Attendance at Fortescue Military Academy M1 Y:2142
House Thoth, Squad Leader, Squad Zero
M1 Rank: 1/1275, Tier 3 M-Rank: Null
Term: 2, Round: 1
Daedalus Operating Capital: 60,000 bitcreds
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The hardest Gauntlet they had faced so far was proving difficult to crack. Daedo was not happy that he was unable to weave his way through and avoid most of the enemy. After much research, it was obvious that all the groups searched for him from the beginning of the scenario. There was no proximity agro – or more accurately, the insectoids were always agroed, and the only distinction was whether they were searching for you or knew your location and were chasing you down.
It was the second last Gauntlet of the round, and it was time for a serious attempt by Daedo. There were no points for kills in this scenario. The lowest time to capture all three bases gave the best score.
For Thoth Squad Zero, the M1 ranking wasn’t a challenge, outside of their squad, at least – with the exception of Kang, who had a lot to learn, but she was showing promise and improving rapidly. Daedo had no concerns that she would be granted Master Nader’s approval at the end of the week. No one was aware, except for him, that it was even an issue. He had assigned different squad members to Kang with a weekly goal in different subjects that suited their strengths.
Picard had the hardest assignment. Fortunately, Kang was a better athlete than Daedo when he started. Vannier and Axel-Zero handled most of the academic subjects, he handled AI nurturing, and Mace was her coach for the Gauntlet. Barran wasn’t a natural tutor; he liked to talk but barely listened. And he was busy selling exo contracts to any squad who would pay the 15K price tag for the 2.6 model, the term one tournament model.
Daedo had refined his Gauntlet loadout to the grappler, explosive traps, and railgun. The lack of variety and melee weapon allowed him to carry a dozen explosive traps and grapple hooks.
The current M3 leaderboard was the real challenge. Although he wouldn’t appear on their leaderboard, the points total he achieved could be directly compared to the M3 scores. At the moment, his best score wasn’t in the top one hundred for M3.
This Gauntlet suited Barran’s strengths, thus he was ranked one in M1, and when compared to M3, he slotted in at eleven. It was a fantastic achievement, and it was thanks to how quickly Barran took down insectoids with the swordlance at close quarters. He carried a shield and railgun as well.
The Gauntlet term two, round one – score, ranks in M1, and the equivalent rank if the cadets were in M3:
Cadet
M1 Rank
M3 Rank
Barran, 255
1
11
Picard, 249
2
32
Daedo, 222
3
109
Mace, 221
4
111
Vannier, 215
5
120
Axel-Zero, 210
6
125
Kang, 171
198
Didn’t scroll down that far
The reason Master Nader had petitioned for, and was successful in getting, the same Gauntlet for M3 down to M1 was because of the inter-academy league, which began in term three. The league consisted of a number of events. And the main scoring events were the weekend home and away season of arena matches and Gauntlets.
By reaching the semi-finals, and therefore finishing in the top four M3 squads, M1 Thoth Squad Zero (M1TS0) had proven they were contenders to participate in the inter-academy competition, and if they didn’t, at least their equipment should be utilised. Despite their misgivings with Master Nader and M1TS0, the Fortescue Military Academy hierarchy prioritised performance in the inter-academy league above all.
Due to the advantage of their exos and railguns, M1TS0 dominated the M1 table. Only Kang, who was still learning the ropes, struggled – yet she still managed to land in the top two hundred with guidance from Mace and her own sheer determination.
“Are you going to knock off top spot today?” Mace asked Daedo with a small smile. He usually left his runs to the last minute.
Daedo shook his head. “I don’t think so. I can’t kill them in melee anywhere near as fast as Barran and Picard. And kiting them is less efficient, even if I didn’t get overrun and pummelled. Today I’ll set more traps; let’s see how that works.”
Mace nodded. “I’m doing much the same.” She showed him the twelve proximity explosives she carried. They laughed and discussed their planned placements.
Kang stood by like a third wheel, listening in. During the Gauntlet, she was Mace’s protégé and by design stayed close.
Barran walked in on the conversation. “We need to get a couple into the top M3 scores,” he said to Daedo and Mace.
“For your sales?” Daedo asked, and Barran nodded.
“Isn’t M3 Shu holding down half of the top ten?” Mace asked, pointing out that M3SS0 was using their exo.
“Yeah, but they were already awesome,” Barran said. “It would mean much more if we were pushing up. They would assume it had nothing to do with our skill and everything to do with the exo.”
“I think you could make that argument with the current ranks,” Daedo teased. “Although Picard is thirty-two, she is most likely to make the top ten. I’ll talk to her.”
Barran frowned. “Hey didn’t you see my score!”
There was no way on earth Daedo wasn’t aware of Barran’s score, considering he never shut up about it. “No, I never look at Gauntlet ranks; Myrmidon just summarises for me,” Daedo said, deadpan.
“Oh, you!” Barran laughed. “You had me for a second.”
“Seriously, though – with this Gauntlet, you and Picard are the ones to get into the top three if you can – 260 should do it,” Daedo said.
“Okay.” Barran gave his trademark confident smile. “Watch this space.” He entered the Gauntlet, eyes ablaze with ambition.
Picard was practising a lance thrust as she waited for her turn.
“Did you hear that, Picard?” Axel-Zero said. “You need to get 260.”
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Picard just shook her head as if to say, ‘Don’t talk to me.’ She was a picture of concentration.
“So you are ranked one, two, three, four, five and six,” Kang observed. “And you are still so serious about getting better scores?”
Mace nodded. “We want the chance to compete in the inter-academy league. And to do that, we have to beat M3 cadets.”
“Okay, but if you sell them all your exos, won’t that make it harder?” Kang asked.
Mace nodded. “Yeah.”
Kang slapped her armoured forehead with her armoured hand. It made a loud clunk. “Then why?”
“Many reasons, but most of all, we need to be skilled; we can’t rely on our equipment advantage,” Daedo said.
“You need to go on the next green,” Mace told Kang. Vannier had entered the Gauntlet three minutes before Barran.
Kang nodded. They usually made her go first. But she had been improving.
As Kang took off, Daedo, Mace, and Axel-Zero called after her with shouts of, “Go, Kang!” and variations of “Smash those bugs!” Although no one could see through her helmet, she looked back and rolled her eyes before fixing her steely gaze into the Gauntlet.
Picard readied to go next. She turned to Daedo and Mace and nodded in Kang’s direction. “She’s doing really well.”
“Have you seen the swordlance and shield compound yet?” Daedo asked Picard.
She nodded. “We can test them this weekend.” She bent her knees slightly, and as the beep sounded, she launched herself into the Gauntlet.
“Thanks for all your work last week,” Daedo said quietly to Mace. They hadn’t had much of a chance to review and catch up since the previous week’s events. And for a change, it was Mace who was busy all the time. “We’ll have the test results from your UHVI fluid tomorrow.”
“Looking forward to it. I’d almost forgotten. Have had my head in polymers since Saturday.” Mace’s response was in short, clipped sentences.
Daedo changed the subject back to the task at hand. “You’re only one point behind me. If you beat me, I’ll buy you a chocolate thickshake.”
Mace laughed. “One; they’re free, and two; Picard would kill you. She has me on a strict protein, vitamin, mineral, and fibre diet.”
“I know,” Daedo bawled. He was on the same diet. The chocolate thickshakes were a delicacy they’d picked up from Axel-Zero’s aunt. The drink consisted of coconut cream and cacao, with a tiny amount of vanilla and cinnamon. It was delivered almost frozen. Once the recipe was known, it was something the cafeteria could make in almost infinite amounts.
The beep sounded, and Mace entered the Gauntlet, her loadout identical to Daedo’s – railgun, grappler, and traps.
“Good luck,” Daedo and Axel-Zero called to her departing form.
“Just me and you,” Axel-Zero said cheerfully.
“Yeah, until Barran finishes,” Daedo said with a shiver.
Axel-Zero tapped a compartment on Daedo’s exo that contained some traps. “We’ll have drones in a couple of weeks,” she said.
“Really? How?” Daedo asked.
She chuckled. “I cheated.”
Daedo had a firm stance on cheating. It was permitted. There were no cheats in war, only innovative winners and dead losers. “I’m listening.”
“I’ve been searching the IPO database for two weeks, testing and trying every design in the modelling tool,” she said. “After narrowing it down to thirty, we are ready for live testing.”
Daedo laughed. He had never considered just farming the IPO. It was so simple, he felt stupid. “I have to commend your resourcefulness, Axel-Zero,” he said happily.
“Don’t get me wrong, I’ll be working on improving those designs and coming up with completely new ones. But at least we’ll have some good ones to use right now.”
“You better get ready,” he said. The light was about to turn green. “And great work.”
Axel-Zero beamed as she flew into the Gauntlet.
For the moment, Daedo stood alone. However, Barran or Vannier would most likely exit before his green came up. He’d no sooner done a quick equipment check than Barran emerged from the Gauntlet.
“Woot! Done and dusted,” Barran exclaimed.
Daedo checked his score quickly. It was 259 – an improvement, but not the magical 260, which was top three. There was a cluster of twenty-five cadets between 250 and 260.
“If you were in M3, you’d be fifth,” Daedo said encouragingly.
“Daedo, I’m expecting a 270 from you,” Barran said seriously.
Daedo laughed. “I don’t think so, but I’ll do my best.”
The entry light turned green, although it wouldn’t start timing until he crossed the line. He gave a quick wave to Barran before running past the line into the Gauntlet.
Moments before, while talking to Mace, an idea had hit him out of the blue, and his loadout was perfect. This was the second to last run, so even if it went pear-shaped, he had one more attempt.
He headed for the central crossroads, estimating he would be able to get there without running into any insectoids if he took a certain path. It was south of the centre base. Putting all of his mobility to use, he arrived in less than a minute.
Daedo proceeded to set his dozen explosive traps in the central crossroads, forming a dodecahedron of death, using the posts and structures as well as the ground. Spending two minutes laying the traps could be the downfall of his strategy.
A group of six insectoids had found him and began to give chase. Daedo ran as fast as he could to the west base, using his grapple each block in an attempt to outpace the pursuers. He angled northwest and then southwest, Myrmidon calculating that was enough to miss the west-central roamers.
He arrived at the west base, lay prone on top of the overlooking building, and began to fire down onto the insectoids within the base. They reacted and immediately made a beeline for his position. All he could do was hit them with consecutive headshots, keeping his aiming time to a minimum.
Clearing the bases wasn’t the most difficult part of this Gauntlet. It wasn’t easy either, but he had worked out that the location was ideal for the west base. He had to jump off the building as the last two insectoids closed into melee. Rolling, kneeling, and turning, he was able to complete two more headshots as they charged him down for the second time.
There was no time to rest or celebrate. He turned to claim the base before the roamers caught up.
As Daedo stood in the centre, he waited impatiently for the timer to tick down from ten. What was only ten seconds seemed like an eternity, because if one insectoid entered the base while it was counting down, he would have to kill them, clear the base, and the timer would reset.
… 4 … 3 …
The roamers were closing in.
… 2 …
“Come on!” Daedo yelled.
… 1 … green
Base Cleared.
Daedo sighed with relief. As six roamers closed on him.
It was time to run. He shot a grappling hook above the incoming roamers. As he flew past the group, he kicked out at the closest insectoid. There was no doubt it would attempt to grab him and pull him down. The best way to prevent this was to strike first. Although a kick would do little to hurt it, he was able to push the creature out of harm’s way.
“Bye,” Daedo called playfully as he left the group in his wake. Now, instead of trying to avoid the roamers, he wove his way to the north base, firing sporadically, trying to give away his position to every possible roamer on the map.
A trip that should have taken less than two minutes took over four, with Daedo covering as much ground as possible. He now had all six – west and north – roaming groups chasing him. Normally he would have to kill four of the groups before completing the Gauntlet; as the bases were captured, they closed the search net tighter and tighter.
The west groups would venture east or north to the last base, depending on the capture order.
He closed on the north base. It would be impossible to capture with his current train of bugs. He shot one of the resident insectoids before heading southeast. The rest followed.
Daedo had to use a burst of speed from his jumpjets. Up until that point, he had been using them sparingly, allowing his energy storage to remain full. The train would surround and overcome him if he wasn’t able to cover twice their distance in a slightly shorter timeframe.
Myrmidon calculated the speed and trajectory for Daedo, who followed his AI’s direction markers. Myrmidon would ensure that Daedo used just the right amount of power for the jumpjets; it was certain he would need more later.
Pulling off one of Barran’s favourite manoeuvres, Daedo ran across the face of a building. Using one jet, angled down, to keep himself from falling, he skittered above the eighth and ninth group of insectoids.
Daedo: Time for an old-fashioned zapping!
Daedo informed the slightly confused AI. He was unaware the saying was ‘barbecue,’ not ‘zapping.’ In his defence, the tradition was over a hundred years old and had gone defunct well before Daedo’s time.
Daedo: Yeehaw!
Daedo yelled into his internal comms. Only Myrmidon could hear.
Myrmidon: You’re having fun. I am looking forward to seeing the outcome of this gamble. You know if you die, I die.
Daedo: Stop complaining. You’re backed up.
Daedo was heading west again, and the insectoids were not clumped enough. He circled the dodecahedron of death waiting for the last moment when all were at the perimeter.
He was now directly south of the central crossroads, with insectoids lined up from his position to the east of the crossroads.
Myrmidon: Now!
Daedo changed direction sharply to the north, activating both jumpjets to power through the trap zone. As soon as he cleared it on the north side, he set off all twelve traps. The entire area of the central crossroads exploded in all its AR glory.
There was no smell in AR, or Daedo would have been treated to burnt insectoid. Now it was down to speed. The north base was clear; all he had to do was capture it. He had four grappling hooks left, and he used one on the tallest building to swing forward. It was only moments before he would be standing in the north base waiting for the countdown timer.
There was one roaming group left. They would be closing on him as soon as he got to the last base. Daedo had used a lot of time setting up and springing the trap. He headed directly for the last base.
Myrmidon: They are here.
Myrmidon pinged the location of the last roaming group. Daedo gained height using his grapple and got down on top of the closest building. He began to fire upon the group as they charged him down. Like he had done many times, he leapt off the building as the last couple finished climbing it. There was never enough time to take out a whole group. There were too many, and they moved too quickly. Bugs climbed ten times faster than humans. They barely slowed.
Daedo turned, knelt, and took down the last two before they could close the gap on him again.
He had cleared these bases twenty-five times and had worked out the most economical method, which he now repeated. Building, prone, snipe, jump, run, turn, kneel, and finish off.
Daedo stood in the centre of the last base and waited for his score as the timer counted down. Myrmidon could estimate his score accurately, based on the time, but was quiet with his friend.
… 3 … 2 … 1 … green
270 – Cleared
There were no extra points for killing insectoids, but when all were dead, the ‘Cleared’ status was shown.
Cadet
M1 Rank
M3 Rank
Daedo, 270 – Cleared
1
1
Barran, 259
2
6
Picard, 255
3
12
Mace, 229
4
105
Vannier, 219
5
110
Axel-Zero, 212
6
124
Kang, 191
175
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