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Author Topic: By the Horns (A BattleTech Alternate Universe)  (Read 115479 times)

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drakensis

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Re: By the Horns (A BattleTech Alternate Universe)
« Reply #45 on: June 18, 2013, 01:59:19 AM »

Well this has had a lot of of positive commentary in the IRC channel for Another Periphery Lords game.

One minor gripe:

Quote
Grover began to reply, but then he shut his mouth.  “You cannot prove anything.”

Having him shut his mouth and then having him obviously speaking doesn't flow well. Something about him biting back the first response and instead saying that (childish as they are) might work better - or simply have him look at Henri with an implied 'you can't prove a thing'.
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Takiro

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Re: By the Horns (A BattleTech Alternate Universe)
« Reply #46 on: June 18, 2013, 06:28:50 AM »

Looking forward to more!
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masterarminas

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Re: By the Horns (A BattleTech Alternate Universe)
« Reply #47 on: June 18, 2013, 09:49:27 AM »

ComStar Class A HPG Station
Samantha City, Taurus
Taurian Concordat
October 27, 3025


“Hey, Bob,” one of the guards called out to his companion, who sighed.

“Look, Jeremy—Chief Waters is going to have both our asses if you keep talking when you are supposed to be standing post.  What?”

“You ever seen one of those before?” the relatively new ComStar recruit pointed at the ‘Mechs moving along the boulevard—a late night exercise, according to the TDF.  Nothing to worry about, the guard thought.  The Taurians often conducted exercises of tanks and ‘Mechs and infantry at odd hours—even here in the core of the capital.

“They’re ‘Mechs, Waters,” he said . . . but then he actually looked at them.  And he frowned.  They were ‘Mechs, to be certain, but of a design he had never before seen.  And the Battalion marching by . . . every last one of the ‘Mech were that same unfamiliar design.  What the hell?  No one fielded entire battalions of the same BattleMech—not since the Fall of the League, at least.  And that insignia—Robert Grey knew the shoulder flash of every TDF unit on Taurus, but he had never before seen that flash . . . and his eyes grew wide.  Not outside of a museum, the cold realization came bubbling up from the depths of his memory.

He reached down and placed his hand on the phone—and that was when the line of ‘Mechs and tanks and infantry carriers suddenly wheeled and began advancing on the compound.  “SHIT!” he screamed—but the incoming PPC bolt tore apart the guard shack before he had the opportunity to trigger the alarm.

Of course, the explosions and weapons fire was more than enough to alert the men and women who called the ComStar compound home.

********************************************************

“What is happening?” Precentor Taurus screamed as he entered the control center—he was still pulling on his robes of station.

“Thomas has gone mad—I do believe that this is his answer to the Primus,” the ROM Chief of Station said bitterly.  “He’s attacking the facility.”

The ComStar leader blanched . . . and then he cursed.  “The HPG—I’ve got to get to the HPG,” he said.  “Can you hold them off?”

“How long do you need?” the ROM officer asked with a grimace—and both men ducked as an outlying structure erupted in a fireball . . . and hundreds of Taurian infantry darted in through the breaks in the compound walls.

“Five minutes minimum—ten would be better.”

“My boys can give you three—maybe four.  May I suggest you implement the Omega Protocol, Precentor?”

Precentor Taurus nodded.  He inserted a key into one of the computer stations of the command center; entered a short code, and then he turned the key.  “Omega Protocol activated,” he said.  But the ROM Agent was already gone, leading the men and women of the security force in trying to hold back tanks and ‘Mechs and infantry with only small arms.

Damn you, Thomas Calderon.  You have condemned the entire Concordat to death with this action, he thought as he knelt in the entrance—looking at the twenty meters that separated him from the entrance to the communications dome at the center of the compound.  Twenty meters—just twenty meters.  However, it was twenty meters filled with weapons fire.  Gritting his teeth, Precentor Taurus dashed out, zigging and zagging as he rushed toward the entrance of the dome.  He never saw the Taurian paratrooper drifting down from above who fired a burst into his back as he sprinted across the open courtyard.

********************************************************

The outer compound was child’s play to secure—but the dome itself featured multiple levels, many beneath the city streets.  And the tight quarters, plus fear of causing damage to the invaluable HPG restricted the weapons that Corporal Mueller and his maniple could carry to light-weight SMGs and pistols, along with a handful of flame incinerator units.

Say what you want about their beliefs, he thought, the robes were throwing up heavy resistance in his path.  And that made him wonder—why does a religion that preaches peace need to have so many well-trained and heavily-armed people?  He stopped next to a corridor junction and then he nodded at one of his men—the one carrying the flamer.  The trooper gritted his teeth and he stepped forward, extending his arms around the bend and squeezing the trigger . . . and screams began to fill the corridor, along with a few initial gunshots.

“Go,” Mueller ordered, and the maniple of ten troopers rounded the corner—firing single shots into the burning figures ahead of them.  It was a mercy, really, he thought.  Better than letting the fire finish its work.

A single pistol shot snapped ahead of him, and Mueller crouched—but he didn’t hear the passage of the bullet.  And then another.  And a third.

He broke into a run and entered the HPG chamber itself, and without thinking he raised his SMG to his shoulder and fired three bursts into the back of the security officer who was casually shooting the technicians in the head.  Shooting his own people in the fucking head, Mueller thought as he swore.

The next tech in line, the one that the ROM agent had been about to execute, sobbed.  “Thank Blake,” he cried.  “Thank you, thank you, thank you.”

Mueller and his men spread out and they searched the chamber—but the security man with the pistol had been the last line of defense.  “Bravo Three-Two,” he broadcast.  “HPG secure—we have live prisoners,” and then Mueller frowned as he saw the red flashing lights on one console.  That can’t be good, he thought.  Then he blanched.  “Central, they’ve set their reactor on overload—we have . . . three minutes to core detonation.”

********************************************************

“I thought you were the best, Harper?” the sergeant growled at the Explosive Ordnance Disposal tech.  “Disarm the bloody thing right quick, now!”

“It ain’t a bomb, Sarge!  It’s a bloody damned fusion reactor!  And the controls are locked!” Patricia Harper snapped as she wiggled her way into the wire-filled outer containment vessel. 

“Just turn the damn thing off!” the Sergeant bellowed again.  Already, the Taurians were evacuating the troops above—and the civilians in nearby residential sections.  If this thing blew . . . well, several thousand people would have a very bad morning.  Pat crawled through the outer containment vessel and then she found what she was looking for.

“Got it!” she snarled.  “Time to core overload?”

“Forty seconds,” the radio squawked. 

“It’s all about the fuel,” she said as she worked.  “These things can’t sustain a reaction without the fuel feed—cut the lines and avert the overload.”

“Can’t be that simple, can it?” asked the Sergeant.

“Making a bomb is easy, Sarge—making one that will go off on a moments notice and NOT blow up when someone bumps into on a daily basis; well, that’s a bit more difficult.  But they don’t need to use a bomb, not when they can overload this generator.”

“Thirty seconds.”

“Problem is, unlike a bomb, it takes time to build up to detonation—and a LOT of fuel.  Cut,” she grunted as she finished wrapping the det cord, “the fuel lines and the whole thing goes cold.”

“Unless you breach containment—you are right up against the interior vessel, Harper.”

“Twenty seconds.”

“Teach your grandmother to suck eggs, Sarge.  I’ve got it—backing out now,” and she began to crawl away from the fuel lines . . . and then she cursed.

“Fuck,” she whispered as she tried to move—but she was caught on the wiring, hung up good.

“Ten seconds,” the radio whispered.

“Get out of there, Harper!” the Sergeant yelled.

“No time, Sarge,” she whispered as she lifted the trigger for the detonator.  “No time,” and she closed her eyes as she hit the clacker twice.  The explosion tore apart the fuel lines—and the reactor’s safeties automatically shut off the fuel flow as sensors indicated a leak in the outer containment vessel.  Without the fuel, the fusion reactor in the INNER vessel slowly weakened and dissipated.

She had saved thousands of lives—at the cost of her own.  And she was only one of hundreds of Taurians who sacrificed themselves for their Protector, their nation, their people that day.
« Last Edit: June 24, 2013, 11:38:53 PM by masterarminas »
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masterarminas

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Re: By the Horns (A BattleTech Alternate Universe)
« Reply #48 on: June 18, 2013, 10:59:48 AM »

ComStar Class A HPG Station
Samantha City, Taurus
Taurian Concordat
October 27, 3025


Thomas stepped gingerly through the rubble of the formerly immaculate courtyard in what had once upon a time been the premier ComStar installation on Taurus.  Despite protests from his security—and Brenda Calderon, and Helena Vickers, and Henri Jouett—he had insisted on seeing this with his own eyes.  Well, his own eye, he thought with a slight snicker.

But the amusement faded away as he saw the lines of dead being respectfully covered and the wounded being tended.

“How many, Brenda?” he asked.

“Ours or theirs?”

“Fuck theirs—how many of ours?”

“Fifty-three dead, three times that wounded.  Primarily in the infantry—ComStar didn’t give up without a fight.”

“Could have been worse,” muttered Henri Jouett.

“It would have been worse if not for Tech-Corporal Harper,” Brenda Calderon said with a sigh.  “She saved a lot of civilians—and a lot of our people, not to mention the HPG itself.”

“John,” Thomas said to his body-guard, “made a note that I want to see her family myself—at the Chateau, when they have had time to grieve.”  He nodded to himself.  “Ask them if they are willing to accept the Standard of Taurus on her behalf.”

“Yes, Protector,” the body guard said with a bow, and Brenda nodded her agreement. 

Conversation came to a halt as Thomas knelt down next to a wounded soldier, and spoke with him quietly, then he moved on to the next, and then the next.  Finally, the Protector left the wounded men and women and the group moved on.

“Has your Commander Fletcher had any luck in figuring that thing out?”

Helena snorted.  “He’s happier than a pig covered in slop, Protector Thomas—as soon as the reactor is repaired, he thinks that he can bring the HPG on-line.” She chuckled.  “Of course, having several live technicians from ComStar helps; and the fact that their own security was trying to kill before we took over has rather . . . inspired some of them.”

Thomas nodded and he frowned.  It was amazing how much finding out that your own people wanted you dead could focus one’s attention—the surviving techs, most of them Alpha Division, had (for the most part) experienced a conversion experience in the maelstrom of that assault.  Some were cooperating—others, not so much.  But some of them, shocked beyond belief that ComStar lacked any trust in their ability to keep silent, that the organization would rather kill these men and women themselves than risk their secrets emerging . . . ah.  It rather warmed Thomas’ heart that a few of these had their eyes opened.

And then he smiled grimly as he came upon another stretcher.

“Precentor Taurus—did you receive my answer on this morning?” Thomas asked the wounded man as he was being carried past.

“You are a dead man, Thomas Calderon,” the ComStar leader whispered.  “ROM will not rest until you and all your heirs are dead—until the Concordat is history, lifeless and depopulated.  You have started a war that you cannot imagine—and you will pay for it with all that you hold dear.”

Thomas knelt and his smile faded.  “If the Primus of ComStar wants a war, then a war he has, Precentor.  As for you—well, there are many secrets that need to be extracted from that skull of yours.  And even if you die before saying a word, Precentor, I promise you that death will be long in coming—and pain will fill every last moment of your life until the end.”  Thomas stood.  “Maybe I’ll send the Primus your head—as an example of what ComStar can expect if they interfere with the Concordat.”

“You’ve damned yourself beyond all redemption,” the Precentor whispered.  “Blake will devour your soul.”

“My dear Precentor,” Thomas said gently, “Blake was just a man.  Not a god—a man.  I know—it was my own ancestor that nominated him to be the last Director of the Star League Communications Division.  Your fraudulent mysticism and fabricated beliefs do not frighten me.”

“You will learn to fear the Word of Blake before your end, Thomas Calderon,” the Precentor spat, and then he grimaced at the pain from his wounds.

“Not likely, charlatan,” Thomas whispered in the ear of the man.  “See to it that his wounds are treated—I want him healthy when he is questioned,” the Protector ordered the medics.

“Helena,” he continued to the Marshal.  “Light a fire under your man—I’ve got a message to send to the Primus . . . one that will make him sit and take notice.”

“Of course, Protector Calderon,” she answered quietly as Thomas continued his tour of the damaged compound, speaking with the people who earned this victory.
« Last Edit: June 24, 2013, 11:39:21 PM by masterarminas »
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Takiro

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Re: By the Horns (A BattleTech Alternate Universe)
« Reply #49 on: June 18, 2013, 04:13:44 PM »

Can't wait to see how ComStar reacts to this.  ;)
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Gabriel

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Re: By the Horns (A BattleTech Alternate Universe)
« Reply #50 on: June 19, 2013, 01:09:24 AM »

Fanatics always make that one mistake. When you push a good man against the wall and he thinks he has nothing to lose. How far he is willing to go for REVENGE!!!
« Last Edit: January 03, 2016, 02:57:16 PM by Gabriel »
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Fear is our most powerful weapon and a Heavy Regiment of Von Rohrs Battlemech's is a very close second.-attributed to Kozo Von Rohrs
Will of Iron,Nerves of Steel,Heart of Gold,Balls of Brass... No wonder I set off metal detectors.Death or Compliance now that's not to much to ask for,is it?

masterarminas

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Re: By the Horns (A BattleTech Alternate Universe)
« Reply #51 on: June 19, 2013, 12:50:57 PM »

ComStar Class A HPG Station
Samantha City, Taurus
Taurian Concordat
October 28, 3025


“Jack,” Helena growled.  “You said you could get this to work—what’s the hold up?”

The engineer crawled out of an access hatch on the side of the HPG, and he sighed.  “Boss, I don’t know what half of this gear is supposed to do.  Typical piece of Terran shit with a dozen components where any sensible engineer would use one!  Everything is cross-connected the Nth degree—it’s like they deliberately designed a Rube Goldberg machine specifically to spite anyone who ever got their hands on it!  I’ve got power flows all the place here, leading to circuits that don’t do anything!  But if I cut out those circuits, the whole frigging thing goes dead!”

Helena glared down at the engineer—and the team of scientists assembled from those embarked on Saucy Sam, and the surviving ComStar Adepts and Acolytes who had agreed to cooperate. 

“Damn it, Jack,” she snapped.  “I’m not asking you to rebuild the blasted thing—just make it work!”

“Boss, I . . .,” and seeing the look on Helena’s face, he sighed and rubbed a greasy hand through his hair.  “Fine.  But if we are going to be using this-this . . . piece of sh- . . .,” he winced as Thomas walked over and quickly adjusted his word choice, “junk, then we need to understand what each of these components are supposed to do—and right now, I don’t.  Know.  What.  Purpose.  Half.  Of.  Them.  Have.”

“Understand it later,” Thomas commanded.  “Right now, I need this on-line—can you do it, Commander?”

Jack sighed again and he began to mutter.  “Blood paranoid Terrans, none of these technicians know anything other the SINGLE system component they were assigned to run.  The only ones with a complete knowledge were killed by ComStar security.”

“ROM,” corrected Henri Jouett as he smiled.  “And Precentor Taurus probably knows—but he will take some . . . persuasion to reveal his knowledge.”

“Did you know they don’t have a single manual of operations?  They memorize their tasks—rote memorization without understanding the basic theory of how it works!” Jack whined.

“JACK!”

“Okay, okay, okay,” he muttered.  “We may burn out half of the circuits that I don’t know what they do, but okay.”  He steeled himself and he stood up from the floor and turned to the senior Adept that had changed sides—Dennis Frasier.  “Is the generator aligned?”

“On target, Pre-,” the man blushed.  “Commander.  HPG is on target and auto-stabilized.”

“Charge capacitors and prepare to establish communications wormhole.”

Dennis nodded and the team of former ComStar personnel began to sing out the litany as they worked the dials and pressed the keys.

“I fucking hate Gregorian chants,” he said as the machinery hummed to life.  “Ready to record and transmit—if I am reading this board right,” and he crossed his fingers.

“Then let us begin,” said Thomas.


ComStar First Circuit
Hilton Head Island, North America
Terra
October 28, 3025


“. . . and the Pronouncement of Interdiction has been distributed across the HPG Network, Primus,” the Adept reported.  “As of two hours ago, the Taurian Concordat has been officially Interdicted as per your command.”  Then he paused, and he swallowed heavily.  “I must report, however, that the Taurus ‘A’ Station has missed its past four transmission windows—and we have no confirmation from Taurus that the Interdiction has begun.”

Julian frowned, even as the members of the First Circuit started to whisper among themselves.  It wasn’t unheard of for an ‘A’ Station to temporarily go off the air—but the timing was . . . worrisome.  “Contact directly one of the Concordat ‘B’ Stations—have them confirm and see if we can determine what is wrong with the Taurus HPG.”

“Primus,” the sweating Adept said with a deep bow, “we did so six hours ago—none have replied to our transmissions.”

“It takes time to realign the HPG,” one of the Precentors of the First Circuit began, “and ‘B’ Stations are limited . . . perhaps their response is just delayed.”

“Even a ‘B’ Station should be able to respond to a priority transmission from the First Circuit in less than two hours,” snapped Myndo Waterly.  “Unless the Precentor in command is incompetent—did we send all of our fools to Taurus?”

Before anyone could reply, the sound of pounding feet came from a corridor and an Acolyte ran into the First Circuit.  Ignoring the Primus and the circle of Precentors both, he whispered to the Adept, even as Julian ground his teeth.  The Adept jerked, and his head snapped around to stare with horror at the Primus—and his jaw dropped, leaving his mouth open.

“Pri-primus,” he stuttered.  “We have received a transmission from Taurus—relayed here.  I-I,” his voice trailed off.

“CONTROL YOURSELF!” Julian snapped.  “Play the transmission.”

The Adept swayed.  “Pri-primus . . .,”

“Did you not hear the instruction of the Primus?” Myndo asked smoothly.  “PLAY IT,” she commanded.

The Adept bowed low and he walked over to a system control and adjusted the lights.  A holo-projector in the center of the floor activated; the image was shaky, filled with static, and slightly out of focus.  Julian frowned.

“Adept,” he said softly.  “Are we experiencing technical difficulties?”

“N-no, Primus—the transmission from Taurus was not precisely attuned,” he answered with an audible swallow of the lump in his throat.  “The computers are processing and cleaning the transmission as . . . we . . . speak,” and he grew quiet as the image solidified—the color base still slightly off and shaky, but it was not the image of Precentor Taurus.  No, the image that stood in front of the First Circuit was that of Thomas Calderon.

Sharp intakes of air came as several of the Precentors gasped, and Julian grabbed the sides of his podium in grips so tight that his knuckles faded to white.

“Primus,” the image spoke as it wavered.  “I have received your . . . ultimatum and carefully considered a reply.  In the words of General Anthony McAuliffe during the Siege of Bastogne in Terra’s Second World War—NUTS!  Or, if you aren’t a fan of history, then a simple PISS OFF is our answer to you.  Part of our answer, anyways,” he said with a chuckle.  “I believe you recognize the chamber I am in?  Your own ‘A’ Station on Taurus?  It is mine now; it belongs to the Concordat.”

Horrified—and furious—voices began to echo around the chamber, but the transmission continued.

“As you might notice, your Precentor Taurus is not present—he is under arrest and the evidence is damning.  I have been assured that he will be sentenced to death for his crimes against the Concordat.  My forces have seized not only the ‘A’ Station on Taurus, but every ‘B’ Station within the Taurian Concordat—and we are operating this station now to send you this message.”  Thomas paused and canted his head as he smiled.  “Seriously, you did not think that the sons and daughters of Samantha Calderon could figure out how to operate this technology?  If so, Primus, you are a fool.”

“We here in the Periphery have much experience with the perfidy of Terrans, Primus Tiepolo.  Your demands were unacceptable to us—and your actions in causing the incident upon which you based those demands were unconscionable.”

Julian’s face went white, and the image sneered at him.  “That’s right—we have access to your archives here on Taurus.  And it was orders from Terra that instructed Precentor Taurus to alter Grover Shraplen’s message to Brigadier Tharn of the Pleiades Hussars.  Those altered orders and communications which resulted in the attack on your facility on Jansen’s Hold; without them, it would have never occurred.  I don’t know what is more contemptible, Tiepolo—your callous sacrifice of men and women who served you or your greed over what the Concordat possesses.”

“But that is now over.  I hereby declare ComStar an outlawed organization within the territory of the Taurian Concordat—all who owe it allegiance will leave immediately under pain of death for defiance of this order.  I hereby nationalize your HPG stations—we Taurians will operate them ourselves, for our own good.”

“Of course, we will consider handing them back to you—in exchange for the head of one Julian Tiepolo.  Nothing attached—just the head,” Thomas said with a grim smile.  “There is an old expression, Primus, which you should have considered before this gambit began—fuck with the Bull and you get the horns.  Don’t push us into going further, or by the Horns, you will regret those actions forever.”

The transmission flickered again, and then it abruptly ended.  And utter chaos descended on the Chamber of the First Circuit.

Julian swayed and he tried to speak, but he couldn’t draw breath—and then he staggered as the pain in his chest exploded.  He collapsed onto the floor.

“PRIMUS!” someone shouted, but Julian couldn’t see his face—his voice seemed so very far away.  “GET A DOCTOR IN HERE!”  And everything faded to black.
« Last Edit: June 24, 2013, 11:39:50 PM by masterarminas »
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Takiro

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Re: By the Horns (A BattleTech Alternate Universe)
« Reply #52 on: June 19, 2013, 04:05:37 PM »

Sounds like someone needs a heart doctor.
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Kwic

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Re: By the Horns (A BattleTech Alternate Universe)
« Reply #53 on: June 19, 2013, 04:21:15 PM »

At least his head is easier to remove this way
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Dragon Cat

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Re: By the Horns (A BattleTech Alternate Universe)
« Reply #54 on: June 20, 2013, 08:14:29 AM »

At least his head is easier to remove this way

Had the exact same initial thought
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My stuff, and my AU timeline follow link and enjoy

http://www.ourbattletech.com/forum/dragon-cat-collection/

The original CBT thread
Dragon Cat on CBT


Really, as long as there is an unbroken line of people calling themselves "Clan Nova Cat," it doesn't really matter to me if they're still using Iron Wombs or not. They may be dead as a faction, but as a people they still exist. It's not uncommon in the real world, after all.

masterarminas

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Re: By the Horns (A BattleTech Alternate Universe)
« Reply #55 on: June 20, 2013, 12:41:28 PM »

ComStar First Circuit
Hilton Head Island, North America
Terra
October 28, 3025


“So, to repeat,” the physician-Adept from Kappa Division reported, “the Primus remains unconscious in critical condition . . . but we anticipate a full physical recovery from the cardiac event that he suffered.”

“And mentally?” asked Myndo.

“Treatment was provided within minutes—there should be no permanent mental impairments,” the doctor answered.

“Very well,” Myndo snapped.  “With the Primus incapacitated, it falls upon us of the First Circuit to respond to this travesty on Taurus.  I believe that my fellow Precentors now see the need to act decisively to eliminate this threat to our very existence.”

“How?” snapped Precentor Sian.  “He has at least one HPG under his control and he has made a broadcast!  Once the Great Houses learn of this, they will . . .,” but she didn’t finish the sentence.

“One broadcast—possibly using traitors within ComStar forced to work the machinery at gun-point,” Myndo interrupted.  “He doesn’t under the technology—and he cannot replace any of the parts.  Only we, here on Terra, can do that.  And we all saw that message—he cannot even work the HPG properly!”  Myndo paused and she nodded.  “The Concordat already lies under interdiction—if he broadcasts again, the message will be stopped at Stations loyal to us.  Now is the time to respond to this affront—to make certain that Taurus regrets the day it lifted a hand against those who are faithful to the Word of Blake!”

“And what do you suggest, Precentor Dieron?  That we send the Fleet?  If we do that—and the Great Houses learn of it—we are done,” Precentor Tharkad bluntly asked.

“Taurus is their economic, military, industrial, and spiritual heart, Precentor Tharkad,” Myndo said with a grim smile.  “The Station which they took by force lies there, in Samantha City.  Where the Protector and his family reside.  Where their military and intelligence commands are headquartered.  Where their most prestigious universities and service academies are located.  Where their industrial strength is concentrated.”

She paused and smiled at the members of the First Circuit.

“I submit that this city which is home to Thomas Calderon is a cancer which must be removed—doing so will cripple the Concordat and show the Taurians that not even on Taurus behind their asteroid defenses and their nebula are they safe.”

“Destroying their capital city?” Nicholas asked into the silence.  “Are you mad, Myndo?  We are speaking of ten million civilians living an area the size of Greater London.  Even with Backdoor allowing our Fleet to bypass the asteroids and enter the Taurus system without engaging their main defenses, what makes you think they will survive to enter orbit?  We all know how the Taurians will respond to three WarShips entering THAT system—their fighters will be carrying nuclear weapons; the Concordat has a tremendous stockpile of tactical devices that they will not hesitate to use.”

“Precisely, Precentor ROM,” Myndo snarled.  “I do believe that you have at least one agent in place in the facility which produces their tactical weapons—Fission Utilities, Consolidated and Unlimited?  That is the name, yes?”

Nicholas sighed.  “I do have an agent there.  But those are small—TACTICAL—devices, of about 35 kilotons each, Precentor Dieron.  Even if I sent my agent an order to detonate one, it wouldn’t destroy the entire city.”

“No, one device will not suffice.  Nor will multiple devices concentrated in a single location,” Myndo mused.  “But, if I am remembering your reports correctly, the Taurian Defense Force must regularly replace their existing warheads with new ones—half-life being such a bitch for these . . . primitive weapons.”

“Yes,” Nicholas whispered.

“And this Foo-Coo does so in bulk, yes?”

“Fuck you,” Nicholas said with a hint of a smile.

The Chamber went silent as the blood drained from Myndo’s face—she began to snarl, but Nicholas raised one hand.  “It is pronounced ‘fuck-you’, not ‘foo-coo’, Precentor Dieron—although many in the TDF and those who work there refer to the facility as ‘Nukes ‘R Us’.”

The silence dragged on as Myndo struggled to compose herself, but then at last she nodded.  “Thank you for that correction, Precentor ROM,” she snarled.  “They produce replacement warheads in bulk, do they not?”

“Yes.”

“And they ship them in blocks of one hundred, yes?”

“That is a typical delivery—one hundred warheads, once every two months,” answered Nicholas.

“You agent will supply other ROM teams with the next scheduled delivery—and they will appropriate it.  A single 35-kiloton detonation will not achieve our goals—but one hundred?  Distributed throughout Samantha City?  And I do believe that these Taurian weapons—being intended for use in space—leave massive amounts of lingering radiation behind, yes?”

Nicholas nodded, but he set his jaw.  “Do you believe that the Taurians will not move heaven and earth once they realize that someone has stolen one hundred nuclear warheads?”

“Are you saying that ROM cannot accomplish this, Precentor ROM?” Myndo asked sweetly.

“We can accomplish this—if the Primus orders it.  You are not Primus, Myndo Waterly.”

“The Primus is . . . unavailable, Precentor ROM,” she answered in a sharp voice.  “And if the First Circuit commands it—you will act.  Or you will be replaced.”  She paused.  “To the rest of humanity it will appear as if the Taurian obsession with these weapons of mass destruction resulted in a tragic accident that took the lives of so many millions of their own civilians.  I dare say, we might be able to convince the Great Houses to begin reducing their own stockpiles—for if this can happen to the Taurians, it might happen to them.”

“Any analysis of the blast patterns will indicate . . .,” began Protector Atreus.

“They will analyze information that passes through our HPGs—we will give them the data that conforms to our story.  It’s not like Hanse Davion or Takashi Kurita or Maximillian Liao will visit Taurus to confirm the story with their own eyes.  We control the flow of information—and through it, we WILL control humanity,” Myndo snapped.  And then she glared at the members of the First Circuit.  “Which is why we must end this Taurian Crisis NOW.  Before the situation grows out of control.”

One by one, the voting members of the First Circuit slowly nodded their agreement, and Nicholas sighed.

Myndo . . . glowed with delight, and she nodded as well.  “And in the wake of this . . . tragedy . . . we must begin to look to our own defenses in the Outer Worlds.  Perhaps it is time to address deploying the ComGuard and Militia to defend our compounds—slowly, of course.”

She turned her gaze back to Nicholas.  “One final matter,” she said.  “Have an intermediary pass along to Maximillian Liao and Michael Hasek ALL of our information on the latest deployments of the TDF—border defenses, what units are present.  EVERYTHING.  With an Interdiction already in place, I doubt very much that those two can resist the . . . opportunity to wrest a dozen or so worlds away from the Concordat.”

She paused again, and smiled.  “When our Great Work is finished, we will have completed the job that the Star League began—and the Taurian Concordat will no longer be a thorn in our side.”  She waited until the voting members nodded their agreement.  “Then we are in recess—Blessed be Blake!  May his Word bring Peace to all Humanity.  United under our rule—of course.”
« Last Edit: June 24, 2013, 11:40:23 PM by masterarminas »
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masterarminas

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Re: By the Horns (A BattleTech Alternate Universe)
« Reply #56 on: June 20, 2013, 01:19:17 PM »

ROM Command Center
Hilton Head Island, North America
Terra
October 28, 3025


“This is madness, Charles,” Nicholas muttered quietly to his aide.  “Killing individuals is one thing—we are going to be slaughtering millions here.  Between the detonations and the radioactive fallout . . . I will personally be responsible for my very own Kentares Massacre.”

Charles Seneca grimaced and he sighed.  “She doesn’t understand the meaning the words discretion or subtlety, does she?”

“No.  But if I balk, the First Circuit will replace me with someone who will carry out their orders without question—probably with that asshole Harriman.”

Charles winched again.  “It’s all so pointless—if they would LET us do our jobs, we could go in an eliminate the captured personnel and all of the Taurian scientists who MIGHT understand how to make it work.  Hell, we could take out Thomas Calderon and his family, if that is what the First Circuit wants—if they don’t interfere or micro-manage.”

“HAH.  They want absolutely control over everything—and heaven forbid if you tell them the sky is blue when they think it should be pink,” Nicholas fumed.

Charles looked around the room and then he swallowed heavily.  He leaned in close to his superior and began to whisper.  “There is another option, Nicholas—one that doesn’t require you to become a mass-murderer.”

“Oh?” Precentor ROM answered just as quietly.  “What are you suggesting, Adept?”

“With the Primus incapacitated, you control the security apparatus—except for the details assigned to each of the First Circuit.  But they are lightly armed . . . we have two thousand loyal agents here on Hilton Head that answer only to you—and the Primus.”

“They answer to me as long as I am Precentor ROM, Charles.  As soon as the First Circuit sees fit, they are going to replace me—I know that is what Myndo wants.”

Charles swallowed and he looked around the room again.  “They can’t replace you if they are dead, Precentor ROM.”

Precentor ROM’s head jerked up and his eyes grew wide.  He began to speak—and then he closed his mouth.

“Myndo is a threat to the Order, boss,” Charles continued.  “That is the precisely the reason we were formed in the first place—to eliminate threats to ComStar.  That she holds a seat on the First Circuit shouldn’t have any bearing on our duty.”

Nicholas licked his lips which had gone dry, but still he said nothing.

With a sigh, Charles made one final effort.  “How long do you think the Primus will live if Myndo gets a taste of wielding his power—he’s helpless in the hospital right now, boss.  She’ll smother him herself—if you don’t stop her.”

At last, Nicholas nodded.  Reluctantly, but he nodded.  “We have to take them all at once—the voting members.  We cannot risk a schism because we missed one or two.”

“Just give the order, boss—give the order and you will be in charge until the Primus wakes up.”

Nicholas closed his eyes and then he nodded.  “Do it.  Today.”
« Last Edit: June 24, 2013, 11:40:52 PM by masterarminas »
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Takiro

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Re: By the Horns (A BattleTech Alternate Universe)
« Reply #57 on: June 20, 2013, 04:03:11 PM »

This is a real coup!
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Gabriel

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Re: By the Horns (A BattleTech Alternate Universe)
« Reply #58 on: June 20, 2013, 11:52:49 PM »

Finally some one who thinks
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Fear is our most powerful weapon and a Heavy Regiment of Von Rohrs Battlemech's is a very close second.-attributed to Kozo Von Rohrs
Will of Iron,Nerves of Steel,Heart of Gold,Balls of Brass... No wonder I set off metal detectors.Death or Compliance now that's not to much to ask for,is it?

masterarminas

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Re: By the Horns (A BattleTech Alternate Universe)
« Reply #59 on: June 24, 2013, 12:08:39 PM »

Evacuation Tunnel Alpha
Hilton Head Island, North America
Terra
October 28, 3025


Myndo cursed as her guards pressed her back against the wall; the Acolyte who led them into the passageway staggered as his body absorbed the hail-storm of bullets emerging from the side corridor that connected to the evacuation tunnel.

“DAMN HIM,” she snarled.  Who would have thought that Nicholas Cassnew would have dared such an action?  That he would have the audacity to attempt to overthrow the First Circuit itself!  “When are our reinforcements arriving?” she asked her security chief.

The Adept shook his head.  “Precentor Dieron,” he said slowly, “the ComGuard and Militia has declared itself neutral in this conflict—they refuse to support either side; we have no reinforcements coming.”

“Options?” she asked.  Of all of the members of the First Circuit—the ones that mattered, the ones with a vote and a power base—she was the sole survivor.  If—IF—she could get out of this trap which Nicholas had transformed Hilton Head into, then she was certain that ComStar would rally to her cause.  But it all depended on getting free of Hilton Head Island and the massive facility built beneath the surface of the land and sea.

“ROM is coming for us, Precentor—we have no way out,” the security man paused.  “It is time to consider a negotiated end to this be-. . .,”

“NEGOTIATE?  Nicholas is the one that has spilt blood here on Holy Ground, Adept!  HE is the one who has abandoned all that Blake commanded of us—there can be no negotiation!  Do we still have communications with the outside world?”

“No, Precentor.”  Comms had been among the first thing that Nicholas had severed with powerful jamming devices blocking almost all signals.  Only the land-lines and optical cables had not been affected—but now, even those had been cut.

“Toyama foretold that this day would come,” Myndo snarled.  “When those who deny the Word of Blake attempt to seize the power of Terra and plunge humanity back into chaos and confusion—only through Blake can we know Peace.”  She sighed.  “Can we get to the Device of Last Resort?”

Her security chief winced as his men exchanged fire with the ROM agents loyal to Nicholas—and then he nodded.  “Perhaps, Precentor.  If he has not anticipated us attempting to trigger the device.”

“Blake will grant us a way, Adept—lead us there; leave half of your men here to cover our passage.  Their deaths will give us time to initiate the self-destruct of this compound.”

“You would kill every member of the Order here on this island, Precentor?” asked the shocked voice of Myndo’s aide-de-camp.  “Destroy this facility completely and leave ComStar leaderless and adrift?”

“Precentor ROM has already done that!” Myndo barked.  “If they follow Nicholas Cassnew and fail to abide by the Word of Blake, then those who fight us are heretics—apostates!  A new First Circuit will arise from the ashes, one which will lead us into a Golden Age.”  Myndo smiled.  “Besides, Sharilar,” she said.  “There is an evacuation pod accessed in the device’s chamber—we shall make our escape and rebuild the First Circuit—as Toyama and Blake intended.”

Myndo paused.  “And then we will deal with the Taurians once and for all time.”  She smiled.  “They were the cause of the downfall of the League and they seek to do the same to ComStar—we will implement a final solution to the Taurian problem.  Never again will they threaten humanity!”

Sharilar Mori just shook her head in disbelief at first, and then as the gunfire in the corridor increased, she drew a pistol from the folds of her robes.  “As the Primus orders,” she whispered.

Myndo Waterly smiled broadly.  “Yes.  You see the Truth, Sharilar.  I am the true Primus of Com . . . PUT DOWN THAT PIS- . . . !” she began to yell, her eyes growing wide as her aide raised the barrel aligned with the chest of Precentor Dieron—the guards moved fast, but not fast enough.  None had expected such a betrayal here, among the inner circle of Myndo’s chosen—and that gave Sharilar time enough to steady the weapon and squeeze the trigger.
« Last Edit: June 24, 2013, 11:41:19 PM by masterarminas »
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