Pyrrhucy (part 23)
Mr Zoat
Dedicated ragequitter
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14th February 2013
18:36 GMT -5
The assembled heavy cruisers point their guns down the gravity well and open fire, moon rock evaporating as the plasma hits the moon surface. It will take a while to dig down to the Dominion gate structure, but it inevitably will reach it. And then we'll have to keep an eye out for future infiltration attempts, but until then there won't be any more attacks from that avenue.
Zo told me that they had only one gamma gong on the fleet, and while I haven't gone room-to-room I certainly haven't seen any sign of there being more. Apparently, they're very resource-intensive to make, and it was only going to be used to contain prisoners. Plenty of time to check later.
The Dhorians have been loaded into two cruisers that I personally ripped the guns off, given a message to play in case Hyathis sends her fleet to finish them off on the way home and told to get out. I can see them heading for the edge of the interdiction zone now. It won't be a comfortable trip, but they'll make it. In a few months.
Eiling is watching the guns ravage the lunar surface.
"Lantern, are these ships American ships now?"
"Legally, their status is in limbo. The Dhorians declared war against Earth, but the disposition of any property would depend on the results of the final peace treaty negotiations. I'll be pushing for the Justice League to take full control of them, because it's legally far simpler. And less likely to cause friction between Earth nations in the post-Anti-Life period."
"Everyone who took part in this mission except you is American."
"And Abra Kadabra. Who… Still isn't an American citizen."
"He isn't?"
"He's a time traveller, so he isn't a natural born citizen, and then he was a convicted felon… But that's not the point."
"Isn't it? You know what the Chinese do with their metahumans, don't you?" I nod. "You could have gone to them. They'd probably have let you write your own ticket. You stuck with the Justice League. And sure, they're your friends. But is that why?"
"It's generally right to be on the side without concentration camps."
"Yeah. But it's not just metahumans, is it? Free speech, rule of law, free trade… All the things that makes America great. You spend most of your time on Earth in America. You signed up with an organisation that's run by Americans for a reason. I'm assuming it's because you like the way we do things."
"I like the way you do things when you do them like you're supposed to."
"You don't like me, you don't like what I do. Fine. Nate's lucky to have people on his side like you."
"No, it's not that. You want to sell weapons to America's enemies for whatever reason, I wouldn't care all that much. And your explanation made a lot of sense. My issue is what you did to Major Adams."
"That was the best I could do. It wasn't like I had an entirely free hand. Once Lemar and Yarrow decided to try and kill each other, I had to keep everything quiet."
"Why not clean house? After Lemar was dead, arrest Yarrow and Polk and have them killed while escaping. Then have the official report blame the three of them for the smuggling-."
"Officially there wasn't any smuggling. And it had to stay that way if the C.I.A. was going to get its money."
"Then come up with something else. It's not like Adams had a motive either."
Eiling shakes his head. "He'd have kept investigating. I'm not going to try and tell you that it played on my conscience for decades or anything like that. I've seen better men killed for less, and some of them were on my side. But given the objectives, there wasn't any other way to handle it."
"And did the C.I.A. do anything useful with that money?"
"Damn good question." He snorts. "I'd say 'no', but I didn't know that at the time."
"Same principle. I'm sure that whoever used these ships to throw an asteroid at someone you don't like would think they were doing the right thing. As far as I'm concerned, if you're going to pull the trigger in a situation like that, you better be right. Because the default setting shouldn't be 'ruthless bastard', it should be 'follow the rules'."
"How's that working out for you?"
"Reasonably well." I shrug. "I trust the League not to do anything disastrous, even if I'd rather that they pushed a bit harder sometimes. I don't trust the various parts of the United States government to do the same."
I look over his shoulder at the lunar surface as the guns finally break through to the Dominion gateway, smiling as it's destroyed.
Cease fire.
The guns stop shooting.
"That it?"
"Until next time. Hey." He looks around. "You'll actually get a pardon out of this, won't you?"
"Yeah. I'm too useful not to. Won't get my rank back. Won't get my kids back. But I'll get 'freed'. How long am I going to live for, anyway?"
"Between the stem cells and the Danner Formula, at least another century. Possibly longer. Possibly a lot longer. So I expect we'll be seeing a lot of each other."
"And I'll be seeing a lot of Adams. Great. So what's next?"
"If you're in need of a place to go?" Truggs strolls in, smiling smugly. "Then what's next is-."
"No. And don't pretend that was a fluke: you were obviously lurking by the door."
"No?"
"I have a plan for removing the Anti-Life from Earth. Unless it fails, there's no need to evacuate people."
"Do you need the ships for this plan of yours?"
"I need the resources that would otherwise be spent on checking potential colonists for Anti-Life infection. The ships would only be used as a distraction."
But the gong might be genuinely useful, if we can work out how it functions.
"What if they're already ready to go?"
Breathe. Breathe.
"That may be acceptable. Take it up with Batman when we return to Earth. Enjoy your stay in the prisoners' suite."
"Not the first time."
"Glad that you're happy. Now, if you'll excuse me, I need to report in."
He waves with exaggerated disinterest, and I fly down the corridor a way to get a little privacy.
"Orange Lantern to Lantern Gardner. I have a… Situation."
18:36 GMT -5
The assembled heavy cruisers point their guns down the gravity well and open fire, moon rock evaporating as the plasma hits the moon surface. It will take a while to dig down to the Dominion gate structure, but it inevitably will reach it. And then we'll have to keep an eye out for future infiltration attempts, but until then there won't be any more attacks from that avenue.
Zo told me that they had only one gamma gong on the fleet, and while I haven't gone room-to-room I certainly haven't seen any sign of there being more. Apparently, they're very resource-intensive to make, and it was only going to be used to contain prisoners. Plenty of time to check later.
The Dhorians have been loaded into two cruisers that I personally ripped the guns off, given a message to play in case Hyathis sends her fleet to finish them off on the way home and told to get out. I can see them heading for the edge of the interdiction zone now. It won't be a comfortable trip, but they'll make it. In a few months.
Eiling is watching the guns ravage the lunar surface.
"Lantern, are these ships American ships now?"
"Legally, their status is in limbo. The Dhorians declared war against Earth, but the disposition of any property would depend on the results of the final peace treaty negotiations. I'll be pushing for the Justice League to take full control of them, because it's legally far simpler. And less likely to cause friction between Earth nations in the post-Anti-Life period."
"Everyone who took part in this mission except you is American."
"And Abra Kadabra. Who… Still isn't an American citizen."
"He isn't?"
"He's a time traveller, so he isn't a natural born citizen, and then he was a convicted felon… But that's not the point."
"Isn't it? You know what the Chinese do with their metahumans, don't you?" I nod. "You could have gone to them. They'd probably have let you write your own ticket. You stuck with the Justice League. And sure, they're your friends. But is that why?"
"It's generally right to be on the side without concentration camps."
"Yeah. But it's not just metahumans, is it? Free speech, rule of law, free trade… All the things that makes America great. You spend most of your time on Earth in America. You signed up with an organisation that's run by Americans for a reason. I'm assuming it's because you like the way we do things."
"I like the way you do things when you do them like you're supposed to."
"You don't like me, you don't like what I do. Fine. Nate's lucky to have people on his side like you."
"No, it's not that. You want to sell weapons to America's enemies for whatever reason, I wouldn't care all that much. And your explanation made a lot of sense. My issue is what you did to Major Adams."
"That was the best I could do. It wasn't like I had an entirely free hand. Once Lemar and Yarrow decided to try and kill each other, I had to keep everything quiet."
"Why not clean house? After Lemar was dead, arrest Yarrow and Polk and have them killed while escaping. Then have the official report blame the three of them for the smuggling-."
"Officially there wasn't any smuggling. And it had to stay that way if the C.I.A. was going to get its money."
"Then come up with something else. It's not like Adams had a motive either."
Eiling shakes his head. "He'd have kept investigating. I'm not going to try and tell you that it played on my conscience for decades or anything like that. I've seen better men killed for less, and some of them were on my side. But given the objectives, there wasn't any other way to handle it."
"And did the C.I.A. do anything useful with that money?"
"Damn good question." He snorts. "I'd say 'no', but I didn't know that at the time."
"Same principle. I'm sure that whoever used these ships to throw an asteroid at someone you don't like would think they were doing the right thing. As far as I'm concerned, if you're going to pull the trigger in a situation like that, you better be right. Because the default setting shouldn't be 'ruthless bastard', it should be 'follow the rules'."
"How's that working out for you?"
"Reasonably well." I shrug. "I trust the League not to do anything disastrous, even if I'd rather that they pushed a bit harder sometimes. I don't trust the various parts of the United States government to do the same."
I look over his shoulder at the lunar surface as the guns finally break through to the Dominion gateway, smiling as it's destroyed.
Cease fire.
The guns stop shooting.
"That it?"
"Until next time. Hey." He looks around. "You'll actually get a pardon out of this, won't you?"
"Yeah. I'm too useful not to. Won't get my rank back. Won't get my kids back. But I'll get 'freed'. How long am I going to live for, anyway?"
"Between the stem cells and the Danner Formula, at least another century. Possibly longer. Possibly a lot longer. So I expect we'll be seeing a lot of each other."
"And I'll be seeing a lot of Adams. Great. So what's next?"
"If you're in need of a place to go?" Truggs strolls in, smiling smugly. "Then what's next is-."
"No. And don't pretend that was a fluke: you were obviously lurking by the door."
"No?"
"I have a plan for removing the Anti-Life from Earth. Unless it fails, there's no need to evacuate people."
"Do you need the ships for this plan of yours?"
"I need the resources that would otherwise be spent on checking potential colonists for Anti-Life infection. The ships would only be used as a distraction."
But the gong might be genuinely useful, if we can work out how it functions.
"What if they're already ready to go?"
Breathe. Breathe.
"That may be acceptable. Take it up with Batman when we return to Earth. Enjoy your stay in the prisoners' suite."
"Not the first time."
"Glad that you're happy. Now, if you'll excuse me, I need to report in."
He waves with exaggerated disinterest, and I fly down the corridor a way to get a little privacy.
"Orange Lantern to Lantern Gardner. I have a… Situation."
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