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Author Topic: By the Horns (A BattleTech Alternate Universe)  (Read 115531 times)

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masterarminas

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Re: By the Horns (A BattleTech Alternate Universe)
« Reply #180 on: July 22, 2013, 06:24:53 PM »

3rd Platoon, E Troop, Cavalry-Scout Recon Battalion, Sixth Syrtis Fusiliers RCT
Tabernas Wastelands, New Vallis
Taurian Concordat
November 22, 3025


“Sweet Jesus,” Henry whispered as the three scouts were engulfed by the swarm of creatures emerging from the hidden caverns behind the vines.  But then he shook his head.  “Get to the ‘Rats!” he yelled.  “MOVE, PEOPLE!”

The troops needed no encouragement—many were already running, leaving empty water cans in their wake.  The swarm turned, alerted perhaps by the heavy thuds of the combat boots on the baked soil of the ravine’s floor . . . and it was fast enough that not all of Henry’s people managed to reach safety in time.

Terrified screams echoed throughout the cleft in the rocks as the adults pounced on soldiers ahead of the arrival of the swarm, their powerful limbs sending them on fifteen and twenty meter leaps.  Henry pulled out his pistol and he took a step forward—but a hand clamped down on his bicep like a vise and hauled him back.

“YOU TOO, LT!” snarled Gunny Franks as he pulled the officer away from the men and women being submerged under the tsunami of oncoming insects.  The young officer tried to pull away—his face twisted with anguish over his men—his men—screaming in agony in front of him.  “THEY ARE ALREADY DEAD, SIR!” The gunny bellowed again, yanking Henry towards the nearest vehicle.

The two men stumbled up the rear ramp of the closest Packrat—a ramp that the other troops had already begun to raise; and then the engine roared, the vehicle shook as the driver put it into gear, and the eight wheels spun like mad before they caught traction and the twenty-ton recon vehicle accelerated away.

The stutter of the pintle-mounted auto-rifle echoed in the stagnant and blistering heat of the troop bay.  Henry half-stood and he looked out of the small armored periscope . . . , “Sweet jesus,” he repeated himself as one of the four scout cars suddenly began to weave and then flipped over on its side—the spider-things had already managed to get inside.  For just a second, Henry could see the face of the driver as he swatted at the juveniles . . . and then a far larger adult closed those hideous claws around the driver’s head and squeezed.  Blood splashed across the wind-screen . . . and then Henry’s ‘Rat rounded the bend and started up slope.

“Not your fault, LT,” the gunny whispered as he sat down next to Henry.  “Not your fault, sir.”

“I’m in charge, Gunny—they were my responsibility.”

“LT, I’m going to tell you a secret that everyone who has been in combat knows—but no one really shares,” Joshua said after a moment’s pause.  “Shit happens.  People die.  And sometimes, LT, sometimes it isn’t the fault of any of the survivors.  Just like this SNAFU today.”

“How many?” Henry asked.  “How many of our boys and girls are gone?”

“Too many, LT,” the non-com sighed.  “We still need that water.”

Henry looked up and he nodded.  “One ‘Rat—volunteers only.  And I want Infernos loaded in the missile launcher.  I’ll take it down there.”

“Not your job, sir—that’s mine.”

“Today, Gunnery Sergeant Franks, today it is my job,” Henry whispered—and the experienced NCO began to nod his head. 

“Get in, get the cans, patch them, get the water, and get the hell out, Sir,” Joshua said.  “They are bugs—you can’t avenge the troops by killing them.  Set up a perimeter with fire and grab that water and get the hell out of there, LT.”

“I won’t be sight-seeing, Gunny,” Henry said as the ‘Rat came to a halt at the top of the slope . . . the blazing sun already nearing the horizon and the winds beginning to howl.  The ramp dropped and Henry walked over to the edge of the ravine and looked down—but the swarm had not bothered to chase the speeding vehicles.  No, those spider-things were hauling his boys and girls—all wrapped up in silk strands—back towards the caves.  “I need a driver and four volunteers . . . can you talk them into it?”

“You’ll have them, LT.”

“Volunteers, Gunny—don’t strong-arm them if they don’t want to go,” Henry warned.

“You do your job, Sir; I’ll do mine.  You’ll get your volunteers . . . Parsons, Hondo, Bowen, Chin, and Early—you just volunteered to ride with the LT.  RIGHT?”

The five soldiers paused, but then one of them—Janice Early—sighed.  “Might as well . . . if we don’t get that water, the desert will kill us as sure as those bugs.”

Henry frowned, but one by one, the other four nodded their agreement . . . and the very junior officer decided not to push it.  “Break out the flamers and incendiary grenades,” he ordered.  “Saddle up when you’re ready—Gunny, the platoon,” what’s left of it, Henry thought, “is yours.”

“We’ll be waiting, Sir,” Joshua said.  “Good hunting.”
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Gabriel

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Re: By the Horns (A BattleTech Alternate Universe)
« Reply #181 on: July 22, 2013, 11:45:28 PM »

Oh yeah Starship Troopers for sure. Reminds me of a sci-fi movie called Bugs. You got to nuke the area or call in orbital bombardment.
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Re: By the Horns (A BattleTech Alternate Universe)
« Reply #182 on: July 23, 2013, 12:22:09 AM »

Squish them bugs!
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masterarminas

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Re: By the Horns (A BattleTech Alternate Universe)
« Reply #183 on: July 23, 2013, 11:06:38 PM »

TDF Field Headquarters
Tabernas Wastelands, New Vallis
Taurian Concordat
November 22, 3025


Edward kept all expression removed from his face as the guards ushered in the ‘delegate’ from Michael Hasek-Davion.  The officer was dressed in the field uniform of the AFFS—albeit covered with dust—although he lacked any (visible) weapons.  And at that thought, Edward’s lips did twitch; his guards would certainly have made sure that there were no hidden weapons as well.  In fact—and now Edward smiled a grim smile—he was reasonably certain his guards had strip-searched the man outside . . . and done a cavity search in addition to a complete scan for metal, ceramic, or plastic objects that could be used as a weapon.

The man—one Colonel Malachi Russert—stopped some distance away from Edward and he came to attention and rendered a smart salute.

Edward did not return it, nor did any of his officers.  As the silence grew oppressive, Russert slowly lowered his hand and he stood there at parade rest.

“I understand that you bear a message for me?” the young Taurian asked as he poured himself a glass of water—and did not offer the messenger any.

“I do, Lord Calderon,” Malachi answered.  And Edward’s lips twitched again.

“My rank is Subaltern, Colonel—you will use that title to address me.  I should note, however, that it is Marshal Cory Calderon who commands the defenses of New Vallis,” he said with a nod of his head to the older man seated beside him. 

“Here to beg your way out of the trap, FedRat?” Cory asked.  “You can surrender now and be sent to a penal colony for five years—or you can dance at the end of a noose.”

Malachi nodded and then he smiled.  “The problem with that is . . . I work for Quintus Allard, Marshal Calderon—Subaltern Calderon.”

Edward arched one eyebrow.  “Really?  I suppose that you have some code phrase which can confirm that?”

“I do—but you are not likely to possess the challenge,” Malachi answered.  “However, if you can contact New Avalon my story will be confirmed.”

“We are under an Interdiction, Colonel Russert,” Edward replied.  “That would be a bit difficult to accomplish—however, we have no need to contact New Avalon to confirm your story,” and he nodded to one of the guards who left the command tent.  Only to return a moment later with Ardan Sortek in tow.

“Marshal Sortek!” Malachi snapped as he came to attention.

“It’s Colonel Sortek—commanding officer of the Foxhounds mercenary battalion.”  He paused and considered the man and then he shrugged.  “I’ve never seen him before—but the AFFS is a large organization and if he works for Minister Allard I doubt that I would have encountered him.”

“He claims to have a recognition phrase, Ardan,” Edward said.  “You do know those, correct?”

“Some of them,” Ardan answered with a frown.  “Hello darkness, my old friend.”

“You would pick that one,” muttered Malachi.  “Life is a lemon and I want my money back.”

Ardan nodded.  “It’s a valid counter-challenge, Lord Calderon.”

Edward leaned back in his chair.  “Tell me then, mister secret agent-man—why is Michael Hasek-Davion still alive?”

Malachi flushed hotly.  “I didn’t—and I don’t—have authorization to terminate the brother-in-law of the First Prince, the Duke of New Syrtis.”

“And if you had authorization?  Would Michael be dead—or would you still be in his command staff wondering how the hell you are going to escape?” Edward asked bluntly.

The Davion officer jerked, his jaw dropped, his eyes widened.  And then he bit his lip and forced himself to calm down.  “If Hanse Davion issued an order for me to kill Michael, Subaltern, then Michael would be dead right now.”

“Fair enough,” Edward answered.  “Why did he send you here?”

“To convince you that we are not invading the Concordat—that the Fusiliers are refugees seeking asylum from the tyranny of Hanse Davion,” Malachi answered with a slight smile.

“I would be a fool to believe that—do you think I am a fool, Colonel Russert?” Edward asked.

“No.”  The Colonel paused and then he sighed.  “As a fall-back, Michael offers to give you the Fusiliers on a silver platter—in exchange for transport off-world to a . . . ‘neutral’ power.  For himself and a handful of trusted aides.”

“Ah,” Edward sighed as he considered the officer.  “Why would Michael think I would consider such a deal—when I have the troop strength and firepower to defeat his Fusiliers without letting the Rat go?”

Malachi exchanged a glance with Ardan, who nodded, and then he sighed.  “Because he is offering you the accumulation of two decades of dirty little secrets of the Davion family and their government.  Secrets that will—would—cause Hanse Davion great difficulties at home and abroad.”

“Tempting,” Edward mused, but then he tapped the desk top.  “But it is rather like trusting a snake.  Frankly, I’d rather see him hung than risk getting bitten.”  And then the heir to the Protector smiled again.  “He does command a great loyalty—the majority of his forces are following him to their doom.”

“Duke Michael doesn’t trust the common soldier, Subaltern,” Malachi answered.  “Only the vetted crews of the DropShips and command-level officers heard your broadcast—the vast majority of low-ranking officers, NCOs, and enlisted personnel are not even aware the Eighth hasn’t made their landing on schedule.”

Now Edward frowned and he sighed.  “We need your radio encryptions in that case, Colonel—I will give your . . . common soldiers . . . one more chance at preserving themselves.  After that, when your water starts running low,” Edward shrugged.  “That is when we will attack and annihilate Michael and his Fusiliers.”

“He is expecting that.”

“I do not doubt it, Colonel.  You have his latest troop dispositions?”

Malachi nodded.  “As of two hours ago,” and then he paused.  “The crew aboard my VTOL are fanatically loyal to His Grace—and the bird is armed.”

Several of guards drew in a quick breath of air, but Edward just nodded.  “Ardan?”

“Foxhound Actual to Hound Three Six—take the chopper,” the AFFS officer turned mercenary (officially, at least) spoke into a microphone.  And from outside the tent came the roar of autocannon and the scream of missiles . . . and a lone VTOL on a pad half a kilometer away simply disintegrated under the weight of fire of an entire company of the once-and-future Davion Heavy Guards.

Edward smiled again.  “They will present no threat to this headquarters, Colonel Russert.  Show me where Michael is deploying—and tell me what his plans are,” he ordered.

And with a sigh, Malachi walked over to the map.  “The Duke has deployed in three separate formations that are moving east-north-east along this line of ad- . . .,” he began.
« Last Edit: July 24, 2013, 08:27:02 AM by masterarminas »
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Shadow_Wraith

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Re: By the Horns (A BattleTech Alternate Universe)
« Reply #184 on: July 23, 2013, 11:20:59 PM »

 :D  Nice update!  Wow, Colonel Malachi Russert actually works for Quintus Allard of MIIO?  Did not realize that.  More updates please!
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Gabriel

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Re: By the Horns (A BattleTech Alternate Universe)
« Reply #185 on: July 23, 2013, 11:39:01 PM »

So cool :)
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masterarminas

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Re: By the Horns (A BattleTech Alternate Universe)
« Reply #186 on: July 24, 2013, 11:30:08 AM »

3rd Platoon, E Troop, Cavalry-Scout Recon Battalion, Sixth Syrtis Fusiliers RCT
Tabernas Wastelands, New Vallis
Taurian Concordat
November 22, 3025


Henry sat down (he all but fell) on the ramp of the scorched Packrat—after his troopers, the three who had survived at least, had passed out the water cans.  Soot and ash covered his body from head to toe; his hands and arms were red from the heat of the flames with which he had burnt away the infestation of those spider-things.  He sat down and closed his eyes—and his hands shook.  He shivered in the cold night air; for the sun had already descended . . . and the only light was the reflected the flickering remains of the pyre he had lit in the ravine to hold the creatures at bay.

“Shit’s gotta be filtered first, people!” Joshua snapped as several of scouts opened one of the cans and started to refill their canteens and camelbaks.  “Unless you like drinking pieces of burnt bugs and trees and the residue of inferno gel.”

With a groan, the recon troopers hauled out the filters and began to process the water—the priceless water that had cost them so very much.  They bitched about it, but Joshua didn’t care; as long as the troopers did their job, it didn’t matter if they bitched and whined.  And frankly, he wouldn’t have trusted soldiers very much who didn’t moan and groan.  Then he knelt down next to the ramp and handed the young officer a canteen.

“You need some burn gel on your arms and hands and face, LT,” he said softly. 

“I’ll live, Gunny,” Henry answered as he took the canteen and sipped the tepid water within. Although it tasted metallic from the chemicals used to purify it, in that moment the bitter water was almost the nectar of the ancient Greek gods.  “We got twenty-five cans patched and filled before the pool became too shallow to drain more,” he added.  “Not as much as I hoped.”

“That is more than I expected, LT.  It’ll hold us for a day or two—but we have another problem,” the non-com said with a sigh.

Henry gave Joshua a tired smile.  “My instructors at NAMS always said there’s no such thing as problems . . . only challenges.”

“Typical REMF bull-shit—life ain’t a Zen koan, LT.  And we have problems,” Joshua snarled as he spotted a tiny spider-thing crawling on the ramp and squashed it with his boot.

Henry sighed.  “And those are?”

“The invasion is FUBAR, LT,” the Gunny said in a flat voice.  “You know Colonel Russert?”

“Duke Michael’s Operations Officer?  I know of him—I haven’t ever met him.”

“He made a broadcast—apparently, he’s really part of the Department of Military Intelligence.  And the First Prince is pissed that Michael has invaded the Concordat,” Joshua paused.  “New Avalon has declared the entire Sixth to be in a state of mutiny—they threw us under the bus and there are AFFS forces here on New Vallis working with the Taurians to stop our assault.”

“Shit,” whispered Henry.

“Yeah—it gets worse.  The Taurians have taken our JumpShips and consider us all pirates and renegades.  We can surrender and get sentenced to a penal colony for five years . . . or we can fight and die.”  The Gunny shook his head.  “And if we do that and get captured, we get hung afterwards.”

“This is just getting better and better,” Henry muttered.  “So no reinforcements?  No incoming supplies?  No way off this rock?”

“That’s about the size of it—and that moron Michael low-balled the defenses here by a factor of four,” Joshua added.  “We don’t outnumber the Taurians—they have more ‘Mechs, more tanks, more infantry, and they are dug in deep to stop us from getting to Port Sheridan and fresh water supplies.”

“Wonderful.”  There was several minutes of silence and then Henry pressed his swollen hands into his itching eyes.  “We get any instructions from Central Command?”

“Oh, yeah.  Command says that the Taurians are lying—about their troop strength and accepting our surrender.  But scuttlebutt says they aren’t lying about taking our jumpers—so we’re stuck here in the desert fun, LT.”

“We can avoid the Taurians—until we run out of water and die,” Henry said in a bleak voice.  “Or we can go back to the DropShips, which the Taurians probably have targeted, run out of water and die.  Or we can try to break through their lines and die trying.  Or we can surrender and get killed by our own forces—and if we are lucky enough to avoid that fate, probably be killed by the Taurians anyway.  They hate us, you know.”

“That’s about the size of it, LT.  Major Potter wants us on the move by 0300—he wants the approaches to that river scouted out and we pulled the short straw.”

“You have a . . .,” Henry began, but the Gunny just smiled grimly and unfolded a map and turned on a red-light.  “Thanks,” he finished as he considered the map and frowned.  “Tight terrain—and I’m not really happy about taking Packrats into the teeth of the Taurians.”

“You got that right,” muttered the non-com.  “Aerial recon wasn’t able to get pictures—half of them got shot down by flak approaching the sector that Potter wants us to recon.”

“Flak.  We don’t need to scout it—the Taurians are already there if they have flak emplaced.”

“Command believes that it is a small Taurian blocking force and that we can push through to the river and resupply.”

“Based on what?” snorted Henry.  “Getting everything else perfectly right to date?”  He shrugged and then sighed.  “What do you suggest, Gunny?”

Gunnery Sergeant Franks paused and he looked around to make sure no one was eavesdropping.  “Three Packrats and less than a platoon of infantry aren’t going to make a difference, LT,” he said very quietly.  “The Taurians might shoot us—or hang us—but they might not.  And Russert said that we might get ransomed out early from that five-year sentence.  If not, doing five is better than buying the farm or dancing Danny Deever.”

“Command will consider that desertion in the face of the enemy, Gunny,” Henry cautioned.

“Yeah—the Sixth will consider that desertion.  But, we have orders from Hanse freaking Davion himself to stop this madness.”  Joshua snorted.  “Thank your lucky stars you are in CSR Battalion, LT.  We get the folks who aren’t fanatical followers of the Haseks—unlike the ‘Mech and armor battalions.”

“Praise God for small miracles,” the Leftenant whispered.  “If we broadcast our surrender, those fanatics will be on us in less than an hour, Gunny.  They are only fifteen klicks back, after all.”

Joshua nodded again.  “Russert broadcast coordinates—way the hell up here in the north,” he said pointing to the map.  “Get there and throw down arms and we are golden, according to the Taurian prince.”

“The Taurians have a prince?”

“Yeah.  Edward Calderon is running the show here apparently—something else we didn’t know going in.”

Henry considered for a moment and then he sighed.  “We don’t have the water supplies to make it two hundred kilometers, do we?  And . . . what about fuel?”

“If we ration the water hard—maybe, LT.  Fuel, we’ve got enough with a bit to spare.”

“How hard on the water rations?”

“Seven liters a day per trooper; maybe less.”  Henry winced, but Joshua just shrugged.  “Better half rations than none, Sir.”

“You have a point, Gunny,” Henry acknowledged and then he sighed.  “There’s really no other choice is there?”

“Not a good many of them, Leftenant.”

Henry looked out over the nineteen enlisted soldiers and lower-ranking NCOs that remained—in addition to himself and the gunny . . . and he sighed.  “Start setting up way-points to the surrender coordinates, Gunny Franks,” he ordered.  “We leave at 0300; I’m going to get a bit of shut-eye until then . . . that is, if you have things under control?”

“Can do, LT,” the Gunnery Sergeant breathed with a sigh of relief.  “Just as soon as I have the Doc slather on some burn gel on your roasted skin—no arguments.  I don’t want to lose you to infection if those arms blister up on the move.”

“Whatever you say,” Henry mumbled as he leaned back against a ruck sack—in seconds he was fast asleep.
« Last Edit: July 24, 2013, 10:59:02 PM by masterarminas »
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Takiro

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Re: By the Horns (A BattleTech Alternate Universe)
« Reply #187 on: July 24, 2013, 10:11:41 PM »

Damned if you do, damned if you don't.
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Epoch Rooster

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Re: By the Horns (A BattleTech Alternate Universe)
« Reply #188 on: July 25, 2013, 02:30:37 AM »

Re: Surrender

Alive if you do, Dead if you don't
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masterarminas

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Re: By the Horns (A BattleTech Alternate Universe)
« Reply #189 on: July 26, 2013, 12:02:53 PM »

Maintenance & Logistical Support Field Depot, Sixth Syrtis Fusiliers RCT
Tabernas Wastelands, New Vallis
Taurian Concordat
November 22, 3025


Leftenant General Kevin Rostov—as naked as the day he was born—tumbled to the floor of his luxury climate-controlled trailer the instant he heard the gunfire from outside.  Half asleep, he hit the carpeted surface hard and managed to take the sheets and blankets with him . . . which resulted in pulling the sleeping woman (also quite nude) who had shared his bed (no mere bunk for such an important man, even in the field!) down atop of him, where she landed with a shriek of her own.

“GET OFF OF ME!” Rostov yelled as he crawled across the floor and pulled down the direct phone to the mobile command center that the trailer was parked adjacent to.  Shots continued to ring out—and one of the heavily tinted windows shattered above, showering fragments of glass shards over the two.  “Have the Taurians found us?  Are we under attack?  Hello?  Hawkins, report!” he yelled . . . but the phone was dead.

The gunfire outside slowed . . . and then there was silence; followed by a polite knock on the door of the trailer.  The door opened, and Sergeant Major David Slocum stepped inside; he was wearing a sub-machine gun on a travel sling—the muzzle still smoking slightly.

“What the devil is going on?” Rostov asked as he brushed off the glass, trying to stand up as the woman quickly pulled on her uniform blouse.  “Where’s my guard detachement, Slocum?”

“Dead, sir,” the Sergeant Major answered bluntly and he shook his head.  “You and Major Calley are going to want to get dressed.”

“Taurians?” Rostov asked as he stood up and began to step into a pair of boxers.

“No, sir—we enlisted have decided that following the Duke of Morons to our death is a bad idea.”

“WHAT?” Rostov screamed.

“The techs and engineers and support personnel, General Rostov, Sir,” Slocum repeated, “we are moving the DropShips and the supplies to the surrender point—and we are laying down our arms.”

“THIS IS MUTINY!”

Slocum shook his head.  “It was mutiny when His Idiocy decided to invade another power without telling New Avalon first.  It was mutiny when you officers decided to ignore the messages of the First Prince and failed to tell the rest of us that we were totally fucked, Rostov,” Slocum spat on the floor.  “We’ve recalled the dromedaries and ordnance transports—when they get back, we are lifting and leaving before the Taurians start bombing us.”

“THIS IS TREASON!” Rostov yelled, but then he drew a deep breath and forced himself to calm down.  “Look, Slocum—Sergeant Major!  Emotions are running a little high right now, but if you put down the gun, I won’t have you arrested and tried.”

“A little high?  I’ve spent thirty-two years in uniform, Rostov—thirty-two years and now I don’t have a pension.  My family back on New Syrtis no longer has medical coverage—my wife and kids will lose the house because they aren’t getting my pay any longer.  THIRTY-TWO FUCKING YEARS WASTED, YOU FAT INBRED CRETIN!”

“I am a superior officer, Slocum.”

“No, sir—just a higher ranking one,” the Sergeant Major answered as he charged the SMG with a fresh round in the chamber.  “You and the other officers?  You want to support the Duke of Dunces, you can go right ahead—we’re leaving your asses here in the desert.  His Stupidity is ninety kilometers THAT way,” he pointed with the muzzle of the SMG.  “Have a nice walk, Sir—because we are taking the vehicles.  Oh, I’ll leave the trailer, though—gaudy civilian thing that doesn’t belong here anyway.”

Rostov’s face went white.  “That’s murder, Sergeant Major—you can’t do this.  You can’t leave the loyal people here with no supplies, no transport, no arms.  You can’t!”

“Watch me, asshole,” Slocum growled.

“I’ll surrender,” squealed Major Calley as she pulled on a pair of panties to go with her blouse.  “I’ll go with you and surrender!”

David Slocum frowned and then he shook his bed.  “You made your bed, Major—your people consider you a worthless piece of ass who got your job because of your family connections and that you don’t mind sleeping your way to the top.  You are lucky if I give you a uniform and boots,” and then he raised the SMG as Rostov pulled out a pistol from beneath the bed.

“DROP IT, SIR!”

“You will lower that weapon, Slocum!  I’m not losing my command to mutiny that easi- . . .,” he began, but before he could finish raising the pistol, Slocum squeezed the trigger and held it down—thirty bullets tore across the trailer and ripped into Rostov and Calley.

More enlisted men and NCOs burst in through the door, and they looked at the bloody mess.

“Damn.  He got off easy,” muttered one with a grimace as the smell of urine and feces suddenly filled the air; the muscles of the two dead suddenly releasing as the last bit of life faded from their bodies.

“Bury them, Sergeant Major?” asked another.

“Leave them to rot—and get the other officers and loyalists moving.  We lift as soon as the supply convoys get back here,” Slocum answered.
« Last Edit: July 26, 2013, 12:30:47 PM by masterarminas »
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Shadow_Wraith

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Re: By the Horns (A BattleTech Alternate Universe)
« Reply #190 on: July 26, 2013, 12:09:04 PM »

 :)  Nice to see the average troops seeing common sense in the situation.   Looking forward to see how Michael handles this.
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Re: By the Horns (A BattleTech Alternate Universe)
« Reply #191 on: July 26, 2013, 12:23:43 PM »

I don't imagine Michael will react well to this at all.

But, for some reason, I can't find it in myself to feel any sympathy for an oath-breaker and traitor.



I am hoping that he is captured alive.

Anyone else have any suggestions for what should happen to him?

For myself, I think the Taurians should treat him EXACTLY like any other pirate.  A quick trial, followed by a short dance at the end of a rope.  No reporters, no grand last statements, nothing more than a shameful death as a failure.  His death should probably be witnessed and confirmed by Ardan Sortek, or some other Fed-Suns witness, but without Michael being aware of the fact.

In short, he should go to his death KNOWING that he had failed.  And he should be denied even a platform to spit his venom one last time.  His death should be a statement on the folly of hubris, and the consequences of allowing one's ego free reign.

Afterwards...bury him in an unmarked, pauper's grave.  He dies as a disgraced, disowned, former noble, turned pirate.  Such are not due final honors, nor even any memorial.
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Epoch Rooster

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Re: By the Horns (A BattleTech Alternate Universe)
« Reply #192 on: July 26, 2013, 01:04:15 PM »

A quick trial? Pirates and rogue raiders are not worthy of nothing more than a summary execution upon capture.
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Commander Cyrus Nickle
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Warclaw

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Re: By the Horns (A BattleTech Alternate Universe)
« Reply #193 on: July 26, 2013, 01:15:31 PM »

Worthy of a trial?  No.

Due one under Law?  I believe they are, though I could be wrong, this is Master Arminas' AU after all.

The point I'm trying to make is that he should get treated like just another low-life pirate scumbag.  NOT as an enemy noble, or invading general.  That being the case, no grand show trials, no big splashy media circus, no platform for  Michael to spew venom and/or to try to cut a deal.

He sought to become a King and failed.  As a result, he should die as nothing more than a minor footnote to history.
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Knightmare

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Re: By the Horns (A BattleTech Alternate Universe)
« Reply #194 on: July 26, 2013, 04:27:10 PM »

Dropping him into a Spider's pit would be fitting.
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