
<I>Story will revolve on the takovers of Gand, Toong I, Pakuuni, Toola, Cholganna, Quermia, Vaynai and Rhen Var.</i>
The Gand Homeworld.
The proton bombs fell on the Gand capital city, their shockwaves sending out ghostly rings of tortured air. Deathgliders streaked overhead, black crescents against a red sky, bloody with the smoke and dust of three weeks of unending battle.
The ground was pocked with craters, the huge footprints of forty-ton All Terrain Battle Transports and lined with tracks recording armored battles decided days before. In the near distance, wrecked Riant tanks smoldered, trailing black smoke. Crushed Gands in battle-armor lay scattered on the raw earth like broken eggshells, black jelly that might once have been their alien bodies oozing through the cracked metal.
Thankfully, Commander Kix Davin could not smell the ammonia atmosphere in the filtered air of his cockpit. Only the stink of his own sweat, the ozone smell of overheated circuitry, and the tang of hot metal reaching his nostrils.
This, reflected Kix, was the terrible beauty of war. The unspeakable wonder, the sights that could never be forgotten, burned into the brain to emerge in the nightmares of old men and women-- those who were foolish enough, or unlucky enough, to live that long.
Such was the loss of perspective that came from thirty-three days spent primarily in the cockpit of an AT-BT, striding high above the battlefield. It came from watching lesser combatants scrambling ahead, from forgetting your humanity, and simply becoming a walking ten-meter-tall machine of destruction, facing more targets than you can shoot-- more targets than you have time to chase down or ammo to kill. Small targets that shoot back, sometimes with enough force to sting even a mighty Dragon.
A movement caught Kix's eye, and he ordered the pilot to pivot the AT-BT, gyros whining. The weakened left leg, damaged in a brawl with a Gand spider tank three days earlier, caused his humanoid transport to limp slightly. In the distance, the upright insect form of a green and red spider tank strode from behind a hill-- a shaft of sunlight glancing off its bubble cockpit, carbon scoring streaking its body. The Gand tank moved rapidly to Davin's right, perhaps not seeing him. The AT-BT's gunner zoomed in with his optics, placed his targeting reticles over the exposed flank and squeezed off a laser burst.
There was a flash, and a jagged streak of molten armor appeared across the tank's right shoulder above its leg. A hiss of disappointment escaped Davin's lips. The gunner aimed for the damaged lower belly, hoping for a hit on the engine. A week earlier his gunner might not have missed, but such subtleties of battle were for fresher pilots and fresher gunners. At this range, he knew he should have been glad to get a hit at all.
The spider tank whirled and began running backward, laser cannons flashing with return fire-- a clean miss-- the Gand pilot perhaps rattled by the unexpected attack. The tank spun again and sprinted away from Davin. The broad wings sprouting from the tank's shoulders presented a tempting target, but Davin knew where the machine's critical systems were hidden-- knew the distinction between an easy shot and a victorious one.
He considered following up with a concussion missle before remembering that his tubes were empty. He'd been leading his formation back to the command DragonClaw for resupply, repair, and perhaps a warm meal and a few minutes of fitful sleep. That would have to wait now.
So would the kill shot. The Gand was fast. He had to slow it down if he hoped to do more significant damage. His gunner thumbed back to his heavy lasers, targeted, fired another shot. A flash against the spider tank's lower right leg left glowing traces but did only superficial damage. The tank fired its jump jets, staggering into the air from amid a cloud of plasma-blasted debris. It managed to make it to the top of the nearest hill before the jets flickered and died, dropping it heavily to the ground. The tank's spidery legs stumbled, and for a moment Kix thought it would fall. Then it got its footing and vanished over the hill. He instinctively ordered his pilot to shove the throttle forward and give chase.
"Commander."
The tank was fast, but given its damage, and possibly disabled jump jets, he should be able to overtake it.
"Commander."
After weeks of hard-pressed fighting, the military forces of the Gand were on the run. In the far distance, a dark sphere rose over the horizon, trailing a column of almost blindingly brilliant fire. It was another Gand transport fleeing its homeworld. Targets, once lined up from horizon to horizon, were now hard to find. This might be his last chance to take down a target before--
"Davin!"
He blinked and ran his tongue across his dry and cracked lips, feeling the edge of the day-old stubble growing above them. He blinked again, rewinding the last few moments in his brain, finally recognizing the comm officer facing him from his forward position in the cockpit.
"Lieutanant?"
"Begging pardon, sir, we're ranging awfully far forward of the formation. Our Dragons can't offer much cover for us back there."
"Cover?"
"Yes, sir. The patrol is spread out pretty far, and they can't watch our six and protect our armor at the same time. We need to give them a few minutes to close up." The comm officer tapped at his earpiece and listened for new updates.
"Formation." Kix took a deep breath, shook off the tunnel vision that had locked his entire being on the fleeing Gand. "Sure, Lt. Hake. The Gand's too badly damaged to be worth the chase. Besides, he's doubtless forming up with some friends. We're out of concussion missles and too hot for that kind of skirmish."
"Yes, sir. Here come the bikes and the Drhazi."
A pair of Zephyr-G speeder bikes flashed by on either side, curving in front of them to pass each other and begin counterrotating orbits around his position. They were ungainly-looking things, but fast and hard to hit, capable of lightning in-and-out harassment attacks on an enemy.
One of the riders flashed a quick salute as he zoomed in front of Davin's AT-BT...
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