Supremacist Group Headquarters
Tophar Illig was not a man one wanted to fraternize with in the best of times; in his worse moments, the man was unbearable. His temper was widely known throughout the Supremacist Group, and most of the upper echelons had experienced it's full expression at one time or another. That wrath was about to fall in its purest, most unadulterated form on the diminutive Bernando Julio del Hernandez.
A message had just come through on the Group's secure line, and Bernando had been the unlucky recipient. Now it was his duty to report the contents to his commander, a task none of the others envied. To be sure, Bernando had attempted to pass the job off to anyone he came in contact with, but they would have none of it. So now the small man stood outside Illig's door, hand raised, hesitating to make that first fatal rap.
Smoothing his mustauche, he closed his eyes and sighed. With a prayer to his god that his superior would not kill him on the spot, he finally knocked. A deep, "Come in," drifted through the hardwood door, and Bernando, message in hand, softly tapped the panel and instinctively stepped back as the door opened.
The first sight to greet the messanger was the commander's harsh brown eyes. Tophar Illig was not even a pleasant man to look at. His skin was pulled tight over high cheekbones, his nose was pointed, and his chin, harsh when unshaven, was covered by a three-inch gotee which elongated his face further. He had long since forsaken the Imperial uniform in favor of jet black clothing that made everything about him sinister. Bernando, ever conscious of his task, was tempted to turn and run.
But he was a man of conscience and could not have shirked even this duty, so, stepping forward, he said, "Sir, I have a message from Govinski." Illig stared expectantly, and Bernando continued. "Sergeant Roark has been captured."
Lieutenant Illig stared for just a moment, his features unchanging. Then, slowly, his eyes narrowed. Just as slowly and methodically, he cocked his head and said, "What?"
Bernando nodded. "Yes, Sir. Sergeant Roark has been captured. Worse, he had his identichip on him at the time."
Illig's face grew cold, and Bernando knew he was in trouble. The Lieutenant rose without a word, walked to a small cabinet, and withdrew an old-fashioned fencing sword. The blade, though thin, was kept razor sharp. Bernando closed his eyes to the inevitable.
***
Ten minutes later, as the servants were just finishing their task of mopping up the mess that had previously been Bernando Julio del Hernandez, Tophar Illig was conferring with his staff in an adjacent room. Lieutenant Valin was unabashedly in favor of staging a full-force rescue. Sergeant Bastion, though, brought up the point that rescuing Roark would do nothing about recovering the identichip. Illig sat back and watched the others battle it out for a short time.
After a while, he leaned forward and cleared his throat. The other officers immediately fell silent. Illig's gaze rested on each of them briefly, causing them to shrink backward slightly. Bastion thought, not for the first time, that Illig was mentally off-balance. A trained psychiatrist would have confirmed the notion, but, sadly, none were available. Illig had killed the last one that tried to analyze him.
"Did Roark's chip have the mandatory self-destruct built into it?" he asked.
Sergeant Hiss hung his head. He had been in charge of implementing the new directive, but Roark had not yet been contacted. "No, Sir. We had been unable as of yet to reach Sergeant Roark to have his chip modified."
The Lieutenant's eyes were like daggers. "Well, then," he said, "I guess we'll have to do this the hard way. Sergeant Bastion, have our lackeys stage a large demonstration at the place he is being held. Burn it to the ground."
Bastion looked up in surprise. "Shouldn't we try to get him out first?" he asked.
Illig blinked once. "He knew what he was getting into. Burn him as well."
***
Imperial Special Forces Headquarters
Ansion Deluxe Hotel
"This place really is a rat trap," commented Captain Thrahrn of Black Squadron. The room he and Colonel Vos had designated as a command post was supposedly the best in the joint. If so, Wes actually did feel pity for the rest of his men. He and Thrahrn had already killed several large insects, the two beds were uncomfortable, and the windows let in the outside air. At the very least, the smell in the room was unpleasant; to be completely honest, it reeked of sweat, smoke, and animal waste.
"Well, it's what we have to deal with to avoid detection," commented Wes.
"Yeah, well, sometimes I'd rather just go in shooting. You remember those old holovids of that Rebel hero Han Solo?"
"Yeah."
"Well, to quote him, I prefer a straight fight to all this sneakin' around."
Wes chuckled. "I guess you didn't watch them often, did you?" he asked sarcastically.
Thrahrn was used to his commanding officer's sense of humor by now and took no offense. "Never," he said. "Strictly against Imperial policy."
The two shared a laugh, then Wes said, "Alright. Fun aside, we have a job to do. What's the best way to get in contact with an Imperial officer whose been MIA for the last seven years while running a human supremacy group on a planet outside Imperial space?"
Thrahrn shook his head. "It's not gonna be easy. He hears we're here to call him into account, he's gonna be hoppin' mad. Wouldn't be surprised if he tries to knock us off - his group's large enough that he'd at least get some of us."
"Infiltration's out of the question," Wes said. "It would take too long. The way the group seems to be organized, it's very protective of its upper echelon. Most of the members have never seen Lieutenant Illig, and even fewer know where is base of operations is. If the guy's as good as his file says, he probably moves every few weeks, perhaps even weekly, to avoid detection."
"What about direct contact?" Thrahrn postulated. "Call him on secure Imperial frequencies, come up with some trumped up reason to meet - an invasion's on the way, something like that - then when he does show up, pounce?"
Wes thought for a minute. "I like it. The only problem is that we have another directive. We can't let Ansion fall into Coalition hands. Colonel Sellers specifically ordered, 'If we can't have Ansion, neither can anyone else.' How do we deal with that part simply by arresting Illig?"
"Easy," replied the captain. "Replace him. Pull out the current team of Imperials, replace them with the men we have here, and conduct the group any way you like. Put the population in fear, have a token fleet come in as the 'saviors'...a crowd pleaser on a very large scale."
Wes smiled. "I knew there was a reason I kept you around. Alright, let's do it. I want our men spread out through the city. The very next disturbance, I want them there in an observatory role only. Make sure they know not to get anywhere near the demonstrators or terrorists or what have you. I'll work on getting a message to Illig."
***
Ansion Prison 424
A large crowd of humans had gathered outside. This was nothing new to the residents of the city, but this crowd seemed more organized somehow. They had spent the last day marching through the city, parading their anti-alien signs and shouting vulgar slogans. It was only a matter of time before another fight broke out.
This fight happened to start right outside Ansion Prison 424. Known as "The Hole," only the most dangerous criminals were confined here. Sergeant Clayton Roark, formerly of the Supremacist Group, was deemed to be dangerous enough. His quarters were wretched, and they were about to get worse.
As the humans marched past the prison, an Ansonian youth, apparently angered by the marchers, jumped on one of them. He reeled back from the punches. Seeing one of their own assaulted, other Ansonians jumped into the fray, not realizing that the instigator was slipping away, counting the cash he'd received an hour earlier.
As the fight progressed, the humans seemed to form a protective circle around a group in the center. The Ansonians didn't realize what they were doing until a number of glass wine bottles arced towards the prison. The burning rags in the necks identified them as the dreaded Molotov cocktails - homemade fuel bombs that spread flaming fuel when shattered. The first wave broke against the prison even as the second followed.
Several bottles made it through the prison windows and smashed inside. One landed directly in Sergeant Rorke's cell. Jumping away from the flames, he tried to climb the cell bars, but the sinking feeling in his stomach let him know what had happened. His commander, rather than rescuing him, had decided to kill him. Knowing his duty, Roark closed his eyes and dropped backwards into the flames.