Duty Roster:

Ella Stanbridge (Melissa)
Ertrane “Buck” Buckner (Herodian)
Henri Haank Makruus (Gigermann)
Ibrahim “Abe” Nouri-Abbood (Rigil Kent)
Sam Turner
Sae Rraetheg (CommJunkee)


Strict Confidence

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At port on Yori Prime, the Crew set about to take their liberty when a text-mail message was received at the ship: the local Imperial representative was impressed by their heroism in the rescue of the Lancelot survivors and wished to offer them a charter opportunity. Haank cleared it with Ella, and replied that they were willing to meet on the matter, which was arranged for an hour or so later.

Ella, Haank and Abe arrived at the government offices at the arranged time and met the representative, who gave them the details of the job: a one-time freight transport of 18 tons of miscellaneous research and living supplies bound in-system for a moon of Yori II, and the Imperial Research Station Beta located there, as their usual transport was down due to technical issues. It was an ASAP job—already overdue—and typical of government bureaucracy, they weren’t terribly bothered about the expense; Haank checked the local rates and decided on 900 credits per dT. There were no special handling requirements, but the rep said that, due to the sensitive scientific equipment aboard, they were not to activate any contragravity drives near the station—Haank and Abe both felt as if the rep was withholding some details, but given the need-to-know nature of the job—the station’s existence wasn’t so much a secret, though their operations there clearly were—it was not unexpected, so they let it slide. Ella decided the deal sounded reasonable, and accepted with the usual handshaking, then left Haank to work out the details of when and where the cargo was to be delivered. The Crew planned to leave immediately once the cargo was loaded, and to take the opportunity to fuel up at Yori II, a gas giant, to save some money.

Some time later, the cargo was dropped off at the quay as arranged, and Haank and Sae started loading it onto the ship. Mid-operation, a couple of guys showed up at the ramp saying they were a last-minute addition to the charter, though they weren’t exactly thrilled at the assignment, and were perfectly fine if it turned out there wasn’t room for them. Just to be safe, Haank called up the rep and made certain he had sent them—he had—while Abe chatted them up about whatever-it-was they might be doing at the station. They were a little disappointed when Haank returned and had Abe show them to their cabins.

It was a five-day trip to Yori II, and the Crew took the opportunity to talk to their passengers about the station. They were maintenance crew for the station, on a regular rotation, and had nothing to do with whatever research was being done there behind closed doors, and expected to be bored-out-of-their-minds for the duration. Haank recalled from local business news reports that there had been reported a rash of unexplained misjumps into the Yori system, causing some difficulties with local trade, and suspected the station’s research mission might be related.

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Five days later, the Spinward Star entered orbit around Yori IIn, a smallish iceball with no atmosphere to speak of. They attempted to contact the station, but could get no response at all. They approached cautiously, continuing fruitlessly to raise them on comms, and an external inspection of the station revealed no clues. Sam docked the ship, manually due to the lack of auto-docking support, and the Crew boarded the station, kitted out for a potential fight, leaving Sam and Jones behind to stand watch. No one was home. At all. They headed straight for the station’s operations center to see if there was some kind of log to explain the absence, and found that there was no security protecting the computer systems at all, and that there were no logs of any kind available, apparently wiped from about eight hours ago to the present, when another ship had apparently arrived and docked with the station. Buck suspected a virus, and Haank suggested the ship undock immediately, lest there be some “infection.” Abe, Buck and one of the station crew went to the other end of the station to see if there were any sign of the other ship, while Haank and Ella continued to dig through the computer system, and Sam maneuvered the Spinward Star around the station for a closer inspection of the hull. Though no sign of the other ship was found, Abe did spot what appeared to be a single hole, most likely made by a 4mm gauss round, in the inner station wall. As they continued to search for clues, suddenly, there was a burst of blue energy from below, appearing to emanate from the moon itself, that briefly interrupted electronic devices, though there was no permanent damage to speak of—clearly there was something amiss below, and the Crew were now fully suspicious of the information they had been given, and that the prohibition on contragravity use was a ruse to prevent anyone landing on the moon’s surface where they might discover whatever-it-was. The space-elevator connecting the station to the moon’s surface was “down,” suggesting that the occupants might have gone below—the only thing left to check—so the elevator was recalled and they all boarded for the surface (including the station crewmen—better to keep them in plain view, in the event they are somehow involved).

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The elevator took around fifteen minutes to reach the surface, but to the surprise of all, including the crewmen who worked there, it halted only briefly and continued below the surface buildings, below the icy outer crust of the moon, for some time further until it opened into a massive cavern dominated by a tall tower of unknown construction. Haank recalled his archaeology instruction with Kella (on their trip out of Kegena), and decided the tower must have been constructed by the Ancients. Sae and Abe both set about recording the awesome sight.

The elevator finally reached the bottom of the cavern and stopped, and the Crew exited the car ready for trouble. And trouble found them, in the form of a hidden shooter firing at Ella, who was struck in the torso, to no effect thanks to her space armor. A number of the Crew had near-miss indicators installed on their suits, and were able to trace the source of the shot; everyone dove for what cover was available. Haank and Sae started ’round to flank the shooter while Ella and Buck returned suppressive fire on the position. Ella was struck in the face, her helmet’s faceplate shattered, though she was mostly just scratched; Abe did what he could to help, but she was more angry than wounded. Buck hit the shooter several times with his laser, causing him to retreat behind the rocks and containers strewn about the floor of the cavern in front of the tower. Haank and Sae arrived at the shooter’s position just as he was about to move, and they surprised each other; Haank and Sae were quicker on the trigger, though, and the shooter was riddled with fire, quite dead. Upon closer inspection of the shooter’s body, they noticed some distinctive tattoos, that they deduced, after a moment of retrospection, to indicate the shooter belonged to the terrorist group, Ine Gavar.


Notes

  • Due to expected sporadic absences around the end-of-year holidays, we decided to stick with one-shots for the remainder of the year; this led to that, and we ended up going with a bit more Traveller (obviously), which should wrap up next session
  • Sam’s player ended up being the only one absent (not expected), though Ella’s and Buck’s were quite late (expected)
  • I think PCs in an RPG tend to be more paranoid than normal folk—for obvious meta reasons—so it’s no surprise we wanted to vett the new passengers before allowing them aboard; it wouldn’t be the first time we’ve had someone aboard who meant us some degree of harm
  • Haank’s picking up of the Archaeology skill in the early days of the first run actually paid off 😛
  • Ella ended up taking 1 HP of damage through her helmet—lucky, lucky