HOW IT COULD HAVE BEEN
By Paul Taylor
Erren's tiny vessel cleared the mountain by barely five metres, and dived
down into the valley. The pilots of the Empire's larger craft did their
best to follow, but one of the three ricocheted off the mountain side,
sending rock and snow cascading down the rocky slopes, and hurtled to it's
fiery destruction on the valley floor. The other two could not manage the
sharp dive achieved by Erren, and his sleek cloudcutter was nowhere in
sight or on scanner by the time they had lowered their hovering vehicles
into the valley.
Erren could see them, however. Sitting in his cloudcutter, which was
reposed on a rocky floor deep within a large but inconspicuous cave, Erren
could just make out the two Empire skirmishers gliding slowly, and almost
noiselessly, above the rock-strewn dried-up river bed. He powered up his
vessel's engine, programmed in a course, and prepared to use the laser
cannon mounted on the nose.
With the push of a button, Erren's craft propelled itself with computer-
controlled precision to the cave mouth and out into glaring sunlight. It
flew past the two skirmishers, spitting forth a blaze of white light
courtesy of Erren's trigger finger. One exploded instantaneously, as the
intense heat of the laser beams sliced through it's hull and ignited it's
fuel load. The other was disabled, and fell a metre into the hard dry mud
with an alarming clunk. The cannoneer was clearly undaunted, as the turret
mounted cannon of the Empire's craft followed Erren's wide arc across the
sky, blasting out lances of light. One singed the starboard wing of the
cloudcutter, but the damage was not serious enough to stop Erren from
swooping in for the kill like an enraged harpy. The hull of the Empire's
immobilised vessel was cut to shreds, as were it's three occupants, by the
cannon of Erren, long-time thorn in the side of the Empire.
"Alien bastards!" gasped Erren, between deep breaths.
The sun was almost beyond the south-eastern horizon by the time the
cloudcutter raced through the skies east of Torrund Mountain. All
observers at the secret base, perched between two of the three peaks of the
vast mount, could see that the craft was in some trouble. They had
expected it an hour before, and the rebels communication blackout had
prevented Erren from sending a distress signal, or even a warning of his
delayed arrival. As the craft appeared as a blip on the huge scanner
screen in the main building, a cacophony of cheers filled the air, and the
noise was renewed with increased enthusiasm the moment the cloudcutter
became visible to the eyes of the occupants of the base.
The landing pad was cleared, but the cloudcutter did not head towards it.
Instead, it made a descent towards the snow covered plateau to the west of
the base. A recovery team was prepared before the small craft had even
reached the perimeter of the collection of closely huddled metallic
structures. The cloudcutter shot silently over the base, and for the first
time it was realised that it was gliding, without power.
No-one saw the vessel hit the snow, but some relief was found in the fact
that no explosion was seen or heard. Within minutes, a load-carrier had
reached the cloudcutter, as it lay buried in snow at the end of a thirty
metre groove in the otherwise smooth white landscape.
Darkness was encroaching on the base when the load-carrier hovered above
the landing pad and lowered the heavily damaged cloudcutter to the ground.
The load-carrier itself landed beside Erren's craft. Major Krinnen stood
anxiously outside the opening door of the bulky vessel, which lowered to
the ground to form a ramp. A sigh of relief escaped her when Erren stepped
onto the ramp and strolled casually to the ground.
"Sorry I'm late Major," he said nonchalantly. "Also, sorry about
wrecking a cloudcutter."
"You're more valuable to us than a cloudcutter," she replied, "but only
just! What happened out there?"
The two headed for the main building, ignoring the organised chaos that had been prompted by Erren's unconventional arrival.
"Three imperial skirmishers," explained Erren. "I would never have made
it, if I had not deliberately left Koll-gesson Skyport with a minimum of
fuel. The intention had been to make the 'cutter lighter, to expedite my
journey. As it turned out, it gave me the necessary manoeuvrability to
finish off the skirmishers." They reached the main building, and Major
Krinnen held the door open while Erren continued his explanation.
"Unfortunately, the whole episode left me without enough fuel to make a
vertical landing. So I glided as far as I could and used what little fuel
I had left to make my crash as pleasant as possible."
Once inside, the Major and Erren made straight for the officers' dining
room. Erren had never been to this particular base before, and didn't
expect it to be there long enough for a revisit. That is the way it is
with rebels. A base can't exist for too long, for fear of it's discovery.
This one was constructed for one purpose, and whether or not Erren's
mission succeeded, it would be dismantled upon his departure. As they made
their way through two dingy corridors, the Major gave Erren the usual
praise that he had come to expect from her every time he pulled off some
sensational victory. It was only when they had seated themselves on the
tiny dining room's shabby metal seats, separated by an equally shabby
table, that she began to settle.
"When will you be leaving?" asked the Major, a nervous expression playing
about her face.
"As soon as you can furnish me with the map and bomb," he replied. "We're behind schedule already." He was not sensitive to the feelings of
others, and it took him another couple of seconds to spot her worried look.
"What's the matter?" he asked in as soothing a tone as he could manage.
"This whole mission has been cursed from day one!" She was clearly
agitated. "Two pilots died smuggling the bomb from the imperial arsenal
on Ajax 9 to our base on Ajax 3; you were nearly killed getting here; and
recent reports from our spies around the Western Gulf tell us that another
whole battalion has been assigned to guard the Grand Computer building."
Her stressed expression shook Erren's confidence a little, but he was
ever the optimist.
"Don't worry," he said. "I'll take that building out, and the Empire's
Grand Computer with it. You'll see the blast from here. You'll feel the
ground shake, and know that the Empire's armies in the Ajax system are
finally cut off from their leaders. Once that happens, we'll take them
easy!"
Major Krinnen looked no more heartened, but was silent for a while.
Evidently, it seemed to Erren, thoughts whizzed through her mind. She
eventually spoke again.
"We would be willing to live in peace with the Empire. Why do they need
to repress us?"
"They want control and power," answered Erren. "They can't handle living
on equal terms with another life form. They need to hold us down."
"They consider us to be no better than animals," she said, bitterly.
"I think that's just the excuse they use to convince themselves that they
have the right to treat us this way," said Erren.
"I remember when they arrived," she mused. "Their huge warships dropped
out of the skies above our cities, and decimated their populations with
bombs and laser blasts, without even warning us, just to demonstrate their
power. We had been sent warning from other colonies around the Galaxy, but
what could we do? Where could we have gone? And now we're either slaves,
or living in the wilderness like the animals they say we are!"
"Don't wind yourself up, Krinnen." He seemed calm as always, in spite
of his recent ordeal. "We always knew that the colonisation of other
worlds carried the risk of attracting attention from hostile aliens. But
our population was growing too rapidly for us to choose any other option."
Again, she meditated quietly for a minute or so. Finally she said, "Have
you ever wondered how it could have been, if we had been the powerful ones,
with the advanced technology and military might? Would we have become
drunk on the power, and repressed the other races we discovered? Would we
have been the Empire?"
Erren thought for a while. "I doubt it," he said at last. "We hold
freedom very highly. Most of our colonies were run by democratically
elected leaders before the Empire came. Such things don't even figure in
the imperial mind! But, who can say for sure?"
The door burst open as Erren finished this last sentence, and a Private
charged into the officers' dining room carrying a message. Erren took it
from him before the disgruntled Major, who was after all the senior officer
on the base, had a chance. The message was a transcript of a coded radio
signal, and was serious enough to warrant ending the communications
blackout. It read simply:
IMPERIAL FORCES SEARCHING TORRUND MOUNTAIN REGION. BASE IN
SERIOUS DANGER. PROCEED WITH FINAL STAGE OF MISSION IMMEDIATELY
OR ABORT.
Erren dropped the message on the table in front of Major Krinnen, who
snatched it up and began to read.
"Has the bomb arrived yet, Private?" asked Erren hastily.
"The courier is in visual range now, Sir," the Private answered
mechanically.
"You prepare for take off," said the Major. "I'll get that map."
All three rushed from the room, the Major spinning out a dizzying array
of orders to the Private. Erren was in a fresh cloudcutter, standing on the launch pad surrounded by
busy technicians, by the time the Major returned to him with the map. She
climbed the portable steps to the cockpit, and handed him the small
computer pad. He quickly examined the electronic, interactive sketch,
scrolling around the image as though he was following his intended route.
"This will get you through the building from the ground," the Major told
him, "But getting there will be your problem."
"I have that much fig..." he began to answer. Then, without warning, the
scream of laser fire cut through the air from the south, and everybody
looked through the night-time darkness to the flashes of white in the
distance.
"Battle stations," shouted Major Krinnen, and turning back to Erren she
said, "You had better get inside."
But it was too late. The canopy of the cloudcutter's cockpit was already
closing, and the anti-gravity generators were powering up for a vertical
take-off. The frustrated Major jumped from the portable steps, which were
then wheeled off by the technicians as they abandoned their routine checks,
and she backed away to a safe distance.
With a pulsating hum, the cloudcutter rose from the launch pad, it's
three legs retracting into compartments in it's underside. With a flurry
of fire and hot air, the craft shrank into the darkness towards the
lightening-like laser flashes. The Major cursed Erren's bravado, and made
her way to the command centre.
Erren was amongst the battle within a few seconds, and the two imperial
skirmishers were scattered when his speeding cloudcutter emerged from the
night with screaming beams of laser going before it. The distraction gave
the cloudcutter they were assailing the chance to drop unnoticed to the
ground, where it forced itself deep into the snow out of sight. The
courier was safe; at least for the moment!
Erren looped-the-loop and made another assault on the skirmishers,
threading through their fusillade, to pierce the hull of one of the
skirmishers several times. As it plummeted towards the snowy mountain
side, seven new blips appeared on Erren's scanner; blips that read as
skirmishers!
Erren knew that he could not outfight eight of these vessels, so he led
them towards the base. There, at least, he could rely on defensive fire-
power. His small craft screamed through the air above the base, and
spiralled downwards around the first peak of Torrund Mountain, becoming
indiscernible from the mountain itself, as far as the enemy's scanners were
concerned. The advancing vessel did not know what it was flying into, the
base being adequately shielded from ordinary scans.
Suddenly, a volley of plasma illuminated the sky, and the first
skirmisher disintegrated in fiery brilliance. The Empire would have no
doubt about the rebel's location now; the other seven skirmishers will
already have sent the co-ordinates. They advanced on the base, missiles
and laser cannons tearing craters into the terrain. The rebel's defenses
fought back with all they had, destroying one skirmisher and sending
another into a limping descent, but the onslaught continued.
Erren's cloudcutter skimmed the surface of the snow on the mountain side
beneath the imperial vessels, searching meticulously for the hidden
cloudcutter. That courier carried the bomb, stolen from an imperial
arsenal, without which Erren's mission was impossible. The battle shrank
into the distance behind him, and in spite of the vague sounds of laser
fire and explosion, a stillness surrounded his craft.
That stillness was shattered by a ground-shaking boom, and Erren switched
to his rear view screen to see the base ablaze. The fuel in the generators
must have ignited; anyone still in the command centre would be dead, and
anyone left alive on the base would be executed.
Erren was disheartened for a few moments, until he realised that they had
fought to keep his chances alive. At that moment, a small blip on his
scanner indicated the presence of another cloudcutter. It whizzed past
from his left side, and fell into a parallel course to him. It was the
courier, and Erren opened a communications channel with him.
"I am Captain Erren Bruinn," said Erren. "I must take receipt of the
item you are carrying. The Torrund Mountain Base has been destroyed, and
you are advised to abandon this area as soon as you have relinquished the
item."
"I am Guinn Torrinen," said the courier, "And I have been instructed to
hand the item in person to Major Krinnen on Torrund Mountain Base."
"If Major Krinnen isn't dead," said Erren, "she soon will be. The base
is destroyed, but the mission can continue if you..."
A new blip on his scanner, a big ugly blip, indicated the imminent
arrival of an imperial skybase from the south. It's vast black hulk was
not visible in the veil of night, so the first the two rebels would see of
it was it's barrage of fatal light.
Erren grimaced. "There is no time for argument or explanation," he
screamed through the comm channel. "we cannot fight, and there is no value
in running. I am pulling rank on you! Give me the item!"
Then the metallic mass of the skybase drifted into range, and rods of
blinding light connected it with the slopes around the two cloudcutters.
Steam rose from the snow, making navigation by sight an impossible task.
Both cloudcutters climbed into the air, parting as they did so, followed
by the multiple laser fire of the sluggish skybase. There was no point in
returning fire, as the damage done on a skybase by a cloudcutter's measly
firepower could be repaired with a lick of paint, and Erren was at a loss.
He flew in close to the skybase, out of the range of it's laser cannons'
angles of rotation, searching for a vulnerability; but his attention soon
turned towards the courier's cloudcutter, which had manoeuvred behind the
behemoth.
The skirmishers that had destroyed the base were returning to the
skybase, preparing to dock on it's underside. Only three had survived the
battle, and one separated from the others to chase Erren's cloudcutter over
the top of the huge vessel. It was not swift enough to catch up with him,
nor could it outmanoeuvre him, but it had only to flush him out from the
protection of the skybase's hull. Erren dodged it's fire as best he could,
while keeping an eye on the location of the courier with his all-important
package.
But the courier had decided on a suicidal tactic. As he aligned his
cloudcutter with the skybase's vast rear engine, he ejected the bomb,
letting it hurtle towards the snow. Erren immediately selected the bomb
on his scanner, allowing the cloudcutter's automatic pilot free control of
the craft. He sped away from the giant. The crew of the skirmisher were
taken by surprise, but not as much as by the eruption caused by the
courier's cloudcutter exploding within the skybase's engine.
Fleeing from the carnage, Erren's craft snatched the bomb from it's
descent. The light of the burning wreckage gleaming off the snow
illuminated the landscape. Erren flew high, his course set for the Grand
Computer Building. At maximum speed, it would be a matter of two hours
before he reached it, but it would be two hours of reflection on the
destruction he was leaving behind. Major Krinnen, whether she was killed
in the destruction of the rebel base or the imperial skybase he would never
know; the soldiers and technicians, at least fifty in all; and, of course,
the courier, who probably saved Erren's mission. It was up to him now to
make their deaths worthwhile.
The Grand Computer Building was an ornately moulded metallic structure,
vast and dark, with spires and arches. About it's walls, the tales of past
victories of the Empire were presented in raised metal, stylised and
dynamic. But the kitsch propaganda of it's external appearance cloaked
highly functional bowels. Deep within the complex, a mighty computer
controlled the flow of information throughout the imperial forces within
the Ajax solar system, as well as receiving and sending instructions to
other parts of the Empire. The eradication of this far-reaching technical
fungus from the Ajax system would permit the overthrow of imperial power.
The almost impassable forest surrounding the building harboured a
potential source of just such an defeat. The concept behind the building's
location was that nothing could approach from the air without being
detected by scanners, and nothing could approach through the great expanse
of dense forest without being poisoned or disembowelled or eaten (or all
three) by the particularly aggressive flora and fauna of Ajax 3.
But the Empire had not reckoned on the ingenuity of a repressed
population. Erren's cloudcutter had followed a troop transport to the base
so closely that a scanner could not tell the two vehicles apart. As soon
as the tallest trees could shield him from detection, he lowered his vessel
into the forest, where it rested on the dense foliage (cloudcutters are
exceptionally light when low on fuel). Thereafter, he had only a twenty
metre hike to the basement entrance, as shown on the map, and years of
commando training and experience of guerilla warfare had prepared him for
such a journey.
A crimson dawn marked his arrival at the well concealed entrance to the
basement of the Grand Computer Building. It was nothing more than a
trapdoor, which lifted to reveal a chute into an overbearingly illuminated
place. Erren simply dived down the chute, and found himself confronted by
a voluminous subterranean storage chamber, full of metal crates and
canisters. He made his way to the stairs on the other side of the room,
and ascended to the ground floor.
After many passages, rooms and near fatal encounters, Erren reached the
generator room, a relatively small room with a huge tubular conduit running
from floor to ceiling. Energy throbbed along the conduit, and the
vibration could be felt through the walls and floor. Erren only needed to
set the bomb's timer for an hour-long countdown, conceal the device beneath
the control panel on the wall and leave as quickly as possible. When the
bomb detonates, the entire building should be annihilated, and Erren will
hopefully be a long way from it.
And then, someone shouted at him. Although the sounds were definitely
speech, they were not in Erren's language, but they were followed by a
translation device's mechanical voice, "Drop everything and raise all six
tentacles slowly in the air!"
Erren spun around to see six human soldiers, clad in black armour, each
holding a laser rifle pointed at Erren. His three eyes opened wide with
astonishment for a moment, before he composed himself. His time was up;
although his species were stronger than humans, he could never defeat six
of them. He dropped his three pistols, and slowly raised all six
tentacles, but the bomb was still held firmly in the three fingers of one
of his hind limbs. Before the soldiers knew what was happening, he
activated the detonator. The timer not having been set, the bomb exploded,
tearing open the power conduit, and igniting the fuel core.
Throughout the Ajax system, the command centres of the Human Empire had
lost their flow of commands and information. On the burning world of Ajax
9, a misty, volcanic planet, the gigantic Dome 32 ceased weapons
production. The enslaved molluscoid life-forms stole the weapons carried
by their guards and liberated the rest of the domes on the planet. On Ajax
1, a tiny airless planet, the human occupants of Dome 3 were murdered by
their slaves, and they sent the signal to the rest of the domestic slaves
to follow their example. And most dramatically, on Ajax 3, the only world
in the system with an atmosphere that could support life, and the main base
of operations for mankind in the Ajax system, armies of rebels rapped their
tentacles around the throats of numerous soldiers and officials, throttling
the life from their pathetic human bodies. If Major Krinnen had lived, she
would have been proud of Captain Erren Bruin, as she slithered through
human corpses, commanding tentacled troops into battle.
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