Blood Feud
By, Foxmerc
Edited, JPB and JJC
Review
Fox McCloud would remember the time surrounding
what came to be called the ‘Overlord Incident’ as some of the best and
worst times of his life. He saw that love could bloom amidst the strife
and chaos of war, and that scars, while never fully healed, can be mended.
The destruction of StarWolf and the Overlord facility brought peace to
his life, while Vicenzia “Vixy” Hohleran brought spirit and love. Fox hadn’t
felt as good since before the deaths of his parents.
Four months have passed since the destruction
of Overlord, and StarFox has been blessed with a break in large assignments.
They live comfortably off the large reward from the Overlord incident,
and Fox and Vixy grow closer every day.
But evil never rests. Over the light of victory
looms the darkness of the enemy. Being a publicly-acclaimed hero is a double-edged
sword; you are one of the most respected and liked among your allies, but
the most hated and hunted among your enemies. Fortunately, even a hero
may turn to his allies in a time of need. Unless…
PROLOGUE
Two years before the destruction of Overlord.
Venom-controlled section of Fortuna City.
1653 hours
Fox McCloud sat on the bare wood floor of the abandoned
apartment building’s second floor and shivered as a sharp wind howled through
the broken window, bringing with it a flurry of snowflakes. He was freezing,
even in the stolen Venom arctic camouflage uniform he was disguised in.
Hugging himself tighter, he muttered into his headset, “Damn, Stefan, how
do you stand living down here?”
Stefan Chuzie, leader of the mercenary team IceStorm,
chuckled and replied in his rumbling voice, “You get used to it. Don’t
blame me, I didn’t ask for Pepper to put us working together on this. I
could’ve easily handled it myself.”
Fox laughed and grimaced as another strong wind
bit at his face. “You can’t shoot worth crap, Stefan. Just give me the
go ahead, and I’ll handle the rest.”
Fox heard the black jaguar mumble something about
where Fox could shove his shooting skill, but ignored it. They had bigger
things to worry about. “Slippy, is the extraction zone secure?”
“All clear, guys. Warming up the engine now,” came
the response. Fox sat back and tried to ignore the cold. He wished Peppy
and Falco were here instead of Stefan, but they were both on vacation,
and this was a last-minute assignment. Fox had done other jobs with IceStorm,
but he preferred his own people.
“Get ready, Fox,” Stefan’s voice rumbled through
Fox’s headset. “The meeting’s about to start.”
Fox stood up, stretching his stiff, frozen joints,
and picked up the sniper rifle that lay on the floor. He uncapped the scope,
kneeled at the broken window, and rested the rifle on the window sill,
pointed at the municipal building a hundred yards away across the city
square.
“In position.”
“Ok,” Stefan continued from his position on the
ground level. “The guy you’re supposed to assassinate is a three-star general.”
Fox looked through the scope at the round table
through the latticed window at the target building. Eight Venom officers
sat around it, talking, drinking, pointing at one thing or another. Fox
scanned the group quickly.
“Stefan, there’s four three-stars. Any more description?”
“Hold on.” Fox could hear the rustling of papers
as Stefan went through his intelligence file from Pepper. “Ok, he’s a sixty-three
year old gray ferret. See him?”
Fox scanned the group again, his scope bouncing
everywhere from his shivering. “Ok, I see him, but he keeps walking around.
Gonna be a tough shot, especially in this weather.”
“Well,” came Stefan’s response, covered with almost
tangible bitterness. “Pepper decided to give the great Fox McCloud the
job of shooting, so it’s on your ass now. Take the shot.”
Fox took a few deep breaths and put his eye to
the scope. The general had stopped and was talking to sitting officer over
his shoulder. Fox put the crosshairs on his chest, trying desperately to
control his shivering. He started pulling the trigger, slowly.
Deep breath, pulling the trigger a bit more…
Another deep breath, a bit more…
Fox held his last breath and pulled the trigger
the rest if the way. The loud crack of the rifle shattered the serenity
of the snowy afternoon, and the officers in the meeting jumped up and looked
around. Fox zoomed in and saw the officer was still standing, the window
wasn’t even broken.
Dammit, I missed!
Fox aimed again and fired. He KNEW he had aimed
perfectly, but again, the glass remained undamaged, and the officer was
still standing. But Fox noticed something. He hadn’t even hit the building.
Fox froze, a sudden chill running down his spine
and not from the cold this time. He ducked back into the apartment and
fired three quick shots at the wall next to him. They didn’t leave a mark.
Blanks!
Fox dropped the useless rifle and unholstered his
blaster, wondering how the hell he got blanks in his gun. He remembered
arriving on Fortuna in the dropship and meeting with Stefan at the landing
zone. Stefan gave him the rifle…
Fox spun around to face the door and came muzzle-to-muzzle
with a chrome blaster. The hand that held the blaster belonged to Stefan,
who was grinning triumphantly at Fox. Slippy’s voice rang in Fox’s head.
“Fox! Stefan! Is anyone there? What’s going on? Fox!”
“Keep the engine running, Slip,” Fox replied in
a low voice, keeping his eyes glued to Stefan’s.
Stefan laughed. “I don’t think you’ll be going
anywhere, McCloud. I’m sorry it had to end like this, but Venom paid me
a lot more to keep the general alive than Pepper did to kill him. Hey,
I go where the money is. I also get a special bonus if I bring you to the
general, dead or alive. Drop the gun.”
Fox dropped his blaster, his heart pounding and
mind spinning.
“Smart move, Fox. Like you said, I may not be a
great shot, but even I can hit you from a foot away. Turn and face the
wall.”
Things were getting desperate. Fox decided he had
to make a move. He knew Stefan was a horrible shot and decided to exploit
it. He started to turn to the wall, but swung back, his left hand grabbing
Stefan’s wrist. The jaguar got a shot off well after Fox’s head was out
of the way. Fox spun and kicked Stefan back through the doorway. He was
about to go after him when he saw that Stefan had somehow held onto his
gun and was standing back up, a look of rage on his face.
Fox frantically looked for his blaster, but it
had been kicked during the scuffle into the hallway. Instead, he grabbed
the sniper rifle and ran for the window. Stefan had recovered and was firing
at him, but his aim was as bad as Fox had prayed for. Fox sprinted across
the room, lasers splintering the wooden walls and shattering the remaining
glass of the windows, and jumped through the window.
A snow bank along the wall broke Fox’s fall, and
he quickly recovered, sprinting across the square, where dozens of civilians
ran at the sound of the gunfire. Soldiers were now rushing out of the municipal
building, pointing and running at the apartment building. Fox started to
panic, looking around for anything he could use to get to the extraction
zone a mile or two away where Slippy was still (hopefully) waiting.
In the parking lot of the municipal building was
a row of flatbed trucks, some of which had mounted machine guns on the
back. Fox was running out of ideas and decided to take the one forming
in his head. He sprinted over to the nearest one and smashed the driver’s
side window, unlocking the door. He saw the keys were still in the ignition
and breathed a sigh of relief.
The relief quickly turned to fear again as Fox
saw Stefan rushing out of the apartment building, a line of soldiers with
him. Fox grabbed a passing civilian and threw him against the truck, aiming
the rifle at his head. The male tiger looked about ready to wet himself,
but Fox remained harsh. “Drive this truck to Midland Park as fast as it
will go, and if you make any wrong moves I decorate the windshield with
your brains, got it?!”
‘Hurry up, or I’ll scare you with a really loud
bang!’ It was all Fox could do to keep a straight face.
The terrified man nodded and slinked behind the
wheel. Fox slung the rifle and hopped on the back, charging the machine
gun. He heard the ignition start and the truck began to move. The energy
bar on the gun reached full, and Fox swiveled it towards the apartment.
Fox grinned at Stefan’s surprised look and fired
at the group forming outside the building. Stefan dove back into the building
as the lasers cut through the ranks of soldiers. Some fired back, but most
ran for cover. The truck left the parking lot and began to accelerate down
the main road.
Seconds later, the civilian behind the wheel yelled
out to him, “Uh, S-Sir? There’s s-something up ahead!” Fox turned and saw
two trucks blocking the road, soldiers lined up in front. He swung the
gun around and fired over the hood of his truck. “Get your head down!”
Fox yelled, hoping the civilian would obey. The soldiers fired back, but
were scattering.
Fox took advantage of the moment to aim and fire
off a burst at the fuel tank of the right truck. The explosion rocked Fox’s
truck, throwing him down and blowing the other truck off the road.
“Go!” Fox yelled, regaining his stance and praying
the driver was still alive. “Don’t stop for anything!”
The truck lurched forward and accelerated between
the burning remains. Fox fired off a few bursts at the remaining soldiers
and watched as it disappeared into the hazy distance of the falling snow.
A minute later, they passed a sign that read, “Welcome
to Midland Park”, and Fox sighed with relief and sat down, breathing heavily.
The truck moved along through the snow-covered paths, and Fox heard the
hum of a ship’s engine. Slippy’s dropship was in the center of the park,
as planned, and he ran to the truck.
“Fox! What the hell happened? Where’s Stefan?”
Fox hopped off the truck and said impatiently,
“Long story, come on, we gotta get away from here.” He unslung the useless
rifle and threw it to the ground. That made him remember the driver. He
ran over to the smashed drivers-side window and saw the civilian staring
straight ahead, breathing hard.
“You alright?” Fox asked in a gentle tone. The
civilian nodded slowly. Fox put his hand on his shoulder, which seemed
to snap him out of it. He looked at Fox.
“Thanks for your help. Sorry about back there,
but things were getting rough. The best thing for you to do right now is
to ditch this truck and take some side roads back to the city. You never
saw me, ok?”
The civilian nodded again, faster. Fox decided
he’d e alright and walked over to Slippy. “Come on, let’s get the hell
outta here.”
CHAPTER 1
Two Proposals, Two Plots
Four months after the destruction of Overlord
Great Fox, recreation room
2134 hours
Falco slammed the door of the rec room’s refrigerator
and turned to Peppy and Slippy, who were hunched over a chess game, concentrating
intently. “Where the hell are those two? We have no food, and they said
they’d be back an hour ago.”
Peppy and Slippy shrugged absently, still staring
at the chess board. They had been at the game for an hour and a half, and
made Falco turn the TV off so they could concentrate. This made him hungry
AND bored, so Falco had waited for Fox and Vixy to get back from shopping
and was running out of patience.
Falco gave up trying to get a response and collapsed
into an armchair, watching his two friends play what he considered the
most boring game ever made. “Will you two hurry up? I’d like to watch TV
before the end of this century.”
Falco thought he was finally going to get a response,
but at that moment the door slid open. Fox and Vixy walked, carrying plastic
bags and whispering and laughing to each other. Falco sprung up.
“Where’d you go, the dark side of Venom? You shoulda
been back an hour ago, I’m starving.”
“I know, I know, sorry,” Fox said, putting the
bags on the ground. “It was getting late, we stopped for dinner.”
“I’ll make you something, Falco,” Vixy said, picking
up the bags Fox put down. “I have to put these things away anyway.”
Peppy shot a glance over to them. “That dress looks
great on you, Vixy.”
Vixy smiled. “Thanks, Peppy.” She looked at Fox
and ran a finger under his muzzle. In a lower voice, she said, “Why don’t
you come to my room later and I’ll show you how good it looks off me,”
and walked off.
Fox looked after her, grinning. Falco came up behind
him and smacked him in the back of the head. “Snap out of it, lover. Will
you tell these two to take the game somewhere else?”
Fox shoved his hands in the pockets of his green
jumpsuit and looked at the white carpeted floor, ignoring Falco. “Guy’s,
I need to ask you something.” When Peppy and Slippy still stared at the
board, Fox raised his voice. “Something IMPORTANT!”
Peppy and Slippy snapped their heads towards him
while Falco leaned against the sofa. “Sorry, Fox,” Peppy said. “What is
it?”
Fox looked at the floor again and rocked from foot
to foot. “Well, I, uh… I was wondering if I could… spend some of the money
from our last job.”
“On what?” Slippy asked.
“Uh… something for Vixy.”
“Fox, you’ve taken her to probably every restaurant
in the galaxy,” Peppy said, sitting back. “What could you possibly want
the money for this time?”
Fox looked at the floor and said in a low voice,
“A ring.”
His three friends looked at him, their mouths hanging
open. The next second, Fox was on the floor, Falco’s hands gripping his
jacket
lapels. Peppy and Slippy hovered over him, laughing.
“You’re actually gonna ask?! You’re gonna propose?!”
Falco yelled.
“Sssshhhhhh!” Fox hissed. “Shut up, moron! Yes,
yes, I’m going to ask. Get off me!”
They heard the door slide open and Vixy’s gray
head poked in. “Falco, I have something for…” She saw them staring at her,
all piled on Fox. She shook her head and smiled. “Don’t beat him up too
much, he’s mine. Falco, I made something if you want, it’s in the kitchen.”
She disappeared back through the door.
Fox stood up and Peppy threw his arms around him.
“Fox, I’m so happy for you! You two make a great couple. Go ahead, take
any money you need.”
Fox smiled and brushed himself off. “Thanks guys.
I’m gonna go get changed and plan this out. Don’t tell her anything, and
keep it down if you talk about it.” He started walking away when Falco
said, “So who’s the best man gonna be?”
Fox turned around and saw them looking anxiously
at him. ‘Dammit, I have to choose a best man.’
“Uh…well…I guess….uh…” He turned and sprinted out
of the room, muffled laughter following him.
* * *
The same night
Blizzard, IceStorm’s mothership
2246 hours
The tenseness hung thick in the air of the dimly
lit meeting room on Blizzard’s third deck. Stefan Chuzie’s staff of five
trusted lieutenants sat at the black ovular table, staring at their leader.
They knew of his wrath when he was angry and prayed that they would leave
the room alive.
The black jaguar stood with his back to the table,
staring out the window at the endless space. He was clothed, as were all
the officers, in IceStorm’s uniform of a dark blue jumpsuit, black boots,
and a black jacket, and carried his custom chrome blaster, which he was
fingering, much to the discomfort of his staff.
“Gentlemen,” he finally rumbled. “Can any of you
tell me why none of us are sitting on a beach sipping margaritas right
now?”
None dared speak, which Stefan expected, so he
continued in his strangely calm tone. “It’s because we are running short
of money. And can any of you tell me why we’re short of money?” Again,
silence.
Stefan whirled around and slammed a piece of paper
down on the table, making the officers jump. “This is why!” He yelled,
his rage filling the room like an explosion. The officers looked and saw
it was an old newspaper clipping with the heading, “StarFox Averts Mass
Destruction” with a picture under it of Fox McCloud climbing off a dropship
with a gray vixen.
“Collins, would you be so kind as to remind the
other officers how much money was riding on Overlord?” Stefan said, leaning
on the table, scowling at the weasel.
Collins hurriedly leafed through the folder in
front of him, sweat beading on his brow. “Uh… well, sir… about two-hundred-thousand.”
“Two…hundred…thousand,” Stefan said, emphasizing
each word. He took his seat at the head of the table and leaned back. “And
who knows what other jobs would’ve been needed after its completion? We
would have been in the clear financially for years. And who do we have
to blame for this?”
Silence.
“STARFOX!” Stefan yelled, pounding the table again.
“That damn group has been the thorn in my side for years, and it’s time
for it to end. If we are to move forward with any more jobs, Fox McCloud
and his team must be taken out first.”
There were nods from around the table, and Collins
spoke up again. “Sir, we have one-hundred fifty-three people in IceStorm
as of now, spread all over the galaxy. If we muster together, I’m sure
we could take an assault on StarFox. There are only four of them, after
all.”
Stefan leaned back again. “Yes, Collins, we could
take the four of them. But then what? Everyone allied with Corneria would
be after us for killing their beloved saviors. Could we hold off the entire
Cornerian army? No, no, this requires that StarFox has no help from anywhere.”
He swiveled his chair around and stared out the window once again. The
officers sighed and sat back, glad that they didn’t have to see the look
in his eyes.
“You are all dismissed.”
The tenseness tainting the room evaporated as the
officers moved quickly and quietly out of the room, each breathing a sigh
of relief when they passed the doorframe.
Stefan stared at the emptiness of space for over
an hour, fingering his whiskers and thinking hard. None of this would’ve
happened if he had just killed Fox on Fortuna when he had the chance…
Fortuna…
A spark of a plan began to form in Stefan’s head. As
the details of the plan became clearer, a grin spread over his muzzle.
It’s perfect! It HAS to work!
CHAPTER 2
Shattered Peace
Four days later
Great Fox, Fox’s room
0934 hours
Fox lay under the single sheet on his bed, smiling
at the sleeping vixen snuggled against him. He loved her, and she had told
him that she felt the same way. He glanced over at his dresser where the
gold ring was hidden under his t-shirts and thought about when to propose.
He felt nervous, like trying to put off studying for a final back in the
Academy. However, he also felt anxious, like having a secret that he wanted
to tell so badly.
‘You better think about this. You’re about to
ask someone to spend the rest of her life with you. That’s a major commitment.
What if she says no? God, I’ll feel like a complete moron. What if this
isn’t love? You’ve been without it for so long…’
Fox sighed and looked up at his bookshelf above
the dresser, where he kept his most treasured belongings. In the center
were three identical framed medals with “Decoration of Distinguished Service”
engraved on the wood setting. One was his father’s, for his part in the
initial banishment of Andross. The other two were Fox’s, one for his part
in the Lylat War, the other for his part in the destruction of Overlord.
It was the highest award a non-military person could receive, all three
presented by General Pepper.
The yearbooks from Fox’s time in the Academy were
up there, as well an antique bullet-firing pistol in a glass case that
belonged to his great-grandfather, and numerous pictured of him, his parents,
his friends, the team, and newspaper clippings. The most recent clipping
was headed “StarFox Averts Mass Destruction” and has a picture of him climbing
off a dropship with Vixy after they had returned to Corneria.
Fox continued to look over the contents of the
shelf, listening to Vixy’s rhythmic breathing. His eyes stopped on a picture
of him and his parents when they were on vacation in pre-polluted Zoness.
Little Fox, no more than seven or eight, was standing in the middle with
James and Vixy (his mother) kissing over his head.
That picture held Fox’s eyes for a long time. He
remembered how his parents acted, teasing each other, laughing, and always
there for each other and Fox. It was the same way he and Vixy were together.
They joked and teased a lot, but Fox knew he would do anything for her.
He had already faced his worst fears and singularly infiltrated one of
the largest facilities ever built, risking an encounter with Wolf O’Donnell
who made Fox’s life a living hell for two and a half weeks. He hadn’t done
it for revenge. He had done it for her.
‘Tonight. I’ll ask her tonight.’
With that settled, Fox lightly kissed her head
and joined her in sleep.
* * *
Later that night
Great Fox, recreation room
1956 hours
The team had noticed that their leader was jittery
all through dinner that night, strumming his fingers on the table, rolling
his napkin into a ball and squeezing it. Their suspicions were confirmed
as Fox leaned forward after Vixy had cleared the dishes. His voice was
thankfully muffled further by the television.
“Guys, I’m gonna do it. Now. Wish me luck.”
Falco gave him a playful punch on the shoulder
and Peppy squeezed his hand. Wishes of luck were given and Fox stood up,
his knees shaking, and sauntered over to the sink where Vixy was rinsing
off the dishes and putting them in the washer. He gave a nervous glance
over his shoulder to see the team looking at him anxiously.
With a deep breath, Fox walked the rest of the
way and gave a gentle tug on Vixy’s tail, then leaning on the counter,
smiling nervously. She looked at him and grinned. “Hey, Foxy. What’s up?”
“Rrrrg, you know I hate that name,” Fox said, reaching
in his pocket and feeling the velvet jewelry box.
“I know, that’s why I do it,” Vixy replied, giving
him a peck on the cheek and returning to the dishes. Fox’s heart pounded
in his chest.
“Uh, Vixy, I need to ask you something. Something
important.”
“Sure,” she said, taking off the rubber gloves
and tossing them on the edge of the sink.
'This is it, Fox. This is the moment.'
Fox opened his mouth to ask, but was interrupted
as the 8’o’clock news blared on the TV with a story that caught all five
of them by surprise.
“Our top story this hour, just in from Corneria
City,” the female raccoon said, glancing at the papers in front of her.
“An act of betrayal and murder that shocked those who witnessed it. Fox
McCloud, leader of the mercenary team StarFox and two-time recipient of
the Decoration of Distinguished Service for his acts of valor and heroism
for the Lylat system, tonight turned on Corneria and murdered General Monagi
of the Cornerian Army. He then fled the scene and fired on pursuing soldiers
from his ship with no regard for civilians in the way. Casualties have
been estimated at forty dead and over one-hundred wounded.”
Fox stared at the screen, mouth open and eyes wide.
“WHAT?!”
The screen showed a clip taken from a news camera
at the scene. Monagi was standing at the podium with other generals, including
Pepper, sitting in a row behind. It was a press conference on the steps
of the capital building in downtown Corneria City. The scene continued
until three lasers cut in from off-screen, all hitting Monagi in the chest.
The camera shook a bit, then swung around to show a red fox in the exact
same uniform Fox wears running down the sidewalk. He fired off the rest
of the clip at pursuing guards then dropped the empty blaster and disappeared
behind a building. Moments later, an Arwing with the StarFox logo and exactly
the same design as StarFox’s banked around the building, firing into the
crowd of panicked civilians, then bolting up into the blue sky.
The shot cut off back to the raccoon. “We’ve just
received word that General Pepper of the Cornerian Army is about to make
a statement.”
The screen changed to show Pepper, looking tired
and still shocked, standing at another podium with the Cornerian flag on
the front. Camera flashes went off from around the room as he cleared his
throat and spoke.
“It has been confirmed that the assassin is indeed
Fox McCloud. Fingerprints were found on the gun he dropped, and the Arwing
matches the custom design made for StarFox. This comes as a great shock
to all of us, military and civilian alike, especially so soon after his
valor in the Overlord Incident. He was a personal friend of mine, and to
many others in the army, and it hurts us greatly that he has turned on
us. But we must remember that he is not military, but a mercenary with
no allegiance. It is now assumed that he works for Venom. However, the
army sees this as a great threat, and, despite his past record, must now
be taken in.” It was obvious to all watching that it hurt him to say the
last sentence.
Fox quickly reached out and switched the TV off.
He turned and stared blankly at his team, who returned the stare.
“What the HELL is going on?!”
Peppy stood up. “I don’t get it, you were FRAMED?
How? By who? The blaster had your prints and the fox flew away in a StarFox
Arwing? That’s impossible!”
Fox shook his head, still shocked at how the night
turned from proposing to Vixy to being a fugitive of Corneria, his home.
Vixy put her hand on his shoulder. “What do we do now? Should we talk to
Pepper, try to explain?”
Fox nodded. “Yeah, we…” He was interrupted by ringing
of the phone in the rec room.
“Looks like he decided to talk to us first. Come
on.” They all walked together and stood in front of the phone’s screen.
Fox took a deep breath and hit the receive button. Pepper’s face, still
tired, but this time also angry instead of shocked.
“McCloud! What the FUCK have you done?! Do you
have ANY IDEA what the people here are feeling?! We TRUSTED you! How could
you do this? After all you’ve done for Corneria. Oh, good God, I’m glad
your father’s not alive to see what you’ve done with his name and the name
of StarFox.”
For some reason, it hurt Fox to hear that, even
though he knew he hadn’t done anything. Probably just the shock of hearing
it from a good friend.
“General, wait, just listen to me, let me explain.
I didn’t do this…”
“Forget it, Fox. You can’t talk your way out of
this. As much as I was praying this wasn’t true, there’s too much hard
evidence to ignore. The blaster with your prints on it, same make and model
I know you use. The Arwing, your team owns the only ones of its kind in
existence.” His face softened into an expression between sorrow and disappointment.
“You were a good friend, but so was General Monagi. Christ Fox, you sat
at the same table with him, planned out the offensive against Overlord
with him. How could you so this?”
Slippy stepped forward. “Fox couldn’t have done
this; he was with us all day”
Pepper shook his head. “Of course you would say
that, as I expect the rest of you would. I’m sorry Fox, but we have to
bring you in. Please don’t make this difficult and possibly get yourself
killed. We have an army detachment heading to you now. Go with them and
I’ll see that you get a fair trial. With your history of service to Corneria,
you should be able to avoid the death penalty.”
Fox stared at the screen, not believing what he
was hearing. ‘I’m being hunted by Corneria. By my friend, and the friend
of my father.’ He bowed his head and thought about what to do. If he surrendered,
he would be tried for treason and fifty counts of murder. No matter what
Pepper said, that’s death penalty material. Not to mention the name of
StarFox would be dragged in the mud…
Fox raised his head. ‘I won’t let that happen.
Before I this ends, I’m gonna find whoever did this and restore StarFox’s
name. Peppy entrusted this team’s leadership to me, and I’ll be damned
if I let him or my father down.’
“Sorry, General. I’m innocent, and I have to prove
it before I come in.” With that, Fox reached up and cut the connection
before Pepper could respond.
Great Fox, recreation room
2313 hours
After the team had gotten over the initial shock
of abrupt end of their peace, they sat down around the dining table and
thought the situation through. ROB’s voice cut in every few minutes with
the same message.
“Cornerian transport ship requests immediate compliance
with demands.”
“ROB, tell them we’re not dropping the shields
so go the fuck away!” Fox yelled, then rested his head on his hands and
looked down at t he table. After a few moments he continued.
“Alright, we need to get somewhere safe, because
that ship will call for the cavalry soon. We can think this through once
we’re clear. The question is, who can we trust? Venom’s out to get us,
Corneria’s out to get us, all Corneria’s allies are out to get us. Any
ideas?”
“What about Emayn?” Vixy said hopefully. “After
all you’ve done for the island, there’s no way they’d turn you in.”
Peppy shook his head. “No good, the Cornerian army
is still investigating the ruins from the Overlord relay tower that was
going to be built there.”
Fox sighed and sat back. “There are only two people
besides you guys that I would trust in this situation, and one of them
was Pepper. So he’s out of the question.”
“Who’s the other one?” Slippy asked.
Instead of answering, Fox stood up and walked to
the comm. on the wall. “ROB, set a course for Katina, and hyperdrive it
so we lose the Cornerian ship. Contact William Grey of the air force station
there through closed channel and tell him we’re coming.” ROB gave the affirmative
and Fox rejoined his friends.
“I’ve known Bill almost my whole life, he’ll help
us.”
Falco leaned back and folded his arms across his
chest. “That’s what you thought about Pepper.”
There was nothing Fox could say to that. Instead
he stood up and stretched. “Everyone get some sleep, we’ll go down and
see Bill in the morning.”
Everyone nodded and walked off to their quarters,
but Fox gestured for Vixy to hang back. He gripped her shoulders and looked
her in the eye.
“Vixy, this could get really ugly, not to mention
you might also be charged for helping me if we’re caught. We can drop you
in Emayn or somewhere safe until this is over.”
Vixy responded by pulling him forward and giving
him a long, passionate kiss. “Forget it, you need all the help and support
you can get in this, and I won’t leave you. I’ll never leave you.”
She gave him a kiss on the cheek and walked off
to her room.
CHAPTER 3
A Friend’s Help
The next day
Great Fox, Fox’s room
0822 hours
Peppy opened the door to Fox’s room to make sure
he was awake and found him putting on his jacket and looking in the mirror.
He turned at the sound of the door.
“Hey Fox, you almost ready?”
“Yeah, I just…uh….can I talk to you for a minute?”
“Sure,” Peppy replied, closing the door behind
him and sitting on the side of Fox’s bed. Fox finished rolling up his sleeves
and sat down next to Peppy, looking down at the carpet.
“Things kinda happened fast last night. Too fast.
I was acting out of split-second instinct because of the…well, shock of
the whole thing. This is really, really bad. I just…well…did I do the right
thing? I mean, I’ve known you my whole life, and you’ve been like a father
to me. You took me in when I was orphaned, you helped me through my parents’
deaths, and you gave me the lead position for the team. I know I can always
turn to you, and I need you’re help now, when the whole…GALAXY is against
us. Am I doing the right thing?”
Peppy noticed that halfway through Fox’s talk,
his eyes began to get watery. He was under a lot of stress, and it hurt
Peppy to think that a man his age, no more than a kid, would have to deal
with this kind of pressure. It once again proved that Fox had his father’s
spirit inside him, the spirit to be strong in the face of adversity and
take up a burden that few could bear.
Peppy curled his arm around Fox’s shoulder and
gently hugged the way a father would console his son after the boy had
lost a little league game. “Fox, I’ve told you before what happened on
Venom, to me and James. But I never told you what our last words were to
each other. When he was shot during our escape attempt, we only had a few
seconds before the guards would be on top of us.” He looked over and saw
that, while he wasn’t sobbing, the tears were flowing freely now. But he
should know the whole story, so Peppy continued. “He gripped my hand hard
and shoved something into it. It was that picture on your bookshelf of
your mother. He then said to me in a voice as strong as ever, ‘You’re my
best friend, Peppy. Promise me you’ll take care of Fox. I entrust him to
you. Give him this and tell him his parents will always love him and be
with him’. Then his hand went limp… But Fox, he didn’t have to ask for
my promise to look after you. I’ve always thought of you as my own. While
you see me as a father, I see you as my son.” Peppy stopped because he
too was starting to get choked up. Fox hugged Peppy and the old hare hugged
right back.
“It never goes away does it?” Fox whispered in
a strained voice. “I wish he was here”
“I know Fox, I know,” Peppy whispered back, hugging
Fox tighter. He then pulled away and looked him in the eye. “But I see
him every time I look at you. You’re father would be so proud to see you
now. Yes, you made the right decision. An injustice has been done, and
we’ll all be right with you until it’s fixed. And you have a very special
girl out there who loves you and is sticking with you through all this.
Just concentrate on the situation and remember that we’re all here for
you.”
Fox nodded and wiped his eyes. He gave one last
glance at the picture of his mother and stood up, a look of determination
on his face. “Alright, let’s get down there.”
* * *
Room 212, Parkview Hotel, downtown Katina City
1037 hours
The hotel room wasn’t the best Fox had seen, but
this wasn’t the time to worry about accommodations. The five of them lounged
around the small room, Falco and Vixy sitting on one bed, Slippy and Peppy
on the other, and Fox pacing in front of the door. He looked at his watch
for what seemed like the hundredth time in twenty minutes and said, “Ten-thirty
was the meeting time right? Are we in the right room?”
“This is it, Fox,” Peppy said gently. “He’s ten
minutes late, it’s not that bad.”
Fox returned to his pacing and was about to check
his watch thirty seconds later when there was a knock at the door. He bolted
over and put his hand on the knob. “Who is it?”
“Frickin pizza delivery, open up.”
Fox grinned and opened the door, revealing a grey
dog that was his best friend since he could remember. Bill Grey rolled
his eyes and walked in, quivkly closing the door behind him.
“Damn, man,” he said, embracing Fox. “I missed
you, haven’t seen you forever.”
Fox returned the hug. “Wish it could be under happier
circumstances.”
Bill stepped back and nodded. He looked over Fox’s
shoulder and waved. “Hey guys, what’s happenin’” He received a greeting
from the team, and his eyebrows rose as he saw Vixy. He walked over and
took her hand. “You wouldn’t happen to be the infamous Vixy Hohleran that
Fox has told me so much about?”
Vixy smiled. “Yes, and Fox has said a lot about
you too. Nice to finally meet his best friend from the Academy.”
Bill raised her hand and kissed it. “Very nice
to meet you.”
Falco turned away and muffled laughter as Fox rolled
his eyes and pulled Bill away. “Zip your pants up, we have work to do.”
“I know,” Bill’s face suddenly turned grim. He
pulled Fox over to the side and put a hand on his shoulder. “Listen man,
I’m gonna stand behind you no matter what, but I have to know, and I’m
only gonna ask you once and whatever you say, I’ll believe it. Did you
do it?”
“No.”
Bill nodded. “Didn’t think so. Cuz the news freaked
the hell outta me when I saw it. Hell, it sent a shock through the whole
base.”
“Heh. Freaked us out too, believe me.”
“I’ll bet, man.” He turned and addressed everyone
in the room. “Alright, listen up guys…and gals. Your robot-pilot-thing
sent me the message, so I was able to get this room ahead of time. Everyone
in the galaxy knows your faces, so I recommend you spend most of your time
on the Great Fox and we’ll use this room as a meeting place. I’m doing
my best to look into this, and I’ll inform you of anything that comes up.
In the meantime, keep your heads down, alright?”
Everyone nodded, then Falco sat up and spoke. “Hey
Bill, you know that if they find out you’re helping us, you’ll be arrested
also, right?”
Bill shrugged. “I know that Fox didn’t do it, and
you guys come above everything else. Alright, I gotta get back to the base,
Fox has my number. You guys need anything, don’t hesitate to call. I suggest
you hang out here for a while, then head out one by one. I’ll be back in
a few hours.”
“Hey, thanks man,” Fox said. Bill just smiled and
gave him a playful punch in the shoulder.
“I’ll catch you later.”
* * *
Later that day
Room 212, Parkview Hotel, downtown Katina City
1604 hours
“I don’t get it,” Fox said, staring out the hotel
room’s dusty window at the busy street below. “Why is it called Parkview
if there’s no park in view?”
Bill laughed from his slouched position on the
desk chair, his feet up on the bed. “Thinking about the important things
over there, eh?”
Fox smiled and turned from his vigil at the window,
sitting on the bed across from Bill. “Where did the time go, man? Seems
like only yesterday you and I were at the Academy, not a care in the world.
Not any to compare with this anyway.”
Bill bowed his head. “I hear you. You’ve had it
rough, Fox, but that doesn’t mean life is all work no play. We’re just
past that carefree stage, and you’re having a bad few months. Just concentrate
on finishing this situation, then you and I can have a guy’s night out
and get wasted at every damn club in town.”
Fox laughed. “Yeah, I can always count on that
with you.” He closed his eyes and grinned. “Remember that one Christmas
Eve that you and I were having a snowball fight in your backyard and I
didn’t think Dad was going to make it home for the holidays. Then he showed
up and I was so happy. We were….wow, eight years old.”
Bill grinned. “Yeah, I always kicked your ass in
snowball fights.”
“The hell you did, Willy.”
Bill picked up the pad of paper on the desk and
threw it at Fox, hitting him in the chest. “Don’t call me that, Foxy.”
Fox rolled his eyes. “Very original, get some new
material. Also, it’s taken, Vixy calls me that.”
Bill sat up and leaned forward, grinning again.
“Yeah, you two seem…close. Anything serious? You were kinda vague in your
letters.”
Fox took the jewelry case out of his pocket, held
it up, then replaced it. “I was going to propose to her the second the
news came on and declared me a traitor.”
Bill’s mouth dropped open. “No WAY! Damn, that’s
some bad luck, man. Well, if I were you, I’d wait till after this whole
thing’s over to do it. Seems awkward now. Congratulations in advance, though.”
“Thanks. You told me you were seeing someone. What’s
her name? Emma?”
Bill grinned and nodded. “Yeah, I really like her
a lot, we’re great together. She might be the one, ya know? Speaking of
which…” Bill looked at his watch and stood up. “I’m meeting her for dinner
at five, so I’m gonna get going. You still have another fifteen minutes
before it’s your turn to head out, but don’t doze off. Wouldn’t be good
to spend the night here, in case a maid comes in or something and sees
you.”
“Alright, thanks man. Good luck with Emma.”
Bill gave him a thumbs up and walked out.
Fox sat slouched in the chair Bill had occupied
with his feet up the same way, strumming his fingers on the desk and checking
his watch. He didn’t like being away from the Great Fox and his team for
this long, but his time to leave was only five minutes away.
At one minute away, he decided it was close enough
and stood up as there came a knock on the door. Fox rolled his eyes and
walked over to the door. “What’s the matter Bill, she dump you…?” Fox’s
voice trailed off as he opened the door and stared down the barrel of an
assault rifle. A huge bear, towering at least seven inches over Fox and
dressed in a strangely familiar blue and black uniform, grinned and pulled
the trigger.
Fox snapped to his senses and ducked as the bear
pulled the trigger. The laser flew over Fox’s head, shattering the window
across the room. He shoved the rifle over and drove his right elbow into
the bear’s gut, but he hit rock-solid muscle. The mystery guest laughed
and swung the butt of the rifle around, connecting with Fox’s head and
sending him to the ground. The impact made Fox’s vision blurry and his
temples throb, and he shook his head while fumbling for his blaster in
the thigh holster.
His vision finally cleared to show the bear walking
slowly across the room, the rifle pointed at Fox. Fox desperately tried
to pull his gun free, but it was caught on something. Instead, he swung
his right leg around and fired the blaster from inside the holster. The
laser ran parallel to his leg, singeing his pants, and hit the bear’s leg
just above the knee. He roared and fell to the ground, dropping the rifle
and clutching the wound.
Fox hopped up, and bent over to pick up the rifle
when a shadow fell across the room. He froze and looked at the doorway
to see a black wolf in the same uniform as the bear, pointing a pistol
at Fox’s head. Fox closed his eyes and raised his hands as if to shield
himself. He then heard the shot…
But he didn’t feel any pain. Fox slowly opened
his eyes to see Bill standing in the doorway, holding out a smoking blaster.
The wolf lay face-down on the floor, half his head blown off. Bill lowered
the gun. “Good thing I forgot my wallet, man.” Fox looked over, and there
it was, still on the desk.
He let out a deep breath, then pounded the desk
with his fist. “I just can’t catch a fucking break!” He was about to kick
the remains of the wolf when he heard a low groan and remembered the bear.
Yanking his blaster free, Fox stormed over and knelt down. He grabbed the
bear’s collar and shoved the pistol under his chin, pointed up.
“Who the hell are you?! Who sent you?! Answer me
before I blow your goddamn head out that window.”
The bear just narrowed his eyes and muttered in
a deep voice, “I won’t tell you anything.”
“Hey, Fox…” Bill’s voice drifted over from behind
him. Fox turned to see Bill searching the wolf’s corpse and holding up
the limp right arm. “What’s this insignia? Never seen it.”
Fox looked on the bear’s right arm and saw the
same emblem. It consisted of four blue spiked pointed inwards on a white
backdrop. Fox knew it from somewhere….but where…
“Looks like a bunch of icicles in snow…” Bill muttered,
studying the emblem.
“That’s it!” Fox yelled, startling Bill and making
him fall back. “IceStorm! Stefan, you piece of shit.”
Bill recovered and looked blankly at his friend.
“IceStorm? Stefan? What’s going on?”
“I’ll explain later.” Fox hopped up and started
for the door. “We have to get to the Great Fox, come on.”
“Wait,” Bill said, glancing at the bear. “What
about him?”
Fox stopped and grimaced. He wasn’t in the mood
to deal with it. He turned and fired a single laser that that hit the bear
in the head, splattering the back wall with blood. Fox then holstered the
blaster and continued out the door, not hesitating a moment. Bill looked
after him for a second then stood up. “Sorry, boys,” he said to the corpses.
“That’s what you get when you fuck with a man too much.” He then turned
and followed his friend out.
CHAPTER 4
Flight 173
That night
Great Fox, recreation room
2034 hours
Bill sighed and munched on a chip from the bag on
the dining table. “Guy’s, we’ve been at this for hours, and we can’t get
any solid reasoning. Maybe it was just a coincidence that IceStorm attacked
you there. Maybe they just followed you there.”
The team, Vixy, and Bill were sitting around the
table, trying to see if the attack had any connection to the framing and
having no luck. Fox sighed and leaned back in his chair, rubbing his eyes.
“Listen, it HAS to be connected, it’s too much of a coincidence. Alright,
let me tell the story again, and just blurt out anything at all that sounds
weird.”
Fox recapped the story of his mission on Fortuna
with Stefan, saying every little detail he could think of. “… so then I
spun around and Stefan was right there, holding a gun pointed at me. He
said something like how he wasn’t that bad a shot and to drop my gun. So
I did, then he…” Fox snapped his head up, seeing a wide-eyed Falco, who
had obviously also seen it. They both jumped up and shouted together, “The
gun!”
Finally, the splinter in Fox’s mind, the missing
link, popped into place. He saw the secure conference room again, where
the generals plotted the attack on Overlord. General Monagi was explaining
the purpose of the facility to him. And that one line… “Your job in Emayn
was not a new thing. We had been getting reports from at least seven other
towns across the galaxy that Venom troops had suddenly invaded with what
seemed like no reason. They even hired mercenary teams, some of which you
know; IceStorm, headed by Stefan Chuzie from Fortuna for one.”
“What?” Slippy said. “What about it?”
Fox raised his hands to shush the group and started
pacing excitedly around the table. “Alright, alright, I think I have it.
I KNEW it was all connected somehow. Tell me how this sounds.”
“I remember in the briefing with the generals before
the attack on Overlord, Monagi said that Venom had hired out mercenary
groups to help establish the relay towers. He said we knew of one of them,
IceStorm. With me so far?” He received nods and rapt attention from around
the table.
“Alright, so Stefan and IceStorm lost out on a
load of money from the destruction of Overlord. So he figures, ‘Let’s waste
these annoyances once and for all’. But he’s not a dumb guy, he knows that
if he out-right attacks us, we’ll be martyrs and then he’ll be crushed
by the enraged allies. So what’s the best way to get us?”
“To make us the bad guys,” Peppy said, nodding
slowly, beginning to understand. “That way, he’ll have us isolated and
he might even be seen as the hero when he kills us.”
“Exactly. And look, they have all the resources
to do it. The blaster with my fingerprints on it, they could’ve easily
made a fake uniform, and they have over a hundred members, I’m sure there’s
a red fox in there somewhere.”
“But what about the Arwing?” Slippy asked. “My
father designed that model custom for StarFox, there aren’t any others
like it in the galaxy.”
“I’m pretty sure I can answer that. I went to that
news station’s website and downloaded the video clip of that story. Let
me see if I’m right.”
Fox ran to his room and got the disk with the video
clip on it. He popped it into the dining room’s viewscreen and played it
until the Arwing boosted around the building, then paused it.
“Look. The landing gear is just retracting, and
the forward skid is delayed. The back skids are already up. Peppy, do you
remember who always had that problem and refused to take the time to fix
it?”
“Oh, my God.” Peppy breathed, leaning back. “Of
course, Pigma. It’s Pigma’s ship.”
“Right. It was stored away all this time, and after
Andross fell, the warehouses were probably all but forgotten. Stefan just
did a little research and dug it up.”
“Ok,” Falco said. “So they fly there with Pigma’s
Arwing, shoot the general with your gun, drop it, massacre some civilians,
and voila: we’re the bad guys. That’s actually a really good plan. Hell,
it worked, didn’t it?”
“So what do we do now?” Vixy asked, gripping Fox’s
hand. “You can’t attack them, there’s too many.”
“I know,” Fox said, squeezing her hand back. “And
the evidence we have still isn’t hard enough to prove our innocence. We
have to get that Arwing. Slippy, can you scan recent radio messages around
Fortuna? If we find their base there, that’s probably where the Arwing
is. I don’t think they’d keep it on Blizzard, it’s too noticeable.”
“I’ll get right on it.” The frog ran away excitedly.
“Ok, everyone else get some rest. Bill, can you
stay with us tonight?”
“Sure, man. I’ll take a leave from the base, say
an emergency came up.”
Fox nodded. “Alright, that’s it. Pray Slippy finds
something.”
Everyone went their separate ways. Fox leaned over
and whispered to Bill, “Hey, thanks for saving my ass back there.”
“No prob, man. Now that we see what we’re up against,
watch your back.” He walked off to the guest room, giving a quick glance
at Vixy’s behind and winking at Fox.
Fox rolled his eyes and walked off to his room
some sleep.
* * *
The next morning
Great Fox, Fox’s room
0803 hours
A gentle shake on his shoulder pulled Fox from his
dreamless sleep the next morning. He slowly opened his eyes to see the
only thing that could make the day seem somewhat promising; Vixy, sitting
on the bed.
“Rise and shine, Foxy.” She said, smiling. “Slippy
found something you might be interested in. Poor guy was up all night apparently.”
“Well, this day’s starting out alright so far.
Wanna hop in here with me and make it even better?” Fox’s hand slowly crept
up her blouse.
Vixy gave him a playful slap on his muzzle and
headed for the door. “I think there’s more important work to be done, and
it involves having your pants on. Hurry, Slippy’s going to keel over from
exhaustion any minute now.”
Fox smiled and climbed out of bed when she was
gone. Just being around her made Fox feel better, like he could take on
anything. That was a special feeling he only felt around his father.
After Fox was showered and dressed, he headed into
the rec room where Peppy was hunched over the chess board with, much to
Fox’s surprise, Falco on the other side. Bill was watching from over his
shoulder. Peppy picked up one of his white pawns and placed it with a triumphant
flourish next to Falco’s black king.
“Checkmate!”
Bill laughed as Falco slammed the arm of his chair
with his fist and sat back, folding his arms the way he always did when
he was pissed. “I hate this damn game! It’s so boring, and I always lose.”
Fox grinned and walked over to Vixy, who was pouring
a cup of coffee from the machine. He gave her a kiss and took the steaming
mug she held out. “Where’s the hacker?”
At that moment, Slippy trudged into the room, looking
like a zombie. He was reading a piece of printer paper and nearly walked
straight into the chair Falco was sitting in. Fox walked over and put a
hand on his shoulder.
“Damn, man, you ok? I didn’t mean you had to stay
up all night and do this.” Fox took a sip from the mug and handed the rest
to Slippy, who looked like he sure as hell needed it more.
“I know, but I found an encrypted message that
was sent out from a ship to Fortuna last night. The code was hard, professional
stuff, but I wanted to crack it. I finally did, but I don’t know what the
message means. Here, thought you might want to take a look.” He handed
the paper to Fox then collapsed onto a chair and closed his eyes, taking
a sip from the mug now and then.
Fox read the printed paper aloud. “Scramble PD
and JM, TLA 173 neutralize, weaken SF further, strengthen CA resolve.”
“What the hell does that mean?” Falco asked, looking
over with a confused expression. Fox shrugged and studied the paper again.
Vixy came up behind Fox and looked at the paper.
“Well, the last part is pretty obvious. Weaken StarFox further, strengthen
Cornerian Army resolve. It’s a plan to frame you guys again, I think, to
get the Cornerian Army after us harder.”
That got the team’s attention, even Slippy’s, and
they were all huddled around their leader, studying the paper.
“Well, the term ‘scramble’ is usually used for
air forces, for short notice alerts to take off,” Peppy offered.
“And TLA,” Bill said, rubbing his muzzle. “The
only thing I can think of is Trans-Lylat Airways. Hell, I hear about it
every day, Emma’s a pilot for them and has a flight today. TLA flight 173
maybe? What are they gonna do, hijack it?”
“No, it says neutralize.” Falco said. “They’re
gonna destroy a frickin civilian airliner. Cowards.”
Fox nodded. “So they’re gonna use the Arwing again
to shoot down an airliner. But there are two initials…”
“James McCloud!” Peppy yelled out, startling his
team. “PD and JM, Pigma Dengar and James McCloud. They have BOTH Arwings!”
“Shit,” Fox muttered. He walked to the comm. on
the wall and said into it, “ROB, track Trans-Lylat Airways flight 173 and
see where it is.”
Fox turned back to the group. “If they’re going
to shoot it down, it’ll be done over a city so there are plenty of eye-witnesses.”
“Sir, flight 173 about to enter Corneria airspace,
destination: Corneria City.”
“Alright, upload the coordinates and flight data
to my Arwing.” ROB gave the affirmative and Fox jogged to the door. “I’ll
go defend the airliner, you guys stay here in case IceStorm tries a direct
attack after this fails.”
The team gave affirmatives, and Peppy said, “Fox,
you’ll be in Cornerian territory, so haul your ass outta there once the
ship is safe, or you’ll have the whole air force on you.”
Fox nodded and ran for the hanger.
Bill was about to sit down when he remembered what
he had said. “Hell, I hear about it everyday, Emma’s a pilot for them and
has a flight today.”
Wondering if he was just being paranoid, he walked
over to the comm. and said, “ROB, out of curiosity, where did flight 173
leave from?”
* * *
Near Corneria City
0927 hours
Fox boosted through the clouds over his home planet
as fast as his Arwing would go, the coordinates flashing on his display
getting closer. Finally his vision was cleared of clouds and he could see
the oblong civilian airliner flying towards Corneria, which was a scant
twenty minutes away in the distance. Fox checked his radar and saw no sign
of any other fighter craft.
As Fox neared the ship, a female voice sounded
over his comm. “This is TLA flight 173, we have you on our radar. Please
identfify yourself.”
Fox couldn’t help but chuckle. ‘Surprise!’ . There
was no sense in trying to fake it though, they’d recognize his voice. He
took a deep breath and said, “This is Fox McCloud of StarFox.”
There was silence, and Fox guessed the flight crew
was wetting their pants about now, hoping the heartless bastard didn’t
shoot them down. Finally, the same female voice responded, “Please, we’re
only carrying civilians, don’t attack.”
Fox rolled his eyes. He was getting tired of this.
“What’s your name, pilot?”
“Uh, Captain Aldon. Emma Aldon.”
‘Emma…couldn’t be.’
She continued, “Please, don’t…”
“Captain Aldon, for the next minute, shut the hell
up and listen to me. I’m not here to shoot you down, but there are two
Arwings heading here with just that in mind.” Fox was close to the ship
now. He slowly pulled up parallel to the cockpit and could just make out
the silhouettes of the flight crew inside. All were huddled around the
window, presumably looking at him.
“Listen to me, Emma. When those fighters get here,
I’m going to hold them off for as long as I can, but I don’t know if I
can take two Arwings.” Fox contemplated the next part, and decided it was
necessary. “I need you to contact the Cornerian Air Force base in the city
and tell them you’re under attack, in case I can’t handle them. You still
with me?”
“Y-yes.”
“Alright. I need you keep a cool head during this
whole thing. You might see some fighting, but whatever you do, do NOT deviate
from the course. Fly in a straight line. Swerving won’t mess up their aim
much, and it might get me disoriented. As hard as it may sound, I need
you to trust me. Ok?”
“Ok. I guess I have no choice.”
Fox was hoping for a more positive response, but
that would have to do. He leaned his head back and closed his eyes, trying
to calm himself for the upcoming fight. Two Arwings wouldn’t be easy to
take down, assuming they had at least semi-competent pilots. And one of
them was his father’s…
Fox shook his head. It’s not his anymore. If anything,
he should be happy to destroy the person desecrating it.
His thoughts were interrupted by a low beeping
from his display. He looked and saw two dots heading towards them. Just
as he was about to tell the pilot to get ready, her voice came over, sounding
a bit panicky. “Mr. McCloud, we have two ships on radar heading for us,
starboard side.”
“Alright,” Fox said, taking a deep breath. “Just
remember what I said and stay calm. Did you contact the base?”
“Yes, they’re sending some ships up immediately.”
“Good,” ‘For you. Not for me’. “Alright,
here we go.”
With a quick thumbs up to the cockpit, Fox broke
away and took a position between the airliner and the dots coming at them
from the right. Fox saw them in the distance, coming up fast, and steeled
himself.
“Sir, we have another Arwing on radar, with the
airliner,” came a voice in Fox’s comm., followed by another voice. “I have
him on visual also, sir.”
“What?!” yelled a third, more familiar voice. “An
Arwing, are you sure.”
Fox spoke. “Stefan, you bastard. You couldn’t handle
a straight fight, so you had to frame me. Well, we know it, and we’re going
to fix it.”
“Well, well, long time no see, Fox. It’s just business,
old pal, and you’re hurting ours. Nothing personal. Even if you do defend
that ship, it won’t change anything. After all, you still killed a general
and about fifty civilians.”
Fox growled He could feel himself getting angry
and tried to keep it under control. “We’ll see, you son of a bitch, I’ll
come get you later. I have a couple Arwings to shoot down right now.” With
that, he flicked off his comm. and boosted towards the two fighters.
Fox decided it would be better to keep his comm.
on in case the airliner had anything to report, so he flicked it back on
to hear Stefan’s voice. “—the target. I repeat, stay on the target, do
NOT engage McCloud.”
“Uh, what if he engages us, Sir?” one of the pilots
asked nervously.
“Your mission is destruction of that airliner at
all costs! If that ship gets away, then I’ll kill you if he doesn’t. Am
I clear?”
“Yes, Sir.”
The Arwings split formation and boosted past Fox
on either side. Fox pulled a hard turn and chased after the left one. They
were almost within firing range of the airliner.
Fox locked onto the Arwing and fired a volley of
twin blue lasers. The first few hit the ship, then the pilot barrel rolled
and swerved away. Fox let him go and looked around for the second Arwing.
“I’m hit! Shields at 30 percent! Sir, he’s not
letting us get close enough to the target.”
“Rrrrg, Arwing Two, you’re still at full shields,
engage McCloud. Arwing One, stay on the target.”
“Yes, Sir.”
“Roger”
Fox was still looking around for the second Arwing
when it found him. A hail of lasers fell from above, pounding Fox’s ship.
He pulled hard on the stick, banking right, and saw his shields were at
60 percent.
“Almost in range, just keep him off me for a few
more seconds.”
Fox swung his ship around and saw the first Arwing
flying straight for the airliner. He boosted towards it, approaching it
from its starboard and swerving to avoid the lasers from Two.
“Not today, fucker,” Fox muttered, locking onto
the imposter.
“Two, he’s on me! I need cover, get---“
The Arwing exploded as Fox’s lasers cut through
the hull. He let out a whoop and sped through the smoke left behind as
the wreckage fell to the ocean below. His victory was cut short as another
volley of lasers impacted his ship, reducing his shields to 30 percent.
“Sir, One is down!”
“DAMMIT!” Stefan yelled. “Take him out! Kill him!”
Fox was starting to get worried. His shields were
at thirty and the fake’s was still at one hundred.
“I’m within range of the target, going in.”
Fox looked and saw that he had gotten to close
to the airliner. The Arwing flew ahead of the ship and U-turned, coming
straight at the cockpit.
“Fox!” yelled Emma. “Fox, he’s coming right at
us!”
“Shit,” Fox muttered. He swung around and approached
the airliner from behind. “Emma, dive, now! Do it!”
The nose of the airliner dipped sharply down and
the lasers fired by the Arwing just nicked the tail as the ship dove towards
the ground. Fox was ready and fired a bomb straight ahead.
The explosion blinded and deafened Fox for a moment,
but all but vaporized the fake Arwing. “Yes!” shouted. “Better luck next
time, Stefan!”
“McCloud! You…” Fox flicked off the all-receive
and changed the frequency to immediate-area.
“Captain Aldon, are you ok? Is the ship stable?”
“Yes, we’re fine,” she replied, almost laughing
with relief. “The passengers are a bit shaken, and the flight crew is half-deaf,
but we’re ok. Thank you so much, Mr. McCloud.”
“By any chance, did you record the conversation
between me and the pilots?”
“No, we didn’t hear anything the whole time.”
“Shit,” Fox said, pounding the side of his Arwing.
“Alright, well---“ He was cut off by another transmission from an unfamiliar
voice.
“Fox McCloud, this is the Cornerian Air Force.
You are demanded to shut down all weapons systems and be escorted to our
base. Failure to comply will be seen as hostile and you will be fired upon.
What is your response?”
Fox looked and saw that Corneria City was only
a few miles away, and a squad of eight fighters was flying out of it towards
him. He looked at his shields and saw that the close range of the bomb’s
explosion lowered them to only five percent. He couldn’t last out in the
open for long. His only chance was to lose them in the city.
“Come and get me,” he said in what he hoped was
an intimidating voice and boosted straight through the formation of Cornerian
fighters, diving into the city.
“This is Echo Squad command, all fighters pursue
suspect. Do NOT, I repeat, do NOT fire in the city. Wait until target leaves
the friendly zone then engage.”
The lead pilot received nervous affirmatives from
his wingmen. Fox could tell that they were none too happy about a potential
dogfight with Fox McCloud, and hoped their nervousness would make them
give up the chase sooner.
Fox knew the city like the back of hand and looped
around buildings as fast as his Arwing would go, praying none of the pursuing
ships would crash.
“This is Four, I’ve lost him. Does anyone have
a visual?”
“Me and Two are still on him. Three through Eight,
disengage and circle the perimeter of the city in case he tries to leave.”
“Roger.”
Sweat beaded on Fox’s brow as he narrowly missed
slamming into a skyscraper. He couldn’t keep this up forever, those two
were pretty good pilots. He frantically tried to think of a way out when
he saw the main highway beneath him. The highway…
Of course! Fox and his team followed the main highway
through the city when they defended the city during the first battle of
the war. The highway led out to the ravine where they had taken down commanding
officer. Falco’s voice played back in his mind.
‘Follow me, Fox!”
“Falco! Where ya going?’
“I found the target, try to keep up!’
Fox boosted down and flew parallel to the highway.
Let them follow, as long as they couldn’t fire, Fox only had to hold out
until the ravine.
“This is One, he’s leaving the main city. Preparing
to engage.”
Fox cursed under his breath, but stayed on course,
the trees and rock walls a blur outside his canopy. Finally, off his right,
he saw the waterfall. He boosted past it and pulled up in a sharp U-turn.
“Damn, he’s heading back into the city! All fighters
intercept at the ravine!”
Just as the two fighters pulled into their U-turns,
Fox banked hard left and flew into the waterfall, praying the tunnel hadn’t
collapsed since the war. Luck was with him, and he breathed a sigh of relief
as the water splashed over his canopy to reveal an open tunnel. He quickly
landed on the rock and cut the engine.
“What the… this is Two, he’s gone, the ravine is
clear. Anyone have a visual?”
“Negative, Two. He’s gone from radar also. What
the hell?”
“Keep searching!”
* * *
Great Fox, hangar
1226 hours
The second Fox’s feet hit the metal floor of the
Great Fox’s hangar, Bill’s hands were gripping his shoulders, a horrified
look on his face.
“Is the ship alright?! Is it?!”
“Yes, yes, it’s fine. Bill, it’s alright, calm
down.”
His friend’s expression melted to relief and he
hugged Fox hard. “God, thank you, man. I was scared as hell.”
Fox saw what had happened and hugged him back.
“That was your Emma, wasn’t it? The pilot?”
“Yeah,” Bill replied, releasing Fox and stepping
back. “As soon as I heard, I was gonna get down there and help, but the
military had already blockaded the city. You think IceStorm knew?”
Fox shrugged. “They probably knew you were helping
me from those two guys on Katina. I know how you feel, man. I couldn’t
stand it if Vixy was in danger because of this.”
Bill nodded as the rest of the team entered the
hangar, asking about the situation. Fox told them the story from the introduction
to Emma to the waterfall. After he was done, he leaned on the wall and
shook his head.
“You alright, Fox?” Slippy asked.
“No, I’m not. I’m pissed as hell. I go down there
and take on two damn Arwings and save a hundred civilians, and the thanks
I get is a chase through Corneria City, then sitting in a cave for an hour
until they leave. Stefan was right, nothing changed. Not only that, but
half our damn evidence blew up and sank to the bottom of the ocean.”
The hangar was silent as the realization sunk in.
They were now further than ever from proving Fox’s innocence, with no clear
path to take.
“Maybe when Emma tells them what happened…” Bill
said hopefully.
Fox shrugged. “Possibly, but---“ He was interrupted
as Vixy burst into the hangar, nearly knocking Peppy over.
“Guys, it’s on the news! Hurry, come here!”
They all ran to the rec room where the TV on the
wall showed the same raccoon who had tagged Fox a traitor not too long
ago. It showed her standing in front of the airliner that would be occupying
the bottom of the ocean, had it not been for that same traitor.
“We now come to you live from the Corneria City
Spaceport, where it appears that TLA flight 173 from Katina was the subject
of another attempted act of terrorism from declared traitor Fox McCloud
and his team. According to surveillance and reports from Cornerian Air
Force pilots, three Arwings, all fitting the description of StarFox’s custom
models, attacked the civilian airliner near Corneria City. Military aircraft
arrived to find the airliner badly damaged from a bomb blast and two of
the Arwings gone, presumably spooked away by the approaching Cornerian
forces. The pilot remaining behind was identified as McCloud himself and
was chased through the city in a daring escape. While McCloud did manage
to escape, this attack leaves no doubt among the military leaders that
StarFox has indeed turned against Corneria. General Pepper was unavailable
for questioning, however he---“
The raccoon was cut off as, with a roar of rage,
Fox’s fist slammed into the screen, shattering the glass and spewing a
shower of sparks. The team recoiled and stared wide-eyed at this unusual
reaction from their leader. Breathing deeply, Fox leaned against the wall,
his right hand bleeding, and bowed his head.
“God DAMMIT!” he shouted and punched the wall.
Vixy quietly walked over and gently placed a hand on his shoulder. “Fox…”
Fox roughly shrugged her hand off and turned away,
covering his face with his hands. He suddenly regretted doing that, but
he was too angry to even think about apologizing. “Not now…I…just…not now.”
They all watched as Fox stormed off, blood dripping
from his hand. Vixy turned away and bowed her head, eyes clenched shut
and a single tear rolling down her muzzle. “I hate seeing him like this,
having to put up with this. After all he’s done for this galaxy, and they’re
all blinded so easily.” She shook her head and followed after Fox to her
room.
Bill walked over and crouched by the smashed TV
as the team started talking about what they should do. “Damn,” he muttered,
studying the damage. “Does he always do stuff like this when he’s pissed?”
“Only on days he’s wanted for terrorism,” Falco
replied from the table.
Bill shook his head and stood up. “The girl’s right.
This is bullshit.”
“Well, we’ve established that already,” Peppy said
in an irritated tone. “The thing we have to figure out is where to go from
here. Fox was right, we needed those Arwings as evidence. We can’t use
that decoded message, they’d say we just wrote it.”
“We’re out of options,” Falco said. “I say we just
go attack IceStorm head on, I’m tired of those assholes screwing with us.”
“Well,” Peppy said sarcastically. “That sounds
like a very well thought out tactic, Falco, but even if we did feel like
taking on a hundred ships, we don’t know where the base or mothership are.
For now, I say we just wait for Fox to recover, then think things through.”
CHAPTER 5
Necessary Risk
Later that night
Great Fox, Vixy’s room
2243 hours
Vixy was sitting on the side of her bed kicking
off her shoes when there was a gentle knock on her door. She knew who it
was before the door opened and looked up.
“Vixy?” Fox said in a near whisper, leaning halfway
into the room. “Can I come in?”
“Sure,” Vixy said in an equally low tone, patting
the bed beside her. Fox slowly walked in, closing the door behind him,
and taking the offered seat next to Vixy. The vixen took the hand of the
man she loves and noticed the bandage around it.
“Is the cut deep?”
“Huh? Oh, that. No, it’s alright, doesn’t need
stitches or anything.” He cleared his throat and looked down. “Listen,
I’m sorry for shrugging you off before. I know you were trying to help.
It’s just, well…”
“Oh, Fox,” Vixy put her head on his shoulder. “Don’t
worry about it. I know how hard this must be on you. I also see how you
could lose hope now that it seems, well, impossible to prove anything.
But I know you, I know you don’t give up and I know you have courage. Right
now, you may not feel it, but courage doesn’t always roar. Sometimes courage
is that little voice you hear at the end of a rough day that says, ‘I’ll
try again tomorrow’.”
Fox noticed she was looking at a picture of her
father on her bedside table. She continued in a lower voice. “I kept that
in mind after my father’s death. I never knew my mother, and my father
never told me what happened to her. We both have that one thing in common,
Fox. Our fathers were both killed by Venom.” She straightened herself and
looked at Fox through watery eyes. “But I didn’t have to grow up fast and
take his place in a war, as you had to. You’ve done extraordinary things,
Fox, and I know you’ll see this through to the end, and succeed. I love
you, and no matter what, you won’t go through this alone.”
They embraced, and Fox held her tight, not wanting
to let go ever. “I love you so much, Vixy. Thank you. Thank you for everything.
I swear, I’ll never let anything bring us apart.”
Vixy smiled and Fox felt the magic of her presence
again. He felt all his worries evaporate and all he cared about was living
in that moment with her. Finally, she wiped her eyes and stood up. “Now
go get some sleep. And here…” she turned to a pad on her bedside table
and wrote something. She then ripped off the paper, folded it and stuck
it in Fox’s jumpsuit breast pocket. “Read that and keep it close whenever
you feel down.”
He gave her a kiss and walked out t he door.
Back in his room, Fox closed the door and took
out the note, reading Vixy’s curved script in the dim light.
Fox,
Something my father told me after the first battle on Emayn. It stuck with me and I always remember it.
“People are like stained glass windows. Sure, they sparkle and shine when the sun is out, but when the darkness sets in, their true beauty is revealed only if there is a light from within.”
I know you’ll succeed, Fox.
Forever your love,
Vixy
* * *
The next morning
Great Fox, recreation room
0934 hours
The team wasn’t sure how their leader’s mood would
be the next morning and was relieved when he came into the rec room and
said, “Hey, I was thinking a lot late last night and I might have an idea.”
He sat with his team and Bill at the table and Vixy brought him over a
cup of coffee with a kiss and joined them.
“Oh, yeah?” Bill said, leaning back. “What’s that?”
Falco and Slippy stopped fighting over the napkin
that each claimed was theirs and turned to Fox while Peppy rolled his eyes.
Fox took a sip of the coffee and began.
“Alright, not only do we not have any hard evidence,
but there’s no hard evidence to get. The Arwings are totaled and Corneria
already has the gun. So, the only way to set things right is to get a confession
from Stefan himself. To make him spill the beans.”
Falco snorted. “Brilliant, Fox, but how exactly
do you want to do that? Just call him and say, ‘excuse me, can you just
say that you framed me? I swear I’m not recording this’.”
“The only way to do it is if we get him in person.”
Fox continued, ignoring Falco’s sarcasm. “I think it’s time we stopped
running and brought the fight to them. Otherwise we just wait for them
to frame us again, and if they don’t kill us first, the Cornerian Army
is bound to find us eventually. We have to end this.”
There were hesitant nods around the table. They
knew it too, but sure as hell weren’t looking for a fight with a group
the size of IceStorm. Fox saw this and continued.
“I’m not talking about a head-on fight. We can
think about how to attack later. For now, we have to find out where their
base is. Can you do it Slippy?”
Slippy shook his head. “No, I can only intercept
radio signals, I can’t pinpoint where they come from. And they’re smart,
they never mention the location of the base in all the messages I’ve intercepted.”
“Wait a minute,” Peppy said, leaning forward. “We
worked with them once, right? And Corneria hired them. That means all their
information, including size and base of operations, is in the Army’s database.
Can you hack into it?”
Slippy shook his head again. “Nope. The database
is closed area. It can only be accessed from terminals in the base belonging
to high-ranking personnel. Generals, namely.”
Everyone’s heart sunk at that, and they all leaned
back again. Except for Fox.
“Well, I guess that’s our next destination then.”
He received confused looks from around the table
and Bill laughed. “What are you talking about, man? You wanna walk into
the Cornerian Army base and just ask to use a General’s computer?”
“Something like that.”
Slippy looked wide-eyed at Fox. “Fox, I’ve seen
the blueprints of that building. You know that place like the back of your
hand probably. Security is insane, there’re armed guards patrolling the
corridors, cameras, infrared lasers in the vents, card-access doors, and
the entire army down on your back at the slightest alarm. And that’s all
assuming you somehow get INTO the base. You have the most infamous face
in the galaxy right now.”
Fox nodded. “We do have one advantage, though.
It’s the last place they’d look for me.”
Falco laughed and shook his head. “You’re crazy.
There’s no way this is gonna work. Infiltrate the Cornerian Army base,
it’s insane. Too insane even for me.”
Fox stood up and leaned on the table. “Well, it’s
our only option. So we should stop talking about how impossible it is and
start planning it. It’s a big risk, but a necessary one. Slippy, call up
the blueprint on the armory viewscreen. Let’s go, we’ll talk there.”
* * *
Hours later
Great Fox, armory
1326 hours
Fox rubbed his strained eyes and turned back to
the viewscreen where the blueprints of the Cornerian Army base in Corneria
City glowed. His team, Vixy, and Bill were leaning on whatever furniture
they could find, looking equally as exhausted.
“Alright,” Fox said. “Let’s go over the plan one
more time and try to find a weakness in it. This has to be perfect or we’re
screwed.”
“We know that a civilian supply truck arrives every
day at nine AM and unloads at the docking bay here.” He pointed to a section
on the first floor and continued. “Peppy and I will intercept that truck
before it reaches the base, and he’ll change into the driver’s clothes
while I hop in back. When we get to the loading bay, Peppy will distract
the guards and I should be able to get through the door and into the base,
here. After that, I need to avoid the guards and cameras. Doesn’t look
too bad according to this. I can use that card-hacker I used in Overlord;
it should work on these readers also. I know the way to Pepper’s office
by heart, so that’s the terminal I’m going to access.”
“During all this, Slippy and Falco are in the dropship
awaiting my signal that I’m done. When you hear that, Slippy pilots the
dropship over the roof while Falco, assuming his aim is good…”
Falco snorted and rolled his eyes.
“…will snipe the roof guards around the door. Once
I get the signal that all guards are down, I haul ass to the roof where
you two pick me up and we’re off, picking up Peppy at the rendezvous location
outside the city. During this, Bill will escort the unarmed dropship and
distract any fighters that decide to give us a chase. That’s it, then we
get back here and pop champagne at a job well done. And remember, we’ll
all be using tranquilizer guns. The dosage in the darts will put a guard
out for hours. There will be NO KILLING under any circumstances.”
Peppy stood up and paced in front of the blueprint.
“I don’t know, Fox. We’re counting on a lot of luck here. One false move
will bring the whole thing down.”
“I know, but it’s all we have. This can work if
we do it right.”
“Hang on a sec,” Bill said, squinting at the blueprint.
“Pepper’s office is in the middle of that corridor. Every general has two
bodyguards that stand outside the door and escort him at all times. Dude,
no matter how good your aim is, you won’t get off two darts before one
of them notices something’s up and makes some noise. If Pepper hears noise,
he’ll probably call for help.”
Fox nodded. “Not to mention we’d like to get this
done without anyone knowing it was us. Hmmm. We need another man. We need
someone to either get Pepper out of his office or distract the guards.”
“What if you got to an intercom system and made
an announcement for Pepper?” Slippy offered.
Fox shook his head. “No good, all announcements
are made from a female controller in the security room, which also has
two guards at the door.”
The room was silent as the weary team tried to
think of a solution. They were so close to a good plan, all they needed
was to get Pepper out of his office. What would seem like a simple task
made so hard.
“What about me?” Vixy said after a few minutes.
“No way,” Fox said, shaking his head. “I’m sorry,
but you don’t have the training to do this, and we need someone to stay
with the ship. Not to mention I’d be a wreck the whole mission worrying
about you.”
Vixy reluctantly accepted this and leaned back
against the wall. After a few more minutes, Fox sighed and said, “It won’t
work then, we have to start from scratch. If we---“
“Wait,” Falco cut in, standing up. “I may have
an idea.”
* * *
The next day
Great Fox, hangar
1402 hours
Falco had been more irritable than normal the whole
day, and Fox could tell he was nervous about seeing Katt Monroe again.
While he had never told anyone the whole story about their relationship,
the team could guess what happened from their radio chatter on Zoness during
the war. All Falco had told them was that the two of them had a ‘little
thing’ once, but then they separated. Fox smiled whenever he thought about
Falco in a serious relationship, it just didn’t seem his style. This meeting
would be funny to watch.
The whole group went to the hangar after they received
the alert that a single ship identifying itself as the Cat’s Paw is approaching
the ship. They hung around the door, Falco towards the back of the group,
and waited until a bright pink diamond-shaped fighter roared into the hangar
and landed next to Bill’s ship. Fox smiled at the gaudiness of the ship
as the pilot, a pink cat in a black tank-top and jeans, hopped out and
walked over to them.
Fox held out his hand and said, “Katt Monroe, nice
to see you again. Thanks for coming on such short notice.”
Katt ignored his hand and gave him a kiss on the
side of his muzzle. “Well, look at you, tiger. You’re even cuter in person.”
Fox blushed slightly and stepped aside as she walked past him to the group.
He gave a quick shrug at Vixy, who was giving him an annoyed look.
“Katt, this is Vixy Hohleran, a recent addition
to out little family up here. You know everyone else.”
Katt shook hands with Vixy, who was smiling contemptuously.
“I’m with Fox.”
“Don’t worry, honey, I’m not trying to steal him.
There’s someone else here I’d like to say hello to, though.” She turned
and looked to the group. Falco reluctantly stepped forward with an embarrassed
look that the hotshot avian was seldom seen with.
“Hi, Katt,” He said quietly. “It’s been a while.”
“Hi, Falco.”
There was an awkward silence, which Fox finally
broke by saying, “Meet us in the rec room when you’re ready.” He then gave
a suggestive nod towards the door to the others and they left, leaving
Falco and Katt looking at each other in the bright light of the hanger.
The feline finally broke the silence. “I’m sorry
I left so quickly after Zoness and Sector Z. I really would’ve liked to
talk to you again. It was awkward though, and you know I hate awkward situations.
Like this, kinda.”
“Why’d you ever have to leave at all?” Falco asked,
still avoiding her eyes. “I thought we had something serious going at the
Academy. Then you just left.”
“I left probably because it was getting serious,
and I wasn’t ready for it. Falco, I like you, but I wasn’t ready for a
commitment. And I don’t think you are either.”
Falco sighed and glanced towards the door. “Yeah,
I know, but I see Fox and Vixy in there and I wonder if it could’ve worked
out the same way with us.”
Katt gently gripped Falco’s beak and gave him a
kiss. “I don’t think it would’ve. I’ll always be your friend, though, and
I think it’s best we leave it at that. I’ll be there to get your back when
you need it.”
Falco rolled his eyes and grumbled, “I don’t need
anyone to get my back.”
Katt rolled her eyes right back and headed for
the door. “Yep, same old Falco. Come on, let’s go see what your boss needs
me for.”
* * *
Great Fox, recreation room
1418 hours
Katt walked slowly into the rec room, looking around
and admiring the furnishings, with Falco trailing behind. Fox and the others
stood up from the seats they were in while they waited and walked over.
“Well, I guess you’re wondering why I asked you
to come here,” Fox started. “Well, we have---“
“Hang on a sec,” Katt cut in, raising her hands.
“Before we get started on that, what’s the story? I’ve been tracking your
little terror spree on the news, pretty surprising. What’s going on?”
“I was framed, by a mercenary team called IceStorm.
Their leader has a little grudge against me since Overlord.”
“Oh, yeah,” Katt nodded. “I saw the whole story
about Overlord, congrats on the medal. Not that it matters now.”
Fox shrugged. “Well, in any case, we’re trying
to clear my name, but I don’t know the location of their base. So we’re
breaking into… somewhere to get it, and we need another man. Er, woman.”
“Breaking into where,” Katt asked suspiciously,
slitting her eyes.
“Well, uh… why don’t I just show you the plan?”
“Fair enough. Lead on.”
Fifteen minutes later, Katt sat back in one of the
armory’s chairs and grinned. “You guys are crazy, you know that?”
Fox’s heart sank. The whole plan was based on getting
Pepper out of his office, and Katt was their only chance. If she didn’t
accept, the plan was off.
“It’ll work if we all do our parts smoothly. All
you have to do is come in the back of the truck and sneak in with me. The
security control room is only a few halls away, and you can handle a few
guards. We need you for this, Katt.”
“Listen, hon, you’re talking about breaking into
a general’s office in a high-security base. This isn’t like stealing a
candy bar from the corner store.”
“It looks a lot harder than I think it actually
is. Alright, listen, it’s your decision. Just know that with or without
you, I’m going in there. I have no other choice. Your help would be greatly
appreciated.”
There were a few moments of silence, then Falco
said from the back of the room, “I’m going with him also, no matter what.”
“Same here,” said Peppy.
“Me too!” from Slippy.
“Damn straight,” from Bill.
Vixy gave him a kiss on his cheek and said, “I
would too, if he’d let me.”
Fox smiled and kissed her back. He felt the camaraderie
from his team, and it made him feel that he wasn’t alone on this whole
ordeal. It strengthened his resolve to end it.
Katt sighed and shook her head. “Well, I can’t
let y’all go and get slaughtered by yourselves now, can I? Besides, someone
has to watch after Falco.” This received a scoff from the back of the room.
“When do we leave?”
Fox smiled and internally cheered. He saw the team
breathe a collective sigh of relief. Bill clapped Slippy on the back, which
sent the frog stumbling forward.
“Tomorrow,” Fox said, turning back to the blueprints,
the blue glow highlighting his face. “We do it tomorrow.”
CHAPTER 6
Foxhunt
The next morning
Outskirts of Corneria City
0853 hours
The heavy rain pounded the metal roof of the truck,
drowning out Fox’s thoughts as he sat in the back amidst miscellaneous
supplies, Katt opposite him. The truck shook and vibrated as it crawled
through the streets of Corneria City towards their objective. Fox ran over
the plan in his head again and took a few deep breaths to calm himself.
“How much longer, Peppy?” he called up to the driver’s
seat, taking out his tranquilizer pistol to check the darts.
“Few minutes, I’d say. Get ready, and don’t forget
to wait until I have the guard out of sight.”
Fox replaced the tranquilizer gun in his thigh
holster and took out his standard blaster, which was secured in a shoulder
holster under his jacket. Bill suggested he take a real heater in case
anything funny with IceStorm happened. Fox grinned as he remembered Bill’s
exact words. ‘If I were you, I wouldn’t even go to take a piss without
taking a gun. You never know.’
Fox flipped the safety off and replaced it as Katt
finished checking her dart gun and said, “You know, hon, you look cuter
in a truck driver’s uniform. Maybe you should’ve done that for a living.”
Fox chuckled as Peppy grumbled, “Believe me, when
we go on little jaunts like this, I wish I did.”
Fox leaned against a box of dried fruit and listened
to the rain pelting the roof like machine gun fire. After a minute, he
nudged Katt’s foot to get her attention and said, “Don’t forget the change,
you’re not coming to the roof with me. The control room is closer to the
loading bay, so make your way back to the truck after you make the announcement
and drive off with Peppy.”
Katt rolled her eyes. “I know, you don’t have to
tell me things a million times.”
Fox could definitely see why she and Falco had
something going. He shrugged and said, “I just don’t want any mess-ups.
Better to be sure.”
“Well, don’t worry about me. You have the hardest
part, so take care of your own hide.” She then shook her head and added,
“Can’t believe we’re doing this.”
Fox couldn’t believe it either, but for a different
reason. His whole life, he had just walked through the front doors, receiving
a nod of greeting from the guard. He had been welcome there, they were
his allies and friends in there. Now, he was returning to that same place,
and the only way in was to sneak like a thief. The same people who would
greet him in the corridors would now shoot at him.
That train of thought was abruptly derailed as
Peppy called back from the cab, “Alright, it’s in sight, another minute.
Good luck you two.”
Katt scoffed and stood up. “Save the luck for the
people who need it, sweetie.”
Fox rolled his eyes and stood up also. The truck
began to slow down and it made a right turn, creeping the rest of the way
to the loading bay. Peppy backed the truck up to the concrete platform,
cut the ignition, and got out.
Fox and Katt hid behind some crates as the hare
opened the back doors, trying to look busy as he waited for the guard to
say something. Finally, the canine guard walked up behind him, peering
into the truck.
“Hey, who’re you? Where’s the regular driver?”
“Oh, he called in sick today, I’m the replacement.”
The guard eyed him suspiciously and peered around
the back of the truck again. Fox started to get a little worried. Maybe
it wasn’t such a great plan after all. He had counted on the guards buying
their stories.
“Where are your work orders?” the guard finally
said.
Peppy patted down his pockets and replied, “Oh,
they must be in the cab. I’ll be right back with them.”
“No, I think I’ll come with you.” The guard said,
following Peppy out to the front of the truck. Fox breathed a sigh of relief;
this was their chance. He made eye contact with Katt and pointed out the
back. She nodded back. Slowly and carefully, Fox moved to the back of the
truck, searching the ground before each step for anything that could make
noise. He could faintly hear Peppy making small talk about the weather,
keeping the guard distracted.
As the two stepped out onto the concrete, Fox was
suddenly thankful for the rain; it helped to cover up any sounds they made.
The concrete was dusty, and it crunched slightly with every step, but that
sound couldn’t compare with the pounding of the rain on the pavement and
the truck. As the duo neared the door, they could see Peppy leaning in
the passenger’s side door, presumably checking the glove box. The guard
was facing him, back to them. If he so much as glanced over his shoulder…
Fox silently pulled out his tranquilizer pistol
and aimed it at the guard as he sidestepped to the door. He glanced over
and saw that Katt had done the same. Seeing her be somewhat cautious made
him feel a little better.
They finally reached the metal door, and Katt crouched
with her gun still aimed at the guard while Fox slowly pulled down on the
handle. It creaked and clicked, making Fox’s heart skip a beat, but the
guard hadn’t noticed. He pulled it down the rest of the way and pushed
the door open.
They slipped in and Fox silently clicked the door
shut, breathing a sigh of relief. They were inside the base’s storage room
and were surrounded by crates of various supplies much like the ones back
in the truck. The room was empty of guards for the moment, but that could
change.
Fox turned to Katt and said, “Alright, you know
where to go from here. From my time being here, you could go for over a
minute without seeing anyone else in a corridor. The first floor around
the security room usually isn’t too busy anyway, you just really have to
worry about the guards outside it. I’ll be waiting for that announcement.”
Katt nodded and headed for the door inside. “Take
care of yourself, tiger. I won’t be there to bail you out if things get
rough.”
Fox scoffed and followed her to the door. He put
his ear to the door and listened for any movement out in the corridor.
After a few seconds of silence, he gently pulled the door open and peeked
out. No one. He gave a nod and they both moved out in separate directions.
* * *
‘This is crazy,’ Katt thought as she slowly
walked down the brightly lit metallic corridor. ‘Piece of cake for me,
but that fox is gonna get himself killed.’
As she reached the corner going into a right turn,
she flattened herself against the wall and peeked around it. The security
room was just down the hall, two bored-looking feline guards flanking the
door. It was too far away for Katt to get two good shots in, and she couldn’t
sneak up the bare hallway before she’d be noticed.
She got back behind the wall and leaned against
it, thinking of the best way to get the guards down. ‘Feline guards…’
Katt grinned and stuck the tranquilizer pistol
in her pants behind her. “Time for nature to work its magic,” she whispered
to herself as she straightened out her hair. She made sure the pistol was
easily reachable. If they didn’t fall for this, she’d need it in a hurry.
She took a deep breath and stepped around the corner,
walking down the hall with her hands on her hips. The guards glanced in
her direction then snapped their heads back and stared at her. “Hey, boys,”
she said in a soothing, sexy voice. “I heard you were lonely up here. Thought
I’d keep you company.”
‘Just a little closer. Come on, guys, keep thinking
with that area two feet under your muzzles.’
“I, uh…” the left guard stammered. “You’re, uh…
not really supposed to be over here.”
“Awwwww, you’re no fun.” Katt replied, still walking
forward. “You don’t tell, I don’t tell.”
‘Little closer…'
“Ma’am, could we see your clearance?” the right
guard said, who seemed more in control of his hormones.
“Of course, sugar.” Katt walked slightly past the
left guard, reaching into her pocket. With swift precision, she swung her
right fist around and knocked the left guard to the ground before he knew
what hit him. She then spun around and kicked the surprised right guard
in the face, knocking him against the wall and to the ground.
“Hey, what was that?” came a female voice from
inside the security room. “Is everything alright?”
Katt yanked the security card off the unconscious
right guard and slid it through the reader, opening the door. Inside the
small room was a female wolf with sergeant’s stripes on her shoulder boards.
She jumped up from her chair with shock and reached for a pistol under
the desk. Katt fired a dart into her back and she crumpled onto the floor
without a sound.
She put a dart into the two guards just to be sure
and dragged them into the security room. The numerous consoles and monitors
filled the dim room with flickering light. Katt sat in the operator’s chair
and looked around for the intercom system. She found a button marked “Main
Comm” and figured it was the best choice.
‘Here we go, Foxy. Hope you’re ready.’
Katt cleared her throat and tried to imitate the
voice of the operator as best she could.
“General Pepper, please report to secure conference
room D. General Pepper to secure conference room D. Thank you.”
Katt stood up and peeked out into the hallway.
No one suspected anything so far. ‘Alright, your show now, Fox.’ She held
the pistol ready and made her way back down the hall towards the loading
bay.
* * *
The only sounds Fox could hear in the second floor
corridor were the overhead lights softly buzzing and the pounding of his
own heart in his ears. He slowly walked towards the secure sector, hugging
the wall, gun pointed straight ahead. At a left turn corner, he peeked
around the side to see a guard walking away from him down the hall. Easy
shot.
Fox lined up the shot and was about to fire when
he heard someone shout, “Hey, you!” back from where he came. He snapped
his head around and saw a guard staring wide-eyed at him. Before he could
raise his rifle, Fox hopped back behind the corner and shot him in the
chest, the dart taking immediate effect. He crumpled to the ground without
a sound.
The little scuffle got the attention of Fox’s first
target and he heard footsteps running in his direction. Fox flattened against
the wall and brought the pistol to his right shoulder, listening carefully.
When the footsteps sounded right next to him, he whipped the pistol out,
the butt slamming against the forehead of the guard. The victim landed
on hard on his back, almost flipping over, and lay still.
Fox shot the one he hit just to be sure and dragged
them both into a nearby storage closet. He jogged the rest of the way down
the hall with no encounter and stopped at the door to a staircase leading
to the third floor, the one with Pepper’s office. It has a card reader
next to it, which was no problem. Fox took the small decoder out of his
pocket, stuck it on the reader, and started the scan.
‘The last time I used this was to get into the
bowels of Overlord. Now I’m using it to get into Pepper’s office.’
Fox chuckled nervously and shook his head. No time
to be thinking of anything but the mission. He stared down the hall, ready
to fire at anyone coming around the corner, while he listened to the soft
beeps and clicks of the decoder. After a few minutes, it gave a high beep
signaling success and the reader’s light sent from red to green. Fox slipped
the decoder back into his pocket and entered the stairwell.
He softly mounted the two flights to the door leading
to the third floor corridor. Pepper’s office was only one turn and no more
than twenty feet from there. Fox listened at the door and could faintly
hear two guards having a conversation.
“So she told me not to call again. I don’t get
it, I thought we had something going.”
The other guard sighed. “Women. Sometimes they
just drop you just like that. Hell, happened to me twice before I met Nevine.”
“Yeah, how’s that going?”
“Great, man. I think I’m gonna ask the big question
soon. Got a ring picked out and everything. Believe me, that wasn’t easy
on my paycheck. I have weekend leave on Friday, gonna pick it up then.”
Fox heard a very faint mechanical voice, then the
first guard said, “Yes, sir.”
“Shit man, I have to go, front door guard needs
a relief. I’ll catch ya later.”
“Ok, and don’t worry bout getting dumped. You’ll
find the right one soon.”
“Hey,” the first guard replied, his footsteps retreating
down the hall. “It’s me man, how could they resist.”
Fox rolled his eyes and backed away from the door.
He decided to wait for the announcement, give Pepper a chance to get off
the floor, then move in. He knew Pepper used the stairs instead of the
elevator, because it was closer, so he would get behind the door and hope
they didn’t swing it open all the way.
Fox assumed his position behind the door and kept
the gun aimed down the stairs as he waited for the announcement. After
a few minutes, he began to get worried. It shouldn’t be taking her this
long.
Fox was contemplating whether or not to go check
on her when the intercom beeped and the announcement was made.
“General Pepper, please report to secure conference
room D. General Pepper to secure conference room D. Thank you.”
Fox grinned. It wasn’t a bad imitation, just sounded
like the controller had a cold. No one seemed to notice, and Fox flattened
himself against the wall as best he could.
After a few seconds, he could hear the three sets
of footsteps that would be Pepper and his two guards. Fox jumped slightly
as the door swung open, nearly slamming him in the muzzle. He turned his
head sideways, and held his breath. Pepper and his guards walked down the
stairs, the general mumbling about all these damn meetings he’s had lately.
Fox silently slipped around and through the door before it clicked shut.
He turned and was about to let his breath out when
he stopped dead in his tracks. He was inches away from a guard, presumably
the one that had been comforting his sexually frustrated friend. His back
was to the door as he stared at a painting on the opposite wall. Fox slowly
backed up and aimed his gun at the soldier’s back. A shot couldn’t get
much easier then this.
But no dart came out. Fox pulled the trigger again,
but nothing happened. He checked the barrel and saw it was jammed. If he
tried to un-jam it, it would make too much noise.
‘Can’t anything ever just go my way?!’
Fox cursed silently and thought about what to do.
The guard could turn around any minute, and Fox wasn’t going to use the
blaster unless he really had to. Instead, he retreated down the hall, slowly,
taking each step carefully, and finally let his breath out when he rounded
the corner.
After he caught his breath, Fox cleared the jammed
dart and walked the twenty feet to Pepper’s door, now unguarded. He thought
he’d have to use the decoder again, but the door was surprisingly unlocked.
The ornate door opened without a creak, and Fox slipped in.
It felt odd to be in Pepper’s office like this,
but odd had been Fox’s main feeling that day. He looked at the chairs in
front of the desk, the right one being Fox’s choice whenever he met with
the general. Pepper’s desk cluttered as usual, with two pictures, one of
his daughter, whom Fox had met briefly once, and one of his wife. His ribbons
and medals were in a large display case mounted on the wall behind his
large leather chair.
Fox holstered the gun and sat in Pepper’s chair,
turning the console’s monitor on. The screen flashed on and Fox tried to
remember the detailed instructions Slippy had given him on where to find
the files. After a few minutes of typing and clicking, Fox slipped a disk
from his pocket into the computer’s drive and copied the “Non-military
Associates Locations” file to it. When the status bar reached full, Fox
pocketed the disk and closed the files he had opened.
He stood up and was about to leave when he noticed
another picture frame, to the right of the monitor. Fox never knew it was
there, hidden by the monitor. It lay face down on the desk, which piqued
Fox’s curiosity. He reached out and lifted the ornate frame. The glass
was cracked, as if Pepper had slammed it down hard.
It was a picture of Pepper, James, and Fox. Fox
was in his Academy uniform, standing between the two adults. He recognized
the picture, because he too had a copy of it. It was opening day his final
year at the Academy, the year his father died. Pepper had it on his desk
this whole time…
Fox stood the picture upright and leaned on the
desk. He didn’t know what to think about Pepper. He considered him a good
friend, and was shocked when he didn’t believe him about Monagi’s assassination.
The shock turned quickly to anger. But was it really his fault? There was
a lot of direct evidence.
Fox shook his head again and cleared his thoughts.
He had to stop these side-thoughts and concentrate on getting out of here.
Pepper would catch on that something was wrong when he saw that the conference
room was empty. With his work done, Fox walked quickly over to the door,
reaching once again for his tranquilizer pistol.
He swung the door open and his heart skipped a
beat as he came muzzle to muzzle with a gray canine guard, the same one
who was looking at the painting earlier. He had his fist up as if he was
about to knock on the door and an equally as shocked expression on his
face. If this was part of some movie Fox was watching, he’d probably laugh
at how they both looked standing there. ‘I’m sorry, the general’s not
in right now, may I take a message?’
But this was very real, and the guard was quicker
than Fox. Before he could react, he was kicked back into the room and the
guard sprinted down the hall. “Shit!” Fox cursed, regaining his footing
and sprinting after the guard. If he got to an alarm…
The guard hit a button on the wall and turned back
just as Fox slammed his fist into his face. The alarm sounded and an automatic
voice said over the intercom, “Attention all military personnel, alarm
activated on third floor, east wing. All able guards respond.”
“DAMMIT!” Fox cursed and pounded the wall. He was
about to put a dart in the guard when he heard voices and running coming
from the stairwell. His escape route was cut off. Instead, he grabbed the
shaken guard in a tight chokehold with his left arm and traded the tranquilizer
gun for his blaster. As a squad of guards rounded the corner, Fox shoved
the blaster against his shield’s head and yelled, “Stop! One more step
and you scrape your comrade’s brains from the wall. The guards stopped,
aiming their rifles at the duo.
Fox’s hostage started breathing faster and he squirmed
in the firm chokehold. Fox pulled it tighter and the squirming subsided.
He wasn’t sure what to do now, except maybe try to talk his way out of
it. Before he could say anything, the ranking guard said, “Let him go,
McCloud. There’s no way out, just surrender so we can all walk out of here
instead of get carried out.”
“You mean so YOU can walk out of here,” Fox replied,
trying to stall so he could think. “How far will I get? To a cell and eventually
the death sentence. Might as well end it here.”
The guard obviously opted out of any hostage negotiation
lessons in his training. He didn’t seem to have anything to say to that.
Instead, he spoke in a low voice into his headset, which Fox couldn’t hear
clearly. The four other guards with him kept their rifles trained on Fox,
looking nervous. Every soldier hated guard duty because of the boredom,
but today was turning out not to be just another day at the office.
Fox was about to try moving back some more when
he heard voices from around the corner where the guards were.
“Sir, I wouldn’t advise going out there, you’d
be too exposed,” said an unfamiliar voice, probably a guard.
“Thank you, sergeant, but I think I can handle
this. Stand down.” Fox recognized that as the voice of his longtime friend.
General Pepper walked around the corner, attired
in his usual red uniform, and stood in front of the guards as if there
was no danger whatsoever. He looked at Fox with an unreadable expression,
and Fox stared right back. It was an awkward moment for all present. No
one thought this situation would happen between them and McCloud.
“What are you doing here, Fox? Usually, you try
to stay away from those trying to find you.”
“I was in the neighborhood, thought I’d swing by
and say hello to everyone,” Fox replied, trying to keep his voice even.
He was starting to panic.
“Fox, please. I don’t want to see any unnecessary
death here. Just let him go, drop the gun, and we can end this peacefully.”
“Pepper, just listen to me. I didn’t do this, I
didn’t do anything the news has said. IceStorm framed me, it was all planned
out to turn you against me. And that incident with the airliner, I was
there to defend it from them. None of this---“
“Fox, there’s no use telling me this. I can’t just
release you on what you say.”
“Just give me forty-eight hours, I can get evidence,”
Fox said, almost pleading. The gun was starting to shake in his hand from
tenseness. Pepper shook his head, almost sadly.
“Fox, I can’t grant that kind of request.” He took
a stop forward. “Please, just let him go and come with me.”
“Stay back, dammit!” Fox said, taking a step backwards
with the hostage. A look of dejection came over Pepper’s old face.
“Look at this, Fox. Can you believe it’s come to
this? Your father and I were friends years before you were even a thought.
I held you as a baby, for God’s sake. We were all so proud of you at the
Academy. I felt it my responsibility to take care of you after your father’s
death, and I tried to---“
“Take care of me?!” Fox yelled, startling everyone.
His rage at Pepper and all those who didn’t believe him flowed out at once.
“You don’t give a shit about me! You send me to do the army’s dirty work
no matter what the danger! You cared about me SO MUCH that you did everything
in your power to help me when I was captured at Overlord, right? I endured
a living HELL for two and a half weeks, and finally had to get MYSELF out
of there!”
“I thought you were the one person I could turn
to for help through this. After all I’ve done for you, and all I’ve done
for this whole Goddamn galaxy, it all turns against me just like that!
Well, fuck you, with or without your help, I’m going to clear my name!
I want my life back!”
Fox was out of breath from his outburst and breathed
deeply, his eyes still full of rage. The hostage was clearly more nervous
than ever and started shaking in Fox’s grip. Pepper looked dumbfounded,
and just stared at Fox. Finally, he gathered his wits and managed to say,
“I…Fox…it doesn’t even matter what I believe. I’m not in charge of this.
It’s the will of the police and the army that you be brought in, and I
have to do my job.”
“Well, I’m not coming in until I can prove I’m
innocent,” Fox replied, calming himself down. He glanced over his shoulder
to see if anyone had somehow gotten behind him and noticed the large window
at the end of the hall. It was the only exit he could get to. An idea started
forming in his head, and he jerked his head down to his shoulder, hitting
the button on his headset.
“Slippy, it’s me,” he said in a low voice, hoping
Pepper and the guards couldn’t hear.
“Fox! What’s going on, we heard the alarm sound,
we’re worried as hell out here.”
“Listen, things have gotten a little rough. Forget
meeting on the roof, I need you to meet me by a window on the third floor.”
“Um, ok, sure. How will I find it?”
Fox quickly aimed the gun behind him and fired
four shots down the hall, the lasers shattering the window. “The window’s
shattered. Just circle until you find it. Be ready to leave in a hurry.”
“Gotcha, Fox.”
Fox slowly backed up, pulling the quivering guard
with him like a nervous dance partner. Pepper and his guards followed,
obviously not sure what he was planning.
“Fox,” Pepper said, looking confused. “You know
we’re on the third floor, right?”
Fox nodded, feeling relieved, sure he was going
to make it. “I’m not jumping. Been great talking with you guys, but I gotta
jet. I’ll be back when I have the evidence. And give this guy some extra
hazard pay,” he added tapping the gun against the guard’s head lightly.
Before anyone could reply, Fox heard the loud humming
of the dropship’s engine and rain started blowing into the hallway through
the shattered window. The metal hull appeared, and the side door slid open
to reveal Falco, staring wide-eyed at the scene in the hallway. “Very subtle,
Fox, good job!” he yelled, barely audible over the rain and engine.
Fox whispered to the guard, “Good luck with the
proposal, make sure your not watching the news while you do it.” He then
pushed the guard hard into the group and jumped out the window.
His depth perception was slightly off, and he was
just able to grab the inside of the door before slipping out, seeing the
street of Corneria City three stories down. He looked up, rain blurring
his vision, and grabbed Falco’s outstretched hand. His friend hauled him
into the ship and slid the door shut just as the guards reached the window.
“We got him, go!” Falco yelled.
Slippy gunned the engine and the ship swooped away
from the building. Fox lay on the floor of the dropship, wiping his eyes
clear and catching his breath.
“Damn, man, what happened?” Falco asked, sitting
next to his soaked, exhausted friend.
“I’ll tell you later,” Fox said, sitting up. He
pulled the disk out of his pocket to make sure it was still there. “We
got what we came for, mission complete, just barely. Let’s get Peppy and
Katt and get the hell off this planet.”
CHAPTER 7
Outnumbered
Great Fox, hangar
1348 hours
Fox was dozing off in the back of the dropship as
it neared the silver silhouette of the Great Fox. The adrenaline had worn
off and left him in an exhausted, shocked state. Every muscle ached, especially
his left arm, which had held the guard in a headlock for so long. He had
spent most of the trip thinking about what he had done…and what he had
said. Most of the horrible things he had accused Pepper of were exaggerated
by the tenseness of the moment. Seeing that picture, face down, on Pepper’s
desk had shaken him up more than he thought.
The sudden jerk as the ship landed snapped Fox
out of his thoughts. Falco slid the door open, bright light flooding into
the dark cavern of the ship, and hopped out followed by Katt and Peppy.
Fox sluggishly followed after and fell ungracefully to the deck. He was
rubbing his eyes, trying to wake himself up, when he felt a gentle hand
on his shoulder. He opened his eyes and all his aches and grievances evaporated
as he saw Vixy. She hugged him tight, and he returned the gesture just
as passionately. As he had thought before, in her room, she had that special
gift. She always made him feel better, no matter what had happened.
“You just missed yourself on the news,” she said,
pulling gently away.
“Let me guess,” Fox said, grinning. “That bastard
terrorist McCloud broke into Cornerian Army headquarters, presumably to
steal important documents and sell them to Venom, and escaped.”
Vixy laughed. “Not too far off. Doesn’t matter
though, you got the file, this whole thing will be over soon. Oh, something
else the news said…”
She turned to Bill, who was just hopping out of his ship’s
cockpit. “They identified your ship, Bill. Your face, name, rank, everything
was flashing across every news station.”
“Aw, shit!” Bill growled, ripping off his helmet.
“Guess I’ll be staying on the ship a little longer then.”
“Makes me wonder why Corneria hasn’t tried attacking
us yet,” Fox said. “They could easily find our location.”
“That was on the news too, actually. The reporter
said the army is hesitant to try an open assault because of your ‘skill
with an Arwing’.”
“Fox!” Slippy yelled, climbing down from the dropship’s
cockpit. “Do you have the disk?”
“Yeah, here.” Fox took the disk from his pocket
and tossed it to Slippy, who jogged off with it.
“Alright, hotshot, time for the details. How did
you end up with a Cornerian soldier at gunpoint?” Falco said, crossing
his arms in front of him. Peppy, Bill, and Katt also looked at him expectantly.
“Alright, alright. Can we sit down somewhere at
least?”
They all moved to the rec room and slumped wearily
in the couches and chairs in the middle. Fox sat in on the soft cushion
and enjoyed the relaxation for a moment before beginning. He recounted
his entire story from his split with Katt. The only things he omitted from
the debrief were the things he said to Pepper and his discovery of the
picture.
“Alright,” Falco said after his friend had finished.
“So what the hell took you so long? You shoulda been out of there ten minutes
before the encounter with Pepper happened.”
“I…got distracted,” Fox said carefully.
“By what?” Peppy asked.
“Something I saw in Pepper’s office.”
“What?” Peppy asked again, slitting his eyes.
“Something,” Fox repeated in a stern voice, staring
Peppy straight in the eye. “What does it matter, we accomplished the mission.”
Peppy shrugged and stood down. He knew Fox wouldn’t
talk about something if he didn’t want to. Before anyone could inquire
further, Katt stood up and stretched. “Well guys and gals, I think this
is where I ride off into the sunset. I think I’m still in the clear, no
one at that base would’ve recognized me.”
“You sure?” Fox asked. “We could still use your
help.”
“I know, tiger, but I didn’t think I’d be out here
even this long. I left some unfinished business back home.” She walked
over and gave Fox a quick kiss on the side of his muzzle, again with Vixy’s
disproving glare on her. “You’ll do fine. After that stunt at the base,
I have no doubt you’ll see this through.”
Lastly, she walked over to Falco and gave him a
longer, more passionate kiss on his beak. “Keep in touch, Falco. I missed
you.”
Falco nodded and looked down as Katt left the rec
room with a final wave. Moments later, they heard the faint hum of her
ship as it bolted out into space.
Fox stood up and yawned. “Our little trip to town
wore me out, so I’m gonna go take a quick nap. If Slippy finds anything,
wake me up.”
“Will do, man,” Bill said, standing up also. “I
better call Emma and tell her what’s going on.” They both left the room,
leaving Peppy and Falco alone. Peppy leaned back and glanced at the chess
board on the table, then at Falco. The avian noticed this and shook his
head.
“No way, don’t even think about it.”
* * *
At the same time
Blizzard, conference room
1334 hours
A black fist slammed on the long table in the dimly
lit conference room. The fist belonged to Stefan, who didn’t look as if
he had called the meeting to praise the officers. He glared at the fidgeting
officers around the table with a growl, looking ready to rip apart the
first one who even glanced at him wrong.
“How is it you managed to fuck up EVERY PART of
this damn job?!” he shouted down the table. “First, our two men couldn’t
even kill him when he was alone and completely unsuspecting on Katina!
Then, our two supposed ‘top pilots’, flying Arwings, couldn’t even take
down a civilian ship! And what do we have now?!”
He flicked on the viewscreen at the other end of
the room where he had recorded the recent breaking news story on Fox’s
break-in on Corneria. The officers became increasingly nervous as they
watched what had happened. They knew what Stefan was seeing.
The angry jaguar turned the screen off after the
story was done and continued. “Why would Fox go waltzing into the headquarters
of the army hunting him?! You all know damn well why. Fox knew it was us
that set him up, and what’s the only way to prove his innocence? He didn’t
know where our base was, but he does now thanks to your incompetence!”
With a final growl, he turned away from the nervous
staff and stared into space. It always calmed him down to stare into the
black emptiness of space. It helped him think clearer, to have no distractions.
All he could think about was that he was out of options. Either he attacked
StarFox head on or wait for them to attack him in perhaps a more subtle
way.
“Collins,” he said without turning around. The
weasel snapped his head to look at him, his heart skipping a beat. “How
many able personnel do we now have in total?”
“Uh…one-hundred forty-nine, sir.”
“Before this all happened, you said we should muster
our forces and attack them head on. Well, it seems that is our only choice
now. We must kill them before they come after us and prove their innocence.”
He turned around to face the table again. “Send out the message for every
member of Ice Storm to gather at our base on Fortuna. From there we assign
squads and attack the Great Fox. Now listen carefully.”
Stefan leaned back and continued. “We will not
be able to hold out long enough to actually destroy the Great Fox, not
with them defending it and the sparse number of ships we have. Instead,
all fighters will escort troop transports to the ship’s hangar. This will
push Fox and his team back into their ship to defend it from our strike
teams. They may dominate a fight in Arwings, but they can’t hold out on
foot. Not only will this destroy StarFox, but we can sell or use the Great
Fox to gain back some lost money. Is this clear?” There were nods from
around the table.
“Good,” Stefan said, leaning forward, slitting
his eyes. “Because if this fails, the last thing any of you will see will
be the barrel of my gun.”
Stefan waited a moment, enjoying the looks of terror
that crept onto the officers’ faces, then said, “Dismissed.”
* * *
Two days later
Great Fox, rec room
1402 hours
The team’s patience was on the edge. No one could
seem to do anything but stare at the rec room’s door, waiting for Slippy
to bring some shred of hope. If there was nothing in that file, they were
out of options. Peppy and Vixy were playing chess, Peppy’s favorite game,
after a few failed attempts at getting Falco to play. Fox’s love was proving
to be a better match than the hare had anticipated.
Fox was leaning against the bar, his tail twitching
from side to side as if keeping time, waiting for something. Just as he
began contemplating a drink, the door slid open and Slippy ran in holding
a piece of paper. Everyone jumped up, demanding to know if he found anything.
“Guys, guys, let me talk. Sheesh. Ok, here it is.”
He held up the piece of paper and said, “First of all, it took this long
because it had heavier encryption than I thought it would and I had to
run each code through the hundreds of associates in here. But it paid off.
The good news is that IceStorm was in the file and we have their last known
locations.”
“So what’s the bad news?” Fox asked, fearing another
sudden spike of hell in this nightmare.
“Not too bad. It’s just that they have three known
bases, and we don’t know which they’re in. The first one is their main
base on Fortuna, presumably where the Arwings were kept. The second location
is their mothership, Blizzard. It usually hangs out around Fortuna and
Sector X. A little side note on that, Blizzard is exactly the same model
as the Great Fox. My father built it for them back when they were good
allies with Corneria. So if we’re planning on going in there, we already
know the layout. Anyway, the third location…” He stopped and started to
giggle. “You’re not going to believe this.”
“Try us,” Falco said, rolling his eyes. After the
crap they’d seen in the past week, nothing would surprise them.
“Well,” Slippy continued. “Their third location
actually isn’t confirmed yet. Local police have been investigating it,
but it’s not a definite yet. It appears a hotel and casino right in Corneria
City is a front for their third base. I know, it sounds weird, but that’s
what it says. It’s assumed they use it because of their growing number
of members, and there are plenty of rooms there.”
“Alright then,” Fox said. “Which one do we hit?”
Peppy shrugged and replied, “Well, if our objective
is to find Stefan and make him talk, I’d say we hit Blizzard. I would think
he’d keep himself mobile, and we already know the layout of the ship, as
Slippy said.”
Falco shook his head. “Uh-uh. First of all, even
if you find Stefan, he won’t talk. If he talks, he’s dead anyway from Corneria.
I think we should hit the base on Fortuna. Stefan might be there also,
and if he’s not there’s still bound to be some left-over stuff from when
they had the Arwings.”
“You guys are doing this all wrong,” Vixy sighed.
“You shouldn’t hit anything until you know for sure which one he’s in.
If you hit the wrong one, he’ll catch on and you’ll never find him.”
Fox nodded and turned to Bill. “What do you think?”
“I agree with your girl there. We should keep tabs
on the bases and find out which he’s in, which would probably be the one
with the most activity.”
“Alright then, settled. As much as I hate to wait
on this any more, we shouldn’t go into this blind. Slippy, launch a few
probes and get some recon of the bases.”
It was only an hour later, a few minutes after Vixy
declared checkmate on a stunned Peppy, when Slippy burst into the room
and said excitedly, “Guys! I think something’s happening!”
“Already?” Fox asked. “What is it?”
Slippy handed over a bunch of pictures taken by
a probe over the Fortuna base, and the team huddled around Fox to look.
“Holy crap,” Bill breathed, expressing what was
on everyone’s mind. “Look at the platform, there must be over sixty fighters
there. A few dropships too.”
“Yeah,” Falco said, squinting at the picture. “And
double that many people walking around. Looks like they’re preparing for
a war or something.”
“Or preparing to start one…” Fox muttered. “Slippy,
when were these taken?”
“Half hour ago, I guess. Why?”
Fox dropped the pictures and his hand went to his
comm. “ROB, activate the long-range scanners immediately. Inform us if
anything comes within range.” He received the affirmative and turned to
his team. “Ok, this thing going on at the base may be for another job they’re
doing, but we have to take every precaution. Go make sure your Arwings
are fully prepped, Bill, you handle your ship. Stay on full alert.”
The team could see the possibility of what was
happening and nodded. They might be meeting Stefan a little sooner than
they thought. Only he would bring his entire army with him.
* * *
Great Fox, rec room
1736 hours
The team’s fear was realized hours later. They had
been busy setting up every defense system on the ship and making sure the
Arwings were in top condition. After Fox was sure everything was ready,
he told everyone to relax and get some rest. They might need it.
No one could find rest, however. Usually, StarFox
was on the offensive, and they could attack when they wanted to. This was
different. There was nothing worse than waiting hours on end for an army
of unknown size and power to attack you, possibly with the power to destroy
the ship. Those hours of waiting finally ended, for better or worse, with
the sounding of ROB’s voice over the intercom.
“Alert, unidentified ships detected on course with
the Great Fox, hostile intent.”
Fox grimaced and said, “How many ships?”
“Sixty-eight fighter class, three troop transport
class.”
“Troop transports?” Fox mumbled confusedly. “ROB,
make an announcement for everyone to meet in the rec room.”
The announcement was made and everyone met within
a minute. Fox could see they were as edgy as he was about the upcoming
fight. 68 ships was a lot to handle for five pilots.
“Alright guys, you heard the announcement. Looks
like Stefan gave up on subtlety. We fight in standard formation, and defend
the Great Fox at all costs. I don’t know why they brought both fighters
and dropships, but if the dropships look like they’re going for the hangar,
take out as many fighters as possible and retreat back inside. We’re gonna
have to play this one by ear.”
“Give me something to do,” Vixy said. “This is
my home too, I want to help defend it.”
A knot formed in Fox’s stomach. He didn’t want
to put Vixy in any more danger than she already was. “Alright, um… go to
the security control room and lock the door behind you. Keep an track of
the monitors and tell us if you see anything enter the hangar.”
Vixy seemed satisfied with that and nodded.
“Alright then,” Fox concluded. “Let’s go.” He turned
away to go to the hangar, then stopped short, Peppy bumping into him. He
turned back to Vixy and fidgeted with the ring in his pocket, which he
had carried around everywhere since the day this nightmare began. He wanted
to wait until this was over, but it was too unsure of a fight. He had to
do it…
“Vixy,” he said softly, walking over to her. His
heart started racing again with those old doubts, the possibility of a
negative answer. “I, uh…I wanted to wait on this, but I’m not sure what’s
going to happen out there. I just wanted to ask you…well…” With one move,
he crouched to one knee and held the ring box up to her. His mouth opened
to say the words, but he couldn’t get them out. Finally, he managed, “Will…will
you marry me?”
Vixy’s mouth dropped open and her eyes widened
in surprise. “Fox…are you…oh, my God…”
Fox stood back up just as Vixy threw herself into
his arms and held him tight. “Yes! Of course I will!”
Fox smiled, letting his breath out, and held her
close. A weight lifted from his heart, and he felt happier than he had
ever remembered. He wanted to stay like that forever, holding her, thinking
about their future, engulfed in her love. But he was harshly brought back
to the present by ROB’s voice again.
“Hostile ships closing, five minutes until firing
distance.”
Fox gently and hesitantly pulled away and handed
her the ring. “Here, hold onto that. We have to go do this. I love you.”
Vixy gave him a kiss and said, “I love you too.
Good luck.”
As the team walked to the hangar, he received congratulations
from everyone and Peppy looked like he even shed a tear. As much as Fox
wanted to stay with Vixy, he cleared his mind and concentrated on the upcoming
battle. He had to focus to make sure there was even a Great Fox to come
home to.
CHAPTER 8
Tragedy on the Great Fox
Minutes later
Space near Great Fox
1751 hours
The usual adrenaline rush that accompanied the boost
into space from the hangar was intensified by the anxiety of the upcoming
fight. Fox took a few deep breaths and felt himself become one with the
Arwing. A lesson his father had taught him was to envision the Arwing as
his own body and control it as such. That way, you are not trying to control
a hunk of metal. It then becomes a form of martial arts. While he didn’t
flaunt it, Fox knew that he was one of the best pilots in the galaxy, and
he owed a good portion of his success to mastering that lesson.
“Report in,” Fox said when he saw all the fighters
had left the hangar.
“Falco here, I’m good.”
“This is Peppy, everything’s ok.”
“Slippy here, all systems operational.”
“Bill, lookin’ good.”
“It’s me,” said Vixy. “Can everyone hear me?” She
received affirmatives from the team.
“Ok,” Fox continued. “Forget about escort positions,
we’ll try to engage them as far away from the Great Fox as possible. Vixy,
keep an eye on those dropships and tell us when they near the hangar. ROB,
if we have to retreat back inside, use the ship’s main gun to keep the
fighter’s busy. Alright, let’s take it to em’.”
The team set up in the standard diamond-shaped
formation with Bill trailing in the back. In the distance, they could barely
make out the silhouettes of the approaching attackers. Fox knew that the
team had faced off against worse odds before, but that was against inferior
ships while on the offensive. According to the recon pictures Slippy took,
over half of the fighters were a model similar to StarWolf’s first ships.
While not the best, they were certainly better than standard fighters.
As the ships neared, Fox began picking up radio
chatter shrouded in static. After a few minutes, a message finally became
audible. And Fox knew the voice all too well.
“—ission. I say again, if any member of StarFox
can hear me, recognize this transmission.”
Fox flicked his com to the public channel. “Stefan.
What do you want?”
“Ah, Fox, good,” came the icy reply. “I want to
make an offer. As you can see, we outnumber you pretty significantly, but
I’m not all bad. I’ll give you a chance to surrender. We’ll turn you over
to Corneria and we can avoid further bloodshed. Otherwise, this region
of space will become your cold, dark grave. The choice is yours.”
As the fighters neared firing range, Fox didn’t
even have to think. He vowed he wouldn’t give up until his name was clear,
and he stuck to it. His answer to Stefan’s proposal flew out of his Arwing
in the form of a volley of lasers. They ripped the wing off the nearest
dark blue fighter, causing it to lose control and crash into the fighter
next to it, both disappearing in a ball of flame.
“You can’t get me that easy, Stefan. Bring it on.”
Fox barrel rolled through the clump of incoming fighters, causing them
to turn away while his team broke formation and engaged. The ensuing battle
continued like any other, each pilot concentrating on one fighter at a
time. Fox’s constant glimpses of the Great Fox, their home, reminded him
of the battle at Sector Z, the only other time the Great Fox had been the
target for the enemy.
“Fox,” Vixy’s voice cut in through the radio chatter.
“The dropships have fighter escorts, and it looks like they’re heading
for the hangar.”
“Ok,” Fox replied, firing another round of lasers
to finish off the fighter he was chasing. “Slippy and Falco, follow me,
we’ll try to take out the dropships. Peppy and Bill, keep the others busy.”
When Fox linked up with his two teammates, they
darted through the storm of lasers and explosions towards the three large
ships. As they neared it, Fox could see that it had at least fifteen fighters
clustered around it, all of which turned and engaged them.
“Oh, shit…” Falco muttered as the ships fired on
them. The hail of lasers rocked the ships, causing them to pull away. Fox
checked and saw his shields were knocked down to sixty percent. “You two
ok?”
“Forty,” Falco muttered.
“I’m at twenty,” Slippy said, panic shaking his
voice.
“Slippy, get back to the ship,” Fox said, looking
back at the dropships where the fighters had resumed their escort. Fox
was surprised at their discipline and coordination. There was no way they
were going to get near those ships. “Peppy, Bill, how’s it coming over
there.”
“We took out a good number, man,” Bill said, sounding
calm and in control as always. “But the fight’s starting to show. My shields
are at fifty.”
“Mine too.” Peppy added.
Fox growled under his breath as he shot down another
fighter and jerked the stick hard to avoid colliding with it’s buddy. “ROB,
how many fighters are left?”
After a moment, the verdict came back. “Thirty-four
fighters and three troop transports.”
Fox shook his head. A little over half remaining
and they were too heavily damaged to hold off the rest.
“Dropships are a few minutes out from the hangar!”
Vixy cut in, sounding panicky. Fox could see it now. They put the elite
pilots at escort duty and the rest for cannon fodder to distract them.
They were planning on taking over the ship, not destroying it.
“Everyone retreat back to the Great Fox, they’re
going to infiltrate it. Meet in the armory. ROB, cover us and take down
as many as possible with the main gun.”
Fox received the affirmative from his team and
covered their retreat, taking a few more fighters down. When the last Arwing
disappeared inside the hangar, he turned and boosted to it himself, avoiding
the pursuing ships as best he could. By time he reached the safety of the
hangar, his shields were at a heart-stopping four percent.
He landed his ship as usual and sprinted to the
hangar door. After it slid shut behind him, he unholstered his blaster
and shot the access panel next to the door, shielding his eyes from the
rain of sparks. That would buy them a few minutes while IceStorm cut the
door down.
He sprinted to the armory where his team, Vixy,
and Bill were waiting anxiously. Fox himself was beyond anxious, he was
downright scared. Three dropships at ten people per ship, that’s…
“Thirty troops. They’ll be here any minute, and
we weren’t fully prepared for this. We’ll have to improvise this as we
go. Don’t forget, they know the layout of the ship, so they’ll check the
usual hiding places. We’ll split up and cover the main accesses into the
ship. Slippy, Falco, and Peppy, you take the hallway from the rec room
to the hangar. Bill and I will take the rear access to the hangar. Vixy,
get back to the security room and lock it behind you. There’s no way in
unless you unlock it from inside. Ok, load up and get to it. And guys…watch
out for each other and don’t give up.”
The team nodded and turned to the weapon racks.
Fox got himself a rifle from the rack and shoved a few mags in his pockets.
He slung it over his shoulder and took a pistol from the rack, handing
it to Vixy.
Vixy took it and checked the clip. Fox had taught
her a lot about firearms in her time on the ship. She looked nothing like
the timid girl who almost threw up after killing a man in their escape
from Overlord. She actually looked comfortable with it, which made Fox
feel slightly better.
“If anyone tries to get in that room besides one
of us, don’t hesitate.”
Vixy nodded, swallowing hard. She may have been
better at handling this, but she was far from a combat veteran. Fox looked
at his team expertly preparing as they had dozens of times, then at her,
and felt a wave of sadness. She shouldn’t have to go through this. “I love
you,” he said, giving her a kiss.
“I love you too. Please, be careful.”
Fox managed a weak smile and turned to his team.
Everyone was finishing up their preparations and forming in the center
again as ROB’s voice sounded on the intercom.
“Three hostile ships have landed in the hangar.”
“Alright, let’s move,” Fox said. He noticed Slippy
and always laughed at the site of him holding a rifle, seeing as it was
over half his height. There was no humor in it this time; their lives rode
on their use of these weapons.
“Good luck.”
* * *
Great Fox
1903 hours
Just as Fox and Bill reached their defense positions,
there was a loud thump that echoed ominously through the metal corridors,
followed by a dead silence. The quiet before the storm. IceStorm had breached
the hangar’s locked door.
The duo’s defense was located at the intersection
of a three-way corridor. The vertical line of the T led to the repair docks
of the hangar, while the cap of the T led to the elevator on one side and
another hallway to the storage rooms on the other. Fox hid behind the storage-side
wall, Bill behind the elevator-side, both ready to pop out and shoot down
towards the hangar door.
“You think Stefan’s on board?” Bill asked, leaning
against the wall.
“Definitely.”
“How are you so sure?”
“Well,” Fox replied, sneaking a quick peek down
the corridor at the closed hangar door. “First of all, he’s not a pilot.
He would’ve had to come in a dropship. Also, there’s no way he’d let his
men have all the fun of killing me.”
“Yeah, true. But—“
He was cut off as Vixy’s voice sounded in his headset.
“Fox, Bill, it looks like there’s a few headed your way. Four…no wait,
five, maybe more.”
“Ok, thanks,” Fox replied.
“So how do we do this?” Bill asked, checking the
mag on his rifle. “Just pop out and waste ‘em?”
“Not much else we can do. We’ll alternate, one
of us will fire then the other will while the first reloads, ok?”
Bill nodded. “Ok, I’ll go first.”
“No way, my ship, I’ll go first. I’ve gotten you
in this deep enough.”
“Forget it, you’re engaged, I go first.”
“You have a girl too, and you already saved my
ass once. I go first.”
“Fox, I’m going first!”
“Forget it, I am!”
Bill raised his eyebrows and put up a fist in the
familiar signal for Rocks, Paper, Scissors. It was how they had always
settled little disputes back in the Academy. Fox rolled his eyes and put
up his fist. He knew Bill could never resist scissors and kept his fist
the rock after three pumps.
“Ha!” he said as Bill pounded the wall. “Just be
ready to pop out when I’m done, we’ll be fine. When I---“
He was cut off by a sharp hiss from down the corridor.
He peeked around the corner and saw a current of blue sparks shooting out
from the side of the door. They were cutting through the lock. Fox gave
a quick glance at Bill, who flattened himself around the corner against
the wall.
Fox himself crouched, taking as much cover as he
could from the corner while aiming his rifle straight at the weakening
door. His steady, controlled breathing made the sight bob slightly, as
if counting down the time, intensifying his anxiety of the unknown outcome
of the approaching fight.
The sparks and hissing stopped and Fox held his
breath, steadying the gun. The door slid open, revealing a dark figure
with numerous others behind him. The figure was clothed all in dark blue
and black and moved quickly into the hall, his rifle aimed down the hall…right
at Fox.
Suddenly, Fox felt a hard shove and was pushed
roughly back behind his corner, landing on his side. He sat up, wondering
what happened, and heard the deafening rattle of an assault rifle on full
auto. Bill was crouching and firing down the hall, his face sporadically
illuminated by the red lasers. Some of the returning lasers were coming
too close to him for Fox’s comfort.
“Dammit, you moron!” Fox shouted over the noise,
hopping to his feet and recovering his rifle. Fox was anything but mad,
though. That move had surprised him; chances are Bill saved his life…again.
“Do you have a death wish?!”
“I told you I was going first!” he shouted back.
“Just get ready, I’m almost out!”
Fox flattened against the wall and waited. A few
seconds later, Bill shouted, “I’m out, two down!” and ducked behind the
wall. Fox took a deep breath and spun around the corner, gun pointed straight
ahead. To his surprise, there was nothing in the corridor except two prone
bodies…and a black object flying in the air towards them. Fox’s reflexes
kicked in this time and he caught the object as it flew by him. He immediately
knew what it was from it’s shape and weight, and his eyes widened.
“Grenade!” he shouted and threw it back down the
corridor, ducking back behind the wall. Fox felt the explosion more then
he heard it, being half deaf from the gunfire already. The residual smoke
wafted down the hall, making him and Bill coughed.
“Nice catch, man!” Bill shouted between coughs.
“Why couldn’t you ever do that on the baseball team back in school?”
Fox couldn’t think of a comeback and was coughing
too much to say one anyway. After it had subsided, IceStorm resumed firing
down the hall. Fox snuck a quick peek and saw that four of them were crowing
around the doorway. A laser struck the wall next to him, making him jerk
his head back around the corner.
“Forget it, we can’t keep this up,” Fox said. “Use
a grenade, if we keep popping out, we’ll get hit.”
“Me? I thought you brought grenades.”
“I thought you brought ‘em.”
Bill shook his head and coughed a final time. Pangs
of panic began to hit Fox as he looked around the corridor. They couldn’t
keep this up for long. He pointed to Bill’s side and shouted, “Hey, we
can use that!”
Bill looked where he was pointing and raised his
eyebrows. “A fire extinguisher? What the hell you wanna do, give ‘em a
cold?”
Fox rolled hi eyes. “No, we can use it as an explosive.”
“Will that work?” Bill asked, grabbing the red
container from the wall. “I thought that only worked in movies.”
“It’s CO2, right? It’ll explode if shot.”
Bill shrugged. “Worth a try I guess.”
Fox dropped the rifle and took out his pistol,
which he was more accurate with. He took a quick peak around the corner
and saw that the four remaining mercenaries were now in the corridor, moving
towards them. “Just toss it down there and I’ll shoot it.”
“What, in mid-air? What kinda marksman do you think
you are?”
“Just do it, throw high.”
Bill gripped the metal cylinder by the nozzle and
wound back. “Ready?”
Fox nodded and readied the pistol.
“Now!”
Bill spun around the corner and heaved the extinguisher
with a powerful under-hand throw. At the same time, Fox popped out and
aimed over the heads of the soldiers. As soon as he saw the flash of red
enter his sight, he fired off one laser. The red disappeared in a huge
ball of white foam and a loud explosion.
“Ah, shit!” Bill shouted, though it sounded muffled
and far away to Fox. He shook his head, trying to clear the ringing in
ears and looked at the result of his work. As he had expected, the explosion
wasn’t incendiary, the explosion simply turned the metal container into
pieces of deadly shrapnel. The corridor was covered in white foam, and
the four mercenaries lay prone, metal shards sticking out of numerous places.
Fox remembered Bill’s yell and looked over.
“Damn, you alright, man?” he said, crouching by
his friend. Bill had a small shard in his right shoulder and blood soaked
through his flight suit. “This is gonna hurt a bit.” Before he could protest,
Fox yanked the shrapnel out, causing a yelp from Bill, and pushed on the
wound.
“It’s alright, it’s not too deep. Just keep pressure
on it and we’ll get you to the infirmary.”
“Yeah, I’m ok,” Bill grumbled. He nodded towards
the dead mercenaries. “Better than them anyway.”
Fox chuckled and sat back against the wall. His
chuckle turned into a laugh and soon Bill joined him until tears streamed
down their cheeks from laughing so hard. The relief at still being alive
flooded out.
When Fox was back in control, he wiped his eyes
and flicked his headset on. “How’s everything coming with you guys?”
Peppy responded, sounding out of breath. “Good
over here. Eleven confirmed kills…” there was a short pause and a burst
of gunfire from his end. “Twelve. I think they’re pulling back. Falco was
grazed by a laser, but that’s as bad as our casualty’s are. You ok?”
“Yeah, six down here. Bill had a run-in with some
shrapnel, but it’s ok.”
Peppy sighed and continued panting. “I’m getting
too old for this.”
Fox chuckled and said, “You ok, Vixy?”
“Yeah, I’m here. From the looks of it, I’d say
they’re retreating. They seem to be heading back towards the hangar.”
Fox let out a long breath of relief. Everything
was going to be ok. “Great, we got ‘em on the run. Everyone meet up and
we---“
“Oh, no,” Vixy’s voice cut in. “Fox, someone’s
at the door. I see sparks, and---“ There was silence then Fox heard a loud
thump followed by several gunshots. “Fox! FOX!”
Fox’s heart leapt to his throat. “Vixy, are you
ok? Vixy?!”
Silence.
“Oh, God. Peppy, take Falco and Slippy and meet
in the repair hangar hallway, I’m going to check out the security room.”
Fox turned to Bill. “Bill…”
“Forget it, man, don’t worry about me. Go, hurry!”
Panic squeezing his heart and fear fueling his
movements, Fox turned and sprinted towards the security room, praying for
the safety of his fiancé.
* * *
Great Fox
1936 hours
Fox slowly moved towards the entrance to the security
room, gun pointed ahead. Smoke lingered in the air over the cut-down metal
door and two soldiers in IceStorm uniforms lay sprawled on it, smoldering
laser wounds on their torsos. He hesitated at the open doorframe, not wanting
to look in for fear of finding another corpse.
He took a deep breath and popped into the room.
The glow of the numerous security monitors lit the empty room and reflected
off a blaster on the ground. Fox saw that it was the same model he had
give Vixy, and it was still smoking lightly. She was still alive, but that
didn’t comfort Fox much. She was in IceStorm’s hands.
Fox figured they’d be heading for the hangar and
ran down the corridor towards the rec room, which was connected to the
only corridor leading to the hangar. As he neared it he slowed down and
readied his gun. The door slid open and Fox came face to face with what
he had feared.
Stefan stood in the center of the room, where the
team had been relaxing just hours ago. He was slowly backing towards the
hangar door, and head-locked in front of him was a very frightened looking
gray vixen. Stefan saw Fox and brought his silver blaster to Vixy’s head.
“Not another step, Fox, or she gets it.”
Vixy looked wide-eyed at Fox, futilely pulling
at Stefan’s tight grip. Fox’s mind went blank and he started to sweat.
He was terrified of the situation, not for his own life, but because one
of the only lights in his life was under Stefan’s gun.
“Fox…” Vixy said in a shaky voice that wrenched
Fox’s heart to hear.
“Stefan,” Fox said in as steady a voice as he could
muster. “This is between you and me, let her go.”
“Wrong, Fox. This is between my team and your team,
and she’s part of your time, isn’t she? But I know she’s more than just
a teammate to you. After all, you single-handedly infiltrated Overlord
to rescue her. Well, now it’s come to this. You should’ve just surrendered,
Fox.”
“Is this about money, Stefan? You were pissed I
lost you the payment from Venom for Overlord. If it’ll end this whole thing,
name a price. Just please, let her go.”
“Money?” Stefan said, backing up a bit more. “Money
is only part of it. Lylat can’t have both of us, Fox. As long as you’re
around, you’ll continue to fuck up everything I work for. Sorry, but I
can’t let that happen.”
Fox kept pace with his steps until Stefan’s back
was against the door. “So what do we do then? Just keep fighting until
one of us is dead? Fine, then so be it. But she’s not a fighter Stefan.”
The jaguar nodded towards the corridor Fox came
from. “My two dead men back there would say differently. A girl with looks
and shooting skill, nice catch, Fox. But it ends here. I’d love to stay
and chat some more, but my ship is waiting. And it looks like there’s not
enough room for another.” He shook his head in mocking thoughtfulness.
“What to do, what to do.”
“Stefan…”
“This is what you get when you fuck with me, Fox!
If you two have any last words, you better say ‘em now.”
Fox’s heart skipped a beat as he dropped his gun
and ran forward. “Stefan! No!”
Stefan released his headlock and pushed Vixy forward.
Fox thought he was letting her go and relief flooded him.
Then he heard a sharp crack.
What happened next took all of five seconds, but
it would replay slowly in Fox’s dreams for years. Fox reached out towards
Vixy as she stumbled forward, reaching out for him. Her body heaved forward
as a red beam of pure death ripped through her torso, just under her rib
cage, barely missing Fox and spraying her blood on him. Fox could only
stare in horror as Stefan ran through the door, leaving Vixy to stumble
for a few seconds, clutching her chest with look of shock on her face,
then fall backwards onto the white carpet, a spreading pool of blood under
her.
Fox’s trance snapped and he felt like he had been
shot as well. Frantically, he ran over and fell to his knees by Vixy, propping
her up slightly in his arms. He could feel the blood running out of the
wound in her back and began to feel choked up as he realized what was happening.
She was dying in his arms.
“Vixy?” Fox said in a shaky voice, tears streaming
down his cheeks, mingling with the blood…Vixy’s blood. He felt as if his
life was being ripped from him, everything he loved was being taken from
him. She opened her eyes and looked at him with a weak stare.
“Fox…” she said in a low voice, almost a whisper.
Blood ran down the corner of her mouth as she spoke. “Fox…is…is it…bad?”
Fox’s heart felt like it was being literally crushed.
He gripped her hand tight, trying as much to comfort himself as her. Even
a fully stocked hospital probably couldn’t save her.
“You’ll be fine,” Fox replied, the tears flowing
harder.
Vixy slowly raised her other hand and squeezed
Fox’s. Fox could tears forming in her eyes, beginning to run down the side
of her face. She knew also. She knew this was it.
“Oh, God, Vixy…” Fox said weakly, his voice breaking.
“I’m sorry. I’m sorry. This is my fault. God, I’m so sorry…”
“No…” Vixy whispered her voice shaky from crying
and weakness. She opened her closed hand, and in it was the ring, the little
circle of gold that signified so much, so much happiness, so much love.
“Fox…” she continued, sobbing harder, her entire
body quaking with the effort. “I…I would’ve stayed with…you…through anything.
Why…why did this ha…have to…happen? Oh…God…”
Fox didn’t have an answer. He just knelt next to
her, praying that it was all a nightmare he would wake up from. He squeezed
her hand harder and gave her a final kiss. “I love you. Vixy…I’m so sorry…I
love you…”
Vixy gently caressed his face as her eyelids began
to flicker.
“I…love you too…Fox…”
Vixy’s right hand went limp in Fox’s grip and her
left hand fell to the floor, the ring bouncing out and rolling a short
way before falling over on the bloodstained carpet. Her eyes slowly closed
as her head leaned to the side, letting out a final breath.
Fox stared at her, not believing what he was seeing.
The woman whom he had met in Emayn, who had been full of such energy and
determination. The kind, loving vixen whom he had always shared his feelings
with, who had always been there when he was down, who had always made him
feel that he wasn’t alone, that he was loved. That woman, the woman he
loved, who was going to be his wife, had died in his arms.
She was dead.
Dead…
“Vixy!” Fox embraced the limp body of his fiancé
and cried uncontrollably into her shoulder, the blood still running down
her back. “VIXY! NO! Please, God, NO! I’M SORRY! VIXY!”
CHAPTER 9
Shattered Dreams
Two days later
Great Fox, recreation room
1428 hours
Peppy quietly closed the door to Fox’s room and
walked back to the rec room where the team waited for his report. Their
leader had been quiet, almost zombie-like, ever since they found him with
Vixy’s body. He rarely ate or spoke, just sat on his bed staring at his
shelves filled with pictures and memories. The others had feared that it
may be a permanent effect, but Peppy assured them that it was just shock.
Fox had been the same way after his parents had died.
“How is he?” Slippy asked as Peppy entered the
room, eyes avoiding the large rust-colored spot in the rug where they had
tried to clean the bloodstain.
“No change yet,” Peppy sighed, slumping down onto
the couch. “I swear, I can’t believe how much crap he’s had to take in
his life. His parents brutally murdered, the burden of war on him at the
age of eighteen, enduring torture at the hands of his most hated enemy,
then his fiancé shot right in front of him. And he’s always come
out on top, which is amazing. I’m starting to have second thoughts as too
whether he’ll make it through this.”
“Well, how the hell are we gonna know?” Falco said
irritably. “You’re right, the only time I’ve ever seen him like this was
when his parents died, but that was only for a couple days. How long will
he be like this?”
Peppy shrugged. “No way to tell. The only thing
I think we can do is let him work it out. I doubt if any of us will be
much help.”
“Well,” Falco said. “I think one of should be in
here at all times in case he tries some crazy shit like he did in Emayn,
remember? Wouldn’t surprise me if he just blindly went after Stefan.”
Of course they all remembered. After Wolf had made
Fox out to be the bad guy to the townspeople, he just left in the middle
of the night and took basically the entire Venom force on in a rescue attempt
on the hostages taken. It was a miracle he hadn’t been killed, though he
had been seriously wounded. There was a chance he would run off in search
of revenge, and probably without much regard for his own life.
* * *
Great Fox, recreation room
0114 hours
Falco’s eyes snapped open as he was awakened by
a loud crash, like glass breaking. He sat up in the couch and looked around
in the dark, trying to remember where he was. He realized he was still
in the rec room, and cursed himself for falling asleep on his watch. A
low moan caught his attention coming from the same direction as the crashing
sound. He flicked on the light and looked for the source of the noise.
The bar in the rec room, though fully stocked,
was not usually used. The team drank only for special occasions or celebrations,
and Fox seldom drank for any occasions at all, at least on the Great Fox.
His view was that he should always be clear-minded in case something came
up, which was a good point. That early morning as Falco looked at him sitting
at the bar, he looked anything but clear-minded.
Falco slowly walked over and saw that his head
was down on the wood counter, his right hand clutching a shot glass full
of brown liquid. A two-thirds full bottle of whiskey stood next to the
glass, a pool of its contents surrounding it on the bar where Fox had apparently
missed the glass. As Falco neared him, Fox slowly raised his head and downed
the entire glass of whiskey in one gulp, then shakily put his head back
down.
Falco took another step forward and glass crunched
under his boots, where the remains of a shot glass were spread. Fox probably
dropped it off the bar in his condition. The sound roused his friend and
he slowly turned his head to look at him with dull eyes. Falco didn’t like
the look at all.
“Hey ‘re, buddy,” Fox mumbled in a slurred voice.
“Wha’ ya doin’ up this late?”
“Fox, are you ok? Was that bottle full when you
came out here?”
Fox moved his shoulders slightly, which could be
passed off as a shrug. “I’m a’ight. Ne’re beddur. Wha’ bottle? Oh, that…”
He grabbed the bottle and poured another full glass, most of it spilling
onto the table in his shaky hand. “Ya wa’ some? Plenny here.” He started
giggling into the counter for a few seconds, then gulped down the whiskey.
Falco shuddered. His father had been an alcoholic,
and he was anything but giggly when he was drunk. He definitely didn’t
like seeing his friend like this and he knew he had to make Fox stop.
“No, Fox, listen. Don’t you think you’ve had enough?
Come on, I’ll take you back to your room.” He moved towards Fox, ready
to steer clear in case he threw up in his direction. Fox mumbled something
into the table and knocked over the bottle as he reached for it again.
It rolled off the bar and smashed on the tile surrounding the wood counter.
Fox giggled a little more and slumped back down.
Falco carefully put an arm around Fox and helped
him up, supporting most of his weight. “Come on man, you’ll be ok. Just
get some sleep, ok?”
Fox put his arm around Falco’s shoulder and slowly
dragged his feet along the carpet, mumbling and swaying. They were almost
to the door when Fox stopped dead in his tracks, making Falco almost fall
over.
“What is it? Come on, man, the door’s…” Falco cut
short as he saw where Fox’s glazed and vacant eyes were staring: the circular
reddish-brown stain ten feet away on the carpet. Fox suddenly fell to his
hands and knees, his head down, and Falco could hear him sobbing.
“Her…her blood…” Fox stammered in between sobs,
his voice slightly clearer than it had been. “Her…blood…it…it…it was…all…OVER
ME. And…she was…she was…dead…she said…’I love you’…then…she was DEAD. Her
blood…her blood…” He stopped trying to talk and cried into the carpet.
Falco crouched down next to his friend and put
a hand on his shoulder. There wasn’t enough alcohol in the entire galaxy
to drown out the pain Fox was feeling. He couldn’t imagine how Fox was
feeling, and he hoped he never had to, let alone three times.
He sat there, trying to think of a way to comfort
Fox, but not seeing any possibilities. There was no such thing as comfort
in this bad a situation, as Falco had learned back at the Academy when
Fox’s parents had died. Fox just brooded for a few days, then seemed normal
again, if not a bit more serious. But this was more than brooding. As far
as Falco could remember, Fox had been drunk only once in his life, and
it was for fun, not to drown pain.
Eventually, the sobbing subsided and Falco was
able to help Fox up again and support him the rest of the way to his room.
Hoping the sleep would sober him up, Falco left him snoring in his bed
and made his way back to the rec room, in case Fox woke up and felt like
another round. It wasn’t long before he again fell asleep on the couch.
* * *
Great Fox, recreation room
1256 hours
“I’m telling you, he shoulda been out by now,” Peppy
said, glancing at the wall clock for the umpteenth time that hour. Since
Vixy’s death, Fox had been seen about three times a day, if that. One of
those times was always in the morning, and Peppy was still too concerned
about Fox’s condition not to worry.”
“I told you, he’s probably still knocked out from
last night,” Falco replied from the couch where he was watching TV with
Slippy. Bill was still off in his room. “It even surprised ME how much
he drank.”
“And he wouldn’t be like that if someone had stayed
awake during his watch.”
Falco rolled his eyes and stood up. “Ok, ok, I
fucked up, I get it. Fine, if it’ll make you feel better, I’ll go check
on him. Ok?”
“Ok.”
He left the room and walked towards Fox’s quarters,
suddenly seeing why Peppy so worried. Falco had left Fox on his back, which
wasn’t smart. If Fox was as wasted as he looked, he could’ve choked on
his vomit. And if we woke up with a bad hangover, he might try something
stupid. Falco had taken Fox’s blaster from his room when he dropped him
off early that morning. One of the many lessons he had learned growing
up in his household headed by an abusive father was to never let a drunk
person have access to a weapon.
As Falco neared Fox’s door, he heard a faint clicking
sound coming from inside the room. He couldn’t identify the sound and tried
to think of what could make it. Slowly he opened the door and looked into
the dimly lit room.
Fox sat on the edge of his bed, his left side to
the door. Falco could see an empty glass case on the floor and remembered
that Fox had kept an antique bullet-firing gun in one up one his shelf.
He saw it on the bed next to Fox, with his friend looking down at something
in his hands. A few seconds later the clicking stopped and Fox dropped
a handful of bullets beside the gun on the bed.
Fox’s movements were purposeful, not at all like
the drunken randomness from earlier. Falco looked on in silence, either
not understanding what Fox was thinking, or not wanting to believe. Fox
picked up one of the bullets from the pile and held it up in front of his
face, staring at it as if contemplating whether it really existed. Slowly
he lowered it and clicked it into the clip in his hand.
Falco snapped awake as Fox picked up the clip and
slammed it into the pistol. He stared at the pistol, taking deep breaths,
and, with one swift move, clenched his eyes shut and brought the pistol
under the back of his muzzle, pointed upwards.
“No! Fox!” Falco dove into the room and tackled
his friend, knocking his arm away as he pulled the trigger. The loud crack
made his ears ring as he and Fox fell to the ground in a heap. After hopping
to his feet, Falco picked up a dazed-looking Fox by his jacket lapels and
slammed him against the wall.
“What the hell were you thinking?!” he yelled in
Fox’s face. “You were about to blow your fuckin’ brains out! Do you realize
that?!”
Fox looked genuinely surprised as he stared at
Falco, then at the gun in his hand. He dropped the gun as if it had suddenly
become very hot and slowly shook his head, whispering, “Oh, my God…”
Fox embraced Falco and softly cried on his shoulder.
Falco hugged him back, finding himself in the unfamiliar role of the comforter
for the second time that day.
“It’s ok, man,” he said gently, patting him on
the back. “You won’t do any good dead. She wouldn’t want it like this.
We’re here for you.”
Falco heard running footsteps from out in the hallway
then Peppy’s voice. “What the hell was that? Was that a gunshot?”
Falco shook his head and mouthed, “Not now” to
him. Peppy saw Fox’s condition, then the gun and pile of bullets. Falco
guessed he pieced together what happened, because he muttered, “Oh, God”
and backed out of the room. None of them had even considered that Fox would
kill himself. Falco knew everyone had their limit before they decided that
life wasn’t worth living. Some of these people succeeded in suicide, but
some, a small number that he had seen, rebounded and instead succeeded
in living a normal, happy life. It was only a question of which path Fox
would choose, and only he could decide.
***
Great Fox, Fox’s quarters
1541 hours
Fox,
Something my father told me after the first battle on Emayn. It stuck with me and I always remember it.
“People are like stained glass windows. Sure, they sparkle and shine when the sun is out, but when the darkness sets in, their true beauty is revealed only if there is a light from within.”
I know you’ll succeed, Fox.
Forever your love,
Vixy
Fox slowly reread the note over and over again,
the note Vixy had given to him in her room what seemed like a century ago.
She had been there for him when he had felt the pressures of the situation
pushing on him. That night, in her room, she had made everything better.
But she wasn’t there this time, and she would never be there again. Fox
was alone.
Fox swallowed back fresh tears and folded the note
back up. He was still shocked from his whole episode with Falco. He knew
what he was doing when he put the gun to his head, but it somehow felt
unreal, like it was a dream that he would wake up from if he pulled the
trigger. Falco had saved his life, and all thoughts of suicide were wiped
from his mind. He knew it was for real. His friend was right, he couldn’t
do any good dead, and it wasn’t what Vixy would’ve wanted.
After he had composed himself, Fox finally convinced
his team that he was fine, that he was thinking clearly. He gave in and
let them take anything they considered dangerous from his room, and only
then let him be alone. Fox loved his team, but he just needed time to think,
and hoped they understood that. Time to think, and time to plot.
Surprisingly, Fox hadn’t even thought about Stefan
until that day. After reading Vixy’s note a few more times, the jaguar
was all he could think of. His hatred had been repressed by grief, but
now that Fox was under control of his pain, his rage surfaced. He hadn’t
felt such hatred towards someone for a long time. Not even Wolf O’Donnell
reached this level. The sole owner of the level had been Andross.
Fox realized he was shaking and took a few deep
breaths to calm himself down. He knew what he had to do, and he also knew
his team wouldn’t go along with it, not in the condition they thought him
to be in. It couldn’t wait any longer. Even if revenge was not an issue,
they were still at war with IceStorm. Fox just wanted it over once and
for all.
‘I know you’ll succeed, Fox.’
‘Forever your love.’
‘Forever your love…’
With a clear goal in mind, Fox felt at peace. He
folded the note and replaced it on his shelf, then lay back on the bed.
He needed to get some sleep. It was going to be a long night.
CHAPTER 10
Last Resort
The next morning
Great Fox, recreation room
0942 hours
“Guys, what the hell is this?” Bill entered the
rec room waving a piece of paper in the air. “I went in to check on Fox
and this was on his bed.”
Peppy’s heart skipped a beat as his first thought
was that it was a suicide note. He jumped up and grabbed it from Bill as
the others huddled around him to read it.
Left for a vacation in Corneria City. 276-487-9103.
--Fox
“Vacation?” Slippy said in a surprised tone. “Why
would he just leave without telling us?”
Peppy shrugged. “Not only that, but he wouldn’t
go to Corneria City. He’ll be seen there.”
“Well, he isn’t exactly in the best frame of mind,”
Bill replied, taking the note back. “What about this number? Looks like
a phone number. Should we call it?”
Falco shrugged. “Why not?”
“Don’t use visual, only voice,” Peppy said. “We’re
still wanted, remember.”
“How could I forget?” Bill mumbled, walking over
to the phone on the wall. He picked up the receiver used for voice-only
calls and punched in the number from the note.
“Hi…oh, sorry, wrong number.” He hung up the receiver
and turned to the others. “Looks like he really just went on vacation.
It’s a hotel in the city, Corneria Grand. He’s taking a hell of a risk
for a vacation.”
Peppy nodded. “Yeah, well he---“
“Wait!” Slippy shouted, sprinting out of the room.
“What the hell was that all about?” Falco said,
receiving a shrug from Peppy and Bill. A few minutes later, Slippy returned
with a panicked look on his face.
“Guys! Remember when I was talking about the IceStorm
bases and I said that a hotel in Corneria City was a suspected front for
one of them?”
Peppy’s jaw dropped along with Falco’s and Bill’s.
“Oh, no…don’t tell me.”
“Yeah, the name is Corneria Grand. He’s going after
Stefan.”
“But how could Fox know?” Falco asked. “You never
told us the name.”
“Well, I never said anything because I didn’t think
it really meant anything, but when I went to my computer this morning,
the record showed that someone logged on really early this morning, around
four AM. I thought it was just a glitch.”
Bill shook his head in amazement. “Damn man, does
he usually do shit like this?”
“Actually, yeah, he does,” Peppy said. “On Emayn,
he ran off in almost the same way, just leaving us a note. Dammit, we should’ve
seen this coming.”
“So what do we do now?” Slippy asked.
“What else?” Peppy said, heading towards the door.
“We go after him.”
* * *
Cornerian Army Headquarters, Corneria City, General Pepper’s office
1107 hours
General Pepper stood at his desk, about to head
down to the base’s cafeteria for lunch when the viewscreen rang. Cursing
his luck, he hit the receive button and was greeted by a blank screen and
what sounded like traffic in the background.
“Hello? This is General Pepper, who is this?”
“It’s me.”
Pepper was surprised as he heard Fox McCloud on
the other end. “Fox? Where are you calling from?”
“I’m on a cell phone in Corneria City. Listen to
me, I want to end this. Now. You know the Corneria Grand hotel?”
“Yes.”
“It’s a front for IceStorm. They---“
“How do you know that?” Pepper asked, not sure
where the conversation was heading. “It’s classified.”
“I know, I have your files. That’s what I was there
for when we had our little run-in. Listen to me, IceStorm framed me, and
they recently tried an attack on the Great Fox. I don’t care if you believe
me now, but I can prove it. You want me, now you know where to get me.
I’m heading there now.”
“Wait, you’re going there alone? Fox, that’s suicide.
If they really have it out for you, you won’t be able to get in. According
to our investigations, everyone who works there is a part of IceStorm.”
“I know, but it’s the only way to end this.”
“Fox,” Pepper said in a calm tone, the same way
he had tried to talk Fox into releasing the hostage in their confrontation.
“Don’t do this. It doesn’t matter what happened, I don’t want to see you
dead. Think of your team. Think of Vixy. She---“
“Vixy’s dead,” Fox cut in with a low voice. “I’m
doing this as much for her as I am for me.”
Pepper was stunned into silence, and finally managed,
“God, I’m sorry Fox. How did it happen?”
“Stefan,” he replied in a distant voice. “I’ll
tell you all about it over coffee someday, but just get a force over here
now.”
Pepper was about to reply with another attempt
to convince him to back off when he heard a click and the traffic noise
vanished. He sighed and switched off the receiver, sitting back down in
his chair. After a few minutes of thought he punched in the number for
the control room.
“Control room,” came the female voice.
“This is General Pepper. Announce for the Strike
Team One’s commander to meet me in conference room A, urgent.”
* * *
Corneria City
1116 hours
Fox watched Stefan walk in the front door of the
Corneria Grand hotel as he clicked off the cell phone and tossed it on
the passenger seat of the stolen car. He could see the entire front of
the thirty-floor hotel from his parking space across the street and made
the call when he saw Stefan’s chauffeured car pull up under the covered
area by the front door. The valet and bellboys looked nervous by his presence,
which suggested that Pepper was right in saying all the staff was IceStorm.
Fox knew Stefan would head for the thirtieth floor.
All floors except the twenty-eighth and above were actual hotel rooms.
The top three were IceStorm facilities with Stefan’s office on the thirtieth.
All Fox had to do is get to the elevator in the lobby, preferably unnoticed,
and ride to the top. His only target was Stefan, he didn’t care about the
others.
A shudder ran through Fox’s body as he remembered
his last moments with Vixy. And the blood…so much blood. He shook his head
hard, concentrating instead on the front of the hotel. He had to get to
Stefan before the Cornerian strike team did, and get him to talk. Then
finish him.
Fox took out his pistol, checking the clip and
flicking the safety off. He’d have the element of surprise on the valet
and bellboys, and the only other staff in the lobby should be the concierge
at the front desk. He had dealt with worse.
With a deep breath, Fox holstered the gun and started
up the car. The hotel loomed over him as he drove over and under the “Corneria
Grand” sign, pulling to a stop at the front door to his right. He casually
got out of the car and tossed the keys to the shocked canine valet on the
other side”
“Here, take care of this for me, will you?” he
said in a conversational tone. The valet grabbed for a gun under his jacket,
but Fox was prepared and shot him in the chest. He turned on the two bellboys
and dropped one before the other returned fire, forcing him to duck behind
the car.
Fox peaked around the front of the car and saw
another bellboy rushing out the front door to help the other. Seeing two
bellboys with guns made Fox grin, despite the danger. “Any other day, this
might seem odd,” he muttered to himself, ducking back behind the car. He
waited until he heard the click of a pistol clip release and popped up,
shooting them as they reloaded.
Fox jogged to the front door, grabbing on the dead
bellboys’ pistol in his left hand, and entered. The concierge at the front
desk was ready for him and fired off three rounds at him. He rolled to
the side on the thick carpet, the lasers just missing him and shattering
the glass on the front doors. Fox fired from where he lay with both pistols
and dropped the concierge.
Fox hopped to his feet as the twenty or so civilians
in the lobby screamed and ran towards the door. A detail Fox had forgotten
was the civilians. He looked around, spotting a fire alarm on the nearby
wall, and pulled it. A loud resonating alarm went off, accompanied by red
flashers on the walls. The stairwell doors opened as confused-looking people
exited into the lobby and saw the ruthless, heartless traitor Fox McCloud,
as if to emphasize that they should leave immediately.
After the flood of people had thinned, Fox jogged
towards the elevator, but was stopped by a voice from behind the front
desk. He whirled around and aimed, but there was no one there except the
lifeless body of the concierge. The voice was coming from a radio on his
belt.
“What’s going on down there? Why did the alarm
go off? Is anyone there? Answer me!” then after a few seconds of silence,
“We’re sending a squad down.”
“Shit,” Fox mumbled and ran to the elevator. He
pushed the call button and saw, to his dismay, that it was a cylindrical
glass elevator. He kept hitting the button frantically, as if it would
make the elevator go faster and eyed the stairwell. It finally arrived
and Fox hopped in, hitting the ‘30’ button just as the stairwell door swung
open and five people in IceStorm uniforms rushed out.
Fox hit the floor of the elevator and covered his
head as the soldiers spotted him and fired, shattering the glass around
him. He fired his entire clip back down at them blindly, not daring to
expose his head, and the firing ceased as they lost a clear shot.
Fox slowly stood up and reloaded as the elevator
neared the top. He pointed it forward and, after a musical ding and the
doors sliding open, stepped out. As the doors closed, he heard a commotion
from down in the lobby, followed by more shooting. “Looks like the cavalry
arrived,” Fox muttered as the doors snapped shut. He had to get to Stefan
quickly.
The hallway looked like any other in the hotel,
but each room belonged to an IceStorm member. The halls were deserted,
thanks to either the fire alarm or the fight downstairs, but Stefan was
no fighter. He would still be in his office, leaving the fight to his men.
Fox tried to remember the building’s blueprint from Pepper’s file and moved
towards the office.
The eerie silence continued as Fox crept down the
red-carpeted hallway, the trigger of his blaster already pulled back halfway.
He finally reached a heavy wooden door marked “Manager” and put his ear
to it.
“The Cornerian army?! What are you talking about?!”
Fox recognized Stefan’s voice. Another person in the room nervously answered
him.
“I don’t know, sir, that’s the report from downstairs.
They say someone got on an elevator, then the Cornerian strike team showed
up at the door. They think they got the guy in the elevator.”
“Well, why don’t you go find out for sure? I’m
not paying you to think! And get my shuttle ready on the roof.”
“Yes, sir.”
Fox slid to the side as the soldier opened the
door and walked down the hall. After he turned the corner, Fox took a deep
breath and popped into the room. Stefan was just walking around his big
wooden desk in the middle of the red carpet when he looked up with a surprised
expression.
“Don’t move,” Fox said harshly, aiming his gun
at Stefan’s head. The sight of him brought Fox’s blood to a boil with rage
again, but he repressed it. He needed the confession first.
“Fox,” Stefan said with a sigh. “I should’ve known.
How the hell do you know about this place?”
“Why did you kill Vixy?” Fox demanded, ignoring
his question. “You didn’t have to.”
Stefan slit his eyes and scowled. “Why not? As
I said, we were at war, and she was a member of your team.”
“You know damn well she wasn’t!” Fox shouted, his
attempts at controlling his anger becoming increasingly difficult. “She
was a damn civilian, she was no fighter!”
“What does it matter now?” Stefan replied in a
calm voice, which angered Fox even more for some reason. “I know why you’re
here, so just kill me and get it over with. You won’t make it out alive
if you do, though, if my men don’t get you the Cornerian soldiers will.”
“I need to know something first, something that’s
been bothering me. Why did you frame me? It would’ve been easier to wait
until I was alone to kill me, or even just an outright attack.”
Stefan laughed and shook his head. “Oh, Fox, you’d
never understand. You’ve always been well off, always been the hero. You
don’t know what it’s like to be on the defeated side, to have your enemy
higher than you. Framing you was a stroke of genius! I had to make them
HATE you, only then could I kill you and your damn team. You have no idea
of the satisfaction I felt from blowing that whore to hell.”
Fox’s rage broke his repressive barriers and he
fired. His hand was shaking so bad that his two shots hit Stefan in his
left leg and right shoulder, and he fell to the ground with a yell of pain.
Fox took deep, raspy breaths and tried to settle his aim through the red
haze of anger. He was about to pull the trigger again when he heard a voice
from behind.
“Freeze! Hands up, now!”
The haze disappeared and Fox’s grasp on the trigger
relaxed. He began to breathe normally again, knowing that he couldn’t let
his anger take over again. The Cornerian soldiers behind him wouldn’t hesitate
to drop him if he fired on Stefan. Slowly he raised his hands over his
head.
“Drop the gun!”
Fox let the pistol dangle from his finger by the
trigger guard, then dropped it with a soft thud on the carpet. He slowly
turned around to see four black-clad soldiers aiming their rifles at him,
Pepper standing behind them.
Fox slowly reached for his inside jacket pocket
and the soldier’s tensed. Fox raised his eyebrows questioningly at Pepper,
and the general nodded. Fox reached in nad pulled out a small metallic
object, which everyone in the room, including the groaning Stefan on the
floor, squinted to see. It was a recorder.
Fox pushed the rewind button, then stopped it after
a few seconds and played it. The muffled voices of Fox and Stefan broke
the silence.
‘---hell do you know about this place?’
‘Why did you kill Vixy? You didn’t have to.’
‘Why not? As I said, we were at war, and she was
a member of your team.’
‘You know damn well she wasn’t! She was a damn
civilian, she was no fighter.’
‘What does it matter now? I know why you’re here,
so just kill me and get it over with. You won’t make it out alive if you
do, though, if my men don’t get you the Cornerian soldiers will.’
‘I need to know something first, something that’s
been bothering me. Why did you frame me? It would’ve been easier to wait
until I was alone to kill me, or even just an outright attack.’
‘Oh, Fox, you’d never understand. You’ve always
been well off, always been the hero. You don’t know what it’s like to be
on the defeated side, to have your enemy higher than you. Framing you was
a stroke of genius! I had to make them HATE you, only then could I kill
you and your damn team. You have no idea of the satisfaction I felt from
blowing that whore to hell.’
Fox stopped the recorder and tossed it to Pepper,
who caught it awkwardly, a stunned look on his face. Fox walked over to
Stefan, crouched beside him and grabbed him roughly by his lapels.
“I’m not going to kill you,” he growled, his muzzle
an inch from Stefan’s. “That’s too good for you. Instead, you’re going
to spend the rest of your life rotting away in a cell, knowing that Fox
McCloud beat you again, and you failed.” He let go of the moaning jaguar
and turned to Pepper.
“And she’d still be alive if you had just believed
me, and helped me! You never even gave me a chance!” He walked past Pepper,
the soldiers standing aside, and turned to him long enough to say almost
in a whisper, “I never want to talk to you again,” then walk out.
Pepper stood in silence for a moment, staring at
the recorder in his hand, then pointed to Stefan. “Take him away.”
Pepper was relieved that Fox was not guilty, but
felt terrible at the way he treated him. He never even considered what
Fox had done in the past, not to mention their friendship. He was completely
fooled, just as the rest of the galaxy was, and now he had to pay for it
with the loss of their friendship.
“Sir,” one of the soldiers said. “The guards at
the front door say that the rest of StarFox just showed and request orders.”
“Let them go,” Pepper said, relieved that he was
finally able to say it. “Let them all go, they’re innocent.”
EPILOGUE
Three days later
Cornerian Army Headquarters, Corneria City, General Pepper’s office
1341 hours
It was a cold, rainy day when Pepper went in for
work that morning, and it reflected his mood perfectly. He hadn’t been
able to get back into routine since that day in the hotel, and the investigations
into IceStorm’s activities have turned up little. He stared at his desk,
deep in thought, when there was the familiar two knocks on his door, one
of the guards.
“What?” Pepper grumbled.
The door opened and a guard popped his head in.
“Sir, there’s someone here to see you.”
“Well, who is it?”
“Fox McCloud, sir.”
Pepper’s eyes widened in surprise. He remembered
the last thing Fox had said to him in the hotel, that he never wanted to
talk to him again. Pepper couldn’t blame him either.
“Let him in.”
The guard disappeared back into the corridor and
the door opened wider as Fox walked in, looking a little embarrassed, and
closed the door behind him. “Hi.”
“Hi, Fox,” Pepper replied awkwardly. “Take a seat.”
Fox sat in the right chair and glanced over his
shoulder. “The guard on the left kept looking at me weird.”
Pepper chuckled. “I believe it. He’s the one you
used as a shield.”
Fox grinned nervously. “Oh,” He fidgeted a bit
more, then continued. “Listen, I just wanted to stop by to apologize for
what I said. I know how bad it looked from the evidence, I can’t blame
you for what you thought.”
Pepper shook his head. “No, I should’ve listened.
I should’ve at least given you a chance. We were friends, Fox, and I should’ve
seen it.”
Fox shrugged. “Well, it doesn’t really matter now,
it’s over. We both made our mistakes. I just want to move on, leave this
in the past. I was just angry, I shouldn’t have said those things out there
in the corridor.”
Pepper nodded. “Listen, about Vixy…”
“Forget it,” Fox cut in. “She’s dead because of
me, because of my job, and I have to live with that. I know how my father
felt, he had to live with it too.”
“I’m sorry, Fox. I know you were going to propose.”
“I did…she said yes…” his voice trailed off. An
awkward silence followed for a few moments, then Fox stood up. “Well, I’ll
get going. I just wanted to apologize, and StarFox is still open for business
if something comes up.”
Pepper stood also. “You might just get something
soon. We’re digging through everything in that hotel, and something might
surface about Venom.”
“Good,” Fox extended his hand and Pepper slowly
took it. They shook hands for the first time since what seemed like an
eternity ago, and Fox turned for the door.
“Where are you off to now?” Pepper asked after
him. “The military’s formal public apology was all over the news, so you’re
in the clear again.”
“Back to business as usual, I guess,” Fox replied,
opening the door. “The war’s not over yet, not yet. Venom’s forces are
still out there, and I made a promise that I wouldn’t stop until they’re
gone. For now though,” he turned up his collar in preparation for heading
out into the rain. “I have a third grave to visit.”
He closed the door and headed to the exit of the
base. It felt good to be able to walk through the base again instead of
sneaking around and avoiding his old friends. As he walked out the front
door, rain pounding on the streets and soaking him immediately, he thought
back to what he had said.
It’s not over.
Not yet.
To be continued...
[Special thanks to JPB and JJC for their support and input and pointing
out those errors that my spellcheck somehow misses =P
Also, special thanks to Kryssie for her moral support through those tough
spots and writer's block, inspiring me even when she doesn't know it =)
It was a long story, and you all made it possible.]