The Crider Chronicles: Confederacy – Part XXVII

by | Mar 30, 2026 | Fiction | 77 comments

Grugell

A valuable ship lost.

A mission failed.

A plan proven futile.

And an enemy grown stronger.

The Emperor was not happy.

His principal advisor, Kaxatrisk II, along with the Admirals Pokatak IX and Gilgakat XII, were now scattered vapor in the thin Grugell atmosphere, drifting slowly downwind from the Imperium’s disintegration chambers.

Attended now by four of his favored wives, Ignostak XI reclined on a lounge chair in his personal chambers.  Before him floated a hologram of Pokatak IX’s replacement as Fleet Commander, Kodatrax II.  The Emperor watched, for the fourth time this evening, the replay of the new Fleet Commander’s report:

“Our conclusions are as follows:

“First, the humans have formed an alliance of sorts, not a central authority after the manner of our Empire but an alliance of their settled worlds.  Second, they have devised a means of tracking our cloaked ships.  Third, we have managed to decode message traffic that indicates they will begin building armed ships themselves, at a location we have not yet been able to discover.

“To that end, Your Majesty, we have increased patrols in their main traffic lanes, but all Commanders have been ordered to not fire upon any human ships unless hostile action is directed against them.  We must more carefully analyze their trade routes and attempt to discover the source world of the species.  That is, without doubt, where their shipbuilding activities will take place.

“Also, Imperial Shipwrights are working on improving our cloaking devices.  We have discovered that the passage of a cloaked ship leaves a disturbance in trace normal matter patterns and in the dark matter matrix.  It is possible that the humans have discovered this as well, a hypothesis that is supported by the destruction of our ship orbiting the human world Tarbos.  My predecessor was less then prudent in his decision to send only one ship to monitor the human’s activity; in the future, all ships will travel in groups of no less than two.

“Finally, Your Majesty, we propose to step up production of our own armed frigates, and with your permission of course, to begin construction of larger, more heavily armed vessels with improved defenses.  It will take several years to assemble the Fleet we will need to decisively engage the human planets, but with patience and planning, our best estimates indicate we will be prepared in the space of twenty years.

“Finally, it would be advisable in the meantime to open communications with the humans.  Were we to project the appearance of abandoning aggression in order to seek peaceful relations, our actions may seem less threatening, and the humans may decide to slow or even cease building their armed fleet.  To that end we suggest that Your Majesty appoint an envoy to proceed to the human world Tarbos to open discussions with this ‘Confederacy.’

“This concludes the report as of this date, the ninth day of G’risth, Sixteenth Year of Ignostak XI.  I remain Your Majesty’s most humble servant.”

The hologram fizzled and went out.

Ignostak sat up and clapped his hands once.  His four wives disappeared; a servant slipped quietly in from an anteroom, bowing once, quickly.

“You.  You will take a message to Admiral Kodatrax II at the Imperium Headquarters.  Tell him, ‘Proceed.’”

“Is there anything else, Your Majesty?”

“No.  Why are you still here?”

The aide flinched visibly and bowed his way out of the room.

Ignostak stood up and strode to the huge windows in the curving outer wall of his chamber.  Far below him, the central city of the Grugell Empire sprawled out across the yellow sands.  Shining silver spires and domes cluttered the landscape, and in the traffic lanes a few vehicles moved, some power vehicles, others drawn by a large herbivorous animal common to the west of the city.  In the distance, the endless rolling dunes of the Empire’s home world stretched out to the horizon.  Somewhere to the south was the Imperial Retreat, another gleaming silver spire rising from the scrub along the ocean.  Tomorrow he would take his wives, servants and other assorted household members and go there; his spirit was raw, his demeanor irritable, and he was in need of time away from the city and the court.

A movement caught the Emperor’s eye.  In the medium distance, a small Imperium Security flyer floated idly over the city, its scanners no doubt recording activity below, its crew analyzing for any sign of dissent.

One day, Imperium flyers like that will watch over every world now occupied by the mongrel race, ‘human.’  I vow it to be so.

To see more of Animal’s writing, visit his page at Crimson Dragon Publishing or Amazon.

About The Author

Animal

Animal

Semi-notorious local political gadfly and general pain in the ass. I’m firmly convinced that the Earth and all its inhabitants were placed here for my personal amusement and entertainment, and I comport myself accordingly. Vote Animal/STEVE SMITH 2028!

77 Comments

  1. Not Adahn

    If humans have (up until this point) only bred with other humans, how are they mongrels?

      • Not Adahn

        Good point.

        Hybrid vigor FTW!

    • EvilSheldon

      If the Grugell find out about furries, they’re gonna move way up on the extermination timeline…

    • Aloysious

      See, there’s the right kind of Humans and the wrong kind of Humans…

      Just typing that made me feel dirty.

  2. juris imprudent

    So could such a retrogressive culture really innovate? Squelching all dissent, yet science (real science) thrives on dissent.

    • EvilSheldon

      That might be why it’ll take them twenty years to spin up an invasion fleet…

      • R.J.

        Grugell construction regulations…

      • Aloysious

        Do the Grugell have unions?

      • Ted S.

        They wore a union on their belt, as was the style of the time.

    • kinnath

      Organized, collaborative work can produce advances.

      But there are no radical breakthroughs without some wild ass going off in a weird and “unproductive” direction.

      • juris imprudent

        Grugell have exceptionally severe disincentives to risk taking. Though it isn’t said, consider what success must mean to the Emperor – the threat of someone competent enough to knock him off the throne.

      • Threedoor

        Crazy Eddie

      • Evan from Evansville

        “We’re all built up with progress
        But sometimes I must confess
        We can deal with rockets and dreams
        But reality
        What does it mean?
        Ain’t nothing said
        ‘Cause F̵r̵Eddie’s dead”

      • ZWAK, doktor of BRAIN SCIENCE!

        thats what i said

  3. Grumbletarian

    It will take several years to assemble the Fleet we will need to decisively engage the human planets, but with patience and planning, our best estimates indicate we will be prepared in the space of twenty years.

    Now, how many Earth days does it take for the Grugell home world to complete an orbit of its primary star?

    • juris imprudent

      All Grugell thoughts and words have been rendered in their human (English) equivalent.

    • Evan from Evansville

      The orbit is 150,000,000,000 giraffes in length. Their bendy, fighty necks help curve it out.

      • Threedoor

        You can’t square a circle but you can giraffe it.

        I learned something new today.

      • Evan from Evansville

        I used Jupiter’s orbit as reference! Bigger numbers are more fun. I suppose giraffes *could* eat juniper berries, and that’s close enough for glibtasticular accuracy. (Glib + fantastic + spectacular = tasty glib testes. The more you know. *taps noggin*)

        Giraffe neck fighting is fucking *rough.* Damn. Such noble savages.

  4. UnCivilServant

    So there’s a gun store close by enough that I was able to run out and buy a new roll pin over my lunch break.

    It feels odd to leave the house while working remote – even if I’m on my lunch break.

    Anyway, I managed to get it mostly in place, but the last 1/16th inch is not moving any more. I’m not sure if it’s bound up on the junction between the tube and the gas block on the far end.

    What’s the safest way to get it the rest of the way?

    • DrOtto

      The answer is always a BFH (Bigger Fucking Hammer).

    • EvilSheldon

      What tool are you using to start and drive in the roll pin?

      If you drive it in with a normal flat punch, the far end of the roll pin might be splayed out against the inside of the gas tube. In which case, I hate to tell you this, but…you might make another stop by that gun store on the way home…

      (Aside – that’s a pretty good gun store if they have discreet AR gas tube roll pins on hand.)

      The solution to this problem is two-fold – make absolutely certain that the hole in the gas tube is perfectly aligned with the hole in the gas block, and use a roll pin starter to initially drive the pin in. Sometimes it also helps to lightly bevel the far end of the roll pin with a bit of emery cloth.

      • DrOtto

        This may be slightly better advice than mine…

      • UnCivilServant

        It was pliers, and the view from the open side does not indicate any deformation. It may just be too much friction for the grips on these pliers. I’m thinking I might get the vice set up again.

      • Threedoor

        Roll pin starter.
        I need these in my life and have never heard of them.

    • ZWAK, doktor of BRAIN SCIENCE!
      • EvilSheldon

        This. Pliers are really not the right tool for the job.

      • Threedoor

        The roll pins get upset.
        You don’t want to make them angry.

      • DrOtto

        Harry J. Epstein? What an unfortunate name for a business. I would change it if I were him. Like maybe Epstein’s Island of Tools?

      • Threedoor

        I just ordered a Grip brand set from Amazon for $12.

        As much as I’ll use them over the course of my life they’ll never wear out.

      • R.J.

        I hate to be Chris Rock but can I just get just one roll pin punch for $5?

      • Gustave Lytton

        HJE is an outstanding quirky hardware store. Jeffrey needs to change his name. He’s the no talent asshat.

      • Not Adahn

        Ackshually,

        I really like having the one tool I need at the location where it’s needed. Yes I have a set of wrenches, but I also have a crapton of 9/16″ with each piece of equipment that needs one. I hardly ever get out the full set.

      • EvilSheldon

        This is a thing. My reloading press has dedicated hex keys, wrenches, and a special pair of angled-tip tweezers (perfect for removing jammed primers without having to disassemble the entire press) all stored within easy reach.

    • UnCivilServant

      The vice appears to be dealing with the issue. No, the pin was not bound on the edge of the hole, it was properly aligned, just higher friction than the pliers could deal with.

      And I used pliers because that was what other internet isntructions said to so.

      • EvilSheldon

        And I used pliers because that was what other internet isntructions said to so.

        I know you didn’t mean to, but holy shit, that comment just activated my eye twitch…

    • R.J.

      So insulting. She should just look in the mirror.

    • The Other Kevin

      She’s just preaching to the choir. I have a teammate who listens to NPR, and he calls the Midwest “dumbfuckistan”. Except the enlightened city folk, of course.

      • Threedoor

        He’s on reddit isn’t he?

      • Raven Nation

        I regularly get FB posts, etc., from my friends who commiserate with me being an academic in a red state.

    • EvilSheldon

      Possibly the most annoying thing about proggies is their provincialism.

      My apologies to any progressives who need to Google ‘provincialism’.

      • ZWAK, doktor of BRAIN SCIENCE!

        NYC is the capital of provincialstan.

      • Not Adahn

        Urban peasants are a thing. They were called “cockneys” in London, but AFAIK NYCers who thought themselves cosmopolitan because they had visited Manhattan AND Queens don’t have any special name.

      • Sensei

        NA – those in the surroundings who actually don’t live in Manhattan are known as the “bridge and tunnel crowd”.

      • dbleagle

        Her nannies will be taking xer spawn to the colonies to observe. She will not pollute her lungs with the air from ‘Bama (or Wyoming, or Nebraska, or or or) actually entering them.

    • Ed Wuncler

      Most of the Left: The more we insult and belittle these people, the more they’re unwilling to vote for us. I just don’t get it.

      I would make a shit politician but even I know to never insult the people who you need to win.

      • R.J.

        I lived in California for about 5 years, around San Jose in the late eighties/early 90’s. My observations:
        1) Southerners, especially Texans and Alabamans, live rent-free in their heads. People couldn’t help belittling and making jokes. Never seen such a thing. It’s not like people in the South spend time thinking about them.
        2) Californians were absolutely addicted to kicking the can down the road. Endless bonds to pay for this and that, crazy high income taxes, and no way to ever balance a budget. I saw it in the late 80’s, cannot imagine how bad it is now.
        3) The only time I ever heard someone speak actual racist talk and hatred was in Northern California. It was from a group of (known) democrats talking. I just don’t hear it in the South. Maybe we just all get along better. I don’t know.

      • Rat on a train

        Why would you vote against bond measures for safety or children? It was rare that they didn’t push one of those in their sales pitch.

      • R C Dean

        I vote against anything pitched as “for the children”. The little twerps need to toughen up.

    • Aloysious

      Are those Newsome’s kids, or Weinsteins. Or some other simps?

  5. The Late P Brooks

    Newsom’s wife said she brought her children to the red states so they could learn about racism, sexism, and bullying first hand.

    Good gravy what a steaming pile of insipid twaddle.

  6. The Late P Brooks

    I’m thinking I might get the vice set up again.

    Do you have a C clamp you could use as an installation tool?

    • R.J.

      Yes. If it is stuck, a C clamp with a BB taped to it might push it in all the way.

  7. The Late P Brooks

    Meanwhile…

    Eric Swalwell’s campaign for governor had a very good weekend — by both normal political standards and Trump-era ones.

    On Sunday, he scooped up the endorsement of the powerful California Teachers Association, the last major labor prize the gubernatorial candidates had been jockeying for. Organized labor — like Democrats as a whole — has struggled to rally behind a single candidate. But with the support of CTA, along with SEIU’s state council, the United Food and Commercial Workers and the statewide firefighters union, Swalwell has locked down some of the biggest heavyweights.

    ——-

    Swalwell wouldn’t go so far to say the report is a boon to his campaign (though plenty of pundits did it for him). But in a race where the top Democratic contenders have struggled to break out, an ongoing skirmish with Patel and Trump is one way he can distinguish himself from Tom Steyer and Katie Porter.

    “It validates and reinforces that we are the biggest threat to Trump in the field, the only name he knows, the only person he attacks,” he said.

    What does he plan to actually do as governor? Who cares, when Mad King Donald is on the loose?

    • R.J.

      So many people are undecided, he can’t really say he is in the lead. He pulled ahead of the two republicans, so this way there would be a democrat and republican in the race. He is a useless stooge. It would go from bad to worse if he gets elected. Like Biden following Obama.

      • Aloysious

        What does he plan to actually do as governor?

        Bring back Fang Fang. She is his Yoko Ono.

      • juris imprudent

        As long as she outlives him like Yoko did, it won’t be all bad.

      • ZWAK, doktor of BRAIN SCIENCE!

        yoko was the best beatle

        Fight Me!

      • Threedoor

        Fairly sure she died in a plane crash years ago.

  8. The Late P Brooks

    Roll pin starter.
    I need these in my life and have never heard of them.

    I don’t know about those but a drill bit can be a handy alignment tool.

    • Threedoor

      I would 100% break a drill bit off in a hardened roll pin if I were to even as much as look at the two in the same glance.

      • R C Dean

        All right, I gotta admit, this euphemism went right over my head.

  9. The Late P Brooks

    I would 100% break a drill bit off in a hardened roll pin

    Use it to align the parts and be sure the holes line up before you start the pin.

    • Furthest Blue pistoffnick (370HSSV)

      Look at that body roll.

  10. The Late P Brooks

    incredible things are happening in the world of swedish rally

    I’d rather have a Renault R5 turbo.

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