"Is the Taratupa running silent?"
"She is, sir."
Charlie Woods adjusted his suit for the fifth and last time.
"And Luthien has received the HPG message?"
"They have. They received the trans-cluster message six days ago. They've been waiting for us ever since."
"Either to welcome us or ambush us. You know what these Draconians are supposed to be like."
Woods stole one last puff of his cigarette, a chain-smoker, he had a feeling that he would not be allowed to smoke in the Coordinator's presence.
"Let's get ready Captain."
The two men, Woods and his attaché Captain Ernest Halsey, settled in for the long ride down to the Imperial City's DropPort, wondering what their reception would be like.
As it turned out, they were received with a sort of icy politeness. A civil servant, in what Woods couldn't help noticing was a traditional Japanese suit, was waiting for them at their terminal gate.
He had said, "Welcome, emissary of the United Systems. We have been expecting you," and gestured down the hallway.
A security team drawn from the Internal Security Force was waiting for them with the cars, and they drove to the Palace of Unity in silence.
Finally the quiet got too much for the ambassador, and he asked, "Is there any reason for the chilly reception?"
The man looked contrite, "Sir, I must apologize that we are unable to render you a proper greeting, but the Coordinator has had several attempts on his life. Many in the Palace wondered whether or not the United Systems would bother sending an envoy at all in light of recent events."
"It's that bad, is it?"
The servant nodded, "The present Coordinator only came to the throne two years ago, and many things are as yet uncertain."
Woods and Halsey exchanged an understanding glance. They would have to tread carefully.
The whole city seemed to exude a spirit of wariness, wondering what the next hour would bring. And this close to Unity Palace, the feeling was even more concentrated. Even the average man or woman had been affected. Those who watched the convoy driving to the palace watched with wide-eyed attentiveness. How many of them were members of the ISF or some plot or other, none could say.
Finally, after what felt like hours, the Ambassador felt the car slow to a stop.
"We have arrived at the Honorable Gate," their interlocutor said in answer to his questioning glance. "The Otomo must make certain of our passport."
A group of these men, the Coordinator's palace guards as Woods later learned, had moved to the driver's window and were examining the group's papers. They looked at the visitors with undisguised contempt, before the sergeant nodded and waved them through.
The cars drove into a large courtyard, where they alighted, and were conducted to the Throne Room, which was impressive to say the least, all red and black with gold accents. The Coordinator was waiting for them on the seat from which all the Draconis Combine was ruled, with all the strength that could be desired in a young ruler. At least, that was how a Draconian would probably think of him. To Woods's eye, the Coordinator sat rigid with suspicion, and from his point of view understandably so.
Looking at him now, Woods wondered if this was what Commodore Perry felt when meeting the old Tokugawa Shogun, since this man was no divine Emperor.
"You are the American ambassador," he said.
"Yes, lord Coordinator, we are. I am Charles Woods, and this is my military attaché, Captain Halsey."
The Coordinator looked at them for a second longer than was comfortable, before nodding his head very slightly.
Immediately his herald declared, "You stand now in the presence of the Coordinator and Unifier of Worlds, the Duke of Luthien, Kurita Takashi."
Thanks to Woods' unfettered understanding of American history, and in particular the factors that drove the World Wars, he bowed graciously. "The United States greets you warmly, Coordinator."
The Coordinator raised one delicate eyebrow. "More warmly than your predecessors greeted the Shoguns, at any rate."
"That is so, Your Highness. We are not the same country that greeted Japan with warships and threats. We are no longer governed by the same forces, nor will we act in the same way as the America of Roosevelt's time."
"And how will I interpret that," he asked, calm as the blackness between galaxies.
"If it is clarification you desire, then I will say this; Japan was sold up the river once, and the big men of America were part of the deal. A great many ordinary Americans and Japanese were ruined by the war."
The Coordinator sneered, "I fail to see how that is the case. American cities were not reduced to ashes in that war, and her people were not reduced to poverty."
"Not in that war, no. Our turn would come later. But we were hoodwinked just as much as the Japanese were, and the Germans, and the French, and the British. And thanks to that war, many people were conned out of a future.
"The new united States is not enslaved to those forces any longer. There are no more staged elections and the people are educated enough that they can stand on their own two feet."
"Spare me the schoolboy lecture," snapped Takashi Kurita, "And tell me why you are here. Why should the United Systems end her isolation?"
At that moment the doors exploded inwards and a pack of soldiers charged into the throne room. Two shots, and the Otomo guards went down.
"What is the meaning of this?" the Coordinator demanded, beginning to stand, only to be dissuaded when he found himself staring down the barrels of a dozen laser rifles.
The apparent leader of these men, Woods had little familiarity with the ranks of the Combine Army, walked forwards, leveling a pistol at the Coordinator.
"Please, no sudden moves, Takashi," the man said, grinning as he came on. Then he turned to address the room in general, and what Charlie could now see were security cameras, "As of now, the rightful Coordinator is once more on the throne."
"Have I missed something?" Charlie wondered, from shock perhaps. Shock and the sheer abruptness of what had happened.
"Silence dog," the man shouted, firing a beam that hummed past his ear. "What is the meaning, is this is a very good day for the Combine! A very good day indeed, considering I have managed to halt an unholy alliance between the usurper and the outsider."
Charlie stuck a finger in one ear and wiggled it around.
"Care to run that by me again?" he asked, "I'm not here to conclude an alliance, only to serve as the united States' envoy to the Combine."
"Lies will serve you not at this hour, jingai."
"There's no need to be insulting, sir."
Charlie knew his one chance at life was to keep the conversation going, and keep the man engaged, whoever he was.
"Why have you done this," he asked, "What crime has the Coordinator committed?"
"Aside from murdering his own father?" the man asked sarcastically, and he seemed to enjoy the way the Coordinator paled, either from fury or fear, Charlie couldn't tell.
"Indeed," he said, "An awful crime, if it's true. How do you know?"
"Because it was one of his men that did the deed. Everyone said that he was part of the Tyr Resistance afterwards, but he was still part of the Otomo, which Takashi Kurita was the commander of. He also had the man immediately disposed of after the deed was done, and anyone who dared question his legitimacy."
The man listed this all with a sort of gloating malice, and his eyes never left the Coordinator's who stared dirks and daggers right back.
"And so you are going to kill him?" Charlie asked, rubbing his chin, "And who's going to be the next Coordinator? You seem to have a candidate in mind."
"The blood of a traitor can never sit the Chrysanthemum Throne. Thank the gods, the departed Lord Hohiro had another son, Miyamoto. And thank the gods that before he died, he had a son, Isoroku Kurita."
"So, if His Highness is illegitimate because he assassinated his father, then the second son's firstborn will be the new Coordinator?" Charlie wondered out loud. "And what will happen to His Highness's own children, given that his union has borne fruit."
Come on, he was thinking, Just a little further, and I've got the son of a bitch.
"We shall deprive the usurper's lackeys a symbol they can rally around. And we shall show the United Systems what it means to consort with traitors."
"And by deprive, you mean kill?"
"Precisely. Perhaps we shall make Takashi Kurita do it himself, as expiation for his crime."
Now, the Coordinator stood up.
"Touch my son, Shōshō Tanaka" he said, and every syllable thrummed with power and rage, "And your life will be short and your death will be slow."
"That, Takashi-san, is what is coming for the both of you."
From outside an explosion like the crash of thunder sounded, followed by the sound of enormous engines at full power. Seconds later, and Charlie Woods' phone began to ring.
"What's that?" The man demanded, looking at Charlie's pocket.
"My cellular phone," Charlie responded, "Excuse me, but I think I'd better take this."
Tanaka was feeling unbalanced, it can be the only reason he made the mistake of bowing slightly and saying, "Of course, of course."
Charlie fished his phone out of his pocket and answered it, listened for a moment, and then held it out for the officer, "It's for you."
The officer, Tanaka, the Coordinator had called him, cautiously took the strange phone and said, "Konnichiwa?"
The voice on the other end demanded, "Is this the man who made the moronic decision to launch a coup d'état while the united States ambassador was in the same system?"
"Who the hell is this?" Tanaka snarled.
"This is Commander Quinton Parker, commanding the USS Taratupa and the chauffeur of a whole battalion of angry marines. More to the point, I also happen to have an even dozen tactical ballistic missiles onboard. And the only thing stopping me from using every one of them is the fact that not a hair on our ambassador's head has so far been touched. If you touch that hair, my boss, Lieutenant Colonel Engel, will come charging down like the wrath of god to get him out. And if you kill him, I will launch every one of these missiles, and one of these warheads will be coming down right on top of this palace.
"So, what's it going to be? Will you release the ambassador who has approached your Coordinator without a thought of malice and let them talk to one another like civilized people? Or am I going to turn this whole city into a field of green glass?"
"Where are you anyway?" Tanaka snapped, listening with one ear for the clink of boots on marble.
"Currently, I'm a few miles above the Imperial City. Would you like to have a look?"
Tanaka paled, and ordered his men to bring the Coordinator and the Ambassador with him. Parker was as good as his word. The front of the palace was a battleground, with mechs of the Otomo and the rebels heavily engaged, while overhead there was a swarm of small craft of no pattern he recognized firing upon the rebellious mechs. Further out, the various garrisons had lit up with action as formations more loyal to the Coordinator began to mobilize But what truly chilled him was the ship hovering ten miles further up. It was so large he wondered how it could be holding steady in the atmosphere. Through his rangefinders, it appeared to be some three hundred and eighty meters long, and bristled with cannon, lasers and rockets. More than a dozen smaller craft swarmed around the alpha-predator, each one training their own batteries of rockets on Unity Palace.
Tanaka looked from Kurita to Woods, there was absolutely no mercy there. Finally, he reached a reluctant conclusion after staring at the warship a moment longer.
He took out a radio and said, "Men, lay down your arms, and release His Highness," as they began to protest, he turned his eyes to the Coordinator. "These men acted on my orders alone."
Then he drew his Nakajima laser pistol and brought it up to his chin in one smooth motion. Before another word could be said, he pulled the trigger. The beam burned up and out of his cranium, and he collapsed in a lifeless heap on the ground in front of them.
Takashi Kurita stared down at the corpse for a moment before he said, "Filthy traitor," and gave it a good kick.
By now a squad of the Otomo had arrived from further within the Palace. Charlie noticed that several were streaked with blood, and at least one had scorch marks on his jacket.
"We were attacked, Tonno," one of them said, panting and out of breath, "We've been rallying a counterattack against the traitors. When the dropship came down, and we couldn't find you in the Throne Room, we feared the worst."
The Coordinator adjusted his clothes, and suddenly it looked as though he'd never lost control.
"I am still alive, Chūi." The words 'no thanks to you' went unsaid. "Is my son unhurt?"
"He is," the Lieutenant hastened to assure his lord, "A section of the rebels sought to seize the life of the migi and the midaidokoro, but we managed to kill them. All that's left to do is mop up."
"Will you be taking prisoners?" Woods asked, "I'd like to know who was behind this, myself."
"As would I," the Coordinator growled, "This wasn't just an assassination attempt, it was practically a full-scale assault. But first, make sure of my nephew. If Tanaka intended to install him on the throne, undoubtedly he would have meant him to be a puppet while he served as Regent, and he likely intended to have him as a hostage had his rebellion failed."
The Lieutenant saluted, before he said, in complete sincerity, "We are prepared to lay down our lives for this failure, Tonno."
"Is that necessary?" Captain Halsey wondered, more than slightly unnerved at the statement.
The Coordinator stared at the soldier, before nodding his head in the negative.
"Not yet. You have tasks left to accomplish."
The Lieutenant clicked his heels, bowed, and turned to depart.
Woods was unable to stop himself from asking the Coordinator, now they were alone, "Why did they offer to commit suicide? What had they failed at?"
Takashi Kurita leaned back on the balcony, and suddenly he looked as human as any other man. "Because as warriors of the Otomo, their sole purpose is to defend the Coordinator. Were it not for your intervention, it is very possible that they would have failed."
The Coordinator seemed to realize this all of a sudden, since he turned to the dropship that had begun to travel towards the Imperial City's DropPort.
"Your men saved my life," he murmured.
Charlie mirrored the Coordinator's posture, following the progress of the Taratupa. "Even so, that's worth something. For what it's worth, I didn't see the meeting going like this at all. I just thought I'd be delivering a greeting and observing the formalities."
Takashi scoffed and said, "Do your greetings normally include the threat of nuclear force?"
"Not usually. Not to be insulting, Coordinator, but considering the Combine's history, we were afraid that if negotiations went south, we'd have to shoot our way out. The only other ambassador who's getting a similar treatment is the man headed for Sian."
The Coordinator gave a genuine smile, "I would see this city incinerate in nuclear fire before I yielded it to the grasping hands of rebels. I can't imagine your man will have an easy time of it with The Diablo."
"He's actually called that?"
"He enjoys it."
Charlie's laugh was a gunshot in the sudden quiet. "God save us from Capellan Chancellors."
"Now those are words to live by."
XxX
After the dust had settled, the American ambassador and his entourage were properly greeted with a tea ceremony hosted by the Coordinator. Then there was a ceremony broadcast across the Combine for Commander Parker, who was awarded the Guardian of the Lair in a shocking departure from tradition. After all, no one from outside the Draconis Combine had hitherto been awarded any medals from the Combine, since no one had hitherto had the opportunity to render such a service.
The events of Woods' first day on the job would quickly enter internet mythology in the united States, and make him something of a celebrity in the Inner Sphere. And Woods, much to his relief, had a far more uneventful stay in Combine space. At least, compared to some of his successors.