FullAuto Posted September 3, 2005 Share Posted September 3, 2005 1 - Saving Wales. Shuji Akira watched Kojima quickly check the grenades on hisbelt, then brace himself, without thinking, against the Skyranger'srestraining straps. "Just move fast and get behind something," hesaid in Japanese, "and don't worry about your rear. Crossett andGaudin will cover you with the heavier stuff." The trooper and heavyweapon specialists recognized their names and turned to give Kojimathe evil eye and a smile. Kojima said Crossett had cut her hair shorter on each mission and was going to get out when she went bald. Akira studied Kojima's every move, wondering which wereimportant to mimic for his own survival. Kojima was the Far Squadscout, and a veteran by X-COM standards, with four missions and four confirmed kills. "Mostly floaters," he would say, "they're sneaky, but they sometimes go down with only one shot. I let the Heavies takecare of the Heavy bugs." Akira could tell the Skyranger was descending - Englandsomewhere - but he was surprised to find he wasn't frightened.Everything had happened so fast. He was still trying to catch up.Part of him was still back at the underground base in Arkansas and hadn't even boarded the Skyranger yet. Had it been only five days ago that the officials in suits hadvisited his Defense Force training camp on Hokkaido? They hadcasually reviewed everyone in his platoon, and quickly chose him. Hiscommander offered him a chance to not only serve Japan, but the wholeworld. He was not given any details, but the mystery appealed to him,and the chance to be in a group of elite warriors, samuria from aroundthe world. He accepted and was on a plane to America in three hours. He suspected he hadn't been selected for his abilities as muchas for the fact that he had no wife or children and only limitedfamily contacts. He soon regretted his decision. He and Marc Bouton, arecruit from Europe, were quickly inducted into X-COM, the highlysecret international Extraterrestrial Combat unit. Over the course ofthree days they were bombarded with information about new weaponsystems and what little was known about the alien technology they wereup against. And to prove the mission was serious, Captain Marcelletook them into the refrigerated storage areas to see the bodies ofdead, autopsied aliens. But the most disconcerting and surreal part was the missionreports and battle camera footage taken in previous raids. Most ofthe aliens were mysterious and far off, and the footage was poor, butthere had been one taken off a dead troopers body at Santiago whichterrified him. The image was shaky, the trooper running along besidea building, continuously glancing to the open street on his right.Then there was a dull thump, thump, and when he turned back to the lefta reaper stood on its two stalky legs, towering over him and staringright at him. The trooper stopped and got off one wild shot beforethe reaper jumped him and smothered the camera. After a few seconds of crunches and screams, and wild camera panning, the camera lay on the ground, recording just the dead trooper's hand and a pool of blood. Then this morning the alarms had sounded, they all boarded theSkyranger, and Akira was told he was to be the scout for Near Squad,meaning he would help secure the area near the Skyranger. The Skyranger hit ground and jerked Akira back to reality.The rear ramp began to lower. Kojima crouched down and motioned forAkira to do the same. "Bouton's a rookie," he said, "you don't wanthim to blow your head off if he sees an alien right away and getsexcited." After that, Akira was all business, completely focused. Itwas the last time the two would talk. As the doors opened, Akira saw they were in a small countryvillage with a few fields and a large building to the right. Kojimastepped forward onto the ramp and scanned the area. "Far squad left,"he yelled in English and jumped off the left side of the ramp. Akira had been through a few hasty disembarkation drills. Hetook a few steps onto the ramp and jumped off to the right, droppingfour feet to the ground, crouching and scanning the area. He felt light on his feet, carrying just a laser pistol, a few grenades and astun rod. He wasn't sure why he had the stun rod and was tempted todrop it. Kojima had told him it was for stunning aliens at closequarters, but that had to be a joke - some kind of initiation thing. He heard someone drop to his left, probably Crossett. He couldsee an empty field to the right and the building off to his left, butmost of his view was blocked by a stone fence straight ahead. He was the scout, so the rest of the squad was waiting for himto move. Finally his sense of duty, his desire to have it over with,and his curiosity were enough to get him to his feet and up to thefence. As soon as he reached the fence, he saw it. A man-sizedcrimson specter stood at the edge of a small orchard between him andthe building. But it did not stand, it floated just above the ground,gliding along slowly. He lost a second or two getting over the surprise and remembering the spotting signal. It was enough time forthe floater to see him. There were crackling sounds and yellowbeams streaking silently past him. One hit the wall in front of himand blew out chunks of rock. Akira fell back on his training. He quickly gave the signal, the international sign language symbol for bug, pointed his laser pistol and squeezed the trigger hard for automatic fire. His training with high-powered rifles led him to expect aserious kick, but it never came. The pistol fired off streaks ofgolden-orange destruction in rapid succession, sending dirt andbranches flying, and destroying one tree completely. He also thoughthe hit the alien at least once. It was a beautiful display, and it liftedhis confidence for a second or two. Then the wall ten feet to his left exploded in a greenflash, peppering him with rocks and mortar chips. He heard thecrackling of laser fire and human screams behind him and then a woosh,followed by a deafening explosion and an unearthly, piercing shriek. He started to turn and drop, then remembered Kojima's advice. Someonewould cover his rear. By the time he turned back, Crossett had moved up and waskneeling, aiming and firing at the floater with her laser rifle through the newly-formed breach in the wall. Akira knew instinctivelythat this was his chance. He raced along behind the fence, head andshoulders exposed, out beyond the point where the Skyranger wouldblock fire from his rear. He made it to the end of the fence and gotdown, scanning the orchard. The floater was there. He didn't know if it spotted him, butit began to move toward him. As it glided from behind the cover of asmall tree, a single laser shot streaked across and opened theside of the alien in a burst of steam and burned tissue. It gave ashort scream as it dropped. "Thanks Crossett," Akira whispered to himself. Akira made his way cautiously across the orchard. For themost part, everything was very quiet, with occasional, but intensebursts of battle sounds behind him. Obviously behind him. There wasno one in front of him, no troopers anyway. He reached the near corner of the building and scanned alongboth walls before ducking around to his right. No obvious doors tothe right, and one large service door to the left. He would leavethat one to someone else. He moved along, hugging the wall, glancing to the right intothe orchard. The images of the helmet-cam and the reaper threatenedto break his concentration, but he managed to stay focused. He peaked through the first window he came to. Most of the inside of the building was one huge storage area with a twenty foot ceiling, probably a warehouse of some kind. In the far corner there was an enclosed office area which merged with a mezzanine levelrunning all across the far side. He saw nothing unusual, no movement. He checked each window as he went, and glanced behind and sawCrossett covering him from the end of the fence, and Gaudin movingup with a heavy cannon. He rounded the corner of the building and dropped to one knee. Nothing there. Screams and another large explosion far off sent shivers up his spine and reminded him how spread out and vulnerable the squads were. Straight ahead and to his right were open fields, devoid ofaliens and beyond the required security perimeter. All that was leftwas to check out the building. He saw a small wooden door near the far end and made for itquickly. He wanted to be done with it and back in the air in theSkyranger. No, he wanted to be back in Japan. He knelt by the door and listened for a few seconds. He heardtrooper footsteps behind him. What was he listening for anyway, hewondered. What sound did a floater make? Then he heard a door openinside, probably on the first level and nearby. Time to kill one myself, he thought, and charged into thedoor, dropping down again, ready to fire. He was in a small officeroom with another door open into the warehouse and a set of stairsgoing up. He glanced out the door, saw nothing and concluded that thewhatever opened it must have gone up the stairs. He had two grenades on his belt and decided this would be asgood a time as any to use one. He plucked one, primed it for a veryshort fuse, and moved quickly up the stairs. The stairs opened into a room the same size as the loweroffice, but open to the wide mezzanine. It was a bad location toemerge, and any alien up there would have had the advantage of cover,and probably surprise. But Akira was lucky - the area was empty. Then he heard laser fire directly below and loud thunkingsounds from the warehouse. The room he was in had a window facinginside, so he moved to it and looked out over the room. A floater hung near ground level, half-way across the floor.Someone, probably Crossett was shooting up its cover through a windowbelow. Before Akira had a chance to react, the floater saw him andtook two rapid shots up at the window. The first was wild, blowing ahole in the outside wall of the warehouse to Akira's left, but thenext hit the thin wooden wall below the window, shattering the windowand destroying most of the wall around it. Akira turned to take cover and found himself facing anotherfloater near the stairs, no more than twenty feet away. The floatergot off a shot. A glowing yellow sword shot from his pistol andstabbed through Akira's left shoulder. Akira dropped the grenade and fumbled to bring up his own pistol. He squeezed off one shot, missed and decided the grenade was too dangerous. He turned and jumped through the hole in the wall. He fell ten feet onto a pile of crates. As he fell he saw thewarehouse streaked by the fireworks of an X-COM heavy laser. When hehit he remained conscious long enough to hear the exploding grenadeand the screams of a dying floater, much longer and more dramaticthis time. . . . "... had us worried there, Squaddie," Captain Marcelle said.His face filled Akira's still-cloudy field of view. "Can you hear me Akira?" Marcelle was in his uniform, coveredin blood. Mine, Akira realized. "Did you hear me? You're going to be fine." They were in the Skyranger, engines running, in flight. "Kojima?" Akira said. The captain looked distressed. "Didn't make it son. Neitherdid Sergeant Buchard." The captain propped Akira up against the wall. Akira glancedaround. The Skyranger was full of artifacts, dead alien bodies, andstacks of metal sheets like Akira had seen at the base, roughly cut from a UFO. Six other troopers sat silently against the walls.Crossett was there, smiling at him and cutting her hair with a bowieknife. "I didn't get to see a UFO," Akira said to the captain. "You will. You're Far Squad scout now" Akira noticed the pile of floater bodies toward the rear ofthe plane. I got one of you, he thought. Then he saw two morebodies, wrapped carefully in blood-soaked white cloth, one barelyrecognizable as a human form. One of them was Kojima. Akira searched around on his knees for his equipment, checked it over and sat patiently back down. "Damn you," he said out loud. THE END Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
FullAuto Posted September 3, 2005 Author Share Posted September 3, 2005 2 - The better part of Valour. Compared to the flight to England, the trip from Little Rockto Arizona was just a hop, but still two too many hours to think aboutwhat was coming - a desert, everything right out in the open. Most ofthe troopers had grumbled about not having cover, but as a scout,Shuji Akira liked the idea - nothing for the bugs to hide behind. He was near the rear of the Skyranger, ready to be the firsttrooper out the back ramp. Between him and the ramp sat a heavilyarmored robotic tank, equipped with a powerful rocket launcher. Itwould leave first and scout the area. It had been a new addition when the skyranger had salvaged asmall UFO crash in Alberta ten days earlier. A rookie scout namedMaxwell had been killed on that mission, but otherwise it was acomplete success, largely due to the presence of the tank and itsability to obliterate light cover. Akira had missed that mission, still healing from a shot tohis shoulder. The scout who was killed had been in far squad, whereAkira would have been. He wondered if he would have fared any better. Morinov, the near squad scout, now sitting across from Akira,had gained notoriety and respect during that mission by sneaking intothe back of a shed and using his stun rod on a skinny, bubble-headedalien who's complete attention seemed to be on Bouton and his laserrifle out front. The captain had raved about it, "That's what we have to do towin this! I don't have a medal for you, son, but I'll let you namethese new bugs." "They're sectoids," Morinov said, and it stuck. Unfortunately the alien had died, locked away in an empty roomin the living quarters, but its loss convinced X-COM command to build aspecial containment facility for the aliens right in the base. Morinov had told the stun story so many times that Akira gotcompletely sick of it. Even Bouton, the most easy-going trooper inthe squads, had made comments under his breath. And Bouton wasMorinov's backup trooper, the one person he shouldn't tick off. Akira turned to his right to talk to Crossett. She would beright behind him off the ramp. After five missions, her yellow hairwas even shorter than his, about two inches long and uneven in places. "Hair's nice," he said in English. She smiled and slicked it back. "Domo areegatto gozeemas,"she replied. He was sorry he had ever tried to teach her Japanese. "Remember, `Kira," she said, "just point and duck. I'll dothe shooting." While she talked, she rolled her eyes to the right towardMorinov and pretended to stab at him with her bowie knife. Bouton sawit, snickered, then composed himself and gave her a disapprovinglook. Morinov was oblivious, squatting and staring forward past thetank, already planning his next stunning triumph. When the alarms had gone off that afternoon, Akira andCrossett had rushed to the radar center, along with half of thetroopers in the base. From there they had watched the track of theUFO and seen the interceptor converging on it. Nearly an hour afterthe UFO was first detected, heading south from Idaho, the interceptorcaught up with it over Nevada. The captain punched up the display from the interceptor'stargeting camera. The UFO looked slightly larger than any they'd seenso far. "Get close enough to launch an Avalanche," the captain saidover the comm link to the pilot. "..Avalanche launched.." Nearly a minute passed. "...A Hit...he's turning, heading west...250..." "Follow him, Interceptor-1," the captain said, "if he tries tohead out to sea, hit him again, otherwise let him fly or land where hepleases." The troopers in the room all turned and stared at the captainin amazement. Why not just blow it to pieces? There were two moreAvalanches loaded on that interceptor, and a laser cannon to finishhim off. The captain was still staring at the displays, but he seemedto sense the confusion. "We have other X-COM radar sites coming on line in secret basesaround the world," he said. "The UFO incursions are not a localevent. In fact some areas are being hit harder than North America.There is even evidence of a possible alien base somewhere in Russia." He turned to look each trooper in the eyes. "We can't win in a straight battle with the aliens, not withthe resources and technology we have. But we may be able to use thealien technology against them, and maybe learn enough about them tostop them." There was still confusion in the room, but a few of thetroopers were somberly nodding their heads. Akira understood too. "We have to take the aliens alive and their equipment intactif we can." With that he turned back to the displays. Fifteen minuteslater the UFO had landed in eastern Arizona, near a town calledHolbrook, and Akira was rushing to the Skyranger. Now, two hours later, they began their descent over thedesert. Only the troopers far behind Akira, toward the front of theSkyranger, could see outside, so Akira judged their progress from hisfirst landing experience. They hit ground and the ramp began to drop. The evening sunblazed in on Akira and forced him to squint as he got ready todisembark. Someone near the windows called "Bug left." Mine, Akira thought, and pulled a grenade off his belt. The ramp hit ground, kicking up loose sand and crushing asmall cactus. Akira ran quickly onto the ramp behind the tank,priming his grenade with his teeth and clutching his laser pistol. Heheard a crack and a dull thud against the back of the Skyranger. Hadhe missed a bug behind the Skyranger somewhere? Too late to findout; he was already off the ramp to the left. He landed in the parched sand behind the Skyranger's landinggear, and scanned the area. He looked for the violet outline of afloater, but instead spotted a small grey figure with a large head.One of Morinov's sectoids. As he threw his grenade, Akira heard someone on the Skyrangerfire off a laser rifle on autoshot. There was a high-pitched nasalshriek far to his right, which got the attention of the grey alien.It turned for a second and spotted Akira around the corner of thelanding gear. The world went to slow motion as the alien brought itsweapon around and raised it to aim at him. Then the grenade went offand blew the little grey body four feet into the air. Akira took time to scan the area. He saw no UFO and was aboutto send his squad right. He checked again and saw a thin trail ofprints leading back from the dead alien toward a small mesa in thedistance. He moved forward cautiously, a dozen paces from theSkyranger, and crouched behind a cactus. Now, around the edge of themesa, he could see a rounded wall of metal. "Far Squad left" he called back. Crossett was still near theramp. She nodded and yelled something back to Sergeant Evans. Akira moved forward, crouching and scanning often. There wasno good cover, and at the moment he couldn't remember why that was agood thing. He went wide to his left, not approaching the UFOdirectly. He wasn't about to leave his flank open, and Crossett andDavies could watch the center. The tank should have been there.Maybe the captain had programmed it to hang back, Akira thought -rockets tend to kill aliens, not take them alive. He made it behind a small ridge with a patch of scrub andcactus on the other side. he poked his head up and scanned carefully.A large panel in the side of the UFO facing him somehow lookeddifferent than the surrounding wall. It had to be the door - or oneof the doors. Then he noticed movement on the side of the UFO opposite themesa. Another small grey figure was moving out into the open. Akirawasn't sure Crossett and Davies could see around the mesa. He didn'tthink he could hit it with his pistol, and was afraid it would bescared back into cover by wild shots. He pointed his pistol andwaited. He remembered the captain's speech and wondered how the hellthey were supposed to sneak up on an alien in terrain like this. Thistime he would just have to settle for an intact UFO. As the alienmoved out into the open area in front of the UFO, Akira gave the bugsignal and pointed. As soon as he saw that Crossett had spotted it,he squeezed hard for autofire. At the same time, Crossett fired her laser rifle, and Daviesrattled off six High explosive rounds with his autocannon. The succession of explosions drowned out the crackling oflaser fire. The alien was blown apart and buried in sand and glass."Sorry captain." Akira said out loud, "I guess you won't be learningmuch from him." Akira could see clearly for a hundred meters or more to theleft and behind, and saw no sign of aliens, so he made his way slowlyaround toward the side of the UFO, hiding behind small brush andcactuses as he went. He saw nothing beside the UFO and moved up toits corner. He knelt down with the open sand to his left, the UFOdoor straight ahead and the mesa beyond. The small research team at Little Rock had developed hand-heldmotion scanners for the scouts. It didn't seem to be necessary in theopen desert, but Akira wondered if they could detect motion within anintact UFO. He removed the scanner from his belt and held it still.Waves of white light converged into four bright spots. If he wasreading the range information correctly, one spot was only a fewmeters in front of him, inside the UFO. Another was also straightahead, but farther away, beyond the UFO. The other two were backbehind the UFO somewhere. Suddenly Morinov appeared on top of the mesa, moving quicklydown toward the front of the UFO with his laser pistol in one hand andstun rod in the other. With the open terrain around the Skyranger,near squad must have checked things quickly and moved on toward theUFO. But if Morinov was up on the mesa, who were the two blipsbehind the UFO. Akira was hit with a feeling of dread and moved alongthe UFO's side to see for himself. Lack of information was the mostdisconcerting part of battle. Morinov should have checked behindbefore moving to the front. He had left his squad's right flank open. Before he rounded the corner to the back of the UFO, Akiraheard something like a laser discharge, but different, followed by ashort human scream and a second shot. Akira dropped his scanner, rounded the corner and dropped toone knee. He was looking at the back of a sectoid, less than threemeters away. It was holding an extremely large gun, bigger even thana heavy laser. Akira had stashed his stun rod in his backpack and didn't wantto take the time to unpack it. He aimed carefully for the alien'slower back and squeezed off a single shot. The alien dropped and laystill. Beyond the UFO was a dead trooper's body, flopped motionless,face down on the sloping side of the mesa. Gaudin, the near squad heavy weapons trooper, appeared at thetop of the mesa and looked down at Akira, then at the body. It musthave been Bouton. Akira heard more alien fire, this time from in front of theUFO. He moved around quickly the way he'd come. He peeked around infront but saw nothing but the alien Davies had blown up, so he wentaround the front of the UFO and stayed close to the wall. Crossett was already there, against the wall on the other sideof the doorway. "Morey went in and got shot," she said calmly, "Thedoor just opened for him." Idiot, Akira thought. He probably went right in waving a stunrod. Now Akira wished he hadn't dropped his scanner. "Get ready,"he said, and primed a grenade. He moved up to the door. When he gotwithin arm's reach, it opened quickly. The inside was dimly litcompared to the outside. Akira didn't wait for his eyes to adjust.He moved inside and tripped over a body, ending up on his knees andalmost dropping his grenade. A green beam shot over his head andvaporized part of the wall next to the door. Akira raised his pistol, but there was no need. Crossettfilled the room with a strobe of automatic laser fire and the alienwent down screaming. There were two doors out of the room they were in, to the leftand right. Akira tried to cover them both as Crossett draggedMorinov's body out of the ship. Crossett came back in and knelt downa couple yards away. Akira noticed she had a grenade in her hand too.We're a pretty dangerous team, he thought. They kept low and moved along the walls. The wall between thedoors bellied out, blocking the view between them. Crossett stoppedwhile she could still cover both doors, and Akira moved on toward theone on the right. He waited only a second or two next to it, thenmoved in front of it. It opened with a slight "woosh" sound. Hestepped inside and got down, and saw no aliens. The door wooshedclosed behind him. He was in a control room of some kind, and all thepanels and controls still looked intact. The captain will be happy,he thought. This room, together with the area they'd entered through,comprised nearly the whole inside of the UFO, with the exception of acircular area in the center which bulged out into both. He stood up to move around the wall to his left. He heard adoor open ahead of him, followed by laser fire mixed with alien weaponsounds, then there was an explosion. The UFO contained the blast, andthe concussion stunned Akira for a few seconds. Instead of going backhe moved quickly forward through the room. As he approached a closeddoor around the other side, it opened and a small grey alien steppedthrough. Fear and reflexes took over. Akira fired autoshot until hewas sure the alien was dead. Through the open door he could see thedoor into the entry room, and another door to the left which had tolead to the center of the ship. He went through that door and found himself alone in acircular room. In the center was a silver half-sphere with a long,glowing red cylinder rising out of it - nothing else. He left the room and looked through the door into the entryroom. Sergeant Evans was bending over Crossett with a medikit, andDavies was covering the door Akira had just come through with his autocannon. Akira wondered how close he was to being blow up like thealien out front. "All clear on this side," he said. He still had a primed grenade, and he couldn't be absolutelysure no aliens had made it past Crossett and got behind him, so hewent back into the control room. It was empty except for the deadalien. "You shot her, didn't you?" he said. "Well, I have thisgrenade, and nowhere to throw it, and I don't want it to damage allthe captain's new toys." He bent down and lifted the alien up and tucked the grenadeunderneath, then ran quickly to the entry room. The explosion surprised Davies and Evans, but he motioned thateverything was clear. Evans looked up. "Looks like she took a shot in the leg andtossed a grenade too close by. If there's no internal damage from theconcussion, she'll be OK." Akira bent over her. Her eyes were open, but she didn't seemto be fully conscious. "I'll duck and let you shoot, if you let mehandle the grenades, OK?" She nodded weakly. "Who else got hurt?" He asked Sergeant Evans. "Bouton's dead. Sergeant Perez is out checking Morinov. Hemight live, but he's probably no good to X-COM any more." Akira walked back outside into the sun and walked around theUFO again to make sure the area was clear. The alien he had shot inthe back was gone, but Bouton's body was still on the side of themesa. He picked him up and carried him back toward the Skyranger. On the way back he passed Captain Marcelle, already bringingtorches and heavy tools from the ship to dismantle the UFO. "Good work, Akira," he said as he approached, "I hear you'rethe one that crippled the sectoid that got Bouton. We've already gothim locked up inside the Skyranger." Akira passed without saying anything. When he reached the Skyranger he laid Bouton's body on theramp and went inside. Up against the far wall of the cargo bay was acollapsible cage, all set up, with a little grey alien inside. It wasalready sitting up and conscious. Akira stared at it and it stood up. Large, oval, featurelessgreen eyes stared back. THE END Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
FullAuto Posted September 3, 2005 Author Share Posted September 3, 2005 3 - Japanese Monsters. "We shouldn't be doing this at night," Akira complained to noone in particular. Captain Marcelle would know it was directed athim. There was silence in the Skyranger for a minute or two, just thethrumming of the jet engines. Then the captain stood and walkedcasually to the back of the cargo compartment, toward Akira. Helooked at each trooper, nodded his head and flashed a forced smile ata few of them. When he reached Akira, he squatted down, forcing Reynolds, therookie trooper sitting behind Akira, to move back. The captain broughthis face very close beside Akira's, with his mouth up to his ear. Hereached up and turned off Akira's headset so the other's wouldn'thear. "There are people dying in Tokyo, squaddie," he whispered,"your people. I'd think you'd be anxious to get there." Akira said nothing. He could feel that the captain needed ashave, and if the acrid smell of sweat was any indication, he was alsovery nervous. "Anyway," he continued, "you have a right to your opinions,but keep them to yourself. The rookies have it hard enough as itis. And if you don't care about your countrymen, think about all thefunding were going to loose if Japan sees this as alien retaliationfor its X-COM support and backs out." With that the captain pushed on his knees to stand up andturned to face the rest of the strike team. "We should arrive inTokyo just minutes before dawn. We can secure the area around theSkyranger to provide a safe haven for civilians, then spread out intothe city. We won't have to wait for morning because Tokyo has streetlights." The previous afternoon, an X-COM radar base in China hadtracked a large UFO over Japan. It had disappeared over Tokyo foronly a few minutes, then shot off out of radar range over the Pacific.It must have dropped off the aliens that were shooting up the place.Without a UFO, Akira had no clear mission objective other than killingbugs and trying not to kill civilians. From news reports, they had learned that the alien's terroristactivities were confined to a few city blocks, and the Tokyo policehad surrounded the area and were keeping civilians out. But therewere still civilians in the area, and the police had taken heavycasualties trying to help them. Up until now they had had very few, if any civilians to dealwith on UFO recovery missions. Now there would probably be moreof them than bugs - a few blocks of Tokyo could mean thousands ofpeople. The captain held up his alien plasma rifle, recovered in a previous raid, and checked to make sure the clip was seated properly. "They don't know were coming," he said, "but they sure ashell will know when we arrive. Up until now we've remained a secret,with only a few lively rumors from our trip to England in March. Ifwe want to keep it that way, we have to make sure we recover all ourcasualties and give as little information as possible to the locals,including the police." What do we tell them, Akira wondered, that we're a UNpeacekeeping force that just happened to be in town with our plasmaweapons? What happens if a stray shot takes out a civilian? Thenthe media won't leave it alone until the Japanese Government tellsthem what happened. Akira glanced behind him at Reynolds. The trooper wasfumbling with his plasma rifle, nervously checking over the lock onthe clip and the large trigger, probably designed to accommodate bothfloater and sectoid fingers. Reynold's motions were jerky andnervous. They didn't increase Akira's confidence in him. "Remember, Reynolds," Akira said, "I'll go first. Just staywere you can see me and some of the area in front of me. I'll signalyou if I see any bugs and we'll kill them together." The rookie took a deep breath and calmed down some. Hestarted chewing again on the same gum he'd had since they took off. "We still have a few hours," Akira said, "try and get somesleep." "Sorry," Reynolds whispered, "I just don't like flying." Akira tried not to smile. He lay back against the wall andclosed his eyes, but he couldn't get to sleep. He kept seeingvisions of Japanese, people he knew, facing floaters and sectoids andreapers. He's afraid of flying, Akira thought. I envy him his ignorance. four hours later, as they descended on autopilot and theSkyranger switched to vertical thrusters, Akira had not slept at all.But he had to shake Reynolds hard to wake him. This would be Akira's third mission without Crossett for backup.She had spent a month recovering from her wounds and exercising herdamaged leg. In the mean time they had replaced her with a rookie,who had lasted only two missions - blown open by a plasma shot inIceland. Now another rookie had stepped up to take her place. Why didthey keep signing on? Why did they stay when they saw the casualtyrates? Why did I stay, Akira wondered. Everyone thinks they'reimmortal. The Skyranger hit ground and the ramp began to lower. "No lights out there," Sergeant Evans called from the back,"so get flares ready, and kill the inside lights." Akira transferred his plasma pistol to his left hand andgrabbed an electro-flare off his belt. The alien contours of thepistol actually seemed to fit better in his left hand. The lights went out. As far as he knew, Far Squad had no UFO to secure on thismission, so after the rocket tank had moved to the bottom of the ramp,Akira poked Marin, the Near Squad leader, and waved her to the right.Akira called "Far Squad left," and jumped off the ramp to the left.In the moonlight he could make out the shapes of nearby buildings, butthe bright neon signs and interior lights were all out. I guess we're in the right place, Akira thought. "Where areyour street lights, Captain?" he said out loud. The Skyranger's computer had set them down in a small plazabehind a blocky office building. The back of a small gas station wasvisible to the right of the offices, with what appeared to be aconvenience store beyond that. To his left was a warehouse of somekind. Above the warehouse he could see the brightly lit high-rise buildings of Shinjuku - giant banks, department stores and hotelsclustered around the ordered confusion of Shinjuku Station. He saw no sign of movement, but noticed a dark, prone figureon the sidewalk between the office building and the gas station. Hethrew the flare, and it landed within a few feet of the still form.When it hit, the shock activated it and it lit up the corner of theoffice building and the surrounding parking lot. The dark figure onthe ground was now obviously the body of a man in a business suit. Thesidewalk around him dark with blood. Akira had grown up in Yokohama and had taken the train toShinjuku many times. He had fond memories of those outings, and herealized that after today they might be ruined forever. He was suddenly aware of Reynolds, squatting in the open onthe ramp above his head. "Get down here," he whispered. Then hemoved along the belly of the Skyranger, using the front landing gearas cover to check out the door of the office building. While he tried to peer in through the glass door, he noticed alight moving up above. Through a third floor window, he could seesomeone waving a light of some kind. The light moved up to the window, then stopped, occasionally catching pieces of its owner in its beam. After a few seconds, a young woman's voice yelled down in Japanese. "Help us, please. It's in here somewhere" Seconds later the light shook and fell, and the woman screamed.The light must of landed at a strange angle - it still shone againstthe ceiling and far wall of the room, casting disfigured shadows ofthe woman or whatever else was in the room with her. Reynolds didn't speak Japanese, but he had heard the screamand reacted. He was off the ramp and running for the front door. AsAkira jumped up to intercept him, he heard the distinct sound of aplasma weapon off to the right, near the scouting rocket tank. As hereached Reynolds, just in front of the door, he saw the trail of arocket and the entire landing area was lit up by an explosion near the gas station. Secondary explosions continued as he pulled the trooperdown beside the door. Just the thing to get an alien's attentionwhile we're wrestling in plain view, he thought. "Let me go first," Akira said harshly, "and keep your head on." He checked through the door again and still saw nothing, so hestood to move in. He was not used to the weight of the body armor he waswearing, formed from alien alloys, and now realized he had pulled amuscle in his right leg jumping up to stop Reynolds. He put all hisweight on it, winced, and decided he could bear it for a while. He moved forward into a lobby and reception area, lit only bymoonlight and the eerie glow of gasoline fires. At the opposite end ofthe lobby, hallways went right and left. There was also an alcove atthe far end with two sets of elevator doors. The elevators would beuseless without power. Akira decided to check down the hallway to the right forstairs. He turned to call Reynolds forward to cover the other side, buthe was already moving up into position. He might work out, Akirathought, and moved cautiously down the hall. He saw the door to thestairwell, three doors down on the far side. There was no time tocheck out all the rooms on this level - he would have to rely onReynolds to guard his rear. He walked ahead, then thought he heard movement inside the lastdoor before the one marked 'stairs.' He crouched quietly beside itfor a few seconds and was sure he heard a sliding or scraping sound.He opened the door and got down. It was very dark, so he tossed in aflare. He was in what looked like a small waiting room for a doctor'soffice - a few chairs, mats and low tables. A small area filled withoffice equipment and a door to the left were partially hidden by apaper divider. No sign of aliens. Akira went wide to the left, using the chairs as cover. He sawmovement behind the screen and was ready to strafe everything behindit with plasma fire when he noticed a human leg. A civilian. He stood and walked beside the screen. Somethingflew and hit him in the chest, bouncing off his armor, then there wasa crash like breaking glass. Then something else hit him in the head. He lifted his pistol, but the barrage stopped, and he foundhimself facing four huddling civilians - a woman, a man, and two youngboys. "It's all right" he reassured them, "we're here to help... special police," he added lamely. Had they been huddled there allnight? He saw motion at the corner of his vision, near the door hehad come in through. He new immediately it wasn't human and spun tofire, but two shots came from the alien in rapid succession. Onemissed off to Akira's left, the other came right at him. The impactjerked him back, but he managed to bend over and stay on his feet.Another shot went over his head. Akira brought up his pistol and fired. He barely had time tolook at what he was shooting at before it was motionless and steamingon the hallway floor. It was the strangest alien he'd seen yet - likea man-sized, bloated snake or lizard with arms. Reynolds appeared in the doorway, brimming with energy andsmiling uncontrollably. "I got him" he whispered loudly, "I heardthe crash in here and was on my way when I saw him come across thehall." Akira noticed a numbness throughout the right side of his chestand abdomen. He was still bent over, afraid to straighten up or pullhis left hand away from his chest out of fear of what he might see. Reynolds finally figured out what had happened. "You need amedic?" he asked. "Just get back out there and watch the hall," Akira ordered.Reynolds lost his smile and left. The numbness was receding and being replaced by sharp pain,spreading out into his right armpit and down into his groin. Akiralooked to the side and saw the woman tearing off pieces of herclothing, trying to wrap her husband's leg. It had been hit by thestray shot from the alien and was badly damaged. It wasn't bleedingmuch though - the plasma must have cauterized the wound. Akira straightened up and pulled his hand away from his chest.His armor had absorbed most of the blast. A small area of skin hadbeen exposed and burned away on the right side of his abdomen. Itdidn't look too serious, but it hurt like hell. Damn civilians, he thought. Next time we should just stun themall. As he left the room he saw Reynolds on one knee behind a chairin the lobby. He continued down to the stairwell and went in quickly.Had the snakeman they killed come down from the third floor? Werethere more on the second, or in the rooms he hadn't entered off thelobby? At any rate, it hadn't sounded like the woman up in thewindow had been shot, so there was a chance she was still alive. Akiradecided to go there first, then work his way back down to the Skyranger. He made his way cautiously up the stairwell, checking everyturn, until he reached the third floor. The door out of the stairwellwas locked. One shot from his pistol completely destroyed the doorhandle, lock, and part of the door. Akira pushed the door open and waited quietly in a shadowycorner of the landing for any aliens coming to investigate. Ina few minutes he stepped through into the hallway, emerging almostdirectly across, he figured, from the young woman's room. He heard shooting below, out near the Skyranger. It was aplasma weapon, so it could have been X-COM or alien, or both. The door to the room was open, and he could see the lightshining inside. He scanned down the dark hall as he crossed and movedin. It was a small office, divided in two by a dark wooden partition.On the near side were four small wooden desks with personalcomputers and filing cabinets. Beyond the partition, Akira could seeone large, wooden desk. There was no one on the near side, so he moved around to thelarge desk and the window. Desk items and papers were spreadacross the floor, and the flashlight lay on the desk, but the womanwasn't there. Where did she go? The window was closed, but he looked outand checked below anyway. No sign of her down there. He could seethe Skyranger in the plaza below, but he saw no troopers guarding it.That was strange. He decided he hated anti-terrorist missions - noneof the usual procedures seemed to apply. He planned to briefly search the third floor and head backdown, but he was worried about being shot by Reynolds. Then heremembered his headset. He had forgotten to turn his back on afterthe captain had talked to him. He switched it on and heard the end ofan exclamation that sounded like Sergeant Perez. "... back to the Skyranger. Right now ... " She sounded pretty upset. How much had he missed? "Reynolds," he whispered into his headset, "I'll be comingdown the other stairwell. Don't shoot me." There was no reply. "Reynolds, did you get that" Maybe the transmitter wasn't working. Perez's voice came through, interspersed with heavy breathing."Akira? ... is that you? ... Reynolds must be gone ... get back to theplane." Out the window he could see two troopers moving quickly intothe area lit by flares around the Skyranger. It looked like Perez andmaybe Davies. If they were running from something, then he didn't have timeto wait and see what it was. And if Davies's rocket launcher couldn'tstop it, a few pistol shots from a third floor window probablywouldn't either. Akira left the room as fast as his injuries could tolerate andcrossed the hall to the stairway he'd come up. Are we really going toabandon these people here, he wondered, or are we just regrouping? As he rounded the landing between the first and secondfloors, he stopped. At the bottom of the flight of stairs was a youngwoman making her way slowly up. Her head was bent down and all hermovements were very slow. Was she the woman from the window? "You should come with me," Akira said, "you'll be saferoutside." As he spoke she moved up two more stairs and lifted her headto look at him. Even in the darkness Akira could see that she wasdisfigured. Her face and eyes were swollen, and her limbs looked asif she had been severely beaten. She was obviously dazed, so he moveddown to direct her outside. As he stretched out his arm to put it around her shoulders,she suddenly lashed out and struck him with unbelievable strength,sending him flying down the stairs. He grabbed the railing to slowhis fall and ended up laying at the bottom. She let out a high, guttural wail and moved slowly toward him.When she reached the bottom of the stairs he paniced and shot her. She staggered for a moment, then stopped, dropped to herknees and went very still. He could see only outlines in thedarkness, but she seemed to change shape. The flesh on her sidestretched out to a sharp point then went back in. Then the same thinghappened on her neck. As Akira scrambled to his feet, sharp, dark objects emergedfrom her neck, and it appeared as though her body just ripped down themiddle. Something else emerged, something pointy, bipedal and quick. Akira ran for the lobby and didn't look back. He could hear aclicking sound behind him. As he crossed the lobby the clicks weregetting closer and he realized he couldn't outrun whatever it was.As he left the building, he turned to his left, intending to crouchagainst the wall and shoot the creature as it passed. Suddenly a rocket shot past, within a few feet of his headand exploded behind him. The blast knocked him forward, flat on hisinjured chest. He lay there in pain, unable to move for a fewseconds. The clicking was still there, behind him, getting closer. Then it was past him, moving toward the rear of the Skyranger.There were shouts of other troopers - he couldn't tell if they wereright in front of him or coming from his headset. He heard laser andplasma fire and a scream. The shooting stopped, the pain faded, and Akira pulled himselfup. Perez and Davies were near the rear of the Skyranger. Davies haddropped his rocket launcher and pulled out a laser pistol. They wereboth pointing their weapons down at the dead creature and a fallentrooper. "What the hell are these things?" Davies asked, scanningnervously around,"You all right, Akira?" "I think so." "Get in the plane, Davies," Perez ordered, "I want you readyto hit the autopilot and get us out of here if I give the order." "Aren't we going to wait for the others?" he asked. "Sure. As long as we can." The trooper on the ground was Captain Marcelle. Akira checkedto make sure he was really dead and thought about moving his body intothe Skyranger, but that could wait. Akira got down close to the Skyranger's ramp and Perezcovered the other side. The sun was just beginning to come up,coloring the tops of the buildings golden-orange. A minute or two later he saw something moving beyond theflares, but within the light of the few gas fires still burning. "Something coming," Akira said into his headset, "to yourleft, near the store." "It's me" a voice said, "don't shoot." It was Marin, the Near Squad scout. She was running as fastas she could across the open plaza. When she was less than fiftyyards away, a plasma bolt shot from one of the buildings off to theright and hit her square in the side. Without enough armor to goaround, the rookies had gotten the short end of the stick, and it costMarin her life. Akira stood and leaned his pistol on the ramp. He couldbarely see one of the snakemen, around the corner of a one-storybuilding. He got off six shots, but it was very long range, and onlya couple shots hit anywhere near the alien. Then Akira heard the distinct thump, thump, thump of an autocannon and the whole corner of the building where the alien stood waswracked by explosions. There was no sign of the snakeman afterward. "Who was that," Perez said into her headset, as she ran out tocheck on Marin. "Me, Gaudin. I'm coming in. Kolitov is dead ... no, wait... hey Kolitov, over here ... what the ..." Another round of auto cannon explosions went off, this timenear the gas station. Minutes later Gaudin was running toward theSkyranger without his autocannon, trying to strip off his ammo beltand headset. As he got nearer, one of the bipedal crab creatures scooted outof the shadows behind him, gaining on him fast. Akira fired until his clip was empty, hitting the creatureonce. Perez waited, probably afraid she'd hit Gaudin, shot and killedthe creature just before it reached him. Gaudin didn't even seem tonotice. He ran right up into the Skyranger and sat crouched in theback corner, hugging his knees. Perez picked up Marin's body and carried it back toward theplane. "Who's left out there," she said into her headset. There was no reply. She laid Marin in the back of the Skyranger. "Kolitov ...Reynolds ... Sergeant Evans?" no reply. "Get the captain in here and lets go," she ordered. Akira walked toward Captain Marcelle and thought he noticedmovement. He stopped and quickly loaded a new clip. Marcelle's arms movedand he pushed himself up on his knees. He had the same bloated lookof the young girl inside. Akira pointed his pistol "Sorry about this, Captain." He shot Marcelle three times, then forced himself to watch theemergence of the crab creature. When the captain's body began tosplit, he suppressed the urge to vomit until he was done firing andwas sure the creature was dead. He turned and lost it beside the ramp. He noticed Perezlooking past him in shock at what was left of the captain's body. He jumped painfully onto the ramp and was the last one inside.Davies hit the autopilot and the ramp began to close. Seconds laterthe inside lights came on. Akira, Perez, and Davies looked at eachother solemnly and said nothing. Gaudin still sat in the corner, facein his knees, shaking his head. "Going home," Gaudin mumbled. Akira wondered what would happen to Tokyo as those creaturestransformed everyone. "That was my home." THE END Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
FullAuto Posted September 3, 2005 Author Share Posted September 3, 2005 4 - Mind Games. Through the windows on the right side of the Skyranger, Akiracould see the Amazon rolling by below like an endless, lumpy, darkgreen carpet, broken only by the silver arteries flowing east towardthe Atlantic. Where are we going to land in all that, he wondered. "Is that plasma too heavy for you, Sergeant?" Captain Perezasked. It took a second for Akira to realize she was talking to him.He hadn't completely adjusted to his new rank. He lifted the bigplasma weapon with both hands and tried not to let his arms shakeunder the weight. She seemed to be carrying hers with no trouble. "No. No problem." It was the most powerful infantry weaponX-COM had, and there was no way he was going to give it up. "I'm nota scout anymore," he added, "I don't need to be so light on my feet." She gave him a skeptical, sideways look, then turned to lookout her own window. He had a lot of respect for Perez. She had become captain inthe shake-up following the disastrous mission to Tokyo, at a time whena lot was happening within X-COM. New recruits had to be trained, andworld governments had to be reassured after Japan withdrew funding,presumably under an agreement with the aliens to stop terroristactivities in Tokyo. And the base itself was growing. New living quarters,laboratories and workshops were always under construction, and newresearchers and engineers came in every week. Akira found it interesting that, although X-COM wasfundamentally a military organization, the scientists and engineersnow outnumbered the soldiers nearly four to one. Well, without themthey wouldn't know how to use and maintain plasma weapons, and theywouldn't have personal armor, or the new hovertank sitting in the backof the Skyranger, built through reverse-engineering of captured UFOcomponents. Perez had been the obvious choice for captain, though. At thetime she had nine missions, more than anyone else, and she had been asergeant since Buchard was killed in Wales. The only drawback was thefact that some national representatives held her responsible forleaving Tokyo at the mercy of the aliens. She seemed to blame herselftoo, but everyone else new that, by giving the order, she had savedvaluable equipment and a core set of troopers to allow the fight tocontinue. Akira was promoted too, and was now Far Squad's sergeant. Thestrike team's first three missions under their new leaders had gonewell - only two casualties from all three. And for the first time inmonths there were no rookies on the Skyranger. Akira had a good squad- Gaudin, Crossett, and a relatively new, but intelligent scout namedOkamoto who had been recruited only days before Japan withdrewsupport. Crossett had joined them on missions again right after Tokyo -they were severely short on good soldiers and couldn't afford to leaveher behind. She had been in longer than Akira, and he knew that shewould be sergeant if she hadn't been injured, but she didn't seem tohold it against him. Her hair had grown out an inch or two during her recovery,probably costing her a few more missions, but Akira noticed she hadbeen cutting off less on each one. He began to think she actuallyenjoyed all this. Crossett turned to say something to Gaudin and caught Akirastaring at her. She smiled and gave him a thumbs up. She could feelit too, he thought - This is the best squad we've ever had. He wantedto be up there in Okamoto's place, with Crossett covering his back. "We've never fought in the jungle before," Perez said frombehind him. Akira turned and could see in her face how concerned she was.She certainly didn't have Captain Marcelle's poker face. "There are alot of places we haven't fought," he said, "especially some of thenewer troopers in Davies's squad." Sergeant Davies was sitting against the wall right across fromAkira, checking over his medi-kit. "So what?" he said, "The bugs havenever fought us in the jungle either." He's right, Akira thought. "I wonder if they're as afraid ofus?" he said out loud, "After all, they're the ones on the alienplanet." "They're just bugs," Davies said quickly, stowing his medi-kitand picking up his plasma, "and bugs don't have feelings." The Skyranger began its descent and Perez stepped toward thecenter of the cargo bay and addressed everyone. "Our interceptor wasbadly damaged bringing down this UFO. It looked like a fairly bigone. I want Far Squad to find it and guard it, but don't go in untilNear Squad's ready to back you up. And take care of yourselves." They descended quickly and the autopilot headed for a smallclearing. Akira tried to spot signs of the UFO before they reachedtree level. The only interesting feature he could see was anotherclearing off in the distance. The UFO could be at the bottom of it,but he wasn't sure. Their landing area turned out to be so small thatthe Skyranger's vertical thrusters burned the surrounding canopy asthey descended. It was much darker below the canopy, but when they hit ground,Akira thought he could see the dull glint of alien alloys in a sunlitclearing through the tree trunks and sparse undergrowth. He saw noaliens, but there were plenty of places for them to hide. "Anything that looks like a UFO or alien on that side?" heasked Davies. "Nope." The ramp was already dropping and Akira could feel the firsthints of the warm, humid atmosphere. "UFO left," he called. Okamoto echoed with "Far Squad left," and after the hovertankslid out among the trees, he and Crossett quickly dropped out of sightto the left side of the ramp. Akira watched them for a few secondsthrough his window, then moved toward the ramp himself. "Bug, sector thirteen," Okamoto reported calmly fromeveryone's headset. As Akira reached the ramp and Gaudin jumped off, they heardthe deep, repeated whistle of a heavy plasma on autofire, followed byan alien scream. "Gottem," Crossett called, "it was one of those little guys -a sectoid." Akira jumped down beside Gaudin. He was surprised at how thinthe ground cover was, but the trees were dense, limiting visibility tothirty or forty yards. He could still see Crossett and Okamoto movingoff at a right angle to the Skyranger, to the right of where Akirathought he saw the UFO. Higher up he could see the hovertank,scouting ahead just below the canopy. Gaudin stood and moved toward the front of the Skyranger. "Ithink I see one," he said. "Where?" Perez asked over the headset, "Which sector?" "To the left..." he began, then Akira saw him wince and presshis left hand to his temple. "ahnnn...sector..." As Akira watched, Gaudin suddenly turned to his right andfired a rocket through the jungle toward Crossett. It hit a tree longbefore it reached her, blowing the trunk to pieces, shaking all thetrees nearby and bringing down heavy branches, screeching birds andhowling tree dwellers. "What the hell was that" Crossett protested. Akira could seeher looking back at them through the debris and flames. Gaudin didn't reply. Akira turned to find the rocket launcherpointed at him and Gaudin reaching in his pack for another rocket. Akira focused past Gaudin and saw one of the small greyaliens, partially obscured behind a large fern about twenty yards infront of the Skyranger. The alien was not pointing a weapon, juststaring in their direction. Akira took careful aim so he wouldn't hitGaudin and squeezed off a single shot. The plasma bolt singed the topof the fern and took the alien square in the chest. It went down. Akira stepped behind the Skyranger's back landing gear forcover and peered through at Gaudin. He was shaking his head, stillholding the rocket in his hand. "You OK, Gaudin?" Akira asked. "Uh...sure..just got dizzy for a second there." Gaudin stared at the rocket in his hand, felt in his backpackand found only one more rocket, then stared at the destroyed area ofjungle. "Drop your launcher and get out your laser, Gaudin," Akiraordered, "your going to stay here and guard the Skyranger until yourecover." Gaudin nodded without looking up and dropped his launcher asif it were burning his hands. Akira passed him and moved as quickly as he could into thejungle, as afraid of being shot in the back by Gaudin as of runninghead-on into a sectoid. He made it to where the alien had gone down,went around to the left of the ferns, and found it lying there,obviously dead. "UFO is in sector thirteen," Okamoto reported. "I'm movingaround to the right to find a door." Akira could see the wall of the UFO straight ahead of him,three levels high. "And in sector twelve," he added. As he movedslowly toward it, he noticed that the side of the UFO had been openedup on the second level, presumably by the interceptor attack. Suddenly there was a strange voice inside his head, pushinghim aside. It was as if there were two of him inside his mind, onebeing forced out by another who was desperate to protect the UFO anddefend the aliens against an unprovoked attack by humans. Akira strained to force out the usurper. He thought ofCrossett and managed to bring up memories of troopers killed by thealiens. He regained control and was immediately invaded from anotherdirection, this time it was a little harder to fight off and seemed totake minutes. He found himself kneeling on the ground, still in the samespot. Had he hurt anyone? He glanced around and saw no othertroopers, and there was no chatter over the headset. Seconds later a small silver football streaked past over hishead and turned sharply toward the Skyranger. There was a deafeningexplosion behind him. He felt the blast and turned to find a hugearea of jungle to the near side of the Skyranger engulfed in afireball. The bottoms of the trees had been vaporized and theirtrunks blown outwards, bringing the canopy down in a burning ringaround the whole area. "Gaudin" Akira shouted in his headset. "He's dead," Perez replied. "What the hell was that?" Akira decided he wasn't going to wait around for that tohappen again. "Perez, we can't wait for Near Squad. They've gotguided missiles of some kind and some way to get inside our heads andturn us against each other." "Then go," Perez replied, "Davies, get your squad there assoon as you can." Akira primed a heavy, bulbous alien grenade they had capturedon a previous mission and tossed it up through the breach in the sideof the UFO. Seconds later there was a tremendous blast and expulsion ofmetal fragments from the hole. He stood and ran to the door. Itopened in front of him with a woosh, and he stepped in and dropped toon knee. To his left a high wall ran nearly to the opposite side ofthe UFO. To his right was a high room, reaching to the top of the UFOand comprising its entire front half. The opposite side of the roomcontained a large table surrounded by metal arms, like the robots inan automobile plant. Some kind of large animal, possibly monkey orhuman, lay on the table, skinned to lay its insides bare. The high wall to his left had a jagged hole at the top,directly above Akira's head, probably blown out by his grenade.Thick, noxious smoke was settling around him, burning his nose andeyes. "Found a door half-way around the UFO," Okamoto reported. Akira could hear a door open to his left, somewhere on theother side of the wall, then another that sounded like it wassomewhere up on the second level. There was a door immediately to his left, and the high wallwas open at the far end. If he went either way he would leave hisrear undefended. "This is Okamoto. Me and Crossett are inside. It's a smallroom with no doors, just a glowing red field of some kind around a redpanel on the floor." "It's a lift," Akira said, "We saw some in Iceland. If youwant to go up, step in and wave your arm upwards." It sounded simple,but it had taken Akira a long time to get up the nerve to step intoone the first time. Then he had flailed around and nearly been killedtrying to imitate the actions of the sectoid he'd seen use it. The door behind him opened and he turned to find Thompson, theNear Squad Trooper, facing him with his heavy plasma raised. Akirajumped to the side and raised his own weapon, half expecting to beshot, but Thompson just gave him a strange look and scanned around theroom. Akira composed himself. "watch this room while I check inhere," he ordered, waving his gun at the doorway. He stepped up to itand the door opened. Inside was a small room with a platform, in themiddle of which was another lift. No doors. He primed a proximitygrenade and tossed it beside the lift. "Lift on the Skyranger side ofthe UFO is rigged with a 'P' grenade," he reported over the headset. He left the room through the door and ordered Thompson toguard it, then he moved along the wall to where it opened and turnedto the left. He got down and checked around the corner. The ceilingwas only one level high and there were various containers or cages ofsome kind arranged like a small museum. Most contained animal andplant specimens, but a few contained mutated or alien creatures. Nodoors. Akira cautiously searched behind the cases and found noaliens, so he made his way back towards Thompson. He rounded thecorner and moved along the high wall, intending to somehow detonatethe proximity grenade and take the lift up to help Crossett andOkamoto. When he got within five meters of Thompson there was a highpitched whistling sound from above and a small explosion at thetrooper's feet. For a second, Akira's field of vision contracted to asmall tunnel. He felt dizzy and nauseous, but he didn't fall over orpass out. He recovered slowly and looked up to see an alien pointinga luncher of some kind at him through the hole in the wall. He raised his heavy plasma and squeezed off one shot, butmissed far to the right, striking the wall. He was still too dizzy toaim properly. Before the alien could get him, a plasma bolt shot through theopening in the outside wall of the UFO and killed it. Who could have shot through from outside the second story,Akira wondered. Then he remembered the hovertank. "Perez," he said,"remind me to thank whoever programmed that flying monstrosity." Thompson was down. Akira checked him and found that he wasstill alive, and had no visible injuries. He was preparing hismedi-kit to treat him when he heard an autofired laser on the secondlevel. "Last one coming down your way, 'Kira," Crossett called. Akira heard the proximity grenade explode, and he barely hadtime to crouch down beside the door before it opened and a sectoid ranout. He hadn't had time to drop the medi-kit and get his heavyplasma into position, but it didn't matter; the alien ran right pasthim. It ran to the wall across the room and stood there, fidgetingwith its hands. Akira heard movement above and looked up to find Okamotopointing his laser rifle down at the creature. "Hold it" Akira called. "Toss me your stun rod." Crossett appeared above and trained her weapon on the sectoidwhile Okamoto pulled out the long blue stun rod and tossed it down.Akira caught it and walked slowly up to the alien. It looked right athim, and even in its alien face and featureless eyes, Akira recognizedfear. As he stood over the injured alien, he thought he sensed thebeginnings of another attack on his mind. He reached out with the rodand pressed the end against the alien's side. After a blue flash and a "tzzt" sound, the alien slumped tothe floor. Akira looked over the stun rod. "I guess these are good forsomething." He turned and Crossett looked down and gave him a thumbsup and a smile. "All clear," she reported over her headset, and reached forher knife. THE END Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
FullAuto Posted September 3, 2005 Author Share Posted September 3, 2005 5 - House Call. The immediate area around the Skyranger was clear, so thestrike team disembarked quickly and ran the twenty meters to thesmall, scrubby hill. It was Akira's second mission using the newpowered armor, and it still made the whole scene mildly unreal. Hebreathed air from a life support unit inside the suit, watched theworld through computer-enhanced, blastproof lenses, and every move hemade was mimicked by the suit, relieving him of the burden of itsweight. A Russian security officer of some kind and two farmers werestanding on the near side of the hill. Andianov, who had replacedGaudin a month earlier as the Far Squad heavy, translated Russian forCaptain Perez, who was also encased in alien alloy. After a few wordswere exchanged, the officer nodded to the farmers and they pulledaside piled brush and leaves to reveal a metal door. It was at leastthree meters wide, maybe more, like two UFO doors together. The farmers immediately ran off around the hill to the right.Perez, Andianov, and the officer followed and they all stopped whereAkira could still see them. The farmers pulled aside more brush,probably revealing another door that was still hidden from Akira. An interceptor following a large alien ship had detectedstrange emissions from this area of the Russian steppes, east ofRostov. In response, X-COM representatives in Russia had enlistedlocal authorities to help them with the search for the source,claiming there might be an underground terrorist training base builtby the KGB during the late 80's. The interceptor had narrowed the search area to a few squaremiles, and the entrance had been found the next day. Now the officerat the site and the enlisted farmers looked skeptically at the arrayof unearthly firepower and technology standing before them. Thehovertank was certainly unlike anything they had seen so far, and asfar as they knew, the three leaders in power armor could have beenrobots. In fact you could only tell the three leaders apart by therelative sizes of their suits and the family coats-of-arms they hadpainted on them. Perez explained that the special suits were requiredbecause the base was being used to process and smuggle nuclearmaterial out of Russia. "We split up," Perez said over the headset, turning backtoward the strike team. "These are the only two entrances they'vefound, so we shouldn't have anything coming out and getting behindus." Splitting up made Akira uncomfortable, but they had no ideahow cramped it might be below. A large group might just end upstumbling over each other. "We'll take the other entrance," Akira said, pointing with hisheavy plasma to the one farthest from the Skyranger. He waved his squadforward - Okamoto, Crossett, and Andianov. Davies's squad and thehovertank gathered near the first door. Perez and Zander, the team'snew medical specialist, followed Akira. Okamoto moved up to the door, and one section of it opened,sliding up into the hill. The scout moved in and waved the rest ofthe squad forward before disappearing farther inside. Crossett moved in next. She was different on this mission -maybe actually afraid, or finally showing fear. This mission was verydifferent. They had only a rough idea how large the base was downthere. And up until now, even when inside a UFO, open terrain andfreedom hadn't been too far away. Akira checked his heavy plasma clips and turned quickly toPerez. "We have to regroup as soon as we can down there," he said. "Sure," she said, "but we have to cover this entrance thewhole time. Each squad can establish a perimeter, then we'll expandtoward each other and try to merge before moving out into whateverelse is down there." Perez was carrying a blaster launcher, the monstrouscannon-like device used by the aliens in Brazil, and then in Omaha, tolaunch the silver, football size guided bombs. Akira had seen tapesof one of X-COM's test firings in Nevada. The bomb had maneuvered asprogrammed around one shack and slammed into another, destroying bothstructures, along with everything else within a blast radius of twentymeters. It had left a crater eight feet deep. "Do you really think you should use that inside?" Akiraasked. He couldn't read Perez's facial expression within the suit, butshe looked silently at him for a few seconds. "I'll be careful. You keepyour head down." The nature of combat was changing quickly. The next bigtactics change beyond blaster launchers was already on its way - ifit worked. The researchers at Little Rock thought they had learnedenough about alien mind control psionics from the sectoid captured inthe Amazon to construct psi-amps for the troopers and train them howto use the same powers against aliens. Psionic training laboratorieswere nearly finished behind the living quarters. Everyone in thestrike team would soon be assigned to an entire month of psionicevaluation. Crossett was already inside the doors. She had stopped whereAkira could see her through one of the doors which opened for Andianovto enter. She was lit by a strange green glow which seemed to becoming from the floor. Akira moved to the door, it opened, and he stepped through.His squad was inside a large square chamber, with a glowing greenfloor. In the far corner was the red glow of a down access lift.This one was large enough for a tank to use. "Okamoto and Crossett, down you go. Okamoto take north,Crossett south. Otherwise make it up as you go." Okamoto and Crossett stepped onto the lift and Crossett madethe arm motion. They descended back to back and were gone. "What have you got?" Akira asked over the headset. "A maze," Crossett replied, "like the kind they use to studyrats." "No bugs," Okamoto added, "but there are four clear entrancesto this room. We need help to cover all of them." "OK. Andianov, with me." Akira and Andianov moved to the lift and descended. Theyarrived in a room the same size as the one above, but with four wideopenings to other areas. Okamoto crouched to the north, scanning alarge room with a high ceiling, filled with the strange display casesAkira had seen on the Amazon ship. To the south, Crossett covered awide passage that split into two dark, jagged tunnels through somestrange blue organic material. Akira waved Andianov to the east and took the west passagehimself. It led to another room, or maybe a very wide north-southhallway, lined with large glowing spheres, each held off the floor byfour thin tubes. No aliens. There was no opening to the west. Their first objective would be to meet up with davies. Akiraused his teeth and tongue to activate a head up display map of whereeach trooper was and the areas they had seen so far. Davies was tothe north, as expected, about forty meters away. Before ordering the squad to expand the perimeter north, hemoved into the sphere room and up to its south entrance, dropping toone knee where he could keep and eye on both openings. "Zander," he ordered, "come west and cover this room with thespheres." Just as he finished speaking, a purple form glided smoothlyinto view at the far end of the room. Before it noticed him, Akiraautofired in its general direction. The first bolt of plasma missedand struck something in the large display room beyond. later shotsmight have hit the alien, but he couldn't tell because he hit one ofspheres to the left of the alien and it exploded like a small grenade.When the flash was over, the floater was motionless on the ground. Zander stepped cautiously into the room, and Akira motionedfor her to cover the north. Then he turned and moved south intoanother area of blue organic surfaces. The hallway turned into a dim tunnel and split left and right.He went right and found himself moving back around in a circle to apoint where he could see the sphere room to the north and more bluetunnels to the east. "Coming your way, Crossett," he reported over the headset andmoved east. The tunnels seemed to follow the same circular pattern,splitting right and left. He took a quick look up the left tunnel andwaved to Crossett, kneeling, ready to fire. If he were an alien he'dbe dead. He went back and took the right tunnel to the southeast andcame back around in a circle to an eastward opening into a normal,alien alloy room with a partially enclosed area in the center. Theopening in the small enclosed area faced west toward him, so he couldsee inside. It contained a lift going up. There was chatter over the headset - Davies orderingHudson south. A few seconds later he heard heavy plasma fire. "Damn, I'm hit." It sounded like Davies, but the voice wasdistorted by pain. "Where are you?" Zander asked over the headset, "I'll comehelp you." "Hold it, Zander," Akira ordered. He quickly checked his mapdisplay again. Thompson was near the sergeant. "Davies has his ownmedi-kit and Thompson can help him with it." "Thompson's covering our north flank, Akira," Davies saidtestily, "I'll be fine. You worry about your own squad." Akira turned his full attention to the room in front of him.No opening to the south - solid wall. All the way from the sphereroom to here there were no openings from the south, so the squad's rearwas clear. "Far Squad, we have a wall ten meters to our south and west,and the area is all clear," he said over the headset. "Zander andOkamoto move out north into the large room to link up with NearSquad." "This is Davies. We're secure to the west and north. Thetank is scouting the big room now. It looks like there is nothing tothe west of it either." "Good," Perez chimed in, "as soon as it's cleared, everyonecan sweep east." Akira needed to know where the lift ahead of him led."Andianov, can you see into the room to your southeast?" There was a short pause, then Andianov answered. "I can seepart of it, the back of the small enclosure and the opening behindit." "Keep an eye on it. I'll be gone for a minute." Akira moved up to the glowing red lift field and stepped in.He was about to make the hand motion to go up when he noticed movementabove, through the lift's shaft. Through the red glow he could barelydiscern a purple figure moving across to the side of the lift. The figure was moving out of sight, so Akira only had time toget off a single quick shot. It missed, he thought, but it must havemade enough noise to get the alien's attention. Akira had one alien grenade on his belt. He pulled it off,still scanning and pointing his plasma through the hole above. Heprimed it short and tossed it carefully up through the shaft. The explosion came quickly, followed by alien screams. Hewasn't sure how long the area above would be clear, so Akira quicklymade the arm motion and ascended. At the top of the shaft he scannedquickly, spotting one immobile alien, but no others. He was in asmall room containing a few alien display cases, but nothing else.There were no obvious doors. Up through the shaft he heard two bursts of plasma fire, followedquickly by Okamoto's voice. "The big display room is secure...holdit...reaper" Laser fire. "I hit him. He's headed south, toward you Andy." "I don't see him" Akira made the hand motion and descended. He moved out of theenclosure quickly and around to the north where he would be able tosee Andianov. Andianov glanced quickly at Akira from an opening in thehallway. It was enough distraction to keep him from seeing what Akirasaw - a blood-red reaper plodding down the hall on its two stalkylegs, around the corner from Andianov, but only a few meters away. Akira had been haunted by the reaper he'd seen in X-COMbattle footage, but this one was real, and it obviously saw him. Itbegan to move faster toward him, passing within two meters ofAndianov. Akira moved slowly, unable to concentrate amid thoughts of whatthe reaper would do to him - the sounds of crushing bones from thevideos. The reaper was nearly on top of Akira when he heard plasmafire from behind it. He finally managed to squeeze the trigger onhis own weapon, not even sure where it was pointing. The creature's chest and right leg blew apart in bursts ofplasma. Akira could feel the searing heat even through his power suit.The reaper dropped with a heavy thump at Akira's feet. He looked beyond it and saw Andianov, and Okamoto farther downthe hall, both with their weapons trained on him. "Sorry, Sergeant," Andianov said, "I didn't see it until itwas past me. It might have gotten me if it hadn't seen you first." "Well, it's dead," Akira said, "that's all I care about rightnow." Akira turned to cover the east opening of the lift room. Itled into another room about the same size, in the center of which wasa room about half the size. The interior room had a window or openingof some kind facing him, and through it, as he moved slowly forward,he saw the red glow of a lift, then caught a glimpse of purple motion.He got down and waited. A few seconds later he heard a door whooshopen. "This is Hudson," Akira's headset squawked, "just saw a reapergo around the corner twenty meters east of me." "Get down, Hudson," Perez ordered. Akira quickly checked his HUD map to see whereHudson was. Would she actually try to maneuver a blaster bomb pastHim? Before he could protest, he heard the high pitched whistlingsound. The bomb exploded at the far northern end of the alien base,but to Akira, even with his suit blocking most of the sound, itsounded like a grenade going off right next to him. "Huds...hud...right," the headset crackled as at least threepeople questioned Hudson at the same time. Akira checked his map -Hudson's signal was still there. "I'm here," Hudson reported after a few tense seconds, "I'mfine - just a little stunned. Can we just hang back now and let thecaptain nuke everything that's left?" "As you were, Squaddie," Perez replied, "there may bevaluable equipment in this base. Begin your sweep east." Meanwhile, Akira had seen no sign of the floater in the windowroom. He moved forward and knelt where he had a clear view of thelift through the window. He could also see that the north end of thesurrounding room opened into an east-west hallway. He caught aglimpse of purple in the hall before it slid out of sight to the east. "This is Akira. Floater in the hall to my northeast," hereported over the headset - and immediately regretted it.. "Get down, Akira," Perez said. "I've got it," Andianov called. Akira called up his map and saw Andianov begin to move."Perez, don't..." He heard the whistling sound and reacted, pushing off with hislegs to jump back and to his left, into the lift room for cover. The blast hit, but afterwards he couldn't remember hearing it,only feeling it, like an electric shock to his entire body. The flashtriggered the shielding on his blast lenses, but they cleared in timefor hims to see molten debris and superheated air surge into the room.His suit protected him from the worst of the concussion, and heremained conscious. Akira stood and stumbled around the wall into the hallway.The alien alloy floor was scorched and twisted for as far down the hallas he could see through the smoke and dust. He saw no sign of thefloater, but Andianov lay motionless on the floor a few meters ahead. He moved toward the body, passing a hallway off to his left,conscious of the fact that there were now at least two routes for analien to move in behind him. "Andianov's down," he reported, "Crossett, move up to cover myright." "Already there, 'Kira." He glanced right and behind and saw her, standing in the roomwith the windowed inner chamber. She wore only personal armor andsuddenly looked extremely vulnerable. She finished tossing aproximity grenade through a window to cover the lift inside, thenwaved quickly to him. "How is he?" "Don't know yet." Andianov's legs and abdomen were covered inblood. Akira checked his map while he fumbled with his medi-kit. Ashe prepared to seal the wound in artificial skin, Andianov's littleyellow light on his HUD turned to a white cross. "No." Akira checked the portable monitor on Andianov's belt,thinking it might have been damaged by the blast. It was functioningcorrectly. Andianov was dead. Akira did what he could, injecting stimulant and administeringclumsy CPR, made extremely difficult and dangerous by his own power suit. "Andy's dead," Crossett reported over the headset, "Akira andI are leaving him here." Akira glanced at her quickly. She looked back withoutexpression. She was right - time to go. He picked up his weapon and looked around to get his bearings.The blast had blown out the west wall of the hallway, exposing aparallel passage and a long stretch of adjacent doors. There was a series of chatter from Davies's squad, followed bya grenade explosion. "The tank has the central east-west passagecovered," Davies reported, "That should free Okamoto to help you downthere." Akira checked his map. The tank was indeed covering a largehallway in the center of the base. Okamoto could move out. "Good. Okamoto, move east twenty meters, and plant yourselfthere," Akira ordered. Then he knelt and covered Crossett as she movedforward around the window chamber. "Bare walls, south and east," she reported out loud. Akira continued to watch the row of doors and the spaces aheadas Crossett moved on. It seemed strange covering her after all thosemissions the other way around. "Two parallel north-south passages," she reported, "whereverthose doors lead, it looks like it had its own secret passagesurrounding it." Plasma and laser shots went off behind Akira and to the north,near where Okamoto was supposed to be. "Okamoto...what was that," he called. No reply. He checked his map and saw that Okamoto was still yellow.Maybe his headset was out. "Cover me Crossett," he ordered and headed back south, aroundinto the outermost of the two north-south passages. A floater laymotionless on the floor with a plasma pistol next to it. Just aroundthe corner ahead, he could see Okamoto's head and shoulders. "Okamoto's out." "I'm on my way," Perez called, "you keep moving ahead so wecan get the hell out of here." She sounded very different, maybedesperate. She had to realize she had just killed Andianov. Akira moved back around to the doors and found Crossett stillwatching them, along with Thompson, the Near Squad trooper. Hemust have come around the other way. "North side of the base is secure," he reported, "except for afew lifts that Hudson and Mederow are mopping up. There are moredoors behind this area, probably leading into this inside hallway. Thetank and the sergeant have that covered." "This is all we have left then," Akira said, "Hopefully thisdoesn't lead down to another level." Thompson didn't wait for further details. He stood and movedup to one of the four doors. It opened, and beyond him Akira saw theeast wall of a large room, probably filling the entire space insidethe twin hallways. "Big lift," Thompson reported, moving slowly out of sight. "Let's go," Akira said, motioning Crossett forward. Theymoved up to the doors together. The doors opened and they movedinside. The room was big, nearly the size of the high ceilingeddisplay case room. Around the outside were eight large cylinderscontaining glowing fluids of some kind. In the center was a largelift - the biggest Akira had seen yet. Their entire strike team couldprobably fit on it at once, including the tank. Akira watched Thompson move toward the lift, scanning foranything hiding behind the cylinders. It was very quiet, almost tooquiet. When Thompson reached the edge of the glowing red platform, hequickly raised his heavy plasma and fired on autoshot. Suddenly Akira's vision went black and he was slammed in thechest and head by a giant mallet. His blast lenses cleared again andhe saw that the room was filled with smoke, andeverything in it had been destroyed, includingThompson. He quickly glanced to his right and saw Crossett chokingand stumbling through the door. "Perez," he called over the headset, "Thompson is gone. Doyou think you can fly one of those damn things through an opendoorway?" "For a shot up that lift?" She paused, "...Which door?" "Far west," Akira called, "I'm heading through now. You'vegot about five seconds from my mark." Akira stood and was glad to find his legs still worked,although his left arm suddenly felt as if his skin were being peeledoff. He moved to the door and it seemed to open more slowly thanbefore. Aliens could be coming down the lift at any time. "Now," Akira called. If she misses the doorway, he thought, I'm dead. A few seconds later, as Akira ran for cover and was sure theautomatic door was about to close, the whistling sound came and went.The explosion followed, behind Akira and above, and it seemed longer andmore violent than the others. Secondary explosions went on for what seemedlike minutes, causing Crossett to cover her bleeding ears and crouchbehind a wall. Seconds later it was over, and intensely quiet except for theringing in Akira's ears. "What the hell was that" Davies called. "We hit something big upstairs," Akira called. He glanced atCrossett - she looked disoriented, but was already getting to herfeet. "Crossett and I will check it out." Akira moved up to the doors, cradling his heavy plasma in hisright arm, and Crossett followed. He moved into the room and scanned,spotting the bodies of three aliens. Above him the ceiling was almostcompletely gone, revealing another ceiling of alloy and exposed rockhigher up. The red lift field ahead of him had miraculously survived,apparently generated from somewhere outside the blast area. Akira moved to the red platform with Crossett at his back. Hescanned around the remaining edges of the room above and saw mangledfurniture and control equipment. He ascended to get a closerlook and spotted one more alien corpse near one of the destroyedpanels. He saw no other entrances to the room. They had apparentlycleared the entire base. "You really trashed this place, Captain," he chided over theheadset, "but you got the last four." "Good" she replied, unamused. Akira sobered and descended to help Crossett find whateverremains they could for Thompson's family. THE END Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
FullAuto Posted September 3, 2005 Author Share Posted September 3, 2005 6 - Big Fish. The Skyranger barely reached cruising altitude, and alreadythey were passing over Indianapolis and descending. They were after avery large, three-level UFO which had landed in northeastern Indiana.It would be simple, open terrain, Akira thought, but that was adeception. He was sure it would be one of the toughest battles inmonths. The UFO was of the three-level design with five landingpedestals extending below it. Another just like it had skimmed overChina three weeks earlier, and the new Russian strike base had lostits interceptor trying to shoot it down. That UFO had landed nearthe China-Turkistan border, and the Russian base commander, CaptainRagulin, had sent in the rookie strike team in power suits, with heavyplasmas and blaster launchers. Even with all the supportingtechnology, the battle went badly. By the time the captain finallyaborted the mission, six troopers were lost, including Okamoto, whohad voluntarily transferred over from Little Rock only a few daysearlier. This time the pilot of X-COM's new UFO-like interceptor, theFirestorm, had followed the alien ship as it approached the LittleRock base at over mach three. Colonel Perez had ordered an evacuationof all non-combat personnel from the base and had sent the Skyrangerup into a low holding pattern over Tennessee. The Firestorm pilot had closed his pursuit distance enough touse its fusion balls and plasma cannon, weapons that would have meanta quick kill on any other UFO. The large UFO began to fire almost thesecond the Firestorm did. In less than a minute the battle was over,with the Firestorm backing off, badly damaged, and the UFO barelyscratched. It passed within twenty miles of the X-COM base, but continuedon, erratically backtracking across Middle America for six more hoursbefore landing in in rural Indiana. Now the Skyranger was on its wayto catch the abomination on the ground. Akira and Colonel Perez sat in their armor, helmets removed,toward the back of the Skyranger's cargo bay. She was still incommand of the entire X-COM military operation, but that now includedanother base and more troopers, so she had been promoted to colonel,and a commanding captain had been chosen for each base. Akira was oneof them and was now in charge at Little Rock. Well, almost - Perezwas still stationed there, and she outranked him. He imagined hisproblems were very similar to those faced by the captain of a navyflagship with an Admiral on board. "I still think you should stay back, Colonel," he said,"You're too valuable." She read through it, as Akira hoped she would. He liked Perezand was genuinely concerned for the welfare of the organization, butwhat he was really saying was, "Why didn't you stay behind and let melead this mission in peace?" Without looking up, she said quickly, "If I want to run thisoperation properly, I have to know what's going on on strikemissions." "But there are video records, and ..." And you don't evenleave the ship, he thought. You sit at the ramp with your blasterlauncher and try to run the battle from there. His mind drifted as he talked. They had had this discussionmany times before, with Perez complaining about all the specialproblems of X-COM's high casualty rates and accelerated promotionsystem, but whenever they got around to the issue of Perez'sinvolvement in missions and her authority at Little Rock, she woulduse some excuse to cut the discussion short. She seemed desperate tocontinue fighting and prove something, but what? Was she still tryingto make up for Andianov's death? The promotion of other members of the strike team had also putsome distance between Akira and Perez, and had disrupted other tieswithin the team. Davies had been selected to go to Russia as captainof the new base there, but had refused. As far as Akira knew, he hadnever been considered for the job at Little Rock. And Crossett had nearly missed being promoted to sergeant tofill the gap left by Akira's move. He had gotten wind that Perezplanned to promote Mederow, or maybe even Zander to that positioninstead. "Crossett has almost twice as much time in as Mederow, andZander's nearly a rookie" he had complained to Perez one day whenthey were checking supply deliveries. "She's a loose cannon," was Perez's only reply. "She was a loose cannon," Akira said, "I agree, but onlybecause she's a natural at this. I've seen her become much morefocused over the last four months. She seems to know where the squad'sgoing next before I give the order." "For God's sake, Perez," Akira continued, "even Morinov is asergeant in Russia now, and he's crazy. He got Bouton killed" There seemed to be more to Perez's rejection of Crossett thanjust perceptions of past self-discipline problems, but Akira didn'tknow what. That night he and Crossett watched an old movie in herquarters, and he asked her about it. She simply admitted that Perezdidn't like her and left it at that. The next day, Perez announcedthat Crossett was the new Far Squad sergeant. Now Crossett sat in the Skyranger with her squad, reduced tojust herself, a scout and a heavy to make room on the plane for theteam's two new psi troopers, Hudson and Tonida. Over the last twomonths, every trooper had been evaluated for their psionic potential,but only Hudson and Tonida had been chosen for further training. Theyused captured aliens to actually attempt mental control using spinymental amplifiers developed by X-COM researchers. Now the psis sat together in power armor, farthest back in thecargo bay. They had suddenly become the most valuable items in theX-COM inventory and were under orders to not even leave the ship.Akira wondered how much good they would do. He would rather have hadtwo more troopers out where it counted. The Skyranger landed and the ramp began to drop. Akira lookedto his left out the window and saw only corn fields, a few small farmbuildings in the distance, and what might have been a town far off. "UFO right," Perez called out. The hovertank slid out, followed by Zander and Mederowcrossing over to the left. Then Esser, the Far Squad scout, steppedout of the Skyranger and floated around to the right. She disappearedbehind the plane's tail section. The three members of Far Squad, plus Akira, all had flyingsuits - reinforced power suits with anti-grav capabilities similar tofloaters. This was not the first mission they used them, but it wasthe first where flying was key to their plan for taking the UFO. As he moved forward to leave the Skyranger, Akira could see asmall, two story farmhouse directly ahead. Crossett was in front ofhim, and Bradley in front of her. As Bradley floated forward abovethe ramp, he aimed his rocket launcher at the farmhouse and fired. From his vantage point directly behind, Akira could easilyfollow the bright streak of the rocket's path. It hit the first floorwall directly in the center. Old wood, rusted metal and years of dustblew outwards, leaving a hole in the side large enough for two tanksto drive through. Akira saw no sign of any aliens. "I guess he can hit the side of a barn," someone commentedover the headset. It sounded like Zander. Akira and Perez had talked for hours about changes in striketeam strategy and had come to the conclusion that the flow of rawmaterials and captured supplies was steady enough that they didn'thave to worry about conservation during combat. They would usewhatever firepower they had to clear cover and get to the aliens fast,and they wouldn't worry too much about property damage. Crossett moved off and floated up behind the Skyranger'sstabilizers, and Akira heard her footsteps on the roof. As he reachedthe ramp he heard another explosion behind him, toward the front ofthe plane. "What the hell is that thing?" Esser said over the headset.There was a sizzle of laser fire from her position. "My grenade blewright next to him and he's still standing." "It's a soldier of a unknown race," Hudson, the psi, answeredfrom inside the Skyranger. "It's wounded, but not severely. Theclosest approximation of the name is 'muton.'" Akira glanced back before he left the plane and saw bothHudson and Tonida facing away from him, toward the front of theSkyranger - toward a solid wall. Hudson was holding a mind probe, alarge metallic sphere, and Tonida was holding one of the fragilepsi-amps. The sight gave Akira the creeps. Akira heard the whistling crack of a heavy plasma, then morelaser fire. "He took a grenade and two laser hits before he went down,"Esser reported - she always assumed aliens where males. "Sorry, Couldn't catch it," Tonida said. Akira felt like things were happening too fast without him.He manipulated the controls built into the left arm of his suit, andquickly floated around to the right, following Esser's path. When hegot around the corner, he stopped for a second. Half of his field ofview was filled with an enormous alien ship, three levels high andprobably fifty meters across. The top two levels were supported byfive pedestals below, each the size of a small UFO. How manygrenade-resistant aliens were in there? He continued toward the front of the Sykranger and noticedsmoke ahead. The side of a barn had been opened up, presumably byEsser's grenade, and it was burning. Esser was floating ahead,sliding into what was left of the barn's loft. On the main floor,amid the smoldering bundles of hay, Akira could barely make out thestill body of a barrel-chested purple humanoid. A heavy plasma laynext to it. Akira checked his HUD. Zander, Mederow, and Davies, all inpower suits, were heading toward the farmhouse Bradley had blown open.The tank was already there, checking the roof and the second floor. Hecould see Esser in the barn ahead of him, and Crossett covering herfrom atop the nose of the Skyranger. So there was no one between himand the UFO. Akira turned back to his left and saw Bradley using one of theplane's stabilizers as cover. Another streak from Bradley's rocketlauncher cut across in front of the UFO and turned the side of anotherbarn to the right of the UFO into splinters, smoke and flames. Beyondthat barn Akira saw only cultivated fields and an orchard. To theleft of the UFO, next to the farmhouse, he could make out part of afew small sheds. "Crossett," he called over the headset, "have your squadsecure these two barns then move on toward the orchard. Near Squad,when you're through looting the farmhouse, check out those smallbuildings to the left of the UFO. Bradley and I will watch the centerand look for the entrance underneath." "Yessir, Captain sir," Davies replied. Akira had promised himself he would leave as many decisions aspossible up to the squad leaders. Hadn't he? Davies was usuallysarcastic, but Akira sensed genuine irritation this time. No time toworry about it now, he thought. He descended to the ground and found he could see much moreof the terrain underneath the giant ship. He was standing in opensunlight, so it was difficult for his eyes to adjust to the dimshadows around the pedestals. A plasma bolt streaked past to his left and passed under theSkyranger into the fields beyond. He wasn't sure if it was aimed at himself or at Bradley, whohad descended to the ground a few meters to his left. Akirathought he knew where the shot had come from - the small shacks on theother side of the UFO - but he couldn't see any aliens there. It didn't seem to matter to Bradley exactly where the alienwas. He carefully aimed his rocket launcher at the shacks, probablyworried about hitting Near Squad in the building next door, and fired. Akira wasn't sure of what he saw, but he thought the rocketactually went through a small window on the side of one of the shedsbefore exploding inside. The whole front half of the building blewopen, destroying part of a smaller building next to it. He dropped to one knee and aimed in that general direction.As the smoke cleared, one of the misproportioned purple mutons steppedout from right where the rocket had exploded. "Damn," Bradley said, dropping his launcher and fishing alaser rifle out of his pack, "that's one tough son-of-a-bitch." Akira autofired his heavy plasm. At the same time, laser firecut across at the alien from a window on the second floor of thefarmhouse. The alien took three more wild shots in the direction ofthe Skyranger. Bradley got his weapon down and added to the crossfirefor just a second before a small silver football streaked out of theback of the Skyranger and up over the top of the UFO. Akira didn'tsee it descend on the other side, but half a second later the blastprotection kicked in on Akira's lenses and everything went black. His sight was immediately restored when the initial flash wasover. Charred, splintered wood and chunks of dirt rained down overthe entire area around the UFO. The two small buildings werecompletely gone, as was the alien. Part of the farmhouse had alsobeen damage, but not too badly. "Near Squad," Akira called, "Are you OK?" "Fine," Davies replied. "I almost had that one," Tonida reported from inside theSkyranger, "I could feel it." "Both squads," Perez called over the headset from inside theSkyranger, "we have to give the psis more time." Akira had actually seen Tonida and Hudson control aliensback at Little Rock, in the containment facility. But he wasn'tconfident enough in their abilities to risk giving an alien a chanceto shoot back while the psis mentally located it and attempted theircontrol. Akira waved Bradley forward, and they both stood and movedinto the shade of the UFO. They split up, on either side of thenearest pedestal. They had learned from the survivors of the Russianassault that there were doors on the central leg and a large liftinside, but that's as far as they had gone. Akira made his waycautiously around the leg to get within sight of the doors. As the center leg came into view, he spotted a set of doors,on the side opposite the Skyranger. As he continued around and poppeda proximity grenade from his belt, he spotted another set of doors onthe near side of the center leg and caught a glimpse of purple infront of them. Then a huge explosion on the other side of the leg hewas using as cover lit up the entire underside of the UFO and blew themuton back against the doors. No time to check on Bradley. Akira didn't have the grenadeprimed, so he dropped it and raised his heavy plasma. "I've got him! Don't shoot" Tonida shouted over the headsets. Akira kept as much cover as he could, and continued aiming forthe huge purple chest. As he watched, the alien turned, reloaded itsblaster launcher, and went through the door into the center leg. Akira checked his HUD and it confirmed his suspicion - Bradleywas dead. "Davies, Bradley's gone" he called, "can you spare someone tohelp me cover the doors down here?" There was a moment's pause. "Sure," Davies replied, "take thetank." It had probably understood the exchange, but it wouldn't hurtto be more explicit. "Hovertank, cover the UFO's central..." Another explosion came, followed by what could have been alienscreams. This one was in Akira's field of view and triggered hisshields. When they cleared he saw that it must have occurred upinside the UFO. Part of the bottom of the UFO had been destroyed onthe opposite side of the center leg, leaving an opening large enoughfor a trooper to fly up through. Seconds later a muton stepped out of the door. Akira reacted,but saw it wasn't carrying a weapon. "I've still got him," Tonida called, "but I think he was hurtpretty bad by the blast. On the second level the lift pops out wheretwo wide hallways cross. I think I got two aliens with the launcher." Akira wanted to get around the leg to his left to see what thefirst blast had done, but he was afraid to turn his back on the mutonor leave him uncovered. He switched his HUD to the hovertank's viewand saw that it was just moving around the far leg and the muton wasin its sight. While Akira moved back around to where Bradley was, he heardwhat sounded like a grenade, followed by laser and plasma fire nearthe orchard. Crossett was giving orders to Esser over the headset,but Akira didn't get a chance to listen. As he came around the outside of the UFO's leg, he foundhimself facing a muton on its way toward the Skyranger. The alienturned blindingly fast and fired a heavy weapon of some kind. Therewas a small explosion near Akira. It didn't seem small, but heassumed it was because he survived it. His shoulders and the musclesdown his back all tightened as if trying to fold back around hisspinal column, and he lost feeling in his legs. He dropped to hisknees and his vision blurred. Akira's weapon was pointed in the general direction of thealien, so he managed to freeze where he was and squeeze hard forautofire. The heavy plasma had some kick, but it was dampened by theweapon's weight. Akira held steady and continued to fire at theblurry figure barely moving in front of him. "...Akira" He heard Tonida yelling through the constant crack of theplasma. "You killed it! Hold it" Akira's vision was clearing. He had thought that his suit hadbeen damaged by an alien grenade and he had collapsed under itsweight and lost visual input. Now he could see the alien was carryinga small launcher and had probably hit him with a stun bomb. Controlof his legs returned and he moved the rest of the way around the legto cover the door. He was at the edge of a crater, over a meter deep.Bradley's body was at the bottom, inside a jagged remnant of a flyingsuit. He could now see how the alien who had stunned him got pastTonida's mind puppet. The blast had blown a hole in the side of theleg, revealing a small lift inside. The mind puppet was stillstanding beside the door, waiting for Tonida's instructions. "Akira," Perez said, "I'm on a private channel. I want you tocome back and guard the Skyranger." Akira didn't understand. Then he remembered his wildshooting. She thinks I went berserk, he realized. "I'm fine, Colonel," he said, "I got hit by a stun bomb and myvision was blurred for a minute. I couldn't tell when the alien wentdown." Perez paused. "Fine." "We don't need any more holes in this ship, Colonel," Akiracontinued. Their plan was to try blowing a hole in the side on thetop level, with a blaster bomb, then go in with flying suits. "We havea small hole in the underbelly on the other side and access to twodifferent lifts down here. "I still want Far Squad through the top," she replied, "Daviescan cover the bottom with his power suits as soon as they've clearedthe surrounding area." I guess I'm just a another trooper on this mission, Akirathought. He could accept that for now. "Crossett," he called, "Are you secure yet?" He checked hisHUD and saw that she and Esser had already moved under the UFO fromthe other side. In fact he could see her looking at him between thecenter and far right leg, her flying suit painted with the image of abowie knife - her choice of coat-of-arms. "Secure," she said, raising her heavy plasma slightly toacknowledge him. She had a habit of just appearing when he wantedher. "Toss me a 'P' Grenade," he said. She snapped something off her belt, still training her weaponon the far door. He couldn't see Esser behind the center leg. "Primed or unprimed?" she asked dryly, tossing the grenadetwenty meters to land within arm's length of him. She had lost herfirst trooper as a squad leader, but her sense of humor remainedintact. He primed the grenade and tossed it into the opening of theleg at his side to cover the small lift. "Lift in the leg near theSkyranger is rigged," he announced. The mind controlled muton suddenly began to move, turning backtoward the door. "I lost it," Tonida called. Akira aimed carefully so he wouldn't hit Crossett. He got offone shot before the door closed and the alien disappeared inside. "I think I hit it, but it didn't make a sound." Akira wasn't about to go after it. He just hoped it waseither dead or injured too badly to be a threat. "Area's secure." It was Davies. "We'll take the underbellynow. You glory boys can head up top." "Boys?" Crossett and Esser said together. Akira could see two troopers tromping toward him from the leftwhere the tank was still standing guard. One was Davies, the othersmall enough to be Zander. Another explosion behind him caught him off guard. It tookhim a second to realize it was Perez blasting a hole for them. "Sounds like we might have a door up there," he said, "Let'sgo." He stood, moved quickly out from under the UFO and looked upwhere he thought the blast had come from. There was a hole all right,at the top level, big enough for one. He ascended and hovered justbeside the opening waiting for Esser and Crossett. When they arrived, Crossett waved Esser inside. She wentthrough and they heard the thunking of her heavy soles on alien alloyas she walked farther. "room," she said, "one door." Crossett moved in next, and Akira followed. The room wasroughly a triangle. The wall they'd come through was the long side,and the door was on the wall to their left. It had been blown outwardby the blast. There was an explosion somewhere below, and Davies announcedthat his squad was heading up the lifts. The door opened into a hallway. Esser glanced out in eitherdirection then stepped out completely, moving slowly down the hall tothe left. Crossett followed, turning right and kneeling to coverEsser's rear. Akira followed, heading left and trying to keep some spacingbetween them all. The hall went down a few meters and turned right,probably very close to the outside wall of the ship. Esser took theturn and disappeared. "The hall's a dead end," she reported, "one door to my right." Akira heard the door whoosh open, then close. Then he heardplasma fire below, and Hudson yelling "I had him, I had him." "...quiet," Davies ordered, "Zander's hit" "I'm OK," Zander called, "the suit took it all. I'm just alittle shaken up. Esser appeared around the corner again. "empty," she said outloud, "no other doors." Crossett was still against the wall to the right, covering thehallway in the opposite direction. Only a few meters down itintersected another passage, and again ten meters farther down. Esser motioned that she was going left at the nearerintersection. Crossett nodded and moved forward almost to the corner,turning so she could see down to the left and straight ahead. Akiragot down across from Crossett, covering the hall to the right. A soon as Esser rounded the corner she was shot. A plasmabolt caught her in the leg and took her down only a meter or two fromAkira. Crossett immediately stepped into the hallway and filled thehall with plasma. Akira didn't dare step out into the crossfire, sohe kept his eyes on the other two passages. Just as he heard thedeath scream of the alien Crossett was shooting at, another mutonlumbered out of a doorway toward the end of the center hall. Akira got off one snap shot and missed, then his clip ran dry.Crossett turned to see what he was shooting at. "This one's mine," Hudson shouted over the headset. Akirawasn't sure of that meant he already had control, or if he was justclaiming the alien and they were still at risk. The muton lowered its weapon and moved toward them. "Hudson, I don't like aliens moving toward me with loadedweapons," Akira said. "Okay with me." The alien lifted its weapon, a plasma rifle, and popped outthe clip. Akira reloaded his at the same time. The alien continuedaround the corner past Esser's body and stopped, facing away fromthem. Akira had time to check his HUD. Esser was still alive. Hemoved down to her and plugged his medi-kit into her suit's medicalinterface. The scanner showed that her leg was badly damaged andbleeding. She was still conscious. "Captain, I've been hit." "Yes, I know ..." Akira said, momentarily at a loss for words,"... you'll be fine." He applied coagulants and pain killers andactivated some of the pressure devices built into the suit to stop thebleeding. She might actually make it, he thought. He was nervous, because her life was in his hands, and becausehis life was in the hands of a mind-controlled alien with no clip inits weapon. He finished and left her where she lay. It was as safea place as any. "Load up Hudson, but keep that damn thing in front of me." "Sure, Captain." The alien loaded the clip back into itsrifle and started down the hall. "Stay where you are, Crossett," Akira ordered, "I'll escortthe mind puppet around this way. They began a systematic search of half of the ship, withCrossett covering the center hallway to warn them of any alienscrossing over from the other side. Akira would wait outside doorswhile the alien stepped inside. Hudson would report on what the aliensaw. The entire process worked well and was uneventful until theyreached what turned out to be a triangular room on the opposite end ofthe UFO from where they had entered. The muton stepped inside and wasimmediately shot three times by plasma fire. Whatever had done it was at close range, just on the otherside of the door Akira guessed. He had enough time to pull a grenadeoff his belt, prime it, and toss it inside just as the door closed. The blast went off immediately after the door closed, butthere was no sound from the alien. It might not be dead, Akira thought. "Can you get it, Hudson?Tonida?" "I can tell where it is," someone replied, "but I really needto see it to get control." "I've got it," Colonel Perez said. There was a whistlingnoise somewhere outside the UFO, then a blast knocked the door next toAkira out into the hall and sent molten alloy spraying through theopening. The alien inside screamed in pain for just a second. Akira stepped into the room and dropped to one knee. It wasfilled with smoke and metal vapor that would probably have choked himwithout his armor. A muton lay motionless on the jagged floor and hecould see inviting sunlight through a new opening to the human worldoutside. In the center of the room was a small lift platform. "Davies," he called, "I've got a down lift in the corneropposite where Far Squad came in. Are you secure below it?" "Not yet," Davies replied, "just a second..." Akira ducked inside the room so he couldn't be shot frombehind. He stood behind the alien body and tried to cover the doorand the lift. "...we see it now. It's clear." Akira turned and continued the search through the alien worldof the ship. All he had left to search on his side of the centerpassage was a square room directly in the center. As he moved towardit, There was plasma fire below and Davies announced that the secondlevel was secure and his squad was moving up. Seconds later a trooper, Mederow, stepped out of one of thedoors from the center room. Soon Zander and Davies were there, andCrossett was free to head down the hall to her right. In a few minutes they had searched the entire area. When things had calmed down, Akira went to check on Esser.Crossett was already bent over her and had removed both of theirhelmets. "I hate the smell in here," Crossett said as Akiraapproached, "It smells like oil and rotting fruit." She pulled herknife and started cutting her hair. Akira checked his medi-kit, whichwas still attached to Esser. She would be fine. They were both interrupted by Davies, stomping quickly up,still in full armor. "You should come look at this, Akira." Akira followed him without asking, back to the what lookedlike a control room, one of the last rooms they'd checked. Onceinside, Davies pointed at a display on one of the panels. They hadtaken alien controls intact before, but never with displays active -at least not with anything on them they could understand. The small panel they stared at showed a slowly rotating orangesphere, marked by rough, irregular patches of brown and partiallyobscured by the strange alien writing. The writing wasunintelligible, but it was not difficult to figure out what the spherewas. "Mars," Davies said unnecessarily from inside hisenvironmentally sealed power suit. THE END Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
FullAuto Posted September 3, 2005 Author Share Posted September 3, 2005 7 - Alien Abduction. When the Skyranger arrived in southern Mauritania, just northof the Senegal river, the helicopters from HMS Resolve were stillthere. Akira watched them fly low to clear away the top layer ofloose sand with their prop wash. An interceptor from Russia had found this base after X-COM'snew hyperwave decoder, designed with the help of captured aliennavigators, had intercepted and decoded signals from a large alien UFOon a base supply mission. The interceptor had kept its distance andfollowed the supply ship until it landed within a few hundred metersof where the helicopters now swept back and forth. The interceptorthen followed the supply ship after it took off and shot it down withplasma cannons over Libya. The Russian strike team would deal withrecovering it. The Little Rock strike team had been re-equipped for thismission, a few of their plasmas swapped out for stun launchers. Bystudying captured alien information and captured alien leaders, X-COMscientists had determined that there was a key to the whole alienoperation, but it wasn't located on Earth - a strike teamwould have to go to Mars. They also discovered that higher rankingaliens, alien commanders, might be stationed at alien bases and mightbe useful for determining exactly where on Mars the alien facility waslocated. So their primary objective on this mission was to capture acommander alive. Akira had seen the ship that would take them to Mars, stillunder construction in a hangar at Little Rock. It was a crossbetween the Skyranger and a medium-sized UFO. In fact it combinedsome of the best of human and alien technology into a ship which wouldfight better and fly faster than any interceptor, yet be able to carryeighteen troopers and two tanks. Akira would have liked to give it atest run on this mission and bring along the extra tank and a fewextra rookies. He had been on one alien base raid before, in Russia,and he knew that ten troopers were barely enough to operate down there.And the two psis hanging back left him only eight. He and the psis disembarked from the Skyranger last. Theywalked across the sand toward the two exposed, nearly horizontal alienalloy hatches. The helicopters still hovered low overhead, blowingsand harmlessly against the ten armored troopers arrayed around thearea. They had completed their missions, but their pilots had neverseen power suits, flying suits, or hovertanks before. Akirasuppressed the urge to give them a demonstration of his flying suitand just waved them off, back to the Resolve. Perez wasn't with them. A week earlier, before a mission inthe mountains of Peru, he had finally convinced her to stay behind.She had been reluctant then, but today, with both of her strike teamson separate missions, she had not even mentioned coming along. Herabsence had done two things: It had opened up room in the Skyrangerto add a trooper to Far Squad, and it had indirectly brought Crossettand Akira closer together. During the Peru mission he had noticed Crossett bantering withBlake, the second scout to take Esser's place during her recovery.After that, he had felt the need to spend more time with her. Hewasn't jealous, he just didn't like to think of her starting up afriendship with Blake which could erode their own. So he began seeing her every night, watching movies, cooking,and reviewing old mission footage. One night they left the base for ashort time and went into Little Rock. They ate at an Indian restaurantnear the river. "I think the last mission went smoother without Perez," hesaid. Crossett moved her palau around her plate, but didn't speak. "Well?" he continued, "Don't you think so? She was a mildannoyance to me, but she seemed to really have it in for you. Whatwas the problem?" Crossett quit playing with her food and gave him a look of milddisbelief, shaking her head slightly. "You never figured it out, didyou? You're a good soldier and a good friend, 'Kira, but sometimesyou're unbelievably naive." "What?" "I think you're a good soldier because you understand aliensbetter than humans." "WHAT?" It was really beginning to bother him, especiallycoming from Crossett. "You," she said, smiling a little, "... you were the problem." He was still confused. He tried to remember all the thingshe'd said to Perez, searching for something that could have offendedher enough that she would take it out on Crossett just because shewas his friend. He realized he had been staring at Crossett with hismouth hanging open. "What?" he said for the third time. "What did I do to her thatshe would hold it against both of us?" This time Crossett laughed out loud. "She LIKES you 'Kira.You couldn't tell?" At first he couldn't accept that, but the pieces finally beganto fall into place. Perez had a very subtle personality, and hangingaround Crossett, so direct and open, had probably dulled hissensitivity to it. He thought back again and realized she could beright. But then why take it out on Crossett? Of course, the answer was obvious. Everyone in the Little Rockbase who didn't know them well enough assumed Akira and Crossett wereromantically involved. Perez was jealous. Crossett was eating again, probably waiting for him to workthrough everything, and probably knowing what conclusion he would cometo. How could she stand being around him, always waiting for him tocatch up to her. She looked up at him and he realized that she might not be asdirect and open as he had thought. There was something more thanfriendship there. He felt it too, but had denied it, forced it downout of fear. It was fear of losing her, fear of losing concentrationin combat, and fear of talk among the other troopers. But, what the hell. The base was talking about them anyway,he thought. Might as well give them something to talk about. He reached across the small table and took her hand. Shedidn't look surprised. He stood and leaned over the table to kiss herhard on the lips, and she seemed to expect it. They went to a hotel,arm in arm, and made love. He finally managed to surprise her a fewtimes. Now she stood with her squad, out on the sand, near theentrance farthest from the Skyranger. She was standing beside Blake'stall figure, and they appeared to be talking privately. It didn'tbother Akira this time, He realized that any jealousy, any thoughts ofpossessing Crossett, as a friend or a lover, were foolish. Crossett had a relatively new squad - Esser, Torban and Blake.They had only seven missions between them, which was less than half ofwhat Zander, the least experienced on Near Squad, had by herself.Crossett would have to watch them closely down there. Akira hoisted his blaster launcher - his problem now thatPerez wasn't along - and gave the signal. The scouts, Blake andZander, moved toward the two hatches. As they stepped within abouttwo meters of them, the doors slid open. Akira wondered if there were vertical drops down into thebase, and whether they would be too far for the troopers in powersuits. But as he watched, Zander moved cautiously and smoothly down,as if she was on a steep set of stairs. "There's a ramp leading down to one of the glowing greenrooms," Zander reported over the headset. "Here too," Blake added. Zander's head disappeared below the sand, and Davies wavedthe tank forward, then Mederow and his stun launcher entered. Akirawondered again if he had made the right choice, trading three heavyplasmas for stun launchers. It would greatly increase the odds ofgetting a commander alive, but it could also cost a few lives. Davies moved in, and Akira followed. At the bottom of theramp they found themselves in one of the large green rooms, about tenmeters across, with a tank-sized lift in the northeast corner. The psis came down last, Hudson with Akira and Near Squad,Tonida with Far Squad. They each carried a cumbersome mind probe,hoping to mentally locate an alien commander. Until then, the squadshad to assume every alien was a commander and take appropriateprecautions. "Far Squad. All inside?" he called. "All inside," Crossett replied. "Head down into the base, and try to merge your perimeters assoon as possible," he ordered, "and keep an eye out for anything thatlooks like the command center from our Russian base footage." Akira sat back now and watched his squads deploy, forcinghimself to stay quiet. He couldn't see Davies's expression, but hecould imagine how he felt having Akira right at his elbow - he hadbeen in a similar position with Perez along. Near Squad was down quickly. Akira was not surprised thatthey found themselves in a square alien alloy room the same size asthe green one above. It had one large opening on each wall. As Akirastepped off the lift he could see that the southern opening led into apassageway of some kind, and the west opening led to a smaller hallwayrunning north-south. He didn't have a chance to check the otheropenings. "Bug," someone yelled over the headset, but Akira couldn'ttell who it was. He brought up his head-up-display, but had no timeto interpret it. The trooper covering the eastern opening, just toAkira's left, stood and moved toward the corner of the room opposite Akiraand the lift. It was Mederow. "What is that?" Mederow asked, probably not expecting a reply. Davies was covering the west opening, and Zander the south.They both turned as Mederow moved and began firing plasma andlaser through the opening to Akira's left. Return plasma fire cameback and cratered the wall above Zander's head. Akira spun left and instinctively raised his blasterlauncher as a towering metal biped stepped through into the room. Hisfirst impression was of a reaper covered in armor, then of a robotreaper. Akira had to suppress the urge to squeeze the trigger on thelauncher. Through the din of plasma discharge and destruction, Akiracould hear something over the headset. "It's ... sectopod .. tough." It sounded like Hudson. Akira had no weapons to defend himself, but he was still onthe lift platform. He made the arm motion and began to ascend. Themetal reaper turned to face directly at him, and he could only hopehis armor would help him survive a nearly point-blank plasma hit.Just before the room descended out of sight, and before the alien gotoff a shot, two final streaks from across the room took it down. The lift took him up into the green room, where he foundhimself facing Hudson. "I could probe it," Hudson said out loud, "But there wasnothing there to control. It was mostly machine, and I couldn't..." "Alien," the headset blurted, "moving among the cases in thebig room." Hudson froze in his crouched stance and tightened his grip onhis psi amp. Akira's HUD now contained a flashing red light. He descendedon the lift and switched his HUD to the video channel of the spottingtrooper. He knew that voice - it was Blake. He came up with Blake'sview, a large room like they'd seen in Russia, lined with specimendisplay cases, like a big museum. As he watched the merged scene ofwhat he saw and what Blake saw, a strange alien appeared for a fewseconds in Blake's world before disappearing behind another case.Blake kept his head and didn't take the shot with his laser rifle. It was roughly humanoid, and gliding along, almost like afloater, but it was completely covered over by orange robes - a deeporange version of the grim reaper. Why did everything have to remindhim of reapers? "It's just a soldier," Tonida reported, "they don't seem tohave a spoken language - closest English word to their race-concept is'ethereal'. Not too tough physically". The alien appeared again, and this time it spotted Blake.Blake got off a laser autofire, and seemed to hit. The alien fired aheavy plasma and grazed Blake's armor. "I can't control it," Hudson said, "these things have someawesome mental powers." Akira reached the bottom of the lift and saw that Near squadonce again had things under control, with Zander and Davies cautiouslyadvancing through the openings to the south and west to join FarSquad. Meanwhile, Blake was not firing back at the robed creature andhad nearly been hit again. He finally fired back and killed it."Damn. Something was inside my head for a minute there," he said, "Ithink they might be turning this mind control stuff back on us." It had been months since the strike team had faced sectoids incombat - the only race they knew of that used mind control. Now theymay have found another race, possibly even stronger. But the last time they had faced mind control they had hadnone of their own, and new X-COM troopers hadn't been screened fortheir ability to resist. Now they would find out if it was all worthit. Akira knew what the mental strength ratings were of everyoneon his team. They were all relatively high, at least in the top thirdof the recruits screened. He also knew that some of the veterans,specifically he and Davies and Mederow, were somewhere around average.Mederow's score was slightly below average, and Perez had considereddumping him from the squads. Akira checked his HUD. Crossett's squad was ten or fifteenmeters to the southwest. The advancing troopers in each squad hadalready seen most of the intervening space. A barren hallway randirectly east from Crossett's squad and passed just south of the roomwhere Akira was standing. Crossett had already begun moving eastalong it, giving orders to her squad as she went. "Torban has at least thirty meters of solid wall off to ourwest," she reported, "It could be the edge of the base if it's laidout anything like the last one." Akira could see Zander heading south into the cross-passage,meeting up with Crossett to secure the southeast corner of their zone.On his HUD he could see the tank to the north, and the schematicrepresentation of what they knew so far showed a solid wall there too. "It looks like we have an edge of the base to the north and tothe west," he said over the headset. "Far Squad, freeze on a linewith the south hallway. Near Squad, keep a line to the east, evenwith the lift room. Send whoever you can spare to the north and westto clear our rear, and I want at least one stun launcher from FarSquad back there," Akira gave up trying to track everyone in both squads, andconcentrated on finding a use for his blaster launcher. He couldn'thaphazardly destroy the place and risk killing a commander. The onlyuse he could come up with was to blow open a more convenient routeinto the command center. A heavy plasma fired to the south. Akira's HUD showed noaliens spotted. "What is this thing," Crossett called, "some kind of alientree?" Akira switched to her view and saw a room covered in the darkblue velvety material. In the center was a rooted plant of some kind,probably three meters tall and four meters across at the top. It hadthick, rubbery-looking branches, topped with colorful, spurting disks,like flattened doughnuts. "..Can't probe it," Hudson said, "It's alive, but I don'tthink it's very intelligent. "My plasma blew off pieces of it," Crossett said, "but itwould take all day to whittle it all down. I'll just wait and seewhat it does." Akira thought about having Crossett drop back, then hitting itwith the blaster launcher, but it didn't seem necessary. "found the northwest corner," Esser reported, "we've got acouple of those rooms with the rows of suspended spheres and onelarge, square enclosed area with only one door. It's..." "How big?" Akira broke in. Could they have the command centeralready? "What?" "The door. Is it large enough for a tank?" "No," she replied, "It's a normal door, around the west sidehere." "Tank," Crossett ordered, "go to where Blake is now and coverthe display room with Torban. Blake, help Esser check that door." "Captain," Crossett called on the open channel, "I can see athin north-south passage to my south-east about fifteen meters, and ithas a small window. Looks like it could be the command center. MaybeZander could..." "Bug" someone called out, followed by the "thwump" of alauncher. One red box flashed on Akira's HUD, then a second. Heswitched and came up with Torban's view of the display room. Abouthalfway across the large room were one of the ethereals and anotherrobot reaper. "The launcher didn't do it ... reloading." "Ethereal soldier," Hudson called, "it's not a commander." Akira switched to the tank's view - it was still movingthrough the suspended sphere rooms, not yet in sight of the displayroom. Torban might be able to reload and stun the ethereal, but couldthe robot reaper even be stunned? Akira checked his HUD map. The hallway to the south of himwas clear, except for Crossett, tucked into a side passage. And FarSquad's lift room was empty for now, at least until the tank gotthere. Good. Akira knelt, quickly programmed waypoints into his blaster,and fired. His heart stopped and he thought of Perez and Andianov as hewatched the silver football streak from his arms into the hall to hissouth, then disappear around the corner to the right. the blast camea half second later, its flash reflecting through the passages andlighting up the room where Akira stood. The flash was followed by a blastof hot gases and smoke. If the bomb had followed its course, it should have hit adisplay case toward the far end of the big room, behind the aliens -hopefully close enough to destroy them, but far enough away fromTorban. "Nice shooting, Captain," Torban called, "I just hope therewasn't anything important in any of these cases" Akira resumed breathing and checked his HUD - All known aliensdead, all troopers alive. Only a few seconds later, Akira's red indicator flashed again.This time he switched to Blake's view. At first it was a littledisorienting, until Akira realized Blake was looking up a lift shaft.At the top was an alien - and ethereal - with its back turned. Akira overlaid the HUD map and saw that Blake had moved down apassage inside the large square area at the squad's rear. He had saidnothing over the headset, probably trying not to make a sound - nearlyimpossible in powered armor. "Not a commander," Hudson reported, then Tonida saidsomething, but Akira was distracted. Mederow, still covering therooms to the east of the lift room Akira was in, suddenly dropped hisstun launcher, stood, and ran straight ahead, through a room with aglowing purple floor. Akira moved to the opening to be able to track Mederowbetter. "Mederow," he called, foolishly using an open channel, "getback here." Mederow kept going, through into a dark room beyond thepurple floor. "What happened, Akira?" It was Davies on a private channel. "Don't know. He just stood and ran off that way." Meanwhile, Akira still had Blake's view up. He heard and sawa grenade go off at the top of the shaft, then Blake ascended. Whenhe reached the top, Akira heard plasma fire and Blake collapsed. Hisvideo was still running, and seconds later, just at the corner of theskewed field of view, Akira saw another trooper ascended the lift. Asmall launcher went off, then Esser's face appeared as she fumbled forsomething next to Blake's body. She moved out of view and Akira hearda laser on autofire. "Two dead ethereals up here," she reported "that last onecould have killed me, but I think he tried to get inside my headinstead." "Checked both," Hudson said, "one leader, one soldier." Meanwhile, Mederow re-appeared to the east, carrying somethingin his right hand. As soon as he entered the purple room, he turnedstiffly toward Akira and tossed the object toward him. Akira watched it land only a meter or two in front of him, andonly then realized it was a grenade. He tried to jump back to hisleft, behind the wall in the lift room, but the grenade went offbefore he got there. It blew him back, right onto the lift, andknocked the blaster launcher out of his hands. Zander was stillinside the passage to the south and had avoided the blast. Akira remained conscious and was surprised to find the suithad taken most of the damage. He seemed to only have a few bruisedribs and a major headache. "What was that?" someone asked, probably Davies. "Mederow..." Akira answered, getting back to his feet, "he'slost it completely." He moved back to the opening, next to the destroyed robotreaper, and picked up Mederow's stun launcher. Zander moved to whereshe could cover the east and south. Mederow was still there, with another grenade in one hand,priming it with the other. His face was expressionless. He wasn't ina hurry or excited, as if he was only putting on his shoes or pouringhimself a cup of coffee. Akira didn't wait for the grenade to come his way. He firedthe stun launcher and hit the far wall, only a meter or two fromMederow. The trooper wobbled a little and seemed to nearly drop thegrenade, but he continued his motions, getting ready to throw. Then a bolt of plasma from off to Akira's left took Mederow inthe shoulder, creating a spray of molten alloy and a small cloud ofvapors. Mederow went down, dropping his grenade. It went off a fewseconds later, just beside his head. His icon on Akira's HUDschematic flashed for a few seconds, then went white. "Mederow's dead," Akira announced. Akira was surprised by how much Mederow's death effected him.He stood motionless for a few reckless seconds before recovering hissenses and getting behind the cover of the wall to his left. He andMederow hadn't been that close, but he had been easy to get alongwith, and it seemed like he'd been in the squads a long time. Maybe it's all finally getting to me, Akira thought. He forced himself back to business. "Davies," he called on aprivate channel, "You and Zander can't cover this side by yourselves,and I'm no help covering with only a Blaster and a laser pistol." "Right," Davies said. His voice didn't have the usual edge onit - Mederow must have gotten to him too. He called to Crossett, whodirected Esser across to the east. "I've got Blake," Esser called back, "he needs a medi-kit." "Drop him near the lift," Torban called, "I can ..." "Leave him," Crossett ordered, "we don't have time for that -I need you in the room to my south." Akira was sickened by his initial response of satisfactionthat Crossett could so callously disregard Blake's injuries. He felt hehad to do something about it. "Zander, move south into thepassageway. Esser, cover east from this lift room. I'll head backand take care of Blake." Confirmations of the orders came from Zander and Esser, but noone else commented on the plan. A few seconds later he saw Esser trotting cautiously into theroom from the west. He motioned her toward the east opening, droppedthe stun launcher, and picked up his blaster. Damn thing's like an anchor,he thought. If he wasn't so afraid of what it could do he would havetraded weapons with Zander and sent her back to treat Blake. He moved quickly west toward Blake, who was still a lively, solidyellow on his HUD. As he trotted the thirty yards through the alienalloy passages, he thought about how seamlessly the squads wereoperating, cooperating instinctively and able to trade members withouta glitch. He wasn't sure they could have done that when Perez wascommanding. Blake lay motionless right next to Far Squad's lift. Akiraattached the medi-kit's diagnosis package to the port on Blake's suit.It was obvious he had been hit in the chest, on the left side andunder his left arm. Diags told him the arm was fine, but there wereserious internal injuries, probably aggravated by Esser carrying him.Still, he would probably live. Akira gave him the recommended levelsof coagulants and stimulants, trying at the same time to slipartificial skin through the jagged fist-sized opening in his flyingsuit. "My guess is your fighting days are over for a while," Akirasaid out loud. "but who knows how long this will go on." Over the headset, Crossett and Davies were giving orders toorganize the squads - now only five troopers, including the twosergeants, and a tank. Akira watched them on his display, moving intoa rough line from the tank, which had located the southern limit ofthe base, north-west all the way up to Davies, moving along itsnorthern limit. They would sweep east, securing every door and lift asthey went to protect their backs. If the command center was indeed just south-east of Crossett'sposition, they would wrap around it like a hand grabbing a grenade.Again a red box flashed on Akira's HUD without a word over theheadset. He switched to automatic and Torban's view came up, againlooking up a shaft at a robed ethereal. Akira was amazed at howmotionless and quiet Torban was able to stand - not an easy trick in asuit designed to detect and amplify your every move. After five or six painful seconds, Hudson finally called in."Not a commander." "Give me second with this thing," Tonida called. Torban waited, still unbelievably still. Under anycircumstances the suit should have been making small whirring noisesas servos reacted to minute balancing movements and nervous jitters.Akira brought up the heavy's status display and found out how he didit. Torban had manually increased his movement triggering thresholdto the point where only significant movement registered. It wouldslow down his reactions quite a bit, but it was an interesting trick. "I had him for a short time," Tonida reported, "long enough tosee he's alone." That was all Torban had been waiting for. Akira, still on thestatus display, saw his movement threshold drop to near normal, andother indicators all went up, indicating sudden movement. He switchedback to video and saw that Torban was moving behind a wall of somekind. A second later a grenade went off and the alien gave out ashrieking, warbly cry. Torban immediately turned, pulled his laserpistol from its holster and headed back toward the lift. When hereached the top, Akira could see that the alien was dead. "We're going to have to make you a scout, Torban," Akira said,only half joking. Davies interrupted. "I think I have the eastern edge here.Me and Esser will start south." Akira had done what he could for Blake, so He stood andchecked his map. He decided to join Crossett and move toward thecommand center. As soon as he moved off in her direction he heardplasma fire directly in front of him, either from Crossett or directedat her. He resisted the urge to just run to her and brought up hisdisplay - no red box. "One of them took a shot at me through the window on thecommand center's side passage," Crossett called over the headset. "I didn't get a read on it," Hudson called, "Sorry." A few seconds later, Akira moved into the room with the large,strange plant. Crossett was covering its eastern opening. "Hello 'Kira," she said on a private channel, withoutturning. "I was watching - nice work on Blake." "Thanks," he said, getting down on one knee to her south,"Which way to the command center?" Crossett motioned with her heavy plasma at the long walldirectly in front of them. "In there." Akira glanced along the wall. It stopped, and the passagecurved east about five meters north of them, and it did the same aboutfifteen meters to the south. In the center of the wall was a smallwindow into what looked like a parallel north-south passage. "It could be the command center," Akira said. Crossett turned and looked at him through augmented lenses andalien alloy. "It is the command center." "We're snagged for a little while," Davies called, "we hit oneof those small lift rooms with the windows. I have to cover whileEsser checks it out." A red box flashed, followed by the a repeated whine of plasmaand laser fire very close to the north-east. "I'm hit," Zander called, "but I think I got it." Akira's gut turned hollow. He switched to an openchannel. "Hudson, what was it?" "Don't know, Captain. Didn't have time." "Damn." Akira said out loud. Zander had heard. "Sorry, Captain," she said, "I ..." "Don't worry about it. How bad are you hurt." She paused, "... I'm fine." Akira hated this. Why couldn't he just kill aliens? Now theymight have lost their commander and Zander's concentration could beshot. He thought about sending her back and taking her place in thesweep. That would probably make her feel even worse, but it mightsave her life. He decided to trust her and leave her in place. Akira checked his HUD schematic to see how everything wasprogressing. Esser had checked out a small room above the windowedlift room and found nothing. Now Esser, Zander, and Davies werearrayed in an east-west line from just north of Akira to the easternedge of the base. Torban was directly south of Akira, and the tanksouth of him, in an open hallway running along the south edge of thebase. They had secured all but the south-east quarter. "I have a large set of doors to the south of me", Zander said,"just like in the videos." "Good," Akira said, "That's the command center. Can we coverthose doors with at least two stun launchers?" "Torban," Crossett ordered, "move up there. The rest of uscan cover this end." Akira realized they only had two stun launchers - Mederow'swas still lying in the room with the purple floor. He looked down athis blaster launcher and wondered what use it would be. Any blastcould easily kill the commander behind a wall somewhere - if it wasn'talready dead. And the squad was packed pretty tight now. When theywere sure they had an alien commander they could use the launcher tolevel everything else, but he would worry about that when the timecame. "I'm going back to get Mederow's launcher," he said out loudto Crossett. He patted her shoulder as he passed behind her, headingnorth. His alloy glove on her armor made a dull, impersonal clunk. By the time Akira reached the purple room and the stunlauncher, the tank had verified that the south wall of the commandcenter was solid, with no way out, and had stopped to cover a roomwith a small lift. Torban and Zander were covering the big doors andCrossett had moved to the small window to watch the hall inside thecommand center. "I've got one of these damn up-and-down lift mazes over here,"Davies reported. I think I can handle it on my own" "Right," Akira called, "but if you run into the commander, trynot to be too hard on it." Akira swapped weapons and moved south, dropping into positionbeside Zander. "We're heading in." Zander, Esser, Akira, and Torbanall stepped through the doors, into an east-west passage. "Looks like the same layout," Akira announced. He pointed tothe east, where the hall turned south. "Esser and Torban that way.Zander keep close behind me." Akira went west, about ten meters, where the hall also turnedsouth. He rounded the corner and got down. The hallway was empty.It turned back east about twenty meters ahead, and was featurelessexcept for the small window halfway down on the right - the samewindow he and Crossett had seen from outside. A muffled explosion went off somewhere, but Akira wasn't sure where.It sounded like it was both in front of him and behind him. The redbox flashed. A second later there was a blast of plasma fire andanother explosion. The red light went out. "We stunned one" Torban announced. "Not a commander," Hudson reported. Akira moved south, and Zander followed. Before they reachedthe corner, they were hit by a huge explosion. Akira's blastlenses activated immediately and left him blind as he flew back intosomething else, probably Zander. Sight returned a fraction of asecond later, and Akira had to strain to see through the smoke andmetal vapor. He was lying on Zander's leg, but her suit seemed to beintact. "You OK?" he asked, not waiting for a reply before bringing uphis HUD schematic - Everyone solid yellow. "What was that?" "Must have been a blaster bomb, confined in the passage to thesouth," someone called. The tank was to the south. Akira switched to its view andfound it still guarding the small lift. At the left edge of itsfield of view he could see some smoke, but nothing like thedevastation of a blaster bomb. If they have blaster bombs, its going to cost us a lot toget near them, he thought. But they had to do it. "Zander, go around and collect the alien they stunned, anddrag it somewhere where things aren't exploding. Torban and Esser,head south now - let's get this over with." As Akira rounded the corner, he found the site of the firstblast. It had completely destroyed the large set of doors leading into the lower level of the command center, along with most of the wallaround them. It had also blown open part of the wall to the south,leading out of the command center. It must have been just out of viewof the tank, he thought. He began to wonder if an alien could have gotten past themthrough that hole, but his thoughts were cut short. A silver blasterbomb zipped out through the open doorway, gleaming briefly in theeerie alien light, then making a sharp left turn. Again the world exploded, leaving Akira disoriented, but stillkneeling upright. He thought he had heard a man scream through thelingering sounds of destruction, but he wasn't sure. His HUD wasstill up, and just as he located the other stun launcher group on themap, one of their marks turned from yellow to white. It was Torban. He checked detailed status on Esser and found that she hadbeen seriously injured. "Zander, ..." he called. "I've got it," she said, "I'll take care of her." Akira had used a blaster launcher and knew it could bereloaded and fired again in just a few seconds. He moved quicklytoward the destroyed doorway, hoping to get a shot before the nextbomb killed him. As he reached the doors, a robed alien stepped out directly infront of him, carrying a large launcher. Akira reacted and fired hisstun launcher, engulfing the alien and himself in a series of sonicshock waves. Akira stumbled, and fumbled to reload his launcher, but hishand was not entirely his own, making only some of the movements hecommanded of it. In his weakened state he felt someone else insidehim. It was like the alien in his head in the Amazon raid, but muchstronger and larger than Akira. He had no option but to move asideinto an unused corner of his mind and let the alien take control. Itwas for the best anyway, he thought. Another explosion went off somewhere and the large alien leftAkira alone to slowly, cautiously crawl back to the center of his ownthoughts. He sat there for what seemed like hours, wondering if thealien would come back. ... "Captain?" Akira opened his eyes and scanned around without moving hishead. His helmet was off. Davies stared down at him, still in hisfull armor, holding a stun launcher in his hand. Crossett walked up. "Is he OK." "Sure," Davies said, "just stunned. You got the last one." "Good," Crossett said, "It almost got to Blake." Davies noticed Akira move and knelt down beside him. "Sorry,Captain. I had to stun you to get the commander." Akira came to his senses. "We got one?" Davies removed his helmet. He was smiling like Akira had neverseen him smile before, "Yes, sir. You got him, mostly. You ready fora vacation on Mars?" "My bags are packed," Akira said, pushing himself up to asitting position and trying to shake the stuffing out of his head. Helooked at the stunned alien beside him. The psis had already fit itwith a psi-suppression collar. "I have to go check on Esser," Crossett said. Before she left,she bent over and patted him on the thigh. It made a dull, impersonalclunking sound. She looks good in alloy, he thought, as she stomped off downthe smoking passage. 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FullAuto Posted September 3, 2005 Author Share Posted September 3, 2005 8 - Exposure. Akira and Crossett were sitting in one of the small commonrooms on the bottom level of the Little Rock base's living quarterswhen the alarm sounded. Akira received a personal page over theintercom. "Perez wants you," Crossett said smiling. It was an inside joke, one Akira wasn't quite ready to laughat yet. He just gave her his best look of cold disgust and saidnothing. They had been watching local news. A clean cut, well-chiseledman with an accent from some state farther north tried his best tosqueeze every ounce of sensation from a group of a few hundredstudents from the University of Arkansas and the Baptist College whowere marching north toward the state capital. Some of the studentscarried peace signs and placards displaying general slams against themilitary. There was also a group of students trying to block thegates of Camp Robinson, on the north end of town. But what concerned Akira the most were the two dozen or sostudents who had driven sixty miles northwest in crowded cars, into aremote area of the Boston Mountains, to march back and forth outsideof a small military supply post built on the site of an old bauxitemine. They explained to the single reporter on the scene that it was atest site for experimental aircraft. "Do they know we're down here?" he asked out loud. "Probably not," Crossett said, "Someone may have seen theSkyranger or the Firestorm taking off or coming back, but they don'tseem to have a clue what's really going on." There were only a few seconds of coverage about the BostonMountain protest, then the station went on to other stories. A few minutes later, Crossett and Akira felt the sudden roarand thunder clap of the Firestorm taking off and immediately goingsupersonic. The news station quickly cut back to cover the event. Their tape showed another old college student sedan pulled upon the twisty gravel road and five more protesters piled out. Theattention of all of the students and the news camera was suddenlydrawn back to the supply post by the dramatic sounds. The cameramissed whatever had made the noise, but some of the students had seenit. Most of them huddled together for a few seconds, then one ran offto an extremely old Ford Escort and drove off toward Little Rock,probably to get friends. The reporter, who had been facing the otherway during the launch, interviewed students to get a description, andgot a wide range of answers. "You'd better go, boss," Crossett said, "sounds like we've gotcustomers. You can monitor the action outside from the commandcenter." Akira set off west, through the base's main lift, toward thesmall command center spread out inside the radar equipment rooms.We're in no shape to mount a UFO recovery, he thought. It had beenless than a week since their base raid in Africa, and he hadn't evenhad time to fill out the squads with replacement troopers. And therewere those damn students outside - could they launch with them aroundand give them even more of what they were looking for? He found Perez in a small room filled with monitors, below theshort range radar room. "It's one of the big one's," she said, "coming in from thenorthwest at about Mach four." Akira checked the radar screen and saw that Perez had launchedthe Firestorm to intercept. "What's that interceptor going to do?The last one that attacked one of those monsters was destroyed." "He can follow it," she said, "pinpoint its landing site." Akira nodded. "Come look at this," she said, and led Akira down the hallinto a room below the long range radar next door, carefully steppingaround scattered electronic equipment and loose cables as she went.She pointed to a relatively new display mounted up in the far cornerof the room, connected to their new hyperwave decoder. The information the decoder had deciphered and translated fromthe ship's transmissions confirmed that it was one of the large,five-legged alien battleships. It had also classified it as a mutonship. "What do you make of that mission?" Akira asked. In most cases the decoder could also surmise the basicobjective of the UFO, such as base supply, terror missions, orscouting. In this case the mission was just "retaliation." "I asked Dr. Morey about it. He said it indicates the alienswant to inflict damage on the sources of the attacks which havedamaged their own ships." "Us," Akira said, "this base." "I would guess so." "Do they know where we are?" "Don't know - scouts have come close, but have never landedhere. " "And Morey's people have had the mind shield operating for acouple weeks," Akira added, "to try and block the emissions from allthe psionic activity." He paused for a moment, thinking. "Maybe theethereal commander has somehow given our position away." "Maybe," Perez said, "but we checked it for transmitters andscanned for alloy, and it's had a psi-suppression collar on since wenabbed it. Maybe the aliens are watching the local news." They both hurried back to the command center. Davies was atthe tracking display. "Which way is it going?" Akira asked. "Southeast," Davies replied, "looks like it's coming thisway." "It could be here in about twenty minutes," Perez added. "Do we have enough defenses?" Akira asked no one inparticular. Davies and Perez shrugged without saying anything. Thebase had point defense systems - missiles and plasma, and an unfinishedgrav shield to slow down incoming weapons or ships, but they had neverbeen used and never tested for fear of giving away their position. Perez gave no sign of taking charge. She was looking at Akirafor this one. Technically, he was in command at the base. He thought it through. It would take nearly ten minutes forthe handful of experienced troopers to get into their armor andcollect their weapons. They would also have to evacuate whoever theycould. "Davies, call the..." Akira suddenly remembered the protestersagain. "Damn." "What," Davies asked. "Perez, Get Dr. Morey in here, and Perry. Fast. Davies, youget the troopers suiting up, and round up any recruits that havepassed a reasonable amount of screening. Get them into defensivepositions with weapons and headsets, and some of the old personalarmor, if we still have any." Akira waited a few minutes to give Perez a head start findingDr. Morey and Perry Lem, the Chief Engineer, then he went to a commandterminal and set off the general evacuation alarm. He watched thetrack of the UFO for a minute as it made noticeable progress acrossIdaho, accompanied by the rhythmic honking echoing through theunderground base. It crossed into Wyoming just as Dr. Morey and Perryarrived. Morey was a tall, authoritative scientist who communicated inshort, intense bursts in between forcing himself to listen to otheropinions. But he was brilliant and very convincing if allowed to talkuninterrupted. "Dr. Morey, get your people and the engineers out of here, andaway from the supply post. And on your way, try to convince thestudents up there that this is a real emergency and they're in realdanger. Tell them there are volatile materials on the post and wethink they might explode or something. Just get them away fromhere." "An alien battleship may be here in about fifteen minutes,"Akira continued, "Can you evacuate the Avenger?" "Don't think so," Perry said, shaking his head and wringinghis plump hands. "we have the drives pulled apart to test thenavigation system. It would take us hours to get it up again." "Dr. Morey," Akira continued, "How far along are you with thealien commander?" "It's tough," Morey said, "We have the mind shield andpsi-suppression fields operating, so our use of psi-amps is limited,and the ethereals don't seem to have a spoken language." "Can you evacuate it in the Skyranger?" Akira asked. As he spoke they heard the roar of the Skyranger's verticalthrusters echoing in from the hangar to the south west. "Damn," Akirasaid, "No time to land it again." "It would have been dangerous and disruptive to move the alienanyway," Morey said. Akira couldn't tell if he was serious or justtrying to make him feel better. "One more question," Akira said, "Will the tanks' programmingallow them to help defend the base if we're invaded?" Morey looked questioningly at Perry, who stuck out his lowerlip in thought, then nodded slowly. "Sure," Perry replied, "I don't see why not." "Then it's time for you both to leave." They both turned and headed back east toward the lift and theliving quarters. Before they disappeared, Morey turned and said"Good luck, Captain." Akira nodded and looked back at the monitor. The battleship wasnearly into Colorado already. It may be coming for the aliencommander, he thought. Maybe that means we're as close to theanswer as we think. A few minutes later, the Firestorm caught up to the UFO. Itmanaged to drop in behind and get a good look, confirmed thebattleship classification, then followed at a safe distance. "Firestorm-2," Akira called, "if the target gets within ahundred klicks of the base, I want you to hit it a few times then bugout for the emergency hangar." The pilot acknowledged. The evacuation was proceeding smoothly, but he could see thatthe reporter at the scene realized something important washappening. Vans filled with dozens of scientists and engineersstreaming from a small supply post gave him plenty of fuel forspeculation. One of the vans stopped and Dr. Morey stepped out. He triedto shout over the barrage of questions and accusations from thestudents. "I am Dr. Stan Morey, of the DoD Alternate Energy DevelopmentProject," He began. It was their official cover story, provided bythe U.S. government. Was there really such a project, Akira wondered?If so, the heat would soon be on them. "For the past few months," Dr. Morey continued, "we have beenusing this facility as a secure laboratory for the development of acompressed hydrogen fuel. Your presence here compromised thatsecurity and we were forced to make plans to move our researchelsewhere. Unfortunately, an accident in packing the existingmaterial for shipment has left it unstable and near the point of anunpredictable and little-understood slow fusion reaction. For yourown safety, we must insist that everyone evacuate an area within aradius of ten kilometers from this base, until the small group ofexperts we've left behind can stabilize the sample." "Nice," Akira said out loud. "I just caught the end," Crossett said, coming into the roomin her full flying suit, except for the helmet. "but it sure soundedconvincing. Morey's a scary guy." Akira smiled. "We'll see if it works." The students werestill discussing the situation among themselves, but a few vehicleswere already loading up and heading down the road. Davies arrived, wearing just the environmental suit that wentunderneath his armor. He checked the radar monitors. "Looks like we've got about eight or nine minutes," he said."How do you want us deployed, Captain." "What have we got?" "Well, we have us three, plus Zander, Perez and the two psis.We also have the two tanks and one rookie, Richter, checked out onplasma and power suit. I figure we can give him to Crossett." Akira nodded quickly. "Beyond that we have six rookies that I'd trust with lasers,and I found personal armor to fit four of them." "Oh," Davies continued, "and Esser - she's hurting pretty bad,but she refused to leave and is trying to squeeze into her armor." "Fine," Akira said, "she can guard her living quarters."Akira looked up at the crude map of the ever-changing base on thewall above the terminals. "We have to prevent any damage to keysystems on this base, but our priority is to defend the containmentfacility and the Avenger's hangar. If either was destroyed we'd beset back months. If they know where we are, I don't think we'd lastthat long." Akira looked closer at the map, as if reading information thatwasn't printed there. "We can shut down the main lift and lock thesliding hangar doors from here to keep them out for a while." "Not long," Davies said, "A good plasma shot would rip throughthe hangar doors like paper - they're made of pretty light stuff. Andthere are shafts running alongside the main lift that are big enoughfor bugs to get in. I don't know how effectively we can block them." Perez was just walking in, already suited up. She looked asif she'd stumbled across a party she hadn't been invited to. "Colonel," Akira said, "can you see about shutting down themain lift once everyone's out, then block the small service shaftsaround it?" "Sure, Captain," Perez said without much enthusiasm, and left. Akira checked the monitors again. The UFO was in Kansas, lessthan six minutes away and still headed directly for them. "I have to suit up," he said, "I want the rookies split up andin defensive cover where we can watch them." He pointed at Crossett,"You and Richter take the rocket tank and cover the southwest hangarand alien containment. Davies and Zander get the plasma tank andcover the Avenger. We'll arm the psis and put them upstairs in theliving quarters with Esser. Perez and I will stay near here to coverthe lift and the hangar next door." With that he ran out through the lift room, where Perez andtwo rookies were stuffing shafts with lab equipment, then south intostorage to find his armor. He changed in the center of the floor andgot his helmet on just as the interceptor pilot reported through thechatter of excited rookies that he was breaking off his attack. A few seconds later, as Akira ran back toward the commandcenter, the base echoed with a low, pulsing whine . It must be theplasma defenses, he thought, but he had never heard them in operation. When Akira reached the command terminals, he saw that theplasma defenses were indeed firing, as were their one laser batteryand two outdated missile launchers. The UFO was now nearly directlyabove them, at about fifteen hundred meters and descending fast. The external cameras were still operating, and Akira could seethat some of the students and the reporter and camera crew had beenfoolish enough to stay. Now they could see the ship and werebeginning to understand how large it was. Some ran for theirvehicles, others stood and watched the high-tech fireworks display inawe or fear. "No more secrets," Akira said out loud. Perez heard him as she walked into the room. She stood besidehim and watched the monitor, letting her heavy plasma drop at herside. "We'll have to go soon," she said, "in the next few days, ifwe survive this. We can't hold off the press for long." As they watched, the small groups outside came within range ofthe battleship's huge plasma weapons. A series of flashesthat saturated the camera and left nothing but charred, crateredground. One pulse caught two carloads of students fleeing down theroad, and the next took out the outside camera. "There's nothing more to do here," Akira said, "let's get intoposition." Perez motioned toward the lift room. "I told Okabe to waitfor the missiles to stop firing, then head into the passage below themissile room to cover the hangar's east exit. Kidd is on the otherside of the lift." "What do they have on them?" Akira asked. "Lasers," Perez said, "Okabe only has a pistol." "Against mutons?" Akira shook his head and tried to positionhimself below the short range radar so he could see north into thehangar and east to lift. "You cover the west side of the hangar.They'll have to pass under the laser defenses to get out that way." "OK. Good luck." Just after she left the room, a hollow explosion went off tothe north, following by sounds of metal bending and falling down intothe hangar. "North hangar doors are down," Akira reported as he ran outinto the hallway and knelt down just outside the hangar. Two more identical explosions sounded to the south just asAkira saw a large, barrel-chested purple alien drop into the hangaronly a few meters away from him. He swung his heavy plasma around andautofired. One shot hit and seemed to shake the alien up a little.It turned within the spray of plasma and looked directly at Akira.Another plasma bolt caught the alien from behind before it could raiseits weapon. It dropped, and Akira could see Perez behind, in position atthe entrance to the passage beneath the laser defense room. Suddenlyat least two separate streams of plasma streaked across toward herfrom the eastern part of the hangar, hidden from Akira's view. Perezjumped back, and Akira couldn't tell if she'd been hit. There was a short pause in the exchange, but the sounds ofweapons fire from other parts of the base filled in. Crossett wasbarking out orders to one of the rookies. Akira took two quick stepsnorth toward the hangar, stopping just behind the opening. He could see two mutons toward the back right corner of thehangar, and as he watched, another dropped down to their left. Perezmoved up, and more plasma streaked as she returned fire. The rookieOkabe was firing too, with his laser pistol, from a hiding placesomewhere east of the hangar. Akira guessed that Perez couldn't see the alien which had justdropped, so he sprayed it on autofire as he backed up a step out ofsight of the other two. The muton moved quickly to its right into the plasma defense room. "Perez," he called on the headset, "A muton has moved into thepassage to your north." He wasn't sure she had heard it through all the plasma fire.She didn't respond immediately so Akira called again as he beganmoving around toward her. "I've got one," Hudson the psi reported. But which one, Akira thought. "Perez. Alien to your north," he called again. As he passed under the long range radar, Akira heard plasma andlaser fire directly behind him, probably on the other side of thelift. He ignored it for the moment and continued around to the northtoward Perez. He approached from the south just as the muton entered fromthe north and pointed its weapon at Perez. The alien got off one shot before Akira sprayed it withplasma. When he was sure it was dead, Akira rounded the corner tocheck on Perez. She was still up, but crouching on one leg and leaning againstthe wall, firing into the hangar. The armor on the other thigh hadbeen blown open, and there was a fair amount of blood. "Thanks," she blurted out. Akira could hear the pain in hervoice. Akira's mind raced. He couldn't treat her with mutons firingat them from the hangar. He had also lost track of the aliens. Theycould have left the hangar and be coming at them from any direction. More sounds of weapons fire, mostly laser this time, echoed tothem across the hangar. "One...One of them got past us," someone said excitedly overthe headset, "From the lift...Kidd is down." In the mean time, Akira had moved up, almost into the hangar.From partial cover around the edge of the opening, he spotted twomutons moving toward the front of the hangar. They firedsporadically in his direction, missing wide to his right. Akira took careful aim at the lead alien and fired. Thesingle plasma shot caught the muton in the abdomen, ripping open itspurple covering and armored skin. It stopped for a few seconds butdidn't go down until Perez hit it in almost the same spot. The second muton paused and fired in their direction. Thebolt shot past to Akira's right. Perez gave an audible grunt, andAkira heard the metalic thunk of her suit hitting the floor. He glanced back and could see that she had been hit in thechest, just below her left shoulder. It looked bad. He moved towardher, pulling at his medi-kit and moving his body between her and thehangar. "...Go..." she blurted over the headset, "that's an order." Akira glanced back over his shoulder into the hangar. Thelast muton had moved almost to the entrance to the missile defensearea. Suddenly one of the rookies - Okabe - spun around the cornerand began firing at the alien from only a few feet away. The muton towered over Okabe, and they were too close togetherfor Akira to take a wild shot. He dropped to one knee to aim. Okabe got off three shots with his laser pistol, probably allhits, before the alien got him point blank in the chest with its heavyplasma. He dropped just as Akira shot the alien cleanly in the headand took it down. Akira brought up his HUD. Okabe was a white cross - dead.Perez was flashing. He turned and found her leaning against the wall,still conscious. She had her own medi-kit half unpacked and wastrying unsuccessfully to take care of her own wounds. "Let me do that," Akira said, crouching beside her and takingthe medical monitor cable from the floor with his armored gloves. "Won't work," she said, "the jack's gone." It was true. The jack would have been on her chest, where there was now a charred hole larger than Akira's hand. Her statustelemetry seemed to be working, so he switched to the limited medicalinformation on his HUD as he began working on the wounds. He didn't like what he saw. She was on the verge of shock andhad lost too much blood already. Coagulants would help, butstimulants might kill her. Before he could take any action, Perez looked up at him, andher eyes cleared. "Go," she said in her crisp, earthy voice, with no sign ofpain. "The aliens that got out are headed for the psis." Akira stared at her for a few seconds. Was she actuallythinking clearly about the situation at a time like this, or was shehallucinating? "Can't you ever follow orders, Captain?" She was right. There was no time for this. If the psis becamecasualties, the Mars mission would be delayed too long and might neverhappen. "Davies," he called over the headset, "What've you got?" After a pause of a few seconds, marked by plasma fire fromsomewhere south of them, Davies replied. "Something got the plasma tank from behind," he reported,"Webb is down, and we have one alien under psi control." Akira found the injection port on Perez's neck and gave hercoagulants. "The one that got your tank could have been the one thatgot past the rookies up here. They're both down too." "This hangar's secure," Crossett interrupted, "but Richter'shurt and one of the rookies went berserk in the lab north of aliencontainment." "Go" Perez repeated out loud to Akira. Without a word, Akira dropped the medi-kit items within reachof her, laid his hand on her shoulder for a second and ran south theway he'd come. "Crossett," he ordered on a closed channel, "keep your squadthere and protect alien containment. If it looks like your berserkrookie might injure the alien commander, shoot him." "Her," Crossett corrected, "it's Collignon. And yes, I'll dothat." Instead of running straight through the empty hangar, Akirafollowed the passages along its edge. He saw no troopers or aliensuntil he reached the main lift. The big lift doors were open, and he could see a trooper'sbody on the other side. He approached cautiously and saw that it wasKidd, his laser rifle still in his hand. He had taken at least twoplasma shots in the chest. A strange, glistening organic sack lay onthe floor beside him, like a pale alien afterbirth. Akira continued east into the living quarters. He could seedown the central hallway into the psi lab's cluster of evaluationchambers. He had just seen the body of a rookie, probably no olderthan nineteen, and it had barely effected him at all. His onlyconcern was that an alien had gotten past and now threatened the psisand the entire X-COM project. He decided he would have to take timelater to figure out what this was all doing to him, and he knew forsure he wanted it to end. As he rounded the corner to his right, into the north-southpassage, he caught a glimpse of purple moving into a doorway aboutfive meters down on the left. A trooper moved into the opening onthe far end of the passage, just inside the Avenger's hangar, and tooka wild shot at the alien before it disappeared. If Akira remembered correctly, that was the door that led toEsser's barracks and the psis. "Hudson," he called on the headset, "did you get it?" "Not enough time," Hudson called, "but we're ready when itcomes up." Akira ran down the hall, as did the trooper on the far end.By her size and location he guessed it was Zander. "Let Esser take the shot," Akira ordered, "Hudson and Tonida,hide yourselves if you can." He knew it sounded callous, using awounded trooper as a shield for the psis, but they were more criticalnow. As he reached the doorway, ahead of Zander, something floatedin behind her from a side passage. It was like a shining opalescentwater balloon about a meter long. Akira took aim at it. Zander was running towards him and tookit as a cue to duck. He didn't realize until later that she mighthave actually thought he was under alien control and aiming at her. As the balloon moved slowly toward them it shimmered brightlyfor a second, then something very much like a plasma bolt shot from itover Zander's head and to Akira's left. It was followed by anexplosion, like a grenade, and heavy plasma fire from the quartersupstairs. Akira had walked this hall thousands of times over the lastyear, coming and going from his living quarters down the hall. Nowthe presence of an alien in the same corridor, in his home, struck himhard. He was suddenly, uncontrollably angry. It helped to squeeze hard on the alien contours of the heavyplasma trigger and to watch the spray of plasma bolts pass around andthrough the alien balloon, ripping it to smoking shreds on the floor. Almost in response, he heard a long volley of plasma and laserfire from the hangar to the south - Davies hangar that was supposedlysecure. There might have also been another shot from upstairs mixedin. Akira pushed through the door and took the stairs in threejumps, ignoring the sudden burst of chatter over his headset. Heentered one of the common bunk areas and found Hudson with a laserrifle trained on a prostrate muton. Esser had her helmet removed andwas bending over Tonida, who was propped against the wall and hadtaken a shot in the leg. Zander looked up at Akira. "It doesn't look too bad," she said,"toss me your medi-kit." Akira reached to his belt, half expecting that he had left thekit with Perez, but it was still there. He popped it off and tossedit to Zander. He brought up his HUD to check on Perez and found hercross flashing, but still yellow. In a few seconds he was back down the stairs, passing Zanderon her way up. He moved quickly south past the slippery remains ofthe balloon alien and stopped at the entrance to the Avenger's hangar.The sight of the new ship, sitting apparently unharmed, helped returnhis calm analytical frame of mind. Then he saw Davies power-suited figure sitting just inside thestorage area to the west of the hangar, next to a dead muton,with Dreyfus standing guard over both of them. The rookie lookedextremely glad to see Akira. "He was under control," the rookie reported very calmly, "thenhe just took a shot at the sergeant, so we had to kill him." "Are you sure it's dead?" Akira asked. He glanced down at thealien and realized it was an unnecessary question. Davies let out a painful, snorting laugh inside his suit andprodded Dreyfus in the side. "Oh, he's dead all right. Dreyfus heredecided to use its body for autofire laser penetration testing." Dreyfus looked hurt at first, and couldn't see the expressionon Davies face, but the rare note of admiration, and maybe gratitudein Davies voice was clear to Akira. "How bad is it?" Akira asked Davies. "I'll be fine for a while," he replied, "You should worryabout cleaning this place out." Akira nodded and switched to his headset. "Crossett," hecalled on the open channel, "leave someone to watch containment andsweep north. You've got everything west of the access lift." "Understood." "Zander," Akira continued, "head north through the livingquarters to the missile battery. I think we may have an alien or twowandering still. We'll cover each other and check the second levelas we go" He spoke out loud to Dreyfus. "You head up the far east edgeof the base. I'll try to give some backup to you and Zander." Dreyfus nodded and ran recklessly across the hangar toward thepsi labs. "I'll guard the Avenger," Davies added seriously. Akira brought up his HUD to monitor progress, and it didn'ttake him long to notice the small, steady white cross toward thenorthwest corner of the base. Perez was dead. And she had died alone,Akira thought. He stood for a moment as a mixture of memories, regrets, andself-blame took over his mind as effectively as any alien mindcontrol. He tried to shake it off, but only managed a slow, mindlessshuffle back toward the living quarters. Crossett must have been watching her HUD too. "Perez isgone," she reported flatly. The control in her voice was enough to snap Akira back toaction. He would have to deal with the memories and guilt later. Fornow he convinced himself that it was the aliens and only the aliensthat were to blame. He moved into the living quarters, up within ten paces ofZander. He watched on the HUD as Crossett's squad advanced. Whenthey reached the midway point between the south and north hangars, thebug warning light flashed and Akira switched his HUD automatically tothe spotters view. He was just in time to see Crossett's tank launcha rocket right into the hallway below the long range radar room. The muton survived the explosion but was immediately hit fromthe side by plasma fire. "Another one down," Crossett called, "last one?" Akira was still on the tank's view, studying the destructionthe rocket had caused inside the hallway and radar equipment rooms.Apparently the tanks didn't distinguish between alien and X-COMproperty. As he shuffled forward and tried to discern details of thedamage in the other room, a plasma bolt shot across the passageway onhis right. There was apparently an alien in with the mind shieldequipment, firing across the psi labs at Dreyfus. Akira checked to see how Zander was responding - she wasmoving up to enter the mind shield room from the west. Akira movedinto the psi labs while Dreyfus wildly fired back at the alien withhis laser pistol. A second plasma shot came from the north without interruptingDreyfus's fire. He either has great cover back there, Akira thought,or he's the luckiest bastard in the world. Akira moved along the psi evaluation chambers, but thoughttwice about stepping out into the cross fire of the central hallway.He stopped where he could see partway north up the hall, and caught aglimpse of the muton before Zander's plasma fire tore open the rightside of its big chest. The alien fell forward to its knees, and before it crumpledinto a fetal corpse on the floor, it looked directly at Akira. Therewas no way for Akira to interpret the expressions on an alien face,but he got the distinct impression of confidence, of a sense ofvictory. If it had been human he would have expected a smug, knowingsmile. "This side's clear", Crossett called, "Krause and I areheading topside to check on the battleship." Technically, Akira should have given an order to move up thelift, but he knew she was probably thinking much more clearly than hewas. "We're clear here too," he reported, "Don't go after the shipuntil we're out too." "Roger, boss." Zander was making sure the muton was dead, so Akira went tocheck on Dreyfus. He was still kneeling, in the center of the hallabout five meters south. His laser pistol was still pointed towardAkira. "You're a very lucky trooper, Dreyfus," Akira said as heapproached, "hopefully it's a consistent trait. You'll need it if weget to Mars." Dreyfus snapped out of his trance and stood. Akira could seethat he was physically unharmed. "Let's go up and see the ship," Akira suggested. The one-sided conversation was interrupted by Crossett. "It'sgone," she reported, "The ship is gone. No sign of any more aliens." "Could any be hiding in the buildings," Akira asked. Heheaded for the lift, and Dreyfus followed. "No," Crossett replied, "they're gone too. Flattened." Shepaused for a few seconds. "You'll have to come up and see foryourself, 'Kira. There's nothing left up here." The immediate danger seemed to be gone. Akira's mind raced aheadas he ascended the lift. The UFO had landed in sight of witnesses,some of whom may have survived. And the news offices in Little Rockmight have tape of the entire incident. It would be only hours beforethe place was surrounded by reporters and blustering local politiciansdemanding to know what was going on. "Zander," he called on the way up the lift, "Davies is in thesouth storage area. See if he needs any help." "Gotcha," she replied. He reached the surface and found Crossett with her helmet off.He removed his own so they could talk quietly while the two rookiesmoved among the remains of the supply post looking for survivors.. "We have to go very soon," Crossett said, staring out towardthe twisted, burning wrecks of student cars and the new van. Akira thought for a moment, then turned to head down the lift."Try to get ahold of Morey and Perry. Get them back here immediately.Tell them they can have any resources they need, and they can shutdown the mind shield, but they're working eighteen hour shifts untilthe ship is ready and the ethereal spills its guts" "Ethereals don't have guts." Akira allowed himself a brief smile at that. he watched herfor a moment as she turned and looked out through the destruction. "You haven't cut your hair after these last two fights, " hesaid. Crossett just shrugged her shoulders as best she could in herflying suit. "I'm going to see if I can contact Washington," hesaid as he left, "Maybe they can invoke national security and suppressthis mess, at least until we're out of here." Before attempting to make the satellite link with half of thesurface equipment destroyed, Akira went to see Perez. Richter was with her. He was stripping her flying suit andgetting ready to move her to cold storage. Two of the rookies werestanding nearby, just watching silently. Akira wanted to help her, but there was nothing to do. Hebriefly considered taking her with them to Mars, but it was anunnecessary gesture which would just take up space and disrupt themission. Maybe she was actually better off. Maybe they would all diehorribly on Mars. . . . Akira and Crossett watched the local channels closely thatnight. The destruction in the mountains and the loss of one station'sreporter had not gone unnoticed, but there was no mention of the hugeUFO. Apparently there were no survivors. The DoD regretfully reported that research on an importantalternate fuel source had been disrupted by the students, resulting inthe unfortunate explosion which had devastated the area. Thepotential for lingering radiation and future explosions justified theevacuation of the immediate area around the base. There would be a complete investigation. Congress was alreadychoosing representatives to head up the initial review, which couldtake months. "So no one knows we're here," Akira said. Crossett leaned against him. "No one except the aliens." THE END Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
FullAuto Posted September 3, 2005 Author Share Posted September 3, 2005 9 - God Of War. Akira took a final, quick slug of his coffee, spilling alittle on his jump suit. He tried to wipe it off with a napkin as hewalked toward the main lift to greet the Russians. The western skies had been relatively quiet for the week sincethe Little Rock base had been attacked - just one snakeman terrorship, prudently shot down over the open Atlantic. The scientists hadused the time to intensify the interrogation of the ethereal commanderand had discovered the location of the alien base on Mars. During the same period, the Russians had taken on a harvesterand a muton battleship. They had lost a lot of good troopers,including Captain Ragulin, and now had only five to send along toMars. Akira had seen the list and knew that Morinov was one of them.In fact, he was their captain now, taking over for Ragulin. Akira tried toforget his previous impression of Morinov, who was remembered atLittle Rock as a reckless braggart. Morinov's promotion had come out of an emergency council ofX-COM's national representatives, held in the wake of the attack atLittle Rock and the disastrous Russian missions. The same councilhad promoted Akira to commander of the entire X-COM organization - aposition left vacant by Perez's death. Akira ascended on the main lift, emerging from the floor of alarge, corrugated metal storage shed, hastily erected to cover thelift after the base was attacked. The Russians were already there,unloading from the van and glancing around with mild curiosity. Akira was surprised he didn't spot Morinov immediately,expecting a loud, energetic personality to stand out in the group ofmore stoic Russians. Morinov finally turned from a conversation withone of the troopers and walked toward Akira. He saluted and Akiraclumsily saluted back. He'd aged, Akira thought, and all his brash, youthful energywas gone - replaced by a cool analytical stare. It wasn't until theyshook hands and exchanged greetings that Akira realized he had gonethrough a nearly identical transformation in the last year. Suddenlythe idea of judging someone based on actions taken before the definingexperience of X-COM seemed foolish. "Has our equipment arrived?" Morinov asked in English, handingAkira a manifest. Akira politely glanced at the list, which he could recitefrom memory. "Everything is in the southeast storage area. You caninspect it as soon as you're ready. The plasma tank is being deliveredby special Air Force transport and should be here this morning." "When do we leave?" Akira checked his watch. It was barely 0800 in local time,making it early evening for the Russians. "We can let your troops getsome sleep this afternoon, then launch in the evening." The Russian troopers had gathered around - two additional menand two women. The two men were Korkia and Maleev, but he didn't knowwhich was which. Akira recognized Zdanovich, the only remainingRussian psi, from her photos. And the other woman, Iwahara, was theonly remaining Japanese trooper in X-COM besides himself. Recruitinghad slowed to nothing there after the Japanese pact with the aliens. "Ohayoo gozaimasu," Akira said, bowing slightly to her with asolemn face. "Shintsu desu." She bowed quietly in return. "Will we have time to adjust our schedules during the flight?"Korkia or Maleev asked. "Dr. Morey says the flight to Mars will take thirty-twohours," Akira replied. "If he's right, we'll arrive mid-day for you,but the middle of the night for us." Akira had already thought itthrough and was actually more worried about the shifted cycles than helet on. "We'll get some extra rest on the flight and hope it'senough." Morinov glanced around at his troops. "Then lets leave now -this morning. You will fight in your afternoon, we will fight in ourearly morning." It had merit. The Russians could sleep two nights on theAvenger. "Sounds good," Akira said, "Let me check with our engineerson the Avenger's status and find out when the plasma tank willarrive." He also wanted to check with the scientists to make sure itwould be daytime when they arrived at the site on Mars. Akira gave the Russians a brief tour of the base, forgettingthat Morinov already knew his way around most of it, then went to talkto Perry Lem. The Avenger could be ready in two hours, so Akira moved thelaunch up. They all kept very busy for the first hour, inspectingequipment, writing letters, and eating if they had appetites. All thetroopers, with the exception of Davies, worked quietly, keeping theirthoughts to themselves. Davies, completely recovered from his legwound, moved among the Little Rock troopers, getting progressivelylouder and more animated, patting the rookies on the back and going onabout how they were going to destroy the bugs for good this time. Farfrom being an inspiration, he seemed to be getting on everyone'snerves. Akira finally had to send him off to double-check theammunition stores in the Avenger. Akira checked to make sure the Russians had everything theyneeded, then went and found Crossett in one of the small commonrooms. They sat together, studying Dr. Morey's report on the etherealcommander, but said very little. For twenty minutes the base wascompletely quiet, but thick with apprehension. Then the alarmssounded. Akira headed for the command rooms, and Crossett followed.Morinov and Maleev were there already, pointing at the display andwhispering in Russian. They moved against the wall as Akira andCrossett entered. Akira glanced at the screen and saw a UFO track coming towardthem over the Pacific. There was also a report on the Air Forcetransport carrying the plasma tank. It was less than fifteen minutesaway. He continued on into the next room to check the hyperwavedecoder's monitor. He wasn't surprised to find the UFO was abattleship on a retaliation mission. He was a little surprised thatthe transmission pattern was ethereal. "A battleship full of psionic ethereals," he said out loud.If it was after their base, which he didn't doubt, and it got past thebase defenses, which the last one had, the ensuing fight could costthem valuable resources needed for Mars. They might even lose thewhole war. He moved back to the main control room and only then noticedthat the two Russians had been silently following him. Crossett wasstill watching the displays, and Davies was just walking in. Akiraordered the launch of both interceptors and gave the pilotsinstructions to attack, but to back off if they took too much damage.The base defenses might be able to finish off a damaged battleship. "It's a battleship full of ethereals, headed for us," Akiraannounced. "Captain Morinov, please make sure your equipment is allstowed on the Avenger, then let's get all the troopers on board. Weleave as soon as the transport gets here and we can load up thehovertank - we'll leave without it if we have to." Everyone nodded and moved off quickly to finish preparations.Akira went to find Dr. Morey and Perry Lem to start the evacuation,and possibly the booby trapping of the base. Ten minutes later the transport was landing. The UFO hadreached California and was still moving on a steady course towardArkansas. Akira did a quick inspection of the Avenger. The Russianswere loading the last of their equipment, and one of Perry's engineerswas reviewing the ships navigational settings. She turned and smiled as Akira approached. "Captain - I mean Commander, It's just about ready to go." She was too happy, and Akira's initial impulse was to chastiseher to impress upon her the seriousness of the situation. He checkedhimself, realizing how little he understood the engineers - theyseemed to thrive on the hopeless situations and last-minute pressures.And today they were going to see the culmination of all their workover the last year. Akira managed a smile back, ignoring the knots in his gut,"What's this Cydonia place like?" he asked. "Cydonia's its old name," she replied, "pre-Mariner. It'sactually the eastern highlands of Acidalium Planitia." "What's it like," Akira asked again. "Oh. Well, it's hilly, and a little rough in places. But itwon't be as bad as, say, landing in the Andes." Akira had dozens of other questions for the engineers - wouldtheir power suits hold up in the Martian atmosphere? How would iteffect the hovertanks? Would they have enough light on the surface?He had already asked Perry specific questions as he thought of themand had received terse replies which somehow left him uneasy. Akira left her and went to round up all the troopers and getthem onto the ship. He found most of them already on their way. Theevacuation was also going well - all but a core handful of theengineers and scientists were already on the road. Akira contacted the transport, told them to send the tank downthe main lift on its own and advised them to take off as soon aspossible. The design of the Avenger required him to board before thenewly arrived hovertank was loaded, but before he entered he shook handswith Perry Lem, who had stayed behind to see the launch. "Good bye, Perry," Akira said, "don't forget to lock up whenyou leave." Perry smiled. "I will, and I'll leave a few surprises for anyintruders." Akira quickly herded the troopers into the ship. Crossett andRichter were the last to show. "It's already over Kansas," Crossett reported as she climbedthe ramp. "We have about four minutes." Akira followed Richter up the ramp and ordered their own plasmatanks inside, arranging everyone to leave room for the Russian tank. "Perry," Akira called out, "If you're still out there, openthe hangar doors." "Yes, sir." The automatic launch sequence would have opened them, butdoing it ahead of time could save them a few precious seconds. Akiraheard the steady metallic grind of the opening doors, still notcompletely repaired from the last alien attack. Before the sound hadsubsided, it was accompanied by the whirring of a plasma tank on themove, and the Russian tank slid into view at the bottom of the ramp. Morinov called out something in Russian and the tank moved upthe ramp into the ship. Akira immediately gave the order for Daviesto start the launch. "Does your tank speak English?" Akira called back to theRussians. One of the Russian troopers whispered something in Russianand his squad-mates all laughed, even Iwahara. "Yes," Morinov replied, snickering, "A little. But sheprefers Russian." Akira knew their good humor was fueled by nerves, and probablyat his expense, but he was glad to hear them laugh. It was a goodomen for what could be the most important departure in human history. The Avenger's ramp rose quickly into position and Akira's eyeshad to adjust to the ship's relatively dim interior lighting. Secondslater there was a brief jolt, as if the Avenger had jumped an inch ortwo in the air, then landed back in the hangar. "Anything wrong?" Akira called back to Esser, who was nextto one of the ship's control stations. "No, Sir...We're up. Radar altimeter data shows us at eighthundred meters, accelerating at just over three Gs. Internal sensorsshow just under one G." Troopers began moving around the ship. There was just enoughroom on board for each of them to stretch out and sleep - somethingthe Russians would have to do soon. Akira walked forward toward Esserand the control stations. For the first time Akira really believed they might make it toMars. They would complete the trip, historically assumed to takemonths, in just over a day. If we get through this, he thought, thehuman race will do some amazing things, but if we fail... "Colonel," Esser called out, not realizing he was rightbehind her, "The Battleship is less than a minute from the base.Interceptor two is down, and interceptor one has broken off its attack." "Has the UFO changed course?" Akira asked over her shoulder. Hecould tell by the jerk of her hand on the display controls that he hadstartled her. She was as wound up as everyone else. "Not that I can tell," she said. Akira watched the radar signature of the huge ship approachthe base and ignored the urge to contact the base on the radio.Hopefully, Perry was already on his way out. "After that beating from the interceptors," Esser said, "thedefense systems may be able to destroy it." "Maybe," Akira replied, but they had the same defenses as lasttime - the grav shield wasn't even finished yet. The battleships symbol changed to a green cross sitting on topof the white box marking the Little Rock base. Akira moved backtoward his seat, knowing that a rocket tank could not hold out againstso many ethereals. He wondered if Perry had gotten away in time - hewas no soldier. He settled in for the trip, reviewing the two pages of sketchy,and possibly unreliable information the scientists had extracted from theethereal commander. Two of the Russians were already asleep, and the rest weretrying to get comfortable....thirty-three hours and 270 million kilometers later they couldsee the blotchy, rust-colored planet getting steadily larger at theinformation station. There were no windows on the Avenger. Akira scanned around and found Davies nearby, checking overhis blaster launcher. "Wake the Russians please, Sergeant," he calledcalmly. Davies nodded and began his rounds. They were both amazedthat the Russians could sleep on this flight - Akira himself hadgotten very little. As they made their final approach, the planet seemed to rotatebeneath them. Akira knew enough about Mars to recognize theunimaginably huge rise and caldera of Olympus Mons as it rolled overthe horizon. The Avenger, moving at sub-orbital velocity, seemed tocreep past, just above the mountain's northern slope, as if trying notto wake it. After a few minutes Olympus was behind, and two more majestic,ancient volcanos marked their path to the north and south, likesentinels guarding the alien stronghold. Akira did not know theirnames, and he saw them only briefly. The visual display was graduallyobscured by a golden glow as they entered the thin Martian atmosphere. The glow continued for five minutes, then faded as the Avengerslowed to two kilometers per second. They were twenty kilometers up,descending slowly across a large, cratered plain, weathered overmillions of years by the thin, fast Martian wind. Within a few minutes Akira saw high, rough terrain rise overthe horizon. Esser called up some maps that Dr. Morey's people had supplied."That's all Acidalium Planitia ahead of us," she reported. "What usedto be called Cydonia is back along those highlands. Her alloy fingertraced a line from what she estimated was their present position,eastward to a sight someone had marked with a small box on the map. Dr. Morey had explained to Akira that the site was alreadyinteresting before the aliens gave it away, because crackpots hadinterpreted strange shadows in Viking images of the area to be ancientpyramids and a huge face rising out of the ground. It wasinteresting, Akira thought, that Dr. Morey had still referred to themas crackpots. It took less than ten minutes for the craggy orange rise toroll toward and underneath them. To their south the rough, hummockyterrain went to the horizon. To the north, the drop at the edge of thehighlands looked like the edge of the world, broken only be deepcrevices carved by huge, but long gone rivers. Esser began to slew the camera around and play with themagnification. In a minute she had it pointing at a rough, shadowyarea ahead of them. At first Akira could make out no interestingdetails, but as they approached and settled toward the surface, hecould make out terrain features that obviously were not natural. Therewere at least six strange pyramids, all oriented with the cardinalpoints of Mars, but scattered with respect to each other on aconspicuous patch of level terrain. To the south of the pyramids wasa face, a human face larger than any on America's Mount Rushmore,staring skyward from the rusty Martian dust. Akira turned to make sure everyone was ready. While theyfinished sealing their armor he repeated their mission instructions. "We'll be landing in a minute or two," he began, and left afew seconds for that to get everyone's attention. "Keep your suitssealed at all times and be careful moving in the lower gravity." He had to stretch up so all of the troopers toward the back ofthe ship could see him over the three hovertanks in the center of thehold. "I can't tell you exactly what this mission will be like. Ourresearch team believes there is an entrance to some kind ofunderground base inside one of these pyramids, and that the alienmastermind behind the entire Earth invasion is somewhere down there." He realized he wasn't giving them much to go on, so he triedto bring it all back to something they understood. "We'll treat thesurface like a UFO recovery mission. The Americans will be Far Squadand take the plasma tanks with them to search for the lift. TheRussians will watch the area around the Avenger and escort the psis tothe lift once we find it. Remember, this time we're here to destroy,not capture." His last sentence brought unintelligible exclamations ofapproval from inside sealed helmets. The American psis, Hudson and Tonida, sat together just toAkira's right. By now they were probably used to being treated asprecious cargo and didn't show much reaction to the plan. Akiracouldn't see much of the Russian psi, Zdanovich, who sat with her ownpeople nearer the ramp. Akira quickly sealed his own helmet. "We're down," Esser called over the headset, "and decompressing." As the air hissed out of the Avenger, Akira looked over thethirteen troopers and the tanks. It was the largest and, with theexception of a few rookies, the most experienced X-COM force everassembled. And it would probably be the last - no matter which waythings went. The hissing stopped and dim, orange tinted light pouredin as the rear of the ship opened up. His stomach lurched as theship's artificially gravity cut out and he was suddenly standing onMars. There was more he wanted to say to them, but it would have towait. "Far Squad left," he called out. Davies repeated it. A plasma tank slid out first, and Akira moved to the monitorsin the back of the Avenger and switched one of them to its viewpoint.The tank was immediately hit from the right by a plasma bolt. Theview swerved and centered on a small crater southeast of the ship.The light was dim, like late twilight on Earth, but Akira could makeout the familiar shape of a sectoid on the monitor. Out of the cornerof his eye, he could also see the American psis clutch their psi ampsand spin to face southeast. The tank took a shot at the sectoid and missed. Immediatelyafter, the tank's viewpoint disappeared and Akira felt dense vibrationthrough the hull of the ship. Two enemy markers flashed on his HUDand more plasma fire went off, tinny and quiet in the Martianatmosphere, even with his helmet's amplifier at maximum. He checkedthe monitor showing the schematic map view and confirmed that thefirst tank was gone. The other monitor switched automatically to thespotter's view. It was Korkia. He had killed the sectoid and was now firingat one of the flying disks, barely visible off beyond the crater. Hewas also blocking the ramp so that the second hovertank couldn't get ashot. With one hovertank out, there was more room to move aroundinside the ship, and Akira could see Davies trying to get forward withhis blaster launcher. Another member of the American team, probablyRichter, had moved outside and floated around the corner to the left. Akira's blood pressure rose - it was taking too long todisembark - one alien blaster launcher shot inside the avenger rightnow would wipe out most of his troopers and decide the whole war.He was about to order the Americans to move out, despite the firefight,when another quiet explosion punctuated the disappearance of the lastenemy marker on his HUD. The troopers cleared the ramp and their exitproceeded like a drill. As the third tank was gliding out of the hold, Akira heardanother plasma shot and the monitor switched automatically to tanktwo's view. It had been hit, and was firing through a square openingnear the top of one of the pyramids. Morinov was quick with hisblaster launcher - he must have had a few waypoints programmedalready. Though quieter, the whistle of the flying blaster bombsounded the same as on Earth. Akira watched through the tank'scameras as the bomb passed through the small opening and turned theinside of the pyramid into a blazing hell. A second later the soundof the blast hit Akira and he regretted having an amplifier. Thesectoid inside the pyramid disappeared, but the blast seemed to dolittle damage to the pyramid itself. The tanks and American troopers spread out quickly among thepyramids. Akira moved past the psis to the ramp and could see theremains of the destroyed Russian tank at the bottom. The enemy markerflashed again. This time Akira switched his HUD to Dreyfus's view.Dreyfus had spotted a sectoid moving behind a pair of pyramids just tothe north of the ship. He hesitated to shoot, probably afraid hewould hit Richter, who was almost directly in the line of fire and hadturned to face Dreyfus for some reason. After a few seconds Richtertook a quick shot with his laser rifle, hitting Dreyfus. "Dreyfus," Akira called firmly, but calmly, "Shoot Richter." Akira's HUD told him Dreyfus was wounded and would needattention soon. He moved out onto the ramp to head that way himself,but saw Crossett already moving along the south edge of the pyramidto take care of it. I should stay here and command, he remindedhimself. He remembered how much he had grumbled to himself aboutPerez coming along on missions and wondered if any of the troopersfelt the same about him. Akira could see Dreyfus now, but not Richter. The woundedtrooper knelt and hesitated. After another shot from between thepyramids barely missed him, he squeezed of at least six laser shots onautofire. Akira checked his HUD's map view, which showed no symbol forRichter - he must have switched off his link. He switched back to Dreyfus' channel. "Did you hit him?" "Sure, I hit him," Dreyfus replied, "He's down." The bug marker flashed again and Akira heard plasma firetoward the front of the ship. He had no time to orient himself andchange views before the marker disappeared. One of the Russians saidsomething over the headset. By the tone, Akira thought he might beswearing. "Trooper Maleev has killed another sectoid west of theAvenger," Morinov called from the other side of the ramp. Akiraguessed it was a much shorter and calmer translation of what thetrooper had actually said. Davies yelled out instructions over the headset for Esser tocheck out the pyramid to the right, which had already been hit byMorinov's blaster launcher. Akira was still on Dreyfus' view. The trooper was movingtoward the back of the pyramids and was just passing Richter's body.Richter looked very dead. Akira suddenly realized how hard shooting himmust have been for Dreyfus - they had come through training together.He wondered if Dreyfus could hold up through all this, Akira's thoughts were interrupted by movement to Dreyfus'sleft - a sectoid. The trooper saw it too and got off one quick shot,missing far to the left and striking some dim structure in thedistance. The alien had been moving south, not directly toward Dreyfus,but now it turned and lifted a large weapon. Dreyfus had knelt downand was taking better aim at the alien. Before he could fire orthe alien could use its weapon, a plasma bolt shot over the trooper'shead and seared through the thin atmosphere, right into the alien'schest. It let out a horrible, shrill, high-pitched scream anddropped. Tank Two had moved around the pyramid to the east of Dreyfusand had taken the shot. Akira switched to its view, fifteen feet offthe ground. It turned north and moved toward another pyramid. "Dreyfus," Akira called, "stay behind cover where you are.Let Crossett check out your wounds." The trooper's advance stalled as Esser and Davies found theentrances to the two nearest pyramids and went inside to check themout. "Some sort of control center. Empty," Davies reported. "Same here." Akira took the time to study the map on his HUD and hopbetween trooper viewpoints. They knew of five pyramids now - the twoEsser and Davies had just searched, two more to the north of those,and one west of the Avenger. Zander was getting ready to enter thatone. The two tanks had found the east and west edges where theartificially flat terrain gave way to the natural rough hills. Theywere moving along its edge toward the two pyramids to the north. Akira suddenly realized that the ground around the pyramids,flattened and smoothed by the aliens, had craters in it. He knew verylittle of how often craters were formed in an area this size on Mars,but it was the first solid evidence of just how old these structureswere. It was intimidating, so he got his mind off of it. He fumbled with his mouth controls to find a privatechannel. "Crossett, How's Dreyfus?" "He's stable," she replied immediately, "Not hurt all thatbad, and his suit resealed properly" Akira checked his HUD again. Dreyfus and Crossett were in thesmall gap between the two nearest pyramids. There was a wide space,maybe forty meters, between them and the two pyramids farther north,so there was a lot of open ground to cover. "Dreyfus," he called on the open channel, "hold your positionand cover the open area to your north. Davies, Esser and the tankswill come around at those other two pyramids from the flanks." "Yessir" Akira was going to confirm the plan with Davies, who didn'tlike to be left out of decisions regarding his squad, but he didn'tget the chance. The bug marker flashed, this time from tank three.It was approaching the pyramid to the west and spotted a sectoidaround the side. The plasma tank got off one shot and missed, thenwas hit by the alien's plasma fire. Akira thought about launching one of his blaster bombs, but heonly carried five and didn't know what they might need them for in thefuture. He programmed the waypoints anyway and waited. The tank turned quickly and moved back toward the pyramid toit's south. It had spotted the alien, which could now be destroyed,even without line-of-sight, by a grenade. "Got that one," Tonida the psi called excitedly. "I've got a bead on it if you loose control," Esser called. Akira stood, tapped a few of the controls on his right arm,and flew up five meters and north toward cover behind the top of oneof the pyramids. He heard plasma fire and switched to Esser's view.She was indeed aiming carefully at a sectoid, which had its backturned to her and was firing at something hidden off in the darknessbehind the pyramid. Another distorted alien scream announced that ithad hit something. "Splash one for the psis," Crossett called. "Two if they can make this one blow itself up," Esserreplied, still aiming carefully. "Tonida, can you hold it?" Akira asked privately, immediatelyregretting his choice of words. "I think so, but someone has to keep it in sight." "Okay," Akira replied, then added Esser to the conversation."Esser. See if you can move up to that pyramid. We're going to sendthe sectoid inside, and I want you to follow." Esser agreed, but sounded skeptical. She moved north, keepingher weapon pointed at the alien, which moved back and forth on thepyramid's west side. Tank Three slid into Esser's field of view, heading farthernorth to another pyramid just visible in the thin light. From hisobservation point behind the peak of the pyramid, Akira could dimlysee the tank for himself. He was amazed that it could understand soquickly that the sectoid was under mind control and completely ignoresomething it was otherwise trained to kill instantly. He looked to his right and saw Davies moving up to the door ofa pyramid to the northeast. Tank Two had already passed around itsfar side and moved around to the north. Below him, Crossett movedcautiously out into open terrain. Suddenly, he saw the tracks of two plasma bolts aimed at thetank, each originating from a different location far off to the north.distorted plasma fire sounds seemed to come from all directions, and adull crash of metal told him the aliens had hit their target. Three alien markers lit up on Akira's HUD, then onedisappeared as quickly as it had come. He looked hard into the dimlandscape and saw what must have been a cyberdisk, straight north, outbeyond the last pyramid. He couldn't make out the other source ofplasma fire to its left. Crossett knelt in the open and autofired continuously at thecyberdisk. As Akira entered waypoints into his launcher, the diskbegan firing back at Crossett. Akira let the blaster bomb fly. It whistled up, over thepyramid, dove quickly down to the ground out beyond Crossett, andstreaked straight ahead into the cyberdisk. He thought he heard asecondary explosion from the cyberdisk's self-destruct mechanism. When his visor cleared there where lumps of Martian dirt andpieces of the cyberdisk raining down everywhere, some plinking againsthis flying suit as he hovered in place. with much less gravity andalmost no atmosphere to resist it, the debris from the blast wasspreading much farther than it would have on Earth. Another large explosion went off near the second source ofplasma fire, followed by the distorted scream of a sectoid. Daviesmust have tossed a grenade from behind the northeast pyramid, Akirathought. Akira switched back to the open channel. "What was that thirdalien marker?" "That was mine," someone replied. It sounded like Zander. "Iwas face-to-face with one when I stepped into this pyramid, but it'sdead now." Akira checked his map. Zander was inside the pyramid off tothe west of the Avenger. Davies was heading into the pyramid to thenortheast, and the psis still had control of their sectoid and weresending it into the pyramid to the northwest with Esser close behind. Akira waited for bug markers, but none flashed. In a fewseconds Tonida called out. "Our sectoid found the lift." Akira switched to Esser's view. She was standing just inside apyramid, aiming carefully at the back of the captive sectoid. Thefloor of the room glowed green like the main lift in an alien baseback on Earth. "That's it," Akira called, "Tonida, get your alien backoutside and post him to the north as a guard. Esser, follow him andshoot him if he turns on you. Everyone else head for the lift." "Morinov, space your troopers to the northwest of the Avengerto guard the psis as they cross." Akira watched from behind his pyramid as the troopers below himand to the east cut across the open field toward the lift. Crossettran back for a moment to retrieve a grenade from Richter's body andspare clips from a dead sectoid. Akira dropped down beside her as she moved across toward thelift. "I expected worse," he said out loud, but realized she couldn'thear him. They reached the lift safely and Akira quickly counted twelvetroopers, including himself, and the one surviving tank. Esser wasstill outside. "Esser, kill the alien and get in here." The plasma shot outside was followed by an noticeable flinchfrom Tonida. In a few seconds Esser was inside. Zander had located a strange panel on the wall beside thelift. When Akira gave her the signal she pressed it and they alldescended at once. Akira had been afraid all along that all theintelligence they had about this place would lead to a trap. Hewaited to descend into a barrage of plasma fire, or a blaster bomb setto go off in the center of their group when they arrived. But the lift stopped without incident, in a room about thesame size as the pyramid, but with wide openings to the east andwest. Through the openings Akira could see more glowing green floors. Troopers quickly moved to check out the neighboring rooms andfound them empty except for large lifts. It looked too similar to analien base on Earth. "We'll split up," he announced. "The Russians will take theeast lift with the remaining plasma tank. The Little Rock squad willtake the west." Now he turned to find the psis. They were stillclustered together. "You psis will stay up here and monitor fromthese rooms. If you see we're all dead or you lose contact with uscompletely, get to the surface and try to get the Avenger back toEarth." The group split up and headed into the lift rooms. Troopersfrom each squad carefully checked down the lift shafts before steppingout onto them. Akira looked across to the other room and saw Morinov.He nodded and gave the order to descend. Akira watched Esser and Zander drop into the unknown and heswitched to Esser's view. He waited to hear an explosion or a burstof plasma fire, but none came. Esser was looking into another room tothe west. It had a smaller room, three or four meters across, insideof it, with windows all around. "Looks like a base," Esser called, "we're in a typical roomwith an opening in each direction. I see a..." "Shhhhh" Zander interrupted. "Listen" She sounded panicky. Esser was quiet, as was everyone else onthe channel, but Akira could hear nothing. Crossett and Dreyfus wereready on the lift, but he hesitated to send them down until he foundout what had disturbed Zander. Esser view froze for a second, then suddenly spun around to faceeast. Something quick and black moved into the opening, less than tenmeters away. The pulse of a laser rifle and the blue flash of aheavy plasma on autofire mixed for a few seconds, and a chrysalid laydead on the ground only two paces from Zander. Akira had occasionally thought about the worst scenarios onMars. The trap situation, with a quick death from plasma fire orblaster bombs was not the worst. A base full of more chrysalids thanhis squads could handle had crossed his mind, but he'd always quicklyforced it aside. He waved Crossett and Dreyfus down and watched them disappearinto the floor, then he moved onto the lift with Davies. He suddenlyfelt a large explosion through his whole suit, and the room below wassaturated with a bright white flash. Alien and trooper screams cameto him from below, and over his headset. He quickly checked his HUD. In the room below the Russiansquad's lift, Iwahara's symbol had gone white and Maleev's was flashingyellow. "Morinov," he called, "Maleev is wounded." "I see. On my way down now" We can't keep this up, Akira thought. If we keep losingtroopers at this rate, we've lost. The possibility of defeat hadbeen overshadowed by hope and much greater unknowns when they'dstarted this mission. Now it loomed in front of him as reality -maybe even the most likely outcome. Who did he think he was topresume to come here, to the alien stronghold, with little more than adozen troopers. Now he had eleven - only eight without the psis. He descended and found troopers moving out through each of thefour openings of the room. Crossett was moving quickly to the east,probably trying to find the source of the blaster bomb attack beforeanother one was launched. The bug marker flashed and Esser fired three shots with herlaser rifle through the western opening. Akira's weapon needed nodirect line of sight, so he stayed around the corner on the lift andbrought up his HUD map. "An ethereal," Esser reported excitedly, "inside that littleroom. I don't see it now." Esser had stopped firing. Davies moved around to get a lookwhile Akira programmed way points. He hoped a blaster bomb explosioncentered on the opposite side of the room would take out the centerroom and the ethereal without harming Esser. Things grew quiet as Esser waited for the alien to reappear.Now Akira heard what had frightened Zander only seconds before - thesliding click, click of chrysalid claws on alien alloy. It was hard to locate in the maze of rooms, but it soundedlike it was coming from the west. He switched to Esser's view just asa shiny black and green shape skittered into view from the northwest. Akira let his blaster bomb fly as Esser swung her rifle tofire at the new threat. The silver football-shaped bomb streakedbehind and within a few feet of Davies, then cut around the cornerinto the other room. Akira's body shook violently. As his eyesrecovered from the flash, he could still see debris flying intothe room. Esser and Davies had been knocked down, but she was gettingup quickly, laser ready to fend off whatever had survived. Daviesstayed low and began programming his own blaster launcher. Akira reloaded and watched through Esser's camera as shescanned back and forth across the devastated room. The small,windowed room in its center was nearly gone. As the smoke and metalvapors began to clear, she centered on a lumpy black shape oozingfluid just inside the other room. She stepped forward cautiously to check it out. "Let me check the bug," Davies ordered. "You cover me." Meanwhile, the rest of the troopers, realizing no one was hurtin the blast, spread out even further. Crossett had moved all the way into the room to the east, andcould probably see Morinov and the tank. "There's a dead ethereal inhere," she called, "and it's got a blaster launcher." One less to worry about, Akira thought. But he had no ideahow many there were. "Another one here too," Esser reported. "That last blast gotthe chrysalid and the ethereal I saw in here. Akira still had Esser's view up. Something moved at the leftedge of her vision. She dropped to one knee and brought up herrifle. She was looking south, into a large room filled with displaycases, apparently identical to the large rooms they'd seen in basesback on Earth. Whatever had moved was at the far end of the room, but was nolonger visible. As she continued to aim in that direction, A heavymetallic sound came from just southwest of her. She jerked her weaponright just as a giant sectopod lumbered into view only a few meters infront of her. She didn't bother aiming now, but stayed kneeling andsqueezed off autofire. Akira was as startled by it as she was and had to suppress theurge to raise his own weapon and fire. He quickly decided thecreature was too close to Esser for him to use his blaster launcher. Esser got in one, or maybe two clean hits before the robotfired. Her video feed lit up as plasma hit her and dispersed, takingmolten alloy from her armor with it. She was knocked back, but landedwith her viewpoint somehow upright and straight ahead. The camera survived, and Akira could see another group oflaser rounds cut across from off to the left somewhere. One of themcaught the sectopod and its legs gave out. It collapsed and didn'tmove. "I'm OK," Esser called. Akira checked his HUD and found out that she was. It lookedlike she hadn't been injured at all by the blast. He checked trooperpositions and realized the shot that killed the sectopod had come fromDreyfus, who had moved down a passageway to the south of the liftroom. He took note of the positions of the other troopers. Crossettand the tank had moved south, parallel to Dreyfus and had hit a largeenclosed area. Maleev had moved east from the Russian lift room withMorinov covering the north. A bug marker interrupted him, and he switched immediately tothe spotter's view. It was Crossett, peeking around the northwestcorner of the large enclosed space at one of the balloon aliens Akirahad seen at Little Rock. She was aiming carefully, but not firing. "I've got it," Hudson called. Akira thought quickly. "Use it as a scout," he ordered, "butdon't go too quickly. Crossett, follow it an keep an eye on it." "Yes, Commander." Suddenly, three more bug markers appeared in quick succession,accompanied by plasma fire from all around him. The trap, he thought. Akira cycled through viewpoints. The first marker had comefrom the tank, which was far to the east, facing a sectopod at closerange. The second had come from Morinov, but Akira saw that theRussian was now running into the other lift room with no aliens insight. He wondered for a moment if Morinov had gone berserk, until herounded the bend into the passageway to the east, where Maleev hadgone. Maleev was still there, but he was immobile, in a kneelingposition with a chrysalid bending over him. Morinov got off one shot before something exploded right atthe alien's feet. The blast wiped out the video for a few seconds,but when it returned, Akira could see the chrysalid and Maleev weredown. He didn't have time to watch another chrysalid emerge fromMaleev. The third marker had come from Davies to the north. Akiracould see that he was in one of the large display case rooms. Hecould also see an ethereal looking back at him from behind one of thecases less than five meters away. Almost as soon as Akira switched tothe view, he lost it. Akira checked his HUD - Davies' marker was gonetoo. Either he had been hit so hard that his link had beendestroyed, which didn't happen often, or he had deliberately switchedit off. But Akira hadn't heard an explosion or plasma shot from thatdirection. Akira began programming his own launcher. He decided Davieswas under alien control and destroying the alien in the room with himmight help. But could he place the explosion so it wouldn't hurtDavies? "Esser, take cover" he called out. "Davies," he said to himself as he worked, "shake it off!Kill the damn bug." Akira was ready to launch, but stopped when he saw Daviesvideo re-appear. There was no sign of the alien, and Davies bug marker wasgone. Davies suddenly turned and was facing the alien, only a fewsteps away. He looked down at his blaster launcher, and cleared thewaypoints, but before he did Akira could see that the ones he hadprogrammed would have taken the bomb back toward himself and the othertroopers. "I...," Davies mumbled, obviously struggling, "Akira...Ican't..." Akira didn't get a chance to say anything. Davies quicklyprogrammed a single waypoint and pulled the trigger. Davies view lit up and saturated as Akira felt the blast fromonly twenty meters to the west. The flash lit up the inside of thelift room like flash powder. He ran recklessly west past Esser, thennorth to where Davies had been, meeting Zander moving more cautiouslyin from the east. She covered him as he examined Davies' still body. His power suit was badly charred and dented inward in placesfrom the blast, but there were no obvious penetrations. Akira grabbedclumsily for his medi-kit and managed to get Davies hooked up. Hefound no signs of life. He removed Davies' helmet. He wasn't sure why. In thestrange atmosphere of the base it might insure his death. Maybe hejust thought the trooper should die in the open, not sealed up in sometin can. Blood flowed from Davies' mouth and a cut in the center of alarge purple wound on his forehead. For a few seconds, Akira's thoughts drifted back over thelast year, to his first missions in Wales and the Arizona desert.Davies had been there. Others had been there too - Gaudin, Perez,Evans, Bouton - all dead now. "It's time to end this," he said out loud. Zander continuedto cover him and glanced over at Davies but said nothing. Akira checked his map display again. The tank had survivedthe fight with the sectopod, but Maleev was dead. It looked liked theRussians had found the eastern extent of the base, and Akira guessedthat the two large display rooms the American team had enteredrepresented the western edge. Esser was moving farther into thesouthern display room, and could see no openings or doors on theopposite wall. Akira hoped that meant they had also found thesouthern extern of the base. So the problem had limits. But we may not have to clear itall out, he reminded himself. They would find the mastermind, killit, and take it from there. Korkia and Crossett, with her celatid scout, were eachabout to enter small doors to large, square enclosed areas. Thesimilarities between this base and those on Earth made Akira suspectthat the mastermind would be in something similar to a commandcenter, with nested hallways and a large lift, but neither of theselooked like a command center. Korkia moved into a small door on the south side of the squarearea north of the Russians. Akira switched to her view and saw astraight hallway with a lift at the end. It was just what he expectedand just like in the Earth bases. Meanwhile, Crossett had followed the celatid through a door onthe west side of the southern enclosure. He again switched views andsaw a hallway similar to the one Korkia was in, but longer. And itappeared to split at the end, going north and south.. This was different, Akira thought. Everything else they'dseen so far in this base matched some pattern of rooms back in theEarth bases, but this one didn't. "Everyone north of the lift rooms, hold your advance for now,"he ordered. He kept Crossett's viewpoint, but left Davies' body and movedsouth and east, back toward the lift room. He froze when a bug markerflashed, and he heard laser fire close by to the south. He moved twosteps farther, until he could see down the passage which ran southfrom the lift room. Dreyfus was ten meters down, firing wildly at a huge, bubblymass moving at him from the south. Akira had a clear shot at it pastDreyfus, but he had no weapon to use. He began programming waypointsfor a blaster bomb shot, but the creature was too close to Dreyfus bythe time he finished. He watched as it reached its prey. It stopped directly infront of Dreyfus, who kept his head and got in one more hit. Then,without doing anything to the trooper, it slid back south. Dreyfushit it again as it moved away and it collapsed on the floor and laythere oozing. "You are the luckiest bastard I've ever met," Akira called. Dreyfus didn't reply. He was frantically scanning to thesouth and east for more creatures. Akira still had Crossett's view up and could see now that thesplit hallways each ended with small lifts after only five or sixmeters. "Hudson," Akira called, "send the alien up one lift.Crossett, cover the other one." For a just second Akira expected Davies to break in and makesome jab to remind him not to order his squad around directly. Butthat little rivalry was all over now. "OK," Hudson replied, "the celatid's heading up." There was a pause for a few seconds, then Hudson let out aloud whoop. "Jackpot," he called. "The little bag bought it, but I thinkthis is the place. There's a big room right above you, Crossett, andit's crawling with ethereals. At the back there's a huge blob thatlooks like it could be the brain." Akira ran through his options. He could risk a blaster bombup the lift past Crossett, or he could send troopers up one or two ata time with grenades to finish of the ethereals. They could also waitfor the ethereals to come down after them. He checked the map on hisHUD and realized he still didn't really know the layout of the room,just the description Hudson could give. As he studied the map, the layout of most of the new roomsuddenly appeared, accompanied by flashing bug markers. "Who the..." Akira blurted over the comm link. But it had tobe Crossett. He switched to her view and saw the room. It lookedlike she was at the back of a small theater, with chairs facing westtoward something at the other end. There were large tanks of somefluid in the corners, but Akira didn't get a chance to see many moredetails or get a good look at what Hudson had identified as thebrain. Crossett had come up firing wildly, and it looked like she hadtaken down one of the ethereals. She tossed a grenade farther intothe room and moved a couple steps south, enough to see the pulsatingblob before plasma burst against her and she fell. "No," Akira grunted deep in his throat, and began runningsoutheast towards her. He heard the grenade go off and anotherethereal moan. As he entered the passage to the south, he sawDreyfus, a complete rookie only days before, calmly holding hisposition at the far end. Akira was embarrassed for a second and regained his composure.He checked his map again and found Crossett's marker still flashing -still alive. He knelt in the hallway to think for only a second ortwo, counted his blaster bombs - one in the chamber and two on hisback - and began programming waypoints. "Stay where you are, Dreyfus," he ordered. His first shot streaked east down a side passage, then turnedsharply south as it followed the outside of the enclosed area belowthe theater. An instant later, the whole area lit up, and the blastpressure dissipated down half a dozen connecting hallways. Akira allowed himself to move east until he could see thedestruction. Through the smoke and vapors he could see that the blasthad destroyed the door to the long hallway, along with most of thewalls around it. He placed another bomb into the chamber and felt the dullclick as it dropped into place. He was in a hurry to get to Crossett,but he forced himself to take his time. He had fought for nearly ayear and lost dozens of friends. He didn't want to blow it now. He heard heavy plasma fire far to the north, but managed toignore it as he programmed. He pulled the trigger and watched thebomb disappear through the opening he'd just made. This blast nearly knocked him over, but he regained hisbalance and dropped his last blaster bomb into position. He hoped thesecond shot, programmed to go up a few meters inside the doorway, haddestroyed the floor in the center of the room, allowing him to send abomb up into the room without risking an explosion near Crossett. As he finished his programming and was about to pull thetrigger, possibly for the last time in the war, an ethereal steppedout of the destruction into the hallway only a few meters in front ofhim. Akira couldn't launch with the alien there, and he had noother weapon. Instead of running, he waited for the plasma bolt tocome, instinctively deciding it would be better to take it in thefront instead of the back. Instead of a plasma bolt, the alien threw its mind at Akira.He found himself once again struggling for space in his own head.Most of his thoughts turned against the other troopers, and his handmoved to reprogram the launcher. But the struggle ended, and the alien left Akira's mindabruptly. He glanced around and found himself in the same place asbefore, but with the correct waypoints programmed on his launcher tosend the bomb toward Dreyfus. The alien lay in a still pile on the floor. At the other end of the hall, Dreyfus lifted his laser rifleslightly in a mock salute. The mind control had been too successful, and Akira had cometo close to using the launcher against his own people. And he wasn'tsure he could risk sending a bomb up into that room with Crossettthere. He threw it aside and grabbed the dead alien's heavy plasmaand made sure it was loaded. "Thanks, Dreyfus," Akira called down the passage, "Let's endthis thing." He motioned for Dreyfus to follow and headed into thedestruction caused by the first two bombs. Once inside, Akira could see that his second blaster shot hadblown a large hole in the floor of the theater room. Akira stoppedbeneath it and waved Dreyfus past him to the lifts. Crossett was up there, but so were ethereals, he thought. Hewaited for a few seconds and listened. An alien glided into view upabove just long enough for him to take a quick shot and miss. "I can't believe it," Tonida called, "Zdanovich got that one -an ethereal" Plasma shots seared the air above Akira, one streaking all theway across the opening over his head toward where he had seen the alien. Zdanovich said something in Russian, then switched to English."I could not get a shot at the brain. The ethereal is dead." "Time to go," Akira said out loud. He pulled a grenade fromhis belt, primed it short and motioned for Dreyfus to go up the lift. Akira tossed the grenade up over the edge to where he saw theplasma shots coming from. It exploded almost as soon as it landed andanother alien moaned as Akira hit his flying suit controls to ascend. He rose into the room amidst rows of broken and burning seatsand he quickly took in the scene in front of him, forcing himself notto turn around and check on Crossett. The brain was there, pulsating directly in front of him. Timeslowed as he pointed his heavy plasma at it. He could see anethereal's flame orange robes near the left edge of his vision, but hedidn't let his eyes drift from the brain or his weapon point anywhereelse. As his finger applied pressure to the trigger, the braincalled out to him somehow. In a fraction of a second it passed on thestory of the alien's relationship with humans, how the aliens guidedhuman development on Earth and would help them and live with them asbrothers and sisters in the future. Akira's finger let up on the trigger a little, but the soundof laser fire at his back cleared his head. He thought of Crossettdying behind him and Davies' body down below and squeezed hard on thetrigger. The first shot blew of a large piece of the brain, but Akirakept firing. Dreyfus finished off the ethereal to the left and addedlaser autofire to the barrage. Within seconds the brain wasreduced to a lump of charred, steaming sewage slowly oozing of of it'splatform. Akira scanned the destruction in the room and made sure noethereals were hiding. He moved quickly back to Crossett and pluggedin his medi-kit. She was unconscious and hurt bad, but she would make it. "What's going on, Akira?" Morinov called. "We've got etherealsout in the open and running away." "It's over," Akira called on the open channel, "the brain isdead. Clean up the remaining aliens and lets get out of here.". . .They collected their casualties and headed back to theAvenger. Dreyfus carried Davies' body and Akira carried Crossett.Zander and Esser returned from cleaning up the panicked aliens on thenorth end of the base and, out of habit, gathering up alien technologyitems. Korkia and Morinov carried the two dead Russians on board. Akira was quiet. He realized he should have been ecstatic - Thewhole invasion could be over, and he would be a hero back on Earth.But all he felt was tired and a little angry. When he was in themiddle of it all, everything was urgent and a struggle to survive. Nowthat he let himself believe it was over, he just kept asking himselfwhy it had ever happened in the first place? What did all thosesoldiers and innocent civilians die for? Dreyfus, on the other hand, couldn't stop talking. "Wow! Ican't believe we did this," he repeated every few minutes. As Zanderand Esser loaded the last few items on board, Dreyfus stopped what hewas doing and turned to Akira. "Now what do we do?" he asked. "We wait for them to come back," Akira replied. He touchedthe button to close the doors in the back and re-pressurize theAvenger. When it finished he removed his helmet. Then he reached upto his left shoulder, then his right hand popped his commanderinsignia off of his power suit. He handed them to Dreyfus. "I won't be needing these any more, but I have a feeling youmight." Dreyfus stared as the insignia dropped into his gauntleted hand. Akira reached over and started the launch sequence, then satdown beside Crossett. She was conscious, but groggy from painmedication. He removed her helmet and she gave him a weak smile. "Congratulations, Commander," she said, then she reachedbehind and pulled out her bowie knife. She handed it to him andpointed a shaky finger up at her hair. "All of it this time." THE END Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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