SYSNES2: On the Lathe of Suns

Ol' Eagle-Eye takes in the View

Sunsets were always the saddest time of day.

With the sun behind them, and dark shadows cloaking the alien vegetation and erosion, the western hills looked akin to gentle piedmont of Mt. Triumph. It had been three decades of his lifespan since Altos Mundane had last seen the place he had been born and raised, and he dreaded to think how many years had slipped by unnoticed in flat space-time.

He clambered up here near every evening to take in the view; nostalgia may be a bitter brew, but men indulge themselves in far worse poisons. If you didn’t stop to think about where you’d been, how could you be sure in where you’re going? That had been a favourite phrase of Altos’ father; not the smartest of men to be sure, but he had dug kernels of wisdom from a long life working the land. Simple human truths fit a life better, not the bright sharp big ideas of philosophers, though those had their place.

Bessy chirped beside him, and he whistled back a standdown code. As she flexed and cycled her barrels Altos reflected that rigging explosive timers into your best gear to prevent theft was another thing his father had taught him. Not that Bessy would explode of course, she had far too much sentimental value for him to risk that, but an electrified chassis had proved more than an adequate deterrent thus far in life. Still that his last standdown had elapsed meant he’d been up here longer than he realised. Oia did turn more slowly than Old Standard, and Abell took hours to haul its orange bulk beneath the horizon. The dusts and the atmospheric composition did give it garish vibrancy he’d grown to appreciate though.

He chided himself for a minute or two - he’d been so lost in the sight and the memories he hadn’t even got round to making the hard decision yet. Cultivating a reputation for careful consideration is one thing, but take it too far and people will wonder if you're going senile.

He turned towards the wooden entry hatch. This church of yellow sandstone was the tallest thing for twenty klicks in every direction of featureless badlands, a natural focal point for the rough village of Standardite buildings that had formed around it. The grounds had held a grove of dead and desiccated trees when they’d first arrived, long since chopped for firewood. The trees had been dead for centuries by Altos’ estimation, but that hadn’t stopped the stupid Oiat priest from screaming bloody murder. Laughin’ Janos Typical had wanted to shoot the man at first, but Altos had managed to bring him round to the folly of making a martyr of a holy man. Typical may have twice the force following him Altos did, but the big lug still looked up to a man who had ridden with Elric Standard himself, the fact Altos had been nothing but a common sniper in that first band notwithstanding. Altos’ would rather the young bucks listen to his years of experience as mercenary captain before and during the Dathic War, and the time-crunching interstellar travel that left him late middle aged when the rest of that old band was dead and buried, but he’d play whatever cards he’d been dealt to get the job done.

Bessy was light for all her 190 centimetres in length, and lithe for all the incrustations of machinery around the original gun his second wife had given him all those years ago, but it was still a hassle to fit down the hatch carrying her. The fact that the hatch was, like all the old architecture on the planet, designed for a people a good bit shorter than a regular Standardite didn’t help either. The ladder up had been kept in good condition though and descent was easy enough. The priest had kept some sort of telescope up on the roof when they’d first arrived, a nice looking piece that had disappeared into someone’s loot stash with some speed. The idea that the priest had shared his passion of sitting and looking was one of the reasons Altos had warmed to the man.

Elsie Banal sat cross-legged at the bottom of the ladder, keeping watch over the door for him. She’d only been with Altos’ company for a few months, but he’d had a couple of her cousins with him since the Second Battle for Standard, and they were both fine lads and she looked to be of a similar cut. Truth be told he’d always been a bit over protective of the young women in his company, always having dreams of what the original Bessy would have been like if she’d made it, and turned some who wanted to follow him away. Elsie at least had put his mind to rest; after she cut the balls off the thief who’d been siphoning fuel from the main transport for his personal veto Alto’s had no worries for her safety.

Worries for her fashion choice maybe; with a spring-loaded pistol holster on each of her forearms and a pair of even bulkier pistol deployers on each thigh, Altos’ lived for the day she’d accidently catapult one of her mean looking automatics across the room when scratching her nose. He had no clue why the younger generation insisted on having more guns than they had hands at all times. He had Bessy for his serious kills and his little Dathic Service issue Deegle for his quiet ones; anything more would have been an indulgence. When Altos’ and the other old fogies in the company had been drinking Ol’ Sticher Humdrum had advanced a theory to explain it. The greyhair, in charge of fixing both the companies gear and their wounds, thought it was because the kids didn’t have a sense of place anymore. They didn’t have a world, they didn’t have holds, and few had clans worth a damn. So they doubled down on the most visible and personal aspects of their forefathers; more guns and more attitude, and strutted around to hide their insecurity. There might be some merit to the idea, though personally Altos’ opinion was that the kids were just idiots. He hoped for the sake of the future that Sticher was right, and that the kids would calm down once they had a place in the universe once again.

It was that more than anything that had made him add his voice to the hundred other leaders of the Basin when they told the Commodores to go screw themselves last year. They couldn’t keep their people whirling around from planet to planet; they’d lost so much already, you had to pick a place to stand, any place, or you’d lose yourself as well. Now though he had additional issues, especially at this last communication from the cowards who had run away to Mern. His boys and girls followed him because they believed in him, just like Janos’ derpwits followed him because they believed in him. Standards were a free folk, they followed the man not the title and certainly not the rules. That’s what Elric had shown them right from the start - that the choice was in each of their hands and each of their hearts. Elric Standard, Commodore; the name came first and the other words were just descriptions of what he did. To put their title first, to not even sign their names to their demand, showed Altos’ more than anything that the council had lost their way. To act like the Standardites owed them allegiance, rather than setting an example and trusting them to follow left a bitter taste in Altos’ mouth.

Heh. Thinking about that his choice was obvious really, if you had a chance to fight for the soul of your people, and you rolled over, well then you were the worst sort of traitor you could be. At least he’d seen a beautiful sunset whilst he was wasting time up there on what should have been a snap decision. He turned to Elsie.

“Thankee for waiting for me kid, now run along to Janos and relay a message, he’ll like the personal touch from a lovely lass.”

“Yer done made a choice whilst roosting up there Ol’ Eagle-Eye? Thought it’d be days yet” she replied with a grin.

“Slam that trap of yours and tell him...tell him we’ll be with him to the bloody end.”
 
Dis, if you still have the PM where I sent you the names for my two ships, could you please send it back to me? I cannot remember positively what I named them, and don't want to make my titling even more confusing than it already is. :p
 
I've been away from my computer the whole weekend, and I could sure use an extension of a day. If that's impossible I'll try and push something out in time.

Well I have tomorrow off and planned to do a lot then. 12 is the time I wanted to start so sometime between then and midnight my time might be acceptable.
 
I've got my orders collated at work. Just need to copy and paste. Only reason I have not sent yet was I was hoping to get an agreement with littleboots on the dardareo situation (v starvation) I have not had that but I have sent a proposed timetable which I will include in my orders as a provisional part.
 
Treaty of Atooa

- The Yanii will provide the Quasi with a Socioarchaeologist team, for the Quasi to do with however they see fit.
- The Quasi will provide the Yanii with a Designer team, for the Yanii to do with however they see fit.
- The Quasi will allow Yanii ships to resupply at their base in Lipsid Beta.
- Yan and Quasi will remain at peace, and co-operate to keep the Lipsid Alpha system peaceful and free of outside invaders.
- This treaty will expire in 7 years, at which time it will be available for renewal.


Signed
Hiy Yiiai, Direct Representative of the Yan people
 
I have been in a wedding away from home all weekend. I won't have time for #nes before sending orders tomorrow morning, so it'll need to be PMs if you need to let me know anything. I'll be turning in orders in about 7 hours.
 
Treaty of Atooa

- The Yanii will provide the Quasi with a Socioarchaeologist team, for the Quasi to do with however they see fit.
- The Quasi will provide the Yanii with a Designer team, for the Yanii to do with however they see fit.
- The Quasi will allow Yanii ships to resupply at their base in Lipsid Beta.
- Yan and Quasi will remain at peace, and co-operate to keep the Lipsid Alpha system peaceful and free of outside invaders.
- This treaty will expire in 7 years, at which time it will be available for renewal.


Signed
Hiy Yiiai, Direct Representative of the Yan people

Signed,
Somkid Jatusripitak
 
RE: Ilosian Internal Shipping and Commercial Interests Report

S,

You will need to have these compiled much quicker next year! Its useless towards the end of the year! Also get some form of year on year data.

R

ORIGINAL MESSAGE BELOW >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>

Hey R,

Latest numbers compiled as of year UC 4971 for Segmentum Alnitahium

Yours,
S.

Leaderboards


Spoiler E Output :
Position Nation E Output
1 Black Iron Republic 493
2 Dardareo 452
3 Csserians 301
4 Corans 249
5 Valk Irinate 45 166
6 Yanii 156
7 Niovgroyokia 146
8 Hankish 145
9 Praxzen 122
10 Heph Tyranny 113
11 Leeni 107
12 Firzonat 1 100
13 Ilosians 84
14 Delugers 77
15 Quasi 74
16 Standards 72
17 Seffasians 68
18 JIM Corporation 63
19 Hearthfire Terraforming Ass 49
20 Zera 45
21 Lessor Cathedral Habitats 42
22 Saint Rihndell 30
23 Glon Miners 22
24 Knights of the Vale 16
25 Fourth Edenic Monks 13
26 Oia Kingdom 12
27 Hearthstone Station 11
28 Northern Adama Towns 7
29 Atooa Dathics 5
30 Brown Market 5
31 Dathic Frostminers 3
32 Treesev Miners 3
33 Mernt Tribes 3
34 Saldrid Group 1
35 Grannee Smit 1
36 SAH6.ii.b Expedition -2
37 Standard Rebels -12


Spoiler Population :
Position Nation Population
1 Black Iron Republic 115
2 Standards 85
3 Yanii 74
4 Valk Irinate 45 71
5 Dardareo 67
6 Zera 65
7 Corans 65
8 Delugers 61
9 Quasi 60
10 Leeni 53
11 Hankish 43
12 Csserians 40
13 Praxzen 37
14 Standard Rebels 33
15 Firzonat 1 31
16 Ilosians 30
17 Seffasians 30
18 Lessor Cathedral Habitats 28
19 Niovgroyokia 23
20 Knights of the Vale 21
21 Heph Tyranny 21
22 Hearthfire Terraforming Ass 19
23 Oia Kingdom 19
24 Mernt Tribes 17
25 Glon Miners 16
26 Fourth Edenic Monks 15
27 JIM Corporation 13
28 Atooa Dathics 10
29 Saint Rihndell 10
30 Northern Adama Towns 9
31 Grannee Smit 9
32 Hearthstone Station 5
33 Saldrid Group 5
34 Brown Market 5
35 SAH6.ii.b Expedition 4
36 Treesev Miners 4
37 Dathic Frostminers 2

Spoiler Ratio of Talents to Total Population :
Position Nation Talent Ratio
1 Dathic Frostminers 100
2 SAH6.ii.b Expedition 100
3 Saldrid Group 100
4 Praxzen 59
5 Ilosians 57
6 Niovgroyokia 52
7 Atooa Dathics 51
8 Saint Rihndell 50
9 Leeni 50
10 Hearthstone Station 40
11 Hearthfire Terraforming Ass 38
12 Yanii 37
13 Grannee Smit 33
14 Lessor Cathedral Habitats 33
15 Firzonat 1 32
16 Hankish 32
17 JIM Corporation 31
18 Treesev Miners 31
19 Corans 30
20 Quasi 28
21 Csserians 27
22 Seffasians 25
23 Glon Miners 25
24 Brown Market 25
25 Northern Adama Towns 23
26 Delugers 22
27 Valk Irinate 45 22
28 Dardareo 20
29 Heph Tyranny 19
30 Black Iron Republic 19
31 Standard Rebels 18
32 Zera 18
33 Standards 15
34 Knights of the Vale 14
35 Fourth Edenic Monks 13
36 Oia Kingdom 11
37 Mernt Tribes 6


Spoiler e per population :
Position Nation e/p
1 Csserians 7.53
2 Dardareo 6.75
3 Niovgroyokia 6.35
4 Heph Tyranny 5.38
5 JIM Corporation 4.85
6 Black Iron Republic 4.29
7 Corans 3.83
8 Hankish 3.37
9 Praxzen 3.30
10 Firzonat 1 3.23
11 Saint Rihndell 3.00
12 Ilosians 2.80
13 Hearthfire Terraforming Ass 2.58
14 Valk Irinate 45 2.34
15 Seffasians 2.27
16 Hearthstone Station 2.20
17 Yanii 2.11
18 Leeni 2.02
19 Dathic Frostminers 1.50
20 Lessor Cathedral Habitats 1.50
21 Glon Miners 1.38
22 Delugers 1.26
23 Quasi 1.23
24 Brown Market 1.00
25 Fourth Edenic Monks 0.87
26 Standards 0.85
27 Northern Adama Towns 0.78
28 Knights of the Vale 0.76
29 Treesev Miners 0.75
30 Zera 0.69
31 Oia Kingdom 0.63
32 Atooa Dathics 0.50
33 Saldrid Group 0.20
34 Mernt Tribes 0.18
35 Grannee Smit 0.11
36 Standard Rebels -0.36
37 SAH6.ii.b Expedition -0.50

Spoiler S Output :
Position Nation S Output
1 Praxzen 378
2 Corans 220
3 Yanii 205
4 Ilosians 142
5 Delugers 106
6 Dardareo 96
7 Leeni 81
8 Csserians 80
9 Quasi 79
10 Hankish 76
11 Zera 71
12 Seffasians 55
13 Standards 34

Spoiler S per pop :
Position Nation s/p
1 Praxzen 10.22
2 Ilosians 4.73
3 Corans 3.38
4 Yanii 2.77
5 Csserians 2.00
6 Seffasians 1.83
7 Hankish 1.77
8 Delugers 1.74
9 Leeni 1.53
10 Dardareo 1.43
11 Quasi 1.32
12 Zera 1.09
13 Standards 0.40



RESOURCES

Spoiler F Output :
Position Nation F Output
1 Zera 162
2 Knights of the Vale 110
3 Grannee Smit 90
4 Delugers 56
5 Mernt Tribes 32
6 Northern Adama Towns 30
7 Seffasians 26
8 Yanii 22
9 Standards 22
10 Praxzen 21
11 Valk Irinate 45 20
12 Hearthfire Terraforming Ass 19
13 Leeni 17
14 Oia Kingdom 14
15 Hankish 13
16 Fourth Edenic Monks 12
17 Quasi 12
18 Dardareo 12
19 Lessor Cathedral Habitats 9
20 Saint Rihndell 6
21 Glon Miners 6
22 JIM Corporation 5
23 Atooa Dathics 4
24 Corans 4
25 Black Iron Republic 3
26 Saldrid Group 2
27 SAH6.ii.b Expedition 1
28 Niovgroyokia 1
29 Treesev Miners 1
30 Heph Tyranny 1
31 Brown Market 0
32 Standard Rebels 0
33 Firzonat 1 -2
34 Dathic Frostminers -3
35 Hearthstone Station -8
36 Csserians -8
37 Ilosians -47



Spoiler M Output :
Position Nation M Output
1 Black Iron Republic 180
2 Ilosians 150
3 Heph Tyranny 84
4 Csserians 42
5 Atooa Dathics 38
6 Firzonat 1 32
7 Glon Miners 30
8 Hearthstone Station 27
9 Standard Rebels 22
10 Oia Kingdom 12
11 JIM Corporation 10
12 Leeni 10
13 Seffasians 8
14 Fourth Edenic Monks 7
15 Praxzen 7
16 Northern Adama Towns 5
17 Saint Rihndell 0
18 Dathic Frostminers -1
19 Treesev Miners -1
20 SAH6.ii.b Expedition -2
21 Saldrid Group -2
22 Brown Market -2
23 Grannee Smit -2
24 Quasi -3
25 Hankish -3
26 Mernt Tribes -4
27 Knights of the Vale -6
28 Zera -6
29 Lessor Cathedral Habitats -8
30 Hearthfire Terraforming Ass -10
31 Standards -11
32 Delugers -14
33 Dardareo -20
34 Niovgroyokia -23
35 Yanii -23
36 Valk Irinate 45 -27
37 Corans -38

Spoiler V Output :
Position Nation V Output
1 Valk Irinate 45 289
2 Leeni 60
3 Quasi 29
4 Delugers 28
5 Treesev Miners 23
6 Dathic Frostminers 11
7 JIM Corporation 9
8 Grannee Smit 8
9 Northern Adama Towns 7
10 Standard Rebels 6
11 Hankish 6
12 Oia Kingdom 5
13 Zera 5
14 Corans 4
15 Saldrid Group 2
16 Praxzen 2
17 Seffasians 1
18 Brown Market -1
19 Hearthstone Station -2
20 SAH6.ii.b Expedition -4
21 Mernt Tribes -4
22 Fourth Edenic Monks -4
23 Knights of the Vale -6
24 Lessor Cathedral Habitats -7
25 Hearthfire Terraforming Ass -10
26 Saint Rihndell -10
27 Glon Miners -11
28 Atooa Dathics -12
29 Yanii -20
30 Ilosians -23
31 Standards -30
32 Niovgroyokia -34
33 Firzonat 1 -37
34 Heph Tyranny -41
35 Dardareo -45
36 Csserians -47
37 Black Iron Republic -76
 
That Time The Damn-Fool Commodores Did Something Right For Once

About six thousand men and women, the population of a decent-sized homestead cluster, began to feel a shy tug on their bodies, female breasts and male genitals affected first. They had entered the gravity well, and the planet was telling them which way ‘down’ was. For most of them, down was not the direction of the floor, which would prove disorienting. The six thousand secured themselves in various fleet-approved (or not) positions. Upper officers made sure their subordinates weren’t asleep or having sex, (wayward crewmembers often seeking to give a new meaning to ‘reentry’) and looked around commandingly issuing mostly trivial orders while, as in most militaries, the petty officers did the actual work.

“Check and mark, fuel controls running cool. Hull pressures in the green.”

“Quails in the nest. Copy to confirm.”

“Partridges accounted for.”

“Pheasants here.”

“Condors fully secured.”

“Egrets out of egress.”

“Kia…”

“I said we’re in!”

“Alright then. Lock down for descent protocols. Goin’ in hard or we’ll miss lunch.”

“It’d be roast pheasant if that training exercise were real.”

“Flare you, ass.”

“Hope Datha’s ghosts don’t hear that.”

“Datha of the thousand barbeques, praise be.”

“Stop burning the Com’s time on chit-chat. We have re-entry in five…four…three.”

The loaded tramps roared down through the atmosphere, inhabitants gel-cushioned and sedated. The changeover from vacuum to sub-atmospheric thrust systems resulted in a minute or so of free-fall while the course-correcting software booted up. Sometimes it failed, which was fun. Huge VTOL thrusters emerged from their cocoons and engaged, shifting the vertical descent to an angular and finally a horizontal flight path, parallel to the rugged mountains of Mern. A cascade of sonic booms echoed across the mostly-deserted valleys; after a few unfortunate deafening accidents they’d stopped coming down over settlements.

The low thrum of approaching vessels caused most of the spaceport support personnel not in bunkers to grab something sturdy; multiple shockwave-blasts of wind always accompanied the landing of such massive ships, literally some of the largest that modern physics and technology permitted to escape a near-g atmosphere. Insofar as a motile skyscraper could lumber to a halt, the Ne’er Do Wells did so gracefully. Skimmers roared unceremoniously out of the door bays before they were fully open, overloaded with stir-crazy men and women ready and willing to spend their pay on stimulating the local economy, in addition to other things. Spaceport personnel scurried into the cavernous holds in their wake to unload satellites and other equipment for repair and maintenance.

One such skimmer of hooting, rowdy Standards was an assault-boat marine team, led (well, organized) by their communications officer, Kia Common. She had the same scarred, tawny beauty that most Standards possessed, but eschewed the traditional long battle-braid of most clanswomen for short, close-cut hair. That wasn’t all she eschewed; Kia’s habits were disciplined, even for an officer, not that she didn’t have a sense of humor. The general private-network rumors were that she was a lesbian or just asexual, or stranger still, faithful to someone on planet.

“Stretch those legs while you can, boys, they’ll be stumbling before long,” she said, extending her own for effect as she put the veto on auto-drive. Their vehicle permissions let them through the hastily-erected metal palisade surrounding New Port Elric, Mernt banditry being what it was. As they roared past clapboard and brick buildings, some still covered in scaffolding, locals eyed them with a mixture of admiration and jealousy. Fleet positions were coveted.

“Ki, betcha two bottles of Dathic amaranth Quiet Trey could drink you under the table,” said Jem Usual, the hulking, tatted-out explosives specialist.

“Ey, Trey doesn’t drink.”

Poor Trey looked up shyly. “The Five Sages don’t prohibit a drink, but destroying the human consciousness with any drug is anti-syne.”

The others raised their eyebrows and grinned before starting in on another round of viciously mocking Trey’s gods. There was a reason he was the quiet one.

The various men and women of the Standard military, ‘In Elric’s employ’ as they liked to call it, had the same inter-service rivalries, petty politics, and undying loyalty present in any organization of professionalism and veterancy. They also got drunk together. The place for doing this on Mern was a sprawling saloon called The Hull Breach. The sign was a vid, on repeat, of the implosion of the Iris Salamander that the Standards had helped bring down, back when they’d had an industrialized planet and a fleet worth speaking of. It was a fun place, and the décor was both comfortable and weaponizable.

Kia was looking forward to letting off steam. Her mate (she did in fact have one) was still cooling his heels in Airharbor, so the best she could hope for tonight was a friendly barfight with an army man and the sacrifice of some brain cells to alcohol-induced oblivion. Her easy smile froze tight to her face as she saw that the Hull Breach was not in fact filled with roaring crowds of drunk Standards, but quiet groups drinking and talking in hushed, respectful tones. The reason for this was a tall, extremely elderly man still wearing the Dathic auxiliary uniform after all these years. Old Commodore Felix Lewiston greeted the marines with a weary smile. At a hundred twenty, his hair was starting to turn.

Kia snapped crisply to attention, echoed slightly more sloppily by her troops whose animated and vaguely scatological conversations died away as soon as they barged in behind her.

“No need, folks,” said the salt-and-pepper bearded man. “I hate to do this to you on leave, but I need to borrow you, Kia. Your boys will be fine, I’m sure; the veto has their billets pre-programmed.”

The commander smiled, inwardly screaming. “Commodore, if they make it back to their billets, something would be deeply wrong indeed.” She turned on her heel, shouting out, “Ten-hut, Egrets!”

“YAH!” they cried back in unison.

“You’re under direct orders to storm the Commodores’ HQ if I’m not back in two.”

“Suuuure thing,” said Trey, already slipping in his earbuds to listen to more faithcasts. Jem and the others made similarly sarcastic remarks as they sauntered towards the bar.

Felix turned towards Kia. “It’s nice to see you again, Ki.”

“Aw shucks.” She smiled ruefully, softening her displeasure without hiding it. “After giving me such a fond farewell with a demotion and a transfer, I was beginning to think you didn’t love me anymore.”

The entrance to the veto-roof was through a trap door, and Felix groaned as his old knees took the ladder steps. “You know,” he huffed, “most of us on the Council don’t blame you for what happened on Darklern.”

Kia laughed out loud at this. “Oh, I get it now! When Karston was Commodore I had to sit in a cramped little lifeboat prepping for damned vacuum warfare, but now that he’s lit out to the Basin with Janos and his crew, all my sins are waaaashed away.” Her cultured Dathic accent started to slip into something a little more Standardite.

“You blew up his veto,” deadpanned Felix.

“He tried to RAPE a girl,” shot back Kia.

“Then she should have spoken up! You’ve always been too honest for your own good. That’s why you’re not a Commodore. You might still be in time, if you learn some common sense.”

She breathed a sigh of relief as their boots crunched across the gravel of the roof. Becoming a Commodore was her second worst fear, behind being drummed out of the fleet entirely. She’d been worried for a moment that that was why Felix was here.

“I think I’ll keep the honesty, sir,” she replied.

“Thought you’d say as much. Anyhow,” Felix continued, “You’ll have a bit more leave than you expected, once you get your new orders.”

The Commodore’s veto was a nice piece of work. Shiny, with sliding doors and everything, it looked pretty foreign by the make of it, thought Kia. They climbed in and the thrusters auto-engaged with a pleasant hum, a far healthier sound than their shoddy old standard-issue rig.

“And who says I’ll go along with your scheme?” said Kia. “I like the Egret.”

“The lifeboat?”

“Finest lifeboat in the sky, I always said. And I’ve grown fond of the boys. They fight hard…or plan to, at least.”

The Commodore scratched his beard. “You’ve always had an independent streak, but despite it you’ve followed orders, even when you had a dozen good chances to leave. And some might’ve followed you, besides.”

At this, she almost looked ashamed. Probably remembering Darklern, Felix pondered.

After a short silence, Kia replied, “Iris or Hiders or worse’ll kill us if we don’t hang together and act civilized.”

The Commodore smiled that grim half-smile.

Before long, they floated over the campus of New Port Elric Agricultural and Mechanical University, its construction funded by the moon-men in return for the Standards’ forbearance. “Pretty,” said Kia, at the faux-Dathic architecture. “I like that…whatsitcalled, paving. Probably not worth a civil war, but we have those anyways.”

“It’s as close to a future as we’ve got, Kia. If we still have one.”

They landed on the strange paved ground, in a square surrounded by buildings, and a cluster of soft and useless looking people gathered around the veto to ask if the Commodore needed anything. As if he wouldn’t holler for it supposing he did. For the sixth time that day, Kia Common wondered if Laughin’ Janos Typical and his horde weren’t right after all. Then she remembered it was Janos.

They were ushered by the annoying crowd up a series of wide stone staircases into a high-ceilinged hallway in front a door made of some nice dark wood substitute. Felix opened it with a piece of twisted metal (what was this, Kia wondered, a fairy tale?) while grinning. “Easier to hack a digital lock than a real one these days,” he said, and they walked inside.

Nine men and women were sitting at a gigantic conference table, a beautiful piece of old wood likely salvaged from Standard itself. Most of them were gazing in a fiercely individualistic fashion at the sun, which was setting picturesquely over the foothills of the Elric Mountains at that very moment, shining through a wide bank of clear windows.

Kia rolled her eyes. The greybeards weren’t going to impress her, even if any one of them probably could have disarmed her in a flash. She’d left her standard-issue with the annoying crowd, but her hollowed out and mechanized left quadriceps contained a small collapsible armory. Some of these folks were probably more weapon than flesh, though, especially as their biological parts got old and creaky. At least they looked human. Standards never altered the face.

She recognized Felix’s younger half-brother Trevi, currently the head of the Council. He looked predictably like a younger, handsomer version of Felix. She also knew Commodore Toric by sight, though it was not strictly a Commodore as much as a priceless Dathic artifact, a cyborged human with petabytes of analytical software socked away in the prefrontal lobe. It eyed her utterly emotionlessly, gauging countless, soundless variables in its predictive matrices. Besides those two, and Commodore Suji Sujiston, the founder of a powerful new clan on Mern, the rest of the Commodores were unknown to her.

Kia saluted crisply, before saying, “Sirs and ma’am, thank you for the opportunity to spend my few precious hours of leave in the company of the Confederacy’s finest citizens.”

A few of the Commodores smirked, especially the Lewistons. One woman with an iron-grey braid that hung down to her waist frowned, though she’d already been frowning before. It seemed like most of the Commodores liked her, but by no means all. It was this female Commodore who verbally whiplashed her first.

“Commander Kia Common, we would appreciate your full and frank assessment of the current situation within the Confederacy.”

“Well, the fleet in being is still loyal, and you’ve got a real nice, uh…palace here, but things are sort of fraying at the edges, if you don’t mind me saying so.”

“We noticed,” said Felix. “We thought that making an example of Mal would bring the other rogues in line. Instead it seems to have made them more desperate.”

“Well, you can’t please everyone,” Kia said. “The real problem is that this Council, this isn’t right. Elric was our king, our god even if you want, but he worked through the Congress of Townships for all his decrees.”

“We’re not living on Standard anymore,” said the gray-haired woman. “The fleet holds everything together, so the fleet should rule. It’s just the simplest way.”

“Yeah, no,” said Kia. “All due respect, ma’am, but where’s this ‘ruling’ coming from? The fleet is our pride and joy, but it’s the instrument of the people, not the other way around. There are some bad men down in the Basin, but there are some good ones, too. You could kill them all without talking, but is that really the Standard way?”

There was silence around the table.

“While successful by most matrices of military performance, the diplomatic fallout from the death of Mal Reyn, combined with other anecdotal data, predicates a high likelihood that the quelling of the Basin rebellion will simply cause another rebellion, and another, until the core regions of the Confederacy fracture into her constituent planets,” said Toric far too quickly.

“The brain is right,” said Kia. “Not to mention, you killed a lot of Mernt who didn’t even fight back.”

“The commanders in charge of that particular operation have been relieved,” said Commodore Trevi smoothly. “It took us a while to find a replacement for the captain of the Second Army, but I think we might have found her…” He grinned, handsomely.

Kia sighed deeply. “I try and convince you that a diplomatic solution is the only path to peace, and you give me the Aay Team?” Grimaces around the table at the usage of the Second Army’s unofficial name.

Felix said, “You’re a resourceful commander, as you proved during the first landings on Oia. Our orders are for you to solve the Basin situation as cleanly as possible. If that can be done without violence, then so be it.”

“Like Janos will go down without a fight,” said the gray-haired woman.

“We like that you’re adaptable,” said Commodore Suji. “We could find a toady who’d follow our orders to the letter and refuse to fight, or a bullheaded outrider just as likely to join the Basin as defeat them. But we trust you to make the right choice.”

“Above all, we don’t want another massacre,” said Trevi. “The Csserians might be soft as pudding, but they have enough money to buy a war if more Mernt get killed.”

“Yeah, okay, it’s important, and I’ll do it,” said Kia.

“Then congratulations, Captain,” said Commodore Felix.

The newly-promoted officer began to count off on her fingers. “But. I want to be able to keep my men. And reorganize the army. And your Council has to be willing to make some serious concessions. If you want the Basin back without bodies flying everywhere, you’re gonna need to bribe the hell out of them, and also give them some high-minded concessions like a planetary council or some useless piece of government crap like that.”

“We’re open to reforming the government,” said Felix evasively.

“Damn right you are. One last question, sirs. Am I going to be court-marshaled if this goes wrong?”

“Nothing nearly that official,” said Suji, smiling.

“Great.”
 
Sorry about the delay, but the story provided a more complete explanation of my leadership's plans than I could fit in my orders. :<

Uh, I won't be back from work until 12pm GMT or so. But I'll gladly delegate it to qoou if it must be done then.
 
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