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How did we end up here?
- Chapter 15 -[]
Terran Hegemony Safe House Delta
45 KM from Union City, Puget Sound
Terra, Sol System
8th March, 3027
The wind off the Sound had a bite to it that morning as I stepped out onto the balcony of the command center, the cold stinging my cheeks as I took in the sight of the base below. The storehouse had changed in the past two weeks. What was once a collection of hastily assembled structures and repurposed spaces was starting to look like a proper, permanent base of operations. The walls had been reinforced, the defensive towers were nearly complete, and the Dropship bay had been fully converted into living quarters that now buzzed with activity. The base was coming to life, each day adding another layer of permanence to our makeshift home.
Leaning against the balcony railing, I found myself lost in thought, the cold air clearing my mind as I watched the activity below. I couldn't help but think back to my days at Sandhurst, to the moment that had changed everything for me. Wrecking a Warhammer during a training exercise—an incident that had earned me an early expulsion and a reputation that would haunt me for years.
"What a mess that was," I mumbled to myself, a wry smile tugging at my lips as I recalled the stunned faces of my instructors, their disbelief at my reckless maneuver that had ended in disaster. A lapse in judgment, a moment of overconfidence, and I had found myself on the outside looking in.
Expelled from ComStar shortly afterward, with nowhere to go but down, I had felt like my life was over before it had even really begun. But now, standing here, watching the hustle and bustle of our growing operation, I felt something I hadn't felt in a long time—hope. Maybe things were starting to look up. We had stumbled across some valuable salvage in recent weeks, enough to keep us busy and more importantly, enough to keep us afloat.
"Perhaps this is my second chance," I whispered to the wind, feeling the weight of my past slowly lift off my shoulders. "Maybe falling from grace was what I needed to find a new path."
Below, the scene was lively. I spotted Arai down by the Ripper-class VTOLs, her usual confident stride evident even from this distance. She was talking to Larry, her body language unmistakably flirtatious—leaning in close, her smile wide and playful. Larry, however, seemed completely oblivious to her intentions. He was nodding along, arms crossed, his focus entirely on the mechanics of the VTOLs rather than the woman trying to catch his eye.
Arai reached out, brushing a strand of hair behind her ear in what I recognized as a deliberate, flirtatious gesture. She said something that made Larry chuckle, but it was clear his mind was on the maintenance schedule she had just outlined, not on her. She tilted her head, clearly frustrated but determined, leaning in even closer.
"Poor Arai," I muttered, amused by the scene playing out below. "She could wave a neon sign in his face, and he'd still be more interested in the VTOL specs."
Larry was always like that—focused, disciplined, and utterly clueless when it came to anything outside of his immediate field of expertise. He could fly any vehicle you put him in, shoot the wings off a fly at a hundred meters, but put him in front of a woman who was interested in him, and he was as lost as a newborn lamb. It was almost endearing. Almost.
I turned my attention away from their amusing dance and looked towards the training grounds where the Jump Troopers were having their own kind of fun. They were supposed to be running drills, but the drills had quickly turned into a game. With their jump packs strapped on, they were bounding around the compound like a group of oversized children, laughing and whooping as they soared through the air.
One of them—Jackson, if I wasn't mistaken—performed an impressive somersault mid-jump, landing with a thud that shook the ground. The others cheered, spurred on by his display.
"Show-off," I muttered with a grin. But I couldn't deny it—seeing them enjoying themselves, finding moments of lightness amidst the seriousness of our situation, it was good for morale. They were an elite group, trained to be the best of the best, and they knew how to handle themselves. But right now, they were just having fun, enjoying the freedom their jump packs afforded them.
Watching them, I felt a sense of pride. These men and women—my team—were more than just employees. They were becoming family, a strange, mismatched family held together by our shared purpose and the hope of something better. And maybe, just maybe, we could build something lasting here.
I breathed in the cold, fresh air, feeling it fill my lungs and clear my mind. "Not a bad start," I said softly, more to myself than anyone else. "Not bad at all."
For the first time in a long while, I felt like I was exactly where I was meant to be. This base, this crew, this life—it was all starting to feel like home. And as I watched them work, play, and live, I knew that whatever lay ahead, we would face it together.
I lingered on the balcony, letting the wind tug at my hair as I looked out over the base. For the first time in what felt like ages, I felt a sense of peace settling over me. It was a feeling I hadn't known in years, not since I first woke up in this strange, altered world.
I still remembered the shock, the sheer disbelief when I realized I was no longer in my own body. It had taken me days to even begin to accept that I was stuck in the body of a girl in a universe that was supposed to be nothing more than a setting for games and books. At first, I had panicked, thinking that with my knowledge of this universe, I could somehow change it, fix it—make it better.
But that wasn't how it worked. No matter how much I knew, no matter how much I tried, the universe had its own rules. The grand plans I had made when I first arrived crumbled one by one. I thought I could outsmart the system, but the truth was, I was just another player in a game far more complex than I could ever have imagined.
I had imagined having an edge—being able to acquire the right resources, knowing which alliances to form, and what battles to avoid. But reality was far less forgiving. Instead of inheriting a fleet of warships or a cache of advanced technology, I found myself scraping by, barely surviving on the margins. I didn't get the grand beginning some self-inserts might dream of—no sudden windfall, no miraculous discovery that would set me on the path to power. Just me, my wits, and whatever scraps I could get my hands on.
At first, it felt like a cosmic joke—this world had given me nothing to work with, and I had struggled to adapt. I had failed in ways I never imagined I would, and those failures had nearly broken me. But looking out over the base now, I realized something: maybe it was for the best.
Had I been handed everything on a silver platter, I might have missed out on the lessons that came with fighting for every inch of progress. Every piece of salvage, every soldier that joined our ranks, every step forward was hard-won, and because of that, it meant something. It was real, tangible, not just some fantasy.
"I didn't need to fix the Inner Sphere," I murmured, the realization settling in my bones. "I just needed to survive it—and maybe, in doing that, I've found something better."
I hadn't reshaped history or bent the world to my will, but I had built something, something that was mine, forged from the sweat and grit of every person under my command. This was real. This was meaningful. And for the first time, I felt truly connected to the world around me—not as some outsider trying to mold it to my desires, but as part of it, working within its bounds to create something of value.
Maybe that was what I needed all along. Not the fantasy of ultimate power or the illusion of control, but the reality of connection—of finding my place in this vast, chaotic universe.
"Maybe this is enough," I whispered, feeling the peace within me grow. "Maybe it's more than enough."
As I looked over the base, watching my people work, play, and live, I knew that whatever came next, I was ready for it. I didn't need to change the world. I just needed to live in it, and maybe, just maybe, that was the greatest victory of all.
The wind grew colder, but I remained on the balcony, my thoughts drifting back and forth like the tide below. This—this life, this base, this ragtag group of misfits trying to make something out of the scraps left behind—maybe it was the life I had always wanted, even if I hadn't known it.
I had always imagined myself at the center of something grand. Before all this, I was convinced that if I ever ended up in a place like this, I would be the one to change everything. The Inner Sphere would bend to my knowledge, to my will. But standing here now, I realized how naive that was. This universe had its own plans, its own way of doing things, and I was just a small part of it. A single gear in a vast, ancient machine.
I looked out at the rusting ruins scattered across the landscape, remnants of wars fought over three hundred years ago. The Star League had clashed here with Stefan Amaris, ambitions colliding with ideals, leaving nothing but destruction in their wake. These ruins, these broken dreams of empires long gone—they were my reality now. And yet, in this bleak landscape, I had found a way to live, to build, to hope.
"Funny how that works," I mumbled to myself. "Finding a way to live among the ruins of other people's dreams."
There was a bitter irony to it all. We were scavenging in the aftermath of a war that had long since ended, picking through the bones of a civilization that had torn itself apart. Every piece of equipment, every bolt and shard of armor, every half-buried crate of munitions—it all told a story of a time when people thought they could change the world through force and fire. And here I was, living off the remains, finding purpose in the rubble.
These ruins provided us with a means to live. The salvage we brought back, the old technology we repaired—it was enough to keep us going, to keep this dream alive. And sometimes, I couldn't help but feel a pang of sorrow for the world that had been lost, for the machines and the people who had been swallowed by the tides of war.
"If I ever find a Mech out there," I whispered to the wind, "I'd bring it back. I'd repair it. No war machine deserves to be left in the mud, forgotten and abandoned."
There was something sacred about those machines, even after all this time. They were built for war, yes, but there was a beauty in them, a craftsmanship that spoke to something deeper. They were more than just tools of destruction; they were symbols of humanity's will to survive, to fight, to endure. And maybe, in some strange way, that's what I was doing too—fighting to survive, to find a place in a world that didn't want me.
I leaned against the railing, feeling the cold metal against my palms, the wind tousling my hair. It was a bitter life, yes, but it was mine. I had made it mine. From the moment I had been thrust into this world with nothing to my name, I had fought for every step forward. And maybe that was enough. Maybe that was more than enough.
I watched as the last light of the day began to fade, casting long shadows across the base. I could see my people, my crew, moving about below, finishing their tasks, laughing, talking, living. They were making the best of what we had, just as I was. We were all survivors here, in our own ways.
"This is my life now," I said softly, more to myself than to anyone else. "And maybe it's the life I was always meant to have."
There was a strange comfort in that thought, a kind of peace I hadn't felt in years. I didn't have all the answers, and I didn't know what tomorrow would bring. But I knew one thing for certain: I wasn't alone. Not anymore. I had a crew, a purpose, a place to call home, even if it was just a rundown storehouse in the middle of nowhere.
As the first stars began to appear in the twilight sky, I felt a sense of resolve settle in my chest. There was still so much to do, so many challenges to face, but for the first time, I wasn't afraid. I was ready. Whatever came next, we would face it together.
"Maybe it's not about changing the world," I mused, a faint smile forming on my lips. "Maybe it's about finding your place in it."
And with that thought, I turned away from the railing and headed back inside, the cold wind at my back and a newfound sense of purpose in my heart.
The darkness was settling in, but I knew that somewhere in those shadows was a path forward. It wouldn't be easy. It wouldn't be simple. But it was ours to walk, and for that, I was grateful.
Because sometimes, living in the ruins of old empires, you find a way to build something new. Something better. And maybe, just maybe, that's all anyone can hope for.
We weren't heroes. We weren't saviors. We were just people trying to survive. And in this world, that was enough.
- Author Chapter Note
- I lost the previous version of this chapter… but hey here a pretty self reflection style chapter just more slice of life aspect then some of the other.