines of the story "Copy that." As the driver made the correct adjustments. The tech adjusted his scan for wide range, in that split second as the scope changed parameters; he caught a blip on the screen. "All stop!" he yelled out. The vehicle slid to a stop almost slewing sideways on the slick road. He slowly swept the area as the rest of the team waited. "Sorry. Thought I saw something." He said. The driver started the scout forward. They would be a little behind schedule for the next pod deployment so the driver increased his speed. Moving almost recklessly over the wet terrain, the scout shot over a small embankment and landed with an immense spray of water and mud on the other side as all four wheels spun momentarily before propelling the vehicle forward. The vehicle rounded a corner and was stopped by a fast flowing current of water that covered the roadway in front of them. The tech scanned the area for an alternative route. "We're going to have to retrace our steps." He said finally. "This river goes on for several klicks." The driver threw the vehicle into reverse and moved back to the embankment. He deftly turned the small scout around and began moving parallel to the flowing river. Passing through older ruins and more collapsed buildings, the weather grew worse. Thunder rolled and lightning flashed as the team maneuvered past smaller bodies of standing water. A large lightning bolt struck the ground beside the vehicle, rocking it and making the electronics and interior illumination flicker. The four men looked at each other, not saying a word. Lightning began to crash down around them; some strikes close enough to leave scorch marks on the armored finish. The driver dodged the impacts and headed for a building. Driving through a hole in the wall and into the somewhat dry interior, he stopped the vehicle and let out a breath of relief. "Notify base camp that the lightning storms are hazardous." He said as he regained his composure. The sensor/commo tech immediately started the task. The weps tech was doing a recalibration of his equipment when the ground began to tremble under the vehicle. "What the hell?!" The co-driver slapped a switch, outside, outrigger arms deployed to stabilize the vehicle. Normally used when the drone launch system was installed. The trembling increased accompanied by a crackling sound. The troopers were shook up even in their gyro-stabilized seats. As one, they reached for the gimbal that was on the arm of each chair. Fingering that gimbal, the tension on the shoulder straps increased and sat them upright in the seat. "Send a burst transmission to base!" the driver shouted over the increasing din. "Give our position! Experiencing seismic activity!" he yelled. "Sensors off line!" the tech yelled. "Resetting!" he shouted as he reached out and flipped the circuit breaker next to his panel. "Commo system is out! All weapons off-line!" Weps reported. Abruptly the noise increased and the vehicle pitched forward. The co-driver fired out the emergency grapples to stop the forward movement. The grapples shot away from all sides of the vehicle and found purchase in the walls, ceiling, and floor of the old building. The vehicle shook and shuddered until finally pitching backwards and falling into the deep crevasse that opened up beneath it. The cables held for several seconds before ripping entire sections of the walls and flooring into the crevasse with the small vehicle. The earthquake stopped as soon as the scout vehicle disappeared. Mud and water flowed into the large hole, filling it over. The rain continued to fall but the thunder diminished and the lightning stopped. "Major Hunter. Scout 21 reports lightning and tremors in their sector." Hunter slid his chair along the track built into the floor until he was beside the commo tech. "Lost transmission. Could be electrical interference from the storm." "Keep trying." Hunter said as he slid back to his console. He called up that sector and reviewed the satellite data. Weather patterns looked a little rough, a localized storm front. Next, he keyed up the geological information. No reports of seismic activity. Very strange, he thought. He positioned his boom mike closer. "Sgt. Hazard. Meet me at the entrance ramp." He said as he got up and moved to the hatch. Outside, the rain was increasing, signaling the change of day. Hunter glanced at his wrist chrono as Hazard walked up to him. "Sir." "Scout 21 has encountered a phenomenon in their sector." Hunter gazed out at the heavy rain. "We've lost contact with them." He added. Hazard nodded knowingly. "So it's begun." He said flatly. Seventh Division Headquarters was located five klicks from the first Alpha Base. A sprawling mini city of its own, it was a constant buzz of activity. Col. McKnight entered through the large gates and was directed to the main building. Outside the building, there were already a number of APC's lined up with their angular snouts pointing out. His driver stopped in front of the main doors, as he moved to the side hatch. As soon as he stepped out and made his way up the steps, the vehicle pulled over to the parking area, already a muddy quagmire from the vehicle traffic and constant rain. McKnight walked inside, removed his helmet and approached the quarterdeck officer. "Colonel McKnight reporting." He said as he signed in. The officer located his name on the desk console. "Yes sir. Briefing room three, down the main corridor on the left." McKnight nodded and moved off. Divisional HQ had been erected quite rapidly, some of the sections he passed were still being finished, but at least the roof and exterior walls were up. He entered the briefing room and looked around at the other officers gathered there. Colonel Todd Shumate, First Bn. CO, Colonel Bruce Gordon, Second BN. CO, and Colonel Don Chewlewski, Fourth BN. CO, were all standing in a small group by the beverage dispenser, talking quietly. He walked over and shook their hands respectively. They had all been in the same class at the academy. The discussion had turned to the latest intel on the planet, when the Brigade Commander and the Division Commander entered the room. Lieutenant General Francis Curtis, a veteran of numerous off-world conflicts and skirmishes, was talking animatedly to the Division Commander, Major General Artemis Smith. Smith, in contrast to Curtis's smaller frame, was a large, barrel-chested man, sporting a scar on his throat from one of many skirmishes, which made his voice a hoarse, and raspy stage whisper. The junior officers came to attention. "As you were." Smith said. "Stand easy gentlemen, this is just a briefing. Outside these walls, you can call me sir all you want. But, right now, right here, I'm Arty." Smith announced with a twinkle in his eye as he shook each of their hands and motioned them to be seated. General Curtis grinned smugly at the statement. The junior officers took their seats and looked attentively at their commanders. "Francis tells me that some of his boys have been exceptionally busy in his neck of the woods. Seems they may have found what appears to be an old military base." Smith stated as he looked at Colonel Shumate. "Todd, tell us about it." He said as he reached for his mug. Shumate stood and moved to the large display screen. He picked up the controller and punched in a code. On the screen, the picture showed a large facility from a distance. "This was taken yesterday from Hill 214, Western Sector, Grid 111." He zoomed the picture closer. "One of the recon teams discovered it after making a detour around a mudslide." He punched up a closer view. "They launched a drone into the area and recorded this." The picture changed to show quick movement of several humanoid forms darting into a large building. "Further analysis could not be made due to the degradation of the picture quality. The team moved in and recovered the sensor, but had no further contact. This activity was at the same time as the final deployment from the Dodd." He advanced the picture frame by frame. "Coinciding with the drone launch, we can see the hurried movements and efforts to make the area look deserted." Shumate sat back down to a quiet room. Everyone looked at the screen where the picture had been frozen showing the humanoids. "Well done Todd." Smith said, "Fleet Ops has requested satellite coverage over that entire area." He paused to sip his tea. "I've authorized four satellites to be tasked for that. We'll be getting coverage from ground level on up." He looked at the other men, his eyes slightly squinted. " I can't, with a clear conscience, authorize an operation to search that base without knowing who or what is waiting for us." He took a sip of his tea. "What we have is someone on this planet that does not want to be found. We need to ascertain their intentions and react accordingly." He looked each man in the eye. "We need to be absolutely certain who they are. If they are indigenous, then we contact them for information, offer assistance and begin diplomatic and trade negotiation." He paused. "If they are not indigenous, and hostile, then I expect you boys to give them an asskicking off my planet." He said as he set his mug down. Smith stood, stretched and moved to the display screen. "Intel has been working on this one." He tapped the screen, "This soldier moves like a veteran, smooth, fluid and no wasted effort." He stepped back and stared hard at the frozen image. "We need detail on what they're capable of. Weapons, strength, the usual" He turned and faced the room. "Frank, tell these fine lads the real reason we called this meeting." Smith walked over to the beverage dispenser as Curtis stood and moved to the display screen. "Gentlemen, what I'm about to tell you stays in this room." His twinkling eyes now rock hard. "We've made contact with a Newson battle fleet. Our deep recon caught a reading of them as they were sweeping the edge of this system." Curtis adjusted the display to show the sensor record. "This is what happened when we moved a cruiser and two frigates into a blocking position." The screen showed plasma fire and missiles reach out from the Broderian ships. Several Newson vessels were destroyed or crippled as wave after wave of ordnance hit their fleet. One Broderian frigate was damaged as return fire came swiftly. The heavy cruiser launched all missiles at the Newson command ship, destroying it. Immediately following its destruction, the remaining Newson vessels detonated. The damaged frigate was tossed into the cruiser causing heavy damage and casualties. The display went blank. "You can see that they don't want us to capture any of their ships. Two frigates and one cruiser out of action. From the reports, its obvious that the command vessel controls the self destruct mechanism." The officers were quiet as they digested the information. "Now you know the reason behind this meeting." Smith said from his position. "We need to find out how the Algearians got the technology to leave orbit and why the Newson haven't overrun this place. The timetable has been moved up. Our projections show the second wave of the Newson force will reach the outer moons in three days. " He moved to the table. "That gives us at least that long to find out whom our mystery guests are as well as consolidate our forces. There must be a connection somewhere on this planet. We need to find it." He brought back the image of the humanoid at the abandoned base. "That's where we're starting. We need intel from them." He emphasized by walking over and tapping the screen. " Todd, Don, that's your task. Find them, capture them, or recover a body." He paused again and took a sip of his beverage. " The rest of you, continue your primary objectives as planned. That is all." The junior officers got up, collected their briefing materials and were given a micro disk as they left the room. No words were exchanged as they walked to the front of the building. Back in the briefing room, the two generals were still sitting at the table, both gazing at the display screen. "Arty, I don't like this." Curtis said pensively. Smith nodded as he continued staring. "Neither do I. Remember UNL-375?" he asked as he turned his gaze to the other man. "Been trying to forget it. That was a tricky operation. Contract deployment, poor communication, bad diplomatic stance, bad decisions all around." Smith was absently rubbing the scar on his throat. "I was just a Colonel back then. Left out of the command decisions. Contract jobs never go right, always something left out." "Oh yes, contract job all the way. That was when Kirby was fleet commodore. He pulled some slick moves back then. Saved a lot of troopers." "That he did. I met him after that. He changed." "Combat will do that to a man." Curtis said as he stood and gathered his paperwork. "This was different. I was on the command deck when he gave the order for sterilization." Smith's eyes had lost focus as he thought back to that time. "Almost as if he enjoyed doing it." He said softly as if to himself. CHAPTER SEVEN The overhead panel sparked, fizzled and went dead. The vehicle was jammed at a slightly upward angle, creating a heavy list to port. Sergeant Deakins reached over and pulled the circuit out on the power panel. Emergency lighting had turned on as soon as main power was lost. He looked over to the co-driver, Sergeant Crowe. Crowe's head was against his shoulder, the restraints keeping him upright in his seat. A small cut above the right eye had formed a partial blood mask on his face. Deakins released his harness and turned to look behind him. His actions were rewarded with a sharp pain between his shoulder blades. He winced but continued the movement. The dim lights did little to illuminate the interior. He could barely make out Sergeant Roberts still seated in the sensor tech position. Roberts was looking back at him through the haze. He gave Deakins thumbs up. Deakins nodded and turned back to Crowe. He reached out and checked for a pulse. Crowe moved just then with a groan. "Crowe? Crowe? Hey in there, wake up." He said as Crowe slowly turned his head and lifted a hand to his face. Deakins spoke into his mike. "Systems check. Everybody sound off." He said as he reached for the aid kit. "Sensors off-line. Weps off-line." Roberts reported. He turned and looked at the Weapons station. That section of the scout had been sheared off and now only solid rock was visible. " Hull breech. Weapons station is gone. Wood is gone." Roberts stated. Deakins looked back to the area behind his seat. Shaking his head, he returned to the task of bandaging Crowe's head injury. Deakins finished the field dressing and moved to the rear of the vehicle. His door was jammed shut by the rock. He looked at the area where the Weps station had been. Rock had sheared it off smoothly as if by machine. He turned to Roberts. "Anything?" Roberts fiddled with a few switches before answering. "Primary systems down. Secondary systems heavily damaged." He shook his head as he flipped switches. Reaching down between his legs, he stabbed the reset button hoping to restart the sensor systems. Sparks arced from the overhead panel followed by the acrid smell of burning insulation. Finally, a small cursor appeared in the corner of his monitor. Deakins crawled over his seat and was releasing the interior cargo door when Roberts got the monitor to work. On the screen, a systems check was running which calculated the damage and time to repair. The onboard computer was running a continuity test of all operating systems and giving a complete list of it capabilities. The information on the screen stopped with an audible tone. Both men looked at the monitor. "That's that. Commo, Weps, main sensors, propulsion, out of commission." Roberts turned to Deakins. "Game over." Deakins looked at him. "No. No, it's not, not by a long shot." He punched Roberts lightly on the shoulder." I'm not giving up, and neither are you." He thrust his hand out. "Duty and Honor." He said. Roberts grasped the outstretched hand. "Duty and Honor." He responded. Deakins returned to his task. Roberts went back to the computer. Deakins finally got the cargo hatch open and was rummaging inside, putting items on the deck. Roberts tried a system diagnostic program to get some of the exterior sensors on-line. Finally, after doing a quick re-route and switching a few circuit boards, he was able to re-boot the main computer. "Here we go." He said as sensor information was printing on his screen. Deakins turned from his work. "We're thirty meters down. Can't lock down the location, too much rock and damage for a satellite uplink." He adjusted the image on the screen. "It's a shelf, approximately twelve meters by eighteen meters." He typed in a command. "No transponder from Wood's armor." He added. Deakins nodded. "Atmosphere is breathable, actually a little better then up top. Seems like the rocks act as a filter, and its dry." He reported. "Ok. I vote we blow the hatch and get out of this hole." Deakins said. "I'm with you on that." Crowe piped in from up front. "Do it." Deakins watched as Roberts reached over and hit the emergency release tabs along the side of the vehicle. Explosive bolts fired and the side panel shot away from the scout. The panel flew a meters away and landed with a solid thump on the dry substrate that covered the rock shelf. Roberts tossed out a light stick. The little green cylinder flipped through the air and landed in front of the panel, bathing the chamber in an emerald hue. Deakins reached up and helped Crowe unbuckle and step outside. Crowe leaned against the side of the scout as Deakins grabbed the equipment from the pile he had made on the deck. Roberts boosted himself out and waved a small hand held scanning device around the chamber. Deakins handed three rucksacks out to Crowe who piled them at his feet. Roberts walked a few meters away and waved his scanner around before returning to the men. "I can't get much out of this. This is a cavern of some kind, but the scanner can't lock onto anything substantial. Lot of interference." He waved it around. "There's a passageway in that direction, but how far it goes or where it leads, I don't know." He took the offered ruck and slipped it onto his shoulders. The other men put theirs on as well. "It's a better choice then staying here and waiting for the roof to cave in." Deakins said. Roberts nodded and moved off, followed by Crowe and finally Deakins who set a transponder at the wrecked vehicle. He jogged to catch up with Crowe. CHAPTER EIGHT McKnight was lost in thought as his APC entered the gate to Alpha Base. The slight bump as the heavy vehicle cleared the gate threshold was enough to shake him out of his reverie. The APC pulled up and stopped in front of the command building. He stepped out and into the rain. He stood on the steps and looked around the perimeter. Squads were moving along the wall, various vehicles moving about, ships landing and taking off, and in the sky, the constant rain and cloud cover. He turned and walked up the steps and went through the double doors. Giving a nod to the quarterdeck officer, he made his way down the now finished hall to his office. McKnight walked in silence, his mind, digesting the briefing, intel reports and the upcoming battalion briefing. General Beckett sat at his desk and watched the fleet status board. The clear windows that faced the op-center gave him a commanding view of the operations display screen. In the last forty eight hours, several research and mining vessels had been dispatched and the path through the debris field had been widened and cleared. No further attacks from raiders had been reported. Several battle groups had moved into the other system and taken positions around UNL-465. Beckett turned his gaze to the report on his desk. He scanned through it as he had for the last several hours. Admiral Kirby had requested and received approval for the use of Sirius. Beckett's appearance had suffered in the days since the meeting. His uniform was as ever, starched and perfectly worn per regulations, his eyes though had appeared to be sunken, the spring in his step was missing and he was curt and almost rude to his junior officers. He now spent most of his shift in his office and was rarely seen walking the floors of the center. The replacement shifts as well as Beckett's relief, came and went with whispered words of caution. Beckett's relief, newly appointed Brigadier General Dietz, a now graying at the temples former division commander, noticed the change in Beckett but, still getting used to duty at the op center, didn't have the time to delve further into it. "Damn that man!" Senator Carson vented to his aide. "How dare he belittle me in front of my own staff and those lower class security guards!" Carson stomped around his suite of rooms located in the distinguished visitor section of Archangel's central decks. "Really senator, it wasn't all that bad." Denninger, Carson's most trusted aid and 'fixer' replied. "Admiral Greerson is close to retirement and Kirby will find a suitable replacement." Carson paced back and forth, as Denninger spoke, stopping at the last sentence. "Absolutely correct." He paused as his mind worked at a frantic pace. "The old battle axe is out in a few months and we'll have the ear of the Chancellor again." He clasped his hands behind his back as a glint of malice crossed his face. "Once he leaves, Kirby will nominate a puppet that we'll control. Perfect. Perfect." He muttered as he resumed his pacing. "Just one problem with that sir." Denninger added. "With this Newson situation escalating the way it is, the Chancellor might leave Greerson in command until it's over." "Damn you Denninger!" Carson erupted "Why can't you give me some good news?" Carson fumed as he walked to the view port and stared out. "Well sir, there is always the possibility that he would be replaced if he was injured in combat or worse." Denninger paused to let what he had just said sink in. "Kirby would have to replace him in short order." A strange smile formed on Carson's face as he thought about what the other man had said. He slowly tilted his head back and closed his eyes, relishing the thought. "Senator? Are you alright?" Carson spun around, facing Denninger. "Of course. Couldn't be better." He said with a far away look in his eyes. "Whom do we know in the Forces?" he asked as he made his way across the room and poured a large glass of Thelsian Ambrosia. Denninger pulled out a small admin comp and rapidly typed in commands. "We have one that's worked for us in the past." He typed a new set of commands. "And already in this system." Carson held the glass in his hand as he smiled again, a cold smile, to go with his equally cold, emotionless eyes. "Excellent. Truly excellent." He said, whether he was commenting on the ambrosia or Denninger's statement it was never known. "Lets hold up here and rest a bit." Deakins said as he shrugged off his pack and stretched a little. Roberts stopped and waved his hand held scanner around the large cavern they had stopped at. Crowe hung back a few steps and watched the back trail. "This is some rock." Roberts commented as he viewed the readout. "I'm barely getting a signal from the transponder." Deakins walked over and looked at the readout. "Maybe this rock acts like a natural shield of some kind." Roberts shook his head. "I don't know enough about geology to figure it out. We're only about two klicks from the scout, but the signal strength is like we're half a planet away." Crowe moved up to the other men, resting his rifle over his shoulder. "Our trail is clear, no movement and nothing registers on thermal." He said as he moved to the front of the little group. The men rested for nearly an hour planet time before shouldering their packs and moving off. The suit lights illuminating the pathway and very little of the surrounding rock. Crowe had moved ahead and Deakins had fallen back into the rear position. Suddenly, Crowe's light wobbled and then flashed in all directions amid a great rattle of loose gravel. "Oh shit!" Crowe yelled out as the pathway gave way under his feet. Flailing his arms wildly, he grabbed the edge of the path as his boots scrambled for a hold. Roberts ran up and threw himself flat at the edge of the hole. Deakins threw himself down and slid up to Roberts ankles, grabbing them. "Hold on! I got you!" Roberts yelled as he grabbed Crowe's pack. "I'm slipping! Can't get a grip!" Crowe yelled out. Deakins tightened his grip on Roberts's boots and ankles. Roberts grabbed the pull strap on Crowe's pack and pulled hard, Crowe's slow descent was stopped, for a moment. "It's giving way!" Crowe yelled as loose gravel slid down the wall. "Let me go! I'm too heavy!" Roberts slid a little closer to the edge, pulling Deakins with him. "No way! You go, we go!" the muscles on Roberts arms vibrated as he pulled harder. Crowe's boots found a small lip on the side of the crevasse, which he used to push himself a little out of the hole, more loose gravel falling around him. Deakins slid closer as Roberts braced himself for the next pull. He fumbled at his waist until he pulled free a small device. He slowly released one hand from Roberts and raising the line thrower, took aim at the unseen overhead wall. Roberts slid towards the hole, pushing more loose gravel onto Crowe. "If you're going to do something, do it now." Crowe said through gritted teeth. Deakins aimed and fired one handed, watching the line arc out into the darkness. The small screen on the device flashed green and held a steady glow indicating a solid lock on the rock. Deakins slowly moved his hand to Roberts load bearing vest and attached the carabineer to the loop on the back. Releasing his grip on Roberts, he rolled free and grabbed the other end of the line. Roberts began a slow slide towards Crowe. "Great idea! Wish I would have thought of that!" Roberts yelled out as he slid more towards the opening. Deakins didn't respond but activated the hand unit for the line. Slowly the slack disappeared and the two men's forward motion was arrested as the line went taut and started slowly winching them out of the hole. Crowe's boots finally cleared the edge and he rolled over on his back taking a deep breath. Roberts patted his shoulder and nodded. "Had me worried there for a bit." He said. Crowe took a few deep breaths. "Yeah. Me too." He said when he finally got his voice back. Deakins retracted the line back into the hand unit. "No need to thank me, its all in a day's work." He said, adding a bit of levity. The other two men looked at him, shaking their heads. Crowe put his head back down and took some more breaths before sitting back up. Roberts sat up and did a quick check of his equipment. "It's a good thing you didn't have your full armor. The weight would have sent us all over." Roberts commented as he brushed some dust off the front of his combat uniform. They all nodded agreement and went back to checking their gear. "Uh guys. We may have a problem." Crowe said. Both men turned to look at Crowe, who was propped up on his elbows. The cavern had grown lighter in the past few minutes, now more noticeable. Deakins could make out Crowe and Roberts, not just the usual dark shadows he had grown accustomed to the past few hours. The men looked around, as the light grew stronger. "That wasn't there before." Crowe said as he pointed to the far wall which they could now see a sealed iris type looking hatch. The cavern began to look more manufactured not a natural formation. A small skitter of loose gravel came from behind them. Deakins spun, his rifle coming up. "No!" Roberts yelled out. An intense white light lit the cavern and then, nothing. CHAPTER NINE "Lieutenant Waters, what was your first impression as you entered the vessel?" Waters thought about the question as he looked at the officer across from him. Slightly pudgy, a fine sheen of sweat over his face and constantly sipping from the glass he filled from the carafe on the briefing table. "Sir, my first impression was one of emptiness." Waters answered as he observed the reaction. The other man took a sip, nodded and traced his finger down the hand held unit to the next question. No name on the ill fitting uniform, shifting uneasily under Waters gaze, the man seemed out of his element. Waters already had the impression that this was a cursory debriefing. His report was finished the same day of the contact and submitted through the chain of command, now this debriefing was being done in case he might have overlooked anything. If this interrogator was Broderian Forces, then Waters was in the running for the Chancellor ship. He casually glanced at his wrist chrono. "Lieutenant, there are only as few more questions and you'll be on your way." The pudgy man said without looking up from his hand held. Waters feigned amazement and then put on the blank, wide-eyed young officer look that he had fine-tuned to a work of art. "Oh, that's ok sir, I was just checking so that I wouldn't be late for pre-schoolers school." Waters mentioned off handedly to gauge the reaction. There was none. That answered the question that Waters had been running over for the last two hours. "Sir. I am finished with this interview. You are not an officer in the Forces, so we can end this charade." He said as stood up from his chair. "If you're Intelligence, then you already know more than I would on this matter." He strode purposely to the hatchway. "I have a unit to attend to. Good day, Sir." He said with emphasis on 'sir'. He closed the hatchway behind him and walked to the troop berthing section on McAfee's main deck. As he entered the troop bay, the area was a buzz in activity. Squads and platoons forming, troopers moving back and forth, full squads moving to the hanger bay for transfer to other vessels. Amid the bustle, Sergeant Wilkes found him and guided him to a small corner out of the flow of traffic. "Sergeant what's going on here?" he asked as he was jostled by a passing formation led by a serious looking officer enroute to the launch bay. "Damnest thing I ever saw." Wilkes said into his ear so as to be heard. "Admiral Greerson made an announcement followed by a major from operations and Captain Ryan himself. We're shipping out to the planet to reinforce our troops already there." He paused and pressed himself against the bulkhead as a platoon's heavy weapon section squeezed past. "How's the platoon look?" Waters asked. Wilkes hugged the bulkhead again as an engineering group shouldered through. "Better than we will be if we don't relocate somewhere else." Wilkes said as he grabbed Waters upper arm and guided him through the maze of departing and preparing units. They reached their platoon prep area and took a breath to be out of the way of all the movements. Waters platoon was in various stages of unit prep. A few of the squads were already suited up and making final equipment checks while the rest were wandering about seemingly without purpose, attempting to gather gear and finish preparation for disembarkation. Waters started to address his men when his personal messenger beeped. He grabbed it off his waist and looked at it. Here we go, he thought as he replaced it into its pouch. "Gentlemen, that was our status for boarding. Someone loves us upstairs." He paused as he looked around the squad bay. "We've been moved to the front, with the first deployment." Some of the men groaned and sat down while others leaned close to each other and whispered. "You heard the man ladies! Assholes and elbows! Move it out! Move it out! Move it out!" Wilkes shouted "I want you sorry lot of degenerates prepped and ready for an extended planet deployment in 15mikes!" Wilkes tirade continued as he walked among the men and in some cases physically 'encouraged' them to increase their efforts. Waters moved off to the officer area and greeted several others along the way. "Hey Waters! I heard your unit got moved to the front of the line." Lieutenant Bean, 2nd Platoon's commanding officer shouted out. "Whose ass did you kiss to get that privilege?" Waters flipped him an obscene gesture as he passed. "The list is long and distinguished." He said in way of reply. This brought a chorus of laughter from the other officers in the area. Waters continued to his quarters, once inside, donning his armor except the helmet, which he tucked under his arm. He left the quarters and moved to the arms room to check what ordnance was to be issued. "Lieutenant. Congratulations on being one of the first units to deploy." The arms room sergeant said a grizzled older veteran of many conflicts. Waters nodded acknowledgement as he took the offered equipment list. He reviewed it quickly before signing it and handing it back. "Thank you Lieutenant. Your equipment is already on its way to the launch bay. And sir, tell Wilkes he owes me a case of Thelsian ambrosia. He'll know why." The old sergeant grinned broadly as he signed off the form and gave Waters a copy. Waters tucked the paper into a pocket, turned and walked away. "Good hunting." The old sergeant said quietly to Waters retreating form. "Sir. All battle groups report ready." The OOD reported to Captain Winslow. Winslow nodded and continued checking off the report he was reviewing. "Have the admiral meet me in CIC." Winslow said as he stood and left the bridge. Winslow moved down the passageway to the central part of the ship. A fully armed and armored trooper was standing outside the CIC hatch. The trooper came to attention as the captain approached. Winslow saluted and entered the CIC. Greerson was already inside watching the large status board. He nodded greeting as he caught Winslow's eye. "Sir, group Beta and Gamma are taking up a position on the far side of the planet." The officer reported to Greerson. "Johnson, Howser and Connelly are almost finished with troop deployments and have signaled us that they will be leaving system within the hour." Greerson nodded silently as he continued to watch the board. Winslow walked up and stood beside him as they both watched the board. "Four divisions on planet. Over one hundred ships surrounding it. Must be something important down there to warrant all that firepower." Winslow commented. Greerson stuck his cigar in the corner of his mouth and pulled out a folded transcript from his pocket. He passed it to Winslow, who read it before handing it back. "Kirby authorized the use of Sirius? What of the other planets in this system? We haven't even scanned them in depth or charted their relationship to this planet." He walked off a short distance and then returned. "What is he thinking?" Winslow asked incredulously. Greerson puffed on his cigar before answering. "John, I know it's unusual. I don't like myself. Kirby must have a good reason. What it is I don't know yet." His eyes narrowed. " But, I'm going to find out before we have to use it." Winslow nodded and crumpled the paper up in his fist. Tweet
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