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The
Invasion of Leogard 2000 short story by Jonathan Hicks Thirty-five years after
Episode IV – A New Hope As
of this recording I’m fifty-two years of age and I’m an ex-scout. I was born
on Wennicas, in the Setnin Sector and I’m the second of two. My older sister
died when I was in my teens. She was a deep space explorer. I
guess that’s why I joined the scout program. Oh, most kids my age had a thing
about space travel and how wonderful it would be to fly around in huge
starships and discover new planets, but considering the rigorous training
course that most applicants had to go through it was
almost impossible to join the exploration core. My sister had applied and was
chosen from over fifteen hundred students to join a five strong crew on a
survey vessel. The vessel had only just cleared Galli Station spacedock when a fault
with the main hyperdrive vaporised the ship. Well, it was only natural that I
should follow in my big sister’s footsteps. My
parents were devastated when I handed my application to the program. They
didn’t want me to go because they were afraid of losing their last child. It
took me a few days to convince them that this is what I wanted to do, and
that it would be a fitting remembrance to my sister if I continued what she
started. What
a pile of crap. I’d have said anything to get into the program and keep my
parents happy at the same time. I’m a smart man, I did quite well at school,
but I didn’t want to get a job supervising labour automatons or working on a
site. I wanted some adventure, and it was my sisters' death that got me into
space. The bureaucrats in the program were only too willing to give the
younger brother of a deep space explorer a chance to carry on his sister’s
work. It did wonders for their publicity, showing courage in the face of
despair and how travelling in space could be a family thing. Actually,
things didn’t quite turn out the way I had planned. I flunked most of my
initial tests and did awful in the training sessions. I suppose that
somewhere at the back of my mind I could imagine the wave of energy flowing
from the hyperdrive engines and atomising my entire body as the containment
chamber buckled, just like what happened to my sister. That was one fate I
didn’t want to share. I completed the training program, failed (much to the
delight of my parents), and was assessed. I was told I would serve the
program better if I joined the Setnin Military Core, keeping peace and order
on the worlds of the sector. What a joke. I subconsciously aimed to fail my
tests, because I was scared of ending up like my sister, and end up being
given a job where I could get shot to bits by a crazy with a blaster. And
that’s where I ended up. In a Trouble-shooter Squad. Now,
being in a T-Squad is not like what you see on the vidflicks.
We don’t get dressed up in power armour or run around toting guns bigger than
a baby dewback. We generally dress smartly, and
when we come across any trouble we slap a few wrists and say ‘would you be so
kind and stop being naughty?’ The weaponry only really comes into it when we
want to show off a bit, and even then we just stand at such an angle the
person we’re making the point to sees the pistol hanging from the holster. I
think the best place to start my story is on board the Galactic Alliance
warship Divine. I was in a group of
eight, just one of two teams. We were on our way to the Leogard System to
sort out riots over the water shortage. Apparently the colonists were having
trouble with re-boosting the planet’s eco-system after extensive mining and they
didn’t have enough water. Or something like that.
Hell, I’m not a xenometeorologist, if that’s the
right word, so I’m not too well versed on the ecological differences between
planets. To cut to the chase, we had been assigned to an administrator to sort
out the problem. Yes, it was a diplomatic thing, but sending a few well-armed
personnel could only be a good thing, as far as the Setnin Council was
concerned. Their loyal colonists beating the crap out of each other was not
doing much for their public image, so I suppose they wanted the situation
dealt with quickly and quietly. I
have to admit, I found it pretty strange the way the Galactic Alliance decked
us out with full equipment and popped us in a warship. Fine, back then I
thought nothing of it, I just thought it was cool to
have so much firepower at my fingertips. In retrospect, I’m a bit annoyed at
myself for not thinking of that before we made planetfall. The
warship was standard, which meant it came with sixty orbit-to-surface
tactical high-yield concussion warheads and short-range assault blasters.
Isn’t that a lot to calm down a bunch of struggling colonists who only want
better conditions? The Divine was a
nice looking thing. The drive and command section was smooth and long with a
long boom to the engine section. You know the Nebulon B Escort Frigate?
Well, half it's size and smooth out the lines and you've got the Nebulon S
Fast Attack Warship, built as a trading agreement between Kuat
Drive Yards and Setnin Sector designers as a symbol of peace between the
Galactic Alliance and the Setnin Sector. Strange how this symbol of
partnership was only manned by Alliance personnel, but, hey, if I was a
politician then I'm sure I'd have moaned about it.
At
the time we all sat in the mess room talking about how great it was going to
be to drop into the centre of the town and walk off the shuttle in full
dress, scaring the pudu out of the civilians. Bran,
one in my group, kept going on about how he hoped there was going to be an
armed uprising so that he could plug a few terrorists. A
lot of the people in my group had been on other missions, but this was my
first. I can remember thinking how embarrassing it would be if I wet myself
as soon as a gun went off. The only fight I had ever had in my life was when
Snorky Simes had tried to bully me out of my food money in the third semester
of school. I lost then, too. The
members of the other team weren’t really well known to me. Suselow was nice,
but the others were a bit... how can I put it... overbearing. They’d been on quite a few dangerous missions, and
wouldn’t let us forget it. Between
leaving our staging satellite and arriving at Leogard, we had to prep all
weapon systems and ready the landing craft. I
was lumbered with seeing to the landing craft, which was an orbit-to-surface
vehicle with no armour or armament. I had to check the computer and guidance
systems, which was a long boring job going through a checklist and making
sure all the systems worked and everything was where it was supposed to
be. Anyway,
lets speed things up a bit. The
Leogard system slowly grew to a large brown-ish
ball as we entered orbit. I tell you, it’s quite a view when you’re looking
down on a planet that you’ve never seen before. I’ve orbited my own homeworld
loads of times, so gazing at the shining curvature and watching as whole
continents fly by is no big deal. Looking at somewhere new, however... It’s
heavenly. Literally. The planet was a kind of smeared browns, if you can
imagine such a thing, and it was covered with smatterings of grey, which I
assumed were continents, or at least land masses. The
shipboard scientist had already warned us that the air was breathable but we
would need to carry small oxygen cylinders and masks to get healthy doses of
air until the local atmosphere or whatever took to our systems. I suppose if
I’d paid more attention in biology I would have understood exactly what he
was saying, but as far as I was concerned it meant taking two or three snorts
from the tube every half hour. I knew that Bran wouldn’t bother with the
cylinder- he would just take as many deep breaths of the local air as
possible and suffer it until he got used to it. He was strange like that. I
never quite understood what he was trying to prove to us, unless he was
trying to prove something to himself. It
was briefing time when it happened. We were all sat in our regs with equipment at the ready when a klaxon went off.
Red strobes started flashing down the corridors and we heard shouts out in
the corridors. The officer in charge went nuts - I can't tell whether he was
annoyed at the interruption to his briefing or what, but he slammed his
datapad down on the desk and walked to the door. We just sat there bemused.
Hell, we weren't ship crew, what did we know about emergency operations on a
starship? Anyway,
just a few seconds past and he came barrelling back in, shouting for us to
lock and cock and get the hell to the main airlock access. Of course, we were
a little peeved and being told that you were running to the main access hatch
meant two things; we were going down or we were about to be boarded. It's
weird how you can have a thought and then it seems that thought takes form
and you really aren't surprised by it. As we're legging it down the central
thoroughfare the whole ship squeals and bucks, nearly throwing us to the
deckplates. Something hit us. Something powerful enough to make the lights
flicker and the walls to vibrate fit to bust wide open. The deck crews are
going crazy, and who can blame them? So were we! Another
hit and then we pile into the hangar. Nebulon S vessels are only small
and so only have a fighter, usually an X-wing, and a drop shuttle, that
shuttle being meant for us, but we're told to suit up and ready weapons by
the main airlock access hatch. The blast doors on either side of the hangar
are closed but the yellow shimmer of the atmosphere shields light the area in
case the doors are blown off. Now,
the commanding officer is giving his orders crisp and clear with absolute
certainty and with no sense of having to muddle through a suddenly
unfathomable situation. He was either really, really good at what he did or
he had been prepared for this. I ready my weapon and take a deep breath. It
wasn't me who noticed this it was Bran. He nods at the officer and whispers
it to me and I start to get a little worried. What were we here for again?
Riot control? Unless the colonists had suddenly got hold of a warship that
could attack a Nebulon S then I didn't think so. Another
hit. Whatever was scoring those hits was pounding the Divine good and proper - a shower of sparks and an explosion down
a corridor denoted a severe hit and we all get ready for the decompression
alarm. Which never happens. So we breathe out again
and wait to die during the next hit. We're
suddenly told to get on the drop ship. We clamber into the small vessel,
which is cramped and has an annoying hum that gets in your ears, and stare
out the portholes as the great blast doors wind open and we shoot out through
the magnetic shield. What
a sight! The Divine is badly scored
and is leaking gas from its rear engine section but is still chucking out
bright beams of turbolaser fire. She turns as we
move away, the small ship diving down to Leogard. Then
we see what the problem is. Two other ships, about half the sizes again as
the Divine, are throwing all sorts of energy at our ship. They're long and
flat with raised rear sections that must house command and control decks.
They don't appear to have their own hangar decks so there's no fighter
action, which is a shame because that's quite a sight to see. The
one enemy vessel is exploding all the way along her bow as the Divine piles shots into her. The other
vessel has broken combat and, even though she's badly damaged, is starting a
descent on the same vector as us. The
shuttle lights up as the exploding ship is finally consumed in a huge
fireball, parts of the ship casting out into the void as the engine core
ruptures and explodes violently. Result. And
then we hit the atmosphere of Leogard. The ship bounces in the upper torrents
and we ride the ride, hanging onto handgrips and cargo netting as we rush to
the surface. I don't know what the other enemy ship is doing, I get the
impression we're racing her down to the surface, but the Divine isn't built for planetary insertion and so can't follow. Then
there's a bump and we're down. The rear door opens, we pile out with weapons
hot and ready. We've
landed in the largest population area of Leogard and we're met with the sight
of several thousand colonists on a bleak world turned brown and nightmarish
by decades of strip mining. A few plants are sprouting from reconditioned
soil, there are several fields of food stretched out, but other than that
it's just habitat domes and tall comm antennas. We
don't have time to introduce ourselves as the enemy ship comes roaring from
the heavens. It
lands heavily, one landing strut buckling and giving the ship a slight slant,
but it's intact. There's someone on board, we know, as the engines wind down
and the exterior lights come on, and this is confirmed when the forward ramp
drops and troops start heading down onto the surface. The
officer gives the order and we move forward. He shouts something about us
being a Galactic Alliance T-Squad and that they should lay down their arms. I
take the few seconds to look at the design painted on the hull of the vessel
and at the way the apparent enemy is dressed. They're from the Ki-Ki Sector,
I'm sure of it. The emblem on the hull and on the chest plates of the troops
is the pyramid-shaped logo of the Prime Lord, the guy who runs the Ki-Ki
Sector and who declared war on the Setnin Sector a few weeks ago. But we'd
been told it was all bluster, all empty threats and roars of nothing. Right.
So, attacking a Galactic Alliance ship and landing troops on a Setnin Sector
world is empty of danger, right? Of course it is. That's why they open fire
and waste our officer. It don't mean nothing. Things,
technically speaking, go to frecking
hell. Up come our weapons and we open up, blasting away at the troops who
look, for want of a better word, quite unorganised. I don't think they were
expecting this kind of trouble and, after all, they didn't have the other
ship to back them up. We're
well prepared for the assault and we keep shooting, then one of our guys, the
one with the uplink to the ship, starts shouting at us. Something about how
the Divine had detected two other
ships heading in of the same configuration as the first two. Damn. When
a troop transport starts rolling down the ramp of the enemy ship we take the
initiative and I'm thrown a proton launcher. I nestle it on my shoulder and
with a squeeze of the firing stud and a bright light the transport explodes
right on the ramp. If I'd known what the result of that was going to be I'd
have checked my fire because then the whole starship erupts, already badly
damaged and not liking the major explosion on it's
boarding ramp. Bits of vessel start to fall from the sky and it's over. That
is, until the guy with the uplink starts shouting down his microphone. The Divine isn't answering our hails. In
fact, there's no signal at all. We're all looking up into the sky to see if
we can see any tale-tell signs of anything burning up in the atmosphere but
there's nothing. Looking
up into the bright blue sky like that was pleasant until the two newly arrived enemy vessels started bombing the town. This
is the part where I'm going to leave what happens next to your imagination. I
don't really want to remember, don't want to have to remember. Just imagine
small points of light, each one exploding like a small sun, totally blanket
bombing an entire town. It was a massacre. We just stood there and watched.
We were on the outskirts; there was nothing we could do. Buildings erupted,
masts fell, plants and people burned. It was like the hand of some nameless
god had reached form the sky and slammed its palm down on the constructs.
Five minutes later and it was all craters and rubble. And
that's that. Leogard falls to the Ki-Ki Sector. I
didn't know at that time what had happened to the Divine. I don't know why I'm recording this, to be honest. All I
know is that we're trapped on this ball whilst the whole place crawls with
Ki-Ki troops. We spend most of our time fighting and running, stealing what
we need and trying to keep the soldiers off our backs. I guess that I'm
afraid that if I get killed then people will forget what happened here. A
whole colony town wiped out in less than six minutes. Every man, woman and
child wiped away because the Ki-Ki troops wanted to make their landing with
no trouble. How can anyone justify that? We know that the old Prime Lord
blamed Setnin for the instability of his own sector and the death of his
daughter but he was dead, so why the sudden attack? Was the new Prime Lord of
the Ki-Ki Sector, the dead Prime Lord's son, carrying on his father's
revenge? Was he trying to avenge his sister? I'm
not going to pretend to understand it. Its war and I'll shoot whoever I'm
told to shoot. At this moment we're shooting Ki-Ki troops, and until someone
tells us to stop we'll just keep shooting. But
as soon as we're off Leogard and we get ourselves a starship we're going to
make them pay for what they did. We're
going to make them pay. The
Invasion of Leogard 2000 short story by Jonathan Hicks Thirty-five years after
Episode IV – A New Hope Histories – The grime and destruction of war, told from an unknown soldiers point
of view. This Jonathan Hicks tale shows
the actual Ki-Ki
invasion of Leogard from
the ground up, and the cost it extracts from the men who fight, and those who
are left behind.
Cast of Characters
Bran Snorky Simes
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