Author: Julian Miles, Staff Writer
The panoramic window that occupies the longest wall of the executive office at the top of the Vimentane Tower shows a breathtaking view of the nighttime traffic in LEO over London. Against the curved inner wall, a buffet has been laid out ready for the next delegation.
A door in that wall opens a little way, hits one of the tables laden with seafood, and closes. Parker Lenting looks up at the sound of it closing. He permits himself a little frown. Sure enough, a few minutes later the main doors to the office open. Technical Analyst Howerd Banton has rushed halfway down the room before it shuts.
“Director Lenting, I’ve been trying to reach you all week.”
Parker smiles at him.
“I’ve been ignoring you.”
Howerd doesn’t even pause.
“The Carminshan contract cannot be signed!” He slaps a datapad down on the desk and points to it.
Parker sees several sections have been highlighted. His smile disappears.
“And that’s why I’ve been ignoring you.”
Howerd stalls.
“What?”
“The quantities aren’t incorrect, Mister Banton.”
That sets him off again. His eyes widen.
“Quantities? I haven’t even looked at them. It’s the thirty-coil Gauss cannons and the cluster munitions with depleted uranium payloads. Both are embargoed under Tycho Treaty. Also, the penalties for shipping Gauss weapons outside Terra Sector Zero are punitive.”
Parker stops idly tapping at his keypad. Steepling his fingers, he gazes at Howerd until the man starts to fidget.
“What do you think we do here, Mister Banton?”
Howerd gives the question serious consideration before replying.
“I thought we were supplying licensed military equipment to Galactic Forces across the Terra Sectors. However, having seen and compared the summaries of the Magdubor, Xhintyl, and Lordintum contracts to the Carminshan one, I can only conclude we are, for want of a better term, supplying illegal weaponry to intergalactic organisations, some of them quite likely criminal in nature. It’s beyond my comprehension how much suffering we have enabled, and also the reasons why elude me, as I can find no trace of profiteering.”
Parker raises a hand for silence.
“Let me provide some context. When humanity first blundered across alien races some 115 years ago, we quickly learned that we were the new kids among an astonishingly old and long-established galactic empire. We were also considered primitives, having managed to enter our interstellar phase while retaining tribal drives. The fact we still fought wars over territories, resources, and religions was not well received out among the stars. Steps were taken to prevent us causing trouble. Somewhere around that time, a galactic criminal organisation noticed we made really effective guns and bombs. Indeed, we’d taken personal and planet-bound weapons technology far beyond that developed by other races.”
Parker pauses to take a drink before continuing.
“So they approached several Earth governments with an offer we quite literally couldn’t refuse.”
Howerd leans forward.
“Which was?”
“Those ‘steps to prevent us causing trouble’? It means exterminating humanity and turning Earth into a farm planet. The only reason we’re still here is because of those illegal weapons, which we supply at cost or for free.”
He waits for Howerd to draw the obvious conclusion. When that doesn’t happen, he sighs, then continues, voice coarse with anger.
“We do that because the moment we’re no longer useful to their organisation, our protection vanishes, and we’re all fertiliser within a month.”
Parker glares at Howerd.
“Any questions?”
He considers for a moment, then steps back.
“I’ll ensure the Carminshan contract is checked and ready for them, Director Lenting.”
“Thank you, Mister Banton.”
wow, what a humbling story to our presently lonely species: Our planet being co-opted for intra-galactic criminal purposes because we have focused too much on weapons development. A timely story while the effort to slow Russian oppression is rapidly making drone tech that latest way to win a war.
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