《Stray Cat Strut — A Young Lady's Journey to Becoming a Pop-Up Samurai》Chapter Twenty-Nine - Trench Run
Advertisement
Chapter Twenty-Nine - Trench Run
“Operator: Why is the city on fire?
Lord Burninator: There were aliens in it.
Operator: That can’t be your response to everything.
Lord Burninator: You clearly haven’t thought this through.”
--Excerpt from official transcript between Family operations centre and samurai field command, 2038 Venezuela Incursion
***
The turrets I was setting down on the edges of the tallest trucks were the same cheap crap I’d been using for a while. A laser-gun, a small battery pack, a little strip of solar cells and three legs which ended in suction-cup grippers that had no difficulty attaching to the stainless steel roofs of the trailers I was passing.
From earlier observation, the turrets took about three, maybe four seconds of continuous fire on a single model three to take it down. Way less time to take out model ones though, the little birds were easy to knock out of the air.
By the time I was at the back of the convoy I’d set down nearly fifty of the things. They had pretty decent range, and some of those near the front were zapping the quickest of the aliens already.
I’d dipped down four times between slower trucks and bought a few cat mecha. They were more than capable of keeping up with the convoy, and I figured the extra bit of mobile firepower might give us an edge if... or when, the aliens reached us.
I placed the last turret on the roof of the very last vehicle in the convoy. I probably didn’t need to bother, it was another of those oversized mobile bases, with guns bristling out of its sides and a few turrets on the top already, but the turrets would give me and Myalis an idea of the convoy’s status as it moved ahead, and I figured I could retrieve them after, maybe hand them off to the Family to place them along the length of the defences around the city. It was that much more firepower, and the self-sustaining sort.
“Hey, Grasshopper,” I said.
“That’s me,” Grasshopper said. “Is something wrong?”
“Nah, not yet,” I said. “I’m about to start my bombing runs. I’ve set down some turrets here and there, should keep the convoy... safe-ish. Honestly, it’s not much, but it’ll put a dent in their numbers I hope.”
Advertisement
“I understand,” Grasshopper said. “Do your best!”
“Right,” I said. I kicked my bike into gear and shot up a ways. From above I could see the vague formation the antithesis were taking. A large group of them were spread out to the left and rushing in towards the convoy. More were out by the front, where a few patches of forest made it hard to tell where they were hidden.
There was actually some sort of facility in the middle of those woods. Probably abandoned by now. Still... “Myalis, can you check to make sure there’s no one alive around here, I don’t want to bomb some poor sap hiding in that building over there.”
Searching now... no signs of life. The facility is an older slaughterhouse, it has been out of operation for a decade.
“Got it,” I said.
I turned my bike over to the large group heading into the side of the convoy.
The antithesis at the front were more numerous, but they were starting to enter the effective range of the guns on the mobile base, and a few of those armoured cars with machine guns on their roofs were near the front, spraying down lines of fire into the approaching mass.
The group to the side didn’t have as many obstacles, and if they reached the convoy, they’d spread out and rooting them out would be a mess. Some of the trucks were driven by flesh-and-blood people, we didn’t want to deal with dead drivers causing blockages on the road.
So I was going to teach the fuckers about the beauty of high explosives.
“Myalis, I need lots of grenades with the pins already pulled,” I said. “Maybe one every two metres or so?”
Noted. What are you thinking about for the payload?
“Can’t have anything that might damage the convoy. Just a big boom?”
Concussion grenades will release a large burst of kinetic force without launching any shrapnel from the explosive itself. Pieces of antithesis might reach the convoy, but not at speeds that would endanger the vehicles. Also, the explosives are relatively inexpensive.
“Works for me,” I said.
I lined the front of my bike up with the far end of the row of aliens, guesstimated how far ahead I needed to be for the grenades to drop on the formation, then took off.
Advertisement
“Now!” I called out as I leaned into my bike.
Grenades started to appear next to me in mid-air, matching my velocity for just a moment before trailing down and towards the ground. I’d miss the very start of the formation, but then, I kinda figured I would need to make another pass at it.
Loud whumps sounded out behind me, louder than a gun going off, but much bassier, the kind of sound that was felt as much as it was heard.
“Alright,” I said as I reached the front of the formation and pulled back on my bike so that I flew up and around.
Glancing down, I saw the horde of spread out model threes rushing towards the convoy, and occasionally right into an explosion.
The concussion grenades were going off in a roughly straight line a half dozen metres ahead of the antithesis line, big blasts that tossed up dirt and flung away any alien unfortunate enough to be within the radius.
The bombs went off like a metronome, a bang every tick.
I grinned as part of the explosive line went off right on top of the meatiest part of the horde and dozens of aliens were ripped apart. The last bit went off behind the horde, which was a bit unfortunate.
I’d thinned it though, and a good chunk of the remaining antithesis were limping or were too injured to keep on going.
“Myalis, I think we need to switch it up,” I said. “Concussions are nice, but they’re too... binary. They either kill the fuckers, or miss outright. Maybe something a bit more... fire-y?”
Something that will last longer, then. A liquid that combusts with contact to oxygen might suffice. With a dispersal system to spread it. Perhaps a napalm-based explosive? It would create a temporary barrier between the antithesis and the convoy.
I nodded. “That sounds perfect. Same rate, on my mark?”
Ready.
I dropped down, much closer to the ground than I had been on my last run. A bit more dangerous, sure, but I also wanted to be more accurate with my fire.
“Now,” I said as I took off.
The first grenade appeared next to me, a small canister, the size of a bigger soda can. It flopped down and out of sight. I couldn’t afford to look back, not when I was so low to the ground that the taller stalks from roadside weeds were whipped back with the air from my passage and the nearest antithesis to my right were so close I could see the saliva clinging to their teeth.
The first grenade went off with a sound like a fart in a tin can. It made up for that with a wash of heat that I felt on my back as I raced ahead.
Each burst increased the burning crackle until I pulled up and away at the end of the antithesis formation. When I glanced back, it was to see a sight that would make Gomorrah proud, a wall of flames, thicker by the middle, but still a good couple of metres wide. Some aliens were caught in the flames, writhing around as they burned.
The rest, smart enough not to run into a puddle of napalm, were bunching up and hesitating. A few started to run around the flames, but they’d have a long way to go.
A long way while staying entirely within the range of the turrets and manned guns in the convoy.
Flickering laser beams caught aliens in their sides and followed them long enough to put them down and the few trucks with turrets protecting the convoy opened up, firing past the napalm and into the enemy’s flanks.
“That’s a lot of fire,” Grasshopper said over the coms. “It’s actually good for the environment to clear out some surface brush on occasion. I don’t think you’re supposed to use napalm for that though.”
“It’ll go out eventually,” I said. “How are things by the front?”
“Well enough, so far,” Grasshopper said. “But the numbers are increasing. I think the forest will be a problem.”
“Well, I have plenty more napalm,” I said.
“I think passing through the forest while it’s on fire would also be a problem. Maybe we can come up with another solution. One that doesn’t harm the nice trees as much?”
I sighed. “We’ll see.”
***
Advertisement
- In Serial39 Chapters
Blue mage
The end of the world is the best thing that ever happened to Jace. All of his life things have gone well until now. Now Jace has graduated college but can't get a job in his chosen field due to this young age. Watch as a depressed Jace learns to enjoy a new monster eat monster world. Updates Monday, Wednesday, Friday at 7:30am(PST) Only posted here on Royal Road!
8 93 - In Serial7 Chapters
Dungeon City Vanskoria
In this modern era, a dungeon where magic existed emerged almost 300 years ago. After a long history, a city were erected as humanity frontier to challanging the dungeon. Between blood and broken bone, in the face of eternal struggle, human adapted to the challange. From the ashes of burning desire to life came human that capable to use magic. They were called Magus, and they were all born, life, and die protecting the Dungeon City Vanskoria. The story following several characters, Leon and Hana, a teenager pair that has just starting their dungeon diving world. He, a bastard child, came from nowhere and no family background. She, a cursed child, unwanted by her family. Together they tried to find comfort in each other and tried to make a living in the dungeon city. When the relationship between Vanskoria and the rest of the world were worsened, Ray Edmund step forward as a representative for the city. His work was to tell the world what dungeon is all about and how Vanskoria deal with it. As a veteran of dungeon diving, he quickly found that his world was really different from the world that normal people saw. The final character, Arianna Valentine, a normal girl with a normal life, faraway from the dungeon life. But there was an accident that involving her and a magus several years ago. From then on her view were distorted little by little, dragging her surrounding into a total confusion and unknown future. Author Note : Update weekly on Weekend (around friday-sunday), 3-5k words per chapter Slow pace, lots of conversation and drama. The action part will came later on.
8 75 - In Serial25 Chapters
R U L E S
"Jesus Christ." I called out, this was the first time I was finding out my body could be so sensitive, I was so used to the five pumps and done but James was showing me something different, he was showing me to myself. "He can't help you now." His husky voice had whispered.
8 208 - In Serial7 Chapters
but you didn't ; l.s
based off a poem.
8 129 - In Serial14 Chapters
The Downward Spiral
Blood? My wrist was covered in it. It wasn't dried up or reeked of the combination of that black gunk from all those other freaks. It was fresh and warm too. Where was it coming from? I checked my body. My t-shirt was splattered in everyone else's blood but my own. Turning over my hand, my eyes lowered to where Ray was holding onto me. I gasped and released him, covering my mouth to stop from screaming. "Holy shit dude! What happened to your-?!" Tears were forming in his eyes but he looked down and hid his hand from me. "Please d-don't worry about it. Let's just go find a real hospital already." He said while shaking. "I...I don't want to think about it right now O-okay? It's no big deal..It's just...it's a finger..." My mind went blank. I pulled him into a tight hug. I wanted to do nothing much but to cry right now. I got him into this mess. This was all my fault. If only we would have just stayed at home that night. I didn't have to go to that stupid concert... After watching fans rip each other apart during one of her concerts, Sasha Brown's main goal was to keep her brother safe from whatever the hell broke loose in Jackson, Tennessee. Expecting the police to take care of it, she soon realize it wasn't blowing over anytime soon, especially with the growing number of rabid monsters running around, the living dead, and crazy psycho cults forming. One night brought an unfamiliar deadly world for both Sasha and her brother Raymond, and both are willing to fight it out to survive it.
8 391 - In Serial24 Chapters
Mine (LenxMiku/Lenku/MikuxLen)
Miku was always with Mikuo, her brother. Exactly like Len was always with Rin, his sister.Miku and Mikuo (along with Rin and Len) are as thick as thieves. Len couldn't care less about femalesMiku couldn't care less about malesNo, they weren't gay, just... distant.- TWO YEARS LATER -Len was spacing out, staring at the tealette.'She seems like she's having a bad day,' he thought.Little did he know that Miku was always having a bad day. Ever since her parents died, Mikuo has been working his butt off trying to take care of his 'baby sister.' By five minutes."Like what you see?" A certain teal haired boy asked the distracted Len."What?"
8 179

