The Unincorporated War (5 page)

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Authors: Dani Kollin

Tags: #Dystopia, #Science Fiction, #Fantasy

BOOK: The Unincorporated War
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We will lose a long war,
thought Justin to himself for the umpteenth time as he stared down at the planet below. Even on the flagship of the O.A. fleet Justin felt ill at ease. True, the ship and the fifteen others she rode with were a testament to the ingenuity of the techheads at the Gedretar shipyard in Ceres, particularly Kenji Isozaki, the chief engineer, who’d apparently pissed off the wrong executive at GCI and had, as punishment, been sent to Ceres. An unassuming man, Kenji had turned out to be a certifiable jury-rigging genius. He’d proposed an idea that was so simple Justin had accepted it on the spot: Don’t build a fleet; improvise one. And that’s exactly what the O.A. had done. What Justin found himself flying in couldn’t really be called a ship, more like a large mine hauler retrofitted with added living quarters, fusion generators, and, according to Kenji, some “big-ass” rail guns. The guns, Kenji had explained, had originally been slated for use in a Jovian mining operation. That they were now being pointed toward the inner core rather than the outer planets was of no consequence to the intrepid engineer. He’d been given a task and over the course of a year went about completing it. Accordingly, the enemy had a fleet as well. A lot more formidable, Kenji had explained, but by no means invincible. Justin’s spies in the corporate core had confirmed Kenji’s suppositions and had informed the President that the corporate core had at least twenty true warships in ser vice, with more on the way.

And that was why Justin had decided to attack.

Though it was still referred to as the Red Planet, little of the iron oxide that had caused the planet to rust and, ergo, appear red remained. Instead, what Justin looked down upon was a planet that in many respects resembled Earth, Mars’s far bluer cousin orbiting roughly fifty million miles away. Earth was bluer by virtue of having more water, but Mars was greener. Much greener.

The Mars Justin remembered from his first life had not only appeared bright red in the night sky but, according to the data at the time, had also had an average surface temperature of minus 81 degrees Fahrenheit, with extremes that ranged from a balmy 75 to minus 100. But this new Mars had no such extremes. One could walk freely, albeit a little more lightly, on the planet’s surface by virtue of its 0.38 Earth gravity. The planet’s day was twenty-four hours, thirty-seven minutes; its axial tilt allowed it to enjoy seasons; and the amount of sunlight that reached Mars, less than half that of Earth, was sufficient for photo-synthesis.

Mission one had been to make the thin Martian atmosphere more robust. To do that the early colonists had to first rebuild the atmosphere and then heat it. Here nanotechnology came to the fore. Trillions of microscopic machines
swarmed the planet, freed up the permafrost layer, liberated the oxygen molecules from the rocks and dirt, prepared the soil for biologicals and plant life, and released CFCs into the atmosphere, creating a green house effect. The plants then did their duty by releasing copious amounts of oxygen into the emerging atmosphere until a more Earth-like equilibrium had been reached—all within seventy-five years.

Though everyone in the O.A. preferred to dig in rather than build out, Justin, like his Terran cousins he was now coming to attack, still harbored dreams of creating other Earth-like planets somewhere out in the belt. It was impractical to be sure. The vibrant, productive, and fast-growing belt community had proved the folly of waiting for terraformation. Why wait seventy-five years for a verdant planet when a reasonable alternative could be created in ten? Sure, there’d be no sky to look up to and centrifugal gravity to deal with, but those were small considerations when the possibility of exploiting and enriching oneself from the innards of an asteroid came into play.

Surprise had been easy to achieve. It helped that the asteroid belt essentially began at the orbit of Mars. The original plan offered up by his naval command had been to simply circle the planet a few times, show the O.A. flag, and leave. But Justin wanted a greater triumph. He was going to capture a borough, or something suitably large, and then hold it for as long as possible. Shortly thereafter he would stage the greatest rescue in the history of the human race.

“Sir,” said a bright young ensign, “the landing party has reported. All resistance on the northern plateau has ended.” Justin turned around and realized that the information had not been directed at him but rather to the new acting Admiral of the O.A. fleet. Admiral Sinclair turned to Justin. “Mr. President, if you still insist on going down to the surface, now is as good a time as any. However, I must once again caution you against it.”

A half smile parted Justin’s lips. “Admiral, we’ve been through this. I thank you for your concern. But revolutions get led from the front. Let the politicians and corporate executives stay on Earth and send others to do their dirty work. In the Outer Alliance everyone fights, everyone takes risks.
Especially
your President.”

“But sir,” said the young ensign standing next to Sinclair, “if we lose you we may very well lose this war.”

Justin looked around and saw that the comment had elicited a fair amount of agreement.

“But not going will guarantee our failure.” Justin then turned to Admiral Sinclair.

“Do you have children, Admiral?”

Sinclair was taken aback. “Seven, sir.”

“Have they joined the fleet?”

“Five have,” answered the admiral. “My youngest, Adrianne, is only eight, and my wife is pregnant.”

“Is my life more important then theirs?” asked Justin.

“Sir, that’s not the point.”

“Admiral, that’s the
only
point. For too long value was placed on life by how many shares you owned or had owned by others; no more.” Justin paused for a moment. “By the way, Admiral, what percentage of yourself do you own?”

“Now? One hundred percent.”

Justin turned around the command room as he asked the other officers assembled, “And you?” He was greeted with a chorus of, “Hundred,” and, “All.”

Justin nodded approvingly. “Your children are the most important thing in your life and,” he said, turning back to Sinclair, “I may have to order your children into a situation that will get them permanently killed. It’s the worst part of this job and I can’t shirk it. But at least they’ll know …
you’ll
know, and everyone in the Outer Alliance will and
must
know, that I accept those same risks or I cannot give or expect anyone to follow any orders. So yes, I’m going down to the surface, and that, Admiral,” Justin said with a sly grin, “is an order.”

“Mr. President,” Sinclair answered, shaking his head, “you have an annoying habit of getting your way.”

Justin laughed. “You should talk to my wife. She’s proof positive that I don’t.”

“She’ll be fine, sir,” replied the admiral, knowing full well that Neela was on the surface of the planet at that very moment. She’d gone down as a combat medic with a group of ground assault miners. Justin had initially tried to bar her, but she’d used the same arguments on him in private that he’d just used on the crew.

Justin smiled awkwardly and left the command room for a t.o.p. to the surface of Mars and his prize.

2 Corporate Core
 

One year earlier
New York, Earth

To all concerned parents and educators in the greater New York metropolitan area:

The New York virtual reality museum is once again open for viewing. Due to the nature of the current emergency it will be kept open continuously for the next year to help overcome backlog problems that have resulted from the unfortunate events of the recent past. Please contact us via phone or Neuro to arrange a visit. We remind all that virtual reality is just as dangerous today as it was three centuries ago. More so if you consider how the weaker, uninoculated among us will look to it as an escape from present troubles. Protect your loved ones, students, and society from that greatest of all evils as soon as possible.

—Advertisement run in
The Terran Daily News

 

H
ektor Sambianco was nervous.
No,
he thought to himself, …
anxious
. He was standing on a hover disk thirty feet above ground level in Colonization Park in the middle of New York City. The disk was encircled by a clear rail and afforded the new Chairman a 360-degree panorama of the bustling crowd gathering below. Just beneath him was a thick globular mist that covered a soon-to-be-revealed statue. The air was clear and cool. Hektor was wearing a moderately expensive seven-piece suit, a tri-tie, and leather cowboy boots that he’d personally shined to a gleam. This was to be his first public event since becoming the Chairman of GCI, and he knew just how important it was. His anxiety had nothing to do with stage fright, a fear he’d overcome long ago in his steady march up the corporate ladder. Nor did it have to do with the fear of acceptance. The crowd knew Hektor from his media-saturated days as Director of Special Operations and over the course of many ups and downs had grown to love and accept their stalwart leader. But it was different now. Now he was the Chairman and the incorporated world was curious to see if he’d become
The
Chairman. And the crowd was vast.
As big, if not bigger,
noted Hektor as he meticulously rehearsed his opening lines in his head,
than the one Justin Cord addressed not that long ago.

The event itself was trivial—the simple unveiling of a statue and the renaming of a park. Under normal circumstances Hektor’s presence, even as Chairman, should have drawn a crowd in the tens of thousands and certainly not in the numbers now stretching as far as the eye could see. But Hektor knew that neither his ascendance, the statue, nor the park’s renaming was the real reason for the swelling multitudes. The real reason could be found in the crowd’s baser instincts. They were scared. And Hektor was going to use that.

A large light, covering the entire underbelly of his hover disk, flashed a series of bright colors and then slowly pulsed down through a series of solid colors until it came to a stop at a luminous green. The audience was brought to silence through a series of hushes that flitted through the surrounding area like a soft wind through leaves.

Hektor looked out at the mass while firmly grabbing the top of the rail. He then leaned slightly forward, made sure to look around once more, and began what he felt was to be the most important speech of his career.

“My predecessor …,” he bellowed, more for effect than need, “was a great man.
The
Chairman, and that is how …” Hektor feigned choking back his emotion. “… and that is how I will always think of him, was the finest example of the incorporated system.”

The crowd broke out in applause. Hektor waited for it to subside before continuing.

“His rise from the penny stocks to the pinnacle of respect and power is … without precedent. So it is altogether fitting that we dedicate this statue to him. And it is also just that this park be renamed for him. Because he was
The
Chairman the park will henceforth be named Chairman Park.”

There was another series of polite applause. This, the current Chairman knew, was not what they’d come to hear. Still the conventions must be observed.

“The sculptor asked me how The Chairman should be posed. Being a true artist, he of course listened carefully to what I had to say, asked many questions, and then … did what he wanted.”

Hektor waited for the smattering of laughter to die down.

“I’d wanted him putting away his spacer uniform and picking up his executive case, symbolizing his decision to leave the world of space in order to enter the world of business. But the artist chose better, I think.”

Hektor pressed a button on a small console and the opaque bubble surrounding the statue slowly began to fade. When the field reached total visibility there was applause, proper and formal, and some whistles and shouts of approval. The statue showed The Chairman leaning over a rail, staring intently in much the same way as he’d stood in the Beanstalk overlooking his vast dominion.
In truth, the pose was exactly what Hektor had asked for, but he felt there was no harm in letting the world believe he was more flexible than not.

“This,” he continued, “is how The Chairman looked when viewing the Earth from the top of the Beanstalk. It was something he did often while running the affairs of GCI and the world beyond: gazing intently at the world he loved so dearly.”

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