Author's Note: Everyone is eighteen or older!
*****
"One."
"Hayden Christensen."
"Two."
"No
fuckin'
way, Hayden?"
Dey tossed one of her cards down on the table. "Tap for this card," she said, jerking her chin to catch the attention of the table. The smart tabletop whirred and three of the land tokens -- two island, one mountain -- turned on their side. The piezoelectric fabric that the card was printed on hummed to life with the impact and showed a flickering holographic outline of the Nesruden Destroyer. The magically powered automaton -- a 2/2 junk card she was mostly playing to bide for time -- stomped from side to side.
"Three."
"You know, Mark," Fong said, grinning as he looked at the fourth member of the cramped rookie room. "You don't need to count out loud."
Marcus DuPont grinned -- his smile a Cheshire frown, hanging as he was by his knees from a workout pole he had slung across the middle of the room. Sweat beaded along his exquisitely sculpted olive-brown chest, accentuating the fine lines of his musculature. Dey bit her lower lip and was once more thanked God for a fully integrated, properly postpuritan USAF.
Now try saying that again three times fast,
she thought.
"If I don't count, then how can you, ah, know how great I am?" Mark asked.
Fong rolled his eyes. "As I was saying-"
"Four!"
Marcus curled up, his chin almost touching his thighs.
Fong scowled. He tapped against the top of the table. "Another land -- Wandering Falls. Comes into play tapped."
The table shimmered and showed the new card.
"Oh, a life land," Dey murmured.
"Don't try and distract me from your horrible, horrible decisions," Fong said. "You just said that Hayden Christenson, from the
dreck
that is the
original
Star Wars one-two-three, is the
best
Anakin Skywalker. You've got three remakes to pick from and you choose the
original
? What is
wrong
with you?"
Dey looked at her hand, mulling over her decisions. Fong was building up a hefty set of lands in his play space. She drew a card, then tapped her destroyer card. The image of the card swung at nothing and the table dinged as Fong's health started to whirr down. As they finished clicking into place, she smirked at him over her cards.
"Anakin is a whiny bitch," she said. "Whose inability to deal wiff his poor widdle feewings sets the stage for a purge that wipes out his entire religious order
and
kicks off three decades of warfare, strife and devastation that leaves literally billions dead. It takes a special kind of narcissistic baby to pull off
that
level of stupid, and Hayden acts the part
perfect
. Yeah, you hate Anakin. That's because you're
supposed
to hate him." She tapped her finger in the air. "Checkmate."
"Sixteen!"
"You are not at sixteen!" Fong said.
Marcus grinned and winked at them as he hung from the pole.
The door leading into the room didn't open -- regs said that doors were always open unless a cadet was sleeping or enjoying some consack time -- but it was suddenly filled by another one of the peppy, bushy tailed cadets of the United States Air Force. Muller was one of the only people in their class who had actually been born off world, at Hamilton. Fortunately, the last few months of actual sim-time and shared combat training maneuvers had sanded off (somewhat violently) his urge to preface everything with an excited smile and 'say, did you know I've been in space?'
But right now, the look on Muller's face was anything but peppy and excited.
"Guys," he said. "The Ruskies and the Reds have opened up!"
"Ah
balls
," Dey said. "I knew this was going to happen. Didn't I tell you?"
"DeShane," Fong said, grabbing his cards up, hastily jamming them into his pocket. "Every week you predict something bad's going to happen."
"And they usually do," Dey said, with well practiced fatalism.
Heading to the messhall -- and the centralized vid units there -- was tricky. In the grim, bitter days of the twenties and thirties, when it hadn't been entirely clear who would get the immense amounts of money and acclaim that would come with tackling the great depths of space, there had been people who had thought that the future of America's spaceflight program would be in the Annapolis Naval Academy. But the bitter debates and senatorial hearings and backroom deals had been shaken out and the simple fact had remained clear.
So long as humanity stubbornly stuck to its guns and
refused
to become a big happy peaceful United Federation of Hugs and Snuggles, there would need to be a wet navy and the nuclear quadrangle of surface installations, orbital silos, submarines and aerial bombardment. The idea was if every single superpower on Earth was ready to blow every single other superpower on Earth into a radioactive cinder at the drop of a hat, war would be limited. Restricted.
Civilized.
That had meant that the navy kept their subs and their aircraft carriers and the USAF got the stars. But after a disastrous string of flight errors caused by systemic doctrine faults, the USAF had moved their academy from Colorado to the biggest chunk of near Earth real estate that they'd grabbed back in the 50s: Ceres.
So, getting from the rookie bunks to the messhall required navigating tunnels that had originally been cut for a science and mineralogical research mission, before the belt had been uniformly abandoned to military installations and isolationist nutjobs in favor of resource rich planets with atmospheres and gravity and other useful things like that. The tunnels were cramped and jagged, cutting through the weakest part of the dwarf planet's skin. Some were partially exposed to space, protected only by a hardened carbon composite tube with interwoven magnetic shielding.
They were all a pain in the ass.
"You know, the last time the Earth had a multipolar geopolitical situation," Dey said as she turned to the side to squeeze through an exceptionally narrow bit. "It kicked off the first Big War."
"That's a real comforting thought to share, Dey, thank you," Fong said, his voice tight.
"Multipolar?" Marcus asked, bringing up the rear.