NATION

PASSWORD

The Silent Crusade Ends (Tyran Only, MATURE)

A staging-point for declarations of war and other major diplomatic events. [In character]
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Azurlavai
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Founded: Aug 29, 2013
Ex-Nation

The Silent Crusade Ends (Tyran Only, MATURE)

Postby Azurlavai » Tue Jun 12, 2018 12:22 am

Shalum-Annexed Liam State
Maldoria, near the Azurlav border
Orenburg


This town was like many in Maldoria. Run down, with terrible roads and buildings falling apart. Orenburg hadn't seen any upkeep since the Imperials ripped it away in their treaty. The people here lived what lives they could, pretending everything was fine. Even though power was spotty with rolling blackouts, the water content was poor and only the Shalumite police and garrison had anything like TV or internet (and still poor connections at that), it was all they had. They were former Azurlavs, though enough generations had gone by that no one remembered it. Many had jobs as subsistence level workers in the local silver mines, where at least one miner a month died from accidents and the rest worked themselves to an early grave. Others farmed the land outside of town, growing food to be taken north, with some little held for the town. But the best jobs were in serving the Imperial garrison. Plenty of local women were entertainment for the troops in town, National Guard troopers enjoying an easy posting. More were servants, fetching food and cleaning the barracks, shining shoes and pressing uniforms. It was the same way at the police station, where the chief himself had two women to himself (a mother and her teenage daughter) and was loath to share his good fortune with any of his men.

In times such as these, people had found solace in their faith. But while the majority of the slaves and servants were Azurlav, few practiced the faith of their homeland. The Silent Crusade had done its work here, and hard. The ones who still paid penance to Odin and asked Thor to watch over them did so in secret. No shrines, no temples, no icons or runes. It was done in backyards at night, and in basements in the dark. The kommissars had clamped down hard here, leaving the local chapel as the place of worship in Orenburg. Here, at least, the Shalumites showed mercy. The people assembled for mass, came in for Sunday worship, and many saught the priests in the confessionals to try and figure out the way forward through life. But always, the answers were, look to God.


This morning's service was the same as countless others before. Most of the slaves were poured in, watching the pulpit with rapt attention as the preacher read from the Holy Book, telling of the glory of God and the saints, and why they were all so much better off for worshipping him. The church, itself not in very good condition either, was silent save for this one man in black with a white collar, an Imperial himself lecturing to the savages. Such was the way in Maldoria.


But it was today that, of all things, a chorus of gunfire rang ooutside. Many turned, and the preacher paused, listening. Executions didn't happen much anymore, but the occaisonal criminal would be shot by the garrison or a slaver come in to buy new meat who spotted a runaway slave. But after a moment, it happened again. And again, until the streets outside were suddenly a storm of gunfire and shouting, yelling across what sounded like half the town. As most of the slaves were either in here, the garrison barracks or the mines at this early hour, no one in the church was sure of what was happening. Voices hollered in Shalumite accents, Imperial troops yelling at each other to cover them, toss them a new magazine. But as time went on and the gunfire became more and more intense, the troops' yelling became panicked. Their familiar gunfire dropped off, to be replaced by hoarse calls in a tongue the people in the church were unfamiliar with, and guns that boomed like thunder.

Finally, silence. Most of the church was standing, the slaves moving away from the doors, ducking between the pews and sheltering loved ones, watching the doors and windows carefully. For several minutes, it was this way. But then, suddenly there came the rumble of truck engines pulling up in the gravel outside the church, squeaks of transmissions and shocks as these vehicles came to a halt. Doors slammed, more of the hoarse voices, the clatter of weapons reloading and charging bolts as they chambered rounds. Silence again.

Without warning, the double doors were shoved open, admitting a gaggle of rough looking figures. Dressed in weathered coats and light sweaters, dressed as any normal person from another country might dress. But these men and women, who were rough and weathered from travel, looked more like gangsters. They all carried firearms, big and blocky ones, and wore bandoliers, bandannas, a few had old military tactical webbing or vests. Only a rare one wore body armor, and at least one was covered in the blood of the Imperial soldier she'd ripped it off of.


The rough mob pushed into the church, gesturing with their guns and spreading out, moving to the walls. The slaves, used to being intimidated, cowered before these strangers, ducking low and preying they did no wrong. The mob, at least two dozen, shoved their way in, hollering at each other and cursing, spitting and yelling. One pulled out a can of spray paint, and covered a crucifix on the wall with a blast of red. Several in the crowd gasped at this sacrilige, but stayed silent. The preacher stepped forward, protesting. Slaves they might be, but they were his flock, his charge. For his trouble, one of the crowd turned and shot him, on the spot.


The slaves ran. They poured out of the church past the rough crowd, almost trampling each other as they made for the door, smashed out windows, searched for the side exits and bulldozed through the residence. The mob followed, firing into the air, yelling at the running crowd. Two of them found another preacher in the back, and the pulled him forward, a rope materializing from the group. In less than a minute, the preacher was hanging from a beam, a noose around his neck, kicking as he fought to save himself. Soon, he was twitching as the last of the air left his system. The rest of the mob ransacked the church, pulling down what little silver and gold this church had been bestowed in relics and decoration. They smashed out the stained glass windows, shot depictions of Christ and spray painted over everything else that had a cross on it. It was mayhem.

Most of the slaves had, sensibly, run for the exits. But a few, about twenty or so, stayed. Some were huddled against the wall, staring down the mob's guns. Some were crouched between the pews, trying to figure out what had happened. A handful had been trampled in the rush, and they were being hauled up by the strangers.

A hush. Much like the one earlier, except this one was charged, eager, bloodthirsty.

Another figure stepped into the sacked church. She glanced up, her painted face half-covered by a bandanna, decorated with shark's teeth. She tugged back her hood, revealing bleached blond hair, cut short. Her face was white, with black stripes over her eyes. Her outfit said nothing special about who she was. A sweatshirt, an armored vest, a bandolier. In her hand she held a simple shotgun. There was nothing special about her.

Except that on her chest was a lupine, fangs bared. A crudely painted emblem, depicting a snarling wolf, far less sophisticated than any military badge or patch. But it was the same logo that everyone here wore. A snarling wolf's head, in red or white or black. On jackets, hats, vests or masks. Now, the slaves could see that behind their goggles and glasses and hoods and masks, they all wore painted faces. War paint. Some had merely commando stripes. Others had painted runes across their features. A few had even gone the full bore and painted their entire face in blocky war emblems.

The woman crossed to the inside, staring up at the hung priest, swaying lightly. She stopped before him, set her shotgun down and closed her eyes, tipping her head back and raising her hands. Her followers all bowed their heads, a clenched fist held over their chests. And then she spoke, in English surprisingly.

"Brother Hati, He who chases the Sun across the sky. We beseech your blessing here, as we offer these filthy, unworthy souls up to you. May the Wolf Who Hates find these sacrifices fitting, as we send to you our despised enemy. We ask your blessing, Brother, as we seek to cleanse this town, and then this land of the wickedness the Silent Crusade has done here. May your hate ever fuel us, as we take up our holy cause."

The woman dropped her arms, and her following began murmuring to themselves. The woman who now tugged down her mask, glanced around at the slaves left in the desecrated church, now rounded up in the center.

"I am called Angrboda," she exclaimed. "And I am here as a liberator. You have all struggled, and fought, and been beaten down and oppressed. Enslaved. Destroyed, morally and spiritually." She gestured to the church around her. "By them. These...hypocrites. 'Love thy neighbor, do no harm to the innocent.' Lies. Falsehoods." Her arms dropped, and she looked down at the slaves, seemingly so imposing and ferocious in merely her presence. "For decades, you have been brainwashed. Oppressed. Bought. Sold. Murdered. Are there any who still pay heed to All-Wise Odin, or Mighty Thor? Are there still Azurlavs in this stolen land?"

One slave, a young man no older than twenty-one, his face and hands smudged with grime and dust because he had not enough water to bath with, cautiously stepped forward. Angrboda reached out to him, gently taking his filthy hand between her white ones.

"Yes, child? You still pay heed to the Aesir?"

"My dad," the young man stammered. "Before he died, he...he told me what his grandfather told him. About the Sky Gods, and the World Serpant. The Dread Wolf. The Allfather. I uh...I still have his shrine, buried in the basement. I take it out sometimes and-"

"Tomlin, no!" cried one of the slaves. He was older, middle-aged and wore a cross around his neck as he glared at Angrboda. "You'll not come in here with your devil talk, you heretic! This is a house of God, which you have just violated! But I'll not let you corrupt the boy! The Lord protects!"

For a moment, it seemed as if the whole crowd was about to leap on this man, tear him to shreds. The militia were rearing up for it, teeth clenched and fists curled, guns at the ready and knives drawn. But Angrboda showed no reaction. She merely stared at the man for a moment before, with the same blank expression, drawing a revolver and blasting him between the eyes.

"Does he?" She glanced down at Tomlin, then at the other slaves. "We are going to begin righting these wrongs. We will free this land from Christian and Shalumite corruption. We will kill the slavers, and we will restore the ways of your people. If you do not wish to join, than stay out of our way. Oppose us, and we will crush you. But join..." She gestured to the surrounding mob. "And you will become a part of us. Part of a family. And we. Will. Do. Justice. In the name of the Cosmic Wolf Hati, He Who Chases the Sun. We. Will. Kill them. And repay them for every crime they've inflicted on us." She reached out her hand to Tomlin. Shaking, unsure and not quite believing this was happening, the young man gently took her grasp. In a moment, a militiaman stepped over, a mask in one hand and a pistol in the other, offering them both out to Tomlin. Another came forward, a can of white paint ready to begin applying war paint. In seconds, Tomlin went from poor Maldorian orphan to militia fighter, as the crowd pulled him into their ranks.

Angrboda looked to the other slaves, saying nothing but asking everything.

Two of them fled, pushing past her and rushing out, followed by boos, jeers and hisses. But of the remainder, the sixteen left, they cautiously pressed forward. Angrboda took each one by the hand, hugging them, comforting them as the militia opened their ranks, armories and paint cans to these new initiates.

"Go out into the town," Angrboda said to no one in particular. "Spread the word. Loot the garrison. Bring me the Guard captain and the police chief. I will sacrifice them myself. Then we start decorating. Let all know that this place is Jotnar now."

And with that, the self-named monsters spread out, weapons in hand and war cries on their lips as they flooded across the town like a wildfire. Anyone who stood up to them, they fell upon brutally or shot. Anyone who fled, they mocked and laughed at. But many more stood up, were embraced by the white lady named after Loki's mistress, and took up guns and war paint.

The Jotnar had launched their holy war for real. It was time to end the Silent Crusade.
*No battle plan survives first contact with the enemy.
*If your positions are firmly set and you are prepared to take the enemy assault on, he will bypass you.
*If your ambush is properly set, the enemy won't walk into it.
*If your flank march is going well, the enemy expects you to outflank him.
~Murphy's Laws of War

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Shalum
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Postby Shalum » Fri Jun 15, 2018 11:35 pm



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Religious Unrest in Southern Maldoria
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Bruhl- Since the Great War came to a close over seventy years ago, the citizens of the ‘Liamite Military Administrative Zone’ have lived under the oversight of an Imperial garrison and a margrave appointed by the nation’s lower and upper houses. Despite lobbying by groups of both sides of the border for the territory to be repatriated to its original owners, there has been little headway on the matter. It is something that the locals have taken into their own hands on numerous occasion, but the most recent incident is a disturbing reminder of just how far religious and nationalist separatists are willing to go in order to further their movements.

In the township of Bruhl, twenty kilometers north of the Azurlavain border, one of the most violent occurrences to date took place late last night. At approximately midnight, communications in and out of the city fell silent. Given the area’s poorly developed infrastructure, which is sometimes prone to power outages, nothing was considered to be amiss. It wasn’t until several local residents reached the local garrison that the first accounts were reported.

Arriving in the small town, Imperial troops were greeted by the sight of the still smoking ruins of what had once been the local church. While the parishioners had been spared, the same could not be said for the local priests. The two, who had been serving in the area for nearly a decade, were found dead against the wall of a nearby business. They had been sacrificed like animals, and the word Jotnar had been written above them in their own blood. While the perpetrators of this heinous act are unknown, the method of sacrifice has been documented on several occasions before by groups that follow Seiðrism - the primary faith of Azurlavai.

In response to the incident, Internal Security has raised its alert level around Bruhl. Furthermore, the armed forces has deployed several infantry and support companies to deter any further events of this nature.

~Tytus Stolarczyk
Conscription is the vitality of a nation, the purification of its morality, and the real foundations of all its habits.

It is better to be a warrior in a garden then to be a gardener in a war.

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Shalum
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Scandinavian Liberal Paradise

Postby Shalum » Sat Sep 08, 2018 11:41 pm

Shalum-Annexed Liam State
Maldoria, near the Azurlav border
Orenburg Outskirts


“See anything out there?”

“Negative.” The thermal imager swept across the landscape. There were the occasional blots of red and orange, but nothing that came close to arousing suspicion. The soldier grasping it shook his head and lowered the device, his lips curled slightly beneath his dark beard. “A few animals here and there, but it doesn’t look like anyone is waiting to ambush us.”

“There are a lot of buildings they could be posted up in. We’ll have to take it cautiously.” A sergeant muttered before reaching for his radio.

Scouting elements had arrived within hours of the incident becoming known. Most of the men present, including those who began to relay their findings, were from patrols that had been in the local area. Under normal circumstances, they would have rushed into the city to see what all the ruckus was about, but there were murmurings that they had a true slave rebellion -albeit a small one- on their hands. Aside from securing the perimeter, they had been ordered to stand down and wait for backup to arrive.

It had, in force.

A proper task force had been dispatched from Concordia, picking up several assets along the way. Several motorized platoons worth of line infantry, usually reserved for holding down the most rebellious areas of Liam state or patrolling the Azzie border, had arrived from the main road to the east and had promptly set up shop. If they were going to hit the town, it was going to be under the cover of a mortar team (something none of the commanders wanted to actually utilize) and supported by several armored vehicles. Even more militia were present, though were being held in reserve lest they do more harm than good. With them came the slave retinues and camp followers that swarmed about, tending to whatever the soldiers may have needed.

In one tent, Major Eran Aulus grunted quietly and set his cigar aside in a waiting ashtray. The lighting wasn’t the best, but it didn’t take much to read the map of the town. It was nothing special, aside from the fact that it was close to the border. That in itself didn’t make the place unique, seeing as there were a lot of villages that were. “Still no word from the garrison?”

“Not a peep,” a captain replied with the shake of a head. “We’ve tried to radio a dozen times now, and we haven’t gotten a thing.” His lips curled in distaste. “I can only assume they’ve been overrun.”

Looking back to the battle map, Major Aulus was silent. Over the last half hour, the last contingents of his plan had moved into position. There was no grand strategy to an operation like this. His men would move as one, from multiple angles, and enter the city in and slow and methodical fashion, taking it block by block until they all met in the square. There were still civilians in the area, that much he knew, but the enemy (if they remained at all) could have just as easily been among them. The last thing he wanted was unnecessary bloodshed; a dead slave was useless to his liege, after all.

“Send out a notice: in a half-hour, the scouts are to pull back and join the rest of the line units. At that time, we’ll begin to move in, with the first and second companies from the militia leading the way. Rules of engagement are remain in effect. Securing the city and determining the status of our garrison troops are the primary objectives - in that order.”




“The militia guys are starting to move. That’s our cue. Driver, get us moving.”

After having sat in the same position for nearly two hours, Darmal Sial’s ass was beginning to grow numb. The gunner had been told to man his post while they waited, as if anyone was going to attack their temporary encampment. At the news, however, his lips curled into a small grin as he rose up into a standing position and bent his knees several times to get the blood flowing again. Reaching up, he pulled the slide of his heavy machine gun back, racking a round with a solid thump-thump.

Vehicles at the head of the detachment, such as his own, were older model MRAPS and humvees. They were solid pieces of surplus gear that the Imperials up north had no longer needed; aside from the usual maintenance problem, he hadn’t run into many problems with them. That being said, it was all relative given the sort of quality that went into most military contracts. Darmal was certain that his armored truck would see him through a fight, but if it came to duking it out with Azzies down south, he would have much rather been in one of the newer vehicles that the more veteran units were issued.

The diesel engine rumbled as they lurched forward, the gunner sweeping his weapon around in a wide arch as the city began to grow closer. They were moving a steady pace, aware of the fact that nearly thirty light infantry troops were moving ahead of them. Darmal could make out their silhouettes against the darkness, and he was careful to not let his weapon steer too low. While most of the tribesmen the Duchess had at her disposal weren’t even worth the weapons they carried (they weren’t any better than hired thugs), they were good at distracting the enemy.

Several minutes of silence passed. Everyone else in the vehicle was tense, their eyes peeled on the nearest buildings and their rooftops. Occasionally, a radio would crackle with some positioning updates, but Darmal barely paid attention to that. Finally, though, his sergeant grunted in the passenger seat. “Dead ahead,” he called out, “I see someone in the street. Might be a civvie. Keep it tight.”

Swinging the gun around, Darmal swallowed. He could see them too. It was too hard to make out who they could have been, though. They would have to get closer, and by then the militia would already be on the scene.
Conscription is the vitality of a nation, the purification of its morality, and the real foundations of all its habits.

It is better to be a warrior in a garden then to be a gardener in a war.

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Azurlavai
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Founded: Aug 29, 2013
Ex-Nation

Postby Azurlavai » Mon Oct 08, 2018 5:50 pm

Shalum-Annexed Liam State
Maldoria, near the Azurlav border
Orenburg Outskirts


“Hurry up! The Imps will be here any second!”

“You want this damned thing to go off in our face! Go on and explain to Hela how your dumbass died!”

Up and down the street, the Jotnar were in motion. Given the size of the garrison and the radio chatter from their former communications posts, Angrboda and her Warchiefs had known that a counter attack was coming. By the Hate-filled Star of Hati, she had decreed that this would be their first massive sacrifice to begin their war of blood. The streets were prepared, lined with stag skulls and the hanging heads of the National Guardsmen and local constables they’d already butchered. Lines of chalk decorated the lanes, and dozens of buildings had glyphs and runes daubed on their walls, depictions of vicious beasts and wide, staring eyes of malice. Torches were ignited in both ceremonious and strategic places. In the center of town, a large, crude monolith had been erected, at least twenty feet tall and built of scrap wood, metal and the wrecked remains of a National Guard vehicle. But it was clear what it was; an icon of a wolf, with jagged scrap metal fangs and headlights for large, reflective eyes.

The ceremonial preparations done, the cultists had swiftly moved to readying for an attack.

The Warchiefs Angrboda had under her command were all former military, veteran soldiers of the URA which sought to never avenge. They immediately put their experience to work, turning the buildings of the towns into close quarters nightmares of barricades, IEDs, booby-traps and other surprises. They stripped the town of vehicles they could use, such as vans for troop carriers, pickups to turn into guntruck technicals and municipal trucks for heavy battle haulers. The cultist forces, now backed by the weapons seized from the garrison, set to work turning what they couldn’t use into additional weapons in their fighting arsenal. Artillery shells for guns too complex and heavy to take were buried in the streets, under cars and inside buildings, wired to triggers and wire traps. By the time Shalumite forces were massing on the edge of town, the final preparations were being set, and the cultists were heading to positions.

Guerilla fighters waited in alley ways and windows, ready to engage and draw the enemy in. Marksmen were posted on rooftops and high windows, their long-range rifles (most of them hunting arms) ready to fire. The outer rings of the town were left mostly empty of fighters, leaving a handful of skirmishers and those civilians who hadn’t caught on to what was happening and left.

They would make fitting padding to the sacrifice.

For the time being, they left the scouts be. For as much as the long-ranged troops watched them from a distance, cultists would turn out in the street and stare right back at them, a physical barrier to obscure the motions of their comrades. In longcoats, pilfered armor and warpaints all around, they stared back at these recon teams, goading them on, cheering warchants in Old Norse and modern Azurlav. Those who had been recruited from the town itself were especially venomous, and some even cut themselves with knives and made blood oaths to slaughter every Shalumite they came across, uttering the names of Gods their parents and grandparents had forsaken.

No more zealous a follower than a convert, after all.




The figure they spotted was motionless, just on the edge of dark and out of the range of being visible. In response, they strode forward, slowly. No hurry in their motion, nor urgency. Whoever they were, they were tall and wore an obvious longcoat fluttering in the breeze. The closer the soldiers and militia got, however, the more detail they made out.

Including the fact that this was a woman. She wore her hair sheared short, and in one hand she held a simple pump action shotgun, gripped by the barrel instead of held ready. She was covered in symbols, emblems and glyphs, a snarling wolf head on her scavenged armor.

And her skin was painted white. Her hands, her face, her neck and even her bleached hair, everything was stained white aside from charcoal black around her eyes.

As she came closer, the Shalumites on foot could hear from her lips the rolling lilt of her voice. Hoarse, rough and coarse but beautiful and hypnotic. The closer she got, the more it was realized she was speaking an old tongue, a Nordic cant that few understood and none in the crowd could discern. But she strode forward bravely, continuing to speak as she did.

And then one of the militia fighters realized, as she stopped within full sight of the MRAP, that the repetition and tone was one of prayer. But before he could shout a warning to his fellows, she opened her eyes (terrifyingly enough they’d been closed the whole time) and uttered the final words.

“We offer these lives up to Brother Hati, the Wolf of Hate. Bestow upon us your blessing, that we might gain you even more souls for your fearsome appetite.”

And with that, windows and doors all along the lane flew open. The next few seconds the previously darkened street was nothing but light as dozens of weapons suddenly opened up at near point blank range from all sides. From the rear, two VBIEDs sped in, their drivers ditching the cars just before the explosive-crammed vehicles slammed into the column and detonated spectacularly.

Pure chaos.
*No battle plan survives first contact with the enemy.
*If your positions are firmly set and you are prepared to take the enemy assault on, he will bypass you.
*If your ambush is properly set, the enemy won't walk into it.
*If your flank march is going well, the enemy expects you to outflank him.
~Murphy's Laws of War

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Shalum
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Founded: Oct 07, 2012
Scandinavian Liberal Paradise

Postby Shalum » Sun Oct 14, 2018 7:36 am

Shalum-Annexed Liam State
Maldoria, near the Azurlav border
Orenburg Outskirts


The soldiers at the tip of the column, predominantly menfolk, were native irregular troops. While they didn’t necessarily come from the surrounding countryside, they were all Liamite by birth. Like with any other puppet regime, for every dissenter, there was someone who was willing to work with the installed leadership. For some the pay was better, and for others there simply wasn’t another choice unless they wanted to work a truly menial job. For all of its investment, the Empire couldn’t force companies to move into the area, nor did the politicians in power blame them for being hesitant. It had been proven time and time again that the border regions were unstable, and no one wanted to risk a loss - especially when it came to shareholders.

The man on point, a private by the name of Sven, was in his early twenties. He wasn’t built like one of his Imperial overseers. No, he was tall and skinny, armed with a kalashnikov that almost looked comically large in his hands. As his gaze swept back and forth several times, his arm seemed to shift unnaturally so; it was most likely due to the fact that his flak jacket wasn’t fitted either, meant for someone larger than himself. The young soldier opened his mouth to command the unknown figure to remain where they were, his finger slipped from the guard to the trigger as he did so.

It was too late for him, and many others.

They had all been expecting an attack, certainly. The rest of the column was keeping their eyes outward, or on the roofs that overlooked the main road. What caught them off guard was the sheer brutality and decisiveness that the enemy attacked with. Sven was the first to fall, his mouth parting to allow for a strangled cry of pain as bullets fired from multiple angles cut through him like a knife through hot butter. Like a macabre game of dominos, the rest of them began to fall, often times before they even knew what was going on. The few that were lucky dived for the road underfoot, or disappeared into nearby alleyways, more concerned with self-preservation than what may have awaited them in the following moments.

Further away from the chaos, as explosions ripped at the armored frames of gun trucks, officers were already shouting new orders to their men. None waited for their field commanders to pitch in, instead ordering their men to take up defensive positions where they could. Unfortunately, the approach to the town didn’t provide a lot of the way in rubble. Instead, the grunts were forced to fan out, ducking low into the ditches that ran along the main road. Branching streets were welcome, as they usually provided a little dip for drainage that was big enough for a man to lay down in.

“Move your asses!” A sergeant practically snarled, battle rifle pointed towards the sky as he rested on one knee. “Someone get-”

His orders were drowned out a moment later. The weapon’s company assigned to the task force had been in the process of setting up during the approach. While most of them were still out of position, the heavy machine gun teams had rushed to set up on either side of of access road that branched. The repetitive rat-tat-rat-tat of their M2’s was deafening, like the hands of an angry god ripping through the fabric of time and space. The captain kneeling nearby wasn’t sure if they were even firing with effect, but he couldn’t afford to care either.

The militiamen were a lot more sluggish to rally than the irregulars and state troops. From the distance, Major Aulus could only watch with a frown as his troops fanned out, sporadic fire crackling out from their positions. Whoever these savages were, they seemed like a worthy opponent, if only for the moment. Of the two companies he’d sent in, only a few had made it back to friendly lines. He wanted to believe that a few more had made it, somewhere, but judging from the ferocity that the enemy was fighting with, he wasn’t going to hold his breath.

“The men are in position, sir.” A young aide reported hurriedly, sweat trickling down his forehead as his head snapped up from his radio. The man was twitchty, one hand never far from the pistol on his belt. It was his first engagement, it seemed. “Orders?”

“Prepare the 3rd and 4th companies. What’s the status of our armor?”

“Moving up now, sir. Lieutenant Moore will radio when he’s ready for final approach.”

Given how quickly they had been called up, the task force had been forced to move with urgency. Rather gather up the full force of an armored group, they had cut most of the excess weight - with one exception. Among their contingent of wheeled and tracked carriers were a quartet of M20 Dobermanns. The medium tanks were older than anyone manning them, and lacking in heavy firepower, but they were quick and reliable.

Belching black smoke, two of the tanks rolled forward, their weapons swiveling towards the town ahead of them. One was the standard variant, meant to take on other armored vehicles and support infantry groups, while it’s companion that lead the way was a recon variant. A bit less lightly armored, thus making it quicker, it boasted an rapid fire autocannon. As they began their approach, men slid out of the turrets on top of each, ducking down behind the weapon shields as they charged the affixed heavy machine guns.

“Alright, first company, move up!” Captain Markham Wynne was at the core of the next group. If the militia were going to be swept aside by whoever they were facing, it was his men who would break through. The guardsmen of the motorized battalion were much better equipped and trained. “Prepare to advance! Support the tanks!” Somewhere off to the side, several more MRAPs peeled off as well, moving up ahead of the tracked vehicles. “Let’s go, move!” All around, there were hollers from junior officers, directing their squads to move up.

The militia were not without their purpose though. As the state troops advanced under the cover of fire, the more lightly armed soldiers contributed. Some of the more organized groups tried to do their part, moving alongside their other comrades, while others merely bunkered down and began to lay down suppressive fire. This far out, no one had a good bead on the enemy, at least without scopes, but it was better than nothing.

“Watch out for more of those suicide trucks, dammit! Keep an eye on the flanks!”
Conscription is the vitality of a nation, the purification of its morality, and the real foundations of all its habits.

It is better to be a warrior in a garden then to be a gardener in a war.

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Aethurheim
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Founded: Apr 15, 2021
Father Knows Best State

Postby Aethurheim » Sun Apr 18, 2021 12:20 am

Co-written with Shalum

Present Day
South Maldoria, near the Æthurian border
SKO Team 11 “Ravn”


The hills of Maldoria were often left barren, a result of inclement weather and overlogging to make room for both farms and mines. While green fields were still rolling before their eyes, flowers and shrubbery extending for miles, only a few small copses of trees could be spotted here and there. It wasn’t a good situation for infiltration, but they hadn’t trekked ten miles from their landing zone to double back into Æthurheim because of a bad hand. Team leader Major Jostein Hoel scanned the compound again, grunting quietly as he did a third count. Twenty-two. A large number, but if they moved quickly they could get in, grab the objective and extract. If things got loud, however, that was going to be another issue entirely.

A tap on his shoulder, and he glanced back at Løytnant Tore Grendahl, who raised his NVGs to quietly sign at his team lead. The question on all their minds; were they a go? Hoel considered for a moment before rolling the other way, flashing hand signals to the radioman, Løytnant Dag Melhus, who interpreted for a moment before silently pulling the handset from his backpack and click the send button twice to get the attention of the satellite receivers. After a moment, and a crackle of static, the NSB agent on the other end sent the response;

“This is Oversjef, go ahead.”

To the black ops team, even on minimal volume barely above mute, in the still hours of the dark night and so close to the enemy, the radio was practically blasting in their ears. After a moment to ensure they hadn’t been heard (even though the nearest Shalumite trooper was eight hundred meters away) Melhus responded in a voice barely above a whisper.

“Oversjef, Ravn-3. Ravn-Actual reports target site possesses two-two contacts minimum. Site illumination minimal, attitude lax. Interrogative from Actual; do we proceed?”

The team waited, breaths baited as they listened to the silence. Nearby, perched on a rock formation and so still she practically merged into the stone, was Kaptein Hanne Nesheim and her spotter Løytnant Eivind Tanck, who did the unenviable task of calling targets to her and interacting with the rest of the team. When she was posted up on her PR-42 rifle, her eye never left the scope until she had to relocate. Tanck glanced back, signaling an interrogative, to which Hoel signaled back a standby. This operation had come too far to get impatient.

Finally, the response from the base came back.

”Ravn, Oversjef. You have a green light. Acquire the target if possible, neutralize site if not. Radio silence unless absolutely. Good hunting. Over.”

“Copy, Oversjef. Op is go. Out.”

And with that, the SKO team silently rose, the three forward team members hunched down as they moved down the hill towards the target, sticking to the brush and scrub to cover them as they made the final approach towards the Imperial outpost.




Whoever had designed the outpost hadn’t exactly had comfort in mind. There wasn’t much to it beyond the bare necessities. Inside the double ring of Hesco bastion barriers, the army had set down a pair of shipping containers which had been retrofitted to house the troops. Nestled tight between them were a handful of generators which hummed constantly, feeding the few electronic systems inside. At the moment? They were mostly empty, aside from the handful of troopers who were sleeping off their overnight shift.

“Have you got it working yet?” In one of the pushouts along the wall, where the team had set up a heavy machine nest, Private Levi Fehr exhaled softly as he ran a hand through his hair. Compared to most other postings in the sector, he really couldn’t complain. It wasn’t as if the 34th Panzergenadiers had been sent in on a whim. No, they had come to replace a hussar brigade that had been holding the Cult at bay for months.

It beat getting shot at, but damn if there was nothing to do.

Opposite of him, Lance Corporal Sierra Mueller huffed as her fingers worked the radio. This far out from the city, it wasn’t as if they got much but static. Occasionally, she would catch a music station, or one of the programs that was being broadcast from up north through an affiliate. Neither were what they were looking for though. “I’m afraid not,” she frowned as she clicked to the next channel, “still nothing.”

“Damn.” The soldier sighed as he leaned back against the reinforced barrier, filled with dirt that the combat engineers had dug up before they hightailed it back to Palomar. Reaching down, he picked up his helmet and donned it once more, his eyes wearily gazing out of the emplacement and into the countryside in the distance. As the straps swung freely by his chin, he shrugged a shoulder. “I don’t even really give a shit about the game, but I haven’t even got to hear them play this season.”

A couple dozen yards away, near one of the wheeled Pumas that they had arrived in, a lieutenant dug into a MRE with about as much enthusiasm as one could expect. His lips curled as he poured the contents onto a styrofoam plate. If that’s what they call beef stew, I’m not sure I want to see what poor cow it came from. He thought as he squeezed out the last of the packet. “What were you saying?”

A sergeant rolled her shoulders, assault rifle slung over her shoulder as she shook a water bottle that had been mixed with electrolyte powder. “That report they sent us earlier? It sounds like they’re sending in the sixth division to Palomar now too. There’s gotta be something going on over there.” Her lips pursed slightly. “And we’re stuck in the middle of bumfuck nowhere.”

The lieutenant had to pause as the sound of an impact driver filled the air. Aside from their APC, the squads relied on a pair of lighter mine-resistant vehicles for patrols. Judging by the sounds of it, someone was finally getting around to maintenance work. “You’re not going to hear a single complaint from me.” The lieutenant chuckled softly. “If you want to go smoke the crazies out of boltholes, be my guest.”




Ravn team saved their energy on the journey down. Erratic movement was a trigger to human vision, a hardwired response to spot predators moving and stopping on the prowl. But by moving smoothly and at a good pace, they were actually less likely to get an errant glance their way. The service road for the post came up before the three kommandos, and on the other side was a line of Hescoes. Their first two sentries were posted here, one that walked the road and the other who was supposed to man the 14mm machine gun pointing off into the darkness. Luckily, the two had glanced away from their surroundings, and from the sound of it were currently discussing a game ongoing elsewhere in the Empire and who would win. Grendahl and Melhus reach the road first, as the opposite points on their inverted arrowhead. Hoel swept across the road quickly, almost like a spectre from the darkness.

To his credit, the trooper spotted the major quickly, and blinked in astonishment as he attempted to process the camouflaged ghost, carrying a carbine painted in the same pattern and wearing a set of goggles that glinted green in the light. But before the unlucky soldier could shout off a warning, Grendahl leveled his own carbine and, in a perfectly timed moment with the distant sound of the impact driver, fired a suppressed shot that took the man in the throat. Suppressed gunfire wasn’t as silent as in the movies, and operators had to make sure their noise was covered by something else. A single, solitary clap in the midst of an outpost making noise like this would draw a glance, but not much thought. Hoel swept up behind the walking sentry as he recoiled back in shock and surprise, already raising his rifle. The kommando quickly let his weapon hang, the steel knife in his hand in a flash as his other hand clapped over the man’s mouth, suppressing any noise as the knife drove decisively into the sentry’s temple and up into his brain. Slitting throats took too long, too noisy.

It was over in a moment, both sentries downed in quick succession as the team dragged the bodies over the Hesco, Melhus hurriedly grabbing a nearby tarp and tossing it over the splash of blood. Two down, twenty to go. They needed to find that hard drive and leave. However well they concealed the evidence, it was still evidence, and they had now left traces of their presence. Which meant this op now had a countdown.

Up in the rocks, the sniper team scanned over the post. So far, the three frontmen weren’t in danger of being discovered. It would be much harder to hide the bodies that Nesheim dropped, so they saved her pinpoint fire until the absolute last minute. In the meantime, Tanck had sized up a lieutenant, probably the commander of this post.

“Lieutenant spotted, near the motor pool.”

His job wasn’t to find things for her to shoot, Nesheim could manage that well enough, and she had likely selected her own target. But he needed to mark priorities for her so she didn’t need to constantly scan, center her aim. Her and that rifle were a finely tuned piece of balance, and a perfect shot took patience and preparation.

Hoel moved to the edge of the Hesco, glancing around the edge and pulling back. Central structure, likely to be the barracks area and computer center. For obvious reasons, it was in an area of high visibility, where everything could be run from. It wasn’t a large post, and this late at night there was likely to be a reserve asleep. He quickly shot off a hand signal, and Melhus and Grendahl stacked up on him. The major reached up, quietly squeezing off a burst to Tanck. Any spoken words now, even whispered, could be a death sentence. But the spotter was ready and knew his job, and after a few seconds squeezed back. They had a window.

Swiftly, the three kommandos moved across the space, carbines up as they scanned around them. Targets all around, but for an instant everyone was looking in the opposite direction, a rare opening they wouldn’t get again. Exfiltration would be a different matter.

The entrance quickly swallowed them, and Hoel snapped a hand up to rip the light duct taped to the doorway down, giving them a moment of silence as they all piled in together, in in front, Melhus behind with his rifle over the major’s shoulder and Grendahl watching the area they’d just abandoned in case some poor bastard stumbled across them. After a moment to make sure there was no alert, they slipped further in.

The two shipping containers were definitely an improvised structure, likely to have carried the equipment these troopers had brought with them. The computer and other electronics had to be last minute additions, and attempt to get the tech edge on the Cult of Hati. The Jotnar had buried deep since their failure in Concordia, and finding them had been difficult enough the garrison had been reinforced with several divisions of regular Imperial forces, the Guard gutted so badly they had given up the countryside for Concordia proper. But that tech was a double edged sword, as they were about to find out.

The computer operator glanced up from her station, a habit she formed as soldiers constantly entered and exited most likely, and Hoel was on her almost as fast as the surprise in her eyes. With a single hand on her mouth to stifle the noise and the other behind her neck, he wrenched with a single hard move, catching the corpse as she went limp and started twitching, letting her down as her movements stilled so as not to make noise.

Melhus was up. As well as radioman, he was also their tech specialist, and he quickly plugged the interface into the Imperial computer. Fortunate it was still logged in, or this would take much longer. Instead, the small module in Melhus’ hands injected the virus, easily slicing through security and accessing both the hard drive and the wider network. The point of choosing a remote outpost that was just setting up was to both exploit the Imps for assuming the Jotnar couldn’t take advantage of that network and to get past what would otherwise be a heavily fortified FOB. This kind of info normally wouldn’t be in a simple observation post, but the Cult was making the Empire desperate and angry.

Two things happened at the same time; Melhus chuckled quietly as the module flashed an affirmative. The classified intel had been ripped, and they had what they needed from the Imperial battlenet. Virus deployed to throw the system into chaos for a bit, cover their tracks.

And the poor bastard who had just rotated off working on the MRAPs stepped into the container, likely tired and looking forward to a good snooze in his bunk. He had gotten two steps inside and gotten a look at the three figures hunkering in the dark around the computer before Grendahl drilled three in his chest. The soldier fell, hard.

With no noise to muffle the shots or the impact.




Thump!

With the door to the container still half open, the body hadn’t even landed cleanly. Knocked back by the powerful round, the soldier had been blown back into the entrance he had just come from. Regulation stated that he was supposed to be wearing body armor on duty, the sort of thing that might have saved him if the outpost was suddenly hit, but at some point he had slipped it off while working on the squad’s truck. With a hand barely ghosting the handle of his service pistol, his blood splattered the metallic wall.

Lance Corporal Cynthia Heldic had been fast asleep in the room, unaware of what was transpiring around her. While some of her squadmates had taken to the night shift, she and two others had been sent out in one of the trucks on patrol. Even if nothing had happened, eight hours on the gun scanning the countryside for targets had taken something of a toll on her. The container wasn’t exactly comfortable, but it was air conditioned. It was more than she could have asked for.

The twenty something soldier jerked awake in the darkness. Are we getting hit with mortars? It was the first thought that flashed across her mind as she instinctively reached for her sidearm, a .45 ACP that she had kept close while she rested the rest of her kit against the wall. The blonde licked her lips, the taste of cotton on her tongue as she rolled towards the sound, vision still a bit blurry as she came to.

Her eyes widened in horror.

It was impossible to tell the entire situation in an instant, but it wasn’t hard to miss the bodies that littered the floor. Amanda was a twisted wreck on the floor, neck twisted at an odd angle and her eyes wide in horror. Beyond her body? Another one of their men lay, still twitching in death.

“Fuck! Fuck!” She hadn’t meant to curse, it was something that was purely instinct. Usually when they were under attack, the enemy wasn’t past the gates already. Still halfway on the floor, laid out in an awkward angle, she drew her pistol and undid the safety of the weapon with practiced ease. The intruders were already turning towards her, but that didn’t matter now. Not as she aimed for center mass.

In the confined space of the container room? The sidearm sounded like a canon as it barked.

It only took another moment for shouts of alarm, from what few army regulars still lived, to fill the night air.




There had always been the risk of soldiers asleep here in the containers, but the fewer the bodies the better for this op. The idea had been to blame these events on the Cult, and the longer the time until Ravn team could escape before discovery, the more this story would hold up. But this trooper had, through a quirk of NVGs, managed to appear as little more than another pile of equipment, strewn around the inside of the ad hoc barracks. Their field of view had been too flat, too blurry with their advanced goggles, to see the difference.

Which currently resulted in Grendahl lurching back as the .45 round smashed into his chest. Even with the ceramic ballistic plates under the kevlar to deaden the impact, the kinetic force of such a weapon was too intense to simply absorb, and the kommando lurched back, blindsided by the sudden shot and cursing. Melhus hunched over, protecting the module with his body and the radio, fumbling for his M19 on his hip. Hoel, meanwhile, rose up and switched to full auto, hosing down the trooper in her bunk with a long burst. Ten rounds of 6.5mm streamed out to tear into her form, those that missed or overpenetrated drilling through the wall behind her.

“Shit!” Hoel cursed, his hushed oath suddenly much quieter after the noise. They had maybe a second to get this done now, and he immediately activated the squad net. “Ravn, Actual! Go loud!”

Up on the rock formation, Nesheim took the breath she was in the middle of, letting it out halfway as she narrowed in on the lieutenant, her finger twitching on the hair-trigger as the muzzle barked, this one sending a high velocity .308 magnum bullet, hand loaded and specially crafted, to cover the distance in the snap of a finger.

Back in the container, Hoel quickly did a check on Grendahl. No blood, so the round hadn’t penetrated, but the operator would still be nursing a bruise for some time. The Imperial’s shot hadn’t been suppressed at all, so they would have to fight it out. They could either run for it or turn this place into their bunker.

“Melhus, get the system secured! Grendahl, we make a hole!”

One way or another, they would have to move fast to capitalize on the confusion, before the post had enough time to organize and center on them. With that, Hoel swapped magazines and stepped over the corpse, shouldering the door fully open as Grendahl recovered, carbine in hand as well as they stepped up to the gap. The first two sentries outside had just turned to investigate what was happening when they were blasted down by the kommandos’ carbines, a third soldier nearby getting her head cored by another shot from Nesheim.

Without a word, they bolted, Melhus taking up the rear as they sprinted towards the perimeter Hescos. Beyond that was darkness, and freedom.




“By the Maker!” Asta gasped as she backpedaled right into the hard edge of the field table they had set up earlier. One moment, they had been lamenting their service like any other night, and the next the lieutenant was simply gone. Whatever had drilled him had been a heavy, most likely armor piercing, round that had punched right through his plate carrier. As she sucked in a deep breath and fumbled for her rifle, the sergeant couldn’t help but shoot him a panicked look.

She had seen enough men die in this war already. It didn’t take a genius to realize that he was but another one of them now.

“We’re under attack! Everyone get down!” The brunette barked as she undid the safety of her rifle. It was a shorter bullpup, the sort of model that the army had liked to send them into urban environments with. “Does anyone have eyes on? Sierra? Levi? Anyone?” She barked into her radio as she rolled onto her stomach, weapon up as she swept the area around her.

Across the outpost, the door to the other building swung open with a bang. “I’m with you, man! I’m right here!” The trio that emerged looked worse for wear, some still stripped down to their undershirts and eyes crusted as they brought their weapons to bear, formation tight. Although they might have been asleep only a few moments earlier, the panzergrenadiers were disciplined when they needed to be. “It came from over there!”

“Movement!” Another grunted as his eyes caught a flash of dark material. He hesitated for a brief moment as his mind struggled to process if they were friend or foe. Judging by the way they moved, and the direction? They weren’t his people. “It’s the fucking Cult! They’re trying to make a run for it!”

They moved as one without another word. “Someone get a light on them! Don’t let ‘em get away!” Another growled as his finger slipped from the guard to the trigger. Set to semi-automatic, the trio of rifles began to spit death into the darkness.




“Gah! Godsdammit!”

Hoel stumbled as a round snapped into his calf, sending him towards the ground. Grendahl, not missing a beat, swept his team leader up with one arm and handling his carbine with the other to return fire. Melhus came up behind them both, his M19 in hand as he worked to put the module on the side away from where the panzergrenadiers were spitting lead from. Reaching the outer Hescos, the three kommandos managed to get to cover sufficient enough to take a pause, consider their options and reload.

“Three firing on the team,” Tanck deadpanned, his fingers idly spinning the binocular wheel to adjust. “Take the center one, the other two will be confused.”

Nesheim didn’t respond, merely working the bolt as another shell casing was ejected out, smoothly raising the scope back to her eye and moving smooth as fluid, narrowing in on her target.

Hundreds of miles away, in a command post shrouded in darkness and filled with cigarette smoke, another team worked in hurried silence, attending to what they needed to do while still looking up at the main screen, depicting the vitals and radio signals of Ravn team. This excursion, if successful, would enable countless more covert forays into Maldoria, literally spelling the success of the NSB and SKO assets that would be doing just what Ravn team was.

Except now, Ravn was taking fire from well trained Imperial soldiers. True, they had the data, but extraction was no longer as certain.

“Ambolt 2-1, standby for Strike Package Bravo. Authentication Delta-1.” The NSB coordinator glanced over at the agent standing at the main console, arms crossed as he listened quietly to the chaos unfold on Ravn’s end. “Sir, do we also prepare the Kortsverds?”

“No,” the handler quietly said, eyes narrowed as he observed the screen, like some ghastly specter observing the field for the dead and dying. “Svart Ørns can slip past Imperial radar. But Kortsverds would light up the entire net. We stick to the stealth assets...and only if there’s no other option here.”

Major Hoel grunted, wincing at the bullet that had caught his leg, but it wasn’t the worst wound he’d ever taken. The adrenaline would help him power through the next minute, which was far more important than bandaging the wound now.

“Dead bag!” he snapped, and Grendahl immediately pulled the oversized rucksack off his back, unzipping it as Hoel and Melhus popped up, adding their fire to the assisting shots their sniper had sent their way. In an instant, Grendahl hauled out several rifles of aging quality, worn assets captured from Cultists still in UR territory or who had done deals with them in the past. Old Imperial weapons and a few battered ATR-55s, staples of the Cult in their guerilla war on the Empire. That task done, he quickly put an arm under Hoel’s, hauling the team leader up as they finally set off into the darkness, assured that they now had enough room to escape the garrison’s guns.

“Oversjef, Ravn Actual! Target acquired, we are extracting now!”




“Hugh! Hugh! Fuck!” The furthest soldier cursed as his rifle barked thrice more, sending lead towards the barrier where the intruders had taken cover. Unfortunately, cover worked both ways in this instance. “Nico! Cover me for a second!” The riflemen didn’t wait for an affirmation as he slung his rifle over his shoulder and reached down to grasp for his fallen squadmate’s arm. “You’re gonna be okay, man! I’m right here!” He grunted as he began to pull him towards cover, bullets zipping back and forth over their heads as blood began to soak the dry ground.

“I’m sorry, Lieutenant. I’m really so sorry about this.” Across the field, the sergeant felt as if she might just puke as she had to all but belly crawl over her body. She had been in plenty of firefights before, but it had never been quite this brutal. He had always been there for her, like an island in the storm. And now? It was up to her to get their people out of this in one piece.

As more of her people fell out of their tents, or wherever else they had been cooped up in at the moment, Sergeant Asta worked her way across the dirt. “C’mon, c’mon, where is it?” They had a few long range radios, of course. Each of the vehicles had one, and their radio operators carried them on patrols. The problem was that those particular pieces of gear were on the far side of the yard. There was no way she could get to them in time.

The same couldn’t be said for their emergency flare guns. Tucked away in a low storage box, whose latches seemed insistent on being stuck now of all times, was one of those very pieces. Cursing under her breath, the sergeant fumbled with one for a moment. She would have traded anything for an illumination round, but this was the next best thing. As sweat dripped from her brow, the sergeant rolled onto her back and lifted the gun towards the air. A single pull of the trigger sent a bright red streak into the sky, but she didn’t even watch it as she went to reload the gun again.

“Die you sons of bitches!” Although they were in too confused a state to realize that half of their team laid dead already, those who were left had begun to fall in. Their training brought them close to the action, teaming up where they could. One soldier in particular, who snarled at the supposed cultists, was a short and heavy set man who practically slapped a box of ammunition into his light machine gun.

When a flare rose into the sky, unannounced and at such a late hour, it wouldn’t take long for something to happen. Even if the sector had been quiet, when compared to others, the Cult had attempted a few exploratory operations earlier in the year. The hussars and panzergrenadiers spread out across the area were still alert, and action always drew them in like moths to a flame.




“All Ravn callsigns, this is Actual! Relocate and begin evasive maneuvers!”

”Actual, say again, you’re breaking up. Is the asset secure, over?”

“Confirm, Oversjef! Hard pursuit, we are moving to LZ Fjord, request immediate evac!”

“Better make that a medivac, sir,” Grendahl replied, turning to squint at the outpost in the distance. “Crazy bastards are shooting flares at us. Must be desperate.”

Abruptly, one of the rounds fired by an Imperial panzergrenadier came too close, and the kommando ducked reflexively as the shot cut their air just a foot over his head. Melhaus immediately shoved his team member along, the module still tucked under an arm as he had no time to tuck it into his bag.

“That’s not at -us-, faenhode! They’re calling the QRF!”

In the distance, they heard another snap as Nesheim let her last shot out, Tanck quickly snatching up the shell casing into a bag as he packed up his spotting gear, the sniper team immediately moving to dismount the stone and make for the nearest sparse cluster of trees, the closest thing they had to a forest.

The night was lit up as, from the outpost, one panzergrenadier began squirting fire towards their backs, immediately diverting the kommandos down into one of the numerous gulleys, Hoel groaning as his wounded leg twisted under the strain. He sat down, hard, forced to stop by the bullethole. In an instant, Melhus was there to pick him back up, even as machinegun fire streamed over their last position.

“Dammit, didn’t we wipe those assholes out?”

“Not to worry, drengr,” Hoel shot back through clenched teeth. “We’ll be gone before the first Puma leaves their FOB. Just gotta get to the LZ.”

Which, no one wanted to admit, was still five hundred meters away, considered extremely close to the outpost, their team was split and they’d have to wait for the chopper to arrive with hostile assets closing in on them. Their only hope was if the survivors didn’t choose to pursue. That would get them a few more minutes.

”This is Ambolt 2-1. We are go for launch, Strike Package Bravo. ETA twenty mikes.”

If they didn’t get extracted soon, their story of a Cult attack would get a lot harder to explain.




“Is everyone alright?” Sergeant Asta called as she pushed up off the dirt. It was only once she had sent the second flare up that she realized that the enemy wasn’t returning fire anymore, not at least as far as she could tell. The same couldn’t be said for her own people, who were doing their best to light up the far side of the base. Head low and rifle close to her chest, she slid into cover next to one of her men. “How’s he doing?”

“Not great, ma’am.” The private grimaced as he dug through a medical bag, his fingers coated in sticky red blood. “Whatever they were packing went through his plate and dropped him hard.” He tapped a syringe of morphine. “I’m pretty sure they got Cynthia and Amanda, ma’am! And Jakob…” His eyes were dark as they darted over towards the soldier, still halfway lying in the doorway.

“Dammit.” It wasn’t surprising. Whoever these people were had gotten through their perimeter, and had probably taken a few more out along the way. “They...they got the lieutenant too. Someone get on the radio already!” She barked as she forced herself to look away.

“Already on it, ma’am!” One of the troopers called back, halfway leaning out of one of their MRAPs. He had certainly been asleep when the attack occurred, and had only had time to pull a plate carrier over his pale, bare chest. Holding up the radio transmitter, he grimaced. “Help is coming, but they’re still a few minutes out! Fast movers!”

“Someone cover me, I’m getting on the gun!” Another called over the gunfire. The response was instant as the rest of them, without a real need for prompting, opened fire once more. The soldier in question took that opportunity to sprint across the yard, not even noticing as his sock covered feet dug into the gravel. Teeth grit as he grunted, he practically tore the door open to clamber inside the armored truck and into the gunner’s seat. Getting into the other one, closer to the perimeter, would have been easier but they had been working on swapping the piece out for maintenance earlier in the day.

“Don’t let them get away!” Asta called as she lifted her rifle. “Keep them pinned down!” She barked as the gunner struggled to swing the heavy machine gun around atop the truck while still cowering behind the bullet shield.
Last edited by Aethurheim on Sun Apr 18, 2021 9:13 am, edited 2 times in total.
"A foolish man misuses his words. He either speaks too much and makes his words worthless or too little and renders them meaningless. A wise man speaks when needed, and reserves his words for true wisdom."

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Aethurheim
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Founded: Apr 15, 2021
Father Knows Best State

Postby Aethurheim » Sun Apr 18, 2021 10:43 pm

Co-authored with Shalum

Northeast Liam, Æthurheim
Ambolt 2-1, callsign “Frafalle”


The JF10K Svart Ørn had been in service with the Luftforsvaret since the late 1980s, a dependable and sleek bird kept in service by numerous upgrades and additions to her build. Her base model had actually been introduced in 1976, an infamous profile that had been studied and in some instances copied the world over. The Luftforsvaret proudly flew her for thirty years and would likely keep flying her until she was so outclassed in the air they were moving into science fiction.

Kaptein Esther Norred, callsign “Frafelle” glanced at her instruments, adjusting her heading as she did so. After taking off from the concealed airstrip this close to the border, she was technically about to violate another nation’s sovereignty. Such an act would normally bother her, but the nations neighboring Æthurheim were age old enemies (with the exception of Svinia) that every Æthurian child grew up being taught to hate with their very being. Shalum for the crimes of today, Acrea for the crimes of helping them and both for the crimes of the past. In some places across Æthurheim, ancient scars from the Great War could still be found, and the humiliations their grandparents had endured had been etched into modern memory. Things like the Iron Island Incident and the current skirmishing at the border only served to cement that hatred into the current generation.

“Esther, navpoint coming up. We’re due for course correction.”

Her copilot, Løytnant Haakon Mathisen callsign Spøkelsesrytter, was responsible for watching the onboard radar screen and manning the comms, countermeasures and weapons, leaving the act of keeping them airborne to her. She checked her own instruments to make sure he was correct (not that she doubted him, he was a better navigator that she’d ever be) and radioed to her wingman.

“Blodørn, this is Frafelle. We’ve reached navpoint 6. Ready course correction east by northeast, over.”

In response, the fighter next to her gently tilted its wings, and she spotted Kaptein Trond Horgen even flash her a thumbs up, her low light visor showing the motion even when their surroundings were pitch black.

”Copy, Frafelle. Course correction ready, on your mark, over.”

There was a procedure to flying multi merke warplane flying at near supersonic speeds, a dance to ensure you weren’t about to hit someone else or make a crater in the ground, and like any dance this one had a pattern of steps, an established method all pilots knew. She waited until the computer beeped at her and gave it another long three second count before she radioed over once more.

”Course correction, mark.”

Carefully, the two fighters tilted in midair, nosing towards the northeast and the Maldorian border. Flying this low, with the stealth coating embedded in their wings, the twin dagger shaped planes should be able to slip by the Imperial radar net without touching it off, though they were prepared at any time to scramble back. If the kommando team managed to reach their designated LZ and extract, an air strike to cover their escape would be unnecessary, and the goal then would be to leave with all due haste.

Miles away, the copilot of the SK42L Kongefisher tapped the readouts in the age old tradition of seeing if physical impact would change the results shown. In this instance, like most, the instruments did not change, and he hissed in eternal frustration born from both malfunctioning equipment and boredom.

“Needle’s sticking again. It says we’re still full up.”

“Have the knuckledraggers look at it once we’re back at base,” the pilot responded, her voice making it clear she didn’t want to have this conversation once more.

Escorted by a pair of MAS-81 Drakon attack helicopters, the stealth equipped transport sliced across the Maldorian countryside, cutting the long route around the hills so as to avoid Imperial outposts and long range radar and anti-air sites. Technically, they were well within the kill range of at least a half dozen missile systems, but so long as they kept off sensors, those missiles and their operators were blind to their presence. All the better to grab Ravn from their LZ, and fast.

Nesheim slid behind a tree, raising her compact SMG and checking behind them for the fifth time. Her long range rifle was useless in this mobile escape, broken down and quickly stashed in Tanck’s bag with his spotting gear. This was the point where she felt the most helpless, where her gods given accuracy had been stripped from her and she was forced into the same range as those she could normally touch with impunity. Being a sniper had that effect on the mind, and she suffered from it harshly. Next to her, Tanck checked their path forward, adjusting his NVGs in one hand while the other swept their surroundings with his carbine.

“Movement,” he hissed suddenly, spying headlights on the road pulling out of the outpost they’d just stung hard. “Vehicle, moving on intercept course. Ravn 4 to Actual, you got a truck coming after you, estimate about two hundred meters from your position, over.”

”4, Actual. Copy that, keep your eye on him. We’re en route to the LZ. Do not break off, repeat do not break off. We all get out or no one does, over.”

It was a good sentiment amongst special operations warriors, but the simple fact was the team was split with hot pursuit. If it came down to it, they had to sacrifice their lives and safety for the data. Those were their orders. But Hoel had never left an operator behind, and he didn’t sound like he’d make a habit of it now.

“Actual, 4. Solid copy. We’re coming for you, Major. Just hold the bus until we get there. Out.”[/i]

Tanck glanced to Nesheim, who gave a short nod back, not taking her eyes off their rear. With that, the sniper team immediately moved through the trees at a low sprint, watching the road as they raced to catch up with the rest of the team.




Bang! Bang! Bang!

The heavy machine guns that the Shalumites liked to mount on their vehicles was rather infamous. Chambered with a 12.7mm round, which could cut through a light vehicle’s armor or pierce a soldier as if they weren’t even there, every discharge sounded like a god’s personal vengeance. The night sky soon began to flash white as tracer sounds filled the air.

Of course, the man behind the gun didn’t actually know where his targets were.

“Keep it up! Don’t give them a chance to even freaking breathe.” Despite the confidence of the driver, the panzergrenadiers weren’t exactly in any shape to actually pursue their attackers. The squads were still trying to recover, many of their teammates dead or dying. “Sergeant? Are we clear to pursue? Over.”

Asta grimaced as she helped one of the privates lay out a fallen comrade. He was bleeding, and rather badly at that. The plate had saved him from certain death, but he needed more help than anyone alive could give him. “Don’t do anything stupid! Just keep them occupied until the cavalry shows up!” She barked into her radio as she dropped down onto her knees. Peeling off her dirty combat gloves, she began to dig into a medical bag. “Stay with me, soldier. Help is coming.”

“You heard the sergeant.” The truck grunner grunted as his fingers flexed against the trigger. The frame shook as his gun fired again. “They’re our problem for now. Let’s pay ‘em back for their kindness, yeah?”

A few miles in the distance, the low rumble of diesel engines cut through the night sky as a patrol from the 44th BCT broke from their nightly route. The shift, until now, had been like any other. Everyone had seen the warning flare rise up over the hills, and now the constant drum of gunfire was like a thunderstorm as it rolled into the area. Asking for permission to move and assist had been more like a formality than anything else.

All they had to do now was get there before the party ended.

“Do we have any birds in the sky?” Everyone was at their posts at another outpost further down the line. When the cult struck at one target, they usually seemed to hit a dozen more at once. “Anything at all?”

“Not right now.” An airforce controller quickly shook their head. “A couple strike drones to the west, and a few fighters head back to Palomar. Nothing that will make a difference right now.” He paused and glanced over his shoulder, towards one of the trucks with a drone launcher built into the bed. “I have an idea though…”




”Sverd-1, Ravn 3! We’re taking incoming heavy weapons fire, contacts in pursuit! Where are you, over!”

“Ravn, Sverd, we’re almost there. ETA ten mikes. We’re cutting it pretty fine, you’d better all be there, over.”

”Sverd-1, Ravn Actual, I’ve got two other team members out there behind us, you’re gonna have to wait when you touch down! Over.”

The copilot glanced over at his pilot, who pursed her lips before shrugging and shaking her head, tapping the clock on the dashboard. Underneath it was a timer, quietly ticking down to when the jets would be within strike range. While blaming the missiles on Cult IEDs could be done, it would be a hard sell.

“Ravn, Sverd. We hear you, but no promises made. Ambolt is right behind us, loaded and ready for bear. They better be running for their lives Major. Over.”[/i]

Hoel swore as he stumbled again, leaning on Melhus as he tried to keep his focus. His calf was now completely soaked in his blood, no time to strap a tourniquet on. The adrenaline that had been keeping him going was beginning to be outweighed by the pain, but at least for now he could still move forward.

Another brace of machine gun fire cut the air over their heads, massive rounds more akin to cannon shells zipping past the run they were hidden in. Their luck would soon run out, however. The dry riverbed petered out a hundred meters from the LZ, and that gun could still reach out and hit them, even if the truck carrying it stopped now. Grendahl, covering their rear, ducked again reflexively, his hand cautiously stroking the underbarrel grenade launcher he carried, the only one of the team to do so. While he could fire back, their position for now was concealed, the gunner clearly only having a general idea of where they were.

“Let’s move, what are we waiting for?” Hoel snapped, limping forward as fast as he could, making it almost seem like he was hopping forward.

“Sir, what about the last-”

Melhus was interrupted as Hoel growled and yanked his arm off his radioman’s shoulders, moving towards the end of the riverbed and the open expanse.

“We run it of course! Always the plan! So are you a Kommando or not?”

Melhus glanced back at Grendahl. The two had served together in the Angrepstropper, before they’d moved on up from crazed shock troops to surgical operators. If anyone could talk the major down, it was him. But the weapons expert just shrugged, flipping up the leaf sight on his grenade launcher, apparently nonplused.

“Don’t fucking look at me, I’ve never been able to stop him.”

Melhus glanced back, obviously worried about their team leader...only to watch the crazy bastard hop his injured ass up the bank and into the open ground, even as the tracers from the heavy machine gun cut the night air around him.

“C’mon, drengr! He has to reload sometime!”

And with that, the front team kommandos were abruptly running to cover the last few hundred feet towards salvation, bullets lighting up their world as they sprinted to catch their insane commander.




“Spread out! Got too bunched up!”

The lance corporal who gave the shout couldn’t believe this. He wasn’t the one who should have been leading the formation, it had only been three weeks since he had passed the paperwork part of his test. But with the sergeant still back at the outpost, trying to pull the last of the squad together while they handled the wounded, the duty had more or less been pushed onto him. Aside from the two in the truck? He and three others had spread out along it’s flanks, keeping low while bullets flew over their heads.

Bang! Bang! Click!

The gun fell silent without warning. For a brief moment, the soldiers could actually hear themselves think, at least until the low sounds of cursing filled the air. Had their truck been more modern, like one of the ones parked back at the outpost, it wouldn’t have been a problem. The weapons stations were remote, and fitted with both night vision and thermals. “Stop the truck for a second!” The gunner barked as he began to fiddle with the heavy weapon. “I’ve gotta reload!”

As the brakes squealed in sudden protest, the lance corporal hissed as he dropped down onto his stomach. The dirt and rock dug into his vest, but he didn’t pay it any mind as he peered through the night scope affixed atop his rifle. Bathed in the green haze of light, he could make out the hills a fair bit better than the nake eye alone could. There!

“Movement to eleven-o-clock!” He called out as his finger ghosted the trigger of his carbine. The corporal knew the rest of the fireteam had the same scopes he did. They didn’t even compare to NVGs, but they were better than nothing. “Engage!”

A few miles away, in the safety of his commander seat, Captain Anton Setter grunted as his armored vehicle raced down a country road. Infrastructure this far out from the major cities was more of a suggestion than anything else. The combat engineering teams had done this best to improve things, with their dozers and road graders, but it was slow going work. Especially when the cult lurked, just waiting for the right moment to detonate a roadside bomb or hit a passing work crew.

“Can’t this thing go any faster?” He muttered into the radio as his eyes swept over their surroundings. The new Hornisse was like an entirely different beast when compared to the older Sentinel he had commanded only a few weeks prior. While the engine was much more powerful, and the main cannon capable of tanking on a tank in the right conditions, the best feature (in his personal opinion) was the upgraded electronics suit. It was as if he could see everything, between the various cameras and the remote weapons station at his fingertips.

“I’m sorry, sir.” The diesel engine whined a bit louder as they rocked again. “I don’t feel comfortable going much faster than this.” The driver glanced down at the odometer. Forty miles an hour offroad wasn’t bad for their conditions, all things considered. “Motor pool would have my ass if we scratch the new paint.”

“All units, be advised, this is Outpost 11-Gamma broadcasting on guard. Be advised, we have a drone in the air. It will be on station shortly. Say again, drone in the air.” The radio crackled in the crew’s ears.




“Incoming!”

Even as far away as they were, the Imperial troopers were still capable soldiers. Ravn team had hunted down Revenant, KSA and even Cult figures back in Æthurheim. Tenacious and dedicated, certainly. But few soldiers between them, mostly mercenaries to pad the militia. But these soldiers were actually trained to put rounds on target, and while the heavy machine gun had gone quiet at last, rifle rounds were zipping past them. This close to the LZ, there was no longer any choice.

“Grendahl, let ‘em have it!”

“Copy that!”

Aiming down the leaf sights once more, Grendahl squeezed the 40mm and the weapon lightly pushed against his shoulder, a loud cough popping out. Unlike what movies, video games and popular media stated, rocket, missile and grenade launchers were actually low recoil weapons, the impact of the explosive being the far more devastating part of the weapon. In this case, the explosive shell whistled past in a low parabolic arc, smashing into the front grill of the vehicle chasing after them, detonating with the fury of a hand grenade.

“Burn like Sunni, bastards,” the weapons expert exclaimed before turning to follow Hoel across the open scape.

“Sverd, this is Ravn 3. We are at the LZ, how copy ETA, over?”

”Ravn, Sverd. Sat says we’re three mikes out, with the planes right behind us. The rest of your team better be right on your ass, over.”

A round split the tree right next to Melhus, who spun around, handgun raised to squeeze off a few rounds by reflex. The range was too far for pistol shots, but the distance was closing, backlit by the fiery inferno the truck had become. Grendahl and Hoel, having reach their own positions behind a rock and a tree respectively, rose to fire back, their suppressors long since exhausted and their carbines firing loud and proud, shell casings rattling off the rock and ground nearby.

“Hoel, two o’ clock!”

“I see him!”

The major squeezed off a burst, cursing as he had to swap magazines. There was no controlling the casings, of course, but he could at least change magazines without leaving evidence behind.

“Ravn 4, Actual! Where the fuck are you, we’re getting lit up over here and our ride’s almost on target!”

“Actual, 4! We’re inbound Major! More contacts on the road! We’re about to get company!”

Tanck and Nesheim were practically sprinting through the underbrush now, trying to reach the LZ in time. In the distance, they could see the burning wreck, illuminating the firefight that was raging between the front team and the troopers from the outposts, tracers filling the air like angry hornets streaking through the sky.

Abruptly, one round ricocheted off the rocky surface Grendahl was taking cover behind, splintering the stone and smacking into the man’s chest, piercing through the side gap, barely avoiding his heart and it ripped his torso from side to side, dropping the kommando like a sack of potatoes with a yelp that was cut off midbreath.

“Man down! Sverd, you get your ass down here now!”

Melhus sprinted over, flipping Grendahl over as the man flopped around like a fish, gasping for breath as a lung collapsed from the bullet wound.

“Shit, he’s still alive! Hang in there, Tore!”




“Holy shit!”

The truck had been designed to take punishment. Decades of conflict in Maldoria had taught the army a few things. In the early days, so many vehicles had been lost to ambushes, especially when they came in the form of roadside bombs. Now every truck sent into the combat sectors, with the exception of the logistical ones, was mine resistant and heavily armored. When the grenade struck home, and an explosion engulfed the front of it, the heavy engine sputtered and died. The soldier in the driver’s seat was alive, though slumped in his seat unconscious. In the gunner’s station, the private who had been manning the gun groaned as blood dripped from where his helmet had smashed into the armored ring.

“Someone check on them!” A rifle barked again off to the right of the lance corporal, no doubt one of his men trying to keep the enemy pinned for a few moments longer. Shaking his head, he dared to rise up and dash for the burning truck. “Weber! Grab the man on gun, I’m going for the driver!” It was only once he drew close that his lips pulled into a grimace. At a distance it hadn’t looked great, but the MRAP had certainly seen much better days.

Further down the line, Private Lockhart gave a humorless smile behind the scope of his rifle. “Hey! I got one! Shit, they’re trying to grab him!” His rolled onto his side to reach for a fresh magazine, slapping it in as fast as he could. “Can anyone...dammit.” With the rest of his fireteam congregating around the truck, it was up to him to keep the enemy occupied. Lifting his rifle again, he took aim at the figure hunched over his target.

Perhaps it wasn’t right, but the rule of war had no place here. Not after what these people had done to his squad. He didn’t hesitate to pull the trigger.

Across the field, the armored formation rattled over the hill. “Heads up everyone! We got a pretty good explosion in the distance.” Hammer 1-1’s commander radioed as the vehicle, at the head of the formation, turned towards the skirmish. “Spread out! They might have something that could crack us open like a tin-can.”

“We hear you, 1-1.” Captain Setter grunted back as his fingers danced across the control console in front of him. His driver didn’t need any prompting, nor did any of the others. They peeled off the road one by one, spacing out so that a single explosion wouldn’t take them all at once. “Let’s see how this thing handles offroad, yeah?”

The driver chuckled as their vehicle took a nosedive into a shallow hill. “You sure the protection system works, sir? I know they say it does, but I don’t know if I trust it-”

“Contact front! Contact front! We’ve got footmobiles!” The gunner barked as he swung the turret around. Hydraulic whined as he brought the cannon to bear, the scene clearly displayed through the night vision cameras. “Permission to engage?”

“Driver? Slow us down a bit, they should be in range now.” Anton ordered at once as his own fingers brought the secondary to bear. Like so many other vehicles, it was a remotely operated heavy machine gun. “Permission granted, light them up.” He finally said as one of their Pumas, loaded with a squad of infantrymen, broke off to circle around and approach from a wider angle. It wasn’t an encirclement, but it was as close as they could manage with their numbers.




Melhus howled as, attempting to pull Grendahl out of the line of fire, two shots smacked into his back. The first was absorbed by (and broke) the ceramic ballistic plate, allowing the second to slip through and exit through his collar. A spray of blood decorated the forest floor, and he stumbled as the adrenaline took over, firing his handgun back blindly at the encroaching troopers. Compared to the other two, Major Hoel’s injuries were suddenly very light, and he swapped another magazine, cursing as he tapped what he had left. They weren’t fitted for a long fight, and at this point he had to be down to less than a hundred rounds.

“Sverd, Ravn! Tell me you’re over the hill, or you’ll need a burial detail! Under heavy fire, light armor approaching! It’s do or die time!”

“Actual, to your eight!”

The added weight of another carbine and an SMG, which seemed inconsequential compared to the ever increasing vehicle assisted firestorm coming towards them, rattle behind Hoel’s position, Nesheim and Tanck bringing their fire to bear as they took up positions on the flank.

“About time, Eivind! Where the fuck were you two?”

“Do you know how much distance there was, sir? We’ve been running track just to get here!” Tanck ducked reflexively as another brace of shots came his way, huffing and puffing before he popped up again, his carbine chattering. “Where in Hela’s darkest dreams did those tanks come from?”

“QRF, I bet!” Hoel shouted back as he hauled Melhus and Grendahl into cover. “We’re all bleeding out, and the Imps keep getting thick and thicker!”

“Do we have the data?” Nesheim asked, chattering a few bursts from the high capacity mag. With a single motion, Hoel leaned down, yanking the module off Melhus’ chest, sliding it into his own webbing.

“Confirm that. Those fuckers will have to shoot us out from under it before they get this back!”

A nearby explosion underlined that statement, highlighting the fact that might just happen.

”Ravn, this is Dolk-1. We’re coming up on the LZ, a lotta movement down there. Need you to mark your position.”

“About fucking time!” Hoel grunted, yanking a flare off his vest and snapping it. “Tanck, toss this!”

With no hesitation, the spotter took the flare, stepping away from their cover and exposing himself to the fire blanketing their position, hefting the green phosperant stick into the middle of the LZ, simultaneously marking the clearing for the helicopter and designating their own position.

“Dolk-1, Ravn Actual! LZ and friendlies marked with green flare! Contacts out down the smoke, commence support fire! Danger close, enemy consists of foot mobiles and light armor, over!”

”Copy that Ravn. We see your flare. Get your heads down, sir. We’re gonna burn it all down, out.”

With that, the two Drakons broke from the Kongefisher, separating to flank the cluster of contacts on the hill. After scanning the area, quickly designating the thermal signatures closing in on the clearing, the two gunships engaged weapons.

“Scorch the ground, boys.”

Svovel missiles flew from the stub wings of the Drakons, each one seeking out an armored car or wheeled tank, the anti-tank munitions piercing the outer armor plates and making a mockery of the mine-resistant countermeasures. For the infantry, they saved the ball-turreted 20mm autocannons, which spat explosive fire to tear up the ground with their shells, chasing the thermal signatures around through the trees and rocks.

“There’s one, running for the road.”

“Got him. There’s his buddy too. 2, Snag that APC.”

“Copy, Svovel away.”


While the helicopters were busy demolishing the QRF, the Kongefisher finally settled down in the clearing, the side doors opening while the mounted machine guns opened up, ripping the darkness with rapid sheets of tracers.

“C’mon, Major!” the crew chief yelled from the door. “This place is about to get turned into the surface of the fucking moon!”

With that, Hoel quickly grabbed Grendahl’s plate carrier strap, hauling the weapons expert across to the helicopter, fighting the downwash from the rotors as behind him Nesheim did the same with Melhus, Tanck scanning the darkness to make sure they no longer had attention firing in their direction before he too stepped up behind the rest of the team, the door swiftly slamming shut behind him. All told, the Kongefisher was only on ground about forty seconds, before taking off again, wheeling around and heading back for the border, the twin Drakons in hot pursuit before any survivors could positively identify who they were.

”Ambolt 2-1, this is Sverd 1. We have Ravn, repeat, we have the objective and all personnel. Break off, break off and scramble for home, over.”

“Glad to hear the good news, Sverd 1. Breaking for home, over.”

“Oversjef, Sverd-1. Ravn collected, objective in hand, heading for home. Be advised, multiple WIAs, medical attention critical on landing, over.”


“This is Oversjef. We copy all. Good work everyone, medics will be on standby for aide. Come on home, mission accomplished. Over, and out.”




“Mein...gott”

For a moment, it was as if the very air itself had stilled around the outpost. Explosions flashed in the sergeant's eyes as the sky itself rained hellfire upon their reinforcements. Asta wasn’t even sure if they had realized their fate. One moment, they had been charging in to take the pressure off, and the next they were simply gone. In the distance, over the hill, she could still hear the rumble of explosions as ammunition cooked off.

They were all dead. They had to be. The radio net was silent as a grave.

“Ma’am?” At her side, one of the privates had fallen down onto his knees. His eyes were wide in shock, incomprehension too, as he stared out past the Hesco walls. The skyline wasn’t dark anymore. Instead it glowed with fire and destruction. “What just...what just happened? Those were aircraft, weren’t they?” The cult had stolen a few birds, of course, but they had never pulled off something like that before. “Was that…”

“I really have no idea.” The sergeant whispered as she pulled herself up. Her hands shook as she reached up to grasp at the radio attached to her chest. “This is Outpost 10-Gamma broadcasting on guard frequency, does anyone read, over? I say again, does anyone read, over?” Her lips parted with concern as she took a step forward, and then another. “Hammer squad, do you read? Is anyone alive out there?”

Silence hung in the air. Around her, the last of her squad slowly began to emerge from their fighter positions, expressions grim as they clutched their weapons tightly. “One of you get on the long range radio. Start up the Puma if you have to.” The sergeant exhaled sharply. “Radio command and inform them that we have a critical situation on our hands.”

“Code Vermillion, ma’am?” Even though the man at her side wasn’t an officer, everyone knew the meaning. Of them all, that particular color was the highest priority, considering it signaled only one thing - imminent invasion.

“I wouldn’t go that far. Not yet.” She shook her head gravely. “Code Gold for now.” It was a less severe level of imminent threat against the homeland. “Go now. Los! And someone else get on the radio, make sure the air defense companies aren’t sleeping in right now.” She glanced over her shoulder. “The rest of you with me. We’re going out there. If the Maker is merciful...someone might still be alive out there.”
"A foolish man misuses his words. He either speaks too much and makes his words worthless or too little and renders them meaningless. A wise man speaks when needed, and reserves his words for true wisdom."

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Shalum
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Posts: 2471
Founded: Oct 07, 2012
Scandinavian Liberal Paradise

Postby Shalum » Thu Apr 22, 2021 12:49 am

Forward Operating Base Lennox
Palomar, Shalum


The center of Imperial military operations in the southern reaches of the duchy was nothing that would have drawn attention at first glance, much less a second. Until seven months ago, the squat warehouse surrounded by a decrepit security fence had been all but abandoned when its previous owners decided it was simply cheaper to relocate rather than fix the aging building. With space in the city becoming more of a premium with each passing week, however, the army had decided to move in and convert the surrounding area into an operations center. While combat engineers gutted the warehouse, other work crews had erected numerous tents and prefabricated structures around the central building to accommodate the legions who would soon be deployed to the city.

On the second level, in the old office where the managers would have once overseen operations, a command center had been set up. Normally it would have been manned by a dozen communications technicians, but for the moment they had been encouraged to conduct their work elsewhere while officers piled into the room. None of them had felt the need to question the order, especially when the guards at the door had been replaced by intelligence agents in black with SIU symbols stitched neatly into their uniforms.

Agent Alme clicked the remote connected to the digital projector.

Although it didn’t make the trademark click that the older style ones did, he almost wished that it had if only to provide a bit more emphasis to the next slide. In the early morning light, the burning wrecks of four armored vehicles was a grim sight. Unlike the pictures that would soon be released to the media, his team hadn’t been afraid to show the grizzly aftermath. The entire reaction force had died in their vehicles, either killed by the explosion, or cooked alive in the moments that followed.

“If you would refer to page fifty-four of the report.” The STG agent paused for a moment as the assembled officers glanced down at the thick paper sheets that had been laid out in advance. “The quick reaction force, which had been patrolling between forward combat outposts five and fifteen, was engaged and totally destroyed by enemy forces half a kilometer to the south of outpost ten. The entire formation was destroyed, most likely before they had so much as a chance to engage the enemy. In total? Thirty-seven dead. We’re still working to identify the bodies at the moment.”

Although he might have been one of the youngest in the room, it was the officers around the table that shifted uneasily as they glanced between their reports and the images on the screen. War was a brutal business, it was something every soldier came to accept once they had stepped foot onto the battlefield. So far, however? They had made the Cult pay for every loss they took. At least until now. After an extensive search, they hadn’t found a single enemy corpse. A few blood splatters in areas where they had been reported when retreating, but that meant little unless they happened to capture one alive later down the road.

I wonder, Agent Alme mused to himself, if this is what the Cult feels like every time we slaughter them like lambs.

“Do we have any idea what sort of group we’re dealing with here?” Brigadier Markus Holsen of the 61st Dragoons asked, expression tight as he exhaled slowly. He took a moment to tap some of his cigarette’s ash into a tray before he continued. “This doesn’t exactly strike me as Angrboda’s handiwork, or anything we’ve seen from her lieutenants so far. If this was one of them? They’d have done a hell of a lot more than strike at a single point.”

The 312th’s brigadier, who commanded a force of airborne infantry which operated primarily out of gunships, nodded in agreement and took a sip of water from a metal tumbler. “I see here that this Sergeant Asta mentioned...helicopters were involved as well. No positive identifications on make or model, but she and the other survivors present can confirm without a doubt that the enemy force was most likely extracted that way.”

Agent Alme nodded as he shared a glance with another agent in the room. “While I’m afraid I don’t have all the answers, we’ve been working a lot with Imperial Army Intelligence on this one. We even brought a forensics team down from Concordia to do an analysis on some irregular weapon casings we found.”

He set the clicker down and crossed his arms over his chest. “While most of the ammunition spent obviously belonged to our troops, there were some peculiar outliers. One in particular was the presence of 6.5mm rounds found both in the outpost, as well as in the neighboring field where the hostile forces were presumably extracted. There were others, detailed in the report, but that one stands out in my mind. As I’m sure you know…”

Alme paused to give them all a pointed look. “While the Empire has considered using such rounds before, none of our forces use them at this time. The same can be said for local guard forces. The majority of their weapons that fell into Cult hands are surplus stuff from the last generation. Nothing exactly groundbreaking.” His dark eyes drifted to a stack of paper on the table. “If you don’t mind taking a look, they made some...hypothesis based on what military forces in Eracura use those particular ammunition types. I believe they even listed several weapon makes.”

The silence wasn’t uncomfortable, nor was it unexpected. For a moment, the officers glanced over the material while the agent reached over to pick up a mug of coffee that had long since gone cold. “Agent Alme? Are you suggesting-”

“Suggesting is a strong word at the moment. I wouldn’t even dare to infer anything right now.” His voice was low and humorless as he turned back to face them. “We haven’t even gotten to the part where our radars picked up a single, undietended contact to the southwest, near the border, for approximately seven seconds before it disappeared again.”

The city’s garrison commander sighed as he leaned back in his seat, a leather swivel that had seen better days. “This is more or less in line with the other reports you’ve given us, no?” His sun-kissed skin was wrinkled with age and years of stress as he eyed the intelligence officer. “The Cult might not have been as active the last few weeks, but our people have reported experiencing a lot more foreign equipment in their arsenals lately.” It wasn’t the cheap stuff either. Rather than surplus kit, it had most likely come from south of the border; there were only two reasonable explanations there, and neither looked good politically.

Alme rolled his shoulders as he stepped closer to the table. Playing soldier had never really suited him. The body armor and fatigues had never been his style, not when compared to blending into a crowd or dealing with the suits in the capital. “We can assume that whoever did this was well organized, equipped, and informed. Every vehicle in the convoy was equipped with an active protection system. Of course, the one our forces currently utilize is effective against every but top attack systems. Either their ground force was equipped with several launchers,” he smiled grimly, “or they were struck by one of these reported aircraft.”

The officers all shared a glance with one another. “Agent Alme?” The garrison commander gave the man a pointed look. “We’ve all been reading what your people have sent down the pipeline for weeks. Are you suggesting that we have credible intelligence that Azzie forces crossed the border to engage us?”

The STG agent couldn’t help but chuckle softly. “More or less, colonel, yes.” Alme confirmed after a moment. “If we took action every time we had credible intelligence, however, our nations would never be at peace. You know this as well as I do.” Although the Great War might have been the last big dust up between the powers of the Eracuran mainland, everyone with a half-decent intelligence agency knew the truth.

It was a proxy war with more layers than a heartland onion.

“I can safely assume,” Brigadier Holsen exhaled, “that this isn’t the last we’re going to see of this?” It wasn’t a thought that settled well with him. The Cult was bad enough on their own. His troops had taken so many losses holding out further south that they had been rotated off the front so that they could replenish their ranks. While their very existence was questioned by many, as to whether it was a real movement or another front organized by the Azzie government, they hadn’t seen anything concrete until now.

“As much as I would like to take your money, I prefer a fair bet any day.” Agent Alme mused as he stepped back to reach for his coffee again. “No, if I had to wager, this is just the beginning gentlemen. We may not have many agents behind Cult lines, but they haven’t exactly been able to contend our drones either. They’re moving around a lot right now, and if I had to guess, this city is going to be their next target. I hope you’ve enjoyed what little peace you’ve been able to get so far, because it won’t last much longer.”

The colonel of the garrison grimaced as he leaned forward. “And what exactly do you think we should do? High Command hasn’t told us much beyond ‘do what we see fit,’ and I haven’t heard from General Malcomson in days.”

“He’s been busy dealing with things up north. Sooner or later, this storm is going to reach every corner of the duchy, and he wants to be ready when it happens. They hit Concordia once already, and only the Maker knows when they’ll try to do so again.” Agent Alme shrugged. “As far as advice goes? That’s a bit beyond my paygrade. Knowing the Cult’s position though…”

He glanced back at the screen, and picked up the clicker again. It took a few moments to bring up a map of Palomar. “They know they can’t take us in an open fight. No matter how much faith they might have, we still have the tanks and air force on our side.” He mused under his breath. “Couple that with special operations, or whatever our new friends might have in store? They’ll probably try and make life hell for us. Sabotage the mining complexes, maybe even hit logistical lines in and out of the city. That’s what local resistance did to the Azzie military back in the war, if I remember right.”

The colonel grimaced. “We patrol those areas regularly, but there’s only so much we can do, even with as much manpower as we have now.” The bridges and railroads had always been given priority. Palomar depended on them to get food in every day, as well as to get refugees and raw resources out to processing centers further north. There were alternate routes, of course, but that meant routing convoys through more risky routes or adding days worth of travel time. “Even with drone support, our people aren’t perfect. It’s a big damn game of whack-a-mole.”

“Do what you can for now. The STG is going to be deploying more people shortly, including several SIU teams.” The agent couldn’t help but smile a bit at that. So far, special operations had been left more or less to the army and air force. It was about time his own agency got their chance to participate, even if it was the sort of thing that would never make it to the history books. “Trust me, when the Cult starts to make their move? You’ll know.”
Conscription is the vitality of a nation, the purification of its morality, and the real foundations of all its habits.

It is better to be a warrior in a garden then to be a gardener in a war.

User avatar
Aethurheim
Civil Servant
 
Posts: 9
Founded: Apr 15, 2021
Father Knows Best State

Postby Aethurheim » Thu Apr 22, 2021 10:00 am

Fremover Militært Kommandosenter Gallagher, “De Bolverk”, Bredt Øye

The military strongpoint meant to stand against the northerners was an old site. The medieval castle itself still stood as a centerpoint to the base, reconstructed and restored many times as the centuries went by, though in truth its value as a defensive fortification had long ago been rendered obsolete by gunpowder even before artillery, tanks and aircraft underlined it. More modern construction techniques had given her better survivability, including concrete foundations, mortar between the stones, steel beam reinforcements and so on. Now, for the most part, the castle had been turned into a series of offices and historic preservation sites and archives. The real military center was in the sprawl of buildings around the castle grounds, stretching down the hill it was built on. Armories, office blocks, barracks, motor pools, drilling ranges, an extensive airfield and a military technical center made the site commonly called ‘De Bolverk’ into a modern post, filled with regular Hær troops, Gallagher Stat Vakt drilling next to them, Luftforsvar personnel attending to their planes and helicopters, Sjokktropper platoons running through assault courses to keep their skills sharp, attacking dummies with bayonets and combat hatchets. Mammut tanks rumbled on testing courses, Muldyr APCs and Pitbull LAVs rolled down roads either individually or in small convoy groups to ferry troops, supplies or even the vehicles themselves to the training centers or a motor pool. The complex played host to generals, coordinated with several other bases and had well established lines of fallback for the inevitable day when Shalum’s onslaught would overwhelm the place. Thick with radar bases, anti-air defenses, artillery pits, fire control stations, forward munitions bunkers and fighting pits, it was the second most defended place in all of Æthurheim short of Lowellsburg on a war footing. Nothing short of a full fledged offensive would budge this place.

Deep under the base, past high security bunkers and hardened server rooms, there was one place specifically reserved for select personnel. NSB agents, Special Operations personnel, select high level officers and other persons technical and covert. The room was always guarded by NSB agents, Spec Ops personnel such as Fallskjermjegere or simply Militærpoliti. Unlike other briefing rooms on base, when not in use it was sealed up and left to wait until its select purpose was needed again. This was De Skall. The Shell.

“Ravn team’s op was a success, but we cannot say it was a complete success. Major Hoel and Løytnants Grendahl and Melhus are laid up with various injuries for at least the next month of recovery and physical therapy. Imperial QRF was faster than we had anticipated, and we saw firsthand the effectiveness of their light armor doctrine. From now on, SKO teams will run in pairs with heavy armaments. Forget reducing footprint. We’re not going to put our people at risk like that again.”

The picture changed from the overview shot of the outpost first used to plan the raid, changing now to a satellite overview of the Maldorian city of Palomar, the largest and closest urban center to the border. The quiet shifting of figures in the dark room was the only sound, as well as the occasional cough. Just from the sounds of the fabric scraping, the agent giving the briefing could tell there were just as many military uniforms in here as there were suits, and the sounds were emanating from either side of the table, a clear sign of the divide between the NSB and SKO. While they often worked together, there was no real trust between the intelligence and Special Forces communities, too many operations where the sadistic streak of the spies clashed with the professionalism of the kommandos.

After a pause to let the quiet tension settle, she continued.

“We have a short window where the Imperial datanet’s intel is assured to be 100% accurate. Access codes, VIPs, deployment schedules, lines of supply, the works. But it's only a matter of time before they realize how much of their information is compromised. Very likely they realize we were behind the raid, but have no conclusive proof to take us to international. Ops predicts they’re moving to reinforce Palomar, and this will be where we strike. Intel decryption tells us that several divisions are already in the area, and the city’s value as an ore extraction center is obvious. But this city is also reliant on food imports. Extensive mining and deforestation efforts have rendered the soil mostly untillable, and both the garrison and population rely on foodstuffs from elsewhere. Cult efforts to breach the city have had...mixed results. We know Angrboda’s people have a presence inside, but not a strong one. For now, they’re happier to attack from the hills, targeting the food trucks. As we’ve seen, Shalumite light armor deployments have made that far more hazardous.”

The picture changed again, to show a convoy of Imperial trucks and wheeled light tanks rolling down a road, panzergrenadiers in hotseats and alongside the vehicles.

“Our overall strategy with Palomar has to be fluid. We won’t know how much support we can gain from the civilian population until we start our operations, and the Cult informants are less than reliable. Our objectives therefore are broad. One: disrupt the logistics network in and out of the city. With foodstuffs reduced the garrison will either reduce their personnel or cut off what they give to the civilians, causing mass unrest. The backlog of mining operations will also impact the Imperial Army in the long term, robbing their nobles of a source of wealth. Two: get the Cult and our operations set up. The more people we infiltrate into the city, whether they be Cult, NSB or SKO, the more effectively we can operate. A thicker cultist screen gives us freedom to move in the shadows. Three: gather additional intel. Our data breach will be discovered and addressed sooner or later. We’d do well to act as if that were sooner. When that happens, our insider intel is going to go sour, they’ll change everything. We need to make sure we’re ready when that happens by acquiring computer hard drives, files, testimony, scramblers, interrogations, whatever works. If all goes according to plan, our people on the ground can react accordingly and we can move to the next phase.”

The picture flickered again, now presenting a series of photos, hard-faced profile pics of military men and women, names and ranks listed below them, twenty-one in all.

“For this, three SKO teams have been called in and briefed. Langbrosme, Rødfang and Bjørnefelle, all currently gearing up for deep infiltration, demolition work and extensive survival. Given the stakes and their isolation, each team has been expanded to seven members each. We had to assign the unwounded members of Ravn and split Rådyrhund. Technically, that means this is a five team operation. NSB assets will be on station with satellite scans and drone surveillance where necessary, but heavy air assets will -not- be an option on this one. Palomar is not only too heavily defended but also too heavily manned to be effective or deniable. If necessary, extraction can be made available via helicopter and gunship forces, but only as a last resort. Make no mistake, our people will be alone in the wildlands. This operation, codenamed Snøhund, will launch from Liam state in twenty-six hours. After that, the task force will make their way to Palomar and get to work.”

A pause, as much for impact and effect as for the time to absorb everything that had just been said. Not a sound from the room. A pin could have dropped while a mouse coughed and it would have resonated like gunfire.

“If there are no questions, everything we just showed you is available in the files in front of you, as well as dossiers and intel packets. Read and review at your discretion, given the tenuous nature of this op we encourage feedback and spitballing ideas. This is all classified Priority One. Ladies and gentlemen...let’s get to work.”
"A foolish man misuses his words. He either speaks too much and makes his words worthless or too little and renders them meaningless. A wise man speaks when needed, and reserves his words for true wisdom."


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