Jim Dawson
Freistadt, Omega-7 system
August 2nd, 801 A.S.
I just realized it’s been a while since my last journal entry. I’m on Freistadt in the Omega-7 system. Pretty gloomy place! The view out the bar window here is everything but pleasant: mostly sulfur clouds and dust. Omega-7 lies in the heart of the Walker Nebula. It’s officially a Freeport, so you see lots of different groups. There’s a bunch of IMG personnel, the odd Gateway crew taking a breather, a dozen Bounty Hunters, and even some Red Hessians. Really strange mix, but everyone pretty much gets along, except maybe the Bounty Hunters. They’re a crusty looking group who keep to themselves over in the corner, their backs to the wall. Tomorrow I’m running some supplies down to Ronneburg, the Red Hessian base over in Omega-5. One of the Hessians at the bar here said there’s been some pretty hot and heavy fighting lately, so they’re running low on supplies of H-fuel.
Just a quick recap how I got here: Three weeks ago, I set out from Kensington with supplies for the Hood, an abandoned Bretonia Armed Forces battleship in the Dublin system. The Independent Miners Guild refurbished and turned into a Freeport of sorts. It attracts a scruffy lot, all the dregs from the bottom of the Bretonian barrel. My initial journey went smoothly, although I was scanned twice by BAF crews as I passed by the battleships guarding either side of the Dublin gate. The Bretonia military currently checks everyone coming and going from Dublin very carefully. Rumor is they’re looking for MOX or Toxic Waste, both good materials for making dirty bombs. There’s a separatist group that operates in this area – they’re called the Mollys. They’ve been threatening to take out targets in New London for the last forty years or so and the government is apparently very worried about attacks. Word is that the Mollys home base is somewhere in the Dublin system, at least that’s what the Gateway rep. told me. She also said they probably wouldn’t bother me too much, since I wasn’t allied that closely with BMM. But she urgently warned me about the Corsairs.
And sure enough, a raiding party of three Corsairs jumped me soon after I left the patrol perimeter of the Essex Battleship. Only the chance arrival of a group of Bounty Hunters saved me from certain death and I barely made it to the Hood. Once I reached the safely of the Hood, I checked out my surroundings. It certainly was a pit. There were no Liberty pilots in sight. The miners were pretty hard to understand. I did pick up that the best Gold mining area in the system belonged to the Mollys. Second best was the BMM operation, which was strictly off limits to independents like me. My best chance was in the Independent Gold Field. Only problem was, that was Corsair central, since the New London Jump Hole was in there somewhere. A lot of the miners looked pretty stressed. They were doing more fighting than mining. Casualties had been running pretty high. I set off the next morning and decided to test my luck. The mining itself is pretty straight forward. Look for any stray asteroids flying along, shoot them. Now and then, some gold would be revealed. Slow work, but lucrative if there are no hostiles in the area. I went for several hours before the dreaded Corsairs showed up. Then it was hit full cruise and head for help. You could only pray that they didn’t have a lot of Cruise Disruptor missiles on hand. I successfully evaded the pirates several times that day, although once I started to take some serious damage on my shield.
After several weeks of daily forays in the Gold Fields, I had amassed a pretty good load of Gold. I sold some of it to upgrade my ship and weapons, and returned to mining. Eventually my luck ran out. A large Corsair contingent caught me far from safety one afternoon. It was a desperate moment. I had to pull every evasive trick in the book. Countermeasures, drone mines – I used them all. It was a long battle of attrition, but I finally killed two of them. The last one decided to withdraw at that point, which was not a moment too soon. My ship was flaming, most of my weapons gone. But my cargo was intact. When I got to base, the equipment dealer gasped when he saw the condition of my ship. I was the talk of the Hood that night. The bartender called me “Lucky Jim” when I ordered a drink.
It was time for me to get out of the mining business. I’d made my money and my luck couldn’t hold forever. Battling the Corsairs had been much more exciting. I asked around at the bar where my Gold would get a good price. Everyone mentioned Rheinland, or somewhere on the way to it. That’s how I ended up in the southern Omega worlds, very far from home. I wonder what I will find out here.
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Jim Dawson
Baden-Baden, Stuttgart System
November 12th, 801 A.S.
The trip to Ronneburg was pretty intense. The Walker nebula in Omega-7 is dense and full of asteroids and explosive gas pockets. As if that weren’t enough, you’ve got Corsairs wandering around in the mists. At least I was friendly with the Hessians. The Daumann and Kruger mining operations in the system are subject to daily harassment by the infamous Rheinland criminals. I fought my way through several Corsair patrols, and even got scanned by two Hessian ships. Red Hessians and other criminals have no problem stealing from theoretically “friendly” freelancers. Fortunately, a couple of Corsairs showed up just as I was deciding whether to drop my cargo and run, or stand and make a fight for it. I was able to slip away in the ensuing melee.
Omega-5 is a desolate system completely engulfed by ice asteroids. Nothing to write home about, except that it contains no less than five Jump Holes, the greatest number known of any system within the Sirius Sector. Known as the crossroads of the Omega Worlds, it has become the focal point of an epic turf war between the Red Hessians and Corsairs. At stake is the exclusive right to plunder the lucrative Trade Lane routes linking Rheinland and Bretonia.
Just getting to the base once within Omega-5 was a feat. Corsair patrols badgered me the entire way. At one point I stumbled into one of the extensive mine fields laid by the Corsairs to protect their interests in the area. It was rough dodging all the mines and asteroids while keeping the afterburner on almost full time to avoid the ever present Corsair cannons and lasers. At one point I stumbled too close to the weapons platforms that define the defensive line for the Corsairs. Completely out of shield batteries and nanobots, starboard weapons and wing damaged, I limped into Ronneburg after what seemed an eternity.
Ronneburg is a pretty ratty place. A place to eat, sleep and repair ships and weapons. The casualty rate is pretty high, but fresh replacements arrive daily from Omega-11 and Dresden, which keeps the meat grinder fed. They were grateful for the supplies, but immediately pressed me into action. After some field surgery on the ship, I was off on a combat patrol into the “Hammen” Hole, a no mans land between the two weapons platforms lines that offers the only open space within the entire system. Due to the easy maneuverability in this area for ships, most of the daily battles are centered here. Fortunately the action was light that day, and we easily disposed of the two Corsairs that we came in contact with. I noticed during our flight that the pocket was littered with wrecks from both sides. It seemed like there could be some good money to be made in stripping weapons off the derelict ships, if you were gutsy and lucky enough.
When I mentioned this to the base commander back at the bar that night, he replied, “How do you think all of those ships got there in the first place? The grave robber must be very careful here. If you are caught too far from your base when an enemy attack occurs, it’s over. The dead ships you see are all those of scavengers that became too greedy. Neither the Hessians nor the Corsairs condone such behavior, so we leave them to drift. Eventually they prove too tempting to someone with questionable moral standards, and the cycle continues. But feel free to rob the dead, although I didn’t think you were such a character.”
The message was loud and clear. Help them kill Corsairs, but stay away from looting. So I entered into the service of the Hessians for the next several months, fighting someone else’s brutal war of attrition that seemed to have no end. By late October I was physically and mentally exhausted. I became more and more fearful of the daily patrols. My luck was certain to eventually fail. It was time to go. I now had a state of the art Hessian ship and 500K credits to my name, thanks to some looting on the side that I’d kept secret. One evening, I overheard a guy in the bar by the name of Peter Schlupp. He boasted of great riches to be found in the Von Rohe Belt, which lay next door in the Omega-11 system. It was dangerous, to be sure. But if you had strong enough shields and a lot of good luck, you could rake in the credits scavenging wrecks that had been disabled in the intense radiation fields surrounding the dying red giant sun.
It sounded perfect - the retirement run. I requested a transfer to Freital the next day. Freital was another lonely rock on the other side of the Omega-11 Jump Hole. It was used mostly as a staging point for war supplies, although they also ran raiding parties against the Daumann operations within the system. It also served as an outpost to check Corsair expansion north from the Omega-41 Hole, which was a developing problem. Omega-11 was truly the end of the world. The sun had gone red giant, consuming the inner planets before humans ever set foot in the Sirius Sector.
The Von Rohe Belt was the remnant of one of them. It happened to contain the richest diamond deposits known. But it was not easily accessed. It was surrounded by region of intense radiation, known simply as the “Abgrund.” There was no other way to access the Belt. You had to gun it from the edge of the planetary fragment fields that ringed the perimeter of the system. “Bring a full load of nanobots, you’ll need them. And watch your damage bar, or you’ll join the many others that stayed out a bit too long,” was the advice I got from one sickly looking veteran scavenger on Freital. Radiation poisoning was a daily fact of life for the scum that inhabited this pit.
Early the next day, I crossed the Abgrund and entered the Von Rohe Belt. Moving parallel to the sun, I discovered many wrecks that day and the week following, each one a little bit further out along the Belt. In one week, I made my first million, mostly on diamonds, but also on salvaged weapons. All sorts of dead ships were out there: Hessians, Daumann, Corsairs, Bounty Hunters. They had all succumbed to greed.
After two weeks of life on Freital, I was deathly ill from the daily doses of radiation. Fortunately, my net worth was now well in excess of 1.5 million Credits. It was time to return to civilization and the good life. I bid my comrades goodbye and headed to Freistadt to bribe myself back to respectability with the Rheinland Police. As I flew in silence across Omega-11, I reflected on the remarkable journey I had completed since leaving Liberty what seemed like a lifetime ago, yet was actually less than five months.
So here I am, relaxing in the mud baths of Baden-Baden, an exclusive resort for the Rheinland and Liberty rich. Who knows, maybe one day the mysteries of the universe will again drive me to explore the unknown – or I manage to burn through all the money I have – either way, I’ll take it easy for a while.
<@ElectricBrain> TACH IS DEAD!
<@Tachyon> am not
<@Tachyon> stfu
<@ElectricBrain> no u stfu
<@Tachyon> no you
<@ElectricBrain> no u
<@Tachyon> no you
<@ElectricBrain> no u
<@Tachyon> NO YOU I WIN
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