Centerpoint Station
"I'll right the wrong here. Just go"
The lift doors close.
Frank Farmer's face has a resigned look of sadness. Artemis, on the other hand, was finally fired up. No matter what, it was ending, and he was going to be a part of it.
"Did you figure out how to deactivate the system?"
Frank nodded
"Yes, though the trick is going to be keeping it deactivated long enough"
They reach the cooridor, a long, wide hall that curved around the edge of the central sphere. Corellian troops were moving at brisk paces, passing them and paying no mind. Obviously, Director Farmer and the young soldier had their own business to attend to. No one knew they were playing for the other team. Of course, the soldiers were mostly automatons at this point. Intuition wasn't a big thing for drones.
Frank leaned in to Artemis, whispering
"follow my lead. Don't say anything"
Artemis nodded.
They rounded the corner and reached a very, very heavy blast door.
"What if we see him?"
The thought had crossed Frank's mind. Soldiers wouldn't realize. But Frank Farmer had no doubt that if Alexander Winton ran into them, he would know instantly that they were no longer under his sway.
"We won't"
It was more of a prayer than a statement but that was the way it had to be. As was the next course of action. Farmer pulled out his security card and swiped, the blast doors opening, one behind the other to reveal a massive room filled with computer equipment. Dim lighting contrasted with bright LED lights - screens were covered with hundreds of miniature graphs, monitoring brainwave functions, and sensory readouts allowed a primitive visual of what soldiers were seeing.
The display was interesting in its own right. The appearance of several imperial transports, carrying grunt stormtroopers to their slaughter. It would take many, many transports for the empire to get a foothold into the station, many more to win any real part of it. But the empire, if it had nothing else, had soldiers to spare.
But then, so did the Confederation. Armies of humans and droids at Alexander Winton and Saga Judec's disposal. This could be a very drawn out, bloody battle. Which it obviously was meant to be.
The room they were in was interesting in that it carried not soldiers but scientists mostly, none of which carried any of the implants. All were willing workers of Alexander Winton. A single MagnaGuard Battle Droid stood as sentry inside, away from the prying eyes of those in the halls. Red eyes stared down at Farmer accusingly.
One of the controllers stood and approached.
"Director Farmer, do you have new orders?"
Farmer nodded. Without moving his face or shoulders, he let a small object drop from his hand and fall to the ground.
BANG!
A bright white light lit up the room, a loud crash sounding.
Moments later, the light was gone, the magnaguard droid flailing blindly, its optic sensors damaged by the flashbang. Farmer already had his blaster out, firing several shots at vulnerable locations, the droid dropping.
Then he turned to the scientists.
"Everyone, back away from the machinery"
A few scientists tried ordering soldiers to their aid, but a blast from Farmer knocked out those controls.
"Let's make this go quick and quiet. Artemis, the door"
Artemis moved to seal themselves into the chamber, then deactivating the door controls.
Next, firing on cameras looking INTO the room, trying to leave the monitors of those looking OUT intact.
Farmer, meanwhile, had rounded up the controllers, ushering them into a small closet at one end of the room, and jamming the door to keep them inside.
"alright, to work"
They begin moving across the controls, trying to find the off switch, as if there was only one. It was several minutes of this before they got the first sign of trouble. Someone was banging on the door outside.
Looking up at the monitors, they saw that they had company - a contingent of MagnaGuard droids was accumulating outside the blast door, and was beginning to find their way in.
"We don't have much time. Any more of those flashbangs?"
"It won't work on such a large number of them. I do have one other trick though."
"What."
Farmer moved behind the computers, grabbing a small sliver of metal, no thicker than a pen and poking it through the ventilation shaft.
The sound of grinding metal against metal was heard, a screeching and then a silence. Brief but poignant. The cooling system of the massive computers had been outwitted by a scrap of metal.
Pounding on the blast doors was growing more insistent, and even the strength of the doors would not last against the increasing number of droids and weapons.
Alarms began sounding as the system began to slowly but surely overheat.
Farmer turned to Artemis, that sad look back in his eyes.
"You need to finish what we started. Save your friend, Della. Save the Corellian soldiers. Get everyone to the docking bays and off this cursed station."
"What about you?"
Farmer took a deep breathe.
"I'll make sure that the computer are shut down for good before the droids get in to stop. But you shouldn't be wasting your time here. You have other things you need to do. Go"
"But"
"Go - that's an order!"
Farmer helped Artemis onto a chair and up into one of the ventilation shafts that led out of the room.
Artemis turned after him.
"Don't worry, I won't be far behind you"
Artemis disappeared, and Farmer turned his attention to the door, slowly caving in under the oppression of the droids outside.
He closed his eyes and recited a silent prayer, grabbing a small round object from his jumpsuit
"I'll right the wrong here."
The blast door finally caved under the pressure, MagnaGuard droids bounding in. Hundreds of shots fired instantaneously into the man's body and he collapsed to the floor.
The droids had already forgotten him as they tried to undo the damage to the machine.
As the life left his body, he dropped the small object, eyes closing as it beeped loudly.
The thermal detonator, dead man switch armed and activated, let out a massive explosion, erupting and sending droids, computers, and the body of Frank Farmer flying.
=================================
Artemis was already many meters away when he heard the blast. He glanced behind him, fearing what he knew to be true. He would have gone back, but he knew he had a task. and his own orders. He had to go on.
He made his way through the shafts, toward the lower cooridors in hoping of finding Della.
=================================
Throughout the station, thousands of young Corellian soldiers felt a moment of seering pain before waking up, weak, tired, trying to get a sense of where they were and what had happened with their lives over the past year. Some did not survive, the sudden shock to the implant killing them instantly.
The healthiest, and most ready, were those from Artemis' own bunk, who had been freed by night of their zombie like state. Even without Artemis, they began to rally those around them, in hopes of seeking their freedom.
==================================
Alexander Winton knew something was wrong. His line of vision had been compromised. The Corellians were free.
Apparently, he had miscalculated something. The power of the will to be free. No matter. It just meant more humans had to die today.
And speaking of death, he smiled as he saw the surveillance video, the imperial shuttle landing. Smiling from the office of the High Commander, he watched as among the chaos, his daughter appeared. Right on schedule.
TBC