And now, before christmas, a musical number:
Unity City, North America
Terra, Terran Hegemony
20 August 2577
There were drums and then a squeal of what Ian recognised from his youth as the sound of an electric guitar riff. It wasn’t something that he’d expected to hear in an official video message from the Periphery.
The image that was displayed showed a simple line of six people, five in military uniforms which he now recognised as representing the Periphery states, the sixth in a simple business suit.
Over this image cut in his own voice, his own words: “We the Lords representative of the Realms of the Human Sphere -â€
The preamble to the Articles of the Star League was interrupted by the lone civilian: Jack Calderon, Protector of the Taurian Concordat himself. “Stop pretending that you’ve never been bad. You’re never wrong and you’ve never been dirty.†His words, as much snarl as song, dripped sarcasm: “You’re such a saint. That’s not the way we see you.â€
“You want to rule us with an iron hand.†Rachel Calderon-Davion pointed accusingly out towards the viewer, towards Ian. She, at least, could sing well. “You changed the rules and became a butcher. This isn’t Terra, you aren’t our dads and mothers.â€
“They never knew anyway,†the blue-clad Savitri Centrella interjected slyly.
Marcus O’Reilly, cloak of imperial purple over the Marian Legions’ uniform, stepped past the two women. “I never walk away from what I know is right. But I’m going to turn my back on you.†And he did, cloak flaring dramatically.
The picture cut to show a plaza filled to bursting with civilians. The centre of one of their capitals? The buildings certainly looked to possess the necessary grandeur. Clearly visible over the crowd were all six Lords standing upon the balcony of one building, clearly addressing the crowd. Placards left no doubt where the sympathies of their audience lay with regard to the Star League: against it.
Overlaid across this, the song went on, all six voices raised in defiant unison. “Freedom, we’re gonna ring the bell! Freedom to rock, freedom to talk! Freedom to raise our fists and yell. Freedom to rock, freedom to talk! Freedom Ring!â€
The video cut back to the six leaders, the Canopian leader now taking centre stage. “You’re playing God from your ivory tower. Back off Ian, I don’t care for your preaching. I ain’t no angel but I never felt better.â€
She stepped back and allowed the man presumably representing the still almost unknown Tortugan Domain to step up. “We’re a distant future generation. We’re not the serfs you want to make us. You better leave us alone, ‘cause you sure can’t take us.â€
Callum Avellar, the last of them to take the stage, moved forwards until he was glaring into the camera up close, the music that had backed the entire video fading back slightly. “No one gets to tell us how live our lives, we’re going to do that on our own.
The refrain came again, but now it wasn’t overcut with the crowd. No, this time the imagery was of a more military nature.
There were ships: big, menacing warships. Aerospace fighters flying in formation in numbers that actually did at times obscure the sun above them. Tanks and blocks of parading infantry. BattleMechs.
Ian Cameron had been a soldier, a Mechwarrior. He recognised some of the ’Mechs but there were also an incredible range of others that he didn’t. Worse: many showed what to him were the obvious tell-tales of the advanced technologies that had – less than a year ago – seemed to suggest that the SLDF would have an overwhelming advantage over the more primitive weapons of the Periphery.
“It’s not exactly the New Sydney Philharmonic Orchestra, is it.†Shandra Noruff-Cameron’s expression suggested darker thoughts than her relatively casual words implied. “I hope they don’t expect a reply in the same vein, because I’m sorry love, neither you nor Ian Marik can carry a tune in a bucket.â€
“It’s different,†he told her. “Rather the point, I suspect.â€
“Oh?â€
“They don’t think the way we do. They don’t see events the same way we do and their reactions to those events may not mirror what we would expect.â€
“You mean calling you a butcher, or a would-be tyrant?â€
“I’ve been called worse.†Ian’s lips quirked. Much worse, in fact. He had take power rather irregularly after his brother’s assassination, but out of necessity rather than any form of personal ambition. “In a way I’m glad that they’ve channelled their aggression into that singing because the personal letters that each has written are almost reasonable. In tone at least.â€
“Personal letters? An interesting term for something that they managed to mail to every news agency in the universe. I think the Dracs aren’t reporting it, but even the Capellans – who certainly could quash the reports – haven’t elected to do so.â€
Ian shrugged. “I’m going to consider that a step in the direction of Chancellor Liao allowing something resembling a free press. Something this juicy was going to leak almost immediately anyway, no matter what the Bureau of Star League Affairs did.â€
“There’s some interesting analysis in there and I don’t think all of it is the various heads of state regurgitating what they’ve been fed by their staffers. Savitri Centrella’s letter is brutally frank: she actually applauds what she describes as the Star League’s initial mission statement: Albert Marik and I wanting to put an end to the almost permanent fighting on the wars. Of course she then asserts that I’ve lost track of the mission in favour of focusing on my means – the Star League. The post script... well, you’ve read it.â€
“’Fighting for peace is like fucking for virginity: someone gets screwed.’ Canopians! No doubt it will play well with the newsbites.â€
“Yes, but can you imagine some script-writer suggesting to their ruler that they say something like that? They’d never have dared. That has to be something she decided on herself. I wish I had a better record of her personal history, it must be fascinating.â€
Shandra smiled wryly. “Turning to a younger woman? I’m heartbroken, love.â€
“The interest is entirely platonic, I assure you.†Ian shook his head. “Then we get Rachel Davion’s analysis of how the Periphery campaigns turned out in their history, with comparisons back to the Outer Reaches Rebellion two hundred and fifty years ago.â€
“What I wonder there is why she’s spelling out the problems we had in their history.†Shandra Noruff-Cameron had only briefly led the Star League Defense Forces but she had led the Hegemony Armed Forces before that for decades. “That can’t do anything but help us avoid making those same mistakes.â€
“Probably she doesn’t intend this war to be anything like that history. After all, according to their history, we win.â€
“After, if she’s telling the truth, killing more soldiers and civilians than every other war since the invention of the Kearny-Fuchida drive... combined.â€
“True.†That one word cost Ian Cameron more than he would have believed possible when he was ‘just’ a senior general. “Unfortunately there is also the letter of Jack Calderon.â€
Ah yes.
That letter took pride of place. It laid out the situation in stark terms: the Pollux Proclaimation had linked the Star League inextricably to the policy of forcing the Periphery in compliance with the League’s government. Therefore either the Periphery submitted, which they had elected not to do, or the Star League must be destroyed.
The letter finished with an ultimatum: if the Star League disbanded of its own free will then the independent states of the periphery would be delighted to sign binding peace treaties with the various member states. The Protector had not felt it necessary to spell out the alternative.
House of Government, Atreus
Marik Commonwealth, Free Worlds League
25 August 2577
It was exactly three months to the day since Jacquelynn Ortega had briefed Parliament on the Magistracy of Canopus, to which she had been ambassador since 3025. Since that time she’d been being debriefed by the National Intelligence Agency on an astonishing range of topics, ranging from the history of the Succession Wars to the brands of food she had purchased when she was a student on Aitutaki in her late teens.
There was no surprise that on being summoned to see the new Captain-General there was a FWLN officer in the antechamber of the subterranean command centre beneath the League’s centre of government.
But finding that she knew the officer in question was a surprise. “Captain Jones?â€
Grace Jones of FWLS Harpy rose from her chair (institutional, thinly padded and generic) to look at her. “Ma’am?â€
“Ambassador Ortega. We met three years ago when the Harpy was representing the League at the Canopian Naval Review.â€
Jones nodded, recognition dawning. “Of course, now I remember. I’d be surprised the Canopians hadn’t interned you if I wasn’t still astonished that Marcus O’Reilly let me leave with the Harpy.â€
It was impossible for Ortega not to whistle softly at that revelation. “That’s unbelievable, surely he would have to know that he’s ceding much of his technological advantage by doing so.â€
“God bless that old Roman sense of honour,†the Captain said. “Although maybe it’s just his cruel streak: it’s killing me to see the Harpy opened up by what passes for dockworkers in this era.â€
Ortega shook her head. “It’s not long since that they were pirates. Hard to think that he’s representative of them all.â€
The door opened and an aide looked out. “Captain Jones, Ambassador Ortega, the Captain-General will see you now.â€
Inside, Ian Marik sat behind a towering desk and motioned the two women towards seats facing him. “Tea, coffee?†When both declined, he waved off the steward who was attending on him with a small tea trolley and also the aide.
“Thank you for both coming,†he said, as if they’d had any reasonable alternative to accepting their respective summons. “I’d like your opinion of the Star League’s proposed strategy over the next year.†Ian pushed folders across the desk to them, each clearly only containing a few sheets of paper. “Obviously, this is highly classified.â€
Ortega skimmed the documents and then went back over few points she felt needed more scrutiny while Jones apparently preferred to read the entire document steadily. Of course, as a military officer, some of the terminology probably was more familiar to her, the diplomat thought.
“There are a couple of things that stand out, sir,†Jones began. “Firstly, it assumes a degree of passivity on the part of the Canopians. My own experience is that the Magestrix feels warfare is better practised on worlds outside her own domain. The business on Tellman’s World is an excellent example.â€
“Do you agree, Ambassador?â€
“I do, sir. The Magestrix is extremely protective of her industries and civilian population. She will not want any confrontation to take place inside the Magistracy or the Duchy of Andurien.â€
“I was afraid you’d say that. And the Marians?â€
“Hard to guess, but my suspicion is that they will be looking to use the Rim Worlds to tie up Star League resources. Expect that campaign to be rather harder than this anticipates. It was the second longest-fought theatre in the Reunification War.â€
“Damn. Is there any chance that we can convince them to side with us,†Ian asked. “We were allies in the thirty-first century, after all.â€
Ortega frowned. “I wouldn’t rule it out but you’d have to make a very solid offer.â€
“So you don’t think he could be convinced to join the Free Worlds League as another province?†Ian asked. “Because perhaps I’m guilty of some over-optimism, but allowing the Harpy to come home to us... even without some of her databanks...â€
“That probably is over-optimistic, sir.†Jones leant forwards, ignoring the comment on the paucity of electronic records the Harpy had provided about the Marians. “I don’t think you quite appreciate how unpopular the Star League is in the Periphery. I wouldn’t have entirely ruled out the possibility of an eventual merger in the thirty-first century but that was really extraordinary given that it was based on Kristen Marik establishing a close relationship despite the Caesar having killed her half-brother Thomas back in ’25.â€
“So what do you recommend then, Captain?â€
“Honestly sir? Play the diplomatic game and hope like hell that the Lucies and the Crappies get themselves carved up.â€
“Am I detecting a bit of aggression towards our allies in the Star League?†asked the Captain-General.
She held up two fingers, one on each hand. “Perhaps just a smidgen, sir. We have history.â€
“Part of that history is that right now, we’re allies. Try to keep that in mind.â€
“Sir, I’m going to be straight up: with an ally like Viola Steiner-Dinessen you don’t need enemies.â€