This is a classic DSC fanfic by a one Dropshipcommands all time entertainers.
SOLARIS
By ERRATIC CHEESE
Chapter 1
Mean Streets
Now I ain’t big on writing. I wasn’t one of those kids who wakes up one morning with a crayon in his hand and decides to spell "DOG" on his bedroom wallpaper. Nah, not me. While most kids were in school, gazing at blackboards and fantasizing ’bout their biology teachers, I was out in the real world, jacking hover-cars and kicking dice with real men.
I was a nobody back then. No future. Total freaking scum. But hell, those were wild times and I loved it. Shine a spotlight down the alleys and you’d find me there, hassling credits and hanging out with high-heels and low-lives. Mixing it up with the rough. Walking the walk and talking the talk. Yeah, that was me.
Like I said though, I ain’t one for writing. Much as some folk ain’t able to stand the sight of blood, or the smell of freshly polished heat-sinks. You see, writing makes mah’ head hurt and like most folk, I don’t take too kindly to headaches.
But hell, here I am tellin’ this here tale, doing something I wouldn’t normally do and putting mah’self through all manners of misery.
Why?
Well heck. . .sometimes a story jus’ gotta be told.
Now I’d like to sit here n’ say that this here tale revolves around a group of men. But the fact is, this tale doesn’t revolve, so much as jump from one place to the next. And come to think of it, this here story wouldn’t jump at all, were it not for just one man. Yup. Just one guy. A guy with ideas. A guy with vision. Yeah, this here is a tale about a guy with dreams.
You see, for most folk growing up in West Side Solaris, you were pretty much guaranteed to end up like scum no matter how you played your cards. This place sucked you in and spat you out. Built you up and broke you down. It treated you like scum. But heck, that’s Solaris for you. Scum central of the universe.
But my story is different. Me, my life went backwards. Reverse, you know. Call it fate, destiny, Kama-sutra, I don’t give a ****. Me though, I call him Palerider.
* * *
Chapter 2
The Pale Rider and I
Palerider. Yeah, even after all these years, his name still has a kinda weird echo. Sort of resonates in the back of your mind like a really bad doorbell. They say it’s on account of how the vowels are spaced evenly after each consonant. Yeah I know it’s corny. I know. But hell, science has been spitting out even crazier theories since the beginning of time.
But the way I see it, in a universe filled with half a billion Tom’s, ****’s and Harry’s, a guy with a name like Palerider just kinda stands out. Know what I mean? And that’s just what ole P.R. does. He stands out like a pole dancer in a church choir. I ain’t saying the guy strips for a living, you know, just that. . .ah heck. . . like I say, I ain’t big on writing.
Me though, they call me Crowfoot. I picked that name up on the streets, on account of how crooked I was. I ain’t a hunchback or anything like that. I drink my milk and get my calcium like everyone else. No osteoporosis for me, if you know what I mean. Nah, when I say "crooked" I mean, well you know . . .I wasn’t a very nice person back in those days. I guess the name just stuck with me after all these years. It’s sorta like my baggage from the past. Reminds me who I was. Keeps me sane.
I don’t know why a guy like Palerider hung around with a *** like me in the first place. I never quite understood that. I ain’t saying that I’m a ***** up. Nah, it’s just that I figured a guy like Palerider would have his own clique. His own gang.
But hey, here he was on Solaris and on Solaris everyone is the same. We’re all degenerates. Filth. Scum. All of us. There’s polite scum. Impolite scum. Scum in rags. Scum in fancy suits. Young scum. Old scum. Ugly scum...and even some of the most damned sweet looking scum possible. The kinda scum that makes you just wanna buy an apron and salivate for hours.
But in the end, we were all just scum.
Anywhere else I’d have been a loser, a bookie, a gambler. But out here on Solaris, I was just a regular guy. For guys like me, Solaris washes away your sins. It does for us what "Head and Shoulders" does for dandruff.
But Palerider, nah, he was different. He wouldn’t tell me much about his past, but I could tell it was pretty **** dark. You see, he was a Mercenary. A freaking good Merc too. You can still see it in his eyes. He’s seen a lot of killing. A lot of pain. And now here he was on Solaris, running from something. No, not running. He ain’t the kinda guy who runs. He was trying to forget. And on Solaris, amidst all the crazy hustle and bustle, all the lights and goings on, well hell, there ain’t no better place in the universe, designed to make you forget.
* * *
Chapter 3
The Gaming Planet
The heartbeat of Solaris has always drummed the same. You see, at the centre of things, you had the games. The Mech Games. You probably already heard of ’em. Morons strap em’selves up inside big metal robots and beat the hell outta each other. Of course nowadays anyone who wins a tournament becomes a freakin’ celebrity overnight. Sponsorship deals and all that ****. But not in the old days. Nah, in the old days it was war and Solaris was the battlefield.
In those days, Solaris was the rear end of the universe. Before the Gaming Commission stepped in and cleaned things up, Solaris was gangster paradise. Down here, you got more casinos, brokers, bookies, gambling joints and arenas per square kilometre, than any two planets combined.
It’s a zero sum game. Somebody wins. Somebody loses. Money is transferred back and fourth like a puck on an air hockey board. The richest one percent of Solaris, the real kingpins, Mafiosos and criminals, own half the planet’s wealth. That’s about six hundred and fifty trillion C’s. One third of that comes from hard work, two thirds from inheritance and interest, the rest, hell, the rest floats around from one gambling table to the next. Games are fixed, bets are made, bookies wire money and people die. That’s the cycle of Solaris, and it spins any freakin’ way it wants to. Gluttony captures the evolutionary spirit, and that’s what Solaris was about: Greed.
Today though, Solaris looks like Disney Land. Sure, it’s still the same filth, the same warped morals and cheap ideals, packaged in glitzy foil paper and snazzy billboards. Only now it’s all run with the mechanical precision of off-world Mega-Conglomerates and Super-Businesses.
The big Corporations moved in and took this place over. I guess in the end the Gaming Commission had finally gotten its way. They waltzed in from off world and made this place their own. They cleaned up the streets and pushed the crime out to the fringe. But while the kids played on the vomit coloured bouncy castles, daddy dropped the house payments and junior’s college money down the poker slots. Things were different. But somehow, they were also the same.
But guys like me, we all remember the old days. The days when dealers knew your name, what you drank and what you played. Those days were dangerous, but hell, they felt right.
The lights, the noise, the billboards, it’s all there to numb your mind. Hell, it drives you crazy sometimes. It breaks you down, makes you vulnerable, sucks away at your brain till the dollar-signs chisel their way into your skull. The Psych guys say holo-subliminal advertising has ceased and been outlawed, but I don’t believe them. Cus when you look up at all those lights and all those big flashy billboards. . . that’s when Solaris hits you.
About a billion suckers flew in every week on their own nickel and almost 80 percent of them leave broke. People touchdown with a couple thousand credits and end the day bust, with nothing but their name and a couple hours worth of breath mint.
Fortunes and lives were made and lost with the roll of a dice. And that’s when things get violent. Broke guys, you see, ain’t got nothin’ to lose. And when you got nothin’
to lose, you get dangerous. So you can imagine how things are down here. With a couple million pocket-stalkers, roaming about, Solaris is a pretty **** dangerous place.
* * *
Chapter 4
Ricky Bambossa
Take Ricky Bambossa for example. A gangster. A real nut job. Rumour is, this guy has the whole East Side eating out of his stinking palm. I mean the whole freaking East Side! Bambossa’s got sticks working every joint from Port Hamilton to the mouth of the Zipper.
He gets his cash by paying off the tipsters at the spaceports. I mean this guy had everyone under his payroll. Spaceport security, managers, even the freaking pit-crews. He patted everyone on the back and they returned the favours.
The spaceports were his, and everyone knows whoever controls the spaceports, controls the arenas and whoever controls the arenas, controls Solaris. It’s just how things work.
Ricky you see, had things figured out. It’s all a matter of statistics. At the spaceports, a tourist lands on Solaris roughly every quarter of a second. Which means in every minute, you got ‘bout two hundred and forty retards clearing through customs. So basically every hour, you got a hundred and forty four thousand morons collecting their suitcases. Add up the figures for an entire week, and its like Biblical scale retardation, condensed and spinning around like crazy inside a rickety slot machine.
Of course every suitcase and piece of luggage filtering through the spaceports has to be pushed through the scanners. And that’s where the "marking" takes place. You see Ricky has probably 150-200 men under his pay, working those scanners, checking out every suitcase that cycles through customs. As soon as they spot a guy with cash, BAM, the guy is marked. I ain’t lying. These goons move fast.
About fifty tourists are marked per hour. Ricky only goes after the big fish, you see. Some poor ****-*** tourist touches down with a suitcase full of gold bullion, two hours later he’s lying face down in the gutter, naked and broke. Hit ’em hard, hit ’em fast. That’s the way things work.
I mean, eventually things got so freakin’ bad down at the ports, the management had to install these robot/android things to replace the guys working the scanners. You know, like that sissy gold robot thing from Star Wars.
Course that was one big mistake. Equal rights riots and robo-hate crimes went up big time. You’d get slicers breaking in and re-programming the droids to dish out obscenities every time a tourist cleared through customs.
"Welcome to Solaris. Kiss my metal hide. Love me! Love me!" - Unknown Customs Unit - 3051
Yeah well, that there was the last time the F.S.C let robots do a man’s job. Nowadays the only robots you find on Solaris are a couple’a hundred tonnes heavy, three stories tall, and packing enough firepower to level a city. Yeah, it’s a strange kinda irony. I guess artificial intelligence ain’t no match for natural stupidity. Makes my knees itch just thinking ‘bout it.
So like I said, at the centre of things you had the games. The ’Mech Battles, held in giant arenas. Course, there was no honour in those days. Just bloodlust and money. Something about men beating the hell outta each other just seems to awaken the primal **** inside of everyone. Makes me sick.
You see the pilots of these things, they ain’t know nothing. They’re just degenerates with nothing to live for. Bald headed, crack junkies with not an ounce of worth inside of them. In those days, you see, it wasn’t about the jocks. It was about the Mechs.
Behind the machines though, are dangerous men. Crime lords and gangsters, criminals and kingpins, battling it out in front of audiences. Gangsters like Ricky Bambossa, and his arch rival Sonny Gambollio.
* * *
Chapter 5
Sonny Gambollio
Sonny Gambollio, you see, was a real big shot back in the days. The guy had a hundred acre ranch out in the city and followed every single game on his bank of a hundred and twenty five big screen monitors. He had a hard-on for information and had his hand in every freaking tournament that went on. This guy didn’t throw darts at a board. No. He bet on sure things.
Sun-Tzu, The Art of War: Every battle is won before it is ever fought.
Sonny didn’t enter a deal unless he was the one in control. Yeah, Sonny made a career out of fixing fights. You’d see a hundred tonne mech waltzing with a 35 tonner, next thing you know, the heavy’s knees fall off. Just like that! I mean, it boggles the mind, the kinda stunts these guys get away with. You’d see pilots ejecting at the start of a match, for no reason, and always, when you check the boards, Gambollio was the one guy drawing in the cash, placing careful bets with his phoney names and wise-guy handlers.
So Sonny’s methods weren’t scientific, but they worked. When he won, he collected. When he lost, he told the bookies to go **** themselves. I mean, what were they gonna do? Muscle Sonny Gambollio? Sonny Gambollio was the muscle!
Course, he eventually got caught. Turns out somebody tipped the Commission off on a fix, and they nailed Sonny’s nuts for "manipulating a gambling licence for personal profit."
*** knows what that means, end result though, Sonny spends a couple days in the slammer. Nailed and jailed. Joke is, the case went on for about nine months on account of judges kept turning up dead. 22 juries later and Sonny gets out with a pat on the back cus’ of "good behaviour".
But get this, someone in the Commission then tips out Sonny, telling him that Ricky Bambossa, was the one who spilled the word on Sonny’s little operation.
Well that there was the birth of a new era. You see, in those days ain’t no gangster ever turned on another gangster. In those days, the blood was thick. You looked out for one another. But what Ricky did, you see, he crossed a line. And since then, everyone’s been backstabbing for a living.
Funny thing though, Ricky and Sonny go way back. And I mean real way back. Guys used to be best buddies till Sonny caught Rickey smooching with his girl. Things got ugly, and as usual the girl took the bullet in the crossfire. Slug hit the dame and deflated her left breast. But get this. Turns out she had some cheap plastic surgery **** job. **** doctor filled it up with laughing gas to cut back on the cost of silicone. Next thing you know, Sonny and Ricky are on their knees laughing like hyenas while the poor girl bled to death on the carpet.
Thinking about it makes me sick. Sometimes I think that had Sonny and Ricky blown each other away that day, maybe Solaris wouldn’t be the cesspit it is. But I dunno. I ain’t no psychic.
* * *
Chapter 6
Life with my buddy Palerider
But anyway, there was me and there was Palerider. Just a couple of guys under the lights, trying to stay clean. We worked around the arenas mostly. Palerider had some kinda ’Mech fetish or something. Nah, that’s being a little harsh. The guy liked his ’Mech’s, sure, but his real gift was spotting a winner.
We stayed away from the big battles mostly. The big, holo-vised, over-hyped **** that draws in the crowds. That sort of thing. We steered totally away from that stuff like it was the freakin’ Manjitzu plague. When you got a couple million people betting on a ’Mech, you know the final payoff just ain’t worth it. Half the time, those games are rigged anyway.
So instead, we hit the smaller joints. The games on the outskirts, near Montoya City. Palerider said those games are where the real warriors are born. The players fight in derelict junkyards and unlike the big city games, anything goes. Ain’t no stupid rules. No tonnage regulations. Every man for himself. Once you can field a ’Mech, you’re good to go.
Sometimes games would last an entire day. You’d get guys straggling about on one leg, mincing it up with an underpowered laser and an empty AC. Hell, one time I seen a guy open his cockpit and start shooting the other guy’s canopy with a freaking 15mm Hand-Blaster. Yeah, those were the players that were worth betting on, the kinda jocks who bite the dust but still manage to claw their way outta their own freaking graves. Makes me laugh to think about it all. Those were crazy times.
Palerider and I spent most days checking out the pits and getting to know the pilots. The trick was finding an underdog who really knew his stuff. The kinda jock who no one would bet on, but was good enough to pull off a victory.
Might seem like a rarity, but Palerider had his ways. As soon as he spotted a hot stick, he would get in and start talking to the jock. Smoothen out the edges. You know, giving the guy pointers, tactics and info on the other players. Most pilots get all psycho and tell you to go suck on a heat-sink, but once they hear what Palerider has to say, they mellow out a bit.
There was this one guy down at the pits, **** I gotta tell you about this jock. A guy nicknamed Da BountyHunter. A real flashy hotshot. We made a good bit of C‘s, betting on this guy. He knew his stuff. Always had a Long Tom cannon. *** knows where he found the cash to keep that slug-hose maintained, but hell, it was his trademark. And like Palerider says:
"On Solaris, everyone loves a guy with a trademark."
I used to ask Palerider why he didn’t get back in the saddle. You know, fix up a mech and get inside the hoop himself. I mean Palerider had skill, he could easily rake in the wins with decent odds. But every time I asked, he’d just turn to me and say, with his deadpan voice:
"I don’t do that anymore."
Well that’s how things went. We hung about the fringe arenas, making cash and meeting people. Watching mechs bash chassis like steel gargoyles. Me, I always thought it was a **** waste of C-bills. Remove all the gear and let the pilots beat the hell outta each other with their fists. You know? Just seems like a freaking waste of resources to me, that's all. I ain’t no tree hugging hippy, but I got my concerns, you know?
But hell, that’s the way things were, and that’s the way things went. Up until the Smoking **** Cafe, that is.
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Edited by AndrewOsis, 03 November 2011 - 01:19 AM.