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Authors: Michael J Lawrence

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BOOK: The Terran Mandate
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The Terran
Mandate

 

General Lane sat at his desk - a cheap
looking assembly of lightweight resin that was supposed to look like wood - and
rearranged, again, the assortment of writing instruments and photographs of his
troops in action. The truth was he didn't have much to work with in terms of
making a good impression, but he hoped to appear vaguely intimidating somehow.
His steward had swept out the dust that seemed to invade every interior space
on Shoahn'tu with a mind of its own. Most of it was gone, but a fresh coat was already
gathering in the corner. Other than the desk, the only other furniture in his
austere workspace was a plastic bookshelf that held a few hardbound copies of
military manuals and a small frame for his medals. A small round porthole
looked out over the Shoahn'tu dessert, barely letting in enough light to
notice. Flimsy fluorescent fixtures that hung from the low ceiling provided the
rest of the meager light that he had to work by.

Three loud knocks sounded on the door.
He suddenly felt embarrassed. He decided to stand up and smoothed the front of
his formal dress uniform, which suddenly seemed out of place. "Come,"
he finally said.

Two Marines in worn field fatigues
opened the door and escorted General Godfrey into his office. Catching the
impertinent look on her face at having her movement subject to the whim of
enlisted enemy combatants, he nodded at the Marines and said,
"dismissed."

"Sir, if I may," one of them
said.

"And give her back her side
arm," General Lane said.

"Very well sir." The Marine
retrieved her pistol from a cargo pocket in his trousers and handed it to her
with a curt nod. She grabbed the weapon and hastily shoved it into its holster
and snapped the black fabric strap that held it in place.

As the two Marines hustled out the door,
she came to attention and saluted smartly. "General Godfrey, Terran Guard,
Commanding," she said

General Lane hesitated and then decided
to return the salute.

Snapping her hand back to her side, she
said, "I forgot, you people don't salute indoors, do you?"

"Typically, no," he said.
"Thank you for the courtesy, though."

Both officers looked each other over,
trying to size the other up. General Lane had tried for the better part of a
day to remember when the commanding generals of their two forces had met to
parley in person. As far as he could tell, this was a first.

"Please General," he said,
pointing to a thin plastic chair in front of his desk, "have a seat."

"I'll stand for now," she said
in a curt voice.

"As you wish, General." Lane
decided he would rather sit down even though it meant having to look up at this
woman who had somehow come to command the troops that his own couldn't contend
with in the field. The fact that she was actually a good general just made it
that much more difficult. After taking his seat, he propped his elbows on his
desk and asked her, "What can I do for you then?"

"I'm here to propose a ceasefire,
General." She had said it as if she were reporting the morning muster - as
if what she had just said wasn't the most profound utterance between two human
beings on the Planet of Shoahn'Tu since the Garon Ultimatum.

He stared at her blankly as her eyes
continued to flit around his office, taking inventory of everything as if
conducting some kind of reconnaissance. When he didn't respond, she finally
stopped and looked at him. "Didn't your people tell you?" she asked.

"Just that you wanted a
parley." Based on what he had seen of the vaunted Terran Guard commander
thus far, he began to wonder if this was some kind of joke by his staff. It
would have been in poor taste if it was.

"Good officers are in short supply
these days for both of us then," she said.

Thinking back to the fiasco of the
aborted battle for the Highlands, he said, "Indeed."

She opened her mouth to say something
and then stopped. "I'm sorry, sir, but I've never seen an office -"
she paused and knitted her brow. "-like this."

"Ah," he said. "Yes,
everything is about function for us. Something about delta V and the mass ratio
cost of hauling a gram light years from Earth. I guess we figured we'd better
come with everything we needed right up front."

"That was good thinking,
actually," she said.

"After all these years," he
mused. "We're still using pretty much what we landed with."

General Godfrey pressed her palms
together and then pulled the chair out and sat down.

General Lane decided it was time to get
to the point. "You have two full brigades of mechanized infantry, a tank
battalion and, if I remember correctly, a reserve company of artillery
somewhere. Me, I have three battalions of Marine infantry, with attached armor
companies and a single squadron of some very old aircraft with no
ordnance." He figured these were all things she already knew. "Beyond
that, I have a few thousand starving colonists who all need the Highlands,
which you have ably defended." He leaned back and held up his hands.
"Why would you want a ceasefire?  Why now?" In effect, he was all but
admitting that she was winning and there wasn't much he could do about it.

Godfrey nodded and frowned. "All
true, General," she said. "But I think we're both running out of just
about everything we need to carry on this fight."

"I have colonists that keep me
going, General. Because of them, I'll carry on with sticks and rocks if I have
to." It sounded clumsy, even to him, but she had to know that surrender
was not on the table. "I also have the Paladin."

"I know," she said. "But
our mandate has changed."

"Especially since there aren't any
Shoahn' left," he said.

She glanced at the ceiling and said,
"True enough. But that doesn't really call for a group hug."

Lane raised a brow and said,
"General," a dull edge of caution in his voice.

"What I mean is that I think we
know best how to run things around here. There's more to Shoahn'Tu than scrub
desert and sunshine. There are serious issues that need to be taken into
consideration. Issues that we understand best."

"Have you come here with some kind
of moral mandate?" he scoffed.

"In a way, yes," she said.
"A way for everyone to move forward." She leaned forward and fixed
her eyes on his. "Under our guidance."

"I think we're just about done
talking here, General," he said.

Godfrey rolled her eyes and retrieved a
tablet from her breast pocket. "It's all right here." She gently laid
the tablet on his desk. Lane didn't respond, his eyes descending into a dark
scowl. "Beginning with access to plots in the Highlands - more than enough
to feed your people."

General Lane looked away and leaned
back, hoping she wouldn't notice the flash of shock on his face. This was a
real proposal that could save the colony. But he knew better than to take
anything at face value, especially from the enemy. There was always a price.

"And in return?" he asked.

"You will retain your rank and your
command. You will govern the colony. My personal guarantee," she said,
tapping the tablet. "It's all right here, signed and sealed."

She was offering a lot. Lane had to
admit to himself that it was appealing, but he recognized a bribe when he heard
one. He decided to change the subject.

"It's a shame what happened to the
Shoahn", he said.

"It's exactly what we said would
happen if you came."

"We had nowhere else to go and no
more time to look. What did you expect?"

"To be honest, we expected this to
be over long before now," she said, dismissing the subject out of hand. It
was history, dead and past and he could see she wasn't going to waste time
debating the merits of any of it. He would have to bring it up again someday,
if there was a someday.

"There's more, General," he said.
This was a military parley and he knew there was something she hadn't brought
up yet, something he would have brought up already.

"Your Paladin," she said.

"I wish I had more of him," he
said.

"He's the one thing that can keep
this from happening."

They paused, each taking measure of the
situation like boxers between rounds. The Paladin was his one best advantage,
but all the Cats had done was ensure a perpetual stalemate. What she didn't
know was that Major Walker's Special Combat Armor Team was burning through its
resources at a horrific rate. The dwindling weld compound that repaired their
armor, the highly refined fluids, the precision-machined parts made from
materials they had brought with them but could never manufacture in situ -
these were all things that had cost an enormous amount of delta V and could
never be replaced. Soon enough, the Paladin and his Cataphracts would be
nothing more than museum pieces. They had some fight left, but their real value
came from being a deterrent. And that was something he was not willing to give
up just yet.

"What about him?" he asked.

"The Paladin will be transferred to
my command," she said.

"Good luck with that," he
scoffed. "Major Walker and his men are fanatics, more than you. He would
never submit to your command. Honestly, he barely submits to mine."
Godfrey seemed genuinely surprised by this. Had he gone too far? 

"Then you need to decommission
him," she said, as if it were a simple matter of arresting the commander
of the most powerful combat unit on the planet.

"I can't do that," he said.

General Godfrey stood up and planted
both fists on his desk. She leaned forward and looked down at him, her eyes
focused to narrow slits. "I will dispatch a full brigade to Dirt Hill,
turn every single one of its plots into a smoking hole and put your colonists
in chains to farm the Highlands for food that you'll never see. I'll make sure
you can watch them doing it, too. If you're lucky, one in ten of your Marines
will get a meal a day. The rest I'll burn for fertilizer."

General Lane shot to his feet. "And
what happens when the Paladin tears into your remaining troops?  He would kill
you to a man and take every single one of his own with him doing it. You do NOT
understand this man."

General Godfrey lifted one hand and
tapped the tablet. "Or it can be this, General. There is a way out of all
this that can work for everyone. I'm handing it to you. All you have to do is
say yes."

General Lane realized then that he was
dealing with the most dangerous kind of enemy: one that believed they were
right in a world where everybody was wrong. There were no more moves left. All
he had left was yes or no. And he would have to decide soon. He picked up the
tablet and tucked it under his arm. "I'll take it under advisement, General."

Godfrey waited a moment longer before
standing back up and stepped back from his desk. "I look forward to your
response in the next 30 hours," she said.

"Thank you for your visit," he
said. She nodded and saluted. This time, he did not salute back. With that, she
turned and marched out the door where the two Marines were waiting to escort
her back to wherever she came from.

General Lane let out a long sigh and
shook his head. He didn't like being scared. They had come here with everything
they needed to win. They had a full Marine Expeditionary Force - three
divisions - made up of the finest fighting troops ever assembled in human
history. They came with a company of 12 monstrous war machines that had
survived every battle they had fought and still gave his enemy something to be
afraid of. What happened?  Even as he asked himself the question, General Lane
put it out of his mind. There wasn't time for that now.

He reached down and punched the keys of
a floor safe next to his desk, one of the few things in his office actually
made of metal. He yanked the door open and pulled out a boxy blue controller
with a molded pistol grip at its base. He tapped the small screen on top and it
flickered to life. He waited until it acquired a signal and a small green dot
popped up along an orbital track. The satellite was still there. And she hadn't
mentioned it.

A thin laugh escaped his lips as he
watched the dot crawl along the track.  The satellite tracked miles upon miles
of nowhere important. He could destroy a full square kilometer of anything that
lay beneath it. If it had come anywhere near the corner of Shoahn'Tu they had
been backed into, it might have mattered. It might have made trusting her
unnecessary. It might have even won the war. Instead, the last Strategic Target
Interdiction charge belonging to the MEF floated uselessly in space, taunting
him with a power that could have ensured Godfrey kept her promise. He laid the
device on his desk and stared at the com panel embedded in his desk. He had
been given nothing less than a mandate from the commanding general of the
Terran Guard. And he had no choice but to concede.

He tapped a button on the com panel and
said, "Sergeant, a word if you please."

BOOK: The Terran Mandate
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