80 - Interlude: Uprising
80 - Interlude: Uprising

"Ready, Bakkra?" the team's leader asked, leaning out of cover to address his squadmate.

"Charges set and ready to detonate," the demolitionist confirmed, tapping at his Omni-Tool.

"Good. Pull back, get your head down, and get ready to open fire. They're not going to be happy when we open this door."

Bakkra laughed bitterly. "They wouldn't be happy if we knocked politely. Might as well knock 'em off their feet."

The squad leader chuckled. "By the Pillars, you speak the truth. Everyone, get ready on my signal."

Bakkra scrambled away from the door, and the small charges set against it, and slid behind a fallen office desk - the closest thing they had to cover in this section of the office.

Seeing the last of his team in position, the squad leader nodded. "Alright. Bakkra, on four, blow the charges. Once the path is clear, everyone open fire. It's unfortunate, but we can't let anyone get in our way at this juncture. Understood?"

Nine Batarians answered the affirmative, and the squad leader nodded again. "Alright. Everyone ready. One."

The team hunched behind their cover, checking their weapon's heat levels and ammo blocks. Bakkra clutched his Omni-Tool close, opening the detonation app and ensuring everything was set up.

"Two."

Dukku, the team's grenadier, pulled two fragmentation grenades from his belt. Bakkra pressed his finger against the 'Detonate' key.

"Three."

The Batarians ducked their heads, averting their eyes from the door. Bakkra's left hand tightened around the barrel of his assault rifle, the T8's unyielding metal frame a small source of comfort.

"FOUR!"

Bakkra's finger slipped away from the Omni-Tool's screen, and a single muffled explosion boomed, vibrations shaking the ground and the strike team's cover. Smoke filled the air. After a half second pause, when it became apparent no return fire was incoming, all ten surviving members of the strike force stood, faced the door, and opened fire. Dukku tossed forth his two grenades, and two muffled thwumps followed by the pinging of shrapnel on steel signaled their detonation inside the control room.

The deluge of gunfire would have been enough to cut down an entire team of Hegemony marines, let alone the relatively unprotected engineers and communications specialists they expected to find in the Propaganda Centre's control room.

But as the smoke cleared, the team found that they'd only been facing a single opponent.

And he was still standing.

The armour he wore, a suit Bakkra recognised as the Hegemony's much advertised and most advanced powered hardsuit, bore not a single scratch, the kinetic barriers flickering heavily, but still active.

For a long moment, there was just silence as the awed Batarian strike team stared at their new enemy. And then he raised his rifle and fired, and ten became nine, Kurn flung bodily across the room by the force of the impact.

As soon as his first shot rang out, the team opened fire once more - a barrage of mass accelerator shells sparking off the high-capacity shields. The soldier in power armour seemed to barely flinch, raising his oversized harpoon rifle and firing it again.

A shard of metal as long as Bakkra's forearm shot from the rifle, speared Dukku through the chest, and threw him into the far wall, where he slumped alongside Kurn's bleeding corpse.

The Hegemony heavy's shields finally faded under the constant stream of fire, but he continued unabated, apparently trusting the bulk of his plated armour to protect him. Bakkra had to admit, it was doing an admirable job at that - kinetic rounds were pinging off the armour or simply stopping dead when they hit, with nothing really getting through.

Bakkra ducked back behind cover as his rifle began to heat up, turning to face the back of the room just in time to witness Nakral joining Dukku and Kurn, slumping against the far wall with what appeared to be a flash-forged harpoon imbedded in his collar.

Dropping his rifle, Bakkra reached behind his back with both hands, retrieving one of the squad's three trump cards - a Turian-made ML-68 Missile Launcher. A rapid-fire assault weapon used for suppressing infantry squads or fending off light vehicles, Bakkra was confident it would be able to deal with the Hegemony heavy.

Slinging it over one shoulder, he took a deep breath and stood, closing three eyes and bringing the weapon's sight to his face.

The Hegemony heavy realised the threat too late, and had only just begun turning to face Bakkra when the first missile launched, streaking across the ten or so metres separating the two before slamming into the Hegemony soldier's chest.

The flash of light caused all four lenses on Bakkra's helmet to tint and the sound dampening to engage at full force, effectively blinding and deafening him for the few seconds it took the filters to disengage, and when they did, he could only be equal parts shocked and amazed.

The powered exosuit had only a small hole in the chest at the point of impact, and large burn marks across the front of the torso. It was, he suspected, something that could easily be repaired by just removing the damaged torso plate and swapping it for a new one.

The operator, on the other hand… well, the charred flesh seeping from the hole in the hardsuit left little to the imagination in that regard.

Bakkra pushed the missile launcher over his shoulder, clamping it once more to his back, and retrieved his rifle, looking around at the rest of his squad.

His squad leader, and four other men, still lived. Kurn, Dukku, and Nakral lay dead at the rear of the room, huge metal spikes protruding from their bodies. Brukk was also dead, his helmet and presumably his skull caved in by a heavy impact.

Apparently the 'powered' part of 'powered hardsuit' wasn't just to allow the operator to lift it.

"Good work, Bakkra," his leader said, sighing heavily. "If only we'd seen this coming… we could have prepared sooner."

"Sir, we couldn't have known," one of the twins put in - it was impossible for Bakkra to tell which, as both were wearing their helmets, their faces concealed. "Let's just move up, send the message, and get out."

"Rukkar, Vik, Bakkra, sweep the room. Abrul, Davrul, watch our backs. We don't want any more surprises."

The five troopers nodded and spread out, the twins heading back the way they'd come, quietly stepping over the corpses of their dead comrades, and the others moving forward, through the blown-open door into the Propaganda Centre's control room.

The room still smoked from the explosions that had opened the way, and the floor and walls were dotted with pockmarks from shrapnel and stray fire. Fortunately, Bakkra noted, much of the equipment was stored inside cabinets and under desks, where it had been largely safe from fire.

As his two team mates spread out, checking each side of the room, Bakkra moved straight forward, crossing to the far wall to look out through the window, at the compound below.

The two Judak Nurr APCs that had been used to ram the facility's gates were still in the front lot, totalled by the impact and subsequently used as cover by the strike teams. At some point whilst the teams had been inside, one of them had caught fire, if the plumes of smoke and orange glow from the roof hatch were anything to go by.

A hint of movement on the edge of his vision caught his attention and he turned, scanning the area.

A number of metal shapes were bobbing up and down behind the far wall of the compound - the helmets of a Hegemony Enforcer team, no doubt.

He grunted. "Heads up. Looks like enforcers, down in the courtyard."

Rukkar and Vik moved from their sides of the room to the window, rifles raised and ready. Their enemies, visible only by the bobbing of their heads, reached the gate, piling up on one side.

"They're getting ready to breach," Vik observed. Turning to his leader, he asked, "Sir, what should we do?"

"Give me a few more moments, and the transmission will be out. Hold your fire for now - if we're lucky, we'll be able to escape out the back before they catch up."

Vik nodded and turned back to the window.

Bakkra crouched down underneath the windowsill, only his head poking out from above, and his teammates did the same - concealing themselves from view and providing some small amount of protection.

Unfortunately, the Enforcers apparently had other ideas. Rather than rounding the corner and advancing in pairs, as would have been protocol, only a single trooper stepped through the gate, hefting a heavy weapon of his own.

"ROCKET!" Rukkar called, diving backwards away from the window. Bakkra didn't hesitate to follow, throwing himself across the floor of the room.

Barely a second later, yet another explosion lit the control room, smoke and shards of glass flying everywhere. Bakkra crawled forward on his hands and knees, ears ringing, until he reached one of the consoles, slumping behind it for cover.

"Files are uploaded!" a voice called, indistinct due to the ringing in his ears. "We need to clear out, now!"

Through the smoke, Bakkra saw two silhouettes in the doorway, and stumbled towards them. Another explosion sounded behind him, the blast wave throwing him across the room, his rifle slipping from his hands and clattering uselessly on the floor.

His head slammed into the wall, barely cushioned by his lightweight helmet, and his vision blurred, losing all focus. His legs gave way beneath him and he collapsed, dropping to the ground.

The metal beneath his head seemed to be shaking rapidly, the clunk of footsteps agonizingly loud in his ears. He rolled over onto his back, groaning in pain.

Vision swimming, he barely noticed the black metal boot descending towards his face.

---

When Bakkra returned to wakefulness, all he could feel was a weightless sensation, and searing pain in his wrists and ankles.

He tried to open his eyes, but sharp stinging pain across the left side of his face dissuaded him from that course of action. Slowly, he opened just one eye, feeling just a dull throbbing across his face.

He attempted, in various combinations, opening his other eyes, but opening his lower eyes brought back the stinging pain and his upper left eyelid simply refused to move, as if swollen shut.

Resigning himself to a bare fragment of his usual vision, he took in his surroundings. Judging by the pain in his limbs, and the silhouettes in the darkness, he was in chains, hanging almost naked from the wall of a cramped and filthy cell. All four walls were dirt-caked and grey, stained in places with dark brown fluid that may have been blood.

The loincloth he'd been provided, a mockery of his decency, hung loose from his frail frame, doing nothing to ward off the cold inside the cell.

He recognised it - not the cell in particular, but the type. The Hegemony called them Forced Rehabilitation Centres, but they were more commonly known, especially amongst the Judak Nurr, as Drought Pits.

The Hegemony's most infamous torture method, usually reserved for only the most heinous criminals against the Hegemony. For members of the Judak Nurr to be subjected to that kind of punishment...

Bakkra chuckled momentarily before a coughing fit overtook him. Suspended from his chains, he shook violently, coughing up blood. The red liquid splattered on the floor of his cell.

Well, at least I know we got on their nerves.
 
81 - Interlude: Uprising (continued)
Also, because some people *coughTikicough* said Faith and Hope reminded them of Abridged!Picollo and Nail:

Did you just scissor kick him?

I know, right? I've always wanted to do that.

Please don't do it again.

My body, my rules!


---

81 - Interlude: Uprising (continued)
Bakkra bit back a groan as the trap door above his head swung open, flooding the small chamber with light.

The chains around his wrists dragged him back, lifting him from the pit and into the fresh night air, sending shivers across his body.

Two heavily armoured figures grasped him by the arms and torso, lifting him bodily from the pit and holding him whilst a third unlocked the shackles around his limbs.

Throat dry and eyes swollen shut, he cast a baleful gaze over the two soldiers holding him and croaked a single word. "Why?"

The one on the left chuckled and pulled Bakkra forward as the last of his chains fell away. "You've made quite a mess of Lorek, recently. The Hegemony have decided to make a message of your corpses."

Snickering, he tossed Bakkra over one shoulder and turned, marching across the darkened compound. His two comrades followed, dropping the empty chains back into the pit and kicking the chamber hatch shut.

Looking around, Bakkra could see hundreds of other groups of Batarian soldiers carrying prisoners of their own - it was hard to tell, given the darkness and his crippled vision, but it looked like they had captured a large majority of the Judak Nurr. A significant undertaking. Usually they would have just been killed.

No doubt the Hegemony would host a grand and highly publicised execution, transmitting the proof of their victory all across the Batarian sector. He could picture the headlines now: 'Hegemony heroes destroy major Human-sponsored terrorist operation, save Lorek from Human aggression'.

Never mind the fact that, like almost everyone else in Batarian space, not a single member of the Judak Nurr had even met a Human, let alone received their sponsorship.

Honestly, the idea that the reclusive powerhouse of the Orion Arm would care about the plight of the Batarians was humorous at best, if they even knew about the Hegemony's corruption. Which they likely didn't, owing to the Hegemony's omnipresent political propaganda.

Slung across the enforcer's shoulder, Bakkra could do nothing but observe as he, and a hundred or so other prisoners, were carried across the prison compound's courtyard under the light of the stars.

Since he was facing backwards, he had no idea of their destination, but the stares of the few comrades he could make out in the night told him that it would be unpleasant.

Just moments later, his suspicions were confirmed as his Hegemony carrier unceremoniously dropped him onto the ground. "Alright, scum. You wait here for pickup. You move, and we won't hesitate to shoot you."

Bakkra nodded, not trusting his sore throat to make the right sounds, and carefully looked around the area.

He, and several dozen others, had been set down in the middle of a wide open area, marked with reflective white lines and flashing lights.

A landing pad… Pillars, where are they taking us?

---

The answer to that question was two-fold. First, the Judak Nurr members were transferred by shuttle into the hold of a Batarian freighter, and from there, into a more distant orbit where the freighter met up with the single largest ship in the Batarian fleet.

The Might of Khar'shan. One of the Hegemony's largest and most powerful ships, the Might of Khar'shan served as a spaceborne reminder of the Hegemony's supremacy over the rest of the council.

As the prisoners were marched two by two from the hold of the freighter, through an airlock and into the belly of the Might, Bakkra noted that the few glances he could catch of the dreadnought through viewports seemed to indicate it had been at some point damaged.

Armour plates had been in some places removed, replaced with huge sheets of Nanoweave Tarps marked with the Hegemony symbol, and several gun turret mounts scattered across the visible hull appeared to be missing their corresponding turrets.

No, not battle damage. A refit of some kind?

The Enforcer behind him gave him a solid shove, sending him staggering across the airlock umbilical. "Keep moving, whelp!"

Shaking his head, Bakkra sped up, returning to the side of his fellow prisoner - a member of the Judak Nurr he didn't recognise, presumably from one of the other cells. The rebel's eyes widened questioningly, and Bakkra grunted, averting his gaze. The rebel turned away, apparently willing to accept 'nothing' as an answer.

But as the pair were lead deeper into the vessel of the Hegemony's flagship, Bakkra couldn't help but wonder.

---

The next time he opened his one healthy eye, it was because of the shrieking of the ship's alarm.

Why, exactly, the Might of Khar'shan's alarm was going off was unknown to him, but it was loud enough to rouse him from his slumber. He sat up, pulling at the chain around his ankle and peering through the small peephole in the wall of his cell.

The corridor's lights had been dimmed, replaced by the orange flash of a warning siren, and Hegemony Enforcers walked in pairs down the hallway at regular intervals, holding their oversized weapons casually across their shoulders or by their hips.

Bakkra noticed that none of the Enforcers seemed particularly worried about this alarm.

It's probably just their protocol. When the alarm sounds, patrol the cells in pairs.

Suddenly, an explosion sent shudders throughout the room, throwing Bakkra roughly to the floor. He clambered to his feet and peered out into the hallway once more. The Enforcers seemed to have been barely staggered by the blast, but were now clutching their weapons more tightly, in a combat ready pose.

Now they're worried… about what?

He didn't dare hope that it was some kind of rescue attempt. The idea was too stupid to fathom - who in Batarian space had the kind of power to oppose the Might of Khar'shan? And who outside would care enough to intervene, risking open war with the Hegemony in the process?

Only madmen, surely.

Bakkra suddenly became aware of a rhythmic thumping sound coming from somewhere above him, the clank of metal on metal slowly growing louder.

The Enforcers must have heard it as well, all turning and looking at something on the ceiling that was out of Bakkra's line of sight.

The clanking stopped. The Enforcers tensed.

With a final, loud clang, a metal grate fell from the ceiling.

The Hegemony soldiers all immediately snapped to attention, half a dozen rifles pointed at the grate lying on the floor. And then, slowly, they looked up, - just in time to see the grenade fall through from the vents above.

Bakkra ducked away from the vision slit, - apparently in vain, as no explosion tore apart the corridor. Taking a moment to peer out again, he saw that all six Enforcers were still stood perfectly still, rifles held pointed at the grate.

None of them moved an inch. None of them made even a single sound. They were completely and utterly still.

Peering down at the ground, Bakkra saw that the 'grenade' was not, in fact, a grenade. Rather, it was a device, shaped somewhat like a crown, flickering with blue energies.

Another clank drew Bakkra's attention to the far side of the corridor, where just two Enforcers remained, apparently unaffected by the strange device that had somehow incapacitated the rest of their group.

A green-and-grey-clad biped in combat armour dropped into view, presumably from the vent system, landing squarely in the middle of the corridor. In their hand, they held a short baton. As they stood, they casually turned their head from side to side, surveying their situation.

The two still-active Enforcers didn't hesitate to open fire, the echoing blasts of two rapid-fire heavy shotguns shattering the stunned silence that had grasped the hallway.

The figure made no effort at dodging, an ovaloid shell of green energy around their body blocking the barrage of fire.

The green-and-grey soldier tilted their head left, then right. A sign of admiration and respect, but also a declaration of superiority.

If the stranger was a Batarian, they were arrogant.

With a flick of the wrist, the stranger's baton extended into a full length staff, and they stepped forward, stabbing at one of the Enforcers. Electricity arced across his armor, the kinetic barriers flickering wildly before shutting down, bursts of smoke flying off his armoured hardsuit.

Although it knocked down the Enforcer's shields, his armour appeared able to resist the obvious shocking effect of the weapon, and he batted it away from his chest with one arm, still firing the shotgun one-handed.

The green shell around the stranger had faded away to a barely-present shimmer by the time the barrage of kinetic rounds finally abated, both shotguns dangerously close to overheating. Changing tactics, the soldier stepped closer to the two Batarians, before launching into a spinning leg sweep with their staff that ended abruptly when it struck the first Enforcer's leg.

The stranger tilted their head to the right again, as if it were nothing more than a minor setback. And then they dropped the staff, leaned backwards almost ninety degrees, and kicked straight up, hitting one of the Enforcers in the chin hard enough to lift him from the ground and slam his head into the ceiling. He dropped like a sack of bricks, and didn't get up.

The second Enforcer dropped his shotgun, activating glowing orange Omni-Gauntlets in its place. Without giving his opponent a second to respond or reposition, he lashed out with a heavy right hook at the stranger's crotch, shattering the remnants of their energy shield and sending them flying down the hallway in an ungainly heap.

To their credit, they immediately sprung back to their feet, took two short steps, and literally leapt back into the fight, swinging at the Enforcer's face with one fist.

The Enforcer ducked, stepped to one side, and launched a furious flurry of blows with his hands, elbows, knees, and feet that sent the stranger sprawling out of Bakkra's line of sight despite their efforts to counter. He could still see, however, the Enforcer, winding his fist back for another heavy punch.

The Enforcer's Omni-Gauntlet shot forward, and there was a distinctly unhealthy thudding sound. Snarling wordlessly, the Hegemony trooper drew his fist back for another punch, but before it could connect another grey-clad soldier appeared, dropping into the room from above as the first one had.

They surveyed the area in much the same way as the first one had, and then retrieved their own staff, bringing it out to its full length with a casual flick of the wrist.

The Enforcer looked between his initial target and the newcomer, obviously trying to decide which one to attack first. In the end, he settled for finishing his first fight, delivering another powerful blow to the still-hidden soldier before releasing them and standing, cracking his knuckles.

The second soldier spun the staff by their side with one hand and then spoke, in a language Bakkra's translator didn't recognise.

The Enforcer stepped forward, carefully staying just out of reach of the stranger's staff, looking for an opening. And then the first grey-clad soldier reappeared in Bakkra's line of sight, somehow still walking despite having taken several shotgun rounds and at least three power-armour assisted Omni-Gauntlet blows in quick succession.

And before the Enforcer could even realize his mistake, they rushed forwards, launching into a flying kick.

The Enforcer responded quickly, sidestepping the kick and striking the soldier in the back with an elbow as they went past. The second soldier stepped forwards, staff raised, and launched a flurry of blows, the Enforcer easily blocking or batting aside each one.

The first soldier picked themselves up and joined the fray, striking rapidly at the Enforcer with hands and feet whilst nimbly dodging the sweeping attacks of their comrade.

Even two on one, the Enforcer held his own easily, the few hits that landed barely fazing him, and the attacks he landed in turn easily knocking his foes a step or two back.

It wasn't until the third grey soldier dropped from the ceiling that the strangers finally gained an advantage, simply body piling the Hegemony trooper and dragging him to the ground in a pile of flailing limbs.

Pinning him down with their own weight, they worked together to pry the Hegemony agent's helmet off. The staff-wielding soldier collapsed it back into its baton form and struck at the Enforcer's exposed face.

The agent began to convulse mildly as electricity sparked from the end of the baton until the electricity cut out and the Enforcer slumped, unconscious.

The three grey-glad soldiers climbed to their feet easily. The first to arrive pointed out the six incapacitated Enforcers and spoke again in their unknown language, allowing their teammates to pass them by before turning and making their way towards the cells.

The biped peered through each of the cell view slots as they walked, finally stopping just out of Bakkra's line of sight. Though he could not see them, in the complete silence of the hallway, he, and every other prisoner, clearly heard their words.

"Krilak Thol?" the strangers asked, obviously waiting for a response before continuing in broken but understandable Western Khar'shani. "Come with us if you want to live."
 
Last edited:
82 - Interlude: The Nexus
Something, something, Geth do not intentionally infiltrate.

82 - Interlude: The Nexus
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♦Topic: [MAJOR] Hegemony victory over 'terror cell'
In: Boards ► Galactic Affairs ► Politics ► Batarian Hegemony

Nua'Taach nar Prismoid
(Original Poster) (Veteran Member) (Pilgrim)
Posted on 8/11/2160:

Report found here.

As anyone following Batarian politics is aware, the Judak Nurr are the most recent in a long line of resistance movements against the Hegemony.

According to the Hegemony report, linked above, as well as a couple of my own sources, the Judak Nurr's most recent attack on a broadcasting facility (thread here) was thwarted by the SIU, who then went on to capture the rest of the cell in a series of midnight flash raids across Lorek's habitable zone.

This is bad news for the Batarians as a race, because at this point pretty much everyone was convinced those guys were the last hope of any kind of democratic renaissance in that particular area of space, and now their main militant cell is being shipped off to Khar'shan for summary execution.





(Showing Page 2 of 2)

► 120120021
Replied on 8/11/2160:
I see. This turn of events is doubly unfortunate, then.

Seems strange that they'd be using the Might of Khar'shan for a prisoner run, though. Weren't there rumours about it vanishing into Verush Orbit for some huge refit? Do the Batarians even have the capacity to refit a Dread in less than four GS months?


► Menae's Proudest (Turian)
Replied on 8/11/2160:
I suppose they might - apparently they've been offering big money for Quarian pilgrims? Batarian State Arms are really stepping up as well. Rumblings of the Hegemony deploying some second-generation power armour came up a while ago, I believe.

It's possible the Hegemony have just massively gotten their military-industrial act together. Finally. Not like every other force in the Citadel isn't doing the same. Hell, the Corvette I used to serve on got sold to a Quarian pilgrim a couple years back. Too outdated for the Hierarchy to make use of.

Shame the Judak Nurr have been shut down now. Would have liked a bit more of those combat footage. Always interesting to watch, and might have given us a bit of insight into those power armour rumors.

And, I guess it's unfortunate that the Hegemony is going to continue to exist for a little while longer. At least until they do something colossally stupid and get themselves killed.

► BeepBoopIAmGeth (Geth)
Replied on 8/11/2160:
Seven trimesters ago, the number of Quarians on Pilgrimage in Hegemony Space was six.
Last trimester, the number of Quarians on Pilgrimage in Hegemony Space was six hundred and seventy four.
The number of Quarians on Pilgrimage in Hegemony Space is increasing at an increasing rate.
Batarian State Arms is offering standardised high wages and free access to old equipment to every Quarian Pilgrim who signs up for a three year contract.


► Scallwug
Replied on 8/11/2160:
By high wages, do you mean by Citadel standards or Batarian standards?

Because I don't think they can afford the former, and the latter is roughly equivalent to the kind of money that Citadel register monkeys earn.

That said, I guess the Quarians can't really be picky when it comes to jobs. Who'd hire a suit rat as a register monkey?

No offence, OP.


► Dioxygen Difluoride (Salarian)
Replied on 8/11/2160:
#Menae's Proudest:
Something, something, remote controlled Thresher Maws. I'd laugh if the Hegemony actually got something out of that research, though. Seems an invitation for the Threshers to break out of containment, kill all the scientists and turn the facility into their nest. You'd have to be mad to try something like that - and this is me, talking.

► SerpentHeadedSaviour (Temp-banned)
Replied on 9/11/2160:
By the spirits, will you people stop condoning the actions of a terror cell and denouncing a member of the Citadel community? Board rules on conduct exist for a reason, guys.

Like them or not, the Hegemony is a longstanding member of the Citadel Council and despite what people seem to believe, they aren't some horrific vile monsters to be mocked and despised by all.

They're a Citadel government, and the Judak Nurr are mass-murdering terrorists. This is not 'the end of all hope for Batarian democracy' - the Batarians have a democracy already.

It's the actions of groups like the Judak Nurr which force them to bring in their emergency measures and tighten restrictions. You think the Hegemony's leaders want to strictly limit trade between the Hegemony and the Asari Republics?

No, they just don't want the terrorists to bomb Thessia, or Palaven, or anyone else's worlds. They're the good guys, here.

► Miracle Star (Watching Over You) (High Mod)
Replied on 9/11/2160:
#SerpentHeadedSaviour

For the last time, this is not a Citadel hugbox. This is the Nexus. The board rules do not prevent opinionated discussion, nor do they require all members to bow to the supreme greatness of the Citadel Council, all glory to them. You want to talk to other people who believe in your delusions of a perfect Citadel government opposed by the horrific Human menace, you can kriff off to the Cyber Ward Forums. In the meantime, enjoy your (third!) six week ban. You will not be warned again.

Now, as to your points.

1 - The Hegemony are not a member of the Citadel Council. They are a member of the Citadel. There is a distinct and important difference. And yes, the Hegemony actually are horrific vile monsters. Look at this STG report on the conditions on Logasiri and tell me those people deserve that.

No, they don't. Most of them aren't even Hegemony natives - they're slaves, snatched up from the Terminus for the express purpose of manual labour (or sex slaving, in the case of the Asari). It is a disgusting practice according to literally everyone who isn't the Hegemony.

2 - The Judak Nurr are not 'mass murderers'. The number of confirmed kills according to the Judak Nurr is less than one hundred, all Hegemony military personnel on active duty. If you believe the Hegemony as you obviously do, it's actually less than fifty, which is downselling their kill count.

3 - No, the Hegemony is not a democracy. It is a totalitarian regime lead by a council of the wealthiest and most powerful Batarian lords (aka the scummiest, greediest, most slave-hoarding lords).

4 - Okay, literally the only valid point you have. The Hegemony is just as reliant on imported resources and talent as everyone else is, in one way or another, and in the current geopolitical climate that does translate to wanting to maximise trade.

5 - Trust me, if any Batarian group bombs Palaven, it will be the Hegemony themselves (or the Hegemony disguised as pirates... no real difference there, though). Remember what happened on Gellix?

► Library Of All Things (Asari)
Replied on 19/11/2160:
I recognize that this chain of conversation has slumbered recently, but rumours have reached my ears from multiple sources regarding this news story. Unfortunately, knowing the moderators frown upon improperly sourced news reports, I didn't believe them to warrant a new post.

The content of these rumours depends greatly on who is telling them, as always, but the basic content is the same. At some point in the last week, the Batarian dreadnought Might of Khar'shan was attacked and boarded by an unknown force, and the captive members of the Judak Nurr (all two hundred and seventeen members of the Lorek cell, according to most of my sources) were rescued by that same unknown force.

Now, for the diverging points of those rumours, in no particular order:

- Two other Batarian ships were destroyed in the battle.
- One of the rescuing force's ships was destroyed in battle.
- The Might of Khar'shan was destroyed in battle.
- The rescuing force was another cell of the Judak Nurr.
- The rescuing force was a group of mercenaries hired by the Judak Nurr.
- The rescuing force was a group of Humans.
- The rescuing force was the Human's sponsors, The Fleet.
- The rescuing force were Turian/Asari/Salarian special forces.
- The rescuing force was a single cyborg assassin with a sword.
- The rescuing force was the Geth.
- The rescuing force was sent by the Shadow Broker.
- The rescuing force was lead by self-replicating war machines from another dimension.

I have heard all of these variations (and a few more, too similar to bother repeating) from my various sources.

If you're wondering about that last one - yes, I heard it from a legitimate source, and yes, he was very specific (and insistent) about the details. It's strange - that source has always been very reliable in the past.

Nonetheless, I thought I would post this here for discussion, if anyone hadn't heard yet, or had something else to add.

► 12012002
Replied on 19/11/2160:
Well, that's incredibly interesting, for various reasons. I'll admit, my sources in the Hegemony are limited and generally a little slow, but after giving one a little prod she revealed that, at the very least, the public execution of the Judak Nurr has been delayed by four GS days. Coincidence? I think not, although whether the rumors are the cause or a result of that delay, I'm not sure.

As for your source, perhaps they were compromised? If it was a Hegemony-based source, you should be aware that the SIU have been seriously cracking down on information leaks recently, and I'm hearing words of them feeding people false information.

That seems... a bit too blatantly false, though. Very strange.
End of Page. 1, 2

■​

♦ Private message from Jack Link:

► No Unread Private Messages
ThereIsNoShadowCabal: I assume you've heard the rumours, regarding the Hegemony's latest little victory against the Judak Nurr?
Jack Link: Naturally.
ThereIsNoShadowCabal: Well?
ThereIsNoShadowCabal: Thoughts? Opinions? Speculation? Snide comments? Confirmation that the Fleet's behind it all? Anything?
Jack Link: I'm afraid not.
Jack Link: To be entirely honest, it has me rather stymied. I'm almost certain it was neither the Fleet nor the Systems Alliance, although I'd have to wait for my sources to get back to me for anything concrete. You know how it is.
ThereIsNoShadowCabal: Of course. Your speculation, then?
Jack Link: I just read Library's list of rumours. Her sources are usually good.
Jack Link: Immediately, I'm ruling out rogue Hegemony, Citadel Council races, and the Judak Nurr. First two wouldn't risk it. Third doesn't have the manpower without the Lorek cell. That's where all their militants were based.
ThereIsNoShadowCabal: Rogue Hegemony? That wasn't on her list.
Jack Link: No, but I expect someone to add it shortly. 'Rogue *government name here* agents' is the Extranet's favourite trope, after all.
Jack Link: Now, after taking out the obviously false, we're left with only a few remainders. Cyborg assassin, mercenaries, Geth, Shadow Broker and self replicating robots from another dimension.
ThereIsNoShadowCabal: What's that quote you like? By removing the impossible, the remains, however implausible, are truth?
ThereIsNoShadowCabal: Well I hope that works, because we have a whole heap of implausible right here.
Jack Link: Hm. Your thoughts?
ThereIsNoShadowCabal: Well obviously, ruling out the self replicating robot. That's the dumbest thing I've ever heard. Who'd believe that?
ThereIsNoShadowCabal: And the cyborg assassin. Fanciful as it is, I'm pretty sure a single assassin couldn't take a dreadnought. Especially given there were a lot of SIU agents onboard. Those guys are hardcore as kriff. Have you seen the video of an SIU agent beating down a Krogan?
Jack Link: No, but I'll look it up. I like to keep up to date on these things.
Jack Link: But back to our hypothetical assassin. Even if they could, somehow, board the dreadnought and eliminate the SIU, I remain unconvinced of their ability to pull a Moses and get the prisoners all out safely.
ThereIsNoShadowCabal: I'm uncertain as to what 'pulling a Moses' entails, but sure. That leaves mercenaries, Geth, and Shadow Broker.
ThereIsNoShadowCabal: No way it's mercenaries. Judak Nurr don't have the funds for a mission that big. And who would be insane enough to take it, anyway? Except maybe the Blood Pack, I guess.
Jack Link: One would thing the Blood Pack were perhaps not the wisest choice for a rescue mission. We're agreed on that point.
Jack Link: Thought I obviously lack sources within the Geth Collective, I would rule them out as well. What do they stand to gain from attacking a major Citadel power?
ThereIsNoShadowCabal: Never mind the fact that they haven't been outside the Veil since the Morning War began.
ThereIsNoShadowCabal: So Shadow Broker, then?
Jack Link: Once you eliminate the impossible, whatever remains, no matter how improbable, must be the truth.
Jack Link: That said, I don't see what the Shadow Broker has to gain, either. I don't doubt he has the manpower, but why invest like that?
ThereIsNoShadowCabal: You're right, as always. I don't see why he would bother. And my sources are quite adamant on a 'no' regarding the SB's involvement, anyway.
Jack Link: That's troubling confirmation to receive.
Jack Link: I have a few more untapped sources, high ups who owe me favours. Usually I wouldn't bother wasting those favours for an extranet rumour like this, but given the state of the rest of my sources, I believe it may be for the best. I'll get back to you.
 
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83 - Rescue
83 - Rescue

For a group of terrorists, the Judak Nurr were surprisingly well behaved throughout the little rescue mission. After I'd finally managed to subdue the Batarians in power armour - quite a chore, given they seemed largely immune to the stunning effects of the Stun Staff and the Tesla Rifle as long as they wore their armour, - and opened the cells up, they shuffled out, organized themselves into groups and quite happily followed two of the NeoAvatars in running back to the Might's airlock.

After I'd explained things to their leader, he'd offered up a short speech, talking about freedom and finding allies in the fight against the corrupt Hegemony, and then told everyone to shut up and get the hell off the ship.

They didn't even stop to loot the unconscious Hegemony soldiers along the way, - although a few of the sleeping grunts did receive some swift kicks from passing militants, - mostly seeming content to follow their orders and scram.

Given that the route they were taking lead them through three corridors that were on fire and one more with a hastily-repaired hull breach, that was probably fair. Luckily, sealing the other doors and access panels linking the prison deck to the other decks had done a perfect job of keeping the Hegemony out of the way, which make the self-imposed escort mission infinitely more tolerable, even if the Batarians did keep glancing at the nanofiber tarp I'd slapped over the broken window and muttering uneasily as they went by.

Then again, given these guys were a militant cell of a resistance movement perfectly willing to use violence - in small doses - against the Hegemony, I'm pretty sure they would have been more competent in a fight than most escort mission VIPs, so it probably wouldn't have been too bad either way.

They only hesitated even slightly when they crossed the umbilical into the Jacob Keyes, and that was probably because it wasn't until then that they saw a NeoAvatar without a full-head helmet.

Realizing that they were being saved by one of the most elusive and mysterious races in the galaxy was probably quite a shock. After all, it wasn't like the Systems Alliance had really done a lot with the Citadel in this timeline, thanks to Fusou's interference, and they were the extranet's favorite new 'mysterious superpower', for good reason.

Most Batarians outside the Hegemony had never met Humans before. Hell, most of them probably hadn't even seen a Human before, outside of pictures. For people inside the Hegemony to not just see them, but be rescued by them...

I guess today's their lucky day, I muttered across the Command Network.

Stop channeling Johnson. Just because we named a ship after him-

I rather maturely responded with the digital equivalent of poking my tongue out and making silly noises.

---

Once the last of the Judak Nurr had crossed the umbilical into the Jacob Keyes, the ship disconnected from the dreadnought, thrusters flaring up as the ship shot away from its larger Hegemony counterpart.

Once it was sufficiently distant from the Might, it, and its escort fleet, engaged their FTL drives, blasting away from the crippled Hegemony flagship.

Through the small Subversion Drone mounted to the hull, I continued to monitor the ship's systems, watching with amusement as the Hegemony tried, and failed, to purge their systems of my virus.

Seeing some commotion on the bridge through the ship's cameras, I quickly tapped into the audio feed.

"-mean we can't get rid of it?" the ship's commanding officer, Admiral Kiathu, screamed in barely restrained rage.

"Even a complete reboot couldn't remove it, sir!" some poor ensign reported. "The images are everywhere!"

The Admiral roared in frustration and threw the datapad he was holding into the far wall. "WELL GET RID OF THEM! THIS UGLY HUMAN ABOMINATION NEEDS TO BE REMOVED!"

Oh.

Oh.

He did not just call my face ugly.

Wow, the little bitch, Hope put in. I thought that selfie was perfect.

I know, right? Tapping into their systems, I began engaging in a little ill-spirited trolling. Welp, hope they didn't need those maintenance manuals. Or control over the sanitation systems.

---

Once Hope and I were done making things miserable for the ship's crew we withdrew from their systems almost entirely, allowing them access to their weapons and engines once more. The only thing we left behind was a basic Progenitor info-worm. I'd already infected one Batarian vessel with it, the cruiser Dravush, but I hadn't received anything of note from it yet, meaning it hadn't docked with any Batarian installations recently.

A shame, but hopefully ploughing the dreadnought for information would be more bountiful.

Speaking of ploughing bountiful things for information, Hope announced over the Command Network, I want to go-

Speak to Fusou, yes, you mentioned. Suppressing a groan, I slipped into the body of my NeoAvatar, currently making their way towards the Jacob Keyes' deployment bay. But we have more important things to worry about right now. Like the fact we have a hold full of terrorists.

Yeah… hey, we need to stop collecting terrorists. First the Rats, then the Rebels, now these guys… I mean, we didn't collect any in Red Faction, but everywhere else we've got a solid record going.

Suddenly Hope's NeoAvatar, beside mine, came to life. Hope shot me a grin and began humming the Pokémon theme.

Frowning, I rolled my eyes and waved a hand towards the door. A pointless gesture, since I was actually accessing the door through the Command Network to open it, but… ah, well.

With a swoosh, the door slid open, revealing a loud, somewhat smelly hold full of malnourished and largely naked Batarians.

Funny how different things seem more important when you're not busy getting your shit kicked in by some douchebag in power armour.

Luckily for me, at least someone amongst the crowd of former prisoners was on the ball, because almost as soon as we entered, the entire group began muttering and turning in our direction. A teal-skinned Batarian shouted loudly in Western Khar'shani and began making his way through the crowd, his fellows parting ways to allow him easier passage.

Krilak Thol nodded his head in greeting as he approached, tilting his head slightly to the right. "You are the captain of this expedition?"

I nodded and tilted my own head to the right in return. "Indeed," I said in Khar'shani. "I do apologise for the lack of living space here - this area is for storing vehicles, not enough people to crew the ship."

Krilak spread his arms widely - the Batarian equivalent of a shrug. "It is no issue. We will make do. Your soldier mentioned this would be temporary?"

I nodded again. "We figured that dropping you off back on Lorek would be a dumb idea, so we're transferring to our homeworld, just until the heat dies down. Once we get there, which will be in about…" I trailed off, turning to Hope.

"Eight minutes until we're landed and ready to disembark."

"Eight minutes, we'll get you fitted out with some food and beds and the like. In the meantime, a couple of my crew will be down shortly with some clothes. One size fits all, but better than nothing."

Krilak Thol nodded gratefully. "I appreciate your hospitality, captain. Have you established contact with other cells of the Jaduk Nurr?"

"Unfortunately not. It appears they all went to ground after the raids on Lorek, for which I do not blame them. Once we arrive at Miranda, I will provide you access to our communications facilities, should you wish to attempt to reach them yourself."

The revolutionary nodded. "I am grateful. You have done the Batarians a great service."

"Nobody benefits from a government like the Hegemony. As mentioned, we'll be touching down in just a couple of minutes. Once we get planetside, you'll be assigned temporary lodgings, should you wish to rest, and will otherwise be free to explore the city. The same is extended to all of your companions. At noon tomorrow, the Faith Foundation's leaders will be in touch for the proper negotiations."

Krilak stepped back, eyeing me warily. "Negotiations? For what?"

"Our assistance, of course. As I mentioned, nobody benefits from the existence of governments like the Hegemony. The Faith Foundation aren't going to take the fight to them directly - we simply don't have the assets," I lied through my teeth.

"However, we're more than happy to assist you against them. You have good reason for wanting them gone, a semi-trained and experienced militant group, and an insider's view of the workings of the Hegemony," Hope put in. "Batarian State Arms are stepping up the production of new, high quality gear for their SIU units - as you've no doubt seen. The Faith Foundation is willing to serve that same role for you. Weapons, armour, vehicle support. It's all up for grabs."

Krilak's eyes narrowed. No doubt he was wondering what we stood to gain - and he was right too. We… actually didn't stand to gain much. Our picking a fight with the Hegemony was more for moral reasons.

"And the details of such an arrangement would be discussed in these negotiations, tomorrow?" he finally asked.

Hope and I nodded, and Krilak grinned. "Very well. My men and I will discuss the matter tonight. Is there anything else we should know?"

Hope and I shared a glance. "I don't believe so," I said after a moment's consideration. "If anything else comes up, we'll be in touch."

Krilak turned and made to leave but suddenly stopped, turning back around. "Oh, and one other thing. I recommend you re-check your translation systems. I think your units of time might be off a little."

Ah. He hasn't heard how fast Human FTL is.

'Human' FTL is Slipspace. We're not using Slipspace.

No, we're using something faster. My point stands.

I waved a hand dismissively. "I don't believe they are. This translation software comes straight from the Citadel embassies."

Krilak's face twitched. "Oh? I had heard rumours of the vast superiority of Human FTL, but… I hadn't imagined they were that much better."

Hope grinned wickedly. "I think you'll find that compared to the Citadel, everything on Miranda is 'that much better.'"

---

As promised, the Jacob Keyes was quick to make landfall, setting down in the designated landing area in the mountainous region north of New Bondi. The Batarians, now all clothed in ill-fitting grey jumpsuits, disembarked with surprising vigor, many taking deep breaths and simply standing around enjoying themselves.

I had to wonder how long it had been since they'd been outside.

A number of NeoAvatars had been stationed at the starport, providing helpful directions to the Batarians as they made their way away from their ships and closer to the city. Looking down from their perch on the high cliffs, the city was visible as a carpet of buildings reaching from the base of the cliffs to the distant sea, webs of elevated tunnels and canals crisscrossing the area.

Beyond the city, well into the ocean, a looming hulk of metal was visible, rising from the depths like some kind of leviathan - the lower case, giant sea monster, kind, not the uppercase, douchebags who created the mechasquid, kind.

The FFV Ringworld - I'd actually built the thing relatively close to 'standard' - I'd taken images of the Manswell Expedition vessel from the data disk Fusou had given us and used that as a base from which to create the ship, giving it a somewhat more 'authentic' appearance.

I mean, I doubted the Judak Nurr would care, but I appreciated the attention to detail.

I took a breather, shifting my consciousness to the body of another NeoAvatar, located in a smaller building in the suburban area of New Bondi, closer to the beach.

I had a little less than twenty hours before I had to go back to doing diplomatic shit. So I figured I'd savour what little time I had, and go for a surf.

Australian procrastination, at it's finest.
 
84 - Mediate
Short chapter because blugh.

84 - Mediate
I watched through half a dozen cameras as the Batarian entourage made their way from the accommodation I'd provided them, - one of the larger 'hotel-esque' buildings in Miranda's northern district, - down to the nearest transport terminal, a small skyrail station built on the bank of one of the city's numerous canals. Amusingly, it wasn't Krilak Thol leading the procession, but rather one of the armed and armoured militia members, who was waving his arms and gesturing enthusiastically as they entered the terminal.

This particular Batarian I recognized, but not because he was on the Hegemony's hit list. Rather, he was one of the more avid travellers amongst the Judak Nurr's militia cell, or at least it seemed.

Some of the Batarians actually surprised me with how much they used the public transport, even in just the day and a bit they'd been present. Though most of them didn't use it, a couple of them had apparently taken it upon themselves to visit every train station in the city, or something, and this particular Batarian was one of them.

After travelling south all the way through the city they'd spent a short while on the beach, looking out at the 'wreck' of the FFV Ringworld and watching Hope and I surf, and then gotten back on the trains and gone back north to their little hotel.

I wasn't entirely sure as to why they'd felt the need to take a trip to the beach, but thankfully Humans were still one of the biggest mysteries in the universe and apparently the Batarians didn't think much of my NeoAvatar's massively faked sentience as they made their way through the city.

The precession stepped onto a train that had just pulled into the station - two minutes ahead of schedule, but it wasn't like anyone else was waiting on the train.

Whilst they settled in on the train, I turned my attention to an alternate NeoAvatar, 77 kilometres away.

---

The Michael Bay Military Base, despite its name, had yet to suffer too many explosions, and the few that had occurred had been less 'enormous ball of fire' and more 'chunks of ceramic scattered all across the floor'.

This was largely because we hadn't actually started testing many of our more stupid ideas yet. The current project in the works was a new form of flight-capable, or at least superjump-capable, NeoAvatar - we'd kicked the idea around a little while after Hope had first figured out how to operate Eezo, but now we were taking the time to actually do something about it.

By stripping away the NeoAvatar's resource storage systems mounted in the, uh, chest region, and relocating some of the bulkier sensors to take their place, we freed up a lot of space running along the Avatar's spine - a space we promptly filled in with a small Eezo core.

Unfortunately, even with the Eezo core as small as it could go whilst still being useful, it was still too big to fit comfortably inside a Human-sized frame. That problem was relatively easy to solve, simply by covering the whole thing in armour. When completed, it simply looked like a battlesuit with a large backpack mounted power core - which wasn't too far from the truth, honestly.

Once we had the Eezo core sorted, making the robot light enough to be capable of flight, we had to figure out the actual mechanisms of said flight. After a little fiddling around, we came up with a workable design - four lightweight wings were built into the backpack, capable of folding up for storage. Those wings were less for gliding and more for controlling flight, which meant we were able to cut down on their size a bit.

The main propulsion came in the form of a number of microthrusters, not just on the backpack but also on the waist and each boot, providing a fair amount of control over the flight path.

Or, it would, once we figured out how to actually fly with it.

"Okay," Hope said as the Fabricators finished construction of our first test subject. "Do we want to do this the boring, effective way, or the stupid, fun way?"

I shot her a flat glare. "That's a stupid question, and you already know the answer."

---

The AeroAvatar stepped into the middle of the room, braced slightly, looked up, and activated the Eezo core. A blue glow wafted over the AeroAvatar, bringing its weight down to more manageable levels. All systems reading nominal, Hope activated the thrusters. Dozens of small pulses of energy fired from the suit and flight pack, lifting the heavy-turned-light unit easily into the air.

And straight into the ceiling.

At hypersonic speeds.

The AeroAvatar's head practically splattered on impact, shards of metal and sensor components exploding all over the testing room in a shower of debris. Detecting an issue, the thrusters cut out, causing the now-headless Aero to fall, in relatively slow motion, back towards the ground.

And then, midair, the Eezo core exploded, sending even more shrapnel flying around at high speed.

Hope and I shared a glance, giggling. "Well, that didn't work."

---

"Okay, take two. I set the power down to seventy five percent."

The Eezo core engaged safely, the Aero braced, and the thrusters fired.

This time, instead of shattering on impact, the Aero 'merely' caved in its own metallic skull, toppling towards the ground with sparks flying from its damaged sensor arrays.

Bright side, the Eezo core had the decency to wait until it hit the ground before it exploded.

---

"Test three. Power to fifty."

Thud.

"Ooh, that had to hurt."

Thud.

"Think it'll explode this-"

Boom.

"Never mind."

---

"Test five."

"Oh, hey, it didn't headbutt the ceiling and kill itself. Progress!"

"Yeah, but I feel like-"

Boom.

"Ugh."

---

"Test eleven, or why the fuck is the eezo core still exploding."

Boom.

---

"Test forty six. This is getting silly."

"Do you want to just put it back in the design program and get that to figure this out?"

"NO, DAMNIT!"

---

Eventually I had to leave Hope to it, as Krilak Thol's train was finally pulling into the station nearest what I'd dubiously declared the Faith Foundation's New Bondi Headquarters - a shy, one story building with a number of smaller rooms, currently nothing but server farms, surrounding a single larger meeting room, complete with a number of different table shapes that could rise from the floor, a ceiling mounted holographic projector, and a number of speakers and microphones scattered throughout.

To be entirely honest, the main reason for that was for showing off. But it worked.

The Batarian entourage stepped off the train, eighteen in all, and I immediately started fiddling around inside the meeting room, creating a long, curved table large enough for all of them to sit on one side - and, after a moment of stupidity, chairs to match.

---

Krilak Thol brought not one but two inner circles to the meeting - the majority of his people were his militant leaders, with only a handful of his more politically-minded followers present. I suspected that was due to Lorek's status as the hideout for the primary militant cells, meaning that the Judak Nurr's true political inner circle was probably elsewhere.

Given this particular meeting was more about the militaries than the politics, though, I didn't foresee that being much of an issue.

Once the Batarians had taken their seats, I decided to make my entrance. Kind of. Following in the fashion of Warframe's Cephalon Suda, my avatar for this meeting was nothing more than a holographic translucent green sphere, flanked and orbited by a series of smaller spheres.

I could have used a NeoAvatar, but… well, frankly, I felt like showing off.

The Batarians eyed the holographic geometry warily as it wobbled in the air at the far end of the room from their table.

"Greetings, Krilak Thol and associates. I do so hope you've enjoyed your stay on Miranda, brief as it has been."

The rebels glanced between themselves and muttered - I could still hear them, of course, but I figured giving them the illusion of privacy wouldn't hurt in this case. Finally, Krilak turned to speak to me.

"You are the Faith Foundation's leader? I'm afraid to say you have me at a disadvantage, here."

"My name is Faith. I understand that must sound rather presumptuous, and I do apologize for that. Shall we get straight into business?"

Krilak nodded firmly. "Very well, then. Your starship captain explained that you wish to offer us the aid of the Faith Foundation in our rebellion against the Hegemony, in the form of supplies, equipment and soldiers. Is that correct?"

"As a brief overview of what exactly it is we wish to offer you, it is acceptable," I confirmed.

Krilak nodded again. "And may I ask why? Captain Drake said that no one benefitted from the Hegemony's presence - was that her opinion alone, or the opinion of your group as a whole?"

"All of us. Not, necessarily, all of Humanity, although I suspect almost all of them would be against the slaving and the torture and so on, but the Faith Foundation certainly stand against the Hegemony. This galaxy is veritably plagued with issues - piracy, slavery, famine, war. The Hegemony are not the sole cause, but they are certainly one of the greatest concentrations and contributors. They are but the first target."

"So we're just soldiers to you?" One of the Judak Nurr's military leaders asked pointedly. "It sounds as if our cause doesn't interest you."

"I apologize. I was merely explaining the larger picture behind my actions. The ultimate goal is to remove the Hegemony and put a more favourable, morally acceptable government in their place. We believe that you could form that government, and because of that, we are very interested in your cause."

The soldier went to speak again, but Krilak waved him down. "May I ask what would happen, were we to refuse?"

"You would be returned to Hegemony space, to a location and at a time of your choosing, and should the forces of the Faith Foundation ever encounter you on the battlefield, you would not be fired upon… unless, of course, we are… provoked."

Krilak smiled smugly. "Excellent. It is nice to see you are willing to take no for an answer. Integrity in negotiations is something I admire. Now, as you say, to business? Were we to accept, what are your expectations for us? You say you wish the Judak Nurr to supersede the Hegemony. Do you hold other expectations for us?"

I paused for a moment, considering that. "Not particularly. If you continue to live up to your reputation, then merely assuming control of Batarian infrastructure and operating as you are should be sufficient."


Krilak frowned, his eyes narrowing. "You're willing to provide us equipment and manpower for nothing in return? Forgive me for being suspicious."

My holographic avatar flickered as laughter echoed through the room. "Consider it an act of… good faith."

Krilak's eyes narrowed again.

"Will you accept our offer of assistance, Krilak Thol? Or shall we make arrangements to return you to Hegemony space?"

The Batarian entourage shared some nervous glances, but apparently everyone present trusted their leader to make the right choice.

"Much as I hate to say it, Faith, we could certainly use the assistance. On behalf of the Judak Nurr, I accept."
 
85 - Dambuster
85 - Dambuster

After dubiously accepting our assistance, Krilak had ordered his four military advisors to hop to, and plan a nice, big, showy attack, to prove that the Judak Nurr were still up and kicking, whilst he and the more peaceful members of his inner circle got to work coordinating the rest of the resistance movement, getting a great deal out of my highly advanced FTL communications systems.

Of the four militant officers, only one was a former officer, an ex-member of the Hegemony's military - the others were veterans of gang and mercenary fighting, and the sum of their strategic planning experience was as members of the Jaduk Nurr.

Luckily, that had apparently taught them something, because they were doing a better job at picking out the suboptimal targets than I was.

Then again, I wasn't really trying, because thanks to a message I'd received from Fusou, I already had a target in mind. I waited for Jarruk, the ex-military veteran, to finish explaining that proximity to a Hegemony airbase made attacking the Jalnor Refinery, and several other critical targets, a proposal far too risky for the Judak Nurr, and butted in.

"Which is why we're not going for any of the targets nearer the cities. Not yet, anyway."

The holographic map of Jalnor, Lorek's capital city, faded away, replaced by another, smaller map. Honestly, the Batarian base we were now looking at reminded me a little of the Amp Stations from Planetside. A single large factory building, surrounded by a number of smaller attendant buildings such as barracks and store rooms, all protected by a huge wall dotted with watchtowers.

"This facility is located in the Kurapp valley - am I pronouncing that right? It's well out of the way of any civilian installations. Unfortunately, being an armour and artillery testing range, it's also surrounded by flat, open plains and bristling with heavy turrets, of both anti-tank and anti-air varieties," I explained, gesturing to points of interest on the map as I spoke.

"So we can't flank it, and a full-on assault is suicide," Kren'thal summed up neatly.

A couple of the other Batarians were nodding. "You have a plan, though, I take it? You wouldn't have brought it to our attention otherwise."

"Amphibious assault. An elite team - and not to diss your own skills, but I'm thinking a Foundation team for this mission, - performs an amphibious assault and rushes in to destroy the anti-air turrets. When those are down, your forces will be able to come in by air and drop into the facility, hopefully whilst they're still disoriented and trying to regroup."

The Judak Nurr commanders seemed relatively happy with that, until one pointed out the obvious flaw. "But the river is almost eighty metres from the edge of the facility, and there's no cover. The only approach angle that would let you build speed would be going against the current. You'll get slaughtered."

"Absolutely right. Except… the river that runs through this particular valley is monitored from here, the Kuvinara Dam, just two kilometres upstream, at the edge of the valley. And according to a quick aerial scouting run, the reservoir is almost full. We ran a simulation of what might happen if the entire reservoir was poured into the valley..."

On the holographic map, the water level began to rise, reaching closer and closer to the base until eventually it intersected the walls. By the time it stopped, almost sixty metres of the Batarian base would be underwater.

"Basically, the Batarians should have built on the other bank." At Kren'thal's questioning look, I continued. "The other bank is more elevated. Because the water will be spreading over the north bank, it might not even reach high enough up to overflow on the southern side."

The ex-mercenary nodded. "I see."

Jarruk, the elder of the four Batarians and the only one with actual experience as a military commander, finally offered his thoughts. "Opening the dam would give them too much warning… we'd have to destroy it all at once. If nothing else, it'll certainly send a message. The Hegemony will certainly hate us after this. Destroying the dam won't have too much of an effect on the civilians in the area - last I checked, Unna was the only town that river serviced, and it's been abandoned since its mines were tapped out."

"If we do go ahead with this attack, what do we gain? Besides reputation."

"Can I answer that question with another question? Pretend for a moment you're the Hegemony. You've just authorised construction of a large, heavily fortified military armour and artillery compound with its own factory and research and development facilities in the middle of nowhere on a relatively unimportant backwater, over six hundred kilometres from the nearest inhabited area. Why?"

"Stupidity," Nukrae offered sarcastically.

Jarruk shot him a glare. "It's a vehicle depot with it's own factory and engineering facilities. The factory would make sense - for providing repairs and the like. But they wouldn't need the engineering facilities unless they wanted to do something new and untested. It's a prototype lab."

I nodded my head. "That's what my sources indicate." Thank you, Fusou. "Unfortunately, this means there will be a lot of BSA employees around. They're technically military, but they're not soldiers..."

Kren'thal shrugged. "As long as they don't point guns at us, we generally just tie them up and leave them. Not sure how well that'll work if this isn't a hit-and-run, though. Think there'll be a lot of suit-rats?"

I blinked. "Suit rats? You mean Quarians? Why would they be there?"

"The Hegemony hires them," Nukrae explained, spitting on the ground. "Gives them a nice, well paying job, guaranteed access to old Hegemony resources, and a bit of practical experience for their Pilgrimage, or whatever. They treat the damned vandals better than they treat their own people, mostly."

Well now, that's an interesting tidbit I hadn't known. I made a note to review the other employment records Fusou had dug up - there might have been more information there. And then I got back to the point of the meeting.

"Interesting. But not as interesting as this. Supposedly, two SIU officers, - and, of course, their entourage, - are to visit the facility in four days' time, for a 'routine inspection.' Whether or not you believe that, it's a chance to put the hurt on one of their biggest factories outside their home system, and take out two SIU high-ups to boot."

The four Batarians fell silent, weighing possibilities in their heads.

"Four days is not a lot of time to prepare," Kren'thal pointed out, after extended consideration.

"Never said it would be easy," I replied with a shrug. "Not saying we have to do it, but the potential benefits…"

Jarruk snorted and turned to his fellows. "The potential benefits are great. Worst case success, we knock off two SIU elites and destroy a major factory. Best case, we can take the factory, or at least its databanks, for ourselves.This isn't the kind of opportunity we can afford to pass up."

Apparently, having their senior militarist on side was enough to convince the others, as they all began nodding earnestly. "Alright, then," I said to the suddenly very eager officers. "Let's get to work."

---

The first stage of the plan was easy. A force of twelve Faith Foundation assault troopers, and twenty Judak Nurr specialists, were dropped into the fields a few kilometres downstream from the dam. We knew it didn't have any military presence, but we didn't rule out private security - hence the caution.

After spending the better part of an our trekking along the riverbank, our fears were confirmed. The dam was protected by a very frail, and largely useless, fence, a number of cameras, IR trackers, and motion sensors, and routine patrols by very bored looking Batarians with SMGs.

Hacking into the systems was easy enough - once we'd figured out where the cameras were transmitting too, I teleported a nanite-bomb down to infiltrate the systems, handily disabling the cameras and feeding the attached monitors an endless loop of 'nothing to see here'.

Then, we actually broke in.

With just six guards on site - four on patrol, in pairs, and two more in the security office, it was trivially easy to access the compound, and without the cameras, the latter two were useless, meaning we were almost entirely free to roam, save for the areas patrolled.

Due to the wide open spaces and long sight lines, however, the assault troopers were able to stealthily take out the patrolling guards with Hope's new tranquilizers, giving us access to everywhere in the facility save the one, still occupied command room.

Another teleported bomb, this time a gas grenade, was more than sufficient to incapacitate those two unfortunate guards.

I hoped the Hegemony didn't blame these people for what was about to happen. Not like we gave them a chance to resist us, or anything.

Once we'd totally secured the compound, we moved on to stage two. Six incredibly ballsy Batarian demolitionists, lead by a former mining engineer who'd claimed to have experience with 'something similar', - presumably cliff face blasting, - rappelled down the face of the dam with bandoliers full of Foundation explosives, mounting them periodically as they worked their way along the structure. Once each Batarian had exhausted their bandolier of explosives, they were hauled back up by two comrades, clambering to the top of the dam once more.

Once everyone had climbed back up and packed up their gear, we moved off the dam, no one particularly wanting to stick around and wait for it to explode.

The twenty Batarian rebels, plus my own squad of twelve, regrouped on the grassy verge near the edge of the embankment, loitering near the water as they waited for the dropship to arrive.

Once the dropship arrived, then we could launch the assault - we didn't want to start until absolutely everyone was ready to join in.

The Batarian demolitionist who'd lead the rappel teams approached my commandeered AeroAvatar, the currently idling squad leader of the present group of Foundation troopers.

"Sergeant Noon. We're all packed and ready to go, and the charges are set. On your signal, we will activate the detonation sequence."

I nodded. "Great. Dropship should be here any second now. Sort your men and wait for pickup. We'll get ourselves set up."

Giving an entirely unnecessary hand signal to the other Aeros, I sent them the order to prepare for the operation. They nodded, signaled their acknowledgement, and started getting set up, sealing helmets, checking weapons, and powering up their flight kits.

The low whine of engines drawing closer dragged both of our eyes to the skies as an older model Batarian-made Skyhauler, flying low over the trees, finally arrived at the site, swinging out over the reservoir before coming in slowly to deploy boarding ramps onto the bank.

"Alright, the shuttle is here. Everyone ready?"

The Aeros provided a number of basic thumbs-up responses. The Batarians mumbled their agreement, slinging their thus-far-unneeded weapons onto their backs and clustering together near the dropship.

"Excellent. Time to light the fuse."

Bakkra nodded his head grimly and tapped a key on his OmniTool, six bombs simultaneously detonating across the front surface of the dam. The superstructure held for just a couple of seconds, metal groaning in protest, before finally splitting apart. The water began to push, ripping huge chunks of concrete from the dam and flinging it downstream.

The Aeros, still standing on the bank, opened up one last lockbox of equipment, retrieving from within a number of thin, narrow planks.

Hope's Avatar grabbed two, bringing one over to me.

Bakkra's questioning glance was too much for me to resist.

"It's an amphibious assault raft. You may have seen some of the troops training with them, back on Miranda."

I just happened to know that 'may have' was the incorrect term - Bakkra was one of the Batarians who had spent a great deal of time exploring New Bondi, and I'd definitely seen him at the beach.

The Batarian blinked, and after a moment's consideration started looking between our 'amphibious assault rafts' and the water rushing over the edge of the dam, as if trying to comprehend the kind of madness we'd been cursed with to determine this was a logical course of action.

Eventually, he managed to spare the brainpower to speak. "You're insane. Twice insane."

I flashed him a cheeky grin before slipping my helmet on.

"Nah, mate. I'm an Australian."

Turning my back on the dumbstruck Batarian, I grabbed the offered surfboard and stepped into the rushing water.
 
86 - Flooded
Dear real life.

I am trying to write a fanfic here. I do not have time for your shit. Kindly fuck off.

~Faith

---

On a more serious note, very sorry about the delay. Work related shenanigans lead to four days in a row of 16 hour shifts. This was, as one might imagine... suboptimal, for fanfic writing purposes.


86 - Flooded

Let me make one thing perfectly clear. Surfing off a waterfall created by a collapsed dam and riding the river down to a military facility defended by artillery and anti-tank cannons is not a particularly wise move.

For one thing, the fall would kill most people. Whilst surfing down waterfalls was technically possible, it was not generally considered a particularly smart idea, especially on larger waterfalls. Attempting to surf almost six hundred feet of waterfall was firmly in the 'suicidal' category.

Of course, most people aren't hyper advanced robots with anti-gravity packs, glider wings, and microthruster systems. That kind of trivialized the threat, just a little.

The Aeros descended with all the grace of particularly heavy bricks, plummeting towards the swelling river below.

With a series of splashes, we landed, immediately clambering back on our boards to make the most of the powerful current. The river was strong enough to almost throw me downstream, but a combination of the board, the Aero's wings, and repeated application of the microthrusters was enough to keep me steady long enough for speed to take over.

I almost felt sorry for the Hegemony soldiers. Even though they must have been aware of the dam exploding, they had no idea what was coming.

---

For all that it was carrying us along, the water was still travelling faster than the Aero units, and it had a head start, too. By the time the strike force reached the base, almost two feet of the outermost wall were underwater, and a good chunk of the open ground inside the base was also submerged.

We made it almost right up to the gate on our surfboards before people actually started shooting at us, but thanks to the darkness, few of the bullets managed to hit, and due to the sheer strength of the shields the Aeros were equipped with, none of the accurately-aimed mass accelerator rounds did anything.

Unfortunately, the rather flimsy surfboards lacked starship grade energy shields, and under the deluge of fire we were taking from the squad of defenders and their two mounted guns, they were utterly shredded. Then again, at this point, they'd served their purpose.

As one, all twelve Aeros engaged their eezo cores and shot into the sky, hanging at around eighty feet easily. From our vantage point eight stories up, we could look down over the entire base, quickly pinpointing our targets - a number of Anti-Aircraft emplacements, mounted on the roofs of each watchtower around the facility. Wreathed in blue against the darkness of the night sky, we probably made quite a sight - a cluster of small stars hovering above the compound.

Inhabiting the body of the lead Aero, I reached over my shoulder, retrieving one of the weapons we'd specially made for this mission - a single use double barrel rocket launcher that fired a dual EMP/Nanite warhead. We called it the Arc Launcher, just to keep with the Mass Effect theme.

The EMP would activate just before contact, and overload the target systems temporarily. Then the nanites would take over once the rocket hit, subverting the target by precisely deconstructing its innards.

Used right, it 'merely' gave the appearance of an EMP so powerful it could even fry hardened systems, and it was that particular illusion we wanted to sell at this point. The Judak Nurr knew that the Faith Foundation, like the rest of Humanity, was very advanced. We weren't keen to let them know just how far ahead of them we were, though.

Twelve metal rockets the size of deoderant cans rained down on the anti-air turrets, each detonating with a flash of blue and a burst of sparks. The Hegemony defenders immediately found two thirds of their air defences useless, and quick follow-up shots brought down the last handful of turrets before they'd even turned to face us.

The side effect of using nanites to disable enemy technology was that whilst they were there, they were also able to scan it and add its blueprints to the Command Net. Not that the Batarian's flak accelerators or missile pods were particularly valuable to me, but more design reference points couldn't hurt.

With the last of their anti-air capabilities thoroughly fried on the inside, I sent a signal to the three nearby Skyhaulers, alerting them to the base's vulnerability. The force we'd taken to the dam would join us first, being the closest, but the other two would be only moments behind, and with all one hundred and twenty men available and armed with the Faith Foundation's latest weaponry, this base was certain to fall quickly.

With eighteen of our twenty four EMP/Nanite warheads spent, Hope and I spent a relative few minutes discussing where best to place the last six. Ultimately, we decided on putting one into the base's communications tower and saving the rest for if the Hegemony started rolling out the tanks. We weren't the only ones with heavy weapons, but we were the only ones with nonlethal heavy weapons.

From our perch above, Hope and I had a perfectly good view of the base, and once we accessed their computer network, we had control of all the base's major systems. It was a relatively trivial matter to pin down where the visiting SIU officers were - in a meeting room on the top floor of the central facility, alongside the facility commander, the factory head, the chief of security, and two Quarians who I assumed represented whatever interests they had here.

I quickly sealed the doors to that room, locking the group in. And then I locked down the rest of the base, too, cutting off the defending forces and leaving them scattered throughout the compound.

The first Skyhauler arrived, drifting low over the still-flowing water to drop the troops right on the water's edge - now well inside the complex. The resistance fighters dropped from the shuttle onto the dirt, shouldering their sleek new Tesla Rifles and rapidly spreading out.

As Hope and I had learned the hard way from our little excursion to the Might of Khar'shan, the Tesla Rifles were more than capable of dropping a Batarian non-lethally, as long as they weren't wearing a fully sealed hardsuit. Luckily, this base was built in one of the hottest habitable regions of Lorek, and from what we could see through the cameras, not one Hegemony trooper had their full suit. Most had chosen to forgo their helmets, and many more had also ditched their sleeves, gauntlets and shoulder pads, leaving their arms entirely exposed.

The Judak Nurr had surprised me with how well they'd taken to my less-lethal alternatives to their old T8 Mass Accelerator rifles. Well, after I suggested that they be allowed to strip and loot the unconscious Hegemony soldiers and then tie them up in embarrassing positions, anyway.

Of course, some of them complained that without killing people they'd never get anything done, but incapacitating, disarming, and imprisoning people seemed like just as effective a compromise to me.

The fact that Hope would then be able to create braindead clones of those imprisoned people and perform diabolical science on them made it actually useful for us.

Of course, that was assuming that the Judak Nurr didn't go around shanking all the unconscious Hegemony soldiers. I doubted they would, but it was still a slight concern of mine.

Still hanging in the air above the compound, I began directing the Judak Nurr, unsealing doors and allowing them access to the smaller groups of Hegemony forces scattered throughout the compound. Caught by surprise, outnumbered, and hopelessly outmatched, the Hegemony's soldiers began dropping like rocks.

Whilst I dealt with that, Hope moved off to complete her part of the mission, taking half the Aeros with her for a quick tour of the factory floor.

---

The door slid open with a near-silent swoosh as the Aeros approached, revealing the interior of the factory's primary engineering bay.

Hope glanced around, immediately noting three things. First, the large majority of the machines in the area were modular omni-fabbers, configured to create relatively small components. Second, the machines were not set up as part of a production line, meaning every set of components was put together by hand. Custom orders, then.

Third, there were four Hegemony engineers and two Quarians pointing guns at her.

Not even security forces, she thought with a sigh. I was hoping for a challenge.

Don't jinx it, Hope.


Ignoring her creator slash elder sister, Hope fixed her gaze on the foremost Batarian.

"Surrender now, and you will not be harmed."

The first volley of mass accelerator rounds slammed harmlessly into the Aero frame's Zoltan Phase Shields, dealing so little damage they failed to even breach the first layer. With a loud and dramatic sigh, Hope slung her Arc Launcher over one shoulder, swapping the heavy weapon for a smaller and more practical Tesla Carbine with exaggeratedly slow motions.

Apparently not recognizing the futility of their resistance, the engineers kept firing. The second volley of mass accelerator rounds also slammed harmlessly into the Aero's shields, but this time Hope retaliated, rapid-firing bursts of electrical energy with perfect accuracy into the weapons of each enemy.

One by one, the eezo-based weapons overloaded, sparks shooting and smoke billowing from burnt out electrical components. Given thirty seconds and access to omni-gel, that kind of damage could be easily fixed, but she had no intention of giving them that.

The other five Aeros in her group entered the room, bringing their own rifles up. The factory employees, suddenly realizing just how outmatched they really were, dropped their pistols and raised their hands in surrender.

Hope directed a pair of her Aeros to wander over and restrain them whilst she and the rest of her squad examined the factory's systems and products.

The omni-fabbers were merely worse versions of the Progenitor fabricators the Faith Foundation already possessed, their only advantage being the sheer degree to which they could be miniaturised - building one into a wrist-mounted omni-tool the size of a friendship bracelet, alongside a microcomputer and a sensor array, was not only usual but expected.

Hope scanned the devices for her database anyway. And then she turned to the end of the production line, where six large, bulky hardsuits hung from mesh frames supported by robotic arms.

All six were in various states of disrepair - or rather, in various states of construction. One was barely more than the inner suit and the exoskeletal frame, whilst another was almost entirely completed with only a few plates on the arms missing, revealing the gel layer beneath.

Approaching one of the more complete suits, she made note of the Batarian symbols etched onto the collar - the icons representing the SIU, followed by what appeared to be a name.

Turning to the restrained engineers, now sitting in the corner with their hands bound, Hope pointed at the exosuit. "Are these custom made for each individual operator?"

One of the Batarians spat on the ground at his feet before turning to his fellows. "Don't answer. Don't even talk to her."

Hope frowned. "Oh, all right. Ignore me then. That's fine."

Shrugging, she turned back to the exosuit, hanging idle. Reaching up, she placed a hand on the chestplate of the suit, nanites seeping through the palm of the Aero's glove and spreading through the exosuit's internals rapidly.

Between the physical suits and the design plans for the individual components courtesy of the omni-fabbers, Hope had a fairly comprehensive understanding of the suit's intended workings, even though none of the ones hanging in front of her were quite finished.

A grin spread across her face.

"Yoink."

---

In between guiding the Judak Nurr on their little jaunts through the base, I spared a few moments to glance at the flow of data entering the Command Network via Hope's Aero - currently the blueprints for suits of Batarian power armour, ones more advanced than those we'd encountered on the Might of Khar'shan.

These ones included an impact-dampening gel layer, for one, although I wasn't sure whether that was a direct response to my scissor kick trick on our raid or an upgrade that had been in the works for a while. They had a few other things, too. More power cells and emitters for stronger kinetic barriers, a more flexible exoskeleton to allow a greater degree of movement, and plates of armour running along the forearm that could slide down over the hand to serve as knuckle dusters, reducing reliance on Omni-Weapons.

It was rather fascinating, actually. In no way was the technology that made up the suit was nothing new or exotic or particularly game-breaking - it was simply put together in a way the denizens of the canon Mass Effect universe had never happened upon.

I found myself pondering the other universes I'd visited - would the Bright Foundation have developed their tech differently, given the right stimulus? The Zoltan, the Red Faction? What technologies had I missed out on because I'd been focused on improving what I had, instead of moving sideways and discovering new things?

Something to ponder once we returned to Miranda, I decided.

And then I turned my attention back to the raid.
 
87 - Uprising
On the one hand, taking all these free overtime shifts is a huge time and energy drain and leaves me pretty much no free time.

On the other hand, I really can't afford to pass up so many hours of overtime pay. Ugh, damned Australian economy.


---

87 - Uprising

As Hope and her team joined the Judak Nurr in scouring the facility and tazing the defending Hegemony forces, I dropped from my own high perch, making my way to the base's garage. No one was inside, luckily, which meant that our imposed lockdown had completely isolated the defenders from their tanks and heavy firepower.

Not that the tanks and IFVs we found would have been worth much. The whole point of me and my team staying in the air was so that if the tanks rolled out, they'd be instantly taken out. The fact that we hadn't needed to do so was merely icing on the sweet sweet cake of victory. The tanks themselves were of a neat design, aesthetically, but as I sprayed the inactive war machines with nanites, I couldn't help but notice that these were clearly of a bulkier and less efficient design compared to the tech I'd seen in the power armour.

The tanks were clearly decades, at least, behind the armour. Then again, in the real world militaries kept tanks around for fairly long periods, as I recalled, so perhaps there was nothing odd about it in this context either. With the heavy mass accelerator and the rocket pods, it probably could have made mincemeat of the Jaduk Nurr had we not dealt with them quickly.

A ping from Hope drew me from my reverie, and I turned my attention back to the raid.

---

The Jaduk Nurr acquitted themselves well during the raid. They stuck almost entirely to their non-lethal weaponry, leaving the Hegemony guards and the Batarian State Arms employees tied up and humiliated but otherwise unharmed. Hope and her Aeros followed suit, although they took the time to take blood and DNA samples from the incapacitated Batarians.

The Quarians, all seventeen of them, surrendered willingly once their Batarian guards went down, and though they too were restrained, they were left conscious. We didn't want to risk damaging their suits by overloading their systems, or anything.

The Jaduk Nurr made only six exceptions to their 'no killing' rule. The two SIU officers, and their four subordinate bodyguards, were brought down first with non-lethal weaponry, and then executed via rifle rounds to the head.

I was… somewhat displeased that they hadn't even told me until afterwards, but…. They needed to die. It was… for the best. I think.

Mostly, though, I was glad I didn't have to watch. I buried the news of their deaths deep within my mind and ignored it, focusing instead on continuing to loot and sabotage the facility. Once the omni-fabbers had been stripped for parts, the doors had all been sealed and welded shut, the air conditioning had been clogged with foam, and the sewer systems had been turned off, I signalled to Hope that I was ready to leave.

She conferred with Nukrae, the leader of this particular assault, and after a short deliberation they called in our air support for pickup. The Skyhaulers emerged from over the top of the still-flowing Kuvinara dam, rocketing across the plains towards us.

---

The Kurapp Valley Factory raid was only the first in a series of rapid strikes pulled of by the Jaduk Nurr. Following a short rest at the landing site of the Jacob Keyes, the resistance fighters got to talking, jokingly planning to take the fight to the Hegemony in Lorek's capital city, Jalnor. And then it stopped being a joke.

Emboldened by their success and the proven superiority of their Faith Foundation equipment, small teams of six to twelve individuals hopped into Skyhaulers and scattered across Lorek's capital province, launching minor attacks on Hegemony checkpoints and control zones throughout the more restless districts of the city.

More often than not, they returned mere hours after they left. According to more than a few of the returning resistance fighters, they'd taken to dropping in from above, stunning the surprised guards - a process they came to call 'sparking', for some reason, and then spray painting anti-Hegemony propaganda and slurs all over their armour and checkpoints before taking their gear and leaving.

I couldn't blame them. The Hegemony were kind of dicks. As long as they weren't killing anyone, I figured a little embarrassment wouldn't hurt.

Following their highly visible dam raid and the chain of minor attacks, the Jaduk Nurr retreated to safe houses and bases across the Lorek countryside, staying long enough only to grab what little the Hegemony hadn't before fleeing back to the rally point, going to ground before the Hegemony could retaliate. By the time the military forces who had been on route to Kurapp had turned around to return to deal with the spate of attacks in Jalnor, the Judak Nurr forces were already on their way out.

---

In the shade of a five hundred metre cruiser, two dozen Batarian Skyhaulers, six Asari-made Kimbeyla Aircars, and a single Batarian picket corvette rested on the frigid grass. Scattered around the array of vehicles was a multitude of tents, thrown together by the Judak Nurr so they could spend their last night on Lorek sleeping on the soil.

Personally, I thought it was a little silly, but I'd never been particularly sentimental about leaving my home.

The number of Batarians in the group had risen to almost four hundred now - before we'd come here from Miranda, Krilak Thol had gotten in touch with the few agents who hadn't been captured, and told them to wrangle up some more manpower for the cause. The fact that the Hegemony had let over two hundred wanted criminals slip through their grasp, whilst transporting them via dreadnought, had been a huge boost for morale, and a handful of the Judak Nurr cells had brought themselves back up to a 'full' member count.

Those second-generation rebels had only been too happy to sign up when the veterans returned to their safehouses and hideaways, pooling supplies, equipment and transport to get everyone back to the Jacob Keyes without issue.

Although I was still unclear as to how exactly they'd gotten their hands on the picket corvette. It wasn't a particularly large ship - less than thirty metres long, two levels, and four shared bunks for a total crew size of sixteen, - and its firepower was nothing impressive - it was just a corvette, and in this universe that basically translated to 'really big tactical bomber', - but the fact that they'd even somehow stolen it was staggering.

They'd probably find some use for it, though. Likely running supplies to the front, or something.

That was what it was currently being used for, anyway. The lower deck, the cargo bay, was almost stacked full of crates of weapons, equipment, armour kits, explosives, and vehicle part fabricators, along with four suits of SIU power armour.

Although it certainly seemed a lot of supplies to look at, I couldn't help but recall that we were facing a galactic power. This was probably just a drop in the bucket for them. Power armour excepted, of course.

Overall, we hadn't really accomplished much on the first day of our new partnership. Nothing on the scale of our end goal, anyway.

But hey, small steps.

---

Time passed, as it is wont to do, and for months the Judak Nurr remained holed up on Miranda. Hegemony forces swarmed over Lorek, fleets scouring the system whilst SIU teams trawled every scrap of data they could get their hands on to find where we were hiding.

From their new base of operations, the Judak Nurr reconnected with their other cells throughout the Hegemony, taking census on member numbers and counting supplies. Those cells that believes themselves to be under investigation by the Hegemony were marked as priority targets to be extracted, whilst the more hidden cells remained in place, spreading anti-Hegemony propaganda and disrupting the system from within.

The combat arm of the Judak Nurr were kept busy running supply runs and extraction missions in their newly acquired corvette, although it was hardly suited for transporting the larger cells and we often provided assistance on those missions by sending along our Elysion Pioneers, upgraded to mount Kinetic Barriers and Marauder Shields in addition to their pre-existing Phase Shields.

In that sense, Fusou's presence was both a blessing and a curse. On the one hand, it meant we could be a little more liberal in applying our out-of-universe technology, as we already had with our Tesla weapons and Phase Shields, but on the other hand it totally invalidated the work we put into keeping the Birch, Rowan, and Juniper class vessels within acceptable bounds for the 'canon Mass Effect universe' tech level.

Which wasn't really a huge issue, but it still ticked me off. Hope was more than happy to sort those problems out, retrofitting the Frigates and Cruisers to be more in line with the rest of our Progenitor-level spacecraft. Well, when she wasn't busy making a mess out of our testing grounds, that is.

Anyway, the long story short is that in the six months following the Kurapp Valley raid we did a lot of plotting and skulking about and the occasional stealthy recon run, but not a lot else. The number of Batarians on Miranda obviously began increasing - to the point where Hope and I had to decorate and furnish another couple of highrise buildings for them to live in, - and morale amongst the Judak Nurr was soaring.

Today, especially. Because today was the first time that every member of the movement currently on world was to come together in a huge rally. Krilak Thol was giving a speech, and everything. Just under three thousand Batarians were crammed into the New Bondi Concert Hall, reconfigured temporarily to serve as a gathering point for the burgeoning resistance movement.

At this point, Hope and I were legitimately considering getting them their own damn city. Then again, given the reason for this rally in particular, perhaps they'd be sorting that little issue out themselves soon enough.

Vendul Kohm, a preacher and a member of Krilak's core team, approached my holographic avatar, hovering above a small terminal backstage. "Faith. The last of our people have arrived, and Krilak is ready to begin. Are the cameras ready?"

The geometric avatar bobbed. "They are. Once you hit the stage, I'll start the stream."

Vendul nodded and made his way back over to Krilak and the rest of his entourage, gathering up near the stairs up onto the stage proper. I switched my perspective, abandoning the cameras backstage for one in the centre of the room, pointed directly at the stage. From here, I got the same view everyone in the galaxy was about to get for the most significant political act since… well, actually, only since the Citafel's first contact with Humanity, but if one didn't count that then it was easily one of the most important political acts in the last three hundred years.

Krilak Thol emerged from behind the curtains, flanked by Vendul and Jarruk, his two most senior assistants. The other members of his inner circle followed behind, quietly spreading across the stage until they created a line of Batarians, shoulder to shoulder in the classic v-formation with Krilak, obviously, taking the centre position.

They were met with much applause, cheering, and general jubilation from the crowd. For many of them, this was their first chance to see Krilak Thol in the flesh - he spent much of his time running his resistance, communicating with cells on other planets, and working out in the gym on the first floor of his hotel. Due to his efforts, the number of Batarians present had increased almost tenfold over what it had initially been, as minor cells from across the Hegemony abandoned their homes and fled to Miranda. But nevertheless, the man was a recluse, very rarely emerging for longer than a few hours at a time, and usually then only for important meetings.

This was, in fact, the first time I'd seen him leave his hotel in almost a week.

He stepped forward, allowing his inner circle members to slink back into the darkness at the rear of the stage, and brought his arms up wide in a gesture that engulfed the concert hall. As he did so, I dimmed the entire room's lights, shining a single spotlight down onto the stage from above.

No one asked me to do that. I just thought it would look cool.

And I was absolutely right.

Krilak took a deep breath and began to speak. His voice, amplified by a throat mic and a number of speakers throughout the building, echoed through the hall, and two thousand voices fell utterly silent.

"Brothers and sisters of the Judak Nurr!"

"For millennia, our people have languished under the cruel reign of the slave masters, the highest lords and kings of Khar'shan. Our freedoms and liberties suppressed, our contact with the greater world, and the greater galaxy, abolished."

"For centuries, the Hegemony have destroyed the proud culture of our people. Where once we were strong, now we are cowardly. Where once we were poets, musicians, artists, creators, now the galaxy at large sees us as nought but slavers, pirates, and thugs. The Hegemony is viewed as nothing more than a wretched hive of scum and villainy, a den of liars, thieves, and petty warlords."

"For decades, we have starved. Forgotten and left to rot by a government which does not care for our lives, or the lives of any others, only its prepetuation and the chance for further glory, further power, and further riches."

"For years, we have struggled, our voices unheeded, our cries of pain and desperation ignored, our very liberty nothing but a distant dream. Our faith in the pillars was shaken, our hopes for a better future cast aside."

Krilak's mournful tone shifted, becoming lighter, more focused.

"For months, we have fought, striking out against the cowards and the fools, the slave masters in their ivory towers. First with our words, and then by force of arms, we fought to rise again. Together, we brought the lights of truth, of dignity, and of freedom to the people!"

"Now is our time! Now, we rise above the bounds of our past! We tread the path to a brighter future, and we do so without fear, without doubt, and without a thought of surrender! We will not let our cries go unheard! We will not let the Hegemony silence us!"

"We will visit upon the Hegemony the pain they have inflicted upon us one hundred fold, and they will pay in blood for their crimes! We will be the heroes who stood against the lies and the fear! We will be the heroes who stood against the corruption and the greed, and we will be the heroes who struck it down!

"In light of those injustices caused by the Hegemony, we will scream our defiance until the stars echo our calls! And we will be remembered!"

Anything further Krilak wanted to say was drowned out by immense cheering, many of the present Batarians jumping to their feet and raising their hands into the air, making some sort of gesture with their hands.

Krilak held up his palms, waiting for silence. The crowd's cheers died down and people fell back into their seats. Krilak held the pose for a moment whilst the last whispers died out before he continued to speak, voice booming.

"In the coming months, we will rise against the Hegemony, and take back our freedom!

"In the coming years, we will war against the Hegemony, and reclaim our worlds in the name of freedom and prosperity!

"In the coming decades, the Batarians will once again become a true galactic power! Not through lies and fear and threats of violence, but through prosperity, unity, purpose, and strength of will!

"In the coming centuries, the Citadel will sing songs of the Batarians - not songs of fear, of violence, or derision, but of liberty, of equality, and of strength, in its purest form!

"In the coming millennia, historians will look upon this day and know that it was now, this very moment, that the Hegemony's death began! And for that, we will be remembered!"

And then, having just declared war on the Citadel's strongest non-Council power, Krilak Thol pulled the mic from his throat, dropped it on the ground, and left.
 
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88 - Revolt
*incoherent tired babbling, followed by sobs*

88 - Revolt

Of course, it was one thing to say you were going to war. It was quite another to actually do it.

The Judak Nurr didn't back down from the challenge, though. Within half an hour of Kirlak Thol's speech ending, he and his military advisors had hopped on a train to the Faith Foundation's New Bondi headquarters for our next round of military planning.

We'd been picking at the Hegemony for months, now, but the amount of damage done was negligible - the Judak Nurr cells still in Hegemony space focused more on spying and stealing information than fighting, and the few we had to exfiltrate generally managed to evade notice long enough to make the extractions quiet and gunfight free.

But this next raid was going to be different - it was going to be one hell of a blow to the Hegemony, a sign that the Judak Nurr weren't fucking around any more.

The five men strode into the New Bondi office with an air of quiet confidence, as if refusing to acknowledge the enormity of their recent actions.

Knowing that they, like most Batarians, were sticklers for not wasting time nattering, I got straight to work, my own holographic avatar hovering above the table.

For this particular meeting, Hope had joined me - not as a hologram, but in person, having temporarily requisitioned the NeoAvatar who was, on our official papers, known as Danielle DeMedico, Chief of Security.

Not that Fusou's faked papers mattered one bit out here on Miranda, but still.

Tossing a casual wave their way, Hope opened the proceedings. "Bold move. We're going for a follow up?"

Nukrae snorted. "Having made such a declaration, it would be a shame to back down now."

Krilak frowned at his subordinate but did not argue. "Indeed. Now begins the final and most crucial stage of our activities. We need to begin pushing the Hegemony back. It's no longer enough for us to skirt around the edges, striking at exposed targets. It's time to take the fight to the Hegemony, strike where it matters."

My hologram flickered. "You have some ideas, I hope?"

Krilak nodded sharply. "Naturally. The Hegemony are a galactic power - but like most galactic power, a huge proportion of their territory is centred in their home cluster. Distant Mass Relays hold only small colonies, isolated outposts. We're going to hit them first. If we can remove every Hegemony stronghold outside of the Kite's Nest cluster, then we can cut off all their access to outside resources."

It seemed a smart idea. Smaller hits to build experience for the Judak Nurr's forces whilst fighting minimal opposition, and then escalating as the war dragged on.

"That means we have three current target theatres. The Eagle Nebula, the Viper Nebula, and the Omega Nebula. The former two contain only a single target each. There are two worlds in the Omega Nebula to deal with, although they're in different solar systems. Lorek is one, and for symbolic reasons I'd like to liberate that world first."

Hope nodded. "Alright. Say we do that - what's the other Hegemony world in the Omega cluster?"

Krilak frowned and bowed his head. "Logasiri. One of the worst planets in Hegemony space. It's almost entirely populated by slaves, who operate mines across the surface. Palladium, mostly. Bit of platinum and iriduim around as well. More famous for the slaves than the goods."

Nukrae took over for the military analysis. "From what we can tell, very little Hegemony military presence - a frigate wolfpack, a couple of cruisers. Token ground forces. They rely on the fact that it's a colossal piece of do'fanan to keep it defended. No one would ever willingly go there."

"The labor is hot, endless, and backbreaking, even in the low-G environment. Every horror story told by slaves elsewhere in the cluster is topped by one from Logasiri." Krilak continued. "For obvious reasons, it, too, is a high value target for us. Not only will it earn us great political goodwill from the Citadel and make our stance on slavery clear, it'll force the hands of the Terminus pirates allied with the Hegemony."

Hope glanced at my holographic avatar. I don't follow.

Neither. Ask?


She turned back to Krilak. "Sorry, I don't follow. How will it force the Terminus' hand?"

"Either they join the Hegemony and fight against us, or they leave the Hegemony to die. If they side with the Hegemony, then we'll have to fight them, which is a shame. But if they don't, they won't dare show their faces to the Hegemony again - they'd be killed. The two groups have a largely symbiotic relationship, so I wouldn't be surprised if they did flock to the Hegemony's aid, but if we can put on enough of a show of strength before they arrive, they won't risk it. They're the Hegemony's allies, but they're no fools. They won't die if they don't have to."

Makes sense.

The green glow of my holographic avatar intensified briefly as I spoke. "If you don't mind, I'd rather we deal with Logasiri first. Lorek's population is much less slave-heavy, and the slaves there, from what I understand, are better off than those on Logasiri. Brusque as it is, I think they can wait."

The Judak Nurr militants seemed to agree on that point. Jarruk leaned forward, resting one elbow on the edge of the table. "Faith, could you bring up a map of the Omega Nebula?"

I did so, holographic emitters in the ceiling creating a three dimensional representation of the Terminus cluster, all six solar systems in a loosely-correct layout. I marked planets, all its Mass Relays - the system had several, almost all of which were Primary Relays - and, of course, the space station Omega.

Wait, isn't one of those Relays the one that leads to the Collectors?

Oh, shit, yeah. I completely forgot about those guys. Next time we talk to Fusou, we should ask her if she's dealt with them yet. If she hasn't, maybe we should pop over and kill them ourselves.

We could go as a group, make it a bit of a... bonding exercise?

A good suggestion, Hope. I'm sure you'd love to
bond with Fusou a little.

Fuck off.

Unaware of our little mental spat, Jarruk pointed at the two planets of interest. "Lorek is closer to the Mass Relays and to Omega, a more important location to the Hegemony, and Fathar is just generally a more populated area of space. We strike there, the Hegemony and their Terminus lackies will show up faster and hit us harder. Thematic as it would be, I must side with Faith. Logasiri is both an easier target, and more deserving of being liberated from Hegemony rule in the first place. Once it's dealt with, then we can turn our sights to Lorek."

Kren'thal grinned. "And once Lorek is dealt with, we can move to take Anhur and Aratoht. And that'll cut off a huge amount of the Hegemony's mining operations. Neither world is particularly wealthy, but it'll still be a huge strike against them."

Krilak rested his palms on the edge of the table, eyes focused entirely on the galaxy map.

"It's decided, then. Logasiri shall be the first world freed of the Hegemony's reign."

---

Staging planet-wide revolutions against an interstellar government was somewhat outside my area of experience, but I was more than willing to watch and learn from the Judak Nurr.

The first stage of the plan was simple, and one that played on a recognised fact of 'modern' warfare.

Orbit gives the ultimate high ground advantage.

The first step to achieving orbital supremacy wasn't actually directly related to it - we were going to knock out the comms buoys linking Logasiri, and the other planets in the Batalla System, to the Omega Relays and the rest of the galaxy. Having cut off their ability to call for reinforcements, we were then going to move to Logasiri proper.

The planet's main orbital infrastructure was a transport hub - a huge space station that served as a glorified warehouse and dock for dozens of cargo freighters and transports. The Judak Nurr wanted to take the station, its resources, and, most importantly, its ships, for their cause.

The planet's orbital defences were managed by another, smaller station, heavily defended and armed with multiple GARDIAN arrays. That was the primary target of the first phase. Knocking that out of the sky, along with its attached fleets, would completely eliminate Hegemony orbital control.

Standing between us and our goals was a wolfpack of six modern Hegemony frigates and two outdated cruisers.

They'd never know what hit them.

---

Hegemony Captain Der'vayn stood proudly at the helm of his command cruiser, staring out into the endless black of space, deep in contemplation.

At least, that's what it would look like to anyone who couldn't see Verush Aflame 2: Thunderstriker playing on his visor.

Just as the handsome Krav'lin gunned down six dirty Turian special forces soldiers with a shotgun in each hand, the Asari maiden Nueva swooning at his heels, Der'vayn heard a shout from behind him.

Grunting, he switched off the media player, cleared his visor, and turned to face his bridge crew.

"Yes?"

"Sir, we just lost extranet access and all communications. I sent a message to the transport hub and the surface - same issue. We've lost everything outside orbital range."

Der'vayn swore loudly, then paused to compose himself. "Clearly it's an issue with the comms buoy. Call the transport hub, tell them to send a ship out to fix it."

"Sir… aren't we supposed to provide escorts to all Hegemony vessels?"

Der'vayn sighed. He'd forgotten that policy. He could see the reason for it, but it didn't make it any less irritating. "Split up the wolfpack. Send three ships with them. That should preemptively silence any complaints."

"Sir." The communications officer turned back to his post and set to work.

Der'vayn held silent for a moment longer, waiting for any further issues to arise. When none seemed forthcoming and his communications officer had settled down, he turned back to the window and resumed his holovid.

Only a scant ten minutes had passed when he heard another shout.

Irritated, he minimized the media player and turned again. "Yes?"

"Sir, we recieved the first two seconds of an SOS from the frigate Impaler before the signal cut off completely. Now I can't raise it, the Mauler, or the Whiplash. The maintenance corvette isn't responding to hails either."

To Der'vayn's experienced mind, that could mean only one thing. Hostile action. If he'd lost three frigates - a third of his force, - without even a whisper, then he didn't like his chances of surviving it.

"Set all stations to high alert. Helm, set course for the transport hub, and tell the Indris to follow us. We'll rally with the rest of the wolfpack there and hold position until we get a clearer idea of what's going on."

"Sir. Relaying instructions now."

After a moment's consideration, he added, "And ask Lieutenant Orpak if his new toy is ready. If those suit rats have the right idea with that stealth drive, that corvette might be our only chance of getting reinforcements. I want it making a beeline for the Omega-2 relay as soon as possible."

"Sir."

As the ship's alarms began blaring, filling the halls with the low-pitched sound of gongs, a number of armour panels across the Untrel's hull slid away, small GARDIAN nodes and mass driver cannons rising from recessed storage bays and unfolding into a combat-ready mode.

Underfoot, the floor rattled as the old cruiser's drive core engaged, throwing it into what Der'vayn suspected would be it's last ever bout of combat.

Somewhere behind him, the sensor officer gulped, and called out, "Sir, we've got contacts on the edge of sensor range. Six of them, light cruisers. Don't match anything in our target acquisition database."

Der'vayn groaned. "Helm, standby for evasive maneuvers. Gunnery, ready the main cannon and prepare the point defence lasers for interception duty. All hands to full alert. If I'm right, we've got combat imminent."

And then all of the lights went out.
 
89 - Interlude: Slavers
This was meant to go up yesterday, but was delayed due to reasons. Sorry.


89 - Interlude: Slavers

Hegemony General Murvas Kappiru was roused rather suddenly by a loud, wailing alarm, and cracked his eyes open slowly, allowing them to adjust to the dim light.

The sheets rustled as his Asari bedmate untangled her arms, then reached out and tapped the alarm clock's surface. The alarm continued. She tapped the device again, before finally giving up and laying back down.

Sighing irritably, Kappiru sat up, looking over at the bedside cabinet.

The alarm clock itself was silent, it's screen dim. He realized belatedly that the alarm sound was actually coming from his desk, on the far side of the room. Grunting, he rolled out of bed onto his feet and staggered sleepily across the room.

His Omni-Tool continued to wail, a small icon on the screen flashing brightly. Snapping the device up, he tapped at the screen, shutting down the alarm and then accessing his alerts.

It was a rather blunt message from his greenest officer, the Hegemony's latest up-and-comer of the month. Kappiru skipped through the page and a half of official jargon regarding the use of a class three alert, getting straight to the actual message.

General Kappiru.

Fleet elements have been engaged by Judak Nurr forces. All ground forces have been moved to high alert, and the owners of all compounds have been warned of the threat. Communication with everything outside the Batalla system has been lost. Orders?

Lt. Balak


Kappiru groaned, put his Omni-Tool down, and started getting dressed.

---

The military shuttle made good time through the small city that Logasiri called its capital, its military identifier causing other craft to make way as the automated piloting program rushed the vehicle to the Logasiri Military Command Centre.

The city shortly gave way to rough fields of rock and dust, a single winding path cutting through the dark ground below. The shuttle's engine decreased in volume as it slowed for its final approach, swinging into position over one of the LMCC's smaller shuttle pads.

Kappiru was out of the shuttle before it'd fully powered down, his usual uniform replaced with his aging but still-functional Command Hardsuit, the helmet tucked under one arm. Lieutenant Balak was waiting on the pad to greet him, opening the door for him as he approached.

Though Balak was technically nothing more than a platoon leader, he always had been one of the more proactive military officers on base. When he wasn't leading his platoon, he often sat in on command meetings and War Room briefings.

Technically, all officers at platoon level or above were invited, but most didn't bother. Lazy bosh'tets.

"Balak, report. What's the full picture?"

The Lieutenant nodded and kept walking, winding through the base's corridors towards the War Room. "Approximately forty seven minutes ago, we lost all extranet access and communications with everything beyond fleet range. We booted up the hypercom relay to get system-wide comms again whilst engineers from the Logasiri Transit Nexus went to check on the comms relay."

Balak stopped talking to show two of his eyes to a security scanner. The scanner beeped twice and the door slid open.

"Frigates Impaler, Mauler, and Whiplash went with them. About ten minutes later, we recieved part of an SOS from the Impaler before we lost contact with all four vessels. Captain Der'vayn ordered all remaining vessels - Indris, Untrel, -"

"I know my own fleet, whelp. What happened?"

"Yes, sir. Captain Der'vayn ordered all ships to form up. They detected unidentified cruisers on the edge of sensor range and were ordered to prepare for combat. Then we lost contact with them, as well. The hypercom relay came online a little after, and though we can still detect the fleets in orbit, we can't raise them."

"They're still in orbit?"

"Yessir. Well, not the ships sent to the comms buoy, but the rest, yes. Undamaged, as far as we can tell. Some kind of cyberwarfare. The same thing that happened to the Might of Khar'sh-"

"You weren't supposed to be reading those files, Balak." Kappiru admonished harshly. "Don't forget why you're here."

Balak tilted his head guiltily and continued. "We've also lost contact with the Transit Nexus and the Naval Yard, although we received a message from the latter informing us that Lieutenant Orpak has taken the corvette Venom to try and get word to Lorek in person. The Quarians were… unsure of the long-term functionality of the stealth drive, but Captain Der'vayn apparently decided it was worth the risk. It'll be a day or so before we hear back, though."

Kappiru nodded. "And our enemies?"

"Still lingering just outside the Transit Nexus' sensor range, although a few smaller ships have joined them. Corvettes. I'm not sure if they don't realise we've got the hypercom online or if they just don't see it as a threat."

Balak stopped again, accessing another retinal scanner. The blast doors slid apart, and the two officers stepped into the War Room.

The rest of Kappiru's command staff quickly tilted their heads as he entered before returning to their tasks, vigilantly watching sensor readouts and monitoring communications.

"Sir! Krenbal Mirak wants to know when full power will be restored. What should I tell him?"

"Tell him it'll be restored when we're done with the hypercom," Kappiru explained patiently. "And that we'll let him know when it happens."

"Sir." The communications officer began tapping away at his screen.

Kappiru walked forward, to where a single holographic display dominated the centre of the room. "Alright. Correct me if I'm wrong at any point. We've got no orbital assets, six enemy cruisers in a holding position, and Hegemony reinforcements are at least a day away."

Various members of his command staff began nodding.

"Alright. Someone get in touch with any allied Terminus warbands in range. Someone else, bring all ground forces up to high alert. If they've taken orbit, they're either invading, sieging, or bombarding. Is it confirmed they're Judak Nurr?"

"Not yet, sir. We didn't get a chance to cross-check our sensor readouts with the Hegemony SCN. Seems likely, though - who else would care about Logasiri?"

"A reasonable conclusion," Kappiru acquiesced. "I think we're far beyond 'stupid Vorcha raiders' here.' That means we can rule out bombardment - they've never used such heavy-handed tactics before."

"They'd be foolish to siege the planet, as well," Balak put in. "Our population is far smaller than our agri-fields can support. They're not going to starve us out in months, let alone in the few hours before the Fleet arrives."

Kappiru nodded.

"Sir, we've got multiple contacts approaching," one of the younger officers called out. "All three corvettes - a Hegemony Prowler and two unknowns, - and a dozen shuttles. Too small to identify. At current approach velocities, ETA seventy minutes."

Letting out a weary sigh, Kappiru allowed his head to droop. Just three sweeps out in the shade before retirement… Pillars, damn it all.

---

The six battalions that made up Logasiri's planetside forces were quick to mobilise, armoured transports and Skyhaulers clustering around their respective bases. Outside the LMCC, home of the Logasiri 1st Battalion, Hegemony soldiers rushed around, lugging crates of ammunition, deployable cover, and other supplies. A trio of Quarians clustered around one of the landed Skyhaulers, tinkering with one of the engines whilst a bewildered Batarian engineer looked on.

Kappiru turned away from the rushed preparations and looked back at the war map. Based on the approach angles and velocities, approximate landing zones had been determined for all the incoming craft - most of which happened to correspond to the planet's largest slave-operated mining and farming compounds.

The guards of those facilities had been warned, but though the compounds all had guards and automated turrets, none were really designed to hold off actual attacking forces for any great length of time. Only one even had anti-air capabilities, and there were two enemy corvettes heading for its location.

The first of the battalions began to move out, the icons representing tank columns and transport convoys spreading across the map.

---

Pormlin Tuk had been having an excellent day. He'd caught one of the recently-acquired Asari slaves attempting to escape, and, after having some fun with her, had dragged her back to the compound, where he'd received a pat on the back and permission to personally… reinforce the slave mentality.

Of course, he hadn't been at it very long when every alarm in the base sounded and he was told to gear up and get ready for a shootout, but that was altogether a different kind of fun. He'd chained the Asari maiden into the bed with a promise to return shortly and retrieved his equipment, and then he'd moved to meet the rest of his shift at the east gate.

And that was about when his day stopped being so good.

Two Skyhauler transports dropped out from the clouds above, rapidly descending towards the compound.

The two APCs in the centre of the now-empty compound plaza opened fire on the transports, a torrent of mass accelerator rounds slamming into the kinetic barriers of the first ship. The second ship took advantage of the lack of fire headed its way to accelerate further, going into a steep dive and pulling up just in time to avoid slamming into the ground just fifty metres or so from the wall of the compound.

Even as it flew towards them, the ramp dropped open, revealing a team of Batarians in hardsuits not dissimilar to his. Their guns, rather than firing mass accelerator rounds like any normal firearm, fired some kind of lightning beam, and he watched as Nup and Yerri dropped, the vulnerable internals of their armour overloading.

He and the rest of his shift ducked behind cover, firing blindly at the people on the transport as it flew over their heads, landing instead inside the compound.

The roof hatch, usually an emergency exit, popped open, and an Asari with lightweight green and grey armour and a full-face helmet climbed out, wielding a staff that crackled with electrical energy. Taking just a second to survey the area around her, the Asari leapt at the squad of guards stationed on the wall, sweeping one off his feet with a spinning strike.

Pormlin opened fire, sending a stream of mass accelerator rounds her way, but the Asari ignored him, instead targeting and disarming Chunta, who was standing much closer. It took him only a moment to figure out why - a shell of green energy had encased the Asari, some kind of advanced kinetic barrier blocking the projectiles before they even came close.

Chunta released his grip on his gun before the staff hit it, knocking it flying over the wall but leaving him unharmed. Whilst the Asari was overextended, he stepped forward, jabbing at her crotch. The Asari took the blow without flinching, reaching up with her free hand, grabbing Chunta by the back of his head, and slamming his torso into her rising knee, muttering something Pormlin's translator failed to catch.

Then she threw Chunta off the wall, whereupon he fell relatively slowly and landed on the cold ground with a dull thud.

Seeing the weakness of her shield, Pormlin swapped his rifle for his shotgun, a smaller cut-down variant of the classic Batarian T97 Shredder, and stepped forward, weapon raised.

The Asari turned her head, and Pormlin stared for a fraction of a second at his reflection in her black visor before she flung the staff at him, javelin style.

The end sparking with electricity slammed into his torso, lightning crackling across his armour. Kinetic barrier emitters burst like overripe Muvka fruits, spots of heat that burned his flesh even through his bodysuit. His visor HUD flickered out and his ears were flooded by a horrible buzzing followed by total silence, his helmet completely fried.

The Asari stepped over him, and Pormlin held completely still, hoping she wouldn't notice he was still alive. Apparently his deception worked, as the Asari retrieved her staff from the ground and dashed off to rejoin the fighting somewhere else.

Waiting a few moments to be sure she was gone, he rolled over, climbing to his feet. The rest of his squad were also starting to get up, Nup and Yerri already on their feet whilst Vashk was still sitting up. Down below, Chunta was still lying on the ground, either unconscious or unwilling to get up - Pormlin couldn't blame him. He hadn't exactly gone unscathed, this time.

An explosion sounded behind him, audible even through his now-worthless helmet, and Pormlin spun to see the guard's quarters going up in smoke, the walls of the building collapsing in.

Feeling a tap on his shoulder, he turned to see Nup, gesturing at the building. Behind Nup, Yerri and Vashk were looking in the same direction, hefting their rifles.

Nup presented three fingers on his right hand and two on his left, crossing his fingers into a hash symbol, and then pointed at the guard's quarters.

Pormlin nodded, and unslung his rifle.
 
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