The Space Dolphinoids were one of the Shepistani Republic's deepest, darkest and filthiest secrets. They had to make sure no one knew the truth.Space Dolphinoids massacre thousands of survivors of the incident; then play head games with the few survivors who make it to a nearby planet.
Maynilad, Luz
MOUNT MARCOS
"Thank you Mister Man. I am glad that we've come to such a profitable agreement. The progress on the Space Bridge has been amazing, we couldn't have done it without your help." President Ferdinand Shroomarcos shook the hand of the Umerian MiniFine representative as they concluded their meeting. The Umerian left the room, and Shroomarcos sat alone for a moment. He massaged his temples and slouched on his chair, tired even though it was still mid-morning. It was good to be king, yes, but to have a kingdom such as the Feelipeenis... Shroomarcos sighed. He pressed a button on his real-wood desk, connecting him to his secretary outside. "Show the advisor in."
The real-wood doors to the Presidential office opened, and in came a Shepistanimerican wearing pastels and Gay-Ban sunglasses. He sat down on the chair in front of Shroomarcos' desk, without even waiting for the President of the Feelipeens to offer him a seat. He also didn't bother removing his sunglasses. He smiled at Shroomarcos, showing him his pearly whites.
God, Shroomarcos hated him.
"So, consorting with the Umerians now, are we, Ferdie?" the Shepistanimerican was chewing gun, which irked Shroomarcos even more.
"It is the business of business, and none of your business," Shroomarcos replied tensely. "Besides, we have other matters to discuss. The Doña Spaz. There were no survivors?"
"Nope."
"So, there were survivors?" Shroomarcos raised an eyebrow.
"Uh, no," the advisor shook his head.
"So, you mean there were no survivors?"
"Uh," the advisor scratched his head. "Yeah. No survivors. Sorry."
Shroomarcos' facial features hardened.
"What happened to all the people in the ships, in the escape pods and the life boats?" he asked quietly.
The Shepistani advisor scratched his head and shrugged.
"Well, everyone on board just kind of... died."
"Your ships found the wreckage and exhumed the remains," Shroomarcos stated. "What theories, if any, do you have as to the cause of their deaths?"
"We have two theories at the moment. The first one is that they all died." Before Shroomarcos could say anything, the advisor continued. "Of peritonitis."
"And the second?" Shroomarcos' eyes narrowed.
"Space beasties mated with them."
"I see." Shroomarcos said, grinding his teeth as he did so. He became silent as he thought it over. "It is a great mystery then."
"It is, your excellence," the Shepistani advisor said. "A grave and unfortunate one."
"I will have to tell my people," Shroomarcos said solemnly. He spun around on his swivel chair, turning his back to the advisor while settling his gaze out the office windows, catching a view of his beloved Maynilad. "You may go now."
"Thank you, your excellence," the Shepistani advisor quickly left the room. As he passed by the halls, he walked past Imelda, who was headed in the opposite direction. The Shepistani advisor quietly looked her up, eyes hidden under his Gay-Bans. "Mmmm."
Imelda entered the Presidential office.
"Honey? Can you help me pick my shoes?" she asked as she leaned forward on the Presidential table.
Shroomarcos spun again, bringing himself around to face his wife. His face was a glowering mask of rage.
"...honey?" Imelda asked hesitantly, shrinking as she did so.
"Just fuck off!" Shroomarcos roared. "Take your shoes and get the fuck out! Out! OUT!!!"
Bizayahs, Bizminda
The deaths of untold thousands of Feelipeenis sparked a wave of protest across the continent. Not merely at the loss of life from the maritime catastrophe, but from long-simmering discontentments that had been bottled up for the past six terms of the Shroomarcos administration. The dissatisfaction over divisive social issues, the disparities between rich and poor, the continuing persecution of the war against the communistas and the Moros, the curbing of media rights and the disappearances of political opposition, even the recent presence of Shepistani bases and Shepistani soldiers, all was coming to head. For decades, Shroomarcos' administration had kept a firm lid over these problems, but eventually some of it had to leak out.
Feelipeenis began taking to the streets in protestation. In civil disobedience to the Shroomarcos regime and all it stood for.
Some of the protesters recognized one of the Pulisiya as the thug who had beaten their friend half to death a night ago for having violated the curfew. The Pulis man saw them and chortled, asking them what they wanted when they approached them.
They answered by smashing his face in with a rock, and breaking his bones with sticks and stones.
The Pulisiya had the excuse they needed. They advanced forward instantly at the sight their member going down, moving like a phalanx of shield and baton, implacable and unstoppable - even to the point of uncaringly stomping their fallen friend even as he tried to get back up on his broken legs. The Pulisiya slammed their riot shields on the bodies of protesters, sending them to the ground where they would be beaten mercilessly with batons or face-stomped to the pavement.
They came with the ferocity of blue steel. Initially confident troublemakers had themselves taken down a notch when the Pulisiya's well-drilled baton-swings fractured their femurs like twigs, sending them down reeling and clutching their legs, where they felt bone protrude through flesh.
A woman tried to stand defiantly, taking cues from the tank man of Tianguomen Square. She stood alone, raising her hands as if to ward off the riot shields that came to trample on the disenfranchised Feelipeeni citizenry. She was armed with no sticks, no stones, her only possession the knapsack of food and clothes and water she had brought with her on her trip to the city.
For a moment, the Pulisiya paused, not knowing what to do with her. Unarmed, unaggressive, was she deserving the indiscriminate justice they doled out with such fury?
A brave man joined her stand, but at this interruption prompted the Pulisiya to act. They bashed his brains out with batons, and soon he staggered back to the woman and she could see that his eyes were barely opened, that blood and brains were leaking from his head and from his ears. The man, now knowing better, reached out to the woman and tried to pull her away from the Pulis.
But before he could stagger away and bring her to safety, the Pulisiya advanced on them and trampled them underfoot.
The protestations had stopped, the screams had started.
But the Feelipeenis would not go down quietly. Not this time. Not after so much. Not after everything that had happened, after what the regime had done to them. They were sick of the graft and the corruption, sick of the authoritarianism. They all knew someone who had been taken from them, disappeared to the secret jails, or salvaged and left to die in ditches by the goons. They saw what was happening all around them, everything that had transpired, everything that was going on in their country, and at this they said 'no'.
No!
Those of the protesters clad in blood red bandannas, signifying the color of spilled blood, took out their Shroomolotov cocktails - San Miguel beer bottles filled with flammables - lit them up and threw them at the Pulisiya. They burned. The black and blue uniforms turned yellow and orange as they caught fire. The Pulis tried to put the flames out with water cannons, but the water shortage saw to that and all they could get out of their high-pressure hoses were feeble squirts. Officers screamed as they burned to death, running all over the place until they finally crumpled over and shriveled like burned leaves.
It wasn't over yet.
The implacable wall of riot shields reeled as something banged against them with more force than the oppressed masses could muster. The Pulis staggered back, riot gear clattering, as they were overshadowed by massive unstoppable forms that slammed their phalanx down, that scattered them and sent them running for their lives - out of fear and horror.
There was more.
With the disfigurated visage of a man, the body of a world, and the legs of an arachnid, it crept across the land, stalking through the scene of carnage like a horror show amidst the throng of wretched peoples. The protestants laughed in joy at the sight of things thing, while those remaining Pulisiya screamed in dread.
The straggling Pulisiya had congealed into a single area, concentrating their formation while the rioters threatened to drown them. As they saw that unspeakable thing approach them, they merely resigned themselves to a fate far worse than death.
The thing caught fire, and as it burned it skittered towards the Pulis like a flaming grimacing arachnid. The personification of all that was wrong in the world, the embodiment of the evils that had subjugated the common man, of the authorities and their wanton abusement of country and countrymen, an idol that in itself was a sacrament against all that was past and holy. The protestants waved flags in the wind, fanning the flames until they became naught but smoke and ashes, until the streets were littered with the incinerated carcasses of the once-dreaded Pulisiya.
The few survivors there were ran to the military lines, and there they told the army commander what had transpired.
Communista! Sputtered the Pulis. "Naay mga communista didto!"
"Pila?" How much, the commander asked.
"Sila tanan! Mga communista sila tanan!" All of them, they were all communists.
"Sige," the commander acknowledged. They would deploy the troops. "I-deploy ang mga sundalo!"
The armored vehicles came. The protesters were already waiting for them. Feets clad in slippers and sandals, stomping twenty thousand strong on the gravelly earth. They came in numbers, for so many they were that their footfalls in unison caused the very ground to shake. Now was the winter of their discontent, even if the Feelipeenis never had winters in any of their worlds. In the sweltering humidity, they were drenched in their own sweat and reeked of their body odours. The protestants came to face the soldiers, themselves armed with nothing but their bare hands while the troops shouldered Armalytes and had armored vehicles.
Once more, both sides reckoned each other in the silence before the storm. Sticks and stones and face-smashing rocks, versus assault rifles, Armalytes, and tanks. It was not a fair fight. Yet the protesters were not cowed by fear. The soldiers were the ones who seemed to hesitate.
Were they ready to take the lives of those they had sworn to defend?
Then a shot rang out. They echoed through the air like the crack of thunder that came after lightning.
Rat-a-tat-tat-tat! Rat-a-tat-tat-tat! Rat-a-tat-tat-tat! Rat-a-tat-tat-tat! Rat-a-tat-tat-tat!
"Shit!" screamed the military commander. They had guns! "Naa silay armas!"
"Unsa atong buhaton?!" What do we do, a subordinate asked.
"Pataya sila!" Kill them, the commander shouted.
"Pataya sila tanan!"
Kill them all.
They raised their rifles and fired. Armalytes roared, though the echoes of gunfire could only be heard when the screaming stopped. Then it became quiet.