CHAPTER 1: NO MORE RUNNING
They sat around a long conference table as Izel and his surviving flockmate relayed the story of how they had come to be in the situation that Xipa had found them in. They told of how the sentry had met up with them to update them on her findings concerning the influx of Bug troops, and how they had proceeded deeper into the district to investigate the insect activity there. They had been engaged, and had sought refuge inside the factory. When Cyan team had come to look for them, they had fought a running battle throughout the building and were eventually driven to the top floor by the overwhelming number of Drones. They had barricaded themselves up there until Xipa and Bluejay had found them.
Xipa showed the Ensis the footage that Bluejay had taken of the massing forces beneath the wall, concerned muttering filling the room.
"What do you make of this, Fletcher?" Xipa asked. "You have more experience fighting the Bugs than anyone in this room."
"It's an invasion force," he replied, scratching his chin with a prosthetic finger as he looked at a still image of the Bugs. "They have armored support - looks like they're setting up an anti-air blanket to protect their staging area, and they're starting to make inroads deeper into the city. Once they find a way through, they'll be coming for us."
"I have to agree with Xipa's assessment," Miqi added. "We have no choice now but to evacuate our population. She believes that her fleet has the resources to carry out such an evacuation, but we have to start soon. We may only have days to work with here."
"Fighting isn't an option," Xipa continued, her gaze wandering between the women. "It's going to take everything we have just to get you out of here before we're overrun."
"We don't stand a chance against a force that large," the scarred Ensi muttered.
"You can give us your assurances that we will be able to return once it's deemed safe?" another of the Ensis asked, scrutinizing Xipa from across the table.
"You have my word," she replied. "If your wish is to remain in orbit rather than return to Valbara, then nobody will tell you otherwise. I don't have the authority to
make
you do anything - you're not part of the Consensus. It's all voluntary."
They convened for a few moments, whispering to one another, then seemed to come to an agreement.
"Very well," the scarred Ensi began. "We have reached a consensus. We will consent to your evacuation on the condition that we be allowed to return as soon as it's safe. This is our home, and we will not abandon it."
"Agreed," Xipa replied, allowing herself a flutter of green and a sigh of relief. "Now, we just have to formulate a plan for how we're going to get a thousand people into orbit before that army reaches us."
"We might not be able to fight them head-on, but we can certainly stall them," Miqi suggested as she leaned across the table. "We can move through the city far faster than they can, and we can set traps, create blockages at strategic points that will add hours to their journey. We can buy ourselves some time."
"I want to involve Fletcher in this process," Xipa added, nodding to the Earth'nay. "He is a veteran of hundreds of battles on dozens of worlds, and he has skills that we lack. Fletcher," she added, switching back to English. "Have you ever taken part in urban combat before?"
"I have some experience," he replied with a grin.
"I want you to help formulate an evacuation plan. Your experience will be invaluable."
"You got it," he replied with a lazy salute. "I'll be glad to have something to occupy myself with that doesn't require lifting anything heavy. How are we going to communicate with the fleet, though? The second we send out a powerful enough signal, the Bugs are gonna ramp up their operation. It'll be like firing a flare in radio form - they'll know exactly where we are."
"It won't matter," she replied. "We won't send the signal until we're ready to move. From there, we can coordinate with the fleet all we want. The damage will already be done."
"So, the signal is gonna be the starting pistol," he mused. "The fleet will need time to coordinate. We're springing this on them out of nowhere. The first thing we need is a large, open space that we can secure as a landing area." He leaned over the table, poring over the giant map that was laid out on it. "See, this is the problem with being a bunch of space hippies. All your park areas and open spaces are overgrown to the point we can't get a shuttle in there. If you'd built a few giant parking lots or sterile industrial parks, you'd be spoiled for choice. I'd say find a large enough roof, but there's no way to verify the structural integrity of any of these buildings."
"Fletcher," Xipa chuckled, gesturing to the far side of the map. "We have a spaceport with a runway designed to accommodate shuttles."
"Alright then," he replied. "The question is, can we get a thousand people there safely? We have injured, elderly, children. One thousand, divided by twelve," he muttered to himself as he did the math in his head. "I mean, we certainly have more than eighty-three IFVs in the fleet, but I don't see that being feasible. That's assuming they could even drive from point A to point B on these fucked up roads."
"I think we would need to move them underground," Xipa replied. "It's the safer option but also the most time-consuming. Time wouldn't be a factor if they'd just taken my offer from the start," she grumbled.
"Well, they had a plan, and they wanted to stick to it," Fletcher said with a shrug. "That's kind of how you guys are. Getting you to change your minds is a fucking ordeal."