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The winds of Fortuna were like sharp needles flying as Wolf
O’Donnell
stood by his grounded wolfen ship in the middle of a snow-blanketed
field.
His jet was smoking still from the lasers that killed the engines, and
the fuel line was destroyed also. Behind the jet was a trail of
trenched
snow, evidence that the jet had landed tens of yards away and slid to
this
spot. Wolf injured his right arm at the process, but it was
an internal injury, so there was no bleeding. Broken bones a great
possibility, but still he could move his arm, painfully though.
Wolf grumbled as he used his other arm to wrap himself tighter
with a torn blanket, huddling close by the cold steel of the jet to
shield
some of the wind. His comlink had failed, and the long-range
communicator
suffered the same fate. Still, he hoped feverishly that there would
be some rescue before he would freeze to death. After four hours,
nothing yet, and he was getting numb, his arm painfully reminding him of
the crash. He looked up at the spot where the smoke was rushing out
from, and sneered at it. While it may do him nothing good, at least
it was better than sitting on the freezing snow like a statue.
And I will become a statue in two hours if those stupid
rescuers
don’t come here!
He blamed himself for being in this pit. After the battle
against Starfox nine months ago, he was a mess, not being able to will
himself to fly again, and his hatred for Fox had reached a point which
he would do nothing else. Three months later, Leon Powalski went
over to Macbeth when he heard news about Bill Grey’s capture once again
in Fortuna along with his dalmatian cousin and several scientists.
A week after that, Leon came back home grouchily, saying that Fox McCloud
and his merry pilots had stormed into the base and rescued Bill.
At least Roverans, the dalmatian, was still in Leon’s paws, and that
would
give him a small advantage over the dog that wished to see him inside a
furnace. Just a week ago, Wolf was appointed to patrol the area
around
Fortuna alone, and he wasn’t pleased at that. As time went by,
Andross
and Wolf had gone further apart, and there might be a point which he
could
leave Andross and his stinking Venom Forces forever.
As Wolf scanned the space as he orbited Fortuna, three
Cornerian
jets burst into the scene with a barrage of lasers. Too distracted
to respond, Wolf turned toward the cold planet and entered the
atmosphere,
with the three jets tailing him. Instantly, a blizzard clouded his
visual of the landscape and the three jets, but his radar accurately
pinpointed
the jets’ positions. Wolf tried the best he could to fend those
pests
off, but the three kept at it, firing at him, making mincemeat out of his
sputtering engine. Finally, Wolf realized that the engines had
failed
and saw the ground grew closer and closer. He crashed with a
rocking
shake, and his right arm hit one of the canopy windows hard, breaking
both
the window and his arm. When he halted to a stop, the jets had
left,
cheering themselves. Now, here he was, sitting in the middle of
nowhere,
and his butt and tail were frosty. He could stay in his jet, but
it’s colder in there, and it’s a fuel mess in the cockpit.
“C’mon, c’mon! Where are you morons!?” He cursed
with a deep sigh, and with his head bowed and almost covered by the
blanket,
tried to sleep.
He was awakened by a sharp whisper of a hovering craft near
him.
His good left eye peered open, and spotted a transport landing just yards
away. He stood up, thinking he was about to be saved. The
blizzard
was gone, and a small blanket of snow had covered him. As he
brushed
the snow off him, he noticed the insignia on the transport. It was
Cornerian.
Cursing himself, Wolf reached for his phaser, but just for the
fun of it, he didn’t pull it out just yet. Moments later a door
slid
open and a blue-uniformed raccoon walked out, his face firm and a phaser
on stun aimed at Wolf. He seemed to be alone.
The raccoon stood yards away. “Venom soldier, you are
under
arrest for violating Cornerian borders.”
Wolf laughed. “I’m neutral officer. I don’t side
with maniac emperors.”
“The life-scans say that you are with Ven-”
Wolf instantly pulled out his phaser and quickly fired the
first
laser. The raccoon was struck dead with a blow to the chest, and
toppled forward, landing with a joyful yet faint thud.
“Boring conversation, anyway,” Wolf said as he walked over to
the raccoon. He roughly took his phaser from his limp paws, kicked
him soundly on the head, and laughed. Leaving him to freeze in the
cold, Wolf got inside the transporter and with a roar of soft engines
lifted
off and sped into space.
“I am the symbol of all evil. No one can reach even halfway up the mountain of evil that I conquered easily.”
There were no threats as Wolf cruised through space
toward
home. Everything was silent except for the soft hum of the engines,
and the creaking of Wolf’s reclining pilot chair. Unlike a cockpit,
a transporter pilot can get up from his or her seat during flight, and
there was no control stick to steer; only buttons. Wolf never had
experience with transporter flight, but it was generally like those of
jet piloting. However, being in a transporter has its grave
dangers.
First off, all transporters under both Venom and Corneria are so slow
that
even an Invader-class flea could fly circles around it. Also, it
has no warp drive, so you can forget about escaping safely from a
squadron
in a slow poke like this. Finally, the ship has low power to
shields;
one hyperlaser shot would take care of it.
Oh yeah, I don’t have any weapons on this junkyard of a
ship.
No lasers, no bombs, no nothing. What is this, a Peace Corps ship
or something? Wolf thought sarcastically as he went over the many
buttons on the console. He set the transporter on autopilot and
walked
off. He found his thawing blanket on a closet, and laid it on the
floor. With a yawn, he sleepily laid down on the blanket, and tried
to sleep again. Sleeping while lying down was something you could
never do in a cockpit.
Bill Grey was getting stronger toward his fears. Sure his
memories of the first torture at the paws of Leon and the disappearance
of his cousin Roverans haunted him, but its time for him to face
them.
The nightmares that used to come every single night now skip a day or two
at times. Once he tried to bear the noise of the table saw at a
construction
site near the Katina Base, and he managed to do so for fifteen seconds
before he ran off, whimpering. Still, that’s an improvement.
His hatred for Leon had grown however, and there were some witnesses that
claimed to hear screaming and Bill cursing Leon just before lights out
to sleep. He became more open like he used to be, but Leon would
always be in his mind, wether he liked it or not. His sanity had
gotten worse, but he could keep his moral thinking and temper cool, if
he wanted to.
Three days after Wolf’s escape from Fortuna, Bill was sitting
behind his desk in his office at the Katina Base. The desk was
littered
with paperwork that had stacked like skyscrapers during Bill’s absence
of duty, and now waiting to be completed. The phone on his right
flashed a red button as Bill was going through a report.
Bill pushed the button and went on speaker. “Yes, what
is it?”
“Sherry here,” answered one of the Command console officers and
friend of Bill. “My radar shows a Cornerian transporter entering
Katina space, but the pilot doesn’t show Corneria identification.
He might be for Venom.”
“Where is it heading, Miss Trevor?”
“Um, toward Venom sir, but he has to get through our space
first,
if he goes in a straight line. The autopilot might be on.
What
should we do with this?”
“Send a jet over to him and use a tractor beam to pull him to
here.”
Suddenly, there was commotion in Command. Sherry spoke
in a surprised voice. “Sir, our life scanner had gone through a
list
of Venom officers, and the one in the transporter is a Lieutenant
Commander.”
Bill was startled. “Lieutenant Commander? You mean
the one sitting in there is Wolf O’Donnell himself?”
Sherry was equally surprised. “I’m puzzled by this as
well,
but the scanner confirms it. That’s Wolf in the transporter.
General Pepper will like this, don’t you think so?”
His hatred for Leon crept into Bill. He knew Wolf was a
friend of Leon, so why not make some fun out of this? “Um, Sherry,
eliminate my last order. Send four Bulldog jets to the scene and
blast him.”
“Excuse me, sir?”
“You heard what I said, Sherry. Blast the wolfish creep
to bits. Deploy four fighters now.”
“Why four?”
“In case of a trap.”
“Well, okay sir. Right away sir,” she said finally and
hung up.
When everything was silent again, Bill reclined back his chair
and laid both his feet on his desk. “Let’s see if you can top this,
Leon Powalski!”
“Heroes come and go. Wars come and go. Evil however, has a way of staying in the minds of anyone indefinitely.”
Wolf knew the alarm coming off wasn’t good news when he woke up
suddenly. The ship was flashing red, and that annoying,
undescribable
alarm harmed his ears. He rushed to the console, his eye on the
radar
screen. Four white blips in attack formation were heading toward
him dead ahead, with lasers already warmed up and ready to kill some
sitting
duck named Wolf.
Bulldog class jets. Oh this is going to be my day.
No weapons, no chance of outrunning them, and I’m outnumbered four to
one.
Gee, will the host of the Worst Day of My Life show please come over and
give me a stinking prize? Now, before I meet Mr. Laser, or Miss
Nova
Bomb? This is going to be a whole load of crap.
He stared at the monitor screen, frantically readjusting his
eyepatch as he does when he’s extremely nervous. He could see the
planet Katina, that stinko white planet, in the short distance, only
twenty
minutes away. To his horror, four jets representing Death were
coming
toward him. While he knew it was fruitless, he pushed some buttons
and turned his ship around, hoping to buy more time. Why do some
people are desperate to run for their lives even when it’s
hopeless?
Is life that precious?
With the jets on his tail and quickly overtaking him, Wolf was
sweating like Pigma at a summer day. His heart pounded, sucking
fluid
in and out like a bagpipe with a frantic musician. He panted, and
his left good eye blinked quickly and fluttered. He was paying no
attention to the radar screen at all. Half a minute later, Wolf
turned
and saw one of the jets on view from his side window. He could see
the leopard pilot waving at Wolf with a cheery smile. Wolf gave the
finger at him and the pilot just laughed and got behind him, ready to
shoot.
Well, this is it, Wolf. The perfect ending of a
not-so-perfect
life. Go ahead guys. Shoot me. I’ll see ya in Hell
later.
Wolf then heard an explosion, but he wasn’t feeling any fire
or heat. It came from behind, from one of the jets. “What the
heck?”
He clicked on the rear view screen and saw an unexpected
sight.
Only three jets were there, scrambling all over the place. Someone
was firing at them, but Wolf couldn’t see his “rescuer.” He stood
up from his chair, not knowing what to do. Lasers were flying all
around him, but they weren’t intended to hit him. Another explosion
occurred. Two jets left.
Trying to calm himself down, Wolf sat back down on his chair,
watching the rear screen. To his surprise, there were yellow lasers
flying around, and no jet registered shoot lasers of that color.
One of the lasers struck one of the Bulldog jets, and the explosion
almost
blinded Wolf. The remaining jet, knowing he was against a skillful
adversary, tried to escape, but Wolf first caught sight of the unknown
jet chasing him. It was bluish in color, but it was of a strange
shape and bears no Corneria or Venom insignia. It was firing the
yellow lasers out of it’s wings, and the remaining Bulldog jet finally
exploded.
Wolf cheered, but he was uncertain that this strange pilot may
be friend or foe. He clicked on an all-frequency line, and held the
comlink close to his relieved face. “Yahoo! That’s amazing!”
To his shock, a female voice answered, just as jubilantly as
he. “Well thank you. May I ask your name, dear sir?”
“Wolf O’Donnell, Lt. Commander of Venom and leader of
Starwolf.
What’s yours?”
“Sheila Lupine, and I’m neutral. Now what’s with you
flying
a Corneria transporter and having four Bulldog jets on your tail?”
“It’s a long story. I can’t see you anywhere...”
Sheila answered that by positioning her jet alongside the
transporter,
and Wolf could take a close look of the ship off his side window.
He was almost in awe of it’s uniqueness and beauty. It was
generally
shaped like the biplanes of the old days of pioneering aerial flight
hundreds
of years ago, with some differences of course. It was blue from
tail
to nose, except for the black shaded canopy of the cockpit. It was
so shaded that Wolf couldn’t see the pilot. The guns were located
at the far edges of the two wings, and the letters Sunlaser were painted
yellow on the right side of the tail.
“Sunlaser, eh? Is that custom-made?”
“Yep. Took me a year to built it from stolen parts.
It’s my pride and joy. What happened to your wolfen jet?”
“Frozen in Fortuna. A stupid mistake. How come you
rescued me?”
“I don’t like Corneria and their scum. They want peace
yet whenever they see a Venom soldier they picked up their guns and try
to shoot him or her. They are hypocrites by and far.”
“Well then why didn’t you join with Venom?”
“I’m a free spirit, a rogue pilot like you used to be.
I steal to live, and I shoot down anything Cornerian for fun.”
Wolf laughed. “You know, I think I’m going to like you,
Sheila. Do you have a comlink monitor?”
“Yeah, I do. You might recognize my face.”
Wolf clicked on one of the monitors on the console, and saw the
face of the pilot who saved his life. She was a white-furred wolf,
with fierce golden eyes and the ears were colored red. She was
beautiful,
but Wolf couldn’t recognize her at first. “Um, no I really
don’t.
I’m not sure.”
Sheila almost made a pouting look. “I’m the granddaughter
of Sir Gremaio.”
Wolf almost sputtered with delight. Sir Gremaio was the
very last pilot to be knighted decades ago, and his granddaughter was
said
to be one of the best pilots there is.
“You’re the one? I’ve heard you once shot down eight
Cornerian
jets four months ago!”
“Was that what the rumor said? Well, it’s mostly the
asteroids’
faults. I’m just better at maneuvering than they are, if you know
what I mean,” she said and laughed as she expertly made a barrel
roll.
“Those asteroids exist for a reason, you know.”
“I don’t like asteroids. They unnerve me for some
reason.
Listen um, is there anyplace we can stop safely?”
“How about going into Katina?”
“You’re joking right? I mean a Venom-controlled place.”
“I know what you mean, but do you want to keep flying that slow
transporter?”
“What are you getting at?”
“Why don’t we get the attention of a patroller that flies a
good
fighter jet, and kill the pilot to get his jet.”
“Hmmm, I like that. You will see how accurate my shooting
is.”
“Actually, let me do the job. I’m good at shooting with
my phaser, but I have other great skills I want to show you myself,
okay?”
“Fine. I’ll follow you to wherever we land. What
if we find Bulldog jets along the way?”
“I can take care of those idiots. After all, I just shot
down four of them, right?”
“While I don’t really love Wolf, I liked him simply because he is like me; independent, a great pilot, and I just loves the way he viewed Fox with hatred. I don’t care much for him also.”
The two wolfish pilots landed in the middle of a grassy field,
almost surrounded by roaming hills. The tall grasses and flowers
swayed with the wind, and when Wolf’s canopy opened, he could smell a
flowery
fragrance. It sickened him, but he decided to tolerate it, for
Sheila’s
sake.
Sheila shook paws with him when Wolf stepped down. She
wore a white shirt with a green-colored collar. Her black baggy
pants
were clean and silky, and a golden belt had a holster with a phaser
similar
to Wolf’s.
“So, how do we attract a pilot to get here? You go up on
the highest hill and wave at one? That ought to attract one.”
“Are you trying to flatter or insult me? Oh never
mind.
I got a flare gun in my jet, and I’ll shoot one up. That ought to
do it.”
Wolf nodded and Sheila grabbed the gun and shot a red flare up
into the sky. After several minutes, both of them could see a jet
coming from the northwest. It was a protector class ship, less
advanced
than the Bulldog or wolfen class jets, but this one could fire good
lasers
and maneuver well. Have no bomb-carrying capacity though, and low
shields. The unsuspecting bobcat pilot landed a few yards away from
the two wolf pilots, and came out with his phaser aimed at them.
“You need help?”
Sheila spoke first, rather casually. “Yes, we do.
My ship is experiencing engine problems, and needs to be fixed.”
The bobcat put away his phaser. He didn’t know Wolf or
that they intended to kill him. “That ship looks custom-made,
Ma’am.
I don’t think the mechanics would know how to fix it.”
“It’s actually more similar than you think,” she said, and
opened
a panel door on the Sunlaser’s nose, exposing part of the engine.
“Come and see.”
The bobcat nodded and walked over next to her, his eyes focused
on the engine and not on her. Instantly and with no warning, Sheila
grabbed his right arm and twisted it in a snap motion.
The cracking sound that followed made Wolf smile. The
bobcat
screamed and tried to reach for his phaser with his good arm, but Sheila
had already gotten it, and threw it away. She then pushed him and
he stumbled to the ground, moaning and holding his injured arm.
Sheila laughed lustfully and calmly walked over to him.
Grabbing his shirt on the chest, she pulled him up, and kicked him on the
groin. The bobcat flinched and stopped breathing for a second
before
letting out a moan. Sheila punched him in the face with an
uppercut,
and a twirling ariel kick sent the victim to the ground, lying down
unconscious.
Wolf came up to her, clapping and grinning. “That’s quite
a skill you have. Where you learned that?”
“My father was a black-belt in Judo. I was a student of
his, but I treated the art as if something for me to use to fight, not
for spiritual reasons or something like that. I have one finishing
move for this fellow.”
Wolf backed off. “Oh really? Let’s see it.”
Sheila knelt just behind the bobcat’s head, and with her lethal
paws, held his head in a certain position. One twist ended the
bobcat’s
life. A minute later, his protector class jet and the Sunlaser flew
off into space.
Bill Grey was irritated once again. He paced back and
forth
in the Command Room, the console officers pushing buttons and reading
reports
on their radar screens.
“Sir,’ one of them said. “The unidentified ship and Wolf
had left Katina. What is your order?”
“I’m thinking, I’m thinking. Um,...okay. Send nine
Bulldog jets to chase and hunt them down. Try to prevent them from
entering Venom space.”
“But sir, the unknown ship had already killed four jets in
rapid-”
“I know! This time, they will be killed!”
“We got company,” said Sheila as soon as they came out into
space.
“Nine jets on our tails. Bulldog class.”
“Looks like you made ol’ Bill mad. You think you have the
situation taken care of? I don’t see any asteroids though.”
“Don’t worry, my one-eyed friend. I don’t like Bill
anyway.
His voice accent is too-surf like for my taste.”
Wolf laughed, and accelerated toward Venom several hours
away.
However, his jet was too slow, and lasers from the pursuers were raking
on his jet. Sheila made a quick U-turn and fired on the jets while
still upside-down. With superior speed, she passed through the jets
like a blur, shooting down four jets in three seconds. Once she
passed
them, she made another U-turn and now on the tails of the five remaining
jets.
Wolf was amazed with her excellent skills, but he had too many
problems to admire her. Two of the Bulldog jets still concentrated
on him, making swiss-cheese out of his inferior jet with their relentless
lasers. Already his shields were down to danger point.
“Sheila! Get your white tail over here and help me!
I’m almost down!”
A rather irritated female voice answered. “Yeah, yeah,
don’t pull your remaining eye out. I’m coming, alright?”
Moments later, the lasers firing on him stopped suddenly.
Wolf looked behind and saw the debris of the two jets that were chasing
him. Once again, Sheila had saved his life.
“There, you happy now?” said Sheila. “I’ll distract the
others. You get out of here if you want to live to see me
again.
I’ll catch up with you.”
Wolf was too agreeable to argue, so he just sped off at his
fullest
speed. At the meantime, Sheila had the last three Bulldog jets on
her tail. Those survivors were getting desperate to stop her, for
their lasers were more wildly shot and relentless. One of the
lasers
struck her right top wing, but her shield was powerful, and no damage was
done.
“C’mon, Boys. You want a piece of me? Go ahead and
try!”
Sheila deflected a couple lasers with her barrel roll, and tilt
her wings right to head on that direction. The jets kept at it with
their fire, and followed her moves. The three jets went on a
triangle
formation, but they couldn’t gain on her, but they didn’t lose her
either.
Sheila wasn’t the least bit worried. Laughing with Death,
she dipped downwards and turned right again. The pursuers were on
her tail still, but that didn’t matter to her. “You still want to
play? Boy, you guys just love me, don’t you?”
She made a somersault and the Bulldog pilots found themselves
with an expert pilot on their tails. One pilot didn’t even had time
to react when he was blown into space dust.
Sheila quickly shot down another one, and now firmly fixed on
the very last jet. “Play time’s over. My apologies!!!”
The last surviving Bulldog jet was torn apart into fire and
dust
as the yellow lasers cleanly shot through the hull, and one of them went
right through the pilot’s head like a knife through butter. Once
again, Sheila victors against her enemies.
Sheila pretended a yawn. “Ho-hum, you need more practice,
Boys. Let’s see now, I shot down fourteen Bulldog jets in a matter
of an hour, killed a patrol pilot, and saved the leader of Starwolf
twice.
Yep, I thinks that’s a personal record for me. Ha, ha, ha, ha!”
“Despite my evilness, even I can have a good heart, but only after that certain person does some special favors to me.”
Wolf’s jet was in a mess. His engine was sputtering when
Sheila had caught up with him, and was losing fuel faster than what it
supposed to be. His targeting monitor was out, and so was the gun
on his left wing. Parts of his right wing were peeling off, and one
part of his canopy window was cracked. If he doesn’t land or dock
soon, he would be drifting in a dead jet in space.
“You okay, Wolf?” Sheila said as she pulled up by him.
“Does it look like I’m okay? God, this jet is a
junk!
Give me a wolfen class jet anytime!”
Sheila scanned around. Katina was just a dim blot behind
them, and no other planet could be seen for now. However, in the
far distance ahead, she could barely spot a grayish cylinder shaped
object.
It might be forty minutes away, maybe more. “Um, Wolf, where are
we?”
Wolf checked his navigation screen. That one too was
dead.
“I don’t know, Sheila. Don’t you have a navigation screen working?”
Sheila made an embarrassed chuckle. “Actually I don’t
have
one at all. A mistake when this jet was under construction.
I forgot to add it in. Sorry.”
“Oh great,” he said sarcastically. “The invincible Sheila
Lupine, who shot down fourteen jets in one hour, forgot to add in a
navigation
screen. Well how in darn carnation can you find your way in this
stink hole of a galaxy!!?”
Sheila shrugged. “I never really need it. I don’t
actually travel all that much.”
“Figures. Wait, what about that gray object in front of
us? What is that anyway?”
“It might be an hour away. Space station maybe?”
Wolf shook his head. “There’s no registered station in
Katina space except for Outpost 459, and that one is not this.
Believe
me, I know. Well, what else could it be?”
“I’m not sure. Let’s check it out. How’s your
fuel?”
“At this rate, it will keep this junk running for an hour and
a half. If that’s a space station, then we must dock there.”
“Right. I’ll scout ahead and I’ll keep in contact with
you. Warn me about any more Katina jets, and I’ll be there to help
you.”
“Yeah, fine. Go ahead. I don’t think Bill will be
stupid enough to send out more of his pilots. He now knows what you
are capable of.”
Sheila laughed. “He doesn’t even know half of me!
See ya later!”
The Sunlaser flew off, leaving Wolf sputtering once again,
towards
the gray object in space, whatever it was.
Sheila hummed to herself a song that she heard in a bar weeks
ago as she cruised straight toward the gray object, which was becoming
to be more like a space station. So far so good. No more
Bulldog
jets are coming in, and everything looked smooth. Wolf was perhaps
ten minutes behind her.
“Hey Wolf, how are you doing so far?” She said in her
speaker
comlink, for they were too far apart to use the monitor comlink.
“Fine, if you think having your right engine almost dead is
fine.
My left one is sputtering just okay!”
“Leave your sarcastic nature at home, Wolf.”
“Sorry, no can do. Venom is hours away, I’m sure.”
“I need to slow down here. Your jet is almost off my
radar.”
“I can take care of myself, thank you very much!”
“Can you still fire your lasers? Can you steer? Can
you even make a flip?”
“I never learned how to make a somersault, Sheila.”
“Really? And you call yourself the best there is!”
“Don’t make me mad, you pale-furred whelp! You think
you’re
the best? Well, put me in a wolfen ship and I’ll give you a lesson
you’ll never forget!”
“You want me to turn around and fire a couple of my yellow
lasers
at you? You are in no position to boast your ‘high skills of
flying’.
Besides, you owe me, twice!”
Sheila heard Wolf growl and heard a bang of glass. She
shook her head. “You know, if you break that canopy in outer space,
you’ll be sucked out.”
“Why don’t you just figure out that gray object and keep your
smart mouth shut, understand?”
“Yes, your majesty,” she spoke quickly then shut off her
comlink.
Laughing to herself, she made a barrel roll for fun. She may be the
only one to annoy Wolf O’Donnell and get away with it. But then
again,
no one besides Leon had saved his life before, twice.
The gray object was indeed a space station, but it was long
abandoned.
The many windows of the cylinder-shaped station were dark, but since
there
seemed to be no evidence of a battle, it must have been evacuated due to
it’s age and uselessness. It looked so old that it must have been
used a hundred years ago when space travel had reached it’s first
high.
On the very center of the cylinder structure was a connecting loop, with
about forty docks, but some of them are useless. Still, Wolf must
dock here if he doesn’t want to drift in space without fuel. It was
quite small, probably capable of carrying over three hundred
people.
A hundred years ago, this must be big. Now, there are star cruisers
that could swallow this runt whole. Once again, though reluctant,
she turned back on the comlink.
“Hey Wolf-”
Immediately, she heard him speak several curses in rapid
sequence
and some words in a tongue she couldn’t describe but doesn’t want
to.
“Sheila! Didn’t I tell you to keep your mouth shut?”
“I’m at the space station. Abandoned. Some of the
docks are too dangerous to be used, but there might be one still usable.”
“Well finally! My right engine is dead now, and my left
is giving way.”
“Pull yourself together, Wolf. The station is just
fifteen
minutes away. I’ll find a suitable place and dock there. You
dock your jet right next to mine, and we’ll figure something out once
we’re
inside.”
Sheila heard a sigh of relief then the comlink was shut off.
“Commander Grey, the stranger pilot had docked in the old ID23
space station,” reported one of the console officers in Katina
Command.
Bill rubbed his chin thoughtfully.
“What is the condition of Wolf’s jet?”
“Hanging in there. He might make it to the station.
I think Wolf and the stranger are going to stay there and figure out a
way on how to be rescued.”
“Yeah, that’s what I was thinking. It’s time we kill this
stranger and Wolf and gain our revenge. Send two transporters
carrying
nineteen soldiers to ID23, and we’ll hunt them down by foot and phaser.”
“Nineteen, Sir? We can have room for one more.”
“Yes, I know. I’m going with them myself.”
“Bill Grey’s state of mind is questionable.”
The interior of the space station was cold, dark, and had a musk
smell. Sheila couldn’t see four feet ahead in the blackness, so she
went back to her jet and got out her flashlight. With that tool,
she could see the rotting gray walls and cracked panels. Several
large tiles on the ceiling were hanging loose, with only a corner or two
still hanging on for dear life before it could plummet down to the floor
of death. While the exterior of the station showed no battle
aftermath
scenes, the interior showed a much different story, starting with a drop
of dried blood on one of the walls near where she had docked.
Curious, she walked further out, scanning with her
flashlight.
Suddenly, she smelled a bad odor, and decided to follow it. She was
led into a room close by, and soon regretted her curiosity. A
decaying
body of a lion in Cornerian uniform was laying in the middle of the room,
his eyes dried up and the smell was horrible.
Sheila covered her nose and backed out quickly.
“Ugh!
What the hell happened here?” Despite her better judgement, she
decided
to brave the stink and took a closer look on the victim. Four burnt
marks on the lion’s chest was good enough to satisfy her investigation.
“Phaser wounds. Must be some battle here,” she said to
herself.
“Space Pirates.”
Sheila twirled her body around, and saw Wolf at the
doorway.
He had a flashlight as well. “Wolf! How you get here so
fast?”
“Time flies when you’re having fun, doesn’t it? I think
I could guess what happened here. Thirty years ago, Space Pirates
terrorized the Lylat System. This station must be one of their
proud
war trophies. C’mon, we got to find the main circuitry room so that
we don’t have to rely on these flashlights all the time. History
lessons will have to wait for now.”
“Let me get back to my jet. I have supplies that we might
need.”
“But why? We’re only going to be here for a couple of
hours.”
“Or days, or weeks, or months, or years. Maybe
forever.
Who knows really? In any case, supplies are needed.”
Sheila went back to her jet and packed together all the rations
she had, including two shock grenades, four batteries for flashlights,
a time grenade, and another phaser, all in one brown leather sack.
She hauled the sack over her shoulder and mentioned to Wolf.
“We have to find something that would help us get to the right
places, like a map or something.”
“We’re in a labyrinth for now, Sheila. Until we find this
map, we could be going in circles. What’s with the weapons?”
“Just in case Bill decides not to give up. Let’s go.”
Thirty minutes later, two Cornerian troop transporters, which
are much different than the usual transporters for they have laser guns,
had reached the old space station. Bill, at the pilot’s chair,
easily
spotted the stranger’s custom-made jet and a riddled jet next to it at
the docking bays. Behind him, nine troops that were chosen due to
their skill of the use of the phaser, were silent, all waiting
anxiously.
Because the Air Force usually goes into the action in the war, the left
out troops had an increasing urge to go into battle and see some action
for themselves. Bill knew why they were so anxious. After
sitting
in some Base on their butts, they finally get the chance to see some
blood.
Wolf’s blood especially, and that stranger’s. Some of the
troops were friends of the pilots that died on the paws of the stranger
that had somehow befriended Wolf of all people. They wanted
revenge,
and Bill would be glad to give them a chance on getting that
revenge.
He docked in a bay somewhere nearby the “prey’s” jets, and when they had
stopped, Bill stood up from his chair and looked on to his troops.
“Now, I know that you must have heard about my horrible
experiences
with Leon Powalski nine months ago. Even now, I’m haunted by his
evil ways. Wolf O’Donnell is an animal that deserves to die even
more than Leon, despite my hatred towards him. Wolf is charged with
numerous war crimes, and if he wasn’t stopped, then more innocent people
will suffer because of his sins, his maniacal ways. For the first
and perhaps only time, Wolf is vulnerable, and it’s up to us to make
total
advantage of his weaknesses. This is our best chance, and perhaps
this is our only chance to stop this monster. As far as we know,
Wolf may have some experience with shooting with a phaser, so be
careful.
Also, once we get inside, we might see some carnage from a fatal battle
long ago. Those carcasses may sicken you, I know.”
“What about that stranger?”
Bill sighed. “I don’t have any information at all about
him or her, but along with Wolf, the stranger deserves to die. This
pilot was responsible for the deaths of fourteen of our pilots
today.
We know about his or her piloting skills, but as of right now, the
stranger
doesn’t have the advantages of being in the cockpit. Even he or she
is vulnerable. Now, these two are criminals, and the only logical
punishment for criminals of their level is death. Therefore, you
all have my full permission to shoot on sight.”
Bill absently touched his phaser on his holster. It felt
cold to the touch, just like death. “Let’s move out!!”
“Soldiers are trained to kill and expected to be killed for their banner and the government it represents.”
“My flashlight’s going dead,” Wolf commented as they stumbled
around the maze-like corridors of the space station. “Seems like
death is having a field day around me lately. My wolfen ship went
dead, I almost froze to death, I killed a Fortuna pilot, fourteen Bulldog
pilots killed, I was almost blasted twice, you killed that bobcat in
Katina,
and now, here we are in the Space Station of Death and Carnage.”
“Yeah, this is a good day for me too,” she responded almost
instantly.
She found another door and slid it open. Another stuffy smell went
up their tortured nostrils, but this room looked much bigger than the
small
quarters. In fact, by her flashlight, Sheila spotted several
computers
and consoles, and a large pole of glass was stationed in the very center
of the room.
“Engineering room,” replied Sheila. “We can turn on the
lights from here, if those bulbs still have any spark left.”
“Let’s check and see.”
Sheila walked over to a loosely shut metal door that squeaked
loudly as she opened it. Inside were switches. She turned one
of the them on that was labeled ‘Engineering’ and the lights on the
ceiling
turned on.
Sheila smiled as she turned off her flashlight.
“Yes!
Hopefully we can turn on all the lights in this station. We might
be able to juice up the communications line. What is the closest
place from here that is Venom-owned?”
“Outpost 459. It may be a boring space station, but it’s
the closest place, I believe. See if you can turn on the computers
here.”
Sheila clicked on a couple more switches and a humming sound
could be heard. After being in a silent place with only the sounds
of his breath and Sheila’s chatter, the humming was music to Wolf’s
ears.
The computers soon booted up, showing old symbols of the Corneria Defense
League that died out ten years ago. Wolf walked over to one of the
computers and typed a few commands on it.
“You’re trying to open a channel to Outpost 459?”
Wolf ignored her, too busy on the computer. Soon, he
grumbled
and banged on the monitor. “Damn! The communications lines
are all down!”
“Darn it! Of all things...now what are we going to do?”
Wolf was about to answer when the computer made a buzzing
sound.
“What’s going on, Wolf?”
“One of the scanners reported intruders.”
“Us, probably.”
“Yeah, and twenty other life-forms are in this place also.”
“What?”
“Thank goodness you brought those weapons with you,
Sheila.
We have company, and I don’t think they are going to like us.”
“Bill just doesn’t give up, doesn’t he?”
“Leon must have fried his brain several times too often.
For the moment, all the troops are in two places, split into two groups
of ten. We are far away enough from them.” Wolf’s injured arm
then sent a shot of pain up to his brain, and he groaned.
“You’re going to need medical attention, Wolf. Where is
the closest medical room?”
“Sheila, all those troops may be armed with laser machine guns
and then some. My arm is the least of my worries now.”
“Oh phooey,” she stubbornly answered and looked at a map of the
station at another computer screen. “Oh goody, there’s one across
the hall from here and left. C’mon, this will only take a few
seconds.
I have experience in the medical field.”
“You killed a lot of pilots today yet you’re experienced in
healing?”
“Call me a hypocrite. Are you going to stand there and
let those troops find you or are you coming with me?”
Wolf threw up his good arm, and sighed. “Yeah, yeah, I’m
going.”
“Looks like we don’t need these flashlights anymore,” one of the
troopers in Bill’s group remarked as the lights above them flickered
on.
However, for some of them, they wished to continue being in the
dark.
Several blast marks were on the walls, and a raccoon skeleton was lying
just nearby them. Several of the troops tried to act tough but
others
covered their mouths.
“At least it’s for the better for us,” Bill said casually, his
phaser aiming forward. “Consider this a history lesson, fellas, and
you’re also lucky. From what I’ve heard in high school, those Space
Pirates are even more meaner than the Venom Invasion Forces. Thank
the Gods they were wiped out the face of the Lylat System. Where
are we, Sergeant?”
The runt-sized squirrel, holding an electronic map of the
station,
responded. “We are in the Fourth Sector, Sir. There may be
a computer nearby that can pinpoint Wolf and the stranger.”
“Find it, Sergeant. The rest of you, let’s continue on.”
Wolf sat on a leather clinic-type bed, his legs out from the
front,
waiting impatiently as Sheila dug through the main medicine
cabinet.
There were four other beds such as this one, and a large mirror was on
the back wall. On the other side, an out-of-date CAT-scanner lies
on the corner, somewhat dusty. Since this was in outer space,
there’s
not as much dust mites coming around here.
“Sheila, you’ll going to be using decades old medicine on
me.
Are you sure that’s safe?”
“Oh yes, and you can thank technology for that. Even
after
a hundred years, the medicine will be usable,” she answered and then
found
a white capsule. “There it is.”
“What? I never seen anything like that before.”
“Thirty-years can change many designs of medicine, among other
things. This is a pain-killer that can also heal your bones if they
are broken. It will take fifteen minutes for this to take full
effect.”
“Fifteen minutes? With those troops running around here,
I have a feeling we won’t have fifteen minutes.”
Sheila walked over to him and gave him the capsule. “Well
tough, my friend. You want to dodge lasers with a painful
arm?
Take it.”
Grudgingly, he swallowed the capsule, and drank some water from
a canteen Sheila had with her. He stood up and took out his
phaser.
“Because the communication lines are down, calling for rescue is
out.
We going to have to find other means, but what, I’m not sure. For
now, we have to be alert for those Katina boys and maybe even Bill.”
Sheila nodded and took out her own phaser. With Wolf
leading
now, they cautiously walked out of the room and tried to find their way
to wherever their feet took them, and hopefully kill a few troops along
the way.
“Never let your anger get the best of your judgement.”
Despite his anxiousness for battle, Private Grosla wasn’t
prepared
for it. Ever since he joined in the Katina Army, he had not seen
one battle except through monitors. He watched those pilots kill
and be killed with a sense of awe. He believed that those pilots
were fearless, charging right into the enemy with no thought of his or
her own life, for the safety and protection of the Katina Military.
However, as he roamed the empty hallways of the station, he felt
something
new when it comes to battle: fear. He feared for that moment when
Wolf or that stranger would burst right into view, their lethal phasers
aiming right at him. He feared for an ambush. He even feared
of his trustworthy comrades leaving without him, trapping him in a dead
place. Quickly, his positive feelings towards battles had
dramatically
dropped. His breathing was so loud that the bobcat was worried that
Wolf may hear it and know his presence.
The nine other soldiers, holding their machine guns with alert
determination, felt the same way more or less. They were in the
third
sector of the station when they found a cardboard box in the middle of
the hallway as they turned on a curved corner. It seemed harmless,
but there was something about that box that made Grosla
uncomfortable.
One of the troopers, a brown doberman, casually walked over to it and
picked
it up. The others, including Grosla, crowded him, attempting to
make
a closer look as the doberman opened it.
Inside was a red baton-shaped object, with a black box off one
of the ends. The doberman recognized it immediately, and dropped
the box, his eyes full of fright. “A time grenade! Let’s get
out-”
He never finished the sentence, for the grenade had exploded,
killing him instantly. Grosla never saw the shrapnel coming right
towards his head, and soon he felt a sharp pain right on his brain and
saw fainting darkness. He toppled to the ground, along with all
nine
of his comrades. In a matter of moments, the place had gone silent,
and after thirty years of stillness, the space station had once again
served
as a graveyard.
Bill was so startled that he threw down his comlink, his
soldiers
watching him in amazement. “I just heard an explosion through my
comlink. Something had happened to the other group.”
The other soldiers could only shrugged, knowing the worst had
happened. They looked among themselves, their eyes worried and
shaking
with sudden grief. Half of their entire team had been vanquished.
Bill picked up the comlink and fastened it on his head
again.
“Sergeant, did you hear that explosion?”
The squirrel that was left alone far away in another room
answered,
almost quickly. “Yes, sir. I checked on the computer and the
blips representing the other group had disappeared suddenly.”
“You mean that-”
“They’re dead, sir. All of them. This could mean
a grenade, possibly a timed one, had done the job. A phaser can’t
eliminate all of them at once.”
“So, Wolf and that stranger have more weapons than just their
phasers. This is now getting serious. Where is Wolf’s
location?”
“Um, let me check,....oh dear..”
“What? What?”
Bill heard a yelp from the other end. Frantically, he
cried
out for a response. “Sergeant? Sergeant!?”
Another voice answered him. “He’s fine, for now.
Stupid fool wasn’t even paying attention to our positions when he was
looking
at the life-scanner. How are you doing Bill?”
“Wolf!”
“Never cry wolf. You know that,” the evil one-eyed beast
mocked. “Sheila here is a genius. After all, she killed a lot
of your precious pilots and ten of your troops. You came in here
as a hunter. Now, you are the hunted. I know we can chat a
little while longer, but Sheila here is getting tired of holding your
runty
squirrel. Watch your back, mutt! Ta-ta!”
Bill threw down his comlink again, this time shattering it into
several pieces. He looked at his soldiers with great fury.
“To the room with the Sergeant! Double-quick!”
Wolf laid down the squirrel’s comlink with a grin. Sheila
was easily holding the Sergeant’s small body, but she was desperate to
kill him so that he won’t struggle again. She showed that in her
eyes.
“This time, Sheila, let me do the job,” said Wolf. “Put
him on a chair.”
The squirrel was roughly forced to sit on one of the console
chairs. He wasn’t tied in, but he knew escape was futile with these
two fiends nearby. “What do you want, you cyclops?”
Wolf shook his head. “I always hated that insult.
You’re very brave, calling me that while I’m the one with the gun.
Either that or you’re a brain-dead idiot. Can you fix a
communications
line?”
The squirrel refused to answer. Wolf pulled out his
dagger
that he always had and laid the blade right in front of his neck.
Pain darted up to the squirrel’s brain, and he grunted faintly.
“Listen, you bushy-tailed runt! If you don’t answer me,
then that tells me that you can’t do it, and that will make you
expendable.
If you are worthless, then one second later, you will be cleaning your
blood off the floor with your intestines as a mop! Do you
understand
me!?”
The squirrel shook his tiny head up and down, the dagger making
him bleed. Wolf smiled again, and put the dagger back on his
scabbard
and pointed at the computer. “Now, can you fix it?”
“Well, it’s um, out of date, but, uh, I can fix it....”
“Good. You’ll be alive for a few more seconds.”
Sheila decided to speak up. “Wolf, Bill and his boys are
coming. We need to get out of here.”
“Of course. We’re not going to stay here, but we have to
leave other than the hallway.”
“So how can we get out?”
Wolf pointed upwards, and Sheila saw a large vent on the
ceiling.
With a few crates already in the room, it could be easily
reachable.
“We go through by the ducts and into Engineering. I don’t think
it’ll
be comfortable, but it’s a whole lot better than meeting Bill head
on.
Tie this runt up by the mouth and I’ll get the crates in position.”
About ten slow minutes later, Bill and his group of panicked
soldiers
rushed into the same room. They frantically looked around, their
minds racing and guns pointing in case of an ambush still. Bill
found
the comlink on the keyboard of the computer.
“They have the Sergeant with them. Split into pairs and
spread out. I don’t care where you go.”
“What about you?” one of the troopers asked.
Bill looked up at the ceiling and found the vent opened.
“I’m going through the ducts. If we don’t have our targets killed
within an hour, then meet here and we’ll get out of this dump. I’ll
call for Katina fighters and blast their ships, and Wolf and that Sheila
will be stuck in this hellhole forever.”
“It is better to reign in Hell than to serve in Heaven.”
The squirrel was roughly taken down from the duct into the
Engineering
room with Sheila already standing. He was then forced to sit at
another
chair as Wolf came down. Sheila stood by the doorway, alert for any
soldier to come, while Wolf mentioned the squirrel to one of the large
electric circuit boxes by a computer.
“Let’s see if you can fix it, runt.”
The Sergeant then nervously opened the door of the box and
found
a mangle of wires and microchip drawers. He cursed himself, for
this
may take hours for him to get this mess settled up and Wolf had been
known
to be very impatient. Still, he poked his head into the box and
prepared
to do his work.
“Um, sir, I need some tools.”
“I don’t see any here. You’ll have to settle without it.”
“Then it will be harder for me to fix it, and it’ll take
longer.”
“You have ten minutes, starting now.”
The Sergeant cursed himself and began readjusting the old
wires.
While things may seem hopeless, he still have the chance to make the best
out of this. To make sure, he quickly felt a square-like bump on
his right pocket of his uniform shirt. Smiling, he craftily drew
up a plan that could or could not finish off these wolfish fiends once
and for all.
The ten minutes had passed, and when Wolf spotted two blips on
the life-scanner that were moving close to the Engineering room, he
almost
panicked. “Have you fixed it yet, runt?”
The squirrel pretended to be busy. “Can’t you wait for
another minute?”
“No! Get out of there now!”
It’s either now or never. The Sergeant then reached in
his pocket and reached out a small microchip-type bomb that was supposed
to explode five seconds after the small red button on it had been
pushed.
He laid it within the still-mangling mess of wires, and pushed the
button.
Sheila saw him and rushed close to him as he hurriedly crawled out.
The squirrel stood up quickly, but Wolf grabbed him by the
arm.
Sheila couldn’t see the bomb, but she knew this squirrel had put
something
in there that wasn’t supposed to be there. Realizing that she must
get out, Sheila had just popped her head out of the circuit box when the
box exploded right next to her.
With a pained squeal, Sheila was thrown a few feet away while
still lying down, her face a sudden charred mess. She rolled across
the floor for another few feet, then halted, her body almost still.
Wolf, his fury reaching a new boiling point, shoved the squirrel to the
floor next to her and fired at him with his phaser. The squirrel
didn’t even make a sound as he died, smoke fuming out of the laser
wound.
Wolf scrambled next to Sheila, holding her burned head.
Wolf looked at the doorway just in time to see two Katina
soldiers,
their machine guns aimed at him, appearing. With a desperate plan,
Wolf rolled just out of the way as the soldiers’ lasers went right by
him.
Wolf then knelt quickly and fired at one of the soldiers, and quickly
fired
at the other. The shots were accurate, and the soldiers fell to the
floor dead without uttering a sound. Frantically, Wolf knelt right
back next to Sheila, but he knew she was going to die within seconds.
Even as the excruciating pain tortured her mind, she managed
to smile as Wolf looked at her from above. “Looks like...your
debt will...never be repaid. You owe me twice, remember?”
Wolf chuckled a bit, but that was it. He had a reputation
of laughing his lungs out as a prisoner of war lie before him dying, but
this was no prisoner. This was a friend. “I will forever be
in your debt, Sheila Lupine.”
Sheila coughed, then she herself chuckled. “Take my
Sunlaser,...Wolfie,
and get the hell out of here...”
Her eyes suddenly closed, and her head went limp. Wolf
knew what had finally happened to her. Carefully, he laid her head
to rest, and stood up. He remained standing for a few seconds
before
he left the room. Before he would leave, he fired another laser
shot
at the squirrel Sergeant. The squirrel almost jumped with the
impact,
and then he was still again.
Another ten minutes had passed. Bill Grey had reached the
Engineering room, and was shocked at the scene as he came down from the
ducts. With a sigh of disbelief, he spotted his dead Sergeant,
fired
twice, right next to a dead white wolf with red ears. That must be
the stranger, this Sheila that killed so many of his pilots and soldiers,
and now even she had expired her life.
Bill ignored her and got into the hallway. Now, Wolf’s
partner was dead, and he would be alone. And with good riddance,
Bill thought. He ran out and roamed the hallways, alert for the
one-eyed
monster named Wolf O’Donnell.
“Sheila Lupine had done the impossible. She managed to warm my cold heart.”
Wolf was stuck. After minutes of fruitless searching, he
just couldn’t find the place where Sheila’s jet was docked at. He
fumbled around a large lounge room, not knowing where to go. All
around him were benches, withered trees, one dead and decaying corpse,
and dusty Cornerian tapestries were hung from the ceiling. A dried
up foundation with cracked cement was there also. There were
several
doors that leads to different ones, and Wolf couldn’t figure out which
one would be the correct one to go to.
Dang! Am I going in circles here? Have I been in
this lounge before? Oh gee, now’s a great time to be lost...
A laser shot close by, hitting a chair with a bing sound.
Wolf twirled his head and spotted Bill standing at one of the doorways,
his machine gun aimed directly at Wolf. He aimed his phaser back
at him, but both of them didn’t attempt to fire. It was almost like
a showdown.
“Take that as a warning shot, Wolf. You eluded us long
enough. Now you will die just like that white wolf in the
Engineering
room.”
Wolf was never in the mood to talk while in a showdown.
“Oh yeah, who says so?” With a quick pull of his finger, he fired
a laser at Bill. The dog was one thought ahead, and ducked just as
the laser brushed past his helmet. Wolf rolled behind the fountain
in the center of the room as a barrage of lasers burned spots on the
floor
where Wolf had moments before had stepped on. Bill continued to
fire
at the fountain, splattering chips of cement onto the floor and Wolf.
After twenty shots, Bill finally ceased fire. “Come on
out, cyclops!” He taunted, not noticing that he was still unwisely
stood out in the open. “Pop your head out so I can make it burnt
like your girlfriend!!”
Wolf growled, but he knew that Bill wanted him to become
angry.
He kept his cool, and remained hidden behind the fountain. “Why
don’t
you come and get me, loser! You’re still the hunted!” And
with
that, he stood out of hiding and quickly fired a laser shot and made a
run for it towards one of the doors.
The shot luckily struck Bill’s right leg, and he fell,
screaming
in pain. Still determined, he fired a desperate barrage of lasers
towards Wolf as his enemy was running. To his greatest
disappointment,
the shots missed, and Wolf was gone out of view.
“Damn! Not now!!” Despite the pain, he tried to
stand
up and attempt to chase Wolf, but he quickly stumbled and fell
again.
He was weeping sudden tears, and threw his machine gun in great
anger.
Wolf had escaped right under his nose, and his leg was busted in the
end.
This mission, despite the death of Sheila, was a complete failure to
Bill.
The remaining soldiers burst into the lounge almost simultaneously, and
rushed to Bill. The Commander never bothered to order his soldiers
to chase Wolf. This mission was already over. Wolf would
survive
to fight another day.
Sitting in the cockpit of the Sunlaser, Wolf breathed a sigh of
relief and turned on the engines. With a humming song, the
custom-made
jet moved out into space, and Wolf made one last look at the space
station
that would the resting place of a certain white wolf with red ears.
“I say farewell, my friend. I know I have never told you
this before, but thank you for saving my life, twice.”
With a burst of engines, he turned towards Venom, and left the
space station and Sheila Lupine for the last time.