New
Tau Metropolis, Tau sector
Shelby
felt like the pieces were beginning to fall into place, but they could easily
come apart at any moment.
Obadiah
had his yard dogs humming with the rebuild project. Admiral Irons’ idea to draw
in the support of the worlds around the naval base had proven enormously
helpful. The representatives and senators had gone to bat on the hill in
support of the base… naturally of course since they saw it as an opportunity
for their businesses and trade to thrive.
That had
sold the project on the hill despite opposition from Bek.
They had
also pushed for the base to the north. That was an ongoing project she knew.
She hated that the communication lines were so fragmented there at the moment.
Hopefully Cynthia was okay. She wouldn’t feel comfortable until there was an
ansible in place and Rick was up there.
She was
still on the fence about bringing the Taurens in. On the one hand, they may
need all hands on deck. But on the other… they’d been shooting at each other
not so long ago, and the Taurens had a loyalty issue still with their aborted
civil war.
“Penny
for your thoughts ma’am?” Boni, her AI asked whimsically.
“Just…
thinking that the enemy of my enemy is my friend. And some things make for
strange bed fellows,” Shelby replied.
Boni
smiled on her HUD.
“How are
we with the troops?”
“Another
saying for you, a body in motion…?” Boni replied. “So far so good. They are
marching to the sound of the guns, which is the important thing at the moment.”
“Are
there guns sounding off on T-15?” Shelby asked.
“A
recent artillery strike on refugee vehicles. No other shots fired at the
moment. They are contained.”
“I doubt
that,” Shelby murmured. “Somehow, I doubt that very much.”
<<(O)>>
Purple Nights
Secretary of State Moira Sema was
cautiously pleased with the long hours of work with her Tauren counterpart and
their respective staffs on the new treaty. The new agreement with the Taurens
was for mutual defense against the Xeno-Necron alliance to the north.
The Confederation was still
getting their house in order but Admiral Irons and the Tauren President’s
broadcast about the threat had ended a lot of insurrection overnight. No one
wanted to rock the boat. In fact, many personnel who had resigned in protest
over the surrender or had refused to fight their own people were asking to be
let back in.
She shook her head. That was not
her problem of course. The Taurens had to figure it out on their own. Clearly
trust would be a long term issue. What was her problem was to make it all work
somehow. Give them a framework to shape protocol to keep everyone in line and
on their best behavior.
They were about to test the
waters with the agreement for Ninth Fleet to transit through Confederation
space. Transiting through Confederation space would cut the transit time to the
north by months. It also would allow the fleet to show the flag, which would
hopefully put any further thoughts of rebellion to rest in the restive
territory.
Picking up some Confederation
ships to ally with them would be nice. They were still working on that. They
did agree to have guides to escort the fleet, however the navy was concerned
about the Tauren ships being able to keep up.
From what her people were
reporting, the Taurens had similar concerns.
<<(O)>>
Minox
IV
“So…
what gives skipper?” Sergeant Bolt asked with a frown as he came up to the
lieutenant. He flick his long ears at his boss.
“We’ve
been reassigned,” the lieutenant said. She looked a little nonplussed but then
interested.
The
Serval blinked. “Okay…?” he drawled.
The LT
eyed him. “You heard about the mess in T-15?”
The
Neocat nodded. His long ears flicked again and then went back as the
implications sunk in. It was going to mean a long transit in stasis as a
popsicle and then possible combat.
“They
are giving an ollie ollie in free call to all troops in the area. So, we’re
going.”
Bolt
blinked. “So, the contact and inspection mission?”
“On
hold. Clearly the Taurens here are behaving themselves. We’ve recruited some of
their alien population to do the job for us.”
Bolt nodded.
They had established that much. There had been some strides in integrating the
various species too. Not great ones, but some strides.
“We move
out in two hours, so get your people squared away and to the LZ. Oh, and we’re
not going alone.”
“Ma’am?”
“We’re
taking a couple squads of Taurens with us.”
The
Serval blinked in surprise at that news and then his eyes narrowed.
“It is
going to get crowded in Marine country, at least until we get into stasis. I
want everyone on their best behavior. We need to be one big happy family.”
“Aye aye
ma’am,” the cat said with a wary nod. This is going to be… interesting, he
thought with a slight shake of his head as she dismissed him.
<<(O)>>
President
Scar Chin studied the reports and then sat back and rubbed his brow. It was a
lot to take in.
His
peripheral vision caught movement. He turned and noted a distant ship was
moving under power. He puzzled over it and why it was triggering something in
his mind before he realized it was most likely the Feds.
The Fed
cruiser was moving their Marines out to T-15 as quickly as possible. They were
even taking a squad of Taurens with them.
He
wished them luck. They were definitely going to need it.
<<(O)>>
Sergeant
Bolt nodded to his troops. They'd left one
fire team behind to man the embassy, such as it was. Hopefully, the brass would
send in additional people soon.
The
serval's eyes moved to the Taurens. He flicked his long ears. They seemed
uncomfortable, but it wasn't because of the enclosed space. None had been on a
Federation ship, and they had been shooting at each other not so long ago.
There
were two squads of them. Some were young, only two were older. Only one was a
noncom. He had yet to get together with the bull. He hoped that they'd get
along; he didn't need a pissing match.
He
glanced at the Marines across from the Taurens. Come to think of it, some of
his people weren't too comfortable with them on board either.
"Okay,
listen up. We've got a ride to the combat zone. We're going to spend it in
stasis. We're going to go into stasis in two days."
The
troops looked concerned.
"I'm
taking that time to get aquainted. We need to get up to speed on each other and
tech. I know it isn't enough. I've asked the captain to wake us one week out
from our destination so we squeeze in any additional training. Any
questions?"
A few
people looked ready to say something but he rolled right over them. Most likely
they were protests.
"Good.
Remember, one big happy family at the moment. I don't know what our assignments
are when we get there but I want us working smoothly when we do. That way we
can hit the ground running. Right?"
That
last word came out as a command growl. Instinctively, the troops all stiffened
and nodded.
"Good,"
he said with a slight ear flick of amusement. "Kit check-in ten then
inspection, then we get to the nitty gritty on the range to zero in and get
aquainted. Then we'll break into fire teams to hit the dojo and simulation
time. One third on, one third racked out, one third doing our usual duties and
rotate. I'm going to see the XO on that. You've got until I'm done to get
squared away. Help each other," he said.
He knew
there was going to be resentment and even an instinctive desire to let the
Taurens hang, also competition. Well, he would deal with each as it came up. He
could handle competition. A little healthy competition was good.
"Get
on it, people," he growled as he about-faced and left the compartment.
<<(O)>>
"Sergeant
Bolt?" the Tauren who came up behind Bolt said.
"Yes
… ah ...?" he frowned. He'd instinctively tried to ping the Tauren with
his implants but hadn't gotten a response.
"Sergeant
Gros. My people are having trouble accessing some facilities."
"I'm
noticing that and the why now. I'm sorry we haven't gotten together for a pow
wow before," the serval said.
The
Tauren nodded. "We were thrown together. I was a corporal up until a few
hours ago."
"Well,
that solves the question of who ranks who."
"Oh,
you do, Sergeant."
"Nice
that we've got the pecking order established, the smaller being stated. He felt
a bit ludicrious next to the bigger alien. "Do you have a counterpart in
the other squad?"
"Sergeant
Toa. He's also new. You'll find that we are … green."
"How
green?" the serval asked as he crossed his arms and narrowed his eyes.
"As
in most of us are straight out of boot?" the Tauren replied.
"Oh,
lovely," the serval replied. "Well, at least you haven't picked up
any bad habits," he said.
The
Tauren nodded. "Toa and I were top of our class. I just finished advanced
training and they, well, dumped us in this mission."
"I
see. Well, the good news is that we've got time to sort things out."
"Yeah,
like access to things? Even the head is locked. It is called a head,
right?"
"Yes,"
the serval said. His mental evaluation of the Tauren went up a point.
"Okay, we need to get you ID tags or get your tags integrated with
ours." He saw the Tauren's ears droop and then perk up. "Do you have
tags?"
"No.
We have basic ID tags but not internal like you do."
"Ah.
Well, good news is, they are easy. Just go to medical, they program the ID, it
is a big pill or two, swallow, and in the morning you wake up with a basic ID
and HUD."
"No
pain?"
"Nope.
It gives us a link to you so the AI knows who you are and will let you into
areas of the ship you are authorized to be in. And it IDs you on the
battlefield to us and to each other."
The
Tauren nodded. "Good to know."
"If
you have advanced implants, it gets better. But let's go see what the brass has
in mind for you."
"Ah
… yeah."
"I
know, don't poke the bear or in this case the brass. In this case, it is a
decision above our pay grade so we gotta," the serval said with an ear
flick. "Let me take the lead."
"Ah,
yes, Sergeant." The Tauren nodded.
Bolt
nodded and motioned for the Tauren to follow him.
<<(O)>>