themocaw

Diary of a Terran Soldier

Diary of a Terran Soldier

An Unconventional AAR

**********
February 14, 2229
Somewhere in Hyperspace

So this is my first journal entry, and the only reason I started keeping one was because Jenkins had one too many beers and got philosophical.

See, we were sitting in mess hall 7117 after training, kicking back and having a couple of beers, and we started reflecting on just how great the ol' "Valley Forge" is. Biggest troop transport in its class, powerful as hell and faster than shit on skates. Anyway, Jenkins started talking about how the really awesome think about the Forge isn't how powerful it is, but how robust it is. Sure, most of the one billion troops it carries are sleeping peacefully in cryo, but there are still about fifty million troops still awake and training, like me and Jenkins.

That number got him even more philosophical. 1 billion. A couple of hundred years ago, that many people was about a quarter of the entire human population in existence. Now we send that many soldiers to far-off worlds to go fight aliens. About half of them get to see home again. So that's five hundred million soldiers dead just like that. Jenkins, being a complete jerk when he gets philosophical, started ranting about how our lives have no meaning in the big picture: we're just casualty number four million six hundred fifty thousand and ninety, not Jimmy Jenkins from Aldebaran.

Anyway, he finally passed out and left me behind to shoulder the weight of his philosophy, and so I figured I may as well try and leave something for posterity behind to prove that Steve Lee of Proxima 7 was more than just a number. More than just another nameless soldier fighting and dying far from home. So here it is, my journal.

Where to start. . . well. My parents were doctors, and we emigrated from Earth to Proxima 7 beacause Earth was getting too crowded and expensive, and we wanted a fresh start. Proxima was where I grew up: it was where I learned to drive, where I had my first kiss and other things that followed, and where the Yor decided to start their invasion.

They hit us without warning: their heavy fighters had shot down our Defenders before we knew what was happening, and then their troop transports started dropping hunter-killers from orbit. Two billion people died in the next four days, including Doctors Crystal and Derek Lee. I, on the other hand, survived, was recruited into the resistance, handed a laser rifle and told to shoot it at anything that didn't have skin. Never fired it once: Earth sent in the cavalry first, and I became yet another refugee running away from the front lines of the Second Interstellar War.

Funny thing is, it wasn't my parents dying that made me join up. It was running away from that fight on that refugee ship. Something about that feeling of being totally helpless and running for your life that I didn't like. Decided I was going to go ahead and take my destiny in my own hands, something like that, be better to be able to shoot back than have to run all the time. I enlisted the moment the refugee ship touched ground again.

Boot camp was eight weeks of hell crammed into six: I can't remember a time when I wasn't cold, hungry, tired, or all three. But soon enough, I'd gone from "This is a plasma rifle, there are many like it but this one is mine," to "I solemnly swear to defend the Terran Alliance and all its interests from all threats domestic and foreign." A couple of hours later, I was on the Valley Forge headed to the front lines.

As "training cadre," we weren't put into cryo, but put into rigorous training: they can do a lot with cryo-hypno, but there are things you have to learn for yourself. I learned how to be a Combat Anti-armor and Tactical Support driver: flivver pilot. If you don't know what we do: take a hovercar, armor it up, and attach a big gun to the top. We're nowhere near as heavy as a real tank, but we're faster, smaller, we have better range, and we're more expendable. The last part is what makes us nervous, and why we get called "eggshells with sledgehammers."

Anyway, Jenkins is waking up, and he'll be totally insufferable when he's hung over, so I'll stop there. Will talk about more when there's more to say.

Ciao
400,318 views 140 replies
Reply #101 Top
wait ithinnk i hear something i think its something crashing ...aw no wait its my jaw dropping



great story



I second that. BTW, I am seriously considering writing something like this-but mat the diary of a prisoner-of-war rather than a soldier.
Reply #102 Top
Go for it, General, spread the meme
Reply #103 Top
Thanks for the encouragement! Or maybe a pilot's diary. I could expand on the Omega Guard featured in my latest AAR. Who knows?
Reply #104 Top
Mate! I've been reading this since you started and I just wanted to but in and say, you ROCK! This is the best story I'm yet to read on GalCivII!

Wow. Just, Wow.

If you ever have the time to write any sequels to Diary of a Terran Soldier or another AAR I'm so there! Good work themacaw, Bloody Brilliant

Reply #105 Top
Yep. "Diary Of A Terran Soldier" and "Fall From Grace" are now my two most favouritest AARs.  

-Scot
Reply #107 Top
WOW, just W..O..W, now I feel a connection with the troops I send to capture planets for my empire, its so damn honorable what they will do for their empire..
Reply #108 Top
Wow. I seriously, seriously enjoyed this story. Just... wow.
Reply #109 Top
Wow. I seriously, seriously enjoyed this story. Just... wow.


Who didn't?
Reply #110 Top
说曹操,曹操到。你写得写真好,谢谢你。

Seriously though, many thanks to you for an enjoyable short story, you ripped of Heinlein without being a blatant hack, which takes skill of its own (please, don't misconstrue this, it's a compliment, and I genuinely enjoyed this story). Character development was quite good for a short I felt, with the exception of--of all people--One; can't put my finger on it (and it might be the 4AM local time befuddling my thoughts), but her development didn't feel quite whole. Then again, it's a short.

Again, many thanks, and maybe I'll get around to doing an AAR of my own.
Reply #111 Top
Just bumping this thread for the benefit of any reader that hasn't had the pleasure of reading this yet. Its one of the best AARs ever. Seriously, READ IT!
Reply #112 Top
Agreed Firebender, bumping as well!
Reply #113 Top
I too agree with this so i will add my bump to the cause.
Reply #115 Top
Why?
Reply #116 Top
Why would you not read what is arguably one of the best GCII AAR's ever written Etrius?
Reply #117 Top
Fan...tastic AAR (and I would never have found it without all the bumping), puts mine to shame. Great plot, memorable characters and witty dialogue, I bask in your reflected glory.
Reply #118 Top
Maybe I should post my story I've written, it's somewhat like this. Keep writing this is some good material.
Reply #119 Top
Great story!  

I was suposed to be studying for like 20 min now, a quick look at the forums and of I go, or so I thought. You're story grabs me and dosen't let go...

BTW An interesting sotry could perhaps be told from the Dregin, Korath or Yor perspective.

I hope you write more stuff.   
Reply #120 Top
We are the Borg. Lower your... what? Okay, you can bump that thread and then we'll assimilate you.  
Reply #121 Top
We are the Borg.


They're the star trek robot people, right?
Reply #122 Top
"They're the star trek robot people, right?"

Exactamundo! This was just an inside joke.
Reply #123 Top
An absolute belter     
Reply #125 Top
Unfortunately themocaw has been MIA for some time :(

I wish he'd come back and continue his AARs and storytelling. His writing was awesome.