"Taylor, we were just discussing our agenda."
"For what exactly, Sir?"
"For the entire fleet. I am posing the question, what do we do now? We made it this far, and we seem to be safe for now. But what are our ambitions? What avenue do we want to pursue now?"
It was the big question none of them had an answer to, and Taylor was no exception, yet they all looked to him.
"I hate to say it, Colonel," Dupont added, "but it was you and your alien friend who got us out here, and we are all very grateful for that. You saved millions of lives. But you must have had some idea or intention for what we could do when we got this far?"
Taylor shrugged and shook his head.
"You see," Bletchley quickly joined in, "He's just a dumb soldier who jumped first and leaves us with the consequences!"
Nobody doubted Bletchley's assessment of the situation even though it made Huber shudder to hear him being quite so repulsive.
"Well?" Bletchley asked Taylor.
"Well what?"
"What have you got to say for yourself?"
"Well, I ain't no soldier, I'm a marine. And you ain't no Prime Minister, just an asshole."
Huber laughed, and several joined in which belittled Bletchley to the level he slumped back in his chair.
"In all seriousness, Taylor. For whatever reason we have arrived here, now we have some big questions that need answering. We have to start working together. So, Taylor, I don't care what ideas you did or did not have, start thinking. Where do we go from here?"
The room looked to him for answers, as if he was their great big hope for an answer to all their prayers. It was a responsibility he never wanted. He took a deep breath and thought about it for a moment. He laid out all of the options in his head as though he were planning tactics on a battlefield, and finally he spoke.
"Seems to me we have just three options..."
All eyes were stuck on him, awaiting a miracle answer.
"Option one. We can try and find a way home. That would make coming out here pointless at this stage, and we'd be annihilated. Option two. We continue to operate as a fleet and stay on the move so that we are hard to track, and carry on living like we are right now. Finding resources to keep us active and alive will be tough, and we risk running out of gas in the middle of space somewhere and not being able to do a thing about it..."
He paused for some time.
"And option three?" Huber asked anxiously.
"We find a replacement Earth. A planet that can sustain life and we can rebuild on. Somewhere with the resources to keep us going."
Nobody said a word for a full minute while they considered that last possibility.
"Are those really the only options we have?"
Taylor nodded to the Admiral.
"Not that I am glad we have not come to a quick conclusion here, but I can't say I am eager to pursue any of them."
"No, Sir. I wasn't eager to fight an almost unbeatable enemy. I wasn't keen to go into space at all. And I certainly never wanted to leave Earth behind. We have to work with the hand we've been dealt."
"The hand you dealt us," added Bletchley.
"Yes," Taylor replied, "The hand that kept you alive so that we could be here today to make this decision. I don't like it anymore than you do, but I'd do it again. We have to accept that we lost. We gave Erdogan everything we had to give, and he brushed us off like we were nothing. He isn't Karadag, and he isn't Demiran. He is an entirely different kind of bastard who is smarter, faster, stronger, and with a far greater force than we had ever seen. We lost. I lost. Does that make you feel any better?"
Taylor never thought he would hear the words come out of his mouth. Losing was a prospect as alien to him as his friend Jafar was.
"I went toe to toe with Erdogan, and he beat me as easily as he beat the armies of Earth. I would never wish to face him again, nor wish it on any man."
It was in this moment those around the table finally began to appreciate how dire their situation was. They had relied on Taylor for so long that his acceptance of defeat and assessment of their situation hit them hard.
"So three options?" Dupont asked, "One that sees us dead, one probably dead, and one with a new chance at life? Seems pretty simple to me."
Huber nodded.
"I wish it were that simple. Do you know how rare habitable planets are? We'd be lucky to find one in ten years of searching."
"Maybe," said Taylor, "or maybe our luck hasn't entirely run out. So we set our overall mission to find a planet we can live on. Up till then, we are living the only other option; option two. Maybe we get lucky, or maybe we at least get a few months or a few years of peace aboard these ships."
"How long can we last out here?" Bletchley asked.
"This exodus, as desperate as it was, had been well planned. We have refinery ships, factories, and processors. We can mine a few places along the way that won't be hard to find and go on for a few decades easily, providing the fleet remains intact, as we know it. The incident with the Goeben earlier cast major doubts on the security and longevity of this fleet. Those are doubts we must overcome."
Taylor didn't like having the responsibility placed on his shoulders one bit, but he knew he was only stating the obvious. It was the only course of action they could take.
"Okay, show of hands," said Huber, "Do we follow Colonel Taylor's plan, to search for a planet we can settle on? This is a mission that could take us many years, if it ever succeeds at all. But if we do it, and let every person in the fleet know it, at least they will have hope; that somewhere down the line we might rebuild our homes on some new version of Earth, as farfetched as that may be."
Every hand in the room went up within seconds. It was clear that nobody had a better idea.
"Okay, motion passed."
"Sir, if I may?" Taylor asked.
Huber agreed.
"What do we know about our surroundings? What scouting of the system has been done?"
Huber looked confused.
"You think I would send another ship out or break up the fleet, after what happened at that old gateway or whatever the hell the damn thing was? We cannot afford losses, and we do at least have safety in numbers. If I send out scouts, and they are ambushed, you know how quickly those alien vessels move. There is a good chance we could lose any number if they go it alone or in small numbers."
"And to be in unknown territory without information or advance warning of activity, it's suicide."
Huber nodded.
"A few weeks back I would have agreed with you, Colonel. But we don't live in that world any longer. This isn't some Marine expedition."
Taylor said nothing. He had no energy left in him to argue.
"No. We have a plan now, and we will implement it, but first things first. Let’s secure the damn fleet. I want sweeps of every vessel. Thorough sweeps. I don't care how long it takes; I want it done and done properly. I will not tolerate another repeat of the Goeben. I want Krys agent scanners operational and looking for spies within the fleet. Let's get this locked down, or none of us is safe."
That was at least something Taylor could agree on.
"Taylor, I am placing you in command of this purge. Yes, a purge. Purge the fleet of all alien presence."
"Except for one."
"Yes, except for one," he replied.
"On that note," added Bletchley, "You have an alien walking freely among the fleet when we have already discussed the dangers of such things. It has access to you and key officials, as well as the Washington, the Capitol ship of this fleet," he turned to Huber. "Will you allow this to go on, Admiral?"