Chapter Four – A Warning to the Prophet
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There were mourning banners in Dakar, representing many different cultures' customs. The Federation's banners were at half-mast outside the Senate building as Jamitov took his place among the remaining officials of the Santiago government facing the usual morass of reporters and behind them the sheep of the capital – government bureaucrats, their families and a leavening of tourists.
The mood was fearful and that reflected poorly on the leadership. Fortunately, there were two obvious candidates to blame and they weren't here to defend themselves. If there had been, someone might have stirred up a mob to break through the thin cordon of Federation soldiers and storm the senate building.
He could almost imagine the image, like a call-back to the French Revolution. Of course, the best part, the trampling of the media caught in the crossfire, would have to be diplomatically omitted. And the guards' firepower would make Napoleon's 'whiff of gunpowder' fade in comparison.
Still, Jamitov would rather avoid being the centre of a guillotine scene. He wouldn't have come down here from his office in Zahn if the political solution didn't demand it.
Emerging from the front doors, Dermail Catalonia went directly for the podium, a scattering of his political allies following him to join the other Ministers, Vice Ministers and military officers.
Catalonia raised his hand and a few bars of the Federation anthem rose from hidden speakers, cutting short conversations and bringing the attention towards him. "People of the Federation, ladies and gentlemen of the media," the senator greeted them in a dignified fashion. "I bring you grave news."
"As many of you have heard, a small number of mobile suits have launched a series of terrorist attacks against the Federation. Disgraceful as such actions are, they have been met with stern resolution by the leadership of the Federation. Prime Minister Santiago and Marshal Ulyanov, taking the lead in this, were on Corsica to take further measures when, perhaps aware of the intention of their meeting, the terrorists launched another cowardly attack upon the peaceful island."
"Yielding to the protests of their security, both men accepted evacuation with minimal security so that their escort could engage the terrorists in action. Alas," Catalonia gripped the podium with both hands and leant forwards. "Alas, the unarmed transport they were aboard was gunned down without mercy by the terrorists before they could be repelled." Releasing the podium, he brought his right hand up to cover his heart. "I ask a moment of silence in tribute to these brave men."
Caught up in the theatre of the moment, even the media fell silent. Jamitov let his eyes flick down to his wrist and counted the seconds. After fifty seconds, a mournful trumpet blew from a bandsman stationed to one side of the podium.
"It is incumbent upon us all to live up to the brave example of our fallen leaders," Catalonia continued. "It having been established by divers that neither the Prime Minister nor the Marshal survived the crash of their aircraft, the Senate has elected me to serve as Prime Minister of the Federation."
Cameras flashed as journalists raced to be the first to spread the word that the Federation had a new Prime Minister.
"We face today a moment of crisis such as we have not seen since the ambitions of Zeon were laid bare." The new Prime Minister rested his hands upon the podium, shoulders squared. "There are those, I am sad to say, who are plotting to bring the horrors of war back to the Earth sphere. Not content with the tremendous bloodshed of recent years, the organisation known as Karaba have followed Zeon's example and cast aside due political process -"
Jamitov's lip twitched despite his best efforts at remaining stoic in the face of this performance. Ah, the sacred cow of the Senate. Not so moving to the mob though.
"- and deployed a weapon of mass destruction against the Federation base at Lake Victoria. Even now we know they are raising an army against the Federation. This is perhaps known to many of you but we have had further reports from Sol-Earth Five, brought to the Senate's attention by General Hyman Jamitov."
Cameras swung to the focus on Jamitov, who did his best to remain calm under the attention. He had expected this, but the limelight was new to him.
"In a rare error of judgement, my predecessor felt that General Jamitov focused too much of military intelligence's resources upon the movement of the remainder of Zeon's war machine that lurk within the far corners of the solar system. Yet Karaba was not, until lately, a matter for military intelligence but for civilian agencies. And warnings that should have been heeded have, I regret to say, fallen on closed ears."
The prime minister clenched his fists. "Until now, I say. Gihren Zabi's shadow has risen again, and his adherent Aiguille Delaz has seized not one but two colony cylinders with the intention of replicating the Zabi's despicable obliteration of Sydney."
A deathly silence fell upon the crowd. Faces paled and the first sounds to break that moment's calm were the sobs of children sensitive to the mood even if they did not understand the nature of that threat.
Catalonia took a deep breath. "We have been slow to anger, a virtue of the Federation. But now we must be swift to act. Surrounded by such threats we require a decisive response, one that will safeguard our freedoms and the future that we desire for our descendants. I have, therefore, ordered the formation of a special task force charged with the destruction of Karaba, the annihilation of Delaz and the neutralisation of the weapons with which they threaten us."
"The task force will be directed by General Jamitov, who has at his command all of the resources of the Federation's military intelligence, and field command will be held by one of our finest officers, General Khrushrenada."
Jamitov stood, adjusting his uniform tunic as he walked forward to flank the podium from one side while Treize Khrushrenada occupied the other. They must make quite a contrast in the public eye, the spymaster thought to himself, under no illusions that his white hair and slightly stooped posture could match the vitality of the younger general.
"Ladies and gentlemen, to these fine officers I entrust our safety. We cannot be in better hands," Catalonia proclaimed with apparent confidence. "We shall pass through this time of trials and we shall emerge stronger and better than we have ever been."
And if a few eggs get broken, Jamitov thought, well that's how omelettes are made.
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The voyage had passed in a haze. Cima had used the small medical kit to sedate herself, knowing she would need less air while asleep. The drugs did nothing for her dreams save hamper her ability to escape them. Water was rationed ruthlessly and her head ached from dehydration as she watched the clock count away hours and days in a daze.
Six days later, hoping she was finally close enough to be detected, the major turned on the radio and set it to replay a short distress message before she took the last sedatives. Everything was now in the hands of fortune, that fickle bitch.
She was never sure when she awoke again. Voices she could have put off as coming from within her head, and she had been seeing flashes of light for a while since she drank the last of the water.
Cima's first certain recollection of rescue was of a ceiling light. Then another, and another.
After a moment her muddled thoughts focused enough to realise she was passing them, being carried past them. A straw was pushed into her mouth and she sucked automatically, sweet water drawn into her parched mouth.
She was alive!
It embarrassed her that she could not stop tears from spilling down her cheeks, either in relief or in regret that it was not over at last. No one mentioned them, at least she had that mercy.
At some point she may have passed out again, she next remembered a sponge bath, secured in what seemed to be a medical berth. The nurse wore a federation uniform, which bothered her for no reason she could place at the time. Cima was offered a bottle and eagerly sucked down the contents – more water, probably laced with medication and calories.
She slept, the ghosts unaccountably silent for the first time in forever. Perhaps they were as exhausted as she was.
"Can you answer some questions?" she was asked on waking. More water was on offer, and food – she hadn't been able to keep the ration bars down after the fourth day – so she nodded.
The questions didn't come immediately though and she was able to eat in peace. Breakfast, for all it was mid-afternoon according to the clock in the corner of the medical space.
The door slid open shortly after the tray of food was taken away and admitted two officers. A woman – brown hair, full figure, about Cima's age – wearing a captain's rank tabs and a man a few years younger with dark hair and the tabs of a lieutenant. Cima compared her own hospital gown and decided she was under-dressed for the occasion.
"Excuse me for not rising to greet you, captain," she said before they began. "I don't wish to seem ungrateful for being picked up."
"I understand it's not medically recommended." The captain took the one seat, leaving the lieutenant standing behind her. "We were in the right place at the right time. You may have used up all the luck of a lifetime though."
"It may have been hoarded for the occasion," she said. "If I may enquire, are you en route to Sol-Earth Five?"
"We should be asking the questions," the lieutenant advised sharply.
The captain gestured for him to desist. They weren't heading after the colonies, Cima decided. Why not? She would have thought the Federation would mobilise everything they had to prevent further colony drops.
"I'm Murrue Ramius, Captain of the Federation Cruiser Albion. This is my second in command, Lieutenant Noah Bright."
She hesitated and then smiled cynically. "Garahau Cima," she introduced herself. "Late of Zeon forces, one-time pirate and currently a Federation military intelligence informant." True, if not in any official capacity. "Oh, and patient."
Bright's face paled and then tightened. He opened his lips to speak, looked at his captain and remained silence. Cima was impressed at his discipline, obviously Ramius ran a tight ship.
For her part the captain seemed to simply consider the words and then nodded. "Quite the resume. Which of those left you adrift in a mobile suit?"
"The Delaz fleet." She closed her eyes, reliving the moment yet again. "They have two colonies under thrust towards Earth. When I last spoke to General Jamitov, I didn't know the targets yet."
The two officers exchanged looks. "Earth then," Ramius said quietly. "That hadn't been confirmed."
"So you do know. Then…"
"We're headed for Zeon," the captain said. "Those were our orders and, so far, they haven't been changed."
"You surprise me. I've have thought Ulyanov would throw every ship he had at the colonies, to stop them. He was something of a blunt instrument at A Baoa Qu, after all."
"You've been out of touch for a while." Ramius rose to her feet and smoothed down her skirt. "Things have changed on Earth, but I'll send word to General Jamitov immediately. Is there anything more you can tell me?"
Cima considered and then smiled. "Delaz is probably dead. I fired a rocket cannon right into his bridge and he'd been there a minute or two before."
Bright blinked. "You're not a very subtle spy."
"He'd killed my ship and everyone aboard," she said tightly. "I'm not fond of half-measures."
"Obviously not, given Halifax."
Cima glared at the lieutenant. "I think we're done."
"You said you were working with Federation military intelligence," he retorted. "Why would they ever work with you?"
"Jamitov had something I wanted and I had something to offer."
Ramius raised an eyebrow. "If he offered you a pardon, I think you may have been optimistic about your chances."
"I didn't want a pardon." Cima looked at Ramius. "I wanted a fair trial."
"I see." The captain looked at Bright and flicked her eyes towards the door. He obediently rose and exited the room. "You may get your chance at that. We'll see what the Zeon provisional government have to say. In the meantime, I'll have to keep you under guard."
Cima raised her hands and watched them tremble. "You should warn them I'm a dangerous woman. I may vomit on them."
Ramius touched her cap – not so much a salute as acknowledging the remark's accuracy, and the door slid closed.
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Duo ducked his head slightly as he passed the entrance to the Dublin naval base, grateful for the weather that gave him a ready excuse to mask his face. It was irrational at this point – there was no evidence to suggest that the Federation knew who he was. At most they might have an idea of Led Wayline's face.
But still, paranoia clawed at him.
Hiding this near to a Federation military base had seemed insane at first glance, but it seemed to be working. Once a hive of activity as the Federation contested the Atlantic against Zeon submarines from North America, Dublin's military importance had dwindled and the base had contracted.
Around it was shabby city that had expanded into the abandoned hangers and warehouses, trying to accommodate a refugee population with limited resources. Few people knew their neighbours the way Duo was used to and so close to the base, heavy trucks carrying what were obviously mobile suits didn't catch attention. A splash of paint to replace the original crimson with the Federation's typical cream and blue further reduced the chances of civilians recognising them for what they were.
Reaching the door to the building they'd laid claim to, he held the groceries with one hand while he fished for a key in his pockets. Before he could find it, the door swung open to admit him.
"Thanks," he greeted Athrun and stepped inside.
The other pilot closed the door wordlessly. "No trouble?"
"Price of fruit is up, I've no idea if that's significant or not," Duo told him, dumping the bag on the table and pulling an orange out of the top. He tossed it to Athrun and opened the refrigerator to unload the other contents. Four healthy appetites went through a lot of food. "Any news here?"
"I've just been watching the news." Peeling the orange, Athrun split the insides in half and handed one half to Duo. "Led's friend Char is with the Specials. There was footage of the unit being assembled at Panama and I saw the helmet."
"Do you think they know who he is?"
"Unless the Federation are blind and deaf, I'd expect someone knows."
"So fifty-fifty?" Duo bit into a section of orange, enjoying the tart juice. "Hmm. Panama. That would probably make contacting your friendly Federation captain a bit risky."
"She took off days ago."
He gave the other man a look. "You made contact?"
"No, but it's kind of hard to miss a ship launching from a mass driver. There are online boards from people who make a hobby of keeping track of that goes up. Too much bother for the military to shut them down except in wartime. And even then, you only need someone with binoculars within five or ten kilometres."
"Well scratch one way off the surface."
Athrun nodded. "I don't know that we'd want to go for Panama anyway. It seems like the Specials are almost taunting Karaba, basing themselves so near to North America."
"You think they're hoping Karaba will attack them?" asked Duo.
"I doubt they're counting on it, but it would be very convenient."
"If Karaba do attack, they'll use another nuclear weapon," Heero said, opening the fridge. "Otherwise they'd be badly outnumbered."
Duo almost jumped out of his skin. "Heero! When did you get here?"
The other man gave him an amused look. "Since Athrun mentioned Char. Your spatial awareness needs work."
"So you decided to give me a heart attack?"
"I'd blame the amount of soda you drink for that." Heero winked and Duo gave him a second look.
"Wait, your eyes?" Heero had blue eyes but they looked more… violet in this light. He flipped the light switch.
The other man sighed. "Yes. I'm not wearing my contact lenses."
"I didn't know you needed them in the first place."
Athrun snickered. "I don't think he needs them to see, Duo."
"There are times and places where it's best not to advertise I'm a coordinator," Heero confirmed. "I was making some calls to people who don't know Heero Yuy."
"Man." He shook his head. "First Athrun and now you. Does Wayline have another identity too?"
"Who would call their kid Led?" asked Athrun reasonably. "The Federation has lists of everyone who served with Zeon, changing his name was probably the first thing he did before he started taking mercenary work."
Duo pouted. "I feel left out. I want a false identity too."
"If they manage to ID you as one of us then you'll need one for the rest of your life," Heero pointed out. "I've started putting one together for you just in case."
"Ooh, show me, show me."
Heero pulled out his phone and fiddled around with it, then handed it to Athrun to pass to Duo. The coordinator looked at the picture on the screen and burst out laughing.
"What!" Duo grabbed hold of Athrun's wrist and dragged the phone around so he could see it. "What!" he exclaimed again in a shriller tone. "I deleted all of the photos!"
"I always have back-ups," Heero reassured him.
He groaned dramatically. "I was really drunk!" he said. "And I was behind on the laundry."
"And the make-up?"
"Hilde insisted on that before she agreed to lend him a skirt and sweater. Who do you think took the pictures?"
Athrun snickered again.
"I'm not responsible when I'm drunk!" Duo protested. He looked at the picture again. "And I made it look good, at least!"
"I'll be counting on that experience if we need to use the ID," Heero told him and retrieved the phone. "We have some decisions to make. Is Wayline awake?"
"I'll check," Duo said, hoping to escape with some dignity intact. He opened the door and saw the last member of their group walking their way, still buttoning a shirt. "Led, in here."
"Are we throwing a party?" the other man asked as he followed them in. "Because we'd need cake."
"No cake. We're on a budget." It wasn't as if they'd been carrying much money in the Gerbera Tetras. Fortunately, Heero had managed to find a bank where he could access an account he'd squirrelled away for a rainy day – and Dublin was so far nothing but rainy days – but the account wasn't bottomless.
"So, what are we deciding?" Wayline asked once they were all at the table.
Heero ran his hand through his hair, raking the fringe back. "Right now, how we move forwards. We can get off Earth, split up. Leaving the mobile suits behind would make that… easier. We have places we can go. Just draw a line under this and we're done."
Wayline nodded. "Then what is there for us to decide?"
"Whoever took out the Audhumla, I want payback," Duo noted darkly. "There's nothing in the news about the Federation shooting them down so I bet it was Barton."
"This is bigger than Barton or the Audhumla." Athrun lowered his head. "We… killed a lot of people and we enabled Karaba to kill more. That makes us responsible for some of this." He looked up. "I'm not going to make anyone go with me, but I want to try to fix my mistakes."
"How do you plan to do that?"
"I'm not sure," the young man admitted to Wayline. "Maybe follow up those contacts you used to speak to Karaba. See if we can get the nukes away from them. If we can do that then the Specials should be more than able to finish them off."
"I don't think they'll give the nukes up just because you ask nicely. And our suits aren't exactly in good supply."
"I can get fuel," Heero said quietly. "No more ammunition for the cannon but we have enough for a half-load each. Maintenance will be an issue before long, but right now we're okay."
Wayline paused. "You know the odds on this aren't in his favour. Karaba must have more than the mobile suits they used at Torrington."
Heero nodded.
"And you're going along with this… tilting at windmills?"
"Why?"
There was a long pause and then Heero sighed. "Because I knew Barton wasn't just doing some unofficial cleaning up of the Federation's dirty laundry."
"What do you mean?"
"I mean, I had pretty good idea that he was going to use us for dirty work. Not exactly how, no, but I decided it didn't matter as long as I got what I was after." His shoulders slumped. "And now we're here and it wasn't worth it. I never should have gone along with this."
"What were you after?" asked Duo. "It can't be the money."
"I was adopted as a baby." Heero rubbed his face. "But I was also made at the Garm labs, so someone – my biological parents I assume – paid for me to be created there and for some reason gave me up. Barton had dealings with them – and then the Murasame Institute gave me a shot at getting hold of Ulen Hibiki's files. He worked at Garm at just the right time."
Duo reached over and patted his shoulder. "You didn't know it would be like this, buddy. It's not your fault."
"I knew enough."
Athrun cleared his throat. "What were Barton's dealings with Garm?"
Heero blinked. "Oh. He was pro-Coordinator before it became such a hot-button issue. The Barton Foundation was one of the Institute's early backers. He backed off when he got serious about politics but if you know where to look, his wife visited there twice, both times when she was pregnant."
"Trowa Barton was a coordinator?" asked Wayline.
"It's not always obvious," Athrun told him. "A lot of parents just screen for hereditary conditions and the like."
Wayline pinched his brow. "So you two… and I assume Maxwell too, since you follow Yuy around like an annoying kid brother."
They all looked over at Duo and Heero gave him a rueful look. "This isn't what you signed up for, Duo."
"No… you know, it kind of is. Barton's crap wasn't but… I don't want those nukes out there anymore than you do. Count me in."
Wayline groaned. "When did I become the voice of reason?"
"War does strange things to you, Ridden."
The oldest of them gave Heero a dark look. "How?"
He shrugged apologetically. "You were on Zeon recruiting posters back in the day. When I started thinking in terms of disguising you, the face matched. It wasn't hard to guess the rest."
"It's like no one around here is who they say they are," Duo complained.
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To Cima's surprise she wasn't put in a cell once the onboard surgeon certified that she was no longer in need of constant medical care. The guards remained but she was simply moved to a small cabin. During the ship's night cycle, she was even allowed access to the tiny onboard gym. Presumably Ramius was intent on delivering her to Zeon in the best of possible conditions.
At least the gym gave her something to do. Something to focus on. In her cabin she only had the sounds of the ship. It was larger than the Hizack's cockpit but not huge by any measure.
The warning to prepare for zero gravity and docking manoeuvres dragged her out of reliving the destruction of the Megiddo and the Vengeance. Strapping down, she waited out the familiar changes in what her gravity-evolved brain insisted was up and down despite the irrelevance of such terms in space.
Once it was over and another general message confirmed that the Albion was docked, Cima opened the small closet and considered her small choice of wardrobe. Well, it wasn't much choice. Her pilot suit and what she'd been wearing under it hadn't been returned – in fact, she suspected they'd be disposed of as biological hazards after what she'd put them through.
That reduced the choice to nudity or a Federation military issue skirt, boots and tunic – rankless, of course. She felt vaguely insulted that the Albion apparently didn't have prison jumpsuits to offer her. If she wasn't guarded, she could probably have walked off the ship and no one would be able to tell at first glance she was an escaped prisoner.
Admittedly she'd have no paperwork and the first step would be hard to carry out without raising alarms but…
She dressed herself and waited.
And waited.
Cima was contemplating trying to sleep, ghosts or not, when there was a knock on the door. "Major Cima, are you decent?"
It took a moment for her to realise it was Lieutenant Bright. "Close enough."
He opened the door, blinked and then stepped back. "Come with me, please."
"Throwing me off the ship?" she asked lightly as she followed him, the guard falling in behind her.
"Not so far." Bright led her down a deck, his voice not giving her any hint whether he was happy or not about the answer he'd give her. He indicated a door. "In here, please."
"You're very polite, given our first meeting."
"Would you rather I slapped you around?" he asked sarcastically. "The Federation expects me to be both an officer and a gentleman. Did Zeon have similar expectations of you?"
She opened the door, aware that whoever was inside would hear her answer. "Lieutenant, I am far from being a gentleman."
There was a small table inside and two Federation officers. One was familiar – Captain Ramius – and the other was a lieutenant although as Cima entered and took the obvious seat the dynamic puzzled her. The place Ramius was sat, the way she looked for the lieutenant to begin the conversation… it was deferential, as if the ranks were reversed.
"Ms. Cima." The lieutenant gave her a measuring look and then squared the documents she'd been studying. The photo on the front page was readily recognisable to Cima as the shot of her used on her military identification back in the war so the content of the papers was easy to guess at.
"Major Cima."
The woman made a slight gesture, perhaps regretful. "If you prefer. My understanding is you no longer consider yourself part of Zeon's armed forces."
"Such as they are, no. But it's the last rank I held."
"Formally speaking, all commissions within the Zeon armed forces were revoked by the provisional government under the terms of surrender." The lieutenant shrugged slightly. "Preferences vary on the part of former officers as to whether they use the ranks socially."
"We're not here to talk about common courtesy, are we?" She paused. "Whoever you are."
"My apologies." The lieutenant drew herself up. "I'm Lieutenant Relena Mass, the provisional governor's military attaché."
"Major Garahau Cima. Pirate and informant."
"Yes." The lieutenant glanced sideways at Ramius, "An enquiry has been sent regarding the latter?"
The captain nodded. "We've had no response as yet. General Jamitov's office is presumably rather busy at the moment."
"Hmm. Although this would seem pertinent to the Specials' particular mission."
Cima arched an eyebrow. "The Specials?"
"In light of Admiral Delaz' actions, along with several other anti-Federation activities of late, General Jamitov has been assigned a special task force with a great deal of discretion as to their actions." Mass frowned and shook her head. "A final decision over whether you should receive the re-trial you've requested will wait on an answer."
"You mean on what orders the Governor receives."
Mass gave her an amused look. "My understanding is that you were tried in absentia. While I'm not a lawyer by profession, that is one circumstance under Federation law where a retrial can be carried out, since you've not previously had the chance to defend yourself. The question, of course, is whether that would change the verdict."
Ramius cleared her throat. "Do you have any fresh evidence to present?" She seemed genuinely curious. "There doesn't seem to be any question that you were there and that you deployed the gas."
"The records I wished to present were aboard the Megiddo," Cima admitted, her stomach churning. "I sent copies to Jamitov. Failing that, documents were submitted for the original trial but never presented."
"Oh?"
"My orders and the recordings from my mobile suit."
The other two women exchanged looks. "You kept them?" asked Mass curiously. "That's very meticulous."
"No. I was able to obtain access to the official records of the war crimes tribunal."
The lieutenant pursed her lips. "And these would show…?"
"That I ordered the gassing of the port, not the colony as a whole. And that the orders I was given never specified that the gas I was issued was nerve gas."
"And yet the gas was released into the colony." Mass pointed out quietly.
"I'm fully aware," snapped Cima and then restrained herself. "The port was separated from the main colony by airlocks. After I released the gas someone inside the port opened the airlocks at both ends."
"And this would be proven?"
She cast her mind back. "The separation is evident – all colonies are laid out like that. The gas was on both sides of that barrier, so either I deliberately fed it in on both sides – and my records will show I didn't – or someone opened the airlocks."
Mass nodded thoughtfully. "The militia commander on Halifax colony was General Septim," she acknowledged. "Currently in charge of California base and one of the three senior commanders of the North American occupation force."
Ramius winced. "A retrial that passed the responsibility to him would be… incendiary. Particularly now." She gave Mass a questioning look. "Do you…"
The lieutenant exhaled. "I'll request a copy of the official record. Beyond that, I'm not sure."
"It's up to Artesia Som Deikun, then." Cima made a face. "A woman who spent most of her life in exile and only returned to Zeon in order to surrender it to the Federation."
"That's basically true." Mass agreed after a moment.
"I've never heard that anyone made her do that." Cima gave the lieutenant a resigned smile. "She could have done nothing and a lot more people on both sides would have died. There are worse people whose hands I could be putting my fate into."
{MSG AC/CE/UC}
"As crazy as this plan is, it actually seems to be working," Ridden admitted as he leant over the side of the freighter and looked at the warm Caribbean waters.
"It's all a matter of letting people see what they expect to see," Duo replied in a low voice. It would be a bit awkward if the ship's crew overheard them. "Everyone knows that the Federation is concentrating its best people and equipment in the Specials. And it's no secret that the Specials are at Panama."
"Yes, but…" Ridden tried to reach for words. "Didn't anyone check?"
"Check with whom?" he grinned at the man. "Most people don't have direct channels to high level government officials. If it looks genuine, why would they doubt it?"
The crew of the ship, in a fit of patriotism that might be somewhat influenced by the desire to not have an entire space colony dropped into the Atlantic, triggering tsunamis like those that had devastated the Pacific four years ago, had made it clear that they were extremely supportive of the mission to deliver four advanced mobile suits to Panama.
All it had taken was some official looking documentation, four Federation uniforms and a healthy advance on the transportation bill. Admittedly the shipping company would probably have trouble claiming the remaining payment, but that was what insurance was for. By the time it was an issue, the four and their mobile suits intended to be well away from the ship and… well, what was the Federation going to do? Order a second manhunt for them besides the one that was already underway?
"Major Ridley!" a shout came from the superstructure.
Ridden blinked and then turned, recalling the identity on his papers. Duo followed suite and saw the captain of the freighter standing outside the bridge, waving furiously.
"If this blows up in our faces, I'm blaming you," the Zeon veteran murmured and then strode towards the back of the ship. "Yes, captain. Is something wrong?"
The man scrambled down the ladder to the main deck. "I am sorry to disturb your tete-a-tete with the young ensign -"
Duo flushed and smoothed the uniform skirt he was wearing. Heero had just had to go with the female false identity for him. Vengeance would be deferred but all the sweeter for it.
"- but there is terrible news on the radio."
"Calm down, Captain, and tell me what you have heard."
"It is the Karaba!" the man announced. "They are attacking California Base, in great force. It is said that the Federation forces have been handed a terrible defeat!"
Duo's eyes widened. California was thousands of miles away, the wrong side of the continent. The Gerbera Tetras had a decent range but not that great.
"I see." Ridden rubbed his chin. "And we are here, unable to assist. I imagine General Khrushrenada will respond directly… Do you have any details?"
The captain shook his head. "Only what has been passed on from coast guard to coast guard."
"I believe… Captain, may we look at your charts?"
"Of course!"
Ridden and Duo were quickly joined in the freighter's navigation space by the other two, both also wearing Federation uniforms. "We're here," Ridden noted, tapping the strait between Florida and Cuba. "We could fly ashore easily but we don't have the fuel to reach Panama or California. General Khrushrenada will probably move send a response force by air but he likely won't have anything to spare for us."
"Could you not refuel at a military base?" the captain asked nervously.
"Normally, yes. But now all the Federation forces will be on guard for attacks on them and reserving fuel for their own operations…"
Athrun looked at the map. "There must be a way."
Heero grimaced. "Unfortunately, sometimes there isn't one."
"Wait!" The coordinator suddenly tapped a marking on the map. "Cape Canaveral."
"…what about it?"
"They build solid fuel boosters there – I read about it. Ships launching from the mass drivers sometimes need extra boost to reach orbit."
"So?"
"Well, if we were to strap one to each of our mobile suits…"
"Are you joking?"
"We'd have to work around the current flight packs but the mountings aren't too difficult," the young man said with increasing excitement. "We'd have to talk to the firm but if they have four ready…"
Ridden gave him a look. "You want to launch our suits like improvised ballistic missiles across the continent?"
"Karaba have to be aware that the Federation will respond. This is a trap, one the Specials have no choice but to spring." Athrun stared Ridden in the eye. "This is the only way we can do anything about it."
Heero nodded thoughtfully. "It's mechanically feasible."
"I can't believe I'm going along with this," Ridden said with a groan. "Captain, we'll need to launch our mobile suits – can your ship take that?"
"Of course! She is as sturdy as the Rock of Gibraltar itself!"
"Alright. Ensigns, get your suits ready. Let's hope Canaveral have some boosters we can commandeer."
{MSG AC/CE/UC}
It was easy to forget sometimes, in a war of mobile suits and weapons of mass destruction, that there were other ways to fight a war.
That thought was foremost in Zechs' mind as three Gaw air transports flew north towards California Base. There were twenty-seven more of them on the ground at Panama but someone had smashed valves at the aviation gas fuel farm and a large portion of the facility had gone up in flames as the Specials prepared to launch forth to deal with the attack.
The storage itself wasn't in that much danger, but it was inaccessible until the fires were out, so the only aviation fuel available had been what was already in aircraft or in stray drums. Consolidated it was just enough for three mobile suit transports to make the trip north.
Waiting was unacceptable, so Treize Khrushrenada had ordered two squadrons and his own command team aboard the transports. The Specials might not be able to engage in battle in the numbers expected… but they would be going.
"Twelve mobile suits is a decent number," Emma said optimistically as they sat in their mobile suits, waiting for the transports to reach California. "And we've got quality on our side – Long Daggers and the General's prototypes against old Zeon hardware."
"Don't take the Doms too lightly," Zechs warned. "They're ground type specialists and we'll have to take the fight to them down on the ground while we're using flight packs."
Jerid chuckled. "You're not saying they'll be as bad as those red suits, are you?"
"I wouldn't think so," said Noin. "As a rule of thumb, anyone who paints their suit red is probably good. Otherwise they'd not have lasted long with such an obvious paint scheme."
"It also cuts down on friendly fire. When you're picking your targets by mark one eyeball, obvious colour differences help make sure you're shooting at the enemy and not an ally."
"I guess that makes sense," Jerid conceded. "Maybe the Specials need their own colours."
"I think the General has more to worry about than what colour our 'Mechs are," the Captain told him.
Zechs grinned. "It might appeal to him, actually. The heraldry of a knight of the skies… He admires that sort of thing."
"I wasn't aware you knew him." Emma sounded intrigued. "You have hidden depths, Zechs."
You have no idea. "We're acquainted from before the war. I was surprised to cross his path again when I came back from Zeon, but it seems to have worked out."
"And do you think the same way about… honourable warfare between knights in mobile suits?"
"There's nothing honourable about war," he told her flatly. "The general is an idealist, but war has a way of staining ideals."
Jerid's voice was aggrieved. "Well you're a regular ray of sunshine. Why did you let that other pilot go then?"
Zechs considered the answer and went for the truth. "My pride got the better of me. He probably saved my life, taking the brunt of the crash. Now I've repaid the debt and I can kill him with a clear conscience." Or as near to clean as mine gets.
There was a brief silence before the younger man observed: "Did you ever get any the-"
He was cut off by a brief surge of static over the radio and then Treize Khrushrenada's voice. "My fellow soldiers, we're now approaching the launch point. Our last intelligence is that between ten and thirty hostile mobile suits are still active. General Septim's final report before his command post was overrun indicated further forces were north of the base."
Zechs took liberty to doubt that Septim's final report had been anything but begging and pleading for someone to save him from the enemy, but possibly someone else in the post had relayed useful information.
"The last known location of garrison forces was dug in around the main arsenal. General Jamitov has predicted that Karaba have one of two possible plans: seize the arsenal so they can further expand their forces – or lure the Specials into a trap and destroy us with one of their nuclear weapons."
"Ladies and gentlemen, we did not accept this mission because it would be easy. We chose to shoulder it because it was difficult, dangerous and demanded the very best of the Federation's soldiers. And that therefore we were the only ones who could bear its weight. If the leaders of Karaba believe that we will fail due to some coward pressing a button in a bunker then they are sadly mistaken."
"But if any of you feel at this late moment that you cannot follow me into battle, pray take yourselves south as soon as we are launched. You will be returned to your previous unit with no further statement than this: that you are not one of us. That your only crime, that your only punishment."
There was a pause and then another voice cut in. "All mobile suits, we are five miles out. Launching one!"
There was a rumble and the rear hatch of the transport dropped open. Explosive bolts sounded and suddenly Lucrezia Noin's Long Dagger was no longer behind Zechs' – or rather it was, but from outside the transport and somewhat below.
"Launching two!"
More bolts burst and Zechs was out in the air. He feathered his thrusters to stabilise and then dove after Noin. Cut off from the transport he could not hear the launch commands as first Jerid and then Emma were pushed out and into the air after him.
Their mission complete, the three transports turned and made for their landing zone. They had no fuel to reach anywhere else so they'd be putting down on a highway only a few miles from the base. If all went well then fuel tanks would arrive eventually. If not… well, that wasn't Zechs' problem.
Casually he glanced right. All four of Noin's squadron were flying north. Treize Khrushrenada was to their right, his white and blue suit sporting a high crest on top of its sensor head. Two of the mobile suits with him brought back ugly memories for Zechs – the Duel and the Strike, rebuilt using some of the same components but further advanced over the machines flown by the White Devil during the Zeon War. The last of Treize's command group needed a Base Jabber to stay in the air – a ground combat suit that the general had high hopes for. Beyond them he could make out the contrails of four more suits.
No one had accepted the invitation to turn back. Well honestly, he would have been surprised. Treize hadn't picked the pilots going along out of a hat, after all.
California base was a vast expanse of buildings, roads and runways, stretching from the piers at the coast deep in land. He'd been here before, seen Zeon banners fluttering in the air above the command centre.
Now smoke poured up from tanks, mobile suits and turrets. From this height he couldn't guess which were Federation and which Karaba, but the armoury citadel was obvious enough – it was the only place where weapons fire was still being exchanged.
"Follow me!" Treize roared and threw his mobile suit – the Tallgeese – into a dive. The twin thrusters on its back blazed to even greater fury as he left his escort behind, diving down into battle with the long-barrelled beam cannon firing dangerously fast.
Zechs could imagine the strain that Treize must be feeling – he'd pushed suits to their limits before himself. Unfortunately, the Long Dagger he was in had lower limits than the Tallgeese. And besides which, his duty now was to follow Captain Noin.
"Three Doms coming in on the arsenal from the west," she shrieked like a valkyrie as she led them into a similar dive. "Take them!"
They dropped on them, the ex-Zeon suits skimming the ground on their leg thrusters and avoiding their fire with surprising ease. They fired back with their machine cannon but their own evasive turns made it hard for them to fight back.
Zechs judged his angle and then jettisoned his jet pack. One of the Doms had leant back to spray particle beams across his trajectory with its torso mounted scatter gun but his sudden descent avoided the fire, while the jet pack veered off up and would doubtless come down somewhere. Drawing a beam sabre, Zechs lunged at the enemy mobile suit which responded with its heat sabre – a critical error for the pilot. Zechs didn't even change the course of his attack, the contained high energy particles of the beam sabre tearing through the heat sabre and then deep into the Dom's chest. It reeled drunkenly and then fell.
Looking around he saw Emma and Jerid had taken down a second Dom with their combined beam rifle fire but Noin and the third were out of sight. Then the last of the ground type suits swept out from behind a building, struggling fiercely. Somehow Noin had managed to catch its arms, dragging them up while she braced her Long Dagger's feet against the Dom's back.
Zechs would have bet on the arms breaking under the punishment and he was right but not as he expected. Noin rotated her thrust pack's thrust directly down and heaved the Dom completely off the ground. Clearly panicking, the Dom pilot let his suit's legs flail widely and Noin banked, letting the centrifugal force mount. Both arms parted at once and the massive Dom crashed headlong into a barracks building.
"That was innovative," he conceded. "I didn't see any other Doms this side of the citadel, should we -"
"Hello the Specials!" a voice cut in.
"Who is that?" Jerid exclaimed, having to shout to be heard.
"As you may have guessed, we've been expecting you. Welcome to North America, I've prepared a warm welcome for you," the man continued.
"That's impossible," Zechs murmured. It couldn't be – it just couldn't be who it sounded like.
"He's flooding every frequency," Noin shouted, not hearing what Zechs had said. "He must have taken part of the base communications centre over."
"To be honest, I wasn't going to make a speech… I was even lukewarm about using a nuclear weapon on American soil."
"Scatter," shouted Zechs. "Get for cover – he can't blanket the entire base!"
"But you brought an old friend of mine and I couldn't resist the chance to repay everything he ever did to me. Char, if you can hear me, blame this on your unfortunate origin."
Looking to the north, Zechs saw – or imagined he saw – the dart-like shapes of nuclear missiles plunging towards California Base. Towards him.
"Garma," he murmured, smiling despite himself in sincere admiration. "May you find more joy in revenge than I did!"
{MSG AC/CE/UC}
For the life of him, Duo wasn't sure if the engineers at Cape Canaveral believed the cock-and-bull story Ridden told them about commandeering their equipment, didn't want to argue with the crazy man who'd brought mobile suits into their factory or were genuinely fascinated by the technical challenge presented to them in improvising rocket packs for four mobile suits in under an hour.
For that matter, he didn't really care.
North America was flashing beneath him and his life was doing the same before his eyes. His controls were going crazy, unable to process that they were moving faster than they were designed to cope with. The pilots had to operate by instinct, steering – to the extent it was possible – with their internal thrusters, while crushed under brutal acceleration.
It took them minutes to cross the Mississippi basin and then the Rockies reared up ahead of them.
The acceleration tapered off and the four suits streaked over the mountains, boosters running towards empty, Duo whooping and cheering in excitement the entire way.
"This isn't a roller coaster!" Athrun called. "Pay attention!"
"I am! I don't want to miss a second of this!"
"There are a lot of Minovsky particles ahead," Ridden warned. "We might be too late."
"They haven't used a nuke yet, we're not too late," Heero corrected him calmly. "But keep an eye out."
Deserts rolled below them, wind howling against the suits. The booster rockets, finally exhausted, ejected and fell away into the wastelands below. Ahead of them a glitter on the horizon marked the first sight of the Pacific Ocean.
"California Base is… just a hair left of centre," reported Athrun, checking his instruments. "We're almost exactly on target. Which…" He paused. "Given the stress readings on my suit, it's probably a good thing. I don't think I have a lot of mileage left."
Duo glanced at his own diagnostics and conceded the other pilot was probably right. "They've got one more fight in them, though."
"I hope so, because we're…" Ridden's words were suddenly cut off by another voice.
"…prepared a warm welcome for you. To be honest, I wasn't going to make a speech…"
"Who is that?" Duo asked.
"…I was even lukewarm about using a nuclear weapon on American soil," the voice continued.
"Question retracted, he's a crazy person."
"He must have launched, we have to intercept," Athrun shouted, his Gerbera Tetra twisting in the air as he looked for the predicted missile.
"But you brought an old friend of mine…"
"It could be coming from anywhere," Ridden declared, taking charge. "Cover each cardinal direction. I have south."
"…and I couldn't resist the chance to repay everything he ever did to me."
"West," Duo shouted, turning to engage as Heero spun his suit to look behind them and Athrun pulled as sharp a right turn as he could at these speeds.
"Char, if you can hear me, blame this on your unfortunate origin."
Duo saw the movement out of the corner of his eye, "North! Two of them!" he shrieked, spinning the Gerbera Tetra and bringing his beam machinegun up.
His fire was too slow – he couldn't believe how fast the missile was going, it must be faster than even their transcontinental flight.
Athrun's fire was more accurate and one of the missiles fell out of the sky in two portions.
Without words they switched fire to the second missile, almost on top of them.
From behind them a beam rifle pulse tore the missile apart down its length.
The two turned and saw Heero's suit hanging in the sky, beam rifle outstretched towards the target.
"You got it!"
{MSG AC/CE/UC}
His Long Dagger still stood on the ground, Zechs Merquise… among the other names he'd used over the years… stared up at the sky.
"Where was the earth-shattering kaboom?" Jerid asked, almost babbling in relief. "There was supposed to be an earth-shattering kaboom."
"I think we're better off without the earth-shattering kabooms, Jerid." Emma seemed almost equally shocked. The two Ensigns had both been promoted to Lieutenant after Lake Victoria – there was a lot of that going around with officers who joined the Specials.
"You're not going to believe who just saved us," Zechs said quietly.
"Never mind that now." Noin fired up her thrusters and took off. "We'll regroup on the general's position."
"Do you need a hand?" Jerid asked as his mobile suit took off.
"I'll catch up," Zechs told him and began to run his mobile suit through the debris of the battered base. He wasn't entirely without thrusters so he could still negotiate obstacles easily and crossed the distance within a few minutes.
Even so, he missed what remained of the fight – the streets around the armoury were littered with Doms and Strike Daggers, some of the latter in the same brown and tan camouflage as the Doms. Presumably they had been subverted to the service of Karaba at some point. Garma had clear been busy.
Two Long Daggers were flanking the Tallgeese as he arrived and they turned their beam rifles towards him as he entered the area.
"I wasn't aware losing my flight pack was an executable offense," he offered, now on the familiar ground of trying to persuade someone not to shoot him.
Treize waved his mobile suit's arm, signalling for the pilots to lower their weapons. "It seems we have some unlooked-for assistance, Zechs."
"Yes sir. It seems the raiders have had a change of heart – and of livery."
"Imitation is the sincerest form of flattery," Treize told him, resplendent in Federation colours. "Did you see which way they went?"
"North – backtracking the missiles."
"How can you trust him?" asked the pilot of the Calamity. She seemed more curious than accusing. "If he's really Char Aznable then he killed hundreds of Federation soldiers just in the Battle of Loum alone."
"He also saved thousands more when he killed Kycilla Zabi at A Baoa Qu," the general pointed out. "You're sure she's dead, right Zechs?"
"I was fairly sure her brother was dead too," he said ruefully. "I pulled the trigger personally on Kycilla though. Unless she had a body double or could survive having her head blown off, she shouldn't have survived."
"I must give him credit for persistence I suppose." The general turned his mobile suit to face north. "In person, by preference. Dorothy, lend Zechs your Base Jabber."
"Yes sir," she said in a disappointed voice. The automated aircraft descended from its holding pattern towards an unobstructed runway and touched down. "Handing over control protocols."
Zechs saw the relevant controls light up on his own controls and locked them down automatically. "I have them."
"Captain Noin, your squadron will escort me. The rest of you commence search and rescue. It's possible we didn't catch all the mobile suits and there are sure to be many wounded soldiers waiting for assurance we've secured the base."
There was a brief chorus of obedient "Yes sirs," as Zechs crossed to the Base Jabber and had his Long Dagger climb onto its flat dorsal surface. Locking the mobile suit into place he spooled up the engines and the aircraft accelerated down the runway. For a moment he thought that he'd run out of distance but at the last moment it lumbered up into the air.
Banking he saw the Tallgeese flying northwards, three Long Daggers of his squadron flying alongside the General. As he closed in, they shifted to a V-formation to the Tallgeese's left, letting him occupy the right flank with the relatively clumsy Base Jabber. And drawing a line between them.
"You're really Char Aznable?" asked Emma curiously. "And that was Garma Zabi on the radio?"
"The real Char died years ago." How long had it been since he even thought about poor innocent Char? Almost as long as the young man had been dead, really. One more victim of the Zabi family, although he wasn't entirely blameless himself for using the man as a decoy. "It's a long story, but I took his name and place in the Zeon Defence Academy. As for Garma, it certainly sounded like him."
They cleared the edge of the base and swept over the dusty landscape of southern California.
"How much of what you said to us was true?" Jerid challenged.
"Would you believe anything I told you at this point?" He could imagine the other man's face twisting in frustration.
"No, I don't. You're an enigma wrapped in lies. Whose side are you on?"
"First you say that you don't believe me, then you keep asking questions."
"Stop teasing him, Zechs," ordered Noin testily. "And Jerid, stop falling for his bait."
"But how can we trust him?"
"We can't," she said without hesitation and something twisted inside of Zechs. "And interrogating him won't change that."
Emma cleared his throat. "Char. Or Zechs, whatever. If you're alive… what happened at A Baoa Qu? Did you kill Kira Yamato?"
His mind lunged back to that time, the climactic battle of the Zeon War ranging around the two of them as they each sought to bring their enmity to a close. "I tried, but no. Neither of us could kill the other. Whatever strange fate bound us, it didn't end there. It hasn't reached its end yet."
Jerid snorted. "Can you believe this crap?"
"Lieutenant." Treize brought him to silence with but that word. "We've found our prey."
Down below them a land battleship – an old Zeon unit – lay stricken in a gully. Four mobile suits, white-limbed with blue torsos, stood around it but Char could see by their lines they were no Federation suits.
Other units – hovercycles, trucks and wheeled armour personnel carriers had been scattered around them like broken toys. Bodies too were amongst them.
Three of the mobile suits were at rest, beam machine guns held casually. Only one was on guard and that had its gun pointed towards the ship, muzzle no more than a metre from the glass of the battleships command deck.
"Magnificent," Treize said admiringly. "Come on. We can't miss the final act."
None of the suits shifted as the Long Daggers came to rest. Zechs set the Base Jabber to circle and jumped down to join them, forming a loose perimeter around the Tallgeese.
"May I ask your intentions?" the general asked genially, as if those present weren't in the deadliest fighting machines mankind had thus far devised.
One of the three that were at ease stirred and the cockpit hatch opened. The pilot stuck his head out. "We came here to stop Karaba," he called out.
"And you have clearly done so," Treize noted. "Is that the end of your intentions?"
The mobile suit confronting the battleship lowered its gun. "Which of you is Char?" Without waiting for an answer, it faced towards Zechs' Long Dagger and pointed towards the battleship. "This is for you to finish."
One of the other suits shifted as if to move but then stood back. Ridden's suit perhaps?
Moving forward with his Long Dagger, Zechs crouched slightly to look into the landship's bridge.
At first, he thought it was abandoned, although largely intact. Then he saw that though most of the stations were vacant, the thronelike commander's chair was occupied.
Garma Zabi stared defiantly out at him with half a face. In his arms a blonde woman rested her head against his shoulder but the arm that he used to hold her was metal and plastic. One eye was the same violet that Zechs remembered, the other was as artificial as the plastic around it.
Once Garma had been the most handsome of Degwin Zabi's children, nearly worshipped by masses. Now he was a frankensteinian creation, part man and part machine.
Zechs swallowed.
Garma's lips moved, shaping words that Zechs couldn't hear.
The woman in his arms turned and looked out at the face of his Long Dagger then turned away contemptuously. Icelina Eschonbach, he remembered her now. Garma had loved her and she him. Degwin, far away in Zeon, might have approved the match for the political advantage of his son marrying an Earthnoid, but the girl's father had been a stalwart opponent of the Zeon occupation.
He straightened his mobile suit, unable to face them anymore. "What do you expect of me? To arrest them?"
Treize opened his cockpit and stepped out onto the hatch, the wind catching the cloak he'd added to the normal Federation uniform and ruffling his hair. It should have made him look ridiculous but instead he was somehow majestic, like a figure out of history.
"Let us not make martyrs of them in court, Zechs. They sought the judgement of battle and have received it. You know the fate that befits a fallen soldier."
"I'm not your executioner."
"Finish what you started," Treize told him sharply.
Zechs looked again at the command deck, then at the suit that had menaced it earlier. Why had they left Garma alive, like this? Had they been waiting for him? They couldn't have known he would be coming, no one had. His hands trembled upon the controls.
Was this why I found no satisfaction in Garma's death? he wondered. Did I somehow know he wasn't truly gone?
"Why not you?" he croaked.
The other mobile suit didn't answer for a moment but then, through its external speakers, the pilot spoke. "I found another couple like that once. I couldn't kill them either."
"Merciful of you."
"Oh, would you stop talking about it!" Jerid exclaimed and brought his beam rifle up.
His shot struck the command deck squarely in the centre, blasting a hole from front to back. The commander's seat and its occupants were vaporised in an instant.
"Lieutenant!" Noin shouted.
"What? Someone had to do it. Just get it over with! God!"
"It's fine, captain." Treize turned and re-entered his cockpit. The hatch closed and a moment later the Tallgeese came alive once more. "If you gentlemen are minded to do battle with the Specials, we can do it another time. For now, it would be ungrateful of me not to at least offer you the bare hospitality of California Base."
The one suit that hadn't reacted yet turned to Noin and asked: "Is he for real?"
"Don't look at me." She sounded just as lost. "I just work here."
"Well, why not. It's a free lunch. And between you and me, it's been a long time since breakfast."
Zechs called in the Base Jabber for a pick-up. It was trickier when it couldn't land but there were grips on the underside.
"So, just out of interest," the pilot continued. "Why doesn't he have a flight pack? Is that Jabber like training wheels or something?"
He gritted his teeth. "No, it is not."
"I like him," Jerid decided, although for a mercy, he said it on their squadron's radio channel and not out loud.
Emma snorted. "He may start on you next, Jerid."
"Even so!"
They took off, an understandably ragged formation due to differing flight characteristic. Both sides, Zechs noted from the distance of the Base Jabber, kept their weapons pointed at the ground and their sensors sweeping in case one of the other mobile suits chose to break the sudden and unexpected truce.
"So, do you have names?" the pilot asked on the general band. "I know he's Char." The suit waved at Zechs. "But what about the rest of you? Or should I just call you Snippy, Grumpy and Sleepy?"
"Which is which?" Jerid asked in a tone of dreadful fascination.
"Well she's Grumpy, because, you heard her." The suit pointed at Noin. "And you're Snippy because of, you know, sniping."
"But why am I Sleepy?" Emma asked.
"Oh my god! She's awake!"
"This is the crack team that's had the Federation trembling?" Noin asked Zechs on a private channel.
He nodded to himself. "We should be ashamed."