Close The Back Door

Posted in 8. Eye of the Storms by Andrew Stuart

Day 69 Evening

John Pierce

An invitation to dinner at Fort Stuart was not to be turned down. The food was almost as good as Hanna’s place and the booze was free. The only thing that bothered him was why the invitation had come over the public link and mentioned planning on the Dam project.

That was already planned and darn near complete. All four wheels were spinning and the Electro Forge was pouring metal. The only thing left was some shoring that was waiting on Joe’s crew to find the right trees.

Andy

I saw John come thorough the door with a bemused look that got worse when He saw Sin Blackfeather.

“Sit down everyone, let’s eat before we get down to business.”

After everybody was stuffed and on their third drink I bought up business. “What I am about to ask you to do is the dirtiest, nastiest and most dangerous job on the planet.

“I am asking you to be the stay behind Force. You will not even be able to admit that you are part of Strike Force before it hits the pot. I may be able to leave you some others but, that is still in the air.

“Sin, you know it will be a very dirty guerrilla war and if someone like a damn Buchanan knows what you are doing, they may try to betray you for gain.

“The only thing I can hope to promise you is that I don’t think they can get more than one Assault vessel by us. So are you game?”

John and Sin gulped and thought for a couple of long hard moments.

Sin was first, “Been there — Done that. This time can’t be worse. We might even get some Civilian help.”

I had to laugh, “We get the Ammo and Weapons plants going; I can damn near guarantee that.”

John was next, “I was damn set to go up there and fight. I would be some kind of hypocrite if I turned this down; wouldn’t I?”

I stared at him, “Some people might think you were smart Son.”

John absolutely collapsed in laughter, so much so that Mariana moved towards him. “Damn Boss, I am one of the Young Guns,” He gasped. “Nobody has ever accused any of us of the sin of excess brains.”

I am willing to bet that no one in that room got a full breath for the next five minutes. When I was finally able to talk, “OK you two talk to Judy quietly and She will make you a uniform, she is putting some interesting stuff in them these days. But you don’t ever wear it till it hits the pot.”

Reaching into the desk, I pulled out two sets of rank pins.

“Majors, you are the ones I trust with the life of Alchibah.”

Decisions

Posted in 8. Eye of the Storms by Andrew Stuart

Day 67 Late Evening

From the Diary of Mariana Stuart

I was setting in Diagnostic reading over the day’s files when I heard, “Ma’am do you have time to talk?”

I looked up to see Jaisa Benjamin looking fairly plaintive. “Good Lord Girl, you have to have Man problems. That’s the only damn thing that can put that look on the face of an attractive Young Lady.”

“Right, attractive. Sure I am.” Jai replied dryly. “Only the boys either treat me like one of the guys or are afraid of me! So what if I’m hot?”

The problem hit me like a bolt of lightning. “Girl, don’t you ever doubt yourself. Just because you can kick their asses doesn’t mean you should settle for less than you deserve waiting for someone who gets you. I did once and wound up with an Asshole for a Husband. Girl don’t commit till his voice sinks into your Bones. Screw attractive, the right One gives a shit. Damn, you don’t think Andy is good looking; but sure as the Gods He will defend any Children we might be able to have.

“Damn it Girl, do I look that damn beautiful to You? I ain’t no gift to the beautiful but, the only who counts thinks I am. Although landing a hottie certainly is not a bad thing.

“So who is it Girl?”

Jai was stunned, “I honestly don’t know. I’m so worried about Mike right now it’s hard to think about anyone else.”

“I don’t doubt it. Did you know that Andy is going to fly two sweeps in the Morning and his backup will be Ghost and Digger?”

Jai gaped and said, “But, they just got married!”

“And when a Friends life is on the line that means what?

“Girl, don’t you ever settle for anything less than a Gods Damned Hero.”

Disquiet

Posted in 8. Eye of the Storms by The Pierce Family

Elana Pierce

I couldn’t get the ringing in my ears to stop. I was surrounded by deep darkness punctuated by blinding flashes of light and roar after roar of deep, deafening sound. Through it all I could hear John…

John! My baby brother was screaming and crying. I couldn’t reach him. I tried and tried, but I just couldn’t get to him. And suddenly I was being lifted. The giant protecting us lifted me right up against his chest.

“It’s going to be ok. Just huddle up against me girl, I’ll hold you. Your Mom and Dad and little brother are gonna be all right. It’s all gonna to be all right.” We were running. I felt something hot splash onto my cheek; blood. I was covered in it. The giant was covered in it too, but somehow it didn’t matter. I could just see my parents. He was right, they were ok. I looked up into the giant’s eyes and knew that everything was going to be ok.

A flash of fire and noise, bigger than the others, erupted to my right.

I sat up in bed, gasping, drenched in cold sweat.

Ai-uchi

Posted in 8. Eye of the Storms by The Pierce Family

Summer Pierce
Day 53, evening

Andy had just gotten through giving us all a lesson in hand to hand combat, using Jai, Kurt and I as test dummies. Not the most pleasant experience of my life, let me tell you. But in an odd way it was actually sort of, well, fun.

“Anybody who wants to practice or compare notes, y’all have fun. Gunney and I need a drink!” Andy said over his shoulder, headed towards Hanna’s. We just looked around at each other, still trying to figure out what had just happened. Ryu was the first to speak up.

“Jai, looks like you’ve done this before. Care to try out a few things?” he asked. Jai agreed, and we all started breaking off into pairs, experimenting with the many new moves and tactics Andy & co. had just shown us. I got Kaye. He was a quick learner, but so was I. Cute too. Him, I mean. We traded blows and joint locks, generally throwing each other around. After about ten minutes Kaye stopped mid move, just staring over my shoulder.

“Jai ‘n Ryu are fightin’,” he said, slack jawed.

“I know. Now grab my wrist, I want to try that throw again.”

“Na – look,” he gaped. I turned around and stopped dead. They were fighting, or it looked that way. It was like watching a movie. Their movements were practically a blur. They weren’t calmly powerful like Andy’s had been; this was something else. Before long everyone had stopped what they were practicing to watch the two of us who already got it. I’ve come a long way since we landed, but I doubt I’ll ever be able to play at their level.

Just watching them was tiring. I mean it was literally exhausting trying to figure out what the hell was going on when they moved. Jai was faster than Ryu, although not by much, but Ryu made up for it with his additional power. The result was an intricate and almost incomprehensible flurry of near misses and partial hits. There was no real line between attack and defense. Everything just seemed to flow together. Kicks and blows, knees and elbows flew faster than I would have thought possible, but their eyes never left each others’. And they were grinning like maniacs. For the first time since the storm I think Jai was actually enjoying herself.

The fight came to an abrupt halt with the pair locked nearly side by side, Jai’s elbow a bare inch from Ryu’s neck and his foot almost touching her kneecap.

“Good match.” Jai said. “We should do it again sometime.”

“No doubt. And I’ve got to say, you’re the first person our age that has matched me. I’m impressed.” Ryu replied, disengaging. “Where’d you learn?”

“My Dad and my Uncle mostly, with a fair few other influences thrown in. You?”

“Almost the same, weirdly enough. We should compare notes. I’m busy tonight,” he continued, glancing in my direction, “so tomorrow?”

“Sounds like a plan. Now let’s all go get dinner. I’m sure everyone’s worked up an appetite.”

Hurting

Posted in 8. Eye of the Storms by The Pierce Family

Day 37, dawn

Jaisa tore around the makeshift trail that the Young Guns had worn around the outskirts of Liberty over the past twenty days, her breathing heavy. This was her first day back on the track since the storm, and as usual Summer and John had joined her a half an hour ago in the faint pre-dawn light for the morning run. The other Guns had just started, filing in behind the sibling pace setters. Jai was far out in front, already a lap and a half ahead of her two usual companions, running as if possessed. She couldn’t stop playing the scene in her head, couldn’t stop herself from seeing Emily topple backwards with the catamount-like “varg” on top of her. The outcome was always the same. She knew Andy was right; she couldn’t have done any better, but what did that matter? She should have been able to stop them, should have been able to keep her friend out of harm’s way. And now she had fracked up in a big way again, drawing on the head of the god damned Guard.

Fifteen minutes later she had lapped the main group again. Her breath was coming in ragged gasps. She was on autopilot, her mind quiet for the first time since she woke up in the hospital three days ago. She peeled off of the trail towards the south, immediately flowing into the Korean forms her father had taught her years ago, then to Muay Boran, Capoeira, Krav Maga and back again, mixing and blurring the lines as she went. Anything to keep her mind at bay.

John Pierce
Day 53, early morning

I was really starting to get worried about Jai. I don’t know her as well as the Young Guns, but we had talked a bit on the early morning runs in the lead up to the storm and it didn’t take an psychiatrist to tell she was withdrawing from the rest of us. It seemed like all she felt she had left was duty, and she was pushing herself physically to the brink. She’s as fit and tough as Elana was at her top form, but every human body has limits and unless I’m completely off base she’s fast approaching hers. I think the other Young Guns didn’t want to see it, or maybe they were just afraid to try to talk to her about it. Her dad had tried to back her down, I think, but obviously had failed, and I’m not sure if Andy realized how hard she was pushing herself outside of her normal duties. I guess that’s all just to explain why I took it on myself to try to talk to her.

Since she joined us in the morning again she’s been starting her run earlier and earlier, to the point where she’s almost another patrolling guard on the last shift. By the time Summer and I get on the trail she’s already headed south to the base of the falls to start her martial arts training. This morning I headed down there a couple laps after the rest of the group had joined us, hoping to catch her before she headed back to town for breakfast.

I’m not sure exactly what I was expecting when I got down there, but it definitely wasn’t what I saw. I turned the corner around one of the big boulders down there and just caught a glimpse of her diving off the rocks into the river wearing, well, nothing. I froze. Which means, of course, that I was staring straight at her a few seconds later when she broke the surface and pulled herself out of the water.

“Hello there,” she said flatly, picking up the towel she had brought and started drying off. I whirled around, apologizing profusely.

“I’m so sorry! I didn’t mean, I didn’t know, I just came down here to talk.” I felt like I was in high school again.

“No harm done, we’re all friends around here.” She paused, “All right, you can turn around now, I’m decent. What do you want?”

I turned around and opened my mouth, and then shut it. What was I supposed to say? That I thought she might be detaching from reality and becoming self destructive? How the hell do you say that to someone you barely know? How do you say it at all?

“Right, ok then,” she laughed, patting me on the shoulder as she walked by, “you stand there. I’m going back.”

“Wait,” I blurted out, “I’m worried about you.”

She stopped, staring straight ahead, not looking back at me. “Well isn’t that sweet. I got news for you honey; I can take care of myself.”

“Not right now you can’t. I mean, I’m sure you could kill me with your little finger or something, but you’re hurting right now. I just wanted to let you know if you wanted to talk to someone who doesn’t know you as Lt. Benjamin first and foremost…”

“Get lost hot shot, I’ll be fine,” she shot back, but her voice was quavering as she took a step back towards camp. I took a deep breath and gently grabbed her arm. Not the brightest idea, I know – I felt like I was flicking a tiger’s ear – but I had the impression that it was then or never.

She swung around and slammed the side of her fist into my chest, hard and repeatedly, but she made no effort to pull away from me. She had started crying, slowly at first and then harder and harder, her blows weakening. Finally she started almost melting into me, leaning and crying into my chest. I wasn’t really ready for all this, but I did my best to comfort her. After a time she quieted down.

“Can we just stay here for a minute?” she asked finally, looking up at me. “Just for a minute?” So we did, laying down on the grass and listening to the river flow by.

I asked after a few minutes, “You want to hear a conversation I heard at Hanna’s yesterday? It was about you!”

“Who was it?” she asked.
“Oh,” I deadpanned, “only Andy, Mariana, Ash and Joe; nobody that counts!”

A light actually came back in her eyes, “Yeah, tell me.”

“OK, I’m quoting here.

“Andy said; ‘I love her like a Daughter but, I can’t let up. Her problem is insecurity, She does not believe she is good enough. Good God, when the vargs hit them neither one of them should have survived.

‘The only Fracking reason they did was that she is that good. The only problem is getting her to understand that. I could let up but, I swear that’s the wrong thing to do. It would only make her think I had given up on her. Anybody got any ideas?’

Jai interrupted. “He really said that?”

“Yup. Then Ash piped up. ‘I have been there; if you had let up on me I would have cracked. The only thing that saved me was ’someone’ decided that I was the Little Brother that she had never had. If Mariana had not started beating on me, I don’t know what would have happened.'’

“I just wanted to let you know where they think you’re at,” John finished. “And I think you know they’re right.”

Jai slowly pushed herself up on her elbow, looking down at this man who had somehow, at least for a few minutes, made things ok. She leaned down and kissed him gently, inhaling softly as she pulled away.

“Come on, let’s get back to camp,” she said, slipping her hand into his as she stood up. “Maybe we can catch the end of breakfast.”

Wedding Day!

Posted in 8. Eye of the Storms by Andrew Stuart

From Common Diary Files

Day 67 Morning Alchibah

“The First Order of Business is that No One, I repeat No One; puts on a uniform before the Ceremony. That will be our little surprise to everyone.“Second; myself, COL Stuart, LTC Andrews and CPT McKenzie will be doing check rides for 2LT Benjamin, 2LT S. Pierce, Deputy J. Pierce and Deputy J. Parker Jr. on the run up to Mayflower.

“Third, CAPT Travis, CAPT Monroe and Cadet Bugbee will be running a round trip with their two shuttles and the Galileo to handle the other people attending. As I understand it a Cadet in the Space Arm is the equivalent of our Candidate. Therefore Cadet Bugbee will be given the courtesy due a Junior Officer, which ain’t much. But no one gets on his case understood?”

The room filled with a round of chuckles and outright laughs.

“Good, let’s get up there, shall we?”

Shuttle One filled with Jules and Hanna Parker, followed by Linda and Liza.

“I am sorry J. J. could not be with you,” Andy Stuart said, “but he’s busy getting his butt kicked by Mariana over on Shuttle Three.”

He actually got two smiles, ”Our son a pilot, it’s like a dream come true,” came from both of the older Parkers. Andy stopped by Linda, “If Ash didn’t think he was going to make it, he would have flown the check ride himself!”

Linda just gave him a tired smile back. Andy was still laughing as he slid into the right seat of the Shuttle.

“Ready to wind her up LT?”

Jai Benjamin’s face indicated that she was anything but happy. “I guess I’m as ready as I am ever going to be Sir.”

“Then take us up, LT. Liberty Security and Mayflower Control; Reaper burning trans-atmospheric destination Mayflower.”

As Jai pulled the stick she heard:

“Liberty Security and Mayflower Control; Ghost burning trans-atmospheric destination Mayflower!”

“Liberty Security and Mayflower Control; Magic burning trans-atmospheric destination Mayflower!”

“Liberty Security and Mayflower Control; Digger burning trans-atmospheric destination Mayflower!”

Her heart thumping like a drum in her chest she heard, “Liberty Security; Roger Firebird Flight, all singing clear and Pure. Mayflower Control acknowledged Firebird Flight.”

Jai jerked her head around and before she could ask the question the answer came.

“It’s your call sign after all, that is provided you can dock this damn thing. By the way what does the formation look like?”

“It’s a little ragged,” Jai replied, “but it’s a diamond!”

“Who’s ragged,” Andy asked?

“JJ and Summer” Jai replied.

“Watch it for a few more moments, if it don’t shape up; I’ll kick Mariana and Ash’s arse’s. What you thought Ghost and I were going to trust the real Combat Pilots to anyone else?”

“Boss,” Jai volunteered, “Summer is terrified of LTC Andrews.”

“Of course, LT. That is the precise reason he is scoring her check ride. She has a confidence problem in the Hot Seat. Unlike someone we know, that’s the only place it shows, so we work on it!”

Jai glanced towards the right seat and saw COL Stuart but, for a fleeting second she had a second sight of a howling Wolf. What gave her a shiver was that she preferred the Wolf.

Jerking her head back around she remembered to call, “Mayflower, Firebird Flight requesting Combat Peel.”

“Firebird Flight. Combat Peel approved.”

Jai led them into a low pass around Mayflower. On the Second time by JJ Parker seconded by COL M. Stuart peeled off and went into the dock. The next pass peeled off John Pierce with LT McKenzie in the right seat. Next pass peeled off Summer Pierce with LTC Andrews in the Instructor seat. Finally it was Jai’s turn with the Chief Wolf in her graders seat.

Jai was lucky enough to grease in on the open pad and turned to the right seat for comment. What she got was a grin and an open hand with the Silver Bars of a 1LT in them.

“What do you remember about your Q course LT?” Andy’s smiling face asked.

“14 hours of shear pain and terror,” I replied “Followed by some Big Lug telling me to stand up and look behind me. May I be so bold as to tell the Colonel that my left tit still hurts from where He slammed home that Badge.”

He laughed, “You may LT., but just remember. You crossed that line, no one did it for you. No one who has not crossed that line has ever worn that Badge and while You and I live no one ever will.”

Jai tensed even with her hand reaching out, She now knew the burden the COL was asking her to take and She froze for a moment. Her brain raced for the proper reply then it dawned on Her, “SOCOM Sir.”

Andy grinned and dropped the Silver pins into her hand. “Now let’s go down there and embarrass the hell out of three people who should know better.”

We hit the bottom of the Elevator ride and Col Stuart froze in the door. His hand snapped up in a cold perfect Salute. “Permission to Come Aboard Sir,” snapped out that Command Voice we had all learned to fear.

A young man in a gray ship suit spun around with a confused look on his face; then his spine stiffened and a high voice rang out. “Permission Granted Sir, Liberty Arriving;” as my foot was just about to hit the deck his voice rang again: “Firebird Flight Arriving!”

I looked at Mariana, Ash and JoAnn hanging their heads in their hands and decided I was glad that I was not them.

CAPT Travis walked up and said. “Welcome Aboard Sir, sorry I have to run but, we have a scheduled flight to fly.”

Andy grinned, “No problem Sir, Master Kiyoshi said that He would be waiting with your package and would appreciate a ride up. Seems He wants to see His works on display.”

“Of course,” Travis smiled, “that would have nothing to do with His attachment to Miss McKenzie I assume?”

“I assure you, I would not know,” said Andy with a grin. The two shook hands and turned their seperate ways. Our crew was standing with heads down cause they knew they had done fracked up! Dear God, Thank You it wasn’t me this time.

Andy barked to everyone, “ Ladies and Gentlemen, it will take the CAPT 90 minute’s to make the turn around. Therefore you have two hours to get suited up and ready. Flight Commanders, Report to me.”

I turned and ran, pausing only long enough to ask CAPT Monroe what room I had been assigned as I looked over my shoulder to see three Senior Officers getting their Butts chewed by the Master of the Art.

Two hours later I was standing in the hall outside what used to be Hanna’s Place waiting for the call.

“Let the Party Enter,” rang Travis’s voice. I looked at Summer and nodded, we started around the corners.

We marched up the aisle like the unit we had become, this was the first time the people of Alchibah had seen the Space Black and Silver that was Strike Force. At the front of the room stood CAPT Travis in the Sky Blue and Gold of the Seattle Space Academy; after Colorado Springs had gotten Nuked in the Long War, there was no better and at his side He wore the perfect replica of the Honor Sword of the Valedictorian.

In the front row stood Joe Fortson in the gorgeous Blue and Gold that was the old USMC Uniform and his face told anyone who cared to look that it was his right to wear.

Then Travis barked, “Let the Groom enter.”

The sound system suddenly split with the sound of bagpipes keening ‘Scotland The Brave’ when Andrew Stuart and Ashcroft Andrews turned into the aisle.

Joe and everyone who wore or had ever worn a uniform stood and saluted as the two moved up at a slow march pace. Around their necks were the simple ribbons on a Sky Blue Field with Five White Stars that was the Medal of Honor. We all knew that the Boss wore it but, Ash. That was news to everyone.

As they reached their assigned places Travis called out. “The Matron of Honor will proceed.”

Hanna Parker started up the aisle accompanied by a noticeably more sprightly Jules Parker.

Travis spoke again, “The Maid of Honor will proceed.” I guess Mariana qualified as She had no children but if anyone who worked with the boss thought she was a Maid they were delusional. Still those five Silver Stars were impressive as hell.

Then Travis spoke in low tones, “My lady, come forward.” Then the sound system rang with the sounds of “Waltzing Matilda.”

As JoAnn turned into the aisle the room once more exploded in salutes and I heard Joe behind me, “Never been in the shit, my ass. They don’t hand those out for Good Behavior!”

This as we all stood and saluted a holder of the Victoria Cross.

Could I be stupid if I said the rest of the ceremony was an afterthought?

Two hours later I was in a redressed Hanna’s Place trying my best to get drunk when Ryu sat down and asked. “You can’t get Mike out of your head can you?”

Andy was looking from across the room when Jai finally let the tears flow. “No, if us Girls had not egged him in to taking the rank He might not have gone with Bart.  I know it’s not rational but I feel responsable.  I don’t know if it means anything but; the not knowing is killing me.”

Ryu looked at her, “You think it’s not hurting anyone else?”

In or Out

Posted in 8. Eye of the Storms by William Bartlett

Alchibah Day 68

The width and general form of the outlet from the Gitche Gumee into the western ocean made one think of the Mediterranean and Gibraltar but was really quite different. Between the two headlands there wasn’t a single imposing rock island but five islands large enough to be called by the name and innumerable boulders poking above the surface. The seas basin rose to a kind of shoal area seldom more than four foot deep all across the area and we had to beach the raft a couple of miles from the tip of the southern headland as the water depth and rocks had made passage any closer impossible. Our position was now about 1100 miles northwest of Liberty City and we needed to decide whether to follow the coastline south or take the slightly more direct inland route.

Mike and the Jeep went to find a path to the top of the cliff that rose sixty feet above our landing spot while Janie, Laura, and I did the unloading and disassembling of the raft so that we could salvage all of the rope used in her construction. Due to the easy passage we had arrived with more food than we had aboard when we started. There would be no need to stop and provision before continuing. We had humped most everything to the top of the cliff and stretched out the rope for drying. by the time Mike returned and made his report.

“Just the one mile hike to a spot where the Jeep and I could overlook the ocean took us over an hour,” he began. “And once we got there, as far as we could see, and I’d guess that was well over thirty miles, the coastal bluffs are completely covered with loose rocks, ankle twisting size and up. Cuts and ridges and no sightlines at all to show the best pass forwards. It’ natural ambush country for any native predators.”

We were playing the Jeep’s visual recordings through Laura’s comp unit as Mike continued and that imagery, along with the stored satellite views, indicated the same conditions for at least another several hundred miles going southwards.

“The wind were pretty stiff with lots of surf and breakers coming in and crashing the shoreline. Even if there was a good supply of timber on the spot, which there isn’t, I don’t think we could build any kind of sailing craft that wouldn’t be thrown right up onto the rocks and destroyed on the lee shore. And I didn’t see a single good spot where we could beach for the night either.”

That pretty much covered everything and my trust in Mike’s judgment had by now grown to such an extent that the decision immediately made to continue on the inland route. We stayed here just one night then packed up everything and left the next morning, heading away from the Gitche Gumee and into the heavily forested lands of our next stage.

On this side of the Gumee the forest was densely packed with trees whose trunk diameters were mostly three inches and under. Saplings filled any area they could get a hold on. The thin layer of soil covered the base rock that was at most six feet below the surface. This led to poor drainage and I was thankful for the mostly dry weather recently. Even so the ground was always damp and there were many small patches of free standing water several inches in depth. This wasn’t a swamp but very muddy and slippery none the less. The shallow soil meant that the a trees roots could not support anything much larger than we were seeing and there were many bare trunks that had fallen or been blown down making walking extremely tiring what with stepping over the fallen stuff, avoiding the surface water and trying to keep from slipping. The thickness of the cover meant we could not see much beyond fifty or sixty feet in any direction.

We stated south following a small stream actually not much more than a creek but it soon petered out to just some water burbling out of the ground. I had tightened up our spacing so that we all remained visible at least to the one in front and behind us. That cut the length of our line down to under one hundred fifty feet. Our pet Ugli waddled along some times behind but usually out just in front of Janie as if leading her way. His head in constant motion as if looking for danger. Occasionally when he tired she would have EmyCee gather him up and carry him for a while. He was too big now for any of us to carry, burdened as we were by everything else.

Progress was very slow. We were seeing quite a few small slizards and even stumbled across an aladillo and more than a few of Alchibah’s analogue for earthworms though they were a pasty white in color and about two feet long. With this much to eat I felt certain there would be larger more dangerous animals around to do the eating.

I hadn’t heard a thing till EmyCee’s voice rang out, “Motion Left! I spun in that direction preparing to fire but say nothing. Out of the corner of my eye I could see Mike with his Ruger shouldered, then two rapid shots rang out.

Mike kept his rifle pointed but said, “Think I’ve got him. He’s down and stationary, it’s a catamount.”

“Hold in place everyone,” I said loudly, “Look around for any others. Jeep, Emy, keep scanning.” I still couldn’t see it, too much vegetation in the way. After a minute with nothing else detected I said to Mike. “Switch places with me and I’ll take a look.”

Mike’s first shot had struck the 110 lb. cat while it was about thirty yards out, the bullet entered right below the neck high on the chest between the front legs. It passed entirely though the body exiting out one of the haunches. I could tell by the skid marks that it had dropped at once. Mike’s second shot caught it in the hind quarters just as it slid to a halt. Some fine shooting but now I was wondering if the thing had any friends around.

I took some photos then called for Mike. “You killed it. You clean it.”

“Sure,” he said, reaching towards his belt for the knife that had been in his pack.

“No Just kidding,” I told him. “We have all the food we can carry right now and don’t need the extra weight. We do have two things to consider though. If we leave the body it might attract other predators or scavengers and keep them here till we are out of the area. It might even instill in some of them a fear of humans, and that would be all to the good. But on the other hand it could cause some to view humans as a possible source or provider of food. I not sure which case is most likely so the best thing, I think, would be to bury the body and get out of the area as soon as we can.”

While Mike dug the hole I stood nearby watching for signs of any others. Within twenty minutes we were on our way again. Later that afternoon Janie,. without an alerte from EmyCee, took out another larger catamount with her plasma rifle and this time there wasn’t enough left to bury. That one had come out of it’s lair in the rocks and was even closer than the last before Janie saw it. We were going to need a strategy to deal with them and real soon.

It was only an hour before dark now and we had not come across anything that remotely looked like a good defensible campsite. I tried to convince myself the area around us was at least marginally less dense, and the ground was a bit drier, than what we were used to and called a halt for the day. I had the bots taking down trees an clearing underbrush to form a rough circle about fifty yards in diameter and dragging some of the larger, up to 4 inch diameter, tree trunks to the center. There, while Janie and Laura kept a lookout, Mike and I notched and stacked them in a rough arrow head shape sixteen feet long and eight at the base the walls were just under three feet high. Using more of the lumber we roofed over all of it but the portion right at the point.

We had cut it fine but the bots had finished clearing and dragging the excess timber to three spots where we intended to keep fires burning all night and we were as ready as circumstances permitted by nightfall. We ate a cold meal of smoked meat and some of the collected berries because they were not going to last very long anyway, before retiring into our shelter.

With the fires burning the bots took up position at the point and base of the triangle but about ten feet into the woods though still with a view of the clearing. Janie would take the first watch, I would take the second and Mike the third. Each would last around three hours. Laura, not being a shooter, would get a pass.

The hole through our roof was the only entrance into the shelter and only large enough for one person to stand up in comfortably which Janie did while Mike and Laura fell off to sleep. Ugli was snuggled up next to Laura either for protection or the extra warmth. It had been an exhausting first days march in comparison to the ease of out rafting cross the Gumee, I scrunched up in front by Janie and began massaged her anklesand calf muscles while trying to carry on a conversation.

“Geez Bart,” She almost sighed, “You better cut that out, it feels so good its distracting.”

“Yeah I guess so,” I said giving one last squeeze. “I gotta say Babe I got the shakes myself when I saw how close the catamount got to you before you burned it. How in the world did you ever see it in time to shoot?”

“It was Ugli Bart, I thought he was acting strange just before the first one, the one Mike shot, but I knew something was up the second time. He had been moving his head back and forth but just before the thing charged out Ugli straightened out and went rigid pointing in the direction the catamount came from. I had my rifle up almost before the cat came into view.”

“Well the little bugger does have some finer points after all.” He had finally gotten used to me and had stopped nipping but Janie was still his favorite. “Tell you what, tomorrow why don’t you switch places with Mike and let him be tail end Charlie. Ugli in the center will be better overall than at the end.”

“Why don’t I switch with you Bart?” she asked, “Wouldn’t he be even better in front?”

“Not sure Janie but I am going to have the Jeep moving back and forth across our front again tomorrow making more noise and giving him a wider area where his sensors can pick something out. The cats are warm blooded but both attacks came from a covered position where passive infra-red didn’t help. Letting the Jeep see more has to be for the best.

“We haven’t seen any pack behavior yet, the are behaving as if they each have a personal territory to defend but we can’t count on that without one heck of a lot more experience. Anyway I’ll knock off for a bit. If you start to get to tired wake me early Babe.”

“Sure thing Bart, talk to you then.”

She woke me at the proper time and I stood my watch uneventfully and turned it over to Mike three hour later. Just before dawn I awoke to the sound of another shot. Mike had nailed another cat just inside of the clearing.

The next day we covered more distance and as we got further away from the Gumee the land was drying out and opening up. The Jeep saw two of the cats chasing them off. Somehow they could tell he wasn’t something they could eat. We saw no cats from our positions in the line, just the same run of the mill smaller stuff. On at least four separate occasions Ugli started acting up but no catamount appeared.

We set up a camp similar to the one of the previous night and the cat problem got dramatically worse. We shot four of them, three on my watch, two of them came in simultaneously and the second had launched itself and was airborne by the time I hit it. I used the barrel of the Ruger to swat it down and it thudded into the log wall of our shelter. The Jeep or EmyCee had spotted all of them in advance so no real surprises, still I was beginning to think staying inland and away from the shore for all it’s seeming advantages might not have been such a good idea.

When we broke camp the next morning I changed our order of march again. This time the Jeep was still out front but I had Emy following him dragging two of the cats tied to her by ropes behind. Mike was next and I took up the rear. I was hoping the smell of dead cat would act as a warning to others that it might not be save to get too near and it seemed to be working. But by the time we put up for the night all that was left trailing behind EmyCee were some very small scraps of dead catamount which we left piled in the clearing. Wonder of wonders, no attacks at all that night. Things might be looking up.

Our problems with the cats weren’t eliminated but were now down to something we could deal with. We averaged shooting one every other day with Ugli detecting about half of them first. Ugli was still putting on weight and now must have been nearing forty-five pounds and including tail almost five feet long. When detecting one of the cats he no longer froze but crouched and began creeping in the cats direction. He did at least still stay on good terms with all of us.

Three weeks travel and what I would estimate as almost 250 miles and we were coming out of the forest and into grass again. This time unlike the high country we had passed through when just leaving the mountains the land was much more like the areas of meadow we had seen around Liberty City. The grass was much taller having had time to grow to well over a eighteen inches high and it was strewn throughout with multicolored wild flowers. There were still clumps of trees but I would be willing to bet that before long we would find nothing but the pale blue/green grassland. The maps on Laura’s comp showed this terrain continuing on for another three hundred miles before hitting the forested areas again.

For as lush and green as the grassland was the map showed only one river flowing through. That river came from an area 600 miles to the west larger than even the Inland Sea that was covered with lakes of all sizes. It tended towards the ocean in a manner such that our path would not cross it until we had traveled another 180 miles. At that point it’s course took it in front of a group of three permanently snowcapped mountains that stood out from their surroundings like Kilimanjaro. We had all toughened up to the march to such an extent that I set an internal goal which I mentioned to no one else of reaching it in under the days.

Meat, with all of the catamounts we had shot wasn’t a problem bur we had used up the last of our vegetables several days prior to getting out of the woods. Ugli solved that problem for us almost at once by turning up some of the quasi-potato like things the Devils liked so well. And speak of Devils we still hadn’t seen any of them and other birds were only rarely visible. The avian species were much rarer on Alchibah than on Earth; less time to evolve I guess.

Back to dealing with water… There was a small, almost large enough to call a crick, leading from the forest into the grassland, but I felt certain it would not last long. What we did was take my solar-cloth tarp and line the skin bag that Laura had been carrying and then filling it up and tying it off. That held close to 10 gallons and weighed more than 80 lbs, something for EmyCee to carry. Canteens and the water bag that had been in Mike’s pack gave storage for another three and a half gallons. A gallon a day each was what I thought we would need so we would absolutely need to find more long before we reached those far off mountains. Ugli seemed to get most of the liquids he needed from the food he ate. I couldn’t think of one time even back in the forest where I had seen him even lap at all the free standing water there, We started out following the crick hoping it would last.

It lasted all of the first day and half way into the next. Our order of march was the same we used when leaving the mountains with the Jeep making wide sweeps in front of us. Even though we were moving at a rapid clip Ugli had no trouble keeping up and that was very good because he was getting to a size, around 60 pounds where I would not have wanted to burden either of the bots by having him carried. Once more we were seeing some smaller animal life but that first day nothing dangerous and nothing that attracted Ugli’s attention except in what appeared to be general curiosity.

Randomly cast across the gently rolling grassland were scattered the clumps of trees I mentioned. The groupings were small, sometimes only a solitary tree and then nothing for a mile or more. Usually though there were in stands of a couple dozen. Their shape was more like a willow than a pine. They weren’t particularly tall averaging 40 to 50 feet but the trunks were of a much greater size than the pines had been often 14 inches and up. The branching and fern like leaves on the larger samples started about ten feet off of the ground. There was usually enough fallen wood, dead and dried, on the ground to make a fire for cooking but we would cut one down in order to have enough to keep a fire going through the night.

That first night we stopped I was very concerned that we had no readily defensible campsite and no way to make one. Laura came up with an idea that seemed odd at first but worked out well. She suggested we sling hammocks and sleep in the trees. With the bots to boost us up to the first branches we could get them in place quite rapidly. It took longer to search the trees above for any dangerous tree dwelling animals, which we never did find but nevertheless kept looking for, than finish the rest of the camp. There were mice size brown furred mammalians filling the same niche squirrels did on Earth, but like squirrels the were also vegetarian. One running across your face in the night could snap you right out of a sound sleep though which I found out in a manner that almost dumped me to the ground.

I stood the middle watch again that night and after the three weeks we had spent under forest cover was enthralled with the skies over head, there was a dramatic aurora that wasn’t even washed out when both moons shone full. Twice as bright as any moonlit night on Earth I had to tear my eyes away to search the ground. Good thing Emy and the Jeep were not so ascetically inclined. At shift change scrambling back into the hammock woke everyone up but if that remained the worst of our worries things weren’t so bad after all.

Midway through our second day when the crick did give out by running into a small pool with no outlet we topped off all of our water containers and continued following the depressed course it had made when swollen by the earlier spring rains. That afternoon before setting up camp digging down three feet into the depression we got enough seepage to drink our fill and top off once more. Two days into the grasslands and using the Jeep’s eyes as my sextant I could calculate we were forty-seven miles closer to home. The night stayed warm, in the low 80‘s, and tomorrow would be hotter.

“Alert! Large animal, your position 1600 yards due east in motion.”

I looked to my right and knowing what to look for by the view the Jeep was sending to
Laura’s comp I could just make out dark spots poking out of the grass in the distance. At this kind of range and with us being at a slightly lower elevation the tall grass stood high enough that magnification revealed nothing but a few brownish colored humps that must have been the backs of whatever was moving slowly towards us.

There were some trees a quarter mile to the southwest and I told the Jeep to keep on our right hand as we angled over to take cover. By the time we reached the minimal shelter of the trees the humps had turned into the largest animals we had seen yet and there were hundreds of them. At a distance they seemed to move slowly but their rate of travel must have been better than our walk as the had gained considerably on us. Six legged, like the norm for Alchibah, they were near ten feet long and five foot high at the shoulder. I couldn’t see how low to the ground the main part of their body extended because the grass was too tall. Their heads, very flat and wide were low on the body on a short, perhaps foot long, neck They must have weighed in at well over a ton.

We wasted no time in climbing up two of the larger trees and it would have been comical watching the bots do the same if it wasn’t so important they get out of harms way because unlike us with our simian ancestry they did not climb well. By the time we were all at least 15 feet off the ground the ‘Alchelos’ were streaming past on either side of the copse and more were still appearing over the rise where the Jeep had first seen them.

“I looked down at the Jeep who was dangling. Arms wrapped around the branch I was perched upon and said, “Well J.P., I guess we are well and truly up a tree without a paddle now!”

The Jeep seemed to consider and try to parse that statement and giving it up simply said, “Yes Boss.”

Laura had her com unit set to video and was gathering in more images for the travelogue, nee horror movie she had been recording and working on since the day of the crash. This scene would have worked well on the big screen as they used to say. All’s well that ends well and after two days spent living like birds the Alchelos had passed us by and we were on our way again. Though Mike did shoot one of the trailers and we had meat again.

After Action Report

Posted in 8. Eye of the Storms by Andrew Stuart

Day 41 Late Afternoon

“On that point Karl,” Andy said , “ why don’t you two pull up a chair and let’s talk about that. The Council is probably going to meet to discuss this very question.

“Who is going to give them recommendations other than the people right in this room?

“You hit it perfectly with that comment Karl, you need Cops and I need Warriors. Until we can define the Rules of Engagement or ROE, my people are going to shock everyone with their willingness to use Lethal Force. It’s what they are trained to do.

“We have to have some outside agent to determine when you can call in my dogs and when you can do a search in force.

“I don’t care if we call the position the Umpire, Judge or Chief Magistrate. It’s got to be someone who is out of the Command Chain and available. Neither of us can wait for a full Council meeting.

“Just for an example Karl. What were you doing putting Mariana in charge of a potential crime scene when she was the prime shooter?

“None of our house’s are clean after that little fiasco. Let’s do our best to get it right from here on out!

“So, what do you guys think?”

“Well Andy,” Karl began, “I can see how leaving Mariana there at Hanna’s looks in hindsight but, at the time I had some pretty good reasons. I recorded everything that happened that night so let me quote myself.” . . . “Please Mariana would you stay here and make sure anyone else that shows up stays, and that the bodies aren’t touched before Kurt does an examination? This could be very important.” He then continued.

“First off she was so hot that I wanted to give her something to do till she calmed down. What I was really afraid of was that she would insist on going with me and Joe when we went to Reye’s farm and I couldn’t have that because I suspected some would think her in some way responsible for the situation. If we had needed to use force at the farm, it could have looked bad.
“Second thing was that even though there was another member of the Council in the room, I wasn’t about to leave Reye in charge. Maybe not now, but in the past he had been entirely to close to both Jack and his crew.

“And I did say that Kurt had to perform the examination of the body. I wish I could have used someone not even related to one of the shooters, but there aren’t that many in the colony qualified to do that kind of an examination and at least he wasn’t there when it happened.

“So yeah, I can be second guessed and I might even have been wrong but with no time to waste, I made the best choice I could and I stand by it even now.

“But as you say we are going to be making some recommendations, and I’m sure taking some flack too, but my basic position is simple.

“Until or unless there is a planetary invasion by the UNWG or a civil emergency declared by the Council, the Militia does not act in civil affairs.

“The other night Jai and Summer should have been deputized in order to make it clear in what kind of capacity they were operating. But who was there to do it? I suppose Reye might have, but he was in a state of shock and if he had tried how far would he have gotten? And that’s why I agree with you that we need some published rules so we aren’t making it up as we go.

“I’ve had a lot of experience giving impromptu boardroom speeches, so if it seems like I know what I’m talking about just stop me ok?”

Andy snorted and then laughed for a moment then Karl went on.

“We don’t have the time to and I don’t have the inclination to write a comprehensive set of laws that can cover everything. Our population is so small that we can’t even adapt a reasonable version of civil law say from the 1950’s United States. We almost need the Greek Philosopher King but call him the Philosopher Judge. Someone who does right by nature and if he does it than it must be right.

“Well that isn’t me nor I suspect anyone else in the here and now. Still I almost think we have to delegate that kind of authority to someone but have a body such as the Council or maybe a Judiciary Committee that can overrule any decision made.”

Andy took a long pull on his drink, “Never meant to imply that you did not have good reasons and intents. Hell, everybody involved did. You had no way of knowing that Mariana’s medical Code of Ethics would not allow her to be part of the crime scene. Just as the Young Ladies I just chewed out did not know that it was a Guard crime scene.

“Joe you remember the old joke that the Military has a Standard Operating Procedure or SOP for taking a crap?”

Joe snorted and tipped his mug.

“Karl, I plan to train at least two people to be a stay behind force when we launch. Gotta plan for at least one lander getting past us, shit no one is perfect! That team should probably be cross-trained and sworn in as Reserve Deputies, that way they are Cops. The only way you ask for my Wolves, is as a SWAT team. That is pretty much a Combat situation anyway.

“I propose that each of our three disciplines and I will drag Mariana into this write up a set of recommendations to the Council, for what we see as our roles as to be presented on say a Day 50 Council meeting.

“And you have a good point Karl about the Great Judge. It does not have to be the Council, it could be a group of colonists who either know law or are just plain level headed. Jules and Hanna Parker come immediately to mind, although not at the same time. All we would need is that two or three, whatever number is picked. Stay in communications range during their tenure. Hell, if we can vote via comms, why not act as a Judge via comms.

“Now consider gentlemen and yes I use that term loosely. I have the shear joy tonight of informing Mariana that she fracked up the brief to CPT Kellerman and sweat waking up in the morning.

“Any further thoughts Gentlemen?”

“I screwed the pooch, and much worse than you did Colonel, after all I was there,” Fortson said. “There was a time, and not so long ago, we wouldn’t even be talking about mistakes cause I wouldn’t have let any happen.

“Karl and I are the only sorta authorized police we got and neither one of us plans on making it a career. We’ve got to close this thing down and get it to a just as needed basis. I could go with an appointed judge or judicial committee so long as it’s separate from the Council. That would rule out the Historian, but so be it.”

Karl said, “I’m with Joe. After the shooting, shuttle explosion and the rape investigations are finished Pam and I have to get on with the rest of our lives. I want to build sailing ships and explore this planet, not wait for the next crime to happen, so the Council and the people will have to figure a way. Let’s suggest the Judicial Board and put everyone on alert that unless they figure some other way of doing it that that’s how it’s got to be. Are we Agreed?”

I just picked up the bottle and asked, “Another round?”



Colony: Alchibah is a science fiction blog novel.
Any resemblance to persons living or dead is purely coincidental. Probably.

All Contents (written or photo/artwork) not attributed to other sources is
Copyright (C) 2006 - 2011 by Jeff Soyer. All rights reserved.