They started The War. Well, the Shang did but the Chinese were quick to pile on. And of course there are the reports that they knew about the Yosemite Strike before it happened. They doubly deserved what happened if that’s true. But is it always good to give people what they deserve? I used to think so. I used to be so quick when justice called out. But sometimes vengeance hides under outraged justice. And sometimes what they deserve isn’t as important as what you’re willing to do. I fear we were willing to do too much. Though what is too much when it is a war for survival?
Twilight’s second season nemesis was the recurring Rogue AI. He wore a different dapper suit every episode, donated by a local Texas company, and the show made certain to show a close up of their distinctive logo at least once each time. Product placement at its best. He used the codename Solo because nobody was good enough to be his partner. Or so he thought. He also thought he could beat Twilight and the gang every time he met them. It became more “escape” than “beat” as the season proceeded towards its finale. But Solo never lost his composure. He was a cool customer that the audiences loved.
Our first starships were spindly, fragile things. They were a slender needle nearly five hundred meters long designed to pierce the wall between normalspace and hyperspace. Fuel tanks and crew quarters surrounded the central spindle with little room for anything else. Even the engines were weak things barely strong enough to push them through hyperspace. And so the early starships never left the gravitic rivers that linked our stars together. They simply did not have enough power to try another route.
What happens when you humble an enemy? What happens when you beat them? What happens when you break them so badly that the only thing worse than surrendering is fighting on? What happens when the man that signs the surrender finds living with the shame harder than eating a bullet? What happens? I don’t know yet. I hope whoever reads this doesn’t know either. Because I’m very much afraid that the Chinese will never forget that we won and they lost. And I don’t think they’re going to forgive any of us for that.
Twilight’s season two spent most of its time in Texas and the surrounding States, fighting against human terrorists that absolutely did not belong to any of the known real life terrorist organizations. There was one major recurring Rogue AI that showed up from time to time, but the producers chose to downplay that element for most of the season. Twilight’s rebellious side was focused on much more instead in what many considered one of the best character arcs of any of those original shows.
Forge of War on Amazon
Angel Flight on Amazon
Angel Strike on Amazon
Angel War on Amazon
Wolfenheim Rising on Amazon
Wolfenheim Emergent on Amazon