Harry built a gate inside the gazebo. The roof would cover any contractors who used
it to arrive next to Brophy. The walls would give them protection from the rampant
xenos.
They would have to come up with their own transport and weapons support once
beyond his effective range.
He passed all but Howitz up through the gate. The mech would not fit under the
pavilion’s roof. So he made a bigger gate behind the structure to send the armor back
to the ship. He didn’t know if the moth could use the thing back home, but it had
come in handy starting the clearance of Delgas.
He planted two fabricators for the super bees so Brophy had more air support than the
regular bees when he was gone. Eventually the air would be clear. Until that point,
it was just better to have a pair of robotic monsters circling around and clearing things
out.
He waited for them to start orbiting Brophy. They went down in five minutes as
flocks of winged monsters destroyed them. The flying lizards turned to ash as the
Bolo took revenge.
“What do you think, kid?,” asked Harry.
“Fly like an eagle,” said Brophy.
“I have to get back to work,” said Harry.
“When you coming home, Da?,” asked the Bolo.
“I don’t know when but we’ll play then, son,” said Harry.
Harry stepped on the gate. He felt the disorientation as he stepped off the gate and
looked at the Jordan’s cargo bay. He took off his helmet.
“Your third Bolo is a little stranger than I like machines,” said Har.
“He’ll be fine,” said Harry. “We have our foothold. It looks like things are going our
way for once.”
“The tactical is almost the same,” said Har. “Your army of bees and gun robots are
doing what they can. They are still taking losses.”
“I’m open to suggestions,” said Harry. “Three Bolos are protecting a triangle of area
big enough for an armed encampment. There still needs to be a force on the planet to
clear out that triangle, while protecting the edges. The shooters might do it eventually,
but once the grunts fall back far enough, they won’t chase. And taking on kaiju means
something has to get inside to start working.”
“The good point is the space forces won’t leave orbit unless we get close enough to
trigger them,” said Har. “So we can take the time to build our own fleet to destroy
them.”
“So we can just keep dropping docks without worrying about them trying to stop the
source of the attacking forces?,” said Harry. “Something feels wrong about that.”
“I feel the same,” said Harr. “Other species would try to find the source of the attacks
and cut them off. The enemy doesn’t think this way.”
“Or they could be stalling themselves in the hopes of getting something here to stop
us from taking the planet back,” said Harry. “The Jordan is great ship, but it won’t
win a battle of numbers. Eventually something would wreck us and then we would
drop to Delgas.”
“It’s a consideration,” said Har. “I don’t like the thought, but I won’t deny the
possibility. And we don’t know if they can gate their forces across space.”
Harry paused in confusion. Of course, they could gate their soldiers across space.
Then he realized no one had seen a star whale gate itself across space. Even if it could
build a gate for others, that didn’t mean it could gate itself.
And if it couldn’t gate, it had to fly to another system manually.
So if backup was coming, it was stuck with flying like the Jordan if it wanted to take
them on. It might take weeks, months, for a fleet to arrive to take them on.
By that time, they could have a fleet of their own waiting for anyone trying to take
them on.
If they waited, they could clear the edge of the atmosphere with the numerous ships
they were building at the docks.
Adding docks would cut that time.
“Where are we going?,” asked Harry.
“Briefing room,” said Har. “We are going over our mission and status. We hope to
keep coming back to earn points.”
“I’m sure Junior will carry you around like a little baby,” said Harry.
“I’m sure he will,” said Har.
The two contractors joined the rest of their friends in the briefing room. Harry smiled
as he looked the table over. There were pings for both sides as he went to the table.
“Are the kids with us, Jordan?,” asked Harry.
“Present,” said Junior.
“I’m here, Papa,” said Betty Lou.
“Cruising down the highway,” said Brophy.
“What are we doing about the rest of this?,” said Harry. He leaned on the table to take
everything in. “Do we go down and shoot some more of the xenos?”
“Extra firepower is not needed,” said Junior. “We can hold the surface from any
threats.”
“What do you think is necessary, Junior?,” said Harry.
“A fence around our operating area,” said Junior. “We can hold the points of the
triangle and the bees can clear the inner area and then we can push outwards.”
“What is the absolute range you three can reach on the ground?,” asked John.
A line miles away from the three Bolos formed a triangle bigger than expected. The
main problem was the lack of air cover. Harry’s super bees were in the air, but they
needed to shoot a lot more of the aerial problems in the face to make a difference.
“I’ll have to go down and put up a moving wall,” said Harry. “Betty Lou has one of
the extenders up in the mountains. We can set up where they meet and form a wall
high enough to keep the casual xeno out. Then the bees can hunt down anything
inside the triangle. We can have the shooters push to the line while the wall is being
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built.”
“Mobile guns and the birds are also on the scene,” said Hei. “They will be able to mix
with the other forces as long as the fabricators are still in action.”
“The original fabricator is still in the cave,” said Xin. “The sparrows should be flying
out of there and helping Unit Betty Lou in the mountains.”
“They are so cute,” said Betty Lou.
“There are some natural features we have to take into account,” said John. “We have
several rivers in the area, and there is a chasm between the cave and the other part of
the mountain. Those things will be hard to build a wall around.”
“It doesn’t have to be perfect,” said Delmar. “We could build bridges to get across
some of that.”
“The main problem is what happens when we seal that area off from the rest of the
planet,” said Detrac. “Will the Bolos have to deal with more titans trying to uproot
them?”
“Work twenty four hours a day, eight days a week,” said Brophy. “Ain’t that tough
enough?”
“Maybe,” said Yema. “We’re more interested in what happens when the enemy try
to react to your presence. We’re going to rely on you to stop any threat no matter how
big. We might have to back you up against such large menaces.”
“We will be fighting again if we go down to build this wall,” said Milla. She seemed
to smile. “I can once again affirm my status as the demon of death.”
“Betty Lou,” said Harry. “I think what we should do is start with the wall from your
enclosure down to Junior. Let the bees and shooters use it as a base to shoot over the
top. Junior, let the bees range out to meet the edge of the expanding wall. Then the
shooters can push off to the wall and clear away anything trying to reach that wall.”
“And then the wall can extend to Brophy?,” said Garry.
“Yes,” said Harry. “The shooters will push down to the wall, and do what they can
to keep that area clear.”
“What about the wall leading back to Betty Lou?,” said Howitz.
“We need to stay on one side of the chasm with Xin’s cave on the other side of the
wall,” said Har.
Harry nodded that the wall has to stay on one side of the river heading up to the
mountains. The chasm widened as it led up to where Betty Lou rested. It was an
irregular wall.
“All right,” said Harry. “How do we make this easier to get done because while the
wall is going up, the xenos will try to get inside and tear the kids down.”
“I have a big iron on my hip,” said Brophy.
“Secondary expeller can be sent down from my position, Papa,” said Betty Lou. “That
will cut off the sides, then they can cut off the bottom of the triangle from targets.”
“I like it,” said Harry. “I’ll need to gate down, and give you that other wall builder.”
“Backup?,” asked Yema.
“I can take Milla,” said Harry. “Also there will be a ton of bees and birds blasting
things with Betty Lou clearing space. This should be an easy walk.”
“The cave is a natural nesting ground,” said Xin. “My birds should have expanded
down their side of the mountain by now.”
“All right,” said Harry. “Should I put a cover on the bridge so they can expand into
Betty Lou’s territory without worrying about air attacks?”
“I think they can deal with the air monsters by themselves,” said Xin. “Should they
expand their nests under the bigger machine’s watch?”
“Yes,” said Betty Lou. “I love birds.”
Everyone paused at that statement.
“They are fake birds,” said Delmar.
“They look real enough for me,” said Betty Lou.
“We clear the planet, I will get you some birds,” said Harry. “What do you think
about that?”
“I will kill all of the xenos,” said Betty Lou.
“Let’s build the complex first,” said John. “Keep on task. We have to put people on
this planet to clear the planet. Then we have to worry about putting in wildlife. You
will have to protect all of that, even stuff that isn’t birds.”
“I know how nature works,” said Betty Lou. “I would like birds.”
“Junior, Brophy,” said Harry. “Would you like some type of wildlife installed for you
to look at when we clear the planet?”
“Situation is optimal,” said Junior. “Extraneous animals are not necessary.”
“I like to fish,” said Brophy.
Harry covered his face with his hand. He took a moment to think about the request
from his son.
“There’s no water near you, Brophy,” said Harry. “I guess I can put in a pool for you
to have fish for you to wash.”
“That’s what I like,” said Brophy.
“All right,” said John. “We have a plan. We still have plenty of enemies who want to
stop us. Let’s start the wall thing. Then we can expand from there, building factories
for whatever needs to be put down to help future contractors. I guess Nick can look
around for someone who can build a zoo, or aquarium, in a way that the xenos won’t
try to eat anything we try to transplant here.”
Harry saw Delmar typing on his phone. His phone buzzed. He looked at the message.
MACHINES ARE JUST LIKE YOU.
He frowned at his second. He couldn’t deny the sentiment.
“All right,” said John. “Harry, go do what you got to do. Be careful. We’ll take a
break and get some sleep, and see where we sit in a few hours.”
“I can do the thing in a few minutes,” said Harry. “I think I’ll stay down there and
keep an eye on things while the walls are starting. I’ll gate back after things are on the
way.”
“Be careful,” said John. “We’ve done some crazy stuff with this. We don’t want to
lose everything now.”
“Betty Lou will keep us safe,” said Harry. “She’s a good machine.”
“Do you think they will try the kaiju trick again?,” asked Detrac.
“I don’t know, but the kids know how to counter it, so it’s not going to do anything
but sacrifice their numbers while letting us get done faster,” said Harry. “If we could
get all of them together in one place, that would help us more than anything else.”
“I hope we don’t have to deal with anything like that,” said Har. “We have been able
to hold out against whatever they throw at us. No one will believe what we have done
without the scans from our gear, and the other machines fighting with us.”
“But dealing with titans could put us on the back foot before we can put them down,”
said Yema.
“I’m coming back down, Betty Lou,” said Harry. “Then I need to take a break.”
“I’m waiting, Papa,” said Betty Lou.
“Come on, Milla,” said Harry. “Once we start closing this triangle off, we can think
about putting in a sprawl for people who want to shop, or have safaris, or whatever.”
“Safaris?,” said Milla. She floated at his side.
“Nick’s idea,” said Harry.
“Was not,” said the agent. “Don’t even think about it, mister.”
“Maybe I can get Betty Lou some birds from Earth,” said Harry. “A pet shop should
have parakeets, right?”
“I wouldn’t know,” said Milla. “The demon of death has no pets.”
“Neither do I,” said Harry. “Cat would know. I’ll ask her.”
“I think you should be concerned that your machine wants pets in the first place,” said
Milla.
“I thought about it, and I have decided that a few chickens is worth a lot of alien
deaths,” said Harry. “I would make that trade in a second.”
“Is there any doubt why you are being reviewed?,” asked Milla. “You come across
as erratic and so do your machines.”
“It works for us,” said Harry. They walked down to the gate in the cargo bay. Harry
made sure his kit was ready. He shouldn’t need it, but it only took one big beast to
ruin your day.
The xenos probably still had tricks they hadn’t seen yet. Wallens had less xenos on
it, but looked worse for the handling.
“Do you really think you can create a city here?,” asked Milla.
“That’s not my problem,” said Harry. He stepped on the gate. “I’m just here to kill the
enemy. Other people will have to repopulate the planet, and put animals back where
they belong.”
“I doubt Earth animals will do well here,” said Milla. She joined him on the gate.
“That’s not my problem either,” said Harry. “Switch us, Nick.”
He stepped off the opposite gate in the middle of trees. He took a moment to adjust
to the rippling effect of Betty Lou blasting anything that looked like they were inside
her house.
“I think this is the right decision,” said Harry. “Trying to build the wall on the other
side of the chasm would just leave a hole for the xenos to come in.”
“I think I can clear the other side while you set the wall up,” said Milla. “Just let me
take aim.”
She shot her signature beam across the gap. There were so many targets that she cut
a bite out of their charge, forcing more into the gap.
Harry walked to the edge of the wall and climbed up to look over the other side. His
mobile platforms were continously firing across that gap. He needed to put the
expeller down and let it roll south along the edge of the river. He checked for
Brophy’s signature, nodding when he saw the Bolo was also on this side of the water.
“We have no way of reaching a water supply,” he called. “If we bring people here,
we’ll have to pipe the water from the river to wherever our people are.”
“There might be a branch reaching in further south,” said Milla. She continued
picking off targets from her perch at the top of the wall.
“It might be underground,” said Harry. He checked his visor. “I don’t see any river
on the map. Maybe it flows under this part of the continent. If it does, the xenos could
use it to get under any defenses we throw up.”
“They can fly over anything less than a dome,” said Milla. “Let’s worry about the
basic fortification before we start mapping any river system that might be flowing
under us. If that is what’s going, a grate will keep most of the small grunts out.”
“All right,” said Harry.