The next morning…
Poseidon-class Heavy Walker
Castor One, Somewhere on Grioux, Ter Abbes
“To be a droid,” softly mused the old Colonel, slouching in his command chair.
The holo-projector in front of him showed the man his debacle in motion. Thousands of angry refugees had gathered in throngs, waving sticks and impromptu weapons alongside a myriad of signs. Their chants and songs boomed across the artificial chasm, dug up by the walker’s during the night, that separated them from the Confederation army and the inevitable clash of violence. Some of them attempted to throw stones and debris across the gaping obstacle at the Confederates, leading the Colonel to make a wall of vehicles guarded by unnaturally patient and insensitive battle droids.
Lieutenant Wyries scampered up the walker’s ramp and gave a stiff salute to the colonel, who straightened up and returned it.
“What’s the world from the navy?”
Wyries hesitated, “They’re pretty sure that they shot down most of the ships attempting to break through the blockade, though one may have made it here if it didn’t crash into the ocean. They said they’re not a 100% sure what happened to it. The one ship they did manage to capture self-destructed, like the ones outside the system.”
“Quite the motivation to do a job well done.”
Wyries nodded, “And if we could motivate our politicians with threats like that.”
Panib ruefully smiled and shook his head, “Then we wouldn’t have any politicians…”
“I feel that that’s part of problem sir.”
“No,” suggested Panib, “it’s that we have politicians with opposite agendas who have no concept of paying for the consequences based on ideological agreements.”
“You’re still mad at the president,” observed his subordinate.
Panib scowled, “Of course I’m still mad the president. The jackasses somehow think that after seeing so many military parades and tours of military bases, that they can simply send in the military to fix up everything, because we’re the best…at everything. And if people can’t do it, technology can. And no matter what, we’re going to do exactly what they say and nothing else more, because we’ll just put up with whatever they decide to do, and there’s no consequences from them.”
“Sort of true with the droids…”
The colonel barked a quick laugh, “They’re not quite as sensitive to the stones or insults, but they’re not smart enough to solve the problem in the first place.”
“I’m guessing that we’re not going to simply march all over them…”
Panib sighed, “CSIS finally located several of their leaders, and they’ve agreed to talks. Codi is going, and he’s asked me, and you, to come along as military advisors.”
Wyries frowned, “And what should we expect?”
“The rioters want their own semi-independent state now, based on Grioux. They’re going to call it the People’s Republic of Grioux. But that’s after we, and by we, I mean the Army, move off of the continent.”
“I almost wish that staying here and starving them out was an option.”
“Don’t think I hadn’t considered it,” sighed Panib, “not as a practical option, but one of emotional satisfaction.”
“So where is the meeting?”
The Colonel leaned forward and gestured towards another console with a local map displayed, “Officially, I don’t know. Unofficially, I’m guessing several kilometers up here, at the Hotel Grioux, which is the only building with power in the area which is in this area, the no-flight, no AA fire corridor. They’re not even letting our own drones fly through there.”
“In their defense, we would probably shoot down an unknown craft in that area,” admitted the lieutenant, studying the plans.
Panib nodded in agreement, “I guess it’s a good thing they’re picking us up at 1900 hours. We will at least know in advance when they’re coming.”
Several hours passed, with the colonel and the lieutenant discussing various items, all while receiving hourly updates on a digging operation spearheaded by the rear echeleons of
Castor group and a combat engineer company. But as the night drew nearer, the two found themselves discussing political solutions and practical philosophy more than anything else. After eating their unnaturally bland military rations, the two men briefly freshened themselves up before ambling down the walker’s ramp to an area cleared out for the president’s transport to land. Almost a half hour passed before a wedge-like airspeeder soared down to meet them. Unceremonially, the soldiers stepped aboard and they were away in the air. They whisked through the desolate city ruins before arriving at Hotel Grioux, a crumbling duracrete monolith that alone out of all of the buildings in the plaza remained lit up. Colonel Panib began to murmur.
“I wonder how they managed to get any power to this place.”
“Local generator?” guessed the lieutenant, “I heard we gave a bunch of them to power up the camps before you know…well…this…”
“Seems like a waste to use them here,” noted the older man, ambling forward to a distant turbolift, “there have got to be women and children that could use them better.”
“And if the same gave them up for this? Or if they think that this is a better use for them?” questioned the lieutenant, “do they share your priorities?”
“Maybe not,” decided Panib, “but they’re delusional. And that means their opinion’s don’t matter much to me.”
“You’ll have to better than that,” wryly commented President Codi, “if you think I’m going to let you in the meeting with that tongue.”
The craft briefly circled the decaying tower before gliding in to land on a small rectangular platform where a knot of people of awaited them. President Codi led the delegation out of the craft and began to exchange handshakes and greetings with his erstwhile enemies. Colonel Panib finally came around the shake the hand of the rebel’s chief leader, a blonde haired man named Alexei, who coldly stared him right in the eye.
“What are you doing here?”
“I’m here for the talks,” stated Panib plainly, “I assume you are here for the same.”
“You weren’t invited,” noted one of the other rebels, a green-eyed man wearing a faded business suit, “if this is how your people work, there’s no wonder that you sent us this hell-”
“My apologies, Mr. Alexie,” cut in Codi, “they’ll just be joining this…discussion to ensure that the military fully comprehends its part in our negotiations.”
Alexei curtly nodded, and the rest of the rebels sullenly accepted the soldier’s presence before starting to amble off to the turbolifts. Once on the turbolift, the Confederate negotiators took a tense ride down several levels to the one of the hotel’s conference rooms, a rectangular room with cheap foldable duraplast furniture. The two Confederate leaders glanced at each other as they filled in around the table. One of the presidential aides promptly excused himself from a seat to stand by Lieutenant Wyries at the doorway. The rebel leader stared at the Codi and Panib increduously.
“Where to begin…” started the rebel.
“The public of Ter Abbes will not stand for the current offer,” stated Codi plainly, “This is what I think I can do: I can and will find a way for your people to find a home again where you all can have a normal life, or at least closer to normal life. There are plenty of other places to live on Ter Abbes than here. Maybe I can even work out citizenship deals with other nations within the Confederation if you do not want to live here, but I cannot do that with the situation we are currently in.”
“No,” said Alexei plainly, “you must give us evidence of your good faith before I can even hope to demobilize the people...”
Panib cleared his throat, “He already has. The military isn’t moving against you. It would be too easy for him to order me to either begin capturing your people or more ground, or even to starve you all to death.”
“My people are expecting things out of your people too,” noted Codi, “beginning with the return of Confederation property that you and your like have stolen, and the return and freedom of our people that put here to help you.”
“I cannot do that, it would be difficult…”
“All of this is difficult,” noted the Colonel, “coming here for you I am sure was not easy, and the transition to our way of life sure as hell won’t be easy either. But neither was accepting you. President Codi here stuck his neck out to give you and your peoples a place to go to till you got back on your feet, and you slapped us in the face for it.”
“Perhaps because it wasn’t fit enough for a rat,” snickered one of the rebels, “and the people in charge of it, including the two of you, are no better than rats.”
“Your allies in space are dead,” noted Codi stoically, “there is no help coming for you from anywhere but us. You will have to work with us, despite your distaste, if you want anything to change.”
“I don’t like your world, your people, or your way of doing things,” said Alexei, “and I don’t think that will change being neighbors or fellow citizens. If you do not want to give us independence, you will have to move or kill us.”
Codi hesitated, “Where would you like to go?”
“Not on this world, not under your yoke,” noted the rebel, “somewhere else, where we don’t have to adapt to new customs, to a new society. Someplace that is our own, our home.”
Codi silently considered the man’s words for a minute, “What if we will provide transport for you, and your people who do not want to join us, off our world to somewhere else? Wherever you wanted, within reason. And those of your people who want to stay, can stay, but they must abide by our rules of law.”
“You would send us back to the Empire, to the Coalition, or wherever we wanted?”
“Yes,” decided Codi, “if that is what you wished…”
“I think that will work,” said Alexei, “but of course, we will have to arrange out the specifics and put it to the vote…”
“No,” stated Codi plainly, “I’m putting it out there. If we do not come to a general agreement tonight, I will broadcast it to your people on shortwave, and let them decide with their feet. I will bet you that you will not have a third of your people remain in your camps over night.”
“You oversell yourself,” countered Alexei.
“He does,” admitted the colonel, “but he’s right. Your movement will fall apart. You will not have the people to keep up this pressure, and those that remain will be hungry, tired, and lacking all the necessities of life. You will not be the leader of this little rebellion; it’ll simply fall apart until one of us walks in and throws you into jail for treason. The President here is offering a way for you to save face and restart your lives before your movement entirely collapses, and in return, we get immediate peace and a solution to your problem so that we can continue on with our lives.”
Codi nodded in agreement.
Alexei sighed, “Very well, that is our luck I would suppose. I, for one accept. What of the rest of you?”
The various rebels in the room slowly nodded, and with the agreements that followed, the rebellion on Grioux came to an end.