Mobile Suit Zaku 0085: Uprising

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Jackie

Is this thing on?
Operations
Administrator
Once More, With Feeling​


“Brooke, did you finish the numbers for July? If we don't have them ready by the first we're going to get audited again. I refuse to do hand inventory again so it's going to be on you if it comes to that!” I yelled up the stairs.

In the five years we'd been on Colony 30 she'd aged but I refused to believe she'd grown up. Still impulsive and disorganized... but I supposed she had a good role model to help her manifest that behavior.

Without about eighteen hours to go until the first of August we didn't exactly have the luxury of procrastination. Part of taking the job was monthly consumption reports. We were trying to grow corn efficiently in space and part of that was trying to do more with less.

She'd triggered an audit in January and I would rather slam my leg in an airlock hatch than go through it again. “Brooke, I'm not yelling for my own health here!”

And with that, I had turned completely into my father.

I rubbed my forehead and decided that the best course of action was to stomp my way up the stairs and give her a chance to answer before I unleashed parent voice. There was still a hitch in my step as I stomped one stair after the other, but I'd gotten so used to it that I only really noticed it when it crossed my mind.

I crossed the top stair and opened the door to the upstairs office. She still hadn't answered, but she was where I expected her to be. She was not wearing the expression I expected her to be wearing. I'm not sure which one I was looking for but 'afraid' wasn't it.

“Brooke?”

“Have you seen the news?” she answered in a shaky, fearful tone that I hadn't heard from her in years. Not since--

I turned to the display hanging from the office wall and saw the protest that had been going on, but now it looked violent. The video showed riot police firing tear gas into crowds while a group of Hizacks landed behind them.

“The hell are they thinking, using mobile suits against civilians?!” I yelled at the display. Same shit, different day. Like this was any better than Zeon? Damn them all!

Was a little peace too much to ask for?

I clenched a fist and turned around on my heel, yelling over my shoulder as I stomped back down the stairs. “Brooke, try to get in touch with the Rio Grande. Let them know what's going on. Tell them I could use backup.”

I shook my head as I shouldered my way through the front door of the administration building and out into the agricultural district. There'd been rumblings for weeks, months even, a protest was inevitable. It would burn out in a few days and then we could all get back to our normal lives.

Or it would have.

Earth Federation won the war and now they were back to treating spacenoids like subhumans and I really shouldn't have been surprised, but it wasn't like these civilians were Zeon troops. They didn't pose a threat to the military, so why the hell did they bring mobile suits into it? This was no different than five years ago. The bullies had come to town to show their might.

This time, I was a little more prepared for it.

I ran as fast as my bad leg would let me towards the grain elevators in the middle of the district, not too far from the office, while I typed codes into my hand-console. There were a lot of things I could operate remotely, and a lot of things were automated, and even though I could purge the grain from the other side of the property there were some things I had to do in person.

The shutters on the number three elevator opened up when I finished entering my codes and thousands of pounds of grain started to pour out onto the ground. Normally the emergency shutters would be used in the case of a worker falling into the storage tank. A person could drown in the grain if they couldn't be rescued in time so a quick solution was necessary.

And while that wasn't what I was using it for, the expediency of the method still served my purposes. The recovery grids had already begun drawing off the spilled grains to other storage tanks by the time I made it to the shutters and it wasn't much of an effort to squeeze my way in through the gap.

It stood to reason that if a grain silo could contain thousand and thousand of pounds of grain, well, there's no reason something couldn't be hidden in the middle of all of it, right? It threw threw the yields off but nothing that couldn't be covered up with a little fudging of the numbers.

I finally squirmed may way into the interior of the silo and was met with a blue foot attached to a white leg, attached to a white and blue mobile suit. At some point it had been a commander-type Zaku II, though the similarity to what it used to be was... superficial.

If any of the original parts even remained I couldn't have pointed them out, but it was still mine. The Anaheim technicians had officially registered its systems to refer to it as the YMS-06BZ.

The hatched opened, as if it was inviting me in. The winch lowered a cable lift to bring me up to the cockpit. I stuck my bad leg in the stirrup and gave it a tug and a few moments later I was... back in the saddle.

The hatch slid shut as I buckled myself in and the new panoramic display illuminated around me. It was like the Gundam, yet just different enough to be distinct. The controls were light in my hands and the fingers on the mobile suit's arms responded perfectly, despite the long nap.

The status panel along the left side of the command seat lit up in full green. Reactor output stable, data links online. YMS-06BZ was fully operational. But I'd always been more partial to the unofficial name that the Anaheim engineers had used for it: Boxer Blitz

There were a million reasons why I shouldn't, but I'd never been one to listen to the voices telling me 'no.' The right thing wasn't always the smart thing and there was nothing those people could do against mobile suits. But I was a different story.

I pushed the thrusters up to half power and blew the rest of the grain out through the shutters at my feet and smoke followed. The leg thrusters made the balance of thrust a little different, but nothing that I couldn't manage.

Three quarters power and I lifted off the ground. A half second later the golden commander's fin on the suit's head punched through the tin roof of the silo and the rest of the suit followed. Last time I'd been in a fight I'd almost died. Here was to hoping I did better in my custom Zaku.

Even from only a hundred feet up the curvature of the inside of the colony was apparent and I had to make course corrections to keep up with the spin. Still, it was much easier to fly in a space colony than it was on Earth. Once the spin was negated you were essentially weightless, just flying sideways at the same speed as the ground rotation.

Maybe not actually so simple after all, but I'd chosen to live in space and dammit I was going to justify that decision!

Minovsky particle density shot up and my targeting system started seeking silhouettes to match against, not that it had an easy time with all of the ground clutter. Not that it would give me much in the way of identification. The Hizack didn't even exist yet the last time this thing had been powered up so the best I could hope for was an 'unknown' or a mis-match as a Zaku II.

Wouldn't really surprise me either, apparently the Anaheim IFF computers would call a Zaku wearing red and white paint an RGM-79 if you rounded off the edges a little. At least that's what the scuttlebutt had been among the veterans.

I saw muzzle flashes and the IFF triggered on it, sure enough marking the contacts as 'Zaku II (?)' as if it wasn't entirely sure of the identification. It was good enough for me. Anyone firing weapons into a crowd was fair game. These guys were Federation pilots though, Titans, by the livery of their mobile suits. They deserved my best.

I cut thrust and went into a ballistic trajectory towards the unit furthest from the protesters and called up the control subsystems menu. I highlighted 'B.O.X.E.R.' and selected confirm. The process was the same as the last time, five years ago.

The suit started to respond again once the system was fully active and I reoriented myself into a feet-first orientation. No retro braking, the shock absorbers could handle it, I crashed down on the Hizack's shoulders and drove the suit down into the pavement.

A quick jump and a pivot around my left leg had me facing the rest of his squad and standing behind him. The Hizack wasn't going anywhere fast; the suit's shins were telescoped up into its thighs and the shoulder assembly on the right side had been torn half-away from the torso. It wasn't a trick that would work twice, but the once I got was spectacular.

I pulled the heat hawk off the suit's hip and activated it, the blade warmed to a nice red glow the Hizacks turned to face me. If they were facing me, they weren't shooting into the crowd. If they were facing me, I could fight them. I could win.

I toggled the external speakers and waved my left hand in a 'come here' gesture. “So, is this what the heroes in the EFSF are doing now? Shooting civilians? Such brave heroes you must be. Well all right then, it seems like you heroes wanna dance, so let's dance!”

I reached up to my right shoulder and pulled the shield free to hold it against my forearm, and banged the side of the heat hawk against it. “Come on, are you cowards?!”

The Hizack closest to me dropped its machine gun and drew a beam saber. Going for the decisive win and I couldn't blame him. Mobile suit combat favored the bold. His boosters were lit and he planned to kill the Zaku in front of him in one blow.

He wouldn't be fast enough.

I dropped into a crouch and fired a full powered quarter second pulse from my thrusters, just enough to get me moving. Just enough to get up under him. Half way down to my left knee, I kicked off and up to launch myself under his attack and block his right arm with my shield.

A quick twist of my right wrist, I let go of the handle of my heat hawk before closing my hand again, then drew the blade straight up with all the speed and force I could muster. The feedback was harsh, it was resisting me but not enough to stop me.

I kicked the thrusters again as the resistance on my arm let up, and the Hizack's left arm fell to the ground. I kicked off the ground to keep him off balance as I shifted my grip on the heat hawk to put my knuckles behind the blade and delivered a punch to the Hizack's cockpit.

The blade of the heat hawk melted the hatch armor and then the resistance intensified as I pushed it deeper. A few more feet and—the Hizack went slack and tipped over onto its back from the force of my push. As it hit the ground the beam saber it was holding fell from its hand and went out.

I dropped my shield to the ground and picked up the discarded saber, then shifted the grip of my right hand down to the end of my heat hawk's handle. A sharp tug freed the end of the handle from the rest of the shaft and I took a step away from the dead mobile suit.

Three Hizacks stood in front of me, waiting for something, or perhaps just stunned from the abrupt death of their fellow pilot. I turned my head, and so the Zaku's head as well, towards them and spoke on the externals. “Was he the only one who wasn't a coward? I'm here for all of you, so come on! All at once, I don't care!”

I held both hands to my sides and with a twitch of my fingers, beam sabers extended from both of them. I took a step towards them, and then another, and another. They wore the colors of Zeon and behaved just the same. I had been wrong, these scum were not Federation pilots at all.

But they still deserved my be--

An alert chime in my cockpit was all the warning I got before a dark blue mobile suit hit the ground in front of me and lunged in for the kill with a lit beam saber. I crossed my blades and braced not a moment before his blade came crashing down.

From my point of view as the Zaku's head, I was face to face with... With... No, it wasn't. Couldn't be. I'd seen that face before, but not in those colors. For a few moments, five years ago.

Full power to the thrusters, I pushed up off the ground, against the downward force the other suit was still using to hold me down, to kill me. A sharp pain through my bad leg cased a stumble and I dropped back down to a knee as my suit's thrusters ran wide open.

No, I could fight through it. I screamed as I kicked off of the ground and spun my way out of the blade lock, rocketing up into the air before coming down a moment later, a half dozen or so meters away from him. It was what I thought I had seen.

The colors were wrong, but the face was unmistakeable. Gundam.

“You would dare!? A Gundam stands for hope! For peace! A Gundam is a hero! You haven't the right to that machine!” I screamed at him through the externals. I swung the beam saber in my right hand up to point at the V-fin on his forehead.

“You take that off! Trash like you does not deserve that, you are no Amuro Ray! You will take it off or I will do it for you!”

There was a moment of hesitation from the faux-Gundam before the voice of it's pilot echoed through the streets. “You will try.”

I rolled back on my heels and kicked the thrusters at full power and slammed myself down into the control rig as my mobile suit leapt into the sky and kicked up a cloud of dust. Power off, I rolled forward and then kicked the thrusters again and halted my inertia. For a moment I hung in the air, just for a second--

I rocked backwards in the harness as if on reflex, the suit tipped with me as a Hizack burst upwards through the smoke cloud I'd produced, right where I'd just been floating. I twisted around and kicked the thrusters, boosting my rotation speed as I planted a kick to the Hizack's lower leg. The enemy suit spun around its axis as its thrust was misdirected by the impact.

Letting my momentum carry me through the kick, I stepped on the thrusters once I was re-oriented towards the off balance Hizack and closed the distance in half a second. It was a bad angle but I took a wild swing with my right arm just in case—and connected with the top half of the backpack, and followed through the back of the suit's head.

It wasn't a total kill, but it was going to hit the ground without thrusters so the pilot would definitely be out of the fight, if it didn't outright kill him. No less than he deserved.

Three on one. I'd taken out two. Not bad numbers, but I could do better.

The faux-Gundam came up to meet me with its saber lit, hovering a few dozen meters in front of me as we were both carried up spin. I cracked my neck and the suit mimicked my movements. It gave off a smug look and, while that wasn't my intention, I didn't mind the imagery.

“So then, guess it's time for me to try.”
 

Jackie

Is this thing on?
Operations
Administrator
For Auld Lang Syne​



I tapped the thrusters and launched myself towards the false Gundam, both of my sabers in a double slash coming in from the right. It was an obvious move, telegraphed from the moment I started moving, but that was fine.

The pretender swung a tight, sharp stroke that locked my sabers on a bind against his; the expected counter move. I twisted around and kicked full power to the right leg thrusters and spun around our blades' point of contact and delivered a roundhouse kick into the side of the torso.

When it connected, the force knocked he two of us apart and sent the enemy suit down through the smoke and into the concrete of the city square. The armor was cracked where I'd kicked it, and it had dropped its beam saber.

That shouldn't have happened. Luna Titanium wouldn't have yielded like that. A Gundam would have held up to an attack like that. I cut power and dropped back to the concrete next to the damaged mobile suit and still it didn't stir.

A warning tone chimed through my cockpit and I looked to the side to see the remaining Hizacks had taken flight and... were flying away? That didn't make any sense. Retreating when they had the numerical advantage wasn't how any of this worked, was it?

I knelt down to pick up and re-attach my discarded shield and recover the heat hawk from the downed Hizack. A warning chime drew my attention a moment before machine gun fire peppered the side of my suit and echoed loudly through the cockpit.

I turned to see the false Gundam limping towards me, firing a Hizack machine gun. The right leg was hitching, damaged servos probably. A Gundam wouldn't have been so easily crippled. I turned in place and swung my heat hawk upwards through the body of the gun with my left hand, then palmed the suit in the cockpit hatch armor with my right.

It toppled back to the ground and sparks shot from the damaged knee joint on the right leg. The hatch popped open a moment later and the pilot jumped out and started to fly away with a personal vernier pack. He was wearing a normal suit.

A normal suit inside of the colony? It would make sense if he'd planned on going into space. Things weren't really adding up. The Hizacks left a man behind and the man they left behind was wearing a normal suit and a vernier pack?

My cockpit display focused in on a new high speed contact approaching me, IFF tagged it immediately as an FF-X7 Core Fighter. The systems alerted that he was shining a laser at me—a comm laser! I set the system to accept the link and toggled the optical zoom to get a better look at it. “Hey what--”

They're going to gas the colony. Get to the docks, the Rio Grande is waiting.”

I felt the bile rise in my throat and I shook my head to push it back down, “What the hell!? They... Dammit. I need to get Brooke!”

I have her with me. Get to the Rio Grande, we might be able to stop this but it'll be close. Cutting link now. Thad, out.”

So much the better, there's every chance I wouldn't have had time to get her before they--

No, we were going to stop them. We had to stop them, ten million people were counting on it.

I re-holstered my heat hawk and tossed the stole Hizack beam saber to the ground. I spared a glance at the false Gundam and considered it for a moment. Maybe we could fix it, or maybe we couldn't. In either case, the Titans didn't deserve it. I hefted it up into my Zaku's arms and fired up my thrusters.

The space port wasn't far, at least not while flying. I just had to get there in time to do something about the gas. Still, every moment I was in the air headed for the space port my anxiety grew.

I tightened my grip on the captured mobile suit and leaned a little harder into the thrusters, trading propellant for peace of mind. I could spare it, and if I couldn't I'd spare it anyway. Panic had a way of pushing rational thought to the back burner. Or, perhaps all the way off the stove.


***

Sitting at the briefing table set just off the bridge didn't assuage my anxiety in the slightest. Sure, I was safe but that was never in doubt; as long as I stayed in the cockpit I would be immune to the poison. It was the people outside I was worried about. They'd been my friends and neighbors for half a decade.

Thad and Brooke sat off to my right side. Two people could probably never have looked more opposite from one another, yet they seemed completely at ease with it. I guess any apprehensions there would have ended years ago, with all of the time they'd spent together back then.

The hatch clanked open at the far end of the room and Kars floated in. The years looked like they might have hit him harder than they had me, even if there had only been five of them. They said stress could gray you and it seemed they were right if the streaks in his hair were any indication.

“So what's the plan?” I asked, nearly launching myself out of the chair as I did it. Adrenaline in zero gravity was dangerous.

“We're gonna blow our cover. Do something stupid. You in?” Kars asked me with a hint of a smirk on his face. I guess he remembered the end of the war the same way I did; it had all been stupid.

“I'm already in. I know plans aren't usually our style, but do we have one?”

“I didn't have one, but that mobile suit you captured did give me a few ideas.” Kars answered while rubbing his chin.

“Such as?”

“Well, the Titans aren't the only ones with big boy toys. There's a mobile suit in bay three, I think you should use it to reintroduce yourself.” There was that smirk again.

“I've still got my Zaku.” I reminded him as I started to float up out of my chair. If we were going to act, it would be soon. There was no reason not to be the first out the door, after all.

“You'll like this one a lot better. If you want to send a message to these bastards, this is the suit you're going to want for it.” Kars assured me as he, too, started to drift towards the door.

I shrugged and kicked off the back of the chair, “Well, if you're going to insist I guess I'll have to go with it.”

“That's the spirit!”


***​

The armor was different, the color scheme had a lot more flat dark earth and the metallic grays were missing, the whites took over more for the blues… and it was wearing some kind of visor to go with all of the rocket pods that had been added to the shoulders and the legs…

But it felt the same. It had a presence that couldn’t be replicated, despite what may have changed on the outside. Some things, it seemed, could not be covered up.

I kicked off of the hanger floor and drifted up towards the cockpit that lay open, waiting for me. To either side of my destination stood identical mobile suits. They looked like a variation on the basic GM design, though each sported an antenna coming out of the head and additional armor around the ‘mouth’ and visor.

The burnt-orange, white, and gray color scheme was also definitely non-standard. The Rio Grande crew had been busy while I was away, but that would have to be a story for another time.

I crossed the threshold of the cockpit and the seat was as though nothing had changed at all in five years. It was different from the cockpit of the Boxer Blitz in as many ways as it was the same. It was a first generation unit and it showed, but that wouldn’t slow it down in the slightest.

The straps slid over my normal suit and clicked into place readily. The controls were smooth in my hands and the startup sequence progressed quickly. Main power came online in a matter of seconds and the hatch slid closed as the displays came online.

A chime signaled that the IFF had picked up the suits to either side of me and tagged them both as RGM-79SC ‘GM Sniper Custom’ mobile suits. I spotted Kars climbing into the one to my left and Thad into the one on my right. This was happening.

I toggled up my inventory system while I was waiting for them to power up and scrolled through the list. The system listed out the two four-packs of missiles on the suit’s shoulders and the two three-packs on the lower legs. The gatling guns in the forearms were missing, and since I hadn’t seen them from the outside it stood to reason they were removed at some point.

Still, two beam sabers and two ‘folding beam handgun’ entries showed up under the fixed armaments. Anything else I’d have to pick up, but this was still a lot better than what I’d had to work with last time; she was ready to brawl as she was.

I took a step forward out of the gantry and spotted a few other mobile suits racked up further down the row. Charity’s Gundam was racked up at the far end, with the false-Gundam I’d captured racked up next to it, and the Guncannon after that.

Not exactly a full fledged military but hardly toothless.

I stepped off the ground and drifted under the power of the maneuvering puffer jets, I didn’t want to light the main thrusters while still inside the bay. The catapult was up ahead of me and the launch door was already open with the inky blackness of space visible beyond. The space doors on the dock were open too?

That wasn’t standard, they were usually only opened when a ship needed to traverse in or out.

Either we’d requested it or someone else had, didn’t matter. My mobile suit’s feet locked down onto the catapult tray and I grabbed the shield and beam rifle that extended out towards me. The shield locked down onto the side of my suit’s left arm and the beam rifle linked up with the targeting scanner in the add-on visor on the suit’s face.

I was ready to go. A quick glance over my shoulder showed that the two Sniper Customs were close behind and waiting for me to go first. The one Kars had gotten into flashed me a thumbs up and I returned the gesture.

Down to my left, the status display showed green and online across the board. I keyed up the contact link with the ship, “Once more, then. For old times’ sake.”

Acknowledged. For old times’ sake. Catapult in three. Good luck, godspeed.”
 

Jackie

Is this thing on?
Operations
Administrator
Rebellion​


The IFF system lit up the second I cleared the space doors and the targeting visor started locking targets half a second later. The warning tone that I’d become so familiar with chimed in my ear and I leaned hard on the thrusters to change my trajectory. This was for keeps, I had to keep that in mind.

I felt my vision swim from the G forces from the high powered burn. Thrusters were definitely turned up from the last time and had a lot more to give me than they had back then. I tapped them again, this time a little more gently, to link up with Kars and Thad.

The lock warning chimed at me and I twisted the controls to bring the beam rifle to bear and fired a shot towards a group of suits that had broken away from the rest of the enemy force, presumably to come say hello.

Two more beams came from either side of me and lanced out to join the first and a moment later three distinct explosions registered on the sensors and the computer dropped the markers from the heads up display.

My cockpit jolted and I looked over my shoulder to see the hand of one of the Sniper Customs on my right shoulder. The main panel lit up with 'contact link' and the call opened up a half second later.

The're going to have to pump the gas in through the auxiliary manifold, that's thirty three degrees up-spin and half way down the cylinder. If they start pumping we'll be lucky to have a half hour before every man, woman, and child is dead.” Kars' voice spoke.

“Then we don't have time to waste. I'll lead, you follow. I'll kill every single mobile suit out here if I have to.” I answered back before pushing away and breaking the contact link.

Straps tight, normal suit pressurized. Controls responsive, good to go. I stepped into the thrusters all at once and held on for the ride as engine output ran right up against the limiters and I went from ninety pounds to nine hundred in the blink of an eye.

My normal suit clamped down around my thighs and kept the blood in my head as my suit tore away from my companions fast enough to tear a hole through the sky. The guidance computer compensated for what my limbs were too heavy to mange cleanly and carried me on a parabolic arc around the side of the colony and up towards the mid-way point.

Ten seconds into the burn and up over a kilometer per second, I was skimming along the surface of the colony's end cap, just about to make the turn to head up along the lengthwise portion of the cylinder. There wasn't a person alive who wouldn't have noticed me. I had to be faster.

I cut the turn so hard I almost clipped the armor-steel of the colony's outer shell and spun the mobile suit around its axis in a temporary spike up over seventeen G and the cockpit warning alarms screamed at me to knock it off so I didn't kill myself.

I cut power to the engines and went into a ballistic drift after I corrected the turn, twenty seconds from the start and moving at a hair under two kilometers per second, I'd be at midway point in a little under nine seconds.

Targeting visor lit up with sixteen contacts and I rolled my fire selector over to the rocket packs strapped to my suit's legs and let them off the chain. All six shots rippled out in three pairs of two before the spent boxes explosively detached and spun away from me, off into space.

I lined the beam rifle up on the nearest contact, a suit that the IFF tagged as 'RMS-117 Galbaldy β', and pulled the trigger. The pink beam lanced out and split the suit in half at the waist a moment before my rockets impact their randomly chosen targets.

IFF updated, one target down, three more hit and damaged. A row of more Galbaldys and GM II suits formed up as I leaned on the brakes and aimed for a slight overshoot. Kars and Thad would be at least a minute behind me because their suits were slower and they had a much stronger self preservation instinct than I did. I was on my own till they got here.

I fired the beam rifle six more times towards the remaining fifteen mobile suits as I swung back around in an arc over the windowed section of the colony exterior. Out of six shots, IFF tagged two explosions and brought the total opposition down to thirteen. Not great odds but I had friends on the way and an ace in the hole.

I squeezed the trigger again and the beam rifle failed to fire and the status console lit up in red. Weapon malfunction. I wouldn’t be able to fix it, so I tossed the rifle to the side and switched over to the shoulder rockets.

A chime and a new contact on my scope drew my attention: a small ship, just a launch from a larger ship really. It had lateral bracing between a central body and two large cylinders on either side of it. That had to be the gas.

Target locked, I dumped all eight remaining rockets down range towards the skiff and toggled the control schemes display over to the alternative mode. B.O.X.E.R. activation toggled to ‘yes’ as the controls released and the suit gently rotated over the colony window.

I caught my own reflection in the ballistic glass as the rocket pods ejected from the shoulder pauldrons and the enhanced targeting visor detached from the suit’s faceplate. The iconic V-fin unfolded and the soft white-blue of the visor reflected back at me.

The cockpit reconfiguration was much faster than the first time I’d used it, and faster than the Boxer Blitz had been as well. Or, perhaps that was just the battle that made it seem that way. The control sleeves locked into place and the system once again accepted control input.

I leaned into the thrusters and swung my shield wildly into the chest of a Galbaldy that strayed too close to me and sent it down against the armor-steel of the colony exterior. The red suit didn’t explode on impact but it did break apart and even if the pilot survived, he was definitely out of this fight.

There was a hesitation on the part of the remaining mobile suits, the six Galbaldys and six GMs seemed… off. Confusion and not a little fear colored their movements. I couldn’t blame them, after what had already happened and the reveal of what my mobile suit really was.

I could capitalize on it, turn them away or at least buy some time. Minovsky particle density was high but we weren’t very far away from one another, I could punch through it at full power. Broadcast set to wide-band. I keyed up the microphone sure that I would figure out what to say in the moment, because I sure as hell didn’t have a real plan.

“Is this the side of history you want to be on? You’re just like Zeon before you! Where are the Federation heroes of the last war? Is this something you can live with? The protector, no, the will of the people; Gundam Helios stands against you!”

The nearest suit reacted immediately, the GM II rushed in with a drawn beam saber and went for the killing blow right off the bat. They fought the way that I did: without indecision, committing fully to his attack and his gut. There wasn’t anger in his attack, just raw confidence.

No time to draw my own saber to meet theirs, instead I leaned heavily on the thrusters and tossed my shield into the path of their attack. I was forced down in the control harness as Helios climbed away from the enemy suit.

The slash connected with the middle of the shield and split it apart and she kept coming for me. I could outrun them without a doubt but I knew that if I didn’t give this pilot my full attention she would be the death of me, Gundam or no.

I boosted to the side and drew my beam saber into my right hand, lit it and swung it upward to block the death blow the GM was trying to deliver. Our blades locked together a moment before the enemy suit’s free hand formed a fist and crashed against my cockpit armor hard enough to make my teeth rattle.

Instinctively I fired the vulcans in my suit’s head and sprayed tracer fire against the visor of my opponent and shattered the polycarbonate housing and destroyed the sensors behind it. Another blow landed against my cockpit hatch and I kicked the thrusters to split us apart, less I break a tooth with the next blow.

The GM’s cockpit armor opened up and I could see the pilot within, dressed in a normal suit in an older style cockpit, rather than the panoramic style of my own suit. I began to assume she was planning to surrender, until her suit’s thrusters lit up and she dove in for another attack.

I knocked out her cameras, she opened the cockpit so she could still see. She was a lunatic.

More importantly, she was keeping me distracted from the other mobile suits and that was going to get me killed. IFF was tracking two more GMs headed towards me, with the remaining forces trying to advance on Kars and Thad.

Not that they were having much luck; IFF showed only five enemy suits were still engaged with them. With the three attacking me that left half their forces dead or disabled. It still left me three on one against someone who’d have already killed me were she in a mobile suit worth a damn.

But she wasn’t, and I was mighty.

I tapped the thrusters to draw out a little more distance between me and the Titan ace so I could spare some attention to the two headed over to meet me. Their approach was standard in every sense of the word and there was aggression boiling off of them, rather than the passive confidence of the ace pilot.

Side by side with machine guns in their hands, the two mobile suits rushed in. There plan had likely been to flank me while I was distracted and if I hadn’t noticed them it probably would have worked. I stepped into the thrusters for a quick ten G burst, just to adjust the closing trajectory with the other suits, and readied my blades.

The approach angle for the lead suit, on my right, wasn’t quite right for the killing blow I needed to deliver so I turned about my axis and instead struck the second suit an instant later with both blades passing through the torso of the mobile suit and cleaving it into three pieces.

With a spin that turned me towards the colony solar reclectors, I delivered a rocket-assisted kick into the backpack of the second unit that knocked it down towards the mirrored arms. As the suit ‘fell’ I leaned into the thrusters again and drove my Gundam’s knee into its back and pushed it all the way down into the reflector array

The impact shook me in my harness and I watched as a puff of atmosphere vented into space from the crushed cockpit of the enemy mobile suit. A warning alarm chimed in my cockpit as I returned to my feet and stared up towards the colony itself I saw the final suit approaching me. The Titan ace.

I cut power to the beam sabers and slid them back into their charging scabbards and then held my arms forward as the quick-draw holsters slid the twin folding beam pistols into my hands. The enhanced targeting visor was gone but I could do well enough without it.

Both pistols erupted in rapid fire towards the approaching mobile suit. What the pistols lacked in punch I needed to make up for in bulk of fire; I couldn’t count on them to get the job done in one shot. Even then, I still wasn’t sure they were really up for the task as despite the damage each pink bolt of light was doing, she still kept coming for me with her beam saber held out like a spear.

The pistols ran dry, recharge needed, and still the battered and beaten GM still rushed in. I leaned back to kick the thrusters and get out of the way when a flash of burnt orange intersected with the GM and tore it in half. One of the Sniper Customs had sliced the suit in half right above the cockpit with the fixed beam saber attached to its forearm.

The enemy suit’s beam saber shut off as the upper half of the body rotated away from the lower and a white normal suit was thrown free. Somehow, miraculously, the suit was intact and after the Sniper Custom circled back around to retrieve it it seemed that the occupant of the suit was still alive.

IFF was clear, and so I returned the control system to normal mode and felt the soreness from my exertions setting in already. Combat took a lot out of you and the B.O.X.E.R. system took even more. I could see why this system wasn’t included on more suits; if the battle was anything other than a quick skirmish it would be far too taxing on the pilot.

The second Sniper Custom arrived shortly after and behind the two of them, through the armor glass wall of the colony, the unmistakable flash of a mega particle cannon being fired.
 

Jackie

Is this thing on?
Operations
Administrator
Decolonization​



The cockpit alarms screamed at me as I clung to the edge of consciousness. Thrusters were pushed well past the safety zones and the computer was trying to warn me that I was killing myself. It didn’t, and really couldn’t, know that I already knew and didn’t care.

I could feel the bruises forming as I threw the Gundam through an aggressive retro braking maneuver that swung me around on a trajectory into the colony interior. The navigational software flagged the entry point on the hud and I accepted the course corrections to carry me through it.

There were meters of clearance, though it felt like inches, on any side as I passed through the jammed airlock doors, feet first, at speeds best described as ludicrous. The shock of the bright interior light made me shield my eyes, almost long enough to miss the Rio Grande.

The ship was running at a diagonal, burning down spin and firing random-looking pulses from the lateral thrusters. They had blown the interior bulkhead and flown inside of the colony and from the looks of things were trying to land the ship inside the colony.

It wasn't meant to be landed but if there was a place to do it it would be the weak spin gravity of a colony, and no where else. If the ship ever flew again it would be a miracle but at least the crew might survive. It was a desperation move, but I couldn't fathom what had caused the desperation. We'd stopped the gas, hadn't we?

I tapped the thrusters and lunged towards the Rio Grande. I didn't know the exact thrust capacity of the Gundam but I knew that if I could pull fifteen gravities of acceleration without finding the end of the throttle I had enough power to move a battleship.

Most of the thrust capacity was more towards the aft end of the ship; that was where most of the original ship was located, before it had been converted. There was a lot less near the bow; there was a lot less mass up there, originally.

The propellant warning chirped in my ear as the mobile suit’s hands contacted the underside of the ship’s hull and I leaned hard into the throttle. My thrust capacity wasn’t anything near what the Rio Grande could put out but it wasn’t nothing,

The helmsman must have figured out what I was doing because they took advantage of my maneuver to add more power to their aft thrusters. Ten seconds of fuel left, the descent slowed to something the ship might survive.

Another alarm chirped in my ear, the navigation system warning me about an imminent collision with the ground. It would have to be close enough. I tapped the controls and pulled away from the ship as it began to set down on the surface.

My thrusters cut out a second later, out of fuel. The Gundam’s feet hit the ground a little harder than I would have liked but it held up just fine. I started to unstrap myself from the seat. Without fuel it didn’t matter how powerful the suit was; if I couldn’t maneuver I couldn’t fight.

I popped the clasp on my crash harness and leaned forward in the seat. I had the hatch open a moment later and then jumped into the open air. A tap on my right glove fired a burst from my vernier pack and I carried myself up towards the open launch bay in the front of the Rio Grande.

The deck was at an angle and I landed off balance, but kept to my feet. It was lucky that the deck had come down tilted away from the direction of colony spin, if it had been the other way I’d surely have taken a tumble.

Almost without thinking about it I fired a full duty cycle burn on the lateral thruster of my pack and slid sideways across the deck as the foot of a mobile suit came down where I’d just been standing. It was a familiar foot, if not one I’d seen recently.

As it stepped off the deck and down to the surface of the colony a clear look at the damage to the head and the backpack confirmed that it was the same mobile suit Thad had boarded the Salisbury with, all those years ago.

And it was placing a section of the hanger catwalk like a makeshift ramp to lead up into the hangar bay. We were going to be taking on passengers. Refugees. If that was the case, then we had not yet won. There were things that I did not and could not know, but they could only be bad if crashing the Rio Grande was the course of action they’d decided on.

I kicked off the floor and leaned into the thrusters to boost myself up onto the catwalk running along the wall behind the mobile suit cradles and ‘skated’ down it until I reached the cradle that my Zaku was stored in.

The hatch was open, so I climbed inside and took my seat. I skipped all the preflight checks and connected main power and then held on as the suit wobbled, the gyros hadn’t been given time to spin up or calibrate, I’d just take my chances. I could hang onto it.

I tapped out a quick sequence on the communications panel and opened up a contact link with the ship. “What’s going on? We stopped the team outside, but it looks like you’re--”

A Gelgoog carrying a G3 gas launcher made it past us. We couldn’t intercept, we’re trying to save as many as we can before it’s too late.”

My blood ran cold and I stepped into the controls. The suit’s verniers fired before the cradle locks could release and I tore my way free. The suit still hadn’t calibrated, but I couldn’t wait, I lined the nav-track up on the bay’s exit and released the performance limiters.

Full power burn from zero, it was no Gundam Helios but my Zaku was no slouch. I felt myself pressed down into my seat as the adrenaline forced the fatigue from my system. They weren’t going to kill everyone I knew; I wasn’t going to let them.

The suit shook like a leaf as the systems tried to calibrate and compensate for what I was forcing it to do. I needed more speed, wind resistance be damned. Targeting scanners were running at full power as I tore into the sky and still nothing. The atmosphere inside of the colony was playing hell with thermal acquisition and I was reminded of why fighting in space was easier. Finding a squad of mobile suits at range was a lot easier than finding a single one, especially if--

Especially if they were drifting.

I toggled the thermals offline and enabled the Forward Mass Detector instead. I didn’t need a precise bearing, just a ballpark figure and the mass detector would do that. I could do the rest using optical sensors once I was closer.

It wasn’t really designed for this, but if he was flying, and he’d have to be, he’d be a mass shadow where there shouldn’t be one. It had to work. If it didn’t--

The system guessed an answer and I plotted a course to follow it, thrusters still running at full unlimited power even as heat warnings started to chime with increasing frequency and urgency. I ignored them as distance to the potential contact closed in and the suit’s shakes and shudders started to smooth out.

Optical picked up a thruster flare and I re-adjusted my trajectory. I’d spooked him into maneuvering. I twisted the controls to line up for an interception and drew back my Zaku’s fist. I didn’t have any weapons, hadn’t had time to pick them up. One punch would have to do the job.

A few seconds before impact I got a good image of the suit on the screen, a red gelgoog wearing the Zeon crest and carrying a rocket launcher in its right hand. The G3 launcher. They were going to try to blame Zeon for it and get away with it.

My Zaku’s fist collided with the cockpit hatch of the Gelgoog as a flash of light blinded my sensors from the left. Alarms screamed in my cockpit and I felt myself spinning as the suit’s automatics tried to correct.

By the time the suit stabilized I was seconds from hitting the ground and my head was still spinning. A tap on the thrusters to slow down my descent and I switched the navigation over to automatic so I could get my head straight.

Damage along the right arm, it would still work but some of the armor plating was showing red and would have to be replaced, either damaged beyond repair or outright missing in some instances. The manipulator still worked, so I could keep going.

The Gelgoog was on the ground, according to sensors. Destroyed, or close enough to it; it would never fight again at the very least. The rocket launcher was still clutched in its right hand, and the rocket--

The rocket was missing.

I twisted the controls to rotate myself to view skyward and saw the expanding green cloud above me and knew, in that moment, that I had failed. They were all going to die, and it was my fault.
 

Jackie

Is this thing on?
Operations
Administrator
Foolish Heart​


I couldn't think or hear past the blood rushing in my ears or the pounding in my chest or the emptiness of my lungs. A cold fist had clenched itself tight around my heart and it felt as though everything inside me would explode and shrivel up all at once.

By the time I was clear enough to assess the situation I found my Zaku standing in the field outside of the agricultural co-op building. I didn't know if it had been me, or if it had been the mobile suit that had decided to bring me there, but that was where I found myself.

When all else fails you and it feels like the world is going to end, run home. Home where you're safe.

Except I wasn't, and nobody else was either.

The shelter was under the main building and that might save the day but it wouldn't save their lives, even if they outlasted the poison they'd die in a dead colony. The cloud was approaching and it wouldn't be stopped.

I had maybe four minutes, five if I was lucky and I wasn't. Not today.

Down to one knee, I opened the hatch and jumped out into the sky, firing a quick burst from the vernier pack before I hit the ground so as to avoid breaking my legs. I'd killed everyone with my mistake, but I could still save the people in the shelter.

The evacuation ramp was still depressed in front of the building, with the locking hatch at the far end of it. I lit the vernier pack and boosted my way down the ramp, almost skiing along the diamond-plate steel incline towards the door. I was burning precious fuel, but every second counted.

I crashed into the door at a little faster than a run and hurt my right shoulder and collapsed down onto my bad leg. Talk about re-opneing old wounds. I forced myself back to my feet and linked my normal suit into the intercom.

"How many?!" I yelled into the intercom with all of the urgency I couldn't hold back.

"Veronica? Get in here!" the voice on the other end yelled. It sounded like Mason, one of the co-op administrators. Brooke watched his grandkids on the weekends so he could go fishing.

I shook my head to clear those thoughts from it. "Mason, It's G3 gas. I've got a ship on the ground in the power plant district but we have to leave right now or we won't make it in time."

"The Federation rescue teams will get here before the air runs out, come inside and we can wait it out--"

"The Federation are the ones who pulled the trigger! You've got to trust me Mason, how many people do you have in there?"

"We've got thirty nine, but we don't have any way of transporting that many people."

Shit, we'd need a bus to move that many people. I could fit maybe three in the cockpit, but--

"Mason, I've got a mobile suit. Get everyone into one of the grain export containers and I'll carry you. Give me one minute and then open the door. The gas will be here in three so don't be late!" I yelled into the link before I unplugged from the console.

I lit the vernier pack and boosted up towards the still open cockpit of my Zaku. A second later I was in the seat and strapped down and the pain in my knee and shoulder really started to set in. Still, the controls were smooth and responsive and I could fight through it.

The grain transport cylinders could hold eighty long tons of grain and they were air tight. It wouldn't be pleasant but it would take longer for them to suffocate than it would for the poison to kill them so it was a trade off we'd have to make.

I knelt down to pull one off of the transport carriage and was rewarded with the sqealing of protesting metal before it tore free and I was able to slide it down the ramp and near the shelter's main hatch.

I switched on the externals and knocked my suit's hand on the ground, "Mason! It's now or never, let's get these people out of here!"

My display zoomed in on the hatch and I watched it slowly open up. To the opposite side the cloud of gas was working its way ever closer. I'd have to carry these people right through it to get to the Rio Grande.

The IFF system screamed in my ear and I looked up from the container to see a pair of mobile suits landing in front of me, on the other side of the container. IFF tagged them as RGM-79G GM Command (Colony Type) mobile suits. Local Militia, not Titans.

My left hand tightened up on the controls, if I had to fight them I'd need to take them both out quick if I wanted to make it back to the ship before these people suffocated.

Before I had to make the decision on whether or not to fight, they made it for me. The closer unit knelt down on the opposite side of the container from me and grabbed onto it. "Looks like you could use a hand getting these people to your ship."

"I'm not gonna turn away the help." I answered as the civilians filed into the container. Maybe forty five seconds until the gas hit us.

"You were piloting that Gundam outside, too, weren't you? Wish we could have been brave enough to help you, but... well we never imagined the milita would ever have to fight."

I shook my head even though I knew she couldn't see it. "I can't blame you for not fighting your own people two on twenty."

"Titans are not our people."

Understatement of the year.

I looked over and Mason was the last out of the shelter, he wasn't a day younger than eighty but still built like a heavyweight boxer. Hard work had that effect on people, he'd once told me. He gestured for us to go before he, too, climbed into the grain container and the corner lights on the container changed to green to show that it was sealed and ready to move.

I nodded my Zaku's head to the GM and we both started to lift off at the same time, while the second GM followed along behind us. Navigation set a track for the Rio Grande and I transmitted it over contact-comms to the other suit. "Let me know if you need me to tap the brakes, this Zaku isn't exactly stock."

"We did get that impression. Keep this pace and we'll be fine to keep up."

IFF pinged again, showing mobile suits approaching from the other side of the Rio Grande and I had to fight to keep out of the throttle. I had to hope they were friendly because I was in no position to do anything about it.

The IFF finally tagged it as a match for the false Gundam that I'd fought before. They had more than one, it seemed.

The GM that was trailing behind us took up a position next to me and grabbed onto the container just behind me.

This time a male voice came through the contact link. "We've got this."


I let go of the container and switched the control scheme over to B.O.X.E.R. As my Zaku's thrusters shut down and I went into a ballistic arc. The transition was a little rougher this time, the Zaku was damaged and so was I. Still, it was only a few moments before control resumed and I pushed full power to the thrusters. I would end this decisively.

I ejected the left pauldron armor and pulled the beam saber hidden within it. The bright pink blade erupted out with the same fury I felt in my heart, because as long as I could keep fighting I didn't have to think.

I didn't need to ask to know, this was the same pilot I had fought before. He felt the same. The same hate, the same determination.

Our blades met and a snap kick from the other suit landed against my right side and knocked the wind out of me as I bounced around in the control cradle. Wasn't expecting that out of him. I leaned hard into the thrusters to correct and draw distance before a second engagement.

"I didn't take you seriously before, and for that I apologize. I will give you my full attention this time."

He was quick, he didn't give me the chance to draw distance and was on me in a flash, beam saber already heading down for the killing blow and the damage to my right arm meant I wasn't fast enough. The saber entered through my suit's right shoulder and exited through the side of the backpack.

Cockpit alarms screamed in my ears as I lost control of the right arm and my backpack thrusters failed. Another kick to my cockpit hatch knocked me off of the saber and towards the ground and even at full power the boot thrusters were only enough to keep me from being destroyed on impact, not enough to prevent it.

I managed to force myself back up to a knee in the muddy trench that had been dug along-side the Rio Grande by my 'landing' before the false Gundam was once again in front of me. "You're a lot less impressive now than you were then. I suppose killing all of those loyal Federation pilots took a lot out of you, eh, Zeon filth?"

"It seems like killing ten million civilians didn't take anything at all out of you." I spat back as I forced myself back to my feet. One working arm, no thrusters, and no weapons. I'd have to make it work.

Above and behind me the two militia pilots were still descending with the container full of civilians. I had to make sure that container made it to the ship, I only had to last that long.

I ejected the shield from the right arm and grabbed it with my left hand. I didn't have a weapon but I would beat this bitch to death with my shield if I had to. Trapped by gravity, I rushed forward on my feet and swung the shield wildly towards the enemy suit.

He parried with his beam saber but the anti-beam coating and the luna-titanium that the shield was made of didn't yield so easily. I pressed on and drove him further from the ship--

And then I was moving backwards, he'd lit his thrusters and without any of my own I was helplessly driven back until with another kick he knocked me up against the hull of the Rio Grande and more alarms screamed in the cockpit, main power was failing.

I leaned forward in the harness and once again back to my feet, shield in front of me. I tasted blood in my mouth and couldn't shake the feeling that this fight was going to end up going like one I'd fought once before, one that almost killed me.

Except this time I didn't imagine I was going to survive.

I risked a look over to my left and up and couldn't spot the container, the GM pilots must have made it to the mobile suit bay already. At least I'd done that much. They would be able to keep the false Gundam from boarding the ship, at least.

I felt a vibration through the ground, and then three more softer ones, footsteps. Mobile suit footsteps.

To my left, the unmistakable figure of a Gundam V-fin. Charity's old Gundam, but Charity hadn't been on the ship, had she?

"If you want to pretend to be a Gundam" The voice, that sounded so much like the female GM pilot, boomed out, "You can fight against a Gundam."

"I know when I'm outmatched. I'll be seeing you later though, you can count on that."
The false Gundam pilot replied as he took a step backwards.

The female GM pilot lunged in with a beam saber in her hand and pressed the attack, "No, you won't. You don't get to run away, either you kill me or I kill you, but one of us is dying today, that I promise you."

I didn't have much left, but I still had some. I pushed everything I had left through the boot thrusters and made one final lunge forward, past the Gundam. The suit shook and the alarms told me that it wasn't going to hold together much longer, but it didn't need to.

The false Gundam raised its saber to parry the attack and took a step backwards with its left foot to brace itself, and that was my opening. I swung my left arm and released the shield and several tons of luna-titanium collided with the left ankle joint of the enemy mobile suit.

The leg collapsed under it and the suit was forced down to a knee and the momentum allowed the Gundam to drive its beam saber diagonally down through the false Gundam's torso, bisecting it from left shoulder to right hip, through the cockpit.

The B.O.X.E.R. harness released me without disengaging a moment before main power failed and i fell forward against the cockpit hatch. I slapped my hand against the release as my body tensed up from the pain of being re-injured again and this time I fell out onto the ground.

Green gas finally filled the area and I knew there would be no one else left to save. I only hoped that if this was how I died, that what I'd done was enough to make up for what I couldn't do.
 

Jackie

Is this thing on?
Operations
Administrator

Archer​


My heart felt like a toy wound too tight and let go all at once. Tachycardia, that’s what the medical training manual called it. Heartbeat of greater than one hundred per minute. It felt like I was half again as much as that.

I’d never expected to have to fight, that wasn’t what we were for. We were a deterrent and nothing more and, well, it wasn’t like we were out in the middle of things. We’d even managed to keep our heads down and keep ourselves out of the war.

Joining the militia was a natural choice. MS pilot was a logical extension of simulator video gaming, just spend a couple weekends a year behind the controls of the real thing instead of flying a keyboard and get paid all year long regardless.

Then the protests turned to riots and they skipped right over us and brought in EFSF and the Titans. They started shooting and that got us into the cockpit but all the training in the world couldn’t bring me courage. It was a game to me and it always had been, I’d never expected to actually deploy.

And that was my failing, but nobody else had felt any different. Nobody had taken it seriously. Why would they? Training got me to the cockpit but it couldn’t make me pull the trigger.

Then that Zaku pilot showed up and gave the Titans a back eye. I’d never seen anything like it and I’m not sure that anyone had ever seen anything like it. There was no method to the madness, it was all reactive. She had no particular style nor any discernible technique. She fought as though she’d been in a lot of fights, but not as though she was ever formally trained.

And she’d pushed them back and run off. That Gundam had showed up and it fought the same way, but faster. She fought like she didn’t care if she survived.

As I looked from the lit beam saber still buried in the mobile suit in front of me to the broken Zaku to my right, I wasn’t sure that she had. Whatever black magic had allowed the Zaku to punch above its weight-class had run out and the broken hulk that had released its pilot only avoided crushing her body by pure chance.

And she wasn’t moving.

Her drive and determination is what had inspired me. I’d seen her hit the ground after that first clash and then I’d seen her get back up. She kept going even though she couldn’t win, to buy us time. It lit a fire in me and I knew I had to fight.

She was fighting against a Gundam outside, and in front of me was another Gundam that felt like it was calling out to me, asking me to ride it into battle. Nobody stopped me when I jumped from my cockpit and into a mobile suit that wasn’t mine. Nobody questioned it when I fired it up and stepped outside.

The Zaku was still fighting, somehow, when I finally made it back outside. Battered and broken but not beaten. The Gundam knew what it had to do, it only asked that I help guide it, and then it was over.

I extinguished the beam saber and returned it to the rack and turned to the downed Zaku. Whether or not the pilot had survived, she deserved to not be left behind. With a precision born more from extensive practice in making mobile suits make rude gestures than any deliberate training, I scooped the pilot off of the ground and carried her back to the ship’s hangar.

The Gundam moved a lot more smoothly than the GM did and so it was with relative ease that I climbed back into the ship, one handed as I was with the suit’s right hand holding a body.

When the Gundam’s feet hit the deck, two burnt orange mobile suits carrying the Gundam I’d seen fighting outside of the colony turned their heads to look at me. There was a tension in the air. A tension that I broke by extending the Gundam’s right hand and showing them what it held.


***

I’d spent enough time pretending to be something that I wasn’t to know when someone else was doing the same. I may have been a pretend soldier but it didn’t take me more than about five minutes inside of the Rio Grande to realize that it wasn’t.

They’d need nice enough to allow me to disembark from the Gundam without holding me at gunpoint, with the implication that my refusal would result in being shot regardless. Still, even pretend respect was better than none at all. If that Zaku pilot lived I’d have done them a solid, and if she died then at least I’d tried.

That seemed to afford me certain considerations and respect from the crew of the ship that I found myself onboard. Not that there was anywhere else left to go, even my fish would have died from the gas attack.

So I was allowed to proceed on my own to the meeting I’d been requested to attend with the ship’s command staff, with the unspoken implication that this courtesy was extended only so far as I complied. The death of ten million people had a way of making people jumpy.

But I’d been given a name. The Zaku pilot was named Veronica and she had worked in the agri-center and before that she’d been from Texas, earthnoid born and bred. Meanwhile I’d never set foot in natural gravity in my life. There’d been a class trip to the moon in middle school but I’d fallen ill and missed out.

And by that, of course I mean that I faked sick to stay home and play videogames. The ball of dead rock would always be there anyway.

She wasn’t dead, at least not yet. They didn’t tell me much more than that before they’d sent me up to the command deck. As I’d noticed before, the ship might have pretended to be a cargo ship on the outside but from the inside, at least aft of the mobile suit hangar, the ship was completely boilerplate down to the very last screw.

Earth Forces ships were cookie cutter. Every ship of a given class was indistinguishable from any other and this ship was every inch a Salamis-class, save the big box bolted to the front of it. That meant that the command deck was going to be where it always was, and that meant I knew the way.

The door to the captain’s personal office opened up when I knocked on it and so I let myself in. Seated behind the desk was a woman wearing a normal suit, military issue, with a rank insignia on it indicating that she carried the rank of colonel.

I threw my right hand up in a salute and stood at attention, as I’d been trained. “Reporting as requested, Ma’am”

“Would you believe me if I said the uniform was a test? Well, no matter. I would normally be upset that someone took my mobile suit without asking, but you made good use of it and helped a friend of mine. On a day like today I can’t be mad about that.” The woman said. I felt at ease that I wasn’t going to be thrown against a wall and shot, but at the same time, something about her words felt like the last piece of a puzzle clicking into place.

A minor detail, an unimportant battle in the final days of the One Year War. It was a single paragraph at in a high school textbook, but it fit all too well. The Gundam belonged to her. The ship was built off a Salamis and she was a colonel.

The Zaku pilot was Veronica Jackson.

My eyebrows raised and I wasn’t sure if I felt three inches tall in the presence of greatness or if I just made a groundbreaking discovery. “You’re Charity Alexander. This ship is the Salisbury, isn’t it?”

She seemed a little shocked, just for a moment, and then she laughed, “I guess that saves me having to explain it.”

“The Salisbury went down with all hands.”

“We got better.”

I blinked and took a step back. “Well, like… yeah I freakin guess!”

“That’s one way of putting it. At any rate, you’re here in my office because I just got back from a trip to Side 3 to find my ship crashed-landed in a colony full of poison gas. This day hasn’t gone the way any of us wanted and I know that you’ve definitely had a worse time of it than I have. Feel free to turn me down but I’m just going to come right out and say it: I want you to work for us.”

“Let’s assume I actually have other options on the table. Why do I want to work for you instead of selling my mobile suit to the highest bidder and getting anywhere but here?”

“Well, for the moment, Miss…?”

“Archer. Julia Archer.” I answered, finding enough of my spine to put a little edge into my voice.

“Miss Archer, for the moment our short and long term goals align, or at least I believe they do. We both want to get out of this colony. I think we both want to make sure all of the survivors we’ve managed to recover are safe and have a place to stay that way, in the short term.” She explained while standing up from behind the desk and walking towards me.

“I’m still listening.”

“And in the long term, I want to put a bullet in the man responsible for today’s tragedy: Bask Om.”

I swallowed hard and found myself staring into the palm of my right hand. The first battle I’d ever been in was today. The first--

“I’ve only killed once, today, the pilot of that other mobile suit.” I explained.

She nodded at me and, having walked the full length of the admittedly small room, placed her hand on my shoulder. “Do you think you can do it again?”

I closed my hand into a fist and looked up to meet her eyes. I didn’t have parents, not any more. I woke up carefree and I would go to bed an orphan. A fire had been lit in me, and no matter how scared I was, it was going to continue to burn.

“Yes, I think I can.”

“In that case, Miss Archer. Welcome to Hyperion.”
 

Jackie

Is this thing on?
Operations
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Exodus​


That I found myself in a cockpit again was inevitable, that it was so soon was a surprise. That the cockpit belonged to a Gundam owned by Charity Alexander made me feel... it made me feel a way that I lacked the poetry of language to properly articulate.

The job was simple, I was going to stand guard and then transition to escort once they managed to get the ship off the ground. Two burnt-orange Sniper Customs and Aleksi, my wingman, in an old Guncannon, stood with me. One of us at each corner of the ship while work crews in normal suits strapped solid-fueled kick motors to the bow of the ship.

If all went well, they would bring the bow up so that the main engines could get under the center of gravity and power the ship clear of the buildings. The math was complicated and so I always did in-colony navigation with the computers, or I'd eyeball it. Getting a feel for what seemed right was a lot easier than working the numbers out on paper.

It must have been half an hour before the amber lights on the outside of the ship started to flash, a signal to anyone nearby that the engines were about to fire up. The sooner we got moving, the better. Standing around carrying a beam rifle powerful enough to blast a hole through the colony wall was not as comforting as it could have been in light of the way the rest of the day had gone.

Still, when the engines finally lit and the ship rose into the sky on a pillar of fire it was impossible to deny the beauty in it. The only thing left to wonder was what would be waiting for us outside. As Charity had said, there were short term and long term goals. The short term goal was simple: survive.

I tapped the thrusters and kicked off of the ground and let the computer plot an intercept course for the ship, the Rio Grande as they called it. The maneuver wasn't a complex one and I let the automatics handle it. Behind and below the other three mobile suits fell in behind me and followed me up.

The interception itself was simple, a few seconds of thrust, about a minute of ballistic flight, and then a second or two of retro burn. I reached the Gundam's left hand out to grab onto the handhold sticking off the starboard side of the ship's conning tower and cut power to my thrusters.

Letting the ship do the work saved fuel, and while we'd been taught this behavior during training for economic purposes, in this case that same behavior carried over for supply reasons. There was no assurance that more fuel would be coming, and we didn't have enough mobile suit pilots to take turns refueling during a prolonged fight.

Running screaming into the night was looking more and more attractive with every passing moment, doubly so when we passed through the rough ovoid hole that had been blown through the interior bulkhead by the Rio Grande's mega particle cannons.

Stand by for weapon discharge. We're gonna blow the outer doors and accelerate at full power. Enemy contact is likely, avoid fighting if possible, win if not.”

Right, I was touching the ship, so the contact link would be up. Wait, weapon discharge? “Hold--”

The ship's axial mega particle cannon fired and cut off what I was about to say and I was unfortunate enough to be looking at it when it went off. It wasn't as bad as if I'd been looking directly, but the monitors still flashed bright enough to make my eyes burn.

A warning tone chirped in the cockpit and I stepped into the thrusters to get some relative velocity built up. I split away from the ship the moment we cleared the space doors and pulled just enough distance to get my bearings. Would have killed for one of those new flashy panoramic cockpits but they've given me a Gundam so I couldn't be too choosy of a beggar.

The IFF subsystem started populating my displays with contact information sourced from thermal and optical sensors and built a point-map showing everything it could see in nearby space. The Rio Grande was below, with the three mobile suits in my team. Forward and 'above' was a Pegasus-class mobile suit carrier, a Flight III type.

They'd kept the IFF system in this old Gundam up to date if it could tell that much.

More contacts populated into the system and I magnified the optics to pick out four mint-green colored GM Custom types escorting the ship. They could have up to six more stored inside, it wasn't a fight we were going to readily win, Gundam or no.

They were making no move to intercept us. That wasn't like Titans, but then those GMs were painted in E.F.S.F. colors. It wasn't quite adding up, so I held my fire. I was in a Gundam, I could afford to let them fire first. It wasn't like the outcome was likely to change if they decided to give us their best. A Flight III Pegasus outclassed the Rio Grande in every possible respect.

The communication system indicated that there was an inbound laser transmission, not directly for us, but being broadcast to everyone. I toggled the system to accept the broadcast and the speakers crackled before the sound came through.

--is the acting captain of the Albion. We've relieved our command crew of duty and are standing by to assist Rio Grande and her crew in any way we are able. I say again, we are standing by to assist.”

I felt the hairs on the back of my neck stand up. That was stupid. It was either a trap or genuine but they blasted their intentions in every direction and anyone with a transceiver heard it. This was just going to invite more trouble.

IRST delivered a warning tone to tell me that the Rio Grande had just ignited its main drives and was pulling away under full thrust, on an intercept trajectory with the Albion. It didn’t seem like an attack posture, it would be a suicidal one to adopt. The better answer was that they were going to get into close formation with the other ship to give both of them a better defensive posture for the inevitable attack we were going to receive.

Which left the mobile suits, myself included, a little bit outside of the defensive perimeter and therefore we’d be the ones catching the first volley. Top of the line five years ago wasn’t top of the line today, but it was still better than the middle of the road that was the majority of the opposition we were likely to face.

I was not an ace pilot, everything I knew told me that Charity was insane to give me a Gundam instead of giving it to another pilot. If Veronica Jackson was conscious they could have put her in the cockpit and then, at least, they’d have the benefit of a Newtype at the controls. Instead they’d given it to a reservist who was only ever supposed to deploy when everyone else was already dead.

I took a deep breath, in through the nose and out through the mouth. I couldn’t let anxiety get the better of me. The fire was already lit, I’d already fought and won, I could do it twice. I had to do it twice.

And many more times after that, I was sure.

I tapped a sequence into the left control stick and fired a magnetic cable off the Gundam’s right wrist out a hundred or so yards, where it stuck to the shoulder armor of Aleksi’s Guncannon. “I think it’s gonna get weird out here. If it comes to a fight, let me take aggro, you support from range and keep an escape route clear.”

Raid logic huh? You tank the boss and I’ll clear out the adds. Alright, sounds good.”

“Just like Sunday nights, except the mobile suits are real and there won’t be a loot drop at the end.”

Or a lot of loot drops, how do you feel about doing a little salvage after the--contact twelve high. Drive flares. Just over six thousand and closing.”
My own system started alerting me of contacts a moment later and I broke the link to the other suit. Beam rifle was hot and the IRST was tracking half a dozen contacts. couldn’t distinguish anything other than type, at least one ship and a handful of mobile suits, maybe fighters. There was a lot of clutter since they were coming in a few degrees off the sun.

I stepped hard into the thrusters and grit my teeth against the kick as I pushed my suit upwards, to widen the gap between the approaching force and the sun, to improve the scan resolution. I ran the scan again and managed to identify one of the signatures as a large capital ship.

A pair of beams lanced out from the contact group and missed the Rio Grande by a few dozen meters at the most. The gunners would correct and likely land the hit on the next volley. The only survivors of the colony were on that ship. As much as the Titans needed to silence them, I needed them to stay alive.

I brought up the precision targeting scanners and braced the beam rifle with the Gundam’s left hand. Magnification to maximum, I managed to pick out the silhouette of a Magellan-class battleship. Large target, very little transversal velocity. It wasn’t exactly a sniper rifle but beams traveled in a straight line once fired so I just had to aim good.

If I wanted to hit, but I didn’t need to hit, nice as it may be.

I let the IRST compute a firing solution and then squeezed the trigger and stepped on the thrusters. The suit lurched upwards and the targeting system started computing the next shot. A fast moving mobile suit firing a beam rifle at them was a bigger concern than the Rio Grande. The would shoot at me instead.

Another shot from my beam rifle and I tapped the thrusters again, changing direction and speed and carrying myself closer to the approaching battleship and its mobile suit escort. The computer pinged six contacts and identified them as all being a probable match to the Hizack.

I fired a five round burst into the thick of the formation, it wouldn’t likely hit any of them at long range but it would force them to scatter. Four on six wasn’t exactly good odds even if I did have a Gundam. Anything to throw them into disarray was going to make staying alive much easier.

Four beams streaked from behind me towards the approaching fleet and I looked over the Gundam’s shoulder to see the Guncannon and the two Sniper Customs following behind me, the three of them still holding their weapons in firing position.

They understood, as I had, they we had to be bait to keep the ship, and the refugees, safe.

Another pair-linked blast from battleship beam cannons came from the Magellan-class, this time towards out little four-suit formation. Evasion was easy, they wouldn’t have good targeting data for their first shot, and we were a lot smaller than the Rio Grande.

I squeezed the trigger to fire another shot at the battleship but the system told me the e-pack was empty. A twitch of the control stick ejected the spent e-pack and I slapped a reserve pack from the back-side of my shield into the beam rifle’s receiver.

Again, I fired the rifle. The beam streaked out towards the ‘neck’ of the ship’s conning tower as a Hizack intercepted it and took the hit directly to the shield. The shield evaporated along with most of the Hizack’s left arm, and the rest of the suit crashed into the hull of the battleship at a speed that didn’t seem survivable.

I tapped on the brakes and the two Sniper Customs overshot me. Their sniper rifles were stowed and each were holding a dual beam spray gun in their right hands, shield still held in their left. Truth be told, they had more offensive options than I did and they were definitely better pilots.

A warning chime screamed in the cockpit and I felt like I’d been hit by a truck. To my left the blade of a heat hawk was looking at me through the gash it tore in my shield. I really, really didn’t need to be in this fight, my inexperience was definitely going to get me killed.

I ejected the shield and pushed away from it, give the Hizack pilot something to disentangle himself from while I tried to get my bearings. He was still trying to dig his blade out of my shield. I lined up my shot and fired a beam point-blank through the middle of the shield and through the Hizack’s reactor.

The explosion flash-blinded my sensors and I felt the impact in my chest. That was the risk of using beam rifles, it was also why we only used cartridge guns inside the colony. I hit the quick-reset switch for the sensors and tried to collect myself while the displays recycled.

Once the sensors were back online, the first thing I noticed was that my beam rifle was gone. The second was a Hizack pointing a beam rifle of its own at me. With no shield to take the hit, I was definitely screwed.

A mint-green streak collided with the Hizack and a moment later there was a beam saber blade sticking out through the cockpit hatch. One of the GM Customs from the Albion had killed it from behind. A moment later the GM kicked the Hizack away and with its free left hand disengaged the hyper bazooka from the back of its skirt armor and threw it to me.

I caught it and the system linked up immediately. I spun around my axis and centered my sights on the forward main gun turret on the Titan battleship and squeezed the trigger. Once, twice, three times, each targeted at a different gun. The explosions that boiled through the armor caused the lights to flicker throughout the ship and as the smoke dissipated I could make out that the entire forward ‘blade’ section of the hull had broken away from the rest of the ship, and with it two of the ship’s main gun batteries.

The ship started to come about, venting atmosphere and fire. They were going to run away, now that they realized they couldn’t win. The remaining Hizacks formed up on the ship as it limped away. I was still debating whether or not I should give chase when the beam of a mega particle cannon bisected the ship lengthwise and the resulting explosion obviated the need to decide at all.

Off in the direction of the ship, signal flares lit the sky. A command to retreat. It looked like we’d live to fight another day, after all.
 
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