Stray Cat Strut
Chapter Forty-Eight - Push My Red Button
Chapter Forty-Eight - Push My Red Button
Chapter Forty-Eight - Push My Red Button
"What''s the big red button do?
Why don''t you push it to find ou-- wait, don''t actually push!"
--Transcript of a Recording of the Russian Incident of 2025
***
There was this strange thing that happened whenever something big and unique was going on.
I''d first seen it a few years back. A large cylindrical truck had swayed around something on the road and rammed into one of those metal guardrail things on the roadside.
The cab was totalled. The driver was very dead. And then some other truck drove right into the first''s rear. They''d had time to slow down a little, so it wasn''t nearly as big of a bang, but I could still remember the sound of it.
I''d been a block or so over, and I knew that the noise didn''t come from gunfire. It was too... crunchy? Anyway, I''d wandered over to find that people had split into three camps. Two or three guys were checking on the driver, looking for a pulse, trying to get him out of the truck''s cabin. I might have been tempted to help, but by the time I arrived they were already giving it up as a bad job. Dude''s brains were across the dash anyway.
The other two groups were much more populous. The truck was transporting fresh water. The people in the second group had grabbed buckets and were stealing all they could. Water was expensive. Clean water moreso.
The last group, the one I''d been part of that day, just milled around a dozen metres away. Rumours spread, someone who might have seen the accident repeated their story a dozen times, and we all partook in some head shaking and complaining about whatever shit had caused the accident.
It wasn''t a memory I called up often, but the moment felt pretty damned similar.
The Big Gun was done.
Major Tinwhistle was standing tall and proud, hands on hips and eyes stained red by strain and stress. "It''s done," she announced to Grasshopper.
There were only two groups this time. The onlookers, composed of all of the engineers and soldiers who''d been roped into the project, and the samurai. Well, some of us, at least. A few had contributed what they needed to, and were just milling on the edge of the much bigger onlooker group.
"Stray Cat, Gomorrah," Grasshopper said. She smiled at the both of us, then started towards the very back of the Big Gun. Or was it the front? The bit where the shooting would start, in any case, not the end with the exit portal.
That part of the gun was like a small shack. A well-built, brutalist''s ideal of a small shack. The walls were foot thick concrete poured over inch-thick metal plates.
The inside was a cramped little space that I was pretty sure came from one of Tankette''s catalogues. There were a few small adjustable seats in front of a complex set of screens and buttons. All analogue, at least on the surface. I did notice a few ports for data-jacking into the gun, like connecting into the Mesh.
Grasshopper went to the furthest seat and sat, then she gestured to the other two. One was next to Grasshopper, the other at an angle near the rear of the room.
"What are we going to open with?" she asked.
"You mean what are we shooting first?" I asked. "We need to make a solid first impression."
"Something with good penetrative power might be best for now," Gomorrah said. She looked across the screens and muttered something I didn''t catch, probably to Atyacus. They lit up. Diagnostics flashed by, and then a long list of status readouts. It looked like we were green across the board.
SHELL LOADED
MAGNETS ON
CAPACITORS AT... 100%
TARGET LOCKED
BLINK PORTAL TEST... PASSED
READY TO FIRE
"Does anyone in particular want to do the honours?" Grasshopper asked. She gestured at the large red button with the word FIRE stencilled across it.
"I don''t particularly care," Gomorrah said. "Catherine?"
"I mean... yeah, shit, I wouldn''t mind," I said.
Grasshopper smiled and leaned over so that I could reach the button. I touched it, then pressed down. It made a satisfying little ''click'' noise.
Then I felt every hair on my head pulling upwards and suddenly there was a deep and foreign itch in my bones. Text scrolled by on the screen, too fast for me to read. Then the Big Gun fired.
There was a single thump. It was as if someone had dropped a fifty-five gallon drum off the top of a mega building and recorded the noise it made on meeting the ground. Everything rocked back and the dozens of readouts in the room flashed.
"Oh shit, we good?" I asked.
"We are well, yes," Grasshopper said. "Everything is still green. Look." She pointed to the plotter.
There was a flashing green dot that had left Earth''s orbit and was now slowly crawling across the screen towards Phobos. The fact that it was moving at a speed that I could see, though, probably meant that it was moving at an obscene speed out there.
"Nice!" I said. "When is it gonna hit?"
"We have time for a small break," Grasshopper said. "Should we stock up on ammunition in the meantime? I somehow doubt this one strike will be enough to take Phobos down."
"Right, not a bad idea. Do we want to try a few different things? I''ve got some ideas for what we can throw at them," I said.
Gomorrah perked up. "Atyacus and I have been talking as well. Can I have the next shell?"
"Go right on ahead," I said with a gesture to the breach. There were more holes like the breaches all along the back wall, where there was room to store a lot more shots. Something in my gut told me we''d probably need all of them before this was over.
***