The Dogs of War
Posted: 2004-12-29 01:05pm
Minor notes:
Bragulans are a bunch of short (they generally don't reach anywhere higher than 5'9), thick, humanoid-bear creatures. A bear version of the Kilrathi from the Wing Commander games.
Saquati are tall (can reach beyond 7 feet in height) Yeti/Sasquach creatures. The name is a combination of Sasquach and Yeti.
Agta are tall (around basketball player tall, not as tall as Saquati though), humanoid aliens. Their heads are small, bodies are rather muscled. No ears, beady dark eyes, no noses. Dark grey skin. What a hybrid of a traditional Grey alien and Shaquille O'Neil would be.
Soldiers of the Sovereignty:
The Dogs of War
ONE
April 16, 2567
2000 hours
Lieutenant John Baylor, squad leader of Marine squad Baylor, depressed the trigger of his combat auto-shotgun as an armored Bragulan Gamma-Sigma soldier in front of him fell down. He switched to his phased plasma assault rifle as his suit’s heads up display, or HUD, indicated that the fallen body was already loosing heat, confirming the kill. John smirked. Eat monomolecular edged flechettes, fucker.
Behind him, the rest of the squad was firing at the Gamma-Sigma soldiers (Sigma or Sigs, as the slang went) who were in turn returning fire from various positions down the road. Bright blue plasma bolts streaked through the dark night and, in return, were traded with emerald K-bolts as the streets were beginning to be littered with the mostly Bragulan corpses of the Gamma-Sigma. The Marines were winning this battle.
The air reeked with the stench of ozone and the acrid smell of K-bolt acid residue, but John was oblivious to that thanks to his suit’s respirators. He pointed his rifle at a charging Sig, aimed for the center mass (thankfully, the target was rather large, more than six feet in height, and therefore was probably an Agta or Saquati mercenary rather than your average Bragulan foot soldier) and fired before the HUD managed to get a lock on. The rifle sent a bolt of plasma towards the target at speeds so fast that it bore more resemblance to a beam than a bolt and the impact sent the large body spinning and careening to the ground. The superheated gas sizzled through the armor, combusting the flesh and organs underneath it, and then proceeded to melt a hole through the rear armoring. Bloody steam began billowing from the corpse’s hand-sized holes as the embers died down.
Straight down the road, more than twenty meters away, in front of some hastily dug-out fortifications and troop concentrations, a large flatbed truck loaded with soldiers and fixed armaments rolled into the view and immediately unleashed a torrent of fire upon the Marines. Lasers lanced through the air alongside high velocity plasma bolts and were followed by a cascade of slower K-bolts, .50 caliber incendiary rounds and rocket-propelled grenades.
“Down!” John yelled as he threw himself to the uneven and pocked sidewalk, fifty caliber rounds just narrowly missing his head, making deafening hissing noises as they passed right by and exploded on the wall beside him, causing eruptions that sprayed shattered concrete everywhere. To John’s left, a laser beam struck a Marine who got too slow and he dropped to the ground, unmoving. Shit. Then, to John’s relief, the Marine screamed an inhumane wail, and his hand moved to clutch his smoking shoulder. Whether it was just a wound or the arm was totally gone, John couldn’t tell, all he knew was that it wasn’t good and that the situation wasn’t getting any better. “Medic! Get your ass here!”
A rocket, two of them actually, screamed through the air and detonated on the ground ahead of John, momentary blinding him with the incandescent blast of binary plasma warheads. Must’ve been some sort of anti-armor round, John thought The night vision sensors quickly compensated for the bright flash and John was able to see again. “We’re gonna get pinned down!” he screamed frantically as red-hot shrapnel impotently peppered his visor. He got up to a crouch just as the medic arrived to tend to his wounded companion and to drag the stricken marine somewhere safer. John noted that his HUD indicated that his plasma gun’s power cell had 30 rounds left and took aim. The suit’s sensors saw through the dust and darkness and zoomed onto a far away Sigma trooper and the magnified night vision/thermal image revealed that it was carrying what looked like an RPG tube. There was a thermal bloom as the rocket-propelled grenade was launched, and reflexively, John fired his own weapon. The Sig fell down with two on the chest and one in the head (which was now a cauterized stump) and John dropped to the ground, just as the rocket swooshed overhead and detonated, showering everyone with fist sized chunks of concrete and shrapnel. John got back up and fired another burst, however, this time he wasn’t so accurate, as his shots hit precisely zilch. The rest of his troops were better shots though, because even in their pinned down position, John was able to count at least half a dozen Sigmas who were either killed or brutally maimed by their plasma fire.
“We need a LAW!” John hollered through the comm.-link as a nearby lamppost that came crashing down just a meter away from him after being cut into two by a laser. A LAW was the United Sovereignty Marine Corps’ (and the Army’s) answer to the inexpensive rocket-propelled grenades sported by damned near everyone else. It stood for Light Anti-Armor Weapon, a weapon that was basically a tube with a rocket in it. It had a rudimentary targeting system linked to the user’s HUD and helmet sensors, though nothing as fancy as a Tube-launched Homing or Radio-guided (THOR) missile with its binary plasma warheads. And it packed enough of a punch to knock down or severely damage a lightly armored vehicle, like scout vehicles and light tanks or in their case, a jury-rigged battle truck armed to the teeth with machineguns, K-bolters, lasers and plasma cannons.
Then, all of a sudden, what John judged to be a Bragulan from its short height and wide girth, jumped out of the corner of the sidewalk and brought itself directly in front of the squad, and John in particular, catching him in surprise. “Shit!” John hissed as he got over the surprise and suspense of the moment and used his rifle to vaporize the contents of the Brag’s chest cavity before it could riddle him with K-bolts. The Brag’s K-bolter carbine cluttered to his feet, and he automatically took its magazine, unconscious that the clip’s content, which were solid slugs coated in a compound that would turn into a glowing highly caustic semi-liquid substance upon exiting the weapon, was incompatible with his own plasma rifle.
Despite the deafening noise of explosions, the whine of K-bolts and fifty caliber rounds and the thunderclap-like noise of plasma rifles, John could somehow hear hurried footsteps coming towards him. He glanced to his rear to see a fellow Marine crouch/running towards him while desperately trying to dodge enemy weapons fire.
“Gallagher, what is it?” John barked, but stopped himself as he saw the man pull out a large tube-shaped thing that was attached to his backpack. John felt a somewhat overwhelming sense of relief as Gallagher placed the LAW on his shoulder and stopped to take aim of the battle truck, but the relief was quickly washed away, to be replaced by frustration and annoyance as Gallagher tripped on his own shoes and fell helmet-first to the floor. How a well-trained Marine, Earth’s finest, one of the few, the proud and the capable of eating rocks and defecating nitroglycerine could trip on his own foot while attempting to aim a bazooka was completely beyond John.
The fall did not injure Gallagher in any way, as he quickly got back to his feet, only to drop face first to the floor again in order to avoid an oncoming rocket. The screaming warhead exploded right beside Gallagher, on the wall of what used to be some sort of commissary and the area was immediately blanketed by a cloud of thick grey dust.
We’re getting pinned down and killed while this little git is fooling around. Goddamnit! John thought as he combed the debris and searched for the LAW. If Gallagher was blown to smithereens, then too bad, the LAW was what was most important, the LAW was what was going to save them, not some Marine who couldn’t balance himself to save his life. “Goddamnit! Goddamnit! Where is it?!” John hissed in frustration as a round or two ricocheted off his power suit. Then he felt something. Aha. But to his disappointment, it wasn’t a rocket launcher, it was a more...round, and it was moving. What the? It was Gallagher’s head, or helmet rather.
“El-Tee,” Gallagher groaned feebly, feeling the stab of the RPG’s deliberately sharpened fragments on several of his joints. “I’m hit…”
“Don’t worry, just give me the rocket. Where’s the rocket?”
“Its over there...”
“Thanks. Medic!” John could feel his cry being drowned out by the hammering noise of K-bolts and machinegun rounds impacting concrete and decided to scream louder. “Medic! Goddamnit!” He saw the medic run towards their position, only to be tagged in the leg by emerald K-bolts. The corpsman fell to the ground, clutching his leg in pain and filling the comm.-link with a series of hoarse and agonizing screams. K-bolt acid was potent enough to burn through even their suits’ sandwich of multiple armor types, so John knew that it would burn like hell. Aside from that, he also had several personal experiences to confirm that little tidbit of knowledge. “Shit!”
Though John would never admit it to himself, he knew that the Sigs had the Marines precisely where they wanted them, pinned down in an area that provided minimal cover and was easily accessible to reinforcements. John cursed the Sky Eye reconnaissance drones. He would be damned if he let himself and his squad end up as some statistic on some casualty count on some news report on some holoscreen back home. This operation was going without a hitch, and to be one of the extremely few who would come back home in a body bag would be terribly humiliating. Sure, he’d die a hero and though being some sort of hero was very desirable, dying wasn’t. Sure, John had no relatives that he knew of and lived several hundred lightyears away from his parents and sibling/s (at the moment he could not remember any of his siblings, and neither did he give a shit) and whatever family he had, but he was not too keen on dying, even if it was with his (only) friends. He knew he had to get that LAW. Before another jury-rigged truck crewed by smelly un-bathed bears and yetis and with a pair of guns and a laser cannon duct taped to it rolled down the street to finish them all off. Then I guess I should stop thinking to myself and grab the damned rocket launcher, you douche.
And John did just that.
Then he thumbed his rifle’s fire selector to full-auto and sprayed the enemy formations and the battle truck with plasma. His HUD counted that he took down at least three Sigmas, two on the ground and one on the truck, and lavished at the thought that the suit’s CPU always chose to display the low-end kill-counts (as to not inflate the user’s ego, a dangerous thing to do). Then the rifle began to beep. Shit, out of ammo. And John dropped it to the pavement.
“Cover me! Gore, use your fucking grenade gun!” the twelve man squad had one armed with a semi-automatic grenade launcher, two armed with light plasma machineguns, one armed with a precision rifle, and the rest armed with plasma rifles, most of which had under slung grenade launchers. Whatever was left of Baylor squad, John was sure that they would make one helluva suppressive line of fire.
John extended the telescopic rear end of the LAW and armed the weapon. It came alive with a confirmatory beeping sound. “On three. One-two-three!” The Marines released a firestorm of plasma and grenades. Though most of the shots were inaccurate, they served their purpose, to panic the enemy soldiers and to force them into cover. Four Sigs, caught with their pants down in the concentrated barrage, were killed instantaneously. Their bodies charred beyond recognition by the crossfire of plasma and their remains further desecrated by grenades. The battle truck itself was subjected to abuse; although many of its occupants were cut down by plasma bolts, most of the damage to both crew and vehicle were from a direct hit with not one, but two grenades. Whereas any normal vehicle would have been transformed into burning wreckage, the battle truck remained relatively unscathed because of its jury-rigged armoring. However, the grenades did their job as no one in the vehicle’s vicinity was spared from the monomolecular edged fragments and shrapnel of the 40mm warheads.
More plasma and grenades saturated the area, thus suppressing any attempt at return fire. As the cover fire continued, John stood tall and aimed the LAW he held on his shoulders. Through the weapon’s scope and his suit’s own sensors, the rocket launcher achieved a ‘lock-on’ and the targeting reticule glowed red. John squeezed the trigger and ducked as the missile cleared the tube and went its way. The cover fire ceased and everybody watched the rocket streak through the air as straight as an arrow, leaving a thick trail of hot gas in its wake. It struck the battle truck right on the armor plate that protected the vehicle’s fuel tank and exploded. The directed eruption tore through the metal and the truck’s fuel and all the ordinance it carried detonated in a brilliant magenta fireball. The blast violently lifted the truck up into the air like some kind of cheap plastic toy and sent bits and pieces of it everywhere within a two hundred meter radius. The Marines even felt the shockwave, and though John’s night vision was temporarily blinded by the blast’s glare, he was fairly certain that a few Sigma soldiers also went flying with the truck itself. John couldn’t help but suppress a triumphant smile.
“C’mon Marines, let’s move out. Terminate whatever’s left of them. We’re going to finish our job.”
TWO
John’s Journal
April 16, 2567
1300 hours
Diary,
A few hours from now, the boys and I are going to have a little outing in the Sigma world of Nyrbosk, a former Bragulan prison colony in Wild Space, beyond the Sovereignty’s Outer Rim and near the Bragulan Star Empire. We’re supposed to capture several key Gamma-Sigma facilities that hold highly valuable materials of some kind, WMDs from the look of things. Currently, the Iron Fist is in hyperspace en route to the planet. I guess Captain Armstrong wants to go in slow; give the system a detailed scan while in hyperspace so he won’t go in half-cocked. Anyway, this is my first entry in this damned book. I was rummaging through my locker a few hours ago, looking for any spare OrGazmo (the supply ran out, even though we had enough to last us up to a year!), and guess what I found? Yes, that’s right. I found the diary that Mr. Jonesy, my councilor back in rehab, gave me the day before I shipped out all those years ago. I wonder how it got here…
Anyway, this mission is going to be the second friendly outing of Baylor squad, that’s right, my second run as a squad leader. It’s been rather nerve wracking, ever since El-Tee Chen got a nasty case of pancreatitis and I got assigned to be the squad leader. I’ve been thinking that I’m not really cut out for this, giving orders and all that. But somehow I’ve managed to end up okay the first time, none of my men got killed or hurt in any serious way, and I think I’m doing quite okay. But there’s that nagging feeling of insecurity and sometimes it just gets the better of me. See, when you’re in charge, leading your men, you’re the one they depend on, and when one of them bites the dust, you can’t help but feel responsible, even when it was entirely not your fault. That hasn’t happened to me yet, and I hope to hell that it never will, but the thought it is really unsettling. I guess this is all the norm, since I’m just new as a CO and everybody has doubts (they would be insane if they didn’t, and I wouldn’t want my CO to be some sort of sociopath), so I guess its okay. At least I hope it’ll be okay. I shouldn’t whine that much, I probably should suck it in, be a man and all that. Anyway, needless to say, I’m nervous about this upcoming mission. They say Nyrbosk is the Wild West. No matter, bears can’t shoot for shit.
-John
PS:
I keep thinking about the choices that Mr. Jonesy gave me back ‘home’. There were quite a lot of them, actually. I could have (and did) joined the Armed Forces, or become some sort of colonist fixing some sort of atmospheric processor in some sort of backwater barely habitable colony world, or be a councilor, help other people get back to their lives. In retrospect, it seems like being a councilor was the noblest choice, the choice where you actually helped people instead of just blowing things up. But it’s not like I’m not proud of the Corps; in fact, it’s the exact opposite, really.
Semper Fi
April 16, 2567
2400 hours
Nyrbosk was a scarred world. Prior to its terraforming, its surface was bombarded by meteor shower after meteor shower. Yet somehow, for some as of yet unknown reason, the Bragulans were able to convince themselves to set up shop here. They terraformed the world, changed its barely hospitable surface into something that was in fact habitable, and then hollowed out the space rocks that threatened to bombard the planet, converting them into orbital space stations. Some of these stations had an anti-asteroid defense system, the same defense system that - up to a few hours ago - would have been a nuisance for the three Vindicator-class carriers and two Assailant-class destroyers that comprised the USMC taskforce. Now, parts of this so-called defense system were raining down into Nyrbosk’s atmosphere.
Today, Nyrbosk was still a scarred world. However, the scars left by prehistoric meteor impacts were quickly put to use by the Bragulan settlers who colonized the world some centuries ago. The craters had mining facilities, cities, storage depots, and prisons, star ports, military training areas, and more built on them. Recently the Gamma-Sigma militia occupied the world, and the crater facilities were used to support their anti-Imperial operations and logistics train. And, even more recently, also for their violent operations against nations which were either neutral or even belligerent to the Bragulan Star Empire, nations such as the United Sovereignty of Earth, which happened to be one of the organization’s major backers until several decades ago.
Three crater facilities were of particular interest to the Marine force that was currently engaged with the planet’s contingent of Sigma forces. These three facilities were suspected of holding an artifact of great value. The powers-that-be knew there was something important on the planet, based on intelligence from the Central Earth Intelligence Department’s many tentacles, they narrowed it down to the three facilities, and now it was up to the troops to find which one of them actually had the artifact.
Site C had been cleared. The massive underground complex in the epicenter of a crater turned out to be a massive underground complex that was designed to be a prison. The Iron Fist, flagship of the taskforce, told the forces charged with storming Site C that it wasn’t what they were looking for, and ordered them to divide into two and reinforce the forces in Sites A and B. On the way, Baylor squad (along with all other relevant units) received word that Site A had nothing in it as well and was then ordered to go assist those either already at or en route to Site B. Then, on the way to Site B, Baylor squad received yet another order to return to Site A, to pull out a squad that somehow had gotten lost during the ‘evacuation’ and then got pinned down by several heavily armed Sigma detachments.
“How the hell does someone not receive a priority order to withdraw and redeploy, huh?” John asked in his comm.-link as he exited the confines of a dilapidated building and ran across the dark unlit road and then slid down into a ditch, where half of what remained of his squad was positioned at. Right behind him, four other Marines left the building and sneaked through the streets, confident that they were adequately covered by their teammates in the ditch and by the dark moonless night. Perfectly mimicking their lieutenant, they slid onto the ditch and leaned on the walls for cover, weapons at the ready.
“Maybe they got confused? Or they got attacked when they were withdrawing? Maybe the Sigs have some sort of jamming device?” Sergeant Joshua Cruise replied wisely, assessing all the possibilities. John sometimes wondered why he, of all people, was the one given the burden of being the squad leader instead of someone like Joshua.
“Then their CO’s a moron, and then he wouldn’t be in the Corps in the first place. And they wouldn’t have been isolated and vulnerable to attack if they followed the withdrawal in the first place!” John said after checking his rifle and pondering the questions. He then leaned on one of the ditch’s walls and exposed only a small portion of his head and the business end of his rifle to the outside as his eyes and the suit’s sensors each began scanning the area. “Besides, the Gamma-Sigma can’t afford small-scale jammers, I mean, if there was, then wouldn’t we know ‘bout it? Our sensors would have picked it up somehow. And they can’t even afford proper APCs, much less undetectable short range ECM.”
“Maybe the Operators fucked up?”
“When was the last time that happened? Those AI are smart, dammit.”
“They could’ve been pinned down before the withdrawal,” a private, Aaron Mollohan, interjected. He was new. Each squad was supposed to have twelve men, when El-tee Chen was sent home, only eleven were left. Aaron was brought in to fill the gap.
“Then they should’ve radioed for backup during the withdrawal, when there were other units near them. We came here because there was nobody else left to help them. If they waited that long before calling for backup, then that brings me to my first point!”
“Which was…?”
“That their CO is a moron.” John mumbled as his HUD showed him that the scan had turned up nothing. He ceased the conversation, signaling the squad that it was back to business, and began scanning the area around them with his eyes for the nth time. While they were talking and the sensors were scanning, he was also looking around, but he was a bit of an obsessive compulsive and had to make sure. It was foolhardy to rely on the sensor suite and the HUD alone, as they were merely meant to assist. If they were perfect, then Baylor would’ve been replaced with a battle droid of some sort. After a full minute of silence, John eased up and spoke. “Looks clear.”
“Yeah, certainly does. We never really met many Sigs after blowing up that truck,” Joshua muttered.
“They didn’t bother. Had more important things to defend,” John replied. “Alright, let’s get moving.”
Somewhere in the crater that held Site A, far from the epicenter, were several buildings and a wide road that separated them from another batch of ruined buildings. Hiding in the still-standing buildings was the trapped Marine squad, and spread out on the ruins and around the buildings was a heavily armed Gamma-Sigma unit. From the vantage point of the crater’s rim, where Baylor squad was currently surveying the situation, one could see the brilliant exchange of K-bolts and Plasma and the sudden eruptions of detonating rockets. There was a tiny flash of green. Through the HUD’s image magnification, John could see that the flash was actually a thick stream of green light.
“Nuclear Flamers,” John muttered with a hint of awe. Nuclear Flamers were weapons exclusive to the Bragulan Star Empire and were some of the deadliest things that a non-augmented person could carry. Deadly to both the target and the user, that was. Nuclear Flamers were much like flamethrowers. A massive backpack filled with volatile fuel, a hose carrying the fuel to the actual weapon, and the weapon that discharged death. The difference was that the Nuclear Flamer did not spew fire, but highly irradiated matter, substances hot enough and radioactive enough to achieve even worse effects than traditional flamethrowers, effects that were on par with even plasma weaponry. They could burn through armor and eat flesh away; the nuclear fire could even kill you without touching you. The blast of the concentrated cocktail of irradiated matter, toxic waste and acid could overwhelm the NBC-protection systems of most power suits, thus the handlers had to wear specialized lead armor, and even then, most handlers die within years due to cancer, although to the Bragulan Star Empire that was merely a slight inconvenience. However, the Flamers were short ranged weapons, incapable of firing more than twenty five meters, and that should ensure the trapped Marines some measure of protection.
“So, how are we going to break the party?” Joshua asked.
“They’re all spread out. And there’s a ditch that goes behind the closest enemy formation. We split into groups of four and go ninja on them, one enemy position per group. Three bunches of dead Sigs. Once we’re done, Eric pops the man manning the Flamer, make the thing melt down. Since the Flamer is at the opposite side of the ditch, that’ll distract the concentration of Sigmas at the middle and we frag them. Questions?”
“What’ll we use?” Aaron asked.
“Handguns. Rapiers. Piano wire. Hands.” Their service pistols were more like fifteen-inch hand cannons. The clips were loaded in a slot front of the grip, like a submachine gun, as the bullets too large for a clip that could slide into the handle. It had a limited built-in sound suppression, laser targeting system that could be linked into the HUD, and High Explosive Armor Piercing (HEAP) bullets as powerful as those used on rifles, if it weren’t for the power suits’ ability to enhance the user’s strength, it would’ve been impossible for a human to shoot the thing. The rapiers were shock sticks, staves, they could be strapped on a utility belt, but when activated, their maximum length was five feet. At the business end of the shaft was an extremely sharp spearhead, and every inch of steel beyond the handle was capable of delivering thousands of volts of electricity, enough to knock down a large animal. Although light in weight, rapiers were by no means flimsy; they could bludgeon people to death. Piano wire was the nickname of a silksteel razor wire that could be used to strangle even those wearing light battle armor. It was amazing what could be packed into a Marine’s utility belt or back pack. What were more amazing were the suits’ fiber mechanical muscles that could allow them to break necks with frightening ease. John grinned under his helmet. “They won’t stand a chance.”
Bragulans are a bunch of short (they generally don't reach anywhere higher than 5'9), thick, humanoid-bear creatures. A bear version of the Kilrathi from the Wing Commander games.
Saquati are tall (can reach beyond 7 feet in height) Yeti/Sasquach creatures. The name is a combination of Sasquach and Yeti.
Agta are tall (around basketball player tall, not as tall as Saquati though), humanoid aliens. Their heads are small, bodies are rather muscled. No ears, beady dark eyes, no noses. Dark grey skin. What a hybrid of a traditional Grey alien and Shaquille O'Neil would be.
Soldiers of the Sovereignty:
The Dogs of War
ONE
April 16, 2567
2000 hours
Lieutenant John Baylor, squad leader of Marine squad Baylor, depressed the trigger of his combat auto-shotgun as an armored Bragulan Gamma-Sigma soldier in front of him fell down. He switched to his phased plasma assault rifle as his suit’s heads up display, or HUD, indicated that the fallen body was already loosing heat, confirming the kill. John smirked. Eat monomolecular edged flechettes, fucker.
Behind him, the rest of the squad was firing at the Gamma-Sigma soldiers (Sigma or Sigs, as the slang went) who were in turn returning fire from various positions down the road. Bright blue plasma bolts streaked through the dark night and, in return, were traded with emerald K-bolts as the streets were beginning to be littered with the mostly Bragulan corpses of the Gamma-Sigma. The Marines were winning this battle.
The air reeked with the stench of ozone and the acrid smell of K-bolt acid residue, but John was oblivious to that thanks to his suit’s respirators. He pointed his rifle at a charging Sig, aimed for the center mass (thankfully, the target was rather large, more than six feet in height, and therefore was probably an Agta or Saquati mercenary rather than your average Bragulan foot soldier) and fired before the HUD managed to get a lock on. The rifle sent a bolt of plasma towards the target at speeds so fast that it bore more resemblance to a beam than a bolt and the impact sent the large body spinning and careening to the ground. The superheated gas sizzled through the armor, combusting the flesh and organs underneath it, and then proceeded to melt a hole through the rear armoring. Bloody steam began billowing from the corpse’s hand-sized holes as the embers died down.
Straight down the road, more than twenty meters away, in front of some hastily dug-out fortifications and troop concentrations, a large flatbed truck loaded with soldiers and fixed armaments rolled into the view and immediately unleashed a torrent of fire upon the Marines. Lasers lanced through the air alongside high velocity plasma bolts and were followed by a cascade of slower K-bolts, .50 caliber incendiary rounds and rocket-propelled grenades.
“Down!” John yelled as he threw himself to the uneven and pocked sidewalk, fifty caliber rounds just narrowly missing his head, making deafening hissing noises as they passed right by and exploded on the wall beside him, causing eruptions that sprayed shattered concrete everywhere. To John’s left, a laser beam struck a Marine who got too slow and he dropped to the ground, unmoving. Shit. Then, to John’s relief, the Marine screamed an inhumane wail, and his hand moved to clutch his smoking shoulder. Whether it was just a wound or the arm was totally gone, John couldn’t tell, all he knew was that it wasn’t good and that the situation wasn’t getting any better. “Medic! Get your ass here!”
A rocket, two of them actually, screamed through the air and detonated on the ground ahead of John, momentary blinding him with the incandescent blast of binary plasma warheads. Must’ve been some sort of anti-armor round, John thought The night vision sensors quickly compensated for the bright flash and John was able to see again. “We’re gonna get pinned down!” he screamed frantically as red-hot shrapnel impotently peppered his visor. He got up to a crouch just as the medic arrived to tend to his wounded companion and to drag the stricken marine somewhere safer. John noted that his HUD indicated that his plasma gun’s power cell had 30 rounds left and took aim. The suit’s sensors saw through the dust and darkness and zoomed onto a far away Sigma trooper and the magnified night vision/thermal image revealed that it was carrying what looked like an RPG tube. There was a thermal bloom as the rocket-propelled grenade was launched, and reflexively, John fired his own weapon. The Sig fell down with two on the chest and one in the head (which was now a cauterized stump) and John dropped to the ground, just as the rocket swooshed overhead and detonated, showering everyone with fist sized chunks of concrete and shrapnel. John got back up and fired another burst, however, this time he wasn’t so accurate, as his shots hit precisely zilch. The rest of his troops were better shots though, because even in their pinned down position, John was able to count at least half a dozen Sigmas who were either killed or brutally maimed by their plasma fire.
“We need a LAW!” John hollered through the comm.-link as a nearby lamppost that came crashing down just a meter away from him after being cut into two by a laser. A LAW was the United Sovereignty Marine Corps’ (and the Army’s) answer to the inexpensive rocket-propelled grenades sported by damned near everyone else. It stood for Light Anti-Armor Weapon, a weapon that was basically a tube with a rocket in it. It had a rudimentary targeting system linked to the user’s HUD and helmet sensors, though nothing as fancy as a Tube-launched Homing or Radio-guided (THOR) missile with its binary plasma warheads. And it packed enough of a punch to knock down or severely damage a lightly armored vehicle, like scout vehicles and light tanks or in their case, a jury-rigged battle truck armed to the teeth with machineguns, K-bolters, lasers and plasma cannons.
Then, all of a sudden, what John judged to be a Bragulan from its short height and wide girth, jumped out of the corner of the sidewalk and brought itself directly in front of the squad, and John in particular, catching him in surprise. “Shit!” John hissed as he got over the surprise and suspense of the moment and used his rifle to vaporize the contents of the Brag’s chest cavity before it could riddle him with K-bolts. The Brag’s K-bolter carbine cluttered to his feet, and he automatically took its magazine, unconscious that the clip’s content, which were solid slugs coated in a compound that would turn into a glowing highly caustic semi-liquid substance upon exiting the weapon, was incompatible with his own plasma rifle.
Despite the deafening noise of explosions, the whine of K-bolts and fifty caliber rounds and the thunderclap-like noise of plasma rifles, John could somehow hear hurried footsteps coming towards him. He glanced to his rear to see a fellow Marine crouch/running towards him while desperately trying to dodge enemy weapons fire.
“Gallagher, what is it?” John barked, but stopped himself as he saw the man pull out a large tube-shaped thing that was attached to his backpack. John felt a somewhat overwhelming sense of relief as Gallagher placed the LAW on his shoulder and stopped to take aim of the battle truck, but the relief was quickly washed away, to be replaced by frustration and annoyance as Gallagher tripped on his own shoes and fell helmet-first to the floor. How a well-trained Marine, Earth’s finest, one of the few, the proud and the capable of eating rocks and defecating nitroglycerine could trip on his own foot while attempting to aim a bazooka was completely beyond John.
The fall did not injure Gallagher in any way, as he quickly got back to his feet, only to drop face first to the floor again in order to avoid an oncoming rocket. The screaming warhead exploded right beside Gallagher, on the wall of what used to be some sort of commissary and the area was immediately blanketed by a cloud of thick grey dust.
We’re getting pinned down and killed while this little git is fooling around. Goddamnit! John thought as he combed the debris and searched for the LAW. If Gallagher was blown to smithereens, then too bad, the LAW was what was most important, the LAW was what was going to save them, not some Marine who couldn’t balance himself to save his life. “Goddamnit! Goddamnit! Where is it?!” John hissed in frustration as a round or two ricocheted off his power suit. Then he felt something. Aha. But to his disappointment, it wasn’t a rocket launcher, it was a more...round, and it was moving. What the? It was Gallagher’s head, or helmet rather.
“El-Tee,” Gallagher groaned feebly, feeling the stab of the RPG’s deliberately sharpened fragments on several of his joints. “I’m hit…”
“Don’t worry, just give me the rocket. Where’s the rocket?”
“Its over there...”
“Thanks. Medic!” John could feel his cry being drowned out by the hammering noise of K-bolts and machinegun rounds impacting concrete and decided to scream louder. “Medic! Goddamnit!” He saw the medic run towards their position, only to be tagged in the leg by emerald K-bolts. The corpsman fell to the ground, clutching his leg in pain and filling the comm.-link with a series of hoarse and agonizing screams. K-bolt acid was potent enough to burn through even their suits’ sandwich of multiple armor types, so John knew that it would burn like hell. Aside from that, he also had several personal experiences to confirm that little tidbit of knowledge. “Shit!”
Though John would never admit it to himself, he knew that the Sigs had the Marines precisely where they wanted them, pinned down in an area that provided minimal cover and was easily accessible to reinforcements. John cursed the Sky Eye reconnaissance drones. He would be damned if he let himself and his squad end up as some statistic on some casualty count on some news report on some holoscreen back home. This operation was going without a hitch, and to be one of the extremely few who would come back home in a body bag would be terribly humiliating. Sure, he’d die a hero and though being some sort of hero was very desirable, dying wasn’t. Sure, John had no relatives that he knew of and lived several hundred lightyears away from his parents and sibling/s (at the moment he could not remember any of his siblings, and neither did he give a shit) and whatever family he had, but he was not too keen on dying, even if it was with his (only) friends. He knew he had to get that LAW. Before another jury-rigged truck crewed by smelly un-bathed bears and yetis and with a pair of guns and a laser cannon duct taped to it rolled down the street to finish them all off. Then I guess I should stop thinking to myself and grab the damned rocket launcher, you douche.
And John did just that.
Then he thumbed his rifle’s fire selector to full-auto and sprayed the enemy formations and the battle truck with plasma. His HUD counted that he took down at least three Sigmas, two on the ground and one on the truck, and lavished at the thought that the suit’s CPU always chose to display the low-end kill-counts (as to not inflate the user’s ego, a dangerous thing to do). Then the rifle began to beep. Shit, out of ammo. And John dropped it to the pavement.
“Cover me! Gore, use your fucking grenade gun!” the twelve man squad had one armed with a semi-automatic grenade launcher, two armed with light plasma machineguns, one armed with a precision rifle, and the rest armed with plasma rifles, most of which had under slung grenade launchers. Whatever was left of Baylor squad, John was sure that they would make one helluva suppressive line of fire.
John extended the telescopic rear end of the LAW and armed the weapon. It came alive with a confirmatory beeping sound. “On three. One-two-three!” The Marines released a firestorm of plasma and grenades. Though most of the shots were inaccurate, they served their purpose, to panic the enemy soldiers and to force them into cover. Four Sigs, caught with their pants down in the concentrated barrage, were killed instantaneously. Their bodies charred beyond recognition by the crossfire of plasma and their remains further desecrated by grenades. The battle truck itself was subjected to abuse; although many of its occupants were cut down by plasma bolts, most of the damage to both crew and vehicle were from a direct hit with not one, but two grenades. Whereas any normal vehicle would have been transformed into burning wreckage, the battle truck remained relatively unscathed because of its jury-rigged armoring. However, the grenades did their job as no one in the vehicle’s vicinity was spared from the monomolecular edged fragments and shrapnel of the 40mm warheads.
More plasma and grenades saturated the area, thus suppressing any attempt at return fire. As the cover fire continued, John stood tall and aimed the LAW he held on his shoulders. Through the weapon’s scope and his suit’s own sensors, the rocket launcher achieved a ‘lock-on’ and the targeting reticule glowed red. John squeezed the trigger and ducked as the missile cleared the tube and went its way. The cover fire ceased and everybody watched the rocket streak through the air as straight as an arrow, leaving a thick trail of hot gas in its wake. It struck the battle truck right on the armor plate that protected the vehicle’s fuel tank and exploded. The directed eruption tore through the metal and the truck’s fuel and all the ordinance it carried detonated in a brilliant magenta fireball. The blast violently lifted the truck up into the air like some kind of cheap plastic toy and sent bits and pieces of it everywhere within a two hundred meter radius. The Marines even felt the shockwave, and though John’s night vision was temporarily blinded by the blast’s glare, he was fairly certain that a few Sigma soldiers also went flying with the truck itself. John couldn’t help but suppress a triumphant smile.
“C’mon Marines, let’s move out. Terminate whatever’s left of them. We’re going to finish our job.”
TWO
John’s Journal
April 16, 2567
1300 hours
Diary,
A few hours from now, the boys and I are going to have a little outing in the Sigma world of Nyrbosk, a former Bragulan prison colony in Wild Space, beyond the Sovereignty’s Outer Rim and near the Bragulan Star Empire. We’re supposed to capture several key Gamma-Sigma facilities that hold highly valuable materials of some kind, WMDs from the look of things. Currently, the Iron Fist is in hyperspace en route to the planet. I guess Captain Armstrong wants to go in slow; give the system a detailed scan while in hyperspace so he won’t go in half-cocked. Anyway, this is my first entry in this damned book. I was rummaging through my locker a few hours ago, looking for any spare OrGazmo (the supply ran out, even though we had enough to last us up to a year!), and guess what I found? Yes, that’s right. I found the diary that Mr. Jonesy, my councilor back in rehab, gave me the day before I shipped out all those years ago. I wonder how it got here…
Anyway, this mission is going to be the second friendly outing of Baylor squad, that’s right, my second run as a squad leader. It’s been rather nerve wracking, ever since El-Tee Chen got a nasty case of pancreatitis and I got assigned to be the squad leader. I’ve been thinking that I’m not really cut out for this, giving orders and all that. But somehow I’ve managed to end up okay the first time, none of my men got killed or hurt in any serious way, and I think I’m doing quite okay. But there’s that nagging feeling of insecurity and sometimes it just gets the better of me. See, when you’re in charge, leading your men, you’re the one they depend on, and when one of them bites the dust, you can’t help but feel responsible, even when it was entirely not your fault. That hasn’t happened to me yet, and I hope to hell that it never will, but the thought it is really unsettling. I guess this is all the norm, since I’m just new as a CO and everybody has doubts (they would be insane if they didn’t, and I wouldn’t want my CO to be some sort of sociopath), so I guess its okay. At least I hope it’ll be okay. I shouldn’t whine that much, I probably should suck it in, be a man and all that. Anyway, needless to say, I’m nervous about this upcoming mission. They say Nyrbosk is the Wild West. No matter, bears can’t shoot for shit.
-John
PS:
I keep thinking about the choices that Mr. Jonesy gave me back ‘home’. There were quite a lot of them, actually. I could have (and did) joined the Armed Forces, or become some sort of colonist fixing some sort of atmospheric processor in some sort of backwater barely habitable colony world, or be a councilor, help other people get back to their lives. In retrospect, it seems like being a councilor was the noblest choice, the choice where you actually helped people instead of just blowing things up. But it’s not like I’m not proud of the Corps; in fact, it’s the exact opposite, really.
Semper Fi
April 16, 2567
2400 hours
Nyrbosk was a scarred world. Prior to its terraforming, its surface was bombarded by meteor shower after meteor shower. Yet somehow, for some as of yet unknown reason, the Bragulans were able to convince themselves to set up shop here. They terraformed the world, changed its barely hospitable surface into something that was in fact habitable, and then hollowed out the space rocks that threatened to bombard the planet, converting them into orbital space stations. Some of these stations had an anti-asteroid defense system, the same defense system that - up to a few hours ago - would have been a nuisance for the three Vindicator-class carriers and two Assailant-class destroyers that comprised the USMC taskforce. Now, parts of this so-called defense system were raining down into Nyrbosk’s atmosphere.
Today, Nyrbosk was still a scarred world. However, the scars left by prehistoric meteor impacts were quickly put to use by the Bragulan settlers who colonized the world some centuries ago. The craters had mining facilities, cities, storage depots, and prisons, star ports, military training areas, and more built on them. Recently the Gamma-Sigma militia occupied the world, and the crater facilities were used to support their anti-Imperial operations and logistics train. And, even more recently, also for their violent operations against nations which were either neutral or even belligerent to the Bragulan Star Empire, nations such as the United Sovereignty of Earth, which happened to be one of the organization’s major backers until several decades ago.
Three crater facilities were of particular interest to the Marine force that was currently engaged with the planet’s contingent of Sigma forces. These three facilities were suspected of holding an artifact of great value. The powers-that-be knew there was something important on the planet, based on intelligence from the Central Earth Intelligence Department’s many tentacles, they narrowed it down to the three facilities, and now it was up to the troops to find which one of them actually had the artifact.
Site C had been cleared. The massive underground complex in the epicenter of a crater turned out to be a massive underground complex that was designed to be a prison. The Iron Fist, flagship of the taskforce, told the forces charged with storming Site C that it wasn’t what they were looking for, and ordered them to divide into two and reinforce the forces in Sites A and B. On the way, Baylor squad (along with all other relevant units) received word that Site A had nothing in it as well and was then ordered to go assist those either already at or en route to Site B. Then, on the way to Site B, Baylor squad received yet another order to return to Site A, to pull out a squad that somehow had gotten lost during the ‘evacuation’ and then got pinned down by several heavily armed Sigma detachments.
“How the hell does someone not receive a priority order to withdraw and redeploy, huh?” John asked in his comm.-link as he exited the confines of a dilapidated building and ran across the dark unlit road and then slid down into a ditch, where half of what remained of his squad was positioned at. Right behind him, four other Marines left the building and sneaked through the streets, confident that they were adequately covered by their teammates in the ditch and by the dark moonless night. Perfectly mimicking their lieutenant, they slid onto the ditch and leaned on the walls for cover, weapons at the ready.
“Maybe they got confused? Or they got attacked when they were withdrawing? Maybe the Sigs have some sort of jamming device?” Sergeant Joshua Cruise replied wisely, assessing all the possibilities. John sometimes wondered why he, of all people, was the one given the burden of being the squad leader instead of someone like Joshua.
“Then their CO’s a moron, and then he wouldn’t be in the Corps in the first place. And they wouldn’t have been isolated and vulnerable to attack if they followed the withdrawal in the first place!” John said after checking his rifle and pondering the questions. He then leaned on one of the ditch’s walls and exposed only a small portion of his head and the business end of his rifle to the outside as his eyes and the suit’s sensors each began scanning the area. “Besides, the Gamma-Sigma can’t afford small-scale jammers, I mean, if there was, then wouldn’t we know ‘bout it? Our sensors would have picked it up somehow. And they can’t even afford proper APCs, much less undetectable short range ECM.”
“Maybe the Operators fucked up?”
“When was the last time that happened? Those AI are smart, dammit.”
“They could’ve been pinned down before the withdrawal,” a private, Aaron Mollohan, interjected. He was new. Each squad was supposed to have twelve men, when El-tee Chen was sent home, only eleven were left. Aaron was brought in to fill the gap.
“Then they should’ve radioed for backup during the withdrawal, when there were other units near them. We came here because there was nobody else left to help them. If they waited that long before calling for backup, then that brings me to my first point!”
“Which was…?”
“That their CO is a moron.” John mumbled as his HUD showed him that the scan had turned up nothing. He ceased the conversation, signaling the squad that it was back to business, and began scanning the area around them with his eyes for the nth time. While they were talking and the sensors were scanning, he was also looking around, but he was a bit of an obsessive compulsive and had to make sure. It was foolhardy to rely on the sensor suite and the HUD alone, as they were merely meant to assist. If they were perfect, then Baylor would’ve been replaced with a battle droid of some sort. After a full minute of silence, John eased up and spoke. “Looks clear.”
“Yeah, certainly does. We never really met many Sigs after blowing up that truck,” Joshua muttered.
“They didn’t bother. Had more important things to defend,” John replied. “Alright, let’s get moving.”
Somewhere in the crater that held Site A, far from the epicenter, were several buildings and a wide road that separated them from another batch of ruined buildings. Hiding in the still-standing buildings was the trapped Marine squad, and spread out on the ruins and around the buildings was a heavily armed Gamma-Sigma unit. From the vantage point of the crater’s rim, where Baylor squad was currently surveying the situation, one could see the brilliant exchange of K-bolts and Plasma and the sudden eruptions of detonating rockets. There was a tiny flash of green. Through the HUD’s image magnification, John could see that the flash was actually a thick stream of green light.
“Nuclear Flamers,” John muttered with a hint of awe. Nuclear Flamers were weapons exclusive to the Bragulan Star Empire and were some of the deadliest things that a non-augmented person could carry. Deadly to both the target and the user, that was. Nuclear Flamers were much like flamethrowers. A massive backpack filled with volatile fuel, a hose carrying the fuel to the actual weapon, and the weapon that discharged death. The difference was that the Nuclear Flamer did not spew fire, but highly irradiated matter, substances hot enough and radioactive enough to achieve even worse effects than traditional flamethrowers, effects that were on par with even plasma weaponry. They could burn through armor and eat flesh away; the nuclear fire could even kill you without touching you. The blast of the concentrated cocktail of irradiated matter, toxic waste and acid could overwhelm the NBC-protection systems of most power suits, thus the handlers had to wear specialized lead armor, and even then, most handlers die within years due to cancer, although to the Bragulan Star Empire that was merely a slight inconvenience. However, the Flamers were short ranged weapons, incapable of firing more than twenty five meters, and that should ensure the trapped Marines some measure of protection.
“So, how are we going to break the party?” Joshua asked.
“They’re all spread out. And there’s a ditch that goes behind the closest enemy formation. We split into groups of four and go ninja on them, one enemy position per group. Three bunches of dead Sigs. Once we’re done, Eric pops the man manning the Flamer, make the thing melt down. Since the Flamer is at the opposite side of the ditch, that’ll distract the concentration of Sigmas at the middle and we frag them. Questions?”
“What’ll we use?” Aaron asked.
“Handguns. Rapiers. Piano wire. Hands.” Their service pistols were more like fifteen-inch hand cannons. The clips were loaded in a slot front of the grip, like a submachine gun, as the bullets too large for a clip that could slide into the handle. It had a limited built-in sound suppression, laser targeting system that could be linked into the HUD, and High Explosive Armor Piercing (HEAP) bullets as powerful as those used on rifles, if it weren’t for the power suits’ ability to enhance the user’s strength, it would’ve been impossible for a human to shoot the thing. The rapiers were shock sticks, staves, they could be strapped on a utility belt, but when activated, their maximum length was five feet. At the business end of the shaft was an extremely sharp spearhead, and every inch of steel beyond the handle was capable of delivering thousands of volts of electricity, enough to knock down a large animal. Although light in weight, rapiers were by no means flimsy; they could bludgeon people to death. Piano wire was the nickname of a silksteel razor wire that could be used to strangle even those wearing light battle armor. It was amazing what could be packed into a Marine’s utility belt or back pack. What were more amazing were the suits’ fiber mechanical muscles that could allow them to break necks with frightening ease. John grinned under his helmet. “They won’t stand a chance.”