FullAuto Posted September 3, 2005 Share Posted September 3, 2005 Deposition: 21 April, 2028: Dr. Robert Manley The convention was going badly, so I was in the hotel bar before noon. It had beenthe same thing all morning, in every paper presented. "Of course, we haveinsufficient experimental data, but..." and, "If we extrapolate from what little data isavailable..." and, "Naturally, this is all speculation, however..." Xenology was likethat in those days. It was pretty depressing. I had just about decided to skip myown presentation--nobody but bored, brown-nosing grad students would be thereanyway--and take the next transorbital home. I wish I had. Instead, I orderedanother beer and continued sulking. When that bottle was about half gone, there was a tap on my shoulder. I swiveledmy stool around slowly, scowling. As far as I knew, there wasn't anyone within twohundred miles I really wanted to talk to. A man I had never seen before stood theregrinning. He was big, he was wearing brown leather, and I was thoroughlyintimidated. "You are doctor Manley, aren't you?" he said in his huge, deep voice. "Yes," I said, but I would've agreed if he'd said I was Thomas Jefferson. He wasthat big. "Great," he smiled. It made me feel a little safer that I had made this Slavic-lookinggiant happy. "Please come with me. I have a research proposal for you." He turnedand strode self-assuredly out of the bar. Of course I followed him. I didn't know then that he was an X-COM vet, but there were clues. His darkbrown hair was really short--that chopped-off, military haircut. That was a sort oftrend with the kids, though, so I didn't really think about it. What should have toldme was the way he carried himself. He was totally relaxed, like nothing on Earthcould possibly threaten him, but he seemed to notice everything. He looked bothways at every intersecting hallway before he stepped out, and he twitched when heheard the elevator doors slide open. I guess I was too busy wondering what hewanted from me. I thought I was dealing with some monstrous, overeager gradstudent. My primary worry was how I was going to get out of sponsoring hisresearch without angering him. Neither of us said a word until we were in theelevator. "Where are we going?" I asked. He looked down at me as if just noticing that Iwas still there. "My room," he said curtly. "It's secure." I wasn't exactly sure what he meant bythat, but by following him this far I had tacitly agreed to view his proposal. Wedidn't speak again until he had locked the door to his little suite behind us. The bedseemed tiny compared to him. I wondered how he slept on it. "Doctor Manley, what's the biggest problem facing researchers in your field?" Hehad settled himself onto one of the two cane chairs in the room--gently, as ifmaking an effort not to break it. I hunched uncomfortably in the other one. Theshades were closed, and he had turned on all the lights. "How about you tell me who you are first," I was emboldened by the discomfortand the beer, I think, or I would never have asked so bluntly. He didn't seem totake offense, and I relaxed a little. "Call me Gregory," he said. That's about when my nagging, half realized suspicionssort of crystallized. I put two and two together. "Wait a minute," I sat up straighter. "As in 'Gregory Illych'?" he glanced awaymomentarily--answer enough. "As in 'X-COM Captain Gregory Illych'?" Icontinued. Now, he started to look uncomfortable. I think I had guessed before hewas ready for me to know. "Renegade X-COM Captain Illych for whom half theworld's security agencies have shoot-to-kill orders?" "Uh, yeah," he looked down at his scuffed boots. I didn't know why the militaryauthorities wanted him so badly. Nobody knew. I suppose I just assumed that ithad to be something horrible. At least he wasn't proud of it, I thought. It didn'treally occur to me until later that I had been in a locked hotel room with probablyone of the most dangerous men on the planet. I don't think I could have been moreintimidated, anyway. I mean, he was just enormous, like I was sharing a room witha truck. "So, what's your interest in xenology?" I said, more to fill the silence than anythingelse. I felt stupid as soon as I had said it. Any soldier from the old X-COM wouldjust naturally have an interest in alien studies. "You haven't answered my question," he said simply. I didn't have to think over myanswer for long. "Well, it's obvious," I began. This was one of my favorite diatribes, and it wasunusual to have a willing audience. "Xenology is a general term covering all theareas of study relating to things alien, right? Now, before the war, xenologicalstudies were all speculation. There was no data. As far as the researchers knewthen, there might not even be any aliens at all. That all changed with the invasionfrom Cydonia, or so we thought. "I was in college then, and you can imagine the excitement. Everybody rushed tomajor in xeno stuff--biology majors switched to xenobiology, psychology majors toxenopsychology, and on and on. I was just starting my doctoral studies inbiochemistry, and I certainly wasn't immune to the hysteria. I got my degree innonhuman neurochemistry just in time to spend a month doing research in anX-COM base. I ended up the world's foremost expert on alien nervous systemchemistry." I paused for breath, and Illych just nodded. I guessed he'd alreadyknown all that. If I had thought about it at the time, I would have figured that thatwas one of the reasons he'd come to me. In a way, I was an X-COM vet, too. "After the war, I was really looking forward to a long stretch of productiveresearch. I would be at the top of one of the highest-profile areas of research. In afew years, I figured, we would have the aliens' whole brain chemistry mapped out.Of course, the world military had other plans. "Everything from every X-COM base and laboratory, every sample of anythingalien, every tiniest fluid stain or integument scrape was confiscated and lockedaway. It was all locked away from those who could best use it" I took a fewseconds to calm down. That part always got me mad all over again. What a wasteit had been! "It was a five month fight just to get the recordings from the hyperwavedecoders that we had invented. Even then, at least half of it had been editedout--censored! "So that's the problem. The stuff has stayed locked up. They claim that militaryresearchers have been working on it, but I've seen their reports. They obviouslyhave no idea what they're doing. Everything in those reports is a repeat ofsomething we discovered while X-COM was active, or a minor extension of ourwork. Meanwhile, the materials are being consumed by the experimentalprocedures. I know what was in those bases. I know how much they're hiding fromus. I've been following the research, and I have a good idea how much of the alienspecimens are left. It isn't much. The military broadcast a claim two years ago thatit was almost all used up. They had the gall to ask us to volunteer any samples wehad been hoarding, the cretins. "So that left the rest of us, the non-military researchers, out in the cold. We couldn'tbe re-trained, and there's been no experimental data to work with, no resources.Some few have turned parasite, leaching what they can off of what information themilitary releases. Their research isn't what you'd call stellar. Most of us can't evendo that, though. I need samples to work on; I can't just go on speculation andextrapolation. All my work for the last few years has been essentially worthless. "That," I paused for effect, "is the primary impediment to xenological researchtoday. Now tell me why you care." He shifted around in his chair and it creakednervously. "Aren't there rumors that some scientists have secret access to the remainingmilitary specimens?" he asked without preamble. "How did you..." I began. "Wait." I stopped to gather my thoughts for a moment;this guy was way ahead of me. "Okay, yes, That's a rumor I've heard. Nobodyreally believes it, though. What possible reason could the military authorities havefor allowing secret access?" "You said yourself that they're getting nowhere by themselves," Illych got up andpulled a beer out of a cooler. It disappeared, engulfed in his hand. I rememberbeing surprised that someone who was being hunted by several securityorganizations would allow himself to drink. "Rather than admit their failure, I saythey'd be more willing to engineer some covert research opportunities." What hesaid made sense, but he hadn't dropped his bombshells yet. He pulled some glossysheets out of the cooler and tossed them at me. "I know it's going on. I knowwhere. I know who." He leaned back on the bed with a satisfied smile. "There'sproof." The sheets were old style 2-D photographs. I recognized the scientists in them, andthey were recent shots. Dr. Baird had shaved off his beard no more than a monthago, and in the photo he was clean faced. I even recognized one or two of the labs.What I didn't recognize at first were the specimens. When I did, I said somethingI'd rather not repeat. "You're convinced," Illych said quietly. "Good. Now, we can get down tobusiness." I was convinced, all right-- convinced, betrayed, and hopping mad. Hegot up and reached for the cooler again. I stood, too. "Hey," I grabbed at his elbow, emboldened by familiarity, I guess. I'd swear I neversaw him move. Just all of a sudden I'm lying on my back next to the window, andmy jaw really hurts. He didn't say anything, just stood there looking at me. Iguessed--correctly, as it turned out- -that that was no time to be showingweakness. I tried to shrug off the pain. "You never answered my question. Why doyou care?" He bent over the cooler, "I liked X-COM." A sheaf of papers came out with twomore beers. He threw one to me, then unfolded some kind of map on the bed. Ididn't feel like getting up yet, so I stayed put. "I think we got a bum deal after thewar." "You were heroes for a while," I chipped in. I knew what he was going to say, butI couldn't say it for him. I've run into more than a few old vets who weren't toohappy with the way things turned out, and I've learned that the best thing to do is tohelp them talk it out--sort of prod them along. The word 'heroes' usually does thetrick. "Yah," Illych said. "Heroes." He looked down at his hands for a few long seconds."That lasted at least a couple of months. Then how do you get a job when youronly real skill is sneaking around frying monsters? You know, that wasn't the worstof it. I mean, sure, they treated us vets pretty awful. We got some tiny benefitspackage and a little fame, then the push off. But what really got to me was howthey treated the X Lady herself." Now, there was a term I hadn't heard in years. 'XLady' was how the hardest core, most vicious, meanest, and most successfulsoldiers referred to the organization. To them, X-COM was like a mother figure--a woman for whom they'd do anything, take any risk. When one of her bases wasinvaded, I remembered, all the soldiers fought like demons, but certain men andwomen consistently went way over the top. There were even rumors that they stolealien corpses out of storage and had private, secret barbecue parties. "Okay," he continued, "I can understand they figured there wasn't any threat left.Why keep the bases open? I got that part. And yeah, they had to pension us all offand get rid of the techs and the ships and all. No problem, just sell off everything.That's respectable. She'd have just faded into glory like an old soldier's supposedto." He stopped to drink. "That didn't happen," and I knew what did. "Yah," he stood and started pacing the room. "That's when it started to get ugly.The undersea research was the only redeeming part of the next few years. I got toride in the prototype of one of the new subs. It was great. But after they sold offX-COM 1, that was it. No more nothing. "I guess the real bull started when somebody got the bright idea of selling off themerchandising rights. Merchandising" He started counting off on his giant fingers."Gummy Sectoids, Muton Cola, Chrysalid Malt Liquor, Plasma Pops, BlasterLauncher Gum," he paused to switch hands, transferring his beer, "toy weapons,toy craft, fake 'Elerium' crystal charms, Squaddie dolls, alien action figures" Illychran out of fingers. "The films weren't so bad, but the comic books" He shudderedvisibly. "Then there were the Hallowe'en costumes, the inflatable Floaters, and thatlong, public legal battle with that auto company that named one of their models'Avenger'. I mean, it was just plain degrading! "Is that when you got the military after you?" I asked, standing. He looked over atme without moving his head, and I picked up the chair I'd sat in before and sat in itagain. "Yeah, sort of. See, my first try wasn't so smart. I got together a bunch of X'ersand headed for the corporate headquarters of the company that was doing all this.They didn't like our attitude." He snorted. "Their security goons were probablypretty good for keeping out terrorists. On our way out, we had to get past somemilitary. That's when I got this price on my head." Illych was leaving out the important parts, but I knew all the rest from the newsbroadcasts. The public had never found out who had destroyed the Goss Tower orwhy, but it had been an awesome spectacle. Fifty stories of burning offices and fourhundred people dead is something that sticks in your memory like a bad dream.The 'military' he referred to meant the entire Houston police force and all theNational Guard that had been able to reach the site in time, plus several heavilyarmed civilians. According to the press, none of the attackers had survived. "You blew the Goss Tower?" I said, astonished. "Yah. Only survivor." He sat heavily on the bed and stared at his boots. "Damnshame, all those people, but we hurt the company bad." "They told us you were all killed." "Yep. Chased me all the way to Guatemala." He didn't say it like he was proud,more as a matter of course. "Always hated jungles," he muttered. He had myattention now, and I had to keep him from drooping into introspection. "So what's the plan this time?" I tried to sound enthusiastic, despite the fact that Ihad already decided that going along would be suicide. This guy's sanity was longgone; he was way over the edge. "I know where they're keeping the bulk of the samples that are left. You want in, I'llget you in." Illych looked at me, and he was dead serious. "All I want in return is apromise, but it's a promise I'll hold you to." I knew he would, too. He'd hunt medown if he had to, and there'd be no way for me to escape. I realized right then thatI had better start watching my step, 'cause I'd gotten myself into a very dangeroussituation. "What is it?" I asked. "You do all the research you can. You release everything you find, make it allpublic. No secrets." I didn't have to think it over for too long. "Okay," I committed myself. "You get me in to the alien samples, and everything Iget out of them goes public." Of course, I regretted the decision later. -:- Later was two and a half days later, crouched in the dark behind an aluminum shedat some horribly early hour of the morning. Gregory Illych had gone ahead to reconthe main building. I was left alone, totally incapable of using the weapon he'd leftme with and even less capable of getting myself out of there. I knew that we were in Brazil, but I had no clue how we had gotten there withoutbeing stopped by the security at the airport or by customs. We were on theoutskirts of Rio de Janeiro, but damned if I knew the way back to the city. I knewhow to get over the fences, I just didn't know what he had done to keep them fromfrying us. I knew where the minefield started and ended, but I had no idea howhe'd picked our path through it. I remembered where the three guard posts hadbeen, but I hadn't even seen what he'd done to the occupants. I had watched himdisarm the motion detection net, but I still hadn't a clue how it worked. I felt a chillin spite of the humid Brazilian summer. I was having some fierce second thoughts--and third and fourth by then--but Ifollowed Illych in. Let's just say my options were limited. Illych appeared in front of me and smiled a big, white, boyish smile. He slid awayagain almost immediately, and I went after him. We slunk quickly across ten metersof open space, then ducked into a covered doorway. The security light wasconveniently out. The unmarked, battleship grey door was already unlocked, andwe slipped silently through. I had a feeling that Illych had already been here. Itmight have been some lingering scent in the hallway, or it might have been the threeunconscious soldiers around the first turn. Up two flights of stairs and we ran smack into a chain- link security barrier. Thecorridor beyond ran straight as a razor and smelled of gun oil. It was ten feet highand had a single door at the other end, fifteen meters away. I looked up at Illychand, for the first time, saw consternation on his face. Uh-oh, I thought. He pulled something from one of his many pockets and bent to the lockingmechanism. It sprung open with a little "ping" after a few seconds. Illych attached awire to both the frame and the door itself, then swung the gate as far as the wirewould reach with one gloved hand. I started to follow him down the tiled hallway,but he stopped me with one outstretched, hairy arm. He motioned me to wait,pointing to a tiny black box attached to the wall near the door at the end of thecorridor. I'd thought it was the security lock for the door itself, but he seemed tothink otherwise. Illych flipped some new lenses into his goggles and peered ahead. What he didnext, I wouldn't have believed if I hadn't seen it myself. Backing all the way up pastthe security barrier, he took a huge, running leap into the hallway. I'd swear I sawhis back brush along the ceiling at least half the way. He landed not five feet shortof the door, and I saw him make a real effort not to fall forward. With one smooth,elliptical movement, he flipped open the black box and smashed its contents withhis fist. He waved me on, and I went in. The storage facility was a lab like any other. I'd seen hundreds just like it. Wedidn't dare turn the lights on, but I knew where the special specimens would bekept in a setup like this. I stepped through the dark room and into the walk-incooler, feeling like I was on my turf for once. As I yanked at the cooler door, Illychgrabbed at my shoulder, but he was too late. The lights came on. -:- You know the rest. Before you all came barging in and shooting the place up I saweverything. My, what a mess you've made of it. The one opportunity mankind hasever had to study alien species', and you military types have even botched that up.The samples in those jars are contaminated; any first year grad student could seethat. They're useless. That poor, pathetic excuse for a Reaper you've got on life support is almost as bad.How could you not realize that the implants were necessary to the structuralsoundness of its neural system? It's in every damn report that ever came out aboutthe things! Even if I weren't going to spend the rest of my life in military prison, I'dnever be able to get any valid data out of those pitiful samples, anyway. I might aswell be working on one of the toy figures. No, I do not have any idea where Illych went. The bastard left me for dead is whathe did. As far as I'm concerned, I hope he never gets out of that damn jungle andyou all never find his body. END OF STATEMENT Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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