Invasion: Seeds of War
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Retired (involuntarily) Marine Lieutenant General Colby Edison is in exile, running an automated farm it farm is overrun by a horde of alien plants, leafy gremlin-like creatures that begin systematically destroying first his crops and then his home. And not just his farm, but all the surrounding farms as well. The relentless plants have apparently killed his neighbors, and clearly he and his dog Duke are next. But as a retired Marine, Colby has resources and skills not shared by other farmers on the newly terraformed agricultural world of Vasquez and soon he is bringing the fight to the invaders.
Except. . . who is really invading whom? High in orbit above Vasquez, a sentient vegetable studies the planet it had seeded and sculpted centuries before, laying it out as a world-sized garden. Now, returning to inspect the progress of its work, it finds its art has been tainted by the intrusion of crop grids, farm buildings, and people, all of which must be purged if the garden is to endure.
When two species clash, only one will survive.
Former psychology professor Lawrence M. Schoen and retired Marine Colonel Jonathan P. Brazee join forces in this first volume of the SEEDS OF WAR trilogy, pitting Marine against Gardener, with the fate of all of humanity hanging in the balance.
Jonathan P. Brazee
Jonathan Brazee graduated from the U.S. Naval Academy and served 30 years in the Marines as a commander of infantry, recon, MSSG, and air delivery units as well as in various staff billets. He served with the 3d CAG as the military liaison to USAID in Iraq in 2006 and retired as a colonel in 2009. He is a life member of the Disabled American Veterans, the Veterans of Foreign Wars, the U. S. Naval Academy Alumni Association, and the Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America.
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Invasion - Jonathan P. Brazee
DEDICATION
To the SMOFs and fans who created
the San Juan, Puerto Rico NASFiC
and the Helsinki, Finland WorldCon.
––––––––
Your tireless efforts produced many wonderful outcomes,
including two authors from different worlds coming together
in the unlikely partnership that resulted in this book.
Thank you.
Vegetable Wars
Book I: Invasion
Part I: Dreams and Response
General, Second Battalion’s lines are crumbling. What are your orders?
Colby looked up from his console as he tried to comprehend what the red-faced colonel was asking.
Second Battalion’s lines were crumbling? Which second battalion, and how the hell could that happen?
The fact that one of his units was engaged was a complete surprise to him. The division was only deployed as a show of force, not to kick off a war.
General, what now?
the colonel insisted.
Colby didn’t even recognize the colonel, but he cut the connection with his boss, the force commander, with whom he’d been discussing the political situation, and turned back to his console. A moment ago, the display had been clear, but now, red alarm stars were pulsing over the entire front. A swarm of red arrows were pushing through the blue unit symbols of his Marines. As he watched, Second Battalion, Fifth Marines disintegrated, down to 20 percent.
General!
the colonel insisted once again.
Colby shook his head. He didn’t have an operations order for this. His G3 would have 50 such plans in the files for any contingency, but Colby wasn’t prepared for this. He looked around the Command Post, but his Three wasn’t there. Twenty faces looked to him for orders.
Hell, I’m Lieutenant General Colby Merritt Edson, Republic Marines, and this is what I’m trained for.
What’s the status on the arty?
he asked, transitioning into command mode.
Two heavy and one light battery are in place, the mobile and one light are displacing,
a major replied.
Colby powered up the terrain model in the middle of the CP, instructed his AI to overlay the battle onto it, and said, Give me sheath volleys, here, here, and here. It’s too late for Two-Five, but maybe we can stem the tide and give us a moment to dig in.
A heavy battery, with its 24 tubes of 225mm shells, could create a virtual wall of steel, covering 1200 meters of front.
What’s the status on the Navy? What do we have in orbit? Can we get support?
That’s a negative, General,
a lieutenant commander said. The ship’s inner system drive is down.
Tell the captain that he’d better get that drive up and running. We need those guns now!
he shouted.
Damned piece-of-shit Navy! Never there when we need them.
That wasn’t a fair accusation, he knew. He had Academy classmates in the Navy, and they were plagued by the same lack of replacement and spare parts as the Corps was, and half of the parts they did receive were faulty.
No use bitching about it now. If no naval guns, then it’s got to be air.
Air Officer,
he shouted, "what do we have on station?
Nothing on station, sir,
a lieutenant colonel said.
Colby had to take two deep breaths or he was going to go off on the woman. And why the hell not?
Your orders, General. You said not to waste flight hours. You said you didn’t want to break the aircraft.
Colby didn’t remember giving any such orders, although that had become standard practice. Air capability had become a balancing act between pilot hours and airframe hours. The pilots needed them to remain proficient, and the planes needed limited hours so the crews could keep them airworthy.
What can we get in the air, then?
Two Specters and a Wraith, sir.
Out of eighteen craft in the squadron? Hell, I’m going to have to fire me a squadron commander. Get those three in the air, now, priority of fire to. . .
he paused, taking a look at the developing battle on the terrain model. Priority of fire for the Specters to Fifth Marines, the Wraith in general support.
Who exactly is attacking us?
he asked. Two?
Colonel Juan French, his G2, said, The Defenders of Truth, General.
What? The DOT?
That didn’t make any sense at all. The DOT was all talk and bluster. They’d never shown the will nor the capability to launch a military offensive.
Roger that, sir. It’s them.
If they want to play with the big boys, we’ll crush them,
he muttered.
He took a moment to digest the battle. Amateurs or not, they had pushed right through the division’s lines. Even if the Marines had not expected an offensive, there was no way they should have been able to prosecute their assault so well.
Who’s got Seventh Marines,
he asked, confused as to why he didn’t know such a simple fact.
Colonel Harris Bellemy-Mohamed,
the red-faced colonel said.
Harris? My classmate? How did that slip my mind? he wondered before pushing the thought aside.
He opened up the comms on a Person-to-Person line and passed, Colonel, this is General Edson. The DOT is sweeping through Fifth Marines. I need you to pull back, then create a hasty line of defense along the ridge running from zero-three-three-eight to zero-three-four-five. I’ll give you air and arty support, but you need to move it now. You’ve got forty mikes to get into position.
Uh, Colby, I’m not so sure we can do that. We’re having problems with our ammo. I think you gave us a bad shipment.
I what?
he asked astounded.
You’re the Commanding General of the Marine Corps Logistic Command, so yeah, I put in on your shoulders.
What the. . . ? Logistic Command?
he asked, going apoplectic. I’m your fucking division commander, and I’m ordering you to move, now!
Get us good ammo, and maybe we will. I’m not going to fight without it, Colby.
The colonel’s smug tone underscored addressing him as Colby
and not General.
Colby stood up in his chair, barely keeping the volcano inside of him from erupting. Classmate or not, this. . . this refusal to follow orders was completely unsat.
I’m going to court martial his ass as soon as this is over. He’ll rot in the brig!
No wonder he never got his star, the piece of shit. How did he even make O6?
He forced the colonel out of his mind. He had an entire division under his command, and he didn’t need the Seventh Marines to crush the DOT. Maybe if he slid Ninth Marines to the north. . .
General, one of the Specters just went down,
the air officer told him.
The DOT have Gen Six Anti-air? Since when?
It wasn’t shot down. One of the ion thrusters fell off,
she told him in the same calm and collected voice as if telling him his hover back at home needed a new rearview cam.
It. . . it fell off?
he said, wondering to what level of hell he’d been sent.
That’s what the pilot said.
An explosion shook the CP, dust rising from the ground to obscure the terrain model. Captain Jersey Rialto, his long-time aide, rushed in and took him by the arm.
We’ve got to get you out of here,
the captain shouted, pulling him towards the hatch. I’ve got a Hydra ready for you.
Wait, Jersey,
he shouted, resisting the burly captain’s pull.
The dust was settling enough so he could see the terrain model. Seventh Marines was falling apart before his eyes, blue lights winking out as the running count of Marine KIAs kept rising. Ninth was in contact, and as he watched, the Wraith was shot out of the sky. Unbelievably in less than five minutes, a Marine division had been rendered combat ineffective. It was categorically impossible, but there it was right in front of his eyes.
Sir, the Hydra won’t wait forever,
Captain Rialto said.
Tell the pilot to take off,
he told his aide. I’m staying.
Captain Rialto hesitated, and for a moment Colby thought his aide would bodily pick him up and load him on the shuttle, but then the young man nodded and stepped aside.
A series of snaps filled the CP, making everyone duck, including Colby. He looked up, and a line of holes stitched the walls of the CP. They’d taken fire. He turned back to the terrain model, and where a moment ago there were no DOT forces within five klicks of the CP, now they were surrounded. The rifle company assigned to CP security was in a fight for their lives, and they were losing that fight.
Generals didn’t fight battles, they planned them. That was the SOP, at least. But Colby was a warrior at heart, and there really wasn’t any option left to him.
You, prepare a report back to Force, let them know what’s happened. Everyone else, suit up! We’re going to fight!
There was a loud Ooh-rah!
as Marines and sailors rushed to the line of battlesuits in their cradles. Captain Rialto beat Colby to his suit and had started powering it up for him. Colby jumped up and grabbed the support bar, twisting his body like a pro as he slipped into the suit.
Ready?
the captain asked.
Hit it.
A moment later, the suit surged to life, straightening and coming back erect. Lights flashed as systems came online. Colby inhaled deeply. He’d had a long career, both as an enlisted Marine and officer, and he’d spent much of that time in his combat armor. There was a smell, a cross between a locker room and a garage, that both got his blood pumping and made him feel at home.
Colby had no idea how the DOT was defeating Marines, and he didn’t have much of a hope that any of them would survive, but if he was going to go out, he couldn’t think of a better way to do it, fighting with his fellow Marines.
As his suit gave a final confirmation, Colby reverted to company commander mode, quickly outlining a basic plan which the colonels, sergeants major, and other senior officers and enlisted acknowledged, Colonel French became a platoon commander. Sergeant Major Lammi, who’d been his sergeant major when