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Strays [Strays] The Higaflan Mutant Crisis

Freehold - The Great Cerg

Surface, City Outskirts


An hour later, Vega stood with her team, her repairs complete and her Dynamiteon ready for whatever came next. The tunnel they had fought their way through was behind them now, but her focus had shifted entirely to the massive construct before her. Some of the others were calling it a “landship,” though the term hardly seemed to capture its scale. The hulking structure loomed within the pit like a beached leviathan, its rusted bulk scarred and aged by years of use—or neglect. From her vantage point on the lip of the bowl-shaped arena, Vega watched, silent and still, as the chaos below played out.

In the pit, small groups of beings fought viciously, their silhouettes flickering in and out of view as dust and smoke swirled through the heavy air. The cacophony of distant shouts, the clash of weapons, and the crackle of energy fire reverberated up toward her, blending with the quieter conversation among her team. Vega’s red-on-black eyes narrowed as she observed the struggle. The fighters seemed desperate, scrappy—just like her team had been not so long ago.

She half-listened to the discussion playing out nearby, words filtering through her thoughts like smoke through her fingers. Chips and Joe’s voices anchored her to the present. She heard Joe praise Huthang and Yam for their resolve, the faint note of encouragement barely masking the pragmatic tone that followed.

His words echoed across the pit as Vega’s gaze drifted over the landship’s enormous frame. It was true: taking such a construct was no small feat. Its sheer size hinted at the thousand—or more—crew it might house. The battle raging below was brutal, but for now, it was contained. As long as the crew inside held the line and the tech-raiders didn’t get a foothold, the odds were surprisingly balanced.

Vega frowned, the analytical part of her mind ticking through possibilities. Joe’s assessment was hard to argue with. This wasn’t their fight—yet.

“We also don’t owe them nothin’,” Chips added coldly, and Vega couldn’t help but glance his way. His blunt practicality rang hollow in her ears, though she couldn’t deny the truth in it. The idea of stepping in—of saving a struggling crew for little more than a “favor” and fleeting goodwill—was a risky play, and in their line of work, altruism rarely paid dividends. Chips wasn’t wrong. Letting the two sides weaken each other did present an opportunity. A cruel opportunity, but an opportunity nonetheless.

Her eyes flicked toward the others scattered along the pit’s edge. Voidfolk, scavengers, and rogue tech crews mingled nearby, watching the fight with their own quiet agendas. They were like vultures circling a dying animal, waiting to see which side would fall first before making their move. Vega felt the tension in the air, like a wire pulled taut and ready to snap. Everyone here was thinking the same thing: Who wins? Who loses? And how do we profit from it?

Chips’s voice brought her attention back as he moved toward the edge of his cockpit, his last words cutting through the tense quiet. Vega watched as he casually dropped from his cockpit, the lower gravity of the area softening his descent as he landed with an awkward stumble. Chips almost faceplanted, but in typical fashion, he recovered quickly, already walking toward the nearest group of Voidfolk. The Inheritor joined him, the two of them moving off into the growing crowd, leaving Vega and the rest of the team scattered along the bowl’s edge.

For a moment, Vega remained still, her gaze lingering on the landship as her thoughts churned. It wasn’t just a rust bucket to her—it was potential. A landship like that could change the tide for a group like theirs, turning scavengers into something greater. Yet, it was also a liability. If they tried to take it now, they’d be torn apart between the two sides still duking it out below. But waiting too long meant the opportunity might slip through their fingers, claimed by someone else—or reduced to little more than scrap.

Vega exhaled slowly, her second pair of hands curling against the sides of her jacket as she forced herself to stay grounded. The pit was loud, alive with motion, yet her focus remained sharp. Let Chips play the diplomat, she thought. Her own skills were better suited for the fight that might come next. Whatever plan the others devised, she’d be ready—her Mech repaired, her weapons primed, and her resolve steady. She would follow orders, but she would also keep an eye on the landship, that hulking beast of rusted potential, as if she could already see its future: rising from the pit, under their command.

Her attention went to Lisa, she liked her, she seemed nice, "so we going then?' she asked for confirmation.
 
Yamog, on the other hand, was very much uncombfertable with letting Roger Chips handle the negotiations. They didn't have a nuke at hand this time, which made the grizzly potential either worse or better, depending on how you looked at it... Still, wasn't sitting on the fence just as bad?... Those trapped in the giant tank could probably detect the Strays just sitting up here... That made them vultures, carrion feeders, just as bad as the tech scum swarming around the trapped goliath...

The other four armed girl watched Lisa leave with a similar bodily posture, through their tone was a little more dour. "I'm... not happy about this... Going in without a plan? That's bad news..."

Monoeyed gaze slipped across the mechs availble, and considered their general options, then glanced across the sillohette of the vast fallen tower before them.

"...You know, my flyswatter is retooled for slicin', Vega's got a light little skipper for nailing footsloggers, and Huthang's scorpion is kinda flat- What do you say we's all have a look at the bottom of that megatower, and sees if we can't climb up inside?..."

Yeah, that would certainly get them to the tank without being shot at... If the enemy had the same idea through, that might be problematic.
 
Freehold - The Great Cerg
Surface, Rim of the Pit


Except for when executing an ambush, Huthang had no great experience or intuition in matters of tactics or strategy. This in large part helped explain why the mutant had no idea how to best organise their eclectic group for the coming fight. Technically, he supposed there wasn't even a need to fight as the Strays could certainly scuttle away with their collective tails between their legs. Unfortunately Huthang really didn't want to run away - there was just something about that giant mobile landship that called to him, resonating on some deep level like a siren call to his soul. As a result, his current thoughts were along the lines of: 'Step One: Free landship. Step Two: ????. Step Three: ????. Step Four: ????. Step Five: Drive off into the Freehold sunset atop of our rusty nothing-like-new mobile base.'

He turned his attention to the tactical displays, considering his options. While his glassmaker had the power and range to do the job, Huthang wasn't sure that the temporary repairs would hold up enough for accurate sniping attacks against the weakpoints on the spider mechs' legs. Then there were the macro lasers, which could put a dent in the enemy army, but after the battles in the tunnels Huthang wasn't confident he had a sufficient supply of energy cells to handle enough of the enemy to make much of a difference there. His Scorpion had a limited number of missiles left and the available payloads rendered them as weapons of opportunity. There were always the Trencher and Claw, but the mutant was entirely confident that the enemy would shoot him to death long before he could go all psycho squid and stab the enemy to death. No - if he was going to make an effective contribution to coming fracas, it would be with the glassmaker.

So, unless he was missing something obvious, that significantly reduced his effective options. Huthang had a feeling that the others wouldn't end up in favour of an all out battle so his actions would have to be surgical. As much fun as sniping the legs off of the spider mechs appealed to him, the mutant knew that such wasn't the best option. His eyes once more moved over to the spire pinning the landship in place. Enough sustained fire might sever the spire, or maybe...

"Titania, the cables fouling that spire pinning the landship in place? Think we can cut them?" While his faerie ran the math on that, Huthang switched to the Strays' comm channel. "Okay, Titania is running the math, but I reckon I can cut away enough of the crap holding our new base in place to let it move away..." The mutant snorted.
"Anyone want to play distraction? Or make the run to our new base so they can be clued in?"
 
Tunnels, After the battle

Joanna climbed out of the cockpit of her Dynamiteon, assessing the damage it took during the battle. Seeing the side that just tanked a plasma shot, flashing a light on its warped surfaces, she sighs. She starts working immediately, planning to get it to an adequate condition for combat. Her mech now recharging, she goes around for parts that she could use to cover up the now bare structure of her mech's left side. After a while of tinkering, the worn-out areas were covered by plates that was just salvaged, and on top of it, a large metal panel that acts a shield has been attached to the left knee.

-------------------

Surface, outskirts of the city

Standing alongside the rest of the Strays, Joanna listens in to the chatter. They have a point, it might be better for them to wait and pounce once only one side is left, it isn't pretty but she is aware of their current situation. She watches in silence as Chips and the Inheritor walk away. A plan that lets them win without needing to directly confront an entire army? Sounds like something from a TV show where a student who plays chess leads a group of rebels. She looks at the hulking landship pinned down by a pillar and the chaotic fireworks at the bottom of the pit. She knows that even with her unit's speed, the sheer number of enemies down there would quickly overwhelm her and even if it didn't, her batteries would be drained very quickly.

"Everyone down there is fighting for their lives" Ilayd said with a sad tone, referring to the battle in the pit.

But the bunny and Fairy's moment of contemplating was interrupted upon hearing Huthang's plan.
 
Freehold - Surface, Above the Pit

<Maybe!> Huthangs fairy, titania chimed quizzicly after doing some processing before clarifying, <You wouldn't have to cut all of them; Just enough for the weight to shift enough for the end to slide and then let gravity do the rest!>

She continued to explain that while the tower was clearly bent and under stress it was not under significant tension and would not flex or snap back if they managed the feat but that there was a sum greater than zero chance that cutting enough cable to cause the further end of the tower to shift and slide off of the landship might cause it to swing like a pendulum and that the weight might pull more of the tower down with it. And while it wouldn't be in the path of landing atop the landship it could potentially cause a stress fracture in the tower where it had bent and bowed over to capitulate and take the rest of the tower down into the pit; with whoever was on it along with it.

Though she also stressed they could always just eject or somehow manage to run 'really fast' back down it and whatever section collapsed with it and hope they made it in time. That with all their jumpjets none of their fairies saw any hope of breaking that kind of fall with the drop at hand that didn't end in being crushed into what Titania described as 'smushed'.

Looking from where they were at they could make it to the tower rather easily. Past most of the other onlookers and following the lip they could see around a few structures and up a level to a slightly higher elevation through what looked like some kind of highway onramp or exit that ended right where the spire had crashed through it and still pressed up against. From there the spire seemed to start at a verticle angle from wherever it started in the ground at some base before bowing and bending like a fishing rod getting progressively more level and horizontal before it seemed to break into several chain-like segments of spire and exposed cabling which rested on and then dropped over onto the landship and then onto their side of the pit almost like a bridge where it had crashed into their section of the city and currently rested.

To get to the flange of the spire was the easy part; Just follow the lip!

To get to the nearest section of cable to cut would require using their mech to jump from one section of spire to the other multiple times over the breaks where the cabling was exposed and couldn't be more than five to ten meter gaps each but would be required to reach the helpfully highlighted segment areas their Fairys marked that would need to be cut practically right ontop of the landship.

Their mechs could easily maglock to the spire... Probably. With just about everything on freehold exposed to the void there was enough conducted metal used in the structures it was good odds. But doing so would limit their speed for the sake of safety and mean whoever amongst them chose to go cut at the cable would need to go in a single-file line, hopping one at a time over dangerous gaps hundreds of meters off the ground, and while being in plain sight and exposed to everything beneath them if they were spotted cut enough of the cable to cause it to drop or shift and then somehow need to book it back down the other side of the cable either onto the landship itself or to the other side which would put them on the other side of the pit of the lip and a lot closer to the warfortress than they were now.

"What are our odds in the pit?" Micah asked as though he would merit the same kind of voting power for bad plans despite lacking a giant death machine.

"50/50." Joe guestimated. "Thats a lot of techies down there but i'd say they'd get more in each others ways than ours. Too many footmobiles and smaller vics for those deathcrawlers to be able to deploy against us. No, what you gotta look out for is their mecha, their lighter Vics that might have heavy weapons on them, the sheer amount of troops down there that might have ordinance on them, and of course the Warfort itself.

We'de have the mobility advantage and more room to maneuver but the closer we get the less room we'll have as we get funneled in and the more time those techies will have to spread out and encircle us or drive us out of cover and into the guns of that big bastard."
The little mutant offered with surprising insight before, sensing a pause gave off a "What?! Some of us survive this long for a reason you know!" defensively.

To prove a point there was movement further down the lip where no onlookers were currently parked as a building shifted and collapsed into the pit. It slid and fell, the last portions of some old structure as metal girders gave way, but not by age or stress but instead as a large machine wandered and blundered through it. The size of the tech scum barge they had burned earlier it looked like an oddly-shaped primates torso with no head other than a massive lense jutting from between its shoulds and if only in the sense that it dragged itself forwards on two massive limbs that ended in large tool recipticals while dragging its lower body that seemed comically smaller than the rest of it. It fell into the pit with a comical dip forwards as its massive arms reached out as though for a distant ledge before gravity took over and it toppled into the pit in a jumble of metal plates and flailing wires as its missing lower half followed shortly after where it was connected loosely by long fiberous cable like tendons where it had broken and continued to drag its dead half.

The automata hit the incline of the pit and began to tumble end over end as it kicked up dust and debris as it rolled, metal plates and pieces of metal flying off of it before it finally came to a stop at the bottom of the pit. Closer to the tech scum besiegers than the Strays would have been if they chose to descend the large semi-sentient machine went completely unnoticed from the moment it fell up to and including where it now lay motionless and blocked from their view by a collapsed section of structure by the occupied army as they watched on and waited their turn to join in on the boarding attempt. It was clear if they chose to take this option they would have the element of surprise if nothing else...
 
Vega blinked, her crimson-on-black eyes narrowing as she scanned the immediate area, realizing mid-sentence that Lisa, the person she had been speaking to, was nowhere to be seen. The sudden absence made her pause for a beat before a quiet chuckle escaped her. Typical. In the chaos of their operations, people tended to come and go without much ceremony. Shaking her head, she refocused her attention on those who remained nearby, her sharp gaze flicking between them before turning back to the task at hand.

“So... we attack from the outside,” she said aloud, her tone tinged with hesitation as she voiced the thought lingering in her mind. Her hands moved over the controls instinctively as she checked her mech’s weapon systems. The familiar hum of diagnostics rolled through the cockpit as her HUD lit up with details on each weapon. Vega’s mind worked through the options quickly, filtering for those that could function effectively at long range if necessary.

Her eyes lingered on the display for her Hyper Laser and long-range missile pods, her lips curling into a faint smile. Yeah, those would do. But the plan wasn’t set yet. She muttered to herself as her thoughts drifted, her voice barely audible over the hum of her mech’s systems. “Or bait...” she said absentmindedly, the idea forming as she spoke. “One draws the attention, the rest bring in the boom.”

The words felt heavier as she said them aloud, the weight of her own suggestion sinking in. It was a strategy as old as combat itself, but it wasn’t without risk. Who would be the bait? she wondered briefly, her stomach twisting at the thought. Yet even as the question hung unanswered, her mech took a step forward, its massive frame groaning slightly as it shifted toward the edge of the pit.

Vega’s gaze followed, her eyes locking on the chaotic scene below. Dust and smoke churned in the bowl-shaped battlefield, obscuring details but not the overarching conflict. The towering landship loomed in the background, an ever-present monolith that seemed to mock their smallness. Down below, the fighting continued, frenetic and brutal. The thought of being needed down there sent a surge of adrenaline through her veins. This wasn’t just a battle; it was a puzzle, and Vega loved puzzles.
Her mech’s sensors flickered, feeding her updated readings of the area. She leaned forward in her cockpit, gripping the controls tightly, her second set of hands resting on auxiliary inputs. If they were going to do this, it had to be calculated, precise. A wrong move could mean disaster—not just for her, but for the entire team.
Taking a deep breath, she steadied herself. Her mech’s footfall sent a minor vibration through the ground as it inched closer to the pit’s edge, the drop below looking both intimidating and inviting. Her thoughts were racing, her mind toggling between potential outcomes, strategies, and the ever-present question of whether they were ready to take on what lay ahead. She might have hesitated, but hesitation wasn’t a luxury they could afford for long.

“Bell,” she said quietly, addressing her Fairy AI, “run another check on my weapon systems. Prioritize long-range efficiency and adjust targeting algorithms for high mobility.”

As Bell chirped an acknowledgment, Vega allowed herself a moment to breathe. She wasn’t the type to rush into things without a plan, but sometimes plans had to be formed mid-action. As her mech’s sensors pinged and Bell’s adjustments came through, Vega’s determination solidified. If this was the moment they made their move—whether as bait, boom, or something else entirely—she’d be ready. “alright people, I am ready to move on nearest order.”
 
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