Sunday, December 15, 2019

On Complacency

[ Written in-character ]

When I was a contractor for the Federation Navy I met a veteran of the Federal Marines in a bar while my ship was undergoing repairs. He spoke about how the State Peacekeepers sometimes grew complacent when they'd held a system or planet in the warzone for too long. Something about a long period of relative peace drives men to start getting careless; they lose vigilance. So when the Federal Marines moved into the system after months of State occupation, the Peacekeepers were not so much caught off guard as they had forgotten how critical it was to be on guard.

Gate camps aren't as common as they used to be in my experience. There are a few systems where the camps are frequently seen (see: Rancer pipe) but the nature of gate camps has evolved to some degree. Gone are the combat battleships and battlecruisers of old who would await in a system with nary concern over sentry guns. Replacing them are Strategic Cruisers and Battleships fit with smart-bombs looking to score an easy kill on traveling capsuleers and their lightly armored frigates, shuttles, and the like. This in mind, my interest immediately piqued when Commander Sparre called out that there was one of the older style gate camps in the Resbroko system situated on the Hror gate.

The nature of the gate camp isn't as interesting as its choice of location. Pirates are clever. They know that those entering low-sec systems from their hi-sec entryways are often not expecting to be caught except in highly trafficked areas such as the Rancer pipe. This camp was located in the Tiat constellation, which is intriguing because Resbroko has two hi-sec entryways through Hror and Amo. Both of the gates to these systems are close to one another and make for an easy transition if one but knows where the prey is coming. Though Amo does have another entryway into low-sec through Auner, one must still transition into the greater whole of the warzone through Resbroko despite.

The composition of the camp was fairly simple, but peculiar in that it was mixed in effect: A Tempest which was fit for shield tank and its associated Scythe to provide remote shield boosting. Joining the pair was a Prophecy battlecruiser, Ashimmu cap-warfare cruiser, two Exequrors for remote armor repair, and a Maulus Navy Issue for tackle. Presumably the camp was composed of what was available on hand rather than any particular doctrine. The Scythe and Tempest did not compliment the rest of the gang, so stood out on their own with little in the way of support. This benefited us as it meant that we could focus on the main group without much concern for the other two.

To combat the gang we brought our own mix of ships that on the surface looks unorthodox, but largely made sense in its effect: A Leshak battleship and Drekavac battlecruiser armed with heavy damage capability, a Vigilant for tackle, a Curse and neutralizer-fit Algos for counter cap-warfare, and a Cerberus armed with Rapid Lights and a Cormorant to handle small craft. The combination covered all ranges of what we were dealing with without the need for additional logistics support. All of our ships were well capable on their own, but together made for a fierce fighting force.

We decided to make our approach from Amo as it was quite close to the Hror gate which the camp was situated on. They did not know the entirety of our composition. Early on we had split the force to approach from multiple directions as to not outright scare them off with a fight they knew they couldn't take, only to come back after we had turned in for the night.  We learned upon our transit to the system - either by coincidence or because the camp had a scout in Hror - that the group had moved to catch us on the Amo gate. In this, they had every opportunity to leave, but chose to stay, but more on that later.

Commander Sparre announced that the fight was on and told us to jump through the gate. We entered and discovered that Sparre's Leshak had already removed both Exequrors - they were stationary and as such provided easy targets for the intense weaponry of the Triglavian battleship. With the main group's logistics support taken out of the picture, we set our list of priorities: The Ashimmu first, to negate its ability to provide cap warfare, followed by the damage dealing Tempest and its sibling Scythe. The Prophecy was reserved for last and the Maulus Navy Issue was considered a non-issue as it was not fitted with weaponry.

My initial target was actually this Maulus as my Cerberus was specifically designed for these light craft. In addition, removing the additional tackle from the field would allow the rest of our fleet to evacuate if hostile reinforcements or other pirates decided to join the fray. As it already had damage from the Leshak, it was a quick kill. The rest of the pieces fell into place and we did not take any losses due to both the co-ordination and... perhaps a little bit of luck. As we would later discover, several of the pilots were closely linked and experienced mechanical failures upon our arrival. In essence: Their luck finally caught up with them.

The moral of the story is that this particular group had forgotten that there are always going to be those who will come to destroy them. They grew complacent. They expected easy kills and in exchange became easy kills themselves. Pirates should take heed of these words, as the moment you begin to feel that certain smugness - that certain air that you are invincible... You will quickly be reminded that you are just as human as anyone else.


Saturday, December 7, 2019

A Lesson in Spatial Awareness

[ Written in-character ]

"Always expect reinforcements" was a lesson I learned early on as a capsuleer. It's a lesson that has stayed with me as long as I've been a combat pilot and I expect to lose my ship in almost every fight. As early as YC112 out in the fringes of Pure Blind I became aware of "hot-drops". Those times have since changed due to rapidly changing technologies, but nevertheless it is still a valuable lesson to cling to.

Enter the Amarr-Minmatar Warzone - particularly Floseswin, a fairly large system with several stargates connecting to other areas. I'm fond of large systems as directional scan is less valuable. You can warp to an engagement from outside of directional and utilize the tunnel-vision experienced by enemy combatants already engaged to surprise them. There is no more invigorating sensation than landing on an acceleration gate leading into a warzone facility and taking the gate, knowing that on the other side the opposing force is likely too focused to notice your arrival.

When pilot Elsebeth Rhiannon reported that she was engaged by a hostile Kestrel with the Amarr Empire, I was approximately 27AU away and aligned to the gate in my Incursus. I entered warp immediately and took the gate on landing with a rush of adrenaline, but by the time I landed Elsebeth had already dispatched the Kestrel with volley after volley of artillery fire.

I don't readily know if pilot Brynjar Eldr was already on the field upon my arrival, but I know they were there when I checked directional and noticed a Nergal - one of the newer hybrid vessels. The Nergal is a strange ship. A hybridization of the Triglavian Damavik and the Gallente Enyo, one would expect that I would be familiar with such a thing considering my history flying Federation-made classes. Still, the mechanics of the ship largely elude me. I was flying an Incursus, after all; I was flying the precursor to Enyo. However, with such a focus on utility, Triglavian ships are a mixed bag. 


I didn't have much time to consider the engagement when the Nergal landed on grid with us. 

The typical tactic of the Incursus is akin to the Enyo in many ways: Get close, and apply all of your wrath in the form of antimatter. The Nergal was plate-fitted and had the holy trinity of tackle: Scram, Web, Microwarp Drive. The propulsion module is largely useless however when a counter-scrambler is applied. Even more so when a webifier is used in tandem. The ban of any ship against antimatter charges is being a sitting duck. 
 
The Nergal was a mere five kilometers away. 

At that distance, it's near impossible to avoid the application of propulsion dampening. Being plate-fitted didn't benefit the Nergal at all in this regard. Within a moment I had it pinned down and its only option was to engage me, leaving Brynjar, flying a Thrasher destroyer, all the luxury of movement and application of artillery cannons. 



I lost the Incursus, and Elsebeth would lose her Rifter (I am not sure the details as to how), but the Nergal may have forgotten this golden rule previously mentioned. Pilot Miyoshi Hai arrived not long after in another Thrasher - this one autocannon fit. No amount of plates on a Frigate-class vessel can survive that sort of onslaught.

And so the war moves on: One more pirate having lost an expensive, experimental ship, and unity prevails as the victor.  



Sunday, November 5, 2017

Heat

Submitted for the Pod and Planet Eve Fiction Contest on November 5th, 2017.




Cradling the metal container of his coffee, Leucious lifted the steaming cup to his lips and inhaled the distinct aroma. He shook his head abruptly as the powerful aftertaste punched the back of his throat, fetching a sizable amount of sugar in response. Gently chiming, his apartment door alerted him to a visitor, and he began toward the door with a quick adjustment of his robe. “Uhhm… Hello. Do I know you?” Leucious inquired, shifting the drink to one of his cheeks for storage. “Mister Ackadash, I am Mihrandaa Lebonosk – Quafe representative,” The darker skinned woman gave an unnatural smile, bearing unrealistically white teeth. Leucious blinked several times and glanced about his surroundings, making a quick note of the dismal display of his living quarters. Despite the detritus, he gave a wave of his hand in response and began to make his way back into his quarters with the woman in tow. Circling his new thermochromic dining table, he set the steaming cup of coffee its surface and started off toward the kitchen. “Care for something to drink?” Leucious asked, fetching a glass in preparation. “I will have to politely decline.” Briefly widening his eyes in a hidden display of dismissal, he pivoted on his heel with a simper. Settling down onto the bench seating of his dining room table, Leucious gestured for her to take a seat. Quietly, the eccedentesiast settled down with her hands on her thighs, straight postured. Still steaming, his coffee had begun to discolor a ring in its proximity on the thermochromic table, the temperature offset from the beverage shifting its colors. “If I am to be blunt, we suspect that you have been stealing materials and assets from the corporation for your own interests.” She accused. “I don’t.” “An expected defense, but we have evidence, Ackadash. Several eye-witness testimonies, camera drones have spotted you outside of normal work premises during labor hours, and you have shown a marked reduction in performance.” “So, my co-workers hate me, I took some bathroom breaks, and you’re only now noticing that I’m becoming disinterested with your dead end job. Not sure how that makes me a criminal, Mihleena.” “Mihrandah,” She calmly corrected. “Mihrandah, whatever. Look, if you’re here to give me my termination papers, you could have spared yourself the trip and sent it to my datapad,” Leucious snapped back. “Quite the contrary, Mister Ackadash, we’d like to offer you a promotion.” Leucious stared blankly at the woman for some time before his eyelids slowly fluttered shut, drifting away in his thoughts. His brows hung low, bunched together as he tried to make sense of the logic. Canting his head sidewards, he threw his hand up in confusion and let it lazily fall back to his side. Shaking his head, he finally opened his eyes with a single raised brow. “In what world does that make any sense, Mihrandah?” He questioned. “We believe it will ‘jump start’ your ambition to work for us again.” “You’ll have to excuse me if that sounds somewhat errant.” “It is a bit unorthodox, yes, but nevertheless the powers that be at Quafe believe that this opportunity will afford you a certain…” She paused, pushing some of the trash off of his dining table to the floor, “Push.” Leucious lifted to a stand, shaking his head with a solemn groan, gesturing toward the door. Shifting his robe to cover himself, he held his beverage close as he awaited for her to take her leave. In the wake of his seated position, the table - likely the most expensive asset he had - left a discolored imprint of his ass from where he was seated. Accompanying the signature was a simple circle that outlined a much deeper color where his drink was. “Very well, Mister Ackadash, we will file your termination papers immediately forthwith, as you have declined the Quafe Corporation’s lavish offer,” She explained, lifting to a stand. Out of the corner of his eye, he noticed something peculiar in that she did not leave a print on his table. He narrowed his eyes briefly, confused, pondering what the meaning of it were. “No body heat?” He inquired, puzzled. Suddenly overcome by a sharp pain in his abdomen, he gasped, and his eyes went wide, blinking rapidly. Slowly, he turned to face her as she twisted the knife in his gut, feeling the cold of her hand he fully realized that she was not at all human. “Should have accepted the promotion, Leucious.” 




Fractured

Submitted for the Pod and Planet Eve Fiction Contest on November 5th, 2017.

Cover Art by Nomistrav





Date: YC118-XX-XX
Time: Unknown
Somewhere in Delve

Cold. 

Staring at the ceiling with a distant, catatonic gaze, the corpse’s eyes seemed to have a glassy appearance. Hanging slightly ajar in a lazy, almost relieved state, the body’s mouth was slack against the clammy, blanch flesh, droplets of sweat still running down its face. The unprepossessing mass retained its death stare, and was a familiar sight to the Khanid, yet it unnerved him, as the body was not congruent to his own.

Unceremoniously pulled away from its standing posture, the body left watery blood that trickled down from the released needles in spattered, round puddles on the floor. Seemingly far too fluid, the crimson liquid had an unnaturally bright hue under the light that hung in the center of the room. Illuminated like a beacon, the Blooding Stand contrasted heavily against the shadows cast in the room’s corners.

Discarding his previous husk into a nearby chute, the bulky Blood Raider enforcers then moved to grab the Khanid man. Submitting to their firm apprehending, he didn’t struggle in the slightest - rather, he couldn’t. Lifted by his armpits, the workers set his torso onto the mount and fastened his abdomen and shoulders to its surface. He could see his reflection in a specially placed mirror: a limbless torso strapped to the stand in the surrounding mist, preventing any hope of escape. 

Beneath the overhang of the stand, a woman approached and gazed up at him with a routine intent. Lifting what meager portion of his upper arm was still there, she slid the needle into the brachial artery, fastening it in place with a small adhesive. In response, he gave a gentle groan, swallowing dryly.

“Cold, huh?” The woman stated in a pseudo-compassionate voice.

The Khanid man turned to look at her with ice-blue eyes, his chapped lips pursing. The two exchanged a brief stare before the woman continued with her duties and inserted several more needles into the remains of his arms. A veteran of the long affair, Oberyn knew all too well what their purposes were. They were designed to exsanguinate him over the course of hours, or days, or perhaps weeks. He never knew exactly how long.

He felt weak; fatigued for the entire duration of his lengthy bloodletting. Just as the ritual draining of his blood kept its schedule, so too did the continuous fantasies of escaping, too befuddled to fully realize his situation by the lack of blood; the lack of limbs. He wondered why Tairei Namazoth, so high in her position, would personally conduct the Blooding, but never bothered to ask despite the fact that his host provided him with answers to all of his questions. A sad commissary to his captivity in the Blood Raiders station, yet she had questions of her own.

“Do you love me?” Tairei inquired with a wolfish grin, running her index finger along his abdomen.

“N-no…”

“I took you in, dearest Ghost. You should love me, after all I've done for you - after all we’ve done for you. What did you do as an Uhlan, Ghost?”

“G-gun for hire… It’s cold…”

“So, just a mercenary, then? That attachment you were part of when we found you and cooked your Slaver Hound was, what, just a paycheck?”

Lowering his head and grinding his teeth, Oberyn’s eyes danced back and forth, his brows lowering and bunching together, clearly distressed.

“Right, the dog is a touchy subject - forgot. Eh, we’ll come back to it later,” Tairei said, shrugging.

“Why do you keep me alive?” Oberyn weakly questioned.

Glancing sideways, Tairei placed her hands on her hips in thought.

“You know, I usually don’t take prisoners. Thankfully your friends supplied us with enough biomass, but if Blooding was the only goal, why would we keep you alive, dearest Ghost?”

“I…”

“Well, I don’t want to spoil the grand reveal so - here, hold this,” Tairei stated, holding an apple out to him.

Lifting his head in tiredly, Oberyn eyed the apple, confounded, before he turned his attention to her. Lips pursed tightly together in a sheepish grin, Tairei struggled to hold back her laughter as she pushed the apple against his mouth. The Khanid dubiously accepted the gift of food, biting down on it with his incisors. In spite of his predicament, she continued her line of questioning, forcing him to speak out the sides of his mouth.

“I’ll need you to stay a little more lucid during these little counseling sessions, okay, love?”

“Howh long hagh I gehn heah?”

“Going on four or five months, now, I think.”

“Whah..?”

Tairei pulled up a chair and set it down in front of her with the back facing him. Straddling it, she settled down and crossed her arms on the chair’s back as she spoke, “It’s okay if you don’t remember it all. The cloning process we’ve been using isn’t an exact science, I’m told.”

“Haw ahe you schtill chloninh ne?” Oberyn asked, struggling to keep his teeth around the apple.

“Come now, Ghost, I already answered that question,” She toyed, before deflecting, “So, Cyber Knight, then Royal Uhlan. And at no point you ever sort of… Wondered what you were doing with your immortal life? Just bounced around from job to job, killing for money?” Tairei inquired.

“Yeag...” Oberyn replied, swallowing the excess drool as best he could.

“And that was your grand purpose in life? Kill shit, and drink yourself to death? It’s almost ironic, you know that?” She cooed as one of her enforcers approached, handing her a chalice. Sipping from the chalice gingerly, she never broke eye contact with Oberyn. As she lowered the vessel, Oberyn noticed a distinct stain of red on her upper lip and had a shocking revelation of her definition of irony. He dropped the apple from his mouth, and Tairei glared.

“Break his fucking jaw,” She directed.

***

Leather creaked as the belts tightly fastened Oberyn’s overly-skinny right arm to the table before him. Securing the buckles to prevent the mercenary-made-subject from escaping, the enforcer then slid the his fingers inside a metal contraption. He had never seen this new construct before, but knew it was going to hurt. Across the torturer’s table sat Tairei, who rested her chin lazily in her palm with her weight shifted to one side. As Oberyn’s ice-blue eyes gazed about the room to search for anything different - differences in the room often meaning new forms of pain - the dim light above them gently flickered. The floor was still covered in old, dried blood. His blood.

“Give him the apple,” Tairei insisted. 

“He’ll break my fingers again...”

“I don’t care what he’s going to do to you. Give. Him. The apple.”

Pain.

Lifting his gaze to the hooded man in his periphery, Oberyn fearfully considered the order. Only recently given his arms back with his most recent series of clones, he could barely remember how to use them. However, this fact did not stop the torturer from routinely breaking Oberyn’s digits when he failed to co-operate. Slowly, he began to lift his shaking, bruised left hand with the apple in his loose, weak grasp, and offered it to the figure beside him. The man took the apple just as slowly and immediately set to eating it, smacking his lips loudly with little concern for etiquette. Leaning close to Oberyn’s ear so he could hear the full extent of the wet crunching, the man practically stared through him.

“There, now was that so bad? Isn’t charity a good feeling?” Tairei said, delightfully clapping her hands together as she leaned forward. Miserably focused on the floor as Tairei stood and circled the table, Oberyn could barely hear her whisper through the onslaught of open-mouthed chewing in his ear. “Don’t make me clone you again, Ghost. I don’t take prisoners, and this is a luxury I’ve never offered before. Co-operate, and we’ll stop breaking you.”

Struggling to combat the persistent feeling of anxiety, he gradually came to grips with his own lability. Slowly, but surely, she was breaking him, and his cooperation began to feel unnaturally just. Whenever he played along with their perverse game, the easier they were on his body, but the threat of harm still lingered at all times. Such was the case with his fingers loosely draped between the metal bars of what he assumed was designed to simply tear them off. On good days, he only had to watch a holovid of life with the Sani Sabik - how the Empire was wrong, how they oppressed and disenfranchised their belief. One particular video was so often played that he could recall the words from memory, but he was beginning to have difficulty with each new clone, as though the words were on the tip of his tongue.

Conformity. 

Jumping in shock at the delicate touch of Tairei’s fingers against his cheek, he lifted his head to gaze up at her as she sat on the edge of the table. She was smiling, but he could feel something deeply wrong with the way her eyes lacked the gloss of a soul, revealing a liar’s compassion. Conflicted, Oberyn opted to savor what tenderness she offered as a brief reprieve as the torturer activated the device his hand was secured to.


*** 


Date: YC118-10-17
Time: 15:38
Delve
FWST-8 II - Blood Raider Logistic Support

“The Sani Sabik isn’t all about blood, sweat, and tears. Well, mostly about the blood, but you know,” Tairei said as she waved her hand in dismissal.

The pair walked along the market streets with a slow pace. Every person they passed seemed to briefly worship Tairei, who reveled in their admiration with a blissful look. The freckled woman walked with a certain bounce in her step, contrasting Oberyn’s more dutiful trudge, his head held low and glancing out the corners of his eyes.

Sprawling in every direction, the bazaar was quite loud as the many voices coalesced into a cacophony. Large, dim, red diodes illuminated the busy intersections amidst a galaxy of other lights, casting humanesque shadows against the kaleidoscope of color. Merchants sold their wares in expertly crafted booths designed to display, but curiously not secure.

The market itself bustled with foot traffic as each Sani Sabik practitioner happily frequented their favorite wares. Diverging from myth and rumor, the Blood Raiders were clearly still human at their core, made legend by the extremes of a select, violent minority that championed the image of their people. Whereas Oberyn might have guessed that many of them were young, few were, as Blood Raiders were seasoned in the science of medicine by consequence, living long lives as a result. Living long lives as normal denizens with normal ambitions, and normal routines.

Happiness. 

Yet even among the smiling faces and open product, freely available for prying hands, was an air of disciplined restraint. Upon closer inspection one could see the source: The stern-faced enforcers hidden among the crowds. Enforcers who not only upheld the law, but ensured that each member of their community paid their due in blood, whether by needle or by bullet. Enforcers that Oberyn was all too familiar with. Chief among them was Tairei, with whom Oberyn walked as though a courtier. Though he was obedient to her, he could not quite remember why. The perpetual sense of her having wronged him in some way was a troubling part of his daily life.

“The Empire will butcher their babies like livestock,” Tairei abruptly stated.

“What?” Oberyn replied, caught off guard.

“You know it’s true. You worked for them. It’s no secret that Tash-Murkon fielded Royal Uhlans for their deniable ops, and I’m sure you’ve done your fair share of harm to the world. You remember what they paid you to never speak of again, now imagine what they’d do to these children for free; out of spite. Thankfully the Drifters took care of that bumbling bitch from Sarum, but we need to be on even footing with our enemies.”

Oberyn lowered his head in thought. Grumbling uncomfortably under his breath, his brows bunched together, the former Uhlan shifted his attention once more to the people in the market. Indeed, he saw the children, content as they could be in such a hectic place. Amongst his earliest contracts as an immortal mercenary was an off the books defense of a destitute holder from a small Matari penal battalion. Grimacing at his memories, he realized that he once took pride in his platoon sending a band of Syrikos Hounds to kill suppressed Matari soldiers. He could only imagine what they could do to unarmed, innocent practitioners of the faith. 

Purpose. 

“What must I do?” Oberyn responded, looking at her with focus.

“You were a Cyber Knight - the foremost authority on encryption breaking.”

“Yes - but that was before I was an Uhlan. It’s been a long time since I’ve done anything of that nature.”

“True. We baited you on accident. With a jammer of all things,” Tairei giggled, while Oberyn let out a restrained sigh through his nostrils. “Oh come now, that was funny,” Tairei continued.

“Yes, I suppose so,” Oberyn deflected, not wanting to explain that he could not remember what she was referring to.

“We’re planning a big operation with our Guristas friends out in Pure Blind. A little something to shake up the balance of power in the cluster. The Big Four have had a little too much time in the sun, so we’re going to steal technology meant for a more powerful adversary.”

“Empyreans.”

“Precisely. We need someone who can break their encryptions, and that someone happens to be you.”

“When do we start?”

Admiration.

Cut off by the sudden alliance of noise into a singular voice, the two glanced over at one of the many holoscreens in the marketplace. Displayed on the screens was a room that Oberyn had become accustomed to: The Blooding Pit. His blood ran cold when he saw a shadowy figure step into the camera frame, not out of fear, but reverence, as though he had just witnessed the coming of an angel. His hair lifted up on end when he heard the voice of none other than the leader of the Blood Raiders himself.


***


Date: YC118-10-18
Time: 12:07
Venal
6NJ8-V VII - Moon 2  - Guristas Logistic Support


The group looked quite diverse despite being militaristic and uniform in appearance. Flaunting custom decals and callsigns on their suits, the pilots contrasted harshly against the officers, of whom most were veterans of the Caldari Navy, and conformed to a more traditional attire. Amongst the front of the group was one man who stood out, if only for his distinctly casual clothing. With prominent brunette brows and a devious smirk, the man looked as though he were plotting something at all times. It didn’t take him long to notice Oberyn, turning his head with a devilish grin.

Friendship. 

“Didn’t think you cultist psychos had anyone pretty in your ranks. Pleasant surprise, that,” The man stated, looking Oberyn over fluidly.

“Kaikka, this is Ghost. Ghost, is this Kaikka Peunato, a Gurista officer. You two will get along fantastically, he has a taste for you burly sorts. Maybe after this all over you two could be a thing,” Tairei stated, beaming, as though hitching them.

Oberyn shook his head, initially brushing it off as lascivious behaviour for its own sake. Never a pious man, the notion of prurient acts did not bother him as would be expected of those in the Amarr Empire or the Khanid Kingdom. Nevertheless, he turned toward Tairei with raised brow, as if unable to understand her practically encouraging the notion.

“Oh, one of those sorts,” Kaikka said, not losing his grin despite his brows narrowing slightly in judgement.

The Khanid’s behaviour activated a new side of Kaikka, who crossed his arms defensively over his chest and stared with a peculiar, almost disappointed demeanor. Oberyn matched Kaikka’s posture, canting his head sideward and gritting his teeth, his jaw muscles bulging.

“I’m not sure if you two are flirting or sizing each other up, but if you could stave off of either for now, that’d be great,” Tairei joked, rolling her eyes.

Rivalry. 

The lights dimmed and darkness enshrouded the collection of Sani Sabik enforcers and Gurista pirates. Tairei waved her hand at the crimson hologram that shown at the center of the room, showing a three-ringed station that looked vaguely Gallente in design. Kaikka gave a sideward, judging glance toward Oberyn as he presented himself in the light, and began speaking to the collection.

“Mordu’s testing facilities. We got a hint that Chemal Tech offloaded a bunch of their Upwell-branded blueprints here for safekeeping. Now, we’ve had a lot of run-ins with those do-gooders at the Legion, as most of my boys already know, so this’ll just seem like a routine skirmish for them,” Kaikka motioned toward a particular part of the station hologram. “We’ll attack here along the docking port, approaching from the the P5 Belt. That’ll focus their attention away while our Bloodies do their part.”

“Bloodies..?” Oberyn whispered to Tairei.

“Blood. Buddies. Bloodies.” Tairei winked, to which Oberyn groaned.

Kaikka continued, “Sarikusa has called for all Sani Sabik loyalists to bring on The Crimson Harvest. That’ll take the headlines and buy us plenty of time. While we hold off the Legion Lackeys, the Raiders will insert one of their operatives who will then steal the schematics that Upwell has in there using a Transneural Extractor, a little something we nabbed from the spooks at the Society of Conscious Thought. Raider’s will get first chance at whatever they find, and we’ll get our share afterward.”

“You will never stop bleeding for us.” 

“What?” Oberyn replied, shocked, with a puzzled look on his face.

“I didn’t say anything.” Tairei responded, raising her brow at him.


*** 


Time: 17:48

Low, thudding vibrations rippled through carbon-colored suits as they carefully lowered themselves to the exterior surface of the facility. Flickering azure sparks reflected off of the visors of each helmet that vigilantly stared as the metal hull began to melt. The scouring wasn't meant to fully burst the hull, but to act as a guideline for the secondary explosives that were already being secured in place.

Finally done, the figures gently stepped back into the looming black. Of all the dropsuits, only one stood out, bearing a single red handprint on the shoulder to indicate its bearer's status as a leader. He casually glanced at the golden filigree decorating the station’s walls, briefly scoffing in disdain at the pretentious display. The man gave a nod of his head to his companions, and with a jarring burst of soundless light the wall exploded outward. Objects, people, and anything that wasn't bolted down escaped in a flurry of decompression.

“We've started on the cloning facility,” The crackling, menacing voice spoke into the helmet.


*** 


Date: YC118-10-18
Time: 17:49
Pure blind
5ZXX-K V - M17 - On approach to Mordu’s Legion Testing Facilities

“About time. When Omir said ‘Rise Up’, he didn't mean next year, boys. Sending our precious Ghosty-boy in.”

The freckled girl removed her headset, setting it down carelessly as she turned about face. With a few empowered steps, she neared Oberyn’s dropsuited figure at the end of the Engraver-variant frigate’s cargo bay. Gently coaxing his arms to lift, she began to secure spare magazines and batteries to the attachments on his dropsuit before glancing up to him. Soon after, she procured a rifle from a nearby storage compartment and handed it to him, glancing up at his head. His helmet was open, exposing a disgustingly pale, hairless figure beneath that held little resemblance to anything human despite some distinct hints. The face of his combat clone.

“A face so ugly even God forgot you. Are you ready?” She asked.

“You know I hate when you call me Ghost,” Oberyn said, in an eerie, unfamiliar voice.

“Awhhh, does our little blood bag have feelings? Sorry, dearest, but you'll have to deal. I like it, and that's all that matters,” Tairei toyed, “Ghost.”

With an abrupt metal slam, Oberyn’s helmet snapped shut to cover his face. A flash of light in the optics ignited the HUD inside the helmet, readying a connection to the crudely joined Raider-Gurista Tac-Net system. Wincing as the suit began to graft to his spine, he could feel the metal and electronics intertwine with his nervous system. In an instant, he acquired a new addition to his senses, particularly the haptic feedback from the suit, which allowed him to feel the air around him through the iron colored armor plating.

Standing a solid meter taller than Tairei in her comparatively more human stature, the weaponized monster looked down at her with a stoic gaze from his helmet. Beneath the helmet his hairless brows pressed together as his eyes searched her gaze, pursing his lips in desperate hope.

Approval. 

Tairei swung about, grasping a sanguine glass and raising it to her lips, staining them. Careless as she were, a trickle of the crimson treasure ran slick down her chin. She cooed, savoring the taste as she lifted her hand, gently pressing the top of it against her lip. Briefly wondering if this repeated display were intentional, Oberyn considered that perhaps it was to remind him of his place. It did.

When Tairei’s eyes finally came to Oberyn, she dismissively waved her blood-smeared hand toward the door as she spoke, “Run along, now. I've an incursion to run on several borders; I've not the time to coddle you.”

Letting out a huff of air through his nostrils, Oberyn turned about face to step toward the doors leading out of cramped vessel and into the airlock. For a brief moment he felt pitiful, pining for the attention of a woman who was too busy to give him the affection he desperately craved. A moment alone - any moment alone together would be enough; like a fix for an addict.

Hissing air snapped him out of his daze, causing him to lift his attention to face the hermetically sealed door in front of him as his hearing began to dampen. He could visibly see the air rushing out of the doors as they slowly slid apart. Stepping forward, he felt the magnetic attraction of his boots lessen until he began to float outside of the shuttle, the full scope of the triple ringed station coming into full view against the backdrop of a beige moon.

Drifting into the black of space, Oberyn ignited the external boosters on his auxiliary dropsuit attachment with a grunt from the sudden recoil and in an instant he shot toward the testing facility. Beneath the menacing, teal colored eye of the Cloud Ring nebula, the Guristas’ distraction was well into effect. Explosions glimmered beyond the dim red glow of the system’s main sequence star reflecting off of the station’s walls.

Apart from several patrolling and transiting vehicles around the station’s exterior, his path inside was clear. Firing the breaching charge from his shoulder launcher, the small device spiraled outward toward the station’s wall at nearly double his inbound velocity. With a flash of light his entry way was violently formed. Ejecting the auxiliary attachments on his dropsuit to separate himself from the boosters. Igniting the inertial dampeners of his suit, he barely squeezed between the emergency shutters that sealed the now decompressed hallway, landing with a solid ‘thump’ of his magnetic boots attaching to the metal beneath the carpeted floor.

Hearing only his own labored breathing, he traversed the broken corridor of the dark internal super-structure. Strobing hazard lights illuminated his suit in a series of flashing images, giving him just enough visibility to see where he was going. Nearing the now closed blast doors that segregated the obliterated corridor from the rest of the station to prevent decompression, he examined a nearby panel. Grinning and scoffing at the archaic security system, the Cyber Knight made short work of the encryptions and bypassed the airlock entirely.

Confidence. 

“Despite all of Upwell’s and the Legion’s boasting, it seems that they’ve fallen prey to the greatest shortfall in security: Me,” He sarcastically proclaimed through the short range communicae.

“Ghost, shut up and do your job,” Tairei snapped back in a static fuzz.

Oberyn shook his head. Now safely behind the confines of the less wrecked part of the structure, he disabled his magnetic tether and opened his helmet to breathe the air, savoring the smell of spent explosives and ash. Darting into the shadows of a set of vertical pipes, he patiently waited as the Upwell soldiers rushed toward the exploded corridor. Breathing a sigh of relief as an acknowledgement that his experimental armor hadn’t shown on their sensors, he slipped behind them and made his way to the archives.


***


Adrenaline pumping through his veins, Oberyn desperately began to secure the cable to the back of his helmet. Injecting the input line inward, he gave it a firm twist to ensure that it was fastened before grabbing the other end and sliding it into the archival server. He was allotted only a few meters of space, but it was enough to work. Pivoting on his heel, he readied his rifle against his shoulder as the alarms began to flare, signalling his breach into the Upwell Consortium’s archives.

Above all, Oberyn needed to buy time. Every blueprint and schematic that Upwell stored in the database was downloaded indiscriminately. Slowing the process was his dropsuit, which acted as a bridge to extract the data and simultaneously inject it into his memory. Unnerving as the experience was, he was more concerned with his swaying aim, unsure of why he could not steady himself. Briefly, he became distracted with some distant memory - a memory of his hands being destroyed by Tairei. He shrugged off the thought in disbelief.
The door on the far side of the room opened abruptly and both Arkombine clones and Legion baseliners stormed into the room. Bracing himself, Oberyn smashed his finger against the trigger, spraying a wall of lead at the ensuing horde. Clouds of red hung in the corridor as several clones had immediately taken the brunt of his high caliber gunfire. Surviving the onslaught, the remaining responders took cover behind the wall, shouting at one another.

Breathing heavily and his pupils dilated, Oberyn’s mind danced between focusing on firing, questioning why he was panicking, and the glimmering sensation of the Transneural Extractor at work. Memories of a past life began to flash into being in rapid succession.

Burned bodies.

Shaking his head violently, he crouched down, placing his elbow on his knee in an attempt to steady his wavering hand. Seeing a flash of movement, he fired out of instinct, watching an unarmored guard fall to pieces from the rounds. Oberyn shouted at the top of his lungs, his eyes wild as he began to lose track of reality around him. The Arkombine soldiers, suspecting he was injured, mounted a fast offensive, but were shot down in due haste by the insane Khanid.

Destroyed limbs. 

Destroyed limbs. He focused and remembered. He remembered his arms being flayed; being drained. In the moment of revelation of Tairei torturing him for months, he lowered his rifle, his mouth agape in utter shock. Quarreling with himself, he became his own inquisitor, questioning if these memories were his, or someone else’s. Questioning how he could have forgotten such an important detail, he lifted his head just as the Arkombine soldiers began to fill his chest cavity with bullets.

Blood. 

Rapidly bleeding out on the floor with his back against the computer’s base, he could barely keep his head straight. The lingering tunnel vision and a constant sensation of hearing loss gave him an all too familiar feeling, but something felt missing. Scanning his arms for the needles that drained him, he found none - only blood-stained, marred armor plating. Rolling onto his knees, he struggled to lift his arm and feel for the cable connecting him to the database.

“Tairei…” He groggily whispered into his helmet as the Upwell security forces slowly neared.

“Got it, pulling you out now,” spoke an unfamiliar voice.

Abruptly, he felt a stabbing sensation in the back of his head - or perhaps the base of his neck - he could not tell. What followed was terror in the form of a feeling not unlike being sucked out of existence through a straw. Senses failing him, he felt the world turn to black, and felt reality draw quieter than he had ever experienced.

Silence. 


***


Voices.

“What about him?” A woman’s voice.

A man’s voice, “His memory is fractured pretty significantly. I did tell you it wasn’t an exact science, and not to push it. We just used a human being to transmit a shit load of data. It barely works for snatching pilots mid-battle, let alone someone with that much freshly injected memory.”

He opened his eyes and stared at the ceiling, puzzled. Questioning his death, he searched for the differences - differences meant pain. There were wires, cables, and all manner of machination attached to him. He wasn’t being drained of blood, but something else.

“Citadel schematics, but no point defense for it,” The woman uttered angrily.

“I suppose it will have to work,” The man responded with a chuckle.

Blueprints.

The crippling realization almost overwhelmed him. They had not rescued him, but the memories he carried.

Betrayal. 

They betrayed him, but he couldn’t even remember who he was.







Wednesday, November 30, 2016

Revenant: Behind the Scenes

Submitted as an addition to my 'Revenant' episodic series on April 13, 2015. 



Whew! Man, the amount of research and questions I had to ask to make sure I did this right. Was -ridiculous-.

At any rate, so, I wanted to post this episode about a week ago but decided to hold off while I consolidated feedback from several sources. None more important than CCP Falcon who graciously accepted my request to go over it and check for lore inconsistencies. I didn't think I had any because the story is so vague and doesn't really reference any hard-core, set-in-stone bits of the lore, but I'm glad to have gotten his seal of approval, not to mention his interest in future parts!

Character design was honestly the hardest part for me because I wanted enough characters to offer a lot of depth to the story but I didn't want to overload the reader right from the first Episode. So, the three main characters (four if you include BOOZER) aren't all that are in the story, just enough that mattered in the first chapter.

I wound up spending an entire weekend at work just screwing around and fleshing out each character and going over their stories in my head. I have a binder hidden away somewhere in my bedroom containing all of their descriptions, their histories, etc. I -REALLY- hope that they are interesting and lovable enough that it was worth all the effort =P

On the topic of character design, I even took some time to make what I imagine the characters to look like in Eve's character creator, barring some inconsistencies like Pontrovol's long hair since it's not an option in the char-gen =X

Chamilie Ettivala

 Pontrovol "Tricks" Ranchin

 Balris Aginghes

I probably spent the next huge amount of effort just getting the opening right. A lot of weight goes into the first chapter but the first sentence is the make or break. A person can lose interest all together with the first sentence so I wanted to get that done correctly. As such, I decided to flash forward from a scene -MUCH- later on in the story and open with a bang, enveloping the reader in mystery as to what the hell got her into that place. 

Of course, this is my nature, considering that it's how I opened up in -both- of my fan fiction submissions for the Pod and Planet Fiction Contests, one in 2012 and the other last year in 2014. It's sort of a running theme for me and I think it's worked out really well so far. 

The idea behind the story is to show the readers what's going on in Esesier in a new light with a chosen demographic being Eve Online players. Maybe not so much players who are hard-core lore nerds but just players in general. I filled the story and timeline with a lot of drama, tension, thrills, and action to keep the reader entertained but at the same time I'm not going to gloss over specific bits with exposition. This is mostly because I really hate exposition and I want the readers to truly be shown what is happening instead of just being told. 

At the same time, I really wanted to show the players that their actions matter in an indirect way. I tried to keep the story as close to reality as possible when it comes to the Eve universe and even went so far as to find the temperature of the planet the story takes place on and convey that in the first episode (it's cold as shit by the way!). Further more I even took a look at how many moons that planet has, what the general size of it is, etc. 

Beyond that though I even went ahead and looked at the Occupancy history of the system! I plan on including that in a more direct way in the future but it's a -critical- theme in the story series as a whole as Capsuleers and the Empires warring over the system and the planets as a whole goes a long way toward antagonizing the local populace. I've always sort of wondered why the people in these places were always so black/white (or in this case, Green/Blue) in their loyalties and never stood up to either faction. 

At any rate, that's all I have for this little behind the scenes bit! Be sure to stay tuned and check out the next episode, it's gonna get -crazy- :D 

Revenant

Submitted as a personal Eve Online fan fiction intended as an episodic series on April 13, 2015. I don't intend to ever finish this one, as integral parts of it were blended into another story later on, though I may actually do so if the inspiration strikes me.  






“Even after all of this, he can’t look me in the eyes.”

Chamilie Ettivala stared out across the luxurious, sterile office space through a green, hazy liquid and slate glass at the Gallentean admiral settled quietly in his seat. The sound, already an eerie silence, further muffled. Only the sound of her breathing filled the void. For a brief moment, the man lifted his gaze to her, only to immediately turn away and re-focus his attentions on the data-pad in his hand. The man swiveled in his chair to face the window, the decorative back of his seat facing her.

For the while her only solace, apart from the persistence of her own willpower, was the luxurious sight of the Decon Fronds spreading their petals to the morning light shining through the window in thick rays. Dust particles swayed through the beams, reflecting in soft, brief shimmers. The sight of the flowers blooming was a daily gift that reminded her of the delicate plant’s inherent beauty. More morbidly, it reminded her of vaguely of how long she had been in her prison.

The admiral stood and walked across the room. He waved his hand gently over a brightly lit pad on the wall. Soon after, the metal shutters of her glass box began to close, cutting off all sight to the outside world. In total darkness, she now could only hear the bubbles rising from the base of her rebreather that loudly pulsed in rhythmic pattern. 

Once again, she was left with only her thoughts and memories.


#


Region      Constellation System
Placid Amevync Esesier

YC 115 (Late Prevernal)

Recessed lights ignited along the bottom of the bedroom walls in straight, solitary beams that illuminated the tan and black metal panel surfaces. The dimly lit orange lights cast over the room in an eerie fashion. Coalescing with the lights was a unique soothing experience provided by pre-programmed glows beneath the floor panels in the form of preset patterns of orange waves. It was not unlike the nebulous dance of light shining through water at the base of a pool. 

An almost ear piercing chirp screamed from the bedside table of Chamilie Ettivala, who lazily extended her arm and slapped at the source until the noise ceased. The woman rolled upward with her thin blankets draped around a single shoulder, her messy raven hair disheveled. Her silver eyes groggily trailed over the room with a certain look of disdain.

The woman realized fully that she was awake to begin her usual work ritual and without wasting time began to lift her feet to action. Each soft, fleshy patter of her bare feet rang out in the room with a gentle echo. The same dim orange lighting rippled around each foot in aesthetic display. She gave a wave of her hand over a panel recessed into the wall that caused a holographic display to show, providing several options of food recipes. Though limited in scope she found one to her liking and selected it. In response, the projection greeted her with a flashing red and black striped overlay.

“What?” She muttered, tiredly as her eyes trailed over the projection with a newly found alertness. 

She searched with weary intent for the reason behind the error and quickly found a set of yellow characters that explained the predicament: “INSUFFICIENT FUNDS”. Ettivala lifted her hand and placed it to the side of her head with a groan, shaking her head. She began to cover her naked body with a tan jumpsuit, complete with a “LAI DAI” logo on the shoulder. 

As she approached the door leading out of her small apartment a scanner traced over her body with a series of lasers before making a three-tone sound. A computer generated phrase followed:

“Lai Dai thanks you for your service. Have a safe work experience!”

As if by sheer instinct, Ettivala rolled her eyes and continued out of the apartment and into the hall where other workers – similarly dressed in their uniforms – began to leave their assigned quarters and make their way toward an industrial lift. 

She stood among her co-workers, giving a double take toward a scruffy looking man at the back of the lift. The word ‘PONTROVOL’ written across his shoulder further emphasized her familiarity with him, which she used as a target of her elbow to gently nudge the man and gain his attention. 

The man turned toward her with a smirk crossing over his features, showing a set of pearly white teeth beneath the thick reddish-brown stubble of several days past shaving. The man’s long hair was tied back into a ponytail, neatly, and freshly washed. His green eyes almost shimmered as they glanced about aimlessly.

“Hey, Tricks, you have any issues getting breakfast this morning? Mine said that I’m broke.” Ettivala inquired softly, just loud enough to be heard over the lift’s gears cranking.

“Hmm, no – no problems on my end; got my usual. Insufficient funds, huh? That is a real kicker. Don’t you get paid more than the rest of us?” Pontrovol responded, his green eyes focusing on the shadows of each floor the open-faced lift had passed.

“Hardly, you remember a few months ago when they offered me that promotion? I turned it down. They gave me the promotion anyway – got all the responsibilities, just none of the pay. Apparently that went to some new hotshot working supervision.”

“I wouldn’t worry too much, Millie, we’re likely all going to be looking for another job soon anyway. I hear the warzone is moving a bit closer to Esesier these days and you know how Corporate likes to cut their losses and lay everyone off before that happens – especially those of us who were Federation citizens. It’s sort of like unpaid vacation when you really think about it!” 

“Sure. Cut us loose; still charge us for the room and board. Listen, I’m going to run to the bank and figure out what this is all about before I head up there. Try to stall the boss for me?”

“Will do.”


#


The Planet of Esesier VIII, locally known as Calcadia, was generally very cold for a temperate planet. Due to this, Livestock and subsequent agriculture wasn't as high as many other temperate worlds but the planet was well known for what it did provide. Main exports consisted primarily of explosives manufacture, garnished by the production of military grade weapons along with other designs primarily for infantry use. 

Each district contributed to one another through vast traffic lanes. Outside of industrial expansion, the planet had a ripe cultural significance for it's constellation and was well known for the production of arts blending Caldari and Gallentean themes. This had changed as the war was brought closer to the planet in the dead-end system. 

The Cepsa District was reputably the most industrious with a heavy degree of manufacture going toward Capsuleer and Empire interests alike. The Lai Dai Corporation still maintained a presence in some of the districts that were controlled by State Peacekeeper forces, having owned the development rights to the planet since the auction over occupied systems concluded. Even though the Federal Defense Union had thoroughly secured the space above, the Lai Dai Corporation would continue development until the very last opportunity to leave, as they always had.

The district was lightly populated as many had felt it necessary to leave with the constant state of flux between the two warring empires. The citizens who remained were either Federal citizens too stubborn to leave that had adapted or foreign workers from the Caldari State that had travelled in search of lucrative employment in the industrial sectors. 

Built in a circular fashion, the city was set inside a bowl-shaped valley between mountain ranges on all sides but the eastern edge where the ocean stretched as far as the eye could see. The center of the city were industrial refineries and manufacturing centers that were tightly condensed. High capacity residential buildings, such as the one where Ettivala and her companions had lived, bordered the outskirts of the city at the base of the mountains. Between the two different sectors were small businesses and grocers that provided needs and services, such as that of The Bank of Luminaire Vault’s planet-side establishment.

Ettivala briefly waited for the sliding glass door to open before entering the bank. Being directly connected the in-orbit station the system there was usually a slight delay in the transference of funds that was to be expected. Ettivala expected that this was the case and marched over toward the first employee she could sight. 

“Hey, listen, I don’t mean to barge in like-“ Ettivala began before being cut off by the employee.

“One moment please.”

“No, listen, I’m kind of i-“ 

“One moment – please.” 

“I’m late for work. Help me now and I’ll be out of your hair a lot faster, do you understand?” Ettivala finally mustered with a tinge of anger in her voice.

The bank resembled traditional Gallentean architecture with organic curves deliberate the building’s interior design. The air was fresh and cold, bearing a slight mint flavor that was otherwise unnoticeable if a person had not specifically been trying to find it. A corner of the main lobby was complete with a ‘Quafe’ vending machine though it seemed rarely used given its appearance.

Ettivala’s rushed demeanor clearly irritated the employee. The woman gave an exacerbating sigh and moved the holographic display to the side to address Ettivala directly.

“What can I do for you?” 

“I tried to get breakfast today and it said I had insufficient funds. I’d just like to know why and what I have to do to fix it.” Ettivala explained.

The employee shifted the holographic display in front of her once more and began to swipe her hand over it until she found Ettivala’s account. There was little hesitation in her response.

“You’re in the negative by about 389 Credits. Seems like a large sum of it went to the Lai Dai Corporation. You’ll need to pay off whatever it is you owe before your account is positive again, pending an overdraft fee of twenty-five credits and an additional five credits for every day that the fee is not paid.” The employee stated with a grumble, turning to look at Ettivala with a hardened stare.

“That’s impossible, I paid the rent already!” Ettivala responded emphatically.

“Ma’am, if you recall, you said that you would leave if I informed you why you had insufficient funds and what you had to do to solve it. If you would?” 

Ettivala shoved herself away from the counter with a shake of her head. She started toward the door when she began to feel a vibrating sensation on her wrist originating from the Lai Dai provided communicator. She briefly looked over the screen, aged and dusty from constant work in the fields, passed over several owners, and noticed that the message was from Pontrovol.

“Tried to stall him, Millie, but he’s in a particularly bad mood today… Look, uhh… You can stay at my place for a few nights but… Yeah. He said to leave the wristband in your quarters.” 

She could almost read his hesitation in the message itself but one thing was clear: she now found herself among the unemployed. For a moment she stood, silent. She tried to understand how the situation could have gotten so badly out of hand in what was still the morning. Sunlight peered over the crest of the mountains far past the edges of the Calcadia District. 

Ettivala ducked into a nearby alley upon leaving the building and slammed her back against the wall in defeat, sliding down its metal surface until she hit the ground. She buried her head into her hands and her shoulders began to heave, breaking down into a sob. She was well enough into the alley that no one would see her without specifically looking and this gave her a great degree of comfort to expel her emotions into one violent session. 

It was not until nightfall that she mustered the strength to return to the living quarters.


#


Ettivala arrived at Pontrovol's apartment just as the moonlight began to peer through the condensed alleyways of the outer city borders. She had weaned off the shakiness of her initial outburst even though her eyes were still puffy and red. Having dropped off everything that belonged to the Lai Dai Corporation she was clad in a black sleeveless shirt and pair of rugged pants lined with more pockets than seemed necessary; a fashion niche in the making. 

She gave a heavy sigh and waved her hand over the scanner embedded in the wall, looking up toward the top of the doorframe where the hidden camera system was installed. There was a brief pause before a soft three-tone sound rang out in unison with the door opening, a computerized voice speaking as Pontrovol was revealed. 

"Lai Dal thanks you for your se-se-service. Have a safe work experi-Have a safe work experience!" 

An awkward silence befell the two. Ettivala looked up at the source of the sound before looking back at the Ethnic Gallentean man with a raised, expectant brow. Pontrovol chuckled and rolled his shoulders in submission. 

"Technology to make a man immortal but we can't have a door greeting fixed and working proper the man stated with a humorous charm in his voice. 

I’m cold, Tricks. Let me in." 

The Gallentean let Ettivala into his apartment that was almost a mirror copy of her own prior to have to relinquish her lease on it. Apart from the few personal effects, there had been a single outstanding thing that had stood out about the room: A large drone situated uncomfortably in the corner between the wall and the foot of the bed. Ettivala recognized it immediately and gave a wave of her hand in acknowledgement. 

"BOOZER." She stated with a soft smile. 

The drone lifted with a flicker of lights across its carapace, almost as if it were a dog snapping to attention when hearing its name. The drone had a notable color scheme to it that was reminiscent of CreoDron manufacture with key differences in several panels that seemed to have minor differentiations in color and texture. Its overall structure was vaguely reminiscent of a Tristan class frigate with long mechanical tentacles extending from its rear that, for the moment, were coiled around its entirety in a waiting position. 

"He's had to be pretty quiet lately. Neighbors in the adjacent rooms are getting suspicious whenever I work on him." Pontrovol stated with a jut of his head in gesture to the drone's direction. 

"I can imagine. How've you managed to keep from being tracked down by CONCORD all this time anyway? I'm pretty sure CreoDron and CONCORD aren't too pleased with you for running off with experimental Al and modifying it to be -well somewhat sentient." Ettivala responded curiously.

In response to this, Pontrovol extended his hand behind the woman's ear and acted as though her were retrieving an item. The soft brush against her hair caused her to cringe and smile instinctively, trying to escape the ticklish sensation. The man rolled his hand in a flare of motion and presented it, palm up, with a small bluish-green flower that flickered gently before dissipating. A hologram. An age-old illusion that never seemed to die with the times. Ettivala felt a wash of flattery. 

"How do you think I got the moniker: Tricks?" Pontrovol "Tricks" asked, rhetorically. 

"Are you seriously explaining this away with space magic?" Ettivala inquired, scoffing. 

"What would the legend be without its mystery?" 

Ettivala stepped closer to the bed against the wall and sat against it, dragging her hand against the blankets gently. Her lips pulled with slight disgust as she felt small particulates of food, dirt, or any number of possibilities. She flicked her fingers to try to shake away the bits that stuck before looking up at him with a shake of her head.

“You definitely need a woman in your life, Tricks. That or someone to do some laundry once in a while.” She stated with a hint of humor in her voice.

“Oh, yeah? Well, you’re more than welcome to be that woman in my life.” 

“Uhhh – no, not happening.” Ettivala said with a smile, closing her legs against her clasped hands before looking away from the man.

“Whoa, what was that about? You find old Tricks that repulsive, eh?” 

“I’d ask how many diseases you were loaded down with but, what would the legend be without its mystery?” 

“Low blow, Millie, low blow.” Tricks said with a soft chuckle.

Tricks collapsed back into the bed with a heavy bounce that almost threw Ettivala onto the floor. He extended his arms upward and clasped his hands behind his head, staring at the orange wave-patterns that traced along the ceiling that glistened in his eyes. His lips pursed while his brows furrowed, deep in thought, before glancing at Ettivala.

“Something I didn’t really consider. You sleeping on the bed with me or on the floor with BOOZER over there?” 

“On the floor, over by the door in case I need to make a quick escape from a scruffy fugitive of the law who tries to make a move on me.” Ettivala said with a sharp jab at the man’s ribcage.

“Ahh! Well, fine by me, I’m not sacrificing my mattress though.” 

No sooner than Tricks made that statement did the loudspeaker flicker to life with a short chime of traditional Caldari patriotic music. A woman’s voice came on with an almost patronizing tone, like that of a customer service employee: insincere.

“Good evening, employees and contractors. As you all know, Federal Marines and State Peacekeepers have been combating one another in other districts for several months. As such, we have recently received information that the Federal Marines have gained extensive ground and are pushing Peacekeeper forces back to the Calcadia District. They are expected to be here within the next week.

Due to this, we would like to inform everyone that your safety is our greatest concern. On behalf of the Lai Dai Corporation, Esesier Division, this message is to notify all current employees and contractors that you are, until further notice, on unpaid leave.”

Tricks snapped upward like a mousetrap in response to the last few words, staring at the ceiling with wide eyes. The announcement ignited an uproar of yelling and screaming across the complex that could be heard through the walls. The volume of the loudspeaker continuing the announcement in the immediate room had been loud enough to drown out the protests. 

“Lai Dai wishes you luck in your endeavors but most of all we would like to express our deepest concerns toward your health and well-being. Despite this, all Lai Dai accounts are frozen until further notice in the eventuality of immediate necessity to protect corporate assets. 

All assets on loan to employees and contractors are to be left in your domiciles as the Lai Dai Corporation is retaining them until further notice. Please leave your wristbands on the bed and remove all personal effects from the premises. Thank you.” 

The sounds of dissent quickly began to spread to the halls as Ettivala and Tricks sat in silence. The drone began to stir in the corner and take itself closer to the door with its mechanical tentacles, lifting itself upward and placing a single synthetic limb against the door. After a brief moment, it twisted about and started over toward the bed where the two were with an erratic set of twitches. 

“It’s alright, BOOZER, just stay calm for a second, people are just scared.” Tricks explained, putting the drone at ease.

“So, it looks like everyone is in the same boat as I am now.” Ettivala stated, almost amused.

“Yeah, well, try not to say that to their faces. People need work and a lot of us were just scraping by as it were. We’re effectively unemployed and homeless now but I suppose that’s the downside with room and board being provided by your employer.” Tricks scoffed.

Ettivala lifted to a stand with a heavy sigh and crossed her arms beneath her breasts. She began to pace, idly, with her head low in thought. Tricks lifted as well but took a moment to remove his bracelet with a gentle rub against the red, imprinted skin from where the communicator had previously been. 

The man started over toward the recessed closet space and began to remove his things, tossing them atop of the drone, which seemed apathetic toward the menial task of carrying his belongings. As the two humans and single mechanical being gathered up belongings, they started toward the door. Ettivala glanced over her shoulder toward the man with a jut of her head in gesture.

“What are we going to do about BOOZER? You don’t think people will become a little anxious at the sight of a drone the size of a hound just roaming about?”

The drone, covered in clothes, began to retract its tentacles into its chassis, falling to the floor with a hard metallic thud. The lights began to flicker on its frame until dying out completely. Tricks extended a hand and grabbed ahold of an exposed handle on the back of the mechanical construct’s carapace, lifting it up like a tote bag with a grunt. His body noticeably leaned to one side with tensed muscles from the weight of the now dormant drone. Finally, Tricks covered the being with a large jacket, giving it rudimentary concealment. 

Ettivala raised a brow and slowly turned her head back to the door. With a wave of her only free hand over the recessed console, the door slid open and revealed the main corridor leading to the service lift. The hall had been packed to capacity with unemployed workers carrying their belongings any way they could. Some were more encumbered than others. Ettivala and Tricks, now carrying the majority of the man’s belongings, fell into line and boarded the service lift, observing the corridor of waiting individuals as they began their descent with the soft whir of grinding gears.


#


“What do you mean there are no jobs available? There has to be something.” Tricks inquired, his palm facing the ceiling with his brows lowered. 

“Sir, there really is nothing. All of the corporations are pulling assets and laying off workers because the warzone is moving closer to the city and the Capsuleers are relying mostly on automated workforces now. We simply have nothing available for new employees.” Replied the Taskforce Agent.

Ettivala kept to her seat in the lobby. She idly coiled a length of hair around her finger in repetition. As her eyes began to trail around the empty room, she dabbed her lips with her tongue to try to moisten them. She winced at the pain of her dry, split lower lip, swallowing a lump in her throat. 

“So how are we supposed to eat? Live?” Tricks continued in his protests

“Sir, there is nothing I can do, I can’t answer those questions and you know that.” 

“Then what are you doing here?! This is an unemployment office!” 

Ettivala began to shiver and reached into her satchel for her jacket. Covering herself with the ripped and torn garment, she glanced outside with a shake of her head at the sight of light snowfall that began to cast down over the street. The planet was naturally cold but the winter had run late into the year with a cold blast that stretched from the northern part of the continent. 

“Is there anything off world? On one of the stations, maybe?” 

“Unless you want to join the Federal Defense Union, no, there is nothing. The Bank of Luminaire Vault isn’t accepting new hires pending the recent surge in applications and even then, you can only work there with a positive balance – something many workers don’t have now. 

Ducia Foundry is looking for work but you’d be hard pressed to meet the qualifications for anything other than security and you’d need an extensive background and a willingness to work abroad.” The agent explained.

“What is considered ‘abroad’”? Tricks inquired.

“Lawless space. Which, at that rate, you might as well work on becoming a Capsuleer because you’ll probably fair a lot better.” The agent responded with a sardonic tone.
Tricks let his hands slide from the counter with a shake of his head and pivoted on his heel. As he headed for the door, Ettivala sprung up from the bench with her satchel in tow to follow him. The doors slid open and a gust of cold air hit them like a wall, both wincing from the frigid air that whipped their flesh. Tricks turned to Ettivala with narrowed eyes as he crossed his arms in an effort to stay warm.

“Millie, we’re going to die if we don’t find some kind of work...” 

“If we can’t find it, we’ll have to make it.” Ettivala responded.

“And just how do you plan to do that, dare I ask?” 

“Do what the corporations do; kill the competition.” 

Ettivala pointed to a poster fluttering in the cold air. A poster calling for an organized demonstration in the city center, right in the middle of the Industrial Sector. 


#


The protest was scant, much less than was expected from the general outcry that was seen in the reaction to the recent layoffs and about the Gallente - Caldari warzone as a whole. What was expected to be thousands only amounted to a few dozen, each with signs relating to how the war needed to end and Capsuleers needed to leave.

Among the group was Chamilie Ettivala, who bore her sign of protest as the most important thing in her life. The application of a handheld device the size of an apple amplified her voice not unlike a megaphone, as she exclaimed emphatically her demonstration. Pontrovol "Tricks" was nearby, taking a more passive role by handing out water bottles from a crate. 

“Our sons and daughters, brothers and sisters, die every day for a war that will never end! Empyreans extort their labor for expendable lives to service their ships! Life and liberty are a farce in the eyes of the Federation, who has lost sight individual freedom. Even the State, who is only interested in revenue! Who fights for we, those that would garnish either – that would accrue both!?” 

The proclamations echoed off the rusted walls of the market buildings, extending down the alleyways to homeless veterans – survivors, rather – that clung to life by the meager scraps left by charitable Samaritans. Many had visible scars, extensive burns, and other reminders of their time spent in the never-ending conflicts. Others had working cybernetics that were of ill condition, lacking serviceable maintenance over long durations. 

It could be argued that either of the factions did have their legitimate concerns but the evidence was quite the contrary. The sounds of distant shelling rang with gentle vibrations on the ground of the never-ending skirmishes that took place between Federal Marines, the State Peacekeepers, and their subsequent mercenary contractors. 

Among the protestors however were the unemployed both recent and long standing. These individuals had gathered but were only a fraction of the total number.

“I am like many of you; I’ve lost family in this war. I am all that is left of the Ettivala bloodline. After I am gone, there is nothing left. I’ve lost work, I’ve lost my home – I have nothing left, as do many of you. I vow to do whatever it takes to ensure your children never have to experience the sorrow, anguish, and loneliness I have felt.” Ettivala continued, focusing on her speech.

Among the crowd lifted, with resolve, a grizzled and wizened voice. The audience had dispersed and allowed Ettivala and the man to speak eye-to-eye despite some distance between them.

“Whatever it takes? Tell me, Miss Ettivala, are you willing to kill to back up those words?”

“Resorting to violence is a display of weakness; that one’s arguments and words aren’t enough to sway through logic and rationale whereas a savage, brutal swing of a sword would simply remove the arguer; an easy way out.” Ettivala responded at a normal volume, having lowered the amplifier to her hip.

“And how do you intend to prevent your enemy from doing that to you?”

The man was a hybrid Jin-Mei and Gallente, given the shape and form of his features. The lightly tinged accent was yet a prominent hint with each inflection of his words, suggesting that he originated from Luminaire. A patchy blonde beard seemed to have grown deliberately around the scars that decorated his lantern-shaped jaw. His uniform was battle-dress in function with a standard issue Federal Marines camouflage design. Upon each breast were the words “BALRIS AGINGHES”, respectively. 

Balris was no stranger to warfare, as evidenced by the appearance of numerous, grievous scars and burns that decorated his face. A single eye, blotted with milky white and red slurry, rendered useless by whatever had caused the wound. This physical history of his experience, further backed by the quiet mutterings of the crowd who insisted that he was – at the very least – a minor war hero of the Marines prior to the incursion of Clone Troopers that seemed ever on the rise.

Ettivala remained silent, fixated on the man as he slowly approached with the slightest of limps. She would not have noticed were it not for the occasional shimmer of morning light that reflected off the man’s cybernetic leg.

“You sound like you want change or secession. Secession would require that we become autonomous, independent of either the Federation or the State. How do you plan on that?” Balris inquired, pointedly.

“The people.” Ettivala snapped back without hesitation.

“Yes? What of the land that is owned by the Federation? The State? Everyone but those very people you speak of? The Federation and the State both create order, supply standards, and appease the necessity for contentment. Their methods are different and though the occupancy changes frequently… We need one or the other.” The scarred man explained, despite a notable lack of sincerity in his tone.

“The people are more than capable of governing themselves without the necessity of a self-appointed authority. It seems essential on the surface but an informed and involved community is apt to regard itself. Besides, I am not substantiating the separation or abolition of authority, merely the separation from a conflict that seemingly has no end, which we did not ask for, and serves no-one but pig headed politicians and stubborn generals.”

“Quite the contrary, if you want to escape from either, separation and abolition in full is the only way… One does not stop a war that has raged for hundreds of years; you stop the source.”

A moment of silence had washed over the audience prior to their whispering in quiet debate. Having weighed the merit of both participants of the debate, the people of the crowd were evenly mixed on what side to take. Balris adjusted his camouflaged jacket with a cold stare of his single useful eye at Ettivala, who stared back with a heated gaze.

“I’ll accept nothing less than separation without violence.” She retorted.

“You speak for us all?”

“I don’t. I speak for myself. I expect nothing less from these men and women gathered here today. They are more than capable of speaking for themselves, just as much as I.”

“Then you would advocate individuality without governance of a collective. What makes you think they would agree with you? Why should we fight for your beliefs if we disagree, even at the slightest?”

“We’ll die in vain for the benefit of those who fight for fighting’s sake, not for our sake.”

The debate intensified and where others would have grown bored and moved on to the less appealing routine of the daily life, the town began to flock with interest. Each denizen merely listened with intent between the two who spat reason: the War Hero asking the hard questions and the Protestor responding with seemingly all the right answers, knowing her tired and frustrated audience well. The masses formed coalescing groups – many in favor of Ettivala, being the only one who provided solutions, before the streets capacity forced them to merge. 

Bolstered by the resolve of her neighbors’ backing, Ettivala made one final push of reasoning against Balris’ endless inquisition. 

“I advocate that we rid ourselves of subservience to the Governance and the Empyreans alike. That we focus solely on the needs of we, the citizens, unshackled by the reasoning of men who would not see our plight, concerned with their own. 

I advocate the abolition of any who would declare authority over us – that true liberty remain not in the hands of corrupt legislature and judicial entities or the corporate elite, but in the hands of the people and their capability. Authority and entitlement, not in the hands of the aristocracy or the proletariat, but in the hands of all free peoples. That any who dare to impose influence does so in a capacity devoid of rights and significance. 

I advocate that we recognize that all forms of government, no matter how well intended, leads to the oppression of we, the people! That we strike, boycott, protest, and confiscate what truly belongs to us; that we do it now!” 

The crowd had immediately burst into an emphatic cheer with the boisterous finalization of Chamilie Ettivala’s words, exploding with catharsis. In their excitement, Ettivala stepped down from her heightened stage to approach the war hero, Balris, with an outstretched hand in gesture. The man extended his own to engage in gnarled grip of sentimental appreciation, giving a single nod. The two completely ignored by the sudden energy that had taken over the crowd, renewed with purpose.

“It seems like you have a way of getting the people roused, girl. I’ll admit I was a bit skeptical at first.” Balris explained with a candid grin.

“You saw them before your little inquisition. I doubt I would have been able to garner such a response if you hadn’t had your hand in the mix.” 

Ettivala’s silver eyes trailed down to the man’s chest, reading the nametags on each side before continuing.

“So tell me, Balris, what sort of interest do you have in all this? Clearly you wouldn’t have been here if not for that skepticism, surely, but why press it as hard as you did?”

“Perhaps I’m merely an old war veteran who needs to see the end of an age old routine. That chapter in my life isn’t over but I don’t see it ending in my lifetime with the way things are going now.” Balris explained.

“Imagine that, a war hero who’s sick of seeing the war. You should lead them, I am sure they will be more than happy to follow someone of your status – your experience. Lot of these people came when Lai Dai gained the development rights, looking for work. Lot more than that are old war veterans like you. I am sure they would follow someone whom they could relate.” Ettivala suggested with a genuine smile.

The veteran reached into his pocket and retrieved a thin, square metal case. He retrieved a paper roll of a bluish-green herb with red flecks – Calcadian Sage – known for its exclusive growth in the local area. The herb was a minor export but considered, locally, to be a healthier remedy to tobacco and with heavier quantities provided a mild hallucinogenic effect. He placed the roll to his dry lower lip and lit its end with a quick flash of an igniter. 

“Unfortunately, Miss Ettivala, I think you’ve already secured your place, whether you like it or not. You may have shot yourself in the foot with that little speech of yours. All I did was ask questions. It was your proposal.”

Ettivala grimaced and shook her head, casting her gaze down to the trash-covered ground as her black hair fell into her eyes. She shifted her stance to one side with a defiant creak of her leather boots. The woman look about her surroundings at the people who seemed well intent on celebrating the coalition of a single idea – her idea – for what was essentially a regression in establishment.

“No, I’m not a leader. I’m just another person, trying to get by in life without any more tears.” She said with genuine reluctance.

Balris extended his damaged hand to display the now busy street to her with a rough chuckle, shaking his head from side-to-side.

“You don’t understand, Ettivala. They chose you.” 


#


As the end of his rolled Calcadian Sage burned brighter with a sharp inhale, Balris had made a point to lock the munitions canister into the metal launch tube. Dark as it were, the only light was the light that shown from the mounted device attached to his headwear, which ran down his back in a length of synthetic fibers. 

The scarred man had begun to daydream, filling his thoughts with delusions of grandeur and fantasies of living a more simple life that opportunities provided had since passed. He pivoted on his heel and began to exit the pitch-black alley, stepping into the soft moonlight of the planet’s twin moons – one full, the other shadowed by the former – reflecting the yellow sun’s light some distance away.

“Nine meals…” He thought to himself, cocking a smirk that painted over his burn-scarred features. He gave a final, lengthy drag of the cigarette perched on his lower lip before pushing it out with his tongue to let it fall to the ground, raising the launcher to his shoulder and staring down the electronic sight at several flickering lights that began to descend onto the ground outside of a warehouse.

What soon followed was a powerful thump, an explosion that rocked the local buildings and shattered windows. The alley behind the man was completely concealed in a cloud of smoke as the missile launched with lightning precision. It flew for only a few seconds, just long enough for the pilot of the dropship to realize what was heading his way before igniting into flames and setting off a chain reaction of burning fuel.

Balris, clad in a traditional State Peacekeeper uniform, dropped the launcher to the ground and slid his hands into his pockets while his still working eye observed the flaming inferno that resulted from his efforts. As the craft burned to cinders, the food stockpiles within it smoldered. The local populace spilled from their condensed homes out onto the street in awe, observing from a distance. 

“Nine missed meals are all it takes for total anarchy…”