Antz – The
Final Epic
Copyright
2012 by Ronald Edwin Wintrick
Amazon
Edition
111th
– Sandgarth - Bellefontaine
"He
traveled twenty-seven days Jump in that?" Marcus Welby asked as Bellefontaine
put the magnified image of the very small inbound ship tagged Transient on the main screen.
"And
twenty-seven days out right before that." Sandgarth agreed. It was his
request which brought Gregory Matlin and his AI equipped Transient here now. Jeeda
lost interest in Gregory Matlin immediately after hearing of his
accomplishment. Praise for individual heroes would have to come after. If the war with the Antz ever came to a
conclusion, and most thought it never would.
Sandgarth
knew it would. He knew the tenacity of the human race. They would never stop
hunting the Antz. Not until every last one had been exterminated, or until
every last human had been hunted to extinction.
Sandgarth
knew absolutely nothing about the entity known as It. Not in any real sense.
Sandgarth could only judge the invisible, unknowable Leader of the Antz by the
actions of the Antz themselves. The Antz were just mindless hosts- there was no
debate over that further- but the thoughts of the Leader could be deduced by the actions of the host.
The only
verdict Sandgarth could render was that the Antz would never stop. New Armadas
were still arriving to carry forth the invasion, the only difference now the
Antz Armadas immediately departed after deployment and the new hosts spawned on
the afflicted worlds no longer building ships. The Antz no longer attempting to
build ships on any human worlds; the sole purpose of the continuing campaign
clearly that of fully eradicating the entire human race down to the last
individual.
As Sandgarth
rode a lift to meet Gregory Matlin personally he wondered if it wasn’t
humanities’ fault in the first place- in a twisted kind of way- that this war
would never end without the complete destruction of one or the other? The
entity known as It was psychic. It could look into the mind of almost any human
it desired, and looking there It sees the resolve of the human animal. Knowing
humans will never stop, seeing it in our minds, the Antz have no choice but to
press the engagement to its conclusion.
“Our own
fault.” Sandgarth said with a chuckle as the lift-tube ejected him into the
dock.
Then the
emergency klaxons were ringing and the ship beneath him accelerating, a very
noticeable feeling when the acceleration was extreme.
“What the
hell’s going on?” Gregory Matlin asked as he stepped down from Transient.
“Not good
news.” Sandgarth replied, having just received the briefing by link. “I’ll tell
you on the way.”
It
It halted
It's Armada beyond the range of the Station’s puny weapons while It
contemplated this new data. It could detect nothing out of the ordinary with
the humans- at the moment. It knew these human individuals. It knew of their
unique abilities. It fought these individuals on the planet humans called
Alackner. These humans and their abilities
were recognized. The process by which they could accelerate their bodies beyond
the physical normal boundaries was not understood but recognized and under
analysis.
It now
weighed the strategic advantages/disadvantages of digesting the Station the
humans called Fexley and the unique human individuals within. The Station once possessed
by Brian McAndrews, another individual with unique abilities but now relegated
to oblivion. It understood what the humans wanted. They wanted to bring the
fight aboard It’s ships. It desired to bring them aboard. To subdue them and
then- after breaking their bodies- digest their weakened minds.
The allure
of possessing the secret of this new human ability, and the potential of
adapting its use to It’s host individuals almost overwhelmed It's powers of deductive
reasoning. It recognized the emotion swaying It’s decision making process and
minimized that function to an obscure section of It’s consciousness. It then
allocated every available byte of It's consciousness to weigh the problem-
minus the emotional input- but there wasn't enough empiric data to calculate
such a many-faceted equation.
The risk and
computational loop It could not fully delineate was the threat of allowing the
humans to gain control of one of It's ships versus the possibility of acquiring
new data. Valuable data. Yet in the end, despite It's massive processing power,
It was unable to devise a strategy by which It could be guaranteed to harvest
the humans without subjecting Itself to extreme risk. The threat too great, unable
to make the calculation, It chose to relegate to oblivion.
A thousand
photon beams ripped Fexley Station apart.
Next It: It
knew they approached. The 111th and its psychics had been doing It
extreme damage. The Flagship which carried the psychics never exited with the
rest, however. It was never given the opportunity to eliminate. The Armada had
inserted its host and fully armed would have a high probability of eliminating
the Flagship if it exited with the rest.
The humans
thought they were cloaking themselves but the war had now become one of
attrition. They could cloak nothing when It wished to find them, and they were
now never out of It’s sight. After inserting
It’s host the colony ships were now expendable. Colony ships had already been
dispatched to every habitable-acceptable world within reach- reach the lifespan
of It’s hosts to make the journeys- so It pretended and waited for the one time
the Flagship would exit with the rest. It was a patient waiter.
It also
still wondered. One of the humans with the strange ability- there were
thousands of such throughout the human race- was making the crossing from the
destroyed Station.
Fexley
Station
The Antz
Armada sat quiescently just out of reach of Fexley’s weapons- not that they would
have attempted to use them- for seventeen anxious days and nights. As if the
Antz were inviting attack from without, but no attack from without came and the
wait continued.
The entire
human race sat breathlessly awaiting news of the daring assault- those who were
able to receive updates. No Fleet attacks came despite the vulnerability of the
stationary, quiet Antz Armada. Then abruptly the Antz opened fire. Those aboard
Fexley had two seconds warning as alarms shrieked of photon locks.
The Station
came apart in one massive spasm, cut into thousands of pieces simultaneously.
The atmosphere exploded outward taking everything with it. Jeanette had just
enough time to slap her face-shield in place and grab a solid support before a
photon beam cut across the corridor through which she had just passed, not ten
meters distant.
The shock of
the closeness of the raw energy electrified Jeanette’s body, nearly numbing
her, nearly losing her grasp on the support as the atmosphere tried to escape
all at once. She was slammed against her hold on the support, snapped straight-out
like a flag in a hurricane. The rush came and went and was instantly gone.
The piece of
Station, now in zero gravity, was tumbling in an odd spin. There was no feeling
of motion in zero gravity but she was pushed to one side of the corridor.
Enough spin to create artificial gravity. She found a stable position at the
juncture of wall and ceiling and took a moment to look down the corridor and
out into open space.
‘Anyone else
out there alive?’ Jeanette asked by link as she watched the debris of what had
once been Fexley Station beginning to separate out as it expanded, each piece
on its individual journey.
‘Alive.’
Master Sunatta replied.
‘Same here.’
Vina said to an abrupt silence. An abrupt silence that stretched until Master
Sunatta broke it;
‘Den is
gone. We will move forward.’
‘Den isn’t
gone.’ Jeanette replied. She could feel him even though she wasn’t in her
heightened awareness and he was alive.
To remain in her heightened state both aged her, not a real problem with rejuv,
but she also used tremendous amounts of energy and had to eat to compensate.
She would reserve the use of her ability until she needed it or it would eat
her alive.
‘I will go
on ahead while you recover him.’ Master Sunatta informed.
‘Go on ahead
where?’ Vina demanded.
‘My
appointment with the Antz. It was rude of them to cancel at such late notice.’
Master Sunatta thought/said.
‘Wait for
me!’ Jeanette ordered but there was no response and Jeanette didn’t bother
repeating herself. She could feel Den and he was alive. The Fleet supplied grav-harness-
designed primarily to keep you attached to non-massive objects, like the floor
(or ceiling) of the interior of an Antz’ ship for instance and brought along just
in case, now proving a very worthwhile preparation- wasn’t very maneuverable
through open space but by trial and error Jeanette soon had control of her
locomotion.
Space loomed
ahead as she maneuvered down the corridor and then right out into open space.
The pieces of the Station had already spread out over a great distance and
Den’s signature or aura, she really had no name to describe what she could
feel, was coming from one of the farthest pieces and she began towards it
immediately.
Vina came out
of nowhere but Jeanette felt her coming. Together they flew towards Den’s
signature. Jeanette looked towards where she could feel Master Sunatta’s
signature. He was already on his way, somewhere between the debris of the
Station and the Antz Armada still sitting there admiring their work; or
waiting.
Jeanette
didn’t know which.
Alaris Burkett
– Zenith – In transit
The medical
ward made available to them was crowded with ‘Docs, though none were presently
treating patients. The potential patients were all sitting on the extended-out
bed-platforms and in readiness to become patients. All were sure they would be,
including Alaris.
‘You know
the risks.’ Alaris spoke into their minds, vocalizing unnecessary in this
group. They were a hundred and seventy-nine, but none besides himself even half
as strong as the conspicuously missing Madame Beauchart. Jeeda had negated the
idea of including Madame Beauchart in this attack with a simple statement;
“Too many
eggs in one basket.” She said. Alaris had not agreed but the decision was made
and Jeeda not the type to have her judgments questioned. Alaris had served the
Fleet for seven hundred years but this was the first time he’d met Jeeda. MID
had been the highest echelon of Fleet- until Jeeda Collins of course, Alaris
thought with wry humor- but there had been little interaction between the two Sections.
There had been no reason or need to meet her. The MID’s activities clandestine.
Jeeda was as hard as he had heard however- even harder- and Alaris didn’t say
another word. It would have been a pointless waste of time.
Alaris
turned to his mental preparedness and blanked out the too numerous thought
responses- too numerous to comprehend all at once- as he lied back on the
‘Doc’s table. The ‘Docs were in response-readiness. Should any present- or all
present, Alaris thought with more wry humor- need medical assistance they would
receive it instantly.
They weren’t
ready for It and all present were aware. Alaris could no longer hide what was
in his mind from the rest. The hours and days the group had spent in mind-meld
now making them essentially permanently linked. If humanity survived, if they
survived, the members of this group would forever be linked, no matter what
spans separated them.
The training
techniques he learned in the care of MID Doctors now served this group well.
All were progressing and getting stronger. They spent every waking moment in
mind-meld. Most hadn’t been aware of their abilities. None had received the
training Alaris had. Every waking moment had been only a few hours a day for
some- the effort exhausting beyond belief and those weakest members sleeping
twenty or more hours a day. When those sleepers woke they were immediately
melded back into the group and the training continued. They had all made
excellent progress.
Yet the simple
unavoidable fact was they weren’t ready. They weren’t ready for It and they
knew it. Alaris opened his mind to the meld and began to gather the power of
the group. Soon he would attack.
111th
Battle Group - Zenith
‘It is as I
feared,’ Madame Beauchart’s thought entered her mind, ‘yet all is not lost.’
‘You can see that while in transit?’ Jeeda
thought, the message clearly delivered. Madame Beauchart was aboard Zenith, was
with her at all times, but at even greater distances the link created between
them remained unbreakable. Madame Beauchart was never more than a thought away.
‘The group
can. All four survive. One is approaching the Antz Armada as I deliver this
message.’
One alone assaulting the Antz Armada, Jeeda
thought. That would be Sunatta; the secretive, mysterious and terminally insane-
if half of what she had heard was true- leader of the Eldritch. Or second in
command, if that could be believed. She wasn’t sure she did.
“Approaching
exit.” Marcus Welby announced. “Orders?”
“Bypass
exit.” Jeeda ordered to surprised looks. The 111th would crush the
one Antz Armada if it yet remained. The expanding fleets of new mobile
shipyards were constructing new mobile yards and thousands of new Super
Dreadnaught ships per week. Those very same mobile shipyards were expanding
into Interstellar space in every direction as the only hope for saving mankind-
to spread itself across the Universe unchecked and without restraint- just like
the Antz.
Every new
ship constructed was added to the 111th. A constant stream of new ships
joined the 111th on a daily basis, the number increasing on a daily
basis despite the fact that they were coming from farther away every day. There
were no longer individual Detachments. There was just the 111th and
it had been wreaking havoc. Jeeda was spending those ships and crews
mercilessly, but there was no other alternative. Despite the 111th’s losses
it continued to grow at a massive rate.
Yet Madame
Beauchart believed the Antz Armada still remained, so it still remained, making
this an excellent opportunity. An opportunity Jeeda was almost Duty-bound to
accept. A duty she had been bound to accept for the past seventeen days- yet
had not. Now with Fexley destroyed and the very important Eldritch in need of
rescue, she felt more Duty-bound to act than she had. But she did not.
The 111th
had seen recent success. Annihilating every Antz Armada it found. The psychics were
delivering the 111th to resounding victories every single time. Now
the 111th always outnumbered the enemy. The Antz never knew when or
where they would strike. The Armada at Fexley numbered four thousand while the
111th was now forty-seven thousand plus Capital Class ships and
hundreds of thousands of miscellaneous ships of war.
Yet what if
that crazy Sunatta is actually able to get aboard and even crazier than that,
subdue an entire Antz’ ship? If there was a chance- even the remotest- he could
be successful then it was worth the risk of not attacking- at least a little
longer. Just to see what would happen.
Newston
“The food
aboard Falcon isn’t the greatest but
if any of you are hungry the galley in this Section is just down that corridor
there.” The Colonel who greeted them at the hatch of Kent’s ship informed,
pointing the way toward one of the numerous exit hatches in the massive dock
and to the corridor visible beyond. “I’m Colonel Edwards, at your disposal.”
Colonel Edwards
heard, everyone heard, about how this group had been one of the first- maybe
the first, the facts were fuzzy- to begin eating the Antz and that it was now
standard practice everywhere. In most places the Antz were the only food left
available. With the Antz’ full-complement of left-hand amino acids the Antz as
a food supply was proving both abundant and nutritious. The cycle was coming
full circle on the Antz.
“Which
direction?” Carla asked as she pulled her children along behind her past Kent.
Neither she nor the children had eaten Antz but it became a close call when the
supplies ran low. That with Kent wanting
to feed it to them and the children agreeing with everything Uncle Kent ever
said. Kurt was eating the Antz as were most. Carla did not begrudge him that
she just didn’t want to participate if she didn’t have to.
Edwards
pointed again, a small smile on his lips as Carla and the children disappeared
in the direction indicated.
“Don’t like
Antz huh?” He asked Kent and Kurt and the rest who were now debarking. Not
before getting a good look at them. At their old eyes! If he hadn’t known better he would have instantly saluted
them.
He knew
better though. These people weren’t Fleet. Not only weren’t they Fleet but these
people had fought the Antz with swords alone and lived to tell of it. Now
planning to storm the actual Antz’ ships! Amazing!
“Only
because she never tried it.” Kent said. “It’s actually quite good.”
“We brought
some along if you’d like to try it.” Brac said with a big smile.
“I believe I
will.” Edwards said, not really wanting to but it a point of honor- if the
Eldritch could eat Antz so could Fleet. “This is what you’ll want to look at
right away though.” He added, leading them towards the strange ship sitting in
a corner of the dock that most among the group had noticed immediately. There
was no hesitation. They eagerly followed.
“No obvious
signs of propulsion.” Kurt said as they stood next to the ship. It was a
miniature APC, all present recognized, though entirely different. Designed to
carry a dozen troopers at most while full APC’s would carry dozens.
Its most
noticeable attribute was its lack of weapons, however. It would have been
difficult to find an unarmed human ship before the conflict and impossible now.
Or up until now. Now humans were producing them again. A few in any case,
designed for one specific task. To deliver human fighters to Antz’ ships!
“I like it.”
Paul said.
“I like the
handrails.” Kent said as he reached out a hand to test the strength of the
railing. It was solid. “I guess this is how we’ll be riding in.”
Kurt wasn’t
sure he was as enthused as he had been previously as he studied the handrail
and the meter wide platform under it- and he was sure he hadn’t been
particularly enthused before. Not enthused but along for the ride.
“Let’s take
it for a test-flight.” Was what Brent had to offer the conversation. There were
laughs around.
But it was nice to be able to laugh again, Kurt
thought.
New Hope
"Home
sweet home." Moguilo said cheerily as they began climbing out the last bit
of tunnel into the light of day. The first real light they had seen in a long
time. It was warm. Moguilo had to hold a hand over his eyes to the unaccustomed
blinding glare. The others did the same as they came up. It seemed extremely
brilliant and it took long minutes to fully adjust.
The city was
a devastated wreck. There were few buildings left standing and none untouched
by the war. There were people everywhere however. Going through the rubble or
just gathered in groups to converse and share the news. Humans were no longer
afraid to walk freely on their own planet! Now the human race was welcoming the
Antz with open arms.
The difference
was noticeable. Everyone had been running then- running in a million different
directions all at once. Chaotic and disorganized the way the Antz wanted. Now
the people walked brazenly. Out in the open but with swords in ready sheaths. The
other major difference which was noticeable was that the Antz weren't
attacking. The Antz were on the run! That was the reason they were back on the
surface. The Antz would no longer meet them.
"Those
are Eldritch." Mavy said waving towards a group of about fifteen people
about a block distant.
"They're
looking this way." Wayne said.
"They
think we had a child down in the tunnels fighting with us." Pitan said with
a smirk. In fact Mavy was now dressed in a child's clothing. They'd found a
suitcase full of clothing that fit Mavy perfectly- she had not tried to think
about why it was there- the only catch was that it had been a little girl's
clothing and looked it.
"I'm
the only one wearing clean clothing." Mavy said with her own smirk. None
had possessed anything clean until they found the suitcase, and there was
nothing in the suitcase that fit them. Wayne, Moguilo and Pitan looked the
parts they were playing while Mavy looked like she had spent the time in daycare.
"And by the way all three of you are disgustingly filthy!"
Their
clothes were stained black. No amount of washing would get them clean. They had
long since run out of clean clothing. Mavy’s smile spoke volumes!
"They're
coming this way." Moguilo said, hiding his smile well. "I think they
really want to see if there was a child fighting in the tunnels."
"They're
known to us." Mavy said, referring to herself and Pitan.
"Two of
them, in any case." Pitan agreed, though hardly able to believe he was
seeing them here.
Califta
"Good
Lord!" Danny said.
"It's a
good thing you came up when you did. It was assumed everyone had come up long
ago; that was the official report. It's a good thing you came up where you did
as well. This is one of the last staging areas." The stranger said as he
himself turned and headed toward the makeshift spaceport they could only see
from their vantage because of the monstrous ships docked there towering over
the landscape.
"We
were having so much fun we lost track of the time." Sally said to his
retreating back. He glanced back at Sally just a bit oddly but not really. This
war had created all types and the look of insanity in her eyes was clear to
see- also clear how she had acquired that insanity. All six erupted out of the
tunnel opening as he was passing. They came out with little more than the
swords on their backs and their permanently black stained clothing.
"He was
probably in a hurry," Sally said humorously, "to get away from me before
I began telling him stories of Antz cuisine." Sally was looking forward to
telling everyone she could. She’d earned the right and actually the Antz were
delicious. They'd gone deep into the bowels of the Antz’ tunnels, completely
out of communications range, killing Antz everywhere they went. The only reason
they finally came up now was the Antz would no longer engage and they ran out
of food.
"I can't
believe we're going to destroy our own worlds." Doc said, looking at the bulks
of massive ships soaring into the sky less than a quarter kilometer distant.
"Evacuating the entire planet! Evacuating every overrun planet!
"What's
left of it." Trent said as he surveyed what was left of his world.
"I
think it's a good plan." Calla said. "The Antz won't engage us
further and we can't leave them behind us."
"I
wonder if Jeeda Collins had anything to do with this." Doc said with his
usual good humor.
"I'm
wondering where the Antz Armadas are?" Valerie asked as she too looked at
the bulks of the ships towering into the sky, vulnerable to orbital attack.
"I
think we can attribute that to Jeeda Collins as well." Doc added. "I
think we should also get moving."
They all
agreed.
New Culver
Mac was the
only one to flinch as the massive ship dropped towards them like a rock and
then stopped little more than a meter above their heads. Rumors of Antz’ ships
in the area and the pilot wasn’t fucking around.
A huge
boarding ramp dropped and the entire assemblage went aboard. Ships, supplies
and personnel all in one rush and then the ramp was sealing and the ship was
noticeably accelerating into the sky. It was Mac’s first time in a spaceship
and the feeling was odd though he knew from reading that if he felt inertia
over internal gravity- and there was quite a bit, at least two gravities over
standard- it meant they were accelerating at a great rate.
“They’re
pushing it.” Dana said.
“You’ve been
aboard a spaceship?” Murrell asked.
“The Junior
League tournaments took us to many worlds.” Dana agreed.
“World
championships?” Mac asked, Murrell already having caught the gist of it. “What
else don’t I know about you?”
“Ask
yourself what you do know about me,” Dana said, “would be a better place to
start.”
Mac had to
admit, though he did so silently, that he was learning a great deal new about
Dana. The main thing he had learned was how very little he actually knew about
her. The more he was learning the more he was realizing he didn’t know a thing
about her, when he got right down and admitted it to himself.
Mac also
understood one other thing new; Dana never told him any of these things because
that was the sacrifice she made to make their relationship work. Knowing Mac
would chafe under that knowledge, such relationships always difficult no matter
which side of the gender line you are on.
It wouldn’t
have worked then but it was going to work beautifully now, Mac realized;
everything was changed. Mac was changed. Dana was… no she isn’t, Mac realized.
She isn’t changed at all; she was just finally letting it show.
“It’s time
to see what you can do with a pair of swords.” Murrell said to Dana as the
inertia visibly lessened. Murrell and Dana, and everyone else present knew what
the feeling meant, that they had entered jump, but Mac was just glad the
dizzying weight was gone. Then Murrell turned to Mac; “It’s time to begin your training.” Suddenly Mac
wished the inertia was back except as to be returning him to New Culver.
“My
training?” Mac asked.
“Everyone
has to do their part darling.” Dana said sweetly. “Anyway, there’s nowhere else
to go. New Culver is being destroyed. Don’t worry, I’ll protect you.”
For the
first time in his life Mac didn’t have a single thing to say.
The planet Boardwalk – Admiral Haller – Super
Dreadnaught Quince
"The
last of the survivors have been evacuated." Colonel McCutchen turned from
his display to inform Admiral Haller, though he wasn't sure how he was
remaining so calm when he was about to watch his own home-world be destroyed.
Add the fact that not one of his family or friends were listed among the evacuees
and that gave you a pretty fair picture of McCutchen’s feelings.
Haller
looked at McCutchen knowing full well what the look on his face meant. He
didn’t have to ask. They had all lost friends and family along the way, one of
the hardest aspects of doing your duty was the conflict of not knowing if you
were doing the right thing, if having been with your family at this time
wouldn’t have been the more appropriate action.
Haller had
given all those who requested leave to rejoin their families, to fight with
their families on the ground. The ranks were swelling with recruits and it was
better to have those who wanted to join the ground battles on the ground
fighting rather than in the brig or ejected out an airlock. McCutchen had not
been one of those who requested leave and Haller could see the burden he was
now carrying.
Of course
that was all to be changed now. There would be no more leaves. There would be
nowhere to go. There would be plenty of new recruits now, Haller thought with
some irony. They’d be aboard military ships anyway and better to have some
small control than none at all. Haller would not want to be a non-combatant on
a ship at war. Never knowing when the end might be coming and unable to do a
damn thing about it.
This was the
most climactic moment in all of humanities long existence. The moment when the
human race went nomadic! With Haller’s actions- Admiral Jeeda Collins’ Orders-
would the course be forever set
"Fire!"
Haller ordered calmly.
The photon
beams speared entirely through Boardwalk. Through the entire planet and far
beyond- the power of a Super Dreadnought was almost not to be believed. The
photon cannons pivoted as they fired, dissecting the world momentarily into
dozens of parts. The planet did not fall apart of course, but the sky below
shown on-screen instantly turned murky white. The planet had been returned to
its primordial post-coalescent state.
"It's
finished." Colonel McCutchen said.
"It's
just begun." Admiral Haller told McCutchen softly.
The planet Valor
The planet
was named Valoria- but its residents
were now calling it Valor. On Valor they were prepared for the Antz. Though
over eight billion people had originally called Valor home and millions more had
been evacuated to Valor for the coming fight- not one of them remained on the
surface. The surface structures, the gleaming magnificent cities, were as empty
as if Armageddon had just occurred and the Lord had Called all to His bosom-
though even then it wouldn’t be this quiet with those left who hadn’t! The
surface was empty of occupants.
The Antz
Armada was expected. They hadn’t known when, the Antz were no longer following
an understandable battle plan. No one knew when the Antz would show up any
more, if they did Jeeda would be there, but there was no confusion as to the
fact that they were coming. Now they had arrived.
The Antz
exited and moved towards the planet to deploy. Millions were watching from the
thousands of kilometers of tunnels below which had been dug, wired and prepared
to meet the Antz. When the Antz Armada stopped short of deployment range, there
was puzzlement around. The puzzlement didn’t last long though. The Antz Armada
opened fire.
When the
Antz Armada moved on, it left a lifeless ball of glowing magma behind. Then it
jumped for its next target.
Fexley
Station debris
Indecision
wracked Jeanette as she felt Master Sunatta reach the AGP shield of the ship he
had chosen and slip through it effortlessly. The grav-harness employing the
same field had nullified it and allowed entrance. Jeanette hadn’t been sure if
that would work but she had to put Master Sunatta out of her mind for the
moment as they had found Den.
‘I’m alive.’
Den said as he simultaneously roused from his unconsciousness to find Jeanette
and Vina descending on him from open space. Where the Station had gone and what
had happened to it was clear. Den had barely gotten his helmet in place when
the Station came apart, he now remembered, and he had been battered against
something with less give than he.
‘Hey you
didn’t forget to grab that tachyon beacon, did you?’ Vina said, Den having
agreed to be in charge of it. She was joking and she wasn’t- even though it was
clear it wasn’t in evidence- because it was just then that she noticed that the
Antz Armada had begun to move off.
First very
slowly and then with a burst of speed it vanished. The flash when it jumped was
barely visible off in the distance it traveled. They were alone.
‘Master
Sunatta?’ Jeanette tried to link but too late, her shock having caused her
delay. There was no answer, but she hadn’t expected one. Master Sunatta and the
Antz Armada was gone.
‘You’ve got
to be kidding me!’ Den said as he turned to follow Jeanette’s gaze, their links
synced and he understanding immediately what that foolish old man had done.
‘He’s gone.’
Den linked.
‘He’s not gone.”
It was Vina this time using those words, as she looked at Jeanette’s blank gaze
towards the Antz’ exit and knowing what the look meant.
‘Not yet.’
Jeanette said, with Master Sunatta at
that very moment though they were far out of link range.
The brilliant
flash of an exit caught all of their attention; all but Jeanette, she was
somewhere else.
111th
– in transit
‘The Antz
Armada has departed.’ Madame Beauchart’s thought entered Jeeda’s mind and she
acted instantly.
“Exit!”
Jeeda ordered the surprised bridge crew but only moments later they were back
in normal space.
“Fexley
Station?” Marcus asked.
“As quickly
as possible.” Jeeda asserted, wondering what it could all mean. As if the Antz
had just waited for Sunatta, allowed him aboard and then departed with him the
moment he was.
It wasn’t
coincidence. Jeeda had a moment of deep foreboding at what the consequences of
this day would be but her thoughts were interrupted after a quick jump and they
were back at Fexley.
“Detecting
three life-signs.” Zenith informed.
“Bring them
aboard.” Jeeda said as she rose to go and meet this new Emperor… Empress Jeeda
supposed, in the dock when they were brought in. She couldn’t think about
Sunatta or what those implications entailed because only time would answer that
question. What she could do was meet the warrior that the only oldest living
human besides herself had kneeled before. This was a person of great interest
to Jeeda. A person she might very well be able to use. Jeeda was not afraid to
use her people and this would be an interesting interview.
……….
There was no
confusing the fact when the 111th exited. It exited encircling the
still expanding debris field which was once Fexley Station. A perfect circle of
monstrous ships exited at least a light-second out, Vina decided, but there was
no visible break in the wall- mélange- of ships surrounding them that Vina
could detect at all. There may have been a dozen rings of ships surrounding
them if what she had heard of the military buildup in progress was true and no
reason not to believe.
‘I think
they’re here to protect us.’ Vina linked as a small tender departed one of the
behemoths and was almost instantly at their side. Before anyone responded to
Vina’s comment, in any case.
‘You may be
right.’ Den agreed as the little ship sidled up to them and opened a dock. They
were quickly aboard and under way.
Falcon – Kent
“Ship’s
alert!” Intoned Falcon’s AI ship-wide, the red danger lights beginning to flash throughout, as the Super
Dreadnaught suddenly leapt forward at maximum acceleration. “Antz Armada
detected in our quadrant.”
“I guess
that’s us.” Brac said as he exploded into action. Everyone exploded into action,
Kurt right there with them, his military days never to be forgotten and he was
moving as quickly as the rest. The military service which Kent had persuaded
him to join! Never mind Kent was an Eldritch who was supposed to abhor Fleet,
but Kurt hadn’t known that at the time.
Into their
newly designed armor-suits first- there was very little difference between
these suits and regular spacesuits and Kurt was into his instantly. They were
made of the newest materials and could keep the wearer alive for two weeks in
open space, but if Kurt was two weeks in open space the insanity would take him
long before the two weeks.
A search
party would have to be very near to pick up the weak distress signals from
their suits. If they got aboard an Antz’ ship and the ship made a quick jump
and then ejected them it would be a long horrible death. Not as horrible as the
death awaiting them inside those Antz’ ships, should they find themselves
unequal to the task.
Kurt said
his goodbye to Carla several days ago. So it wouldn’t have to be said again.
Both understood he had to go. It wasn’t about proving himself to Kent, this was
about fighting for his and his fellow humans right to live. Kurt had a family
to think about as did most, and as most were doing, Kurt was fighting.
Kurt
recognized something new about Kent as well; Kent was in this for the personal
challenge! He cared about the human race, and his family, but by the intent
look on Kent’s face, almost mania shining from his eyes, Kurt saw him clearer
than he ever had before. What drove a man to live to that age! Kent wanted to
find the opponent who could defeat him and he would keep on forever until he
did!
Kurt wasn’t
sure Kent hadn’t found what he was looking for, that they all hadn’t found that
opponent. Two minutes later they were in the APC and awaiting the Super
Dreadnaught’s exit. They didn’t have long to wait.
New Hope
“I’d heard
you’d reverted but this is almost too much to believe.” The first of the
strangers said as they came near enough to be casually heard, a small ironic
smile twisting his lips as he approached, as he tried to comprehend what he was
seeing. “Everything all right?”
“Everything
is fine.” Mavy said with a low look but no inflection, informing him that no,
she had not gone insane when she reverted- when she’d rejuv’d into the early
teen body she was now stuck in- and that she didn’t particularly like his
humor. She’d heard enough already and still years of it to face. You could
rejuv back, but only grow as fast as the Universe dictated.
“I guess
you’re not offering the story of how you came to be dressed…“ He began again
but Mavy cut him.
“Some
unfortunate little girl lost her life and I happened to find the suitcase. Any
more asshole questions?” Marty Bedlam was known to her.
“Nope.” Bedlam
said. Mavy wasn’t insane.
“What’s up
Bedlam?” Pitan said walking up. The two shook hands warmly. Bedlam was his last
name but it fit his character so well it had become permanent. He was also no
match for Mavy. There were few who were. Though Bedlam was little short of a
maniac Pitan thought well of him. It was all act and there was actually a
decent person underneath, not that you’d ever find him in there. The façade had
been built over long centuries and was unbreakable but Pitan liked him anyway,
though he couldn’t exactly remember when it was he had seen him last.
“Heard you
were in trouble here and came to the rescue.” Anthony Uthich said as he also
joined them, the one other among this group that was known to them. He had no
jokes about Mavy’s clothing though and didn’t give it a second glance. He
wouldn’t have wanted to be stuck in reversion at this time either and she was
obviously making do as best she could. Better than the others, it appeared.
“You came in
via ship?” Mavy asked Anthony, knowing Anthony wasn’t a native and surprised-
very surprised- to see him here. Uthich was an Eldritch Mavy could admire when
in truth there were so few who fit in that category- in her opinion- the
Eldritch comprised of every type just like the rest of society. It still never
ceased to amaze her to find people like Bedlam somehow still surviving. An
amazingly successful survivor, in fact, with his grating personality! It took
every type, she supposed.
Anthony
wasn’t as old as she- not even close- but was highly respected and an extremely
capable individual. Maybe even progressed far enough to be her match, she
thought speculatively as she openly scrutinized him. Humans who lived their
lives in martial readiness were unable to stop these thoughts, unable to stop
measuring all around them, though the two were friends of long and that would
never occur. There was a new
confidence about Anthony that was clear- wars broke some people, but hardened
the few who survived. She could see that Anthony Uthich had been hardened by
this war.
“Got here
too late for the fighting though, it appears.” Bedlam answered instead while
Uthich returned Mavy’s scrutiny, now maybe really seeing her for the first
time, now that he had progressed far enough to be able to.
“The entire
human race has become what China was in the twentieth century.” Uthich said
instead after his own enlightening look into Mavy.
“I remember
you were an ancient Chinese scholar,” Mavy said, “the only country in the
twentieth century to achieve ninety-nine percent martial training of the
populace. If we had only kept that up!”
Uthich
introduced the others of his group and Pitan introduced Moguilo and Wayne. A
few names Mavy had heard before-most not- or forgotten in the mists of time.
Though the old theory that the human brain only used ten percent of its
capacity had been refuted long since- the entirety of the brain was never used,
different parts of the brain designed to do different things and all these
things never in play at once, so only ten percent of the volume of your brain
was used- compared to capacity- but
the part in use always runs at a hundred percent.
Eldritch
were acutely aware of the limitations of the human mind when memories of events
and names of people well known simply vanish from memory when new input needs
to be stored, especially noticeable during periods of intensive study, when
learning new things. Mavy might have been great friends with one or even more
present at some long ago point and neither would remember it. Not only did
humans have to learn from the mistakes of others, but if you grew old enough
you might have to relearn the same things more than once.
“There’ll be
plenty more fighting is my guess, and you’re right about those who remain.
We’ve once again achieved that ninety-nine percent.” Mavy said. “What are your
plans?
“Going out
with the evac ships to find some Antz to fight.” Bedlam said. “We just came up
ourselves- couldn’t find any Antz at all, missed all the fighting- saw you and
thought we might saunter over and ask if you might like to join us.”
“Let’s move
out.” Mavy said, but thinking about old China and how it was now all coming
full circle on the Antz. The Antz had created their worst enemy- the entire
human race standing as individuals.
Califta - Hammerhead
"Long
time no see Doc." Captain Graham of the Hammerhead said as he greeted them personally at the exterior hatch
of their ship as they debarked into his dock.
"Back
in service." Doc said merely, making no judgment.
"Experienced
pilots were needed." Graham said easily, this certainly not the first time
he caught slack for changing allegiances, though the way he saw it he hadn’t
changed anything- just the manner in which he chose to fight. "Now it
seems the Eldritch and Fleet are one and the same."
"I hope
you don't think that means I'm taking your orders." Valerie said just as
easily. "We're not one."
"Not
technically," Graham responded with the same ease, "nor do I envy you
your course though I would be coming
along if I were able. It's not quite so easy to defect from the Fleet!"
"And as
you said pilots are needed." Trent said as they all turned to watch the
shuttle depart again. Every available ship which could escape a planet's gravity
was involved in the evacuation efforts. Evacuation efforts were underway
everywhere across human space and everyone working under the looming threat
that the Antz Armadas could show up any time and what it would mean if they
did; for those remaining on the surface. "I don't think anyone's holding
any animosities against anyone at this time."
"I'm
still Fleet and you guys took me in." Sally said with a laugh, which drew
a look from Captain Graham
"I'm
going to forget I heard that." Graham said.
"You
can forget it or spout it she’s still coming with us." Calla said with a
smile that spoke volumes. "In fact I’d like to see you try something that
ridiculously ignorant."
"I'm
still Fleet too." Danny said with his own laugh. Somehow he didn't think
Fleet was going to do a damn thing about the fact that they were technically
AWOL from their posts. Their posts were about to vanish under photon cannon
fire- friendly fire- and they were about to risk their lives on the craziest
scheme ever devised!
"I
think you’re already serving the highest call," Captain Graham said,
"I’ll have your postings transferred to Doc."
"I
haven't held an official Fleet position since before you were born." Doc
chided Graham gently.
"Oh it
was never actually deactivated." Captain Graham assured him. "The
resignation was accepted, you were given Honorable Discharge. So though you are
not officially under our aegis your rank has remained active, Admiral. I'll
have these two transferred to you right away. And by the way, welcome aboard
Sir."
New Culver
The
spectacle Mac was witnessing was like the computer enhanced fights of the vids
and movies, except this was real and no mistaking it. Vlad and Murrell were
just demonstrating their skills, but to Mac it appeared as if they were really
trying to kill one another. Both were fighting with two swords. The blades
moved so quickly it was impossible to follow them. The four blades were little
more than blurs around the two men as they danced around one another seeking
advantage in the weaving wall of carbon. The clang of carbon on carbon, a
continuous explosion of sound that rang from the walls of the dojo, left no
mistaking the seriousness of this demonstration!
Mac was able
to pull his attention away for a brief moment to glance at Dana to see her
expression and it was no less than he had expected. There was rapt fascination
written across her face! Mac quickly turned back to watch more of the
demonstration, never having actually seen anything like this in real life. He
was sure there was fascination written across his own face as well!
The fight
took a new tone of seriousness, the rhythmic cadence up until then now changing
to more dramatic individual tactics, and immediately apparent Murrell was the
superior fighter and then suddenly Murrell was holding his blade fully extended
the tip at Vlad's throat!
"Well
done, the Murrell of old!" Vlad said as he sheathed his own swords, one
fluid movement, even while the tip of Murrell’s sword still remained at his
throat- that when even the minutest nick of the one atom edged carbon blade
would necessitate a very fast trip to a med bay and quickly into an auto-doc.
That's how much trust Vlad had in Murrell’s control. Murrell removed the tip of
the blade and sheathed his swords.
"A bit
rusty if you ask me." Murrell said. In truth Vlad's skill had surprised
him, or maybe not so surprising and he really was rusty. It had been a long time since he had held a
sword in his hand. He had to admit it felt good and maybe even a little more
than that; that it felt good to be the absolute best. Murrell couldn't fathom
now how or why he would've ever wanted to give this up! That he could've
possibly thought that way at one time simply was beyond his comprehension now.
"You
just needed a good fight." Vlad said, reading his old friend like an open
book. That was the two personalities Murrell possessed. On the one hand he
seemed exactly what he was, an easy going open-minded humanitarian human being
who would give a stranger the shirt off his own back if that stranger was cold,
yet on the other hand Murrell could frown. Sometimes human beings just needed
to frown once in a while, Vlad philosophized. Then Vlad turned to Mac;
"Your
turn."
“Ah, I kinda
thought Murrell would be training me.” Mac said as Vlad resolutely approached.
Dana let out the most genuinely humor filled laugh Mac had ever heard her
utter. She was still laughing when Vlad handed him his carbon practice sword.
The rest of the day would prove as fascinating for Mac as had the demonstration
he had just witnessed, but far more painful.
111th
Jeanette
knew who she was the moment she laid eyes upon her. Even though she was wearing
no insignia on her plain uniform. Even though she seemed a small and
insignificant person, was standing off in one of the back corners of the dock,
and was being totally ignored by everyone else.
Jeanette
knew who she was immediately because she felt her. Jeeda Collins was far in
advance of Master Sunatta. Not in advance of herself, she recognized
immediately- at least not yet Jeanette pondered suddenly- and the more she
studied her the more Jeanette was led to the conclusion that she probably wasn’t
even aware of the ability she possessed. Not able to access it. An ability
Jeanette knew Jeeda Collins possessed the same way Master Sunatta had known she
possessed it.
Master
Sunatta was gone. It wasn't a link that connected them, not a psychic ability,
not able to read his mind, just able to feel his continued existence. The
terrible turmoil she had sensed at the end, and then the abrupt cessation of
any feeling at all, left Jeanette with the fair sure knowledge that her Master
was no more.
Did that
mean that it was now left to her to carry on Master Sunatta's work? His cause?
The long lost ancient Master’s cause? When right before her stood the very
Student who could surpass her! Jeanette knew it with her entire existence. That
Jeeda Collins was the Student who could surpass her.
……….
‘She has
plans for you.’ Madame Beauchart’s thought came into Jeeda’s mind.
‘Plans for
me?’ Jeeda thought highly amused, as she was still trying to devise a way to
acquire the Empress for her own purposes. Jeeda only felt Madame Beauchart’s
humor as answer as the Empress of the Eldritch descended to the dock and walked
straight over to her.
Tall and
skinny was Jeeda’s first impression. Entirely artless with no grace
what-so-ever, as if she had no coordination what-so-ever, yet Jeeda was
instantly on guard as some inner part of her warned of danger not perceivable
to the eye. Though she didn’t move a muscle as Jeanette came to stand before
her, completely at ease, she was prepared to move, and she knew none who could
move faster.
“So you have
plans for me.” Jeeda said. A simple statement that paused Jeanette for a brief
moment but hardly slowed her down.
“That’s
right.” Jeanette said, then she reached out casually and poked a finger into a
nerve ending and dropped Jeeda instantly to the deck. No one had seen her move
and no one moved while Jeanette bent down and picked Jeeda up, threw her over
her shoulder, and headed out of the dock- if there had been cause for alarm the
AI would surely have sounded that alarm- though all wore shocked expressions,
even among Jeanette’s party. “I think the excitement got to her.” Jeanette said
as she departed with the de facto leader of the human race. Stunned faces
followed her as she left but not a word was spoken.
Master
Sunatta
He felt it
when the connection between Jeanette and he was severed. He didn’t know if it was the distance they had traveled-
still in jump and having traversed who knew how many light-years already- but
he suspected it was It, which he now knew intimately because It spent every
nano-moment of It’s time clawing at his mind trying to gain entrance.
Master
Sunatta was not psychic but nor was he weak willed. Without permitting entrance
It could not get in. Sunatta scrutinized It- a mélange of thoughts, feelings,
emotions, half understood meanings all swirling just outside his mind, even
while his swords continued to decimate every Ant that came against him.
Master
Sunatta had to give It It’s due, even as he fought, his swords an impenetrable
wall around himself and tens of thousands of Antz already dead all throughout
the Antz ship- no way to have counted throughout the massacre- yet It would not
use technology to defeat him.
Hastily set
up auto-cannons were blocking his path to engineering and the drive sections.
Those auto-cannons could have obliterated him many times as he had unwittingly
walked under their muzzles, the small noise of their servo-motors warning him
he was being tracked. He did not dare try to force his way past them, It’s
tolerance would then come to an end.
The stream
of Antz pouring down upon him suddenly ceased. The last of them cut to shreds
and Sunatta now alone with It. Two days of non-stop fighting and now he was- if
not in control of the ship- at least in sole possession of it. Then he was
proven wrong. The ship suddenly dropped out of jump. Far off noises a long
distance away told of monstrous ships docking. Then from that far off distance
the unmistakable sound of the Antz as they approached.
“I begin to
see.” Master Sunatta said, though as yet undaunted. His greatest challenge ever,
and doesn’t everyone, deep inside themselves, really want to see just how far
they can push themselves! Master Sunatta knew then, at that moment, that he was
going to find out.
Falcon -
Kent
The APC was
only a very small ship and only built for one purpose, that of ferrying sword
fighters to Antz ships, yet of necessity it was equipped with an AI. The new
drive technology was vastly more complex than anything the human race had ever
produced and only an AI could operate the system. With no question, given time,
it would be standardized so that even a human pilot could use it, but the
velocities at which the drive could move
a ship were far beyond a human’s ability to perceive.
There was no
sensation of movement within the ship at all as it slipped free of the dock
into open space. Then it simply accelerated and hit jump at the same time,
acquiring jump velocity instantly and instantly vanishing.
“Wow!” Brac
said. “Inertia-less drive.”
“Wow is how
fast it’s getting us there.” Brent said as they fell out of jump and clear on
scan was the Antz Armada reported to be here.
“It’s
waiting for us.” Paul observed.
“It is
waiting for us.” Kurt said.
“Makes our
job that much easier.” Kent said with a smile, because at this point there was
nothing left but to go forward. If the Antz were waiting for them it was
something he could understand; this It wanted to test Kent’s mettle as much as
Kent wanted the same. Something understandable to Kent.
“Getting on
the Antz’ ships is the least of our job.” Brac said with a measuring look into
Kent’s face that neither misunderstood the meaning of. Brac recognized then why
Kent was here and even why the Antz were waiting for them, but the simple fact
was it did not matter why any of them were here or even that it was obvious the
Antz were going to welcome them aboard, this was war and new tactics were
needed. Were they all going to die this day? Brac was sure they were, but he
had an eagerness of his own and in his own way was looking forward to it as
much as Kent. As much as all of the rest of them, he decided after a quick
glance around.
“Whatever’s
about to happen, it’s about to happen.” Brac said. The exterior of the little
ship was suddenly glowing a light blue and then they were beside the Antz
Armada and the APC’s external hatch popped. The APC was carrying nothing but
them and vacuum, cycling out the atmosphere as they approached. Kent was the
first one out.
Super
Dreadnaught Venice – in transit
“Good Lord!”
Mavy exclaimed as she began reading the briefing on her seat-screen even as the
shuttle lifted off. “The Antz got Master Sunatta.”
“Good Lord
he attacked an Antz’ ship by himself!” Bedlam said as he read the article they
were all at that moment reading. It was the headline story everywhere.
“All
Eldritch are planning to assault Antz’ ships with swords alone?” Pitan asked as
he got the gist of what he was reading.
“That’s the
story.” Bedlam said. “I didn’t think they would really go through with it
though.”
“I believed
they would try,” Uthich said with a
speculative look on his face, “but I didn’t think they’d actually get aboard.”
“They didn’t!” Mavy said as she scanned
through the article. “Only Sunatta that old fool and he did it with a
grav-suit. Slipped right through the Antz’ shield, apparently.” Which didn’t
make sense even with her limited knowledge of particle shields.
“Nothing can
slip through one of our shields.”
Moguilo said with a grin. “The Antz found that out the hard way.”
“Actually,”
Wayne said to Mavy, “there’s no way a grav-harness should be able to slip
through a stronger particle shield. They both employ the same particle field
and the larger more powerful field would be dominant. He should have bounced
right off that shield.”
“He
shouldn’t have been able to slip through that shield.” Uthich agreed, still
with that speculative look on his face, not sure what it all meant but it just
not making sense to him.
“Why weren’t
you going along?” Mavy asked Uthich.
“We were
just waiting for the deployment of the new APC’s and since we were bored
dropped in to find a little fighting first.” Bedlam answered for him.
“That about
sums it up.” Uthich agreed, wondering if he could still be thinking about doing
the same thing himself. He must be a madman if he was, but that only left one
fact- he was a certified madman.
“Still
planning on going?” Mavy asked.
“Yep.”
Bedlam answered for him.
“That about
sums it up.” Uthich agreed with his grating friend. Grating without a question
but a man you could trust at your back and that was what counted with Uthich.
They were
all still engrossed in the details when the shuttle docked with Venice.
Hammerhead –
in transit
“What are our
orders Admiral?” Valerie asked without a hint of innuendo. Not that could be
detected audibly anyway. She was laughing inside, no question about that.
“I’ve never
heard of anyone being given any kind of discharge where the rank remains
active.” Calla said with her own inscrutable look. If there was one thing you
could count on with the Eldritch was that they had long since learned how to
control their tells- visible body language whether it’s written on their faces
or given away in body language. Solid poker players all- in most cases.
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