Talk:AIF/@comment-13740085-20150419000759

A transmission is sent to the Coalition forces:

"I am Admiral Neil Guy, commanding officer of Aubrey Base. In two (OOC: RP) hours, I will order the Forts and my men and women to stand down, and be exiting Aubrey D in the heavy cruiser USS Pittsburgh, with the intention of surrendering myself. My non-negotiable terms are as follows: 1) the bombardment of Aubrey Base will cease, 2) only myself and the volunteer crew of the Pittsburgh will be taken as prisoners of war, 3) no attempt to storm and seize Aubrey Base with the intention of occupying it and/or obtaining intelligence with be under taken. If any attempt does, my orders to resist you and wipe the computers will go into effect, among some other...unfortunate consequences. I will be exiting Aubrey in two hours, and the stand down orders will be implemented at that time. If you continue the bombardment after I exit Aubrey D and the Fort Perimeter, those unfortunate consequences will be implemented.

Two hours later, right on the tick of the clock, the 500-foot thick armored doors of Aubrey D open 60 meters wide, just enough for the USS Pittsburgh to exit. The doors slide shut, almost on the stern of the Pittsburgh, but carefully timed. On the heavy cruiser's bridge, Guy watches as the doors shrink behind him, and as the cruiser sails past the forts that stood guard over his base since Darksires infamous attack, Guy wonders what the Coalition will do.

He always prepared for the worst and hoped for the best during his battle plans, but now, as he hoped the Coalition heeded his words, for his sake and theirs, he was prepared to fell the heat of explosions as Coalition missiles ripped through the aged hull of the ship that beared the name of his hometown.