Visual representation courtesy of Frontier Trust. |
The Vanguard fired a short pulse from his
aft microverniers, causing his battered machine to drift lifelessly towards the
planetoid, its robotic limbs reluctantly being pulled along by the forces of inertia.
Devoid of motivation and drained of energy, the previous consecutive skirmishes
had accumulated into a maelstrom of deadly conflict involving thousands of
combatants from all sides. When the dust settled, only one machine remained.
As the event horizon of the planetoid inched into view, the Vanguard could make out specks ringing the cosmic structure, looking like tiny lights circling a sphere cut from marbled orange. As he continued on his course, the Vanguard could see that the specks had begun to move: shifting from their seemingly irregular positions into tiered arrangements that grew tighter, more organised and more recognizable. He winced as he tried to recall the specks’ formation – now a wedge-shape with the pointed end facing the Vanguard – and looked up to physically discern the image with his biological optics as the realisation finally dawned.
An
armada on an attack vector.
Putting his thrusters into reverse to
compensate for the forward inertia, the Vanguard slowed his crippled machine to
an almost complete stop and diverted substantial amounts of power into the
machine’s long-ranged sensors to regard his adversary that now stood in his way.
There were hundreds of capital ships: frigates, destroyers, cruisers,
battlecruisers, supercarriers as well as an enormous battlecarrier that undoubtedly
served as the flagship for this impossibly-formidable armada. As the entire
fleet moved into position with perfect synchronicity, the Vanguard could spot
the telltale lances of azure thruster exhaust as dozens of humanoid machines
not unlike the Vanguard’s launched from their parent warships and took up
defensive positions within the main formation.
Vindictive-class
combat visages. Beam claymores. Kinetic repeaters. Disruption fields.
Once the Vanguard reached a mere 10,000
kilometers from the deployed armada, all of the Vindictive-class combat visages
unanimously unsheathed their beam claymores, slender fingers of angry red
energy lancing upwards and culminating in sharpened points as the visages
themselves poised for battle like so many ancient samurai. Their motherships
prepared for war themselves: giant tri-barreled cannons were raised from
concealed positions, kinetic accelerators hummed with energy as their prongs
lit up with bluish energy and thousands of warheads showed themselves from the
equal number of launchers that manifested from the warships’ hulls. Then they
just stayed there. Not one vessel moved an inch, not one visage flexed a servo.
It was as if the armada was taunting the
Vanguard, daring him to take another step.
He hung his head low. He was too tired, too
exhausted from the previous battles. The Vanguard drew his own weapon from its
hip holster, a well-worn and heavily damaged laser katana whose emerald blade
flickered in and out of existence like a faulty light, its energy cell too
drained to even sustain the blade in standby, much less coalesce the light into
a lethal weapon.
Right now, the Vanguard could not hope to
defeat even one Vindictive-class combat visage, never mind the planetary
assault fleet it came with. He had to retreat for now, to rearm, to relearn. As
he turned to make his departure, he put his long-range sensor to its maximum
output, and managed to catch a glimpse of the one thing that will give life to
his battered soul. Even behind three meters of titanium armor and plexi-glass,
she still looked as radiant, as beautiful as ever.
The Vanguard smiled. He will be back for
her, and when he finally returns, even the Imperial Defense Fleet would be
powerless against him. He will tell her what he must, tell her his most
concealed and secret thoughts, tell her that he exists because she does.
But not today.
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