First Contact Fallout by Aer-ki Jyr (best non fiction books to read txt) š
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- Author: Aer-ki Jyr
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Did they actually think the Zakādeāron wouldnāt betray them again after they rebuild their position in the galaxy? How stupid could the Osoālon be? Or did it no longer matter, and was any port in the Hadarak storm worth fleeing to? Not to mention the threat from beyond the galaxy. Marioātopa didnāt know what their reasoning was and at this point he didnāt care. Any Vākitānoāsat rejoining the Zakādeāron deserved to die, and he truly hoped heād get a personal shot at an Osoālon before he and the others ultimately fell in this insane war.
At least Makātoāranās rimward experiment still lived, and would far into the future. The Hadarak wouldnāt make it there for thousands of years, and maybe by that point Star Force will have developed the strength to actually defend the galaxy on their own. They were the only hope now, for the Vākitānoāsat empire was done, one way or another. Marioātopa and the others were remnants of a formerly glorious past, and thatās how he and the other Zenāzat intended to die.
For if they could not protect Holloi from Itaru, let alone the galaxy, then theyād do it the service of removing as many traitors as they could in Makātoāranās name. Beyond that the future was Star Forceās. Marioātopaās end would be here, on Holloi, along with the Eraātran heād sworn to serve long ago. It wasnāt a good end, but it was far preferable to what most Zenāzat in the galaxy were faced with, for Itaru had decreed that while the Vākitānoāsat races could rejoin them, their Zenāzat could not. All would be killed and replaced with the Zakādeāronās superior Boāja, and there would be no exceptions.
After all the Zenāzat had done loyally serving the Vākitānoāsat during their history, that was the ultimate betrayal by the Zakādeāron, Osoālon, and the Jāgar. The original Vākitānoāsat had now fully cast them out, and a part of Marioātopa wished heād gone rimward when heād been offered the chance, but that was long ago and unobtainable now. Best not to look backward. There was killing to be done in the coming years and he needed to make the most of the opportunity. And whatever preparations could be made in the coming weeks should not be squandered. For once the enemy was here there would be no respite.
Marioātopa studied the scouting reports a bit more, then summoned the Zenāzat units he commanded and began to make preparations with others for an immediate counterattack against the first breach point in the planetary shieldsā¦as well as for the defense of the Zorādo facility to which he had been assigned two centuries ago and silently guarded in his isolation. He wouldnāt wait there for the enemy to come to them, but preparations needed to be made in case the Zakādeāron and their cohorts landed nearby immediately. If notā¦and he hoped notā¦maybe the facility would be overlooked for years to come. It would be his personal last line of defense if he didnāt fall prior to it coming under attack, and if he did he needed to make sure those that held the line here were prepared for that fateful day whenever it came to this jungle valley.
2
February 22, 128799
Jamtren System (Eraātran capitol)
Holloi
Tuāvac walked out onto the open promenade that sat between the ring of buildings in the Zorādo, looking up at the jungle terrain beyond as his mind was elsewhere. The Eraātran had been wounded in the war, heād been told, for he had no memory of it. He had woken up here 3 days ago, thrashing around inside a medical center restrained by force fields until he came to his sensesā¦but he hadnāt entirely. There was a chunk of his mind that was missing, and he couldnāt help but search for it, so as he looked at the high ravine walls beyond the Zorādo he was really looking inward, and failing over and over again to find whatever it was he was lacking.
Tuāvac didnāt know where he was, but he knew a Zorādo was a healing facility for those a Kichāaākat could not repair. Typically that meant Core issues rather than bodily hardware, but in his case it had been explained to him that his injury had left him in a coma that was fortuitous. Had he woken, the damage to his brain would have caused the Kichāaākat he wore to replace the brain cells that held most of his memories with new blank ones. But because of the coma those cells were not being used and thus, while ādamagedā they were not malfunctioning so the Kichāaākat had left them alone.
The missing part of his mind was intentional now, for the healers had locked it down so it would not suffer further damage. He was not wearing a Kichāaākat, merely a robe with some monitoring equipment built in, and whatever parts of his suppressed mind were trying to be accessed would be the next cells manually revived and repaired. It seemed this was not the first few days since his coma, and that every so often he would have a treatment that would erase his current memories and heād wake all over againā¦but with a few more of his old memories and skills recovered.
Heād been told that if all were unlocked now, the parts that had been permanently lost would create
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