Authors: Tristan Michael Savage
âHow's that leech going?' he asked his loyal surveillance officer, whatever his name was.
âJust finishing now sir,' the crewman replied.
âResults on screen,' ordered Leroy. The onboard computer displayed the filtered contents of the orbital traffic data file. A one-hundred-percent match of the suspect ship's description was displayed across the forward pane. The enemy vessel was reported to be still docked in the city below. âI want a pod squad ready to go.'
His troops were on standby. Leroy's Long Shots were so named for their preference for deployment in tight situations, allowing them the opportunity for glory and recognition among lesser peers. Leroy was happy to give them what they needed.
âSir, traffic control is still hailing. I recommend you answer,' said Leroy's communications officer and temporary lover.
He turned his head to her and smiled charmingly. âLet's do it then,' he said, drilling into her with his bright blues, thinking about how he would handle her on their next intimate encounter.
Ever since she walked aboard he could feel her gaze on him. The flick of her hair, the subtleties of the tone she used when addressing him. He didn't blame her. He was impressive with his clean-shaven, chiselled face and immaculate haircut. He oozed status even when not on duty. His long coat bore his fleet colours: black with vertical stripes of red on the edges. It hung nicely from his optimised physique.
Wavelength graphics appeared on screen and oscillated in reaction to the voice of the nervous orbital traffic controller. Leroy cut him off mid-sentence.
âThis is Fleet Commander Magnus Leroy of the Tranquillian Composite. We have reason to believe a band of violent Tyde agents is hiding on Lubric. Their vessel recently crossed your border.' He shot his index finger at his communications officer, prompting her to send the criminal ship's data.
The traffic controller confirmed the transmission and assured the fleet commander a search directive would be initiated. Leroy chortled. The action would not be shrewd enough to catch Tyde agents; he knew past any doubt Lubric authorities would fail.
âNo!' he said. âYou will let us handle it. Under direct authority of the overseers we require safe passage and a dispatch point to the surface of Lubric.'
The controller protested. The sound wavelengths intensified,
showing aggressive and nervous jagged rises. Leroy cut him off again. âI beg to differ. The Composite does indeed have a right to unhindered operation on all participating worlds.'
Leroy listened carefully as the controller went on to tell him about Lubric's new security protocol. Apparently all foreign military forces were required to give an eighth zircle's notice before commencing any operations. Leroy wondered if they bothered to get approval from the overseers before setting this up.
âForeign military forces? And do you realise that Lubric is part of the Tranquillian Composite?' he said.
The controller started to yell. The wavelengths doubled in size.
âDo not engage that hangar,' Leroy snapped. From the corner of his eye he saw a subtle smile on his communications officer's face, before she forced herself to resume her serious demeanour. She seemed to enjoy watching him taking advantage of his authority.
âBy order of the overseers, you will let us through. The suspects are Tyde agents, armed and dangerous. We will handle them.'
The telltale signs of primal rage appeared in the voice readout. Leroy turned away and addressed his faithful bridge crew. âSend the pod squad.' The underside of the
Alkaxell
flared. The controller ordered Leroy to stand down, or the
Alkaxell
's dispatch would be fired upon.
Leroy turned to the screen with a lunatic calm. âYou don't give the orders while we're around, kiddo.'
Before the controller could object Leroy signalled his officer to cut the transmission.
The small pod ejected from the
Alkaxell
's underside. Onboard, strapped to their seats, an elite team of Long Shots with black and red armour slid fresh pulse batteries into their rifles.
The pod closed on the orbital defence platform. The platform's colossal defence fins swivelled and their barrels adjusted as they tried to take aim. But the
Alkaxell
had target-locked the platform with one of its own cannons. The mechanical petals around its barrel unfurled and lit. Visible energy gathered on them, fizzling and injecting into the weapon. The barrel recoiled as a sparking energy blast exploded forth and zipped over the pod's trajectory, slamming into the platform's forward batteries. There was no physical damage, but the light wave spread out along the platform. The inhibiting electromagnetic pulse washed into the system and cut the power conduits. Platform lights blinked out and Lubric's weapon array halted. The pod cleared the wall and fell at an increasing speed to the surface of Lubric.
Leroy half smiled. âNow that's negotiation.'
Tazman gagged. He raised a finger and turned away, placing a hand on the wall. Milton stepped back. The Freegu's tail curled. He began a wet coughing fit. Glowing blue vomit sprayed out onto the pavement.
Milton sighed and waited, getting increasingly annoyed at Tazman's antics. Then again he always wanted to experience new things; at least he was getting out more. Another party of strangely dressed beings passed by, chattering among themselves. Milton's gaze wandered across the street to a group gathered around and watching a screen display. He couldn't make out what they were looking at.
A light spray fell from the sky. He looked up. The drizzle was made visible through the city spotlights. Headlamps from hover vehicles turned into beams. Cloud cover above flashed yellow from the inside. Milton folded his arms, shivering in the traffic updraft. He caught sight of more screens dotted about the skyrises and he could now see what was so interesting: they all showed the same thing â images of the former
Orisurrection
colony. News had travelled fast.
Tazman finished and coughed a few more times, pausing in the same position.
âGee, I would have thought a party animal like you could hold your liquor until the end of the night at least,' Milton said.
Tazman's tail uncurled and drooped to the ground.
âYou okay, buddy?' asked Milton.
âTerrific,' Tazman managed.
Milton glanced back at the nightspot just as Thorny appeared between the cat security. He started yelling at the bouncers but they remained unfazed. Two more of his friends burst from the entrance. One of the cats pointed with its sharp
retractable claw and the three patrons scanned in Milton's direction. Milton backed away from the walkpath. Tazman spat and inhaled fresh air.
âFinished? Good, let's go.' Milton grabbed Tazman's arm and pulled him down a side alley.
âHey,' cried the Freegu. âI'm trying to puke here.'
âThey're looking for us, come on you chimp.'
The alley stunk of humidity and rot. Vermin scampered through loose garbage. The ground crunched and squished under Milton's boots. Visibility dimmed down the alley; he couldn't make out an exit. Lightning crackled and revealed the path. It was full of overflowing garbage containers that crawled and slithered with a whole new ecosystem. The crevice seethed with warm, moist air. Milton wiped the sweat from his brow and scratched his head.
Thorny could be heard yelling at someone in the distance. Milton and Tazman crossed the litter and took cover behind a waste container. Tazman hawked and spat. A silence passed. Light padding of rain rang against hollow metal nearby.
Milton inched to the edge of the container and peered towards the alley mouth in time to see Thorny pass. His first sidekick followed and glanced in their direction. Milton froze. The sidekick kept going. A few spuckons passed before number three trailed behind. Milton emptied his lungs.
A brown hairy rodent scampered along the top of the container. Milton was taken aback. It stood up on its hind legs
and spread its arms, revealing a set of webbed gliders. The small animal chuckled and sprang into the air, sailing away until it disappeared down a steaming drain.
Tazman held his stomach with unfocused eyes. âRecreation, huh?' said Milton. Tazman simply shrugged. Milton huffed and started back towards the alley mouth.
Thorny and his two goons sprung out from around the corner and spaced themselves across the alley opening. The one on the left had swollen veins running all over his body. Muscles crawled over his thin frame as he patted a metal pipe in his hand. The big one on the right looked rodent-like himself. He snarled and showed his fangs. Tattoos and piercings decorated his front; matted blue fur stuck out from his back.
Milton spun; Tazman was way ahead, his wobbly form staggering into the shadows. The trio laughed. Milton followed after Tazman, his so-called friend. Squeaks and croaks rose up as the rubbish rattled with fleeing critters â and now Milton was one of them. He ducked under an overhead pipe and almost lost his footing when his boot met a slimy puddle.
He caught up to Tazman who was forced to stop by a high wall at the end of alley. The trio chuckled from the darkness, slowing as they neared.
Tazman huffed and spun decisively, placing a hand on Milton's shoulder. âThey've left us no choice,' he said. He stepped up to them. âTime out fellas.' They stopped. âCan you give us a moment?'
The blue-fur guy snorted something incomprehensible and cracked his knuckles. Thorny looked on with an uncompromising focus, water dripping down his cracked lips and heaving chest. He smirked and all his thorns flexed in a wave.
The muscle guy with the pipe flashed a set of fake, gold-plated teeth and stepped forward. Thorny's hand shot out and pressed against his chest to halt him. âMake it quick, Freegu,' he said, humouring his victims.
Tazman gestured his thanks and turned away, pulling Milton with him. âIt's okay. I know how we can survive this,' he spoke softly, still a little off-balance. âBig Blue will be the slowest. I'll dodge past to distract him. You take care of the other two.'
âWhat, and how am I supposed to do that?'
âUse your ... you know,' said Tazman bringing a clawed hand outward from his chin.
âHuh?'
âYou're flaming breath, silly. You're a Human aren't you?'
âHumans don't breathe fire!'
âThey don't?'
âNo!'
âMilton Lance?' a new voice spoke.
The engineers looked up. Replacing the trio, a tall shadow stood draped in a black hooded robe. The shadow held the metal pipe of the muscle guy, who was bolting back towards the exit. A panting Big Blue was dragging Thorny, who was sprawled across the ground and reverting to his original skinny yellow form.
Blue crouched and hoisted his friend over his shoulders. Shadow pointed with the pipe back down the alley. Blue gave a frightened nod and ran with his friend in tow.
Shadow dropped the pipe and turned back to Milton and Tazman, looking on from the concealment of his hood. Slender grey fingertips poked out from the long sleeves.
âMilton Lance?' it asked again. The voice sounded deep and relaxed.
Tazman's tail pushed Milton forward, prompting him to reply. âThat ⦠that's me.'
The creature eyed them, turning its face subtly. Lightning flashed, revealing large eyes and cheekbones that accentuated a large, narrow skull. No other visible features. The creature stepped forward and bowed his head.
âMy name is Reelai of the Xoeloid. I am grateful to have found you in time.'
âOkay,' said Milton.
âYou must listen closely.' He raised his head again. âA dangerous force hunts you for what you possess. All resources have been put into finding you. I am here for your protection.'
âProtection from what?' Milton stammered.
âThere is not sufficient time to explain,' said Reelai. âThe black-eyed ones close in.'
There it was: confirmation of what he'd seen on the
Reconotyre
and in his dreams. Milton knew it. There was something more.
The shadow named Reelai slipped a hand into his pocket and
pulled out a disc. âThere is a safe haven prepared.' He held the disc out to Milton. âThis will show you the way.'
Milton looked down at the object. It glinted with a golden sheen in the drizzle. He stepped forward cautiously, darting his gaze between the disc and the creature. The being, Reelai, stared with two silver, reflective eyes. Milton reached out with a shaky hand and plucked the thing away.
âI cannot be seen with you. The rest of us will be in danger. You must find your own way. Do you understand?'
âYes,' Milton replied, not sure if he did.
Reelai glanced at the sky then darted past Tazman and leapt high, stepping up the sheer wall and grabbing its top edge. Hanging there for a moment, Reelai tilted his head and looked down at the pair. A crack of lightning cut across the sky behind him. The flash bounced off the wet folds of his garment, momentarily lighting his silhouette like a kind of divine halo. With that, he vaulted over the wall in a single motion and, with a flutter of his black robe, he was gone.