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9/18/2019 10:07:43 PM
6

Polonium

[spoiler]just a little short story I wrote, not part of any Offtopic canon. Lmk what you guys think.[/spoiler] “All units are in position. Waiting for your signal.” The Admiral stared out the window into the void of space as if it were just another enemy to destroy. The focus and intensity of his gaze was unnerving- Raddoch half expected the stars to give way under it. “Get me Ryden Samir.” “Right away, sir.” Raddoch responded. Samir walked into the command room without his usual pilot swagger. “You sent for me, sir?” “Yes. Have you reviewed the attack formations I laid out for you?” “Yes sir, my pilots have been briefed on every detail.” “Good. No improvisations this time, yes?” “No sir, I will stick to the script.” “You better, or this will be your last mission under my command.” The voice of Tactical Officer Cerryn came over the PA system. “Censors have detected Sureli ships in Sector 4638A, as predicted. All pilots to battle stations. Admiral Polonium, your presence is requested on the bridge.” The silent excitement in the main bridge was contagious. Everyone on board knew that this battle would determine who controlled the Kylen System, which was rich with resources. The Admiral took his seat overlooking the stations. To his right sat Captain Mudley, who was in charge of overseeing the day-to-day procedures of the ESS Brooklyn, Admiral Polonium’s flagship. While in theory second-in-command to the Admiral himself, Mudley was not well-liked by the crew and was called “Janitor Mudley” behind his back. To the Admiral’s left sat the actual second in command, the notoriously competent semi-telepathic Venusian known as Raddoch. Tactical Officer Cerryn broke the silence. “Sir, we are receiving a subspace transmission from the Sureli.” “Patch it though.” The voice of the Sureli leader was modulated, as if put through some sort of synthesizer. [b][quote]“This is your last chance, Polonium of Earth. Leave our system at once and never return, and you will live. Stay, and you will be destroyed.”[/quote][/b] For all the fake, gaudy technology obscuring the alien’s voice, the Admiral detected a hint of fear. He motioned to Cerryn to put him on the line. “It appears I am at a disadvantage... you know my name, and I have not a clue as to yours... oh yes, I remember now. I don’t care.” The crew laughed, but were silenced by a glare from Mudley. “You call this your system! Tell that to the locals you terrorize. I’m sure they’ll thank us when we blow your fleet to Kingdom Come. Enjoy your day.” The alien commander laughed, or rather, did something akin to laughter. [quote][b]“You speak of terrorizing, human? You think you can do better? You think yourself... moral? We shall see.”[/b][/quote] The transmission ended. Every eye on the bridge turned to the Admiral. Edward A. Polonium grinned. “Light ‘em up, boys.” The bay door opened, and thousands of Warbird starfighters launched into the cosmos. At their head was the customized X-37 Nighthawk flown by a smiling Ryden Samir. *All squadrons, report.* *Beta Squad is accounted for, sir!* *Charlie Squad is accounted for, sir!* *Delta Squad is accounted for, sir!* *Echo squad is accounted for, sir, and we’d like to add that drinks are on us tonight!” *I’ll hold you to that,* Ryden responded. *Let’s blast these bugs to hell.* Thousands of pilots cheered, a joyous sound over the intercom that was muted by the emptiness outside. The insect-like Sureli fighters poured out of the battle cruisers, each one an ugly blot on the horizon. Ryden’s mouth twitched into a smirk. His fleet of sleek silver Warbirds drove a point through the horde of unorganized metal-clad fools. It wasn’t a contest. It never had been. The Sureli were tactical idiots. They fought through brute force alone, gaining territory by outnumbering their opponents. They were no match for an organized military strike led by the greatest strategist known to the galaxy. Polonium had quite literally a perfect record. He was a war hero whose desk drawers were chock full of medals he never wore. In fact, he’d been known to turn around and give a medal he won to a man under his command. He was Ryden’s childhood hero, the best bug-blaster around, a paragon of the Royal Navy and Ryden never felt better than when he was fighting under his command. The battle was over in minutes. All those stories and movies about long, drawn-out trench wars were ancient history. Out here on the final frontier, the battles were won or lost before they began. Those that remained of the Sureli roaches limped back to their cruiser, damaged. The Brooklyn fired a couple warning shots at them, as the cruiser powered up its thrusters and jumped away. The pilots cheered raucously. The remains of some Sureli pilot floated past Ryden’s viewscreen. Ryden stared at it, a little alarmed. The textbooks and pictures of the Sureli never depicted the actual beings, only their buggish vehicles and their dwellings, which resembled a cancerous growth on the skin of a planet. Ryden had never actually seen a Surelan before. Everyone assumed them to look sort of bug-like. Confusedly, they looked quite similar to the humans. They had a bipedal structure, with four limbs, almost-human like pale skin. They were mostly subterranean beings. Their key differences were marked in their eyes, an alarming solid black, with no iris and no pupil. They had no hair, and their face was not quite human either, very high-cheekboned long-jawed, not distinctly male or female. A gaping hole was torn in its side, from a piece of shrapnel from its destroyed fighter. Ryden sat and stared at it float by, its black, unblinking eyes staring right at him.

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  • *Captain Samir? Captain Samir, do you read me? Captain Samir, please respond!* Ryden was jolted back to reality by the crackling of his earpiece. He hastily replied *Copy that, copy that. I’m here.* *Awaiting your orders, sir.* *Give me a sec, I haven’t heard from the Brooklyn yet.* Ryden patched his radio through to the bridge. *Admiral, enemy forces have been dealt with, permission to dock?* The cold voice of the Admiral cut through the feed. *Denied. Take a squadron, carpet bomb the planet.* Ryden stopped in shock. Admiral Polonium had never before ordered an attack on a civilian planet before, Sureli or otherwise. Ryden used his fighter’s sensors to quickly scan the planet’s surface. *Sir, the Sureli military has practically no presence on the surface. Those are civilians, sir.* *You heard my orders, Captain. Remember our little chat from earlier. You step out of line once more, and that fancy Warbird will be in a scrap heap by tomorrow.* Ryden looked around the roomy interior of his Nighthawk, wondering if this’d be the last time he’d sit in it. He sat in silence for an eternity of a second, considering every word. *Sir, those aren’t just Sureli civilians. There are locals in those cities, locals who didn’t ask to be colonized, are we to murder them in order to take out a few Sureli police bases? We should send a ground team.* There was an even longer silence. Even the radio static seemed to disappear. Thousands of pilots hung on every word they spoke. *Captain, this is your final warning. I want you to lead that squadron personally. There will be no bug left alive on that rock!* Ryden looked down at his controls. The face of the dead Surelan danced in his brain. The hole in its side. The piece of shrapnel lodged in its ribs. *Sir, I can’t do that. It’s not in my blood.* *Well then your bloodline be damned. Captain Samir, you are relieved of duty. Lieutenant Turner, take charge of Alpha Squadron and blow those bugs to shreds.* Nobody moved. *Back to base, boys. Our job is done.* Ryden spoke the words with false confidence. He powered up his thrusters, and a thousand Warbirds flew back to the Brooklyn. On the bridge of the battle cruiser, Edward Polonium was shaking with rage. “Very well. I’ll do it myself. Take us into orbit.” “Right away, sir.” responded the coxswain. The bomb bay doors opened, and several nuclear warheads fell from their chambers. The surface of the planet lit up like a firework. Ryden Samir and his pilots watched from the hangar bay as the lives they saved were extinguished. A few days later. The judge rapped his gavel solemnly. The courthouse room was located deep within the hull of the Brooklyn, a massive, windowless, seldom-used chamber where every word echoed. The court-martial had been postponed for a few days after the Battle of Kylen. In that time, Ryden Samir had been stripped of his rank, honor, and all personal possessions, and had been detained in the brig. “Ryden Samir, you stand accused of direct insubordination. The law-mandated sentence is dishonorable dischargement from the Navy, as well as five years in federal prison. Have you anything to say in defense of your actions?” Ryden slammed his hand down on the table. “Your honor, those people were not our enemies. Those weren’t just bugs down there, those were thousands of Kylenians I was asked to murder. Is that what this Navy fights for? I made an oath to protect civilians at all cost.” He looked directly at the Admiral. “Is this what you fight for, Edward Polonium? The hero of a thousand war stories? The crown jewel of the Navy? A war criminal?” A few onlookers gasped. The crowd stared at Ryden in disgust. “Clap him in irons!” Somebody called. The judge stared him down emotionlessly. “Ryden, you are sentenced to five years in federal prison for insubordination. Take him away.” The bailiffs took his arms and led him down the aisle. He took a deep, long look at the cold face of Edward Polonium. No one ever looked the Admiral in the eyes. Ryden stared at them, long and hard, daring him to speak. For a split second, it seemed as if all color was drained from the Admiral’s eyes, but it was gone as quickly as it came. Ryden’s eyes widened. In a moment he broke the bailiff’s grip and lunged forward towards the Admiral. Ryden fell on him, grabbing him by the cuff and tore away at his neck as the entire courtroom jumped to their feet, shouting bloody murder, but it was too late. Ryden had found what he was looking for. A computer chip was imbedded in Polonium’s neck. Ryden tore it out, and the Admiral’s iconic, glorified face began to change. His military-cut hair disappeared. His skin paled to a deathly white, and his ice blue eyes drained to solid black. Ryden rose to his feet, pulling up Polonium, the Surelan, for all to see. The chaos was gone in an instant. The room was deathly silent. “Treachery.” Ryden whispered. It was his last word before the bailiff raised his handgun and everything went black.

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    1 Reply
    • BuNp This gave me an idea...

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    • DUDE! BUMP

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    • HOL-EE SHEEEET! HE WAS THE ENEMY ALL ALONG!!

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    • Bomp!

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    • Bump

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