Peace Army (3 page)

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Authors: Steven L. Hawk

Tags: #Fiction, #Science Fiction, #Action & Adventure

BOOK: Peace Army
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Although much faster than the carriers he had grown up with, this new version was constricting in its size. Where normal carriers were utilitarian vehicles designed to carry a dozen or more passengers from once place to another, this new variety carried a maximum of two people in tiny, separate compartments. The jet carrier was meant for two things: speed and war.

In addition to the jet design initially described by Grant, but developed by Tane’s ever-growing research and development team, the vehicle boasted a wide range of weapon systems and defensive countermeasures. According to Grant, ancient armies known as “air forces” were built around similar, though not quite as efficient, flying machines.

Tane and Mouse were finally home from the three-day trip that had them visiting the generals of each of the four other Culture Armies. The four generals reported directly to Grant, who also acted as the general of the N’mercan Armed Forces. The purpose of the trip was to notify the other Cultures of the impending arrival of another Minith mothership, and to alert them to the coming battle.

Tane and Mouse had found the other generals and their Culture Armies woefully unprepared for what was headed their way.

Grant had worked miracles preparing Earth and its citizens for this day, but it was an uphill battle at best. Reversing hundreds of years of forced indoctrination toward a peaceful society could not be accomplished in a short period—even when the fate of the planet rested in the balance. The majority of the world’s population was too fixated on Peace to understand the need for an army, weapons, or soldiers, much less the fighting that those things implied. Billions would prefer to let the Minith destroy the planet to picking up a weapon and fighting against their ultimate destruction.

The concept of Peace threatened to strangle any hope for success against a Minith return. It was a deeply bred flaw—one that the human psyche, once geared toward the concept, could not easily shake. At least, not in less than a single generation.

The best chance of breaking the cycle rested with the youngest generation of humans. At the direction of the Leadership Council six years earlier, all children six years or younger were held out of the formerly required Peace training sessions. Tendencies toward violence were officially relaxed for the first time in more than two hundred years.

Parents were required by their leaders to be tolerant of pushing, shoving, and hitting. Instead of using old techniques for stopping and redirecting outbursts, parents were instructed on how to properly guide the behaviors. Children were no longer put into Peace training classes or subjected to mind-alteration therapies. Parents were directed to explain to children that hitting and kicking were acceptable, but only if done to protect themselves or others from attack or abuse.

But knowing what is needed and being able to provide it are two wholly separate things. Many complied and did their best. Other parents could not adjust, though their future and the world’s future depended on it. So they refused to comply with the Council’s directives and raised their children as they had been raised. Still others complied, but could not bear to see their children express the mildest displays of violence. Most of these eventually turned their children over to Council-run orphanages and care centers.

Within these orphanages, trained instructors were hired and all followed the letter and intent of the Leadership directives. Children in these facilities quickly outnumbered the trained adults and they grew up fighting as kids once did, often outside the “only when to protect yourself” guidelines. Nature was permitted to take its course and the strongest and smartest children quickly led their groups. Not surprisingly, the children who showed the most promise of becoming future soldiers came from these places. But there were too few, and they were still too young, to be of any help in the coming weeks.

These thoughts weighed heavily on Tane as he climbed out of the cramped cockpit of the jet carrier.

“See you inside, Mouse,” Tane muttered as he dropped the final step onto the runway.

He saw several gray-clad figures running toward the carrier. They would help Mouse check out the vehicle and prepare it for the next flight. They were not soldiers, but were very good at helping those who were. He and Grant had learned early on that they needed to use non-soldiers in whatever support roles they could. It helped stretch their combat forces to the maximum usable level.

“Hey, that’s ‘Colonel Mouse,’ Senior Scientist Tane Rolan!” The large pilot shouted from his seat in the carrier. Tane looked up. Mouse’s dark face, now full of shiny gold teeth, smiled down at him.

The pilot waved.

“Just messing with you, Tane. See you inside.”

Tane released a breath and waved back weakly. Even after six years of working beside them, the scientist still struggled to know when these soldiers—these former Violents—were were joking and when they weren’t.

He turned quickly on his heel and headed for the giant fortress of concentric concrete buildings. The acid-filled moat was gone and the outer wall of the structure had been breached on four sides to allow traffic to pass easily into and out of the facility.

Upon defeating the Minith six years earlier, the prisoners had been released. The idea was that they would form the foundation for Grant’s new army, and almost all accepted. The large structure had then been turned into a modern-day Pentagon. At least, that’s what Grant called it. Tane wasn’t sure what that meant—there were five concentric buildings, but each was a square, not a pentagon—but it held significance for Grant, so that’s how he always thought of it. What he did know was that the best human fighting force to grace Earth in more than three hundred years was housed here.

Unfortunately, that knowledge provided little comfort.

 

* * *

 

Grant was in a sour mood as he strode toward the inner square. He nodded at the men and women he passed, but his mind was elsewhere. A Minith mothership was only days away and the human forces defending the planet were woefully unprepared. He wanted another six years—
needed
another six years.

Adding another layer of difficulty, the manner in which they acted toward Treel had suddenly become complicated. When notified of the approaching ship, the alien’s stance was immediate and unequivocal. He would stand with the invaders. Minith nature and law demanded it.

It pissed him off, but Grant understood. If he were in Treel’s situation, he would fight for his people, despite any personal feelings for his captors. On top of that, Treel had a family on another planet. The only hope for getting back to them was with the Minith.

Yes, Grant understood.

Treel had similarly understood when Grant announced that his room was again a cell. It was now securely locked, with two armed guards posted outside the door.

Grant’s new concern about Treel’s decision was that Eli would not understand the sudden change in the dynamic. No more visits. No more chess games. No more interaction with the alien soldier who had become a constant part of his young life.

For at least the thousandth time since being brought back to life, Grant longed for the old days, when his decisions affected only himself and the soldiers under his command. Life had been so easy then. Now his actions and decisions affected his wife, his child, his soldiers—hell, they affected the entire human population.

He hadn’t asked for the responsibility, but the future of humanity had been shoved into his hands six years ago. The world’s biggest friggin’ game of hot potato ever, and he had lost.

And he was tired.

The gray hair that had recently started to pepper his otherwise dark crew cut was proof that he was no longer a young buck. The deepening lines in the face that looked back at him every morning confirmed it. He looked his full thirty-eight years.

Make that 638 years
, he silently corrected.
Give or take a decade.

Grant exited the building that made up the Fourth Square and crossed the open courtyard that separated it from the inner Fifth Square building. Each step seemed heavier and slower than the last and he entered the building reluctantly.

Being the innermost building within a series of buildings, the Fifth Square was the smallest, but most secure facility within the mammoth structure. Upon defeating the Minith on Earth, Grant had made it his headquarters and the command center for what was gradually becoming Earth’s Army.

Through the Fifth Square building was the final courtyard, a large, open area that marked the exact center of Violent’s Prison. Grant briefly considered passing through the command building and getting on one of the dozen or so carriers that waited in the courtyard. But the temptation passed quickly, replaced as it always was by resignation and the ever-present weight of responsibility.

He stopped for a moment in front of the command conference room door to compose his thoughts before entering. Grant found himself doing that more and more lately as his energy levels shrank and the weight of his responsibilities grew. Those few seconds to calm his emotions, gather his thoughts, and consider the big picture helped him manage the weight.

He took a final deep breath.

Released it.

Entered the conference room.

This meeting was a daily gathering of the military leaders of the N’mercan and global forces. It was their daily information sharing and planning meeting. In this room, the issues that impacted and shaped the world’s defense against the Minith were discussed, debated, and decided. Except for the Earth’s Leadership Council, the people in this room were undeniably the most influential humans on the planet. Some thought they were the more influential than even the Leadership Council.

“Tane. Colonel Mouse,” Grant acknowledged the two men as he entered the room and took in the attendees. “Good to see that you’re back.”

“Good day, Grant,” Tane replied.

Senior Scientist Tane Rolan was the real hero in the fight against the Minith, both now and six years earlier.

That was Grant’s view, anyway.

It was the diminutive thinker, with the steel gray eyes, who had brought Grant back from his frozen slumber. It was Tane who had given Grant new life, new limbs, and the weapons with which to fight the alien invaders. Grant was merely the brawn—an ancient soldier with muscles and military know-how. Tane was the brains of the outfit. His ability to take Grant’s ideas and turn them into reality was nothing short of amazing.

Grant learned early on that he could describe a weapon or vehicle and, within a few months, Tane and his ever-growing team would parade out a prototype, ready for Grant’s inspection.

Some designs were easier to create than others. Reproducing the laser-based weapon that Grant had found in the Boston museum was a simple matter of reverse engineering. Turning that pistol-shaped weapon into a rifle version was accomplished just as quickly. Those two weapons supplemented the standard, projectile weapons which were the real foundation of Grant’s new army. In Grant’s experience, there was no better weapon than one that fired actual bullets. However, he also recognized the need for diversity in firepower, and the laser-based weapons were a good choice for mixing things up. For every ten soldiers who carried a “real” rifle, one soldier would be issued one of the laser rifles.

Other weapons had been more difficult. The first prototype for the jet-powered carrier fighter that Mouse and his forces flew had taken two years for Tane’s team to develop. The final version had taken the team another year to perfect. Once the vehicle was finalized, it took yet another year to set up the manufacturing facilities that could produce the vehicles in quantity. Grant agonized over the slowness at first, but once the fighter was perfected, and the facility was built, the plant rolled out carrier after carrier. Grant was forced to acknowledge that the laborers of current Earth were good at their work. Over the last two years, the plant had rolled out more than ten thousand of the carriers—almost twice as many as there were pilots to fly them.

The same was true of the tanks, personnel carriers, pulse weapons, and artillery pieces that Grant had added to the mix. The plants—and the workers who staffed them—were building weapons that might never be used, simply because there were not enough soldiers to man them. For Grant, this was a blessing and a curse. It was great to have a surplus of weapons and vehicles—a surplus of weapons is generally a good thing for an army to have. But in this instance, the surplus only highlighted their need to turn more of the population into soldiers.

Of all the cultures, the Afc’n Culture had been the most successful at drafting willing fighters. More than a third of the world’s fighting forces, which currently totaled fewer than sixty thousand, were recruited from the continent that Grant had always known as Africa. Of the remaining forty thousand fighters, roughly fifteen thousand came from the N’mercan Culture. The S’mercan and As’n Cultures had drafted nearly ten thousand recruits each; the Urop’n and Musl’n Cultures contributed less than three thousand. The sixty thousand included virtually all ten thousand of the former adult inmates of Violent’s Prison. This meant that in six years, Earth had produced only fifty thousand additional fighters—from a population of more than sixty billion.

Not enough. Not nearly enough
, Grant thought. He pulled his weary mind back to the here and now.

“Colonel Mouse, how are you?” he asked his second-in-command.

Mouse merely nodded, raised a hand in greeting, and smiled.

Grant’s mood lifted immediately. The sight of the large black pilot proudly showing off his new smile never failed to elicit a warm feeling. The first time he had met Mouse, just a few buildings away from where they now were, the larger man possessed only a handful of teeth. Dental care for residents of Violent’s Prison had never been a priority before they helped defeat the Minith.

Grant took a silent roll call of the attendees as he approached his seat at the head of the long table. In addition to the lead scientist and the commander of his air forces, the primary members of the command team, six in total, were present. All, except Tane and Mr. Blue, were former inmates of Violent’s Prison.

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