Fire on the Frontline

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Fire on the Frontline Page 39

by Trevor Wyatt


  There are housing quarters for special delegates and series of massive conference rooms for the several meetings that take place within the building. There is a landing pad with cradle at the top of the building where air cars and away vehicles from the orbiting space station or orbiting ships can land to drop delegates or senators from other worlds.

  The building also has a stadium sized general assembly area, which is located on a subterranean level. This hall is usually used for general assemblies between humans, Sonali and all other species. Plated with a mixture of colored glass, aluminum and stainless steel, the body of the building looks like a smooth, slick star ship. I almost feel like I can pilot the thing out to space.

  I have heard rumors that the building does have an emergency evacuation protocol, especially in the case of an attack or emergency that threatens its destruction. It can be easily turned into a space vessel with its thrusters and launched into space, where it will merge with the orbiting space station that is FTL capable and escape to a military zone.

  “Excuse me, Captain,” says a voice behind me, interrupting my train of thoughts.

  I turn to see a security personnel looking at me with a warm smile. I smile back.

  “Are you lost?”

  “No,” I reply. “I’m just waiting for my husband. He’s supposed to meet me right here. Thanks for asking.”

  The security man nods, turns, and walks away from me.

  Returning to my fascination with this building, I crane my neck to get a good view of the top of the building. I have to squint and shade my eye with my hand because of the high angle of the blazing twin suns and spikes of reflected light that strikes at my eyes.

  Jeryl tells me that sometimes the top of the building is hidden within the clouds, other times it’s not. This is one of the other times. I see that at the very top, the building curves inward, reducing the area to about a fourth of its base area.

  Then I see a lightning rod (at least I think it is) that stretches higher and higher on. Because of the thickness of the lightning rod, I can’t tell if it’s ten yards tall or if it’s hundred yards tall.

  I begin to think seriously about my theory that the building could be a spaceship. There is a control center at two hundred and seventy fourth level. This control center takes up the whole floor and it’s where the entire building is controlled.

  It’s where the staff of over one thousand members are coordinated and directed.

  Though owned by the government, it’s not a military building hence the staff are not military. However, the staff use a military hierarchical system, which ensures productivity and discipline.

  I even heard that the senior managers in the building are former Terran Armada officers. Some left the Armada just after the Earth-Sonali war to join the team here in the headquarters.

  I don’t blame them, neither do I hate them for leaving the Armada. But if they had left during the war, I may have hated them.

  The pay here is good. Very good.

  A junior staffer here could be earning more than twice what a First Officer in a Battle Cruiser may be earning. And senior staffers here earn way more than some top Admirals. I know that they earn more than my husband, Vice Admiral Jeryl Montgomery.

  But then being in the Armada is more than getting paid. It has become my life. It is my passion—to explore the vast reaches of space and defend the Terran Union with all the firepower of the Terran Armada. I’d very quickly give up life than give up the opportunity to be the captain of The Seeker, which I now command.

  I’d readily give up on life than give up on my dream of commanding the entire Armada fleet alongside my husband one day.

  In fact, I’ll freely pay to be allowed to captain an Armada vessel as massive and extremely powerful as The Seeker. If the Armada thinks it’s wise to pay me in spite of my desire and proclivity, I don’t mind.

  I am standing at the base of the flight of steps that lead up to the building. There is a moderate pedestrian traffic moving up and down the steps.

  They are mostly humans. But every so often you see an alien face as well.

  So much has changed so fast in New Washington. Some are happy, some aren’t. Many are still trying to catch their breath.

  The grounds of the building are very large. Air cars whiz by, dropping and picking up people. Each air car that stops and descends to the ground in my proximity draws my attention. When I see it’s not my husband, I go back to marveling the building.

  Building security is tight around, both inside and outside the building—men and women wielding laser guns set to stun. These people undergo the same training as the Armada security corps that has now become a common stay on all Armada vessel.

  I once tried to get them off The Seeker, when my husband handed over command to me by the approval of the Armada board. Then I found out that it was more than a matter of policy. It was the law, and to issue such an order that would invalidate the work of the security personnel would be unlawful.

  I begin to feel a slow buildup of anger and resentment. The one arm of the Terran Armada I don’t like so much is the Armada Intelligence.

  “Those pompous overbred sons of bitches,” I mutter with acrimony before I catch myself and stop.

  I force a smile as I exhale. I look around and take in a deep breath. The air is warm and filled with the wonderful smell of New Washington summer. The outer edges of the grounds are surrounded with gardens that are well tended and blooming.

  “Here me all!” booms a loud voice.

  I turn my head, a little alarmed, to see who is speaking. I notice an average height (the kind that borders on tall man) and a small gathering crowd. The man begins to address the people.

  They are far enough to notice me in particular as I suspect from the man’s tone and words that his protest is against the Alien Integration Program and against the government and military that sponsor and support this program. Yet, I’m close enough to hear him speak and to realize that he is Lucien Parker.

  Lucien Parker is a household name in almost every household on Terran World in 2205. His outspokenness against all aliens and our bid to integrate them and integrate with them has gone unnoticed by the government. Yet, he is so popular with the masses.

  Everyone within the Armada thinks he is taking advantage of the war that led to the loss of countless lives to rise to popularity. I think so too, and I think it’s the lowest of the low.

  The worst part?

  Lucien used to be part of the Armada. He joined as an enlisted soldier in 2197. He left in 2202, once peace was declared.

  “For five bloody years we fought these scumbags!” Lucien yells, the ever growing crowds roaring in response. “And now these blue skinned bastards are coming to our worlds, living in our worlds, and taking our goddamn jobs and money!”

  The crowd yells its support, some cursing the government that facilitates this “evil”, while others insulting the Sonali, who are the “evil”.

  “They are yet to pledge allegiance to the Terran Union, yet they keep taking money out of our economy! They are waging the same war, only using peace as their mechanisms!”

  The crowd is starting to work into a frenzy. I take several steps away as the crowd grows by the second.

  I see that a bunch of security personnel are holding a very loose circle around the crowd. Their stance is relaxed and unaggressive. However, I know that they can go from there to full on battle mode in the fraction of a second.

  “Mothers, consider your children who have died in the war,” Lucien continues, his voice inflections conveying the gravity of the losses. I even begin to feel the pain and a little anger at the Alien Integration Program before I catch myself. You are playing right into his perfectly crafted motives, I tell myself.

  “These same mothers now have to work alongside the same people who killed their sons!” Lucien says at the point of tears.

  Lucien’s eyes are even glistening in the sun. I marvel at his professional display of theatric sk
ills. I know he doesn’t really care for those mothers. He is an anarchist. And I’m just waiting for the injunction that will declare him an enemy of the state and a terrorist to the Union.

  I will be the one to hunt him down and put him in a cell for desecrating the knowledge and efforts of the millions that died during the five-year-long war. However, Lucien has been incredibly smart. He is yet to break any laws, though he skirts them with the confidence of an experienced dancer.

  And, the Union is supposedly dedicated to free speech. I’d be just as bad as him if I took it away.

  Lucien points to a woman who has been standing beside him this whole time. That’s also when I start to actually notice her. She’s a woman in her mid-fifties. She’s been sobbing a while because her face is moist with tears.

  “This is Martha,” he says. “Her son was killed when the TUS Cortez engaged with the Sonali at Edoris Station and was destroyed. Now this same woman finds herself working for a Sonali manager who has recently been hired by the Pan Solaris Corporation. Is that fair?”

  “No!” the crowd booms in unison.

  I even flinch at their unified voices. I notice some of the guards are becoming nervous.

  “Is it just?”

  “No!” Another boom.

  This time, I take a few more steps backward. I see that the crowd has gotten aggressive and angry. The guards have switched to full on battle mode. I am not sure what triggered them. But I feel the tension rising to nuclear high.

  There is about to be a showdown. Any misstep, any misfire, anything—and this whole protest will end in a disaster. I am almost compelled to radio my ship that’s currently orbiting the planet to send my security detail, which has been expanded to ten, thanks to my crazy paranoid husband.

  Not so crazy paranoid now, I guess.

  Jeryl

  “Are you sure you want to head out there, sir?” asks one of the security personnel, when I point to my wife who’s standing several yards away from the protesters.

  One look at the scenario and I know it’s not going to end well. The guards are too close to the protesters. Their guns are aimed at them. That’s never a good thing to do.

  Whoever gave that order needs to be retrained.

  You don’t point guns at peaceful protesters, no matter how aggressive they become. You don’t cast the first stone.

  Because protests are protected by the law, law enforcers has to adopt a reactionary approach. They can only use full force once the protesters move from being aggressive to being destructive. Even then, applying force still has a limit.

  I know Lucien Parker all too well. I read his files several month ago. Now that I’m a Vice Admiral and the Terran Union point person in the talks with the Sonali and other species in regards to the Galactic Council, I have full access to the resources and tool of Armada Intelligence.

  Lucien Parker is an ingenious tactician. He is versed in all the laws and statues of the government and the military. He was untapped potential as an enlisted man. His record shows that even despite his rank, he was awarded multiple decorations for bravery in combat.

  Armada Intelligence tried reaching out to him after the war. He resigned his commission by then, but he had already begun forming the Terran Nationalists.

  One of the reports I read said he was possessed with the spirit of Adolf Hitler, the twentieth century mastermind behind World War II and the Holocaust.

  This is why I know he couldn’t care less about our Alien Integration Program. He has an ulterior motive, and if he has to use hapless mothers and fathers and children to get it, he will more than gladly do it.

  “Yes,” I say to the guard. “I won’t let these protestors cow me.”

  “Yes, sir,” the soldier says and lets me through in between the crowd and my wife.

  I am about to step into the melee when the soldier begins to speak again. “Sir, don’t you think its best that I call HQ security and bring her over to us? You’re the very face of what these guys are protesting against. If they see you unarmed and unguarded, they could hurt you.”

  I smile at the soldier. Agent Rusher if I remember correctly. “Rusher, I’ve been fighting demons since even before the start of the war. I won’t be easily taken down by a con artist and his goon crew.”

  I step out into the grounds of the diplomatic headquarters with my hand holding my briefcase tight. I march straight for my wife, whose grim expression brightens up as she spots me.

  Ashley’s beauty still stuns me even after eight years of marriage. I hug and kiss her, my back still to the crowd. We look into each other’s eyes for a moment, and the background yells and Lucien’s maleficent words fall into a background din that I’m no longer paying attention to.

  “God, I missed you,” I whisper to her.

  She smiles sweetly and then plants another kiss on my lips. I feel a tingle run all over my body and then feel the pressure between my legs.

  This is when I hear the distinctive sound of laser fire. Terror runs cold in my veins.

  I swivel on my heels to see what happened.

  Luckily, pandemonium has not broken loose yet. But I can see the chains that bind it chaffing away under the building tension and burning hatred in the eyes of the protesters.

  Shit has gotten bad in a split second.

  These things always do.

  The guards had retreated several yards away from the protesters with their guns raised. It looks like a firing squad. I see that the main doors have been secured with another line of guards aiming down at the crowd.

  My wife tugs at my suit. “Let’s get out of here,” she says. “This is about to get ugly.”

  I shake my head, dismissing her request.

  I have worked so hard to bring the Sonali and humans close. First from the First Contact then to the five year war, then to risking my life and my ship to discover the Nakra race, then to brokering a cease fire between our two people, then to an armistice and peace.

  I have been living in jeopardy, putting my wife, her crew, and the crew of tens of other ships at risk to get to where I am now. There is finally the possibility of peace and prosperity for humans and Sonalis and the many other races in the known universe. I am not about to allow some hate-filled lowlife washout to destroy the blood washed, hard work that has brought us here.

  I’ll be damned if I do.

  “Stay here,” I say to my wife. “I’m going to see if I can stop this bloodshed.”

  If Lucien succeeds in shedding the blood of his protesters here at the diplomatic headquarters—the foothold of the drive towards a coexistence between Sonali, humans and other species—it will be impossible for me and the Armada to make a headway with the Sonali.

  Hell, the Council may be compelled by the voice of the people to expel all aliens from any Terran world and from our territory. Another war would be knocking on our doors next.

  I march into the loose circle and stand to face the protesters. The moment they see and recognize me, they pause, unsure.

  “It’s the Avenger of The Mariner,” someone says within the crowd.

  “It’s Captain Jeryl of The Seeker,” another yells.

  “I heard he singlehandedly defeated the Sonali,” a mutter wafts into the air.

  “And what have we here!” a definite voice says. A path immediately appears between me and Lucien, who is several steps up.

  “Vice Admiral Jeryl. I don’t think we’ve had the pleasure,” he says in a cool menacing tone.

  I’m silent as Lucien bows. “Have you come to silence the cry of the people?”

  I see the astonishments of the people at seeing me begin to turn to confusion. I can hear them thinking, why would Jeryl side with the Sonalis?

  When I reply, I don’t speak to Lucien. I speak to everyone.

  “You have a right to protest. You have a right to demand of the government you elected. They are accountable to you. I would not dare tamper with those rights.”

  Then I turn to the guards who are still poin
ting at the crowds. I count about fifteen of them I can see.

  “Stand down!” I yell. And then I hear the chees of the crowd.

  The guard hesitate and then stand down. I turn to look at the guards at the top of the steps. They, too, are standing down.

  I say to the crowd and to the guards around. “There will be no blood shed today on these grounds.”

  I walk away from them to many cheers and surprisingly some pats on the back.

  “Lucien is looking at you with evil eyes,” Ashley remarks with a smile.

  “Let’s get out of here,” I say.

  Ashley leads me towards the building. Walking up the steps has her butt bouncing and her waist swinging, and the view from where I am is alluring.

  I am captivated by my wife’s sexiness. I think back to the last time we fucked. It was insane and crazy—after an away mission she went on that lasted three weeks. But when was it? It seems so long ago. The fact that I can’t really remember attests to how little time we’ve spent together since I left The Seeker and she became its captain. I’ve been to a half-dozen alien worlds back and forth these last three years.

  I begin to think of a way to spend more time with her.

  We come into a scale-defying lobby and make a beeline past the full complement of armed-to-the-teeth security guards for the bank of elevators.

  We enter a private elevator that takes us to the third floor. We start down a wide, deserted hallway that ends in a massive double door titled Conference Room 3A.

  We can coordinate our shore leave so we can spend time together, I muse, still appreciating my wife’s backside. Maybe some slipstream sex over a secure channel?

  I wonder what the Armada Command would think if they find out we’re using slipstream for phone sex.

  “If you keep staring at my ass like that, your eyes might fall off,” Ashley says, then stops abruptly and turns to meet my gaze.

 

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