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drakensis

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Re: State of the Union
« Reply #45 on: August 13, 2021, 11:06:20 AM »

Chapter 3
The Triad, Tharkad
Donegal Province, Federated Commonwealth
22 April 3067


Yvonne Steiner-Davion felt somewhat betrayed by her older brothers. She knew that it wasn’t rational to wish for but she’d somehow hoped that during the eighteen months when Peter was in the Lyran half of the Federated Commonwealth, she’d be able to hand over all her responsibilities as regent. She had her own planetary duchy to govern and was even getting married this year!

But no, Victor and Peter had both run off to the Clan frontier; and it was likely neither would be back until July at the earliest - and that assumed that the Clans were considerate.

Ha. That was a joke. Well the tears were real, even if the laughter wasn’t.

The only consolation was that she could take over Peter’s office again. She liked his desk much better than the one in the smaller office she’d been using since he returned from New Avalon. Smaller was relative, of course. It was still one of the royal office suites and the desk wasn’t technically less well-fitted out. In fact, it was perhaps a better height for her ergonomically. But her grandfather, Arthur Luvon, had handbuilt this one for his wife and it made her feel closer to her maternal grandparents.

She’d no living memories of either - Arthur had died the year their only child was born and Katrina had gone to join him less than eight months after Yvonne’s own birth. A photo of the late Archon holding her was one of Yvonne’s most treasured possessions.

Right now, reports from the Free Worlds League painted an unfortunate situation for the young regent to deal with. It was tempting to wonder what her grandmother would have done; but even though Katrina had reigned through two different civil wars in the Free Worlds League, neither had been quite like this one.

A knock on the door stirred her from reading the analysis. Looking up, Yvonne felt the corners of her mouth lift as she saw her fiance. “Tancred! Have you come to take me away from all this?”

He smiled back at her. “For a while, at least. You have a press briefing scheduled and I did promise some morale support for that.”

Yvonne frowned and checked the clock. “You’re a little early for that.”

“Well, whatever will we do with the time?”

She laughed and left her seat to join him on the couch.

Sometime later, taking advantage of the fact that she’d need to have her hair done again anyway before the briefing, Yvonne lay along the couch, head in Tancred’s lap and looking up at him. He brushed some stray locks of her hair back from her face with careful fingers. “Something’s bothering you today?” he asked, delicately not actually asking what it was.

“I’m not sure that Peter’s right to let the Blakists off the hook,” she admitted.

He rested one hand on hers, letting their fingers interlace. “That makes three of us, since he didn’t seem sure himself. But given the alternatives...”

Yvonne made a face. Tancred had been told about Catherine’s predictions, so he was aware of the nightmarish war that she’d described. While the Federated Commonwealth was probably in a much stronger position to win such a war, it seemed best to try to avoid needing to fight it in the first place. And if they actually got kicked out of the Star League, then the chances of extremists like St Jamais seizing the helm still seemed awfully high. “A part of me says that we should just lance the boil,” she confessed. “Even though I know how horribly high the cost would be.”

“There’s always the temptation as a military officer to go for a decisive engagement,” the Sandoval heir admitted quietly. “And sometimes it’s the right thing to do, to ‘put it to the touch, to win or lose it all’. But the downside of that is…”

“We might lose,” she finished flatly.

“I don’t think anyone really won the war Catherine describes.” Tancred shook his head. “Not even this Devlin Stone that we can’t even put a face to. Why is this bothering you today, particularly?”

The fact that he knew her well enough to read that eased some of the weight Yvonne felt on her shoulders. She hoped to one day have such an understanding of him as well, as their marriage grew and blossomed. “Two new pieces of news.”

The Sandoval heir said nothing, his thumb rubbing across the back of her hand in a comforting fashion.

“From the League… the Regulans have invited ComStar back in to take over their HPGs again.”

“That’s a bold move,” he conceded.

She nodded before resting her head against his thighs again. “They must have been in touch with Mori and Dow ahead of time - elements of the ComGuards are supporting the removal of the Blakists, but it’s getting nasty where the Blakist Militia is trying to hold out.”

“Reinforcements from Gibson?”

She sighed. “Kirc Cameron-Jones is also talking about ‘liberating’ the world from the Blakists. I think Gibson was a Regulan world once…”

“Mmm.” He bit his lip lightly as he thought. “Back before the Camlann decision, yes.” That had been the legal precedent that led to the relatively small number of provinces that had once made up the Free Worlds fragmenting into the current mess. Or rather, to the mess that had been the case under Janos Marik and his successor. The current morass was another matter entirely - and was bringing many of those fragments back together again as worlds looked for strong leaders to follow, giving up some of their freedoms in the hope of security.

“So if Cameron-Jones is sliding into a war with the Word anyway…”

“It’s a concern,” Tancred admitted soberly, “But we’ve all seen it coming.”

He was right, but Yvonne struggled to say it. Tancred stroked her hair soothingly, not pushing.

“The engineers taking over Odessa found something,” she managed at last. “Construction orders for jumpdrive fittings, but not for any ship that the Blakists working there say that they’ve heard of. It’s as if they were trying to hide it even from the people that were making them.”

“Fittings?” Her fiance frowned slightly and then shrugged. “I’m not really well-versed in jumpship construction.”

“Not the core itself, but the systems that are used to control it.” Yvonne swallowed. “They match exactly the specifications used at the McKenna yards on Avalon-class cruisers.”

Tancred’s thumb stopped moving and for a moment she saw his face freeze. Then he took a deep breath and pulled her up to sit in his arms. “I can see why you’re bothered.”

Unless the Blakists were, for some reason, building a copy of a Federated Commonwealth cruiser, their only need for the parts would be if they were repairing one… and there weren’t many Avalon-class ships. Every single one of them was accounted for as active parts of the Federated Commonwealth Navy… except for the FCS Lucien Davion that had fled New Avalon four years ago, carrying - as far as anyone knew - the self-proclaimed ‘Archon-Princess’. The woman who might - or might not! - be Yvonne’s older sister.

The question of what had happened to her - and of her actual identity once Peter’s companion Catherine (spelt with a C, as in cat, the woman insisted) had been confirmed as a Steiner-Davion sibling - hung over the Federated Commonwealth like a sword of Damocles. While it seemed incredible that Kathrina might be able to threaten the vast realm with only a single warship and it’s crew, she could still do a lot of damage. And no one had really expected her to successfully take over both halves of the realm in the first place. But she’d managed that once already.

She was very dangerous, very capable… and now it seemed that at a minimum she might have backers within the Word of Blake. Given a vessel that was presumed to be the Lucien Davion had supported the Capellan attempt to seize Saiph more recently, it was also possible that House Liao was backing her.

“Do they know when those parts were made?” Tancred continued after a few moments.

“Not quite three years ago,” Yvonne told him. “Which would fit if the Lucien Davion had suffered jump drive damage and needed repairs at some time before it was seen at Saiph.”

“Hmm. And they didn’t know what they were making?”

She shook her head. “Or so they claim. It was just parts for a classified project, according to their records. As well as restoring the ships that had been mothballed around Odessa IV, apparently the workshops attached to the yards have built a fair number of parts to be used elsewhere. They had a backed up request for the same sort of parts to fit an Aegis-class cruiser that’s kept being bumped back by higher priority work.”

“Ha.” Tancred shook his head. “Probably for the Immortal Spirit.”

“Oh?”

“A Blakist cruiser that hasn’t been seen in a few years. If it suffered a jumpdrive fault then that could explain it, although it’s a long time to put that work off.” He shrugged. “Does the bad news come in threes?”

Yvonne thought for a moment, but nothing came to mind. “No, I don’t have anything else about the Blakists, but I think it’s enough.”

Tancred leaned closer and kissed her cheek. “Well, let’s count our blessings. At least we now know more about where the Lucien Davion has been, so we’re one step closer to catching it.”

“I suppose that’s so.”

“St Jamais is supposed to be standing down as their Precentor Martial, and his replacement should be more moderate.”

Yvonne couldn’t help but smile at that. She’d seen the recording of the conversation where Peter had essentially bullied the Ruling Conclave into removing Cameron St Jamais. “Catherine found that hilarious.”

“Given your sister’s sense of humour, that doesn’t surprise me.” Tancred held one hand out, ticking off blessings. “And the Odessa yards will be working for the Federated Commonwealth in the future, giving us a new repair yard and depriving them of a naval base deep inside our territory. That’s three blessings to two problems; and I haven’t got to the warships we’re receiving yet. It’s not all great news, but overall I think we’re coming out ahead so far.”

Another knock on the door disturbed them.

“Who is it?” called Yvonne, annoyed that she might have to stop snuggling with Tancred.

“It’s Adele, your grace. You need to get ready for your public appearance.”

With a reluctant sigh, Yvonne got up and started looking for her shoes. She found one on her own but Tancred had to reach under the couch to recover the other - how it had got there she wasn’t sure.

Half an hour later, Duchess Yvonne Steiner-Davion of Donegal, Regent of Tharkad, was immaculately dressed and made-up, standing before hot lights and a ravening horde of journalists. Holo-cameras were recording her for transmission across the Federated Commonwealth and probably to most of the rest of the Star League.

“I can announce today that the Federated Commonwealth Navy will be reinforced later this year by five warships salvaged and then re-constructed at the Odessa yards, restored for us by the Word of Blake. Upgrades are still being completed on the vessels, necessary as these are pre-Star League hulls, but crews are already being assembled.”

Holograms sprang to life either side of her, portraying artist’s impressions of the completely restored vessels. Yvonne gestured first to one side and then the other, hoping that the images were being shown on the correct sides. “The two Pinto-class corvettes will be commissioned as the FCS Sword and the FCS Sabre. The pair of Carson-class destroyers will be commissioned as FCS Maul and FCS Mace.”

She paused to give the audience time to count up to four and realise she wasn’t finished yet. “In addition, the Fox-class corvette FCS Invincible will be renamed as FCS Tabitha Steiner in honour of my cousin who died fighting against the usurper on New Avalon four years ago. This will be necessary to avoid confusion…”

There was a rush of questions from the journalists and Yvonne held up her hand for silence. When the noise had quieted, she lowered her hand and tapped the podium in the agreed signal. Another hologram appeared above her head, this time showing off the original art of the battlecruiser that had been used on the fifty-sovereign bank note.

“Found and restored at Odessa after more than two centuries lost, the victor of the Eighth Battle of Hesperus II…” Yvonne smiled at the eager faces looking up at her… “The battlecruiser Invincible herself has returned to us.”

The room exploded with cheers.

*

Chapter 4
Port St. William, Coventry
Coventry Province, Federated Commonwealth
2 May 3067


Conner had been delayed a little by heavy traffic - the military reservation adjacent to Port Saint William was bustling as dropships moved supplies and equipment to and from the supply warehouses there. As a critical military command and logistical node, Coventry was bearing more of the burden than expected and comparatively last minute changes to deployments were hitting the port hard.

The valet took his rental car away, and the young man paused at the hotel door, self-consciously checking his reflection in the glass doors before approaching. It was a little strange to see the Steiner blue tunic instead of the Davion bottle-green he’d been accustomed to wearing in the Royal Guards.

The doorman smoothly swept the door open in front of Conner, parsing the details of his uniform without even seeming to look at it. “Can I help you with anything, Kommandant?” he asked, ushering Conner inside and out of the wind.

“I’m dining with my sister - Brigadier Sortek?”

“Of course, sir. I believe the Brigadegeneral is waiting for you in the bar.”

There must be hundreds, if not thousands of people coming in and out of the Hotel Grande everyday. The doorman being able to keep up with them - even with the help of a very discreet earbud - impressed Conner more than a little. It reminded him of some of the NCOs that kept the Fifth Royal Guards running for - and occasionally despite - the officers.

Terias Sortek was sitting on a bar-stool, the girly looking cocktail before her in contrast to her military bearing. Conner knew from personal experience that the drink was probably as deceptive as his slender sister (who had a kick like a mule).

“I didn’t keep you waiting long, did I?”

She turned her head sharply at the sound of his voice and then smirked at him. “Well, you do need the extra time to make yourself pretty. Still, you’re pretty sharp tonight, Katriel.”

“You know that’s not my name.”

“Mother calls you that all the time.”

“That was her mistake from the beginning, Tessa.”

She raised her glass in salute. “Truce, little brother. Call yourself whatever you like.”

Conner moved over to the stool next to her. “Thanks. Traffic was bad.”

“I was wondering if the chief was going to drag out your exit interview, try to change your mind. Even with a promotion…” Terias shrugged.

He shook his head in disagreement. “He wasn’t trying to get rid of me, but I think he was pleased I went for it. Said he looked forward to seeing me make my name there.” Like Terias, he didn’t drop the name of who exactly had said that. Even in the Hotel Grande, name dropping the Archon-Prince would get a lot of attention and it might not all be good.

His sister looked thoughtful. “I’ve heard some…” She paused and shook her head before changing the subject. “So are you taking your ‘Mech with you? It might be a bit large for them.”

Conner grinned. “Any ‘Mech must look large from inside your battle armour.”

“Not if I’m standing on top of it.”

“Ha.” The young kommandant touched his chest as if recognising a fencing hit. “No, I’ll be getting something to fit better with their line-up. They’ve got some new equipment arriving to fill the gaps of…” He lowered his voice almost without realising it, “the Defection.”

“You know,” she said, suddenly solemn. “That’s what the Kell Hounds called it when Morgan Kell vanished back in 3016. Do you really want to call it that?”

“It’s better than calling it ‘the divorce’.”

Right then, the maitre’d crossed over into the bar and approached them. “Brigadegeneral, Kommandant. Your table is ready when you are.”

Terias picked up her glass and left her stool, signalling she was ready now and they crossed into the hotel’s highly rated restaurant in silence.

The Defection, Conner thought. That would be his enemy for the next few years, far more than the Clans or anyone else. With the massive reinforcements in the area, the Coventry garrison was unlikely to see action but the Eighth Deneb Light Cavalry RCT would have to interact with the rest of the AFFC almost every day.

There had been rumours for over a year, but it had still come as a shock when a letter signed by hundreds of AFFC personnel had reached the Archon-Prince declaring their intention to resign their commissions and apply to join the SLDF. That, in and of itself, would have been notable only for its scale… but they had also requested to take their regimental colours with them and that was another matter entirely.

In the end it was only the Fourth Deneb Light Cavalry RCT that saw the bulk of its membership elect to make that step, but they were the leading element of the entire corps and their lineage went right back to the SLDF soldiers who’d first pledged themselves to House Davion after their comrades departed in the Exodus. Both their remaining sister Regimental Combat Teams had been decimated by those heeding the same call. And, in the eyes of many of their peers, that left them marked by the same air of disloyalty.

“I considered moving the remaining members of the Fourth across to fill the gaps in the Green Leopards and the Blur-Cheetahs,” Peter had confided to Conner, referring to the Eighth and Twelfth Deneb Light Cavalry, as they discussed his transfer out of the Fifth Royal Guards. “But I think that if I did that then they’d keep shrinking.”

Two RCTs wouldn’t be much left out of what had been six in recent memory, Conner had to agree. Instead, Peter had agreed to transfer the colours of the Fourth and of the defunct Tenth Deneb Light Cavalry to the SLDF, as well as agreeing to sell much of their equipment - and then he’d assigned what remained of the Fourth to their traditional homeworld of Deneb Kaitos and sent them the colours of the lost Fifth Deneb Light Cavalry - along with first priority to claim AFFC recruits from the world towards rebuilding the Fifth to its former glory.

That would take years though. In the meantime, the Eighth and Twelfth would need to replenish their own losses with transfers from other units and show that they could uphold the honour of their traditions. If they couldn’t, then there was little chance that resources would be made available to re-establish other lost commands from the Deneb Light Cavalry. It would literally be a fight for the survival of the corps.

“I almost wish we were still being posted out facing the Periphery,” he confided to Terias, once the soup course was served. “If we see some action then it’ll help the transferred staff gel with the existing membership. And a few pirates probably wouldn’t be too bad.”

“The problem with trial by fire is that fire burns, little brother.” She gave him a thoughtful look. “At least you’re not in Skye… I didn’t want to say in the bar, but there were rumours that the Eighth was a little too close to Robert Kelswa-Steiner.”

“Where did you hear that?”

The infantrywoman shrugged. “I had a natter with the Second Royal Guards’ infantry leadership after they were posted to Donegal.”

“I think that accusation sticks to everyone who’s been stationed in Skye these days,” Conner muttered. “Hopefully he’s out of reach here.” It was too much to hope that the claim was entirely baseless.

“Yes. And to be fair, Coventry is a good posting for rebuilding,” Terias noted. “I’m guessing your new ‘Mech will come right off Coventry Metal Works production.”

“No, it’s a Wolfhound,” he corrected her. “But we will be getting twelve new Commandos, more Wolfhounds… and one of the shipments crowding up the port should be twelve new Valkyries as well.”

Terias blinked. “I didn’t think your new regiment was that short of ‘Mechs?” It was the better part of an entire battalion of replacements, almost a third of the regiment.

“We’re not.” Conner grinned slightly. “Some older and smaller ‘Mechs will be handed down to the planetary militia. Thomas Bradford was a bit unhappy that our assignment was switched with the Third Coventry Strikers.” The Dukes of Coventry had been a major supporter of the royal dynasty since Katrina Steiner’s day, with the current duke having backed Victor to the hilt four years before. Peter Steiner-Davion’s visit was one way to cement that bond.

“I guess you’ll need to win him over.” She finished her soup and dropped her spoon in the bowl. “And if you won’t have pirates to fight, I’m sure that the Fourteenth Donegal Guards will be happy to run training exercises against you.”

The Fourteenth Donegal Guards wasn’t widely considered to be one of AFFC’s elite units but under the leadership of Adam Steiner they’d managed to make their mark of late. With the general now elevated to command all the forces in Coventry Province, they’d make up the other half of the garrison force of the provincial capital.

“I expect they will.” Conner reached over to the breadbasket and picked up a roll, tearing it open and using it to wipe up the dregs of the soup from the bowl.

Terias gave him a sour look. “Mother would have something to say about your table manners.”

“This is really nice soup!” he protested.

She sighed heavily. “Barbarian.”

“You’re just spoiled by the chief’s refined royal manners.”

“His manners aren’t all that refined,” she said absently.

“Oh, were you watching for that?” he asked slyly.

Conner was only joking, but Terias froze for a moment before laughing at his jibe. “Well now that you’re out of the Guards, I’m the only Sortek there to keep him out of trouble.”

“It’s a big job,” he replied, not quite as quickly as he’d have liked as he tried to guess at what lay behind his big sister’s reaction. “Try to get his manners fixed up before the next Whitting Conference, we don’t want him embarrassing the Federated Commonwealth.”

“I didn’t say Peter was that bad either.”

I’m probably reading too much into this, Conner thought. Terias was a little older than Peter - it was a family joke that the Sorteks and the Steiner-Davions had alternated children for almost a decade - and he knew that they’d met fairly often as children. But it was funny. “Yeah, plus keeping the gold diggers away from him is probably more important than his manners.”

His sister’s eyes narrowed dangerously at that prospect. “Talk about vicious battlefields!” she almost spat.

“Is something wrong?” the waiter approaching to collect their dishes asked nervously, apparently spotting her body language

“Just the conversation touching on an unfortunate subject,” Conner reassured him, seeing his sister’s cheeks colouring at being caught in her heated reaction. Maybe I’m not reading too much into it after all...
Logged

drakensis

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Re: State of the Union
« Reply #46 on: August 13, 2021, 11:07:24 AM »

Chapter 5
Old Connaught, Arc-Royal
Donegal Province, Federated Commonwealth
24 May 3067


Peter Steiner-Davion had been visiting a school on one of the many formal visits expected of any ruler who presumed to stray from the environs of his capital or the battlefield. It had been fairly standard - some child barely waist-high in comparison to the Archon-Prince had given him flowers on behalf of the community, there had been a ribbon for him to cut for the opening of some conveniently newly-completed part of the school, he’d made a speech and the children had been allowed to ask some questions.

The little boy who asked how he could get rid of his older sisters the same way Peter had Kathrina was probably not going to enjoy his evening. Peter was just glad he’d not been using his water glass when it was asked. He’d managed to keep what he hoped was a level tone in explaining that he’d not misplaced the former Archon intentionally; and would, in fact, rather like to know where she was.

Exactly what Peter would do should he get his hands on Kathrina was a question he occasionally turned over in his mind late at night. On the one hand, he had a lot of questions, but on the other… would he be able to trust the answers?

Other than that question, the non-standard aspect had been a terse text message advising that for non-emergency reasons, he should consider cancelling his schedule for the rest of the day and returning to Old Connaught. While Peter would have accepted almost any excuse to get out of another chicken dinner with local dignitaries, he’d withheld the decision to drop the duty on Lucy Davion until he could get somewhere private and receive a more detailed explanation.

That conversation had put him in a helicopter making a high speed run back to the planetary capital, the chicken dinner replaced by a hastily organised order from one of the local takeaways. The circumstances didn’t make the burgers and fries any more digestible than the chicken would have been - which was a shame because he suspected they’d been rather nice.

Anticipation was a good sauce, but only when you were anticipating the food - not bad news.

Peter almost leapt from the VTOL the moment it was on the ground and a staff car whisked him away towards the Kell Hounds’ headquarters - which doubled in the same role for the planetary militia and currently as the forward command centre for all of Donegal Province. “Is it as bad as it sounds?” he asked Terias Sortek, who had been waiting for him.

The late Ardan Sortek’s daughter looked serious. “News is still coming in, but given we’re still getting new reports from further and further away… it might be worse.”

“What’s the latest?”

She shook her head. “We’re beginning to get reports from Melissia theatre as well…”

Peter took a deep breath. “We’re fighting on a broad front then.” The Lyran State Command divided its share of the Federated Commonwealth’s long borders into Theatres. The province of Donegal contained Pandora theatre, facing the Jade Falcons, and Kelenfold theatre, facing the shorter border with Clan Wolf and the new Rasalhague-Ghost Bear union. Melissia theatre was Coventry province’s own border with the Falcons. If that was being hit as well as both of the Donegal theatres then the entire Clan border was (figuratively) on fire.

“That’s what it looks like.”

He slammed his fist down on the armrest, started to speak and then paused, breathing in and trying to let the anger go as he exhaled. Old lessons from St Marinus. “A new strategy then. And we’re facing both the Jade Falcons and the Wolves.”

Terias nodded seriously. “It’s not outside of the contingencies planned for. But…”

“Yes. But.” Peter sat back and rubbed his jaw in thought. Nothing new suggested itself, the possible scenarios had been discussed for years now. “Thanks for coming to get me.”

She smiled thinly. “I wouldn’t want to have to explain myself to cousin Bishop if I lost you.”

The car pulled into an underground garage and multiple doors closed behind them, securing the bunker-like entrance against many forms of attack. Security dogs and men with complex electronics swept the car first and then each of them individually as they exited the vehicle.

The time it took to pass through the successive security barriers was only measured in minutes but to Peter they felt like hours. When he entered the command centre at last, the dim lighting and flashes as screens updated with new data left him bewildered for a moment, but the central holographic display drew him in and he found familiar faces around it.

“Sorry to interrupt the formal banquet,” his brother greeted him. “I know you were looking forward to the chicken a la carte.”

Peter tossed the slightly soggy bag half-full of fries he’d not finished at Victor. “Don’t say I never give you anything.” He glanced at the others. “Morgan. Phelan.”

“Peter.” The grey-bearded mercenary was sober as he looked up. “It seems that we’re facing a general offensive.”

In contrast, Phelan Kell was laser-focused on his display. “We knew Marthe Pryde and Vlad Ward were political allies but I didn’t expect this. They aren’t competing for worlds, I think we’re dealing with designated targets under a joint strategy.” He indicated amethyst and jade lights over worlds marked in the blue of the Federated Commonwealth. “See how Vlad’s Wolves are hitting Pandora theatre while the Jade Falcons are hitting Kelenfold?”

Peter nodded. While the latter theatre didn’t directly face them, it was still within reach for the Jade Falcons. But for the Wolves to strike at the worlds they were, they must have either bypassed the Jade Falcon’s worlds or been given free passage. “Not just allies, but a coordinated plan?”

His elder (and now only, Peter remembered with a pang of sorrow) brother nodded sharply. “Exactly.”

Morgan Kell expanded the map to reveal the full border rather than only that of Donegal Province. “So far we haven’t had any report of attacks on the Mkuranga region,” he observed, indicating a small cluster of systems on the Coventry side of the border between the provinces. “It seems that the Falcon efforts against Adam’s command region are focused on the salients driven into their Occupation Zone.”

“That’s more in line what we thought we might face,” agreed Peter. It would be unfortunate if the worlds liberated were lost again, but it would also mean not facing a drive deeper into the Federated Commonwealth. “But here we have the Falcons beginning what could be a drive towards Terra along our flank… would the Wolves-in-Name-Only allow that without joining the race?”

Phelan shook his head. “That joke’s getting old, your highness. But no, Vlad wouldn’t risk the Jade Falcons becoming ilClan if they somehow succeeded.”

Victor reached into the holo-display and outlined the worlds facing attack by the Wolf Clan. “Crimond, Koniz, A Place, Morges… even Pasig up in Coventry province. They have one thing in common.”

“Yes.” Phelan looked up at Peter, eyes glittering in the reflected light. It gave him a somewhat inhuman aspect. “All of those worlds have elements of my Clan among their garrison. Vlad is targeting my Wolves.”

“If that’s the case then he’ll have to come here.” Arc-Royal was where Victor had granted the Warden faction of Clan Wolf an enclave to settle within the Federated Commonwealth during his reign, and it was still the home of the vast bulk of their people. “And Arc-Royal is almost halfway to Tharkad.”

“Marthe came even further when she struck at Coventry back in ‘58,” the Khan warned.

“Alright. Options?” Peter thought that he was up-to-date on the plans for this situation, but it was possible he was overlooking something.

The other three men exchanged looks. “Do you want to request assistance from the Star League?” asked Victor. “It’ll affect what forces are available.”

“What would that do in the short-term?” asked Terias. “Except for the ComGuards, there’s no one with forces in the area right now.”

Victor nodded in agreement, but his face said otherwise. “This won’t be over in a few weeks. If we want help we should be considering it now. I think we can count on the ComGuards. Some of their divisions are on worlds already under attack, but if we want the SLDF to redeploy from their positions in the Free Worlds League then we should ask as soon as possible.”

Peter rubbed his jaw and then shook his head. “I don’t trust Sun-Tzu Liao, and the other likely sources of troops are doing us more good as it is. The DCMS garrisons along the Ghost Bear’s border should hopefully keep them from getting involved or tie them up if they do. And the SLDF’s current deployments are the only reason we’ve been able to pull as many forces from the Marik border as we have.”

“You might be being a little ambitious,” warned Morgan. “The DCMS managed a win against the Ghost Bears but that was one Clan that was already under pressure from their neighbours. Two Clans working together could be more difficult.”

“We already have the ComGuards and Phelan’s Wolves alongside us,” Peter told him, hoping he wasn’t laying on the flattery of the Khan’s forces too thick. “If a third Clan was involved then that might be another matter, but we have more regiments and jumpships mustered here than my father needed in order to crush half the Capellan Confederation. The Clans aren’t an unknown quantity any more, so while I’d rather fight one Clan at a time, if they both want to hit us at once then I believe we’re ready for the challenge.

“Marthe is using her warships aggressively.” Phelan pointed at icons over Orkney. “The Second Federated Commonwealth has reported limited bombardment of the main military dropport attached to their base.” His face darkened. “Half a regiment of your infantry and thousands of tons of supplies were lost. If that’s a pattern, you may need to bring in more warships.”

Peter hesitated. The truth was, that was one area where the Clans still had an edge in numbers. Between them, Wolf-in-Name-Only and the Jade Falcons might have as many warships as the entire Federated Commonwealth Navy and while some of them would be guarding their homeworlds, more than half his own fleet was positioned to keep his neighbours honest. What was left would be outnumbered and outmassed, even with the squadron at Phelan’s command. “The ships I extorted from the Blakists won’t be available until late in the year,” he admitted. “They won’t be fit for immediate use but they can at least replace one of our other squadrons. Until then, all I can do is expedite the corvettes for your fleet.”

He’d promised two Fox-class corvettes in repayment for the naval support Phelan’s Wolves had provided three years ago. The ships were nearly ready for launch - if trials were carried out on the move as they headed for the frontlines, they could be at Arc-Royal by the autumn.

Morgan stroked his beard. “What about the ComGuards?”

“I’m sorry.” Victor shook his head. “Learning about Odessa has alarmed them about the size of the Blakist fleet. Until we have a better idea what they have and where, Dow is keeping his own warships on a tight leash. There may be a few ships escorting their transports but the bulk of the ComGuards fleet won’t be available. And...” He glanced at Peter.

“And I’m not his favorite person.”

Phelan snorted. “You making secret deals with the Word of Blake hasn’t made you any friends in ComStar, Peter. I am not a huge fan of either group of toaster-worshippers, but at least ComStar is the devil we know.”

“I have a similar deal with ComStar on New Syrtis,” Peter pointed out, thinking of the Faslane-class yardship being laid down on the far side of the Federated Commonwealth.

“That makes it worse,” Victor told him. “Dow and the Primus thought that that meant you were on their side. But now they’re worried that their investment could be used against them.”

And I can’t exactly tell them - or any of you - that Odessa wasn’t something I knew about all the time, Peter thought. Terias was the only other person in the room who knew that. Victor’s discretion wasn’t legendary, Phelan’s loyalties were divided at the best of times and Morgan both had no need to know and if he knew then Peter would have to tell him to keep it secret from his son, expressing his distrust.

“Too late to change any of that now.” Peter walked around the holotable and examined the map. “Alright, options. Where can we hold them, where are reinforcements likely to make a difference…” He paused and looked up, “And where can we hit them back?”

Victor examined him for a moment and then nodded in what appeared to be approval. “The numbers of WiNO forces suggest that the Wolf touman is heavily committed. I suggest we hit them.”

“I would really appreciate it if you dropped that nickname and the acronym,” Phelan almost whined.

The two Steiner-Davions exchanged looks of agreement that they’d tortured their distant cousin enough… for now, at least.

“Out of our contingency planning, Operation North Star and Operation Southern Cross both involve seizing worlds in the Wolf Occupation Zone,” Victor continued. “Because the target worlds border the Jade Falcons, they’d also pose a threat to Marthe Pryde and she may feel she has to pull troops out of her attacks in case we use them as bases against her.”

“I discussed North Star with Adam,” Peter confirmed. “Using Twycross as a launching point for the Ceti Hussars?”

“That’s the one. Southern Cross doesn’t have a similar base, but the Occupation Zone is narrower here anyway and we’d be sending four Regimental Combat Teams, not three.”

Peter nudged Phelan aside and overlaid both operations onto the holotable map, studying them. Then he nodded sharply. “Launch Southern Cross. I’ll instruct Adam to carry out North Star as well.”

Morgan hissed between his teeth. “You’re sending seven Regimental Combat Teams a long way behind enemy lines. You could lose them all.”

“What struck me,” he told the older man, “When I read about Operation Bulldog and Operation Serpent, was how outraged the Clans were that we would dare fight back at all. They seemed to think that what they hold is inviolable and what we hold is negotiable. I could lose those troops trying to hold the line here but this war won’t be won on the defensive.”

He reached out and tapped the icon of the Falcon capital on Sudeten and then the Wolf capital of Tamar. “These are Federated Commonwealth worlds, and I’ll see them free of the Clans again.”

“Just as long as none of those RCTs you commit are the Fifth Royal Guards,” Terias murmured from Peter’s side. “You’re not getting away from the Chicken a la Carte circuit that easily, your highness.”

*

Chapter 6
The Triad, Tharkad
Donegal Province, Federated Commonwealth
29 June 3067


A chill went down Yvonne Steiner-Davion’s spine. “I’m sorry, say that again?”

“There was a warship engagement in the outer Coventry system this morning.” Admiral Martin Raeder was the senior naval officer on Tharkad and he filled the uniform well, though he hadn’t had an active command since before Yvonne’s mother died. Admittedly, at the time the Federated Commonwealth hadn’t had any active warships in two hundred years...

“We don’t have any warships at Coventry. Do we?” Yvonne turned and looked at Caesar Steiner.

The General of Armies folded his arms. “We don’t, no. We weren’t the combatants.”

The youngest person in the room pressed the heels of her hands against her forehead. Yvonne had been was about to go to bed. It had been a long day and she was going to need more caffeine to deal with this; and that meant she’d not sleep well and she wanted to just put this off but Uncle Caesar wouldn’t come to her at this hour unless it was time critical…

Restraining the desire to scream, she tightened the robe she’d thrown on when the staff interrupted her ablutions. “Coffee. Then an explanation, please.”

The ever-efficient staff had a steaming mug ready for her and Yvonne added two sugar-cubes, stirring vigorously to dissolve them. The first mouthful was almost scalding; and the hit of caffeine and sugar burned away the cobwebs.

“Alright. Who besides us had warships in Coventry? The Clans?”

“We only have remote data and a transmission from the other vessel, but we believe that six of the seven warships involved were one of Clan Jade Falcon’s Naval Stars. Field Marshal Steiner believed at the time of transmission that one of the Falcon’s vessels is out of action as a result - it’s harder to tell whether the others are damaged.”

Well that’s one less, Yvonne thought. “Who else?”

Raeder looked uncomfortable. “Before it was destroyed, the vessel sent a transmission claiming to be the Word of Blake ship Immortal Spirit. That’s a -”

“Aegis-class cruiser. I thought it was missing… jump drive damage was the theory.” Yvonne heard no reply and then looked up to see the two military officers staring at her in surprise. “It came up in conversation once. What is it doing in Coventry of all places?”

“They didn’t tell us,” Caesar told her. “All we received was a tactical feed covering from the moment they picked up the jump flares until a few seconds before they were destroyed. And a brief text message stating ‘go tell the Spartans’.”

“The… who?” She hated feeling out of the loop. “Who are the Spartans?”

“It’s a classical reference, your grace,” Caesar explained. “‘Go tell the Spartans, stranger passing by, here the obedient lie’. It’s the translation of a classical greek inscription on the memorial to a unit of Spartan soldiers who died to the last trying to hold a narrow pass against overwhelming numbers. Essentially, ‘tell our families we died with honour’.”

Yvonne paused and sipped her coffee again. “I see. And the Falcons?”

“They’re making for Coventry itself, your grace. And once they knew to look in that direction, the Field Marshal’s headquarters were able to confirm that transport jumpships also arrived. There is an invasion force on the way.”

Even she realised that this was bad: losing a major logistical and command hub like Coventry would seriously endanger operations across hundreds of light years. “Can they hold?”

Caesar Steiner spread his hands. “Adam is very able, and two Regimental Combat Teams would be a match for a Clan galaxy of comparable experience… but we don’t know exactly what forces are being committed and the Eighth Deneb Light Cavalry may be shaky. They were posted to Coventry to give them time to recover.”

“And now that time is down to what, a week?”

“About double that,” Raider corrected her. “Coventry’s star has an unusually deep gravity well. Fortunately, the message from the Immortal Spirit alerted us or they might have managed to get much closer before we detected them.”

“And what can we send in response? Where are our nearest warships?” Running reinforcements in if the Jade Falcons had warships blockading Coventry would be suicide without warships of their own. And after the effective loss of the Second FedCom Regimental Combat Team on Tomans, and the Third Lyran Regulars on Newtown Square, it was safe to assume that the Jade Falcons would go ahead and use their warships for at least tactical level fire support from orbit.

“There are none that can arrive in time,” the Admiral advised flatly. “The nearest available force to respond is the squadron protecting Tharkad, but unless we send parts of the capital garrison with them, they’ll also need to rendezvous with troops pulled off the frontlines. And Coventry is four jumps away, it would take most of a month to get there.”

Caesar Steiner gave his subordinate an irritated look. “With the lithium fusion batteries and not waiting for ground units to embark and reach transports, the warships could make it via a proximity point in time.”

“Even without ground forces, I wouldn’t recommend less than twenty days,” Raeder corrected him. “It’s not just charging the drives, they also need to cool. Pushing faster than that has a high risk of losing vessels to a misjump. We only have two cruisers and four corvettes here at Tharkad. The Falcons may have lost a corvette, but we aren’t even sure of that yet, and the data from the Blakists supports that they have at least three cruisers and a battleship in their force.”

“They’ve been damaged.”

“But we don’t know how much!” The Admiral shook his head. “Losing just a single ship could mean the squadron arrives too weak to do anything useful, and we could lose half of them - billions of sovereigns of hardware and hundreds of irreplaceable trained space crews - for nothing.”

Yvonne raised her hand. “Enough.”

Both men fell silent as she rose to her feet and walked to the window, looking out at the frozen courtyards and gardens around the Triad. At this time of night they were almost deserted, lit less by the stars above than by the lights of the palace. It was an odd mix of pools of light among shadows that didn’t quite hide the outlines of the formal hedges and flowerbeds.

“If the squadron makes it, they can’t realistically prevent landings?”

“No,” Raeder admitted. “The sheer weight of numbers is against them.”

“Can they contest orbital dominance? Buy time for more forces to arrive?”

“Yes.” Caesar Steiner nodded and then glanced quellingly at Raeder. “Assuming that they arrive at full strength. The Fox-class can punch above their weight and the Jade Falcon warships appear to be old Star League designs that we’ve wargamed against extensively.”

I wish I could pass this to Peter, she thought. Or call Catherine. Either of them has a better feel for this sort of decision than I do. “And since you’re here now, we need a decision urgently?”

“If the warships are to arrive in time then every hour will count,” admitted the old General.

What had Victor said once to Peter? An adequate plan now was better than a perfect plan too late to be used? Something like that. She leaned close enough to the window that it fogged. Maybe she could call Tancred and…

In the reflection of the window she saw Caesar Steiner looking at her, while Raeder was looking sidelong at his superior.

No, Yvonne realised. I am Peter’s regent. Tancred could advise me but at the end of the day, I must decide. And I trust Uncle Caesar not to withhold information I need. At least, as long as I realise I need it and think to ask.

What to do? What to say? What would they do?

“Uncle.”

“Yes, Yvonne?”

“Catherine mentioned something… actually she mangled it in trying to express something else, I think. But something about three years to build a ship and three centuries…”

The general tilted his head in thought. “I believe I know the one. When asked if he should hazard his ships in a dangerous evacuation of ground forces, an old wet-navy admiral declared that it would take the navy three years to build a new ship, but it would take three hundred years for them to build a new tradition. The tradition being that the navy would deliver his nation’s army to hostile shores and evacuate them if needed. Which was often necessary at the time, as I recall it.”

“Yes. That sounds fitting.” Yvonne looked up, wondering if she could see the ships of the squadron up in the sky. Unlikely, given the lights of the palace, and she had no idea where they might be anyway. “Admiral, you would not hesitate to take the squadron into battle?”

Raeder drew himself up. “I would not, your grace.”

“If we can afford to risk them in battle, then we can afford to risk them in a dangerous voyage,” Yvonne told them, turning to face the two men. “I pray that they will arrive safely and I pray that they will emerge victorious. But these are the hazards of the service.”

“Your grace.” The admiral drew himself up and saluted formally. “With your permission, I will accompany the vessels.”

“Does the squadron not have an admiral?”

“They do.”

Yvonne shook her head slightly in denial of the request. “Then I must ask that you continue in your current post.”

Caesar Steiner reached over and put one comforting hand on the admiral’s epauletted shoulder. “Their burden is to run the risks, Martin. Our burden is to watch them go without sharing those risks. No officer of good conscience enjoys the latter.”
« Last Edit: August 13, 2021, 01:49:05 PM by drakensis »
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Takiro

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Re: State of the Union
« Reply #47 on: August 13, 2021, 11:36:05 AM »

State of the Union II
Stacalkas-Nomen

Looking forward to reading all of this!
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drakensis

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Re: State of the Union
« Reply #48 on: August 15, 2021, 10:28:47 AM »

Part Two - Coventry

I've got this burning like my veins are filled
With nothing but gasoline.
And with a spark,
It's gonna be the biggest fire they've ever seen.
Cut me down or let me run,
Either way it's all gonna burn...
The only way that they'll ever learn
Light Up The Night - Protomen, Act II


Chapter 7
The Great Gash, Twycross
Coventry Province, Federated Commonwealth
3 July 3067


This could have gone better, Jon Davion thought as he watched a lance of Alacorn tanks grind their way into the narrow confines of the best route through the Windbreak Mountains. The massive tanks’ hulls had been scarred and cratered by weapons fire, all driving with their turrets rotated to aim backwards - in case the invaders somehow penetrated the rearguard and set upon them again.

At least this lance was at full strength. Many of the other lances that had already gone past Jon had been depleted by casualties - and not all of those casualties were being dragged into the Great Gash. There were only so many recovery vehicles anyway. The Davion Heavy Guards hadn’t been routed, but the attack hadn’t been what they were expecting either.

A light on one of his cockpit’s many secondary consoles alerted him that someone in the Regimental Combat Team’s headquarters section was trying to reach him; and Jon hit the control to accept the call.

“General,” the speaker declared as soon as the call connected, “It’s Colonel Karner.”

“I hear you, Colonel.”

The Karner family had had many members in the Heavy Guards over the centuries of their service. The regiments of the Davion Guards didn’t just pick the best and brightest out of other regiments, there was also a strong element of family tradition. It was cronyism, but it also helped to maintain the Brigade of Guards’ near flawless record of loyalty: a man or woman might betray a prince, but they were far less likely to let down their family. And to fail both… unthinkable - at least for those who made the cut. Even among traditional families, not everyone was selected for the Davion Guards.

Colonel Wendy Karner, commander of the Heavy Guards’ ‘Mech regiment, had been a classmate of the legendary Kai Allard-Liao and (during the latter’s exchange year from the Nagelring) of Victor Steiner-Davion. Rumour had it that if Allard-Liao hadn’t changed his mind about entering the Davion Guards, she might not have made the cut that year. If so, it was hard for Jon to see how she might have been bettered. Her personal ‘Mech - a Devastator that was one of the heaviest ‘Mechs in the regiment - had battle honours for a decade and a half of skirmishes and battles, including battles against the Smoke Jaguars during Operation Bulldog. During the Battle of New Avalon she’d inherited command of the regiment from Marshal Adelmana and led it effectively while Jon had commanded from his then post as leader of the armoured brigade.

“Did the message get through?” he continued, wondering what Karner made of his leadership so far - his first major action since New Avalon.

“Yes sir,” she answered crisply. “The signal has been sent.”

“Good.” Rather than being hit in the first wave of Jade Falcon attacks, Twycross had first been isolated when the Clanners had stormed Blackjack: the only Federated Commonwealth world that was within HPG range. Until Blackjack was retaken - or some other occupied world within fifty light years was liberated - the only communication between Jon’s command and the outside universe would be the secretive ‘black boxes’ that provided the military with more limited options than ComStar’s HPGs. “At least we can alert Marshal Steiner and the rest of high command that the Hells Horses have joined the invasion.”

And hadn’t that come as a nasty surprise, Jon thought to himself. The incoming dropships had been detected, of course - fusion torches were rarely subtle - but they’d fought ferociously to keep his aerospace fighter contingent from getting close. He’d assumed that it was just an understandable desire to protect the transport dropships from being damaged or destroyed; but both that and the lack of a traditional Clan battle challenge - batchall, as they put it - had also masked that he wasn’t facing the Jade Falcons.

Clan Hells Horses were comparatively unknown to the Inner Sphere. They hadn’t participated in the original invasion back in 3052, arriving at some point after the Great Refusal had ended the threat of a resumed invasion by all the Clans. Even now that they had a presence in the Inner Sphere, they had thus far clashed only with the other Clans until Clan Wolf had ceded them a few impoverished worlds that had once been pirate nests along the edge of the Periphery.

So far as Jon recalled, the only previous occasion when the Hells Horses had fought anyone from the Inner Sphere had been on the Clans’ capital world of Strana Mechty. During the Great Refusal, a small unit of Rasalhague’s Third Drakons regiment had faced a similarly picked unit of the Clan in a set-piece trial by combat: one of the eight fought that had decided the end of the Invasion. The Horses had been defeated then, but perhaps it had taught them something of how to adapt to the Inner Sphere.

Jon’s hope to pick off one of the four Clusters of troops being landed had fallen apart when the Heavy Guards had found themselves facing not the rigidly traditional Clan Jade Falcon but a far more flexible force who understood how to utilise ‘Mechs, infantry and even armoured fighting vehicles together effectively. It was possible that he could have defeated the Cluster anyway, but the cost would have been higher than Jon would have liked, in lives and in time. The former was forgivable, if never to be paid unnecessarily, but the latter would have allowed the other three Clusters to outflank his command.

“General McDonald wants to speak to you, sir,” Karner continued.

“Of course.”

There was a click and then he heard Linda McDonald’s distinctive Skye accent. While many of her officers were from Arcturus itself or one of the other core worlds of Donegal province, the commander of the Eleventh Arcturan Guards was a very visible exception. What that meant about her ultimate loyalties was unclear to Jon and to the AFFC’s own internal security. “General, my information is that you’re pulling back through the Windbreak Mountains.”

“Your information is accurate. It’ll take us ten to twelve hours, but once we reach the other end we can turn the Great Gash into a killing ground.” Forced to emerge from the narrows only a few at a time, any Clan pursuit could be hammered by overwhelming numbers. “How are your Guards managing?”

“I regret that we weren’t able to keep the other Clusters from responding to your attack,” she said as stiffly as her accent allowed. “However, the decision of their leaders to focus on pushing back the Heavy Guards prevented us from drawing them away.”

“The enemy always gets a vote,” he told her reassuringly. “That’s why they’re called the enemy. What losses did you take?”

“Not heavy - although we didn’t do more than sting them either. Both sides are fully disengaged.” She paused a second. “I must register a concern with your plan to hold the Hells Horses at the Gash. Have you observed the weather reports?”

Jon frowned. That sounded ominous. “Not since the morning. Let me update.”

One of the many datafeeds available through the battle-computers were meteorology reports - a considerable factor on Twycross, where the storms were so violent that the majority of the population lived underground. Jon studied the predictions for the next few days and restrained a curse. The Diabolis, a notoriously savage storm that had swept back and forth since before human colonisation of the planet without ever dissipating once, was both ramping up in intensity and veering back towards the Windbreak mountains.

If he tried to hold firing positions couvering the exit to the pass, his troops would be exposed to the fury of the storm while the Hells Horses would be sheltered by the mountains. Visibility would be terrible, preventing units with long-range weapons such as the Alacorns he’d seen earlier from supporting the forces right on the frontlines. His conventional infantry would be essentially helpless. Was even the planet conspiring against them?! “I see what you mean, general. You are quite correct, we cannot hold them at the mouth of the Great Gash.”

He could almost see McDonald nod. “I have a detachment of mountain troops ready to board their dropships,” she informed him. “They can make a low altitude run to join your troops and set up defensive positions in the canyons, buying you time to disengage. I agree that we need to draw this out until we have a better idea of the Hells Horses’ numbers and tactics. We don’t know which units we’re fighting yet.”

Jon reached up into his neurohelmet and rubbed his moustache for a moment. “No,” he decided after a moment’s thought. “Given that we do know that the Horses have a substantial force of battle armour, they would have the advantage in the close quarters of the Gash, unusual as it is for that to be the case when we fight the Clans. Your mountain troops would fight bravely, but I’d be trading their lives for barely a day.” And trading Arcturan Guards for Davion Guards, which would be political hell. “Not to mention that the dropships might not make it here - it’s all our fighters can do to keep the Horses from ruling the skies, there’s no assurance that they wouldn’t see your dropships and decide it was worthwhile to focus in and obtain local superiority against them.”

He considered his options. Maybe… yes, it was just crazy enough that it might work. “Do what you can to slow their advance on the factories, General. I’ll try to keep them away from the capital, but if we have to lose one of them we can get along better without Camora than we can without the Trellshire Heavy Industries facilities.” Without offworld supplies, the factory complex was their best chance of keeping the ‘Mechs and armoured vehicles of the Eleventh Guards and Heavy Guards operational.

“Understood, General Davion.” There was an unspoken: ‘I hope you know what you’re doing.’

He cut the channel and opened another to the Mobile HQ truck acting as a hub for the Regimental Command Team’s communications. “Senior Warrant, have you identified the communications frequencies that the Hells Horses are using.”

The man hesitated. “We have several pinpointed, sir. Some may be decoys, but we haven’t managed to break their encryption yet.”

“That’s fine, I just want to speak to them.”

“To speak to them, sir?” There was a questioning note to the reply, the traditional cue that a non-commissioned officer (or warrant officer in this case) was politely asking if an officer had lost his mind.

“Why absolutely.” John felt his lips curl into a smile. “After all, these are new visitors to the Federated Commonwealth. The least we can do is let them know who’s giving them such a warm welcome.”

“Ah, you have it, General.” He heard the warrant officer typing. “I’m sending you a patch that’ll let you transmit unencrypted on every channel they seem to be using.”

As he waited for his ‘Mech’s battle computer to digest the update and prepare for it, John unlocked the legs of his Rakshasa and joined the flow of troops moving west. It wouldn’t do for him to be left behind. The desert camouflage on the ‘Mechs and equipment around him bore red-white-and blue roundels marking them as belonging to the Davion Brigade of Guards. The heavy ‘Mech’s digitigrade legs ate up the distance easily and he paused five kilometres further west, backing the ‘Mech into a dead-end gully.

Activating the new channel on his comms, Jon spent a moment trying to get into the right mindset. Don’t use contractions, he thought. Do not. Not ‘don’t’. Clanners hate contractions, and I do not need them to hate me… at least not yet.

“This is General Jon Davion, commanding the defenders of Twycross. I request to speak to my counterpart among the warriors of Clan Hells Horses.”

He waited and was about to repeat his request when a clipped voice replied: “I am Galaxy Commander Danielle Amirault of the Hells Horses’ Lightning Riders. Do the vaunted Davion Guards wish to surrender after only today’s brief engagement?”

Jon laughed politely at the stilted insult. He’d heard worse from Draconis Combine Mustered Soldiery soldiers even when they were technically allies, as had been the case for most of his career. “Not at all, Galaxy Commander. I merely wished to offer you safcon.” Lightning Riders? What did that signify? He made sure the conversation was highlighted for his intelligence staff, to see what they could make of it.

“Safcon?” the Clanswoman seemed amused at hearing the offer of safe conduct from him. “In case you have not noticed, General Jon, my forces have already landed upon this world.”

“They have, but we have a choice of where we next battle,” he pointed out, hoping that the name indicated her command favoured more mobile combat. “If you prefer to force the canyons in a gruelling frontal assault, paying for every centimetre with the blood of your warriors then this can easily be accomplished but it is little mark of our respective skills, only the armour and tenacity of our troops. As an alternative, the plains to the west present the opportunity to test each other’s skills openly.”

Amirault seemed to hesitate fractionally. “What advantage do you pursue by making me this offer?”

“Galaxy Commander, the route through these mountains is known as the Great Gash. In those confines, the Falcon Guards were slain by a single mechwarrior - and a Khan of Clan Wolf was killed by a foe she deemed fallen already. It is a treacherous battlefield and it could turn against either of us. I believe in my command’s ability to face you on any ground but I believe that in these confines the deciding factor would be luck rather than skill.”

There was another pause - he thought he heard the whisper of someone giving advice - and then the Galaxy Commander answered: “And how can I know that this is not a trap? You spheroids are known to be treacherous yourselves.”

How to convince her…? Jon switched his tone slightly, attempting to emulate some of the aristocratic hauteur he’d encountered under other officers - mostly arrogant fools, but not all of them - that considered their birth more important than their accomplishments. “I swear by the name of my ancestor, Alexander Davion, who stood among the founders of the Star League, that my offer is in good faith. I shall neither mine the passes, ambush you nor practise any other form of attack on you in or near this mountain range.” It had always amused him to hear that tone, because at least in his experience he’d never heard it from any of House Davion: by definition the most ‘well-born’ of all of the Suns. So who did those prigs think they were imitating?

“You say this, but are you not also descended from the accursed John Davion - named for him in fact - who exiled our Great Father and broke the Star League?”

“Actually, neither is true.” And he wasn’t even lying. “Many Davions have used different forms of that name. The John Davion - spelt with an H - who ended the Star League was descended of Alexander’s son Vincent. My name is spelt without an H and I trace my ancestry to another of Alexander’s offspring, Vincent’s brother Roger.”

“I see.” Amirault’s tone softened slightly, sounding almost… amused. “State your terms.”

Jon glanced at the clock. “A temporary ceasefire, starting on the hour and lasting exactly twenty-four hours. For the first twelve hours my forces can use the pass to cross the mountains, for the second you will have similarly uncontested use of it.”

“Any of your forces still in the pass after your twelve hours expire must surrender,” she demanded. “I demand the right to send an observation force up to pass to watch for any breach of those terms and ensure you are not simply encamping at the exit to assault us as we complete our crossing.”

With just over twelve hours, any of the Davion Heavy Guards that couldn’t make it would likely not be able to escape across the plains anyway, he thought. “That’s acceptable, but your observer force should be no more than a Star - and I want uncontested use of the airspace above the Gash for my evacuation.”

“A Nova Star of observers,” she countered.

“Bargained well and done,” Jon answered, before she could add any more requirements.

Amirault laughed for the first time. “Indeed. I shall be prepared to avenge any betrayal, General Jon. However, I hope that you are indeed the worthy, honourable opponent that you claim to be.” The channel cut out sharply.

Jon took a deep breath and then switched to speaking to his staff. “I’ve offered the Clans a twenty-four hour ceasefire in exchange for free passage through the Great Gash. We have twelve hours to get all our equipment, supplies and personnel across the mountains. After that, they’ll be crossing and we need to get well clear before Diabolis hits.”

“That’s good to hear, sir,” Wendy Karner agreed, ahead of anyone else commenting. “I’ve checked what we have on the Lightning Raiders and it appears to be the nickname of the Hells Horses’ Delta Galaxy. It’s got a somewhat nebulous status - a secondline formation but with frontline equipment. It’s an odd choice for an invasion.”

“Interesting. They’re sending a Nova up the canyon to observe that we’re not luring them into a trap,” he advised her. “I want everyone given a heads up - lock weapons out as they go past. I’m not as married to my word as I want them to think, but for now we’ll play it straight and I don’t want any accidents. When they reach my position, I’ll head up the canyon with them.”

“That could leave you exposed if this is a headhunter attack, sir.”

“It’s a possibility, but I want a first-hand look at them. Information isn’t exactly ammunition, but knowing your foe is the basics of basics, Wendy.”

There was more discussion and he’d almost lost track of time when he was alerted that the Hells Horses had nearly reached his position. Powering the Rakshasa up again, he moved it up to the flow of traffic. A few moments later, rather than the ‘Mechs he had expected, two columns of five hovertanks each in red-brown camouflage moved up; standing out from the Heavy Guards unit just ahead of them.

There were two designs, he spotted, alternating down the columns. One was bulky with a small turret and some fixed hardpoint missile launchers and he saw one side-hatch was open, allowing air into a bay where the shape of Clan Elemental battle armour was visible. The other design was larger but low and sleek with a domed turret festooned with weapons. Ten vehicles was standard numbers for a Clan Star, he thought - probably each rank of the formation was a point of two vehicles and five elementals - meeting the technical definition of a Nova as combining two stars into a combined arms force.

Carefully avoiding bringing the weapons mounted on it to bear on them, he waved one arm of the Rakshasa for their attention and stepped into the flow of traffic. “I am General Jon Davion,” he introduced himself as his command lance joined them. “You may accompany my command unit as we traverse the mountains.”

The leading transport’s hatch opened wider, and an Elemental moved out to stand framed in it. The hovercraft didn’t seem bothered by a full ton of man and machine moving inside it. Then the suit leaped up, jump jets flaring, and seized hold of his ‘Mech’s arm with its manipulator hand.

For a moment, Jon almost swung Rakshasa’s arm to batter the Elemental against the canyon wall. He saw his escorts moving to cover the Clan vehicles, weapons coming live.

“Hold your fire,” he snapped, holding the arm steady.

“Ah!” The voice that came from the Elemental suit was surprisingly sweetly pitched. “I was mistaken, quiaff? Our mechwarriors gesture thus in invitation to ride with them.”

That would have been good to know, he thought sourly. “Yes… aff, you would say. I was merely identifying myself. Still, you are here now.”

The woman laughed. “As you say.” She rode easily on the ‘Mech’s arm as he opened the throttle and they moved west at more than fifty kilometres an hour. “I thought that this was a Timber Wolf, isorla from the Smoke Jaguars perhaps? But now that I look closer, it is not. There would be mountings for an Elemental - it is not even an OmniMech.”

“We haven’t quite managed to duplicate it, but we respect the Timber Wolf design and desired to emulate it,” Jon admitted.

“I apologise for giving the appearance of a headhunter star.” The elemental raised her suit’s stubby weapons arm in salute. “I am Nova Commander Thais. What would you have done if I was truly here to kill you?”

You weren’t picked as a diplomat, were you? Still, she didn’t seem hostile in the question and he knew Clan warriors tended to be direct. “I would have died with honour, and you would have lived without it. Though not for very long.”

*

Chapter 8
Old Connaught, Arc-Royal
Donegal Province, Federated Commonwealth
10 July 3067


“Alright. Three Clans might be a problem.” Peter Steiner-Davion had been worried more than once over the weeks since the first reports had come in of the Clans attacking again, but one of the matters keeping him up late at night had been whether his decision not to request assistance from the SLDF was his pride overcoming his good sense.

“We don’t know how heavily the Hells Horses are committing at this point,” conceded Victor. “Only Twycross has reported them as present so far.”

The younger Steiner-Davion brother - not youngest, just… younger - shook his head. “Losing Twycross would be unfortunate, but it’s also not that far from the worlds our counter-attacks are about to hit. If there’s a possibility of them jumping in with - or even without - the permission of the Wolves to repel those attacks, then it’s time to swallow my pride and request assistance from the rest of the Star League.”

Victor reached over - and up a little - and patted Peter’s shoulder. “Ten years ago, I wouldn’t have believed we’d be in this position, but I agree. And I believe you’re making the right decision, Peter.”

“Ten years ago I’d probably still be thinking more about glory than duty. I was such a fool back then.” He shook his head, dismissing his brother’s sympathetic look. “My staff have drafts ready for a formal request so I’ll send it to Orestes and Dieron before the day is out. Better to leave it to the First Lord to forward to the other Council Lords, but General Kurita should be told directly.”

Victor stepped back and turned to the glass that separated them from the noise of the main command centre. While Peter continued to make public appearances and express his confidence that the war wasn’t being lost, the Field Marshal had been practically living down here. “I know Hohiro has some contingencies laid out. At a minimum, he should be able to cut loose the Twenty-Fourth Lyran Guards and the Twenty-Fifth Skye Rangers. Freeing up the other units there that are on loan to the SLDF would only require permission from his father and the First Lord, since it’s basically the Second Genyosha and their supporting elements.”

“Hopefully Isis Marik won’t see that as being abandoned.”

“There’s still an SLDF presence there with the expansion going on.” Victor looked down at the map visible in the centre of the command centre. “I’d suggest hiring the Northwind Highlanders and Wolf Dragoons but they’re already committed to supporting the SLDF’s line RCTs.” He rested one hand on the glass. “Actually, with her borders looking secure, it’s possible that Isis might be able to persuade the Marshal of the Silver Hawks to commit at least a few troops as well. The question of the Free Worlds League’s seat on the Star League Council is going to come up in November and barring a miracle, there isn’t going to be a Captain-General to fill it so joining a Star League-backed military operation would make political sense.”

“Who are you?” Peter asked, a little more sarcastically than he had intended. “And where is my brother, who knows nothing of politics?”

“I dislike politics,” Victor corrected him. “That doesn’t mean I ignore them entirely.”

“I suppose it’s up to Isis. I certainly wouldn’t object if she can send some reinforcements my way.” Peter considered the distances involved. “Or even the loan of some jumpships. We’re going to have to shift those if it comes to moving Star League troops up to back us.”

The door from the command centre opened and admitted Terias Sortek. “Your highness. Field Marshal.”

Victor shook his head. “Are you this formal with Peter all the time, Terias?”

“Not all of the time, sir. Just when he’s acting in the military chain of command.”

“Ouch.”

Peter sighed at his brother’s antics. “Am I late for…” he checked the clock. “Right, I was going to go get some much needed exercise. Healthy body, healthy mind.”

“Just remember to have those messages sent,” Victor half-asked, half-insisted as he went back to his desk.

Terias arched an eyebrow but held the door for Peter. They walked around the edge of the dimly lit room and out the main entrance, heading for the small apartments that provided accommodations for the staff that Victor had brought with him.

Peter let her into the room he was using - while he could easily have had more space to himself, he actually found it a comforting callback to his time at St Marinus - while he sent instructions to his staff, who were mostly housed elsewhere around the city. By the time he emerged from the small bathroom in his exercise gear, there had been a reply confirming they’d have messages drawn up and ready for him to review within the hour - well before ComStar’s regular daily transmission schedule in the appropriate direction.

“Do you think the Star League can send any forces in time to affect matters?” she asked him, the door still closed.

“The Twelfth ComGuards army is only a few jumps away,” Peter reminded her. “Dow has been sitting on them - it might be paranoid but I think he could be hoping that I’ll ask directly and let him ask me for concessions in exchange. But otherwise it’s not going to change the situation now. That’s not the point really. We’re holding our own at the moment - some worlds are doing better than others and we’re taking losses but once we start hitting their worlds then they won’t hold the initiative any more. It’s how they react to that which bothers me. Will they pull back, or hit harder? Do they have reserves that they can throw in at our attack or is what we’re seeing right now everything that they can field?”

She nodded. “Although they’re hitting us hard already. If we lose Coventry…”

Peter had been about to reach for the door to open it but he stopped. “If Coventry looks like falling, Adam is authorised to evacuate. This isn’t going to be decided by who holds the ground, it’ll be whose troops can keep fighting longer. I can rebuild the factories, or the academies - although I hope I don’t need to. But as long as the Falcons and the Wolves pay heavily for it, we’ll win in the long run. I won’t insult your intelligence by promising you that Conner will be safe there…”

“He is a soldier, after all,” she agreed quietly.

“Yes. But he’s a good officer and a good mechwarrior. I wouldn’t have approved his transfer to the Deneb Light Cavalry if he wasn’t up for it. And with our warships due there any day, we should at least be able to contest the orbitals for an evacuation if that becomes necessary.”

Terias reached past him and opened the door. “Thank you, sir. The waiting to hear something…”

“It never gets much easier.” Peter had heard that from his parents, but feeling it for himself left him frustrated with how helpless he felt at times. It must be far worse for those who actually had little to no way to influence the course of the war. “Are you going to keep calling me sir? Even in the gym?”

The infantry officer looked embarrassed. “I tend to… default to formality. Product of growing up at court. And there were always people willing to snipe at Dad, suggesting we were taking advantage of our father’s friendship with yours.”

“Yeah, I suppose that there were.” He thought back. “But it meant as much to Mom - and to Dad, I think - as all your parents’ military service that your family were also willing to spend that time with us. We didn’t get out that much and with Victor on Tharkad there wasn’t much of a circle of children our age except for the old New Avalon dynasties… you know, the ones where the parents were all angling to do exactly what you were getting accused of.”

“Now you’ll make me blush, s… Peter,” she corrected herself as he directed finger-guns at her.

“Do I get points for that?”

He hoped that she’d blush, but Terias just snorted and stepped ahead to get the door to the gym.

The room was bustling - there was no shortage of people wanting to work off nervous energy at the moment - but Peter didn’t have too much trouble finding a punching bag he could start taking his frustrations out on. Terias had gone her own way, but he watched her out of the corner of his eye as he built up a rhythm of blows against the heavy bag.

Grey blocked that line of sight and he faltered slightly, side-stepping to avoid being left off balance. Peter widened his focus and realised that Phelan was standing next to him.

“Can I - help you?” he asked, between punches at the bag.

The Khan, a year or two his elder, shrugged. “Honestly, with how your troops are fighting alongside mine, I do not think I can ask for more support, Peter.”

“Well - if I think of something…”

Clan Wolf-in-Name-Only - which Peter still thought of them as, even if he didn’t voice it to Phelan - had taken most of their early objectives and struck deeper. Koniz was still holding out but that was a rare bright spot. The AFFC had more or less got the measure of the Jade Falcons, but to an extent it seemed as if they’d taken it as a given that those tactics would work against other Clans… which didn’t seem to be the case.

“I understand that you have requested support from the Star League.”

Peter paused and caught the bag. “With the Hells Horses, it seemed better to do so now.”

The Kell raised his hands defensively. “I have no quarrel with it. But I suggest sending a message to Irece as well.”

“Irece?” That was where Clan Nova Cat had settled within the Draconis Combine. When they chose to side with the Second Star League against the other Clans, they had been driven from the Clan Homeworlds and resettled on Combine worlds that they had once occupied. A complex deal of trading worlds back had left them with a fairly compact domain within the Combine, technically self-governing but pledged to the House Kurita as well. “You think they’d want to get involved directly, rather than on behalf of the Star League?”

“Aff.” Phelan lowered his voice. “They’ve got a new crop of young warriors who’ve come up since their Abjuration by the Clans. Some of them were blooded fighting the Ghost Bears, but others will still be young and hungry for battle. I think Santin West would be delighted at the opportunity to ‘contract’ forces to you, even if the Star League doesn’t vote to send support.”

The idea had it’s appeal, but… “That seems like the sort of practise that the Clans would deem as too mercenary.”

“Not quite.” Phelan paused. “They’d not take orders as such, but they’d coordinate with your forces and follow any plans that are agreed on. In exchange they’d expect some share of the spoils.”

“Worlds?” Because that wasn’t happening unless he was deeply desperate.

The older man shook his head. “If you wanted to, yes. But they might be more interested in bondsmen and in captured equipment. After all, they’re still limited in their ability to produce clan technology on their new homeworlds.”

The equipment could work, Peter thought. I’d like to keep it all for myself, but we aren’t dependent on it. Giving captured Wolf and Jade Falcon warriors to them… how would even work under the Clan customs? Would it be legal under the Commonwealth’s own laws for handling prisoners of war?

“I’ll have to think about it,” he said slowly. “And we’d have to talk about how to make the offer. I get the impression that it would be too easy to wind up insulting them somehow.”

Phelan nodded. “Let me know when you want to talk.”
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drakensis

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Re: State of the Union
« Reply #49 on: August 15, 2021, 10:29:41 AM »

Chapter 9
Port Lawrence, Coventry
Coventry Province, Federated Commonwealth
15 July 3067


Conner’s Wolfhound tore down the wooded mountain slope, a pair of Clan Jade Falcon Kit Foxs giving chase. There was very little difference in ground speed between the three ‘Mechs, but the two Clan OmniMechs had a sharp edge in firepower.

“Just coming up on the cut,” he snapped.

“We’ll be ready, sir.” Sergeant Max Hunter managed to sound slightly reproving.

Which was fair, Conner admitted. Playing bait wasn’t something he’d recommend for a battalion commander, but the Jade Falcon landings had left penny packets of troops scattered across the continent and General Bortmann had dispersed the Eighth Deneb Light Cavalry to try to pick off those that were vulnerable and pinpoint those that would need more attention.

As the largest ‘Mech in his command lance, Conner had nominated himself to draw the two Clan OmniMechs in. The penetrated armour behind his Wolfhound’s left shoulder was a reminder that he had been taking quite a chance. Fortunately none of the systems inside seemed to have been damaged, but they could have been if he’d been a little less fortunate.

He twisted his Wolfhound to one side as he saw one of the Kit Foxs pause to steady its right arm. Sure enough, the blur of a supersonic projectile whipped past his ‘Mech with the sharp crack of its passage.

That would have been nasty if it had hit him. It had done a number on the tree that it hit instead.

“Five,” Conner murmured. “Four.” The trees were thinning slightly, while it looked like natural forest, this part of the hills around Port Lawrence was actually extensive tree farming, supplying the paper mills and timber industry of the city.

He saw a fold in the ground and braced himself for it just in time, the Wolfhound skidding down the short slope and dropping four metres in an instant. Bending the legs absorbed the impact and tracer fire from the other Kit Fox’s autocannon laced the air above him.

He drew out the word: “Three.” The drop had slowed Conner, even if it had probably saved him from taking a direct hit from the salvo. He pushed the Wolfhound to its limits as he made for the open space ahead where full-grown trees had been removed, replaced with saplings that were barely visible from the height of his cockpit.

“Two.” The last trees were ahead of him and, on instinct, he twisted the torso of his ‘Mech around. A Clan laser struck the Wolfhound’s up-flung left arm. The limb went amber and red on his damage display. It wasn’t out of action entirely, but that one hit had compromised armour all along it as the laser pulse had pulverised armour and partially severed two myomer bundles.

He didn’t say ‘one’ as he burst into the open. Eager to catch him out of cover, the two Kit Foxs bounded after him and then the sky lit up as more than a hundred and fifty LRMs rained down on the pair.

In addition to the two Valkyries in his lance, Conner had four Vali fire support vehicles in his force. The lightly-armoured vehicles were parked on a road out of sight of the Clan ‘Mechs, but they were the ‘discount’ model that carried LRM packs instead of the original Arrow IV artillery launchers. It was more than enough for this.

While the Kit Foxs had formidable speed and armament, not even Clan tech could change the fact that they were relatively small ‘Mechs, and couldn’t carry all that much protection. The mechwarriors twisted and turned to try to avoid the bombardment; but, without the trees to screen them, they were exposed and more than half the missiles struck home, blasting apart armour across their upper torsos and shoulders.

Conner spun his Wolfhound on its heel and centered his crosshairs upon the shoulder of the nearer Kit Fox. The three medium lasers spat bolts of light that completed wrecking the joint and the limb went limp, reducing the once dangerous gauss rifle to a dead-weight dragging and slowing the ‘Mech.

Adjusting slightly he tried to take out the other shoulder with his large laser but the Jade Falcon was back on guard and managed to move aside, returning fire with the lasers in the Kit Fox’s remaining arm.

Most of a ton of armour on the Wolfhound ablated under the lasers’ pulses, but at least it was his thicker frontal protection.

A moment later, Hunter’s Commando came into view - it still looked odd to Conner, with the Wolfhound-style head marking it as new production with a full-head ejection system. A full spread of short-range missiles punished the Kit Fox and it staggered before falling forwards and ploughing nose-first into the ground.

Before it could rise again, Hunter and Conner both fired their arm-mounted lasers into the left shoulder, depriving the ‘Mech of its remaining armament.

More LRMs hammered down on the second Kit Fox and something found the ammunition bin for the autocannon. Half of the ‘Mech disappeared in an explosion and, when the smoke cleared, the ‘Mech was only upright because its remaining arm was pressed against the forest-floor, supporting it.

Despite facing the full firepower of Conner’s entire force, the ‘Mechwarrior still struggled to get the Kit Fox back upright so they could bring the other arm’s weapons into play. Some people might have called it brave - Conner just thought it was a waste of effort. “Cease bombardment,” he ordered as he and Hunter systematically crippled the ‘Mech’s limbs with their lasers. “And send infantry for the prisoners.”

He didn’t have any of the Eighth’s limited supply of Battle Armour, but the platoon of mechanized infantry should be sufficient to handle a couple of Clan mechwarriors. If they weren’t then he might have to rethink the implausibility of the Immortal Warrior series and that didn’t bear thinking about.

“Looks like you took a battering there, Kommandant.” Hunter still seemed displeased.

“The armour took the worst of it,” Conner told him. While his technician would probably complain as well, it was a small price to pay for taking out a couple of ‘Mechs. “Hold positions while I check in with command.”

The arrival of the Tharkad warship squadron at a proximity point had eased concerns of the populace considerably, but the professional military officers had known that the odds were still not favorable. Fortunately the six warships had not arrived alone. Between them, the four corvettes and two cruisers had thirty-two dropship collars and they’d only needed two of them for tankers to refill their hydrogen stores after using their reactors to charge their lithium fusion batteries on the way. The other collars had been loaded with heavily armed assault dropships.

As Conner brought up the overall situation he was cleared for, he saw that the orbital space was still contested, but two Jade Falcon cruisers seemed to be trying to crawl away from the FCS Alistair Marsden-Steiner. It wasn’t surprising, the two Aegis-class warships had taken multiple nuclear strikes from the Immortal Spirit before the Blakist cruiser had been destroyed and weren’t in a good shape.

The fight above Coventry wasn’t using nuclear warheads - they were well within the seventy-five thousand kilometres that custom declared was the closest such weapons should be used to a planet and no one wanted to provoke the Falcons further. The other Clan warships were outnumbered three to four with the corvette FCS Alarion having fallen back around the planet to carry out repairs - and while almost half of the assault dropships escorting the warships had been destroyed, they’d cost the Falcons far more than their number in aerospace fighters, and forced the Clanners to drop ‘Mechs and elementals across the planet rather than in a concentrated landing zone.

Looking at the planetary map, Conner saw that scout reports suggested that the bulk of the Jade Falcon’s surviving transports had made it to the town of Whitting, not too far from Port St. William and Coventry Metal Works but well away from the Eighth Deneb Light Cavalry who were based near Coventry Military Academy. Punching the controls, he contacted the RCT command staff. “Command, this is Kommandant Sortek. We’ve picked up the two ‘Mechs reported. That should clear this sector.”

There was a pause before anyone responded. “Kommandant, this is General Bortmann. We’re pulling the Second Battalion back for a transorbital hop to reinforce the Fourteenth Guards in containing the main landings near Whitting. That means Colonel Watson may need your ‘Mechs for additional support in those sectors.”

Conner checked the map. Colonel Watson commanded one of the regiments of light armour and had been based out of McKenzey, about a hundred kilometres to the north. “Understood, sir, I’ll move the elements in my area of operations northwards and contact the Colonel for instructions.”

“Confirmed, Kommandant. And don’t use yourself as bait again.”

He flushed. “Yes sir.”

The older officer sounded amused. “Once is acceptable to show you’ve got the chops, laddie. But just once. You’re -” A rush of sound - loud voices, not saying anything Conner could make out - cut off her words.

“Sir?” Conner checked his comms. There was no jamming or interference he could pick up.

The sound died down. “Really?” the general asked, voice low as if speaking to someone else. “Well… that’s good.” Then her volume rose again. “Good news for the troops, Kommandant. The Falcons are down another warship - there are escape pods leaving their last cruiser. FCS Coventry is claiming the kill. It’s worse down here than if the local soccer team had a win…”

Conner hid a laugh. Things couldn’t be going that badly then. “I’ll pass that on too.”

“Yes, the Coventry natives couldn’t be prouder. Bortmann out.”

He shook his head, careful of the wires connecting his neurohelmet to the rest of the cockpit, and switched back to local comms. “Do we have those clanners in custody? Colonel Watson’s tanks need some support further north.”

“We have, sir.” Hunter’s voice was disgusted. “But look at them!”

Conner glanced around and then focused his camera down on where two Mechwarriors in the green piloting suits of the Jade Falcons were being checked for weapons by the infantry men. For a moment he thought it was his camera, or the shock of defeat making the man and woman look vulnerable… but when he moved closer, the fresh faces and slightly gawky postures showed his first impressions were right.

“Are they even out of their teens?” he asked incredulously.

“I don’t think so.”

The Kommandant thought back to 3064 and the rumours that had trickled back to Tharkad after the fighting against the Falcons then. Conner hadn’t even been in the AFFC the last time that the Jade Falcons had fought on Coventry, back in 3058. “I heard speculation that the Jade Falcons had lost a painful number of their younger warriors on Twycross three years ago,” he said slowly. “And that their newer OmniMech numbers had taken the brunt of the fighting.”

The Kit Fox was a common sight among the Jade Falcons, he thought. But it wasn’t a new design - usually the young and ambitious in light Stars would have had the more modern Cougar or Fire Falcon. “It’s at least possible they’ve been graduating warriors younger to make up for those losses… and perhaps drawing on ‘Mechs that would otherwise be getting handed down to secondline service.”

“You think they’re on the ropes?” asked Hunter, the man’s voice betraying a healthy degree of scepticism.

“No… but they may not be as strong as they want us to think,” Conner answered thoughtfully. “I’ll pass this back up to command, it may be important.”

*

Chapter 10
Dropship Belle Isla, Pasig system
Coventry Province, Federated Commonwealth
2 August 3067


The Excalibur dropship Belle Isla was far from the best armed or most armoured vessel available for the Twentieth Avalon Hussars, but it served well as the command vessel for the Regimental Combat Team. In addition to carrying Sabine Steiner’s command company, it had room for her staff and hundreds of other support staff - as well as two battalions of heavy tanks.

A compartment had been converted decades - or perhaps centuries - ago to serve as a command centre. It was cramped enough that she was glad that they were currently under zero gravity, letting her float over or around banks of equipment and the technicians managing the data. Under combat conditions, the room would be crowded with even more personnel - their body heat and that of the computers enough that the room actually needed ‘Mech-style coolant systems to keep it habitable. Right now it was mostly under merely administrative loads except for the gathering of officers around the main display.

Sabine looked at the 2-D screen (there simply wasn’t space for an effective holo display here) and saw it was portraying the latest updates about the ongoing fighting on Blue Hole. Jade Falcons warships had arrived over the system as the leading edge of their second wave of attacks, covering a landing that had deployed two entire galaxies of ground forces. For now the Fourth Lyran Regulars and Fifth Donegal Guards were holding out but it was only a matter of time. That was what their task force had been intended to change: a powerful force made up of her own RCT and two further brigades built around additional ‘Mech regiments, escorted by a squadron of warships.

“Clear the screen,” she informed her staff. “We have a new mission.”

“General?” Juan Villanova-Petain was her senior brigade commander, heading up the three tank regiments and artillery battalion that made up a large part of the Twentieth Hussars’ firepower. “Has something changed on Blue Hole?”

Sabine shook her head, glad she’d pinned her long hair in place or it would have been adrift around her head in the zero-gravity. “No, Juan. So far as I am aware the defenders are still holding out.” She passed a data disk to one of the techs. “Load this up.”

Louizio Martine-Holm looked concerned. “Are we abandoning our comrades?” The two units on Blue Hole might be traditionally Lyran commands and favoured Kathrina Steiner, but the infantry commander had embraced the reunion of the Federated Commonwealth.

“The Strikers and the Royal Guards are continuing to Blue Hole,” Sabine assured the other woman. It stung a little - command of a task force would have been a feather in her cap and now that was being taken away from her. “However, there is new information about the Clan’s deployments and the Field Marshal has ordered Operation Whiplash to capitalise upon what’s been learned.”

The screen lit up with the seal of the AFFC, then the usual security warnings that anyone with more than a few years in service barely noticed unless they had some specific reason to. Finally they came to the meat of the matter: a map of the entire Clan front, more than a dozen worlds lit up as active combat zones while a handful of others were marked as fallen. There hadn’t been operations on this scale since 3052 - the more recent clashes had been more localised and seen fewer extended contests for control of any one world.

Sabine took a pointer. “There have been a number of reports that the Jade Falcons are deploying younger warriors in older equipment,” she reminded those who should have seen at least some of that. “The leading theory was that the Falcon Khan, Marthe Pryde, was blooding her less experienced soldiers, in much the same way that she did on Coventry nine years ago. However, the numbers of units we’re seeing don’t add up… or rather, they’re adding up too well.” She ran the pointer down the map from one end of the frontline to the other. “We’ve seen essentially every Cluster we know the Falcons have in their Occupation Zone, including garrison units. Some of the latter are wearing the paint of other units, but we have enough captives and data intercepts to be sure of it.”

“But they must have other units guarding their occupation zone.” Shemp Harrangue looked worried. “Have they brought more troops from the homeworlds?”

“If so, why not use them to fight us?” asked Martine-Holm. “They would want the experience of fighting against the AFFC - and the ‘glory’.” She gestured quotation marks around the last word.

Villanova-Petain nodded in agreement. “Could this mean Pryde is rotating units between combat zones? Sending them home after they see action? Shemp is right: they can’t have left their conquests unguarded.”

Sabine smiled thinly. “Good questions. And we don’t know the answers - not for sure. But the initial reports from Operation North Star suggests that Clan Wolf may well have reduced their own defenses to a minimum. While the Ceti Hussars haven’t made planetfall, thus far they’ve only encountered older aerospace fighters and dropships providing coverage of jump points and recharge stations - equipment that may have been taken with Kerensky’s Exodus or captured from our comrades during the original invasion.”

She advanced the operational planning data, focusing the display on just four systems. “Operation Whiplash is a reconnaissance in force to find out if the same is true of the Jade Falcons.”

“Alyina, Baker 3, Devin and Goat Path,” read off Villanova-Petain. “Are we to be scattered in penny ante combat commands across sixty light years?”

“No.” Sabine moved her pointer to the nearest world, Goat Path. “This is a reconnaissance in force. Each world will be struck by a full RCT. If the defenses are too much for us, then we’ll pull back; but if not then we’re authorised to push the advance and secure these worlds - in particular the HPGs since all four targets are within HPG range of Twycross. Taking even one HPG intact will let us re-establish timely communication with General Davion there.”

“Couldn’t this be done with smaller units - even company-sized raids?” The tank commander looked at Blue Hole’s icon, still visible on the edge of the display. “The Third Royal Guards and the Second Coventry Strikers will barely bring the defenders up to equal numbers on the ground… they might even still be outnumbered by the Falcons. We have four battalions of ‘Mechs and far more conventional forces than either of them.”

“Theatre Command is moving the Blue Star Irregulars in to further reinforce the situation on Blue Hole, but they are some weeks away,” Sabine offered in reassurance. “And if Goat Path - our target - isn’t viable then we shall plan on falling back to Blue Hole and joining the battle there as well. However, by striking at the Jade Falcon Occupation Zone, they’ll be forced to consider whether they can afford to continue their offensive. Both Goat Path and Alyina would be ideal bases to launch follow up attacks on worlds that open a direct supply route to Twycross. Devin and Baker 3 together would sever their Occupation Zone, forcing them to use uninhabited systems or rely on Clan Wolf to maintain their own supply lines.”

She paused. “That’s the best case scenario, of course. We shouldn’t assume that all will go well. The plans have been reviewed by not only Field Marshal Steiner, but also Field Marshal Steiner-Davion, General of Armies Steiner and the Archon Prince. In particular, diverting the Blue Star Irregulars to reinforce Blue Hole means that they will be unavailable to assist Adam Steiner on Coventry, which seems to underscore his commitment to taking the offensive against the Clans.”

Her distant cousin had also declined a recommendation to move his headquarters to another world until Coventry was re-secured. Most of the administrative responsibilities had been delegated to Melissa and Main Street as the theatre command worlds, but the Field Marshal was reportedly exercising strategic command from a convoy of command vans and his own ‘Mech rather than expose a fixed headquarters building that the Jade Falcons might manage to target with a lucky headhunter attack.

That argument settled Villanova-Petain down and Sabine moved onto the maps of Goat Path. “We have only a few days to plan our operations - the time it’ll take our jumpships to finish recharging and for our dropships to reach the planet. We have the maps from before the world fell to the Clans, and updates from more recent raids and data-gathering missions…” Which amounted to quite a large amount of data. “So while we won’t know exactly what will be defending the world, we can reach certain conclusions already.”

The topographical map was a nightmare of steep slopes even just as an overview. Sabine could see the colour draining from Villanova-Petain’s face as he geared himself to explain something she’d already realised.

“Obviously our armoured brigade will be severely constrained,” she said before he could speak up. “I’ll be counting on you to keep our dropships and landing zones secured, Juan, but the main striking force for this operation will depend on close co-operation between infantry, aerospace and BattleMechs.”

Martine-Holm peered at the map. “Is the HPG station in the capital? If so, can we afford to focus on taking that city and worry about the rest of the world later?”

“I think it is.” Colonel McGoneghy of the ‘Mech regiment hadn’t spoken until now, but he was reviewing data now on a secondary display. “But that probably means it’s the best garrisoned city on the planet.”

Sabine let them pore over the maps. It was Villanova-Petain who hit on what she’d spotted earlier. “This plateau,” he observed, indicating a section of level ground not far from the city. “It’s agricultural, and access down to the city is poor, but it should be close enough for our artillery to command the industrial and commercial zones. The original military base was constructed on the far side of the city, probably for that exact reason, but the Clans’ new construction has all expanded towards the plateau. If we land my artillery battalion there, the Falcons will either have to push up the roads to get to me or abandon their entire enclave.”

“It would at least keep them focused on that side of the city,” agreed Martine-Holm. “But if we let them think that we’re focused there as well, we could make a secondary landing here.” She pointed at another valley. “Close enough for the artillery to give fire support and screened against aerospace fighters except along some very predictable low level routes. From there we can interdict the main roads westwards…”

Sabine sat back and let her officers exchange ideas freely. They knew the Hussars abilities far more personally that she did, and for every point she’d considered already they came up with another that she’d not yet considered. The Twentieth Avalon Hussars were known for their defensive skill, but Jack Roberts had told her before he handed over command that they were almost as able on the offensive. The ease with which her officers were pulling a plan together was evidence to confirm that.

Cousin Peter has given me a superlative sword to wield, she thought. Now I just have to prove myself fit to lead them.
« Last Edit: August 15, 2021, 12:50:16 PM by drakensis »
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drakensis

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Re: State of the Union
« Reply #50 on: August 15, 2021, 10:31:39 AM »

Chapter 11
Wolf City, Arc-Royal
Donegal Province, Federated Commonwealth
11 August 3067


The Wolves tore into the Royal Guards with abandon, slicing through their lines with ferocity that had to be seen to be believed.

In response, the Pride of the Federated Commonwealth hunkered down, each lance adjusting its formation to cover the vulnerabilities of each ‘Mech. Their armour was battered and ‘Mechs fell, but the formation endured.

Kommandant Michael Searcy saw a Timber Wolf with the markings of a senior officer carve its way past the frontlines, bringing down a Templar as it passed. Two more Wolf OmniMechs forced their way after their leader, unleashing terrifying firepower upon the Mackie IIs that tried to close the gap.

“Cover me,” he ordered and spun his Sagittaire to bring the Timber Wolf into his firing arc.

The smaller, faster ‘Mech side-stepped to avoid the lash of his PPC; but it couldn’t press further towards the Archon-Prince’s position without exposing its rear and the mechwarrior knew it, twisting to fire back at Michael.

His Sagittaire couldn’t match the Clan ‘Mech’s range, but this sort of brawl was it’s meat and mead. Pulse lasers flensed armour all across the Timber Wolf’s front and he had to resist the urge to break away from his lance and go for the kill. “Tag this Mad Cat!” he demanded.

“Got it!”

Michael glanced around, confirmed that a Black Hawk-KU from one of the Lightning companies was skulking behind a Banshee, aiming the target designator at the Wolf ‘Mech.

The Timber Wolf realised its danger and broke into a sprint for Peter Steiner-Davion’s location - the Mechwarrior within must have known that destruction was imminent and was hoping simply to take the Archon-Prince with them.

It was too late, the Banshee had also seen the threat and unleashed its Gauss Rifle and twin PPCs, almost knocking the Timber Wolf over.

A trio of Stormcrows lunged in, forcing Searcy to return his attention to the rest of his lance. Bannson fell, his Templar showing massive damage to the reactor after two of the smaller OmniMechs combined their fire with their heavy ultra-autocannon. The Clan code of single combat hadn’t been given even lip service.

Searcy stepped into the breach between Scott Tracker’s Mackie II and Roscoe Buford’s Hauptmann, vaguely aware that the Timber Wolf behind him had disintegrated under the impact of no less than three Arrow IV missiles fired from well behind the main lines of the Fifth Royal Guards. The Stormcrows were almost dancing through the incoming fire, his lance mates missing shots at ranges where they shouldn’t have had any difficulty scoring hits.

Switching modes on his targeting computer, Searcy slaved his two large pulse lasers to a single trigger and tracked one of the pair, ignoring the damage their own lasers were inflicting. When he fired, the hail of short pulses of coherent light ripped apart his target’s leg at the knee, laming it instantly.

“Finish the cripple,” he ordered flatly, shifting to try to bring down the second Stormcrows.

He was about to fire when a loud buzzer sounded. Instinctively, Searcy brought the Sagittaire to a halt, locked the legs and safed his weapons.

“All units, stand down!” the voice of Morgan Kell declared. There was a pause before the mercenary leader added: “The Wolves have this one, your highness.”

“I noticed.” Peter Steiner-Davion’s voice was unamused.

Michael looked in the correct direction and saw that a Linebacker was standing over the fallen Mackie II belonging to the Archon-Prince. There were a trail of over a dozen Clan ‘Mechs and at least as many Royal Guard ‘Mechs marking the path that the Linebacker must have taken, and given the still standing ‘Mechs frozen on approach, the Linebacker would clearly have been destroyed in the next handful of seconds.

“With that said,” the mercenary added, in the tones of someone who had had better days. “The price paid for that victory was pyrrhic. We’ll discuss in detail during the after action debriefings; until then, all ‘Mechwarriors are to hold position until their lance is called to leave the exercise grounds.”

“Damn,” Searcy muttered to himself. The Fifth Royal Guards weren’t just a field RCT of the Federated Commonwealth, they were also Peter Steiner-Davion’s personal guards when he was away from the capital worlds. That made keeping him alive their most overriding duty and they had just failed. At least it was only in simulated combat.

One of the Stormcrows in front of him waved its arm, careful not to point the autocannon at anyone. “Nice shooting,” the voice of Phelan Kell declared via the omnimech’s loudspeakers. “You almost had me. Who are you? I think Ranna owes you a beer.”

There was a background hiss, as if someone was speaking to the Khan through his cockpit speakers. Searcy couldn’t make out words but it sounded like words. “Kommandant Michael Searcy,” he identified himself. “Who is Ranna?”

The Stormcrow pointed with its one hand. “She’s in that Timber Wolf. I think she might have got all the way to Peter, if you hadn’t slowed her down long enough.”

“Maybe,” Searcy allowed dubiously. “Maybe not. I didn’t actually stop her myself though.”

“Teamwork,” the Khan replied. “Searcy… I know that name…it is on the tip of my tongue.”

He sighed. Here it went again. “I fought on Solaris VII.”

“I do not watch those,” Kell disagreed. “A third of the matches are staged and half the rest are more about showing off than the actual fighting.”

That seemed a little harsh to Searcy. Granted, some of the lower ranking matches weren’t very impressive but match fixing wasn’t anything like that common. It happened, certainly, but it was career-ending if anyone found out.

“Oh, you are the one that brought down Nondi Steiner,” Kell replied.

“I wasn’t particularly trying to kill her, sir.”

“Those are the chances any mechwarrior takes.” The adopted-clansman sounded dismissive. “But she had quite a reputation as a mechwarrior, back in the day.”

“I’d rather not discuss that further.”

“If I can interrupt this rather riveting conversation?” The Archon-Prince’s Mackie marched towards them, Ranna’s Timber Wolf walking behind.

“Aren’t we supposed to hold position?” asked Phelan. “Or are you pulling rank?”

“Blatantly.” Peter didn’t seem at all abashed. “We’ve had more data arrive from the Wolf Occupation Zone and I want your impressions.”

“Right now?”

“I have approximately a thousand times more paperwork to deal with than you do. My schedule is cramped.” The Archon-Prince waggled his Mackie’s arm in Michael’s direction. “Searcy, you can bodyguard and aide me.”

“Am I being punished for something?”

“Yes. I’m not sure what for, but you sound like you have a guilty conscience.”

Phelan laughed at that. “There are times, Peter, that I like you more than your brother. You have more of a sense of humour.”

“And there are other times when that humour causes problems.” Ranna was apparently female, Searcy noted. She sounded frustrated with her Khan but also fond. Some equivalent to Brigadegeneral Terias Sortek, he guessed. Now that he had time to look closer, the Timber Wolf had the markings of a Star Colonel.

“True.”

“I stopped calling your Crusader brethren… well, you know.”

“I appreciate it,” the Khan conceded. “Unfortunately, once you said it, others found it funny and it started spreading.”

The Timber Wolf stiffened, reflecting irritation on the part of the woman inside. “Very few of those among our Clan get the joke.”

Searcy wondered for a moment if the Archon-Prince had really first heard the ‘Wolf-in-Name-Only’ from his sister Catherine. If so, he declined to throw the Regent of New Avalon under the bus. For his part, the former gladiator made a mental note to drop the phrase. He didn’t want the Warden Wolves mad at him, particularly when he’d just had a front view of how fearsome they could be in battle.

The four ‘Mechs moved aside to a quiet corner of the exercise area. This part of Arc-Royal had been mined heavily once, then attempts had been made to repair the ecological damage with trees and grass. The decision to then use it for military training left the vegetation more than a little patchy and quite unable to hide pits large enough for a ‘Mech to use as a firing position.

Adopting laser comms for security, Peter shared the files he’d received. Searcy glanced at them, not sure what he should look for. They seemed to be discussing the garrisons found on the four worlds hit by Operation Southern Cross. Zoetermeer was the only world where frontline forces had responded - the Wolves’ Seventh Battle Cluster had arrived under-strength, with losses from the fighting on A Place and a draft of captive Exiled Wolves, only to be hammered by the veteran Twenty-Third Arcturan Guards - a RCT that had been nursing a deep grudge against the Clans since a detachment of their number had been destroyed on Carse fifteen years ago. The Arcturans had liberated the bondsmen before the Battle Cluster managed to escape, but there wasn’t much about their experience in the report.

“I did not realise that Vlad was recruiting so heavily from the local population,” Phelan admitted thoughtfully.

“It is uncharacteristic.” Ranna seemed bemused. “He has little time for freeborn warriors.”

Searcy scanned through the reports, eventually finding what they had spotted. The bulk of the garrison forces assigned to the worlds had been lightly equipped infantry recruited within the Occupation Zone - all from former Rasalhague worlds, rather than the worlds they were stationed from. The training had been more or less what he would expect… or at least, what he would expect here in the Inner Sphere. Clanners tended to train their warrior caste from childhood. Less than two years of training was exceedingly short by their standards.

He blinked as he reached the demographic breakdown. “They’re on the young side too. Other than the officers, were any of them more than twenty-five?”

“No.” The Archon-Prince sounded troubled. “Meaning they have little recollection of what it was to live under the Federated Commonwealth. Clan Wolf took those worlds when they were children.”

“The ‘Mechs and armoured vehicles are mostly manned by Clan warriors from the homeworlds,” Phelan added. “I suspect the idea is that the infantry police the local population against the rebellion, while the mechanized forces are there to keep the infantry from any ideas of independence themselves.”

“They aren’t worried about us taking those worlds?” Searcy enquired. “If this is all the opposition there is, the counter-attacks we’ve launched could probably fight their way across to the Ghost Bear border as long as they have enough supplies.”

The Khan snorted derisively. “Vlad would probably be delighted to have the chance to send a small force back to pick off the garrisons they’d have to leave behind. Or to simply do that as the cap of his campaign here. He is overly confident.”

“Perhaps with cause.” Ranna sounded concerned. “We have not covered ourselves in glory thus far in the campaign. Where our warriors have faced his in battle, Vlad has been victorious more often than not. They are still Wolves, at least in our eyes. I am concerned that his own followers do not see us so kindly.”

“Are you saying that the Warden Wolves are holding back?” demanded Searcy. There were AFFC forces on every world being attacked, and it sounded as if their allies weren’t giving their all to support them.

“Brother fighting sister can be problematic,” Peter observed drily. “I’m sure it isn’t intentional, but if it’s lopsided… That does make more sense of our reverses.”

“I need to discuss this with the Clan Council.” Phelan sounded troubled. “I had not considered the matter in this light, but we are fighting, not just for the Federated Commonwealth, but for the soul of Clan Wolf. Perhaps it is time I go to the frontlines myself. We have the additional corvettes so our fleet is close to Vlad’s in numbers and we needn’t be so conservative in our use of warships.”

“I wish I could say the same.”

Michael nodded to himself at his liege’s words. The Federated Commonwealth Navy had won a victory over Coventry, but half the squadron committed was limping to Odessa for repairs at the yards there and the other half were only still at Coventry because their jump drives weren’t considered to be in a fit state for the voyage. That wasn’t being advertised, but it meant that across, all three theatres of the war, the Federated Commonwealth Navy only two battlecruisers, two cruisers and six corvettes fit for battle. There had even been discussion of using the ships recovered from Odessa on the frontlines, but the risk of leaving Tharkad uncovered if Marthe Pryde tried for an even more ambitious deep strike was judged too high.

“Talk to your people,” Peter advised. “The Nova Cats have agreed to send Sigma Galaxy across the Ghost Bear Domain to help, I’m going to double down on liberating occupied worlds. Let Pryde and Ward keep feeding troops into the frontlines if they want, when they turn around they’ll find their empires flying very different flags.”

“You can lose a lot of your army with that strategy,” the Wolf Khan warned.

“I can build a new army,” the Archon-Prince said flatly. “Every victory those two are winning is costing them more in proportion than it costs me. I may not like the price; but better to pay it once and be done, than to do this all over again ten years from now.”

*

Chapter 12
New Hanover, Arc-Royal
Donegal Province, Federated Commonwealth
24 August 3067


Daniel Holstein didn’t make much of the fact that the Archon-Prince’s sister was his penpal. He was already the boss’ son, there was no need to add fuel to the suspicions at Arc-Royal MechWorks that he had his job at an unusually young age because of who he knew rather than what he knew.

His place on the Verfolger team was something he felt qualified for. He’d assisted his father during the development of what had become the main production model, the VR5-R - although mostly as a sounding board and to double-check the numbers. Since then he’d been putting his experience with the Mackie refits to the test, in getting the Mackie II production line running; so moving onto how Arc-Royal Mechworks’ first home-developed heavy ‘Mech could be improved upon seemed like a natural progression.

Once it came up in their correspondence, this meant Catherine had written to him with suggestions; but unlike most of those he got from people with pet projects to move forwards, hers came with material support.

Daniel wasn’t sure why Catherine’s notes discussed the proposed variation as the ‘Lament configuration’ - the Verfolger wasn’t an omnimech - or why she had sketched some kind of puzzle box in the margins. The head with pins in it was equally off-topic, he hoped she wasn’t getting into voodoo. However, since the message had come with a shipment of Diverse Optics’ newest medium and small lasers, he was happy to set those points aside. According to Catherine, the lasers should be within a few percentage points of having the same range and power throughput as their clan equivalents.

The real prize in the shipment was a pair of Magna Hellfire heavy particle cannon. The Federated Commonwealth had been trying to replicate the Combine’s heavy PPCs since they first encountered them during the Civil War. James Sandoval had captured several during his unauthorised attacks on the Combine, shipping samples back for reverse-engineering at NAIS and other research facilities.

“An all energy variant would address concerns about the ammunition storage in the right torso of the Verfolger,” Daniel explained to the team. “Even with the cellular ammunition storage systems, right now if the bins are hit the engine would be trashed and the ‘Mech goes from full effectiveness to zero, until it goes through a major rebuild.”

Jacques Gleason shook his head. “But the Verfolger can’t handle that heat burden, Danny. The coolant system can’t dissipate the heat of two of those monster PPCs, and replacing the lasers with these extended range models will just make it worse.”

It was a predictable complaint and Daniel tapped his controls, moving the holotable display to an exploded view of the interior of a Verfolger torso. “Without the autocannon and the ammunition bins, there’s room to add additional heatsinks that’ll bring heat dissipation up to a manageable level for firing both PPCs while on the move, with a margin for use of the anti-missile system.”

“What anti-missile system?” Alice Sakhalin was as sour-faced as ever. “You know how much it adds to the Verfolger’s survival chances on the battlefield, but with no ammunition it’ll be useless.” She had done most of the design work to incorporate the anti-missile system into the current Verfolger’s head, if Daniel was remembering correctly.

“Thank you, Alice,” he said politely. Never be rude to an adversary, his father had advised him. It shows weakness. “I was hoping you’d have some suggestions for adapting the mounting you devised to mount this new anti-missile system.”

The holotable switched to his next display: a diagram that took the engineers a few moments to parse. Daniel sat back and watched their faces, judging their reactions

“A laser anti-missile system,” Gleason shook his head. “This is unproven - no, it’s actually untested equipment, Danny. The Wolves have been working at that for twenty years and they haven’t got anything fit for use.”

Sakhalin looked distracted, “I think it would fit,” she mused. “So if this is a working model it’s down to the size we’d need… how heavy is it?”

“About twice the mass of the current system.” Daniel shrugged. “It’d make the ‘Mech more top-heavy but without the autocannon mount on the shoulder, that’s hardly going to be an issue.”

She snorted dismissively at the qualification. “Interesting. I’d want to get my hands on a working model, before I ventured any opinion on its feasibility.”

“Of course.” He tapped his nose. “Khan Kell’s technicians have been able to share their data with NAIS again, since the end of the civil war. They’ve provided us with their latest prototype and they’re currently working on production issues.”

Gleason sniffed. “So it’s not actually available?”

“We’re looking at a future production variant ourselves,” Daniel reminded the older engineer. “It’s no more assured that we’ll have a Verfolger ready to carry one by the time they have a factory set up for this Laser AMS, than it is that they’ll be ready by the time that we are. But if we get in on this now, the VR5-L could be the first ‘Mech in the Inner Sphere - or among the Clans - to sport a laser anti-missile system.”

That got heads nodding. Everyone knew that whoever managed that would have military procurement knocking at the door.

“Can we fund it?” asked one of the men in suits who had been listening, but keeping quiet, as the engineers hashed out what was possible.

“There is a military research grant available,” he said, not bothering to try to get his tongue around the string of numbers and letters to identify the exact one. “Felix Industries tried for it with some sort of chemical laser arrangement that got exactly nowhere, but the Federated Commonwealth Navy is interested in potentially saving themselves a few tons of explosive ammo feeds through their warship hulls. Field testing its installation on a ‘Mech would be stretching it, but right now the NAIS, Diverse Optics and Wolf teams are the only game in town…”

“And if no one claims the grant, that office won’t have one to offer next year,” the accountant agreed. If a government office came in under budget, they would find themselves with a lower budget as a reward - a truth as old as accountancy. For that reason, even a marginally applicable project would likely be accepted by the navy rather than have no takers at all.

Gleason looked annoyed, but his own proposal didn’t have the mix of money and prestige that would sell it. “Well, it deserves a closer look,” he admitted grudgingly. “So who gets to be project lead on this one?”

All eyes went to Daniel. It was his idea (as far as they knew) and he was Clovis Holstein’s son.

He shook his head at the implied suggestion. “I’m junior and I’m on the recall list for military service if there’s a forward deployment against the Wolves-in-Name-Only,” he observed before someone explicitly put his name forwards. “It wouldn’t do to see the project fail because military exigencies mean the lead role gets handed around.” He locked eyes with Gleason. “How about it, Jacques?”

The older man looked surprised, but then pleased. “Well, I do know a little about coolant systems…” He’d probably expected that he would be relegated to some makework like mirroring the right arm’s existing weapon mounts and battlefist for the left arm. Which would be necessary, but not exactly challenging.

“I admired your work on the PPC mounting we have on the Verfolger right now,” Daniel continued. “Adapting it for a heavier PPC seems like it could be one of the major stalling points.”

“May I see what you have on the idea so far?” he asked.

Daniel yielded control of the holotable and let Gleason look. By the end of the week, he suspected that the veteran engineer would be the project’s strongest advocate - the man had only narrowly missed out on getting project lead for the first Verfolger’s development and losing out to the boss's son might have driven him to look at moving elsewhere.

The younger Holstein huffed mentally. If the Wolves weren’t across the border, he could have at least pushed for co-lead, but between that and office politics… Well, he wasn’t exactly running out of time. There would be other projects and…

His comm pinged and he stepped out of the room to read the message.

When he saw the contents, Daniel punched the wall and then winced. That was stupid, he’d barked his knuckles. But still…

Another Diverse Optics shipment was coming in, this time of new pulse lasers; and he’d been requested - by name - to help organise fitting them as upgrades to the Kell Hounds and Fifth Royal Guards ‘Mechs that carried older models.

There were times when having royal attention opened doors, but right now it was very much a mixed blessing. So much for having much time to work with Gleason on shepherding the Lament variant of the Verfolger through the design process.
« Last Edit: August 15, 2021, 12:00:18 PM by drakensis »
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drakensis

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Re: State of the Union
« Reply #51 on: August 17, 2021, 12:17:15 PM »

Part Three - Twycross

We've got to turn it off,
Flip a switch.
Light up the night!
Light Up The Night - Protomen, Act II

Chapter 13
Cross-Divide Mountains, Coventry
Coventry Province, Federated Commonwealth
7 September 3067


After what felt like a long wait, reinforcements had arrived the previous month to help Coventry’s garrison clear the world of the Jade Falcons. Despite the promising start of the battle, not all of the Clan warriors had been as inexperienced as those Conner had encountered during the initial drop.

The 305th Assault Cluster had come terrifyingly close to breaking through to the Coventry Metal Works factory, only throwing the much lighter ‘Mechs of the Deneb Light Cavalry at them en masse had held them back. General Bortman had been among those who died paying that price.

Upon the arrival of the reinforcements, the majority of the invaders had evacuated under the protection of their remaining warships; but the running fight to push the Jade Falcons to that point had stretched what remained of the two Regimental Combat Teams almost to the breaking point.

Despite the numbers disparity favouring them now, hunting down the scattered forces that had not reached the dropships in time was keeping the remaining garrison stretched to cover all their defensive commitments. They couldn’t be strong everywhere and Conner had welcomed the white-painted reinforcements with open arms.

As he walked his Wolfhound through what was left of the town of Sheffield, he was re-thinking that opinion.

Intelligence reported that they town had been attacked by a Hellhound - a second-rate Clan medium ‘Mech somewhat superior to Conner’s Wolfhound - escorting more than twenty Elementals and several commandeered trucks. The estimation was that they aimed to gather supplies - food for the most part. Sheffield’s police force had called in the attack before the ‘Mech waded right through their station. Conner knew that part of the story because the police chief had reported it was happening before the call cut off.

While the loss of the policemen to that would have been beyond unfortunate, similar raids had seen the Clans leave towns with little more in the way of lives lost and property damage.

The commercial district of Sheffield had essentially been pounded flat.

A battered Buccaneer battlemech stood triumphant over the wreck of the Hellhound, the large laser of the surviving ‘Mech a shattered wreck and armour peeled away from almost all of the ‘Mech. Infantry were conscientiously checking the wrecked buildings for survivors - of the townsfolk or of the Clanners, Conner wasn’t entirely sure. Around the ‘Mech, eight combat vehicles were forming a loose cordon. All were painted in white and proudly wore the badge of the Word of Blake Militia’s First Division.

Conner had heard that the First Division represented the elite of the Militia. They’d certainly looked good parading off their dropships, delivered from Terra to Coventry by a command circuit of commercial jumpships in an open display of the Word’s financial might. Between that and the already well-known heroism of the Blakist cruiser Immortal Spirit, the First Division had been made very welcome on Coventry.

Switching to secondary cameras, the AFFC major could see civilian faces glaring at the Militia troops. It seemed that the welcome had worn bare already. And he could understand why.

“What the hell did they do?” Max Hunter ground out, from the number two slot in the column of ‘Mechs. Conner had brought a full company in expectation of having to give chase to the Clans if they scattered as they withdrew. “Pound the place flat with artillery?”

“They’re equipped for it,” Conner replied, indicating the pair of Sniper tracked artillery pieces that made up a quarter of the force’s combat vehicle strength.

The Militia troops watched them arrive but other than two of the tanks twisting their turrets from side to side to confirm their readiness, none of them showed any sign of concern. “Give me a perimeter, Sergeant Hunter.”

“Sir,” the man replied in the stolid tones of someone convinced equally that his superior was making a mistake and that counsel would not be heeded. He was right about the second part. Time would tell about the first.

Conner powered down the Wolfhound and took the time to fish his sidearm out of a locker and strap it to his hip. He didn’t generally carry it around but this wasn’t exactly a secure area. A windbreaker replaced his cooling vest and then he extended the rope ladder from his cockpit and climbed down.

The nearest squad of Blakist infantry moved to greet him, the leader marked by a blue rank badge on the right-shoulder of his armoured vest. Conner had to squint a bit to make out the III - an Adept-III then. The Word of Blake didn’t use normal military ranks, instead ranking personnel as Acolytes, Adepts and Precentors just like their civilian counterparts. The number following the rank marked years of service.

“Major.” The Adept saluted crisply.

Conner returned the gesture. “Adept. I see you must have faced fierce resistance.”

The implied criticism went right over the man’s head - although from their frowns it seemed a couple of his squad had picked up on it. “We managed, sir. I doubt any of the tank-born made it out, but we’ll make sure.”

“Who’s in command here, please?” There was no point screaming at the adept. And probably not actually screaming at his commander, however tempting the idea was.

“Adept Shawnee is senior.” The Adept gestured towards a low slung Fury tank. “She’s right over this way.”

“Thank you, Adept.” Conner kept his voice clipped and correct.

Under other circumstances, he might have appreciated meeting Marina Shawnee - she was a trim woman who could have been anything between his own age and a decade older. However, these weren’t normal circumstances.

“Major.” She had one eye focused on the monocle of her headset, where he could see data reflected as it updated, looking past him more than at him. “I’m sorry you came all this way for nothing, but I think we’ve dealt with this raiding party. We’ve accounted for the ‘Mech, obviously, and confirmed twenty-one dead elementals. It’s possible that they had one or two more but it seems unlikely that it was a full Star.”

“I’m sure that’ll be a great comfort to the people of Sheffield.”

Shawnee picked up on the sarcasm and arched an eyebrow, giving him her full attention. “We gave the Clanners a chance to surrender. Would you rather we let them go so they could raid more towns?”

“I would have suggested drawing them out of the town and catching them in the countryside, or at least tracking them back towards wherever they are using as a base. What did you do, surround the entire town and issue an ultimatum?”

She flushed angrily. “You may have not fought the Clans before they came here, Major. I’m a veteran of Tukkayid; and when you have Clanners in ground that limits their mobility and weapons range, it’s foolish to give them the chance to regain those advantages.”

A part of Conner noted that she was older than he had thought. Another part, the part that was on duty, thought back to the famous battle and tried to put her words in context. “Adept Shawnee, my understanding is that Tukkayid’s civilian population was almost entire evacuated prior to the battle. Even when you fought in cities there, you weren’t risking innocent deaths.”

“We didn’t bring the Clanners here!”

“I know.” He took a deep breath. “And I am aware that the Hellhound pilot must have killed or injured a number of people when he attacked the police station. However, can you tell me that no civilians were harmed by your own forces?” He gestured towards the Snipers. “I’m sure neither of us believes that artillery can tell the difference.”

The question seemed to sink into Shawnee’s thinking. “There were three fatalities at the police station,” she informed him, sounding distracted as she checked something on her monocle’s display. “Our medics and the local hospital are treating more than forty wounded citizens.”

From his recollections of Avalon City and Tharkad City, Conner thought it could have been a great deal worse. Even so… “That makes this the raid with the most civilians wounded since the Falcons withdrew their main forces from Coventry. It’s not a report I’m eager to make.”

From the look on Shawnee’s face, now that she was thinking about it, nor was she.

“It’s possible the Jade Falcons were more brutal than usual, perhaps venting frustration at their situation.” He paused. “But that’s not the only explanation, and the media are inevitably going to dig into this and want to know why Sheffield has so many casualties, and millions of S-bills in property damage.”

“Our orders are not to take half-measures when it comes to cleansing Coventry of the Clanners…” Shawnee gripped the comm-unit she held with fingers that were white. “I had not considered the matter in this light.”

Conner nodded, trying to look sympathetic. “I take it that the majority of your unit are either inexperienced or, like you, veterans of Tukkayid?”

“Predominantly the former,” she admitted and checked her monocle again. “The same is true for Adept Connery’s Level-II.”

So they had two demi-companies present, presumably with Shawnee taking command as the senior officer. And probably no one who was familiar with this sort of tactical situation. Conner restrained himself from showing frustration. “We have a lot of clean-up to do here,” he decided. “I’m sure your troops will work hard to show their concern for the people of Sheffield… after all, we’re fighting for their sakes.”

“Yes.” Shawnee nodded sharply. “We are. I’ll make sure they’re aware of that.”

Conner stepped back. “I’ll contact my superiors, so we can discuss ways to avoid similar situations going forwards.”

He was tempted to suggest pulling the Blakists from these patrols entirely - there were checkpoints covering the major routes through the mountains and up there they could use whatever firepower they liked without having it cause this sort of nightmare. Unfortunately, he didn’t think it would fly politically.

Once he was back in his cockpit, the young Major contacted Colonel Watson, who was commanding the temporary combined arms brigade Conner’s battalion was assigned to. Losses and geographical dispersion had forced such improvised organization on the Deneb Light Cavalry as they hunted down the stay-behinds - their mobility was higher than that of the Blakists or the Donegal Guards.

“Your concerns are valid, Sortek,” the older man agreed. “But you’re also correct: it’s not politically feasible. We have orders to let the Blakists be seen working with us, as a sign that the Star League is supporting our war against the Clans.”

“Respectfully, sir, they don’t seem to have a playbook for this sort of thing.”

“...then I suppose we’ll have to share ours. I’ll talk to Precentor Yoshizumi and try to talk him into attaching each of his demi-companies to one of our own units.” Watson sounded reluctant to have that conversation with his counterpart. “That’ll let them be seen working directly alongside our troops and we can hopefully act as a restraint. Rotating the rest of them up to the checkpoints may be more palatable for them.”

“Perhaps ask Precentor Fawcett as well,” suggested Conner, thinking back to the briefing that Military Intelligence had provided them on the Blakist officers. The second in command of the First Division had quite a file apparently. “He was ComGuards until fairly recently, so he may have more experience working with other nations.”

“Yes, he was stationed here in the Federated Commonwealth, I believe. Good thinking, Major. Until I can get something set up, please use all possible diplomacy.”

Conner looked at the smoking ruin that had been the centre of Sheffield. “I’ll do what I can, sir.”

He powered up his Wolfhound again and opened a channel to Shawnee’s command vehicle. “Adept, I suggest that my ‘Mechs start by clearing the heavier debris to help your infantry with the search for civilian survivors. Can you set up a comm network so we can coordinate that?”

*

Chapter 14
Old Connaught, Arc-Royal
Donegal Province, Federated Commonwealth
19 September 3067


Even though he knew it was an illusion and that security teams were patrolling the area, Peter enjoyed the feel of walking freely down the streets of Old Connaught to one of the many eateries that served the city. A simple dye had darkened his hair to a nondescript brown, so out of uniform he should hopefully not be spotted by casual observers. It made a change to be surrounded by people who didn’t know his rank or identity. He’d not really had a chance at this since… when was it? The day I left Zaniah, he realised. It feels like forever.

The door of their destination chimed as he opened it, holding it open for Terias.

“I should really be doing that for you,” she murmured as she went past him.

“Please permit me the illusion of being a gentleman,” Peter told her with a smile.

“We have a reservation in the name of Mr. Warden,” Terias told the woman waiting inside.

“Ah yes. Mr Warden arrived a few moments ago. You would be Mr. and Mrs. Morgan?”

“That’s right,” Peter agreed before Terias could disagree.

“Please come with me.”

The infantry officer elbowed discreetly Peter as they followed the waitress through to the dining area. They weren’t the only customers, and the Archon-Prince saw a table with five young men and women wearing Clan Wolf leathers around it. “...then we blew open the gates of the prison complex,” one of the men was saying, “And fought their ‘Mechs inside. Lady Arano blasted open the wall on the other side and joined us in her Kintaro.”

“If a Kintaro could take down the walls, why did you not do that rather than fight your way to the gate?” asked one of the girls.

Peter frowned. Who was Lady Arano, and what prison complex had she called on the Wolf Clan to attack? The warriors seemed quite young… perhaps something during the civil war? But he didn’t remember anything like that.

Phelan was waiting at the table, a beer already open, and Ranna Kerensky sat opposite him. It was disconcerting to see the two members of Clan Wolf wearing anything other than their uniforms, but that was part of the reason to meet here. The uniforms and the distinctions of the Clan were getting in the way of his understanding the people behind them… and that failure to understand could be a part of why the exiled Wolves and the AFFC were struggling to withstand Vladimir Ward’s onslaught. Ranna looked a little uncomfortable in a skirt, but Phelan’s seemed to appreciate the sight.

Since the question was on his mind and Phelan would surely know, he asked about the young clansmen’s anecdote while the waitress was fetching his own beer.

Phelan gave him a blank look in response but Ranna threw back her head and laughed. “It is a game, Peter.”

“A game?”

“Yes - a computer game that is quite popular in the sibkos.” The mechwarrior reached out to pick up her beer and took a gulp. “It does teach useful lessons in resource management, as well as some broader tactical concerns. The player represents a mercenary commander in the late Succession Wars, fighting for the fate of a small periphery realm.”

I wouldn’t have thought that a Clan sibko would find a mercenary protagonist appealing,” Terias observed while Peter digested that answer. “I understood there to be some prejudice.”

“We have been on Arc-Royal for a decade.” Ranna set her beer down. “I have found that warriors who played the game find it easier to understand the Kell Hounds and other mercenaries they must work with. On average, anyway.”

“Wait.” Phelan almost spilled his beer. “Is this that thing that you and father get dividends from?”

“How very Lyran,” Peter mused with approval.

Ranna’s ears went red. “My grandmother had leased her image rights to the developers before she returned to the Clans. While she lived, the payments went to the Wolf Dragoons pension fund but when we came here, Jaime Wolf told me that I had been appointed as her heir.”

“Damn.” Peter shook his head. “A game with Natasha Kerensky and Morgan Kell in it? Where was this when I had the time to play such games?”

“I don’t think it’s a new thing,” Phelan told him. “But from what I know of you when you were the right age, you were more interested in actual military sims than computer games that aren’t all that realistic.”

“It is not that bad.”

“Ranna,” he leant over and hugged Ranna around the shoulders. “It has a Behemoth-sized dropship that crashed on its side on an airless moon and could be restored to take off - without being righted! - in about a day. I don’t think there’s a dropship that size that has ever actually made a transatmospheric flight, and certainly not in that condition. And let’s not get into the infinite supply of Griffins.”

“You’re just pouting about the lack of Wolfhounds,” she told the Khan, poking him below the ribs.

“Well, thank you for clearing that up for me,” Peter said and the return of the waitress with his beer cut off conversation as the four of them ordered their dinners.

“Speaking of realism,” Peter said softly once the waitress had left. “However well Ward is doing in his offensive, our intel suggests that he’s only sent Gamma Galaxy back to defend his occupation zone.”

The first wave of Wolf attacks had hit five worlds and taken three of them. On Pasig, the attackers had focused on the Second Wolf Legion, part of Phelan’s Beta Galaxy, destroying it and then withdrawing before the ComGuards division based on the world could relieve the Cluster.

Koniz remained in doubt as well - despite numbers that on paper favored the defenders, Katya Kerensky’s Delta Galaxy had savaged three clusters of Phelan’s own Alpha Galaxy. In desperation, the senior AFFC officer on-world had ordered the Exiles away, in hopes that the invaders would follow them, dispersing his own command and their mercenary support to give the impression that the defences had collapsed entirely. The brigadier had been right and with half of Kerensky’s force gone he’d managed to pin the rest down in cat and mouse games, but those were the bright spots. And now the second wave had hit three more worlds, one of them Pandora - command world for the entire theatre. There were contingencies for losing Pandora but it wouldn’t be good news if the world fell.

“It may be a case of overconfidence,” Ranna observed. “Vlad may have expected Gamma to win back the worlds quite easily, given the success of his first wave.”

If so, he’d been wrong. Seventh Battle Cluster had only been the first part of the galaxy to arrive, but their defeat on Zoetermeer had been followed by unsuccessful attempts to drive off the forces on Vulcan, Sevren and Laurent.

“If anything, his use of older equipment for his garrisons helped us, the Southern Cross task forces were able to resupply from the captured garrison supplies.” Peter toyed with his knife. “I’ve ordered them to continue pushing - Adam’s Operation Whiplash has given us a clear supply line via Baker 3, so I want them to push deeper - we’ll see if Vlad backs off when his capital is under threat.”

“If he doesn’t, then they might be able to link up with the Nova Cats and retake Tamar itself.” Phelan understood what a boon that would be for morale. The Tamar Pact had been one of three realms that united centuries ago to form the Lyran Commonwealth, and Tamar itself had been a bastion of Lyran strength on the Draconis border throughout the Succession Wars, holding out even when it was almost surrounded by worlds that had fallen.

Terias shook her head. “But if he doesn’t turn back, he’s getting close to us here.”

The attack on Coventry by the Jade Falcons hadn’t succeeded in taking the world, but it had forced a re-evaluation of how bold the Clans could be. Arc-Royal was the heart of the Wolves-in-Exile, who were evidently an objective in their own right in the mind of Vladimir Ward. A similar deep strike could mean their civilian population and ten years of industrial development - both in their enclaves and in developing Arc-Royal Mechworks - falling into the hands of the Crusader Khan. And with Pandora being fought for, Arc-Royal was taking on much of the administrative role of commanding the fighting in the theatre.

“Victor is moving his command post to Kelenfold,” Peter told them. “With the ComGuards’ Twelfth Army and the other forces we have in that theatre, he’s going to try to retake worlds that the Jade Falcons have taken there. It’s clearly a much smaller force than the one hitting Coventry province, and the ComGuards have a warship force under an officer he says he can trust - the same one who led the Operation Serpent naval contingent.”

“Alain Beresick?” asked Phelan.

Peter nodded.

“Good man,” the Khan agreed. “I think he would be their overall fleet commander if it wasn’t for internal politics.”

“I’m glad to hear that. If Victor can smash the Jade Falcons then he’s threatening Vlad’s flank and can also move in to hit worlds along the rimward occupation zones - perhaps even link up with the Southern Cross task force and essentially cut off Ward and half of the Jade Falcon’s occupied worlds from the rest.”

Ranna shook her head. “That’s a very optimistic expectation.”

He tapped the table with his finger. “For us, yes, but for Vlad that has to be… Sorry?” Peter looked up as the waitress returned with a loaded tray.

“Who ordered the steaks?” the young woman asked brightly and when Phelan and Terias raised their hands, she set the plates down in front of them. “I’ll be back in a moment with the rest. Does anyone want a refill?”

Phelan lifted his beer, which was almost empty. “Same again all around?”

They all nodded and by mutual assent deferred further conversation until the waitress had returned, both men finishing their drinks so she could take the empty steins away.

“You were saying?” Ranna asked once they all had their meals in front of them.

Peter used his fork to spear a chunk of potato from his stew. “Yes, the potential threats Victor poses are optimistic for us, but they have to be contingencies for Khan Ward to worry about. He doesn’t know what we’re thinking, we’ve launched counter-attacks that he clearly wasn’t expecting already.”

“I do not know if he will back off,” she said. “I know him best, and Vlad is very target focused. He might prefer to finish his attacks on us first, then return with the momentum of a victory against our Clan to retake the worlds that you are occupying.”

“We might be able to use that.” Phelan stared down at his plate, clearly not seeing it. “There are only a limited number of routes he can take to reach Arc-Royal. Unless he tries moving through uninhabited systems, he has to come via Hamilton or Atocongo.”

“Or both,” Peter reminded him, rubbing his jaw in thought.

“Possible, but either way - to get there he needs to take Esteros or New Exford, both of which are in range of his forces on Bountiful Harvest.”

“But not from Graceland or Pandora. In fact, Pandora isn’t quite in range of Kandersteg,” Terias named another world that was being reinforced in case it was a future target.

Phelan nodded. “It will be easier - not simple, but easier - for him to bring the forces from Graceland and Pandora to bear if he takes the New Exford route. I think we should encourage that.”

“By making it look lightly protected?” she asked. “That seems too obvious - he has to know we realise it’s under threat.”

Both Peter and Phelan started to speak and then paused, looking at each other. “Your plan, go ahead,” the Archon-Prince told his cousin.

“Thank you.” Phelan closed his eyes for a moment and when he opened them, he looked eager. “New Exford is already a rallying point for the forces that withdrew from Koniz, so we can use it the same way for the Clusters Vlad is fighting against right now. I want to take the rest of Alpha Galaxy, and half the Kell Hounds, to join them and take command. If I’m there, Vlad will want to come at me. It’s personal between us. And with the chance to take down our Alpha Galaxy, as well as everyone that has escaped him so far, he will have a completely solid reason to focus there.”

“You’re talking about taking on three Galaxies with less than two. Even counting the Kell Hounds, and considering the losses he must have taken, you’d be out-numbered,” Peter warned him.

“I know. But that is why it will tempt him in. That is your whole strategy, Peter. Dangle victory in front of Vlad and Marthe, make it look as if it’s just in reach.” Phelan looked sad for a moment. “And then go around them for what you are really after.”

Peter sighed and reluctantly nodded. It was costing the AFFC dearly, but he had half the Jade Falcon touman locked down in grinding battles that were bleeding them dry. Without those forces, they would be hard pressed to defend their occupation zone. Of course, with the losses his troops were suffering, it was an open question how long he could keep counter-attacks going.

“Ulric would be impressed,” the Khan said quietly. “Have you heard anything more about the Hells Horses? They are the real wild card now.”

“Nothing.”

“Just Twycross then.” Phelan frowned. “It is possible they simply have no other forces available to them in the Inner Sphere. The Diamond Sharks are being surprisingly close-mouthed about affairs in the homeworlds.”

“I don’t even know what’s happening on Twycross,” Peter confessed. “Jon Davion shut down the black box to relocate it out of the capital - he wasn’t sure he could hold that and the factories, but there haven’t been any transmissions since.”

“Not even HPG?”

The not-currently-a-redhead shook his head grimly and took a drink of his second beer of the night.

*

Chapter 15
Plain of Curtains, Twycross
Coventry Province, Federated Commonwealth
4 October 3067


The last instructions to reach Twycross had advised that some of the HPGs on Goat Path, Baker 3, Devin or Alyina could be in friendly hands to re-establish communications by this point. Jon Davion knew that this was the case, since some transmissions were getting through, although the Hells Horses were doing some very effective jamming that made it hard to pick up all the radio signals arriving via the HPG signal’s emergence point.

Unfortunately, it was impossible to reply to those messages by HPG; because the station had fallen, along with the capital city of Camora. Jon had declared Camora to be an open city and pulled out rather than get into a costly and damaging urban battle in the subterranean metropolis. Until it was retaken or the Hells Horses replaced the components that ComStar had removed at Jon’s behest, the HPG was out of service.

This wouldn’t have mattered so much if it wasn’t for one small detail.

Jon resisted the urge to kick the overturned truck with his Rakshasa’s foot. “Can it be repaired?” he asked instead, looking down at the crate that had been opened to check the contents.

“I’m not even sure what’s wrong with it,” the Chief Warrant confessed, kneeling over the half-metre cube of black plastic. The man had been thrown clear of the truck when it rolled, but he’d come out of it better than the device. “If I could fix this in the field, I’d probably be teaching hyperphysics at NAIS. All I know is some diagnostics on the user interface. We’re not supposed to open them up, for all I know just trying that could wreck it further.”

In theory, the padded crate around the black box should have protected what was officially called a K-6 fax machine. But the difference between theory and practise…

“Do you have any idea what’s wrong?”

“Sir, I’m primarily a cryptographer. I know how to use it and how to plug it in. For anything more than that, we’re supposed to arrange a secure courier to take them somewhere else, where even more secretive arrangements are made for repair or replacement.”

Working correctly, the fax machine could communicate anywhere in the Inner Sphere, although unlike the HPG the signals took some time to arrive. Without it, Jon’s command was cut off from all contact with the outside universe.

“Pack it back up, Chief. We’ll get it back to THI and then I guess we’ll have to see if they can manage anything.”

At least Trellshire Heavy Industries would have cleanrooms and electronic tooling. Maybe they’d get lucky and it was just some obvious loose connection inside. There was nothing to lose at this stage. Well, except possibly Jon’s rank and security clearance if letting this be opened backfired on him.

He straightened the Rakshasa, at least as far as the bird-legged ‘Mech could straighten, and looked around. Most of the brigade-sized detachment he was with had already gone past the site of the crash. The convoy couldn’t afford to be slowed, a full Cluster of the Hells Horses was in pursuit, and given their hovertanks, that meant that some of them were probably already between the Guards and the relative safety of the lines around the factory complex.

By the time the crate was re-sealed and loaded onto a waiting Hover APC, that most-of-the-column had become ‘all but the rear-guard’. Jon and the ‘Mechs of his command lance formed a square around the APC and they ran alongside the road, moving at more than eighty kph to reach a more sheltered spot in the formation. If anyone observed them, it would be clear that the APC was carrying someone or something important, but hopefully no one would be close enough to notice.

‘Hopefully’ went about the same way that the rest of the day had.

“Aerospace fighters!” someone shouted on the general traffic channel and Jon saw a JagerMech III jerk its arms upwards, turning to bring its weapons to bear on what was presumably the vector from which the aerospace fighters were coming from.

Jon was confident that other ‘Mechs of the same kind were doing exactly the same. Really, whatever criticisms might be levied upon Victor Steiner-Davion, at least the then-Archon-Prince had commissioned an air-defense ‘Mech that was able to keep up with modern frontline formations. Older JagerMechs and Rifleman ‘Mechs struggled now that many ‘Mechs had larger and more powerful engines for their size.

While the Rakshasa wasn’t ideal for the role, Jon twisted the torso to face in the same direction. He’d replaced the extended range lasers in the arms with older large lasers to manage the heat more effectively, but his LRMs could still reach a considerable altitude.

The Hells Horses aerospace fighters went over them so fast that he couldn’t even try to identify them. The LRMs he fired upwards might have hit or they might not. The only damage report was from one of the JagerMechs that had taken a hit from an PPC - most likely an attempt to disrupt the Mechwarrior’s fire by causing electromagnetic interference with his ‘Mech’s radar.

“They know where we are and have some aerial reconnaissance,” Jon assessed grimly. “Chief, move your APC over into the middle of the actual infantry carriers. We can at least try to obscure which APC was being escorted.”

The Chief Warrant Officer acknowledged the orders and the Hover APCs of the nearest infantry company smoothly maneuvered to include the vehicle as if they had always had thirteen vehicles rather than twelve. Of course they did, they were the Davion Heavy Guards. And then one of the APCs swung out and moved into the centre of Jon’s command lance.

He saw a head emerge from the cupola, looking up at him. “I think the Clanners can at least count past twelve, sir,” the trooper called, voice barely audible over the wind. “Permission to accompany the General’s lance?”

“Granted,” Jon told him and prayed privately that he was worried about nothing.

Thirty minutes and almost as many kilometres closer to that nebulous condition of safety - the convoy was anchored to the slowest vehicles (the recovery vehicles hauling seven repairable ‘Mechs, two of them enemy salvage) - the General heard the general traffic band light up: “Enemy Hotel Alpha out on the flank, vector nine and distance over a click. They’re evasive, not engaging as yet.”

Hover armour, Jon thought. And not firing on us? That’s unusual. The Hells Horses were as aggressive as any other Clan he’d encountered. If this was the Capellans or the Combine I might think they would be spotting for artillery but the Clans don’t approve of that…

Although, hadn’t he heard something about that? Jon frowned and switched to his lance channel. “Does anyone remember the Clans using artillery? It feels like those tanks are using spotters.”

There was a pause and then an unfamiliar voice spoke up. It took a moment for Jon to realise it was the same sergeant who’d attached his APC and presumably the squad inside to the command lance. “Didn’t the Falcons use it in the Refusal War, sir. To kill the ilKhan?”

“No… I think it was a LRM barrage,” Leftenant Cartwright corrected him, sounding thoughtful. “The Khan who ordered it was killed in a duel over the dishonorable tactic. But that reminds me, the Combine’s O-bakemono, that carries artillery. And it was modelled after a Clan ‘Mech that did the same.”

“Good thinking, both of you.” Jon changed channel on his comm. “This is General Davion,” he ordered. “Adjust your formations for incoming artillery. And get our own cavalry out and screening us from those spotters!”

He couldn’t see the hover tanks of the Seventh Lexington regiment swing out to respond, but a secondary monitor picked out their IFF signals and painted them on the map, moving out as ordered. Jon could also see the convoy shifting to widen the gap between their units and limit the damage any given artillery strike could inflict.

“Missiles inbound from behind,” he heard someone report.

Other voices spoke up, ordering units with anti-missile systems to turn and provide as much coverage as they could. Jon felt his own gaze driven in that direction but forced himself not to. He wasn’t with the rearguard and needed to trust the officers there to do what was required. Besides, his ‘Mech didn’t mount active anti-missile defenses.

At least, he thought, the spotters are still out on the flanks and…

Don’t tempt fate, he told himself. What else could go wrong and what can I do about it?

“Vanguard,” he ordered. “Watch out for Elementals attempting to hide and provide observation data as we pass their positions. Air defense, we may see those aerospace fighters again.” Nothing else sprang to mind and he focused on avoiding any accidents as they continued to march alongside the highway.

There were explosions behind him as missiles got through and detonated among the convoy. The impacts were scattershot and at least with Arrow IV technology, the missiles were relatively short range in terms of artillery. At least, if the Clan variant wasn’t significantly better than those of the Star League - which wasn’t something he should assume.

The wind was picking up even further, as it often did on Twycross. As a result, it took Jon a few moments to realise that what he could hear outside wasn’t just background weather noises.

“VTOLs!” shouted O’Malley, and wheeled his Argus around, stepping out of the line of advance to bring his ‘Mech’s full armament to bear.

The helicopters were angular and predatory, sweeping out of low ground that Jon would never have thought deep enough to contain aircraft and through a gap in coverage forced by the dispersion against artillery. Clanners who understand combined-arms on this level? he thought incredulously even as he followed O’Malley’s example and brought everything in his disposal to bear upon one of them.

Tracer fire from O’Malley’s rotary autocannon lanced across the sky, shells ricocheting off the sides of the first helicopter. Jon fired his own missiles at the second, staggering the launches. The groups of missiles intercepted the rotor blades and the low-flying craft crashed to the ground, low enough that the crash didn’t destroy it.

Switching to the flight lead, Jon lit it up with his large lasers. One shot from either his lasers or O’Malley’s barrage caved in the cockpit.

And then his cockpit went crimson as warning lights lit up. Alert, a side-screen cautioned him. TAG.

Who was targeting him? Jon twisted his Rakshasa, trying to evade the lock. He couldn’t see any source…

“Incoming!” O’Malley spun, firing his autocannon up into the sky above the back of the convoy.

The hammer of god struck Jon’s seventy-five ton battlemech and drove it nose first into the dirt.

His head ringing, Jon drove one arm down and forced the fallen Rakshasa to roll over so that any further fire wouldn’t hit the weaker rear armour. The TAG warning hadn’t gone out, something was still illuminating him.

“General, can you get up?” It was the sergeant from before and his APC skidded to a halt next to Jon’s ‘Mech.

Almost instantly, the TAG warning shut down.

And then the hover APC was blown apart, as a missile that would have cut a light ‘Mech in two struck the little vehicle on the upper hull.

Jon rolled his ‘Mech upright, hatred flaring within him. The APC had blocked the TAG indicator, so the source had to be beyond it.

“I’m marked!” shouted O’Malley.

Beyond the blazing remains of the hovercraft, Jon could see the crashed helicopter from earlier, nose pointed in his direction. He could see movement behind the cockpit glass. As if in a dream, he saw the crosshairs float over the VTOL’s canopy and then his fingers clenched on every trigger on the joysticks.

The lasers cut the wreck almost in two, before the missiles landed and smashed it entirely.

“O’Malley?”

“TAG is gone, General.”

“It was the crashed helicopter.” Jon looked down at the wreck of the APC. “They still had a TAG system active and were able to illuminate us.”

“What now?”

Jon saw another missile coming in. “Keep moving. They’re firing blind, for now. We can probably get ahead of them.”

Fourteen hours later, the battered convoy arrived at Trellshire Heavy Industries. Four more Battlemechs and two tanks were being towed, another three tanks had been beyond salvage. Jon handed the black box over to Janna Olivetti, the THI engineer who had the best security clearance.

The Olivettis were Lyran nobility, though of recent vintage. Janna’s father had been raised to Duke of Sudeten after leaving Defiance Industries and founding his own BattleMech factory there. Janna had studied at the New Avalon Institute of Science, and returned home to continue that tradition only to be lost behind enemy lines when the Clans conquered the world. She’d been found here on Twycross when the world had been liberated three years ago, having been employed by the Jade Falcons as a technician and by Lyran intelligence to run resistance cells against the conquerors. There wasn’t likely to be anyone more trustworthy.

Traditionally it was the responsibility of company commanders to write to the families of the dead, but Jon informed the infantry company’s captain that he’d take that responsibility for the infantry squad and the APC’s crew. Nine letters was a small price to pay.

He was almost done when Olivetti reported that she’d managed to open up the black box. She wasn’t sure if it was breaching the seals or the crash that had triggered the self-destruct, but concentrated acid had wrecked the delicate systems inside. The effect had very thoroughly destroyed any ability to reconstruct how it worked, much less repair it.

For five long minutes, Jon stared at the list of men and women who had died decoying enemy fire away from a worthless wreck.

And then he started writing a tenth letter. A recommendation that they all be awarded the Silver Sunburst. A piece of metal and a letter of praise wouldn’t give the families their loved ones back, but it was all he could do.
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drakensis

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Re: State of the Union
« Reply #52 on: August 17, 2021, 12:18:09 PM »

Chapter 16
Ruatha Petrochemicals Plant, Goat Path
Clan Jade Falcon Occupation Zone, Federated Commonwealth
15 October 3067


In the 3040s the AFFC had considered - or so Sabine Steiner had been told at her grandmother’s knee - instituting a regulation that officers ranked Colonel or higher should not take to the field in Battlemechs. The logic was widely agreed to be sound: management of a regiment or even a battalion largely required a commander’s full attention, which was somewhat difficult to arrange if you were concerned with being shot at, much less shooting back. Rumour had it that Melissa Steiner-Davion had championed it, and Hanse Davion opposed it - both for reasons more personal than political.

Ultimately, the regulation hadn’t been instituted simply because issuing orders that you knew would not be obeyed was corrosive to good discipline.

Sabine had found herself in live combat far more often since she was promoted to General than before. She wondered, at times, if that meant she was doing something wrong.

Right now she was more concerned with keeping the enemy Black Lanner from getting around behind her, than with rehashing the debate; but the thought was pernicious in its demands for her attention. Her Barghest had formidable mobility and firepower, but like any quadrupedal ‘Mech, it couldn’t bring arm-mounted weapons to bear behind it - after all, it had no arms.

That, however, was why ‘Mechs operated in lances and - seeing Mavis Summers’ own Barghest bounding towards her - Sabine switched targets and focused on the Shadow Cat that was dangerously close to getting into the sergeant’s blind-spot.

The agile omnimech - probably salvaged from the war in which the Jade Falcons expelled Clan Steel Viper from the Inner Sphere - hopped aside as Sabine fired one of her lasers. However, she’d expected that and had held her fire from the autocannon on the other side of her ‘Mech.

The Defiance Disintegrator autocannon lived up to its name as the Shadow Cat’s left arm was ripped away by the large calibre shells, halving it’s armament in an instant. It still pummeled the left rear hip of Mavis’ ‘Mech with its remaining missile launcher before bounding away and evading the fire of the second large laser.

In return, Mavis speared the Black Lanner with the extended range PPC mounted where Sabine carried twin lasers. The fifty-five ton ‘Mech rode the impact as the shot carved a long but shallow trench along the side of its narrow torso section.

The mechwarrior must have been inexperienced, for she wavered between continuing to engage Sabine or switching to this new threat. Any decision would have been better than none, Sabine slipped aside, and let Mavis close in, almost burying the muzzle of her autocannon against the medium omnimech’s side before she fired it.

Unlike the Defiance Disintegrator on Sabine’s ‘Mech, Mavis’ variant on the Barghest mounted a Defiance Thunder - trading the flexibility of cluster ammunition for double the rate of fire. The jamming that was impeding Sabine’s ability to communicate with the rest of the 20th Avalon Hussars was cut off as the thundering cannon hammered depleted uranium through both the shoulder supporting the Black Lanner’s own PPC and the cockpit assembly.

Seeing that it was outnumbered, the Shadow Cat fled.

“Give chase?” suggested Mavis, back-stepping her Barghest in case the Black Lanner’s fusion reactor had been ruptured - the blast damage wouldn’t be as bad as holodramas liked to make out but it would be hot and ‘Mech myomers reacted poorly to high temperatures.

“No.” Sabine checked her ‘Mech’s condition in case she’d missed something in the rush of combat. Armour damage, but nothing she couldn’t live with for now. “We need to regroup.”

Unfortunately, her options for a command centre were limited. Most of the Hussar’s dropships, including the Belle Isla, had been ferrying armoured troops back and forth around the planet as they tried to impose some order after the abrupt removal of the Jade Falcon governor and his support. And while the administrative buildings were adequate for the paperwork side of Sabine’s job, they weren’t a secure bunker.

It had been a deeply inconvenient moment for the Jade Falcons to send a relief force. Not that there had been anything much left for them to relieve.

“Baker company, this is General Steiner,” Sabine warned tersely, checking which unit was nearest. “I’m moving to join you, unless you’ve got a very good reason to, don’t go anywhere before I reach you.”

“Confirmed, General. The Falcons made a push earlier, but we’re holding nicely now.”

The two Barghests loped side-by-side up the slope towards the high ground that Baker company was holding. The hill had been partially excavated at some point, leaving a sheltered hollow section at the top that made decent firing positions for Mechs to interdict traffic trying to go through the low ground on either side.

Why the hill was dug out like that, she didn’t know. There was a chemical plant nearby, perhaps it had been intended to site some sort of facility up on the hill. But it was handy now and that was what mattered.

It had been a calculated risk to leave the nearby town - where Sabine had been meeting with such civic leaders as had survived the occupation and liberation - and try to reach Baker Company. The cost had been both the other ‘Mechs escorting her, but given that the Falcons clearly had skirmishers out, getting caught in the town could have been bad.

“This is not what I need to get this planet pacified,” she muttered to herself. The number of alleged collaborators who’d had untimely ends would have been horrific, if it wasn’t so common that it had become banal. Sabine was morally certain that more than half of them were simply people taking the opportunity to settle old scores and perceived wrongs, but she didn’t have the policing infrastructure to prove that.

Among the things that the Jade Falcons didn’t feel that a local police department needed financing for was a dedicated forensics lab. There had been one - one! - maintained at the planetary capital, but that had been firebombed in one of the ‘retributions’ for the police’s support for the Falcons so currently there was no forensics capacity on Goat Path at all.

On the one hand, Sabine didn’t see that the police had had a lot of choice on the matter. On the other hand, police were comparatively high status in Clan society, technically part of the warrior caste. It would have been against all human nature if literally none of them had abused that.

“If the Falcons had been two weeks later, they would have been someone else’s problem,” Mavis agreed as they climbed the last slope.

A pair of Enforcers (older models, rather than the new Enforcer III, but refitted and upgraded) covered the Barghests as they entered the position. While they were massively outweighed, the medium ‘Mechs had enough firepower to at least buy time for the rest of the company if they’d been hostile.

Once codes were exchanged, one of the Enforcers waved them through and Sabine moved her ‘Mech up behind one of the boulders and locked the limbs. No longer needing her gyro and neurohelmet to keep it from falling over, the blonde removed the latter, unbuckled and stretched for the first time in what seemed like days rather than hours.

She used a rag to wipe her face and hands before strapping herself down again. Who knew if she might need to fight again on short notice? “Captain Zibler?” she enquired, remembering the name of Baker company’s commander at the last moment. “How are your troops doing?”

“One ‘Mech down, no serious injuries,” the young man declared. “I sent him back to the plant with his ‘Mech - it’d just be in the way and we can’t exactly re-attach the legs here.”

Sabine wasn’t going to ask why one of the company’s ‘Mechs was missing both legs. She could understand one of the hips or thighs taking weapon damage, but both? Well, strange things happened sometimes.

“How about supplies?”

“We’re alright ourselves - I had everyone restock their cockpits when it looked like we’d be moving on.” Zibler was matter-of-fact about it, although Sabine hadn’t got around to ordering it as a general measure. That spoke well of him. “The infantry aren’t so well off though - they don’t carry as much as we do as a matter of course. I sent them back to set up shop at the plant and see if they can requisition supplies from the town further up.”

That seemed to make sense. “Are we going to have to honour promissory notes?”

“I don’t think so,” the captain told her. “We had a bag of Falcon currency set aside, and even if it’s not legal tender in the Commonwealth, it is made of gold.” He then changed the subject, as if concerned that Sabine might ask how exactly he’d come by a bag of Clan-issued coins. (She had no plans to. It wasn’t as if the Jade Falcon banking system was any concern of hers, it was pocket change by the standards of military and as long as no one was knifed over the money it did no harm to her command). “Do we have any idea who we’re fighting?”

“I’m about to look into that.”

Matching action to her words, Sabine uploaded her combat data for transmission and checked for a suitable satellite. Fortunately, the Jade Falcons hadn’t swept the sky clear of the thin network of coverage that the Hussars had established on her arrival, so she was able to bounce a message off one to her intelligence section and get a reply within minutes.

“Interesting,” she observed once the report came back. “The ‘Mechs that Mavis and I encountered had the markings of two different units: the Twelfth Falcon Regulars and the Jade Falcon Eyrie Cluster.”

“Isn’t that last one a training command?” asked Zibler.

“It is. And they’re both with Rho Galaxy, which was on Blue Hole according to our last data.” Sabine considered that. “I believe… yes, both of those Clusters were identified as present. So there’s a very good chance that the Falcons may have pulled back from their own offensive in order to respond to our presence.”

It would be interesting to know if these were the only two Clusters on the planet, she thought. It was possible that the Eyrie markings represented not the full unit but that the Mechwarrior in the Black Lanner had been recently transferred across to the Regulars as a ‘graduate’. The Eyries functioned much like the cadet cadres of the AFFC: in the event that they saw action alongside a regular unit, the more proficient of their personnel would be raided to keep the frontline regiments viable. After all, there would be more cadets along as soon as the next academy classes graduated. It had happened during the civil war - the First NAIS Cadet Cadre had contributed heavily to forming the Fifth Royal Guards and to rebuilding the Davion Guards units that fought on New Avalon.

In the best case scenario, that could mean that the Hussars were only facing a single Cluster of Jade Falcons. Sabine sent back a request to be notified if any additional unit markings were observed.

“What’s the plan?” Mavis asked impudently. She wasn’t in the chain of command, more of a bodyguard than a member of Sabine’s staff. She was very good at her job though.

“For now,” Sabine told her, “We’ll focus on reassembling our forces into useful battle groups and gathering information on their numbers. The Falcons aren’t as constrained by the terrain as we are, since they don’t have many ground vehicles to begin with. If the numbers are in our favour, I’m happy to fight here rather than withdrawing.”

“As simple as that?”

“As simple as that,” the general agreed. “Our goal isn’t so much the territory as to winnow down the Jade Falcon’s touman. Since they’re here, it’s a matter of fighting them on the most advantageous terms. Convenient of them to come to us rather than making us go looking.”

She was confident that those insouciant remarks would be much repeated among the troopers. Good for morale. It wouldn’t do to let people think that the Archon-Prince’s plans for a counter-offensive might be falling apart after only a couple of months.

*

Chapter 17
Old Connaught, Arc-Royal
Donegal Province, Federated Commonwealth
1 November 3067


The Archon-Prince was pacing his office, crossing it every few strides, frustration evident. “If the timing could be worse, I’m not sure how,” he declared.

“I’m not sure I want to find out.”

Michael Searcy had noticed in the past that Brigadegeneral Terias Sortek had been able to persuade their ruler to relax more than most of the Fifth Royals’ staff, but this time it seemed that her words weren’t reaching him.

The broad-shouldered royal turned sharply as he reached the wall. “I’ve put it off as long as I can.”

“Let me put it this way, your highness.” Some levity might help, Searcy thought. And if he got his head bitten off, well that would probably get an apology later. Peter Steiner-Davion did try to rein his temper in. Most often he even succeeded. “If you fight Clan Wolf it’s possible that you’ll survive, but if you ditch your sister’s wedding, I don’t like your chances of seeing out the year alive.”

Peter stabbed one finger in his direction and then paused and shook his head. “I’ve thought the same thing myself,” he admitted. “And Victor’s already sent his apologies, which leaves very few of our family to attend… but the realm’s at war! For the Archon-Prince to simply abandon his command post and go home for a family occasion when no one else in the AFFC has that luxury, it’s the sort of special privilege that wrecked the Lyran high command for generations.” He shook his head, sending his long hair flying (it made him look more like his late cousin Morgan than his father, for a change). “And not unheard of in the Suns, at times.”

Lucy Davion folded her arms. “I hope you’re not planning on trying to join the reinforcements heading for New Exford, sir.”

“I’m sitting hard on my inner adolescent,” was the reply. “Arc-Royal needs to be protected too, so I can justify remaining here with the Fifth Guards. It’s going back to Tharkad that feels like it’s letting everyone down that’s fighting for my - our - cause.”

Terias pursed her lips. “I assume you’ve weighed all the pros and cons exhaustively?”

“To the point of praying for divine guidance.”

“I assume that none was forthcoming,” observed Phelan Kell, entering the room with his father. “I’m sorry, did I miss a memo about a last minute staff meeting?”

“I’m trying to decide if I should return to Tharkad or not.”

“Ah.” Phelan considered the question seriously. “Well, I suppose you could attend the Star League Council remotely. ComStar would bill you through the nose though.”

Peter actually winced at that. “I trust Yvonne to handle that if it comes to that. She’s got Tancred with her to help and Catherine will be there.”

Morgan Kell shook his head. “Has there ever been a case of a Council Lord not attending? Since the League reformed, I mean. Not the original.”

“Ragnar had some really extenuating circumstances,” Peter reminded the old man.

The Rasalhague head of state had been elected when his father Magnus Haakonson stood down, despite the fact that Ragnar had been captured by the Clans and had been unavailable to actually carry out the duties of his office. Ironically, only months before that election the young prince had been here on Arc-Royal, part of the exiled Wolves - but he’d then been captured again by Clan Ghost Bear, eventually rising from bondsman to warrior for a second time. Christian Mansdottir had been appointed as regent, only to then be appointed as First Lord. It made for a tricky situation now that the Ghost Bears were moving to unite with the handful of Rasalhague worlds not conquered, meaning that Ragnar was expected to take up the duties that had been notionally his for six years.

“The only other example is Sun-Tzu abstaining from the last election of a First Lord,” Searcy offered. “He left, didn’t he? The media made a lot of hay out of it.”

“He did,” Peter agreed sourly.

“I think that there’s very little chance of you being elected First Lord if you don’t attend.” Lucy Davion looked serious.

“I’m inclined to take that as an argument to stay here.”

That got a snort from the Davion general. “You and Victor finally agree on something?”

“Someone has to hold the office, but it doesn’t have to be me.”

“There are a very large number - billions of them - who think it’s more than time that a Steiner-Davion did that,” she told him. “If you go back, you may feel that you’re letting down the armed forces but if you don’t then you’re letting down the Commonwealth.”

Peter looked stricken. “I know. But I… it’s not that easy for me! I set this up, it’s my orders that brought us here. I can’t just walk away.”

Morgan Kell sighed. “So you see both sides. And from your comment on praying, you’re sufficiently unsure that you’re seeking some higher judgement?”

“Yes.”

The silver-haired mechwarrior moved to the desk. “I can’t claim to be the Good Lord, Peter. But may I present an argument that may leave me some moral standing to give you direction in this matter?”

The Archon-Prince looked at him sharply. “Yes,” he agreed, stepping back. “I would appreciate that.”

Reaching into his coat, Morgan produced a billfold, and from it a yellowed and tattered piece of paper. Without a word, he laid it on the table.

Searcy, and the others, moved forward to look at it over Peter’s shoulder as he examined it.

The letter was little more than a note, set above a rainbow coloured patch woven into the paper itself. Six handwritten words of content: Deny this man, Morgan Kell, nothing.

It was signed: Katrina Steiner, Archon, 22 July 3007. Beneath that, in another hand, had been added Melissa Steiner, Archon, 17 March 3039. And again, Victor Steiner-Davion, Archon-Prince, 5 July 3055.

“My god,” someone muttered. It might even have been Michael himself.

“Not quite.” Morgan Kell tapped the patch, quite unnecessarily, and it changed colours to confirm his identity. “But I am someone that has received a great deal of trust from your family, Peter.”

The Archon-Prince looked at Morgan and then reached for a pen. In a blocky print, he added his own name and the date, beneath that of his brother, and then passed the sixty year old document back to its owner.

Morgan folded the letter and put it away. Michael couldn’t help but think that it might be better in a museum. “Peter, there are many people, some of them in this room, who can lead the fight against the Clans. By leaving, you aren’t abandoning us. You are trusting us. But the Star League Council is a battlefield that none of us can fight upon. Only you - so it is your duty to stand for us there.” He paused. “And if others think less of you for it, they are fools and you will know not to pay heed to them going forwards.”

Peter stared at the old man, and then chuckled drily. “Well, that sounds like good advice.” He extended his hand and Morgan took it in his one flesh and blood hand.

“And look at this this way,” Michael suggested. “If you were still here, your highness, then Khan Ward might be too intimidated to come any closer.”

The redhead shook his head again. “If he was only so easily intimidated.” He pulled a hair-tie out of his pocket and started to secure his long hair. Terias Sortek stepped in and took the hair-tie, taking over the process.

“I will be going to New Exford personally,” the elder Kell added, almost offhanded. “I am leaving my home in good hands.”

Michael saw Khan Kell’s head snap up - evidently his father had not shared this decision with him until now.

“Well, I cannot deny you that,” agreed Peter, holding his head still as his subordinate put his hair into a pony-tail.

“I’m sure you’ll do fine,” Morgan added to his son. “But young Scott Bradley doesn’t quite have the reputation that Dan or Akira have among the AFFC. It will help to reassure the local defenders that we are working smoothly together.”

Phelan paused and then nodded in acceptance. “You have fun on Tharkad, Peter,” he told him. “Show Terias a good time and come back in a couple of months with the Star League’s affairs in order. We can keep things under control for a couple of months without you mother-henning us.”

“I already said I was going,” Peter muttered. “I don’t need abuse too.” But he was grinning.

*

Chapter 18
Crescent Harbor, New Exford
Donegal Province, Federated Commonwealth
14 November 3067


The Old Camber Bridge was a monument to the wealth and power of the Star League. A vast, two-towered suspension bridge across the strait that divided the continents of Alnwick and Berwick, according to a tourist pamphlet that had been used for part of the local briefing, it had been built by Star League engineers at no expense whatsoever to the people of New Exford.

Daniel Holstein didn’t believe money came from nowhere, and suspected someone’s tax money must have paid for it, and if New Exford’s taxes hadn’t paid for the bridge then they’d paid for someone else’s. But it had apparently been free to use.

There was a much more practical, lower bridge, connecting both sides of the strait with arches constructed in the relatively placid water downstream of the vast towers that had supported the Old Camber Bridge. It was needed because the suspension bridge had been nuked three times during the First Succession War by a DCMS deep raid. The first two nukes had failed to take out the towers, thus they survived to be a monument… but not a functional bridge, because the third nuke had severed the roadway between them.

The newer, more modest bridge had toll booths, with signs saying that income was being directed towards repairing Old Camber Bridge now that the radiation around the towers was low enough for that to be safe. It occurred to Daniel, as the recovery vehicle he was riding on went past one of the signs, that the completion date of 3055 might be just a little optimistic.

No one was paying the toll today. Grim faced guards were directing the long lines of support vehicles northwards across the bridge. Daniel’s heavy truck was one of the very few going south and it was his third round trip today.

We’ll have to make it the last trip,” the driver - a thick-accented woman from Summer in the Isle of Skye, who identified herself as O’Kea though it sounded like och-eiya when she said it - warned. She tapped the radio. “Kell’s Wolves are getting bent over, good and proper. Sounds like the Hounds aren’t doin’ much better.”

“Depends what the orders are,” Daniel answered, though there were sounds of agreement from the rest of the crew behind them. “I’d rather not cross the bridge if it’s under fire though.”

“You’re trying too hard to sound tough, lad.” The driver tapped another cigarette out of the pack on her dashboard and lit it from the one between her lips. Then she leant over and spat the butt out of the window, jamming the replacement into its place. O’Kea had been smoking solidly since they set out on their first mission of the day - and every day before. Allegedly the only reason she didn’t smoke in her sleep was that she’d once set her bedding on fire.

Rather than arguing, he took the radio handset from where it hung on the dashboard. “Junkyard, Junkyard, this is recovery one-oh-four. We’re just north of the bridge, where do you need us?”

“Recovery one-oh-four.” The voice on the other end was tired. “Head for the junction of the main highway. Reports have a Kell Hounds Verfolger down there. And keep an eye out for any dismounted ‘Mechwarriors trying to hike north - we’re missing a lot of names right now.”

“Got it.” It wasn’t proper military protocol, but the Kell Hounds weren’t exactly the AFFC - and Daniel was technically a civilian volunteer-cum-reservist anyway.

One of the techs pulled out a local map. “Okay, I see the highway, damn… that’s well inside where the frontlines are supposed to be. How’d somethin get disabled there.”

“Supposed to be,” O’Kea muttered around her cigarette. “Not exactly a proper perimeter right now. Get someone up on the MG.”

The tech handed the map to Daniel and scrambled backwards, opening the hatch in the roof. The smell of fire and petrochemicals already wafting through the open driver’s window strengthened.

“It could have been damaged earlier and fallen over trying to get back,” Daniel suggested, but he didn’t sound convincing even to himself. The frontlines were more a suggestion than a solid defensive position.

Finding the junction wasn’t hard, there was another ‘Mech there standing motionless over the fallen Verfolger. Both wore the red and black colours of the Kell Hounds, the Archer’s pristine while the Verfolger’s could only be seen where battle damage hadn’t stripped away both paint and armour.

The radio cracked. “Recovery one-oh-four?” a vaguely familiar voice enquired. “Do you read me?”

“Loud and clear,” Daniel replied as O’Kea turned the truck around, backing it towards the Verfolger.

A tall, greying head of hair emerged from the Verfolger’s cockpit. “I trust you have medics with you,” the voice continued. “Colonel Bradley needs more treatment than I can deliver.”

Daniel cursed mentally. No one had told him that the mechwarrior was still in the ‘Mech. “Anyone with medical training, go check the cockpit,” he ordered as O’Kea pulled over. “The rest of you get the ‘Mech secured to the winch while I give it a once over.”

O’Kea said something under her breath and yanked the handbrake before opening her door. She left the engine running as she climbed down, pulling a medical kit out from under her seat.

The Verfolger had taken a beating, Daniel concluded. The left leg was a stump - severed just below the knee, what was left of the foot and lower leg several metres away. That was what had apparently felled it in the end, although the right leg was a locked up mess so it must have been limping just to get this far. The right arm was just gone, he had no idea what had happened to that. Ford and the rest of the team started checking the hardpoints that were intended to let the ‘Mech be picked up and moved inside a dropship’s mechbay. If they were still firmly attached then they’d be ideal for securing the winch.

Leaving O’Kea and the other two medically-trained technicians at the cockpit, the grey-haired man he’d seen before scrambled down the chest. He had a long, thick beard and a cybernetic arm, Daniel saw, but it was a long moment before he recognised the rest of the face. “Colonel Kell.”

“Dan.” Morgan Kell climbed carefully down to join him. “Good to see you. Well, not the best circumstances.”

“Do we have hostiles in the area, sir?”

“I wish I could say for sure.” The old veteran clenched his flesh-and-blood hand into a fist. “Scott’s in and out of consciousness. His seat came loose when he tried to get his ‘Mech off the floor - probably the same damage that took out his radios. And of course, falling slammed him pretty hard. From what he said, I think a couple of Ice Ferrets had him at their mercy when one of our air patrols saw them and came in for a strafing run. Wherever they went, they haven’t come back yet - but that was an hour ago as best I can tell.”

“It sounds like the perimeter is porous. Respectfully.”

Morgan rubbed his face. “As soon as you have the ‘Mech loaded, get it across the bridge. Our dropships are going to have to hop the strait and pick up every ‘Mech that can reach them. We can at least hold the bridge long enough for the rest of our forces to load safely.”

Daniel looked up at the sky. It was bright, almost offensively blue except where contrails marked the duelling aircraft of both sides. Clear skies with nothing to hide dropship movements. “We’ll lose dropships doing that.”

“I know, but we can’t get everyone across the bridge. If Ward’s forces are racing to get to the landing zones on this side of the strait, it’ll buy time to get everyone else across.”

How did things fall apart this quickly?

The younger man didn’t ask it out loud but Morgan must have seen it. “It’s going to take a while to piece together, and I’m not looking forward to reading the after action reports, but first we have to get the troops out. I’ll get back in my ‘Mech and help them get Scott out of there, but after that I’ll need to join the rear-guard.”

Daniel stared at the Colonel as the old man turned and walked back to the Archer. Then he headed back to the truck and pulled out the cutting gear.

“What are you doing?” asked Ford as the technician dragged cables around the fallen ‘Mech’s torso.

“I’ll take off what’s left of the right leg. It’s not in great shape and it’ll mean a few less tons to carry.”

Looking closer at the limb, Daniel was impressed that Colonel Bradley had managed to walk this far with the ‘Mech. The knee looked close to snapping. What could have left a regimental commander walking a damaged ‘Mech back towards the bridge unescorted didn’t bear thinking about. How much was even left of the Second Kell Hounds? Junkyard was the headquarters for the third battalion, so at least that much had survived.

Banishing the speculation as unproductive, he started cutting away the remaining myomers around the knee actuator. They weren’t  in any shape to do anything anyway.

He was distantly aware of the Archer stepping closer and extending one arm to take hold of cables lifted out of the cockpit by O’Kea. As he brushed the myomers aside and started working on severing the actuator’s fittings (much easier than the actuator itself, much less the endosteel structural members), the Archer very carefully lifted its hand, bringing the mechwarrior - bandaged and braced along three of his limbs, along with around his chest - up and out of the ‘Mech in an elaborate cradle.

It seemed to Daniel that the ‘Mechwarrior was almost as badly off as his ‘Mech. At least no one was suggesting amputating one of Bradley’s legs.

By the time he’d finished the first fitting, O’Kea and her were laying Bradley out on a stretcher. The cabin of the recovery vehicle had a small living compartment, little more than two bunks and a tiny washroom, but it was the best available choice for the wounded officer.

“Holstein!” Ford called. “We’re all hooked up! Are you done with the leg?”

Daniel picked up the cutter and started jogging around the ‘Mech’s leg. “Take up the slack!” he called back. It would probably lift the ‘Mech a little, making it easier for him to get at the other side of the fitting - he’d intentionally started with the one that was higher and more exposed.

Now he started cutting away at the lower side of fitting, applying the cutting torch to one edge until the winch made the characteristic sound that indicated there was no more slack and it was now up against actual resistance. He backed up and watched as the ‘Mech moved, dragging slightly and then the upper body started to lift.

As Ford halted to make sure the lines were still secured correctly, Daniel moved in and started cutting again. He was about half the way through before he heard the other tech order the winch to begin again. Stepping back, he stared at the fitting. Was it beginning to deform? The young engineer took a couple more steps back, just in case it snapped.

“Attention!” Morgan Kell shouted, his voice booming out from the loudspeakers of his ‘Mech. “Those Ice Ferrets are back! Leave the leg, Dan, I’ll get it for you!”

Daniel stared for a moment up at the Archer and then started running for the back of the recovery vehicle. There was no visible sign of the laser beam from the weapon mounted on the heavy ‘Mech’s arm but what was left of the Verfolger’s knee practically exploded. Much less tidy than his cutting had been, but faster.

The winch began to howl as Ford jammed it to full power. There was no longer time to worry about sparing the equipment and it would be faster to drag the ‘Mech onto the truck than to cut it away now.

Sixty-five tons of ‘mech - less the missing limbs - raced Daniel back to the recovery vehicle, which was actually dragged back a little towards the Verfolger before O’Kea put it into gear.

Yanking open the tool cabinet built into the chassis, Daniel jammed the cutter in, barely checking it fit into the clips before he jammed it shut. The heavy truck shook as the crippled ‘Mech finally fully settled onto its bed.

Daniel jumped up on the side and caught a cable that Ford had thrown him. They needed to secure the Verfolger against lateral movement. The engine changed tone and he realised that O’Kea wasn’t waiting for them to finish, they were rolling already. He prayed that she stayed straight until they were done, otherwise he or Ford would be swept off the side and be lucky not to be crushed when the ‘Mech followed them.

One block, another… He was on the third, tightening the cable around the left arm - the only limb left! - when he heard Morgan Kell’s LRMs fire. Dozens of missiles streamed out of the heavy ‘Mech and descended onto something not yet in view.

“Hold tight!” O’Kea roared and turned onto the highway, the recovery vehicle grinding up the slight embankment and onto the road surface. The Verfolger shifted and for a moment Daniel thought that it was going to slip away - but fortunately the cables  - myomer bundles thicker around than his forearms - held. Barely. He clambered down the side of the truck, looking for the next point.

Ford must have done the same for the end of the cable swung over the Verfolger’s hips. “Get it tight!” the corporal shouted.

“Okay!” Daniel fumbled the end, found it and got it hooked in. Activating the battery pack caused the myomers to compact and tighten, tying down the lower end of the ‘Mech. “Get the legs too?”

“I think it’s on your side!”

Fumbling, Daniel managed to find the cable and he started dragging it out from under the leg. Then he paused, climbed up onto the limb and fed it up and then around and below the leg again. A full loop around the limb had a better chance of holding it than one loop across both stumps.

Behind them, an Ice Ferret - a blocky, ugly design much favored by Clan Wolf - came into view, weapons firing at Kell’s Archer.

Nothing seemed to strike home as Kell sidestepped and back-pedalled, firing his LRMs again right around their minimum range, by Daniel’s guess. The salvo smashed into the smaller ‘Mech with crushing force and it fell sideways off the road, rolling down the embankment.

A second Omnimech, same chassis but mounting what looked like laser mounts rather than the missile pods of the first ‘Mech, followed the first. It too was firing on Kell, but there were none of the telltale signs of armour being blasted away.

Ford reached over and caught the end of the cable, starting to secure the other leg. “We lost to these clowns?! They can’t hit him when he’s right in front of them!”

They really can’t, Daniel thought, remembering the tales his father told him - of battles against Yorinaga Kurita; of how Colonel Allard, then a mere leftenant, had shown Clovis sensor data of both Kurita’s Warhammer on Styx and Kell’s Archer during training on Arc-Royal… or rather the complete absence of sensor data when the video records showed both ‘Mechs had been plainly present.

No one had ever adequately explained it.

“Targeting computers just… don’t believe they exist,” was the best Clovis Holstein had been able to come up with, even now. Not that he had looked too hard, and certainly Morgan Kell had rarely taken the field in the almost forty years since those long ago battles.

But here it was again, the mercenary a veritable phantom upon the battlefield.

The second Ice Ferret’s anti-missile system threw small-calibre shells into the path of another salvo of LRMs. It wasn’t enough to stop all of the Archer’s massive firepower, but it depleted the salvo a little and what struck home wasn’t quite enough to fell the Clan mechwarrior.

The Archer stepped in closer, blasting trails through the frontal plating of the Ice Ferret with its lasers and then Morgan closed one battlefist around the smaller ‘Mech’s slender arm and tore it directly off.

“Yeah! Show him!” Ford shouted. Then the myomers tightened and the legs of the Verfolger were secure. All they needed to do now was get inside and…

For a moment, Daniel thought that the lights in the sky were dropship engines - the expected flight of ‘Mech transports that Morgan had told him of, rushing in to collect the battered survivors of this battle.

But they were coming from the south… and they were converging… “Get down!” he shrieked and dived underneath the Verfolger’s hip, praying that the ‘mech was pinned enough not to shift the comparatively few centimetres needed to squash someone in those confines.

The world seemed to end in fire and a rolling thunder.

With his ears ringing and despite his own warning, Daniel peered out around the leg. About an acre of land around the road had been stripped clear of vegetation by fire and steel. Morgan Kell’s Archer was near the centre, paint flensed away, but it was still moving, the mechwarrior turning to rush out of the area.

Up in the sky more missiles were flying towards them.

Artillery - my god, there must be a dozen or more launchers out there! “Ford, are you okay?”

There was no reply. Daniel saw more movement, the first Ice Ferret up on its feet again. It broke into a run and for a moment he thought that it too was trying to escape the bombardment. But a moment before the second volley of missiles landed, he saw the smaller ‘Mech tackle the Archer and pin it in place.

Daniel curled into a ball and prayed for salvation.

When the explosions were done, he looked up and saw both ‘Mechs fallen flat. It was impossible to tell their condition. He also saw Ford, sprawled and bloody on the road behind the recovery vehicle. The technician wasn’t moving as they left him behind. Somehow, Daniel knew that even if they went back, it would be too late.

More missiles hammered down, and then more. Hitting the same targets, not following them. There was the characteristic silvery blast as a reactor’s shielding ruptured. He crawled out from under the ‘Mech and scrambled along the side of the vehicle, finding the ladder that let him haul himself up onto the roof where the hatch for the MG was. The hatch was closed, but he yanked it open one handed and slithered inside, head first.

“Where’s Ford!” shouted O’Kea, around yet another cigarette.

The two techs he’d landed in the laps of lifted Daniel up and shoved him into the front seats. “Dead,” he reported flatly and grabbed the handset for the radio.

“Junkyard, Junkyard. This is recovery one-oh-four, I have operational immediate for whoever is in charge.”

“One-oh-four, hold one.”

It felt like much more than a minute before another voice, this one a woman’s, spoke. “This is Major Murdoch-Wilson, this had better be important.”

“Major, this is Dan Holstein.” His grip tightened around the handset. “The Wolves just obliterated Colonel Kell with artillery.”

“You… say what?”

“They have some sort of artillery battery, missile launchers - I counted close to twenty missiles per salvo. They just hit the junction he was defending with five salvos. Even if he punched out, what chance would he have?”

Murdoch-Wilson still sounded shell-shocked. “One-oh-four, can you return and verify?”

“Not a chance!” O’Kea grabbed the handset from Daniel. “Major, we have one MG between us; and your Leftenant-Colonel Bradley in our back seat, so bandaged he might as well be a mummy. We are not trying to take on friggin’ Clan ‘Mechs in a recovery vehicle.”

“I…” The woman’s voice steadied. “Acknowledged, one-oh-four. Get yourselves across the bridge as fast as you can.”

The line went dead, as dead the chances of stopping Clan Wolf on New Exford.
Logged

drakensis

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Re: State of the Union
« Reply #53 on: August 19, 2021, 12:06:35 PM »

Part Four - Whitting

There is a city that this darkness can't hide.
There are the embers of a fire that's gone out,
But I can still feel the heat on my skin
This mess we're in, well you and I,
Maybe you and I,
We can still make it right.
Light Up The Night - Protomen, Act II

Chapter 19
Dropship Lyre, Alma Alta system
Donegal Province, Federated Commonwealth
15 November 3067


Under normal circumstances, even without a command circuit there should have been enough jumpships on the route between Arc-Royal and Tharkad for Peter Steiner-Davion to have been there by now, but there were actually very few military jumpships that weren’t already supporting the continued operations, either directly or by filling the gaps between commercially viable routes where the supply lines demanded it.

As a result, Peter and his staff were currently about halfway, and waiting for a chartered Scout-class jumpship to arrive for the next leg of their journey. He hadn’t had to commandeer vessels the way Hanse Davion had in 3028 and 3029 to support his invasion of the Capellan Confederation. That might happen though, in which case he’d need as much goodwill with the major shipping lines as possible. Drafting one for his personal convenience wouldn’t help.

“I think I know why Victor wanted to head off to Strana Mechty,” he complained as another message popped into the electronic queue on his workstation. “Even the bureaucrats couldn’t follow him there.”

“I’m sorry, sir.” His secretary Hildgard was working across the compartment from him. “We have learned from that failure and won’t allow you to escape as he did.”

“Damn.” He opened the message. “...what even is this? Am I being invited to a pet show or something?”

“They are adorable kittens,” the young woman advised him.

“Yes, I can see that. But why do I have a message that’s full of kittens?”

“I thought it might cheer you up, sir.”

Peter blinked and then snorted with laughter. “Is that an approved practise?”

“It measurably improves my working environment,” she deadpanned. “However, if even that isn’t enough for you, there should be just enough time before your timeslot in the gym to review the latest messages from the frontlines.”

“Ah, something more interesting.”

Banishing the kitten pictures, Peter opened the indicated files and saw that the first message was from Precentor George Wagoner. Like most communications from the commander of ComStar’s Eleventh Army, the message was terse and to the point. Almost rude, but not quite across the line. Peter rather appreciated it - at least he knew exactly where he stood with the ComGuards officer.

In less than two hundred words, the Precentor advised that Operation Blake’s Trumpet had been delayed twenty-four hours, that all involved units had confirmed their understanding of this and that with this adjustment he had ordered the go-ahead. That meant that jumpships were already moving before this message could have reached Peter or even Victor.

“On the one hand,” he mused. “I would prefer to be the one giving those orders, but…” He frowned… “Hildgard, you deal with about half my messages. Am I micromanaging the AFFC?”

“Less than you were, sir. At this rate, you’ll be spending only as much time on it as you do with foreign relations by 3072.”

“Do you have a graph or something to back that up?” he asked her suspiciously. “On second thoughts, I don’t want to know.”

Blake’s Trumpet was (as the name suggested) Wagoner’s plan anyway, Peter reminded himself. The Precentor had proposed using all four of his divisions to spearhead counter-attacks on worlds that had fallen to Clan Wolf, and to the Jade Falcon worlds that seemed to be acting as supply bases for the other Clan. In practise, that hadn’t been possible - the 48th Division was badly out of position for the operation and the 388th Division had been mauled on Graceland, needing weeks to reorganise even once they’d been pulled off world.

In Peter’s opinion, the ComGuards would have been spread too thin for such attacks anyway. But the idea was sound and so he had proposed an alteration: Wagoner would hit two of the intended targets with the Divisions available, and Peter would place four Regimental Combat Teams under the Precentor’s command to hit the other four. The ComGuards officer had accepted eagerly, some said he had even come close to smiling, and presented a new plan within forty-eight hours.

I approved that plan, and the timetable. Wagoner has no need to come back to me for any further approval. Perhaps going back to Tharkad is for the best, Peter thought to himself. I need officers to show initiative and having me looking over their shoulders is probably stifling that.

“If this goes smoothly, and if Victor’s task forces succeed when it comes to Tomans, Orkney and Jabuka…” he trailed off, unwilling to tempt fate. “If.”

“Yes, sir. And if you would like to check the messages from Marshal Steiner on Coventry, we might be done on time. Wouldn’t that be nice?”

“Do you have a hot date or something?”

“I have a video message from Fredrica,” the woman told him honestly. “One I want to watch privately.”

“An important cause,” he agreed. “Alright.”

Adam’s messages were considerably longer, with attached appendices. Peter started to open them so that he’d have all the details and then hesitated. No, he’d just told himself to give officers more room to work. Instead he looked at the summaries. If there’s something in here that I need to expand on, I can check them tomorrow, he thought. I owe Hildgard that much for hauling her around the Inner Sphere like this.

The summaries were, fortunately, mostly positive in their tone. While fighting was ongoing on a number of worlds, the Jade Falcons had pulled off Blue Hole entirely and their invasion of Mogyorod was under heavy pressure, suggesting that they might have to give up there too - unless the forces from Blue Hole got thrown in there as well. At least some of them had been reported as trying to relieve the worlds hit by Operation Whiplash though, so that outcome seemed less and less likely.

The second message was much less reserved in its optimism. The Seventh Federated Commonwealth RCT and the Kestrel Grenadiers had landed on Blackjack and apparently caught a secondline cluster completely by surprise. Virtually the entire Jade Falcon force had been killed or captured and the HPG should be repairable within a month, which might allow contact to be made again with Twycross. Adam had even authorised the Grenadiers to raid surrounding Falcon-occupied worlds and see whether follow up attacks could be made to widen the routes to Twycross.

“Alright,” Peter declared. “That all seems good.”

“Really?” Hildgard gave him a surprised look. “You’re satisfied?”

“I may check a little further tomorrow, but overall this seems good news. Adam appears to have everything in hand.” He prepared to stand only for a chime to come from the woman’s console.

She looked at it, blinked and then gave him an apologetic look. “The ComStar station on Alma Alta have relayed a high priority message to us, for your immediate attention. Chief Geary advises that he’s running it through the encryption systems now and expects it to be ready within five minutes.”

Peter sighed. “Well that would figure.” He checked the clock. “I tell you what: send him a message to forward it directly to me and you can go watch your message.”

“That’s alright, your highness. I only have to stay and log it in. A moment or two’s delay won’t really matter.”

He rubbed his jaw. “You know, my family has a history of workaholism. You shouldn’t be enabling me like this.”

“I feel very very bad about it,” she told him with a smile.

Leaning back in his chair, Peter stretched his back, feeling the muscles stretch. He really wanted to get some gym time in - he just knew that once the Whitting Conference began, he would have to cut back his personal time in order to negotiate with the other lords. He rolled his shoulders, trying to work out the stiffness.

A second ping announced that the message had arrived. “I’m forwarding it to you now,” Hildgard reported.

“Okay, just get it logged and get out of here before someone else thinks I need to know they have a hangnail or something.”

She saluted him sloppily, and Peter returned it solemnly before checking the message’s source. Ah, from Phelan. An update from the situation on New Exford? Hopefully it would be the third good news of the evening…

He opened the message, and his good mood vanished with the first words.

“Oh my god…”

“Sir?”

Peter leant back and rubbed his eyes. It didn’t change the contents of the message no matter how much he wished it did. “Hildgard, I’m very sorry but I need to send a priority message to Tharkad. Can you set that up right away?”

His secretary’s hands started tapping keys on her workstation. “Understood sir. Who too?”

“My sister Yvonne and to be copied to Field Marshal Caesar Steiner.” He paused. “Have it marked to be copied to New Avalon for my sister Catherine and Field Marshal Bishop Sortek as well. Attach the message we just received.”

Bringing the camera and microphone on his workstation to active, he looked directly at the focus. “Yvonne, I’ve just received bad news and I suspect it’ll reach Tharkad before I do.” He paused and took a deep breath. “We’ve suffered a major defeat on New Exford. Exactly how it happened will need to be investigated, and Victor will be handling that; but in short, it appears that the Crusader Wolves got inside Phelan’s decision loop and tore his Alpha Galaxy to shreds. Estimates are that approximately one in five of the Wolf-in-Exile’s total warrior strength was killed or captured - exactly how much of each we don’t know. The Kell Hounds Second Regiment tried to hold things together long enough stabilise things; but they suffered major command fatalities and it was all they could do to play rearguard for a retreat off world.”

Was it fair to blame Phelan? It was more or less the Khan’s own words, but he had to be hurting right now. Leave it to Victor, Peter decided. Dear God, I do not envy him carrying this burden.

“Perhaps the most painful loss is Phelan’s father. We don’t have the body, but a witness saw his ‘Mech struck by a massive artillery barrage and Vladimir Ward made a point of sending a confirmation message that he also believes Morgan Kell to be dead. His official status is missing, presumed dead. As one of our staunchest supporters, a national hero and a former Colonel of the Skye Rangers, I don’t think there’s any chance of hiding this from the media, so you’re going to have to ride that one out.”

“I’ll tell you more as soon as I learn anything. If not, I should be on Tharkad to see you on schedule.” Peter cut the recording off. “Check that for me, please.”

“I… yes sir.” Hildegard switched her workstation to feed the audio to her earbud, sparing Peter from having to hear it again.

I should have demanded he come with me. Be a military advisor for the Star League Council meetings. He could have given Yvonne away at her wedding, the way he did mother. Peter buried his face in his hands. First Ardan, now Morgan. How many more people are going to die for my decisions? How many others will pay that price when their long service should see them retired to their rightful rewards?

*

Chapter 20
Dropship White Star, Clinton system
Bolan Province, Federated Commonwealth
15 November 3067


The commercial route that ran from Solaris to Tharkad was struggling to keep trade moving. It wasn’t so much that there were fewer jumpships as much as there were fewer of the large large vessels.

The chartered liner taking Isis Marik and the rest of the Silver Hawks delegation had been pre-booked months in advance, so they weren’t really slowed but the shipping line had changed which jumpship would be running the route twice between the booking and the actual journey - first from a Star Lord to an Invader (despite the martial name, one of the most ubiquitous jumpships in use) and then to a Merchant-class vessel that Isis suspected usually handled lesser routes in the region.

There were small clusters of dropships waiting for a jump collar to become available, something that Isis hadn’t seen when she made this journey in reverse, almost three years before.

“This is a major commercial route,” Galen confirmed when she mentioned it over dinner. “But it’s more of a spur of the main artery from Skye and Hesperus to Tharkad - and from the Federated Suns, really.  We’ll link up with that in a couple more jumps at Chukchi. I suspect that we’ll see much heavier shipping on those last four jumps.”

“The Federated Commonwealth is this stretched?” On one level the war seemed far from the Silver Hawks Coalition’s borders but the latest news put Clan Wolf on New Exford, only six jumps from Tharkad. They probably weren’t close enough to threaten the Whitting Conference… but there had been serious consideration of relocating it anyway. It was genuinely possible that if Vladimir Ward kept coming at this rate, he could reach the Lyran capital by Christmas. Of course, what forces he would have by that point was an open question.

Galen considered the question seriously. “I’ve seen worse,” he concluded after finishing his mouthful of the rather nice noodle dish they’d been served. “During the Clan Invasion, shipping got tied up moving dozens of Regimental Combat Teams from the Terran corridor up to the front. It was a nightmare logistically and half of them didn’t arrive until the informal truce Tyra Miraborg bought us was almost over. Peter prepositioned his forces starting a year ago to avoid that.”

“Then this is just keeping them supplied?”

He nodded. “Munitions, spare parts, replacement soldiers when they can be scraped up - and remember, he needs jumpships moving across the combat zone, distributing the supplies to where they’re needed. Getting everything to the major supply nodes is only the first step.”

Isis shook her head in disbelief. “How do the clans manage that? Most of their military supplies still come from their homeworlds, as I understand it.”

“Clan Wolf, yes - when Phelan Kell defected, he brought with him a lot of the technicians who had been upgrading the infrastructure to support them locally. So far it doesn’t seem that their new leadership is moving forwards as quickly with that as Phelan was. The Jade Falcons are different - they poured resources into Sudeten and Twycross’ factories to provide a local source for armour, munitions and even entire ‘Mechs.”

“And then they lost Twycross.”

Galen smiled. “Again.”

Isis reached over and patted his hand. “Yes dear, I know you were there the previous time.”

Twycross had changed hands repeatedly since the initial invasion - taken by the Jade Falcons, liberated only to be captured by Clan Steel Viper. Then the Jade Falcons and Wolves took their own war onto the world, where the Jade Falcons were victorious only to withdraw rather than claiming the world from the Steel Vipers. After the Great Refusal, the Jade Falcons and Steel Vipers had fought over their shared occupation zone with the jade Falcons emerging triumphant… only for Twycross to be liberated a second time during their abortive incursion right after the Federated Commonwealth Civil War.

She counted on her fingers. “Seven times that the world has been fought over in the last seventeen or eighteen years, counting the Hells Horses.”

“That sounds right,” agreed Galen. “The factories make the world a valuable target. Losing it cost the Jade Falcons heavily in their ability to absorb losses. It’s possible - not definite, but possible - that they’re overstretched. With reinforcements being funnelled into the fighting on Mogyorod, Blue Hole and Barcelona that’s three major battles that must be costing them lives and supplies. We know that their reserves are limited… But we aren’t sure how deep they are.”

“How is it that the Wolves are doing so much better then?” Isis enquired. “Surely their resources should be even more limited and as I understand it, their frontline forces are smaller than the Falcons.”

Galen sipped on his drink. “It’s an interesting question, and one that will probably be much debated on Tharkad. My suspicion is that there are three factors.”

“Oh?” She leant back and gestured for him to continue. While it wasn’t her field and she didn’t always enquire, she enjoyed hearing him talk about something that had his interest.

Her lover put his glass down and lifted one finger. “Firstly, they’re fighting on a narrower front - not necessarily fewer battlefields but closer packed and thus it’s easier for them to shift reserves of supplies from one world to another. The Jade Falcons are fighting on two fronts, with the Wolves between them, and taking Baker 3 has cut their occupation zone entirely in two - it doesn’t stop them from sending jumpships through uninhabited systems but that tends to be done in convoys so that they don’t risk a jumpship ending up stranded by a drive failure with no one knowing where they are.”

The next finger went up: “Secondly, because they didn’t ship machine parts and technicians from their homeworlds; so, assuming equal shipping, they had more cargo space available for military supplies. In the long term that would still leave them behind but in the short or medium term, it could mean they have more supplies.”

“And then,” he raised a third finger. “Since the Great Refusal, the Jade Falcons fought fairly heavy conflicts against the Steel Vipers and ourselves - pardon, the Federated Commonwealth.”

Isis smiled and waved off the verbal slip.

“That didn’t just cost them Twycross,” he expanded. “It also cost them a lot of their rising young warriors, supplies and equipment. Meanwhile the Wolves have only fought one significant conflict, a much smaller struggle with the Hells Horses with limited conflicts and the entire matter essentially settled by negotiations. They’ve lost much less material over that time.”

“But even that must have limits,” she pointed out. “Do you think that they really expect to reach Tharkad?”

Galen looked uncomfortable. “I’d like to say no, but we - SLDF Intelligence, that is - still don’t have a good feel for their objectives. I think they’d try for it if they could - the moral and material advantages would be huge - but however badly they have managed to tear up the Wolf-in-Exile forces, their warships took a beating when they tried to prevent the retreat from New Exford. The estimate from Star League Intelligence’s naval section is that they took serious damage to all four of the ships that tried the interception. It cost the Wolf-in-Exile fleet their only battleship, but the Werewolf mauled two battlecruisers and two cruisers before it was destroyed and the Wolves don’t have a shipyard that can handle that - there’s a jumpship yard that can do some work on smaller ships but nothing that large.”

Isis nodded in understanding. Building up the facilities to support her own realm’s tiny warship fleet was taking a great deal of time. One of her more recent concerns had been opening negotiations with her cousin Photon Brett-Marik to use the Technicron shipyards at Tamarind to carry out the next regular maintenance cycle for the smaller ships. Neither realm would have any facilities large enough for their Thera-class supercarriers for years - currently debate was ongoing on whether to risk not doing that work, or coming to some sort of terms with the Archon-Prince for access to the docks at Alarion. The latter would be an intelligence windfall for him, the chance for his engineers to look up close at a neighbour’s largest warship - but if the alternative was not being able to use the Corinth at all…

“I take it that if Khan Ward sends them for repairs that they’re effectively out of the current war?”

Galen nodded. “At least six months either way, plus the repair time.”

“I see. And the Federated Commonwealth now has their new shipyard at Odessa.”

“The Werewolf may not even be salvageable, but if the Exiles’ fleet needs repairs they need only send the ships to Odessa - three jumps away from New Exford or Arc-Royal. Of course, by the same logic…”

“Another target.”

“Exactly.”

Isis considered what she knew of the jump routes through the area, which wasn’t a huge amount. “Am I wrong in thinking there’s something of a rift between habitable systems between Tharkad and Odessa?”

Galen nodded. “Donegal and Pherkad are two jumps apart, but the only inhabited world between them is Cameron, which is far closer to Donegal than Pherkad. There’s a military rendezvous in deep space that military convoys sometimes use, but commercial shipping generally goes around the region.”

“And Clan Wolf may not have current maps,” Isis added. “Does that mean that forces sent to Odessa wouldn’t be available for any attack on Tharkad?”

“It would make it harder.”

She studied her plate for a moment. “Given his own worlds are under attack, I can’t see why he would continue his advance. He has won glory, which may be prized among the Clans, but he is neglecting his own worlds.”

“I’ve only ever encountered him once - on Strana Mechty - and we hardly spoke. But from what Phelan tells me, it’s unlikely he sees those worlds as his in the same way that you or Peter would. Only Clan Wolf - and perhaps only their warriors, those who adhere to his Crusader beliefs - are his people.”

“And he hates Khan Kell?”

Galen smiled. “Oh yes. They’ve been enemies since the first time they ever met.”

Isis leant back into her chair. “Then perhaps his goal is already in reach. Have you considered that his goal may not be the Federated Commonwealth at all? It may be that he simply desires to destroy his rival, and the other half of Clan Wolf.”

Galen nodded. “If I know Victor, he’s already arranged to move command responsibilities away from Arc-Royal - and likely Phelan has been advised to evacuate whatever his Wolves don’t need immediately on hand deeper into the Federated Commonwealth. If you’re right, Vlad Ward will throw everything he has at Arc-Royal, so he can win there and then return to halt the bleeding out of his occupied worlds.”

“And if I’m wrong?”

The blond man reached over and took her hand in his. “Then perhaps you shouldn’t linger on Tharkad, once the conference is done.”

*

Chapter 21
Sarghad, Trell I
Clan Jade Falcon Occupation Zone, Federated Commonwealth
18 November 3067


“You’re sure?” Sabine Steiner asked the Twentieth Avalon Hussars’ intelligence staff. “The same jumpships?”

The Military Intelligence captain pursed his lips. Neil Donner looked more like an accountant than a soldier, but Sabine supposed that the analysis side of intelligence work did involve some of the same skills. She knew he had graduated Albion through the infantry track, so there was obviously more to him than met the eyes. “We’re ninety-five percent sure that the jumpships at the nadir point include the same ones we saw evacuating the Jade Falcons from Goat Path. We’re several jumps away though, it’s possible they didn’t bring the troops here.”

Victory on Goat Path had led to the traditional reward: another mission for the Hussars. Sabine’s command (less a mixed brigade left behind as a garrison) had jumped to Malibu, where the Thirty-Sixth Lyran Guards RCT had liberated the world and were now securing it as a forward re-supply base with expectations of being sent to Twycross as a relief force. From there, her next orders had been to jump instead for the Trell system, where intelligence suggested supplies were being assembled by the Jade Falcons.

Trellwan (officially Trell I) was a small, strange world where the local day was more than half as long as the planet’s short year. It was also less than three days' travel from the standard jump points. To establish surprise, Sabine had brought her forces in via a proximity point between the planet and the sun, giving the ships a good view of both the standard jump points.

“We were wondering why supplies were being sent here,” she observed, looking around the command centre. “Wotan would have made more sense - it’s a central node for the entire coreward end of the Falcons’ occupation zone. But if they want a world that would easily be overlooked when they regrouped, this iceball is one of them.” And being close to the jump points also helped.

Juan Villanova-Petain chuckled. “There’s a certain irony in a Steiner calling a world an iceball, general. Given Tharkad’s natural state, I mean.”

She gave him a frosty smile and then let the ice fade from her expression. “Actually, I spent most of my childhood on Gallery. Tharkad is great for Christmas, but for the rest of the year I’d like to see something other than snow.” Turning back to Donner, she arched an eyebrow. “You said the jumpships include those from Goat Path - that implies that there are others?”

“We don’t have such current data on the other’s exact origins, but we’re looking at a minimum of three additional jumpships of the Odyssey-class.” Donner adjusted his glasses. “It’s not confirmed, but they could be vessels that were observed carrying other Rho Galaxy units away from Blue Hole. If that’s the case, this could be a rallying point for the entire Galaxy. With the right dropships, there’s enough collars between the vessels we’ve observed.”

Sabine braced herself on her seat. “Worst case scenario, what could we be looking at?”

“The worst case would be a major Hells Horses deployment,” Donner told her. “However, no one has reported any contact with them other than on Twycross.”

“It’s only a jump away.”

“We know that the Jade Falcons have or had six Galaxies facing Coventry province,” he continued. “Epsilon, Gamma and Omega are too far away to plausibly have arrived at this point. Iota Galaxy hasn’t been seen since they departed Coventry but we aren’t seeing any sign of the battleship that was escorting them at that point. Kappa left Blue Hole after Rho, so unless the Hells Horses are present we’re at worst going to seeing two battered galaxies, at some point in the process of trying to make good their losses.”

“That would still be more than we can probably handle.” Louizio Martine-Holm looked concerned. “Juan I both left most of a regiment on Goat Path; and two galaxies would usually call for a minimum of four RCTs to face on even terms.”

Donner shrugged helplessly. “The current jumpship strength here isn’t enough to carry that many troops, but it’s possible other Falcon transports have departed already.”

The good news was that by arriving at a pirate point, the Hussars’ own transports were at a safe distance from the enemy vessels. Unfortunately, if they were facing two full Galaxies worth of Clan aerospace then even the Hussar’s reinforced aerospace element - a full regiment, brought back up to strength on Malibu, would be badly outnumbered in the air.

“I suppose there’s one way we might be able to find out.”

Sabine looked over at her armour commander. “What do you suggest, Juan?”

“We could ask them.” He shrugged at her look of disbelief. “The Falcons are supposed to take their customs very seriously. They might not reply, but it’s unlikely that they’d lie if they were faced with a formal… what do they call it, a batchall?”

Donner frowned as all eyes turned to him. “Batchall is considered a serious matter,” he agreed slowly. “The commander of Rho Galaxy, Lizabet Danforth, is considered unconventional, but unless we’d shown bad faith already, it would be considered shameful for her to mislead us. And if she tried, it’s unlikely she’d be a very convincing liar.”

“And if it’s Kappa Galaxy?”
“We know less about that unit’s officers. However, Kappa is a recent formation and of poor status. If we receive a response from their commander then it would be very unlikely that Rho Galaxy is present,” Donner explained.

Sabine nodded. “It seems that we would have little to lose in making the attempt. I believe that such challenges are usually delivered in an overblown and dramatic fashion?”

“Yes sir.”

She nodded at Donner’s confirmation. “Then let us set the stage.”

Shortly, her staff had gathered in one of the corridors of the Belle Isla’s crew decks, watching as a camera was set up to record Sabine standing before a panel that had long ago been decorated with the badge of the Avalon Hussars. The flag of the Federated Commonwealth was now hung next to the paintwork, hiding a much less salubrious noticeboard that informed those passing by of what food they could expect to be served over the next few days, and providing seven types of health advice for soldiers on leave in civilian settlements.

“We’re all set, general,” the corporal reported.

“Very good.” She’d changed into her dress uniform and made sure that she was presentable, while reviewing records of batchalls that the Jade Falcons had issued previously to get a feel for the phrases used.

“Ready to record…” The corporal raised three fingers and then dropped them one at a time.

Sabine glared into the camera. “I am General Sabine Steiner of the Twentieth Avalon Hussars. The gauntlet of the Federated Commonwealth will take this world, Trell One, under its protection once more. What forces will stand in our way?”

After a moment the light on the camera went out. “Alright, we’ll clip the ends of that, ma’am. Do you want us to send that right away?”

“Yes, do so as soon as you can.” She looked at the other officers. “If they respond, there may be some negotiation. If not, we’ll need to launch some reconnaissance flights to get an idea of what we’re facing.”

Commodore Harrangue looked grim. “That will thin our ability to protect the dropships if they launch a strike, general. To minimise that, may I deploy surveillance satellites?”

“Approved. If there are too many forces for us to force them off world, this may turn into a raiding mission, knowing their deployments will be critical to do as much damage to their supplies as we can without getting into a fight we can’t win.”

“We’ll also need to update our maps,” Villanova-Petain warned. “A good defensive position could let us bleed them heavily if they’re as aggressive as they were on Goat Path. But they’ve had plenty of time to alter the infrastructure to suit their preferences so there could be new transport routes and barriers that we don’t know about.”

Sabine’s comm chimed. She tapped it to accept the call, noting it was from the dropship’s command deck. “Do we have a reply from the Falcons?”

The officer’s voice was worried. “No, general. We have jumpships coming in. Three distinct vessels and they’re coming in via the same point we used!”

“What now?!” Harrangue looked grim. “With your permission, general?”

“Go!” she ordered.

The aerospace pilot ran for the stairs that would take him up to the command deck. Sabine was tempted to follow him but if the Falcons replied it would be better to be here… and realistically, she would have little to contribute to decisions for a space battle.

The Hussars’ jumpships didn’t have lithium-fusion batteries. They would need days to finish recharging their drives safely. Fast-charging from their reactors was possible but not something to be risked if there was any reasonable alternative.

“Do we have a tonnage estimate?” she asked instead.

“Fairly low,” the officer told her. “Probably not warships.”

That was something.

Sabine’s command staff looked at each other warily, waiting for the truth to be reported.

“Emergence!” she heard someone else say on the command deck. “Get me identifications…”

After a long moment there was a mumble that Sabine couldn’t make out.

“We have friendly IFF,” the officer reported, sounding relieved. “AFFC jumpship codes, we’re getting specifics now.”

Sabine felt the tension bleed out of her. Reinforcements. That was a weight off her mind, although she’d have been happier if someone had told her that she could expect them.

Captain Stevens took over the channel from the bridge. “General, it’s the Fourth Skye Rangers. I have Brigadier General Mary Edwards requesting a channel to you.”

“Edwards…” Sabine couldn’t put a face to the name, but the Fourth Skye Rangers were an old unit, not one of the units formed out of the old Skye Provincial Militias when the Archon expanded the brigade a few years ago, an elite unit. And most of the ‘old guard’ Skye Rangers were in Robert Kelswa-Steiner’s pocket. The Fourth had been stripped of much of their armour and infantry support during the reorganisation. She wasn’t sure where Edwards’ loyalties would lie… but at least she might have a common enemy in the Jade Falcons. “Put her through. And pipe me through from down here.”

The camera’s light went on and Sabine turned towards the screen above. “Brigadier-General Edwards. Welcome to the Trell system.”

“Thank you, General Steiner.” Edwards sounded amused, but Sabine couldn’t see her as the other woman was only responding in audio. “I appreciate the gesture, but you didn’t need to get dressed up for the occasion.”

“As much as I respect your Rangers, I’ve just sent the Jade Falcon a batchall. If they respond then it would give me an idea how many of their clusters we’ll be facing down there.”

“It does work occasionally.” The other woman’s voice was more serious. “I don’t think they’d have responded if it was me, but we have something of a history with the ‘honourable Clan Parrot’ and I get the impression they don’t like us much. I don’t recall your particular RCT having faced them before though.”

Sabine tried to keep her irritation from showing. She was saved by her comm pinging again. When she looked at it, there was a brief message advising the Jade Falcons had responded and were also trying to open a channel for direct communication. “It seems they’re at least willing to talk. I’m not familiar with your exact orders.”

“Hit and run, targets of opportunity.” Edwards paused. “My orders are directly from Field Marshal Steiner. They don’t preclude assisting other units if the circumstances allow, but I’m specifically prohibited from trying to bite off more than I can chew.”

“I understand the Rangers have sharp teeth.” Sabine shook her head. “I’ll see what the Falcons have to say. If it appears that the circumstances are favourable, may I assume that you would be willing to place yourself under my command for operations on Trell One?”

There was a long moment of silence. “I’d have to review your conversation with their commander,” the other officer said cautiously, not quite coming out and saying she wasn’t convinced of Sabine’s judgement. “However, if the circumstances make an attack here feasible, then as the senior officer, you would naturally have command.”

“Very well.” Sabine tipped her head. “I’ll send you a copy of the conversation once we’re done.” She lifted her comm. “I’ll speak to the Jade Falcon now.”

Unlike Edwards, the Jade Falcon commander was providing a video feed. While much of her head was obscured by a beaked helmet that suggested the shape of a bird’s head, her face suggested she was a few years Sabine’s elder.

“I am Galaxy Commander Lizabet Danforth of Clan Jade Falcon’s Rho Galaxy,” she declared. “The broad wings and sharp talons of my clan secure this world against all who would claim to it.” Then her tone shifted, seeming slightly less rote and formal. “We have not always found that spheroid warriors adhere to the batchall, General Steiner. Why should I trust that you will be different?”

Sabine tried to hide her amusement. “Trust is earned,” she pointed out. “I have never faced you in battle, Galaxy Commander. You will not know my measure until you do.” She paused. “However, I believe your warriors include some who faced me on Goat Path. Ask the Twelfth Falcon Regulars how I fought them there - and recall that they offered no batchall there.”

Danforth eyed her for a moment and then snorted. “The Twelfth were the second part of our touman that you fought on Goat Path. If I asked our garrison, what would they say of your honour?”

“Those who sought a warrior’s death would say that I granted them that.” The death of a warrior facing a more disciplined soldier. The tiny garrison of Goat Path had mostly been middle-aged Clan warriors who cared more that they had been left on the sidelines during their Khan’s glorious invasion than they did for protecting the world. “If the dead could speak.”

“You will find that I value the honour of victory over the honour of death,” the Jade Falcon replied. “But I will test your honour. There is a mountain range north of the planetary capital, the Crysanden Range, I  offer you safcon to land north of the mountains. If you can fight your way past three Clusters of my Galaxy and enter the city then I will accept that my guardianship has failed, and I will withdraw my forces.”

Three clusters - about half a Galaxy, Sabine thought. That was probably manageable for her Avalon Hussars, but something close to an even match. She’d want the Rangers, if Edwards could be persuaded, but if they preferred not then she might be able to win on those terms.

“I will bid forces from my own Twentieth Avalon Hussars and the Fourth Skye Rangers,” she declared. “And your own forces?”

“The Twelfth Regulars will be glad for the chance to avenge their defeat,” Danforth declared. “I shall also grant the Seventh Regulars and the Eighth Talons the chance to redeem themselves for our retreat from Blue Hole.”

“Bargained well,” Sabine replied, “and done.”

Danforth reached up and removed her helmet, revealing she had close-cropped hair showing signs of premature greying. “We will see who has bid well, upon the battlefield.” And then the screen went blank as her signal cut out.

Sabine took a deep breath and checked the camera was off. “Send that to the Skye Rangers,” she ordered. “And prepare for a landing.”

The Crysanden Mountains and Thunder Rift, she thought. A famous battlefield - the Grey Death Legion and then Cousin Victor’s first battle. Good defensive ground - tight valleys and lava tubes. It favours the Falcons… and Danforth seems too canny to be lured into a counter-attack.

But we have some of the best combat engineers in the AFFC. If we can’t open a path through those mountains, no one can.
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drakensis

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Re: State of the Union
« Reply #54 on: August 19, 2021, 12:07:35 PM »

Chapter 22
The Triad, Tharkad
Donegal Province, Federated Commonwealth
21 November 3067


Peter Steiner-Davion slumped into his favorite armchair. It had once belonged to Alessandro Steiner, but the twenty-eighth Archon had left the chair and the suite behind when he abdicated in 3007. The rooms had been largely unused during the reign of Peter’s grandmother, Katrina, then Peter and his brother Arthur had shared them during their childhood visits to Tharkad.

After Kathrina’s reign, Peter had elected not to use the same rooms she had used; instead going back to these rooms. Yvonne presumably didn’t feel the same way so what had been the Archon’s rooms for three generations had been relabelled the Regent’s suite. Such changes had been made before, inevitable with House Steiner having occupied the Triad complex ever since the capital moved to Tharkad from Arcturus.

“So what should I call you, after the wedding?” he asked his younger sister.

“I would prefer Yvonne,” she answered from where she was sitting primly on the couch.

“Yes, it would be confusing if you changed it to Katherine,” agreed Catherine Steiner-Davion, who was occupying the armchair matching Peter’s. The only difference was that Peter’s chair was slightly less faded, since it was further from the window. Neither chair was shabby, but they hadn’t been reupholstered since he was a boy and the difference was just about visible.

“Very funny.” Peter rubbed his forehead. “I meant your surname. I mean, Sandoval-Steiner-Davion is a bit of a mouthful, but that’s about the easiest way to triple-barrel your name.”

“There is precedent,” Yvonne admitted, “And that’s what I’ll use officially, but Tancred and I agreed that I’ll just use Steiner-Davion most of the time. Our children will probably have to decide between Steiner-Davion, Sandoval or Luvon.”

“You want to revive that name?” he asked.

“It was our grandfather’s - and as you told me when you foisted Donegal off on me, the name still has standing there.”

“I object to the word foist -” Peter began and then broke off when there was a knock on the door. “What is it?”

The door opened a crack. “I’m sorry, sir. Precentor William Blane of the Word of Blake has arrived and requests a private meeting with yourself or any of the other Steiner-Davions on a matter of utmost importance.”

Peter checked his mental list of the arrivals for the Whitting Conference. “Did he come directly from the spaceport?”

“Yes sir. When he arrived at the gates the sentries thought he had been misdirected regarding his quarters, but he was very insistent and he is an honoured guest. Security is checking him now, but we’re confident that this is the Precentor.” The security officer looked embarrassed. “He doesn’t appear to be armed, but the situation is highly unusual.”

“It’s a hell of a breach of protocol on his part.” Peter glanced at Catherine. “What do you think?”

“I wouldn’t be confident that we can find any... weapons that might be hidden,” she replied after a moment’s thought. “But however angry he might be about Odessa, I don’t think he’d be suicidal.”

Peter rubbed his jaw. “Better that we don’t all meet him though. No, don’t get up,” he added to Yvonne. “I don’t want him in my quarters either. I’ll speak to him in… ah, I suppose the throne room won’t be in use for anything.”

Catherine chuckled. “It’s not a very intimate meeting place, Peter.”

“I’m not feeling very intimate. And I’ll have a couple of ‘Mechs to hide behind if this really is some sort of trap.” As well as a couple of snipers in the shadows of the gallery.

He pulled himself to his feet and straightened his robe. Like most of the casual robes he wore, it was a plain Lyran blue without any particular trimmings; but it was neat enough and it covered his undershirt, which was less presentable after the day he’d had. Peter shoved his feet into his boots, glad he’d still been wearing his uniform pants and left his sisters to their conversation. Even four years on, they were still getting used to each other - although Yvonne coming to Tharkad had slowed that process considerably so that was probably his fault too.

The throne room was deserted at the moment - it would serve very little role during the Star League Council meetings since, for obvious reasons, none of the council members was seated above the others. The formal discussions would take place in the similarly cavernous ballroom. As Peter walked in, two carefully concealed doors on the back wall opened and a pair of Griffins walked in, positioning themselves flanking the throne. Both ‘Mechs saluted him as he walked down the carpeted strip leading to the throne - text book if not for the fact that they used their left hands rather than waving around the weapons secured in the right fists of the Griffins.

Peter nodded to the pair, who probably hadn’t expected that they would be called to duty at this time of the evening. Both wore the colours of the Royal Guards, with the only difference the lion’s head on the chest of one and the pschent on the other’s, marking them as representing the First and the Fifth Royal Guards respectively.

Taking his seat, Peter smoothed his robes and checked the discreet comm built into the arm of the throne. The rest of the security team were moving into place, while holocameras were running to record everything said for further analysis. Other security measures, such as a subtle air-conditioning that blew air away from Peter, sprang to life.

Only a moment later, with the doors to the ‘Mechbay closed and only visible if you knew exactly where to look, the robed figure of William Blane entered the throne room. Like Peter, he was robed; although his were, of course, those of a Word of Blake Precentor. With his hood back, it was possible to see that he looked bemused at the venue. The man reached the foot of the shallow stairs leading to the throne and paused, bowing his head. “The peace of Blake be upon you, Archon.”

“May it be upon us both,” Peter replied. “I didn’t expect to be formally greeting you at this hour, Precentor. However, I am informed that you wish to discuss a matter of some urgency.”

“Yes.” Blane hesitated. “Several closely related matters, in fact.” He produced a small electronic device from his pocket. “May I activate this projector?”

Peter frowned, but presumably security had checked it already. “Go ahead.”

The Blakist held the device steady and the image of a young woman in an Acolyte’s robes appeared between the two of them, life-size. Her hood was up, but not so much as to obscure her face… and Peter took a deep breath as he saw familiar features. “Who is this?”

“Acolyte Kathleen Madison,” Blane answered. “This image was taken when she first entered ComStar in 3050 at the age of seventeen. She was pulled out of her early training for a more specialised course that doesn’t appear to actually have existed - or rather, was secret even from most of ROM. And after early 3052 she simply vanishes from our records. Admittedly, the schism between ComStar and the Word of Blake might have had something to do with it.”

“She could fit in among my cousins and no one would think she wasn’t one of the Steiners,” Peter said at last. “Or even my own family.”

“There is more than a passing resemblance to your mother and grandmother,” agreed the precentor. “Her mother died in a traffic accident during Acolyte Madison’s teens, her father we have no record of - although I believe such records once existed and were destroyed.” He paused. “She resurfaced in 3064, endorsed as an Adept-13 by Cameron St Jamais with considerable discretion. To the point that we of the Ruling Conclave knew nothing of it until the handover of his office to Laura Chang earlier this year.” He adjusted the controls and the image changed.

Peter was half-out of the throne before he realised it. “Where is she?!” he demanded, glaring at Blane through the image of his alleged sister Kathrina, wearing Blakist robes.

“I wish I had an answer for you.” Blane shook his head sadly. “She was on Terra near the start of this year, playing a role within the reformation of the sects that are broadly considered Shunners. She is, unsurprisingly perhaps, a convincing speaker. However, with St Jamais’ departure to serve on Highspire, she also dropped out of sight. On assignment through ROM, but the nature of that assignment is mysteriously ill-defined in our records.”

“Convenient,” he grated, settling back into the throne.

“I wouldn’t use that word.” The precentor shook his head again. “Rather the reverse. With Laura now serving as Precentor-Martial, there has been a shake-up of the Ruling Conclave. Rather than electing another Expatriate, the former Shunners seem likely to resume their seat… although I believe their new leaders prefer to call themselves Terran-focused or even Terra-ists.”

“You’re joking about this?”

Blane scowled. “I am entirely serious. Alas, so are they.”

“That’s in incredibly poor taste.”

“I know!” The aged precentor shook his head. “There was a real possibility Madison would have emerged as their candidate. I can only thank our blessed founder that our… negotiations over Odessa have spared us both that for now.”

Peter covered his eyes for a moment and counted down from ten. “You’re telling me that my brother’s thrones were usurped by a Blakist agent and that that same agent might become part of your Ruling Conclave?”

“The Word of Blake did not exist at the time,” Blane pointed out. “And I cannot confirm that Madison did indeed spend her twelve years of absence purporting to be a member of your family. Alas, her medical records are also notable for their paucity. But there is a very real possibility that what you are saying is correct. Please be assured that I find this as horrifying as you do.”

“My god…” He shook his head. “And you said related matters, what more is there?”

“The first clue we had leading us to Madison was a covert signal to the Precentor Martial’s office a month ago.” Blane deactivated the holoprojector, returning it to his sleeve. “Presumably by someone unaware that St Jamais had stepped down. Once decrypted, the message requested supply for a warship that no one could identify, or at least no one was willing to admit to knowing about. As the location was within the solar system, Precentor Chung agreed to send dropships with supplies, instead loading them with marine infantry. With some difficulty - and sadly, quite heavy losses - they boarded and seized control of the vessel in question.”

Peter thought back to the data recovered from Odessa. “The Lucien Davion. Cameron St Jamais had recovered it the same time he welcomed this Madison woman back into the Blakist fold.”

“I cannot see any other way that a Toyamist crew would claim to be operating an Avalon-class cruiser,” Blane agreed. “And this does very much support the conclusions we are both drawing about Madison. It is not proof, but the circumstances are beyond suspicious. We will, of course, return the vessel to you - if you prefer not to send a crew into the Terran star system, we can provide a temporary crew to pilot it to any nearby system of the Federated Commonwealth.”

“I’ll get back to you.” So many questions that he had asked himself for years, but now that he had answers they only raised more issues. “And you have no idea where she is?”

“Having departed months ago, she could be almost anywhere in the Inner Sphere. If we find more, then by all means I will pass it on, but you understand why I wished to speak to you in person about this matter without any further delays.” Blane folded his hands. “Any HPG communication would pass through ComStar hands, and I am not prepared to risk this being decrypted by them until you were made aware.”

“I can understand that,” Peter allowed grudgingly. This would be worse than Odessa if it became public, Gavin Dow and Sharilar Mori would have no difficulty torpedoing the Word’s membership in the Star League - and who knew how the Blakists’ extremists would handle that. As much as Peter would prefer to be done with them, right now that wasn’t a luxury he had. The AFFC was in no position to respond effectively if the Blakists decided to sever the Terran Corridor. One of the major arguments for fighting the Clans this year was to have a free hand if that became an issue in the future. “What does St Jamais have to say for himself?”

“So far he is denying all knowledge of Madison or of the Sword of Purity.”

“The what?”

Blane blinked. “Oh, er - my apologies. That was what the crew were calling your cruiser.”

Peter took a deep breath. “Purity. I - see.” This was not going to put him in the ideal mood to sleep tonight. “I assume that I’m not the only one here to find his protests less than convincing.”

The old Blakist shook his head. “Unfortunately, I lack the political capital to bring him back from Highspire, particularly as that was presented as a face-saving way to meet your requirements. We’ll continue to investigate but I can’t promise you quick answers.”

“Your honesty is appreciated. Is there something else?”

“Not so much something to tell you as a possibility you may wish to consider.” The precentor looked tired. “I don’t know if I’ll be the representative at future Whitting Conferences. The political situation within the conclave is… turbulent. I can’t rule out that Adept Madison may not be that representative and given the manner in which First Lords are selected she might even become First Lord.”

“What a wonderful prospect.”

“I understand that you will be seeking the office for the next three years and for what it’s worth, you will have my vote. However, there is also the question of whether new members will be eligible to serve before other houses have a chance to be elected again. If not, only yourself and whoever may be serving as Captain-General in three years - if anyone - are currently eligible. It assures you of election this year. However, after that it would be hard to predict. If the other seats are eligible, it will be fifteen years before House Liao or House Kurita can stand.”

“However, it would almost guarantee that there will be a Word of Blake First Lord within that time. And assumes a viable Marik.”

Blane nodded. “But if you were not elected, or if our representative in three years is not Madison…”

“Ah…” Peter tapped his fingers on the arm of the throne. “Then the Word of Blake will have its turn and she can’t claim the seat for several years - and would be competing with many other candidates when that time comes.”

“It is something to consider, your highness. I believe Protector Shraplen is quite eager to become First Lord to prop himself up given domestic discontent within his rule.”

“And this isn’t you wanting the office of the First Lord for yourself?” he asked cynically.

Blane laughed lightly. “In my experience, Lord Steiner-Davion, no one takes you seriously in politics unless you have some aspirations to dominate the entire Inner Sphere. The importance is to remain realistic about them.”

*

Chapter 23
The Triad, Tharkad
Donegal Province, Federated Commonwealth
27 November 3067


The palace ballroom was set up with tables in a circle, the one gap filled by a podium. Isis Marik saw that the place of the Free Worlds League was the only vacant table, flanked between the three Steiner-Davions at the Federated Commonwealth’s table and that shared by Ragnar Magnusson and Christian Mansdottir, with the two Khans of Clan Ghost Bear sitting proudly behind Rasalhague’s official representatives.

There was an observer’s gallery that, at least for today, was mostly packed with various representatives of the Free Worlds League states. Isis saw the media were crammed into the gaps between, providing a physical buffer; and also the prospect of embarrassment in public, if tempers did flare. As a result, there was a chilly silence among those present in the gallery as moved to her reserved seat there.

A number of cameras followed her as she moved to stand next to her cousin Reginald. Speculation by the reporters sprang up almost immediately.

A large clock set high on the wall chimed the hour and the First Lord rose from his seat and walked around to the podium, timing his arrival so that he was ready when the last chime died. “My lords and ladies,” Christian Mansdottir announced. “I hereby convene the Fourth Whitting Conference.”

There was a rustle of applause at the brief formality.

“Before we move on to matters of debate, we must establish our membership.” The General turned his gaze around the room. “Chancellor Liao, do you represent the Capellan Confederation today?”

Sun-Tzu Liao tilted his head slightly. “I do.” Isis knew that there had been concern her former fiance wouldn’t attend at all, but apparently they had been groundless.

Mansdottir continued, receiving confirmation from Theodore Kurita, Peter Steiner-Davion and Precentor Gavin Dow that they were representing their respective realms and ComStar. Rather than addressing the Free Worlds League issue, he then paused. “Since our last conference, the Free Rasalhague Republic has merged with Clan Ghost Bear. As the serving First Lord, I will continue to moderate discussion until my successor has been elected. However, the vote of the new Rasalhague Dominion will be cast by our Elected Prince.”

“I object.” Theodore Kurita kept his voice level. “By precedent set by the reunion of the Federated Commonwealth, we must vote on whether this new realm retains the membership once held by the Free Rasalhague Republic.”

“Surely if the First Lord’s realm has been disbanded then his tenure is at an end.” The Chancellor’s voice was also mild but that reasonable tone was deceptive.

“I believe that we elected Christian Mansdottir in his own right, rather than as regent for Prince Magnusson,” asserted Peter Steiner-Davion. He looked tired, but resolute. “However, if you wish to, we can certainly vote on the matter. I trust you have no objection to his moderating the vote.”

“It would be something of a conflict of interest,” Sun-Tzu complained.

Mansdottir shook his head. “Precentor Dow, if you would be so good as to take over for this matter? I believe your position as a neutral voice would make you a suitable choice.”

There was no objection and Gavin Dow moved to the podium. “Firstly, let us settle the status of the First Lord,” he declared. “A vote of aye affirms that the elected First Lord retains their office for the duration of their term, regardless of their realm’s state or their position within it, unless specifically removed by the Star League Council. A vote of nay affirms that a First Lord’s term ends immediately they lose office within their realm, if their realm merges with another or should it be otherwise disbanded. Determining how a new First Lord of the Star League would then be determined is beyond the scope of this vote.”

The Precentor-Martial of ComStar looked around the tables. “All those voting aye?”

Both the Archon Prince and the Coordinator raised their hands.

“And opposed?”

Sun-Tzu Liao raised his own.

Dow nodded. “By majority vote, Lord Mansdottir retains his office. We have a new precedent. Would you like to…?”

Back at the Rasalhague table, Mansdottir shook his head. “Please handle both issues, Precentor-Martial.”

“Of course.” Dow paused in thought. “With a vote of yes, the Rasalhague Dominion is confirmed as taking up the membership of the Star League previously held by the Free Rasalhague Republic. A vote of no states that they do not, in which case we may then consider a provisional membership. Who votes aye, please?”

This time all three hands went up immediately. Isis wondered why the Coordinator had raised the matter if he didn’t support it. Trying to draw out Sun-Tzu? Or perhaps he had simply wanted it formally confirmed rather than assumed. She saw Catherine, by far the easiest of the three Steiner-Davions to read, giving the Coordinator a sidelong glance. It seemed she wasn't the only one bemused at the vote.

“So resolved.” Gavin Down stepped back, bowed slightly and then returned to the ComStar table.

Once again taking the podium, Mansdottir looked at the gallery for a moment. “If our provisional members will bear with us for a little longer, we have another member whose status is in question. There are, I believe, four petitions to take up the representation of the Free Worlds League.”

At the desk where the First Lord had been seated, Isis saw Ragnar shift. She’d met him back in 3051, on Outreach, the two of them the youngest of the young royals present. But he had spent most of his time training with the Dragoons, while she had been… well, not doing anything that turned out to be worthwhile. He had presence now - the boy had become a man, and quite an impressive one. She was very happy with Galen, but that didn’t mean she didn’t have eyes.

“I do not see Thomas Halas, Corinne Marik or Kirc Cameron-Jones,” he rumbled in a very bear-like voice. Or at least what Isis guessed to be bear-like. “Do they make no claim for the seat?”

Peter steepled his hands before him. “We have delegations from all three of them; but, so far as I have been informed, none of the three would-be Captain-Generals are on Tharkad.”

“Each of them has written to me, citing that they’re at war and asking that their ambassador be seated to represent the Free Worlds League,” clarified Mansdottir.

“I am equally unimpressed with them.” The Elected Prince shook his head. “To comply with their requests, we would essentially be endorsing them as the Captain-General. How can we do so without taking their measure?”

Theodore Kurita glanced across at Ragnar and then nodded. “I am unconvinced that we should provide any endorsement at all, certainly not without meeting them. I move that we dismiss all of these petitions.”

Peter tapped his desk, twice. “I don’t find being at war a sufficient reason not to attend. You’ve spoken of three of these petitions, First Lord. Is the fourth of a kind to them?”

The general shook his head. “Rather different. I call the joint delegation of the Tamarind Alliance, Silver Hawks Coalition and the Commonality Defense Pact to present their petition.”

Isis’ cousin was first to his feet and offered her his hand up. Joined by Ardal Thomasson of the Commonality, they left the observer gallery with angry glares from the representatives of the three Captain-Generals. Mansdottir ceded the podium and Isis moved to it, flanked by the two men. They had discussed how to handle this and both had agreed that she should be the primary spokesperson. She was less sure, but she was also outvoted.

Before she could begin - before Mansdottir could reach his seat - Ragnar spoke up again. “Why should we support you as Captain-General?” he demanded bluntly.

Alright, a little off-script then… but she had anticipated the question. “You should not, Star Colonel,” Isis riposted, using his military rank. “Neither I, nor my companions claim the position. There is, to our minds, no current claimant fit for the office. And yet, the Free Worlds League is a member-state of the Star League and while the Captain-Generalcy is being fought over, our League should have voice and vote here within the larger League.”

“There are, by my count, currently seven major factions within the Free Worlds League.” Sun-Tzu leant back in his chair, face indifferent. “Even though you all speak, it is hardly with one voice.”

“Our three alliances, and several other provinces who have asked us to represent us on this matter -” a small number but it was important to show the breadth of their support, “- represent more than a third of the Free Worlds League. We have elected not to take sides with the three claimants to the throne, but nor are we seeking independence. For the duration of the Fourth Whitting Conference, we request that we be granted the right and and responsibility to speak for our own people’s interests.”

“You are proposing a temporary measure?” Mansdottir enquired.

“One would hope that by the next conference, in three years, that the situation will be clearer. We may even have elected a new Captain-General.” Isis tried to look more confident in that prospect than she actually was. “In the meanwhile, the worlds under our governorship and protection have continued to pay the taxes due to the Star League, and we are contributing troops to the current Star League military support.”

Five-sixths of that commitment was from the Silver Hawks Coalition, but to bring the her cousin Alys Rousset-Marik’s Krushers brigade up to strength, Photon Brett-Marik had dispatched a battalion of the Thirty-Seventh Marik Militia’s ‘Mech regiment to fight alongside them. Still, it was a somewhat multi-national effort.

“As we are bearing the burden of supporting the Star League in these matters, I do not see it as unreasonable that we should also serve upon this Council. We are happy to cede that responsibility to a Captain-General once there is one.” If she put a little more weight on that last word, who could blame her?

Gavin Dow cleared his throat. “Which of the three of you would vote for the Free Worlds League?”

They’d agreed that Reginald would speak if this point was raised. Isis stepped aside and the elder Brett-Marik replaced her. “The three of us will vote collectively, following our majority opinion. If at least two of us cannot agree on a point, we will abstain.”

“So long as you don’t need to waste our time with extended arguments amongst yourselves, that seems reasonable,” allowed Coordinator Kurita. “I amend my proposed vote, First Lord, to dismissing the other three petitions before voting separately on this one.”

Mansdottir stood but did not return to the podium. “I accept your amendment. My lords, please vote aye if you wish to dismiss the claims of Halas, Cameron-Jones and Corinne Marik at this time.”

The vote was unanimously in favour.

“And now, will you vote aye to accept the joint delegation before us as representing the Free Worlds League, or nay to decline representation to the Free Worlds League for this conference.”

“I dislike the latter precedent,” the Archon-Prince cut in. “I vote aye.”

“Aye,” agreed Ragnar.

The Coordinator also nodded. “I also vote aye.”

Sun-Tzu Liao gave a crooked smile. “I dislike this representation, but as unlikely as I find it, Steiner-Davion and I are of one accord when it comes to the precedent a nay vote would set. Aye.”

The First Lord approached the podium and shook hands with each of them in turn. “Please take your seats, my lords.”

Isis found herself bracketed by the two men again as they took their places behind the Free Worlds League table. Their staff members filtered down to sit behind them. If looks could kill, the glares the other Free Worlds League delegations directed at them would have been lethal - only the observers from Andurien joined the scant applause.

“And now,” Christian Mansdottir declared, “We come to the matter of our provisional members…”

*

Chapter 24
New Hanover, Arc-Royal
Donegal Province, Federated Commonwealth
30 November 3067


Daniel Holstein had never thought that he’d look back on prepping a hundred Mackies for the Fifth Royal Guards with nostalgia - but now he and his father faced an even more demanding schedule. They at least had the Arc-Royal MechWorks and the facilities in Wolf City to support them rather than using half-improvised ‘Mech bays, which put them ahead of their naval comrades.

But it would help if they didn’t have to spend time in meetings like this, rather than getting on with the work at hand.

“We cannot possibly repair the Full Moon here,” the Star Admiral reported. He was new to his rank, promoted to replace the officer who had commanded the Werewolf’s suicidal defense of New Exford’s nadir jump point while evacuation was taking place. “We were incredibly lucky that the jump drive itself wasn’t damaged or we’d have lost all that remains of Alpha Galaxy.”

The Full Moon’s twenty five dropship collars had been vital to transporting the strike force there in the first place. The Potemkin-class troop cruiser had more lift capacity than anything else known in the history of mankind, but it was also a single point of failure.

“We can patch the armour,” the man - for the life of him, Daniel couldn’t remember his name - continued. “But the in-system drive and the weapons are too badly damaged.”

“Could they be repaired at Odessa?” asked Phelan Kell in a quiet voice. The defeat on New Exford had left him… not subdued, not exactly. But he rarely raised his voice and the look in his eyes deterred anyone from speaking to the Khan at length - except perhaps Ranna Kerensky. Unfortunately the commander of the Fourth Wolf Guards was still recovering from the loss of her leg. It would be weeks before she left the hospital and several months before she was fit to return to duty.

The Star Admiral hesitated. “It seems probable. It was a Star League era facility, I am unsure if the facilities can manage a vessel of the Full Moon’s size.”

“It can.” Colonel Allard declared confidently. “We know that at least one SLDF battleship was repaired there in the past.”

Phelan nodded and then turned to another office. “Kristen Carns.”

The commander of Omega Galaxy straightened. “My Khan.”

“Prepare the survivors of your Keshik and of the Third and Fourth Wolf Guardians. Your command will be travelling to Odessa with the Full Moon.”

She stiffened at the prospect of departing. “Sir, we will be ready to fight again within weeks.”

Kell turned his gaze upon the woman and waited until she lowered his gaze, saying nothing until she did. “Our sibkos and our gene-stores will be sent to Odessa aboard the Full Moon. If the worst happens, I will rely upon you to rebuild our Clan.”

Carns swallowed and then nodded in acquiescence.

“With our corvettes picketing Hamilton, I cannot spare any other warships for escorts,” the Khan added regretfully. The Vincent-class corvettes Valiant and Killing Blow lay in wait at the nadir point, while the newer Fox-class ships Kerlin Ward and Natasha Kerensky were guarding the zenith point. When Vladimir Ward struck at the one system between him and Arc-Royal, their orders were to do all the damage they could, before jumping back to Arc-Royal. The planet’s militia would be on their own after that - fighting on New Exford had cost Clan Wolf and the Kell Hounds too much for them to provide further reinforcements. Even the AFFC was overstretched - and bluntly, there was nothing on Hamilton important enough to hazard the forces in range. The world could be retaken and its populace liberated if Vladimir Ward was stopped.

“Will the Archon-Prince allow us the use of the yards?” asked Marco Hall.

“Would you rather I ask Vlad for the use of Star’s End?” Phelan demanded of his saKhan, voice low and threatening. “Although they cannot manage a vessel of this size either, so we would have to appeal to…” He paused and sighed, moderating his tone. “That was undeserved, Marco. My apologies. Peter will support us because we are his allies. The Full Moon may need to wait for use of the yards but he will see the advantage of carrying out the repairs.”

Relaxing perceptibly at the apology, saKhan Hall glanced at Kristen Carns. “May I bid your First and Second Guardians Clusters as part of Beta Galaxy until your mission is complete?”

Daniel had expected one to be assigned to each of the two remaining Wolf Galaxies, but Carns agreed quickly and Phelan made no protest.

The addition of two intact clusters would bring Beta Galaxy up to something like full strength - the Second Wolf Legion had been destroyed outright on Pasig, while the Sixteenth Wolf Guards had been disbanded to rebuild the Second Wolf Strike Grenadiers after both Clusters were savaged on Graceland. Fortunately, the Grenadiers had been spared the worst of the fighting on New Exford.

Alpha Galaxy though…

“How are repairs going?” asked Phelan.

Daniel’s father looked up. “We’re cycling OmniMechs through the factories for major repairs and leaning heavily on dropships and other secondary facilities to get them refitted with payloads. Even so, it’ll be the better part of a month before we have them all ready - and six or eight weeks more before we get all the BattleMechs up to normal standards.”

“And if you lower your standards?” asked Dan Allard. The mechwarrior was Daniel’s namesake and godfather, but they hadn’t spoken much since the return from New Exford - the younger Holstein had been busy working on the damaged ‘Mechs, while Allard had to handle the sudden bereavement of his command and his family: Morgan Kell had been his father-in-law as well as the founder of the Kell Hounds.

Clovis looked over at Daniel. “It depends how many corners we cut. Daniel?”

“We’ve already got the least damaged ‘Mechs back in service - those that were basically needing fresh armour,” he replied. “If we focus on key electronics, gyros, myomers and actuators then we could give you enough ‘Mechs for every remaining Kell Hound and Wolf warrior in… maybe four weeks. It’ll slow down actually repairing them fully though and we’d have to take some of the OmniMechs out of the queue.”

“Four weeks is much better than eight. I assume that we’ll employing more Inner Sphere ‘Mechs than Clan overall?” enquired Phelan.

“That as well as leaving actual defects unrepaired. We’d be ignoring damage to reactor shielding and cooling systems, as well as leaving damaged and destroyed weapons in place rather than replacing them.”

“It’s better than no ‘Mechs at all,” General McCaffee pointed out. The Third Davion Guards had been held back to defend Arc-Royal, but now the Regimental Combat Team would be facing its first major test since the brutal losses they’d faced over Luzerne seven years before. “I doubt Hamilton’s militia will last more than a few days, so the Crusader Wolves could be here in four weeks - less if they were to bypass Hamilton. The question is... we haven’t stopped them anywhere yet. Cunningham’s Commandos are still holding out on Bountiful Harvest, but that’s the only world that’s not fallen entirely to Vladimir Ward, even if we took some back after he’d moved on.” She looked serious. “What are we doing wrong? And what can we do to fix that?”

Phelan Kell rested his hands on the table. “It is kind of you to say we, General. But this failing has not been that of the AFFC.”

Dan Allard looked about to speak, but Kell shook his head and silenced the older Mechwarrior with a glance. “Vlad’s Wolves are no longer our trothkin,” he declared. The other Wolves at the table paled. “Some share the bloodlines of our clan, but he has brought in rabid Crusaders from other Clans who do not see us in that light. This goes beyond the fact that only Delta Galaxy and Gamma Galaxy have fought us under zellbrigen at all, it borders on a desire to annihilate us. There have been reports that warriors taken as bondsmen by Ward or Radick’s galaxies are facing not only chemical interrogation and indoctrination, if they are to regain their warrior status they are required to fight each other to the death.”

Marcos Hall lowered his head. “Katya Kerensky is Loremaster. She would not…”

“Kerensky is Loremaster in name.” Phelan tapped the table with one knuckle. “And in form, a trial of position meets the requirements of Clan law. I will say that we have no reports of warriors under her command requiring that bondsmen offer surkai just for daring to have been part of our Clan before they will even allow them to be recognised as Wolves under any definition. And even then, outside of her reach, it is said that any sign of Warden leanings is grounds to be stripped of warrior status, or simply forced into a Trial of Grievance on unfavorable terms.”

“She could seize on your father’s death - it is dishonourable.” Kristen Carns looked up, expression hopeful. “Khan Ward himself rose to power avenging the death of Ulric Kerensky under such circumstances.”

Phelan bared his teeth and Daniel shivered. “Vlad claims that it was justifiable to use artillery against the ‘stealth armour’ that my father’s ‘Mech allegedly mounted and credits the kill to one of the two warriors that were fighting my father until the barrage. Rodham, if anyone knows him? His giftake has been selected for patrilineal use by Bloodhouse Ward as a reward. If there has been any public outcry, it is very muted.”

Marcos Hall grunted. “And there has been no gathering of the Clan Council to raise such matters, quineg?”

“Neg. Not even on New Exford where close to half the bloodnamed at his command are on one world. According to our few remaining contacts; Vladimir Ward calls us dezgra and chalcas, stirring up hatred of us among warriors who share our bloodlines. And thus his followers are fighting without any of the restraint that we have shown. They know that becoming our bondsmen would see them reaved from Clan Wolf and thus they are fighting to the death, accepting risks that we draw back on.”

He lifted his hand and slammed it down as a fist against the table. “We cannot sink to that level, not and be true to ourselves. But we have nowhere further to retreat to.” He looked around the table. “This is no longer just a war for our survival. It is a battle for Clan Wolf’s soul. If we fail, then you may as well find a new name for what remains, Kristen - because Clan Wolf will be condemned to the same path that consumed the Smoke Jaguars.”

Marco Hall nodded, and Daniel felt a chill as he saw the resolution on the Clan warrior’s face. “Then our lives are no longer a consideration,” the saKhan declared. “We must save them from themselves. No matter the price it demands of us.”
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masterarminas

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Re: State of the Union
« Reply #55 on: August 19, 2021, 01:38:50 PM »

I like this story! You know, it's exciting!   ;D
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drakensis

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Re: State of the Union
« Reply #56 on: August 21, 2021, 11:28:26 AM »

Part Five - Arc-Royal

At the heart of the city there is a
Building that looks down over all there is.
And the man in the tower controls
It all without raising a single fist.
It's like they gathered up the City,
they sold it to the devil, and now
It's gone to hell and they wonder how.
Light Up The Night - Protomen, Act II

Chapter 25
Tharkad City, Tharkad
Donegal Province, Federated Commonwealth
3 December 3067


Yvonne was vaguely aware of a conversation comparing her wedding to her parents’ as Tancred escorted her to the head table of the reception. Lisa Steiner and her sister-in-law, Jacqueline Brewer, dropped the subject as soon as they realised she’d arrived.

“I’m sure if mother was here to attend, we wouldn’t be scoring points off each other over the respective guest lists,” she whispered to Tancred as he seated her.

Her husband - her husband! - leant over and kissed her on the cheek, triggering some impromptu applause from the other guests. “If you’d like, I can set my mother on them,” he offered.

“Let’s keep her in reserve,” she decided.

As if on cue, Tancred’s parents approached and offered their congratulations. In the flurry of small talk, Yvonne didn’t realise that Peter and Catherine had arrived until they slipped into the seats next to her.

Despite Yvonne’s fears, Catherine had obediently worn a gown befitting her position as maid of honour rather than turning up in some fashion disaster. And Peter had been smiling - for almost the first time since he returned to Tharkad - as he escorted her down the aisle. He’d looked enough like their father earlier that she had had to look twice to be sure Hanse Davion hadn’t returned from the grave for the occasion.

“Thank you for putting up with this,” Yvonne murmured to her brother. “I know you’re overworked as it is.”

“I wouldn’t have missed it for the galaxy,” he assured her. “I’m only sorry not everyone could be here.”

Victor had the excuse not only of military duties but also that if he attended then he’d have had to spend the time avoiding his children - Arthur, in particular, was too young not to blurt “Papa!” at times - which would make it hard to keep the media present from bursting the carefully maintained deniability around that relationship. And while Yvonne knew that Peter had offered to cede his role of giving her away to Morgan Kell - she hadn’t been as close to their paternal cousin as her older brothers were. It would have been nice, but perhaps it would have added to the comparisons being made, since he’d filled that role for their mother when she wed.

The dictates of being married on Terra had meant that her parents’ honour guard had been a few officers of the Davion Guards, armed only with ceremonial swords. In contrast, brightly painted ‘Mechs of the Fourteenth Federated Commonwealth RCT and three of the four Royal Guards RCTs had escorted the wedding procession from the Triad to the National Cathedral in Tharkad City and then back to the grand dining hall of the Triad. Rather than a carriage, Yvonne had ridden a sleigh, with several roads specifically not cleared of snow in order to ensure enough depth to support it. Almost a hundred ‘Mechs had done a pretty good job of removing the snow in their passage anyway, she’d noticed.

“I was hoping Terias would come along for the honour guard,” she noted. “You brought enough of the Fifth Royals with you.”

Peter gave her a sidelong look at the mention of Terias. “She and Lucy Davion flipped a coin. She won. Or lost, I’m not sure.”

“Idiot,” she said affectionately.

“Am I?”

“You know she’d have come if you asked.”

Her brother gave her a look. “And if she didn’t? I still have to work with her.”

“Tancred, tell my brother he’s an idiot.”

“You’re an idiot,” the Duke of Robinson’s heir dutifully told his feudal lord and master. “Sorry, Peter. Higher authority has spoken.”

“I will accept the diagnosis, on the grounds that no one gets to win an argument with the bride on her wedding day.” Peter’s lips quirked. “Welcome to the family, by the way. There is now no escape.”

“That’s been the case for a while.”

Tancred sometimes said the sweetest things, Yvonne thought.

"At least you probably won't be asked to wear high heels," Catherine murmured. "The things I do for love."

Peter hid a smile. Yvonne glared at him, then reached over and put one arm around her sister's shoulders. "I appreciate your immense sacrifice."

"Oh well that's alright then."

The dining hall was a riot of colours, with banners representing various prominent guests along the walls - there had been discussion of setting them above the appropriate tables but the decision to mix the nations’ seatings had complicated this. There was a certain amusement to seeing Capellan officers and Lyran magnates bemusedly sharing a table with the equally baffled Khan Bjorn Jorgenssen.

The flags above the head table were representing Donegal and Robinson rather than any national flags, to avoid more inflammatory comparisons.

After the soup course, there was a pause so people could circulate. In some cases this meant people returned to their national contingents to compare notes but in other cases there were conversations across national lines. One example of this was Omi Kurita crossing to the head table on her elder brother’s arm.

“It’s a lovely ceremony,” she assured Yvonne. “I hope that you and Tancred are very happy together.”

“I think we will be.”

Hohiro offered his hand to Tancred. “I hope that we can have a more amicable relationship than our fathers,” he offered. “I know it’s a low bar, but we can try.”

Yvonne’s husband - her husband! - accepted the hand and they shook hands briefly. “Well, I suppose I’ll need to change my wedding gift now, but since you’ve asked so nicely…”

The two Kuritas paused at that suggestion and then laughed after a moment to decide that it was just a joke. Yvonne elbowed her husband. “He’s not serious. He’s not allowed to give me Dieron - where would I even put it?”

Catherine waited until the moment had almost passed before suggesting: “Addicks PDZ, presumably.”

Yvonne had just sipped some water and had to fight not to spit it up. “Catherine!” she protested.

“Well it’s there or Skye, and who wants Kelswa-Steiner involved?”

Hohiro smiled. "If Addicks were offered up as a wedding gift for me, I'd put it in Dieron District so that's probably fair." At least he wasn't taking offense.

"Don't hold your breath," Peter told him with a sigh.

After the main course, there was another circulation while the wedding cake was brought out. Isis Marik had to step aside to make way for the. “You probably made the right decision not to have worlds on the dishes,” she advised. “It’s probably not the best comparison.”

“Thank you,” Yvonne agreed, as if she hadn’t thought of that.

Tancred’s sword was brought out for the first cut - although after this, the waiting staff would be cutting the cake with proper knives. The newly-weds held the sword together, cutting directly through all five layers of the cake before drawing the sword back and out - which took more effort than the cut and for a moment Yvonne was afraid they’d tear the cake open.

Still, the staff then proceeded to disassemble the cake with practised ease, carrying sections away to be cut into portions at each table. The top layer was for the head table and two plates with the first sections were presented to Tancred and Yvonne as the sword was carried away to be cleaned.

“My love,” Yvonne declared once all the cake had been handed out. “In honour of this special day, I have endowed Robinson Academy with the financing to expand their campus and add a full medical school to their establishment.” It would be for military doctors at first, given that the academy was more properly Robinson Battle Academy - and her dead brother Arthur’s alma mater.

Tancred patiently let her feed him the slice of cake and wiped his lips with a napkin before taking up the other plate.

“Yvonne, words cannot express my happiness that you’ve agreed that we can spend the rest of our lives together,” he announced. “I know many have suggested that I should offer you a princely gift, as your father once did your mother, but I believe I am better served in emulating his grace, the late Duke of Donegal.”

The doors opened and on a small rolling platform, three of the staff wheeled in a large desk. As it came closer, Yvonne realised that it was made of Donegal oak, a highly prized and expensive export of her adopted homeworld. While not in any way as costly as her own gift, it was certainly not cheap or easy to come by. And it was in the same style as the desk that graced the Archon-Prince’s office, handed down from Katrina to Melissa and then to Yvonne’s brothers. (Kathrina had never dirtied it by using it).

Her husband waited until it was before her before resting his free hand upon the varnished upper surface. “I hope that the work of my hands will support you and your labours as long as we remember this day.”

Tancred lifted the cake to her lips and Yvonne bit into it, happily. He always knew what she wanted.

*

Chapter 26
The Triad, Tharkad
Donegal Province, Federated Commonwealth
7 December 3067


On the final day of the Star League Council’s meetings, Isis Marik noted a change among those sitting at the Federated Commonwealth table.

Peter Steiner-Davion rarely sat alone there but for the first time since the wedding, Yvonne Steiner-Davion had joined him and their other sister Catherine was absent. She supposed that meant that the younger of the two sisters had finished her honeymoon and only a few moments before the session convened, Tancred Sandoval arrived and sat next to his wife, which moved Peter off to one side rather than taking the central seat.

“Countess Steiner-Davion departed early for New Avalon,” Reginald Brett-Marik murmured from his seat next to Isis at the Free Worlds League table. “Transport connections are tight, as I understand it, so it was this or a two week delay for her.”

That was Isis’ general understanding of the shipping situation, although it wouldn’t affect her return to Dieudonne. The various heads of states would be given priority for returning to at least the nearest border of their native realms. Scout-class jumpships from the ComStar commercial fleet had been specifically hired to bridge between commercial routes in order to ensure that, or the disruptions could have had dire consequences for the Federated Commonwealth’s war effort.

Christian Mansdottir waited until the hour had struck on the chamber’s clock and then rose to his feet, moving around to the podium. “It has been my privilege,” the general declared solemnly. “To serve as the First Lord for the last three years. This Star League, our Star League, was forged facing the prospect of a Clan invasion, but it has become something more. We have forged new relationships and it’s been my very great honour to see the beginning of a new relationship between the realms of the Inner Sphere and the Periphery, with the Taurian Concordat and Magistracy of Canopus joining us as full equals - a chance to learn from a historical failure of our predecessors.”

He gestured to two new tables that had been inserted overnight, expanding the circle. “And now we expand our relationships again. Following the precedent set three years ago, it is my last duty as the First Lord to welcome our new provisional members.”

There was a round of applause as two men entered the ballroom side by side. For a moment they paused and then the younger of the two bowed slightly to his elder, gesturing for him to go first. “Please, Commander. I insist.”

Jaime Wolf wore the full uniform of the Wolf Dragoons, replete with leathers and furs. He walked solemnly to the circle and stood behind one of the tables. “First Lord, speaking for the Martial Alliance, I request permission to seat my delegation as a provisional member of the Star League.”

“Commander Wolf,” Mansdottir greeted him. “You are most welcome.”

Wolf’s table was next to that of the Free Worlds League, so Isis heard him mutter “the last time someone said that to me…” before he was drowned out by several dozen men and women moving from the fringes of the room to join him in sitting down. They were a diverse group - the Khan of the Nova Cats, Santin West, had been seated alongside Theodore Kurita for some of the earlier discussions, but besides Dragoons and Nova Cats there were kilted Highlanders from Northwind and four other mercenary units. Colonel Camacho, commander of the Seventeenth Recon Regiment - now the military of their native Trinity Worlds - wore a FWLM officer’s uniform stripped of the national markings.

When she looked back, Isis saw that the other man had moved to his own table on the farr side of the circle from her. “First Lord, speaking for the Marian Hegemony, I ask to seat my delegation as a provisional member of the Star League.”

Mansdottir nodded. “Imperator O’Reilly, welcome to the Star League.”

Reginald’s fists clenched beneath the table, but he kept his voice low. “I would have been happier if it was the Outworlders.”

“Well, the offer was made.” Isis could have lived without the Marians given their long history of piracy, not to mention their more recent invasion of the Free Worlds League - an invasion that had killed Reginald’s father before it was stopped. “It’s unfortunate that they declined. Perhaps next time.”

President Mitchell Avellar seemed to be in favour, from what little Isis knew of him. But he would require a unanimous decision from his Executive Parliament to accept such a treaty and so far he didn’t have one. For all the quiet scorn she’d heard about that arrangement, Isis felt from her own experience addressing the Silver Hawks’ parliament, that House Avellar deserved high praise for the fact that they had managed to get enough unanimous decisions out of their Parliament to keep the Outworlds Alliance afloat over the centuries.

For a time it had seemed that the Rim Collection would also seek provisional membership but apparently the sudden explosion of violence from the Clans had convinced them that they would be better off independent - and hopefully unnoticed - for now.

The Marian delegation was much smaller, only two advisors joining the Imperator - his two half-brothers. Isis suspected that Julian had brought them simply to ensure that neither was placed in his throne on Alphard during the absence required for him to be here.

Mansdottir folded his hands. “And with this, I formally conclude my term as the First Lord of the Second Star League. Thank you all, and my God go with you all.”

WIth that, he turned crisply and walked away not only from the podium but also the table itself - not even taking a seat among Ragnar Magnusson’s advisors. Many eyes watched him leave the ballroom.

Gavin Dow took the podium instead. “My lords, we must now choose to elect a new First Lord to lead us for the next three years. Our choices would appear to be either the Archon-Prince or one of the representatives of the Free Worlds League, these being the only initial members who have yet to serve.”

Isis rose to her feet. “The Free Worlds League representatives respectfully decline candidacy at this time. We would prefer that a sitting Captain-General hold the title.” It seemed unlikely that the near assurance of serving as First Lord would reduce the tension between the three candidates, it might even make it worse, but far more concerning was the prospect that it might convince the combatants to turn their firepower against the neutral fragments of the Free Worlds League. None of them wanted that.

Sun-Tzu Liao shifted in his seat. “Before the crown is bestowed upon Lord Steiner-Davion, I must point out that we have three new sitting members. There is nothing barring them from election as their realms have not had that joy yet.”

“I must agree.” Grover Sharplen spoke sharply. “Either we are full members with this opportunity, or our membership is a sham.”

Ragnar Magnusson glared at the Taurian. “You’re not prepared to wait six years - or three if there’s still no Captain-General by our next meeting?”

“Why should we?” was the pugnacious response.

William Blane cleared his throat. “I believe the Protector speaks too forcefully. While I would prefer that we be viable candidates, I don’t insist on it. May I suggest a vote on the matter?”

“Seconded,” agreed Magestrix Emma Centrella. “If the vote goes against, we can wait.”

Gavin Dow glanced around and saw no response. “Very well. Although if we continue to add provisional members then this may extend eligibility quite significantly.”

Julius O’Reilly smiled thinly. “For one, I am willing to wait. If it is acceptable to Commander Wolf’s delegations, let the vote be over whether the reset of eligibility takes place before or after the current full members of the Star League have had their chance.”

“Commander Wolf?”

“One moment please,” the bearded mercenary requested and turned to his colleagues.

Isis wouldn’t have had to try very hard to listen but her attention was caught by Caesar Steiner entering the room. The General of Armies was trying not to be obtrusive but it was hard for him to avoid notice as he made his way through the various aides behind Peter Steiner-Davion and caught the Archon-Prince’s attention.

“What’s that about?” asked Ardal Thomasson.

“I’m not sure,” Isis answered quietly, watching as Caesar held out a document for their host to read. Peter’s face was harder to read than it had been a few years ago, but he still had some tells. “Not good news, but I don’t think he’s surprised - more resigned.”

“Precentor-Martial.” Jaime Wolf had finished the hasty discussion - if nothing else, the various members of the Martial Alliance were accustomed to making quick decisions. “We accept the Imperator’s proposal.”

“Very well.” Dow leaned forward slightly. “A vote of aye will specify that eligibility to be elected as First Star Lord will reset after representatives of the Free Worlds League, Federated Commonwealth, Taurian Concordat, Magistracy of Canopus and Word of Blake have either served or declined the opportunity. The deferral this year by the Free Worlds does not serve as declining for future elections in this cycle. Does anyone wish to expand on this?”

No one spoke up and Dow nodded. “A vote of nay will effectively elect Lord Steiner-Davion to serve for the next three years with the Captain-General to serve for the following three years, if there is one. If there is no single Captain-General by the Fifth Conference, then the eligibility will reset immediately. Your votes please?”

Peter Steiner-Davion handed the document he was holding to Tancred Sandoval. “Abstain,” he declared clearly.

Isis frowned, as did many others. “Aye,” she voted, as did Sun-Tzu Liao and all three of the new votes. Only Theodore Kurita and Ragnar Magnusson opposed.

Five to two, she realised. Voting against would have failed, and potentially alienated votes for the coming election. And voting for was voting against his own candidacy. He read the council well.

“Motion passes,” confirmed Gavin Dow. “Do we have a nomination?”

“The Word of Blake nominates Archon-Prince Peter Steiner-Davion.” William Blane projected his voice clearly. “He has proven both his ability as a leader, and a willingness to work with other realms. His decision not to take advantage of the Free Worlds League’s current situation speaks to his principles, and he is unflinching in prosecuting war against the Clans. He is the most fit of all the candidates.”

“He doesn’t seem to be doing so well with that last war,” observed Sun-Tzu. “How deeply have the Wolves cut into the Commonwealth now? They’re going through their tame cousins easily enough.”

Peter met the Chancellor’s venom with a weary smile. “Clan Wolf’s warriors have bypassed Hamilton,” he replied quietly. “We estimate a force of between two and three galaxies will land on Arc-Royal by the end of the week. However, Clan Jade Falcon is in full retreat and we’ve taken back almost as many worlds as the Smoke Jaguars ever held. If Vladimir Ward wants to call that a victory, it’s not one that he can afford.”

Isis glanced at Santin West of the Nova Cats and then at Bjorn Jorgensen and Aletha Kabrinski of the Ghost Bears. Neither of the three Khans present seemed at all upset at that outcome or at the Word of Blake Precentor’s clear antagonism for the Clans in general.

“I second the nomination,” she said and then realised she’d spoken in unintended unison with Ragnar Magnusson. The prince winked at her as he came to the same realisation. “Jointly, it would seem.”

“All those in favour,” Gavin Dow instructed, “Vote aye.”

Peter’s vote, my own, Ragnar and the Blakists, thought Isis. Half the eight votes are in favour. He needs one more - or ComStar to break the tie in his favour.
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drakensis

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Re: State of the Union
« Reply #57 on: August 21, 2021, 11:29:47 AM »

Chapter 27
Jumpship Lestrade’s Loyalty, Summer
Skye Province, Federated Commonwealth
15 December 3067


A general officer rarely had cause to take the lead in their forces (and in the AFFC this would usually lead to what was politely called ‘counselling’ by a theatre or PDZ commander). But a good officer also didn’t ask more than he was willing to give. And facing dangers that your troops were inexperienced in, barely trained for in truth, that called for going above and beyond.

The tech’s had raced to fit ‘Mechs out for this, only four aboard the Colossus-class dropship Pathfinder (the nearest dropship and providentially the one Reinhardt was aboard) were in the sweet spot of integral jump-jets, enough heatsinks to brute force the issue of dissipating heat in space without tedious alterations, and most importantly - having a pair of hand manipulators. One of them was his Black Python and to Reinhardt Steiner, that decided the issue.

The jolt of having his ‘Mech thrown clear of the dropship felt rather different when he wasn’t encased in a drop-pod, but the Brigadier-General found the vac-suit he’d wrestled on to be more of a distraction. If the cockpit breached, this was all that would keep him alive.

There was no up or down. Normally there would at least be a planet in view to give a point of reference, but not out here on the fringes of the Summer system. The Pathfinder was moving away now, leaving Reinhardt and the rest of his little force hurtling towards their objective, a Star Lord-class dropship fully loaded with dropships.

He activated his radio. “The enemy vessel is down.” They were being dropped, after a fashion. His ‘Mech, three others and a jump-infantry company wearing vac-suits under their packs.

This would be much easier with battle armor, Reinhardt thought. I wish I had some.

The Twenty-Fifth Skye Rangers weren’t exactly the top of the AFFC’s supply priorities. Five years ago they’d been a Provincial Militia, albeit one on a fairly sensitive border world, and under at least general suspicion of associations with Robert Kelswa-Steiner. Providing their infantry with battle armor would probably have happened eventually, but when not even every frontline command had it, that wasn’t likely. And being on deployment under the SLDF knocked that priority even further down: shipping new, modern and still somewhat classified Cavalier, Grenadier or Fenris suits out across a foreign nation would be a security concern.

You fight a battle with the army you have, not the one you want. A truism from back in his education, proven right dozens of times.

Reinhardt fired his jump jets, the air they needed drawn from a heavy tank rigged across his back. He wasn’t entirely on course - or so he thought. It had been almost twenty years since he went through training for this at the Nagelring and there hadn’t been any refreshers. What sort of idiot threw himself and his ‘Mech into space when there were shuttles and aerospace fighters optimised for that environment?

His reflection in the cockpit glass showed him the idiot.

“What are you doing?!” an irate voice blasted at them on the radio. “This is hijacking! Piracy!” And then, perhaps because this was, of course, Lyran space: “I’ll see you in court!”

That was the other risk he was out here to bear. It really wouldn’t be fair to have some lieutenant or captain have to bear the legal consequences of his decisions. The heir to a powerful duchy could afford a lengthy court case or even the loss of his career the way most of his subordinates could not. Members of the nobility, particularly those of means, weren’t all that well represented in the Twenty-Fifth Skye Rangers.

On some level, the accusation of hijacking was funny. A very black level of humour, but it was there.

Reinhardt left replying to his staff, back aboard the dropship behind - above - him. He checked his sensors, counted the radar returns and flares of light. It didn’t look like they’d lost anyone yet, although it was hard to be sure with close to seventy jump-infantry out there. Hopefully the leftenants and sergeants were keeping closer track of their charges than he could.

He’d over-corrected, but only slightly; and one more flare of his jump jets brought him close enough to the pylons at the aft end of the jumpship, currently busy deploying a sail marked with the name of the vessel. Leal Lestrade. The first word meant loyal, which was historically true of many of House Lestrade… though the fact that the very distant inhabited world of this system was once the domain of Aldo Lestrade, it was perhaps a little too on the nose right now.

Extending one of the Black Python’s arms, Reinhardt locked the battlefist around the pylon and pivoted the ‘Mech until his ‘Mech’s other hand could also get a hold.

“Captain,” he warned the jumpship’s still raving commander. “I’ll warn you once. Try to jump or obstruct my men at all and you’ll have a far more immediate concern. Starting but not limited by my blowing open your hydrogen seals.”

“I have a contract with the AFFC!” the man screamed. “You can’t do this!”

The first part was completely accurate. In fact, the Leal Lestrade was supposed to be the next leg of the Twenty-Fifth Skye Rangers’ transit to the frontlines. But the second claim was much more dubious.

Reinhardt managed to get the heavy Battlemech’s legs down and the mag-clamps built into the feet finally secured it to the hull. Not that secure - ‘Mechs were designed for space combat to be an option but was by no means a high priority. Unless he was careful, he could easily find himself following Sergeant DeVries’ Griffin which had missed the jumpship entirely.

“Get a rescue shuttle out to DeVries,” Reinhard reminded his staff (in case they were as off-balance as he felt and missed the need) and then he started carefully walking down the jumpship towards the docked dropships.

The two Nightskys that made up the rest of his impromptu lance had landed safely, and they were already moving to assist the infantry as they closed in on the Danais-class dropship that had their attention. He saw one platoon already opening up the airlock nearest the drop-collar to isolate it from the rest of the jumpship. Getting into the dropship was proving harder.

“Sir, permission to breach?”

Reinhardt checked the signal ID and confirmed it was Captain Saunders, the infantry commander. “Do it. We’re on the clock.”

They had come prepared. Less than a minute later the airlock door was loose and the space-suited men were assembling a tent to contain air from deeper inside the dropship once they opened the other side. Venting the entire ship would very much be against their mission goals.

His ‘Mech’s communications system warned him of an inbound laser-com and he elected to accept it, keeping his ‘Mech moving slowly and his crosshairs aimed near to the vulnerable hydrogen seals. “This is -”

“I don’t know what you think you’re doing,” a woman spat. “But the Archon-Prince will never let Kelswa-Steiner get away with this.”

“Nice try,” Reinhardt responded. “But you’re either unbelievably unaware of what’s going on, or you know damn well while I’m doing this.”

Alerts told him that the dropship’s turrets were activating and his tactical computer started illuminating the weapons along with estimates of their fire arcs.

“Hughes, Wainwright. Take out the turrets,” he ordered.

There were quick acknowledgements and pulse lasers flared as the medium ‘Mechs fired pinpoint bursts of coherent light to try to cripple the traverse of the dropship’s weapons. Fortunately the Danais, a near copy of the ubiquitous Union-class, wasn’t that well armed and this one wasn’t even a military transport so it had only a handful of lasers rather than the more formidable arsenal of its sister ships.

“Sir!” Saunders shouted. “We have weapons fire.”

Reinhardt bit back instructions to watch what - and who - they shot at. He’d already given the men that warning and from the infantrywoman’s tone it was a report, not a request for directions. “Carry on, captain. I have your back.”

Mentally he replayed the message he’d received, not even an hour ago.

A weak laser-com signal, transmitted from inside the dropship in front of him from what was little more than a hand-comm aimed out of one of the port-holes. Four words, or rather, three and a half for the last had been cut off by a gunshot, a fraction of a second before the signal cut out.

It might be already too late. But he had to try. Because those words had been one of the priority codes the AFFC had. A hostage situation - and one with a royal target.

The woman who’d got that message out was probably dead, as much as he wished otherwise. The most he could hope for was that she had somehow managed to hide that she’d managed to make the transmission.

The wait to find out was excruciating. He cut off the laser-com from the dropship - yes, if he had attacked a royal dropship for no good reason then he was at best going to be dragged in front of the Archon-Prince in chains (and he would deserve it), but this was not something to take a chance on.

Listening to the tactical chatter of the jump-infantry was almost worse - he had too little context to understand what was going on… but he knew that there were casualties. Whether that was the on-board security fighting back, someone else or both, he genuinely had no idea.

And then: “Ranger One,” Saunders snapped. “We have the package.”

“Situation?”

The woman hesitated. “Sir, we have no code for this. I have two packages, one hurt and the other dying. And I am damned if I know…”

A chill crawled down Reinhard’s spine. “Get them as stable as you can and extract,” he snapped and then brought his staff online. “I need a medical team on a shuttle and I need it here NOW!”

“We have one ready, sir.” Jayne Hobbes, his adjutant, sounded obscenely calm. “It’ll be with you in nine-zero seconds.”

That minute and a half felt like hours, but the small shuttle - barely larger than his ‘Mech - was hovering bare metres from the Leal Lestrade’s hull before the improvised airlock opened and six of Saunder’s infantry emerged, dragging a pair of emergency live-support bubbles.

The pressurized tubes were intended for exactly this, extracting a casualty through hostile environments. They were also entirely transparent and through his cameras, Reinhardt could see the faces of the two women being carried. Both were limp - likely sedated - but one had obvious head-injuries that were only crudely bandaged while the other’s hand appeared to have been mutilated.

Both were tall and blonde.

Both had the face of Catherine Steiner-Davion.

*

Chapter 28
Wolf City, Arc-Royal
Donegal Province, Federated Commonwealth
15 December 3067


“The good news,” Kommandant Michael Searcy pronounced to his lance, “Is that most of Arc-Royal is going to come through this battle without any damage.” The Wolves had landed on only one of the planet’s continents, after all.

“Alright boss, I’ll bite.” Bannson snorted. “What’s the bad news?”

“Every decent pub I know on the planet is under threat.”

The mechwarriors laughed. “You should probably try hanging out somewhere other than Old Connaught, New Hanover and Wolf City then,” offered Scott Tracker. Those three cities, on Gutheim, were each the target of one of Vladimir Ward’s galaxies.

Searcy groaned as if in pain. “If you can hit the Wolves as hard as you just hit me, we might just make it through this.”

The focus made sense, realistically. Old Connaught was the planetary capital and the main base of the Kell Hounds. New Hanover was home to Arc-Royal MechWorks and Wolf City was - naturally - the home of the exiled Warden faction of the Wolves. However, the rest of the planet couldn’t be left entirely unguarded; and until it was clear that Vlad was entirely focused on Gutheim, the defenders had been forced to disperse some of their units across the other continents.

Having the two Wolf warship fleets battering at each other in orbit had complicated moving forces back onto Gutheim considerably. Orbital hops would only have exposed the dropships to being picked off as they tried to cross the oceans.

“All officers, this is Pride Five. Ears up people.”

On hearing the words from General Lucy Davion, Searcy cut the feed from his own battalion to focus his attention on the command channel.

After a brief pause to make sure she had their attention, the commander of the armour brigade, and de facto commanding officer of the entire RCT, continued: “The Ardan Sortek and the Yggdrasil have the Wolf warships’ attention, but we can’t afford to wait until they finish the job. There’s the grudge-match of all grudge-matches going on outside Wolf City, and if Ward’s Golden Keshik is the one that comes out on top then there’s nothing else between him and the Wolf civilians.”

Searcy felt his ‘Mech tremble slightly as the dropship’s engines spooled up. That told him as clearly as words what the general’s intentions were.

“Clan Wolf-in-Exile are under the protection of the Federated-Commonwealth,” General Davion continued. “Our landing zone will be directly between the battle and the city. On the honour of the Archon-Prince, Ward’s Wolves will not get through.”

There was a roar of engines, audible even in the cockpit, and Searcy felt his weight double as the Clarent lifted from the ground.

He knew that more than a dozen other dropships were doing the same. Losing any one of them would cost the Fifth Royal Guard at least a company of soldiers, but the Clarent was the biggest target. The Excalibur-class ship was carrying not just the lead company of Searcy’s battalion but three further battalions - two-thirds of a heavy armour regiment and one of Terias Sortek’s battle armour battalions.

And if the Wolves did manage to bring their guns to bear - for that matter, if they were to get some aerospace fighters past the escorting fighters - then they’d all be dead in seconds. And Searcy couldn’t do a thing about it.

He knew it. Everyone aboard knew it. There was probably something leadership-y that he should say to take their minds off it, but all he could think of were the sort of cheesy lines he’d used back on Solaris VII; when he was as much a performer as a Mechwarrior.

“So,” he managed, forcing the words out between dry lips. “Phelan Kell versus Vlad Ward. Anyone got any money either way on that match-up?”

He hoped that the Khan never heard that he’d said that. Either of the Khans. From nervous laughs, the mechwarriors aboard the Clarent felt the same way but they focused on the conversation rather on their current helplessness. Searcy kept one eye on the monitor relaying the airspace around the little flotilla though, and was sure that the others were doing the same.

Focused on the screen and on keeping the conversation going, it was almost a surprise to feel the dropship adjust its orientation in preparation to land. As tempting as it was to sound relieved, Searcy didn’t want to tempt fate. He ran one last check of his Sagittaire. In almost any regiment, the ninety-five ton ‘Mech would have been one of the very few ‘Mechs of its size, one of the prides of the unit. In the Fifth Royal Guards it was just a little larger than average, and only the fact that he’d managed to have the older pulse lasers replaced with the newest models made it stand out.

“Searcy.”

“General,” he responded, switching to the private channel that Lucy Davion had opened.

“We have a landing zone,” she advised. “But it’s not looking good and it’ll take time to get everything unloaded. I’m giving the ‘Mechs priority for disembarkation - I need you to take them forward and buy us time to get all the rest out and ready to fight.”

Searcy had half-expected it, but he still felt it as a weight settling upon his shoulder. The Fifth Royals were short of senior officers. The AFFC as a whole was still recovering from the losses of the Civil War. Too many had died, too many had left rather than accept the return to a united Federated Commonwealth; and neither Peter Steiner-Davion nor Bishop Sortek was willing to rush more people up the ranks than they already were. And the officers who had commanded the Second and Third Battalions during the Civil War had each been moved up to commands on units more likely to see active service.

As a result, the Archon-Prince was in theory commander of the Royal Guards brigade (in practise handled by General Peter Riskind, the commander of the First Royal Guards), the Fifth Royal Guards RCT (in practise handled by General Lucy Davion of the RCT’s armour brigade) and of the Fifth Royal Guards’ BattleMech regiment. The latter role administratively tended to be divided between the battalion commanders and the RCT’s other general officers. Peter Steiner-Davion had even agreed in principle that he should hand some of those duties off, as soon as there were suitable candidates - but with the war breaking out there was no one available.

Which one of the battalion commanders led the regiment in the field was an open question. Searcy had been with the regiment longest - technically longer than anyone other than the two Steiner-Davions - but he didn’t have seniority in years of service.

“Understood, General.”

“Good man. You’ll have the first call on our artillery as soon as it’s set up to fire,” Davion assured him. “No air support, unfortunately.”

“I can live with that,” he assured her. “I may want FASCAM support, if we need to break contact.”

“Alright.” He heard the tapping of keys as she passed that on. “We’ll prioritise unloading those munitions for you. Anything else?”

“How is it looking?” Searcy enquired, knowing that the general’s staff would give her a better idea than he had.

Davion sounded tired. “The Strike Grenadiers are basically gone. As far as we can tell, there’s about the equivalent of a battalion left of Kell’s Alpha Galaxy - his Keshik and the Fourth Wolf Guards. Or there were twenty minutes ago - you know how quickly that could have changed. Ward’s Alpha Galaxy… well, they weren’t full strength when they landed and we think they’re hurt worse now but we don’t have solid numbers.”

Searcy nodded to himself. Intentionally or otherwise, the two rival halves of Clan Wolf had pitted like against like: Alpha Galaxy against Alpha Galaxy here, Beta Galaxy against Beta Galaxy at New Hanover, and Delta Galaxy against the Kell Hounds at Old Connaught - although the latter had been prioritised for reinforcement by the Third Davion Guards, as the most outnumbered of the three defending units.

Well. Outnumbered, in the sense that less than four battalions of Kell Hounds weren’t considered equal to a presumably depleted Clan Galaxy.

We’ll have just about the same number of ‘Mechs as the Hounds, a little voice seemed to whisper to him. And the Fifth are good… but we’re not the Kell Hounds.

“Understood, General Davion.” Straightening in his seat, Searcy checked the maps of the area again. “We’ll get you the time you need.”

“I know you will, Michael.”

And then the Clarent started lowering its landing gear and the comm channel cutting off was lost in the noise.

Searcy plugged himself into the regimental comm-net. “All ‘Mechs. This is Major Searcy, General Davion’s given me command of the regiment for this operation. Your dropships should be getting orders to disembark us first. Deploy by company and start moving westwards as soon as you’re out - we’re going to Kell’s aid. Formation speed is fifty klicks - you can go faster if it means closing up into battalion order, but no one get ahead of me - use my ‘Mech as a guide for our front rank.”

The engine whine altered pitch and lights dimmed inside the ‘Mech bay. The doors weren’t open yet, but ‘Mechs were being turned and released from umbilicals - the moment there was no chance of hundreds of tons moving around putting the landing at risk, the final restraints would be released.

For a wonder, there were no disasters in rushing over a hundred and forty ‘Mechs off the dropships. One Atlas was a little scraped up from an encounter with the edge of a dropship hatch and a Hauptman lost some armour when the Templar trying to rush out behind it managed to smash an arm into the larger Omnimech’s rear but that was surprisingly little under the circumstances.

They’d landed on the floodplain of a river - the village that Wolf City had essentially swallowed as temporary and permanent habitation was set up had grown up around a bridge and a minor port. Hills rose east and west, but the early hour meant that the Royal Guards were marching with the sun at their back. They’d be silhouetted, but there was nothing that could be done about it - the polarized cockpit canopies wouldn’t let their enemies be blinded by sunlight even at a low angle.

More than twelve thousand tons of BattleMechs in the gold-trimmed blue and white of the Royal Guards marched west - the ground shook under their feet. Behind them the ovoid shapes of their dropships towered over the low buildings of the city, equalled only by Clan Wolf-in-Exile’s own dropships at the spaceport across the river.

“Bannson,” Searcy ordered, focusing on keeping his ‘Mech moving at a steady pace just a hair under a full run - the Sagittaire was among the slowest ‘Mechs in the regiment, so everyone should be able to keep up with this, but not everyone was quite as efficient in getting every bit of performance from their machines. Holding back was frustrating sometimes. “See if you can get anyone from Kell’s force on the comms. We don’t need friendly fire.”

“Got it.” The Templar driver was blunt a lot of the time, but that might work better with the Clanners - they liked direct.

“Roscoe, you’re my artillery spotter. Check when the guns are online. I asked for FASCAM - we may need to hem the Wolves in.”

That was the nightmare scenario, the Wolves just ignoring the Fifth Royals and using their speed to circumvent the larger and slower ‘Mechs so they could hit the landing zone. Just about any other Clan wouldn’t do that, but Searcy had read dozens of reports on the battles so far. These Wolves knew how to go for the throat.

“Roger that.” Roscoe Buford’s Hauptmann sported a custom configuration, replacing the laser that most loadouts fitted to the head with a target-acquisition and guidance system. Those sensors might make all the difference.

“Got something for me, boss?” asked Scott Tracker, the last member of the lance.

Buford glanced at the Mackie II. “If… once we get visual, find me their Khan. Remember what their rank markings are?”

“Square box with red stars,” Tracker confirmed. “You thinking what I think you are?”

“He’s not the sort of Clanner we can coexist with,” Searcy replied flatly. “And he killed Morgan Kell. Something tells me the Archon-Prince wants that account paid in full.”

“Boss.” It was Bannson. “I got hold of some Elemental, trying to get back to Wolf City on foot with an ejectee. He gave me coordinates.”

It wasn’t far. They passed Bannson’s contact on the way and Searcy almost detached a ‘Mech to carry him back to Wolf City - the dumbass elemental was missing an arm and using the other to carry a mechwarrior who was out cold. But that was the sort of stupid durability that came with generations of breeding to fight in battle armour… and he might need every ‘Mech, so the former-gladiator restrained the impulse and had Buford send the details back to the RCT headquarters. Someone could send out an ambulance. Maybe.

Not far meant that it would take the Fifth Royal Guards - some of whom couldn’t get their ‘Mechs up to sixty kph unless the ‘Mech was falling - less than fifteen minutes to reach the coordinates.

Some of Clan Wolf’s ‘Mechs were twice that fast. Vladimir Ward was perhaps ten minutes from kicking in the doors to Wolf City.

“Roscoe…” Searcy demanded as magscan and infra-red lit up at the far fringes of his tactical sensors.

“Six guns, sir. The rest of the battery need two more minutes.”

He glanced at the terrain ahead. It wasn’t clear of obstructions - lots of trees in this part of Arc-Royal - but nothing that would really slow ‘Mechs. And they weren’t far enough into the hills for any steep slopes. There wasn’t much of anything to stop the enemy from slipping around them.

“Stop,” he ordered. “Form ranks. Lightning companies, get back a hundred metres.”

“Michael,” began Wayne Bruce of Second Battalion. “Our allies are probably dying up there.”

“I’m aware.” His voice was rasping. “But we need to do this right. Make sure everyone has their sensors sending their take back. I’m going to be calling in some very specific fire support. Roscoe…”

“Sir?”

“As soon as we see them, get the artillery working. I want FASCAM deployed on their flanks. We need this to be linear - in a running fight they’ll own us.”

“Understood.” The older man was quick on the uptake. “How much should they use?”

“Until they run out of FASCAM or I tell them otherwise.” Searcy checked his clock and patiently waited out one more minute. “All units. Advance. Line companies, don’t stop for anything - just try not to frag friendly Wolves. Lightning companies, you’re to deal with any leakers.”

The trees didn’t stop the ‘Mechs or even slow them. Searcy saw the marks of other ‘Mechs coming this way but they’d followed the road. The Royal Guards were in line abreast, carving out an open corridor half a kilometre wide through the forest.

That the first Wolf ‘Mechs they saw weren’t Exiles was a bad sign. Searcy didn’t see them himself - it was Wayne Bruce’s battalion that encountered two Adders and an Ice Ferret. Most probably trying to find out what was coming at them - they might have had time to report that the answer was enough firepower to destroy them within seconds, but not much more than that.

And then they reached the treeline; not the end of the forest, that was still at least ten kilometres away, but the place where a combination of weapons fire and maneuvering ‘Mechs had torn the woodland apart.

The Wolves(-in-Name-Only) had had time to regroup in response - those who weren’t on the floor. They formed threes and fours, elementals moving around their feet. Only one group of five ‘Mechs marked a Star that had come through the battle without a casualty. Perhaps seventy ‘Mechs in all.

Clan Galaxies varied wildly in their strength. A good rule of the thumb though was around a hundred and eighty ‘Mechs minimum. Phelan Kell’s Alpha Galaxy had been well below that number, Vladimir Ward’s… well, it had been at least somewhat depleted by six months of fighting, although he’d surely had replacement equipment and warriors as well.

Michael Searcy estimated that there were more ‘Mechs wrecked or crippled upon the forest floor than there were standing.

Many, many more.

And in the centre, standing over the ruin of a Stormcrow, one foot still braced just beside a cockpit that had evidently been subject to autocannon fire, a ninety-five ton Executioner OmniMech stood alone: facing them surrounded by the field of fallen ‘Mechs.

Searcy didn’t need Tracker’s “That’s him,” to guess where the Khan of the Wolves stood.

“Roscoe,” he growled as the Wolves saw what they were dealing with and began to fan out.

“Shells incoming.”

“Good man.” And then he switched on his external speakers as the Royal Guards continued their steady charge. “Khan Ward, I understand you like artillery.”

There was no reply - if there was one, it would probably have been lost as scores of artillery shells burst to either side of Clan Wolf’s positions.

The Fifth Royal Guards RCT didn’t have an entire regiment of artillery - but with the AFFC’s switch towards the newer and more tactically flexible Vali and similar artillery platforms, it had been possible to concentrate much of the heaviest mobile artillery available in a number that was rarely seen - including a legacy of the LCAF that Peter Steiner-Davion had gleefully co-opted for his own personal command.

The Elvidner squadron was made up of six Fortress-class dropships, each capable of carrying a combined arms battalion and each mounting a Long Tom field gun in their nose, turning them into heavily armoured artillery platforms. Their standard troop complement included a company of the Fifth’s Mechs each, a company of Battle Armour - and two six-gun batteries of Mobile Long Tom self-propelled guns, every single one of them capable of firing over a ton of high explosive shells each minute.

The Fifth Royal Guards’ artillery battalions were each landing almost forty shells per salvo onto one flank of the Crusader Wolves, the shells doing little to no damage as they rained down, but they scattering sub-munitions across the battlefield to form a minefield that would have taken hundreds of sappers to deploy in a conventional fashion.

One of the Wolves’ OmniMechs - a Hellbringer - found this out the hard way as it led its depleted Star out into the metal rain. One foot was blasted apart almost immediately, then as the ‘Mechwarrior stumbled, trying to avoid a fall, he managed to put the other foot onto a second mine. That destroyed any chance of keeping the sixty-five ton machine upright and Searcy saw at least three explosions as the ‘Mech crashed down.

The three ‘Mechs that had been about to follow it turned back smoothly and immediately rejoined the flank of Alpha Galaxy.

A booming voice cut across the battlefield, projected from the speakers of the Executioner. “House Steiner’s vaunted Royal Guards. If the Archon-Prince has come out to die with his false-Khan then I will gladly end him here as well!”

Searcy stabbed his thumb down on the push-to-talk button for his own speakers. “The First Lord of the Star League has better things to do than get his hands dirty with some rabid dog that crawled out of the Periphery.” Take that, Ward. You’ll never match the trash-talking of a Solaris-veteran.

And there was no further time for insults or challenges as the two forces closed within weapons range. The Clan ‘Mechs opened fire first, their longer-range weapons giving them the opportunity to get their shots off first, but their edge wasn’t what it had been ten years before, much less in 3050, and weapons fire crossed the blasted battlefield with abandon.

Vladimir Ward himself didn’t fire at first. He moved the big OmniMech deftly through the fire - few of those around the centre of the Federated Commonwealth’s line could pass up the chance at such a target, but very little even touched him. If it wasn’t for the savaging one side of the torso had clearly taken from a heavy autocannon - perhaps the one mounted on the same Stormcrow it had been stood over a moment ago - Searcy would have thought the ‘Mech entirely unscathed by the previous battle.

Searcy could have fired - he’d replaced his extended range PPC when he had the Sagittaire refitted, but a pair of Clan lasers he’d talked the Wolf-in-Exile supply clerks out of had more than made up for it - but he held back. He wanted them in reserve.

“Focus on the heavies and the mediums,” he ordered sharply. Assault ‘Mechs - even with Clan technology - would struggle to keep away from the Royal Guards unless they had room to maneuver. Light ‘Mechs were too hard to hit at this range, too agile. But it was the mid-range designs that blended firepower and mobility in such a deadly fashion. Let them get loose, even now, and they could get into Wolf City despite everything the armour and infantry brigades could do. At best that would turn into a destructive city battle that would kill thousands of civilians.

He absolutely wasn’t doing that to keep Ward for himself. There was good tactical sense to it, not glory-hounding.

A Royal Guards Banshee was the first to fall - a lucky hit (Searcy hoped it was luck, not skill) from a Clan PPC burning through the cockpit and killing the Royal Guardsman seated inside.

But the Royal Guards’ Mechs were unscarred by previous fighting and their larger ‘Mechs were generally better armoured. They could survive more hits than their Clan opponents could. The next ‘Mech to fall was a Clan Wolf Nova, followed by a Mad Dog in the same Star.

Then Searcy was too busy to pay attention to others’ targets, for the Executioner accelerated sharply towards him, lasers clustered in one arm lashing out at him. The Sagittaire rocked as armour plating was ripped apart by the shots, his gyro struggling to keep him upright.

Firing his jump jets, Searcy threw his ‘Mech into the air - not many assault ‘Mechs were designed to jump and he guessed that Ward wouldn’t be familiar with the capacities of a relatively new ‘Mech design like the Sagittaire. He was proven right when a torrent of autocannon fire tore through the air beneath him.

‘Mechs were breaking from formation into a wild melee as they clashed at ranges that approached point-blank. A 100-ton Berserker crashed into a Warhawk, smashing at it with its axe. A Zeus exploded as a Timber Wolf unleashed a frankly ridiculous number of short-ranged missiles into it. A Templar raked a massively-outgunned Kit Fox with its rotary autocannon, taking off one arm.

And then the Sagittaire slammed to the ground again. Searcy had already been feathering the jump jets to turn, he kicked off from the landing to complete the move and fired at Ward’s ‘Mech with his large pulse lasers.

In a rush of fire, the Executioner hurled itself skywards, evading the shots with its own jump jets. As Michael ‘Stormin’ Searcy had, the Khan of the Wolves was turning his ‘Mech in mid-air, preparing to bring his weapons to bear again on his opponent.

If he’d led with his autocannon, he would have been protecting his ‘Mech’s damaged right flank from Searcy. But Ward’s ‘Mech was now between the Sagittaire and the heavy ‘Mechs of the Fifth Royal Guards’ nearest Lightning Company, and thus the Clan warrior twisted to his right, screening the vulnerability from the more numerous threat. Perhaps he thought that a single Inner Sphere warrior wouldn’t be able to hit it while the heavy ‘Mech company might be able to throw enough fire to get lucky.

Michael Searcy’s crosshairs were aimed right below the ruptured armour plating as the Executioner fell. Each of the ten medium pulse lasers he’d crammed into his ‘Mech fired hundreds of laser pulses in the fraction of a second they were active, so rapidly that to the human eye they seemed to fire coherent beams. The vulnerability had dropped to below his crosshairs by the time the lasers cut out.

The Executioner was the same size as the Sagittaire, but faster due to the larger reactor and advanced (but heavy) myomer acceleration signal circuitry - not to mention the massive jump jets in the legs. That left much less tonnage for armour.

Searcy’s lasers ripped through the side of the torso and ventilated reactor shielding, coolant lines, and structural members. To his experienced eye, he saw the instant that the shoulder joint buried inside lost its connection to the rest of the ‘Mech and the limb went flying.
The loss of that weight overcame the gyro, also damaged by spalling caused by the laser impacts.

Khan Vladimir Ward, leader of Clan Wolf for ten years, terror of the Inner Sphere... planted his ‘Mech face first in the dirt of Arc-Royal. It must have stunned him, for the ‘Mech lay prone.

“Roscoe!” Searcy snapped, backing his Sagittaire away as the internal systems stuttered under the burden of firing so many lasers at once. Clan Elementals were rushing towards the fallen Omnimech, trying to save their Khan. “Tell the artillery we have enough FASCAM.” Searcy indicated the fallen Executioner by firing a single pulse laser into its rear armour. “And give them the Khan’s location for a one round salvo of high-ex!”

There was a vicious satisfaction to Buford’s: “Roger that!”
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drakensis

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Re: State of the Union
« Reply #58 on: August 21, 2021, 11:31:07 AM »

Chapter 29
Camora, Twycross
Coventry Province, Federated Commonwealth
28 December 3067


Jon Davion was sure that he had seen better sights, but he couldn’t think of any.

Up in the sky above the city; dropships were departing Twycross, loaded with the surviving Hells Horses. He’d offered them hegira at the end. It wasn’t ideal, but they’d taken over a hundred captives during the course of the campaign; and Jon wasn’t so enamoured of the prisoners his own forces had taken that he was going to leave his troops to become bondsmen.

“I wouldn’t have wanted to fight my way in here.” Linda McDonald was standing next to him, looking at the city around them, not at the departing lights.

Camora had taken essentially no damage during the war - it was one reason that Jon had felt he could offer Danielle Amirault a chance to leave without facing harassment. She’d fought clean. Hard, but clean. “It wouldn’t have been my preference,” he agreed, folding his arms behind his back.

“We’ve both seen city fighting during the civil war,” McDonald continued. “People who’ve only waged war out in open ground don’t know what that means.”

Jon considered her words and then nodded in agreement. “The way the Clans fight is artificial, but no more so than the Ares Conventions were. Limiting the human cost of war to soldiers… Well, as much as that’s possible.”

The other general gave him what might have been a smile. “I was working up to this, but I guess I should just say it: you did the right thing by offering her hegira. We held the planet, and we did so at a cost we can live with. So stop looking as if you regret it.”

“Regret it?” He paused and shook his head. “No, I don’t.”

“Then why stare after them with that moody look on your face?”

Moody look? Jon gave the Arcturan Guards officer a sceptical look. “I’m not sure why you think I was moody. I was thinking about one of my mother’s sayings, actually.”

“Oh?”

“She always told me she took joy in every guest. Some of them on their arrival and the others on their departure.”

McDonald threw her head back and laughed. “I should tell my husband that. He’d appreciate it. These guests were definitely in the second category though.”

“No argument there.” He shook his head. “And now that they’re off planet, we have a chance at figuring out what’s going on in the wider war.”

The jamming had been cut off as soon as negotiations over the Hells Horses’ withdrawal were concluded but Twycross had been cut off for long enough that the rest of the AFFC had apparently stopped sending HPG signals to them. It was probably expensive after a while, Jon allowed, but it hadn’t been great for morale.

Above the two AFFC officers, the large dish of the HPG station was lowered to its dormant position - it had been moving around for most of the morning, sending signals out to every system in range in hope that at least one of them would be in friendly hands and see fit to reply. As a result, the ComStar staff were adamant that they needed at least twenty-four hours to check that they hadn’t damaged it somehow.

Given the risk of losing it again, Jon was inclined to accept that caution.

While the innermost workings were being guarded with religious fervor by the security team - less than a platoon of ComGuards infantry who could have kept the Davion Heavy Guards out for only a matter of seconds if Jon was interested - the reception and meeting areas had been used by the Hells Horses as a command centre and so McDonald had requisitioned them temporarily for her own staff (Jon’s being back at the factory still).

When the two AFFC generals reached it, the situation room was full of babble as junior officers and NCOs laid out maps and cross-referenced documents.

“Hello, hello,” declared McDonald lightly. “Have we heard from someone already?”

“Yes sir.” A lanky young… Jon looked carefully and tentatively decided the androgynous corporal was a woman, based on the lack of a visible Adam’s apple. “Blackjack sent a transmission ten minutes ago.”

“The first place we tried,” Jon noted, half to himself. “Good start.” Their last news from Blackjack had been that the garrison was pulling out ahead of overwhelming forces.

The corporal gestured to the main table. “We th-think there will be more, the in-initial report says that…”

McDonald raised her hand to halt the stumbling report. “Deep breath, O’Reilly. Why don’t you show us on the map?”

The corporal obediently took a deep breath - Jon thought he might have seen an Adam's apple and wondered if his first judgement of O’Reilly’s gender was wrong - and then led them to the table.

“Generalfeldmarschall Steiner launched a major counter-attack while the Falcons were bogged down at the base of the salients,” O’Reilly began, indicating the cluster of worlds rimwards of Twycross - between the world and the bulk of the Federated Commonwealth. “That forced the Falcons to pull back forces from their offensive and there have been running fights across the Occupation Zone. Currently, there are liberated or partially liberated worlds around us in every direction - essentially the former salient leading to Twycross has been pushed through to link up with the worlds targeted by Operation North Star.”

“How are the Ceti Hussars managing?” Jon enquired. It had been quite a gamble, sending three RCTs to worlds of Clan Wolf’s Occupation Zone that hadn’t even seen the AFFC for almost two decades.

O’Reilly looked at the map, then picked up some counters and started marking systems as he (she?) checked the reports. “What we know so far is that they report liberating these worlds.”

Jon studied the counters. “Nine worlds - and they’ve gone as far as Feltre?” That was several jumps away from Twycross - closer to Ghost Bear territory than to the Jade Falcons.

The corporal double-checked. “Yes.”

“Not Csesztreg or Verthandi,” observed McDonald, looking at some of the nearer worlds. “I wonder why.”

“Kirchbach is an industrialised world,” Jon agreed, picking out another of the worlds that the Ceti Hussars had bypassed. “That could have a stronger garrison, but I don’t see why the other two weren’t targeted.”

“I-I’m sorry, sir, I don’t know.”

Jon blinked at O’Reilly’s nervous response. “You can only tell us what you’ve had so far, corporal. It’s no fault of yours that data is still sparse.”

McDonald ran her hand down the map to the rimward end of Clan Wolf’s Occupation Zone. The worlds facing Donegal province. “What about here?”

More counters were laid down. “Operation Southern Cross appears to be similarly successful, sir. They’ve almost linked up with the Ceti Hussars and the Ghost Bears. Clan Wolf’s offensive looks to have been halted on Arc-Royal.”

“Well of course.” The Arcturan Guards officer nodded confidently. “Taking on the Kell Hounds on their home ground? Morgan Kell himself would have taken the field.”

O’Reilly paused, shook her (his?) head. “Uh, no mention of Colonel Kell.”

“Early days, early days,” McDonald continued cheerfully. “Any other good news?”

One finger pointed at a world located near the centre of what remained of the rimwards half of the Jade Falcon occupation zone. “Generalfeldmarschall Steiner-Davion’s task force is heading for Sudeten.”

“The Jade Falcon capital,” Jon exclaimed in disbelief. “My god. Is there any bad news in all this good? Did the Hells Horses hit anywhere else.”

“No mention of that so far.” The corporal paused and looked at the report again. “Uh, there are suggestions that the Ghost Bears are entering the war.”

Both generals paused, staring at O’Reilly who fidgeted nervously under the attention. “That could be bad,” McDonald observed. “They’ve got more forces in the Inner Sphere than the Falcons or the Wolves, don’t they?”

“Uh, no sir. Sirs. The Ghost Bears are fighting for the Star League. They’re on our side.”

Jon chuckled in relief. “Oh, yes. I can see how that would be bad news.”

“How?” enquired McDonald, her own tension at the prospect of another Clan fighting them being removed.

He shook his head. “Every world that they take is one more that the hotheads at high command will have to write off their chances of reclaiming. Sounds like some people are getting a case of victory disease.”

The other general eyed the map. “I can see why. It looks as if the Jade Falcons are falling apart.”

“Looks can be deceptive,” Jon reminded her. “And some of these worlds are still being fought over. I’d say we’re in a good position to come out ahead here, but it’s still possible that we could lose a lot of forces if we get overconfident.” He reached over and ran his finger around Twycross on the map. “After all, if our jumpships weren’t already stretched keeping troops and supplies moving, don’t you think someone would have come and contacted us directly by now? That they can’t spare even a Scout for that suggests that the war is far from won.”

*

Chapter 30
The Triad, Tharkad
Donegal Province, Federated Commonwealth
1 January 3068


“What can you tell me?” Peter Steiner-Davion demanded as soon as the door closed behind Quintus Allard-Liao. “Tell us, rather,” he amended, glancing at Tancred Sandoval and Yvonne Sandoval-Steiner-Davion. The couple were sitting on the couch of his office, Yvonne’s husband with one long arm comfortingly around her shoulders.

Quintus placed his attache case on the table. “Quite a lot more than I was expecting, your highness. Let me start with the good news: we have verified that the woman who died after being retrieved by the Skye Rangers is not Catherine Steiner-Davion and we are almost completely sure that the surviving woman is your sister.” He paused. “I’m sorry, let me clarify: she is virtually assured to be your sister. The only doubt remaining is the very slim chance that she is not Catherine. I’m convinced personally but until she’s back here for testing against medical samples we’ve got in the secure vaults at the Triad for in-depth security checks, I can’t completely dismiss the possibility that someone has slipped another decoy in.”

Yvonne stared at the spymaster. “Shouldn’t you just be able to check against Reinhardt? He’s not that close a cousin but he’s right there.”

“Well, there things get interesting. It appears that both of the women are General Steiner’s distant cousins, and to the same degree.” Quintus took a seat. “I’ll spare you the exact medical comparisons, but the numbers suggest that they’re both his fourth or fifth cousins. It’s hard to be precise at that distance of course - two common great-great-great grandparents between the three of them is a fairly tenuous link.”

Peter walked to the desk. “Reinhardt is our fourth cousin, so that would be right for Catherine - but are you saying this other woman is a Steiner too?”

He got a nod in return. “And more closely related to you than the General is. We’re investigating further but we may need to ask for fresh blood samples from other members of House Steiner to pin it down.”

“That’ll be fun,” Peter muttered. “Most of my cousins I can trust are scattered across the Federated Commonwealth holding down important duties. The only ones on hand are the ones least likely to cooperate.”

“Do you think that the dead woman might be this Kathleen Madison that the Word of Blake have warned us of?” Tancred sounded hopeful. “The same Kathrina that usurped the throne?”

Peter saw Quintus frown. “It would be very tidy if she was,” the younger man admitted. “But for that reason I doubt it. I might even think that she might be a decoy intended to lead us to conclude that and leave the real Kathrina at large, to work unhindered on some other scheme.”

“I’d say you were being paranoid,” the Archon-Prince observed, “but that’s what I pay you for.”

“Thank you, sire. It’s pleasant to have work that fits my disposition.” Quintus grinned briefly. “It will take longer to pin it down but… well, it’s purely speculative but if this was Kathleen then there is a way that she could be a Steiner. Richard Steiner was a ComStar Acolyte at the right time, it’s possible he might have fathered her while training on Terra. Naturally or through someone arranging it clinically without his knowledge.”

“Richard…” Peter felt anger rise within him. His cousin had served ComStar, then returned to the AFFC. He’d been a Margrave in Bolan and made such a mess that Peter had had to send Victor to sort it out. And before that he’d been in Skye. “Did you ever stop investigating him for connections to Free Skye?”

“Not entirely, although resources have been called to other matters.” Quintus shook his head in frustration. “I’ll assign new eyes. Perhaps they’ll see something the existing team missed.”

“What else do we know?” Yvonne demanded. “This was more than one woman infiltrating Catherine’s dropship. There must have been a team.”

“Two teams.” The Chancellor’s first cousin pulled documents from the attache case and confirmed his memory. “One of them aboard the Leal Lestrade - a Free Skye cell that someone had buried very deep. Or at least they thought that they were Free Skye. We’re unravelling their connections as best we can but so far it hasn’t crossed with any other part of that organisation that we know about. It’s entirely possible they’re catspaws set up by someone else just using that name.”

Peter rubbed his jaw. “Or that Robert set them up to be deniable.”

“Possible, yes.” Quintus conceded. “We don’t know yet. The other team were outsiders - they came with instructions that they were to be smuggled onto the jumpship and assisted in their mission. While the cell assumed that they were Free Skye, that doesn’t seem to be the case.”

“No?” asked Tancred. “Then who?”

“Two of them had extensive and very sophisticated cybernetics, better than NAIS has, which points one way. And on the other hand, some of their gear suggests ties to the Thuggee cult on Highspire. These weren’t amateurs: they penetrated the security of the dropship, took out three critical officers and had Catherine at their mercy for almost quarter of an hour. If it wasn’t for one stroke of luck, it’s entirely possible they could have extracted back to the Leal Lestrade with prisoners and left a team of infiltrators replacing your sister and three of her confidants.”

“This is exactly - exactly! - the sort of threat that we should have been proof against. How much more do we have to do to protect my family from being replaced like this?” Peter knew he was being unreasonable, but this was the second time. Third time, if you counted his father’s brief replacement by the original doppelganger back in 3025.

“Sire, there is no absolute security. I wish I could say otherwise. We’ll learn from this attempt, but our enemies will also learn. We can - and do - win most of the time. But it would be arrogance to claim we could win every time, however hard we’ll try to.”

“How did they fail?” Yvonne had her husband’s hand in hers, rubbing it as if for reassurance that he hadn’t been taken away suddenly. “Someone alerted Reinhardt somehow?”

Quintus nodded. “We haven’t reconstructed all of the events, but we know that signal came from Catherine’s valet.”

Peter’s sister stared in disbelief. “Wait, Madelaine Thierry? Fussy Maddy?”

“Yes. We believe she spotted them early on, identified that something was out of place and managed to communicate that fact.” The young spymaster shook his head in admiration. “Most importantly, she hid the fact that she’d managed it - if they’d known that anyone off the dropship was aware of what was going on they would probably have moved faster or more openly - directly using the Countess as a hostage rather than interrogating her.”

Peter ground his teeth at that. The worst of Catherine’s injuries were mangled fingers that had not been combat wounds. His sister had been tortured. Not so much for information - chemical interrogation was more effective - as out of what he could only imagine as sheer viciousness.

“But… Madelaine?”

Tancred reached over and brushed a few stray hairs back from his wife’s face. “Courage comes in many forms, love.”

“She never stopped complaining about how Catherine dressed! She used to be on Kathrina’s staff, for crying out loud!”

Peter sighed. “She also passed every security check, and if she complained about Cat’s wardrobe, did you ever hear her say a sour word against our sister as a person? Do you know what she’d arranged for her funeral, Quintus?”

“I don’t have that information at hand, sir, but it should be on her file.” All those who served on the personal staff of a Steiner or a Davion had that on record. It was, after all, possible that they might be following their charge into danger.

“I doubt I’ll be able to attend,” the Archon-Prince said flatly. “But I can at least write the citation that’ll be read there, for how she earned a posthumous Diamond Sunburst. I dread to think what could have been done with a rogue as the Regent on New Avalon. We’ve seen what one could manage on Tharkad, I hope that we’ve learned from that disaster.”

“Will you be staying here on Tharkad until Catherine returns?” asked Yvonne. “I know you wanted to rejoin the Fifth Royal Guards, but…”

“I’d better be here for when Catherine gets back.” Peter shook his head. “If Arc-Royal was still at risk then I might feel differently, but fortunately that threat is over. And I might be needed to keep Tharkad safe from Catherine.”

“Is it true,” Tancred asked carefully, “That she broke loose on her own?”

Quintus nodded. “Yes, she took the opportunity while the Rangers were drawing the attention of her captors.” He smiled thinly. “It’s admirable, but if she hadn’t then we might have the imposter to interrogate. The fatal head injury was inflicted by Catherine, after all.”

“So the story that she headbutted her doppelganger to death is true?”

“Tancred!”

“...in a manner of speaking.”

“Quintus!”

“You’re doing well, sis. Now if you can guess my name,” Peter offered sarcastically, “You’ll be three for three.”

“You’re all a bunch of rotters!” Yvonne snapped. “I hope Catherine butts your heads for you.”

“That would probably be treason,” Quintus pointed out. “You’d have to hang her.”

“I’d give her a medal!” But his sister couldn’t keep her face straight and she joined them in laughing, a choking laugh that was as much tears as hilarity. “We have to find out who’s behind this.”

“We do have leads,” Quintus admitted. “The trouble is, we have too many of them. One of the team was a marine who went missing on the Lucien Davion - he was supposed to replace Catherine’s chief of security - they’re cousins and he’d been surgically altered to replace the man. One of the combatants was a Thuggee, or at least pretending to be hiding the fact he was one.”

“One of Kali Liao’s cultists? Or a red herring?”

“We don’t know yet. Honestly, there are clues that could, but don’t definitely, point at the Word of Blake - or the Canopians, or even the Clans.”

“The Clans?! Now that’s a bit far-fetched, isn’t it?” asked Peter sceptically.

“They would have the medical science for the level of surgery to prepare a doppelganger,” Quintus told him. “And the latest news from Arc-Royal included data on the Wolves’ command dropship that was forced down. Our analysts went through the late Khan Vladimir Ward’s personal effects with a toothcomb.”

“I’m not going to like this, am I?”

“He had personal recordings of messages from Kathrina - very candid in some respects but quite cagey in who the messages were for. But it’s possible that he was the intended recipient.”

“Which would be treason.” Peter picked up his water glass to cleanse the taste of that from his mouth.

Yvonne frowned. “And yet… Vladimir Ward would have been a potential enemy to the Jade Falcons, to Phelan and Morgan… and to Victor. And you know Kathrina never balked at any way to advance herself at someone else’s expense.”

“He also had a giftake canister - a Clan storage unit intended to hold genetic material for their breeding programme. They can maintain a sample for quite a long time with very little logistics. Clan Wolf’s own scientists are sure that the donor wasn’t anyone within Clan Wolf - perhaps not even inside the Clans. They did find a very distant possible match though: Bloodhouse Steiner, one of the Clan Cloud Cobra’s genetic legacies.”

Peter felt a sharp pain from his hand.

“God, Peter!”

He looked down and saw that his hand was dripping with water, with blood joining it. The glass had cracked in his hands. “Ouch,” Peter declared, as the pain of the cuts reached his brain.

Yvonne grabbed a napkin from the table while Tancred took the larger pieces of glass from him.

“I’ll get a medic,” Quintus said calmly and rose to walk to the door. “Sorry, father always said not to tell Steiner-Davion’s bad news when they were drinking. I thought he meant that you might choke.”

“Stop fussing,” Peter told his sister, but he held his hand still so she could catch the blood and water on the napkin and delicately start brushing shards of glass down into the rapidly pinking cloth. “How could she have even contacted the Wolves?”

“In early 3058, only months after establishing the Lyran Alliance, the new Archon almost completely isolated herself,” Quintus told Yvonne once he’d spoken to the guards outside. “The only person she met was my uncle Tormano, all her announcements and speeches were pre-recorded and rather generalised. It wasn’t until partway through the Coventry campaign that she even made a public reference to it at all. My uncle took his secrets to the grave, but even he couldn’t obfuscate the matter entirely. Nondi Steiner’s own files make it clear she was deeply frustrated at his acting as gatekeeper. She even speculated that the Archon was hiding the later stages of pregnancy.”

“You think she was absent.”

Quintus nodded. “The timing would work out. I have a team checking jumpship movements - if she made a secret diplomatic visit to the Clan occupation zone, she could have met Ward then.”

“Met him, established correspondence… given him a genetic sample from herself.” Peter tried very hard not to wrench his hand from Yvonne’s grip. “Was that usurper in bed with a Clan khan? Are there Steiner children growing up in one of those damned Clan sibkos?”

“I don’t know, sir.”

Peter’s eyes flicked to Tancred. “Talk to Caesar,” he ordered. “Get word to Adam and Victor. I can’t do anything about the Clan homeworlds, but I want every sibko the Wolves have here in the Inner Sphere in our hands so we can make sure of this. I don’t care if we have to fight the Bears, or the Horses or even the Sharks for them. Don’t let even one of her children slip past us!”
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drakensis

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Re: State of the Union
« Reply #59 on: August 23, 2021, 12:10:47 PM »

Part Six - Wotan

Well, a friend once told me:
Men, they would follow any man who would turn the wheels.
Now the wheels are spinning out of
Control; what would they do if we held them still?
If you destroy the working parts, what you'll get is a broken machine.
A beacon of light from a burning screen.
Light Up The Night - Protomen, Act II

Chapter 31
Dropship Howaitobesu, Laurent system
Clan Wolf Occupation Zone, Federated Commonwealth
7 January 3068


“I almost thought that you weren’t going to make it,” Alys Rousset-Marik greeted Reinhardt Steiner, as the Twenty-Fifth Skye Rangers’ Brigadier entered the compartment.

The blond man shrugged. “I was beginning to worry about that myself.” His calm seemed forced.

Alys glanced at the head of the briefing room aboard the Genyosha flagship and saw that Tai-sa Laura Nelson didn’t appear to be about to start addressing them. The Genyosha officer remained in command of the SLDF task forces, as a compromise between the AFFC and Silver Hawks contingents. “What happened? Jumpship problems?”

“You could say that.” Reinhardt shook his head disgustedly. “There was a Free Skye cell waiting on the jumpship that was supposed to take us from Summer. It was one hell of a mess and then all the rest of the jumpships we were supposed to use had moved on. If the Archon-Prince hadn’t ordered no less than four commercial jumpships commandeered, I doubt we’d have reached Arcturus by now.”

“Free Skye…” Alys thought back to what little she knew of the dissident movement within the Federated Commonwealth’s most fractious province. “Why would they go after your jumpship?”

The commander of the Twenty-Fifth Skye Rangers sighed in frustration. “I can't tell you much at the moment - security around the ongoing investigation - but most of the pleb-types had been fed some nonsense about objecting to 'their' Rangers being sent to fight the Clans when we should be in Skye, protecting them from the evils of the Free Worlds League, the Draconis Combine and - worst of all - the Lyran government.”

The Free Worlds League, which was currently fighting a civil war. the Draconis Combine, which was happily watching Peter Steiner-Davion pour forces into the fighting against the Clans, rather than against them. And the Lyran government, which was the only protector Skye had had for over two centuries of the Succession Wars. Alys would love to say it made no sense to her, but it felt very much like home. “I see we have no monopoly on stupidity.”

“It’s a resource that seems to be infinitely replenishable,” Reinhardt answered cynically.

“What was that old saying? Only two things are infinite: the universe and human stupidity… and I’m not sure about the universe.”

That finally got a smile from Reinhardt. “Nor am I, Colonel. Nor am I.”

Alys thought he might have said more but the lights dimmed, signalling Laura Nelson’s readiness to address them.

“Commanders,” the Genyosha officer greeted them. “I have, as the saying goes, good news and bad news. The good news: while Clan Wolf and Clan Jade Falcon are on the backfoot, we have not come all this way for nothing, the war goes on. The bad news: we will be spending more time crammed aboard our dropships.”

There were a couple of groans from junior officers who clearly hoped to remain anonymous.

Nelson smiled toothily. “Alas, we have been denied the honour of striking at Tamar, even though we are certainly close enough and I gather that the Archon-Prince grows concerned that our glorious Ghost Bear allies may reach the Wolf capital first. Generalfeldmarschall Victor Steiner-Davion himself has advised me that if the Bears seek to bid for the right to take the world, he would have to bid us away in order that it doesn’t look as if he’s bullying them.”

Alys frowned. Where were the Bears deploying? While they were also fighting under the banner of the Star League; so far as she was aware, they were barely coordinating with the Federated Commonwealth or their other allies.

As if reading her mind, Nelson brought a strategic display of the Wolf occupation zone. “The Hells Horses haven’t made any moves since they retreated from Twycross,” she began, indicating a sliver of worlds along the top of the map. “Whether that will continue, we don’t know. We do know that the Diamond Sharks have seized the jumpship yard at Star’s End - in fact they did so late last year, before the Wolf offensive broke - and they appear to be trying to finish off the pirate bands that have been using the asteroid belts in the system. As long as they hold to that, the Archon-Prince has indicated he’s willing to leave the system to them - it wasn’t under Federated Commonwealth control before the Clans invaded anyway.”

Alys looked at the map, which had historical borders marked, if only for reference. “That doesn’t seem to be restraining him when it comes to the old Free Rasalhague Republic’s borders,” she murmured to Reinhardt.

He glanced at her. “It’s a face-saving reason not to drag another Clan into the fighting.”

Nelson moved her indicator to a line of worlds bordering the Ghost Bear occupation zone - or rather, the Rasalhague Dominion. “While the Bears have taken Memmingen -” in striking range of Tamar “- Diosd and Ramsau -” widening their link to the pocket of the Free Rasalhague Republic that had been spared conquest in 3052 by ComStar’s victory on Tukkayid “- the bulk of their efforts have been nearer Rasalhague itself.”

Six worlds, all within two jumps of Rasalhague, had been highlighted with the Ghost Bears’ banner. Others, some still within a single jump, remained untouched, but the result was to move the border between the two clans twenty or thirty light years into the Wolf Occupation Zone along a broad front.

“Operation North Star, a deep strike by House Davion’s Ceti Hussars, has been successful beyond all expectations.” Nelson indicated a cluster of worlds on the other side of the Wolf occupation zone. “Nine worlds have been liberated but the Hussars are running short of supplies and have bypassed a number of important and presumably well protected worlds to achieve this. They’re also spread out holding and pacifying those worlds.”

“We’ll be accompanying a re-supply and reinforcement convoy to Feltre, the furthest point of their advance. From there, garrison units will disperse to free up the Ceti Hussars to assault the worlds they bypassed. Meanwhile, our regiments will move on to liberate worlds between the Ghost Bear advance and the worlds the Hussars have taken already. The hope is that the Ghost Bears will be less willing to contest a Star League Defense Force task force than they might be the AFFC.”

“Even if half our forces are from the AFFC?” asked Reinhardt.

The Second Genyosha’s commander shrugged. “It’s a theory. If they don’t back off, we’ll do this the old fashioned way.” She switched to another map, one that focused on just the corewards end of the occupation zone: the worlds along the edge of the Inner Sphere itself. “Our targets are these six worlds: Liezen, Bruben, Rodigo, St. John, Alleghe and The Edge. Intelligence suggests that the Wolf garrisons are unlikely to exceed a trinary of ‘Mechs with some degree of aerospace, but we can expect a large paramilitary force of infantry - most likely recruited from former FedCom worlds, in the same way that the Wolves stationed recruits from FRR worlds upon their FedCom conquests.”

Alys raised her hand for attention. “What are we authorised to offer them in terms of surrender?”

“If they lay down their arms,” Nelson told him, “You can offer them repatriation to their homeworld - assuming it’s under Star League control - or release into the custody of Khan Marcos Hall, for those who wish to remain part of Clan Wolf. Other than that, I gather that there are extensive detention camps being set up on worlds a very long way from the other Clans.”

She paused. “There is one specific request from the First Lord, which the Commanding General has approved. Because the Clan’s educate their children in communal creches, it’s possible we may come across groups of children without any family units. Most probably trueborn children undergoing selection and training for a future in the Wolves’ warrior caste. Extracting these sibkos has been given a high priority, to the point that if you find it necessary to withdraw from your target world, evacuating these captives is to be prioritised over anything save for your own personnel. I have a direct promise from Hohiro Kurita and Peter Steiner-Davion to indemnify us for any equipment lost as a result.”

“Interesting priority,” Alys muttered to Reinhardt. “Doesn’t Loki recruit extensively from orphans?”

The man gave her a sharp look.

“I’m just saying.”

“It might be some sort of deal with the Exiled Wolves,” he suggested. “Most of the children would be from their bloodlines.”

Nelson tapped the display screen with her pointer. “Your attention please?”

The two of them returned their attention to the front of the room, Alys feeling as if she was back in school.

“Each of you will be assigned a LIC team to identify any sibkos or similar strategic targets,” the DCMS officer told them. “Officially they are not there to spy on you, just to analyze data on the worlds you’re assigned to. You don’t have to accept any recommendations they make, but unfortunately you may have to explain why you decline any. I’ll back you as long as you’re not openly capricious.”

There were winces around the room, even from the AFFC officers present. No one liked having outsiders in nebulous authority over you - and spies were second only to politicians in the distaste felt for someone having a license to tell you how to do your job.

“We have six targets and only five commands,” Nelson continued. “So, the Twenty-Fourth Lyran Guards will need to handle two worlds. I’ll leave it up to you if you wish to divide your command or handle them in succession, Hewitt.”

General Hewitt, who had been placed in command of the Twenty-Fourth following Sabine Steiner’s departure nodded, mind clearly already on the decision.

“Under the circumstances, I’m assigning you to handle Liezen and the Edge,” the Genyosha officer continued. “The furthest from the Ghost Bears, so having to spread your ‘Mechs thinner shouldn’t matter too much. But you know how plans go awry.”

There were some chuckles.

“Brigadier Steiner, I’m assigning your Rangers to take St John, while I’ll be on Rodigo - in a central location for ease of communication. This leaves the furthest forward systems to our new comrades from the Free Worlds League.” Tai-sa Nelson looked at Alys. “Colonel Marik, your Krusher brigade is assigned to liberate Alleghe, which leaves Bruben as your target, Colonel Reissing.”

Out of the corner of her eyes, Alys saw the commander of the Lucky Thirteenth nod in understanding. “If the Ghost Bears arrive first,” he asked, “Should we try to take the worlds away from them?”

“Personally, I’d go for it, but we’re not supposed to start a fight with the Bears. They’re technically part of the Star League now, after all. It’s different if they’re the ones that start anything.”

Alys sat back in her chair. “What about the sibkos? If the Bears are about to take one…” She frowned. “Could we offer a trial of possession for them? I know it’s kind of odd to be targeting children but at the same time, they’re a specific goal and the Clans get twitchy about their bloodlines. I heard something about some of their sibkos being purged of descendants of failed warriors…?”

Nelson paused and stared at her. Then she straightened her shoulders. “They’re not wrong. I remember from Wolcott - the Smoke Jaguars offered to execute the descendants of their defeated commander. Hohiro Kurita had to tell them he didn’t want that. Yes, I don’t know what the Bears will do to Wolf sibko. If you do encounter the Bears, try asking them at first - but if you need to fight to get the children out, then do it.”

*

Chapter 32
The Triad, Tharkad
Donegal Province, Federated Commonwealth
27 January 3068


Peter Steiner-Davion watched from a window as the dropship carrying Yvonne and Tancred took off from the Triad’s private drop-port. “I feel rotten for sending them off so suddenly.”

“It’s not entirely your fault,” Caesar Steiner rumbled from the armchair he was sitting on, a plate of tart in front of him. “Someone has to keep the other half of the FedCom in line. Who else do you want to appoint? George Hasek? We’d be at war with the Capellans within a week.”

“Not something we want right now,” the Archon-Prince conceded.

“Maybe three or four years from now,” his cousin agreed. “Serve out your term as First Lord, then leave him in charge while you take a month’s vacation. When you’re back we can sort out the Liaos and put all the blame on Hasek.”

Peter looked at the older man, snorted and then went back to his desk. “Don’t tempt me. We’re still not sure he wasn’t involved in what happened to Catherine.”

There was an awkward silence between them at the name. Catherine had survived being captured and being tortured. But the fact that she’d fought back and, after a fashion, triumphed didn’t make the aftermath easier for her. Peter had been forced to recognise that she couldn’t be sent back to New Avalon as regent, for her own sake and that of those she’d be governing.

His sister rambled, more than she had since - since Addicks, he thought. Worse were fits of anger and tears that came easily to her eyes on unpredictable provocations. She had been broken once, clawed her way back and then, Peter thought, used. He had put pressure on her, the weight of duty they were born to… and for all that she’d borne up under burden, she had not healed as he had thought. She had not completely recovered from whatever ordeal had brought her back into his life, an enigma wrapped in mystery and a call to arms that he had jumped heedless at.

“Karla Holstein was right,” he murmured.

“Oh?”

“Yes. Catherine needs more help than I can give, and perhaps more than the therapists we’ve cleared previously. I need to be more honest about that.”

“You realise that if you bring in more people then the better the chances that she’ll be outed as… unwell.” The old man gazed at him without judgement as he delivered that warning. “An eccentric princess is one thing. Missing one finger doesn’t matter much.” Surgical reconstruction had saved all but one finger on Catherine’s right hand - she’d be missing the middle finger unless she elected to have a cybernetic replacement fitted. “But long term psychiatric care is still stigmatized. I’m not saying it’s fair, but realistically, it’s the sort of detail that muckrakers love to find.”

“I owe her better than to use her harder than I already have. And don’t tell me that I should give her the choice. She went from barely recognising a ‘Mech’s cockpit to piloting one competently in six bloody months. We both know what she’ll choose, given the chance. Someone has to keep her from self-destructing.”

Caesar gazed at him for a moment and then nodded sharply. “Just remember that you’re her brother, not her gaoler. It’s a fine line to walk.”

“And if you feel I’m off that line, will you tell me?”

The Generalfeldmarschall huffed and picked up his fork. “Ah, an excuse to keep raiding the palace kitchens here? My goal is accomplished, now to withdraw with the spoils of victory.” He broke off a section of tart and forked it into his mouth, then met Peter’s eyes with a paternal twinkle in his gaze.

How his cousin managed to still meet the physical requirements to keep serving was a mystery for the ages, Peter mused. Caesar drank like a fish, smoked like a chimney and ate so much that you’d think he’d be the size of a whale. And yet he managed to look no more than a little on the chubby side, despite a job that had him behind a desk more often than not.

“We were talking about the Ghost Bears,” the younger man said at last. “You said something about why we’ve not heard from them as much as we hoped.”

Caesar finished chewing on his current mouthful. “Ah. Yes,” he mumbled and then swallowed. “I still have friends in the SLDF, some at the Focht War College, which puts them near enough to the Kungsarme to have some back-channels. It seems that the Ghost Bears’ Clan Council have agreed to funnel their contact with the rest of the Star League through the Rikstag on Orestes. To act as a buffer, you understand.”

Peter nodded. “That makes sense.” The Rikstag was the legislature of what remained of the Free Rasalhague Republic. Exactly what their role would be within the Rasalhague Dominion was as yet undecided but it seemed very likely that they would replace the civilian councils of Clan Ghost Bear, since by votes and voices the Rasalhague natives still vastly outnumbered immigrants from the Clan homeworlds.

“The problem,” Caesar speared the last of the tart on his fork, “Is that the Rikstag is none too fond of you right now.”

“What have I ever done to them?” he protested.

“Feltre. Hyperion. Several other worlds.” Caesar put the morsel in his mouth and then stared at the empty plate in a betrayed fashion as he chewed.

Peter scowled. “It’s not as if they had a hope of ever taking them back. What should I do, let the Wolves regroup in safety there?”

His cousin swallowed. “That first part just makes it worse for the firebrands. And no, of course not. But when this shakes out, do you intend to give them all those worlds back? Meaning to the Ghost Bears, of course.”

“...maybe some of them,” he admitted. Tamar had been an important world for centuries and for decades it had been almost surrounded, first by Combine conquests and then by the Free Rasalhague Republic. The chance to have some breathing space around it now was irresistible. And of course, most of those worlds had been Lyran worlds once… until the Succession Wars had steadily pushed back that border.

“I was senior enough to hear something of it when Kelswa mucked up our one good chance at bringing them back,” Caesar told him. “The chance to remind them that before the Dragon added them to Rasalhague district, they’d been Lyrans. That for all Tyr stood against House Kurita, that the Princes of Rasalhague had ruled a vest pocket corner of the district. And of course, Selwin Kelswa wrecked everything.” He shook his head. “You’ll need to be cleverer than that. And that includes paying attention to what other people think about what you’re doing, however much sense it makes to you.”

“I suppose you have a point.” Peter rubbed at his jaw. “I promise not to mention their failure to protect them eighteen years ago, when I write a message to the Rikstag about coordination with the Ghost Bears. And at least then I’ll be sending my messages to the right world!”

“That may help,” began the rotund General of Armies.

He might have said more but there was a knock on the door. “Your highness, Count Allard is here to see you.” Last month, Quintus Allard the elder had formally resigned his title in favour of his grandson; apparently settling into happy retirement.

Peter glanced at Caesar, saw the older man looking at his empty plate and shook his head. “Please send him in.” He wasn’t ordering more food. He could hardly expect to make any impact on the man’s diet when parents, wife and children had all failed to, but there was no use enabling bad habits either.

Unfortunately, when Quintus Allard slipped in through the doors, he had papers in one hand and a plate of cake in the other. The one landed on Peter’s desk, the other in the gourmand’s greedy hands.

“I don’t get cake?” asked Peter plaintively.

“It’s your castle,” Caesar told him. “You can have as much cake as you ask for.”

“Good news,” Allard - that dastardly traitor - declared. “Kali Liao’s attempt on the life of Naomi Centrella has failed. I wouldn’t go so far as to say it failed miserably - it was close enough to be known and identified. But it failed nonetheless.”

“Wait, what?” The General of Armies looked up from his plate. “She did what?”

Allard raised an eyebrow - the one that Caesar couldn’t see but that Peter could.

The Archon-Prince gave him a tired look. “Kali Liao is not a great admirer of the Canopians. However useful they are as allies, Naomi Centrella’s position alongside the Chancellor seems to have rubbed at her nerves for a while. Assassination is a step up though.”

“It appears to have been a contingency laid quite some time ago. The agent involved attempted to deliver a chemical weapon to Lady Centrella’s apartments. Fortunately, one of her staff had a pet dog that sniffed out something wrong with it and alerted her security. Five more minutes and the Magestrix might have lacked an heir,” Allard added.

Peter could have lived with that. He’d never met Naomi Centrella, for she’d not yet attended a Whitting Conference, but she represented a fairly strong pro-Capellan sentiment within the Magistracy of Canopus. Her elder sister Danai had been more inclined towards military affairs and less enamoured with the alliance, but unfortunately she’d accompanied Victor to the Clan homeworlds and died bravely on the battlefield. Which daughter would have succeeded Emma Centrella had been an open question - the position was elective, but Danai’s death had made it a more or less closed book: the Magestrix’s only surviving daughter was almost certain to have a plurality of electors on her side. On the other hand, Naomi having a near brush with death was just about as good politically so her survival cost him little.

“I trust that her security is being improved,” he said, rather than expounding on that.

“Lady Centrella is making a sudden return to Canopus at her mother’s insistence,” Allard advised him with a degree of glee. “Officially so she can renew her contacts with the Magestrix’ court and advisors since she’s been away for a while. Unofficially…” He spread his hands. “We know enough to be sure that there is an unofficial agenda, but not exactly what it is. It’s unlikely to be fatal to the alliance but Sun-Tzu will need to work very hard to patch things up.”

“He’s unfortunately quite good at that,” Peter mused. “On the other hand, he’ll also have domestic concerns… Do we have any idea what triggered Kali giving the order?”

Quintus was quite smooth enough to pick up that Caesar Steiner was not currently to be brought into the loop on who exactly had originated the order to the agent in place - who was a perfectly genuine Kali-worshipping Thuggee. The agent just didn’t know that his chain of contacts back to Kali Liao’s home on Highspire had been compromised. “It’s not entirely clear but there were rumours that Lady Centrella might be close to the Chancellor personally rather than merely politically. Nothing I have seen suggests that there is an heir, but that would certainly be extremely damaging to Kali Liao’s prospects of ever sitting on the Celestial Throne.”

The fact that Catherine’s visions of the future included two or three such heirs was something that Peter had been worried about for a while. “I’m honestly not sure what would be more alarming: a Liao-Centrella on that throne or Sun-Tzu’s maniac of a sister.” Although at least the former was a long-term concern and not an immediate one.

“I’d lean towards Kali,” Caesar muttered. “Sun-Tzu getting her an insanity plea over those attacks might have been more damaging to the Star League than Kathrina’s indifference to the entire St Ives war.”

“Fortunately, that prospect is significantly diminished.” Quintus could in fact grin more broadly. “My delightful cousin has been removed from the Prefectorate. I don’t know yet how many favours Sun-Tzu had to call in with the House of Scions to get that done so quickly, but I’m willing to wager it’s cost him heavily. And that means she’s no longer eligible for the position of Chancellor without some kind of coup.”

Peter nodded. “That is good. Who does that leave if Sun-Tzu slips in the bath or something?”

Quintus arched an eyebrow and Peter shook his head slightly. That was not a hint. Assassinating a council lord would be a far more risky prospect than using a catspaw for an attack that didn’t even need to succeed in order to have the desired effect.

“My mother is technically eligible,” the young Count admitted, “But she’s politically impossible after her secession back in ‘twenty-nine. That leaves the Duke of Capella and the Shonso of Liao as the primary candidates.”

“Gregory Liao and… Herthong?”

“Hurtong Liao,” Quintus corrected with a pained expression. “He’s more or less in Sun-Tzu’s camp, since the Chancellor’s Xin Sheng policies more or less carried him to rule of a major world.” Shonso was more or less the Capellan title equivalent of a count, but the planet Liao held considerable political weight as the homeworld of the Liao dynasty and capital of the commonality carved out of the Chaos March.

“And Gregory?” asked Caesar.

“Old school politician. He has better connections in the Scions. It’d be an interesting conflict if it comes to that.”

Peter nodded. “I’d better refresh myself on their profiles at some point. Do we know what will happen with Kali besides losing her office?”

“Not yet sir, but there may be more news on the way. It’s…”

Quintus’ comm bleeped, cutting him off.

“That was fast,” the Archon-Prince noted.

The spymaster lifted the comm to his ear. “Allard speaking.”

There was a pause as whoever was on the other end reported. It must have been important, Peter thought. Normally using a comm within this office was something of a security hazard - only a handful of comm units anywhere had the codes to route something past his electronic security.

Quintus’ face didn’t pale dramatically but his expression was serious as he lowered the comm.

“Bad news?” asked Peter.

“It isn’t good.”

“Out with it then,” Caesar grunted, cutting another piece of cake for himself.

Quintus took a deep breath and faced the General of Armies. “Your grace, I regret to inform you that your mother passed away this morning.”

The out-of-place honorific had given the old soldier time to put his plate down. He hadn’t remembered to do the same with his fork and it bounced off the plate and onto the floor.

“The initial reports suggest natural causes,” Quintus continued gently.

Peter stepped forwards to rest a hand on his cousin’s shoulder in sympathy, as the man began to shake with grief.

*

Chapter 33
Sarghad, Trell I
Clan Jade Falcon Occupation Zone, Federated Commonwealth
5 February 3068


Sabine Steiner welcomed her officers to the briefing room in a subdued tone, something that their faces showed they had picked up on.

“Do we have new orders?” asked Juan Villanova-Petain. The armour officer looked as tired as Sabine felt - he’d been visiting the hospital, from what she remembered of his schedule.

His hover cavalry had turned the battle for Trellwan, racing through mountain caves too small for ‘Mechs and presumed too rough for combat vehicles, to cut the Jade Falcons off from their base and the cross routes that allowed them to shift a reserve of strength between the various mountain passes. They’d kept the Falcons penned up long enough for the Skye Rangers to punch through and win the trial of possession - but it had cost them equipment and lives. Neither could be replaced right now, and like any good officer Villanova-Petain felt the latter harder.

Louizio Martine-Holm shook her head. “I just hope we’re getting the regiments back that we left on Goat Path.”

“It’s on the cards, but not just yet,” Sabine told them. “Currently the shipping is prioritised to freeing up the units ear-marked for hitting Wotan and Tamar.”

“We’re not that far from Wotan,” the infantry officer pointed out. “Certainly nearer than the Eighth Deneb Light Cavalry were.” Sudeten was being stormed by Victor Steiner-Davion, which only left Wotan as the hub of what remained of the Jade Falcon occupation zone. They still held other worlds, beyond the Dark Nebula, but Wotan had been the lynchpin for their operations at the coreward end of their territory - it was their last reasonable base they could launch counter-attacks from. Without it, they’d need to build up facilities elsewhere - a problem for the next war, not this one. Assuming the Falcons even managed to hold onto those worlds.

“That would be why the Fourth Skye Rangers were tapped. And the Eighth Deneb Light Cavalry have the use of Word of Blake jumpships. Do you want to be nursemaiding Blakists?” asked Villanova-Petain.

Martine-Holm winced. “No thanks. I heard some nasty stories.”

“We’ve received an announcement from the Archon-Prince,” Sabine informed them, not wanting to get into gossip about their allies. “It came with specific instructions that all units are to show it to the troops within twelve hours of receipt, unless operational needs make doing so impossible. And planetary media are to run it within twenty-four hours, assuming we have access.”

“Which we do,” Villanova-Petain noted. The Jade Falcons had kept Trell I’s electronic media under their direct control and even expanded its scope in some ways. As little as Sabine liked to admit it, there were some ways that the Falcons had done better by these fringe worlds than the Federated Commonwealth had. Not many, but some.

“Which we do,” she agreed. “It may have particular significance for our Hussars, so I felt it best that you should watch it here and raise any concerns you had immediately.”

“Concerns?” asked Martine-Holm thoughtfully. “That sounds ominous.”

Sabine considered warning them and then decided against it. “See for yourselves,” she said instead and activated the projector.

The banner of the Federated Commonwealth appeared briefly and was then replaced by the image of the Archon-Prince. Unusually for an official statement, Peter Steiner-Davion did not speak from the throne. Instead he was standing on a balcony, backed by an evening view of a steep-sided valley, all snow and pines - some of the mountains of Bremen, Sabine thought although she couldn’t place which of the royal residences it might be. Resarius perhaps? She knew Peter liked the place but she’d not been there more than a couple of times.

The First Lord wasn’t wearing his usual dress uniform, just a heavy sweater and pants under a cloak that was probably necessary to keep him warm - balconies weren’t really recommended during a Tharkad winter. His face was serious, perhaps even grim. Sabine understood why and she was sure her officers would soon. “My name,” he declared - perhaps for the sake of the billions returned to Federated Commonwealth rule over the last year, “Is Peter Steiner-Davion. I am the Archon-Prince of the Federated Commonwealth and I am the First Lord of the Second Star League.”

“While I did not begin the current war with the Clans, I am responsible for prosecuting it. On my orders, hundreds of thousands of soldiers have gone into peril. It is to their enormous credit that the war is going so well. I realise that that must be little comfort to those who have lost family members, or who are seeing their sons and daughters, husbands and wives return home with serious wounds. All I can promise you is that the end result of this will be the chance of peace and security that the Federated Commonwealth has not had for almost twenty years.”

The Archon-Prince paused and shook his head. When he looked into the holo-camera again, his eyes betrayed anger. “It was my intention to return to the frontlines after the Star League Council’s meetings. While I have been strongly advised not to take to the field in the manner of my brother - or of our late uncle - I can at least take up a forward command post and free other officers to take the lead. Unfortunately, circumstances have conspired against me.”

“Well thank God for that.” Martine-Holm shook her head. “I’m sure he’s a fine mechwarrior, but if he dies then who takes over - his kooky older sister or the younger one that’s head over heels for Sandoval?”

Sabine paused the recording and glared at her infantry commander. “That is not funny, Louizio. Aside from them both being my cousins, this is not the time.”

The other woman looked at her and then nodded in apology. “I’ll be good,” she promised, shoulders straightening at the prospect of the implied bad news.

A touch of Sabine’s thumb on the controls resumed the replay: “I’m sure many of you have heard theories about my sister Catherine. That she is a clone, or that the woman who usurped my brother’s throne is the clone. That they are one and the same. That I murdered the usurper on New Avalon and that the search for her is a fraud. Some of those I can dismiss, other questions remain unanswered. This situation has now been complicated by a very narrow escape as she returned to New Avalon. Late last year, an attempt was made to replace Catherine with a doppelganger - a plan that would have doubtless led either to another secession or to the assassination of myself and Yvonne before the imposter could be discovered.”

Villanova-Petain began to pray under his breath. Or perhaps curse. It was hard to tell.

“Through courage and resourcefulness - including the supreme sacrifice from a very brave woman - the plan failed. Not, unfortunately, before my sister suffered... My sister suffered torture at the hands of her captors.”

There was an explosion of outrage from Sabine's staff. She paused the recording, waiting out the angry words - although they hardly had the time for Martine-Holm's red-faced fury to abate. It wasn't as if Sabine didn't understand the reaction.

Once she felt that the words could be heard, she let the message resume. “I cannot, in good conscience ask her to take up her previous responsibilities until she has recovered and so my sister Yvonne will be returning to New Avalon as regent while I must remain upon Tharkad.” Peter's words were clipped, a bubbling anger visible but contained by iron self-control.

“That, of course, is not the end of this matter. We have captives… and we have the body of the imposter. The captives point to Free Skye… something that may be considered plausible by some given the poor relations between my immediate family and our cousin Robert Kelswa. However, despite my deep disagreements with both the movement and my cousin, anyone can claim to be acting on another’s behalf, or be misled as to who is funding their activities. And the imposter’s body offers profound testimony as to another’s involvement.”

“It has been my unfortunate duty to order the arrest of my cousin, Marshal Richard Steiner. He will face questioning under the direction of the Senate, both on this matter and to explore the reasons that he and his mother elected to support the woman who once called herself Archon-Princess. We must establish if this imposter is that same usurper, for blood tests confirm her as Richard’s daughter - a daughter whose existence he hadn’t shared with the rest of House Steiner.”

Peter seemed to relax - slightly - now that he had got that off his chest. “I have no intention of attempting to turn the Federated Commonwealth into some sort of police state. There is no indication that this is anything more than a few power-hungry schemers seeking to promote themselves at everyone else’s expense. Were it not for the potential consequences, I would not feel it necessary to announce this to you. I assure you that all possible precautions are being taken to ensure that no scheme like this succeeds... and that those behind it face justice for their crimes. Thank you, and god bless you all.”

The image vanished.

“...that’s your uncle, isn’t it?” asked Martine-Holm quietly. “Richard Steiner, I mean.”

Sabine nodded quietly. “My mother’s youngest brother.”

“I mean… that doesn’t mean you’re involved. There are a lot of Steiners.”

“This message was the first I’d heard of it… but if I was involved, that’s what I’d say, isn’t it?” She shrugged, trying to pretend she was reconciled with the issue. “It’s possible I’ll be relieved to assist LIC with their investigation, in which case you’ll need to take over, Juan. Possibly without much notice.”

“This is going to hammer morale,” her second-in-commander muttered. “Goddamn idiots - what were they thinking?”

“Assuming that it was Kathrina - and if so, she’s dead and good riddance!” Sabine realised she had probably been to vehement there and reined herself in. “Assuming that it was her, probably some variant on ‘mine-mine-mine’. I didn’t really spend much time with her but when you look at what she did and not her charming personality, she was pretty much incapable of recognising when enough was enough.”

If this tanked her career, Sabine was probably going to call on her family connections and petition for the right to kill Richard personally. After his fairly disastrous tours of duty in Skye and Bolan she likely wouldn’t be the only one asking but it never hurt to try.

*

Chapter 34
FCS Ardan Sortek, Sudeten
Clan Jade Falcon Occupation Zone, Federated Commonwealth
11 February 3068


The approach to Sudeten reminded Marshal Jon Davion of the final hours before landing on New Avalon with Peter Steiner-Davion, years ago. He hoped that that wasn’t an omen: while they’d won that battle, just getting to the surface had cost the life of his predecessor in command of the Davion Heavy Guards.

There was the same sense of being a helpless spectator though. At least the command deck of FCS Ardan Sortek was more spacious than that of the dropship John Gordon that he’d occupied then. The main tactical display projected the defenses around the Jade Falcon capital showed a considerable number of dropships forming up around the enemy warships. Most of them were armed transports pressed into service and likely emptied of their troops - the Jade Falcons simply didn’t have that many assault dropships.

At least this time the numbers favoured them, rather than the even numbers encountered at New Avalon. Jon picked out the Sortek’s icon, near the heart of the spearhead of warships that was intended to secure the orbitals. Their own transports were only visible on a wider strategic display - they wouldn’t arrive for twenty-four hours and if the battle turned against the Federated Commonwealth, they could cease deceleration and make for a jump-point with little chance that the Jade Falcons could manage an interception.

Beside the bulk of the Mjolnir-class battlecruiser that Jon rode on, he could see the icon of FCS Hanse Davion. The two ships anchored each other, like the two friends that they had been named for. Most importantly, the Avalon-class cruiser offered Jon’s superior much more protection than the dropship that Marshal Ann Adelmana had ridden over New Avalon.

Even on the strategic display, there was nothing to indicate the presence of the Davion Heavy Guards. Jon’s former command were light years away, still guarding Twycross. His reward for commanding the defense there had been a promotion, trading his command of the Regimental Combat Team for a place on Victor Steiner-Davion’s staff as the Generalfeldmarschall laid the groundwork for administering and protecting the liberated worlds. In theory, Jon was second-in-command of the AFFC contingent here but he’d barely had time to meet most of the commanders involved.

“There she is,” murmured one of those commanders. Amanda Steiner stabbed one finger towards the display, where an icon flickered as it updated with positive confirmation of the identity of an enemy warship.

“Who or what?” he asked curiously.

“Falcon’s Nest.” The captain of the Sortek folded her arms. “The only Jade Falcon warship to get away from Coventry.”

“A battleship?” Jon wasn’t entirely conversant with the nuances of the display yet, but he was sure that the suffix of BB after the name attached to the icon represented that term.

“Texas-class,” Amanda confirmed. “A tough ship, and one that we don’t want to get away. She’s got history back to the invasion.”

‘Get away’? Jon was glad that the naval officer was confident enough that she wasn’t worried about winning. “Can she escape?”

She gave him a look. “Only if we mess up. Han and Dan can generate more delta-v, but right now we’re tethered to our allies and some of them are real slugs.”

“Han and Dan?”

“Hanse Davion and Ardan Sortek.” The captain gave him a shrug. “We’ve been assigned together for more than a year and it’s a mouthful.”

Jon studied the display. There were a pair of Fox-class corvettes escorting the two FedCom capital ships, but the majority of the fleet came from their allies. A trio of Aegis-class cruisers from Clan Nova Cat formed a loose perimeter around them; while the point of the spearhead was the ComGuards flagship, Invisible Truth, backed up by three Lola-class destroyers.

In comparison, the Jade Falcons only had four warships available - less than he had seen estimated as still active. Besides the Falcon’s Nest, Jon saw two battlecruisers - a Cameron-class sister-ship to the Invisible Truth and a Black Lion - with a single Whirlwind-class destroyer as their escort. “They seem to have quite a heavy force.”

Amanda smiled. “Let me tell you a secret, Marshal. All these terms like battleship and battlecruiser are just jargon that we spacers use to confuse ground-pounders.”

“I knew it!” he joked.

“What matters are the size and speed of the shps,” she continued. “We’ve got five ships that can outmaneuver anything they have, if we use them intelligently. Beresick isn’t a fool - I expect he’ll cut loose mixed forces - our slower ships to pin theirs in place, while the rest of us outflank them. With numbers and tonnage on our side, that’s hard to beat.”

“Fire and maneuver.”

“Even in space, catching the enemy in a crossfire can be decisive.”

“Sir!” One of the naval crew turned from their console. “Orders from the flagship.”

Jon knew that that meant the Invisible Truth. Victor Steiner-Davion had assigned naval command to Precentor Beresick, as the most experienced naval commander. That probably wasn’t a crown that the ComGuards officer would retain long though. The Federated Commonwealth Navy had racked up quite a number of victories over the last eight months. Small battles, perhaps. But victories.

“I hear you,” Amanda told the crewman.

“Targeting priorities are assigned, captain. Indefatigable and Indomitable to focus on enemy dropships, Ardan Sortek and Hanse Davion to focus on Falcon’s Nest. We’re clear to break formation and engage by division.”

The captain seized a handset. “All hands, check your suits and brace for maneuvering.”

Jon looked at the controls built into the arm of the pressure suit he’d been helped into before leaving his quarters earlier. Naval practises had been reviewed after the Civil War and crew losses to depressurization had led to compact pressure suits being issued. They weren’t really suitable for a full extra-vehicular activity, but they’d hold atmosphere once the helmets were locked into place. Many of the crew were donning the helmets already, so only lowering their visors would be required.

Amanda Steiner let go of her handset and donned her own helmet, then helped Jon to do the same. “I know it’s a pain,” she admitted to him, “But it’s better than breathing hard vacuum.”

“No arguments,” he agreed. Another telltale on the forearm display went green, indicating the helmet was fully sealed. With that done, he tightened the straps holding him in place.

Satisfied, Amanda did the same and began giving orders, perhaps one in three of which made any sense to Jon. He felt it in the pit of his stomach when the massive Mjolnir-class battlecruiser stopped slowing down and began to turn, presenting a harder target for the Jade Falcons. Despite weighing one and a quarter megatons, the Ardan Sortek’s powerful engines and maneuvering thrusters gave it similar agility to a Leopard-class dropship of under two thousand tons.

The Ardan Sortek shook briefly. Smaller icons appeared around those of the warships and dropships. For a moment Jon thought it was missiles being launched but then he realised that it was both sides launching aerospace fighters - they’d kept all but a modest patrol of interceptors aboard to save fuel and pilot endurance for the real fight.

The dropships closed in around the warships to provide overlapping fire against inbound aerospace fighters. This close to a planet, hopefully no one would break out the nuclear warheads but no one wanted to find out the hard way that the other side was desperate enough to have done so.

The Falcon’s Nest was also turning, trying to keep its flank facing the two FCN capital ships without exposing a weak spot to the three destroyers closing in on the Black Lion-class battlecruiser or the similar formation of Nova Cat cruisers that was picking on the Jade Falcon’s Cameron-class. Precentor Beresick hadn’t chosen to directly compete with the Invisible Truth’s sister-ship and was instead focusing his flagship’s firepower against the one destroyer in the enemy force.

Jon watched the icons of Jade Falcon dropships flare and vanish under the guns of the two Fox-class corvettes. Friendly dropships were also being broken, but they were being hammered by the main batteries of the enemy warships, which meant that that firepower wasn’t being directed at their counterparts.

Then the battlecruiser shook again and this time he knew that it was missiles launching. Six from the Ardan Sortek and ten from the Hanse Davion, the holodisplay marking them as they plunged towards the battlecruiser. He knew, from the snatches of conversation around him, that other weapons were firing - up ‘above’ him in the nose of the ship, heavy particle cannon and gauss rifles were firing, but their shots weren’t as clearly visible.

Four missiles missed the Falcon’s Nest entirely, three others were picked off by Jade Falcon fighters. That still meant that nine struck home. They didn’t seem to have much immediate effect, but another sixteen were on the way.

The markers for missiles launched the other way showed that the battleship had shifted its firepower to them. It only fired six though and Jon watched as four went wild, then the other two detonated short of the Hanse Davion.

“Anti-missile systems,” Amanda Steiner noted. “I wish we had them, but the Lyran admiralty didn’t agree. The next Mjolnir will have them but the Yggdrasil and the Ardan Sortek will need to wait for their next major refit.”

“The Falcon’s accuracy doesn’t seem as good as I expected,” he said. Two-thirds of the FedCom missiles had been on target, but only a third of those fired at them.

She shook her head. “We’re harder targets from this angle.”

There was another jolt and it took Jon a moment to realise, as the ship’s status display lit up, that the Ardan Sortek had taken hits.

“Any moment now…” Amanda murmured, eyes anticipatory. Then she straightened sharply. “Bring us around forty-five degrees, fire as you bear!”

Jon’s stomach complained as the Ardan Sortek whirled upon its centre of gravity, and he could hear the heavy naval autocannon firing, even though they were hundreds of metres away.

The icon of the Falcon’s Nest lit up with amber and crimson lights. “Multiple hits on the prow!” someone called.

The Avalon was still hammering the larger vessel with missiles and it appeared to be practically on fire, so many damage codes appeared around it in the display. Jon called up an image of the ship on his own display, magnified massively since they were barely close enough for the battleship to be visible to the naked eye, and found that the reality was very similar - the blunt wedged bow of the Falcon’s Nest had been torn open by repeated impacts and fires were clearly raging inside, with one of the dorsal dropcollars streaming flames as the atmosphere within leaked explosively.

Then he saw the next salvo of missiles smash into the port flank  of the Texas-class ship not far behind the nose. Something some structural fault must have been created or found, because entire slabs of armour blew away from the side of the battleship, leaving it looking like a partial cut-away, perhaps of ‘fatal failure of damage control’.

The heavy ship turned on its axis, perhaps trying to present the less damaged starboard side to its enemies, but the ship was bracketed now, and wherever it went, either the Hanse Davion or the Ardan Sortek could engage the damaged prow and flank.

“Should we offer them the chance to surrender?” Jon asked mildly. A captured battleship would probably be more valuable than close to two million tons of scrap.

Amanda Steiner gave him a tight look and then nodded reluctantly. “Comms, invite the enemy battleship to surrender - not hegira, just surrender. We’re not letting them leave but there’s no use risking them falling out of orbit. They might hit someone.”
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