Battle Report, 27 May - OPERATION DRIVING FIST

The LZ is at the head of a narrow, scrubby canyon, leading down into the valley where our intel puts the UFO.  The forest is alive with organic noises - rustling and clicks and a kind of insane giggling.

A force of Floaters quickly swarms up over the ridge.  The veterans, Cyclops and Boghead, react first: two explosions of flame and ichor light up the night.  The other Floaters swarm over them, but Cpl. Lambert drops them one by one from a vantage point on other side of the rift.  Lambert is the star of the op, no doubt - Sgt. Gryspeerdt's been calling him "Enigma", as it's a mystery how he got so good.

After their initial attack, the enemy forces seem spent.  The UFO was secured with unexpected ease, a cat and mouse exchange with the alien pilot brought to an abrupt end when it ran face first into Boghead's rifle.

The UFO is in pristine condition, a stroke of luck to lighten up a difficult time.  R&D are besides themselves.  I can't help feeling suspicious, however.

Cdr. Amyus Bale - Personal log - May 27

Sq. John Glanville
Something unprecedented has happened.  A UFO has landed in Argentina.  I don't know how they slipped past our satellite - we only know because Raven-1 spotted the landing site on a scheduled flyover.  Before now the X-rays have always dropped landing pods, keeping their birds in the sky.

Gryspeerdt and Borg make a good team: they held things together.  Both will be promoted to Lieutenant.  Lambert is coming along well and can handle Corporal.  New squaddies Mitchell and Glanville aren't useless either.
Sq. Calum Mitchell

The Tokyo team will be on the flight to Argentina, minus Sq. Mitchell, who was hit by shrapnel.  Nugget James Arnold will fill his place.

Engineering will launch one of our satellites into synchronous orbit above India within the week.  It feels like a pebble dropped in a sea of hysteria, however.

Worse, this sat marks the extent of our current uplink capabilities.  Until we can get a new dish online - which means more space, more power - our other sats will have to languish in storage, while the enemy strikes at will.






Battle Report, 26 May - OPERATION BRUTAL DAZE

There have been brutal days, of late, but this was not one of them.

The strike team touches down around after midday, outside an office building in a Tokyo suburb.  The pavements were littered with hasty takeaways, dropped by workers caught during lunch.  After fighting in the dark for so long, the bright sunlight on the screens, flooding the control room, is disconcerting.

Extraterrestrials - Floaters, Thin Men - have occupied the buildings, leaving the squad trapped out in the open.  With little choice, they charge for the nearest office, hoping to take cover against the outer walls.  With nowhere else to go, Cyclops and Lambert provide covering fire from the ramp of the Skyranger.

Boghead, McGee, Mitchell and Glanville make it into cover by the skin of their teeth.  Within minutes, the office is coming down around their ears, plaster dust mixing with smoke from one of McGee's grenades.

The nuggets show their mettle, however, dropping a pair of tactical frags that cracks open the enemy shell.  The office becomes another shooting gallery, but this time we're the punters.

Cyclops' performance forces me to recognise that, whatever our differences, he's a damn good sniper.  Spotting a Thin Man creeping round the back by nothing more than the emerald glow of its rifle on the rubble, he fired through a wall for the headshot. That's class.

Cdr. Amyus Bale - Personal log - 25 May

More abductions.  Tokyo, Miami, Kaduna - I wouldn't have thought there was anyone left to take.

Why do they do this - take so many people?  What for?  Is there a purpose behind this we could even comprehend?  Maybe taking one of the enemy alive is the only way we'll ever know.

The world is terror-stricken.  Our isolated task force is struggling to combat the the rising tide of panic.  I feel like Cnut, only not so wise - my attempts to halt the flood are in earnest, after all.

Wherever I send our soldiers, the world will pay for it elsewhere.  Which nations do I prioritise, which abandon?  Whose support must I keep, whose lose?  These are decisions I never wanted to make.

The Skyranger flies for Tokyo.  The infirmary is groaning with our best soldiers, so a scratch team is all we can muster.  Sgt. "Boghead" Borg in the lead, with Sgt. "Cyclops" Gryspeerdt; Sqs. McGee and Lambert (busted out of the stockade early); and two rookies still wet behind the ears, Glanville and Mitchell.

Cdr. Amyus Bale - Personal log - 23 May

There is blood on my hands.

LG's armour is stained with it.  It's plating is blackened, friable, breaking off between my fingers.  The back is a ruin, scored and melted and burned through.

Was I complacent, because she wore this?  Did I take risks with her life, all theirs lives, based on this?  I could not forgive myself that.  I will keep it, perhaps, to remind me how close to death we are.

The official letter lies on my table.  ...regret to inform you... killed in action... died bravely in the line of duty... death was quick, unexpected... some comfort...

It would be easier.

But I will not send it.  For now, I can still do better than that.

No letter will be written for Thorne.  She will have simply disappeared - another casualty in the war against our invaders.  Yet as I compose, it is her face I see.  Watching me in the final moments, from the other side of a screen.

The Council will not be happy, that is certain.  An encrypted message from them flashes in the corner of my terminal, unread, demanding my attention.

They can take what I did and go screw themselves.  I have a service to attend.

Cpl. Fernanda "LG" Langran-Goldsmith.  We will remember.



Battle Report, 22 May - OPERATION ENDURING PYRE

FUBAR.

*

The strike team lurks in a white van in an alleyway in Montreal.  On their right, a stained door opens into a laundrette; on their left, condensation hisses from the vents of a small supermarket.

Willie Thorne, returning home from a late night press conference, is diverted by a roadblock prearranged by the Council.  Her driver slows as he enters the alley, his path blocked by a white van.  Within moments, our team has the car surrounded, Thorne and her driver separated at gun point.  Was it only a month ago I said it wasn't my job to point guns at people?

Sgt. Borg addresses the MP, her tone flat.  "Wilhelmina Thorne, you are suspected of collaborating with the extraterrestrial enemy and willfully threatening the survival of the human race.   By the authority of the Council of Nations, you are hereby apprehended..."

Hearing car engines approaching, Twitch tells Boghead to hurry up.  Thorne seems shocked, disbelieving.

Two sleek black cars pull into the alley.  The doors open, Thin Men unfolding themselves from the leather seats.

"Get down!"

The team bolt for cover.  While Twitch, Voodoo, Sentinel and LG fire down the alley, Nix and Boghead head for the roof of supermarket, hauling Thorne up the fire escape with them.

Thin Men everywhere.  Unseen windows shattering.  Snake-silhouettes on the roof of the laundrette, framed by headlights in the alley.  Twitch lunges into the supermarket, dives behind a pyramid of bean tins as three X-rays open fire through the streetside windows.  He signals to Langran-Goldsmith for help, orders Sentinel to suppress the enemy outside.

On the roof, Nix presses himself against a ventilation shaft, forcing Thorne down beside him.  She finds her voice at last

"How dare you?"  She is not talking to Cpt. Gent - she looks straight into the camera at his ear, yanks him down so she can shout into his mic - she is talking to me.  "You think I would betray my country, my people?  What authority do you have for this?"

Boghead grabs her by the shoulder, orders her to be quiet, but Thorne pays her no mind.

"You've got no authority for this, nothing!"  Her voice drops with scorn, disgust.  "You're a thug, in the employ of dictators, nothing-"

Suddenly Boghead throws herself across the politician.  Nix spins, clocks the Thin Man looking down at him from the roof of the laundrette - his shot is wide.  Plasma fire sprays across the concrete.  "Voodoo" Ash, the fire escape creaking beneath him, redoubles his pace, swings up weapon firing.

LG checks her six, makes a dash for where Twitch is pinned down. She weaves across the alley, leaps for the door.

Green fire bursts from the darkness, splays across her back.  Shit.  She sprawls in the doorway, unconscious, bleeding out.  Sentinel looks over in alarm and makes a dash for it, firing blindly into the laundrette.  Crouching behind the lintel and a freezer, he jams a medikit into her suit, halts the bleeding.

"Saxby, down!"  Twitch is too late - a shot to the shoulder sends Sentinel arcing across the littered tiles.  I shout at Boghead and Voodoo to get down there: Borg leaps off the roof, rolling into cover behind a bench; Ash crashes down a drain pipe.  Nix's cam blurs as he turns, scanning the rooftops.

All is confusion.  The supermarket is a shooting gallery for the X-rays, thick with poison, smoke grenades and shrapnel.  Com chatter is panicked, overwhelming; continuous gunfire punctuates the cries.

"Argh!"

"Damn, they got me-"

"Two more-"

"Die, you purple mother!"

A high scream.  A Thin Man has scrabbled up the wall, leveled its glowing weapon at Thorne.  Nix steps in the way, the blast throwing him back into Thorne's arms just in time, as a second X-ray unleashes suppressing fire from behind.  They have nowhere to go.

My hand slams down on the counter.  Relay the situation to Twitch.  Cursing, he braves the firestorm, skids out of the supermarket.  Forewarned by the groans of the fire escape, the suppressing Thin Man bolts, leaping for the street, but Twitch paper-balls it as it falls.  Moaning, Nix rolls into cover and lays out the other X-ray with his sidearm.

Inside, the cams are useless.  I need to know what's happening.

"Strike team!  Report."

Sentinel: "Pretty shot up."

Voodoo: "Bleeding!"

Boghead: "Okay, but they've got us pinned down in here."

Nix: "Holding on, armour took most of it."

Twitch: "Walking wounded, sir."

I close my eyes, squeeze the bridge of my nose.  One soldier out of action, only one unwounded, and us no closer to the evac zone than when we started.  FUBAR.

More Thin Men creep up onto the laundrette roof.  Twitch throws Thorne into cover, puts his back to the ventilator shaft, Nix next to him.  His headcam shifts from Thorne to the enemy moving up; returns to Thorne, lingers.  The firefight below rattles on the coms.

He turns his head away.  He holds his mic to his face.  "Permission to execute Order Swift Gaze."  His head turns back.

Thorne fills the screen, cowering behind a concrete hump, laser fire bursting above her head.  Her eyes are closed, her teeth gritted.  It's her the X-rays want, for their own purposes.  Not ones that bear imagining, whatever she may think.  But the alternative is us, and the Council.  Torture and death at human hands, or worse from the extraterrestrials.

Perhaps this is a kindness, of sorts.  I'll tell myself that.

A deep breath, death grip on the arms of my chair.

"Execute."

The grenade chuckles over the concrete, Thorne's eyes opening as it nudges her leg.

She looks right at Twitch, at me, for just a moment.

*

With Thorne dead, the alien attack lessens.  Boghead, Voodoo and Sentinel make a fighting retreat from the supermarket.  Sgt. Borg grabs the unconscious Langran-Goldsmith by the scruff of her armour, hauls her up the fire escape.  Halfway up, material tears and LG tumbles down, leaving a battered shell dangling from Boghead's fist.  There is no time to go back.

The strike team limps across the rooftops, scrambles for the evac zone.

Mission scrubbed.

Cdr. Amyus Bale - Personal log - 20 May

The Council have a "request" for me.

A Canadian MP, Willie Thorne, has been making loud noises about talking to the extraterrestrials, suing for peace and even seeking cooperation - while they rain death and terror from the skies.  She blames a shadowy coalition of nations for the destruction, claiming that their belligerent attitude is responsible for turning potential friendship into an egregious war.  Bollocks, but close to the bone, nonetheless.

The Council believe she is in league with the X-rays.  A collaborator.  And they want XCOM to bring her in for significant pause questioning.

Extraordinary rendition, by an unrecognised, covert military force.  Abduction, then a meek handover for interrogation, no questions asked.  Is there even any hard evidence to suggest Thorne is anything more than a crackpot?  Or worse, just a public figure asking awkward questions?  Are we no more than their secret police, silencing threats to the new world order?

No.  That's not what the Project is for.

But this isn't like Brazil, where I could put my foot down.  The whole Council is pushing for this, unanimously.  With India screaming about dereliction of duty and France and the UK teetering on the edge as it is, there could be serious consequences for refusing.

Without the support of the Council, we're nothing.  We'd run out of fuel for the Skyranger in a month.

I can't see a choice.


*

Little stays secret for long here.  Divisions are springing up across XCOM Knowle over this.

Sgt. Gryspeerdt, who has been on the wrong end of the Council's "questioning" himself, is outraged.  I sympathise, but doubt I can convince him to swallow this bitter pill as I have.  I may never win him over now.  His viewpoint is shared by many XCOM personnel, particularly among the rookies.  Sgt. Ash is clearly unhappy, though he hasn't said anything.  Sq. Lambert, on the other hand, has already been reprimanded for his outspoken criticism.  If he continues, he'll be cooling his heels in the stockade.

Across the divide are those with nothing but revulsion for a suspected collaborator.  The idea of a human betrayal seems to have hurt them somewhere deep and vulnerable.  The men and women who served at Kaduna, who saw what the aliens are doing first hand, form the hard core: the cold fury they feel towards Thorne is beyond anything they've reserved for the X-rays.

There have been scuffles in the barracks.  People are knotting up, walking in closed, tight-mouthed posses.  The bar is empty, silent.  

I want this over with.

Selecting the strike team has been a balancing act.  Twitch, Nix, Sentinel, Borg - I need them to get the job done.  But can I trust them to restrain themselves?  Sgt. Ash will be a moderating influence, I hope.  Gryspeerdt and Lambert are out, obviously, but Langran-Goldsmith seems steady - she'll make six.

Cdr. Amyus Bale - Personal log - 13 May

Sgt. Pip "Voodoo" Ash

The nickname mill rolls on.

They're calling Ash "Voodoo" these days, I've noticed.

A reference to his mysterious powers over Sectoids, perhaps?

Or just a plausible explanation for how he keeps his hair that way.

Battle Report, 10 May - OPERATION STONE SENTINEL

Alien activity reported in Alexandria, Chihuahua and Mumbai.  By leaving India to cope alone I'm tempting fate, but I want to hit the X-rays hard in the gut and they seem to have concentrated themselves in Egypt.  Cpl. Ash and Sq. Langram-Goldsmith are already in the hangar when Sentinel, Nix and Twitch stroll in wearily: Ash tense, pacing, wanting payback long overdue for "Crater" Hill; LG fresh, eager to do a good job.

*

In Alexandria, the Skyranger swoops in low beneath a raised highway.  Cars and lorries wait patiently for drivers who will never return.  Some still idle gently.

A fairly standard op, but for two things: one, the rookies screwed up the calibration of our laser rifles on their last mission, so the team were down to lead rounds and beam pistols for the most part; two, we faced determined flanking from the enemy's Floaters, able to make rocket propelled leaps straight to 6 o'clock.  More than once, there was a Floater not five paces behind Nix, ready to fire.


Fortunately, so was Twitch.

Jumped by a Sectoid, Cpl. Ash flips up his rifle, hears the dull click of an empty cartridge.  Stumbling back, he scrabbles for his sidearm - firing wildly, he sends it scuttling into the darkness, running scared.

Moments later it's back - with a friend in tow.  By then, however, LG has her rocket launcher prepped and ready.
A good night's work.  The Gent's will make Captain, Ash Sergeant.  Soon-to-be Corporal Langran-Goldsmith is well on her way to doing the same.

Cdr. Amyus Bale - Personal log - 9 May

One of our birds was almost shot down off the coast of Sao Luis last night.  The sats picked up a massive UFO, bigger than anything we've seen before, and too much for Raven-2.  Repair work will take the best part of a week, leaving our satellites in South America defenceless in the meantime.  We desperately need more fighters, but we're being pulled in umpteen directions already.

We might be able to give our stickjockeys more of a fighting chance, however.  R&D already have something prototyped, an experimental cannon based on alien weapons fragments.  This "Phoenix Cannon" should pack a hell of a punch but will require the pilot to get much closer to the target, a risky business.  Lt. Moore, who was - vociferous and scatological - about the need to "stop nannying the foot soldiers and look after your goddamn pilots", has volunteered to test it in the field.  The refit should take about 24 hours, with Skybuck cooing over her new toy all the while.

Public order in Brazil is already disintegrating again, thanks to numerous reported UFO sightings.  I've sent a shipment of scrapped alien weapons tech to Brasilia, in the hope that they can cobble something together to protect themselves, but that's a sticking plaster at best.

The new laboratory is finished but further construction - including prep for this alien containment facility - has ground to a halt from lack of space.  XCOM Knowle had hardly begun excavations into the hill when the X-rays made their move, and since the invasion Engineering have had their hands full with the satellite program, weapons development, fighter manufacture, you name it.  We'll have to start a rush job now, installing lift shafts as we go.

Sometimes it feels like there's too much, and not enough of us to see it through.  For every leak we plug, every hurdle we cross, we come up against three more.  I live in the shadow of the next attack, the next extraterrestrial terror to leap out of the shadows.

Cdr. Amyus Bale - Personal log - May 5

We've got a new bird ready for the air, and we need more pilots.  We only had four on site when the invasion started, here to make sure the new hangar was up to scratch.  With three of them transferred to Brasilia, it's time for some new blood.

Since taking command, I've not had much to do with the stickjockeys.  They seemed to know what was what, and having come through Ground Forces, I was happy to let them do their jobs.  Bringing in someone from outside, however, it feels best to take more of a hand.

Interviews took the better part of a day.  The files for each of the candidates were at my fingertips, of course, but I wanted to get their measure.  

Going by test scores, performance record and service history alone, Lt. Hannah "Skybuck" Moore was well ahead of her competitors.  In person, however, she did not exactly exude discipline.  Or respect for military authority.  Once I'd given the at-ease, she all but started dancing around my office. And when asked if she had any questions, all she wanted to know was whether I was going to shave any time soon.

It was a fair point.  Things have been hectic, and since Purple Mother...

I began to reply with something rueful but stern, only for her to cut me off with a dangerous grin.

"Don't.  I like it."

She could be trouble, this one.  But she's also an ace, by all accounts, and we need the best.

Welcome to XCOM, Skybuck.

Cdr. Amyus Bale - Personal log - 3 May



I'm regretting giving the go-ahead already.

I won't deny it: at first, there was a grim satisfaction in seeing those X-rays ripped open.  But the grisly enthusiasm of the pathologists, the researchers' excitement at each new proof of the aliens' technological superiority - those were not things I could share.

Rapid progress has been achieved, however.  Our South American "specialists" certainly know how to take a body apart, and we've made a scattering of tangible discoveries - evasive and guidance systems for our birds gleaned from Sectoid and Floater implants, insights into Thin Man poison.

In-depth analysis was performed on the clawed monsters brought back from Kiduna.  The labcoats have designated them "Chrysalids" due to their reproductive process - infesting corpses with their eggs, turning them into the zombies we saw in Nigeria.  The gestation period is a matter of minutes; the result is gruesome and dangerous.

The downside is that they've already found all out all they can from the dead specimens we have.  So now they want live ones to study.

This is a serious undertaking, not to mention dangerous.  R&D want a full scale containment facility to house captured extraterrestrials.  And for the capture itself, I'm expected to send some poor schmuck into close quarters with whatever gimcrack electricity gun Engineering comes up with.  No problem.  In theory, it should stun the X-ray, after all.

Further research is on hold until we have cash for the containment facility and I can resign myself to this madness.



XCOM Project Monthly Report - April 2015

We rode out the rest of this month without incident.  They hit us hard and fast, and then they disappeared, their strategy as mysterious as ever.

We have taken our first losses.  They have been difficult to bear, but they will not be the last.  I have to remember this.

Objectively, we've done well.  The monthly report is a timely reminder - the Council is still pleased with our efforts and is funding us accordingly.  North America and Russia are secure for the time being, thanks to our sacrifices.  The situation in South America has been stabilised.  In gratitude, the Union de Naciones Suramericanas have sent a team of "specialists" they claim can help us investigate the extraterrestrial threat.

The price has been rising panic elsewhere, in Asia and here in Europe.  The French are on strike, hysterical at their government's apparent inaction.  The 2012 riots are repeating themselves in London.

I've been talking with Drs. Shen and Vahlen, my heads of Engineering and R&D.  They've convinced me it's time for a change of focus.  We now have the knowledge and materials to equip one strike team with the new UFO carapace armour, but if we're going to win we need to know our enemy.  I've given them permission to begin testing on the alien corpses we have in cold storage.

They had a party in the lab last night, I think.  The research team are... odd.

I headed down to the bar, waving away the salutes.  Had a drink with Twitch, Nix and Ash, out of the infirmary at last.  Shot some pool.  Gave the other Kiduna vets a pat on the back, checked how they were holding up.  Scared the new squaddies.  Raised a glass to Adrienne Joy and William "Crater" Hill.



Cdr. Amyus Bale - Personal log - 29 April

Engineering have completed our two new sats.

I see little alternative but to launch one over Brazil.  Their government is not happy with my stance on performing police actions, and they're threatening to withdraw their support from the Project.  This may be the only way to appease them and the only chance to restore any semblance of order to the country.

The other will be launched over Argentina, as I don't want our birds stretched too thin.  We'll need more planes and more pilots as it is.  Raven-2 is relocating to a hangar in Brasilia as I write.

Cdr. Amyus Bale - Personal log - 24 April

Sq. Zoe McGee
A long quiet stretch.  God knows we need the rest.

XCOM Knowle is subdued.  Sqs. McGee, Lambert and Langran-Goldsmith are raring to go, but the rest of us...

Sq. Gabriel Lambert
The Council member for Brazil badgers me day and night.  While our strike team set out for Acapulco, Manaus was hit hard by the extraterrestrials.  Now the country is in chaos - and the government wants me to reimpose order.  I'm done with them: it's not my job to point guns at people.
Sq. Fernanda Langran-Goldsmith



R&D have finally started prototyping body armour fabricated from UFO plating.  They say it will be lighter, stronger and more resistant to laser fire than conventional armour.

The kind of thing that might have saved lives if we'd had it before.

Battle Report, 18 April - OPERATION CURSED FIST

My eyes are gritty, blurring.  I can barely make out the crash site without blinking.  The electric glow of the screens grinds away at my already aching skull.  My hands are shaking: I force one down at my side, scrub my face with the other.  My cheeks are oily; I need a shave.

The alien scout came down in marsh country to the north of Lake Baikal.  It is early morning there, the ghostly forms of owls swooping above.

Extraterrestrial presence is light.  Rk. McGee quickly bags a Sectoid, as does Cyclops.  A pair of Thin Men spooks the nuggets, resulting in a spectacular round of misses.  I swear into the mic.

One of the snakes spews a cloud of poison over Rk. Langran-Goldsmith.  She screams - for a moment I fear she's going to break and run - but it gurgles into a growl as she fries it from the hip.  Rk. Lambert spots the other, signalling Cyclops to take it out.

They close on the UFO, steaming in the brackish water.  They take up positions around the its right flank, while Langran-Goldsmith moves in towards the wreck.  The alien pilot fires a warning shot from within - I growl at L-G to blow a hole in the wall.

"I have the target," murmurs Cyclops, scope to eye.

"Hold fire," I say, curtly.  I want to see how the nuggets do.

A pause.

"Yes, sir."

McGee misses, but Lambert makes the shot at range.  The Canadian will make a fine sniper.


Cdr. Amyus Bale - Personal log - 18 April

Apparently Raven-2 took down a second UFO last night.  Another scout.  I wasn't in a state to hear, or care.

Recent events have made me painfully aware how quickly experience, expertise - everything - can be lost.  So the nuggets get this mission.  They need to wipe the training grounds off their feet, prepare for what's coming.

Sgt. Edward "Cyclops" Gryspeerdt will accompany to keep an eye on them.  The sergeant is a gift from the Mexicans - the last survivor from the XCOM base in the caves of the Grutas de Cacahuamilpa.  After the X-rays ransacked the place, the Mexican government sent their teams inside to see what they could salvage.  They found Gryspeerdt, and he's languished in a Mexican interrogation cell ever since.  They saw fit to put him on the Skyranger back from Acapulco, however, so either they've got all they wanted out of him, or we've won some trust.  Who knows.

I wanted him out of the base.  He's had this disapproving look in his eye ever since he took Crater's seat in the Skyranger, even more so since my... behaviour last night.  When I told him I'd be sending raw recruits to the crash site, his expression didn't change, but I've given enough orders now to tell when a soldier thinks you're dirt for giving them.  He seems strangely naive about the straits we're in, considering what he's been through.  He's new, he'll learn, but I'm not dealing with that right now.

Keep that eye on them, Cyclops, and they might come back alive.

Cdr. Amyus Bale - Personal log - 17 April

There having a party inn the bar.A wake.  I can here them singing Fleetwood Mac, crackly on the intercom.  Even the new guy.

There is a half a bottle of fremented Yak;s milk on my desk.  Got to be a t keast a 2 litres of the stuff there.  nOt so much now.

Typing has gone to shit.  That's better.

Promoted Saxby and Borg this morning.  Insists we call her "Boghead".  Some kind of childdhood nickname, I think.

I am going to drink all of this.

Sgt. William "Crater" Hill, KIA.  We will remember.



Battle Report, 16 April - OPERATION PURPLE MOTHER

Too soon.

The battlefield is a petrol station with its own fast food restaurant alongside, some Mexican chain I've not come across before.  Within seconds of stepping warily into the all-too explosive cover of the pumps, more X-rays that we've ever seen before explode out of the restaurant.

Too soon.

All firing at once, they rip the apart the three meter high concrete behind which Sgt. "Crater" Hill was hiding.  Out in the open, he stands, screaming his defiance, as he is gunned down in a storm of plasma.

Too soon.

The rest of the Kiduna team are shocked for a moment, unmoving.  Twitch steps out deliberately from behind a car, jaw clenched, pistol raised.

"Get them."

The remaining squad members let loose a furious fusillade of laser fire.

Aliens fall left and right, surprised by the ferocity of the onslaught.

Even as they fall back, "Sentinel" Saxby fries them from behind.

Alien ichor fountains over the tarmac, against the tacky walls of the fast food joint, 
spattering the wilted petrol station flowers.

Soon, so soon, it's all over.  Gasping and sweating, the survivors of Kaduna have destroyed the enemy.



Too late.

Cdr. Amyus Bale - Personal log - 15 April

Sgt. William "Crater" Hill
The battle to keep Mexico on the Council continues.  I hope the Kiduna team slept on the Skyranger, because I'll be sending them out to Acapulco as soon as they've landed and refueled.  Intel suggests a heavy alien abduction force in the region, so we'll need our most experienced troops to mitigate the risk.

They deserve recognition for their service in Nigeria, so I'll be rushing them through a promotion ceremony.  I'll pin the pips on them myself the moment they touch down.

Sgt. Jordan "Sentinel" Saxby
The Gent brothers have both made Lieutenant, while Hill is to be promoted to Sergeant.  I've heard them calling him "Crater" over the Skyranger mics - we'll see if it sticks.

Saxby will also make Sergeant, and Sq. Borg will be boosted up to Corporal.

These soldiers faced everything out there - clawed horrors, zombies, heavy fire - and they've taken it, and asked for more.

We're hardpressed, though.  The enemy isn't letting up, and isn't likely to.

I hope they can handle it.

Battle Report, 15 April - OPERATION FORGOTTEN GOD



A day to make us forget all our gods.

Kaduna is a warzone.  It seems strange to say that only now, when we've been fighting a war for more than a month.  But at Kaduna the squad is dropped into a hell unlike anything they've seen before.

Survivors are still holding out in a military complex.  It is already alight when the Skyranger arrives, alight with flames and the green iridescent slime of alien landing pods.  Wrecked jeeps and abandoned tanks litter the parade ground, adorned with withered, skeletal bodies.  Visibility is poor, with smoke and dust whipped across their faces by the rising wind.

There are no survivors or X-rays in sight, but the air is filled with gun fire and screams.  I order the team forwards slowly, unwilling to send them running into danger.  Dust billows and swirls, masking and unmasking the chaos around them.  The screams rise with the wind.  X-rays are sighted, lost, brought down.

Eventually, the screams become too much.  Sq. Borg dashes forward, spotting a survivor in the haze.  She squats beside him, calming him over the noise of the battle, sending him running back to the Skyranger.

Suddenly, she spots movement in the murk, an unfamiliar silhouette.  She hesitates, shoots, misses, and the monster charges.

Sgt. "Nix" and Cpl. Hill both sink lead into the thing but it keeps coming.  By the time Borg can bring her laser rifle to bear for a second time, slagging it at point blank range, it is virtually upon her.






More screams, from a hangar up ahead.  Fearlessly, Borg forges forwards, only to be jumped again.  Again, Hill and Nix fill it with bullets, but the tough bastard just keeps coming.  Returned from leading a pair of survivors back to the Skyranger, Twitch flips out his laser pistol and finishes it off at range, allowing Borg to slip past into the hangar.

Meanwhile, Saxby hears noises in a nearby office, sees a man silhouetted against the window.  He creeps forward, eases open the door - and finds something unwelcome.  The man, shambling forward, is grotesque - swollen, green-tinged, stagnant.  The aliens have turned him into some kind of... zombie.  Taking no risks, I order the unknown taken down.  With his customary reflexes, Twitch sprays it with shot, but it is Hill, with better aim, who tears it apart with LMG fire, showering Saxby with putrescent entrails.

Inside, Borg reassures another survivor, sends them sprinting to safety.  Nix, overwatching his comrades, spots another, cowering not far from the landing zone.  Cursing the murk that had hidden her from us, I tell him to start running.  Another claw monster spiders out of the smoke, but falls to crossfire from Saxby and Borg.

Hill watches warily as another zombie shuffles into view.  It stumbles, retches, then explodes: bursting from within, another monster, fully formed.

It skitters rapidly between the tanks, pinning Hill against a line of sandbags.  Nix is out of position, but still has a shot.  Skidding in the dirt, he spins, fires.  The creature shrieks, staggers, and Hill coolly unloads a clip into its face, up close and personal.

The screaming has stopped, and our satellites detect more UFOs on their way - it's time to get out of there.  Only five civilians huddle in the Skyranger as it lifts off.  Five people saved, when intel suggested there was five times that number in Kaduna still alive when we arrived.

Cdr. Amyus Bale - Personal Log - 14 April

The world is darkening quickly.

Adrienne dead, sure to the be the first of many.  Pip laid up in the infirmary, the corpse pallor of his face another of reminder of the consequences of my orders.

And now the enemy has changed its tactics.  No longer just the random abductions, the tentative cat and mouse between our birds and their UFOs.  The aliens have unleashed aerial bombardments against major cities worldwide, terrorising the civilian population.  It is a show of force beyond our worst imagining.  One we cannot hope to combat in the air.

Moscow, Paris, Tokyo, Mumbai, Washington DC... the list goes on.  All struck before we could react.

I've put our best guns on a Skyranger: Twitch, new Sergeant "Nix" Gent, Cpls. Hill and Saxby, and Sq. Borg.  They're headed for Kaduna, Nigeria, where there's still some hope that lives can be saved.

Good hunting.

Cdr. Amyus Bale - Personal log - 13 April

Damn.

Damn.  Damn.

There's a lot to do.  Progress updates from R&D.  Specs for the new generator being built down in engineering to supplement to the wind turbines; construction schedules for the two additional satellites being paid for with Canadian dollars from Vancouver.

Promotions to sign off.  Cpl. Gent's kill count after "Cursed Palace" speaks for itself - I'm promoting him to Sergeant.  We could dub him Nix, for those shots in the dark.

I can't concentrate, though.  I've killed my first soldier, as sure as if I'd held the gun myself.

I liked Sq. Joy - Adrienne.  We'd had long, loud conversations before the invasion: about Doctor Who, the absurdity of our gender conventions - railing at the Forces' idea of equal opportunities.  Blowing off steam after boring watches and days full of paperwork.  Flicking through her file, I discovered she'd been finding time to write a blog, even between operations.  It's very good.

My desk is cramped with several large cardboard boxes.  Joy's things, ready to be returned to her family.  I had them brought up here, hoping they might help me somehow with the letter to her parents.  The other thing I have to do.  There is always the official letter, of course, but that has never sat right with me.

There's not much there.  Some clothes, a stuffed toy of a flying bison.  The barracks has taken its share already, honouring informal promises made in the anticipation of death.  Not strictly regulation, but customary.  She always said I could have those boots... I wanted something to remember her by... Something to throw in the X-rays faces when we're out there...  The teas went quickly.

I sift through, hand lighting on a model of a blue police telephone box.  I place it on my desk - my share, to remind me that you cannot turn back time.  That we must live with the past, and ourselves.

I sit down and force myself to write.  That's what I came here for, after all.

The troops have put together a memorial board in the bar.  Sq. Adrienne Joy, KIA.  We will remember.


Battle Report, 12 April - OPERATION CURSED PALACE

Cursed indeed.

The crashing UFO has scored a writhing, heaving rent across the forest, lit red with brush fires and burning trees.  Cinders are rising into the air, and lightning flashes throw themselves across the night at irregular intervals.  There is no thunder, however, only the crackle of flames - and the uncanny bellows of the enemy in the darkness.

Cpl. Hill stations Gent, his sniper, on a rise near the LZ, then leads the rest of his squad in a wide circuit around the UFO, wary of survivors.

Two Thin Men slither into view.  With no more than barks on the radio and movement in the black to go on, Cpl. Gent whips up his sniper rifle and shoots - one X-ray down.  Wielding our lone laser rifle, Cpl. Ash reveals its potential, steadily burning away the stump behind which the enemy is hiding, clearing the way for Gent's second shot.

The noise brings a pair of Floaters swooping through the pines.  
Luring one in, Cpl. Saxby ducks around it and shoots it down at close range, while Gent brings his own rifle to bear on the other from his elevated position.

Before the squad has time to reposition, three more Thin Men are all over them.  A snap shot from Ash takes one out of the equation, but his luck doesn't hold: as he sprints for the nearest tree, he takes two shots to the chest, rolling and tumbling up against the trunk.  Suppressive fire brings twigs and leaves down around his ears.  Bleeding heavily and seriously burned, he tears the tab off a medikit with his teeth and applies swift-congealing gel to his wounds. Meanwhile, another Thin Man oils its way into a flanking position.

Saxby tosses a smoke grenade over the wounded soldier, but Ash's situation is bad.  Concerned for his safety, I send Sq. Joy sprinting round the back in a flanking manoeuvre of my own.  A lucky shot from Gent sends one snake sprawling.  Splashing through a brook, Joy thumps into cover above the other Thin Man's position, takes aim - and the creature twists inhumanly, wrists backwards, and shoots her in the head.

Hill curses under his breath, chucks a grenade into the gully.  Advancing through a cloud of shredded leaves, Saxby guns down the killer on the spot.  But it's too late.

Tense, angry, the remaining soldiers sweep the area, but find nothing.  For the first time, they enter the UFO itself.  Nothing but empty corridors, flickering erratically.  With all the exits covered, Hill coolly dispatches the alien pilot and takes possession of the vessel.

Cpl. Ash is medivacced with all speed.  Engineers swarm over the prize, while the squad, weary, traipses back to the Skyranger.

But there's one left behind.