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Hidden 8 yrs ago 6 yrs ago Post by HeySeuss
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HeySeuss DJ Hot Carl

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Anabasis





They all realized that they were not in Uzbekistan when they woke up; they'd lined up for a shot and then proceeded into a waiting area. They'd been told that they would feel 'drowsy' from the shot.

Understatement of the year. They had several hours to get their shit together and get squared away -- walls were 'bulkheads' and floors were 'the deck' and latrines were 'the head.' That meant they were on a ship of some kind, but not anything anyone had ever served on before, and within the company, there were people that'd served on all kinds. Actually, this place was quieter than a ship, more sleekly furnished, with carpeted floors, and the rooms were fitted out like nice hotel rooms, or cruise ship accommodations. That was a far cry from the dusty, drab-colored, pitted concrete familiarity of post-Soviet decay, the lazy governance of an autocrat whose only investment was in well-equipped security forces to keep the people from demanding a better quality of life. The sterile, neutral air replaced the expected smell of fuel and bad sanitation.

When a call for assembly was made, the contractors were guided into a large audience room with a brushed steel dome overhead, made seemly of curved, overlapping plates, like a large Venetian blind.

The commander of Centurion's force, Colonel Caspar Marais, a South African, who was well past his retirement age -- the man served in the Rhodesian Army and South African Defense Force, and then ran Centurion in Sierra Leone, Angola and Nigeria -- stood before them at a podium

Before the current contract, Centurion was all Africans—different colors, but from South African backgrounds, some of them serving as guerrillas against Apartheid and Colonial rule others on the other side with Police and Military units from the era. It was an aging organization that was ending its active days. Employers were not as interested as they used to be, not with younger, fresher competition coming out of the battlefields of the Middle East and Central Asia. Centurion had a hell of a reputation, and it could still fight, but these were guys in their late middle age.

Where and how Centurion suddenly acquired the resources to pay so lavishly and make offers that had people taking early retirement or just not re-enlisting in order to join Centurion was the subject of rumors. It didn’t matter because the pay was good, the training was tough, hard and overseen by a variety of nationalities. Centurion was no longer simply a South African concern. The larger changes were mystifying but the money was great.

And then, they lined up for the Jonestown koolaid shot in Guyana and wound up in some metal box somewhere.

There was a younger guy, fit and blonde, lean and tanned, on the podium.

"Good morning. All of you no doubt have questions, and this goes easier if I explain precisely where we are.”

It was a picture of the colonel in his younger days. The old guy showed up during the training in Guyana looking 60-something could generally keep up and still knew how to shoot, but he wasn’t going to hack it through the worst of combat. He was there because he was a respected military leader, a man that could win a Bush war in Africa against thousands of insurgents with a few hundred men. They knew his voice because he made the rounds during the training in Guyana.

“Hit the switch." He still had a South African accent, but it was easy to decipher, even for the multi-national bunch that were assembled before him.

All of a sudden, the ceiling started to peel back, plate by plate, revealing an utterly foreign panorama of inky black pierced by points of light, and, prominently in the foreground, a planet of brown and purple and cloudy white.

"Ladies and Gentlemen, we are not in Uzbekistan. We are orbiting the planet Qadah, which we are hired to defend. That is the bad news as far as most of you are concerned. But here is the good news -- when you get back to Earth, you will all be multimillionaires. That's right, this job isn't what you signed on for, but you're getting paid a lot more than what you signed on for if you decide to stay on. I regret the bait and switch, but I couldn't just call you all to assembly in Guyana and tell you this. You had to see this," he waved to the planet overhead.

He paused to let the ideas sink in, and for the audience to catch itself before carrying on, "At this point, some of you are thinking, 'hey, I didn't sign on for this bullshit.' That's true, and we can give you the same hibernation shot you got to get you up here and be put back on ice. You will be shipped back with the contract pay you agreed to and no hard feelings. The rest of us will carry on." He seemed to manage to express a vague sense of contempt, "For the rest of us, we have a job to do. Our employers are the Grathik race. They are primarily scientists. They are snobbish and elitist ivory tower types on steroids, but they are brainy. They seem to think that we are their best hope for salvation against their enemies."

He paused again, "They are paying top dollar for top talent. You have a choice -- go home with a nice little payday or stay on, make history and huge money. This is the final frontier and this is no TV show."

Danny sat in the seat next to Riddler, behind Major Collins and in proximity to his squad, which included Butch (Livia; they shortened the Portuguese to something everyone could pronounce in a way that was hilarious and totally military), K-Ton and the others were nearby -- dysfunctional at time, a squad was still a family, and this was a trying time, which was precisely why you wanted to be near the family. There was a sense of community there. You didn't always like everyone in it, but there was a sense of obligation involved. The entire place was murmuring now, apparently arguing a bit in hushed tones, but Danny took no part in the actual proceedings -- he knew how he was going to go on this one. What he had back home was two kids that could use the child support payments.

"Those of you who wish to leave now may do so; you will be safely conducted back to Earth. But only a few did -- the overwhelming majority, who'd been screened ahead of time for their suitability to the mission, stayed. Once those few had been herded out by the MP's, the briefing continued. "Our employers, the Grathik, are not fighters, and their war has gone on for a few decades. Initially, their enemies were much as they are, fairly hapless in a fight. But that changed when their primary enemy, the Plashi, hired a race called the Salvesh to fight. The Salvesh are a lot like us, they are on two legs and they evolved from predators. The Grathik tried to put another race, the Pilavians, into the fight, but it didn't work. They tried to build robots and that didn't work. So now they're hiring us and things are ugly and desperate."

There were slides of the aforementioned races; a picture of a one-eyed tentacle monster, a picture of something that looked like a teddy ferret that had cute eyes and fur, but with sharp teeth and little claws, and then a huge monstrosity that looked like a cross between crab and snail, eyestalks, a toothless slime-secreting orifice where a mouth was supposed to be, clawed appendages and one huge shell that overlapped like that of a scorpion, albeit lacking the tail. Then there was the Salvesh, male and female, one 30% larger than human norm with a huge crest, and the other about the size of the average human male.

"Our enemies, the Salvesh, are well-regarded interstellar mercenaries. They are evolved pack hunters. Each pack is its own small army. We are not fighting a large army, we're fighting a bunch of small tribes of warriors that work together somewhat. Some of you remember the sort of loose alliances of guerrillas you've fought in the middle east, this is similar, but it's very different. Some groups will be extremely well armed and supported by their employers, who offer fire support and resupply at a cost, others will be less well-equipped. That means they are inconsistent. Enemy forces and their composition from group to group are hard to gauge. Most of us have dealt with insurgents and amorphous organizations of that nature as well. Our primary objective is defense, our secondary objective is to learn about our enemy."

As if to show just how far away from Kansas they actually were, a holographic globe sprung into being, which had some mercs whispering, “Death Star.”

”The defense of Qadah is essential, and the key to Qadah is taking Saina, its moon, intact. While the Grathik are building a viable defense of Saina, we are securing it against covert action, notably sabotage. From Saina, we intend to springboard out into other operations, mainly aimed at reclaiming territory lost by the Grathik. But right now, we have to secure this base.”

The stats came down to PDA’s, information on the atmosphere, breathable but filled with alien allergens that would mess with humanity. Hot, purple jungle. Danny heard Riddler mutter, “Sauna.”

That became the Human nickname for their next battlefield.

--

In another spacecraft in another star system, another briefing was being conducted, but the audience had tusks, snouts, three eyes, four arms, tails. The males had long ridges of hair atop their heads, a plumage that was a point of pride and competition for grooming among males, while the females were far more drab and smaller. They were seated by their packs, with space between the packs, because the rivalry among packs, group marriages that functioned as self-sufficient military units in the field, were fierce and no one wanted fighting in the War Room -- there was a huge and dazzling array of holographic maps and intelligence displayed for reading and downloading, though that was primarily the task of the females -- among them, it was the females that handled the staff work, that dealt with logistics and were responsible for deciding how to handle everything up to the fighting. The males were pointed in the right direction and let go. But the males led in the fight, and so it was a male giving a speech.

"The Grathik are desperate, and it shows. They've uplifted some backwater race and are telling us that these things are dangerous soldiers." Jaka paused to make a loud snort out of all four nostrils, "you know what that means. They've thrown in some cannon fodder savages to fight the inevitable merger. These hairless, clawless, blunt-toothed louts evolved from a class of animals that swings from trees, eats yellow plants that resemble our male sex organs and fling excrement from each other. That should tell you everything you need to know about these slaves the Grathik have brought for a last ditch defense."

"Some of you may well be concerned, this is a new species we've never seen before, but the Plashi have provided some intelligence footage, free of charge for once, captured from their planet's broadcasts." He started pointing to the briefing holos, which showed clips of Survivor, Big Brother and the Apprentice "As you can see, they compete among each other, but have no pack organization and no sense of community responsibility. They constantly backbite each other. They whine a lot. I'm not impressed by this race. In fact, I'm slightly insulted that anyone thinks these humans are anything but a pest we can sweep away. By the time we land, they'll be pulling each other's hair and gnawing at each other with those blunt teeth. Before anyone tries to claim him, the orange haired one, this Donald Trump, is regrettably not among them, though his scalp would make an amusing trophy. He was apparently replaced with someone named ‘Ahnuld.’ Neither," he added, "is Kim or Kanye."

After a half hour of watching "Keeping up with the Kardashians," the assembly of Salvesh were particularly eager to finish her off. There were groans of disappointment.

Yet another show was put up on the screens, a Japanese game show. The audience of assembled Salvesh warriors started roaring in laughter, but once it died down, Jaka continued the briefing, "This race are not fighters. They are entertaining buffoons. They grovel and abase themselves before audiences for scraps of cloth to adorn themselves with and try to avoid hard work. They are delusional, which you knew because they've agreed to fight us. Maybe the Grathik decided that hiring actors was cheaper than hiring warriors. On the other hand, watch out, these humans apparently are grandiose and delusional, and you can expect silly stunts out of them.”

"Nonetheless, despite the insult to our dignity that this feeble defense represents, we have work to do. Our employers want these mercenaries torn to pieces for Xhol'H news because it'll make the merger go easier, so that's what we're going to do. Also, it's good for business if we make sure to remind everyone that we are the best. This ought to raise the rate for future contracts. We will start off slowly and milk this for all it is worth so we can force the Plashi to re-negotiate rates, citing the unexpected hazard. Once we have squeezed the use out of the humans and have our new contracts, we will crush them." That brought on a bit of laughter from the Salvesh assembled, "All that aside, I am now accepting bids for the first landings."

There was a howl of packmasters bidding their forces against these pitiful humans, eager for the glory of sacking the Grathik -- to establish a base on their homeworld's moon was likely to be the final offensive of the war. Once established on Saina, they knew that the Grathik down on Qadah would have no choice to surrender or face slaughter from lunar-launched kinetic weaponry. And everyone knew that the one-eyed mad scientists had no taste for warfare. This was a victorious final battle, the end of a long campaign. The Salvesh wanted to make sure to squeeze it for all it was worth, playing the classic mercenary game of trying to get a payraise.

--

Saina, or “Sauna” , Qadah's moon, was something of a homeworld to the Pilavians working for the Grathik, and but they seemed to be hiding, battening down their hatches to survive the invasion as the spoils of war in a new Plashi empire. The Pilavians were...well, they were nice enough, but a timid people. They'd fought, but they'd largely surrendered when thrown into it, and the Plashi were smart enough to offer a good deal for not resisting too much. Now there were families out there with hostages taken by the enemy.

The planet was heavily terraformed; landmasses moved and created, water converted from ice for the effort. It was a masterpiece of Grathik ecological technology, and designed as a living space for the Pilavians, who were very similar in their genetic makeup to humans...though that meant very little -- they shared proteins, basically. The Humans, though inoculated against dangerous reactions to the atmosphere by the Grathik in a series of shots and pills that were familiar to military people back on Earth since the time when shots and pills were invented, still found that Sauna’s pollen caused uncomfortable itching and other reactions when it was breathed in. Everyone started wearing filtration masks and goggles, to keep the stuff out of sensitive places.

Along the equator, it was farms, made to produce Grathik and Pilavian food for all the different planets the Grathik used to hold, before the Salvesh took most of their planets in the name of the Plashi, and a lot of wilderness -- largely grassland, hills, long sight lines but some scrub foliage and, lots of huge fungus - huge purple, tan and gray mushrooms, hard as trees. The terrain was not familiar – it was a lush, purple, forested landscape with open areas, but lots of underbrush. The whole place was broken up with farmsteads, but a lot more of it was underground, while the surface was dotted with a few installations that the Pilavians used for commerce and farming on the surface. Much of the infrastructure was underground, however.

The surface populations were being evacuated underground as the Pilavians tried to build up defenses that would let them absorb the oncoming invasion while abandoning the surface. They’d come upon the occasional Pilavian home, built into the ground like a burrow...quickly dubbed by some geek as "Hobbitholes."

Danny knew this much -- it was a hot bitch out there, and he was sweating in it. The purple and tan-hued camouflage uniforms they’d been provided for the environment had lots of ventilation, but that was a pebble against a tidal wave. They sweated bullets and hydrated constantly.

There were some reliable Pilavians among the Grathik's support system for the Human mercenaries, but they seemed awkward and unsure in the presence of these human beings -- they kept their distance, not wanting to piss off the Salvesh when they landed, and only did as much as they were told when they were told and when they were watched. The Grathik had them followed by surveillance drones and seemed adept at doing the big brother thing, but even that could only go so far.

Danny sort of liked the Pilavians -- it turned out that a lot of humans did. Maybe it was because they were short, cute, furry and not threatening, and their cubs were cute. But they were fast breeding, poor and desperate, so they became clients of the Grathik. If the Plashi and the Salvesh won, they'd change masters. They had no real horse in this fight, and so they were doing what they had to in order to survive.

It was, as the squad batman, little K'tikki said, "We are not a race that fights for survival. We breed in great numbers and attempt to persevere through our calamities." The attitude made Danny, as an Israeli, sad, because it came from a tan-furred little alien with dark mask markings around the eyes and snout -- four eyes but otherwise very cartoonish -- that sounded just like a ghetto Jew from Poland in the 19th century.

That hadn't been the platoon's only exposure to aliens -- the Grathik themselves were disgusting, but they'd only really been addressed by their grand high sociologist, the one that was responsible for hiring humans and seemed to be gurgling with joy at the idea of speaking to humans. He was, as far as he was aware, one of a handful of the Grathik on planet, and it was odd to speak to one, because they were not as easy to relate to as K'tikki was. The tentacle monster seemed intent on watching the proceedings first hand, though it had claimed that it watched humanity since the first radio broadcasts revealed the race to the Grathik. Colonel Marais seemed to be well-acquainted with that particular tentacle monster; the thing had come to watch their platoon do a field exercise, and even spoke words of Hebrew to him – it was jarring to hear the language of Israel coming from this thing.

"The others think you are not the equal of the Salvesh, they have watched so many of our worlds be taken by them, but I know humanity best of us all. You are my life's work, but I would have preferred to watch you evolve naturally. I have faith in your abilities. I am as proud of you as I am of my offspring..." It seemed a strange comment from a being that employed them as cannon fodder, but he was an academic -- the entire race were professor types -- and he sounded either mad, genius or both. His father was a professor, he'd met other academics that got that way over their projects, obsessions, life work.

The present, however, was an actual patrol. After a week of familiarization with Sauna, the first combat landings of Salvesh were detected and units were mounting patrols to smoke them out. A drone or surveillance satellite would detect activity and a patrol would move in to check it out. There were a couple of tense false positives but no actual contact with Salvesh infiltrators. But they knew the Salvesh were coming and the Grathik were focused on site defense of the launch facilities on Sauna, which could be converted into weapons to use against Qadah, their homeworld. Infantry patrols, like this, were providing security while the defenses built up, looking to hunt the hunters. They knew that packs fought in small numbers, so it made sense to use smaller units to make the initial contacts and pile on. It gave them less of a footprint.

It was Danny on the point of the squad column, eyes open, ears open, weapon held in hands. He'd pause occasionally and visually sweep, particularly as they came upon distinct features of the landscape that might serve as ideal cover or an ideal position of concealment -- he did not want to get sucked into an ambush. They navigated around the hills and positions where they would be silhouetted for long distances, Riddler’s squad was in the lead, with the others bringing up the rear, keeping an eye on the flanks.

It was hot work, easy to fuck off on, and the local plant life was vivid, beautiful and very distracting at first sight, but daydreaming was not his way. Instead, he counted. Steps, features of the terrain, taking note of the ground as they passed it for future reference. When he had a good position of concealment, he took a knee and took stock of the area. And it was as they were moving through those trees with that feathery leaf type, that Danny made the signal for the entire squad to freeze.

He didn't move fast, but he got into a low crouch, his weapon up before him, though his finger was off the trigger and laying against the guard, a precaution against the sort of accidental discharge that'd really fuck them hard in this situation. He had the Israeli-style camouflage (in purple) net on his helmet, the kind that broke up the shape of the head. Every military had their camouflage studies, but the IDF, for whatever reason, adopted the net thing for the helmet, and it had its advocates. He'd gotten his 416 in a flat dark earth color, which was more naturally occurring than black, and made a degree more sense. He had a high degree of confidence in his visual concealment. But it was an unknown enemy, unknown habits.

"Riddler," he murmured on the comms -- Brian got the heads up first, but the Collins was probably on the freq anyway. "I've got multiple hostile contacts. Three-wait, four enemies at eleven o'clock, range 50 meters, moving into our ten o'clock in column. More emerging, I count...uh, six more. Squad strength Salvesh, still moving in the same direction." To be absolutely sure of the communications, he gave hand signals to everyone else to pass on; hostile contact, number of enemies, location.

Danny felt the adrenaline flood, but he willed himself calm, forced himself to wait for Park's input, though he also knew the drill. He was already sliding into what looked like a good fold in the terrain, with some sort of huge mushroom for cover with his scope already tracking the enemy. He put his left fist to his left shoulder and pushed the fist out, signalling a hasty ambush to his team; find concealment and targets.



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Hidden 8 yrs ago Post by Gunther
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Gunther Captain, Infantry (Retired)

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Regaining Consciousness

‘What the fuck?’ Brian Park sat up with a start, looking around. He could barely remember falling asleep. Last he knew he was training soldiers from all over the world in Guyana, South America. Now he was…God only knows where he was. Brian Park didn’t have a clue.

“Sergeant Park,” Major Collins’ voice could be heard drifting through the fog. “Sergeant Park, you OK?”

Brian groggily looked over at Major Collins. “Yes sir, where the hell are we?”

Tony Collins allowed one of his broad warm smiles to wrap around the front of his face. He wanted to laugh, “why spoil the surprise? Get dressed, Sergeant. Get your people up and be in the briefing room in two hours. There is some breakfast in the galley.”

Major Collins walked away leaving that crumb of a clue behind. “Did he say, galley?” Brian asked himself quizzically as he rubbed his eyes.


The Awakening

Brian found the coffee to be pleasing to his palette. He was awake by briefing time, but remained mystified as to where they were until the old South African Colonel on stage in front of the assembled contractors mentioned they were in orbit around some planet he had never heard of inhabited by a race of creatures he never heard of. A stunned look fell upon his face. “Damn, Toto, we definitely ain’t in Kansas anymore,” Brian muttered at a level only those around him would hear.

“All this talk about Salvesh is getting’ me to wonderin’ what they taste like? How many ways can you cook Salvesh? Has anyone ever tasted one?” Brian muttered to himself. “I guess we’ll find out soon enough.”

“Did he just say, Sauna? Damn, that reminds me of that deployment to Southeast Asia four years ago. This is going to be a hot one. Don’t forget your towels, boys and girls.” Brian knew he was going to stay. He didn’t have anything to go home to except mom and dad. He loved them, but didn’t need to be with them. He was positive they would still be there when he got back or didn’t think much about it. The prospect of this adventure thrilled him completely. He did wish he could have gotten off a message before they left earth to let them know what he was doing. He also knew that Operation Security (OPSEC) didn’t always afford such luxuries. He’d been in this business long enough to know some things were just no shareable. He felt sorry for his parents, but he wouldn’t miss this for anything.

When the Colonel asked if there were any questions at the conclusion of his briefing, Brian asked, tongue in cheek, “Will we have time for R&R on this Sauna?!” Everyone in the briefing room could hear this last comment.


Welcome to the Sauna

The climate on Saina or as everyone were now calling it, Sauna was just that. It reminded Sergeant Park of a deployment he made to the Republic of Vietnam when he was with 1st US Special Forces Group. The heat, the vegetation, the insects and constant state of sweat were all the same. The only thing different was the color of the vegetation. Pink and purple flowers swallowed the landscape; were a bit hard to get accustomed to, but made sense for the troops to wear a similar colored combat uniform. Some of the girls he knew back at Brookline High would love the color pattern, and maybe even a few boys. Like everything different in life, it took some time to get used to.

The squad had a week to train before heading out into the bush. As a means of being acclimated to their new surroundings, they rehearsed tactical movement, react to contact, break contact battle drill, hand and arm signals and several of the soldiers in the platoon had the chance to call mortar fire in on targets for training purposes. Those NCOs from western, NATO or former Soviet bloc regions had some skill with calling in indirect fire. This was a new experience for many of the soldiers from other nations from earth. Many nations use specially trained soldiers in these skills to perform these tasks.

On their Operating Base, the contractors would have Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAV) or drones for both surveillance and Unmanned Combat Aerial Vehicles (UCAV) for strategical engagement of deep targets. Each infantry battalion had a platoon of UAV assets available while the UCAV asset was controlled by Centurion itself, a brigade sized element. They also had a 130mm mortar system that could rapidly respond to a call for fire striking targets out to 20 kilometers (20Km). Each of the five battalions in Centurion’s brigade had an organic mortar platoon with four guns per platoon. Brian had the opportunity to meet some of the guys in the mortar platoon that supported their company. He found it helped with the response time if the shooters knew what the guys on the directing end of the radio looked like. There was also a battalion of 155mm Artillery resembling the Swedish Archer system and the American Multiple Launch Rocket Systems (MLRS). The 155mm Field Artillery battalion was organized into four firing batteries of six guns per battery, a Target Acquisition Battery (TAB) and a Headquarters and Headquarters Battery (HHB). TAB battery provided a Target Acquisition Specialists to the platoon. He would travel with Major Collins and be available for calls for fire if needed. The MLRS battalion was organized into three firing batteries, the TAB and the HHB. A Fire Support Team was attached to each of Centurion’s Company level command staff. The Company Commander could call in MLRS fire if the need should arise.


React to Contact

Danny Shattah, the former Israeli Sayeret soldier took his fire team on point. The four soldiers, Serge, Kensington and Pantoja would scout in front of the platoon as they moved along in a staggered file formation. Renard Serge, the former French Legionnaire from the Pas-de-Calais, served as a paratrooper for many years; carried the team’s light machine gun. The man had a reputation as a brutal warrior and his past with the Legion spoke volumes about the authenticity of the stories. Thomas “K-Ton” Kensington had served as an Airborne Sapper in the US Army and had a background in Engineering, both construction and destruction. He would assist the squad when they needed to set in a minefield, build an abatis, daisy chain some claymores or build flame field expedients. Lívia “Butch” Pantoja came from Brazil’s BOPE, their paramilitary commando unit used to combat the drug trade in Sao Paolo. She was an excellent shot, sniper qualified and serving as the squad’s designated marksman.

Brian Park, also known as “Riddler” placed himself approximately one hundred meters behind the point team. They would remain within visual line of sight. If a twist in the terrain prevented Riddler from seeing the point team, Danny knew to have his team go to ground or take a knee until his squad leader caught up or at least could see them. Every soldier in the platoon had their heads on a swivel looking to the rear as much as to the front. A warning sign could come from either direction. Brian recalled having the trail man in a ten-man patrol observe a potentially hostile five-man patrol roughly 200 meters to their left. The hand and arm signals passed up the column until everyone stopped. The patrol faced left, now online prepared to assault. This squad behaved with the same precision and Brian was happy to see it.

The temperature was over a hundred degrees Fahrenheit with the humidity level over 90%. Everyone felt it. It was hot and no one was dry. The squad continued to plod along with roughly a ten-meter interval between each man. Major Collins traveled just ahead of the second squad and roughly 100 meters behind the first squad. The platoon leader, accompanied by a GPMG crew, second and third squads were trailing behind the first squad. One of the GPMG teams followed Major Collins and the second GPMG team and AT gunners traveled with the assistant Platoon sergeant between second and third squads. The Platoon Sergeant traveled at the rear of the column with the platoon’s medic. At ten meters between each person and one hundred meters between first squad’s A Team and its squad leader and between the first squad and the platoon leader, the platoon was spread out over 700 meters. As the terrain became more restrictive, as found in dense jungle, the distance between each soldier was closer to five meters which brought the platoon in just under 350 meters in length. At night, using luminous tape, IR sticks and night vision devices, the distance dropped to one meter. Without the use of technology, it could be as close as one arm’s length distant.

"Riddler," Danny’s voice came over the radio. "I've got multiple hostile contacts. Three-wait, four enemies emerging from cover at eleven o'clock, range 50 meters, moving into our ten o'clock. More emerging, I count...uh, six more. Squad strength Salvesh, still moving in the same direction. They do not seem to have detected us."

’Great. Now we get to see how they fight,’ Brian thought to himself. He knew Danny would take his team to ground, prone behind cover and concealment ready to return fire if needed. When he looked back at the platoon leader, he realized Major Collins had heard the transmission; confirmed by signaling to Sergeant Park. The squad leader hurried the remaining two fire teams forward to get on line to the left of A Team.

“Sergeant Hedberg,” the platoon leader spoke to the second squad leader. “Lead your squad up to the left of first squad. Post the pig between your two squads. When the second team comes up, they will go to your right as well.”

As the second squad quietly doubled past him, Major Collins spoke to the third squad leader, the assistant squad leader and the platoon sergeant. He let them know what was going on, ordering the AT gunners and third squad to fall on him. They would serve as the assault element once contact was established. Next, he flipped a switch on his comms to speak to the Company Commander, “Dagger zero six, this is Dagger one zero, over.”

“Dagger one zero, this is Dagger zero six, go ahead over.” The company commander had previously served as a Major in the American Army. He spent much of his time with the 75th Ranger Regiment or with the 25th Infantry Division in Hawaii. The man stood 5’ 9” tall (1.75m) and weighed a hundred fifty pounds (68Kg) dripping wet. He was expertly trained in several martial art forms including a fifth degree black belt in Krav Maga, black belt in Muay Thai and a first dan in taekwando. Apparently, the man had five or six amateur UFC MMA fights under his belt.

“Zero six, one zero, we have contact with squad sized element of Salvesh, five zero mikes to our front. Danger Close. Requesting Uniform Alpha Victor in our Alpha Oscar for deep recce, over.” Tony Collins spoke over the comms as he moved closer to where the enemy was located. He could see the squads filing into position rapidly and moving to ground, setting up a hasty ambush right on the spot. As the platoon sergeant and Doc Atwater caught up to him, Major Collins spoke to the Platoon Sergeant, “You have the support and security. I am taking third squad, the weapons squad leader, assistant platoon sergeant and two AT gunners to assault along the right flank. Lay down a heavy suppressive fire for me and the lads. We’ll appreciate it right, grand. Got that, mate?”

“Yes sir,” the assistant patrol leader responded. “Should I initiate the ambush?”

“It’s all yours, Sergeant!”

Major Collins took the fifteen soldiers of third squad around the right end of Brian Park’s squad and waited for the Platoon Sergeant to initiate the ambush. He considered the UAV about to fly over the area. Not that long ago, Long Range Reconnaissance Patrols would conduct this type of mission; the deep reconnaissance of suspected and known enemy locations. Now, these high tech gizmos perform that job. During the time of World War II and the Korean War era, British and American Regiments employed an Intelligence and Reconnaissance Platoons (I&R) to conduct these deep recce activity. Those all went away in 1959 when the armies turned their backs on the regimental system and adopted the Combined Arms style of warfare.


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Hidden 8 yrs ago Post by DepressedSoviet
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DepressedSoviet A Sad Communist

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Viktor Sergeyevich Bezrodny: "Bog znayet gde, Bog znayet kogda"(God knows where, God knows when)

When Viktor was awoken from the drug-induced slumber, the first thing he said when he awoke was "YA klyanus' ko Khristu, yesli vy kosnulis' moi sigarety..." as he patted his various pant pockets. Feeling the familiar shape of the small cardboard box, he sat up on the bunk, pulling the pack of cigarettes out from the pocket, removing one, and lighting it with a lighter he had retrieved from a different pocket. Looking around at the room, and at the face of the man who had awoken him, and asked "Where are we? nebo? Is too nice to be ride to Uzbek..."
---
Viktor Sergeyevich Bezrodny: "YA umer i popal na nebo"(I've died and gone to Heaven)

Having been to the 'head', the 'galley' and now the briefing room, Viktor had deduced they were aboard a ship, and a rather nice one at that. Certainly nicer than anything Viktor had had the pleasure of standing aboard. Several times, Viktor had been requested to stop smoking, and each time, he had offered a reply of "Ostanovi menya." So now, as Viktor sat in the room, cigarette in hand, he awaited what would be the most interesting event of his life.

As the Colonel gave the order, and the metal blinds slid back to reveal the dark void of space, Viktor let out a puff of smoke, saying "Chto zh, ya budu trakhal..."

Ultimately, Viktor would choose to stay with the others, far too eager to see how this played out to pass it up.

When the various alien races were brought across the screen, Viktor was sipping from a hip flask, and nearly spat out his drink. "Urodlivyye ublyudki, ne tak li?" he said to no one in particular, leaning in on his seat to look over the Salvesh, trying to get familiar with his new enemy.

When the stats and visuals for the alien environment came into view, Viktor heard the various murmurings referring to the severe heat and humidity, along with the various irritants in the air. "S Nebes, my spuskayemsya v ad..."

Viktor Sergeyevich Bezrodny: "Kto znal, chto ad byl na drugoy planete?"(Who knew Hell was on another planet?)


The jungle was hot, wet, and it made Viktor harsher than he already was in the field. The platoon was on patrol, and Viktor, along with C team of squad 2, were damn-near in the middle of everyone. As they progressed, the order to stop was passed down the line, and Viktor halted and readied with the others.

The order was made for Squad 2 to move up to the left of the now-prone Squad 1, to provide fire at a spotted group of enemies. Viktor waited at the ready, mentally and physically psyching himself up for the combat scenario of a lifetime.
Hidden 8 yrs ago 8 yrs ago Post by HeySeuss
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Sayeret




Big dudes, Danny noted as he watched them through the scope. He'd given a quick visual check on his fireteam to make sure the concealment and cover were good. In Guyana, he'd been a trainer for the Negev, but as one of the few Israelis that jumped over, he was more 'just the facts' and cut out the unnecessary military courtesy and kept it down to an Israeli minimum, which was very first-name and nickname basis. Some of the more straight-laced types, such as the company commander, were not pleased but the South African company command staff knew the score and were the ones in charge and he had superiors in his own chain of command to buffer him from the guy. It was a South-African run PMC, and the flavor remained in space; there were too many special operators in the bunch to go buzz-cut infantry, like a bunch of raw recruits.

The place was hot, but he knew how to cope. They'd acclimated to jungle before getting here and it was a good thing. He wasn't sure if the poodles, his new name for the enemy had trained like hell in a similar environment before arriving. They trained in Guyana, familiarized on Sauna and then, when time came, used Pilavian civilian rail to arrive in their AO, permanently sealing the entrances they emerged from as the engineers prepped the network for invasion. They'd have to get out by other transport after the patrol.

Danny had skills. Sayeret Matkal was a tier one recon unit and Israelis were rare but had a rep similar to the Brit SAS in terms of being innovators in the world of SOF. And Danny's had a decade of service from raw kid age, but minimal spit-shine service. He'd done instruction on special recon and patrolling in Guyana. Everything they were doing right now, and he'd been exacting and attentive to detail because this was the part of the work where mistakes and nerves could get everyone killed. He'd been serious about this. But all of Centurion was. Surprise was always an advantage.

So he passed on his considerable knowledge of cover, concealment and other little things, giving them the extra time to watch, teaching them the virtue of pissing icewater during this phase. He wasn't entirely enamored of some of the chain of command, the salute-needy types and because the culture was secrecy in Sayeret Matkal, he also kept the war stories close. There was service rivalry bullshit over Centurion, but Marais was intent on discouraging it. Outside of training where instruction was quiet, competent and reassuring, making sure people learned properly, Danny was not pretetntious.

Israeli military culture was a civic thing, and the attitude reflected that they were headstrong, highly competent warriors. Park got it, at least, and Collins was SAS. It helped, since Danny was it for Israelis, though the 'take the serious shit seriously' approach infused itself in the culture. Grow a beard, but your weapon and equipment better be flawless. That was the way. The shared ethos let him concentrate on taking care of his fireteam, his guys, where they had a job to do, and no damns were given about background or parade presentation; what counted was the job. So on duty, the Israeli was trying to pass on the skills. Off, he was approachable and normal but also tended to stick with Riddler and his fireteam, who needed to braid and gel together as an element.

"Butch," he murmured into the mic, which was tuned to pick up whispers, on the fireteam freq, which Riddler could hear, "Hammer shots on these fuckers." He knew the legionnaire, Renard, knew what to do with the Negev and K-ton had the M32, though they were getting a little too close-ranged for it to get used more than once. It meant that they'd be engaging with rifle fire. The Salvesh, in the flesh, looked like they'd take more than one shot to go down, even to the head.

Stopping and seeing have him the appreciation of the Salvesh; hunched over wolf-men of horror movie fodder, but very generally. Four arms, and the photos can give you and idea, but they were no substitute for the visceral impression he had of them through a scope, in a huge alien rainforest. He did not ever want to engage these things up close. They were big, but they were graceful with it, not lumbering. Smooth-gaited, they had a powerful economy of motion to their movements. They also had a snarling dog's terror mated to a sentience that had eyes peeled and nostrils flared alertly. Danny checked the wind direction; they were safe for now.

These had crests, males.

"Riddler, counting crests on all poodle contacts. Upwind for now." Fobbit, as the Americans called them, types might discount smell, but Danny had smelled cumin, coriander and other smellsof the enemy's meal in these situations before, albeit closer up, evading insurgents in Syria on deep recon jobs, gathering site recon and designating targets for IAF strikes. He wasn't about to take a whiff of the Salvesh, the atmosphere wasn't 'hostile' but it was dangerous to humans. Crests, according to their briefings, meant males. They sex-segregated the units.

Contrary to a laid back approach in non combat situations or essential training, Danny was sparse on commo.

He had his poodle sighted, it was all a tense waiting game.
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Hidden 8 yrs ago Post by Reaper
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Awakening


"Fucking hell..."
Rachel cursed the moment she woke up, wondering if this was some sort of weird test or initiation. She remembered being given a shot, and feeling drowsy, but this was not her bunk. This was far from the barracks, she could tell that much. Her first instinct was that this was some kind of ship, looking at the interior, but it didn't look like any kind of Navy ship - from any country.

As she got up and sorted herself out, she realised where they were the moment she got a glimpse outside. "What the actual fresh hell is this..." She pondered. They couldn't have been- There was no way.

Our Employer is a What?


The South African Colonel explained everything. If "explaining everything" meant flipping everyone's realities upside down and telling them the contract they took on was to fight in some intergalactic war. She was a fan of sci-fi movies, but even she thought the whole concept of the "Rebel Alliance" being comprised of people just finding out aliens existed - and one of them was hiring them to kill other aliens - was a laughable concept.

This as asymmetrical as warfare could get. Firstly, if the Grathik had the technology to bring humans safely to their planet in the span of time it took them to recover from the drugs, that means that had seriously advanced technology. That meant their enemies would have at least somewhat similar levels of weaponry. So they were quite potentially going up against unknown volume of firepower.

Secondly, they had no idea of the Slavesh's capabilities. A picture offered some insight (aim for whatever their shells didn't cover) but they had no idea how fast or strong they were in a fight. They had no idea if their training would even work - camouflage and stealth movement worked great against humans, since experienced soldiers knew just how much to expect of their enemy's senses. Did the Slavesh detect body heat? Did they have great hearing, sense of smell? Did their organs grow in the same places? No point aiming for the chest if their hearts were stored between their legs or whatever.

Thirdly, the environment. Humans were adapted for Earth. There was no telling what the planet's gravity would do, or its atmosphere. Rachel knew that she sure as shit wasn't going to drink or eat anything that was certified to human food and water. They were briefed on what to expect on the surface of 'Sauna', and it sounded fun. She was used to tropical climate - she trained in it her entire career. She was used to heat and humidity and jungle terrain. She just wasn't used to doing it with a mask on.

Still, anyone looking at her would have seen a giant shit-eating grin plastered on her face. Was this an absolutely stacked deck against them? Sure, but she was never one to turn down a challenge.

Now, the best part of the whole briefing was the reveal of the Grathik. Seeing an alien in the flesh was pretty persuasive evidence it was not a hoax or trick of some kind. At the same time, Rachel couldn't suppress the joke waiting to happen. "I wonder if he's seen the things that come out of Japan." She quipped, more for her own benefit than to humor those around her.

Terra Firma


The worst thing about Sauna was the uniforms. She'd worn green all her life, and she seen the Air Force blues and Navy greys. She'd never seen a respectable military wearing pink. It helped them fit in with the environment, sure, but pink went on princess dresses and ballet costumes. She'd settle for the "tacticool edgelord" black gear instead of this crap.

That was the only thing she hated about the planet. The exercises were easy enough, she was born and raised in this climate, and the masks seemed to be easy enough to breath in, nothing like the stifling gas masks she had used during biological/chemical defense training. The weapons were a nice upgrade too. She didn't know what the Grathik made these guns out of, but they were lighter and felt easier to use. The drills took a bit of getting used to, unlearning her habits from the Singapore Armed Forces and relearning different signals, unit movements.

At least she was fighting beside other soldiers. She wasn't quite on friendly terms with anyone yet, but they all seemed to know what they were doing and everyone at least accorded everyone else with professional courtesy.

Calm Before the Storm


Rachel was right at home in the jungle. Her training took over with ease, feet sweeping aside vegetation before planting her weight down, minimising the noise she made while moving through the foliage. There wasn't much point in moving into thick vegetation with a group their size, so it was easy to just avoid snapping branches like a movie cliche. Her head kept on a swivel as she watched for any movement.

Her index finger tapped a rhythm against her trigger guard, not making any sound but helping her pass the time by moving to the beat of her favorite song. When they came up the Salvesh, she was quick to take a knee on instinct and finding solid cover behind a thick tree trunk. It took all of 5 seconds for her to get the drone up and circling around to ensure they hadn't missed any of the Salvesh that were hidden from sight, or moving to flank them.

The infrared cameras picked up ten signatures moving, and no signs of any hidden tangos. She nodded and confirmed the assessment with quick hand signals. The Salvesh were carrying firearms, though she couldn't identify what kind of weaponry they were exactly, not with what little they knew of the enemy's equipment. Still, the enemy could shoot back, that's all her team needed to know. She had the drone return and switched her tablet back for her rifle, leaning out the right side of the tree so she could aim and fire without exposing as much of her body.

She observed the movements of the Salvesh, trying to see if she could pick up anything useful in their movement patterns, the way they communicated or interacted. She didn't need to understand language or culture to understand that some things were universal. Influence, respect, authority. In any social setting, it was easy to tell who had the ear of the others in the area just by observing who was the one person everyone seemed to be either defering to or talking with.

Enemy commander, third from the head of the column. She signaled once she recognized the other nine Salvesh seemed to be moving in pace and taking their directions from that particular figure.
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Hidden 8 yrs ago 8 yrs ago Post by JDolan
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JDolan A Friendly Homo Drakensis

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Én vagyok most ébren
(I am awake now)


János stirred in his cot, tossing and turning as ever so slowly, consciousness began to return to hie. Where was he? What had happened? Last he recalled, they were discussing training operations in Uzbekistan, mountaineering and arid environment familiarization. The next moment he was waking up here, the air cool and almost damp. Metal surrounded him. A ship? How strange, János thought, as he swung himself out of the cot, hand immediately going to his head. "Kibaszott cigányok!" he grumbled as he pulled himself to his feet. Fucking Gypsies... Stepping away, János patted himself down in disbelief. Well, at least whoever drugged him was better than those damned gypsies - liable to take everything of worth, and probably a few other things after just to piss him off.

No matter though. Wherever they were, it was for good reason. And with the words around him, and the rumble machinery - the lack of windows too - he had no reason to believe at first that they were anywhere else but at sea. Even so, something felt off. Standing perfectly still, János felt it. Rather, properly speaking he had not felt it. A few months in the Indian Ocean and off the East African coast had made him sensitive to the subtle sway and roll of a ship at sea. There was none of that.

What's going on? And where are we going? was János' thought, mulling the inconsistencies over as he sought out food.

Az tintakefeteség
(The Inky Blackness)


The galley had been busy, but not quite crowded. It was the usual large space - burnished steel tables and benches, whitewashed walls, bright lights giving the space an almost institutional quality to it, but one he was pretty well familiar with. The Centurion PMC flag flew at one end high on a wall. He lingered only long enough to get a fresh cup of coffee, and some pastries. Five minutes there, and several more walking down long narrow corridors towards the briefing hall.

The briefing that followed was, in a word, interesting. It was also the mildest of terms one could use. János listened, nodded. He, like many, had a moment of breathlessness as the panels peeled back to expose the brown and purple orb looming large in the window. As the various races were explained, the absurdity of it that was first there, was starting to fade. As exciting as things had been, János had to admit, fighting ill-equipped ragheads and skinnies had been growing old. This...yes, János thought...this would be very interesting. A proper fight probably. Certainly, even if they scattered, there was the novelty of the situation. If only for that novelty value, János wanted in.

The whole time, János sat near to Viktor, the rest of the team assembled along the row - there'd been no assigned seating during all of this, but by habit most had fallen in by their units it seemed. "I iz ada, my vozvrashchayemsya v kachestve sobstvennogo spasitelya Boga...yesli my vyzhivem," he answered in decent Russian. And from hell, we return as God's own savior...if we survive.

Pink Trees, Savage Dogs

The first thing that János noted once he was on the ground was just how bright the planet felt. Sure, the sunlight on the moon wasn't exactly any brighter than he was used to on Earth - hell, if anything it seemed to be much less sunlight. But the sheer change in color palette was an abrupt surprise, indeed. For that reason, whenever he headed out, he made sure to wear a tinted pair of goggles with his face mask. It kept his eyes from burning and feeling like he was stepping into a neon enthusiast's fantasy. He'd been here for quite some time but even now it hadn't quite been a thing he fully adjusted to. It had taken a while for him to get used to always wearing the masks, but they weren't all that intrusive and cumbersome, and with time, he'd learned to adapt to them in a way that was much more comfortable than the days on end he'd spent with 37th Engineering Regiment, wrapped up in NBC gear during both training and exercises.

The order to halt came down the line, and as they did so, each man freezing in place down the line. Everyone was taking up firing positions. A knee behind a gnarled rock. The top of it was just flat enough, offering a firing position as he flipped the M320's foregrip down, using the forward of the twin grips (the rear one being the trigger group for the grenade launcher) as a shooting rest, hand gripping the forward position as he swung the rifle's sixteen inch barrel into position. Slowly, he tracked one of them, in the middle of the pack that was tracing along. To either side, he had concealment but not cover - the foliage didn't look sturdy enough to stop much more than an angry glare, but it'd make him much harder to hit. The fungal growth to one side was a little close for comfort, and he felt the thing shedding spores onto his shoulder as he tracked targets. A few tickled his neck, sliding down the collar of his tunic.

The whole while, János watched, waited, for the signal. The comms were alive with the sub-vocalized whispers of the platoon's eyes being trained in every way and at every direction upon them. Let's see just how hard these fuckers are... the sergeant thought as he shifted, fingers flexing over the grips of his gun as he kept himself focused. His shooting hand flexed, the lower fingers on the pistol grip stretching momentarily, thumb and forefinger both locked to the weapon, ready to go at a moment's notice. There was going to be shooting soon. The only question that the operator wondered...was who would do it first.
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Hidden 8 yrs ago Post by Red Room
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Renard was nothing short of confused when he awoke -he was very accustomed to never questioning the way the world was, be it on his fathers ranch or on a mission. Still, he couldn't help but wonder what the hell was actually going on when the shot he was given ended up waking him up in a glorified metal box. Though he had woken up in far stranger places during his time doing mercenary work, the diction used to describe the place put him on edge. 'Bulkheads', 'decks', and 'the head' were terms used on ships, not on land. The Frenchman felt queasy at just the thought that they were at sea -he and water had an on-off relationship at best.

The thoughts only ruminated more as he made his way to 'the head' and relieved himself of his lunch. He walked out feeling refreshed, just in time for the call to assembly. The bulking man squeezed himself into a chair and did what he did best -waited silently for orders. He was a bit dumbfounded when the order came: "Hit the switch." Renard cocked an eyebrow, until he looked up to the ceiling and had to work very hard to keep his lunch from coming up a second time.

The inky blackness that stared back at Renard was pierced only by the single eye of purple, brown, and white that he would soon come to hate. As the briefing went on, Renard nodded along silently, trying not to think too hard about how the entire thing sounded like a load of horse shit. But hell, a contract's a contract, whether it comes from some vindictive human or a desperate alien, who was he to judge when it was a multi-million dollar contract? "To Sauna it is." He thought to himself, rolling back his shoulders.

---------


Renard had been patient up to the point when they were issued uniforms. "Pink? What the hell kind of mission are we on?" Of course, Saina didn't disappoint: miserable, sweaty, and pink. Of course, that also described Renard fairly accurately at the time, as he itched with gusto at every inch of exposed skin.

As much as he internally griped, Renard rather quickly accustomed himself to the harsh environment. After all, he'd done worse -at one point he took up 'work' in Detroit, so this jungle of a planet couldn't be that bad, could it?

---------


When it came time to go to work in the jungle, Renard for the first time took notice of the soldiers with whom he worked. Obviously he understood the concept that they were all the best of the best, but it was only when they began moving through the jungle that he could comprehend just how lethal these men and women were. They moved through the jungle like it was nothing, looking more like vicious predators than humans.

As massive as he was, Renard never was the gentle type -moving through the overgrowth he was very conscious of every broken branch and crunched leaf pile beneath his feet as he moved with his team. He held his Negev rather casually in his right hand, treating the weapon more like a sidearm than a 7.6 kilogram death dealer.

His head stayed pointed forwards as his eyes scanned a slow pattern across their path. Still, unused to this environment, Renard had a hard time telling one pink from the next, and saw very little of note. It was only when Danny gave the signal to freeze that Renard noticed anything. He took a knee, staying as low to the ground as his frame would allow as he raised his Negev in the direction of the targets. Taking in a deep breath, he silently moved the lever on the side of the grip from "S" to "R" then, after a moment of consideration, to "A". His fingers flexed around the grip of his weapon, as he waited patiently for the shitstorm to commence.
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Hidden 8 yrs ago 8 yrs ago Post by Lord Shaxx
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A True Shadow War

Ashley had done just about everything he had been looking to do in the two hour time frame they'd been provided with. Found the sickbay, ate a solid breakfast and took a long contemplative dump. He remained pretty relaxed up until they were informed of their current whereabouts, the expressions that contorted his face were comical to say the least. He kept an ear open for everything and soaked in all that was provided.

"This place, mate, Hot? That's a bloody understatement. I'm gonna have a right case'ah fuckin' sweaty bollocks, mate." Ashley himself knew there was no way he would turn back and go home now. He had a wife and what was soon to be four children but he was part of something bigger now, it was far from an easy decision to make. He knew first hand what it was like to grow up without really knowing his own father but in his mind he knew they had good support from their families. Regardless, he had no intention of dying out here on some alien rock, especially not with other peoples lives on the line. But at least... at least he got to say a decent goodbye.

After a few moments to think back he simply directed his attention back to the environmental statistics, Ashley allowed his head to fall into an open palm "This is absolutely mental, by the looks of it there'll be more casualties to illness and fatigue than anything else." there was no effort made to keep opinions to himself.


First Contact

It was excellent, they'd met the flying spaghetti monster, spoke to a few furry hobbits and found out that they were fighting the real life tusken raiders. Now they were outside the wire in the thick running about dressed in barbie's discards. He drew himself out of his brief thoughts with haste, returning to surveying the area around himself and remaining conscious of foot-placement, given how relatively quiet the forest was and just how little he really knew of his enemies capabilities. Back on Earth animals could hear things like rustling or snapping twigs from a ranges human hearing simple did not register but the negligent discharge of a firearm, well that was just plain audible. Ashley made to be extra careful, rifle trained in whichever direction his head turned, trigger finger rested readily along the guard prepared to relocate itself and let rounds pop off, footfalls checked and steady.

To his two o'clock just over six metres ahead of himself walked the platoon sergeant, a small man that couldn't have been over five-eight but Ashley could tell the man was a real straight shooter, he had that 'I'm not looking to play games' demeanour about him with a bit of a wittiness about him, the two hadn't really spoken but he knew his name was Boggs. The two found themselves halting and taking a knee as a hand signal made it's way down, Atwater received it from the platoon sergeant and simply turned about to cover the rear.

Slowly Atwater directed himself to the right, eyes flicking to the slight ridge at just under 25m that he could just barely see through thick shrubbery that surrounded them, his observations were disrupted as Boggs gave him a tap, they were moving.

Atwater kept on the platoon sergeants heels as they made their way up front, kneeling down beside the leadership elements as they conversed and planned. The medic kept his weapon down range and snapped his magnifier into place to get better visuals, 'Fuck me, that is one big doggo.' Ashley thought to himself, giving a quiet glance back to Collins. The platoon sergeant soon moved to his own position after Major Collins and the section he had moved with had repositioned themselves, Ashley had noticed a shift in the wind, just a slight breeze that blew a loose strap from his rucksack in the direction of the enemy.

The wind was shifting.

Down the sight of his weapon the platoon sergeant could just about make out the shifts in posture of their new enemy, the original six were soon being joined by an additional nine from ten and one o'clock respectively, the one who seemed to be in a leadership position sniffed at the air curiously though very slowly began to level its weapon their direction, Boggs took no chance "Weapons free, weapons free!" came through clearly over the net, firing commenced, incoming and outgoing it was loud, caused displacement of loose foliage and the shattering of the less strengthened branches, native bird-like fauna overhead began to disperse from their perches some flying high others frantically low between the gunfight, Atwater himself knelt behind one of those shroom-trees taking shots from a non-standard position, his arse planted on the side of his left foot, body contorted in a sideward hunch with right leg partially extended, casings steadily ejected from his firearm as he fired semi-automatically.

Two rounds, two rounds, two rounds.

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Hidden 8 yrs ago 8 yrs ago Post by HeySeuss
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HeySeuss DJ Hot Carl

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The Element of Surprise




Plashi shuttles deposited them onto the surface with navigation data in their PDA's and intelligence warnings of new foes; the war-packs heard rumors of Grathik scientific prowess and some sort of uplift program. They'd fought robotic infantry that were durable and powerful, but not stealthy, not agile if spoofed. The war packs used stealth to overcome the limitations of the system and prevailed. The last upgrades were particularly dangerous but went self-aware and turned on the Grathik; too sentient and the slave AI's, apparently using appropriated code, pursued their own agenda.

The Pilavians fought when forced and cornered, but stealth worked again-- search and avoid patrols were invented by them. Grathik could only do so much to oversee and force the fighting without a revolt and after the damage that the robots did.

They moved forward in alert assurance from the landing site, seeking intelligence, enemies and plunder, the things that ran the Salvesh economy. Drathak's pack was young, fast and eager, long-runners that went lift and bid low in expectation of the best pickings, which they could sell to other packs and the Plashi to pay down their investment loan and upgrade their starting equipment.

Small, agile and aggressive, they hoped to slip past these new soldiers of the Grathik.

Drathak was still cautious in this alien jungle; the Pilavians, if threatened with slaughter, if they thought they were going to be pillaged, were surprisingly inventive booby-trappers, but there was no sign of that.

Drathak had some service under his belt, and used that to argue for pack-investment with the Plashi brokers. In space, the fight was brutal and dangerous, with Grathik technological prowess balancing Plashi wealth. But once they cracked the defenses, the worlds went down fast. The Grathik could not replenish their fleet fast enough and the Plashi had production organized to soak up their losses. It was the opposite of fights on the ground; quantity over quality.

They moved through the alien flora able to sniff the air, provided throat-filters for the purpose. That was how they suddenly found the enemy; metal and something not covered in their scent-briefing. He raised his rifle to sight one of the things, cleverly blended in the environment. His hormones surged and he snarled as he started to fire.

He felt his chest burn and shatter twice; the world around him exploded into weapons fire, and he watched from his grating, bleeding-out vantage, as the new enemy introduced themselves. So many of them that they didn't see, his pack mates whining for medical aid...he wanted to cry the warning, but he was out of breath.

They'd lost their gamble because they thought they owned the element of surprise.

They lost it, but so had the enemy. There were other war-packs nearby.

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Hidden 8 yrs ago Post by Hellis
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Hellis Cᴀɴɴɪʙᴀʟɪsᴛɪᴄ Yᴇᴛ Cʟᴀssʏ

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Waking up.

“I better get an explanation from someone, as to why I got a cottonmouth the world have never seen before” Hedberg muttered. “Worst then that brown Hashish.” His body felt like he had been at Roskilde and decided to do every drug present. Which, knowing the Danish, were a bad idea. Luckily, he was a soldier, and the second a voice of authority rang true in his ears, he back straightened and those others thoughts fled his mind. He didn’t salute, his arms weren’t exactly super responive at the moment. Instead he took in the bullwarks about them. “Ett Skepp?” He asked himself in swedish, thinking it was a ship. “No. I don’t feel the gentle sway under my feet.”

Slowly, it began to dawn on him. When he realized where they were, his jaw tried its best to hit the floor.

----------

Briefing.

Hedberg had seen a lot of weird and terrible things in his life. He had seen what war did to men and women. What fanticism and a split in opinion led to. The loss of civlian life as a raid became to drawn out, to chaotic and a stray bullet hit a window. Making War was not a precise artform, no matter how much they strived to make it so. War was messy, bloody, inherently savage. Yet the men and women of the SOG had not been savages, they had been as precise, as professional as war ever allowed them.

He wasn’t in Afghanistan any longer. Not in Iraq fighting religious fanatics either. He was in space. If his father could see him now. Listening to the Colonel, he was as attentive as ever. The payday for this was immense, he got that much. It only made sense for the risk to match the reward. They would help one race of aliens fight another. What’s more, it seemed their enemy was just as savage as he were trained not to be. He had spent the last five years training Pashmerga and Afghani troops. He listened intently to every word spoken, calmly dissecting the information in his head. This was why he had been fast tracked trough ranks back home. He was finding to many vectors and variables for his liking. Sure, he had been dropped into a shit storm before. Northern afghanistan and its Pakistani border had been like fighting ants, the Taliban hiding in caves and never staying long to fight them. But this, this was quite literally alien to him.

He groaned inwardly at the mention of tropical climate nad heat. He was half Yazidii. He was used to dry, Arid heat from his time in the middleast. But Jungle? That was another ballgame entirely. One he wasn’t to fond of. He remembered all the horror stories from the commander back home, who had been part of the Congo conflict.

“Damn.” He mumbled. “I hate the Jungle.”

-----

Planetfall.

“God. I really hate the Jungle” He mumbled under his breath as they advanced trough the strangely colored foliage. Trough some lovely coincidence, they had put the Ruskies on in his squad. He wondered idly if they knew he had been trained specifically to fight Russian forces in a defensive war. But, he was more then happy to have spetnaz on his side rather then facing them, that was for certein. HIs feet barely made any sound as he advanced. His attention on his surroundings. He didn’t mind the purple or pink he was wearing. In fact, the realization that all these rugged men and hardass soldiers had to dress up like a militirized pride parade was more then weighing up for the cryostasis cottonmouth he was still struggling with. He should look up whatever he was knocked out with, he had problem sleeping back home while that stuff knocked him right out.

The purple founa did present them with a different problem however. Human eyes were not accustomed to such a explosive mix of colors, and it took some getting used to. The pollen clingin to everything was pretty damn annoying as well. But that was jungles for you. Instead of the usual sea of green, it was a sea of purple.

His squad was a colorfull and interesting bunch, he had to give them that. But they were a capable bunch, he had helped train with them, and he had seen the kind of killer instinct and hardened veteran experience you wanted with you during such a unique operation. To his immediete left walked Mathiel Leqba, a French Tunisian who swore more then a sailor and likely made half the races feel better about their ugly physiology due to his own god awful face. Not even a mother could love a face like that. Behind him was Joe Anoi. A pacific islander and american Marine who was one hell of a shot with his rifle. He was also as wide as he was tall, with the most jarhead look the swedish soldier had ever encountered.

------

“Contact”

The word made his mind whirl into action. Without hesitation, he spoke to his squad members. Rossi, Anoi, Leqba, on me. Co-ordinate and pick a target. C-team, B-Team. round to my left. I will put a 40 mil present in their midst. Iko, you do the same as soon as you see me fire. Space to the backline, push them towards our fire. C-team, as soon as weapons are hot, level them to the ground.” He said in short bursts of information as he moved. He saw everyone fall into place and take position. Looking trough his holosight, he saw their quarry move up. They were ugly sons of bitches to be sure. And big to. Way to big to be mistaken for as human. He felt a sudden relief in bringing the axe with him.

“ Mind your cover and watch your line of fire.” He spoke silently. It was nothing they needed to be told he was sure. But reinforcing it was part of his job. A squadleaders voice was there to steer but also reassure. They were all under his umbrella once the shit started raining down. He steadied his own breath, flexed his fingers in a soft drumroll across the handle.

Had one of them moved towards them?

The order came from the platoon medic. Weapons free.

“Second squad! Open fire!” He let the grenade sail over the first hostiles head, landing between the early group and in the midst of the reinforcements. The Heavy Explosive round showered them it dirt, erupting in fire and shrapnel among the suprised aliens.

“Rossi! Focus on the ones scrambling for cover. Leqba, let it fucking rain.” He shouted over the din that now filled the air as several dozen proffesional let their tools of death speak for them. They had the advantage, and it was paramount they utilized it to its fullest. On his command, Leqba let his gun spit heavy bursts of automatic, heavy caliber rounds into the enemy. The negev was one scary weapon to be sure, and its heavy smattering was deafening.

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Hidden 8 yrs ago Post by CaptainBritton
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CaptainBritton Man of War

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Space, The Final Frontier

He sat up rapidly, a sharp gasp escaping him as he traced the details of this new environment closely. "The fuck am I?" He muttered to nobody in particular, throwing his feet to the side and making to his feet. The effects hit him all at once. He rolled his tongue around in his mouth and stretched, yawning rather loudly.

His first thought drifted to the word "ship" as he rose and wandered about. The change into his MCCUUs was sluggish and efforted, and when the call for assembly came, he dragged himself forth to the destination ahead.


Above My Paygrade

He certainly didn't anticipate they were in fucking space, nor that they were working for Invader Zim and Co. His surprise definitely took even more hold when the word 'multimillionaires' was uttered. His sluggishness was overcome by eagerness, by motivation, potentially even by greed. One does not pass up millions just daily, and they certainly don't carry out their task like a zombie.

The mention of jungles did not concern him in the slightest. What was a jungle, even if pink and purple, compared to that of Okinawa, of mainland Japan, of Australia? He anticipated the end of the briefing eagerly, and began preparations immediately. The pink and purple uniforms offset the feeling slightly, but he followed.

Clad in his new uniform paired with the equipment of which he had brought, he prepared for planetfall.


Out of the Frying Pan...

He wasn't anticipating what met him there. It had all been wrong. Everything he thought before, all wrong. It was hot, not just 'a summer day' hot or 'a freshly made pie' hot. It felt as if Satan himself was pissing molten lava down his back the entire time, from the second he set foot on the God-forsaken planet in question.

He rasped through the respirator and, while he was attempting to conserve the water he had, he found himself again and again going to the Camelbak strapped to his ruck. The sweat made the gloves he wore insufferable, and the cotton socks paired with the boots unbearable. He just hoped they'd be back up on that luxury cruise they called a transport soon.


Into the Fire...

To make matters worse, enemies. He fumbled with the M203 and planted one big smooch on the primer of a 40mm HE, slamming it into the chamber and shutting it with a quiet click. He moved with his squad, sticking close to his team lead. It was time to engage. He had moved into position as told, and just waited for the moment.

"Weapons free!" was all he heard. Next thing he knew, those around him were emptying their weapons into the foe, and he did as well. First sailed forth the 40mm and it impacted with a roar which must have been deafening for the enemy and displaced a fair amount of dirt. His next course was to empty short bursts into the targets acquired. Pop pop. Pop pop. All he heard through the noise-cancelling headphones was the dull pop and crack of the rifle as it sent forth hot lead. He found himself pumping with adrenaline, and accompanying his fire was that infernal cry. One that anyone who knew the culture of the South could place. It was the rebel yell.
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Hidden 8 yrs ago 8 yrs ago Post by Therealslayer
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Therealslayer Cage Jr.

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@Cara@JDolan

Hell of a Hangover


Kristjana woke up with a start, her face glistened with drops of cold sweat. A sudden nauseating wave of drowsiness hit her like a vicious punch in the gut. Her hand pressed into the cot behind her steadied the woman slightly, as her other hand clutched her head. "Bloody fuckin'...shite." the woman's voice weaved in and out, unsteady and slurred like she had downed a dozen pints by herself - which reminded her of the times winning games were celebrated with her teammates years ago.

And just like the good old days, the woman blindly ran to the bathroom as her last meal threatened to come back up. She stopped in her tracks as she took in the unfamiliar room. With a blurred vision she glanced around the room like a disoriented gorilla until she spotted something that looked a lot like a garbage can. Without hesitation she ran towards it and proceed to empty the contents of her stomach into it.

For a moment she cursed having to throw up the delicious pineapple chicken she had made herself, but those thoughts quickly were replaced by memories of the mission briefing in Uzbekistan. Right, that's where I am. I was? What the fuck was in that shot? She spit the last of it out and let herself slump back on the surprisingly plush rug underneath her. She cursed some more, rolled over onto her knees and stood up with about as much grace a uncoordinated puppy.

Kristjana scanned the room with a heavy frown: it was nice. Nicer than she'd seen in a while. That carpet though, she'd take it home with her if she could. This was luxury the woman wasn't used to and probably never will. She was a simple kind of gal after all.

After making sure she had clothes on, Kristjana confidently made her way out of her room in search of a bathroom. Sure she wanted to figure out where she was, but finding a bathroom seemed more important. At least to her sanity it was.

Okay, Those Shots Were Spiked With Molly


Kristjana joined the others in the briefing room and noticed it matched the style and luxury of the room she had woken up in. She took a seat next to the small french woman. Kris understood exactly zero french and having had the long and drawn out experience of learning a foreign language before, she wasn't too keen on adding another one under her belt. Two was fine by her, and besides, military hand signals were pretty universal.

She saluted the woman lazily, using only two fingers, and then directed her attention at the man speaking at the front. When the truth about their mission was revealed, she was starting to wonder if there hadn't been any hallucinogens in the shots they gave them. Even though Kris didn't exactly have a clean record with needles per say, there was something about getting shooted up without knowing what was in it and didn't sit right with her. At least when she juiced for competition, she knew exactly what she injected - her body was the living proof of that.

"Bloody hell, if I knew I was signin' up to kill aliens I would have brought a flame thrower." Kris whispered to the blonde woman. "Bugger," was spoken incredulously, under her breath. What else was there to say? All of this was insane and the more she thought about it, the weirder it got. Kris decided it would probably be wise to roll with it. She was always seeking a new challenge. Something to make her grow and learn. Inter-planetary visiting wouldn't have been her first choice for obviously sane reasons...but it would have to do.

Do ya reckon they have gyms up there? This thought, however, she had kept to herself. Some things are really just better off unspoken.

*Insert gunfire sounds here*


The bright purple hues mixed with the yellow tint of her shooting glasses made everything seem like it was edible, or perhaps Kristjana was just really hungry. The shades of orange she saw, however, really reminded her of ice cream. Fifty Shades of Ice Cream, the sergeant chuckled to herself, I'd watch the bloody heck out of that.

Kris fell in step with her Hungarian squad mate, Janos, as she took in their environment. The Saina jungle wasn't as bad as she thought, but the climate she was used to is much different than this unpleasant stuffy warmth. She inspected the flora surrounding them, and again she wondered if they'd stepped into an acid trip. She did find the fauna unusually endearing, however, and would have made on particular animal she saw their squad mascot - if they didn't already have Krieg.

The sergeant was roughly ripped out of her thoughts when the comms suddenly came alive. Her eyes focused on the enemy forces moving in on them. These soldiers were humongous and distinctively unlike anything she'd ever seen before - something that would undoubtedly become a theme over the course of this mission.

Kris placed a hand on her Hungarian colleague's shoulder to let him know she was going to take a firing position beside him. She settled the bipod of the negev on the rock formations they were crouched in front of. She then shimmied closer and settled into a comfortable shooting position with the stock firmly pressed against her front deltoid.

The weapons free command came in and an explosion of sounds filled the area. Kristjana drowned out the noise and instead focused on her breathing. She closed her left eye and stared at their enemies through the iron sights of her automatic weapon. She fully intended every single bullet fired to meet Salvesh flesh as her finger pressed down on the trigger.
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Hidden 8 yrs ago 8 yrs ago Post by vietmyke
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vietmyke

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Awakening

Thomas Kensington- K-Ton as most of his fellows knew him, woke up staring into a sterile, white ceiling light. He found himself in a clean, carpeted room, in a nice bed, with nice furniture and immaculately clean. It was, a clear exit from the dusty, olive-green-and-concrete and barracks of questionable quality and shoddy barrack beds in some ex-soviet country. The first thing he noticed was how comfortable the bed was compared to his old bed before he was cajoled awake and told to sort himself out.

Two hours later, K-Ton was guided out to the assembly area with the rest of his fellow contractors. They were met by the boss himself, Colonel Marais. The Colonel ordered the dome above them to retract, and began his speech. A combination of his speech, and the opening dome above them revealed that- as the soldier next to K-Ton had muttered under his breath "We definitely ain’t in Kansas anymore,”. They were in fact in a spaceship, orbiting around some alien planet, working for some alien customers. The pay they were expecting changed from lavish to exorbitant, and they were given the option to get back in the ice and go home.

There was some murmuring, and some quiet arguing. K-Ton himself settled his mind with a light elbow to Danny Shattah- technically his team leader though they were considerably less formal outside of ops and training- and said with a low mutter. "I'm recording this entire tour. We're gonna be millionaires and fucking movie stars."

K-Ton was only partially kidding- he had no doubt that they would be banned from sharing any media taken from this tour with their friends or counterparts from, but it didn't mean he wouldn't record it. He'd probably record a video journal, maybe convince one of his squad mates to send it home at the end of the tour if he died- K-Ton wasn't planning on it to come to that, but in the worst case, he'd still like his family taken care of. Maybe he'd start a memoir of their platoon and their tour in Qadah.

After the few who were unwilling to be rich were filtered out, the Colonel went back to the briefing. He showed them slides of their employers, their employers' allies, their employers' enemies, and their current enemies, the Salvesh. The Salvesh were interstellar mercenaries, they fought in packs, and reminded K-Ton of Brutes from the Halo series- except with an extra eye and pair of arms. They were assigned to protect Qadah's moon, Saina, a purple jungle that was immediately renamed Sauna.

Memoirs from an Alien Planet. Day 8.
"The squad gathered around and took a group picture today before going out on patrol.
We all looked so utterly ridiculous that we agreed to delete the picture.
We'll take it again indoors so Sterling can photoshop the picture to not look so goddam pink."
-- Kensington, Thomas.


Saina, or Sauna, as the other Contractors liked to call it was all sorts of things, but comfortable wasn't one of them. It was hot, wet, and pink. The humidity of the planet made sweat plentiful yet still feel pointless, and the pink took a long time to get used to. Not to mention, their uniforms was some camouflage pattern based on the pink and purple of the landscape and looked fucking ridiculous. The moon was apparently terraformed for the Pilavians, to use as a psuedo homeworld for the Garthik's worker race- in a sense, Kensington couldn't help but feel like they were in probably the same boat as the Pilavians, a race under the employ of another, given adapted technology to survive.

At the Operating Base, K-Ton had switched on his GoPro camera and attached it to the front of his helmet, clipped to where the binoculars or NVGs would normally clip. He made a few comments to a few people and made sure the camera was working before they were sent off on a patrol to smoke out the Salvesh who had just began landing on the moon. The pink platoon marched off in a column, kitted up and bodies encased in fatigue, armor, and rebreathers. It was too bad they couldn't bring Krieg with them, but the poor pup couldn't handle the air in the jungle any better than they could, and they didn't have dog sized rebreathers in handy.

K-Ton followed behind Danny, about 5 meters back and out, sweeping the outer surroundings with one eye, while keeping another on Danny in the lead. It was hot, and K-Ton had sucked a good amount of water out of his camelbak, and kept the straw inside his rebreather with him. He was almost certain he'd sweated all the water he drank out, and was about to make a comment on that when he saw Danny's arm go up. Freezing mid-step, K-Ton slowly dropped to the ground and took a knee, the enemy had been sighted.

Danny's voice picked up through the comms, and K-Ton slowly slung his rifle, swapping it out for his M32 as he stared down the enemy. 10 Salvesh, 50 meters out. Big and ugly, but not like Halo's brutes, no these things were both fluid in movement as well as strong. Everything said to him that no matter what, K-Ton did not want to get into a melee with these fuckers. He fumbled with his camera a bit, hoping that it picked them up too. He patted his MGL with a comforting pat, his gloved finger tracing the scratched on numbers on the cylinder. He leveled it at the Salvesh and peered through his optic, adjusting for distance. All that was left was the tense waiting.

"Weapons free! Weapons free!" he heard, and K-Ton immediately pulled the trigger once, then twice, then a third time. To their left, he heard the familiar thump! of another grenade launcher, and then a second one. Perhaps overkill, but when faced with aliens of relatively unknown capabilities, you shot first and asked questions later.

While K-Ton's first and third grenade were of the explosive kind, his second grenade loosed bright yellow marker smoke from the middle of the Salvesh position, letting everyone definitively know where the enemy were. The yellow helped contrast the pink, and they were close enough that the smoke wouldn't obscure the target. As the rest of the platoon open fired, the steady crack of rifles firing filled the air around him, the occasional tracer burning through the air as it flew towards the Salvesh.

Crouching behind a strange, but sturdy mushroom, K-Ton reacquired his target and dropped another pair of grenades against the enemy location, this time, an airburst grenade set to explode right over the heads of the vast majority of them, and another HE to root out the ones dug in in the back.

Pulling back behind the mushroom, K-Ton dropped to the ground prone and rolled onto his side, pulling his nearly empty M32 in front of him and pulling out the cylinder. Pulling an EMP grenade out of his front pocket, K-Ton slid that into the first position, before sliding an HE into 2 through 4, and an airburst into 5. Pushing the cylinder back into the weapon, with the second tube set to fire instead of position 1, K-Ton slipped into a semi-prone, with his MGL still pointed forward and his free hand pressing against the dirt, in an awkward half crouch half 1-handed pushup position ready to lift him back up into a firing position should some four grenades plus two others fired by the second squad not be enough.
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Hidden 8 yrs ago 8 yrs ago Post by Noxious
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Noxious ᴅ ᴇ ᴀ ᴅ ish

Member Seen 10 mos ago

They had been here over a week and she was still pissed about being drugged. Shipped off to another planet, no qualms, trudging around the hot as hell jungle in douchebag approved pink camo, totally fine, but for some reason she was having difficulty letting the drug thing go. She didn’t wear this mellowing displeasure on her features; she was born with a face that lacked overt expressions. [Unless liquor became involved.] And she wasn’t about to start whining to a bunch of people who seemed to have accepted it as either completely fine or a minor inconvenience. She wasn’t much for complaining anyways.

Either way, the whole alien roofie cocktail hadn’t pissed her off enough for her to leave, obviously. Here she was in what she assumed Alien would look like if Mattel bought the rights and started with the prequels or remakes directed by Walt Disney. But of course she stayed, like some of the others she’d signed on because what the hell did she have to go home to? And unlike those with families of their own she was pretty sure hers would get along alright. They had each other.

She’d always found a comfort in replicating the family bond among her platoon, and generally she liked the men and women that she’d be spending her unapproved acid trip with. A lot of them reminded her of people from home. Serious when it mattered, but not so much that their muscles bruised from the ass clenching required 24 hours a day. She detested people that had no off switch for the anxiety inducing control and focus during missions. It was likely this reasoning that had endeared her to the man she followed now. Danny was easy to respect, capable, yet without the machismo she had initially expected. One day they would have share a beer in a bar that wasn’t fuchsia infused and talk about the god awful heat.

Someone had once told her that plans for the future were a jinx to the squad, but she disagreed. The worst way to go into a firefight was with nothing to lose.

Danny held up the signal for everyone to freeze and she did, mimicking the signal as her stance settled into a crouch amongst the foliage. One of the truly bothersome things that had nagged at her since leaving Rio was the lack of noise. It had started with the stealth training missions, and then the ships were quiet, even the fucking Pilavians spoke quietly, as they trudged through the ‘rose colored glasses’ inspired landscape their steps were quiet, and now, now she was even paranoid to take a breath. Sao Paulo had been bustling, and even it had seemed quiet compared to the Rio she’d grown accustomed too. Rio was anything but quiet. It was disconcerting for someone who associated that chilly lack of ghetto ambiance to something akin to the grave.

She was thankful now to Danny’s added training in Guyana. She had no lack of confidence in her skills, to be sure, but there were many things about this terrain that had only been briefly covered in prior training. The few times she'd been on missions involving drug lords in the jungle had always been the worst. The last time she hadn't shit right for weeks. The jungles she was accustomed too were spray painted concrete and reclaimed tin. But the enemies, the enemies in her jungle looked like her father, her mother, like her sisters, and that could make all the difference.

Confirmation of the monster bastards came from Danny and was passed down the line. Her crouch settled into a kneel as she eased the SCAR MK 20 onto an overgrown toadstool of some misbegotten genus. [She’d sat on one earlier and convinced herself of their surprising stability.] The rifle was a cream color that neither blazed apparent in the surrounding terrain or became completely muted. She’d contemplated painting it with some nail polish, but, randomly that accessory had not found itself into her possession and she couldn’t rightly slip into the drug store and grab some. Worries for a later date. She forced a breath, and then let them come easily, naturally, finding comfort as she drifted towards the scope and began to release a prayer that even the bulking metal would fail to hear.
Ajoelhou, tem que rezar.
[the one who kneeled, must pray]


As she stared at them through the scope her previous assessment rang true. They were God awful, and she had seen some of Earth’s true monsters. But these fuckers took the cake. There would be little guilt in slaughtering these beasts. Humanity been trained from birth to associate the monsters with something evil, something to be put down, and that is what they would do. The Grathik should have touted this as one of her species great accomplishments, for discrimination was always valuable in war and it truly was a speciality of their home world.

"Butch, Hammer shots on these fuckers." She had made the same observation as Koh, third from the head of the column, enemy leader. Not only did the other beasts seem to keep with her movements, as Butch had been watching her through the scope she’d noticed her claws curling and gesturing to those around her. She quickly released the safety and began firing at her mass.

Soon the others joined her and shots began to ring out from around her. A smile crept upon her usually stoic features. Finally. God she hated the quiet.
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Hidden 8 yrs ago Post by Cara
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Cara

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A New World

Claire took notes. It was a compulsive behavior, though not one which the various pshycs worried too much about. There were soldiers who licked grenades before throwing them, and soldiers who collected the teeth of their enemies, comparatively a paratrooper with a fondness for post it notes was considered 'minimally problematic'. The behavior was most intense when, as now, she was thrown into an unfamiliar situation. Most of the soldiers seemed to be taking it relatively well, which was amazing, when you considered what they were being told.

The news that they would be multimillionaires if they survived didn't please her as much as it did the others. Claire had taken a grand total of six weeks leave in a nine year military career. She didn't like being away from the action, didn't like being paranoid in crowds, or assessing shopping malls for sniper positions when she was with her nieces. The idea that they were out among the stars to make war, a war that had no notional beginning or end, seemed right to her on a deep and visceral level.

Her attention was snapped out of notes by the accented voice of Steindottier. The woman had clearly been speaking to her and made a half hearted salute. Claire focused for a moment to draw the other womans words back into her mind.

"Flame throwers we have," she replied with a smile that she hoped was friendly. From her dossier Steindottier had trained with the British, with whom Claire had always had good relations.

"White phosphorus too, I don't suppose the Geneva conventions are much in effect up here, though I suppose that cuts both ways." She made a mental note to ask what intel the enemy might have on humans. Salutes might be a problem later on.

Phase Line
The sounds of weapons fire echoed and snapped through the alien landscape. The familiar sounds were weirdly attenuated by the different mix of atmospheric gasses, it made judging the distance of a report uncertain. The weapons squad was strung out behind her, the troopers humping their heavy weapons through the pastel steam bath with good humor. It was hard for Claire to really connect with the reality of being here, it seemed so much like the fever dreams she had felt the first time her malaria med had run out in Kashmir. Their allies and their enemies were not anchored in her world view and as such she could draw no real connection to them.

Bullets snapped through the fungal foliage close at hand, snapping her from her reverie. Lifting her stabilized binoculars to her eyes she surveyed the battlefield once again and tried to remind herself that this was actually happening. It seemed like the engagement was going well, but then it always did right up untill the moment it dropped in the pot. Turning to her squad she started snapping out orders.

"Braithwaite, Kamal," she called to the machine gunners, her head set mike piping her words into the comm circuit.

"Shake it out fifty and secure the flank of Hedberg's flank! Keep small and hold your fire till I give the order." Twisting around she made a series of hand signals to the other members of the weapons squad. Deploying her second machine gun team and the pair of mortars behind a convenient hedge of the surprising dense fungus.

"Dagger One Zero, this is Dagger Four Zero," she reported, her voice sounded bored and disinterested as it always did in combat.

"Four is in position on the rise half a click north east of your position, we are holding fire till you call for us, over." It was always tempting to open fire at the first opportunity, but the reality is that the enemy was in uncertain strength, and keeping the heavy weapons concealed was the smart play.

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Hidden 8 yrs ago Post by Gunther
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Gunther Captain, Infantry (Retired)

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The Assault!

The air was thick with small metallic objects flying back and forth and tremendous speeds. The roar of the machine guns, rifles and High Explosive (HE) grenades detonating the kill zone disrupted the silence of the jungle. It was a thunderous sensation in the heat of the tropical setting.

In a firefight or ambush, a soldier tends to adapt a tunnel vision. Fear denies them of vision, to see what is immediately in front of them, unaware of anything to the left, right or rear. It is imperative leaders to snap out of that tunnel and pay attention, to look around even when the bullets are flying. Experience creates combat veterans with the ability to overcome the fear and do what is necessary regardless of the risk.

After a full minute of firing, Brian Park felt a heavy whack impact the front of his Kevlar ballistic helmet. It snapped his head back, causing trauma upon the upper trapezius muscles which would be sore for several days to come. Less than a half a second later, a second round impacted with his left zygomatic arch, the prominent point of the cheek bone. The bullet plowed rapidly through the dermal layers of the left side of his face removing the lobe from his left ear. The impact put more strain on his upper trapezius leaving a stinging sensation along the left side of his face; comparable to seven yellow jackets stinging him at one time. It was enough of a sensation to cause his left hand to reach up to his face, feeling a warm liquid oozing out of the wound. He pulled himself behind a tree, to get out of the line of fire; never a good place to stay for very long.

“Danny!” Brian yelled at his A team leader. “I’ve been hit!” Then he looked for Atwater, “Medic!” He didn’t know the extent of his injury, but assumed he needed medical attention. After several second, he realized he wasn’t about to die. They were still in this fight. “Increase your fire!” Brian yelled at the first squad. “Keep those HE rounds flying.” He looked over at Tony Collins, the platoon leader as he pushed off to the right away from the platoon.

Anthony Collins, Major, Infantry, SAS

The platoon laid down a heavy base of fire with the two pigs in the middle of the line raking 7.62mm fire back and forth across the enemy position. 40mm HE grenades exploded amongst the shocked Salvesh soldiers, their cumbersome bodies crumpling under the massive weight of firepower. Enemy fire slackened only slightly, but Tony wanted a full two minutes of fire before he assaulted into the kill zone. He slowly led the assault element consisting of the 13 soldiers of third squad, the Assistant Platoon Sergeant, the two Anti-Armor Gunners, Rachel Koh and Pieter Gunn. There were nineteen in all. Platoon Leader Collins led the team on an oblique angle away from the right end of the base of fire so that they would not pick up any ricochet fire or be caught in the kill zones by fragmentation producing grenades. The soldiers moved quickly with their rifle butts in the socket of their shoulders peering over the sights hitting any of the Salvesh who may be on their end of the Kill Zone. Collins was concerned about the enemy being reinforced from the direction the Salvesh had just traveled from, to the right. He positioned a fire team in the direction the enemy just traveled from in anticipation of someone reinforcing them.

After the two minutes on his clock ended, he blew his whistle loudly, a long-extended blast. It was the predesigned signal to cease fire. Platoon Sergeant Gustav Boggs yelled, “lift and shift,” over the comms. Sergeant Park yelled, “lift and shift! Lift and shift!” This order tells the soldiers of the squad to shift fire away from the friendly assault element and engage targets who may still be moving on the left side of the kill zone and then lift all fires completely.

The momentary silence in the air lasted less than a quarter second as fifteen soldiers of the assault element moved on ling across the direction of march where the Salvesh infantry had just passed. They fired double taps into every enemy body in the kill zone regardless of whether they were dead or alive. The enemy was completely overwhelmed in the engagement, never having a chance to recover. Once the Assault element moved past the area where all the Salvesh lay, crumpled and distorted, third squad’s C Team took a knee providing security to the left of the ambush site, roughly in front of the left end of second squad. The B Team hastily gathered as many Salvesh firearms as they could, strapping them over their backs. Even Major Collins picked up one and slung it over his shoulder.

Collins’ heart beat rapidly, the rush of adrenaline flowing through his body. He rifled through a few pockets to see if he could find anything of value for the Battalion S2, Intelligence Officer. He stood up, “Koh!” he yelled to the former Singaporean Intelligence Officer. “Anything more on your drone? We need to get some photos of these blokes. Damn, they are ugly.” Collins pulled out his smart phone and began snapping photographs of the dead Salvesh. One moved. It startled him. The beast was wounded, but unconscious. “I’ve got a live one here!” He yelled at the third squad leader, “have an aid and litter team put together a litter. Let’s get this jolly green chap back to base. Maybe the doctors can learn something from him?” Each squad would have one or two 2-man aid and litter teams. The soldiers would scavenge up two long sticks from the undergrowth and then wrap a poncho or two around the sticks to form the litter. It might take four men to carry this thing out of the jungle.

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Hidden 8 yrs ago 8 yrs ago Post by HeySeuss
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HeySeuss DJ Hot Carl

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Geneva is a long way off




"Litter team stand fast! Keep firing!" Danny took the change of squad leadership quickly when Park went down, in order to make sure the situation didn't deteriorate. It did no one any good to start jumping out in the middle of the firefight to save a comrade and Danny was tough on the discipline for this; in a combat situation, the Israeli was cold, but he was also calm. Some of the vets knew not to play medic, but some people never got over that impulse to save a friend, even at the expense of the overall fight.

He'd taken his shots at the Salvesh, unsure if he'd gotten a kill there, but also had a much larger weight on his shoulders now. He wasn't getting as heavily engaged as the rest of the squad because he was keeping an eye on them and making sure, though he took his shots. The squad's three LMG's, Negevs, were at work "talking" to each other; rapid bursts, adjusting aim, and more rapid bursts in synchronization. One gunner fired, then another, keeping the fire steady without wearing down the barrels. Once Park was up and back to running the squad, Danny got back to the fight, switching magazines when he saw tracers from his fire in a rapid, practiced motion.

A couple of the rifles started to fire wildly with the 'increase fire' order and he snapped, "AIM YOUR SHOTS!" They might want to fire rapidly, but they didn't want to waste ammo out here, a long way off from resupply. There was no need to use the radio net; a loud voice was his friend here. Amazingly, the breather masks were designed to allow full volume, as if there was no filter between their mouths and the atmosphere of Sauna. You could take full breaths in this thing, which was the most unbelievable blessing compared to Earth-tech systems.

When the 'lift and shift' order came, he got his first kill; one of the Salvesh was trying to take advantage of the lull and paid the price. Squeeze it like a tit... was what one of the IDF instructors told him during his basic, and he never forgot the advice, partially because IDF marksmanship instructors were all women, and Israeli women tended to be a morale-boosting sight for sore eyes. He squeezed until the trigger broke and squeezed the trigger until he just felt the reset, released and squeezed again, muscle memory all the way, the ingrained habit of well-trained marksmanship for rapid-fire. He had the armorer tune his rifle precisely to work with his sense of the trigger reset, and his muscle memory. It paid off.

That one crumpled with a spray of alien blood from the chest cavity; blue on the purple and pink. Once that died down, the place went quiet for a moment, but for the occasional shots fired as the assault team finished the job.

He took a moment in the grim satisfaction of a good kill-shot. It was countless range-days spent perfecting that in drills of all sorts to get it down to that sort of fast-smooth target acquisition and similarly close shot placement, all with nerves and adrenaline. It was too bad there was no one there to whistle at his accuracy. The moment of triumphant synergy, a decade's investment in conditioning and training would go unremarked. But he lived, it died and that was what truly mattered.

Then he remembered; K-ton was recording this, "K-ton," he called out, "You got that one, right? Millionaires and fucking movie stars!" If the grin looked a little Jack Nicholson under the mask, the dialogue was the sort of casual brutality and surreal levity one expected from a Kubrick flick.

That was a moment of devil-may-care, a way to let off the tension of the engagement, where Danny was calling out orders and watching the performance of his squadmates, worrying about Park and people playing medic and making sure that they weren't being caught off guard by any Salvesh. Stupid shit, stupid humor that wasn't even funny, suddenly was great huge laughs after a firefight where you managed to live and you were relieved to be a survivor. Life had a flavor on the edge.

Back to business. "Fresh mags, fresh belt. Get hydrated," he told the team.

He was tempted to say they'd probably be moving, and to expect more Salvesh, but he didn't want people getting ahead of themselves. A minute or two tops of combat, but he felt wrung out already in Sauna's oppressive heat, sweat running rivulets down his back, soaking his shoulders and armpits and pooling around the mask and goggles he wore.

Despite that moment of fatigue, he was still keyed; the fight had been noisy. He knew there'd be more, and he already had his eyes out. They were on security now, but at least the scout element did their job.

He glanced over at Park to assess the guy's state; it looked like he'd have a hell of a scar from that, but overall it was lucky and could have been a lot worse.

Collins had third squad putting rounds in the fallen enemies to make sure they stayed down. Danny, a pragmatic fighter, approved. Geneva wouldn't have.

Geneva was a long way off. Humanity was in its first interstellar combat.
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Hidden 8 yrs ago Post by Reaper
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Bang bang


When the bullets started flying Julie adapted. Her drone still in the air, circling the area, an eye on the tablet screen to make sure they didn't have more than ten Salvesh to deal with for now. Her other eyeball was fixed on the the crosshairs of her a ACOG sight, swaying with the recoil of her rifle as her military training kicked in. Settle the sights on a target, squeeze. Inhale, acquire target, settle sights, exhale, squeeze. At this range she couldn't reliably aim at the uncovered, unarmored parts of the Salvesh, but honestly she didn't have to.

They were firing so much lead down range that some of them were bound to find something lethal to hit. In simple terms: Throw enough shit at the wall and some of it's going to stick. Hell, she didn't even start spraying when the increase fire order was given. She just spent less time waiting for her sights to settle and squeezing off rounds whenever a Salvesh silhouette popped up in the center of her sights. Guns were useless to a soldier if they ran out of ammo, and it was a currency they could not afford to spend too extravagantly, this far from their resupply.

Jump Scares


For now, the drone wasn't picking up any additional hostile contacts. Once the cease fire signal was given, she cautiously advanced behind the squad, sending the drone further out just as Collins yelled for her to provide an update. They double-tapped the bodies, and as Julie passed by one, the wounded Salvesh tried to snap up and swing a weapon of some kind at her. It barely got all the way up before it took two rounds in the head from her pistol and three more in the chest. Her tablet had dropped to her side in the ambush, a piece of cord in the corner the only thing tethering it to her vest. "Motherfucker." She swore, checking the tablet for damagea as she sent the drone towards the hill to make sure the area was clear.

Contact


"Keep your panties on." She hissed, not appreciating someone barking at her in the middle of doing just what they were asking anyway. "Drone will be over the crest of the hill in 10. 9..."

When her countdown ended, she did it with a curse. The moment the drone cleared the ridge, her screen was dotted with heat signatures. "I have Salvesh silhouettes cresting the hill at a sprint! Roughly about two platoons in strength. Looks like they're here for the after-party." She stated matter-of-factly. No doubt they heard the gunfire and were headed in this direction to either reinforce their friends or avenge them.
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Hidden 8 yrs ago Post by Hellis
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Hellis Cᴀɴɴɪʙᴀʟɪsᴛɪᴄ Yᴇᴛ Cʟᴀssʏ

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Hell comes in a handgrenade, baskets are harmless.

War was never pretty. Battle never went according to plan. And Savesh were brutal motherfuckers. These were things Hedberg was quickly coming to realize. The Savesh, having been scattered at first, none the less returned fired. Dirt and debris shot up in muddy geysers as bullets smashed against the foilage around Second Squad. Leqba for his part, gave as good as he took, the Negev laying down a hailstorm of bullets onto a group of Savesh, keeping them in cover. Hedberg counted his men and women quickly to see if anyone was down, so far so good. He heard Park call out as he took a bullet and swore.

“Helvetes jävla skit!” He placed another HE grenade with heavy thud into backline of Savesh, the grenade landing squarely at the feet of one of them. The blue blood flowing from a severely mangled alien corpse only added to the strange sureness of their current engagement. As he loaded he heard a yelp and a wet smack as Anoi fell onto his back. His eyes wide, he was gripping his upper arm. The bullet had him him square in the arm and buried almost all the way through. Whatever caliber their enemy used, is sure wasn’t pretty. The bullet had been large enough to pack enough punch that the bullet completely fragmented inside the arm. There was no quick fix for it. Anoi had been supremely unlucky to, the bullet had hit him from of the few remaining Savesh as the ambush died down.

“Medic! I’m hit Sarge!” He grunted as he shifted to lay in proper cover. His arm hung limply from where he clasped it. “Goddamnit” He whined as he grew pale I “I think my arm is a goner”

“I can see that Anoi. Stay focused, who knows, maybe the Aliens know how to fix it. FOr now, lets get you to a fucking medic.” He rose to his feet as slung the mans healthy arm across his shoulder and helped him towards Atwater. “Got another one for you Doc.” He said as he helped Anoi down.

“ Bezrodny, make sure your boys and girls are as fresh as can be. I want you to form a firing line to my left. ” He called out to team leader before turned to the other two “I don’t like putting bullets in wounded, but this isn’t earth, they ain't human and they won’t afford us any of the same courtesy. So we follow lead, put down anything that looks like it is gonna even consider getting up. See if you can find anything useful as well, any observations you make, note them down, remember them. It could save you in the future.”

Thats when the bad news came in. More of them, a lot more of them.

“Well shit. Someone better get on coms and see if we can get some firesupport!” He growled as he snapped his M23 open and lodged smoke grenade in place. “Allright you louts, into position. Get to cover, C team to my left. A team, to their left, stagger. B team, to my right. Make sure those pigs cover a flank each. Anything looking remotely close to firing at us, shred it.”

Hidden 8 yrs ago Post by DepressedSoviet
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DepressedSoviet A Sad Communist

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Our Violins are guns, conducting from Hell.

The cacophony of gunfire was like music to Viktor. Each shot a note, each weapon a crucial instrument in the grand orchestral battle. As dirt kicked up around them, he barely even flinched, focusing on using his shots to keep the enemy from closing in, the surrounding foliage making his chosen weapon not very useful for much else. When the order came to increase fire, Viktor's firing was less rapid-pace than the others, with his Saiga's magazines holding only 20 shells. Nonetheless, he worked to make every shell count, his magazine empty by the time the order to cease fire came around. Viktor took the opportunity to duck down behind a tree, quickly switching to a fresh magazine.

"Bezrodny, make sure your boys and girls are as fresh as can be. I want you to form a firing line to my left." Viktor heard the squad leader for second squad, Hedberg, call out to him "I don’t like putting bullets in wounded, but this isn’t earth, they ain't human and they won’t afford us any of the same courtesy. So we follow lead, put down anything that looks like it is gonna even consider getting up. See if you can find anything useful as well, any observations you make, note them down, remember them. It could save you in the future."

"Understood, sir." Viktor acknowledged, shifting his focus to the rest of C team. He signaled for them to form a firing line to the left of Hedberg, himself taking position as forward as possible, to give his weapon a bit more purpose. His hand gripped tightly around both the foregrip and the pistol grip of his weapon, finger resting above the trigger, Viktor couldn't help but feel the most at home he had in years.
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