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The Galactic Crusade- The Complete Trilogy
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Contents
The Galactic Crusade (The Complete Trilogy)
Copyright
Copyright
The First Private
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Epilogue
Afterword
THE LAST COMMANDER
PART 1
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PART 2
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PART 3
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Epilogue
Reference
Reference
The Fallen Ronin
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Thank you.
About the author
Other works
The Galactic Crusade (The Complete Trilogy)
The First Private (Book 1)
The Last Commander (Book 2)
The Fallen Ronin (Book 3)
By Pablo Andrés Wunderlich Padilla
Copyright 2019
***
This eBook is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This eBook may not be re-sold or given away to other people. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each recipient. If you’re reading this book and did not purchase it, or it was not purchased for your use only, then please go and buy your own copy. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author. This is a work of fiction. Any similarities to real persons, events, or places are purely coincidental; any references to actual places, people, or brands are fictitious. All rights reserved.
***
Edited by Monique Happy Editorial Services
www.MoniqueHappyEditorial.com
The First Private
Book 1 in The Galactic Crusade trilogy.
By Pablo Andrés Wunderlich Padilla
All rights reserved by Pablo Andres Wunderlich Padilla 2018
Edited by Monique Happy
Military Editing by Norman Meredith
Cover Art by Gabriele D’Aleo
Cover Design by Tom Edwards
—1—
“Don’t do it! Go, and you’re as good as dead,” says Mario, looking suspiciously from side to side. The halls are empty. But even empty halls have open ears.
“Argo, you know how things are. You know ÆTAS has no hope. The hegemony was stripped from its drones during the Multidrone War, and you know as well as I do that war is won with drones—and the Megachine has more than one billion! All is lost. There is no hope. Best thing you can do is shut up, do your work, and keep your head down. The war will end soon anyway. ÆTAS is weakened beyond hope.”
Mario is right on one account: the Megachine is powerful. Its power is not the product of luck. Its power came from the confederation of China, North Korea, and all their conquered lands, including the whole of Latin America, all the way from Mexico to the Patagonia.
Those old enough to remember back in the day say the third world war was apocalyptic. It started in the year 2034 and ended in the year 2045. Most believe the war never ended. It just began a new phase. The phase of world domination on behalf of the prevailing side.
The nuclear bombs rained down during those harsh years. Nuclear blasts and mushroom clouds governed the earth. That’s when nuclear winter hit, the sky was blacked out, and the temperature plummeted.
The United States, the great hegemonic power at the time, was too distracted defending Western Europe. That’s when Leonardo Chavez, with the help of a drone army supplied by China, took advantage and conquered Latin America in a single blitzkrieg.
The battle that conquered Latin America didn’t even last a month. That was in the year 2045, right at the end of World War III. Afterwards, that bastard Chavez baptized his new conquered land as SLAV: Socialized Latin America under Venezuelan rule. Later that year, Chavez pledged himself to the Megachine, and thus the confederation became global.
“Argo, listen. Listen to me, dammit!” says Mario, his gaze constantly scanning the hallway. It’s a hospital after all. People are constantly coming and going.
You can’t trust anybody, or anything, these days. Eyes are everywhere. Ears come in many shapes. Spies will eagerly turn in their own to earn a couple of Venezuelan bolivares.
I’ve often thought of Mario as a spy. He fits the personality, the type of guy who would turn me in for a fancy dinner, or even less than that. We’ve been friends since we started studying medicine to become doctors in this forsaken land. Took me long enough to graduate, only to realize there is no better quality of life even in a profession like ours.
“You can’t do this! You know what’s happened to those who oppose the Megachine. ÆTAS will inevitably fall. Let them fall, I say. Let them lose. It’s not our skin, anyway.”
“I don’t know, man. Can’t just let them win. Just can’t…”
“Always tunnel-visioned, Argo. The grass is always greener, you know. Once there, you’ll regret it.”
“You’re just jealous I’ve got the balls to do it,” I joke.
“It’s just dumb. Nobody jumps ship to board a sinking one.”
There was once a rebel group called the the CRC, Citizens Rebelling against Chavism. It was quickly dispatched by SLAV and its special forces army, with only a few members remaining well hidden in dungeons and sewers. To survive, they basically bec
ame like rats. SEDISU, the name of the special forces army, made people disappear with too much ease for my taste.
“You will allow socialism and the pigs who dictate to take over humanity? And without a fight? You’re crazy. A coward.”
Mario licks his lips. He hates being called a coward. But he is one. Always has been the type of guy riding the wave. He’ll never oppose it.
“You still believe in that old fallacy called freedom. You think that ÆTAS was created out of thin air? It was formed because the allies lost World War III! And then they lost the Multidrone War! The only way to survive was to form a hegemony in the land once known as the United States of America, where ÆTAS now hides in the shade, desperately holding on for dear life. They are surrounded on all fronts. The Megachine is poised for the deathblow. Just lay back. Watch the spectacle. It’s only a matter of months before the war is over.”
“I just can’t,” I say.
“Do you know why they are losing?
“Why?”
“Because they no longer have drones. No drones. None. Nada.”
“So?”
“You’re blind and pathetic. You well know modern wars are fought and won with drones. If you don’t have them, guess what? It’s flesh and bones who fight wars. Flesh and bone against drones, and you and I are well aware of the outcome. Flesh can’t fight metal. Metal grinds flesh. It’s that simple.”
“We will fight the drones with courage, strength, and honor,” I say, imitating the propaganda that filters in from the north, mostly distributed by ÆTAS supporters—at great risk of being found by SEDISU soldiers.
“We, as in you and the ÆTAS?”
“Yeah.”
“Who do you think goes to the frontlines?” says Mario with a sudden flare of anger.
“Soldiers, cadets, captains, we all battle as one army.” I’m suddenly unsure of what I’m saying.
Mario laughs out loud. This draws unnecessary attention from some nurses. When they’ve turned a corner, he says, “They send people like you. Immigrants from the socialist lands who left their homes to fight under their banner. If you go, you’ll become cannon fodder. You’ll end up buried under thousands of shells and dead bodies. There is no hope, Argo. There is only death or submission. Choose.”
“It’s minds like yours that allowed SLAV to be created in the first place,” I say with a surge of rage. “The attitude of the cowardly who would see their friends and family die and not move a muscle as they perish, but would accept the situation as if ordained by some god.”
“Such a poet. You are quite convinced about going, aren’t you? This is not you talking, Argo. I’ve known you for almost nine years, since we signed up to become doctors. This is Carmen speaking, that sweet girl who’ll never give you but a single kiss. I know you love her. And she has courage. Not you. She must’ve brainwashed you. Am I right?”
I feel my face flush.
ÆTAS has been recruiting soldiers for decades. You’d better not be seen by a drone or a security Anzhou reading one of those banners. ÆTAS is in desperate need of foot soldiers in the absence of drones. And they know people like me are eager for change. So, they freely allow immigrants into their land, guaranteeing a new citizenship card and all, fair wages and even a home, in exchange for ten years of service in the military. Ten years is all they ask. I would give my life for a chance to fight the Megachine in exchange for such a prize.
I was born in the year 2070, when nuclear winter had already blocked the sun and poisoned the air. I’ve never seen the sun, only read about light phenomena like sunrise and sunset. I was born in the Megachine and have never been out of this land, which they say was once called Guatemala. This country was once part of Central America, but all that is now gone. It’s still called SLAV by some who support Chavez, but most of us call it Megachine.
Mario is about to continue his campaign, trying to dissuade me from migrating to ÆTAS, when heavy steps are heard across the hall. The sound is ominous. A punitive march. Heavy legs smashing against the floor. The buzz of drones becomes audible, and both Mario and I start to shake.
An enormous military-grade Anzhou is on its usual patrol. Above it two Wasp-class drones hover. The Anzhou is all metal, without a single soft edge to make you feel comfortable in its presence.
Anzhou–it’s rough and deadly. It has two humanlike powerful legs with many joints and bolts, allowing it agile movement. Its feet are big and heavy, able to crush a man’s skull with a single thump. Its pelvis is small and joins its legs to a large torso with pistons and many moveable parts holding together its two long humanlike arms. In its hands it holds a W-85 12.7 mm heavy machine gun, equipped with a large bayonet below the muzzle. The large rifle is held tight in its hands across its chest, at the ready to aim and kill. The head is small, round, and shiny without decoration. Its eyes are all black and have a glitter, as if they’re possessed by a devil.
The Wasps are the typical war drone, the most common multipurpose tactical drone you’ll see deployed in the field. Be it patrolling or attacking in hoards, the Wasp is considered the deadliest because of its versatility and agility in the air. Wasps are yellow and black in color and have four small gyrocopter blades that allow for precise movements. Underneath its yellow carapace, it possesses six small cameras that look like eyes and two small caliber SMGs.
Two SEDISU officers walk at the side of the giant Anzhou in their green and red military uniforms and hats, with both with their arms folded across the back. Those assholes. They walk chin-up as if they are better than you.
Sedition. Dissolution. Suppression. That’s what the acronym stands for. And they perform those tasks well.
The patrol party walks past us, the Anzhou and its terror-inspiring gaze studying each of us dressed in our scrubs and lab coats. I drop my gaze to the floor and hope not to be a person of interest. There’s nothing worse than an Anzhou being interested in you. Then you get interviewed by the human soldiers, asked for your ID and permits, and, if unsatisfied, the Anzhou and Wasps have the authority to execute you on the spot.
They march right past us. Mario sighs as they walk by. I feel my heart thumping up to my neck. I grew up alone. My parents were killed in a raid that was disposing of CRC rebels. The SEDISU simply bombarded a whole area, in which, unfortunately, my parents were being transported through the metrorail.
Alone and in despair, it was through Carmen and Jorge that I eventually overcame depression and entered medical school. Becoming a doctor was supposed to make you some sort of superior citizen. But honestly, it’s a living hell for everybody.
Wages are almost none. Food is the only thing enjoyable, but even that runs scarce when you have few coins to spare. We depend on government-issued rice and beans, and you have a fixed allotment per month. Runs out, tough luck.
“Oh shit…they’ve found a person of interest,” says Mario, still pale.
I study the patrol and see that they have stopped a man walking down the hall. The interview seems to be going well, the standard questions are being asked. Suddenly the man yelps and begins to run down the hall.
People around him flee as they see the man running with two drones hovering over him. In less than a second, the Wasps open fire and reduce him to a pulp. The sound of the SMGs roaring makes me shiver. You hear it every day. I hate that sound. I hate when they kill some innocent guy for stupid reasons, like forgetting your ID or simply by acting odd or appearing like a spy.
“And there you have it,” says Mario, as we walk away briskly from the scene. “There’s an example of what you’re up against if you join ÆTAS. You better think twice.”
I feel a trickle of urine down my leg at the thought of fighting against machines like those.
—2—
I’m startled by the roar of several warships flying over the hospital. Gigantic machines of death piloted by SLAV air forces. But those technological beasts can be automated as well.
As I leave my job, I do my best to appear as poor and dish
eveled as the average man. I cover myself from the cold, and from radiation. You’d think being a doctor would give you some sort of social status. No one gives a damn. A white coat or a pair of scrubs is a sign of you having a couple of Venezuelan bolivares. Even though the average petty crime is punishable by death on the spot by Wasps, some would risk robbing you just for an extra bolivar. Times are hard.
The streets are a cemetery of old electric cars and gas motor vehicles, accumulating dust and rust as time eats away at old paint. Streets are for walking or riding an old bike, but it’s difficult with so many obstacles, old debris from the war. You wanna get someplace far, you use the metrorail. I usually walk. My home isn’t far from the hospital.
I walk fast. I avoid people asking for money. I try not to make eye contact. A group of glue-sniffing junkies seem to be praying to a fire burning in a trash can. A few gunshots are heard at a distance, followed by the rampage of an Anzhou’s 12.7 caliber. I suddenly come to a stop and sniff around like a hound. That smell…that sweet delicious smell…
My apartment is near. I can see it. But I just can’t resist. I have to eat grilled church pigeon. I close in on the small kiosk with clouds of smoke from the grill coming from its chimney. I greet the cook, “Hey, Narg.”
“What’ll it be today?” He’s never been the chatty type.
“Two church pigeons with special sauce.”
“Ain’t got no pigeon. Out of order. Got only grilled rat and mushed roaches.”
“Damn. Then I’ll take a grilled rat with special sauce.”
“Mushed roaches on the side?”
“No roaches today, thanks.”
I notice three men on small stools at the side of the kiosk, talking in silence. One notices me, but quickly loses interest and resumes talking in a low tone.
“That’ll be three bolivares,” says Narg, handing me the grilled pigeon. Smells amazing.
“Three! That’s absurd!”
“Hey, man. Shit’s expensive these days.”