Copyright
©
2015 - 2019 - This is an original work by Zeb Carter and is protected under copyright by U.S. copyright law. It is only submitted at Literotica.Com and any submission to any other site has not been authorized by the Author. This is a work of fiction. Names, places, characters, and incidents either are the product of the author's imagination or are used fictitiously and any resemblance to any actual persons, living or dead, organizations, events or locales is entirely coincidental.
Author's Note
: Just a note to those who care or are looking for sex in a Sci-Fi setting. There is no sex in this story as told. No tentacle sex or normal human sex. Sorry, that's the way these things go. Have fun. Also, this is a long story or series of stories if you wish. 88,000 words. You have been warned.
Walker Brigade: The M'roby Incident
3.10.0093/4
* * * Max Jones
The ground shimmered as I passed over the plain. Taking strides in a power-walker was like that; the ground just flowed by underneath you. You couldn't focus on the ground you were currently moving over, you had to look ahead of you. After all, you were moving at one hundred kph across the terrain.
My squad was on the move to the flank of the M'roby, the invading swarm of aliens from out on the rim. The M'roby are humanoid in appearance, but that's where any resemblance ends, they have an exoskeleton making them look like a two-legged lobster. They were also stronger and faster than a human, that's why we needed the power-walkers. The walkers gave us the speed, mobility, and strength equal to the M'roby. Our weapons gave us the edge we needed. We were at least ten years ahead of them in weapons technology. They were still using slug throwers, while we had developed particle beam projectors five years ago, and now had plasma pulse cannons and giga-watt hand lasers.
My power-walker was outfitted with two plasma cannons and two 100 giga-watt particle beam projectors. I also had two rail-guns as back up. They would throw a collapsed aluminum slug at hypersonic speeds one after the other so fast that they appeared to be a solid rod of metal. Most of the squad was armed similarly with the exception of my number two. She was loaded down with comm gear, so she just had the rail-guns.
The M'roby had invaded one of our outposts on the far reaches of our section of explored space. Apparently, they wanted this planet as much as we did, so they decided to take it away by force, not even a "how you doing, by the way, that planet is in our sphere of influence, would you mind talking about it." They just landed ten thousand troops on the southern polar continent and started shooting up the countryside.
But, what do I know? I'm just a squad leader in a twelve-man squad made up of three four-man fire teams. My squad is one of the mixed squads; over half of my troops are female. We discovered early on that the M'roby were scared to death of female combat troops. Must be something in their genes or whatever, because when they saw a female trooper start toward them firing, they just froze up, and then they would start running for the horizon.
The first time that happened, there were only about four or five female troops on the ground. When the first one came in contact with the M'roby, she routed a division off a hill all by herself. She started running up the hill firing at them, in turn, they all turned and ran in the opposite direction.
Since then we have allowed more and more female troops to be part of our front line units. Although, all we do then is chase these mothers all over the continent. I don't see how they know that they are female; to me, we all look alike in the power-walkers and body armor. The big brains think that they can smell them, and that smell sets off the flight response in their brains. Me, I really don't give a fuck.
We were part of a five-squad envelopment movement. We were to cut up this plain then hang a left at the mountains to come up behind the M'roby. The only women in the whole operation were in the five squads trying to outflank them. They, the M'roby were sitting in front of three divisions of battle-hardened combat troops, all male, dropped in just for this operation.
The thought behind this plan was to cause the M'roby troops to run smack dab into those three divisions. Blam! Complete annihilation. Then it would be mop-up time and we would get to go home. Not that this planet, whatever its name, wasn't pleasant, but homeworld was where I was born and raised. It was home.
"Rally point Oscar Delta One bearing two-four-oh degrees," Becky's voice sounded tinny over the laser comm, "Twenty-five klicks."
"Give me all-com, Becky," I told her.
"Echo Zulu One. Rally point Oscar Delta One in twenty-five klicks, squawking seven-seven-seven." Yes, I was top-kick, the ranking squad leader in all five squads. So it fell to me to give operational orders to all five. There was an officer present, but he was fifty klicks back, plus he was a green second-louie, hardly able to stand up in his power-walker, let alone command in it.
"Becky, let's start slowing them down."
"Aye, Chief," she responded. "Echo Two reduce speed to one quarter."
We all dropped back to about twenty-five kph as we approached the rally point. So far, it looked as if the M'roby hadn't detected us.
"Echo One, mark." We were there. Stopping, I looked around the landscape; it was a barren wasteland as far as the eye could see. The mountains rose up in front of us, dark jagged windswept peaks bare of vegetation.
"All right, Chief, bearing one-five-zero degrees, two hundred klicks," Becky called out, shaking me out of my reverie.
"Start 'em up."
"Echo Two bearing one-five-zero degrees, two hundred klicks, three-quarters speed," Becky sounded off as we turned in unison to one-five-zero and started the power-walkers toward the rear of the M'roby. The squad trailed out alongside us in a line abreast formation. The other four squads would follow as they reached the rally point.
I could hear the other squad seconds chanting out the bearing and speed as we covered the lifeless, barren terrain ahead of us.
2.26.0093/5
* * * Becky Latham
Damn, this place was huge, I was having a hard time finding the squad bay to which I was assigned - First Squad, Second Platoon, Easy Company, First Battalion of the Sixty-Forth Armored Brigade of the Third Mechanized Infantry Division of the First Stellar Army Corp, 64AR/3MD/ICorp. The directions I had been given were next to useless. I finally found it, but not where the map said it was. When I entered, the bay there was no one around. I tossed my gear in my quarters and then headed for the walker bay to find everyone. No one home, the walkers were parked in their cradles. They were fantastic looking.
Walkers are my passion. They are the most beautiful machines ever created by man; a machine that a human can climb into, and without a thought, control. Get in and walk simple elegance. I hurried to my machine to check her over. The diagnostics said she was nominal, but I detected a slight hum in the biofeedback servos on the right leg.
I opened the panel, checked the servo and found a burr on the offside phalange. Rummaging around the tool cabinet, I found some fine grit, emery paper. I lightly burnished the phalange with the paper and smoothed it down, reducing the hum to nothing. I buttoned up the panel and powered down the walker. Then I checked every walker in the bay. Two of them would need parts replaced to get them working again.
I looked up and saw there was a light on in the Squad bay lounge. I better go see if the Chief had returned and report in. I wiped my hands on a rag and headed for the Squad bay. The Chief was highly thought of in the Walker Brigade. I'd read his file and was anxious to meet him, and proud to be serving with him. Plus, he wasn't all that bad looking. Damn it Becky knock it off, I thought.
* * * Max Jones
"Squad Second Becky Latham reporting for duty, Chief." She stood in front of me with her orders extended for me to take. I really didn't look at her as I took her orders, just kept reading the prior days reports.
"You all squared away, Sec?" I asked, not really caring one way or the other if she was.
"Yes, Chief."
"Good. We ship out in five days, will you be ready?" She had better say yes, or she was out of here.
"Of course, Chief," she said, with such conviction it caused me to look up at her for the first time. I almost fell over backward in my chair; she was perhaps the most beautiful trooper I had ever seen. She looked like she belonged on a magazine cover.
"Anything else?" I croaked out, almost dropping my cigar on the front of my uniform.
"Yes, Chief. I noticed that two of the walkers have been down checked for faulty feedback solenoids and I'd like to get them squared away before we depart."
"Well, take care of it then." I had just completed the paperwork on them but now I'd wait and see what she had to say about them.
"Yes, Chief." She turned and walked away. I almost fell over backward again, as I watched her cute little ass swaying as she walked. Not the time or place Chief, not at all, I thought.
"Damn," I muttered under my breath. Just what I need right now, a damn beauty queen turned soldier.
2.27.0093/7
* * * Becky Latham
After morning power-up and diag, I decided to stay in the walker bay and work on the walkers. Mine was in tip-top shape and would stay that way, now to get the Chief's walker in shape. I noticed at the daily power-up and diag that there was a slight vibration in the servos on the tensor arm.
Sliding in under the power unit, I unlatched the hatch placing the calibration tool into the tensor arm socket. It showed one point two percent miss-alignment of the servos. I slowly twisted the calibration tool and brought the tensor arm into alignment.
Buttoning up the hatch, I sensed more than heard the walker bay door open and someone walking on the catwalk above. It had to be the Chief as I looked at the time.