MSG: In Vain Doth Valour Bleed
Chapter 4
Berchtesgaden, Bayern, Central Europe
August 18, 0087
The world came to a jarring crash for Reinhardt von Seydlitz as his
black-and-gold MS-07B3 Gouf Custom slammed shoulder-first into the
ground, exacting a grimace from its pilot's face and a snarl from his lips. The
stream of high-velocity tracer ammunition that forced the maneuver lashed its
way across the space where the Gouf Custom had been, chewing apart the
terrain instead of his armor. Maintaining his equilibrium, he brought the left
arm of the downed mobile suit up and cut loose a torrent from his own 75mm
Gatling cannon, filling the treeline where the offender lay concealed with an
illuminated stream of armor-piercing lead.
As he brought the struggling Gouf Custom back to its feet, a burst from
his left flank caressed his shield, the smack of the rounds impacting the Luna
Titanium like hail on a tin roof; except that this hail was far more adept at
ablating the surface of the only protection he had against incoming fire. On
the other hand, the staccato made for an excellent spur in motivating him to
get his mobile suit upright and moving again.
Verdammt! Another one! Haskell must have failed!
He wheeled the Gouf Custom about and dove behind a bluff that offered a
suitable defilade from three sides, even for something the size of his suit.
That would buy him a little time to regroup.
A burst on the surface of the defilade, too hard for machine gun rounds, told
him otherwise. Debris from the impact rained down on his suit's armored back
and shoulders, and the dust cloud was quite extensive. It was a big hit; he'd
felt the vibrations through the stick he was grasping.
880mm bazooka. One of the Dom Tropens. Which one, Ogun or Kerr? And
where the hell is Dalyev? Things were not looking so grand for the 358th
'Unsullied' today.
Von Seydlitz toggled his transmit switch to the unit 'push'. "Oberleutnant
Dalyev, acknowledge." Static hissed as his answer. The sweat under his arms and
on his face began to itch intolerably as the stress began to sensitize him to
other discomforts. The air conditioner was already working overtime.
Another 880mm round smashed into the defilade, which was beginning to crumble
from the punishment. Quickly, he stuck the head of the Gouf Custom above
the ridge of the bluff, letting the main camera get a good look, and then
shrank back down again. He found what he had been looking for, the mammoth
red-and-white mobile suit sporting the angry-eyed wind funnel sigil on its left
leg, opposite the golden standard of the 10th Panzerkaempfer on the
right leg.
That is Kerr's Dom Tropen. He is keeping me pinned down. Why? What
are they waiting for? His Gouf Custom had taken some superficial
damage thus far, but was otherwise a sitting duck for the three opposing mobile
suits. They could finish him at their leisure, at the cost of perhaps one of
their number. Were they being commanded by him, they would have rushed his
position.
Unless it is ONLY Kerr. . .and de la Somme.
As if from nowhere, a red-and-white twin to his own Gouf Custom rocketed
up from the other side of the defilade, arcing into the sky, heat saber raised
for a killing blow. Von Seydlitz kicked his own thrusters on, blasting his own Gouf
Custom back and away from the strike area of the other mobile suit, but
keeping the wall of the bluff between himself and the Dom Tropen. The
aggressor Gouf Custom's heat saber slashed air, and then reversed itself
into a guard stance behind the wielder's shield, the white star-and-sword on
the right breast a garish reminder of who this pilot was, as only aces rated
three insignia on their suits in the 10th; Division, Battalion, and personal.
As his mobile suit wheeled backwards, stumbling a bit from the speed of its
reverse, von Seydlitz lashed out with his arm-mounted e-whip at the
red-and-white Gouf Custom, who sidestepped it with an ease that made von
Seydlitz want to vomit.
"You're getting too old for this shit, Reinhardt, baby," taunted de la Somme
from his Gouf Custom, his voice ringing out on the loudspeaker instead
of the radio. "Maybe you oughtta consider taking up knitting, before you hurt
yourself out here and end up like Dalyev and Haskell."
"Maybe you should consider surrendering, Kommandant," replied von
Seydlitz, thankful his face could not be seen by the other pilot. He did not
know if he could keep the tension off of it, and he could feel his lips pulling
back from his teeth despite his best efforts.
His bones were aching from the strain of combat, and his skull was pounding as
his mind tried desperately to keep up with everything around it. He did not
fail to notice that the Dom Tropen was moving, kicking up a lot of dust
from its ground effect thrusters as it glided at tremendous speed around the
bluff to join into the fight. For ground speed, few things could match the
MS-09 series, and von Seydlitz took the opportunity to lament the 10th Panzerkaempfer's
inability to acquire Doms during the War yet again.
De la Somme's laugh was almost derisive, especially with the almost robotic
quality the speaker gave it. "Surrender? I can't spell such a long word,
Oberst! I like 'victor' better. Rolls off the tongue so smoothly,
especially when it applies to someone as neat as me."
"So does 'bastard'."
A tsk, tsk sound came across the speaker. "Bad Colonel, setting such an
example for your men. Harsh language won't get you the swift death you want,
you know. You might want to try being nicer to the guy who's gonna
inherit all your stuff now that you're about to be a smoking hole on Terra."
"I cut you out of the will a long time ago, whelp," he quipped as he brought
the Gouf Custom's arm came up and loosed another barrage of 75mm rounds.
De la Somme's suit dove to the right, returning fire as it moved.
Private Nolan Kerr's MS-09F Dom Tropen slid into position, staying on
von Seydlitz's left as it brought the 880mm bazooka to bear. It was apparent
that it had been in a fight, judging by the fact that the larger suit was
missing its left arm below the elbow, and there were pits in its armor that
suggested 90mm machine gun fire, so von Seydlitz knew that Haskell and Dalyev
went down fighting. Von Seydlitz opened up the thrusters and launched his Gouf
Custom into a powered jump that took him away a hair's breadth before Kerr
could get a solid bead on him with the RB-T27 bazooka. He paid the price as
35mm shells from de la Somme started chewing away at the shoulder armor of his
right arm, snipping off the prominent spike in their barrage.
Antares is out of 75mm shells! Sure enough, de la Somme's Gouf Custom
was missing the Gatling cannon from its shield, apparently jettisoned sometime
earlier. He landed as deftly as he could and slewed around to the left again,
opening fire on the Dom Tropen with the remainder of his own 75mm
ammunition. Kerr was so intent on getting the bazooka on target that the rounds
hit the stationary suit before the pilot could react. The high-velocity tracers
tore holes in the torso and upper arms of the big red-and-white 'Tyrant
Tornadoes' suit. The Dom Tropen folded and crumpled to the ground, out
of the fight. Its glaring green mono-eye went dark.
But there was no time to celebrate. De la Somme cut on the speed and closed the
distance between their suits faster than he could bring the 75mm Gatling around
to engage him. In desperation, the right hand of the Gouf Custom snagged
the heat saber and drew it, barely managing to parry de la Somme's. The
crashing ring as the two heated swords met and separated shook both the suits,
and set von Seydlitz's teeth on edge. It was a high-pitched keening sound that
you could feel in your guts.
Clumsy fool! he berated himself angrily. Do not block with the damned
EDGE! It was only dumb luck that the two blades did not shatter from the
impacts. As it was, he knew his own blade now had a sizeable notch in its edge.
Swinging the heat saber in three successive overhead chops to keep de la Somme
occupied, he ejected the now-empty 75mm Gatling from his shield, enabling him
to bring his left hand into the fight. A spray of 35mm warshots bought him a
little distance, but de la Somme was relentless. The sabers clanged against
each other again and again, each pilot acting and reacting with only
milliseconds to spare between actions.
De la Somme struck first blood, with a sudden reversal of an overhead slash
into an upward stab that cut deeply into von Seydlitz's suit's right side. He
felt the impact as the suit shuddered like a wounded man who'd just been laid
open with a blade.
And then he began to get angry. The little Range just STABBED me!
Balling the left fist of his Gouf Custom, von Seydlitz's mobile suit
followed its pilot's command, reared back, and punched its opponent in the
head. De la Somme's suit reeled from the blow, staggering to maintain its
balance.
This was his last chance: to goad de la Somme into doing something rash. It was
dirty manipulation, but von Seydlitz had just about run out of options, and he
had to even the playing field somehow. Despite a fatigue that had his soul
crying out for relief, he grinned. Slugging a mobile suit was not standard
field procedure when in suit-to-suit combat, except with the 10th Panzerkaempfer.
The metallic tenor rang out from de la Somme's suit. "Ohhhh, we're getting
serious now, are we? Let's dance, Reinhardt!"
Got you. "My kind of dancing is a contact sport, Kommandant."
And von Seydlitz went on the offensive, driving on the other Gouf Custom
with all the fury he could muster. He managed to sever de la Somme's right arm
assembly at about the wrist, removing the hand from the arm, but not enough to
disable his e-whip.
"Slick, Oberst, but not good enough to catch this Gingerbread Man!" sang
de la Somme's voice into von Seydlitz's head.
BAM! BAM! BAM! went the 35mm staccato across his torso, jarring him
enough that he tasted blood on his lips. The onboard computer began screaming
at him that the reactor was damaged, and there were multiple points of serious
internal damage to the suit. He thumbed the manual override and pressed onward,
each attack pushing de la Somme further towards the treeline. He flicked the
right hand open, tossing the heat saber into his left hand and catching it with
ease, and then shifted the movement into an underhand slash that cut across the
red-and-white surface of de la Somme's suit, scarring its torso and carving a
diagonal across the star-and-sword symbol.
At about ten meters to the treeline, de la Somme began to get nimble. He began
rocking the Gouf Custom from its left foot to its right, like a boxer,
concentrating on defending from von Seydlitz's attacks rather than
counterattacking himself. His shield absorbed the brunt of the remaining 35mm
ammo from von Seydlitz, which reduced this fight to nothing more than a melee.
De la Somme reminded him of this by kicking his suit in the gut with a foot.
The two Gouf Customs danced back and forth for what seemed an eternity,
each pilot bringing to bear every skill they had developed during the One-Year
War for the purpose of overcoming the other. The audacious de la Somme's style
was easily an even match for the mechanically-precise von Seydlitz's, and for a
time it was apparent that something was going to have to give before an edge
could be found. Shields in tatters, heat sabers notching, and with no
ammunition in either suit, it appeared that the only clear winner of this was
whoever did not simply die in their cockpit from the strain.
Then it seemed the end was finally there. De la Somme swept his right arm
backwards for a power slash; so far back it shifted the aspect of his entire
suit, and exposed his left side behind his shield. Von Seydlitz brought both
hands onto the heat saber and chopped downward, slapping the blade from the
hand of de la Somme's suit, then stabbing the tip right through the mono-eye of
the 'Tyrant Tornadoes' Gouf Custom.
"Ouch!! Nice tag, Reinhardt, baby."
"Concede defeat and I will let you live to call it a draw."
De la Somme laughed, ever cheerful. "You're such the nobleman, Colonel. But I
don't think so."
Von Seydlitz's eyebrows rose. "And why is that, exactly?"
Rather than respond by word, de la Somme responded with action. The e-whip he'd
lashed out when his right arm swung backwards had managed to attach itself by
its grappler to a tree trunk, previously damaged by stray fire. With a tug, the
e-whip and its cargo pulled free and came around like a horseman's flail. The
hardwood smashed into von Seydlitz's Gouf Custom at great velocity,
shattering into splinters and knocking the 73-ton mobile suit to the ground. It
landed with a thump that shook the leaves from some of the nearby trees.
Before the black-and-gold 'Unsullied' suit completed its landing, de la Somme
had pulled the heat saber from the head of his own suit and had it impaled
through the grounded von Seydlitz's right shoulder, pinning the other suit to
the earth.
"I'd extend your offer to me to yourself, Reinhardt, but I'd rather just see
you dead."
I bet you would. With a jerk on the sticks, von Seydlitz's Gouf
Custom scissored its legs and swept de la Somme's suit off its feet. The
resounding crash it made when it hit spurred him on, reaching out with the left
hand to pull the heat saber from his suit and release the machine back into the
fight. He had just managed to pull it free when de la Somme rolled his suit,
kippupped it to its feet, and was preparing to extend the e-whip to finish von
Seydlitz off. Von Seyditz knew he
would not be able to get the mobile suit to its feet before the e-whip tagged
him and he was finished.
True to form, de la Somme almost casually flicked the magnetic lash towards his
torso, a massive taser with which to put the 'Unsullied' suit out of this fight
for good.
Von Seydlitz, in a movement so fast it was a blur, caught the tip of the e-whip
on the flat of the heat saber, then released it as de la Somme's Gouf Custom
began dumping electricity across the e-whip's length.
He maintained enough awareness to hear de la Somme's incredulous voice spit out
"What the fuck??", and then his head was filled with sound as he
power-tackled the other Gouf Custom, bringing both suits to the ground
again, but this time the tables had been turned in his favor.
With his Gouf Custom sitting astride de la Somme's, knees pinning the
arms of the other suit to the ground, von Seydlitz reached down with his own
hands and grabbed de la Somme's head, then began to methodically smash it into
the ground.
"Do not" SLAM "presume" SLAM "that an enemy" SLAM "is
helpless" SLAM "until you" SLAM "make them so," SLAM "Kommandant,"
he barked through the loudspeaker, enjoying the feel of having the other mobile
suit's head flattening under the power of his fists.
This was why it was such a surprise when the point of a heat saber burst
through the left side of his torso, causing every light in the cockpit to go
red and every warning sound to scream that this suit was a dead machine. He
cursed under his breath, stunned, as he stared through the main camera at the
several decimeters' worth of heat saber jutting from the left side of his Gouf
Custom.
That is MY heat saber! The realization hit him as the entire
world went dark before his eyes, his suit shutting itself down as the reactor
coughed up its last bit of power and then ceased operating.
De la Somme's e-whip had managed to maintain its grip on the saber even as it
began to melt from the residual heat. Then, as von Seydlitz had been punishing
his suit so violently, he'd simply slipped the saber closer and closer to their
position, before giving it a hard tug and driving the point through the thinner
rear armor of von Seydlitz's suit.
The hiss and pop as the simulator door opened, and the rush of cooler, moist
air was almost a baptism after the awful stink of the interior and the heat the
combat had built up in its pilot. The sound of cheers and whistles assailed his
ears, and he realized that probably every member of the 10th Panzerkaempfer
had watched this fight. Von Seydlitz began unbuckling himself from the
apparatus, feeling the hands of others on his shoulders and arms to help pull
him out of the rear entry hatch to the simulator capsule. He did not protest. He
felt as weak as a kitten, after this one. Fighting de la Somme was worse than
fighting any three other pilots, and that included the notoriously aggressive
Margul.
Instinctively, he glanced at the chronometer inside the capsule, and was
horrified by the time. FOUR hours!! We were in there for four HOURS! No
surprise I feel so wretched now, is it?
As he was bodily lifted from the confines of the simulator and back into the
world outside, it was indeed apparent that the men had stopped what they were
doing to watch the titans clash. Damn. And we still have suits to finish
putting together. I need an example. . .
Managing to clear his throat without it being conspicuous, he spoke aloud, "Hauptfeldwebel
la Vesta. I will hope for your sake that you completed the mission I assigned
to you before taking yourself away from it."
Master Sergeant Wolfram la Vesta, commander of the 186th 'Deep Dwellers'
Amphibious Platoon (formerly Battalion), ran a hand through his black, curly
hair. "Hemphill's finishing the last batch of mixing now, Colonel. Mom didn't
raise anyone in the family stupid enough to leave white phosphorus lying around
by itself."
Judging by la Vesta's heritage, von Seydlitz did not doubt that. La Vesta's mother was an Italian, and his
father a Dane, thus producing a being with Mediterranean coloring, VERY blue
eyes, and an attention to detail that had made the 'Deep Dwellers' a very
efficient and effective amphibious assault team. Von Seydlitz aimed his eyes at
the subterranean lake further down the sublevel, where the ten short tons of
white phosphorus were being prepared for their intended purpose. Sure enough,
the bulbous head of Private Nestor Hemphill's MSM-07E Z'Gok E was
sloshing around in the water, its claw-like manipulators underneath the surface
where the floodlights illuminated the dark brine water.
Hemphill had been immediately the one to ask for about this portion of Nemesis.
He was the unit cook, almost good enough to be a master chef if he was not
already a soldier. La Vesta had handed him the recipe for what they needed and
he took to it like Mario Batali on an alfredo sauce.
"Excellent," he said, turning his attention back to his men. There were a few
missing. "Break time is over, meinen Rebell. Get back to your tasks and
out of the tactical area."
With a few more backslaps and laughs, the men began to disperse. Von Seydlitz
wiped a hand across his face, suddenly feeling dizzy from the endorphins
flooding his system. He was beginning to wonder if he was going to collapse
before reaching his office when the animate fireball that was Antares de la
Somme slammed into him and wrapped him in a bear hug.
"Woo-HOOO!! That was the COOLEST thing ever, Reinhardt! I haven't
had that much fun in YEARS! We've gotta do that again! Can we? How about
tomorrow after dinner? C'mon, you know you wanna! You had fun, I can
tell, and maybe we can even get six more in there and make it a REAL
challenge! Yeah, in fact, I think we should do just that, since that's the next
stage in the training schedule coming up anyway once the platoon trials are
done! You might even win this time, too, but you need to bludgeon
Haskell for tripping his Zaku Cannon in that ditch line, and Dalyev
needs to learn that the Zaku Kai is NOT a baseline Zaku II even
if it feels like one. I think you should hit them with pipes. NO, sticks. NO,
cinderblocks, even better!! But that was SOOO great anyway! You've gotten
AWESOME in there, too! Packard must've been a GOD out there with that modded-up
Gouf, don'tcha think?"
"Let go of me, Kommandant," was the choked reply. Von Seydlitz was
having difficulty breathing even before de la Somme attached himself to him and
began to constrict. Thankfully, the younger Commander complied with his
request, and he maintained his own balance in the process. Besides, de la Somme
reeked of sweat, salt, and adrenalin, a tripartite combination that von
Seydlitz's olfactory senses were not willing to tolerate for lengthy amounts of
time at this moment.
"Hey, I've gotta get back in there and run Weissdrake's boys through the
bitchslap. Thanks for chatting, mein Bruder, and I'll catch you later,
'kay?"
With a slap on the back and a wave, de la Somme was off heading for the
simulators again, laughing and joking with whomever he came into contact with.
Von Seydlitz shook his head wearily and began his trek towards his chair,
amazed as always by just how much enjoyment someone could get out of simulator
training. This would be de la Somme's third time in the sims today. While the
capsules and their programs approximated the best and worst of mobile suit
combat, complete with knocking a pilot around in his own cockpit when called
for, not to mention spitting sparks, smoke, and all the accompaniments of
sustaining damage, it was only a simulator, and Antares de la Somme had always
loved video games.
Enjoy it while it lasts, Antares. Once Weissdrake gets those ships to
Regensburg, Nemesis becomes the only life we have for a very long time.
Simulators notwithstanding, everything was proceeding on schedule. No one
seemed to mind that weeks were passing, as long as something got accomplished
each day. All but three of the mobile suits were already constructed, tested,
and deemed fit for combat; the other three would be before the end of the
month. After that, it was train, train, and train some more until Commander
Karl Weissdrake delivered the cargo ships to their destination. The rest of the
logistics were being dealt with already. The deliveries had been on time, with
no unexpected delays. In fact, with the exception of the ships, everything was
perfect.
"Seven MONTHS??"
"That's what Leiger said. That is how long it will take to get all three ships
rigged for IMO regulation, then gather a crew, then ship them to Regensburg
from Duisberg."
"WE have the crews already. Did you inform him of that, Karl?"
"Ja, Oberst, but it makes little difference. These are three
eight-hundred ton transports, and unless you want to use external tanks to
stash the 'cargo', what we require is going to take an overhaul of the interior
compartments of all three ships. It's impossible to bend the laws of physics
and time to suit our needs in this matter."
"You try telling that to Generalmajor von Mellenthin, Kommandant.
He would have you strung up by your entrails for the pleasure of hearing you
scream."
"I would tell him exactly what I told you, and you know it, Oberst von
Seydlitz. But I can't tell him, so I'm telling you. You're going to have to
push Nemesis back a few more weeks. We have waited years, von Seydlitz, what is
a few weeks compared to that? An inconvenience, that's all."
An 'inconvenience', he said to me. Von Seydlitz slumped down into his
chair, resting his head in his hands. So tired. And so anxious to get
Nemesis on the road already. The further we delay, the more time there is for
something to go wrong. He could have throttled Weissdrake if he could
have only reached through the telephone. That conversation had been over two
months ago, and it never failed to make his world go red just recollecting it.
The odds are against us with each passing moment. The Titans grow more
powerful every day, and the world is changing as we sit under this mountain and
dream the dreams of conquerors. Jaburo has been destroyed. Abowaku has been
relocated. Titans are attacking Granada and Von Braun with everything from
mobile suits to colonies, and Axis gets that much closer. If we don't move
soon—
A sudden thought snapped him back into focus. "Dalyev! Haskell! Kommen Sie
hier, jetzt!" he roared out the office door, certain the two would hear
him, and be absolutely in a hurry to receive the cussing out he was going to
give them.
Steinbaum, Nordrhein-Westfalen, Central Europe
August 20, 0087
"—all I'm saying is that Commander Weissdrake's probably getting fat and comfy
while stuck in Duisberg. I mean, he could be out here in the fucking boonies
with—" was about as far as Private Gary van Allen got when the motor noise of
the Ditch Witch went abruptly silent. He put the hand hoe he'd been using
aside, closed his eyes, turned around, and opened them. . .
. . .to find Marine Captain John Roberts looking up at him with a bemused
expression on his face and a hurtlock in his eyes. "Private, I believe you were
saying something a moment ago. Repeat it."
Van Allen cleared his throat and stood at attention. "Sir, I was just pointing
out that—"
"No, Private, you were fucking pointing out that Commander Karl
Weissdrake of the 555th Airborne was fat and comfortable in Duisberg instead of
being here in the 'boonies' with us. Is that not the case, Private?"
"Yes, sir," replied van Allen, his voice on the edge of something resembling
shame.
The third member of their team, Lieutenant Lucian McKenna, winced a little bit
as he continued uncoiling the long, copper-colored wire being laid in this
particular 20 cm. deep ditch. The three Marines of the 22nd 'Onslaught' had
been out here for several weeks now, digging and placing and testing and
generally getting tired of the bright orange Bundespublikwerk uniforms
they were wearing and the rustic Westphalian charms of Steinbaum, nestled at
the southeastern edge of the foreboding woodlands known as the Teutobergerwald.
Van Allen, being the lowest-ranked, was having the hardest time of it, since he
could simply not remember to keep his mouth shut around Captain Roberts.
Opinions'll get you buried like these Hall probes, kiddo, he thought,
angling this strand of probe so it would cross perfectly with the previous
strand, which would run perpendicular to the new arrival, forming a very
precise grid coordinate. The time this was taking, already several days behind
schedule due to weather and social gatherings in the area, was almost worth
seeing his latest idea come to life. God, he thought desperately,
please let this work, for the sake of us all, and please don't let Captain
Roberts gut Gary like a fish.
"The last time I noticed, Private," continued Roberts, his own voice calm and
his eyes unwavering from the face two inches away from them, "you wore the
insignia of the Zeon Marines on your uniform. You know the one I'm referring
to, don't you, Private?"
"Yes, sir!"
"It's the one with the anchor and the bird and the semper fidelis,
correct, Private?"
"Yes, sir!"
"Is the bird fucking the anchor, Private?"
"No, sir!" Van Allen was beginning to sweat a bit.
Roberts was not. "Then I want you to explain to me, Private," as his voice
began to increase in volume, "why it is that you wear this insignia, and all
the pride and heritage that comes with it, and yet you cannot refrain. . ."
If it were physically possible for Roberts's face to get any closer to van
Allen's without kissing him, it was a matter of microns only. ". . .from using fucking
profanity while idly discussing matters pertaining to other Zeon officers
and having the gall to judge their merit based on their mission! Do you fucking
hear me, Private!?!"
"Yes, sir!"
"Now if I ever hear you slander another officer in this Division, from any
unit, using language of that manner and verdicts of that nature, even if said
officer is, in fact, sitting on his ass in a hotel in Duisberg
because that officer is NOT a Marine and NOT assigned to getting
Colonel von Seydlitz's plan to its successful readiness, all of which amounts
to you spouting horse piss from your mouth onto that insignia that you fucking
wear on your uniform instead of doing YOUR JOB. . .!!"
Roberts's teeth were snapping so close to van Allen's face it was a wonder that
they weren't chewing apart his skin. ". . .then I will RUN you around this
entire goddamn forest so FUCKING far and so FUCKING fast that
your ASS CHEEKS will FALL OFF your worthless, enlisted HIDE, Marine!!
And when you reach down to put your ASS CHEEKS back on so that you can
KEEP RUNNING, I will commence to truly KICK your ASS that much harder,
because Marines' ASS CHEEKS do NOT FALL OFF, DO THEY, Private!?!"
"N-NO, SIR!"
"Good fucking answer, troop! Now get back to work and cease that
behavior from this point onward, or I will show you the pain a tongue can cause
its wielder. I don't give a care on Terra how long we're out here doing this,
because the longer it takes because YOU want to voice an opinion, the
longer your penance for playing patty-cake on MY time will endure once
we return to Berchtesgaden. Move it!"
With a salute and a tremble in his frame he did not have earlier, van Allen
picked up his hoe and recommenced working on the trench. Roberts glared at the
taller Marine for a long moment, then turned and went back to the Ditch Witch.
He was angry, and he could not remember the last time he'd used so much profanity
on anything.
But the fact remained that there were still two kilometers of this stuff that
had to be set, and that was going to take forever as the weather began to turn
from summer to autumn, and the cold began to settle throughout Europe. Then it
would snow, and there was where misery lay.
Piss on you, van Allen. I want out of here, too. He cranked up the Ditch
Witch again and started moving, aiming in a straight line for about 300 meters
on this run, as displayed on the laminated chart in front of him. If this
worked, not even God could help the Federation from the punishment they would
receive from the 10th Panzerkaempfer Division this time.
All they had to do was survive long enough to see it. Roberts gritted his teeth
and set himself to work, the churning of the black earth below him no less
turbulent than the churning of impatience in his soul.
Kehlsteinberge, Bayern, Central Europe
August 22, 0087
It all started with a walk in the mountains and a phone call, but that path
could not be seen to its end by anyone except God perhaps. Thusly, it all
started with just a walk in the mountains.
They were a fairly typical German family, from Ligeretalm, out for a picnic and
a walk near the site of long-dead Adolf Hitler's Eagle's Nest hideaway (a place
he only visited once in his lifetime, for he was severely acrophobic, and the
trip up Kehlsteinberge was not one to his liking). Despite the
shady history of the mountain, it was still a tourist attraction, mostly for
historians and scholars but for the occasional Wanderlust victim as
well. It was also an awe-inspiring area, as most of Upper Bavaria was, a
place of peace and quiet, shattered occasionally by tragedy that would be
remembered, but not fawned over. Even the space freighter which crashed on the
side of the mountain could only mar its surface for a time. Several months
later, those who had lived here all their lives could look at the mountain and
hardly notice the change to its face caused by the impact.
It was a tragedy, but only one in a long line of them. Here, life went on.
This particular family, long accustomed to sudden spontaneity (as most
Bavarians were), were simply doing their normal routine. There was nothing
suspect about them being up here, and little to endanger them. The occasional
wolf would not disturb them, choosing flight over fight in the presence of
humankind. Bears were almost nonexistent, and the deer, elk, and other forms of
fauna would follow the wolf's lead rather than risk the displeasure of the
bipedal lifeforms who walked these trails and forests like gods, dispensing
treats with one hand, or death with the other. These days it was usually
treats, as hunting was outlawed and had been for several decades. The animals,
however, remembered in their bones the time when this place was the favored
hunting grounds for the Swabian Dukes, and such things are best left as good
practice.
While the freighter crash was noticed, commented upon for a while, and then
written off as a closed case, it too had become part of this place. So much so
that it had almost slipped the minds of everyone here; almost.
The husband, going a little gray in his age but still as fit as he had been in
his younger days, had a nagging sensation tugging at him even as he strolled
with his wife down the trail, the kids racing ahead of them. It was a familiar
tugging, one he had not felt for almost a decade, and it was because of that
lapse in time that he could not readily identify it. His conscious mind wrote
it off as a lark, a bit of whimsy for no real, tangible reason, just an odd
feeling in the back of his mind. His unconscious mind, not in charge of the
situation, harkened his memories back to the War, the time he'd served as a
Federal Forces Ranger, 32nd Pioniere Company, defending Earth, and
Germania, from the Zeon who had come to bring their iron rule to all humanity.
He had survived the War with enough horrible memories to last ten lifetimes,
and the last thing he wanted to do was dwell on those. He had the scars to
remind him every day he saw them marring his form.
But the nagging sensation would not abate. Even as they crossed from the woods
into a sizeable clearing (a place where he'd first met his wife, so many
exceedingly joyous and painfully mournful years ago) where the entirety of Kehlsteinberge
could be viewed when the weather was clear, it would not leave him be.
Something was wrong, something big, and he frowned as he tried desperately to
either ignore the whole thing or figure out the cause, whichever came first. He
was here to spend time with his wife and three children, not dwell on a past
only the fanatics would choose to dwell upon.
Fanatics like that fool Delaz, bringing his hell-borne Stardust to Earth and
rending the face of Terra with his hatred. The Federation had tried to
cover that up, even to the extent of enforcing a media blackout, but the
veterans knew. No amount of cover story or lies could close that wound from the
ones who knew what it was to bleed for a cause.
With the Titans here, though, the Zeon had never risen again, except in the
service of the AEUG and for a different reason than revenge. As long as the
Titans stood, there would be no more Stardusts. He was confident of that, so
why was his mind trying to drive him insane? He pursed his lips and stared at
the ground as he walked, his wife's hand in his own giving him scant comfort.
It was on the ground before him. His mind focused to a clarity he had not
needed to since the end of the War, and his body ceased its forward motion,
jarring his wife to a stop as well, as he realized that he was standing on the
tread marks of a heavy lift transport. In fact, as his eyes scanned the area
around them, there were the tracks of multiple heavy load-bearing vehicles.
Turning back around the way they came, ignoring his wife's question as to the
sudden halt, he could see them winding their way into the woods they had
departed, continuing deep into the forest.
It would not have been such a large concern of these had been the tire marks
from motorbikes or small recreational vehicles, for these areas were popular to
camp in, but these could not be mistaken for anything else. He had seen these
kinds of vehicles during the War, and while most had been converted for other
functions, their purpose was essentially the same as the role they had filled
back then: hauling big heavy cargoes, like armored vehicles, ammunition,
artillery pieces, and mobile suit components.
Tracks like these had no business in this place. He knew he had found a big
piece to what was puzzling him, but there was more. He spun on a heel,
following the treads back to the clearing, then broke out in a run, leaving his
wife behind, sprinting ahead of his children, eyes seeing nothing but these
marks before him, ears not hearing the calls of his family. The tracks ended
several hundred meters into the clearing, and he gasped at what he found.
Even with several weeks' worth of overgrowth, it was very apparent that there
was a "footprint" in the topsoil. A depression several centimeters deep, at the
end of the path carved by the tracks of all those vehicles, as though something
extremely large and heavy had landed in this very spot and was then taken away.
He could hear his family coming towards him, and he stretched his arm backwards
towards them, fingers splayed out from each other as though he were signaling
to his old Ranger company members to hold position, though he knew that his
wife and children could not possibly understand the sign language.
His eyes were riveted on the footprint in the earth, even as his head began to
turn towards the east, drawn as if by an invisible strand towards the face of
the mountain itself. His head reached the point where his eyes could no longer
stare at the ground, and they instead shifted to the surface of Kehlsteinberge,
and he blinked. There was a black patch on the mountain face, undeniably where
the space freighter had crashed, in a perfect line from the footprint.
The touch of his wife's hand on his shoulder snapped him back to reality, and
he forced a smile on his lips despite the misgivings these pieces of evidence
were eliciting in his imagination. The news had said that nothing had survived
the crash, not even the cargo. If that were the case, then what the hell was he
looking at here?
He meant to have that question answered if he had any say in it. He had a phone
number back at home he could call, the one in the desk drawer he thought he
would never have to use. It would be a late solution, but better that than any
of the alternatives he could think of. Impulsively, he pulled his wife into an
embrace, almost out of desperation, and clung to her as though she were the
only point of sanity in a sea of madness threatening to drown him in the waters
of his own fear. He hoped, and he prayed, that this was just a misunderstanding,
a piece of information he had not heard on the news, and it was just the old
fears of a tired man who had wrapped himself in a cloak of intuition to survive
the darkest time of his life. He hoped his intuition was leading him astray now.
Deep inside, he knew it was a false hope.
