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Chapter
Five
Tom
Grier wanted to shout to those Marines, but he knew it would be
useless. It was just a holoscreen with video gathered by aerial
drones. Those Marines didn't have a chance. Not because they were
heavily outnumbered but because of the rebel device that totally shut
down the powered armor-suits.
Some
of those Marines were strong enough to get out of the suits, but then
they would find themselves unprotected and unarmed. Even the
strongest among them would barely be able to drag a QBR-44, which was
the main weapon of the Marines.
“You
don't need to do this,” Tom told Sandy and her bodyguard, “This
is not the way to get me on your side. Those Marines are helpless and
defenseless.”
The
aerial platform that had delivered the Marines was a burning hulk.
Tom couldn't believe all of this was happening because the Free
Republic had picked up his signal on that plateau. A signal from the
enhancements that they had surgically removed from his head. The
rebels had laid a surprisingly effective trap.
“They're
going to know there are underground installations in that area. Those
vehicles can't really come out of nowhere. You are sort of blowing
your cover to make a point.” Tom told them.
Sandy
shook her head slowly, “You still don't get it, Tom.”
“Get
what?”
“We're
not trying to make a point,” Sandy said, “We are trying to
liberate our world and our people.”
Tom
wanted to come up with some reply, but couldn't think of one. “Those
Marines are just doing a job, they aren't your real enemy.”
Sandy
laughed, “I knew you would say something like that. The ones
pulling the trigger and slaughtering my people and enslaving the rest
aren't the bad ones. Wow. They willingly volunteered to do the dirty
work of the tyrants, that doesn't exactly make them innocent
bystanders.”
Sandy
leaned over the control panel near the holoscreen and said, “Task
Force, RTB. Condition Orange.”
The
rebel armored soldiers began climbing back into the ground vehicles
which sped away from the scene. Then the video was cut off. The two
soldiers came into the room.
“We'll
just leave them there, this time,” Sandy said, “You can go back
to your room.”
As
if there was a choice. Tom covered the left side of his face with his
palm again. It had gotten to be a habit. Not only had he lost the
enhancements and the ability to merge with the armored suits of the
Marines but even something as simple as depth perception, since he
only had the right eye now.
There
was more pain from the left side of his face, so he applied a bit of
the cream that had been left in the room for the purpose. It deadened
the pain receptors and made his face feel almost normal.
Nothing
made sense. Sure, he could see why people would oppose the new regime
controlling the Free Republic, but secession was simply wrong. Sync
or any other planet shouldn't be able to just opt out and become
independent just because they didn't like the present government.
Sandy
was a commander. Tom shook his head, that was a hard one to figure
out. Sure they could have set it up to seem like she had authority.
Maybe it was all one big act, but it didn't seem to have a point.
The
next day the soldiers were back and they escorted him to a new room.
It was empty except for a powered armored suit standing in the
center. Tom slowly walked all the way around it. It was very
different from the ones his Marines used. It was smaller, for one
thing, and probably weighed a lot less.
It
looked civilian. Totally unarmed. Like something you would wear to
check outside your spacecraft because the antenna wasn't calibrating.
“How
long are you going to stand there without saying something?” a
magnified voice on the armored suit said. It was Sandy. Since he
could not see inside of the suit, he could not assume she was
actually inside. It could be another trick.
“Was
I suppose to say something?” He asked.
The
voice returned, “I assume you had something you wanted to say. Or
ask.”
“It's
question time, then,” Tom said, slightly amused, “Do your rebels
not have any enhancements? Do they not bond with their suits?”
“They
do not do either. Here on Sync, the suits are tools that we use. In
your fleet, the Marines are the tools that get used.”
Tom
frowned. “That's not very nice.”
“It's
true.” Sandy said.
The
suit still hadn't moved a millimeter. Surely there was a reason he
was standing in a small room that was empty except for this suit.
“Why
do you assume I will join your cause? Just because some emphatic
meter says I will? There's got to be more to it than that.” Tom
asked.
After
a brief moment of silence, the suit answered, “Humanity. You
exhibit humanity, Tom, most of the enemy Marines we found seemed to
have lost it. Probably because they had been part of the collective
mind for too long.”
“Your rebellion doesn't stand a
chance as far as I can see,” Tom said, “The fleet is way up
there, out of your reach. They hold the high ground, you could say.
Unless you have a plan to take out the fleet and anything else the
Free Republic sends, your rebellion is doomed.”
Another moment of silence, a longer
one.
“That is where you come in, Tom.”
the voice replied, “You are going to help us defeat the fleet.”
Tom laughed, “What do I know about
taking out ships?”
“You just need to get there.”
…
Carrier Umbrage, flagship.
Command & Control
Jesse Gallant, the Marine General on
the ship did not like being subordinate to the Admiral. He felt that
the Admiral should run the fleet, not the operations of the ground
forces. He dared not say or write any of these feelings down. He knew
that Admiral Robinson actually was crazy enough to throw people out
of an airlock.
The control room was very busy. There
was a large dominating holographic representation of the planet below
with symbols denoting the location of ground troops and ongoing
operations. There were people at consoles around it focusing on more
regional and local operations.
Then there were the controllers on the
outside of the room who were in constant communications with active
units on the ground.
“Where is my extraction team?”
He asked one of the younger officers who monitored the operations of
a highly mobile unit. Maggie Anders sat up straighter when he started
talking.
“The
detachment lost contact an hour ago. I can't raise them.” The girl
said, “Their suits are still sending signals, but their Aerial
platform is not. The platform is destroyed.”
General
Gallant was livid, “Why wasn't I informed?”
The
girl looked scared, “I passed on everything.”
Maggie
Anders punched up her logs and the General saw that they had been
rerouted. Admiral Robinson hadn't even bothered to CC him on any of
it. The Admiral had already ordered three more aerial units, sent to
retrieve what looked like stranded Marines.
General
Gallant looked around the room. How many of these people were no
longer telling him what was going on? The situation was out of his
control, yet he knew that he would be blamed for anything that went
wrong. Fine, we would do this the old fashion way.
“It's
too quiet in here!” The General announced, “I want my staff to be
told, verbally, about everything that happens. I want to be informed
about what is going on down there!”
“Yes,
sir!”
Umbrage
bridge
“So,
they used this device again, there has to be a way to counter it.”
Admiral Robinson said.
“I
think so, sir,” One of the young engineers answered, he was still
nervous from being summoned to see the Admiral, “I'm already
working on a countering system. It would send out the direct opposite
signals, although this won't always work.”
The
Admiral nodded, although he did not understand the technology
involved, “Is there a time-frame on deploying something?”
“It's
too soon to say.”
“I
see, I want that device to be your top priority. I'll have your other
duties reassigned. Dismissed!” The Admiral said, then he spun his
chair around and floated off.
The
Admiral asked Commander Grabble for a report on the extraction team.
“The
enemy was long gone when the second team arrived. They found Marines
trapped in their armored suits but got them out. It was a chore to
carry those suits to the aerial platforms. The Marines who had lost
their suits were not very happy as they climbed into third aerial
platform which had arrived empty. They are leaving the scene now.”
A
messenger arrived and stood next to the Admiral, “We've just been
informed that some rebels are going to be congregating in a township
called Valla, in the North Plains section. The source said the
meeting would be about new plans for the rebel forces.”
The
Admiral thought about this. Just bombing the site would be good, but
capturing some rebel leaders would be better. After dismissing the
messenger he floated over to the Commander again, who had been given
the same intelligence.
“How
big is Valla?”
“About
fifty-thousand residents.”
Admiral
Robinson nodded, “We need to get some troops in there incognito. Is
that possible? I want to be able to disrupt this meeting and capture
some bad guys. I want to demoralize the rebels and be able to get
useful intelligence from the prisoners.”
“Yes
sir, I'll see to it.”
“And
don't share this intelligence with General Gallant's people.”
------ Chapter Six
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