Dust swirled as the prowler lifted off, Talon tilting her head back to watch it ascend. In solon, it rose high enough to disappear into the dark sky.
A shape approached, shadowed by the dust. <Talon? Are you and the Colonel ready to go?>
<Affirmative, Beryl.> The pilot sent back. She and Spiral had chosen by random chance who would remain aboard the
Plummet and who would go with Colonel Jardin to investigate the buried human ship that the ground team had discovered.
Talon had won.
As a consolation prize, Spiral was left all alone with Alex on the prowler. She hadn’t
exactly been disappointed, especially when Beryl promised to show her the memories of the ship later.
“Ah, tozet Beryl.” Said the Colonel, as the listel reached them amidst the settling dust. “Lead on.”
The three left for the top of the Shell-excavated shaft, Beryl’s excitement leaking through her sanzai even as she spoke aloud. “It is true that this vessel is one of your evacuation craft?”
“It’s supposed to be.” he replied. “I am very interested to see what it’s doing out here, though.”
“Because of the depth from the surface at which it was found, it seems that it has been here a great time.” Beryl said.
“All the more mysterious, then.”
They reached the elevator, and departed downwards. Talon asked, “How far down is the ship?”
“It is four hundred mannal down to the hatch which the Shells uncovered.” Explained Beryl. “It is not yet discovered how deep that is compared to the rest of the vessel. We do not know the precise size of the vessel.”
“For an
Infinity-class?” The Colonel said. “They’re big colonial transports. Six klicks long, one tall, almost one wide. In Soia units, ah, a bit under eight-thousand mannal long, thirteen-hundred tall, one-thousand wide.”
Talon and Beryl exchanged wide-eyed stares. Even the largest mobile warships of the Union barely reached one-thousand mannal in length.
“That is gigantic! And these were warships?” Beryl asked.
“Armed transports.” the human said. “They were first built towards the tail end of the First War, as independent evacuation ships that would scatter out into the galaxy, each enough to carry a self-sustaining human population. It’s still a secret just how many ONI built, but I know a few were retrofitted as heavy warships when things stabilized slightly during the first few decades of the Second War.”
Beryl shook her head, as the elevator approached the bottom of the shaft. “Then it is no surprise why your ODST leader did not wish to explore within the vessel blindly with just our few numbers.”
“Definitely.” The Colonel tapped the datapad carried at his hip as the three of them disembarked. “For one thing, without the map I pulled from the
Plummet, it would take us far too long to find our way to anything useful. And in the meantime, there’s still an unknown number of Bug-bots aboard the
Mandelbrot.”
“They will be little threat to us.” Said Talon with confidence. Fighting within the confines of a ship was the environment that played most to the strengths of the loroi. Few opportunities for enemies to engage from far enough away to be out of detection range.
“Depends on what they’ve found in there.” Countered the Colonel. “The
Mandelbrot should have been one of the disarmed ships of the evacuation fleet, but the fact that she’s back here indicates that the plan changed. And an
Infinity-class that’s been rearmed has quite a few nasty weapons aboard. It shouldn’t have been any easier for these Shells to explore the ship blind than it would be for us, but we don’t know how long they’ve been at it. If they’ve found an intact armory or main engineering...”
They walked in silence for a hundred solon, until the mind-signatures of the rest of the ground team came into range.
Well, the loroi ones, at least; it was still eerie to only sense the ODSTs waiting there once she could physically see them herself.
“[Sir.]” The ODST leader said. “[Any idea what happened? To the evac fleet?]”
“[No more than you do, Sarah. But we know where to go for answers.]” The Colonel said. Turning to the lead teidar, he added in Trade “My people will take point, once we’re inside. Better familiarity with the environment, and all that.”
After a few solon, the teidar nodded.
Talon eyed the field-patched crack that crossed the red-haired loroi’s visor, and sent quietly to Beryl <What damaged her helmet?>
<She jumped from the surface onto the cargo elevator when it was halfway down the shaft.>
That was well over a hundred mannal, straight down. <Is that…
normal behavior for teidar?> Talon had not had much cause to interact with members of that caste, before. It was only recently that the tenoin found herself pressed into ground battles. Not what she had mostly trained for, but the rewards had been worth it thus far. And every warrior was expected to maintain her abilities as an individual combatant, a task which Talon had not let slip.
<For
her? Yes.> Beryl sent back, sub-channels radiating amusement at the teidar she had come to consider a friend.
The loroi in question sent to the team <We teidar will follow close behind the human warriors. Tempo will translate between us and the aliens. Beryl, you and the pilot will stay behind us.>
A wave of acknowledgments came back.
Meanwhile, one of the humans crouched next to the control station by the ancient airlock. “[Ready to crank it open on command, sir.]”
“[Understood. Remember people, gloves are off now. No holding back. Get it open, Private.]”
Metal shrieked as the airlock hatch slowly ground open under the muscle power of a single human.
“[They’ll definitely know we’re coming, now.]”
“[Pretty sure they figured that out when all their buddies up here got turned into soup.]”
The humans slipped through the opening as soon as it was wide enough, followed shortly by the teidar.
As she passed through the loroi-sized airlock, Talon eyed it. <Could hardtroops really fit through this?>
<Knowing the Shells,> replied Beryl, <They might have removed some of their limbs first and re-attached them afterwards.>
Talon shuddered at the thought.
The inside of the vessel was pitch-black, illuminated only by the flashlights of the ODSTs and a the clip-on stronger lights that Talon had carried down from the ship and were now attached to each loroi’s suit.
Advancing down the cramped corridor, Beryl observed <The vessel is in remarkably good condition given its likely age.>
Ahead, Colonel Jardin inspected his datapad. “Wall markings say we’re about a kilometer forward of the main atrium, just above the crew quarters. We’ll head to the nearest transit shaft and head down to main engineering first. That should have hard-copy records of any ship refits or equipment transfers; it’ll give us an idea what to look for from there.”
The humans took off running down the corridor, the loroi keeping pace behind them.
After some solons, Beryl sent <Interesting.>
Talon looked over at the listel. <?>
<In our attack on the ground camp earlier,> the white-haired loroi continued as the group threaded their way through corridors and intersections <the ODSTs were running significantly slower, and the teidar left them well behind.>
<Leaving the fighting to the teidar?> asked Talon. <Do they already know the red-haired one so well as to realize how she would appreciate having the Shells left to her?>
<Possible.> Beryl mused. <But I think it is also likely that they were observing the teidar in action, seeing how they fought.>
Talon frowned. <They feel 'suspicious' towards us?> She’d certainly never gotten that feeling from Alex, but she hadn’t interacted with any of their ODST warriors. And from what Alex had explained about this ‘ONI,’ his uncle was some sort of human mizol: he was probably
always suspicious of those around him.
<It seems more likely that they wished to determine how much faith they could put in our warriors’ abilities.> She glanced at Talon, as the two of them caught up with the group stopped in front of a large, wide door spanning the opposite side of a T-intersection. <They have seen how well you tenoin fight in space, and now they wished to see how well teidar fight on the ground.>
Talon straightened up at the compliment.
Up ahead, one of the human warriors had again knelt by a manual-opening crank. “[Ready, sir.]”
“[Open it.]”
As soon as the door ahead opened a crack, air whistled past the group and into the compartment beyond.
“The transit tubes were pumped down to vacuum.” mused the Colonel. “Quite interesting.”
“Is that normal?” asked Tempo.
“If they expected combat or serious damage, yes.”
<Since their ship ended up crashed hundreds of mannal underground, I think they were
right.> sent Talon.
<It is not for certain that they crashed underground.> Beryl sent, her side-channels granting glimpses of her rapid thoughts. <The geological features in the area are—> She froze.
Several solons passed, while air continued to vent.
<Beryl?> asked Tempo.
<The dig site!> Beryl sent the overhead image that they had all first glimpsed from the Plummet’s first approach to the moon. The image slowly pulled back, showing the location of the dig site in context.
...at the end of a long, smooth-edged valley. Old and weathered, enough that it hadn’t stood out as a notable feature earlier, but now?
Talon’s eyebrows rose. <You think that they
caused that?>
<A ship of that size, crashing at significant speed? It is possible, assuming that the vessel could be made strong enough to survive the impact.>
One of the teidar standing by the door whirled around to look back at them. For a moment, Talon thought that the purple-haired loroi was reacting to their conversation — neither she nor Beryl had been trying to keep their sending private — but then she registered that the teidar’s focus reached
past them.
<Hardtroop. Thirty mannal distant. Side-corridor.> A loud
thunk echoed down their own corridor, followed by a rattling of metal. <Eliminated.>
The three teidar looked around, scanning to the sides, above, and below. <No more Shells within detection range.> confirmed the one who had acted.
Tempo nodded. <They knew that at least one teidar was part of our party. They have likely dispersed throughout the ship; the Enemy knows that they can’t face a teidar, but they can force us to travel in a group for protection.>
The red-haired teidar — ‘Fireblade,’ if Talon remembered Beryl’s sending earlier correctly — added <Then it is fortunate that that was already our plan.> She eyed Tempo and added a brief message.
Which the mizol then repeated aloud “Keep your vision sharp for Enemy explosive traps. They may have had time to bring such equipment in to this vessel with them.”
“Noted, thank you.” Colonel Jardin said. The rushing air had finally died down, and the door was cranked open only just enough for one loroi or human to pass through. No reason to make it any easier for the hardtroops to follow. “On the plus side, with the ship pumped down for combat, we can tell if a compartment’s likely to have been breached recently.”
Good point.
The group filed through, lights illuminating a metal cargo platform, hanging over a bottomless shaft and suspended from a vertical metal rail that ran from the shadowed depths below up in a curve off to a side route. “[Corporal Anders, is it safe to use?]” asked the human Colonel.
One of the ODSTs stepped forward, pulling a tool from her belt. Two of the other warriors grabbed her legs and held her higher up, so that she could wave the tool past the mechanism connecting the platform to the rail. “[Wear’s within the safety limits, sir, but I wouldn’t go too fast. Don’t think we’ll be able to really put the pedal down anyways, using portable power.]”
The two supporting warriors set her back down on the plating with a clang. “[Goddamn, they really built these things to last, huh?]”
“[Structural-grade Titanium-B, in a near-vacuum, underground with no radiation or thermal exposure? It’ll last as long again and probably still be safe.]” The human gallen stepped carefully onto the platform, shifting her weight around.
The platform didn’t move.
The rest of the aliens boarded, their Colonel keying his radio “This tram should be plenty safe with just us on it. It’s a lot faster than walking.”
Talon was among the last to climb aboard, her eyes dropping to glance at the shadows below, stretching beyond the reach of their carried lights.
At her side, Beryl looked wistfully back the way they came. <The Shells hiding around the ship does mean that fully exploring this vessel will have to wait until a much larger team from the Tinza fleet can land and search it in force.>
Talon didn’t need to examine the listel’s side-channels to feel her disappointed curiosity. <It’s been here a quarter-million years. It’ll still be here waiting for you, later.>
The ODST gallen knelt by a console off to one side on the platform, opening a panel in its front. “[Backup power pack’s long-gone, of course. Guess that was a bit much to hope for.]” She pulled a fist-sized canister from her belt and reached into the depths of the machine.
Underfoot, the platform lurched slightly. “[And there we go.]”
Talon peered at the alien energy carbine slung over the human’s shoulder. Specifically, the identical canister which was attached just forward of the main grip. She pinged an alert to Beryl. <It seems that the humans use a standardized energy pack for their machinery and small-arms both.>
That was the sort of technological trick that was sure to interest the listel and bring her mood up. Talon had heard enough hangar-technician gallen complaining about the logistics of managing many machines — hand tools, APUs, munitions carts, etc. — each with their own slightly-different power requirements and battery packs to know what a useful bit of technology that was.
<Really?> Her plan worked; Beryl’s sub-channels radiated her own interest. <That is a most interesting design choice! The degree of centralization which it implies about their society is surprising, from what they have told us earlier.>
The purple-haired teidar grumbled <Or perhaps they don’t let
aliens build most of their warriors' equipment.>
Beryl responded <That could account for it, yes. Either way, it shows a dedication towards standardization that may tell us much about their society!>
This time, it was the junior-most teidar who sent next <Well, at least we know that they truly do not so much mind being in close proximity to each other.> Her sanzai included a note about how cramped the corridor was that they had come here through, by comparison to those found aboard Loroi warships.
The platform shook slightly underfoot, before with a chorus of metallic creaks and groans it began to descend along the metal rail.
“Next stop, Main Engineering.” Colonel Jardin announced.
Talon sent to Beryl <I think that Alex would be happy to tell you much about his people’s society.>
<That is true, he is certainly friendly enough. But he is also only one person, and so is not a sufficient source for properly learning about an alien society.>
Talon glanced aside at Beryl, and shook her head with a smile.
Listel.
The cargo tram traveled on, shifting smoothly — well, relatively smoothly — between vertical and horizontal travel several times. Every time they switched, there was a door ahead of them that had to be manually cranked open. Which also meant several dozen solon waiting for the air pressure to equalize before proceeding.
Tempo asked “This vessel does not have direct transit routes? Such a path as this cannot be especially efficient.”
On the plus side, there had been no further Shell contacts. The Enemy must not have penetrated too far into the ship on foot, not yet.
“The
Infinity-class were designed to serve as auxiliary warships as needed. Every few compartments are grouped into reinforced sections, internally armored. The transit corridors dog-leg when they pass through, to stop a direct line from channeling a potential blast straight into the armored doors and jamming them.” Colonel Jardin responded.
That was an interesting design choice. It must have made the craft much heavier than they would otherwise have been. Loroi warships rarely bothered — the reduced maneuverability just meant that the ship was more likely to
get hit in the first place. Besides, with the weapons used in modern warfare, almost any significant hit to a ship would either be stopped by the screens & armor or it would cripple the ship… at which point the vessel would be utterly unable to dodge or survive the follow-up shots which would surely follow.
Was the balance of weapons versus defenses
so different, in the era of the Human-Soia wars? Or was there some calculation that she was missing? It did not seem likely that an eight-thousand mannal long ship — larger than most stations! — could dodge especially well, but she also acknowledged that she did not know what its engine systems were like.
The ride continued in silence, ODSTs and teidar sweeping their lights across the sides of the transit corridor as they swept past. The only sound was the intermittent squeaking of the millennia-old propulsion mechanism that moved the tram. Until—
“Well. So much for the direct route.” Colonel Jardin deadpanned, looking at the torn and bent metal which reached down from the ceiling to the floor, ahead. He tapped at the datapad in his hand. “Nearest access point is a maintenance tunnel fifty meters back, should take us down into engineering past the forward reactors.”
The group stepped out onto the narrow walkway mounted mid-height on one side of the corridor, presumably a maintenance aid. Once more forced into single-file, they proceeded for some distance back the way they’d come.
This next hatch was small enough that the Colonel himself crouched down and grabbed hold of the circular handle. Putting his weight into it, he unsealed the heavy metal plate and swung it down while stepping to the side to avoid the expected inrush of air.
None came.
“This section’s been opened before. Keep your weapons ready.” The human unwittingly echoed Fireblade’s simultaneous sanzai command.
He — wisely — stepped aside and let his second-in-command go first, followed by the red-haired teidar. Armored boots echoed against ancient steel, reverberating down the tiny passageway.
Thinking of which, what was it with humans and tight spaces on their ships? Was there not enough room on an eight-thousand mannal warship, that they had to squeeze every last cubic finger-length with armored plating or machinery?
Talon was the last one down the ladder, closing the hatch behind them. As a silver crest to this particular wave, at least the cramped quarters would make it difficult and slow for any hardtroops to traverse after them.
The ladder emptied out into a corridor smaller than the transit one above, but still close to what loroi would consider comfortable. The ODSTs were already halfway down to the nearest bend, moving at a jog.
Around the corner, there was another long, open stretch which led to a closed hatch some hundred mannal distant. When partway into that open space, Tempo asked pointedly <Teidar, would any of you be able to accurately employ your powers against a target as distant as the length of this corridor?>
Her side-channels highlighted both the utter lack of any form of cover in the corridor as well as the multiple small, recessed ports in the hatchway ahead. Talon’s training lay in navigation and fighter tactics rather than shipboard fighting, but it didn’t take much imagination to recognize infantry
firing ports.
<Not with useful accuracy, Parat.> replied Fireblade. Her own side-channels, as well as those of her caste-sisters, signaled their agreement with the sub-verbal point that the mizol had made.
This was clearly some sort of internal-security station. One that had been designed with defending against teidar. Or ‘Guards,’ technically.
Talon shuddered as they jogged along, glancing around the featureless gray walls of the corridor. A place specifically designed by aliens to efficiently kill loroi.
How many ancient servants of the Soia had met their end in a kill-box much like this one?
The armored hatch here took longer to crank open; likely it was heavier than those not used for defensive emplacements. Colonel Jardin didn’t say anything about the place. The question was whether that was because he didn’t want to discuss the topic, or because he thought the loroi with him hadn’t made the realization themselves.
Probably the former – the human had worked enough with Tempo and Fireblade to surely realize that they would make the obvious connections between the design elements.
On the plus side, the rush of air into this next compartment reassured them that they had gotten ahead of the Shells.
“There we are.” Jardin said, as the group stepped out of a small alcove into a largely-open space. “The forward reactors, or at least one of the chambers.”
If the group had had a gallen along with them, she would certainly have been drowning the humans with questions right now.
That said, Beryl asked almost as many. “What sort of reactors were used on a vessel this large?”
“Standard catalyzed-fusion design, same as any large UNSC warship.”
“Fusion?” The listel asked. “Is that not very much inefficient compared to using refined antimatter?”
“Antimatter? On a warship? That’s just asking for a penetrating hit to the tanks or engineering to wipe the whole ship. With redundant fusion reactors, you get better survivability.”
“And significantly greater fuel use.” noted Beryl.
“Almost a hundred times the fuel mass for a catalyzed-fusion setup, if I remember my basic education. But on a ship the size of an Infinity, larger tanks aren’t much of a problem anyways. It helps that near-inert fuel is much easier to store. They’re part of the internal armoring for a lot of warships, for that matter.”
He traced one gloved hand along the long-dead display of a control console. “Sure, you can still overcharge them to get a big explosion out of one of these, but you’d have to do so from inside the ship, and deliberately.”
The group passed through another narrow corridor, turning into a compartment that looked more like an admiral’s office than anything. All it lacked was a bustling crowd of torrai sorimi and listel pasadi. “And here we go. The central maintenance offices.”
Ah. It would have been a crowd of
gallen, then.
Multiple consoles and terminals lined the walls, while the interior of the room featured two parallel rows of desks, covered in dust.
Jardin stepped up to the dust and ran one finger along it. “Paper copies are gone, no surprise. I don’t think they would have lasted this long even if we hadn’t re-pressurized the place.” Walking past the desks, he stepped through a door at the back of the room which Talon had missed.
She eyed the paper-dust as the senior officers and the ODST technician followed him into the small room — presumably a senior gallen’s private office. The Colonel had said that this office would have tracked every design or loadout change made to the vessel, and likely far more besides.
Talon had heard more than a few gallen complaining during shared bathing times about how much work it was to keep up with
Tempest’s maintenance, especially given that ship’s status as the last of his class. Worn-out hardware that had to be kept working with improvised ‘fixes’ because the only replacements that they could get from the Fleet wouldn’t be compatible with other systems, software that was more patch than original code, machines fooled into working by gallen carefully — and angrily — customizing the controls, stuff like that.
What would it have been like to have to track maintenance procedures for a ship from a nation that had
no more replacements coming? Towards the end of humanity’s doomed defense, when vessels like this one were being prepared to flee off into the unknown? Knowing that any machine which broke down would never be replaced? And recording all of this on physical copies?
Talon carefully rested one hand on the back of the chair — normal-looking for an alien design, but then the humans weren’t exactly ‘alien’ in form — and sent a private reassurance to the memory of whatever long-dead human had once worked there. Even today, there was someone who appreciated the challenges that they must have faced.
“Ah, here. Maintenance and refit logs.” Jardin’s voice could be heard, drawing Beryl and Talon over to the small room. He stood in front of a computer terminal, a cable connecting it to the datapad in his hands. “Let’s see what they were up to... offloaded passengers and cargo, restocked weapons, and… refitted missile pods?”
The Colonel leaned one shoulder against the wall, peering down at the ‘pad. His eyebrows rose. “Last date was three months after we went under.” His helmet rose, brows furrowed as he stared off into the distance.
“[There’s one more file, sir.]” the ODST technician stood up next to him, pointing over his shoulder at something on the datapad. “[It’s not linked text, so the maintenance systems didn’t display it automatically. It looks like a video recording, but it’s not formatted as coming from engineering.]”
“[Yes, I saw it.]” Jardin’s gaze sharpened and he glanced around the room at the other humans and loroi within. “[It’s flagged as the Captain’s own log, but it’s missing any trace of the expected encryption. Hell, may as well play it; what’s a secret that’s a quarter-million years out-of-date?]” He tapped at the screen.
Talon’s eyes widened as the datapad projected a video, of a human wearing an unarmored UNSC uniform. This one certainly looked the part of an aged warrior, the sharp lines on her face framed by brown hair mostly faded to gray. Yet for all her apparently extreme age — assuming that the signs meant the same as on loroi — her green eyes were steady as they bored into the camera.
“[Date is 2620, September 19th. Final log before re-entry attempt. If you’re seeing this, the attempt was a failure and we ricocheted back into deep slipspace. Yet enough of the ship must have survived for this message to be recovered, which indicates some progress. Our navigational data and best estimates for our planned trajectory back into realspace are appended to this file.]”
The human woman leaned closer to the camera, and Talon felt Beryl’s concentration as the listel focused on memorizing every sound for when she could understand the language later. “[The most important part is that our sensors have confirmed the system we are attempting to re-enter as the source of the slipspace-realspace barrier disruptions. It’s in the star charts as the ‘Soell’ system, no visit history. We’ve confirmed our readings with UNSC
Mobius and triangulated the target. My money’s on some sort of Soia pursuit-weapon, keeping the evac fleet trapped in slipspace. Damned if I know how they’re getting that to work almost a thousand light-years away, however.]”
Talon couldn’t follow the alien’s words, but just watching the expressions on the faces of the humans in the room shift from confusion to horror gave her a guess.
It wasn’t good news.
The human in the video leaned back, mouth pressing into a thin line. “[I’ve sent a copy of this log and all of our findings back to the rally point via probe. Something will get back to the fleet, no matter how our attempt goes. A second probe is set to launch when — if — we reenter realspace. You’ve apparently picked up at least one of them or you wouldn’t have found us, so Godspeed and better luck with your own efforts.
“[Admiral Keyes, out.]”
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
In the thousand or so solon since the video had ended, Talon hadn’t seen Colonel Jardin’s face change at all. It had been an unmoving rictus of anger and determination as he had tersely summarized the video to the loroi, it had been the same rictus as he had all-but-ordered them to follow him to the probe launch systems in the ship’s bow, and it was
still the same expression that she could see now as he glanced back at the loroi following in the wake of his own warriors.
“Atmosphere’s already present in this section.” The hatch opening behind him without any movement of air confirmed his words. “The bugs are here, or have been here already. Parat Tempo, you can interrogate any of them we catch alive?”
“With physical contact, yes.” the mizol confirmed.
“Good. Teidar, when you ‘see’ one of them, take them out non-lethally if possible. We need to know if they’ve found one of Mandelbrot’s probes. That might have led them to this ship… and it could lead them to the evacuation fleet.”
Fireblade visibly bristled as the human spoke to her as if to a subordinate. But her radiating irritation didn’t last long, tamped down quickly by a wave of understanding. After a few solon, she nodded.
Not a surprise to Talon — the whole crew of
Tempest had known enough about their lead teidar’s background to see why she of all people might by sympathetic to the humans’ situation. If anyone in the universe had lost as much as had a survivor of Seren, it was one of the ten aliens in front of her.
And now there was a chance of finding something of them left behind, even if it was just a lifeless fleet of transports drifting forever in the starless void of slipspace?
The ODSTs spread out through the hatchway; if Talon’s mental following of their route was correct, they should soon return to the transit vehicle that they had left behind before descending to engineering.
While the humans were silent as they moved along, a barrage of sanzai flowed back and forth.
Most of it was above Talon’s caste-grade, strategic considerations that Beryl and Tempo discussed with each other. Only occasionally did they ask a question of Talon.
<The human admiral’s message did not state how many of their vessels remained active in the evacuation fleet when she departed.> Beryl pointed out. <But yes, if that group consisted of multiple transport vessels similar to this craft, then finding them would be a significant boon to any Union researchers who could reach it.>
<Or especially if
it could reach
them.> Tempo responded. She pinged for Talon’s attention. <Tenoin arrir, have Alexander Jardin’s instructions on slipspace navigation mentioned how well-preserved such craft might be after many millennia of drifting there?>
Talon thought for several solon while the group jogged on. <Negative, mizol parat. But at one point he did say that Soia stasis chambers worked by shifting their contents into slipspace. That implies that being present in slipspace protects objects from decay.>
Beryl mused <And yet the chamber we entered onboard that Soia dreadstar was separately frozen in
time, even though the ship as a whole was already present in slipspace. Well, the
chunk of the ship that we found. Perhaps some sort of ‘pocket’ was formed?> The listel’s frustrated-but-curious side-channels emphasized just how little she — or any living loroi — knew about the strange new mechanics of this realm of FTL travel.
<It is possible then that there might be still-living people preserved aboard the ships, if we can find them?> Tempo’s sub-channels showed her tempered interest.
<Not impossible, parat.> Beryl responded hesitantly. <But the fact that the Soia added specific preservation systems within certain compartments implies that merely being
present in slipspace does not entirely prevent the passage of time.>
<That is a good point.> Tempo sent. <And yet—>
<Contact.> sent Fireblade, highlighting a pair of Shell signatures that she could perceive.
“Colonel Jardin, we have detected two Enemy personnel in the next compartment.” Tempo relayed. “They are standard workers, not hardtroops.”
The ODSTs slid to a halt near the next hatch, carefully not touching it. “Can you disable them from here?” the Colonel asked.
Fireblade and the second-most-senior teidar stepped forward, close to the ODSTs. Their gazes locked on the two enemies behind the bulkhead.
Even as Talon observed, the two signatures flickered, fading.
“They are neutralized for now, while we focus on them.” Tempo said.
Without their leader having to say anything, two of the ODSTs immediately dropped to the door crank and threw their weight into it.
Colonel Jardin immediately slipped through the hatchway as soon as there was room, his second-in-command reaching after him with one arm and a shouted warning.
The Colonel then
flew backwards out of the doorway at speed, accompanied by a loud
bang and bright flash.
Talon jumped aside as the human skidded across the floor to slam into the wall behind them.
“[Fucking mine!]” One of the ODSTs shouted, kneeling in the entrance and scanning his lights across the corridor beyond. “[I don’t see a second!]”
The human technician had another tool out, waving it before her as she gingerly stepped through. “[Looks like it was just the one. Big blast, though. Shaped charge.]”
Talon and Beryl sprinted over to Jardin and leaned over him as he slowly climbed to his feet, waving them back. “Shield took it. These bugs don’t kid around with the explosives, do they? You and they don’t even
have shields.”
Tempo watched him as he walked back to the hatch, her arms crossed as the concern faded from her mind-signature. “By the size of the blast, that was likely a repurposed excavation or forced-entry charge. You are most fortunate to remain alive.”
The yellow-haired teidar sent <However the humans make these energy ‘shields,’ that would be a useful piece of equipment for the Union!> Her side-channels flicked through her thoughts on just what sort of tactical options such protection could open up.
“[Clear, sir!]” shouted one of the ODSTs from the next compartment. “[Two bugs secured.]”
The group followed through, two Shells pinned to the floor underneath four ODSTs each. Definitely overkill for the low-gravity aliens, on a world that was a bit heavy even for loroi preferences.
Talon eyed the blackened blast-mark etched into the floor near the entrance. No visible damage to the metal plating, only discoloration. And from a breaching charge?
Jardin waved Tempo forward as he stepped aside, speaking to his own warriors “[You can say one good thing about the Soia: they didn’t make aliens
this ugly.]”
The mizol set to work.
<Interesting.> Beryl observed. <These are shipboard Umiak workers. Note the smaller size of the body, the lack of a thumb-spike, and thinner limbs. Not planetary laborers, and certainly not infantry soldiers.>
<That implies that the Hierarchy did not send specialized excavation workers.> noted Tempo, her side-channels flickering between her own thoughts and those relayed from the terrified alien under her hand. <Very interesting.>
After a few solon of concentration, she nodded and stood. The Shell she had interrogated twitched as a needle-precise telekinetic strike severed its spinal cord. The body slumped to the ground, mandibles tapping weakly against the floor for a few beats before stilling forever.
“Anything?” Asked Colonel Jardin.
Tempo shook her head. “These two were common laborers, sent to set charges throughout the ship. They do not know of any probe recovered, only the outline of the excavation of the vessel.”
“Do they know how their people found the ship in the first place?”
“Routine magnetic survey of the moon.”
The human’s eyebrows rose. “Either their sensors are very sensitive, or they must have been well within the atmosphere already to spot a ship this deep on magnetics.”
“The Enemy are known for their near-maniacal dedication to even the smallest detail. Surveying any system they control down to such a level would be expected for them.” Tempo responded as she briefly checked the second Shell. With a brief shake of her head, she sent it to join the first in oblivion.
“[Damn, that’s cold.]” commented one of the Helljumpers.
Colonel Jardin asked “Nothing more in that one?”
“No more than the first.”
“A pity.” The humans unceremoniously moved off to one side of the compartment and cranked open another hatch. This time, the recognizable walls of the transit corridor greeted them. “Nothing for it but to check on the probe launch systems. We’ll hike back to the tram, backtrack to the main route and follow that all the way forward to the bow.”
As the warriors piled aboard the cargo tram, Beryl asked “Is it common for human vessels to position the hangar bays at the front of vessels?”
“Hangars?” Jardin looked at her, frowning. Then his face cleared. “Ah, no. Message probes are launched from the main mass driver in the bow. Kicks them straight into slipspace.”
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
They eventually disembarked, went through another security checkpoint, and came to—
“
This is a mass driver?” Beryl asked, looking up along the ancient metal tube overhead in the cavernous chamber which disappeared off into the shadows forward.
“Hmm?” Colonel Jardin looked up from the console he had re-powered. “Oh, yes.” He turned to his ODSTs. “[The firing logs are corrupted. Go look inside the barrels and see if there’s a probe sitting there.]”
Four of the human warriors set off, climbing the series of ladders up to the metal scaffolding which lined each colossal barrel far overhead.
“But they seem most large!” The listel continued, her side-channels counting her estimate of the size of the weapons before them.
One of the remaining ODSTs said in broken Trade, “Thirty-five mannals between sides. Largest in fleet at end of First War.”
Talon eyed the structures. That
was the sort of weapon she’d want, going into a fight against an enemy who considered ‘moon’ to be a good size for a warship. After all, a target that large wasn’t going to dodge even something as slow as a mass driver round.
She needed a closer look.
She and Beryl each moved for the ladders at the same time, Talon holding back to let the listel go first. They reached the top just as the nearer team of two ODSTs began to crank open a massive metal plate in the side of the barrel. The four of them stepped through with flashlights in hand, playing the beams over the interior.
“[Nothing here, sir. Port-side MAC’s empty.]”
The other team added “[Starboard’s clear, too.]”
“[Any sign of a recent firing?]”
“[Can’t say I know what to look for, sir. But we’ve got our helmet cams rolling; we’ll see if the kid can poke through the footage later and spot anything.]”
<It seems empty to me.> Talon sent.
<Agreed.> Beryl added. <And I understood enough of the human warriors’ speech there to hear that they see the same.>
Sanzai faint with distance, Tempo replied <Good progress, listel. Return down here; we will likely leave soon.>
As the six warriors reached the bottom of the ladders, Colonel Jardin’s voice faded into earshot “So. We have a probe that
may have been launched,
may be in the hands — or claws — of the Bugs, and
may be able to lead them to our refugee fleet. Assuming they can figure out how to get into slipspace, but if they have had
Mandelbrot’s drive to examine...”
“It seems unlikely that such a probe would remain in a functional state after this large amount of time.” Tempo replied, gesturing with one hand to the MAC cannons overhead.
“Depends where it went. They’re pretty solid-state, so it would take a good while to decay enough that no data could be pulled. But yes, if it went into orbit around the system primary that would still be enough to have fried it long ago. But if it ended up buried into another planet, like this ship?”
“And if the Shells did recover it?”
“Well, assuming it’s got the same data as in Admiral Keyes’ last message, they’d have a pretty accurate idea of where to look for the refugee fleet. That’s a bit over a hundred
Infinity-class transports, some armed… and either one or two fully-operational moon-ships. Depends if
Equalizer and the Second Legion stayed behind as a rearguard or left with the fleet.”
With the group back together, Jardin led them towards the exit from the cavernous compartment, but not the one they’d entered through. “We’ll check the bridge, next, if it’s still in one piece. If any of the computers there survived, they might have more accurate navigational data.”
A cold shiver ran down Talon’s spine. The thought of the Shells finding an entire fleet of ancient warships, ready to look over… a thought struck her. “Would these ships still have survivors on them? In sleep aboard the stasis chambers?” The loroi hadn't known enough to guess, but presumably the human might.
“Can’t say for certain, but my money’s on ‘yes.’” replied the human leader. “UNSC stasis technology would not hold up for anywhere near this amount of time, but the fact that the passengers from
Mandelbrot and
Mobius were offloaded to 'somewhere' indicates that they decided to throw in with the rebel loroi aboard their moon-ships. And Soia stasis fields can easily hold for this long, especially if the ships were held in a stable slipspace pocket.”
Tempo asked “And how would they be likely to react to being ‘found’ by the Hierarchy?”
“That depends on just how much the Bugs know about them and how they choose to open things.” he said, leading the group down a stairwell behind the teidar and ODSTs. Talon glanced over the side and shone a hand-light down the central shaft.
The flashlight beam disappeared into the darkness, at least a hundred mannal below.
Colonel Jardin continued “Assuming that the rebel loroi did take aboard the humans of the refugee fleet, then we can take it for granted that if the Bugs decide to fight the Legions then the UNSC remnant will fight alongside the loroi. Not that I think they’d need the help — the Second Legion had been through the wringer in the withdrawal from Earth, but the Eleventh was near full-strength when they were pulled off the front lines.”
Beryl’s burning curiosity as to just how Soia-era loroi society had been structured glowed brighter than the hand-light in the listel’s grip. But her side-channels acknowledged that this was not the time to ask.
“And if the Enemy does not attempt to begin hostilities?” asked Tempo.
The human shrugged. “We’d never seen aliens like the Bugs before. If they play their cards right, the Legions and the UNSC might end up
helping them. Play up your Union as 'Soia Remnants' or something like that.”
“These rebel loroi would aid a war against their own people?” Tempo asked, even as her side-channels radiated her lack of surprise.
“They’ve fought their sisters before.” Jardin said. “The only species that has only ever been on one side of the Wars has been Humanity.” In a nonchalant voice, he added “Pity we were on the losing end both times.”
The stairwell ended, leading into a short corridor and another armored doorway. The human penchant for excessive interior reinforcement of their ships was starting to become familiar to Talon. It was still borderline claustrophobia-inducing to walk through the narrow alien corridors compared to something more comfortably scaled, but she was learning to put up with it.
“[Hold up, sir.]” The human gallen raised one hand in a fist, waving her scanning device over the hatch even as one of her fellow warriors crouched by the manual-opening crank. “[Electrical activity on the other side of the door.]”
“[Map says through there should be the upper bridge maintenance access.]” Jardin said. “[The Bugs could have brought some of the computer systems online.]”
“[Might be, sir.]” the technician’s voice was doubtful. “[Readings are faint, but they would be for a system that old, vacuum or no.]”
“[Open it.]” Jardin instructed the ODST at the door controls.
Beryl sent <From what I could understand, it seems that this should lead to the ship’s command deck, and that the Shells may have already begun to search the ship’s electronics systems there.>
At that, the junior-most teidar walked over to stand behind the technician who knelt in front of the door. Watching in curiosity as the human warrior fiddled with the tool in her hands. “[Bit of a fluctuation in the readings, just—]” her voice sharpened, “[Shit! BOMB!]”
She threw herself aside, legs uncoiling like a spring.
Which left one junior teidar standing
exposed in front of the still-opening door.
The ODST cranking the door pushed himself off from the wall, tackling the telekinetic warrior just as a gout of flame vented out of the open doorway. Slammed into them.
A bright energy field flared into being around the human. The two warriors skidded down the corridor, armor clattering off the floor tiles.
Talon flew aside under a telekinetic shove, the whole group scattering before the flames which poured from the hatch.
<Injuries?> Asked the lead teidar.
A wave of negative confirmations came back, tinged with pleased surprise in the case of one junior teidar.
With a pulse of her own telekinesis, the warrior pushed herself upright and aside. A solon later, and the ODST also floated to his feet, clearly startled at the movement.
Another human warrior immediately reached over and pulled him to the wall and out of the hot air. “[Good save, Chuck.]”
As the white-hot gases began to slow down in their venting, the human technician shouted to be heard “[That was a lot bigger than just some mine. Sir, I think they rigged the whole damn bridge to blow! I’m reading antiparticles in the blast mix; I doubt anything’s left of the computers!]”
“[Get in there as soon as it’s safe and see if anything can be salvaged.]” the Colonel’s voice was sharp enough that it could only be an order.
<The Shells seem to have destroyed the ship systems which we came here to find.> sent Beryl, disappointed. <Their gallen does not believe that anything may remain.>
<Unfortunate, but not surprising.> mused Tempo. <The Enemy would likely have recognized the compartment and realized its importance.>
The ODST technician stepped carefully through the still-glowing doorway, one arm raised protectively in front of her face. “[Jesus Christ, even the floor plating’s half-slagged.]” Around her, a faint energy field glowed where the last gasps of the superheated air streamed past the alien warrior.
None of the loroi moved to follow the humans inside, at least not just yet. Talon could feel the blistering heat radiating off of the visibly-warped floor and machinery even through her flight armor. The humans might be crazy enough to go inside right now, but they had energy shielding to protect them. She had only the insulation of her boots, probably made by some neridi lowest-bidd—
Metal groaned under the concentrated attention of three teidar, rising threads of thermal distortion fading as a narrow path of floor plating was thermokinetically
forced to cool. Not quickly, but faster than it would otherwise.
Along the narrow route of tolerably-warm metal, the loroi party followed their human allies.
<I wish I could have seen it before it was destroyed.> Beryl sent, her head turning one way and another as she took in the obliterated compartment. <It is now hard to tell what machinery once existed here.> She paused, side-channels radiating confusion. <Although from what appear to be the remains of control consoles throughout the room, I cannot see the logic in their positioning.>
Tempo replied <You may yet have the opportunity to see such a craft undamaged.> She turned to eye Talon. <If our attempts to tie the humans closer to us have worked, then they will hopefully allow us to accompany them further on their next journey.>
<Next journey?> Talon asked, frowning slightly. After the Tinza fleet had secured this system, where would—
The realization hit her and Beryl at the same moment, judging by the listel’s side-channels.
But Tempo laid it out clearly anyways. <These humans had come to the Soia Ring in the first place in order to cover for their refugee fleet’s withdrawal. They had even even accepted that they would not return from that mission. And now that they are told that their refugees were not
able to flee? There is only one place that the Colonel and his warriors will wish to go from here.>
Her side-channels highlighted Talon. <And judging by how well their pilot has worked with Beryl and you two tenoin, it is very likely that we will go with them. You have done very well at learning their ship-handling and ‘slipspace’ navigation.>
Talon pulled back her shoulders proudly, as she turned to look across the half-melted control consoles that had once lined the human warship’s bridge. <That is perhaps why their Colonel asked me to accompany this exploration, to look through the computer systems and see where it had traveled from.> Her side-channels admitted that he hadn’t specified between her and Spiral. She held one hand out above the ancient machinery, feeling the heat through the thermal lining of her palm. <Although I think that the chance to examine
this ship’s systems may be gone.>
<That is perhaps his reasoning.> mused Tempo, watching the human warriors as they methodically checked one all-but-destroyed machine after another.
<What other cause could he have?> asked Talon, more interested than offended.
<I can imagine three. First, for your skills and knowledge in human navigation systems in addition to Beryl’s own experience observing the same. Second, so that his nephew and Spiral could be alone on the ship together; some conversations are easier between only two people.>
Talon smirked. Farm-girl certainly wouldn’t mind
that reasoning.
Tempo continued <And three: So that there would be only one loroi warrior aboard the ship with his pilot in the event that he had to take actions which we might object to.>
The smirk fell of of Talon’s face. She spun to face the mizol, confusion spreading across her face. <Explain.> By the puzzled side-channels of the rest of the loroi, she wasn’t the only one who felt lost.
All except one: the lead teidar. Her mind-signature gave away nothing, as she stood like a statue by the entry hatchway.
<The Colonel knew only that the Enemy had access to his people’s artifacts.> The mizol explained. <He could have no way of knowing exactly how that came to be. What if it had been discovered that the human refugees had escaped the Soia long ago, and now some faction of them had returned to this sector of the galaxy with a base hidden under this moon’s surface... and were willingly trading with or even outright
supporting the Hierarchy? If a senior military officer of his people had been present here and ordered him to abandon us on the surface, or even to fire on us?>
Talon’s blood chilled, and she stared at the mizol who so calmly described such a vile scenario.
The parat’s sub-channels showed no concern. <I did not think that that third possibility was likely; we do not know how capable their pilot would be in personal-scale fighting and it would have been simple enough instead for the Colonel to invent some excuse for having one of his ODST warriors remain behind.>
Picturing Alex
fighting Spiral made Talon’s stomach clench.
Tempo turned her head to fix Talon with a calm gaze. <It was a risk worth taking. If we had refused his request, that would indicate a lack of trust and damage much of the rapport which we have carefully built over this last nanapi.>
Talon turned away, glaring at some rack of unrecognizable machinery slumped in a corner of the room. Just the idea that—!
She wrestled her thoughts aside.
Warriors did not think in such ways, not about good allies that had fought alongside them already in several battles!
Some of what was on her mind must have leaked out, as Tempo sent <They have not been
fully truthful with us. Several of their conversations and spoken explanations have been clearly… ‘altered’ or truncated to hide some piece of information which they do not want us to know.>
The mizol glanced aside to Beryl, who pursed her lips and added a few brief memories of different talks with the humans, showing where one or more of them had definitely been about to say something before changing their spoken sentence.
Talon balled her hand into a fist and only barely held herself back from slamming it against the console in front of her. The only thing that helped keep her stomach down was that it was
Alex who had repeatedly been about to be fully open and honest with them — as a good warrior should — before his alien-mizol uncle ‘corrected’ him.
<Exactly.> Tempo sent.
Curse all mizol and their mind-prying!
With humor glowing behind her sanzai, the parat continued <He seems to be the youngest of the humans, and the friendliest towards us… and towards you three in particular. As these ten humans are pulled closer to us, eventually they will feel comfortable enough to tell us even those secrets which they have so far held back.>
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
And we've just nosed past the halfway-point in this fanfic, by page count. Some fun poking around in a crashed Infinity-class, and Tempo gets to outline the sneaky mizol-things that she's been thinking about. And RIP to Miranda Keyes; at least she got to wear Admiral's stars this time before meeting her end.