Chapter Thirty-Three - Long Road Ahead
Chapter Thirty-Three - Long Road Ahead
There have been proposals over the years for a comprehensive defensive strategy. Something that would keep Earth entirely secure, no matter the size or scope of an invasion.
The issue is always the same though; who would foot the bill?
--Quote from, Ongoing Threat, 2051
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I kicked a model threes corpse in the head, and with the added boost from my armour, sent it flopping back to the edge of the road. Think well have to deal with more of them? I asked.
The convoy was rolling on behind us, surprisingly quiet, actually.
Maybe, Grasshopper said. But theres always more xenos out there. Even in this forest... I dont envy those who will eventually clear it out.
I winced. Yeah, someone would have to go tree-by-tree, checking every inch of the place for any missing chunks of antithesis stuff, just on the off chance the fuckers rooted themselves down and started a fresh hive here.
Were going to need to do that everywhere, arent we? I asked. If the incursion was world-wide, then even after clearing all the current hives, wed have to canvas the entire damned planet.
Seems like it, yes, Grasshopper said. I dont know what that will mean for the future, but maybe it will be for the best. Well have a chance to root out every last foothold they have on our world.
Yeah, I said. I wasnt quite as optimistic as she was.
I kept an eye out on the trees and brush around us, but nothing showed up to try and eat our faces. Even as we reached the very end of the forest, I could feel my heart thundering away as I fully expected something to jump out at me.
It never happened though.
Want to pick a side, or should we both stand on the same one? Grasshopper asked.
Huh? Oh, of the convoy? Uh, splitting up is probably safer, I said.
Grasshopper nodded, then moved to the side. See you in twelve minutes, she said.
I snorted and found a spot of my own on the edge of the road. We both stopped just a few metres from the edge of the woods where the trees grew a little more sparse. I raised my gun to my shoulder, but left it pointing at the ground.
That was something, I said.
It was a good experience, I think.
I guess, I said. Hard to say how often Im going to have to do something like this. Doing a lot of new things lately.
A Vanguards life is rarely stagnant.
She shook her head. I dont mind. Though I have to admit Im not too comfortable with close physical contact.
Oh, I said. Uh, we can buy some blankets or something, if you want?
She giggled. No, its fine. Uncomfortable doesnt mean allergic to.
Right.
My bike spun around and came to a gentle landing right next to me, so I hopped onto it, then scooted forwards so that Grasshopper could get on. She did, though I immediately realized that she was going to make flying awkward. Her gear had to weigh a lot, despite being all spindly and weird.
I moved just a bit faster than the convoy, mostly so that Grasshopper wouldnt be nervous, and because it gave us a good opportunity to see what kind of shape the convoy was in from above.
We did pretty well there, Grasshopper said.
Yeah, I think so, I replied. Any obstacles between here and the city? I started to lower us down with a press of a pedal, then winced when the bikes autopilot kicked on and stopped me from dropping too fast. Hopefully Grasshopper didnt notice that, or shed get to point out that her accident statistics were spot-on.
Only the strange boredom.
The what? My hover bikes legs deployed as I landed us on the roof of the mobile base with a solid thump. I wondered what the guys inside the base were thinking about all of this. Probably some pretty horrific shit if they saw us wiping out a wave right in front of them.
Grasshopper climbed off my bike, then stretched as though it had taken us an hour to get there. The strange boredom, where theres nothing to do, but plenty to look out for. We should be in light orange to green from here until the outskirts, but we still need to be on the lookout for trouble.
I nodded along, then moved to the front of the base. I sat myself down next to an antenna thing and just let my legs dangle off the front. No reason to be bored and uncomfortable, I said.
Grasshopper hummed in agreement as she moved over to that huge gun shed been using earlier. I suppose not. She laid herself down behind it and pressed one of the big eyes of her helmet right up against the scope. Nothing but clear skies ahead.
She was right. The mobile base and the entire convoy moved on towards New Montreal with barely a hitch. We had to squeeze past a few cars that had been abandoned on the road, but Grasshopper was able to connect to the cars systems, boot them up, and drive them into the ditch. Turns out theyd just stopped working because the local internet network glitched out.
A little ways closer to the city, and I could see why. A small town was on fire. Or had been, at least.
It was one of those stop-over places. Just a few hundred homes and a big four-way intersection with one of each fast-food chain and some gas stations. Smoke still rose out of the shell of homes, and one of the stations was covered in whitish fire suppressant foam, likely dropped on it from above.
Not one person was out and about, and some of the homes we passed had boarded up windows and doors. Freshly done, if I were to guess. Didnt know if that would even slow looters down. If I was looking to loot someones place, Id go for the homes with lots of security. They probably had more shit worth the trouble.
And then, maybe an hour after we left the very edge of the forest, the convoy was rolling into New Montreal, or at least the suburbs.
Cranes were lifting up massive slabs of cement, and I noticed entire rows of buildings being torn down. Thousands of folk in bright hardhats and vests were crawling around the city, like maddened ants, and the proof of their labour was impossible to miss.
A wall was going up around the entire city, topped with guard towers where crews were installing AA guns, and larger cannons were being mounted on swivels.
It seemed like the city was preparing for a long war.
***