4484 lines
228 KiB
Plaintext
4484 lines
228 KiB
Plaintext
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This book is dedicated to the following people:
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- Graham Bell and Brent Rolfe for being such good
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sounding boards for my ideas;
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- Ron Futcher and Christine Pascoe for the patient
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reading of the original short story and subsequent
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novel versions;
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- All the people at Anime Australia for their
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support. I couldn't have done it without you all;
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and
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- Widya Santoso and Lady Angela Menace-Rover
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esquire, for the Night Music Squadron's legend and
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their <Macross Memories>. May their creation
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survive the holocaust of the savaged Earth.
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Aubry Thonon
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... the Yin and the Yang, the Good and the Bad, the Light
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and the Shadow - for this is the crux of the matter, this
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alter-ego of what we call Protoculture, the Entity known as
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Neoculture.
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Excerpt from PROTOCULTURE AND THE CHILDREN OF THE SHADOW.
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CHAPTER 1
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Exactly how did I come to the idea of the `Think-Cap`? Well,
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when we first developed the Veritech Fighter, we thought we
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could control its movements by manipulation of controls in the
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cockpit. This theory crumbled very quickly as we tested the
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first plane: its movements were jerky and it left a lot to be
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desired in menoeuverability. What we needed was a device like
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the human brain to put the finishing touches on the Veritech's
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actions. From there we developed a helmet containing various
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apparatus to record the brain's `thoughts` and transmit them
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to the `central nervous system` of the plane. I believe the
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term `Thinking-Cap` was first used by Admiral Hunter, while
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still a civilian. It shortened to `Think-Cap` and the name
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stuck amongst the pilots.
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Dr. Lang, Interviews.
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Hausthar C. Reneth gave the novel he was holding but a
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nervous glance as he waited in his bunk. He was a boy of
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about 17 years, normal height for his age (6 feet 2 inches),
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short reddish hair and a body who although wasn't fat could
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have done with a little more exercise. His eyes gave a lonely
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feeling, a feeling most people picked up instantly. This
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peculiarity awarded him very little friends and the fact that
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he was shy of nature did nothing to help.
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He turned over and wondered when the P.A. system would call
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his name. Hausthar had been in training at the Robotech
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Defence Academy for two years now and was waiting eagerly for
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the final exam. Two years of hard drills and brain wrenching
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theory on space and atmosphere flight contour and combat were
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culminating in a combat simulation where luck somehow seemed
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to enter the game.
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Sitting up on his bed, he had just started reading again
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when the P.A. hummed to life.
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"Cadet Reneth, Hausthar C. Please report to the briefing
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room for final combat simulation 5." The voice from the
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speaker was calculated to send chills along a cadet's spine.
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It did.
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As he walked towards the simulation rooms, Hausthar went
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into his meditation routine. To properly interface with a
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Veritech Fighter there had to be no outside thoughts, no
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interference within the pattern of thoughts of the pilot. Any
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deviance would slow the Mecha's response and make you a
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target.
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Two steps from the Com-Sim door he heard a metallic voice
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sounding from within, garbled beyond recognition. Hausthar
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unstrapped his side-arm from its holster (Pilots are to wear
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regulation gear during simulations, Simulation Rule No. 24)
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and flattened himself against the wall. The doors were
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automatic so he would have to fiddle with the lock and if he
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were silent enough he could have surprise on his side. In a
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flash he faced the door and charged in, the door opening in
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front of him - and fell down, his foot caught on a wire
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stretched inches from the floor.
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"You have just been killed Cadet! One does not charge in
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when one is expected you know. Or didn't you hear your name
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being called out over the Academy's P.A.?" Hausthar looked up
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to see a metallic figure looming over him like a vulture
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waiting for its prey to die. He forced his eyes into focus
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and recognised the semi-humanoid shape.
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"Victor! What are <you> doing here?" he exclaimed.
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"I am to be your Com-Sim examiner my friend. But let me
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tell you; if you do as well in there as you did just now, you
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haven't got a chance."
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Victor was a six feet high android, a marvel of Robotech
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engineering, created not two years ago. He was endowed with
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the strange life-like qualities that all
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Robotechnology-produced machine seem to achieve. As far as
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Hausthar knew, Victor was a one-of-a-kind unfortunately, for
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supplies had been redirected towards the construction of the
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SDF-2. Victor worked for Dr. Lang, the Earth's discoverer of
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Robotechnology. What his functions were, however, Hausthar
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could only guess at.
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Ever since they had met, Victor had looked after him, acting
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like a brother to him and pulling practical jokes most of the
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time. It had been a rather strange sight to see an android
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set up a joke and laugh afterwards. Exedore, the Zentraedi
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scientist, had explained that this came from the fact that
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Victor used Protoculture technology. As to what Protoculture
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was supposed to be, no-one seemed to have any idea - or they
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weren't telling. For reasons unknown to Hausthar, only a
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handful of people outside Dr. Lang's scientific team knew of
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Victor's existence; a secret Hausthar seemed privy to.
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Victor pointed towards the simulation cockpit. "If you will
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enter the simulator, we will start as soon as possible. You
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will be coming from 3 O'Clock high with regard to the enemy
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target at a velocity of Mach 2. Your deceleration factor will
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be at an initial 0. Objective: infiltration and destruction
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of a Zentraedi Battle-Cruiser by any, repeat <ANY>, means
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deemed necessary. You will be piloting a VF-1J with full
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ammo-pack. Battle-pod density will be at maximum. Three
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squadrons are there to assist you. Understood?" Hausthar
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nodded. "Good. Now if you will wait a moment, someone else
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is taking the test too." Victor entered the control room and
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looked into the adjacent simulation area where another figure
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was waiting by its machine.
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Michele Cequor was not impatient by nature but the waiting
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was gnawing at her nerves. She was a tall, slender girl, 16
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years of age, with long, rust-coloured hair and light-green
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eyes that wouldn't quit sparkling. Among boys her age she was
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considered `dangerous` ever since she put one of their friends
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in hospital after he had made a rather open pass at her.
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A series of heavy footsteps behind her made her turn around
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and face her examiner. Victor stepped into the pool of light
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surrounding the simulator and greeted her. Michele replied in
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kind as she jumped into the cockpit. She wasn't surprised to
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see Victor, after all he had always been there for her
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whenever she needed help. Especially since her parents had
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died. She shook her head, banishing the thought.
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Michele had already been briefed about the simulation and
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Victor was now checking her straps. She understood the
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meticulous care with which he did it. Series five simulations
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were rough on you. Many a time had she come out of the
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cockpit with bruises and she had heard of a couple of broken
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arms from last year's graduates. This was as close to reality
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as you could come (almost) without risking your life.
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Victor finished his checks and closed the simulator's
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canopy. Swiftly, he made his way back to the control room,
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closed the door behind him and sat down in front of two
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consoles, the chair straining under his weight. He flicked a
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couple of switches and monitors came to life around him. He
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particularly studied two sets of screens which would give him
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an outside observer's eye-view of the simulations and an
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interior view of the cockpits.
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The lights dimmed within the confines of the simulator rooms
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as he bent over a mike and signalled the start of the tests.
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On his screen he saw the faces of the young pilots relax as
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they made contact with their Mecha. With but a few moment's
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hesitation both went into action, unleashing destruction in
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their own, private little war.
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Hausthar menoeuvered his Veritech close to the
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Battle-Cruiser and searched for an opening while firing at
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incoming Battle-Pods. The enemy's ships looked not so much
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like machines as headless, featherless ostriches: oval spheres
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from which hung pairs of reversely-hinged mechanical legs. He
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looped to avoid incoming laser fire and released a pair of
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heat-seekers at the Pod in front of him. He was just about to
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target another when his plane shook from a direct hit.
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Turning his head to inspect the damage, he saw a sizeable hole
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in his left wing. In space it did not matter but it now ruled
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him out from any atmospheric combat that might take place. He
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swore and told himself to be more careful. Looking forward
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again he relaxed, mentally reaching further inward to the core
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of his Veritech Mecha.
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It wasn't so much having trouble as not getting a break.
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Ever since the simulation had begun, Michele hadn't had a
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chance to search for an entrance into the Zentraedi Cruiser.
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She blasted the few Pods that were on her side of the ship and
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switched her plane to Guardian configuration. Her F-14
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look-alike plane shuddered a little as the two engines swung
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down to form legs, the exhaust splitting in two, becoming
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feet. The ailerons folded inward and the tail assembly
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flipped and came to rest on top of the main body. From the
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back, where they had been positioned between the engines, two
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rectangular pods moved to the side, swung forward and hands
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slid out from their fronts to form two arms. The Veritech
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hung there for a moment, a majestic hawk with arms, then
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detached a high-powered GU-11 gun pod from its right forearm
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and readied itself for battle. Already more Pods were coming
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from over the Cruiser to do battle. The Guardian swung its
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GU-11 towards them as Michele mentally reached in and sunk
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into the technology that surrounded her.
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Victor was quietly watching the simulations when an alarm
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sounded - something was wrong with Hausthar's simulation. He
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was about to request further information when a second buzzer
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joined in, this time coming from Michele's console. What had
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been deemed impossible was now happening: the simulations were
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being tampered with. Victor reached for the phone and started
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dialling.
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Hausthar was in trouble - for a while now, he'd had a couple
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of Pods on his tail and could not shake them off. He had got
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himself to accept the inevitable when a sudden burst of
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high-density depleted trans-uranic shells took out both
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enemies at once. He turned around and saw a Veritech in
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Guardian mode blasting Pods in every conceivable directions.
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Taking advantage of the fact that the Pods were now more
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interested in the Guardian than in him, Hausthar changed his
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Mecha into Battloid. The plane mechamorphed to Guardian and
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continued to change; the `legs` moved forward along the
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cockpit as the plane split in half just before the wings. The
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two parts folded as the wings swung back, forming chest and
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back. A laser turret previously located under the cockpit
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slid from its protective placing and rightened itself on the
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`shoulders`, looking like a visored helmet. The Battloid
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grabbed the GU-11 gun pod from its fore-arm and headed for the
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Battle-Cruiser.
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Michele had been eliminating Pods right and left, trying to
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make her way towards the cruiser, when she encountered a
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Veritech in need of assistance; whoever was inside was pursued
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by two Pods and had tried to shake them, to no avail. She
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back-flipped her Guardian and sent a burst of high-density
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depleted trans-uranic tracers at the pursuers. The tracers
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met their targets, ripping armor off the Pods and reaching
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into the vehicles to their power plants. Both Pods
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illuminated the sky with the light of their final doom. The
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now-freed Veritech changed into Battloid and proceeded to
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blast a portion of the Battle-Cruiser's armor away. It waited
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outside long enough to look her way, as if making sure she was
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all right, then entered the ship. Michele took this as an
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invitation, fired her last pair of heat-seekers at an
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approaching Pod and followed the Battloid into the ship.
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Dr.Lang entered the control room running and proceeded to
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sit down without asking a question; apparently he had been
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briefed on the problem. His eyes gleamed with excitement.
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Victor was not sure what to make of this. Dr. Lang was not
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known for his emotional outbursts. In fact, nothing phased or
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excited him apart from Robotechnology. For him to be this
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restless it must have been very interesting indeed.
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"I don't <believe> it! Victor, have you seen this? They've
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broken into each other's simulations!" Lang's German accent
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was strong during moments of stress and this was one of them.
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"I never dreamed this would be the outcome of the project!
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This... <this> is incredible!" Lang reached for the intercom
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and requested for the transcript of the simulations to be
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brought up to him as soon as possible. He leaned back with a
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smug look on his face. For the first time in his existence,
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Victor saw Lang smile at something that was not powered by
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Protoculture. They both turned around and faced the monitors
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where a battle of rare violence was unfolding.
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Hausthar and the other Veritech (which had changed into
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Battloid by now) made their way towards the engines at a
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painfully slow pace. They were stuck outside a cargo bay with
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Zentraedi troops shooting at them from inside and Battle-Pods
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coming in from the rear. Hausthar looked towards the bay's
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ceiling, changed to Guardian and unleashed a series of
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missiles at the power circuits overhead. A chain of
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explosions raked the cargo bay and shook the corridor in which
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they stood, forcing the Battloid to hold on to an overhead
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pipe. Hausthar peeked inside the bay and saw no movement. He
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motioned the other Mecha to follow him and crossed the
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now-devastated area to the door on the far side.
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Michele watched as the Guardian beside her released a
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contingent of missiles at the bay in front of which they had
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stopped. She grabbed an overhead conduit as the floor moved
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from underneath her feet and steadied the Battloid. The
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Guardian urged her on and crossed the open expense of the
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cargo bay. Michele followed it, allowing herself a look at
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the dead Zentraedi. The aliens were fifty to sixty feet tall
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and humanoid in build. In fact, if it wasn't for the height,
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they could have passed off as her next-door neighbours. The
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Veritech's Battloid mode had actually been created to handle
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hand-to-hand fighting with those giants.
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A nearby explosion shook Michele out of her daydream and
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brought her back to the 'reality' of the simulation. The shot
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had been fired by a group a Battle-Pods which had caught up
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with them while they had been pinned down. Michele ordered
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her Battloid to turn around and fired a shot at the electronic
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lock on the door between them and the Pods. The door hissed
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shut, breaking one of the Pods' laser cannon in two.
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Michele's Battloid broke into a run and followed the Guardian
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to the nearby engine room.
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Hausthar watched in admiration as the Battloid accompanying
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him got rid of a group of following Pods. <Not bad!> he
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thought. <They're making these simulations more realistic all
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the time. If I didn't know better, I'd swear that Battloid is
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controlled by a real pilot.>
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His train of thought stopped short as he found the door to
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the drive room. The door was shut tight so a couple of
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bullets made themselves acquainted with its lock. He left the
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Battloid as a guard and went inside to try to overload the
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engines. No sooner had he stepped inside that three Zentraedi
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stepped from behind what looked like maintenance material and
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showered the area he was occupying with lasers.
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<Maintenance material? Wait a minute. Zentraedi don't know
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how to maintain or repair any of their equipment.> He'd have
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to talk to somebody about this! Hausthar dodged his Guardian
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to the side and emptied his Gatling gun into the power
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coupling of the engines behind the Zentraedi. The GU-11 made
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the awaited buzzsaw sound as its gatling cannons peppered the
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coupling until it ran out of ammunition. The coupling began
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to glow with the light of uncontrolled energy. Hausthar did
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not wait to see the result of his shots and retreated out of
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the room as explosions began to resound within.
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Michele had somehow sensed that the Guardian wanted her to
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remain on guard outside the room. She heard shots being
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exchanged within and suddenly saw the Veritech come through
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the door as if its laser-punctured tail rudders were on fire.
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She followed it down the corridor and arrived at a dead end.
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With an unspoken agreement she let loose her remaining tracers
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while the Guardian opened fire with its laser turret; the wall
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could not take the combined beating and gave way. The air
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rushed out to meet the vacuum of space, sucking out the two
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Veritech Mecha at the same time. Both reverted to Fighter
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configuration and kicked in their after-burners to gain speed.
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<To Hell with fuel consumption!> thought Michele. <I've got
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to get out of here!>
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From behind her a bright light emerged as the
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Battle-Cruiser's engines finally gave way to the on-rushing
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flow of energy and exploded with a flurry of unleashed
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Protoculture.
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Hausthar's jet shook as it caught shrapnel in its belly,
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warning lights telling him he had lost his left engine and
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laser turret. The Veritech next to his waved its wings at him
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in victory and returned to the SDF-1. Hausthar nudged his
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plane into a low-consumption orbit towards the Fortress until
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he could be picked up by the rescue operators.
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CHAPTER 2
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There was not a day during most of the First Robotech War
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when I did not hear of a pilot's incredible escape from death
|
|||
|
quoted as 'coincidence' or 'shear dumb luck' and that got me
|
|||
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thinking. So many 'coincidences' were happening that I
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|||
|
finally got around to interviewing Dr. Lang and the Zentraedi
|
|||
|
Historian/Adviser Exedore on the subject. Their answers
|
|||
|
talked of a Plan - not, as one might be excused to think, a
|
|||
|
military plan, but rather one emanating from the Protoculture.
|
|||
|
It was their belief that the Protoculture was able to shape
|
|||
|
events much more easily than it did machines during
|
|||
|
mechamorphosys, a term invented by Robotech Research to
|
|||
|
describe the process of transformation of a Veritech. What
|
|||
|
are the implications of this Plan and what is it working
|
|||
|
towards? Exedore seems to think even the Robotech Masters,
|
|||
|
creators of the Zentraedi race, do not know. Maybe we shall
|
|||
|
find out if we ever meet with the Invids, rumoured to
|
|||
|
literally thrive on Protoculture.
|
|||
|
Jan Morris: Solar Seeds, Galactic Guardians.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Cadet Reneth went back to the mess hall where he met with
|
|||
|
Michael Circle, one of his rare friends. Greeting him with a
|
|||
|
wave of his hand, Hausthar sat down at an empty table, waiting
|
|||
|
for Michael to join him. Michael was a tall, slim young man
|
|||
|
with a life-guard's build and a smile that would let you know
|
|||
|
everything was going to turn out for the best. He also was
|
|||
|
the Academy's top scorer in the simulator and in social
|
|||
|
events.
|
|||
|
Michael sat on the chair opposite Hausthar's and had started
|
|||
|
digging into his lunch when the results from the final exam
|
|||
|
were posted on the master bulletin board screen. Michael
|
|||
|
glanced down the list to his name and gave a <whoopee> as he
|
|||
|
viewed his score. Hausthar had a look at it. Rather
|
|||
|
impressive; Michael had good reason to be pleased. He shifted
|
|||
|
his gaze downward to his name and froze as he reached it:
|
|||
|
there, in blinking letters where his score should have been,
|
|||
|
was a message from High Command. Slowly he read it out.
|
|||
|
<Report to Dr. Lang at once.> What had happened? He hadn't
|
|||
|
cheated on any of his tests, so why was he summoned by the
|
|||
|
sacro-saint of the R.D.F.?
|
|||
|
Michael was still grinning madly when he finally caught the
|
|||
|
look on Hausthar's face. He turned around, saw the notice and
|
|||
|
the smile vanished from his own. No-one, but no-one, was ever
|
|||
|
called to Research unless something drastic had happened and
|
|||
|
so far those who had gone there had never gone back to the
|
|||
|
academy. Whatever the problem Hausthar had with Research it
|
|||
|
was a big one, and Michael intended to make sure his friend
|
|||
|
got away clean.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Hausthar sat in the waiting room, reading a technical
|
|||
|
magazine relating the latest advances in Robotechnology,
|
|||
|
trying hard not to look nervous - and failing at it. The
|
|||
|
receptionist glanced in his direction over her glasses and
|
|||
|
smiled. Most people had the jitters whenever they were called
|
|||
|
to see Dr. Lang; his irisless eyes alone were enough to put
|
|||
|
you off. But Dr. Lang seem to have a knack for making people
|
|||
|
feel that Robotechnology was the Ultimate Science, and
|
|||
|
theatrics was his best approach at it. Even so, Lang was
|
|||
|
taking longer than usual with the person he was talking to
|
|||
|
right now.
|
|||
|
Hausthar was about to ask the receptionist to ring Lang when
|
|||
|
the door to his office opened and a young woman with rust-
|
|||
|
coloured hair walked out briskly, her face lit up by a joyful
|
|||
|
smile. Lang followed her out of the office and spotted
|
|||
|
Hausthar. "Ah, there you are. I am sorry about the delay.
|
|||
|
Won't you come in?" The receptionist goggled at her employer,
|
|||
|
hearing him apologising to someone. The outburst of concern
|
|||
|
from Lang did nothing to calm Hausthar's nerves. He had heard
|
|||
|
of Lang's legendary aloofness when it came to people; the fact
|
|||
|
that he was now making an effort to be charming was unnerving.
|
|||
|
Lang sat down behind his desk, took a file that was lying on
|
|||
|
top of it and began to read out loud: "Cadet Hausthar C.
|
|||
|
Reneth. Date of birth: Unknown, presumed to be around 1995.
|
|||
|
Place of birth: Unknown, from the accent presumed to be North
|
|||
|
American Continent. Found wondering in the Western
|
|||
|
Wastelands, amnesiac, in September 2011. Amnesia was
|
|||
|
accredited to shock. Both parents presumed dead. Entered the
|
|||
|
academy in January 2012. Almost perfect scores on the
|
|||
|
simulators during his stay. Nature: Shy. Recommendations:
|
|||
|
Cadet Reneth is too non-violent of nature to make a proper
|
|||
|
combat pilot. Suggest position in rear-echelon. Signed: E.J.
|
|||
|
Maetseas, Academy Supervisor." Lang placed the folder back
|
|||
|
down and looked at Hausthar with his totally black eyes. A
|
|||
|
moment of silence passed before Lang talked again. "I had a
|
|||
|
look at your last simulation, Cadet." Again a pause, making
|
|||
|
Hausthar sweat more than he thought humanly possible. "I have
|
|||
|
a proposition to make to you. How would you..." At that
|
|||
|
moment, shouts of protests emerged from outside the office. A
|
|||
|
cry of surprise echoed through the door, which was suddenly
|
|||
|
flung open by a tall, smug looking, brown-haired Cadet.
|
|||
|
<Michael>, thought Hausthar. What was he up to now?
|
|||
|
"I'll apologise later to your secretary for tying her up,
|
|||
|
Doctor." Michael had a gleam in his eyes, a gleam that
|
|||
|
Hausthar had learned not to trust; it generally meant that he
|
|||
|
was about to pull a joke on somebody. Michael stepped forward
|
|||
|
and the office started to fill with scores of students until
|
|||
|
only the area behind the desk was free of them, the Cadets
|
|||
|
maintaining a respectful distance from Lang.
|
|||
|
"We've come to expiate our sin, Doctor. Whatever it was, we
|
|||
|
were all in on it. Right guys?" he shouted to the mob behind
|
|||
|
him. A deafening chorus of <Yeah>s and <You're on>s erupted
|
|||
|
from the group. Michael grinned that smile of his again. "So
|
|||
|
what's it gonna be, Doc? You can't very well expel the whole
|
|||
|
Academy." A smug look made its way past the smile on his
|
|||
|
face.
|
|||
|
Lang looked at the crowd in his office and smiled inwardly
|
|||
|
as he spied the looks of concern on all the present faces.
|
|||
|
"As I was saying before we were so rudely interrupted, how
|
|||
|
would you like to become a part of Robotech Research? We are
|
|||
|
currently looking for new test pilots." A wave of silence
|
|||
|
swept the crowd as the words sunk in. All eyes were on a
|
|||
|
baffled Hausthar who was still trying to make some sense of
|
|||
|
the situation. After several tense seconds, his brain finally
|
|||
|
gave signs of life.
|
|||
|
"I accept." The shouts and cheers from his fellow students
|
|||
|
set off half the earthquake alarms in the building.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
As the last of the Cadets left the office, a side door
|
|||
|
opened and Victor joined Dr. Lang in his office. "It is as
|
|||
|
you predicted." To Victor this did not make sense. His
|
|||
|
forecast had been that only Michael would turn up to defend
|
|||
|
his friend.
|
|||
|
"Yes my friend," said Lang "it is surprising. But no less
|
|||
|
than is to be expected when you try to outwit the
|
|||
|
Protoculture."
|
|||
|
Victor turned towards the files on the table. "I see you
|
|||
|
have transferred the other to the Skull Squadron. Is that a
|
|||
|
wise move considering the importance you seem to attach to her
|
|||
|
well-being? Surely you must know that the Skull is a
|
|||
|
commando-like outfit, picked for all the dangerous missions.
|
|||
|
Do you really want to endanger her so?"
|
|||
|
"Victor, let it suffice to say that it would be going
|
|||
|
against the Protoculture to do otherwise. She requested the
|
|||
|
transfer and I gave it to her." He paused for a while,
|
|||
|
sitting amidst his thoughts. "I have new orders for you
|
|||
|
concerning these two. You will watch over them and report
|
|||
|
their every actions to me and me only. I want to know where
|
|||
|
they are at all times. And most importantly, they must never
|
|||
|
meet or get to know of each other! Is that understood?"
|
|||
|
"The order is understood, but not the motives. Surely there
|
|||
|
can be no harm to the Shaping if two humans meet one another?"
|
|||
|
"Ah yes, the Shaping... Let me show you something about
|
|||
|
those two particular humans." Lang went over to a wall safe
|
|||
|
and placed his hand on a touch-sensitive plate. A light
|
|||
|
emerged from the safe's door and scanned Lang's left eye
|
|||
|
before a soft voice finally said "Retinal scan positive. Safe
|
|||
|
opened." A muted click sounded as the safe swung open. Lang
|
|||
|
reached in and removed a thick dossier which he offered to
|
|||
|
Victor.
|
|||
|
"Here, read this."
|
|||
|
Victor scanned the first page and let out an electronic
|
|||
|
whistle of surprise. "So that's why you are so interested in
|
|||
|
them. But what about the third?"
|
|||
|
"The third one?" Lang paused, lost in thoughts. "He died
|
|||
|
right after his 'birth'." He turned to face the panoramic
|
|||
|
windows behind his desk. The Japanese countryside laid out in
|
|||
|
front of him, his irisless eyes wondering towards Fujiyama,
|
|||
|
lingering on the dormant volcano. He still found that memory
|
|||
|
too vivid, even after all this time. "I consider it a
|
|||
|
personal failure. The blame was entirely mine." His eyes
|
|||
|
stayed fixed on the mountain, his thoughts away from
|
|||
|
Robotechnology to his moment of failure. He never heard
|
|||
|
Victor leave.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Michele knocked on the door of the flight commander's office
|
|||
|
and cursed under her breath. She was perspiring heavily and
|
|||
|
swearing against the air-conditioning which had been present
|
|||
|
on the plane that had brought her here. Why couldn't they
|
|||
|
have turned it off and let her get acclimatised with the
|
|||
|
South-American climate? She waited for an answer to her
|
|||
|
knock, then walked into the room.
|
|||
|
The office was not especially large and the lack of windows
|
|||
|
did nothing to help; windows were not particularly sought
|
|||
|
after near the Zentraedi Control Zone - they had the nasty
|
|||
|
habit of attracting Battle-Pods at night. All along the walls
|
|||
|
were aerial photographs and military maps of the area around
|
|||
|
the South-American Grand Cannon, a military base that had been
|
|||
|
taken over by Zentraedi Malcontents. On the far end of the
|
|||
|
room was a desk and standing around it were two figures. The
|
|||
|
first one, obviously female, had green hair, what Michele
|
|||
|
would have called a perfect body, and yet gave out an aura of
|
|||
|
command and power. The second figure was that of a man with
|
|||
|
blue hair, a person who would look right paper-pushing behind
|
|||
|
a desk. Michele approached the woman.
|
|||
|
"Corporal Michele Cequor, reporting for duty, Ma'am." She
|
|||
|
gave a brisk salute and waited. Not being able to see the
|
|||
|
woman's rank, she had decided against possible embarrassment
|
|||
|
and not guessed it.
|
|||
|
The woman with the green hair turned towards her with a
|
|||
|
startled look on her face and answered her salute. A grin
|
|||
|
appeared on her lips. "Good morning to you, Corporal.
|
|||
|
However, I am not the commanding officer. The person you want
|
|||
|
is Commander Maximillian Sterling." The woman's shoulder
|
|||
|
finally fell into the pool of light generated by the room's
|
|||
|
incandescent globe and a Lt. Commander insignia shone hard in
|
|||
|
the semi-darkness of the office.
|
|||
|
"Thank you Ma'am. Could you please direct me to him?"
|
|||
|
The woman's grin expanded to a smile. "Certainly." She
|
|||
|
gave the man next to her a push with her elbow. "Max?
|
|||
|
There's someone here to see you."
|
|||
|
The man looked up from the maps and pushed his glasses
|
|||
|
further on his nose. He obviously had not heard a word of the
|
|||
|
conversation which had taken place. "I'm sorry Miriya, what
|
|||
|
did you say?"
|
|||
|
"I said someone's here to see you." She pointed to Michele
|
|||
|
who had, by that time, turned completely red.
|
|||
|
Commander Sterling moved around the table and stared at her,
|
|||
|
his blue-tinted glasses shining in the darkness. "What can I
|
|||
|
do for you?" His voice was calm and soothing and his attitude
|
|||
|
gave off an air of self-humility.
|
|||
|
Michele was still red with embarrassment. "Corporal Michele
|
|||
|
Cequor, reporting for duty, Sir." Her blood was beating
|
|||
|
furiously in her neck. She hadn't been here for five minutes
|
|||
|
and she'd already committed a blunder.
|
|||
|
"Oh yes, we were warned about your coming. It seems you
|
|||
|
consider yourself quite a good fighter pilot." Sterling's
|
|||
|
smile seemed on the verge of neatly splitting his face in two.
|
|||
|
"A friend of mine taught me that thinking is different from
|
|||
|
doing."
|
|||
|
The Lt. Commander's voice came from a seat near the far
|
|||
|
corner. "Max, would you please stop teasing her?"
|
|||
|
Michele's face was once again red, but this time from anger.
|
|||
|
How could he doubt her abilities? "If you do not believe my
|
|||
|
files, maybe a test...?"
|
|||
|
"Yes, why not." Although Michele would not have thought it
|
|||
|
possible, Sterling's smile increased again.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The base's simulation room was smaller than the one at the
|
|||
|
Academy but otherwise looked the same. Michele strapped
|
|||
|
herself in and gave the <Go> signal. A tech's voice resounded
|
|||
|
in her ear. "We'll run a simple simulation: attack of a
|
|||
|
Zentraedi renegade camp. Intelligence has it that the
|
|||
|
renegades are armed with a Heavy-Artillery and a Tactical Pod.
|
|||
|
Good Luck." Lights dimmed, the simulation began.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Michele was flying at low altitude over the jungle, her VF-
|
|||
|
1A responding swiftly to her controls. She spotted a column
|
|||
|
of smoke coming from below, slowed her fighter and
|
|||
|
mechamorphed to Guardian, her Veritech hovering just above the
|
|||
|
tree-top. She zoomed-in her external cameras towards the fire
|
|||
|
and spent a few seconds spying on the fire's proprietors. She
|
|||
|
counted two Heavy-Artillery and a Fighter Pod. Once more
|
|||
|
Intelligence had failed to live up to its name. She kicked in
|
|||
|
her external speakers and spoke in a firm voice.
|
|||
|
"<Zentraedi. This will be your only warning. Stand clear
|
|||
|
of the Pods with your hands up. Do not attempt to resist
|
|||
|
arrest or face the consequences of your actions.>" Military
|
|||
|
Protocol dictated the warning, Zentraedi up-bringing decreed
|
|||
|
the response; as usual, the renegades paid no attention to the
|
|||
|
threats and jumped for their Pods. Michele released two heat-
|
|||
|
seekers which promptly dispatched one of the Heavy-Artillery
|
|||
|
Pods and its pilot. The rest of the Pods started to
|
|||
|
retaliate. Warnings echoed through the Veritech's cockpit as
|
|||
|
shots came up from the jungle, originating from two Female
|
|||
|
Power Armors which had laid hidden there. Too late to do
|
|||
|
anything about it, Michele realised she had fallen into a
|
|||
|
trap. The shots impacted on her Guardian, penetrating armor
|
|||
|
and frying internal circuitry. Backups automatically came on-
|
|||
|
line, but the damage had already been done; the Veritech
|
|||
|
plunged to the Earth, its engines flamed-out. It hit the
|
|||
|
ground with a deafening thud and laid there, unmoving.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Miriya looked at her husband and saw a frown on his face.
|
|||
|
"Well, she's out cold. It'll be over in a minute." She
|
|||
|
pointed to the console where Michele could be seen slumped on
|
|||
|
her seat, her eyes closed. A trickle of blood emerged from
|
|||
|
under her helmet where she had hit her head on the control
|
|||
|
panel.
|
|||
|
Max had already called the paramedics and was about to call
|
|||
|
off the simulation when the technician cried out in surprise.
|
|||
|
"I don't believe it! The Veritech's <reconfiguring!>"
|
|||
|
Maximillian's eyes opened wide. "What about the girl?
|
|||
|
What's her condition?"
|
|||
|
The tech gave the screen a glance. "She's still out."
|
|||
|
"Then who is controlling the plane?" enquired Miriya.
|
|||
|
Once again, the tech turned to the console, punched out a
|
|||
|
code and made a sound of consternation. "The computer says
|
|||
|
<she> is Ma'am!"
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The Battloid had finished its reconfiguration and now stood
|
|||
|
above the trees' canopy. It dodged the shots fired at it by
|
|||
|
the Fighter Pod, rightened itself and grabbed the GU-11
|
|||
|
attached to its forearm. Swiftly taking aim, it pressed the
|
|||
|
trigger of the auto-cannon. The Fighter Pod disappeared in a
|
|||
|
bubble of fire.
|
|||
|
The Female Power Armors hung back while the Heavy Artillery
|
|||
|
Pod discharged its four missiles. The Battloid saw it had no
|
|||
|
chance of avoiding all of them - counter-measures took out
|
|||
|
two, a shot from the gun-pod destroyed a third but the
|
|||
|
Veritech had to sacrifice its left arm to protect itself from
|
|||
|
the fourth. The arm disappeared in a cloud of smoke and
|
|||
|
debris.
|
|||
|
The wings that formed the Battloid's back swung apart,
|
|||
|
revealing sets of missiles; two metal streaks rose from them
|
|||
|
on pillars of smoke and annihilated the offending Pod. Alarms
|
|||
|
screamed for attention inside the Battloid as the internal
|
|||
|
temperature rose due to a short-circuit in the engines. A
|
|||
|
wail came from the radar as it registered a high-energy
|
|||
|
reading from both Power Armors. The Battloid dropped to the
|
|||
|
ground, but too late; one of the beams of energy emitted from
|
|||
|
the Power Armors connected with its head, perforating the
|
|||
|
armor and severing the servo-motors controlling the head's
|
|||
|
laser gun.
|
|||
|
Using its hand to position the laser, the Battloid fired it
|
|||
|
at one of the Female Armors. The laser hit one of the Armor's
|
|||
|
missile launchers, melting away the armor and raising the
|
|||
|
internal temperature so fast the missiles contained within
|
|||
|
exploded, reducing the machine to so much dust.
|
|||
|
The last assailant fired a salvo of missiles and flew away.
|
|||
|
The quickly aimed missiles exploded around the Battloid, but
|
|||
|
one made its way to the left torso, ripping the internal
|
|||
|
structure apart, causing more alarms to wail in the cockpit.
|
|||
|
The Battloid raised its GU-11 gun-pod and fired at the
|
|||
|
receding Zentraedi Mecha. Armor flew apart from the Power
|
|||
|
Armor while the GU-11 started to melt from over-heating. The
|
|||
|
heavy shells finally made their way to the engines of the
|
|||
|
Armor and ruptured its primary power source. The pilot's cry
|
|||
|
of rage was cut short by the ensuing explosion.
|
|||
|
The Battloid fell back against a tree, smoke coming out of
|
|||
|
the gash in its head, clutching its left side, adopting the
|
|||
|
slumped position of its pilot.
|
|||
|
Michele still hadn't moved.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
CHAPTER 3
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
V.C.T.R.; J.N.C.M.; you guys just love to give us weird
|
|||
|
initials, don't you? Have you ever thought what it would be
|
|||
|
like to live with initials instead of a name? Hausthar called
|
|||
|
me Victor, why don't you call her Janice Em?
|
|||
|
Remark by android V.C.T.R."Victor"-1 to
|
|||
|
the Research and Development Cyborg Team.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The entrance to the building was anything but obvious -
|
|||
|
trees, bushes and the architecture did much to hide the front
|
|||
|
door. Hausthar searched for a while, gave up and turned
|
|||
|
towards the soldier patrolling the outside.
|
|||
|
"Excuse me. Is this RDF Research?"
|
|||
|
The sentry looked up and smiled. "Sure is. May I help
|
|||
|
you?"
|
|||
|
"Er... yes. Where is the front door? The path leads up to
|
|||
|
nowhere."
|
|||
|
"You're new, aren't you sir? Well don't worry, everybody
|
|||
|
asks me the same question when they first arrive. You see,
|
|||
|
the people in there have a rather strange sense of humour.
|
|||
|
They've hidden the door with an Enhanced Video Emulation so
|
|||
|
no-one'll see it. Just walk straight down the path and into
|
|||
|
the wall." The guard gave him a salute and went back to his
|
|||
|
post.
|
|||
|
Hausthar walked to the wall, gave a last pleading look to
|
|||
|
the guard, closed his eyes and stepped forward. He didn't hit
|
|||
|
concrete, instead something <wush>ed and a stream of cool air
|
|||
|
hit his face. Opening his eyes, he found himself in the
|
|||
|
reception area of an office building. The door he had just
|
|||
|
stepped through once again made its sound as it closed behind
|
|||
|
him, still hidden from sight.
|
|||
|
"May I help you?" The voice was soothing - if he hadn't
|
|||
|
been so nervous, Hausthar might have enjoyed it. He was. He
|
|||
|
didn't.
|
|||
|
"Yes. I am looking for Dr. Lang. Where may I find him? My
|
|||
|
name is Reneth."
|
|||
|
The secretary who had been sitting behind the reception desk
|
|||
|
got up and walked towards him. "Ah yes, you must be the new
|
|||
|
test pilot. Nice to meet you Corporal Reneth."
|
|||
|
Hausthar looked at her with a start. "I'm sorry, there must
|
|||
|
be some mistake. I'm only a Cadet."
|
|||
|
Once again, the secretary beamed her cheerful smile at him.
|
|||
|
"Not since 1600 hours yesterday you aren't. Dr. Lang pushed
|
|||
|
it through. You must be something special for him to go
|
|||
|
through all that trouble."
|
|||
|
"I'm not, I assure you. I'm just a pilot who nearly didn't
|
|||
|
make it on his last simulation." Hausthar's mind was working
|
|||
|
overtime. Once again Lang had shown human interest in him.
|
|||
|
Hausthar pinched himself hard to make sure he wasn't a
|
|||
|
Protoculture-powered android. His pinch drew blood. <At
|
|||
|
least I'm human.> He turned his mind back to the problem at
|
|||
|
hand.
|
|||
|
"Where might I find Dr. Lang please?"
|
|||
|
The secretary went back to her desk, typed a short sequence
|
|||
|
into her computer and waited for the response. "He is in
|
|||
|
Research Lab 19. If you'll take the elevator to the fifth
|
|||
|
basement, it's the third door on the left, fourth corridor to
|
|||
|
the right." Her hand was pointing to an empty wall. Looking
|
|||
|
up again, she noticed the hopelessly-lost gaze on Hausthar's
|
|||
|
face and explained. "The whole reception area is full of
|
|||
|
E.V.E.s but if you look carefully, you will notice small white
|
|||
|
signs on the floor. They indicate doors and elevators. You
|
|||
|
want the elevator in the North wall."
|
|||
|
Hausthar thanked her and walked up to the wall, placing his
|
|||
|
hand up from where he'd found a mark. It disappeared into the
|
|||
|
wall and the effect of seeing his arm cut off at the wrist was
|
|||
|
almost more than he could endure.
|
|||
|
"Why the cocky set-up?" he asked.
|
|||
|
"Well, the R&D staff have a pretty weird sense of humour.
|
|||
|
If you think it's strange, how do you think <I> felt when I
|
|||
|
came back after one weekend to find somebody had remodelled
|
|||
|
the entire building like this? Anyway, it doesn't extend into
|
|||
|
the Lab area, so once you get into the lift there shouldn't be
|
|||
|
any problems." She picked up a folder from the desk, gave
|
|||
|
Hausthar a small wave and vanished through a wall.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Hausthar drew in a deep breath, walked through the wall into
|
|||
|
the elevator, hit the button marked '-5' and fell back against
|
|||
|
the rear of the lift. <This is too much!> He had expected
|
|||
|
strange things to happen, but inside the labs, not in the
|
|||
|
reception area!
|
|||
|
The lift slowed to a stop and opened its doors. Hausthar
|
|||
|
sighed with relief as he was confronted with doors. <At least
|
|||
|
there isn't any of these blasted E.V.E.s down at this level.>
|
|||
|
Hausthar wandered down the corridors, looking for the room he
|
|||
|
had been directed to. He came to a halt in front of a door
|
|||
|
marked "V.C.T.R. Maintenance Lab". As he tried the handle,
|
|||
|
the door suddenly opened and a startled Hausthar found himself
|
|||
|
in front of a tall mound of metal. It spoke to him.
|
|||
|
"<Haust!> What are you doing here?" The voice was very
|
|||
|
familiar - it reminded Hausthar of ...
|
|||
|
"Victor? Is that you? What happened?" If what was
|
|||
|
standing in front of him was indeed Victor, then someone must
|
|||
|
have shoved a grenade in his insides - minus the pin.
|
|||
|
"I'm here for my check-up, as usual. You didn't think I
|
|||
|
repaired myself, did you? C'mon in, the more the merrier."
|
|||
|
Hausthar entered the room and was treated to a sight he
|
|||
|
would never forget. Victor's 'skin' was lying on a set of
|
|||
|
benches at the far end of the room. All around were batteries
|
|||
|
of electronic equipment of various sorts, none of which were
|
|||
|
familiar to him.
|
|||
|
"So this is where you come for your lube job?"
|
|||
|
"Yes - apart from the fact that each of my <lube jobs>, as
|
|||
|
you put it, costs over thirty thousand credits. All of
|
|||
|
this..." he made a sweeping movement with what Hausthar could
|
|||
|
only describe as his right arm "...and all these people are
|
|||
|
here just to make sure everything ticks at the right moment.
|
|||
|
All are here to make sure I am in the best of health. I get
|
|||
|
the best mechanics for my joints, the best electronics experts
|
|||
|
for my micro-chips... but I still can't figure out why they've
|
|||
|
got medics on the team." His voice lowered so only Hausthar
|
|||
|
could hear. "To tell you the truth, they turn me off before
|
|||
|
the medics start on me, so I don't know what they do. I've
|
|||
|
tried asking but I keep hitting a blank wall." His voice went
|
|||
|
back to normal. "So - what are you doing here?" He sat back
|
|||
|
on a tilt table and settled himself as the technicians went
|
|||
|
back to work.
|
|||
|
Hausthar looked for a while before answering. "I'm looking
|
|||
|
for Dr. Lang. I was told he might be somewhere around here."
|
|||
|
"Well, you got close. Actually, he's in the next room down
|
|||
|
the hall. Listen, if he's waiting for you, you'd better
|
|||
|
hurry."
|
|||
|
Hausthar opened the door to exit, then turned around. "When
|
|||
|
will you be finished?"
|
|||
|
"None of your business, boy. I'll meet you in your room at
|
|||
|
1900 hours - and try to be there, OK?"
|
|||
|
Hausthar gave him a puzzled look. "How do you know where my
|
|||
|
room is? I've only just arrived."
|
|||
|
"Simple, organic brain! I reserved it for you. Nice room
|
|||
|
in the west wing, overlooking the cliffs and the sea. Had
|
|||
|
your things transferred there from the Academy already.
|
|||
|
You'll love it. Now run along. Mustn't keep the Doctor
|
|||
|
waiting."
|
|||
|
Victor ushered Hausthar out and closed the door behind him.
|
|||
|
Hausthar turned down the corridor and made his way to the next
|
|||
|
door. Opening it, he arrived just in time to hear Lang
|
|||
|
talking to a small boy.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The boy must have been five to eight years of age, with
|
|||
|
blueish hair, and was wearing a body-suit with RDF insignias
|
|||
|
pinned to it. Lang was crouched next to him, holding one of
|
|||
|
those electronic kits which seem to fascinate kids that age.
|
|||
|
"I've told you already, Scott. If it doesn't want to work
|
|||
|
the way you want it to, bashing away at it won't help." Lang
|
|||
|
was examining the breadboard on which the circuit had been
|
|||
|
built, prodding several micro-chips which looked the worst for
|
|||
|
wear. "You can't force experiments or people to conform to
|
|||
|
your world view!" continued Lang. "The Universe just doesn't
|
|||
|
work that way! Do you understand?" The small boy nodded and
|
|||
|
kept on staring Lang in the eyes, apparently determined to
|
|||
|
take all the Doctor could dish out in the way of lectures.
|
|||
|
"Good. Now let's see what went wrong."
|
|||
|
Hausthar thought this a good time to make his entrance. He
|
|||
|
cleared his throat and stood at attention. "Cadet... er,
|
|||
|
Corporal Reneth reporting, Sir!"
|
|||
|
Lang looked up in surprise. He obviously hadn't heard
|
|||
|
Hausthar come in. "Ah, Corporal. Welcome! Come in, come in.
|
|||
|
I'd like you to meet my godson, Scott Bernard. Scott, this is
|
|||
|
Corporal Hausthar Reneth. He'll be working with us from now
|
|||
|
on."
|
|||
|
Scott looked up and returned Hausthar's salute. He was the
|
|||
|
only one who even bothered. Lang nearly smiled at this. "I
|
|||
|
think I should warn you that protocol is not what it should be
|
|||
|
around here. You must understand that we can't just drop
|
|||
|
everything and return a salute every time someone walks in.
|
|||
|
We're pretty informal on that subject."
|
|||
|
"I'll try to remember Sir."
|
|||
|
Just then, Lang noticed the still-present Scott, holding his
|
|||
|
circuit board in his hand. He gestured to one of the female
|
|||
|
staff. "Susan, could you please take care of Scott while I
|
|||
|
look after Corporal Reneth?"
|
|||
|
The tall, slender tech made her way towards the group, long
|
|||
|
amber hair trailing in her wake. Lang made the presentations.
|
|||
|
"Hausthar Reneth, I'd like you to meet Susan Bernard - my
|
|||
|
niece and Scott's mother."
|
|||
|
Hausthar started to salute, but remembered Lang's
|
|||
|
instructions and offered his hand instead. Susan shook it
|
|||
|
warmly. "Glad to have you on the team." she said sincerely.
|
|||
|
She bent towards Scott, took his hand in hers, and led him
|
|||
|
away to a bench on the other side of the room.
|
|||
|
"Scott shows great potential as a pilot, but I'm afraid he
|
|||
|
just doesn't have the patience to be a scientist." mused Lang.
|
|||
|
Turning towards Hausthar, he beamed a smile. "Well, any
|
|||
|
questions?"
|
|||
|
"Well.." started Hausthar. "Now that you mention it... What
|
|||
|
am I to do here?"
|
|||
|
Lang gave him a startled look. "You mean they haven't told
|
|||
|
you? Hah, bureaucratic baboons." He took Hausthar by the
|
|||
|
shoulder and led him along the lab. "You are here to start
|
|||
|
tests on new series of Veritechs and Ground Support Mecha."
|
|||
|
"And why have I been promoted? Not that I mind..."
|
|||
|
"That is easy to explain. It is an idea of Gloval's,
|
|||
|
actually. To reward volunteers for their services."
|
|||
|
Hausthar had stopped listening after the second sentence.
|
|||
|
"Gloval? As in 'Admiral Henry J. Gloval'?"
|
|||
|
"One and the same. You see, Henry... I mean Admiral Gloval,
|
|||
|
thought that our present weapons might pale in front of the
|
|||
|
Robotech Master's arsenal if it ever came doing to fighting.
|
|||
|
So we have been commissioned to furnish new series of
|
|||
|
Destroids and Veritechs. Let me show you."
|
|||
|
Lang leaned towards a vid-screen and turned it on. He
|
|||
|
punched a sequence of buttons while explaining. "The last
|
|||
|
Zentraedi attack taught us that our Destroids aren't up to
|
|||
|
shape, especially the M.A.C. IIs - we lost another one three
|
|||
|
days ago. They're just too easy a target at short range.
|
|||
|
Ah!" The vid-screen finally came to life, showing a picture
|
|||
|
vaguely resembling a M.A.C. II. The picture rapidly changed
|
|||
|
and a whole stream of Mecha were displayed whilst Lang
|
|||
|
continued to talk.
|
|||
|
"You see, although we may have the advantage of surprise, it
|
|||
|
is a very thin one. So we have reconfigured the Destroids to
|
|||
|
give them better defences in close-quarter combat. We have
|
|||
|
also designed a new series of Veritechs. Here's the Logan,
|
|||
|
the A.J.A.C., and a new ground-based Veritech, the Hover
|
|||
|
Tank - none of which have been tested yet. That's your job
|
|||
|
and that of the other pilots. It's up to you people to test
|
|||
|
all these new Mecha and find their faults - and chances are
|
|||
|
there will be a lot of them."
|
|||
|
Hausthar was still staring at the screen where pictures of
|
|||
|
high-tech helicopters turning into Battloids were quickly
|
|||
|
replacing those of a plane barely taller than a man changing
|
|||
|
to Guardian. This was followed by a Hovercraft Tank changing
|
|||
|
to a two-legged gun turret and finally into a Battloid. The
|
|||
|
shape of that last Battloid gave Hausthar the eery impression
|
|||
|
that it was wearing tails.
|
|||
|
"When do I start?" he enquired.
|
|||
|
"First you'll have to settle in," answered Lang "then learn
|
|||
|
the theory behind these new Mecha and have a couple of
|
|||
|
sessions in the simulator so you know what they are supposed
|
|||
|
to be like. You'll then try it on actual machines and tell us
|
|||
|
where and when they differ from the simulations. You'll first
|
|||
|
try out Research new pet Veritech - it's a replacement for
|
|||
|
the VF-series Veritech... faster and more compact." He
|
|||
|
suddenly seemed to remember something. "Have you got a room
|
|||
|
yet?"
|
|||
|
"Yes, Victor booked on for me. Even transferred my things
|
|||
|
to it already."
|
|||
|
A dark cloud briefly crossed Lang's face. He quickly
|
|||
|
dismissed it with a smile. "Good, you'll settle in fast then.
|
|||
|
The secretary will give you directions to your room. Please
|
|||
|
come by my office tomorrow at 0900 hours. We'll finalise your
|
|||
|
transfer then."
|
|||
|
Lang turned around without further goodbyes and started
|
|||
|
arguing with a technician as Hausthar left. The argument
|
|||
|
echoed through the hall as he headed for the lift, Lang's
|
|||
|
voice filling his mind.
|
|||
|
"...And I'm telling you we <don't> need a personality system
|
|||
|
check. Why put more hardware into it than is necessary?
|
|||
|
There is no way J.N.C.M. will develop a relationship with her
|
|||
|
other than the one we'll program it with!..."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
As he turned the corner, Hausthar realised he was lost.
|
|||
|
Where he thought the lift should have been was a long
|
|||
|
corridor, with doors sprinkled in its walls. He heaved a
|
|||
|
sigh, looked skyward in desperation and approached the first
|
|||
|
door. His recent experiences had made him wary though, so he
|
|||
|
first looked in to check if he was not about to interrupt an
|
|||
|
experiment.
|
|||
|
The room was large and dimly lit. The only source of light
|
|||
|
was a spot shining from the ceiling onto a table in the centre
|
|||
|
of the room. Upon that table was a small girl, still a baby,
|
|||
|
her greenish-blond hair dispersed around her face. Her head
|
|||
|
was covered with electrodes connected to an apparatus Hausthar
|
|||
|
recognised immediately - it was the power source from a
|
|||
|
Veritech. What was she doing wired to a Protoculture
|
|||
|
Generator? As he was about to step into the room, a voice
|
|||
|
resonated through the darkness, human but with a metallic
|
|||
|
twang to it.
|
|||
|
<Well Cochran? Any reactions?>
|
|||
|
"No Dr. Zand. We haven't been able to get even a squeak out
|
|||
|
of the Sterling girl. And we've been pumping her full of
|
|||
|
Protoculture all day."
|
|||
|
The voice that was Zand gave a thoughtful sound before
|
|||
|
answering. <Increase the level by a factor of two.>
|
|||
|
Cochran stepped into the light. "But sir, this could kill
|
|||
|
her!" He immediately regretted his outburst. Hausthar saw
|
|||
|
his eyes go wide, his breathing becoming irregular, his hands
|
|||
|
clawing at his throat as if someone, something, was choking
|
|||
|
him. The voice came from the darkness again.
|
|||
|
<I said increase the level by a factor of two. Do you have
|
|||
|
something against that?>
|
|||
|
Cochran shook his head negatively in panic, his face
|
|||
|
starting to turn blue. His knees had buckled but he had not
|
|||
|
fallen.
|
|||
|
<Good.> said the voice. <Just remember that.>
|
|||
|
Cochran collapsed to the floor, his breathing coming back as
|
|||
|
a painful hiss. After several seconds he got up, wandered to
|
|||
|
the generator and turned a control. The hum from the
|
|||
|
generator increased and a moan rose from the table.
|
|||
|
Nobody noticed Hausthar as he closed the door and went in
|
|||
|
search of a bathroom in which he could be sick in peace.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The first thing she was aware of as she came to was pain -
|
|||
|
pain in her head, pain in her ribs, pain every time she drew a
|
|||
|
breath. Her mind started to register other things beside the
|
|||
|
pain... a regular beeping sound coming from her left, a slight
|
|||
|
cool breeze and warmth on the right side of her face. She
|
|||
|
opened her eyes and closed them just as fast - waves of pain
|
|||
|
crashed around in her skull. She waited until they had
|
|||
|
receded and tried again, this time slower. Her eyes slowly
|
|||
|
focused on a blank area in front of them. <Wall>, she
|
|||
|
thought. She slowly turned her head towards the warmth and
|
|||
|
noticed a window through which sunshine was streaming.
|
|||
|
Her mind swung into action as she tried to correlate the
|
|||
|
different sights and sound around her. Awareness finally came
|
|||
|
to the top. She was lying in a hospital room. Assuming she
|
|||
|
hadn't been moved, she was still in a RDF base somewhere in
|
|||
|
South America. She had been sent here to join part of the
|
|||
|
Skull Squadron that had temporarily been placed under the
|
|||
|
command of Max Sterling. Her name was... Her name was... Her
|
|||
|
eyes opened wide in alarm as she realised she couldn't
|
|||
|
remember. Her name was flitting in and out of her awareness,
|
|||
|
taunting her with its information, but never giving it up.
|
|||
|
She laid back once again with a sigh of despair.
|
|||
|
The door opened and a nurse walked in, checked the
|
|||
|
instrument panel next to her bed and beamed one of those
|
|||
|
smiles that only nurses had been trained to give.
|
|||
|
"Good morning Corporal Cequor. Nice to have you back
|
|||
|
amongst the living." She proceeded to tidy-up the bed.
|
|||
|
Her name! And with the name came a flood of memories.
|
|||
|
Michele Cequor, Corporal fresh out of the Academy, had
|
|||
|
challenged perhaps the greatest ace the RDF had ever known and
|
|||
|
had wound up in hospital! The problem was, she couldn't
|
|||
|
remember how. Fleeting images of Female Armors and explosions
|
|||
|
wavered in her mind.
|
|||
|
"How did I get here?" she asked nervously.
|
|||
|
The nurse finished her chores and looked at her before
|
|||
|
answering. "I really don't know what happened to you. They
|
|||
|
brought you back from the simulation room with a couple of
|
|||
|
broken ribs and a concussion. It was touch and go there for a
|
|||
|
while but you looked like you wanted to pull through - and you
|
|||
|
did!" She started for the door. "You'll be released in a
|
|||
|
couple of days so enjoy the holiday. From what I hear, the
|
|||
|
Skulls are being moved back to Macross in a week. See you
|
|||
|
later." She closed the door behind here.
|
|||
|
Michele looked at the ceiling and tried to get her memories
|
|||
|
and feelings straight. The squadron was being recalled. That
|
|||
|
meant she would be under the orders of this hard-head she had
|
|||
|
heard about - what was his name again? Hunter, Richard
|
|||
|
Hunter. He kept on having this on-again off-again
|
|||
|
relationship with both the singing star Lynn Minmei and his
|
|||
|
superior officer, Lisa Hayes. <What a jackass!>
|
|||
|
She laid back and waited to be discharged. This was going
|
|||
|
to be a long week!
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
CHAPTER 4
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
People have come to regard Protoculture as just another fuel
|
|||
|
to burn, just another weapon to use. What they do not seem to
|
|||
|
understand is that Protoculture radiates, sends out shock-
|
|||
|
waves with its every use. The warriors using it do not seem
|
|||
|
to realise that every time they fire a shot, someone out there
|
|||
|
has his or her life thrown out of balance.
|
|||
|
And I don't mean the person who gets his head blown off by
|
|||
|
the shot!
|
|||
|
Jan Morris: Solar Seeds, Galactic Guardians.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Michele was walking away from the hospital, trying very hard
|
|||
|
not to break into a run. She hated the place. It kept on
|
|||
|
reminding her of the price of failure in war. She made her
|
|||
|
way over to the squadron's headquarter, knocked on the door,
|
|||
|
waited for an answer and walked in.
|
|||
|
"Corporal Michele Cequor, reporting for duty, sir!" Hadn't
|
|||
|
she said the same thing just a week ago? Wasn't this the
|
|||
|
start of a conversation that had led her to a hospital bed?
|
|||
|
Her thoughts were cut short by the almost too cheerful voice
|
|||
|
of the squadron's present commander. "Hello again, Corporal.
|
|||
|
And how are we feeling today?" His voice was too syrupy for
|
|||
|
her taste.
|
|||
|
"Not too well, sir. I still don't know how I went with the
|
|||
|
simulation. Nobody seems to want to tell me."
|
|||
|
Sterling's smile left his face. "Well, let's just say you
|
|||
|
showed me I was wrong. It was a rather, ah... interesting
|
|||
|
experience to watch you at work. Are you packed?"
|
|||
|
The question took her by surprise. "Er... Yes sir!
|
|||
|
Actually it's more like I haven't yet unpacked. I spent all
|
|||
|
of my time in the hospital."
|
|||
|
"It doesn't matter. We've been recalled to join up with the
|
|||
|
rest of the Skulls in New Macross. I'm sorry but nobody here
|
|||
|
seems to need a wingman, so you'll just have to do by yourself
|
|||
|
for a while. However, a friend of mine in Macross needs a new
|
|||
|
partner. His last one tuned out during a recent attack by the
|
|||
|
Zentraedi. Are you interested?"
|
|||
|
"Yes sir! What's his name, if I may be so bold as to ask?"
|
|||
|
Sterling's smile made a reappearance on his face. "you
|
|||
|
may - Richard Hunter. Have you heard of him?"
|
|||
|
<Oh no! Not him! Not the jackass!> She gulped as she
|
|||
|
tried to keep her feelings hidden from Sterling. "Yes sir, I
|
|||
|
have. Quite a bit."
|
|||
|
"He's a good friend and a good pilot. A bit mixed up
|
|||
|
sometimes, maybe, but the best there is! Besides me that is."
|
|||
|
His smile grew and grew until Michele could no longer stand
|
|||
|
it.
|
|||
|
"We're leaving in half an hour Corporal, so have your
|
|||
|
equipment stashed on board the transport plane and get your
|
|||
|
Veritech ready. We won't be waiting for anybody." He gave
|
|||
|
her a salute, waited for her to return it, and walked out the
|
|||
|
door, leaving a very confused pilot behind him.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Simulations he'd seen, but never anything like the last set!
|
|||
|
If these new Veritechs were anything like what he'd just
|
|||
|
experienced, the Robotech Masters would very likely find
|
|||
|
themselves overmatched.
|
|||
|
Hausthar was back in his room, sitting in a chair on his
|
|||
|
balcony, feet up on the railing. He watched the sun as it
|
|||
|
drifted slowly towards the sea, its orange mingling with the
|
|||
|
dark purple of the water, sending ripples of light which
|
|||
|
danced and rolled with the smooth waves of the bay. Off into
|
|||
|
the distance some pleasure boats were making their way back to
|
|||
|
harbour before the night. Behind the dark sunglasses, his
|
|||
|
eyes shifted upwards to the sun, squinting as they reached it.
|
|||
|
Hausthar gave a short sound of surprise - he was vaguely
|
|||
|
seeing three shadows, maybe twenty feet tall each, covered in
|
|||
|
flowing robes whose soft, high collars resembled the petals of
|
|||
|
a flower. The shadows drifted and shimmered, increasing their
|
|||
|
wraith-like appearance. Hausthar closed his eyes, rubbed them
|
|||
|
and looked again.
|
|||
|
The shadows had gone.
|
|||
|
<That's it>, he thought. <You're losing it. First shadows,
|
|||
|
then voices, and then off to the loony-farm.> He decided he
|
|||
|
needed a shower - a long, cold shower.
|
|||
|
As he got up, something slipped from his top pocket and fell
|
|||
|
to the ground. A letter. Hausthar picked it up and looked
|
|||
|
at it. The letter was correctly addressed to his room. He
|
|||
|
turned the letter around in hope of seeing who sent it. No
|
|||
|
such luck - the letter didn't even have a return address. The
|
|||
|
funny thing was, Hausthar didn't remember receiving it, much
|
|||
|
less placing it in his pocket. He went inside, grabbed the
|
|||
|
letter opener, and opened his mysterious correspondence. The
|
|||
|
message inside was simple and to the point:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Meet me at the
|
|||
|
Black Pegasus Club
|
|||
|
at 1900.
|
|||
|
Please come alone.
|
|||
|
Ricky.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
At least he now knew the name of the writer. But who was
|
|||
|
this Ricky? "Well, whoever you are, you've got yourself a
|
|||
|
date." he thought out loud. "But it's going to be on my
|
|||
|
terms."
|
|||
|
He folded the letter again and went to change.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The Black Pegasus Club was a high-class bar/cafe where most
|
|||
|
of the Veritech pilots went after a hard day's flying. Today,
|
|||
|
as usual, it was filled with pilots drinking their cares away,
|
|||
|
hoping to drown their sorrows in the bottle... and as usual,
|
|||
|
failing miserably. The room was dimly lit but was free of
|
|||
|
that perverse low-hanging cloud of smoke normally pictured
|
|||
|
with such establishments. This absence of smoke came from the
|
|||
|
fact that very few Veritech pilots smoked, and those that did
|
|||
|
never survived long - smoking slowed your reflexes and
|
|||
|
mellowed your thought-processes, and in a Veritech this
|
|||
|
combination spelled disaster.
|
|||
|
A small band was playing a slow tune in the corner. It was
|
|||
|
composed of all sort of musicians; the Dark Pegasus Band was
|
|||
|
renown as an open band. Anybody could join in at any time -
|
|||
|
as long as they played reasonably well.
|
|||
|
Hausthar had chosen a seat in an alcove on the side opposite
|
|||
|
the entrance. A series of Petite Cola bottles were stacked on
|
|||
|
his table in the shape of a pyramid, a testimonial to how long
|
|||
|
he had been sitting there. He had just finished placing his
|
|||
|
most recent bottle at the apex when a voice broke through the
|
|||
|
low murmur of the crowd.
|
|||
|
"<Hi>! Sorry I'm late. Been waiting long?" A shadow
|
|||
|
slipped itself onto the seat facing him and placed something
|
|||
|
small on the table. "You wouldn't believe the trouble I had
|
|||
|
getting into this joint. The security here is worse than at
|
|||
|
RDF headquarters!"
|
|||
|
Hausthar forced his sleep-weary eyes to focus on the shadow
|
|||
|
in front of him and tried to make some sense of what they were
|
|||
|
telling him. The first thing that struck him was the face -
|
|||
|
<God she's cute> was a thought that came to mind instantly and
|
|||
|
<How the hell did she get in a place like this> was another
|
|||
|
that immediately followed.
|
|||
|
The face reflected youth and was not unpleasant to look at.
|
|||
|
A small knob of a nose was set in contrast by two deep-blue
|
|||
|
eyes and by the not-quite-shoulder-length crop of pale-pink
|
|||
|
hair that was tied back from her eyes by a red piece of
|
|||
|
material. She was wearing a legless, heavy-tissue leotard
|
|||
|
with a short-sleeved jacket that only came half-way down to
|
|||
|
her waist. The leotard was light green in colour and the
|
|||
|
jacket was light brown, offset with a large patch sewn just
|
|||
|
above the left breast. Hausthar squinted to make out the
|
|||
|
embroidery: three pink tri-petal flowers on the same stem
|
|||
|
against a background of stars. He followed the arms down to
|
|||
|
the item on the table: slender wrists, complete with light-
|
|||
|
green sweatbands, were connected to hands holding a small
|
|||
|
purse. The look was one of girlish seduction and how she had
|
|||
|
managed to walk in without eliciting any cat-calls or whistles
|
|||
|
was beyond him.
|
|||
|
He hadn't realised how long he'd been staring until she
|
|||
|
shook her hand in front of his eyes.
|
|||
|
"Hello? Earth to Hausthar... Come in... Anybody home?" Her
|
|||
|
face was giving a sincere youthful smile that Hausthar found
|
|||
|
irresistible.
|
|||
|
"Um... er... Sorry. May I assume that you are the one who
|
|||
|
sent me the note?"
|
|||
|
"You may - and you would be correct in your assumption.
|
|||
|
Anything else?"
|
|||
|
"Yes. How did you know where I was stationed? No civilian
|
|||
|
is supposed to know about transfers to and from Research."
|
|||
|
"Well now, if I told you everything there wouldn't be any
|
|||
|
little secrets in our relationship, now would there?"
|
|||
|
<Relationship?> What was she talking about? "Hum...
|
|||
|
Yeah... Well, who are you?"
|
|||
|
"Oh, did I forget to sign the note? My name is Ricky."
|
|||
|
"Nice to meet you." Hausthar was feeling a trickle of cold
|
|||
|
sweat making its way down his back. <This is crazy>, he
|
|||
|
thought. <Either she is nuts or I am.> "Would you like
|
|||
|
something to drink?" he proposed nonetheless.
|
|||
|
"Yes, thanks. How about a Cola? And loosen up for God's
|
|||
|
sake. I'm not going to eat you."
|
|||
|
"I'm sorry, but I find it very difficult to relax in company
|
|||
|
of a person I have never before seen in my life but who seems
|
|||
|
to know everything there is to about me."
|
|||
|
"Jeezus. You're a hard case, you know that? But if it's me
|
|||
|
that's bothering you, I'll put you at ease." She stood up and
|
|||
|
wandered over towards the band. Hausthar could faintly hear
|
|||
|
her ask whether they knew how to play 'In My Heart'. The lead
|
|||
|
musician nodded his head and turned around to talk to his
|
|||
|
players. Ricky walked down the small stage towards a
|
|||
|
microphone, flipped the echo switch on and gave a small nod to
|
|||
|
the band. By this time, the room had turned quiet, waiting to
|
|||
|
see what would follow.
|
|||
|
The band opened with electric guitars, a piano and a
|
|||
|
backbeat on the drums, setting the rhythm for the rest of the
|
|||
|
instruments. The opening was short but alive with feeling and
|
|||
|
the audience was already captured in its spirit when Ricky's
|
|||
|
voice drifted through the music.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
In my mind,
|
|||
|
I had to try to make it on my own...
|
|||
|
Sometimes it's hard to be alone.
|
|||
|
In my mind,
|
|||
|
My loneliness would never seem to end...
|
|||
|
Something is happening
|
|||
|
I don't understand...
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
A trumpet took a soft solo, a languid sound amidst the heavy
|
|||
|
backbeat of the drums and the sharp sound of the piano and
|
|||
|
guitars, while Ricky danced on the stage. She twisted and
|
|||
|
turned, doing a half ballet, half disco routine and smiling at
|
|||
|
Hausthar all the while. Slowly, she made her way back to the
|
|||
|
mike as the band picked up.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
In my heart,
|
|||
|
I feel the heat
|
|||
|
Of something burning deep inside of me;
|
|||
|
I'll be the one that I could never be,
|
|||
|
Now that I found you!
|
|||
|
In my heart,
|
|||
|
I realise -
|
|||
|
'You ever loved me opened up my eyes.
|
|||
|
You are the answer and the reason why.
|
|||
|
... 'Living my love for you
|
|||
|
In my heart! Music & lyrics (c)
|
|||
|
appropriate people
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The band continued with the music as Ricky sustained her
|
|||
|
last note, gave a bow to a pleased audience and made her way
|
|||
|
back to the table. Hausthar could not help but smile and join
|
|||
|
with the crowd in applauding her performance.
|
|||
|
Ricky sat down, panting slightly from exhaustion. "Well,
|
|||
|
what do you think? Still uptight?"
|
|||
|
Hausthar smiled. "I've got to admit you've loosened me up.
|
|||
|
Now, how about that Cola?"
|
|||
|
"I thought you'd never ask." Hausthar once again noticed
|
|||
|
how her smile was enhanced by her dimples.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
<If anything in this world is ever true>, thought Michele,
|
|||
|
<it's that night missions are the worst!> Her Veritech was
|
|||
|
making headway towards the Arkansas Protectorate, an area of
|
|||
|
North America where the inhabitants had accepted the Zentraedi
|
|||
|
as local government. Through the misty clouds that were
|
|||
|
hanging outside her plane she could barely see the rest of the
|
|||
|
squadron, and wondered whether or not they were really there
|
|||
|
or just part of a delusion.
|
|||
|
The group had just made landsight when the reality of the
|
|||
|
world was brought back to her attention. "This is Skull Two
|
|||
|
to all Veritechs. We've just received news of an attack on a
|
|||
|
nearby town and have been ordered to help." Maximillian
|
|||
|
Sterling was on the verge of yawning with boredom as he
|
|||
|
informed his crew of their assignment. The Fighter jockeys
|
|||
|
had a strict rule about life: Dying is sometimes unavoidable,
|
|||
|
but loosing your cool is inexcusable.
|
|||
|
A voice replied over the Tac-Net. "Aw Jeez! Zentraedi
|
|||
|
<again>? Don't these guys ever learn?"
|
|||
|
"Apparently not. So let's go find them and make them pay
|
|||
|
for good ol' France." Maximillian never had forgiven Dolza's
|
|||
|
armada for the destruction of his homeland and had centered
|
|||
|
his vengeance on the Malcontents.
|
|||
|
"Roger sir..." The voice held off for a few seconds as the
|
|||
|
planes closed in on the town. "Got 'em! Radar contact
|
|||
|
established, multiple paints. Radar signatures indicate two
|
|||
|
Light Artillery Pods, one Heavy Artillery Pod, five Battle
|
|||
|
Pods and a Cyclop Recon Scout. Computer also says we've been
|
|||
|
scanned - they know we're here sir!"
|
|||
|
"Thank you Corporal. Alright, listen up. Normal battle
|
|||
|
plan." A few of the pilot sniggered at this - Normal Battle
|
|||
|
Plan generally meant a free-for-all. "Hit whatever you can
|
|||
|
but stay with your wingman!" Sterling's blue Veritech banked
|
|||
|
hard, soon followed by the red of his wingmate and soulmate,
|
|||
|
Miriya Sterling. The squadron split into groups of two,
|
|||
|
leaving Michele on her own.
|
|||
|
The pods had known they were coming and proved it by laying
|
|||
|
down a barrage of firepower that took out three Veritechs
|
|||
|
before anybody had time to react. The computers of the
|
|||
|
surviving Veritechs immediately took note of the location of
|
|||
|
the downed planes for later retrieval of the wreckages.
|
|||
|
Michele chose one of the surviving Veritechs and took the
|
|||
|
place of its missing partner. "You've just changed wingman,
|
|||
|
flyboy."
|
|||
|
A voice drifted on the Net. "I noticed my old one dropped
|
|||
|
out on me. My name's Michael. What's yours?" Two Stilettos
|
|||
|
left the underside of his wings and connected with a Battlepod
|
|||
|
intent on the destruction of Skull Two. The Pod's armor
|
|||
|
expanded, cracked, then finally gave way, like an overblown
|
|||
|
balloon.
|
|||
|
"Mine's Michele. Bandit at Six O'Clock - bank right." She
|
|||
|
changed to Guardian mode, thrusters folding forwards, and gave
|
|||
|
the engines all the power she could muster from the plane.
|
|||
|
The Fighter shook as the engines decelerated the Mecha at a
|
|||
|
rate well above the recommended limits. A Light Artillery Pod
|
|||
|
surged past her and centered itself on her HUD. Michele
|
|||
|
fingered the firing studd and felt rather than heard the
|
|||
|
buzzsaw sound from the undercarriage GU-11. The pod tried to
|
|||
|
imitate swiss cheese as the rounds impacted with it, but soon
|
|||
|
gave up as its generator exploded, showering debris amongst
|
|||
|
the countryside.
|
|||
|
"Skull Two to Skulls Five and Thirteen. The Cyclop's making
|
|||
|
like a banana. Stop it from splitting any further."
|
|||
|
Michael acknowledged and both he and Michele turned their
|
|||
|
planes around and went after the Recon Scout.
|
|||
|
"Yo, Michael. I never went up against a Cyclop before.
|
|||
|
What are they like?" said Michele jokingly.
|
|||
|
"Think of a saucer with two compass attached to it on either
|
|||
|
side. Also it's green and deadly."
|
|||
|
"In that case I've got a visual on it. 11 O'Clock high,
|
|||
|
trying to hide in the clouds."
|
|||
|
"Well, here we go with the usual. <Zentraedi Pilot. This
|
|||
|
is the first and only warning you will receive. Land your
|
|||
|
craft and come out quietly or face the consequences.>
|
|||
|
Michele, have you ever wondered which lame-brained idiot wants
|
|||
|
us to say this every time? They never comply anyway."
|
|||
|
"True enough Skull Five. Radar shows incoming missiles.
|
|||
|
Lots of 'em. Activating ECM. How about a little covering
|
|||
|
fire?"
|
|||
|
"You've got it Skull Thirteen... Watch out, we've got a
|
|||
|
survivor... Never mind, it just blew up of its own accord."
|
|||
|
"How's a little pincer manoeuver sound to you? You take the
|
|||
|
right, I'll take the left."
|
|||
|
"Affirmative... Hold on a second, I've got a high-energy
|
|||
|
reading coming from this baby."
|
|||
|
"Same here."
|
|||
|
"More missiles?"
|
|||
|
"Radar paint says one medium range heavy warhead, but the
|
|||
|
energy paint is totally wrong for it."
|
|||
|
"Try to get a visual on it."
|
|||
|
"<Skull Five, bank right! Bank right!> It's coming right
|
|||
|
at you!"
|
|||
|
"Got it Skull Thirteen... My God! I just got a visual on
|
|||
|
it. Those bastards have attached a Reflex Generator to it.
|
|||
|
Avoid contact at all cost. This thing can blow you to kingdom
|
|||
|
come without even meaning to."
|
|||
|
"Negative Skull Five, I can't shake it. Countermeasures are
|
|||
|
not affective. Computer estimates thirty seconds to impact."
|
|||
|
"I can't get to firing position in that time!"
|
|||
|
"Don't I know it! I'll try to lure it away from inhabited
|
|||
|
areas. At least neither of us'll do any damage when we go
|
|||
|
up."
|
|||
|
"Skull Thirteen, eject! Dammit Michele, get the Hell out of
|
|||
|
your plane!"
|
|||
|
"No can do, Michael. I'm sticking this one out. All I need
|
|||
|
is just a few seconds more... Come on... Skull Five, I've
|
|||
|
cleared the city. I'm going to ej..."
|
|||
|
"Michele? Dammit Michele, answer!... <MICHELE!!>"
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
CHAPTER 5
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
We had an inkling of what would happen. I mean, all of us
|
|||
|
had a different idea as to actually what, but we all agreed on
|
|||
|
the fact it would be stupendous! After all, you can't subject
|
|||
|
a humanoid body to such an amount of 'Culture without some
|
|||
|
side effects.
|
|||
|
Why weren't we sure? 'Cause it is rather hard to find
|
|||
|
volunteers who'll agree to have a Protoculture generator
|
|||
|
placed beside them and detonated at point-blank range.
|
|||
|
Remarks attributed to a R&D technician.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Because you don't just pilot a Robotech ship, Rick; you live
|
|||
|
it!
|
|||
|
Roy Fokker, Skull Leader - deceased.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"Stop shouting! I can't hear myself groan!"
|
|||
|
"Michele? Is that you?"
|
|||
|
"Of course it's me, you idiot! Do you know of anyone else
|
|||
|
who'd use this frequency?" The voice coming from the tactical
|
|||
|
net was tired and drawn-out, with little stops and starts
|
|||
|
between words as if the person on the other side was stifling
|
|||
|
moans of pain.
|
|||
|
"What's your status?"
|
|||
|
"Don't know yet. I'm running an analysis program at the
|
|||
|
moment."
|
|||
|
Michael thanked the stars for giving him back this
|
|||
|
particular wingman, grouchy though she may be. "What
|
|||
|
happened? I lost contact with you for a good thirty seconds."
|
|||
|
"I have absolutely no idea. Last thing I remember is the
|
|||
|
missile closing in on my tail, a big white explosion, and me
|
|||
|
panicking... Hold on, the analysis program has finished."
|
|||
|
"How bad is it?"
|
|||
|
"<Bad>. Both engines are dying on me, my left wing is
|
|||
|
hanging on God knows how, visual communication is non-
|
|||
|
functional, weapons systems are down, ditto for the radar and
|
|||
|
visual systems. In other words, I'm a flying wreck. And if
|
|||
|
you thought the hardware wasn't bad enough, I'm leaking
|
|||
|
fluids."
|
|||
|
"You mean you're bleeding?"
|
|||
|
The voice that answered back was full of sarcasm. "Oh what
|
|||
|
a novel way to say it. <Of course I'm bleeding!> How would
|
|||
|
you feel if you'd just had a missile blow up your tail-pipes?"
|
|||
|
"Ok, OK... You don't have to shout. Can you make it to New
|
|||
|
Macross?"
|
|||
|
"I'm blinder than a bat at the moment. Somebody'll have to
|
|||
|
guide me in."
|
|||
|
A smile crept on Michael's face. "No problem, I know just
|
|||
|
the person." He switched to Skull Two's frequency and raised
|
|||
|
Commander Sterling. "Excuse me sir, but we have a situation
|
|||
|
on our hands over here. We request permission to leave the
|
|||
|
mopping up to the rest of the group and a priority approach to
|
|||
|
New Macross airfield."
|
|||
|
Sterling's face flickered into being on the left commo
|
|||
|
screen. "How bad is it Michael?"
|
|||
|
"Skull Thirteen is barely able to fly sir. Most of her
|
|||
|
electronics is down and the rest is ready to give."
|
|||
|
"Permission granted Skull Five. Just you make sure she gets
|
|||
|
back down in one piece or I'll nail your hide to my
|
|||
|
thrusters."
|
|||
|
Michael saw the smile on Sterling's face and responded in
|
|||
|
kind. "Threat received and understood sir! See you back in
|
|||
|
New Macross." He switched frequencies again and raise
|
|||
|
Michele. "Yo, Skull Thirteen, we've been ordered back to New
|
|||
|
Macross ASAP. Bank fifteen degrees port, follow my manoeuvers
|
|||
|
and let's head home."
|
|||
|
"Roger Skull Five. Beginning manoeuver... now!"
|
|||
|
Both Veritechs banked, one with the grace of a ballerina,
|
|||
|
the other like a hippopotamus doing the two-step. After-
|
|||
|
burners flared into the night as both planes disappeared
|
|||
|
beyond the horizon.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Hausthar's consciousness was struggling to get a grip on
|
|||
|
reality. Blackness surrounded him, closing in on him from all
|
|||
|
sides. He opened his eyes and quickly glanced around. His
|
|||
|
head fell back just as quickly as he moaned in pain.
|
|||
|
Headaches he'd had, but nothing on this scale. He opened his
|
|||
|
eyes again and slowly made his way to a sitting position.
|
|||
|
He was back in his room, that much was obvious. He wasn't
|
|||
|
drunk, this was also obvious. So why did he have a headache
|
|||
|
which would make aspirin manufacturers fight over his account?
|
|||
|
And why couldn't he remember how he'd made it back to the
|
|||
|
base? He got up, fought down a wave of nausea which surged up
|
|||
|
and shuffled his way into the bathroom. Opening the cabinet,
|
|||
|
he struggled with a pack of aspirins and swallowed a couple.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
He sat down on the side of the bath and waited for them to
|
|||
|
take effect.
|
|||
|
<What happened last night?> Surely you couldn't get such a
|
|||
|
headache from drinking Petite Cola, even if you <did> drink
|
|||
|
over forty bottles. His thoughts went round and round inside
|
|||
|
his head as the worst of the headache subsided. <Breakfast!
|
|||
|
That's what I need! A good, solid breakfast to get back into
|
|||
|
shape, even if it is...> His eyes labored to focus on his
|
|||
|
watch... <four O'Clock in the morning!?> He walked out of the
|
|||
|
bathroom, turning off the light as he did so.
|
|||
|
Once he finally got to the kitchenette he started to cook a
|
|||
|
couple of eggs and slices of bread, left them to boil and
|
|||
|
toast respectively and stomped back into the living-room. He
|
|||
|
spied the sofa, still half-hidden in the darkness, and made
|
|||
|
his way towards it, with the resolute intention of falling on
|
|||
|
top of it and forgetting all about the world. This resolution
|
|||
|
quickly crumbled as he noticed a dark shape lying on the sofa
|
|||
|
and several items of clothing in a pile next to it.
|
|||
|
As he got closer, the dark shape became a blanket with a
|
|||
|
head protruding at one end. Hausthar recognised the face. He
|
|||
|
sat very gently next to her and looked deeply at the face
|
|||
|
which was presenting itself. <Even in her sleep she has a
|
|||
|
smile on her lips>, he thought. He brushed back a strand of
|
|||
|
hair that was slowly making its way to her lips and turned his
|
|||
|
attention to the pile of clothing next to the sofa. Shoes,
|
|||
|
socks, headband and sweatbands were lying on one side of the
|
|||
|
pile. On the other side was the jacket he had seen her with,
|
|||
|
and in the middle was... <her leotard?!> Hausthar jumped up.
|
|||
|
<My God, what is she wearing under that blanket?> He made his
|
|||
|
way back to the bathroom, turned on the light, and for the
|
|||
|
first time noticed that he himself had been walking around in
|
|||
|
his underwear. <Oh this is great>, he thought. <What else
|
|||
|
can go wrong today?> As if to answer his question, a strand
|
|||
|
of black smoke and a pernicious odour twisted their way around
|
|||
|
the door into the room. <Damn, my toasts!> He scrambled out
|
|||
|
through the doorway.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
New Macross Airport was the only airport for miles around.
|
|||
|
Since there was close to no civilian flights, most of its
|
|||
|
functions were military - which is why no-one was surprised
|
|||
|
when a call came from two damaged Veritechs, including one on
|
|||
|
the verge of disintegrating into its component parts.
|
|||
|
"Lewis, what's their ETA?"
|
|||
|
Lewis turned around towards the Chief Controller and flipped
|
|||
|
through his calculations. "Approximately two minutes. We've
|
|||
|
cleared runway five and placed all emergency services along
|
|||
|
it. Unless it crashes into the city, we should be able to
|
|||
|
save the pilot."
|
|||
|
"Good. Just make sure you don't send them on a collision
|
|||
|
course with the SDF." His eyes turned back to the middle of
|
|||
|
Lake Gloval, a few hundred meters away from the tower. "I
|
|||
|
always said it was a bad idea to build this airport so close
|
|||
|
to this pile of junk that passes off for a Battle-Fortress."
|
|||
|
Lewis did not respond - this was the third time this shift
|
|||
|
he'd heard the complaint, ever since a plane had mistakenly
|
|||
|
been diverted on a collision course towards the bridge of the
|
|||
|
old Fortress.
|
|||
|
"Planes on approach. Two Veritechs confirmed... Skull Five,
|
|||
|
Skull Thirteen, do you read me?"
|
|||
|
The speaker crackled into life as both pilots answered back.
|
|||
|
"Skull Thirteen to Tower, request emergency approach."
|
|||
|
"Roger Skull Thirteen, approach is clear on runway five.
|
|||
|
There is no other traffic in the vicinity so don't worry if
|
|||
|
you have to over-shoot and try again. Medics and firemen have
|
|||
|
been placed all along the runway and are ready to assist you.
|
|||
|
Do you copy?"
|
|||
|
"Roger Tower, coming in. Heads up down there!"
|
|||
|
Lewis looked out the window and saw a pile of junk make its
|
|||
|
approach onto runway five. The pile of junk extended landing
|
|||
|
gears and thus identified itself as Skull Thirteen. The Chief
|
|||
|
Controller suddenly gave a grunt of surprise, dropped the
|
|||
|
binoculars he was using and grabbed the nearest microphone.
|
|||
|
"Skull Thirteen, abort! Abort! Your left landing gear is
|
|||
|
not fully extended."
|
|||
|
"Negative Tower, cannot over-shoot the runway. My engines
|
|||
|
are about to go and my brakes just gave up the ghost. If I
|
|||
|
don't buy the farm on this one Michael, I'll buy you lunch."
|
|||
|
"You've got it." said the other pilot. "Just you make sure
|
|||
|
you're in one piece for our date."
|
|||
|
"As you wish. Attention Tower, this is Skull Thirteen on
|
|||
|
final approach. I'm coming in hot so make sure your people
|
|||
|
mind their heads when I land."
|
|||
|
"Roger Skull Thirteen... and good luck."
|
|||
|
The Veritech trembled as it descended onto the tarmac. Its
|
|||
|
wheels cried out as the asphalt ripped away some of their
|
|||
|
rubber. The jet started to slow down as the engines were
|
|||
|
reversed. With the sudden loss of speed came the loss of the
|
|||
|
balance that kept the plane upright - the left landing gear
|
|||
|
touched the ground and folded back into the body of the jet.
|
|||
|
Skull Thirteen seemed to hang in mid-air then dipped towards
|
|||
|
the ground. Its left wing clipped the grass on the side of
|
|||
|
the runway and the plane was flung in circles down the rest of
|
|||
|
the runway, coming to rest a few hundred meters later.
|
|||
|
Emergency crews were already drowning the plane in foam to
|
|||
|
prevent a fire from starting whilst medics tried to open the
|
|||
|
cockpit. The pilot was crouched inside, head resting on her
|
|||
|
shoulder, eyes closed, blood seeping from her nose.
|
|||
|
"Tower, this is Skull Five... How is she doing?"
|
|||
|
"Tower to Skull Five. The medics are just taking her out of
|
|||
|
the cockpit and into the ambulance. I can't see how bad it is
|
|||
|
from here."
|
|||
|
"Thank you Tower. Skull Five requesting approach vectors."
|
|||
|
"Roger Skull Five, runway eighteen is clear for landing.
|
|||
|
You have priority."
|
|||
|
"Understood Tower. Warn the hospital I'll be over as soon
|
|||
|
as I can. Skull Five on final approach."
|
|||
|
Lewis transferred Skull Five to another controller and
|
|||
|
turned towards the Chief Controller. "What do you think her
|
|||
|
chances are Harry?"
|
|||
|
"Difficult to say from here. I've seen people survive a
|
|||
|
fall without parachute from a thousand feet. I've also seen
|
|||
|
people die from tripping on the last step of a staircase. I'd
|
|||
|
say it all depends on how strong her will to live is."
|
|||
|
"Well, there's nothing more we can do about it." said Lewis,
|
|||
|
pointing to the tarmac. "The medics just took her away. What
|
|||
|
do we do with the wreck?"
|
|||
|
Harry glanced at the runway. "Leave it where it is for the
|
|||
|
moment. The runway's been scored so deeply it's unusable
|
|||
|
anyway."
|
|||
|
Lewis turned to his instruments and plugged his headphone
|
|||
|
back in. A moment later he turned back in surprise and
|
|||
|
gestured towards Harry. "Harry, I think you'd better listen
|
|||
|
to this." He flicked a switch and the master speaker hummed
|
|||
|
with power. A voice came through, a voice they had heard not
|
|||
|
long ago.
|
|||
|
"...C'mon guys, how about some service? My left side is
|
|||
|
killing me and I've got hydraulics leaking all over my body.
|
|||
|
Yo, Tower, can you read me?... Tower, this is Skull Thirteen.
|
|||
|
How long are you going to leave me to rot in this sun? I know
|
|||
|
I'm in bad shape but I ain't totalled yet. Can anybody hear
|
|||
|
me?..."
|
|||
|
Harry and Lewis looked at each other for a long time, then
|
|||
|
turned towards the runway, towards a plane wrecked on it - a
|
|||
|
plane that was complaining of lack of service, a plane that
|
|||
|
was talking in its pilot's voice.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
CHAPTER 6
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
I mean, what do you do with somebody whose brainwaves don't
|
|||
|
register but whose body refuses to die? We didn't know. So
|
|||
|
we decided to put her on ice, on observation. We hooked her
|
|||
|
up to every apparatus you could name, and then some. And
|
|||
|
still all they told us was she was brain dead. So you can
|
|||
|
imagine our surprise when this happened!
|
|||
|
Unnamed orderly at the New Macross Military Hospital.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The darkness was surrounding her, closing in on her from all
|
|||
|
sides. She fought with it until she felt she would die,
|
|||
|
suffocated by the impenetrable blackness. She finally gave up
|
|||
|
and waited for something to happen. She didn't have to wait
|
|||
|
very long.
|
|||
|
"Hello." The voice was very soothing, very syrupy, almost
|
|||
|
annoying. She looked about, trying to find its source.
|
|||
|
"I said 'hello'. Are you so impolite as not to answer?" the
|
|||
|
voice enquired.
|
|||
|
Michele gulped before answering in a faltering voice.
|
|||
|
"Hello."
|
|||
|
"That's much better. Welcome Michele!" the voice boomed
|
|||
|
throughout the darkness.
|
|||
|
"How do you know my name?"
|
|||
|
"I know all there is to know about you - including the fact
|
|||
|
you seem to have an affinity for landing yourself in
|
|||
|
hospitals." The voice chuckled. "You do not seem to be at
|
|||
|
ease."
|
|||
|
"I am claustrophobic. This darkness is smothering me."
|
|||
|
"Ah! Well, this can be arranged." The lights came on
|
|||
|
abruptly. Where she had been floating were now ceiling, floor
|
|||
|
and walls. Two plush seats were waiting next to a chimney in
|
|||
|
which sizzled a warm fire. "Please take a seat." Michele
|
|||
|
tested the seat before she settled. It was real.
|
|||
|
"Is this any better?" the voice enquired.
|
|||
|
"Yes, much better thank you. Who are you?"
|
|||
|
"Good! Abrupt and to the point, I like that. My name would
|
|||
|
tell you nothing."
|
|||
|
"Show yourself then." Michele cried out, searching the room
|
|||
|
for the source of the voice.
|
|||
|
"Oh, very well."
|
|||
|
A shadow began to form on the seat in front of hers. The
|
|||
|
shadow took form and substance nearly immediately. Michele
|
|||
|
jumped to her feet and grasped at her hip for a weapon that
|
|||
|
wasn't there. In front of her, straight out of a religious
|
|||
|
book she had once read, was the Devil.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Hausthar had finally changed into his uniform and was
|
|||
|
digging into a hearty breakfast when the sun decided to rise
|
|||
|
and send its warm rays through the windows. Ricky stepped
|
|||
|
through the door of the kitchenette, once again wearing her
|
|||
|
leotard. She walked over to Hausthar and gave him a peck on
|
|||
|
the cheek.
|
|||
|
"Good morning! Had a nice sleep?" Try as he might to stop
|
|||
|
it, her smile was growing on him.
|
|||
|
Hausthar harumphed. "Yes... How did I get back here last
|
|||
|
night? More importantly, how did you get in here?"
|
|||
|
"Well, you were having such a good time at the club, when
|
|||
|
suddenly your face went blank and you nose-dived into your
|
|||
|
Petite Cola pyramid. A couple of the pilots there helped me
|
|||
|
get you into a cab and it drove us back to the base. As for
|
|||
|
my getting in, the guard threw one look at you and ushered us
|
|||
|
in. When I looked back at him, he was busy dialling a number
|
|||
|
on his phone. Happy?" She threw two slices of bread in the
|
|||
|
toaster and sat on the chair in front of him.
|
|||
|
Hausthar ate the last of his toast in silence and got up.
|
|||
|
"Yeah, I s'pose. Listen, I've got flying duty today, so could
|
|||
|
you close the door behind you when you leave." Funny how his
|
|||
|
heart was cringing at the thought of her leaving while his
|
|||
|
brain was all against the idea of her staying.
|
|||
|
"Sure! Have a good time." She got up to retrieve her toasts
|
|||
|
and turned to face him as he was stepping through the door.
|
|||
|
"Please be careful." she said in a low voice. She briefly
|
|||
|
looked him in the eyes, then went back to the table and
|
|||
|
buttered her toast.
|
|||
|
Hausthar looked at her, puzzled. He eventually shrugged in
|
|||
|
defeat and closed the door behind him as he left.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"Are... are you the Devil?"
|
|||
|
"Oh no." the Entity replied. "I simply took this image from
|
|||
|
your mind. <Devil>, eh? I must admit I like his style!
|
|||
|
Please, please, sit down. There is nothing worse than to
|
|||
|
speak to someone who insists on standing up."
|
|||
|
Michele slowly made her way back to her seat. She noticed
|
|||
|
that the Entity was not completely there, that parts of It
|
|||
|
were shadowy. As if reading her mind, the Entity spoke. "The
|
|||
|
shadowy parts are the areas of this body whose descriptions I
|
|||
|
could not properly get from your memory. Most annoying - I do
|
|||
|
so hate messy solutions."
|
|||
|
"You still haven't answered my question: how do you know my
|
|||
|
name?"
|
|||
|
The Entity looked surprised. "But my dear, I thought it
|
|||
|
would have been obvious to you by now - I've read your mind.
|
|||
|
I know all there is to know about you. For example, the red
|
|||
|
tinge in your hair is real, you have a strong liking for your
|
|||
|
new wingman, and you have a birth-mark on your..."
|
|||
|
"All right, I believe you! No need to sprout personal
|
|||
|
details. Don't you have any decency?"
|
|||
|
"Mmm... no, I don't believe I have."
|
|||
|
"Oh great! Which still leaves me in the dark. Who are you
|
|||
|
and where am I?" Michele nearly shouted her last question.
|
|||
|
The Entity gave a small sigh and dug into a non-existent
|
|||
|
pocket. When It withdrew Its hand, It was holding two photos.
|
|||
|
"I guess the best way to present myself would be to start with
|
|||
|
the rest of my 'family'." It handed the first photograph to
|
|||
|
Michele. It pictured a tall man, dressed in a long white
|
|||
|
robe, with white hair and a white beard. A light shone around
|
|||
|
his head in a halo, obscuring his feature. The effect was,
|
|||
|
well, Godly. "Yes, I know what this looks like - you must
|
|||
|
remember that I am trying to pull images from your memory and
|
|||
|
imagination that will suit. And I am sure that this goody-
|
|||
|
two-shoes egomaniac would enjoy being represented thus."
|
|||
|
It handed over the second picture to Michele. It was rather
|
|||
|
different from the first, though certainly just as surprising.
|
|||
|
"This one is the third of our group. Whereas my 'brother' and
|
|||
|
I live in a quite spiritual plane, this one can be found in
|
|||
|
the physical world." Michele did not know what to make of the
|
|||
|
picture - surely this had to be a joke! The Entity withdrew
|
|||
|
the pictures and replaced them both in his pocket.
|
|||
|
"To once again take analogies and names from your memory, I
|
|||
|
am called Neo. The names of the other two are not important
|
|||
|
at this point. Let's just say that we three represent the
|
|||
|
perfect trinity of Good, Evil and Neutral." It shifted
|
|||
|
slightly in Its seat. "So much for who I am. As for your
|
|||
|
second question... " Neo pointed at her head. "We're inside
|
|||
|
your brain. Or what's left of it at the moment."
|
|||
|
"What do you mean <what's left of it>?" enquire Michele.
|
|||
|
"It seems your medical people can't quite decide whether you
|
|||
|
are dead or not. Your brain shows no sign of activity but
|
|||
|
your body refuses to die. These simpletons should never have
|
|||
|
graduated out of kindergarten!"
|
|||
|
Michele's face had drained with the news of her physical
|
|||
|
condition. Neo used the silence to once again dig into Its
|
|||
|
non-existent breast pocket and pulled out a lit pipe. "I'm
|
|||
|
sorry, I forgot to ask. Do you mind if I smoke?" Michele
|
|||
|
shook her head, still trying to come to terms with the
|
|||
|
revelation. "Thank you. Nasty habit, smoking, but I just
|
|||
|
can't seem to get rid of it. I picked it up by studying one
|
|||
|
of your kind. I believe you now him - Admiral Gloval.
|
|||
|
Charming chap! I just wished he'd be a little more nasty
|
|||
|
sometimes." It pulled on Its pipe in silence for a moment,
|
|||
|
then suddenly brought it down.
|
|||
|
"Aha, it seems you have a visitor." Neo pointed towards a
|
|||
|
mirror which had just appeared above the fireplace. Michele
|
|||
|
looked into it and saw herself lying in a hospital bed, with
|
|||
|
all sort of equipment strapped to her. A shiver ran up and
|
|||
|
down her spine.
|
|||
|
The door to the room opened and one of the hospital's
|
|||
|
doctors walked in backward, hands in the air, and bumped into
|
|||
|
the nurse that was tending to the electronic gear. A voice
|
|||
|
came from outside the room.
|
|||
|
"Listen doctor, I said I was going in to see her, and go in
|
|||
|
I damn well will!"
|
|||
|
The doctor retreated even further into the room and a figure
|
|||
|
appeared, holding a gun loosely towards him.
|
|||
|
"Michael!" shouted Michele, half out of her seat. Michael
|
|||
|
did not seem to notice her. "Michael?!... Damn it Michael,
|
|||
|
answer me!"
|
|||
|
Neo took another puff from Its pipe. "I'm afraid that he
|
|||
|
can't hear you. As far as he's concerned, you are lying on
|
|||
|
that hospital bed."
|
|||
|
Michael had by then escorted both the doctor and the nurse
|
|||
|
out of the room and locked the door shut. He came back and
|
|||
|
sat on the edge of the bed, staring at Michele's prostrate
|
|||
|
body. He reached out and took her hand, holding it tight.
|
|||
|
"C'mon partner, don't quit on me now. Who's gonna save my ass
|
|||
|
next time if you go?" He stooped over her body and brushed
|
|||
|
back her hair into place, caressing her cheek as he did so.
|
|||
|
Inside the other room, Michele gasped - she had felt Michael
|
|||
|
squeeze her hand. She had felt him brush back her hair and
|
|||
|
touch her cheek. Her hand went up to her face, to where his
|
|||
|
hand had been, and for the first time in as long as she could
|
|||
|
remember, Michele cried.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Hausthar walked up to the hangar where the new Veritech was
|
|||
|
stored. He was supposed to test it today, to push its
|
|||
|
envelope until it finally gave way. It was not a task he was
|
|||
|
looking forward to.
|
|||
|
"Hey, George - you in there?" He peered into the darkness
|
|||
|
of the hangar and spied a shape moving towards him. George
|
|||
|
was the main engineer of Research, and the two of them had met
|
|||
|
the day after Hausthar's transfer. It hadn't taken long for
|
|||
|
the two of them to realise they both enjoyed talking about the
|
|||
|
new Mecha.
|
|||
|
"Hausthar, long time no see." A tall man emerged from the
|
|||
|
shadows of the hangar, wiping his hands on a dirty cloth - no
|
|||
|
matter how modern the engines, they still managed to soil up
|
|||
|
anybody tinkering with them. "I heard you were taking Alpha
|
|||
|
One up for a spin today. I'll have my men prepare her for
|
|||
|
you. She's a mean looking bitch. You think you can handle
|
|||
|
her?"
|
|||
|
Hausthar laughed. "I hope so. Don't mind telling you my
|
|||
|
insides are in a knot. This is my first flight on an untested
|
|||
|
ship."
|
|||
|
"Don't worry - they nearly all make it back the first time
|
|||
|
out."
|
|||
|
"<Nearly?!>" Hausthar was gaping at him, trying to figure
|
|||
|
out if George was being serious.
|
|||
|
"Once you are up there" continued George "you won't have
|
|||
|
time to worry." He slapped Hausthar on the back and went back
|
|||
|
inside the hangar.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Neo looked at the girl in front of It, bent in two on her
|
|||
|
seat, tears spilling from her eyes. "<Ahem.> I do believe it
|
|||
|
is time to talk business."
|
|||
|
Michele stopped crying and turned her blood-shot eyes toward
|
|||
|
It. She sniffed a couple of times before answering. "What do
|
|||
|
you want from me?"
|
|||
|
"Your soul!"
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Alpha One was the first prototype in a new series of
|
|||
|
Veritech - it was smaller than the old VF-series, but still
|
|||
|
not as small as the design team would have liked. Gone was
|
|||
|
the old VF-14 look: Alpha One had two gigantic engines
|
|||
|
occupying all of the plane's undercarriage and two smaller
|
|||
|
engines up top, near the wings. Also a great departure from
|
|||
|
the old VF design was the dropping of the laser weaponry and
|
|||
|
the incorporation of internal missile launchers into several
|
|||
|
areas the plane's body. Research had told Hausthar that by
|
|||
|
the time they had the design perfected they would be able to
|
|||
|
store between forty to seventy missiles all over the plane.
|
|||
|
Included in the new design was a new version of the GU-11 gun
|
|||
|
pod, the still-unnamed GU-XX. Hausthar wasn't too happy about
|
|||
|
the lack of an energy-based weapon, laser or otherwise. His
|
|||
|
main concern was what would happen to the pilot once the
|
|||
|
plane's ammunitions had been spent. Research's answer had
|
|||
|
been that if the Alpha had to stay in the fray long enough for
|
|||
|
all its ammo to be used, then the armor and shields would
|
|||
|
probably have given way long before. Not a comforting thought
|
|||
|
for pilots.
|
|||
|
But for this flight Alpha One would be going weaponless.
|
|||
|
Hausthar's job was to push the prototype to its limits and
|
|||
|
beyond, and hopefully survive when it finally snagged. As he
|
|||
|
taxied the plane towards the runway, it occurred to him that
|
|||
|
he had forgotten the routine visual check-up that was normally
|
|||
|
part of the pre-flight operations. Neither had he checked to
|
|||
|
see if they had packed his parachute.
|
|||
|
The Tower gave him a green light on departure and Hausthar's
|
|||
|
worries were left behind as the plane rocketed down the runway
|
|||
|
and went ballistic a few seconds later. He reached the
|
|||
|
testing corridor within a couple of minutes and started to
|
|||
|
relay information to the control Tower. A voice came over the
|
|||
|
tactical net as he finished, a voice hauntingly familiar.
|
|||
|
"Hausthar? You have been given the green light. Start your
|
|||
|
run."
|
|||
|
Hausthar recognised the voice - it was Lang's. But Dr. Lang
|
|||
|
never bothered to come watch the testing of new Mecha! What
|
|||
|
was he doing here? Had Lang come for him? Why was he so
|
|||
|
important to Lang? Hausthar's mind was full of questions as
|
|||
|
he rogered the order and began to push the throttle forward.
|
|||
|
The plane's twin main engines roared into life as power
|
|||
|
reached them. The Veritech lurched forward and began to form
|
|||
|
the well-known cone of noise as it approached Mach-1. Inside
|
|||
|
the cockpit, Hausthar was reading off the instruments into the
|
|||
|
Net, more to calm his nerves than for those listening.
|
|||
|
"Mach one. Mach one point five. Mach two. Mach two point
|
|||
|
five. Mach three. Slight buffeting starting to gain
|
|||
|
intensity. Computer has just engaged secondary engines to
|
|||
|
counter-balance. Mach three point five. Mach four. Heat
|
|||
|
reading on the nose cone reaching maximum tolerance. Plane
|
|||
|
controls are starting to rebel. Mach four point five... "
|
|||
|
The plane gave a sickening lurch as an explosion occurred
|
|||
|
somewhere down the left side of the body. Warning buzzers
|
|||
|
filled the cockpit with their death songs. "Tower do you read
|
|||
|
me? I have a malfunction in the port engine followed by
|
|||
|
explosion and loss of compression. Hydraulic pressure to the
|
|||
|
port control surfaces is dropping fast. Both secondary
|
|||
|
engines and main starboard engine are locked at maximum.
|
|||
|
Repeat, all remaining engines are locked at maximum. Over."
|
|||
|
More buzzers filled the air of the cockpit. Hausthar didn't
|
|||
|
even take the time to turn them off.
|
|||
|
"We copy Alpha One. Initiate bail-out procedure."
|
|||
|
"Roger Tower, bailing out." Hausthar reached for the
|
|||
|
ejection handle and prayed that he wouldn't be smashed by the
|
|||
|
plane's speed. He pulled on the handle.
|
|||
|
"Tower, this is Alpha one. I have a malfunction in the
|
|||
|
ejection mechanism probably due to previous problem. Can you
|
|||
|
help?"
|
|||
|
"Alpha One, do you have report of a fire in the port main
|
|||
|
engine?"
|
|||
|
"Roger that Tower, fire warning is on for port main engine.
|
|||
|
Request procedure to dump this heap o' shit."
|
|||
|
Hausthar heard several curses being said, then a voice
|
|||
|
Hausthar did not expect to hear. "Hausthar, this is Victor.
|
|||
|
Open your main computer console. We'll try to shut off the
|
|||
|
remaining engines and have you bring the plane down by
|
|||
|
gliding."
|
|||
|
Hausthar reached for his emergency toolkit and pulled out
|
|||
|
the appropriate screwdriver. He had the panel open in no time
|
|||
|
at all. "Victor, main computer panel open, awaiting
|
|||
|
instructions."
|
|||
|
Lang's voice replaced Victor's. "Locate the starboard main
|
|||
|
engine's fuel control chip and short circuit it by cross
|
|||
|
connecting with any Delta circuit."
|
|||
|
Hausthar took out a probe from the kit, located the
|
|||
|
appropriate circuits and jammed it between them. Sparks
|
|||
|
showered the cockpit in a brief display of pyrotechnics.
|
|||
|
"Tower, this is Alpha One. Procedure accomplished and
|
|||
|
engine shorted out. Secondary systems suffered damage from
|
|||
|
procedure though."
|
|||
|
"Got it Alpha One. Can you give us a list of the systems
|
|||
|
that went down?"
|
|||
|
"Systems include pursuit radar, starboard missile launchers,
|
|||
|
mechamorphosys circuits and landing gear. I repeat, both
|
|||
|
automatic <and> manual controls for the landing gears are
|
|||
|
down."
|
|||
|
Victor's voice sounded resigned. "Roger Alpha One. You are
|
|||
|
going to have to ditch her into the sea. Can you give us a
|
|||
|
relative position for touch down?"
|
|||
|
"I think I'll splash down somewhere south of Tokyo Bay. I'd
|
|||
|
estimate ten klicks or so."
|
|||
|
"Got it Alpha One - we are sending a ship to pick you up.
|
|||
|
God's speed."
|
|||
|
Hausthar felt his throat close up - if Victor was going
|
|||
|
theological on him, things must be bleak indeed. "Thank you
|
|||
|
Tower. Out."
|
|||
|
Hausthar's plane was beginning to break apart when it
|
|||
|
finally reached the touch-down area. Buzzers were once again
|
|||
|
filling the cockpit, warning him that he was either flying too
|
|||
|
low or driving too fast. Hausthar felt a pang of regret as he
|
|||
|
realised he might never again see Ricky. He didn't have time
|
|||
|
to think anything more - the plane hit the water at well above
|
|||
|
the recommended speed. It bounced several times across the
|
|||
|
small waves and finally came to a bone-wrenching stop in the
|
|||
|
middle of a wave. Before the next wave reached it, it had
|
|||
|
disappeared beneath the surface, leaving nothing but a few
|
|||
|
wreckages and an oil slick to mark the fact that a tragedy had
|
|||
|
occurred.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"You want... my soul?" Michele asked incredulously.
|
|||
|
Thoughts of Hell and Eternal Damnation filled her mind.
|
|||
|
Apparently Neo had also picked them up for It was quick to
|
|||
|
retort.
|
|||
|
"No, no, no. Not like that. I think I have chosen the
|
|||
|
wrong words. I desire your... co-operation. Is that better?
|
|||
|
Yes, co-operation. I want you to join my cause and help me in
|
|||
|
my fight." It was waving Its pipe excitedly.
|
|||
|
"Let me get this straight. You want my help? But aren't
|
|||
|
you evil?"
|
|||
|
"Yes on both count. Although Evil is a very relative
|
|||
|
concept. What might be Evil to you is perfectly normal to me.
|
|||
|
May I also add that such help or co-operation, call it what
|
|||
|
you will, would be rewarded with Power. Power such as you
|
|||
|
have never dreamed of before - Power to destroy your enemies
|
|||
|
before they can even sense your presence. This is the reward
|
|||
|
I offer you. And all you have to do is follow my directives."
|
|||
|
It leaned back into Its chair and started to pull on the pipe
|
|||
|
again, filling the air around It with smoke.
|
|||
|
Michele was looking at the mirror, watching Michael fuss
|
|||
|
over her unconscious body, trying to bring her out of her
|
|||
|
coma. For this was what she had decided was happening - she
|
|||
|
must have gone into coma and was dreaming all of this.
|
|||
|
"I'll need time to think about this." she told Neo.
|
|||
|
Neo smiled at her. "Of course. Take all the time in the
|
|||
|
world. I'll always be around if you need me. All you'll ever
|
|||
|
need to do is accept me in." Neo stood up and approached her
|
|||
|
chair, Its body towering above her. "Now it is time for you
|
|||
|
to go back, Michele Cequor." It waived Its hand toward her
|
|||
|
and she felt herself begin to dissolve
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Michael was still stooped over Michele's body, oblivious to
|
|||
|
the pounding on the room's door. He was pushing back more
|
|||
|
hair from her face and brushing her cheek softly when he felt
|
|||
|
two strong arms encircle his heck and pull him down. Warm
|
|||
|
lips rose to meet his as Michele put all she had to offer into
|
|||
|
their first kiss.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
CHAPTER 7
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Of course, in retrospect, it is very easy to see why this
|
|||
|
had all happened. The changes in moods also become
|
|||
|
understandable. But then again, everyone has 20/20 hindsight!
|
|||
|
Why did I not understand? Why did I not realise that two such
|
|||
|
crashes in so short a time could not be coincidental? We
|
|||
|
might as well just shorten it and get back to the eternal
|
|||
|
question - <Why>. In younger days I would have said that this
|
|||
|
was the will of the Shaping and left it at that. How little
|
|||
|
did I know then about it and about the person who had
|
|||
|
unleashed it on an unsuspecting galaxy, this Haydon. Rem
|
|||
|
keeps on telling me that the Haydon I imagine never existed.
|
|||
|
He seems bizarre lately, as if a conflict is raging inside
|
|||
|
him. It is that conflict which made me think back to those
|
|||
|
days of trial-and-error. I can still hear him pacing in his
|
|||
|
cabin, shouting "Leave me be! I didn't want any of this to be
|
|||
|
thrust upon me! Why can't you leave me alone?" His
|
|||
|
personality is changing, changing just like those of Hausthar
|
|||
|
and Michele did - but, I fear, for the worse.
|
|||
|
Dr. Lang; Diaries.
|
|||
|
Ref: LDHT946-862.
|
|||
|
Haydon Memorial Library.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
This was starting to get monotonous - black on black
|
|||
|
surrounded by black. What had happened to the colour scheme?
|
|||
|
Hausthar looked around. This is not how he had imagined the
|
|||
|
bottom of the ocean. And where <was> that rescue ship?
|
|||
|
A light flared off in the distance, as if to answer him.
|
|||
|
The rescue ship - at last! Hausthar waited for the light to
|
|||
|
come closer. And waited. And waited still. It finally
|
|||
|
dawned on him that the light was not moving.
|
|||
|
"Hey, over here!" he shouted, not really hoping to be heard.
|
|||
|
"Ah, there you are. For a moment there I thought I'd lost
|
|||
|
you. You can come out now." The voice sounded middle-aged
|
|||
|
and sure of itself - so sure in fact that Hausthar had popped
|
|||
|
the seals on his canopy before remembering he was still
|
|||
|
underwater. Surprisingly, he met no resistance when he tried
|
|||
|
to open the canopy, and no water tried to force entry.
|
|||
|
Hausthar jumped down from his Veritech. Something was
|
|||
|
illuminating both him and the Mecha, but would reveal neither
|
|||
|
ground nor sky, nor anything else for that matter. With no
|
|||
|
other apparent options, Hausthar started towards the light he
|
|||
|
had originally spied.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The light turned out to be a window, about three feet off
|
|||
|
the ground, just hanging in mid-air. Looking through the
|
|||
|
window Hausthar was confronted with a scene straight out of
|
|||
|
nineteenth Century England. Horse-drawn carriages were making
|
|||
|
their way down a street - Baker street, if the signs were to
|
|||
|
be trusted - while people dressed for the part moved about
|
|||
|
their business one floor below his. Hausthar gazed for a
|
|||
|
while, then stepped to look behind the window, from the side.
|
|||
|
No street presented itself, just the same impenetrable
|
|||
|
darkness. He went back to the window and peered through - the
|
|||
|
street was still there.
|
|||
|
The sound of a violin drifted by from behind, the scratchy
|
|||
|
sound of an instrument played very amateurly - it sounded more
|
|||
|
like a fight between cats. Something tugged at the corner of
|
|||
|
his mind. <A violin, Baker street. Then could it be that
|
|||
|
this is..?>
|
|||
|
"221b Baker street, my abode - exactly!" the voice echoed
|
|||
|
behind him. Hausthar turned around and was confronted by a
|
|||
|
tall, thin man dressed in light brown trousers and white
|
|||
|
shirt, fighting with a violin in an effort to get music from
|
|||
|
it. "Congratulations young man. Good deductions, even if
|
|||
|
they were a little slow. I say, are you sure I'm supposed to
|
|||
|
play this badly?" The man's eyebrows collided with each
|
|||
|
other.
|
|||
|
Hausthar gasped for breath as he tried to answer. "Er... No
|
|||
|
sir... That is, I don't think so... That is, I can't
|
|||
|
remember."
|
|||
|
The man looked him in the eye for a moment then breathed a
|
|||
|
sigh of resignation. "I was afraid of that." He positioned
|
|||
|
the violin back on his shoulder and began to play - very badly
|
|||
|
- a Minuet in G Hausthar had heard recently. "Do you know who
|
|||
|
I am?" the figure asked.
|
|||
|
By this time Hausthar had regained some of his sense. "I
|
|||
|
know who you look like." he answered.
|
|||
|
"Good! Very good! Never make any judgement until you are
|
|||
|
certain you have all the facts. I made that mistake several
|
|||
|
times myself you know." He stopped playing the violin and
|
|||
|
placed it back in its case. "Now, down to business." The man
|
|||
|
squatted down and a Victorian-era armchair appeared under him.
|
|||
|
"Please, take a seat."
|
|||
|
Hausthar noticed that a similar seat had appeared just
|
|||
|
behind him. It looked real enough. He tested this theory by
|
|||
|
sitting in it. "Are you really... him?"
|
|||
|
"Sherlock Holmes? Oh, dear me, no! Not at all."
|
|||
|
"Then why did you...?"
|
|||
|
"Take his appearance? Elementary my dear Hausthar - I
|
|||
|
needed something you would not be afraid of, and this seemed
|
|||
|
perfect for my needs." He reached towards his left and took a
|
|||
|
pipe from a table that had materialised under his hand. He
|
|||
|
filled, then lit it whilst talking. "I also wanted to make a
|
|||
|
good impression and I must admit I liked this personality.
|
|||
|
Ah, the adventures Mr. Holmes had! But this is secondary to
|
|||
|
my immediate problem." Holmes - or rather the person which
|
|||
|
looked like Holmes - leaned forward in his seat. "You see, I
|
|||
|
need your help."
|
|||
|
"My help sir? How so?"
|
|||
|
Holmes dug into his pocket, pulled out a photograph and
|
|||
|
handed it to Hausthar. "Moriarty is on the loose again!"
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Michele was re-arranging her pillows for the third time in
|
|||
|
as many minutes. The Sterlings were supposed to arrive soon
|
|||
|
and she wanted to make herself as presentable as possible.
|
|||
|
<Damn those medics for not allowing me to get up!>
|
|||
|
A surreptitious knock came from the door. At Michele's
|
|||
|
beckon the door opened and both Max and Miriya Sterling came
|
|||
|
through, Max bearing flowers. As usual, he was wearing his
|
|||
|
smile, but Miriya was showing a look of concern.
|
|||
|
"Hello Michele, how are you doing?"
|
|||
|
Michele told herself to be cheerful and forced a smile to
|
|||
|
appear on her lips. "As well as can be expected given the
|
|||
|
circumstances, sir. Do you know why the medics won't release
|
|||
|
me?"
|
|||
|
Maximillian, busy putting the flowers into a vase, was
|
|||
|
visibly startled by the question. His smile even flickered
|
|||
|
off for a brief moment. "I don't know. But it really doesn't
|
|||
|
matter, does it?"
|
|||
|
Miriya stepped closer to the bed. "It's a pity you won't be
|
|||
|
able to join us."
|
|||
|
"Join you?" Michele looked up to Maximillian. "What is
|
|||
|
going on Commander?"
|
|||
|
Max gave out a small sigh. "First of all my rank of
|
|||
|
Commander was only temporary - I am back to Lieutenant.
|
|||
|
Second, what Miriya means is that we are going out into
|
|||
|
space."
|
|||
|
"Why? What's going on?" Michele's voice was on the verge
|
|||
|
of tears.
|
|||
|
"A Robotech Automated Factory has been discovered. It is
|
|||
|
still manned by non-allied Zentraedi. The Skull and the Night
|
|||
|
Music squadrons have been asked to investigate - we're leaving
|
|||
|
this afternoon."
|
|||
|
Michele's voice was frantic, two pearls of water forming on
|
|||
|
the edges of her eyes. "But... but you can't leave me here!
|
|||
|
You just <can't>. You have to take me along!"
|
|||
|
Maximillian's smile had disappeared and his face was now
|
|||
|
mimicking Miriya's look of concern. "The doctors feel it to
|
|||
|
be in your best interest if you were to stay here a little
|
|||
|
while longer. Rick agrees with it."
|
|||
|
Tears now flowed openly on Michele's face. "But why? Why?"
|
|||
|
Max stood there, not knowing what to say. Miriya stepped
|
|||
|
forward, sat on the edge of the bed and placed her arm around
|
|||
|
Michele's shoulders. "I know what you feel. It is the way I
|
|||
|
felt when I gave birth to Dana. It is hard to spend your time
|
|||
|
in bed when you feel you should be up there with your
|
|||
|
wingmates. All you can do is grit your teeth and wait for
|
|||
|
your time."
|
|||
|
Michele gave a sob and buried her head in Miriya's shoulder
|
|||
|
to weep in anger.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"I'm sorry Dr. Lang, I just can't seem to be able to do it
|
|||
|
right."
|
|||
|
Lang looked at the remnants of the egg, a shapeless mass of
|
|||
|
clear and yellow goo. "It's okay Michele." He placed a new
|
|||
|
egg on the ground. "We have plenty of spares. Let's try
|
|||
|
again, shall we?" He stepped back out of the way.
|
|||
|
A Mecha's hand extended itself from the Guardian and moved
|
|||
|
towards the egg. Fingers the size of telegraph poles
|
|||
|
surrounded the egg and moved in to pick it up. The shell gave
|
|||
|
way and splattered its yolk and white.
|
|||
|
"<DAMN!>" A metal-shod fist whizzed through the air and
|
|||
|
impacted with the wall in frustration, threatening to bring
|
|||
|
down the building. "Why can't I do this right?"
|
|||
|
Lang came back into view, followed by several other
|
|||
|
technicians and scientists. "It's all right my dear - after
|
|||
|
all, you just came through a traumatic experience. Let's
|
|||
|
forget about the eggs and concentrate on your memory for a
|
|||
|
while."
|
|||
|
The Veritech in front of the scientists mechamorphed from
|
|||
|
Guardian to Battloid and sat on the floor with its back
|
|||
|
against the wall. "What do you want to know?"
|
|||
|
One of the personnel behind Lang opened a notebook. "Well,
|
|||
|
how about your name for a start?"
|
|||
|
"Easy. My name is Michele Cequor. Any more trivial
|
|||
|
questions?" The Veritech shifted slightly to a better sitting
|
|||
|
position.
|
|||
|
"What happened just prior to and after the explosion?"
|
|||
|
"Well, I remember being chased by the missile. I didn't
|
|||
|
want both of us to blow up in the middle of the city, so I
|
|||
|
lured it as far out as I could. I'd just cleared the city
|
|||
|
when the explosion occurred. The next thing I know, Michael
|
|||
|
is screaming in my ears, wanting to know what had happened and
|
|||
|
what my status was. I told him the bad news and we got sent
|
|||
|
off to New Macross ASAP. When we got there I managed to land.
|
|||
|
I was surrounded by hundreds of medics and firemen - all these
|
|||
|
people, and do you think they'd do anything for me? They just
|
|||
|
left me there to rot on the runway until I complained and you
|
|||
|
came along Dr. Lang."
|
|||
|
The person with the notebook was writing frantically. A
|
|||
|
woman close to him was next with the questions. "What about
|
|||
|
during the explosion? What were your thoughts?"
|
|||
|
Once again, the Mecha shifted uneasily. "I remember
|
|||
|
panicking, thinking I was going to die and trying to fight it.
|
|||
|
I could feel the computer reaching out in despair as its sub-
|
|||
|
systems were dying out one by one. I remember mentally
|
|||
|
grabbing hold of that part of the computer which was still
|
|||
|
functioning and crying in helplessness. That's when I blacked
|
|||
|
out." The Battloid's hand wiped its 'eyes' and grabbed hold
|
|||
|
of its other shoulder, in a gesture of defenselessness.
|
|||
|
"And what about your present condition?" asked the man with
|
|||
|
the notebook. "What do you make of it?"
|
|||
|
The Veritech grabbed its knees and pulled them in, like a
|
|||
|
child searching for protection. "I don't know. I really
|
|||
|
don't. Maybe I got merged with the Veritech during the blast.
|
|||
|
Maybe I replaced the computer when it died. All I know is
|
|||
|
that I am Michele - <I am alive!> So why am I being kept
|
|||
|
inside this hangar? Where is my body Dr. Lang?"
|
|||
|
Lang looked up past the pulled-in knees to the faceplate of
|
|||
|
the Battloid and stared long and deep into it. "You are being
|
|||
|
kept in surveillance because of the shock you have suffered.
|
|||
|
The reason you are kept in this hangar is because there is no
|
|||
|
hospital bed, or in fact hospital, big enough to fit you. As
|
|||
|
for your body..." Lang paused. "We are still running some
|
|||
|
tests on it to find out what happened."
|
|||
|
The Veritech sat there silently. When it finally spoke its
|
|||
|
voice contained a tremor that had not been there before. "I'm
|
|||
|
sorry Dr. Lang. If only you knew what it was like. I wake up
|
|||
|
every day and wonder why my eyes are over fifty feet from the
|
|||
|
ground. I try to eat but have to remember to plug myself in
|
|||
|
for a recharge instead. I just can't take it anymore!" The
|
|||
|
Veritech's head lowered itself onto its knees and the Battloid
|
|||
|
emitted strange short sounds, its shoulders raked by spasms.
|
|||
|
It took Lang a good four seconds to realise the Veritech was
|
|||
|
crying.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
A head protruded at right angle from the door frame. "Are
|
|||
|
they gone?" it asked.
|
|||
|
Michele finished drying her tears and threw away the paper
|
|||
|
handkerchief she had been using. "Yeah, come in Victor."
|
|||
|
Victor squeezed his body through the door's frame and made
|
|||
|
his way to her bed. "If you feel like you look, I wouldn't
|
|||
|
want to be in your shoes - you look terrible!"
|
|||
|
Michele sniffed. "I feel even worse. Not only did I stuff-
|
|||
|
up on my first sortie, not only did I make a fool of myself in
|
|||
|
front of my commanding officer, not only have I been ordered
|
|||
|
to bed duties for an indefinite amount of time, but thanks to
|
|||
|
this little accident I'll miss my first outing in space." Her
|
|||
|
clenched fists relaxed slowly. "It's nice to see you again."
|
|||
|
she admitted.
|
|||
|
Victor made embarrassed little noises and overly shuffled
|
|||
|
his feet. "Aw, shucks! 'Twas nothin' really." Testing a
|
|||
|
chair for robustness he opted to sit on the floor next to the
|
|||
|
bed, his head still at eye-level with hers. "I just couldn't
|
|||
|
leave my little sister alone in a big hospital, now could I?"
|
|||
|
Victor had been the one who had rescued Michele from the
|
|||
|
wreckage of Macross City two years ago in the SDF-1. Ever
|
|||
|
since, he had looked after the orphan girl as if she had been
|
|||
|
his little sister, making sure she re-enlisted into the
|
|||
|
Academy, and helping her through long nights of study. He was
|
|||
|
the best friend she ever had, except for...
|
|||
|
Michele shook her head. Now was not the time to think of
|
|||
|
Michael. "And to what do I owe the pleasure of this visit?"
|
|||
|
she enquired.
|
|||
|
Victor shuffled his way towards the bed. "I am here to make
|
|||
|
sure you recover that cute little smile I always enjoyed."
|
|||
|
Michele's face fell even further. "I am sorry Victor, I
|
|||
|
just don't feel up to smiling right now."
|
|||
|
"In that case, I'll have to use extreme measures." He got
|
|||
|
up to his feet and started to unbolt a plate from his arm.
|
|||
|
Michele looked up in surprise. "Victor, don't you dare!
|
|||
|
Not now! <Please!?>" A small mechanical arm unfolded itself
|
|||
|
and extended towards the bed, reaching for her body. "Victor,
|
|||
|
I mean it!" She tried to avoid the arm but was too slow. The
|
|||
|
arm made its way up and down her ribs, finding well known
|
|||
|
spots in its waves of tickles. "VICTOR!?! <Stop> it!!" She
|
|||
|
was laughing hard by now, and was about to slide from the bed
|
|||
|
when the arm retracted. The laughter abated.
|
|||
|
"Thanks, I needed that."
|
|||
|
"Always happy to oblige." Victor sat on the edge of her
|
|||
|
bed. A straining groan echoed through the room for a moment
|
|||
|
and then became a memory. "Now what's this I hear about you
|
|||
|
and Michael Circle?"
|
|||
|
Michele tried to subdue a new fit of laughter. "Now why did
|
|||
|
I ever think I could keep this from you? How did you find
|
|||
|
out?"
|
|||
|
"I have my sources. Well, is it true?"
|
|||
|
Michele leaned back, a smile reappearing on her face. "Yes,
|
|||
|
it is. What do you want to know?"
|
|||
|
"Everything!"
|
|||
|
Laughter echoed through the thankfully empty halls of the
|
|||
|
hospital.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Hausthar gazed at the picture he had been given. "Mo...
|
|||
|
Moriarty?"
|
|||
|
"Oh, I'm sorry. I got into my role too much." Holmes sat
|
|||
|
back and pulled on his pipe a couple of times before
|
|||
|
continuing. "You see, a long time ago an alien scientist
|
|||
|
discovered a way to produce a new, clean energy. He named it
|
|||
|
Protoculture. I was, of course, very flattered that he had
|
|||
|
chosen this name... but the Energy derived by this process has
|
|||
|
nothing to do with me - or should I say it has everything to
|
|||
|
do with me?" He blew smoke to the ceiling. "You see, there
|
|||
|
has always been three of us - Good, Evil and Neutrality
|
|||
|
keeping the balance. We had been dormant for several eons
|
|||
|
when this discoverer suddenly awakened us. Not since Haydon
|
|||
|
had taught the Invids how to use the Flowers had we seen such
|
|||
|
an intellect." The man calling himself Holmes was looking
|
|||
|
through Hausthar, into the past, reliving memories.
|
|||
|
"Neo was the first to regain full capabilities, and used the
|
|||
|
time it had at its disposal very well I'm afraid. You see, we
|
|||
|
cannot act on the physical plane, not without great strain.
|
|||
|
We have to use agents to do our work. When necessary, we can
|
|||
|
use the Energy derived from the Flower of Life to act swiftly
|
|||
|
and decisively, but it is a drastic measure which requires the
|
|||
|
agreement of us all. My agents were the Invids, at least
|
|||
|
until I slumbered - without my guidance some strayed to the
|
|||
|
other side. Neo took control of the scientist's race and had
|
|||
|
them remove the pollinators, small dog-like animals with a
|
|||
|
rather high intelligence, from the Invid orchards. This
|
|||
|
enraged the Invids, creating more converts. Slowly I was
|
|||
|
loosing my flock, balance could no longer be kept. I had to
|
|||
|
try to make amends, to restore it. Thus came the Robotech War
|
|||
|
as you know it."
|
|||
|
"And did you win?" Hausthar asked.
|
|||
|
"Yes and no. I won the first match, barely. But you know
|
|||
|
what they say - best out of three, It's not over until the fat
|
|||
|
lady sings and all that. I am afraid your Earth will become a
|
|||
|
battlefield for more physical and psychic wars before balance
|
|||
|
is once again restored. I can already feel my nemesis working
|
|||
|
against me. He has prepared re-inforcements and is about to
|
|||
|
send them a signal flare."
|
|||
|
"How?"
|
|||
|
"Your forces are on their way to capture a Robotech
|
|||
|
Automated Factory and bring it to Earth. When the Factory
|
|||
|
defolds into Earth orbit, the displacement in the Energy will
|
|||
|
pinpoint the Earth to the Robotech Masters and come they
|
|||
|
will."
|
|||
|
"But can't you stop it?"
|
|||
|
"How I have tried! But my agents believe they are acting
|
|||
|
for the benefit of all concerned."
|
|||
|
"So? What has that got to do with it?"
|
|||
|
"My boy, haven't you been listening to anything I have been
|
|||
|
saying? We, I, do not exist! We are merely the psychic
|
|||
|
projections of the actions being done in the physical world.
|
|||
|
Every time someone commits 'evil' in your world, Neo becomes
|
|||
|
stronger and more apt to shape events to its own choosing.
|
|||
|
And the same thing applies to 'good' and me. Our powers
|
|||
|
depend on the application of the Energy derived from the
|
|||
|
Flower. That is why I cannot stop your forces - they truly
|
|||
|
believe in what they are doing! They think it is the best
|
|||
|
course of action. Little do they realise that the
|
|||
|
spacefolding of the Factory will attract the Masters to Earth
|
|||
|
like moths to a flame. Except that in this case, I'm afraid,
|
|||
|
<they> will be the flame that will bring Earth's demise."
|
|||
|
Holmes turned towards the window, visibly annoyed. "Isn't it
|
|||
|
possible to have a conversation without being disturbed?" he
|
|||
|
shouted.
|
|||
|
Hausthar, taken aback by the abruptness of the comment,
|
|||
|
looked through the window and was surprised to see the
|
|||
|
interior of a hospital room. In the bed was a figure, so
|
|||
|
covered with life-support systems that it was hard to tell its
|
|||
|
gender, much less its identity. The door to the room opened
|
|||
|
and a man in overalls shuffled in, obviously not at ease.
|
|||
|
Hausthar immediately recognised him.
|
|||
|
"George!" he cried out. The man in the hospital room did
|
|||
|
not even start, as though the words had not reached him. In
|
|||
|
fact, he was moving towards the bed.
|
|||
|
George looked at the figure in the bed and sighed deeply.
|
|||
|
"They tell me there's a chance you can hear me. They also
|
|||
|
tell me you might not make it out. So I just have to tell
|
|||
|
you... I'm to blame for your accident." He paused and cleared
|
|||
|
his throat a couple of times before going on. "You see, one
|
|||
|
of my mechanics was working on your engine, bolting back a
|
|||
|
panel that had been removed for maintenance, and he decided to
|
|||
|
take an early lunch. By the time I came back, you were
|
|||
|
already gone." George's head hung low. "The bolts were not
|
|||
|
properly tightened and must have hit the engine with enough
|
|||
|
force to rip it to shreds."
|
|||
|
A loud sniffle was heard in the room. George took out a
|
|||
|
handkerchief and wiped his nose, his face flowing with tears
|
|||
|
of self-recrimination. "If I'd only checked and made sure,
|
|||
|
this wouldn't have happened! If you ever come out of it, I'll
|
|||
|
try to make it up to you, I really will!"
|
|||
|
He replaced the handkerchief in his pocket and stood there,
|
|||
|
arms limp. "I got to go. I'll see you later, eh?" Walking
|
|||
|
towards the door, he opened it and stood in front of it. He
|
|||
|
turned one last time towards the bed and said "Goodbye
|
|||
|
Hausthar."
|
|||
|
Hausthar was so shocked he never notice George's departure
|
|||
|
nor the closing of the door. "<Hausthar?!> You mean that's
|
|||
|
me under there?"
|
|||
|
Holmes was quietly puffing smoke into the air. "My boy, you
|
|||
|
will recall I never said anything on that subject. But now
|
|||
|
that you raise the point, yes it is you." Hausthar was still
|
|||
|
staring through the window, eyes locked on the figure in the
|
|||
|
bed. "This brings me back to our earlier conversation -"
|
|||
|
continued Holmes, "I need your help." Hausthar was oblivious
|
|||
|
to all but the hospital bed and had not responded.
|
|||
|
"HAUSTHAR!"
|
|||
|
Jumping in alarm Hausthar stammered "Yes... er... my
|
|||
|
help... How so?"
|
|||
|
Holmes was once again smiling. "You are repeating yourself
|
|||
|
my friend," he pointed out, "but it does not matter. What I
|
|||
|
require is your help to stop the possible catastrophes which
|
|||
|
might follow the arrival of the Factory in Earthspace. I
|
|||
|
cannot do it myself." Hausthar opened his mouth as if to
|
|||
|
reply but was promptly cut off. "Now I realise this is not a
|
|||
|
decision to be lightly made, so I will give you time to think
|
|||
|
about it. I shall therefore send you back whence you came.
|
|||
|
But first..." The violin magically reappeared in Holmes'
|
|||
|
hands. "I have a symphony or two I would like you to listen
|
|||
|
to." The languid sound of the wooden instrument filled the
|
|||
|
air.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
When Hausthar finally awoke, he was instantly aware of
|
|||
|
several factors - first of all, most of the life-support
|
|||
|
equipment had been unplugged from his body. Second, his left
|
|||
|
hand had been placed onto his chest. And third, something was
|
|||
|
laid upon it. Remembering the headache which had greeted him
|
|||
|
when he had last woken up, he moved his head very carefully.
|
|||
|
His eyes slowly adjusted to the low ambient level of light.
|
|||
|
His hand had in fact been placed on his chest and the
|
|||
|
perpetrator of that action could now be identified - sitting
|
|||
|
on a chair at his side was Ricky. She had gathered his left
|
|||
|
hand in both of hers and was now sleeping with it under her
|
|||
|
left cheek, head resting on his chest.
|
|||
|
Hausthar smiled lightly and raised his right hand to her
|
|||
|
head, feeling the silky smoothness of her hair, running his
|
|||
|
fingers through them. He thought back to that morning he had
|
|||
|
found her asleep on his sofa and a warm feeling engulfed his
|
|||
|
chest. He continued to caress her hair for a while before
|
|||
|
finally falling asleep with his hand still resting upon her
|
|||
|
head.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
CHAPTER 8
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
How do you make the difference between a Mecha and a human?
|
|||
|
Both require fuel of some sort; both think and reason; both
|
|||
|
can be hurt and both can die. And if that wasn't enough, here
|
|||
|
we were against a machine with goddamn <feelings>! You can't
|
|||
|
win against that you know. Turing must be smiling in his
|
|||
|
grave.
|
|||
|
R. & D. Lab Technician.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
And in my dreams I've kissed your lips a thousand times.
|
|||
|
Late 20th Century song.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The metallic footsteps resounded heavily throughout the
|
|||
|
garden. A sixty feet tall shadow fell over the bushes as the
|
|||
|
Mecha walked past them, deep in conversation with the human
|
|||
|
accompanying it.
|
|||
|
"I understand why you would want to keep my body for
|
|||
|
observation Dr. Lang, but why can't I see it now? Your
|
|||
|
technicians say I have recovered completely from the
|
|||
|
incident."
|
|||
|
The man next to it harumphed and looked towards the sky,
|
|||
|
never ceasing to walk down the path. The sky was the dark
|
|||
|
blue that only could be seen on a cloudless day. Staring at
|
|||
|
it was like staring through infinity itself. And in that blue
|
|||
|
sky hung a warm yellow sun, witness to so much destruction
|
|||
|
upon the planet it shone over. It took Dr. Lang a while to
|
|||
|
get his ideas through the wall the beauty of this place had
|
|||
|
established in his mind.
|
|||
|
"Please understand: although your 'body' has recuperated, we
|
|||
|
are not sure what psychological factors remain from your
|
|||
|
ordeal. It is not everyday that we can talk to someone who
|
|||
|
survived what you experienced. It could well be that seeing
|
|||
|
your body would upset your mental state. We have no way of
|
|||
|
knowing how you will react. This is entirely new to us... so
|
|||
|
we would prefer to be cautious about it."
|
|||
|
The Mecha bowed its head in recognition of the inevitability
|
|||
|
of Lang's words. Both continued to walk down the path which
|
|||
|
wound itself around the gardens in the institute, watching
|
|||
|
nature unfold itself amongst the bushes that were hiding the
|
|||
|
surprises the next turn of the path would offer. They came to
|
|||
|
a field of grass interspersed with wild flowers. This garden
|
|||
|
was the pride of the Institute in a world where most of nature
|
|||
|
had been destroyed in the Zentraedi Rain of Fire which had
|
|||
|
annihilated most of the wildlife, both plants and animals.
|
|||
|
Lang sat on a bench situated in the middle of the green and
|
|||
|
gold field, and beckoned the Mecha to lower itself beside him.
|
|||
|
<It is hard to think of the cruel world which lurks behind the
|
|||
|
walls of this garden when one is surrounded by such beauty>,
|
|||
|
thought Lang. <Why must the human race, ANY race, have such a
|
|||
|
penchant for war?>
|
|||
|
"How goes your training Michele?" he suddenly asked, shaking
|
|||
|
the feeling which was overcoming him, a feeling he hadn't felt
|
|||
|
for so long... <ever since that first trip amongst the remain
|
|||
|
of the crashed SDF-1>, he reflected.
|
|||
|
"Very well Doctor, I am quickly learning to adapt to this
|
|||
|
new situation..." The Mecha paused a few seconds. "Aren't
|
|||
|
these birds lovely? I do so love their songs..." Two
|
|||
|
compartments opened on each side of the Mecha's thorax,
|
|||
|
revealing sensitive loudspeakers. Both instruments hummed for
|
|||
|
a moment, then burst into life with a re-creation of the
|
|||
|
bird's song, perfect down to the last note. The speakers
|
|||
|
repeated the call as the nearby birds flew down to find the
|
|||
|
source of this song, finally perching themselves on the
|
|||
|
shoulders of the machine and joining it in its joyous
|
|||
|
exclamation of music.
|
|||
|
The Mecha lowered its right hand and extended a waldo from
|
|||
|
its forearm, reaching down with it to pick a flower. Another
|
|||
|
waldo quickly followed it and soon the Mecha was holding a
|
|||
|
bouquet, offering it to the birds who quickly rummaged through
|
|||
|
it, searching for bugs within the yellow petals and green
|
|||
|
leaves of the plants.
|
|||
|
"Sometimes, if I concentrate enough, I can feel the feedback
|
|||
|
from the things I pick up. I can actually feel the fragility
|
|||
|
of the plants I just picked. Maybe this isn't so bad... but
|
|||
|
still, I will feel better when I'll have rejoined my body."
|
|||
|
"I thought we weren't going to talk about that anymore
|
|||
|
Michele." remarked Lang.
|
|||
|
"I'm sorry Doctor, it just slipped out. It's just that I
|
|||
|
feel something has happened to my body, something... Oh well,
|
|||
|
I suppose you're right. 'Better off not talking about it. I'm
|
|||
|
not really in such a hurry to see it. After all, it's not as
|
|||
|
if it's about to get up and walk out on me, is it?"
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Michele was fuming. Ever since she had gotten out of the
|
|||
|
hospital, all she had been faced with was paperwork. Signing
|
|||
|
release forms at the hospital, signing in at the base, proving
|
|||
|
to the commanding officer that she was fit for duty (more
|
|||
|
paperwork), getting allocated a room, a new Mecha...
|
|||
|
paperwork, paperwork, <paperwork>. All these pieces of paper
|
|||
|
were dancing around her mind in such a disorderly fashion that
|
|||
|
she couldn't remember the contents of the last form she had
|
|||
|
signed. If someone had presented her a contract, she would
|
|||
|
probably have bought five hectares in the Wastelands without
|
|||
|
realising it. Luckily, Michael was helping her.
|
|||
|
Picking up both her bags Michael winked at Michele, grabbed
|
|||
|
a pamphlet with the base's map and timetable, prodded her up
|
|||
|
the stairs to the second floor and guided her to a room near
|
|||
|
the end of the corridor, in the north wing of the building.
|
|||
|
He dropped the bags and gave her one of his infuriating grins.
|
|||
|
"Would you believe that the Private in charge of room
|
|||
|
allocation gave you the room next to mine by mistake?" He
|
|||
|
didn't wait for her to answer but fished out a key from his
|
|||
|
pocket and started to open the door. "Wouldn't it be
|
|||
|
surprising if it had... Why yes, there it is... A common door.
|
|||
|
Now isn't <that> a coincidence!"
|
|||
|
Michele grabbed the bags and smiled at him as she closed the
|
|||
|
door behind her. "If there is one thing I have learned it's
|
|||
|
that nothing happens around you by coincidence. I suppose it
|
|||
|
is coincidence that you took sick just long enough to be able
|
|||
|
to get a room next to mine in the hospital? Or that virtually
|
|||
|
every flowershops' bouquets found their way into my room by
|
|||
|
accident? Or that..."
|
|||
|
"All right, I'll confess, I'm guilty of all charges." He
|
|||
|
smiled at her and went to open the window drapes. The view
|
|||
|
from the window gave onto a panoramic display of the SDF-1 and
|
|||
|
SDF-2 resting back-to-back in the middle of Lake Gloval. The
|
|||
|
sun, already starting to set, was perfectly centered between
|
|||
|
the gigantic 'tuning forks' which were the fortresses' Main
|
|||
|
Guns. He stared awhile at the sight of the red-orange globe
|
|||
|
as it descended behind the megalithic figures in the lake.
|
|||
|
Just as it disappeared beyond the horizon, Michael heard a
|
|||
|
rustle of clothes behind him and turned around. Michele was
|
|||
|
finishing taking off her uniform in the middle of the room.
|
|||
|
"Ah... Er... I think I'd better leave... "
|
|||
|
Michele looked at him with a languorous smile. "I was
|
|||
|
hoping you could spend the night here" she softly said.
|
|||
|
"Yes, well, I seem to have left my pajamas in my room..."
|
|||
|
blurted Michael.
|
|||
|
Michele's lips met his as she grabbed him around the waist
|
|||
|
with one hand and started to undo his buttons with the other.
|
|||
|
"I was hoping you would say that." she whispered.
|
|||
|
There was a light ruffle as the last of her clothes slowly
|
|||
|
fell to the ground.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
His whole body was still slightly sore from the endless days
|
|||
|
in the hospital bed, but at last he was free... <well, as free
|
|||
|
as one can be in the Armed Forces anyway>. Hausthar's heart
|
|||
|
jumped with joy as he once again stood in front of the
|
|||
|
Robotech Research and Development building. He entered the
|
|||
|
premises, waved at the secretary and promptly walked into the
|
|||
|
'wall' leading to Lang's office. He was just about to knock
|
|||
|
on the door when voices within made him pause.
|
|||
|
"... But General Leonard..."
|
|||
|
"There are no 'but's, Lang! This plane of yours is off the
|
|||
|
project. The council has finally seen it my way and has
|
|||
|
ordered you to start testing and production of the new Hover
|
|||
|
Tanks and AJACS. You wouldn't go against council directives,
|
|||
|
would you?"
|
|||
|
"Well no, I... "
|
|||
|
"I didn't think so! This is Dr. Lazlo Zand. He will be
|
|||
|
your assistant in this project. It seems he shares your
|
|||
|
admiration for this <Protoculture> of yours."
|
|||
|
Hausthar recoiled at that name. <Zand>. It was the same
|
|||
|
name he had heard days ago in one of the underground
|
|||
|
laboratories. He was the one who had ordered that green-
|
|||
|
blond haired child to be hooked up to a Protoculture
|
|||
|
Generator.
|
|||
|
"I hope you two will enjoy working together. Goodbye Lang."
|
|||
|
Hausthar moved away from the door as it opened. Two figures
|
|||
|
walked out of Lang's office: a bald, fat man dressed in a
|
|||
|
brown Southern Cross Army uniform and a short wizened person
|
|||
|
whose facial features seemed to be hidden from Hausthar by a
|
|||
|
constant mist around his face. Both disappeared down the
|
|||
|
corridor.
|
|||
|
Lang stood by the doorway, watching their shadows retreat in
|
|||
|
the distance. "Politicians!" he snorted. Hausthar's presence
|
|||
|
suddenly came to his attention. He studied him for a moment
|
|||
|
before speaking once again. "Glad to see you are out of the
|
|||
|
hospital. I'm sorry if this seems a bit rude, but could you
|
|||
|
come back some other time?"
|
|||
|
There again was the politeness Lang was such a miser with.
|
|||
|
<Why is he so polite with me?> thought Hausthar. He
|
|||
|
nonetheless stuttered a yes and watched as Lang retreated into
|
|||
|
his office, the door closing noiselessly behind him.
|
|||
|
He had turned around and was about to make his way down the
|
|||
|
corridor when a sudden feeling of warmth spread like a wave
|
|||
|
from his lower abdomen across his chest. With this feeling of
|
|||
|
warmth came a shortness of breath which hit Hausthar with
|
|||
|
surprise. He wasn't feeling pain... in fact the feeling was
|
|||
|
rather pleasant, as if he'd just had an... He shook his head
|
|||
|
and tried to clear his mind from this line of thought. His
|
|||
|
breath slowly returned to him.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Michele laid on her back in the rather large bed in her
|
|||
|
room, her breathing slowly going back to normal. She turned
|
|||
|
to look at Michael who was lying beside her, watching her,
|
|||
|
caressing her hips. She slid on top of him and embraced him
|
|||
|
with all the passion she could muster from her soul.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The Mecha bay was a noisy place to be: work was always in
|
|||
|
progress around the clock. Servo-motors whined as damaged
|
|||
|
Veritechs struggled to mechamorph under the watchful eyes of
|
|||
|
the technicians. Hausthar stopped and glanced around until he
|
|||
|
had spotted the person he was looking for. Getting closer, he
|
|||
|
tapped him on the shoulder.
|
|||
|
"Hey, George! You got a minute?"
|
|||
|
The overalls straightened out and revealed George's
|
|||
|
features. His face lit up as he recognised the person who had
|
|||
|
called him. "Hausthar! Man, am I glad you're out of
|
|||
|
hospital..." He stopped and eyed his friend suspiciously.
|
|||
|
"You <were> discharged, right?"
|
|||
|
"Yep, all nice and official." replied Hausthar. He glanced
|
|||
|
at the Mecha George had been working on.
|
|||
|
"She's all repaired and ready to go. Even painted her with
|
|||
|
your colours: Light blue with light brown trimmings."
|
|||
|
Hausthar walked around the Alpha, his hand gliding along its
|
|||
|
metal skin, his mind replaying the moment of the crash, trying
|
|||
|
to file it away, trying to forget it.
|
|||
|
"When is she going up again?" enquired George.
|
|||
|
"There's been a slight change of plans." admitted Hausthar.
|
|||
|
"Oh. What happened?"
|
|||
|
"She's going to be moth-balled. They think she's too
|
|||
|
dangerous." Hausthar said. He continued to eye the jet as he
|
|||
|
walked around it, inspecting it.
|
|||
|
"<WHAT?> That's outrageous! She's about as safe as they
|
|||
|
come." shouted George.
|
|||
|
"Shush... You know that and I know that... But they don't.
|
|||
|
Which is why you are going to find a nice, secluded hangar for
|
|||
|
this baby and moth-ball an empty shell in its place. I want
|
|||
|
to be able to finish testing her without their knowing it.
|
|||
|
Can it be done?"
|
|||
|
George's face was grinning happily at him. "Does the sun
|
|||
|
rise every morning? It'd be criminal to put this plane on the
|
|||
|
shelf. Hangar D is empty, and I'll fiddle the paperwork so it
|
|||
|
remains that way. Even smuggle a few spare parts and
|
|||
|
equipment in there for the check-up."
|
|||
|
"What about ammunition for the live-ammo testing?"
|
|||
|
"Are you kidding? I sometimes tell myself that the only
|
|||
|
reason Zentraedi aren't able to walk out with all the ammo
|
|||
|
they want is because they are not allowed <in> in the first
|
|||
|
place. Apart from that, they'd never be caught. You worry
|
|||
|
about making sure nobody realises you're flying a plane that's
|
|||
|
supposed to be moth-balled, I'll take care of the rest."
|
|||
|
"Thanks for the help." A clock on the wall gave out a short
|
|||
|
buzz, causing Hausthar to automatically look at his watch. "7
|
|||
|
O'Clock!" he exclaimed. "Jeezus! <Ricky!> I forgot about
|
|||
|
dinner! Listen George, I gotta go, fast. I'll see you
|
|||
|
tomorrow." He scrambled for the door without waiting for an
|
|||
|
answer, leaving a surprised George behind him, scratching his
|
|||
|
head.
|
|||
|
"Well, well, well." George muttered to himself. "She must
|
|||
|
be one hell of a girl for <him> to be in such a state."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
In a hangar especially designed for it, a Battloid was
|
|||
|
having a hard time falling asleep. It shifted restlessly on
|
|||
|
its specially designed bed. It didn't really need a bed to
|
|||
|
sleep, it could have slept on the floor, but the
|
|||
|
psychoanalysts had decided it would be better for its mental
|
|||
|
health to have as many 'normal' things around it as possible.
|
|||
|
And it had worked; just the act of lying on a sixty feet bed
|
|||
|
usually sent the Mecha into something akin to human sleep.
|
|||
|
But this time it was not working right.
|
|||
|
The Battloid tossed and turned on its bunk, trying to catch
|
|||
|
that elusive sleep. Brief bursts of memories flashed through
|
|||
|
its mind in its half-asleep state. Missiles pursued it
|
|||
|
through a landscape even Picasso would have had a hard time
|
|||
|
understanding. Energy crackled through its imaginary body as
|
|||
|
the missiles surrounded it, blocking off all escape routes.
|
|||
|
It had prepared itself for the worst when a face appeared in
|
|||
|
front of it, fending off the missiles, offering a shield to
|
|||
|
their blasts. And with the face came a name from deep within
|
|||
|
its memory. <Michael>, it thought. <I must find Michael.>
|
|||
|
It struggled against consciousness a while longer before
|
|||
|
finally surrendering to the black abyss of a restless sleep.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Ricky had been waiting at the restaurant for a little over
|
|||
|
half-an-hour when Hausthar finally arrived. It was a small,
|
|||
|
friendly establishment located on the fourth floor of an old-
|
|||
|
style building near the centre of Tokyo.
|
|||
|
Hausthar grabbed the seat opposite hers and slumped into it.
|
|||
|
"I'm sorry I'm late" he apologised "but I had some business to
|
|||
|
take care of at the base."
|
|||
|
"It's all right." replied Ricky, placing her hand gently on
|
|||
|
top of his. Hausthar's heart skipped a beat. "I'm just glad
|
|||
|
you're here." Her eyelids lowered slightly, accentuating her
|
|||
|
schoolgirl look.
|
|||
|
"So am I." He stared at her for a while, time forgotten,
|
|||
|
until someone cleared their throat next to him. He looked up
|
|||
|
to see what looked like a waiter waiting to take their orders.
|
|||
|
The newcomer confirmed his suspicions.
|
|||
|
"May I take your orders?" he uttered in perfect waiter
|
|||
|
fashion, flipping open a small book.
|
|||
|
"What do you recommend?" asked Ricky.
|
|||
|
"The lasagna is particularly delicious tonight, miss."
|
|||
|
answered the waiter, removing the top from his pen.
|
|||
|
"We'll have two lasagnas with a bottle of red wine." said
|
|||
|
Hausthar.
|
|||
|
"Very well sir." replied the waiter and walked off towards
|
|||
|
the kitchen, taking two more orders on the way. He had barely
|
|||
|
made it to the swinging doors when an explosion sent him to
|
|||
|
the floor.
|
|||
|
Hausthar looked up just in time to see a ball of fire engulf
|
|||
|
the tables closest to the kitchen door, instantly incinerating
|
|||
|
those seated around them. A secondary explosion resounded
|
|||
|
outside the restaurant's front door, remnants of another
|
|||
|
fireball burning through it. Hausthar searched for Ricky and
|
|||
|
found her sprawled on the floor. He stood up to help her to
|
|||
|
her feet. A flaming support beam speared through the chair he
|
|||
|
had been seated in a fraction of a second earlier. More
|
|||
|
pieces of the ceiling rained about him as he heard the
|
|||
|
frightened screams of patrons running for the fire exits. He
|
|||
|
picked up Ricky's inert body before realising that the fallen
|
|||
|
beam had blocked his only escape route - he was surrounded by
|
|||
|
fire. Frantically he searched for an opening in the wall of
|
|||
|
flames. He caught sight of a window behind the waving
|
|||
|
curtains of fire. He struggled to get a better glimpse of it;
|
|||
|
something snapped in his mind. He felt a gust of wind
|
|||
|
originate from it and blow in a straight line between him and
|
|||
|
the window, extinguishing the flames.
|
|||
|
Ricky's voice came to him through his stupor. "<RUN!>" He
|
|||
|
reacted automatically, racing for the window. Another
|
|||
|
explosion resounded behind him, sending Hausthar and Ricky
|
|||
|
flying through the window, falling to the ground. In his
|
|||
|
state of panic it took Hausthar several seconds to realise he
|
|||
|
had yet to hit the pavement, and that in fact the speed of his
|
|||
|
fall had dramatically reduced. He hit the pavement with a
|
|||
|
heavy thud and immediately tried to get back on his feet.
|
|||
|
"What the... ?"
|
|||
|
A hand grabbed his wrist and pulled him up from the
|
|||
|
sidewalk, urging him along the street towards a cab waiting at
|
|||
|
the corner. "What happened? <What happened?>" repeated
|
|||
|
Hausthar, staring at Ricky's face.
|
|||
|
"I can't tell you." she answered, tears streaming down her
|
|||
|
face. "I can't tell you. Let's just go home." She hailed the
|
|||
|
cab and waited for it to arrive.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
CHAPTER 9
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Who needs a heart when a heart can be broken?
|
|||
|
Late 20th Century song.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The taxi pulled in front of Research's main gates and let
|
|||
|
two figures out before departing again. The two figures
|
|||
|
passed by the guards without being challenged and made their
|
|||
|
way towards a building in the compound. Neither talked until
|
|||
|
they had reached Hausthar's room and closed the door behind
|
|||
|
them.
|
|||
|
"What was all that about?" demanded Hausthar, making an
|
|||
|
obvious effort to keep his voice down. "By all rights, I
|
|||
|
shouldn't be alive. I shouldn't have been able to make my way
|
|||
|
through the flames and I certainly should not have survived
|
|||
|
that fall. <So what the Hell is going on?>"
|
|||
|
Ricky was sitting on the couch, looking at her feet, not
|
|||
|
daring to raise her head. Hausthar threw his hands up in
|
|||
|
desperation and switched on the television in time to catch a
|
|||
|
news bulletin about the disaster.
|
|||
|
" ...ill no idea on how the fire started, but firemen have
|
|||
|
ruled out malicious intent. So far no survivors have been
|
|||
|
found as the blaze still rages here in down-town Tokyo, but
|
|||
|
witnesses say they saw two figures thrown from the
|
|||
|
restaurant's fourth-story window as they tried to escape the
|
|||
|
flames. No bodies have been found outside the restaurant so
|
|||
|
police are dismissing this account..."
|
|||
|
Hausthar turned off the sound and faced Ricky, forcing her
|
|||
|
to look at him. Tears were still streaming from her eyes as
|
|||
|
he asked her once more, desperation in his voice. "What
|
|||
|
happened Ricky?"
|
|||
|
"It happened too soon." she answered through her sobs. "You
|
|||
|
weren't supposed to awake until I was finished with you."
|
|||
|
Hausthar's thoughts were stopped by the shock her words
|
|||
|
produced in him. "What do you mean 'until you were finished
|
|||
|
with me'?" he asked, sitting down in a chair opposite the
|
|||
|
couch. "What were you supposed to do to me?"
|
|||
|
Ricky fought down the sobs as she answered his question. "I
|
|||
|
was sent to train you, to help you along the way, to try to
|
|||
|
make you understand what was about to happen to you. But this
|
|||
|
accident triggered off your powers before I had a chance to
|
|||
|
explain them to you."
|
|||
|
"My powers?" Hausthar said queasily. "I don't have any
|
|||
|
powers."
|
|||
|
"Yes you do." she replied. "Thanks to your genetic make-
|
|||
|
up, you have been granted the power of control over certain
|
|||
|
energies. I was sent to try and teach you how to use them
|
|||
|
without harm, and I have failed."
|
|||
|
Hausthar's mind was becoming quite numb by the minute.
|
|||
|
"What genetic make-up? I don't even know my parents."
|
|||
|
"That's because you don't have any. You're a clone,
|
|||
|
Hausthar! Part of Earth's first experiment at generating
|
|||
|
life. Your mother was an artificial womb and your father was
|
|||
|
an undifferentiated cell on which your scientists
|
|||
|
experimented. You are part of Earth's first Clonal
|
|||
|
Triumvirate! That's why you have the Power."
|
|||
|
Hausthar slumped into the chair. "A... a clone? Bu.. But
|
|||
|
that's impossible, I have memories. I'm a human being, with
|
|||
|
feelings, and emotions!"
|
|||
|
"You were 'born' a little over a year ago" insisted Ricky
|
|||
|
"in a laboratory in this research facility. These memories
|
|||
|
you have were impressed upon you as part of your in-vitro
|
|||
|
training. The only real memories you have are those of the
|
|||
|
past year."
|
|||
|
By now Hausthar was gazing blankly past her shoulder,
|
|||
|
through the glass door into the night. "You said I was one of
|
|||
|
three. Who are the others?"
|
|||
|
"I... I'm not allowed to say." admitted Ricky.
|
|||
|
"What about the cell donor? Whose cell was it?"
|
|||
|
Ricky paused a moment before answering softly. "Lang... It
|
|||
|
was Dr. Lang's cells they used for the genetic manipulation."
|
|||
|
Hausthar continued to gaze through the window, showing no
|
|||
|
signs of life. "I'm sorry Hausthar. You weren't supposed to
|
|||
|
learn about all this until I'd finished training you and..."
|
|||
|
"Who sent you?" he interrupted.
|
|||
|
"I... I can't... " stammered Ricky.
|
|||
|
Hausthar insisted. "Who sent you?"
|
|||
|
She lowered her head to avoid his gaze as she replied "You
|
|||
|
met him when you had your accident a few days ago."
|
|||
|
Hausthar emitted a low growl as anger flooded into him. He
|
|||
|
got up and briskly walked back and forth along the length of
|
|||
|
the room, finally stopping to smash his fist against a door-
|
|||
|
jamb. "A pawn!" he roared. "I am meant to be a pawn!" His
|
|||
|
fists repeatedly smashed against the wall. "To answer to
|
|||
|
someone's whims and fight for him in his power-play? I am no
|
|||
|
servant! I am not a clone! I am a human being!" he exclaimed
|
|||
|
as he threw open the door and disappeared down the corridor.
|
|||
|
Ricky jumped from the couch and ran after him, shouting his
|
|||
|
name. She caught sight of him as he rounded a corner but by
|
|||
|
the time she herself reached it, he had vanished from the
|
|||
|
corridor. She called out his name several times, not caring
|
|||
|
about the building's other inhabitants, but to no avail - the
|
|||
|
only reply she heard was the sound of her heart. Collapsing
|
|||
|
against a wall, she slid down to the floor. "I love you!" she
|
|||
|
murmured as she buried her head in her hands and wept.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Hausthar stopped running once he had left the building and
|
|||
|
lost himself in the labyrinth that was Research. He walked,
|
|||
|
not caring where, until he found a bench hidden by a grove.
|
|||
|
Dejectedly, he sat on the bench and threw his head back,
|
|||
|
staring at the stars and the moon. His eyes caught on to the
|
|||
|
bright body that orbited the Earth just slightly under the
|
|||
|
moon. This was 'Little Luna', a Robotech Factory captured by
|
|||
|
the R.D.F. a couple of days ago in a daring raid against the
|
|||
|
remaining Zentraedi forces in this quadrant. Hausthar gazed
|
|||
|
at it for a long time before speaking.
|
|||
|
"You and me both, Little Luna. It seems we are both to be
|
|||
|
abducted by people we know not, to be used in a fight we care
|
|||
|
nothing about. We are both pawns in this game, <toys of
|
|||
|
destruction!>"
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Michael stood in front of the Colonel's door, waiting to be
|
|||
|
let in. He was wondering why he had been called so early in
|
|||
|
the morning - what was so important that it had to be done at
|
|||
|
3 O'Clock in the morning?
|
|||
|
The door finally opened, allowing him to enter. Inside the
|
|||
|
office was the Colonel, his aide and a third person who needed
|
|||
|
no introduction to Michael. "Dr. Lang! Sir! What are you
|
|||
|
doing here? Has something happened to Hausthar?" he
|
|||
|
exclaimed. The Colonel harumphed his disapproval. "Oh. I'm
|
|||
|
sorry sir." Michael saluted and came to attention.
|
|||
|
The Colonel's aide turned towards him and explained.
|
|||
|
"Nothing has happened to your friend, Corporal. Dr. Lang here
|
|||
|
has asked for you specifically." Lang rose from his seat and
|
|||
|
turned just in time to see Michael try and stifle a yawn.
|
|||
|
"I'm sorry sir," apologised Michael "but I've had a rather,
|
|||
|
er... busy night."
|
|||
|
Lang gave a small smile. "It is me who should apologise. I
|
|||
|
keep on forgetting there is a 17 hour difference between here
|
|||
|
and Japan. But in fact it is because of your, as you said,
|
|||
|
busy night that I am here to see you. I need your help,
|
|||
|
Corporal."
|
|||
|
Michael looked at him questioningly. "How may I be of
|
|||
|
assistance to you Dr. Lang?"
|
|||
|
"We've had a rather bad case of shell-shock in Tokyo lately.
|
|||
|
No, no, it's not your friend Reneth. What we need is someone
|
|||
|
to talk to our patient, to humour it, er... her. It seems she
|
|||
|
will not be quiet until she's seen you."
|
|||
|
"Excuse me sir, but let me try to get this straight. You
|
|||
|
got me up at three in the morning to talk to a shell-shock
|
|||
|
patient?"
|
|||
|
"A very special patient as you will see." replied Lang.
|
|||
|
Michael gave out a small sigh. "Very well sir. I'll do
|
|||
|
it."
|
|||
|
Lang turned towards the Colonel. "Do you mind if I borrow
|
|||
|
him for a while? I'll return him as soon as I've finished."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The hangar was guarded by four M.P.s in full gear. Lang
|
|||
|
showed them his identification and they immediately began to
|
|||
|
open the heavily-barred door.
|
|||
|
"Let me try to soften the shock a bit. This is not your
|
|||
|
average patient we have in there." started Lang.
|
|||
|
"Why?" joked Michael. "Hospital beds too small?"
|
|||
|
"You could say that. Remember though, no matter what you
|
|||
|
see or hear, I want you to humour that patient. We do not yet
|
|||
|
know what might happen if she goes crazy, but given her
|
|||
|
condition, it would not be pretty." The guards opened the
|
|||
|
door and saluted. "Well then, if you do not have any other
|
|||
|
questions, I suggest we go in."
|
|||
|
The inside of the hangar was dimly lit, leaving only small
|
|||
|
areas lit by yellow globes. In the far corner, Michael could
|
|||
|
see a big shadow against the wall, surround by slightly
|
|||
|
smaller ones. From the vicinity of the shadow, a voice
|
|||
|
emanated.
|
|||
|
"Michael, is that you?"
|
|||
|
"Michele?" queried Michael, looking around for her. "What
|
|||
|
are you doing here?"
|
|||
|
"They were kind enough to bring me here from Japan to see
|
|||
|
you." replied the voice.
|
|||
|
"From Jap...?" started Michael.
|
|||
|
Lang interrupted him and turned towards one of the guards.
|
|||
|
"I think you'd better hit the lights." The guard moved
|
|||
|
towards the nearest wall and fumbled a bit in the dark.
|
|||
|
Bright lights came on, illuminating a gigantic chair in which
|
|||
|
was seated a Battloid. Michael strained to find Michele, but
|
|||
|
could not see her. The Battloid stood up and walked towards
|
|||
|
him, extending a waldo.
|
|||
|
"Michael," said Michele's voice, coming from the Battloid
|
|||
|
"It's so nice to see you again."
|
|||
|
Michael shook the waldo, a little dumfounded. He glanced at
|
|||
|
the Battloid, trying to understand why it looked so familiar.
|
|||
|
Recognition finally came and his mouth opened in consternation
|
|||
|
as understanding set in.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The apartment was in complete darkness as Hausthar walked
|
|||
|
in. He briefly glanced around but found no signs of Ricky.
|
|||
|
Moaning softly he sat down on the couch and tried to
|
|||
|
understand how he was feeling. He felt betrayed, hurt, but
|
|||
|
above all he felt a sense of loss, as if a part of him was
|
|||
|
missing in some way. Surely this could not be attributed to
|
|||
|
Ricky's disappearance? After all, he had only known her for
|
|||
|
less than a month!
|
|||
|
He kicked his shoes off and laid on the seat, hands behind
|
|||
|
his head, trying not to think about the cold hand that was
|
|||
|
gripping his heart. He lounged there for several minutes,
|
|||
|
staring at the darkened ceiling, until a restless sleep
|
|||
|
finally took him.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
" ...in a big hangar like this one, only it had more
|
|||
|
furniture. I've been cooped in there for over two weeks. So
|
|||
|
yesterday morning I told them that if they didn't let me see
|
|||
|
you soon, I would go on strike and not participate in any more
|
|||
|
of their tests." droned the Veritech. It suddenly realised it
|
|||
|
had been speaking for the last thirty minutes without letting
|
|||
|
her listener place a word in. "Oh! I'm sorry Michael. It's
|
|||
|
just that it's been so long since I've talked to somebody I
|
|||
|
knew before this accident happened."
|
|||
|
Michael smiled a feeble smile. "It's all right Michele, I
|
|||
|
understand perfectly. I guess I'd feel that way too if I'd
|
|||
|
been prodded and pushed by strangers for so long."
|
|||
|
"It wouldn't have been so bad if it weren't for the fact
|
|||
|
that they wouldn't let me see my body in the hospital." A
|
|||
|
thought crossed the Battloid's mind. "Say, you wouldn't have
|
|||
|
seen it, would you? After all, you are my wing-man."
|
|||
|
"Well... I guess... Yes, I have..." stammered Michael.
|
|||
|
"How is it doing? Is it all right? No permanent damage I
|
|||
|
hope?" it asked anxiously.
|
|||
|
"No." Michael answered. "It's doing fine. It's in great
|
|||
|
shape. Best I've ever seen."
|
|||
|
The Battloid seemed happy about this news. "Good. I guess
|
|||
|
I don't have anything to worry about then." It was about to
|
|||
|
continue with the conversation when Lang came up to them and
|
|||
|
intervened.
|
|||
|
"I am sorry to interrupt, but it is getting rather late.
|
|||
|
I'm afraid Corporal Circle has to go back to his duties."
|
|||
|
"Oh." said the Mecha dejectedly. "I s'pose you have to
|
|||
|
then." A trace of sadness was evident in its voice. "Will I
|
|||
|
be able to see you again?"
|
|||
|
"Sure," answered Michael "any time you want."
|
|||
|
Lang walked up to the Battloid and looked it in the eye.
|
|||
|
"You need some rest too, Michele. Why don't you try to sleep
|
|||
|
a bit while I walk the Corporal back to the office?"
|
|||
|
"Very well Dr. Lang." replied the Veritech as it once again
|
|||
|
returned to its gigantic chair.
|
|||
|
"Doctor Lang," asked Michael as it left them "why is it
|
|||
|
carrying a GU-11?" In fact, the Battloid was not only armed
|
|||
|
with its GU-11, but Michael had noticed it also had a full
|
|||
|
complement of heat-seeking missiles on its wing pylons.
|
|||
|
Lang cleared his throat before answering. "It complained
|
|||
|
that it felt naked without them. It started to go hysterical
|
|||
|
on us after a couple of hours, so we armed it with a full
|
|||
|
weapons complement. It's been quiet ever since." Lang gently
|
|||
|
grabbed Michael's arm and started towards the exit, pulling
|
|||
|
him along. "I'm afraid I have some other news for you, but
|
|||
|
you may not like it."
|
|||
|
Michael stepped through the door into the cold night air of
|
|||
|
the outside and turned towards him. "What now?"
|
|||
|
"Well... " started Lang "we ran some psychological tests on
|
|||
|
her." He pointed towards the hangar with his thumb.
|
|||
|
"And?"
|
|||
|
"And it seems it's in love with you." Lang let out abruptly.
|
|||
|
"<WHAT?>" shouted Michael. "You can't be serious. I have
|
|||
|
enough trouble keeping up with the <human> Michele, but a
|
|||
|
sixty feet tall can of sardine..? I'd never survive the
|
|||
|
relationship!"
|
|||
|
"We totally agree with you, but it thinks of itself as
|
|||
|
human. So do many of our experts. They've even started to
|
|||
|
refer to it as 'her'. What we need... " Lang never got to
|
|||
|
finish his sentence - a dark shadow was approaching from the
|
|||
|
base, calling out to them.
|
|||
|
"Michael. I was told I'd find you here. Why'd you leave in
|
|||
|
the middle of the night?"
|
|||
|
"<MICHELE?!>" cried Michael. "What are you doing here?
|
|||
|
Didn't they tell you to..." He never finished either. A loud
|
|||
|
screech came from the hangar as its door was forced open from
|
|||
|
the inside. The tall figure of the Battloid stepped through
|
|||
|
the opening and rightened itself before speaking.
|
|||
|
"Did you call me Mi..." it started to say when it caught
|
|||
|
sight of Michele. It stiffened as its sensors registered the
|
|||
|
identity of this newcomer. "Who... Who are you?" it demanded.
|
|||
|
Michele was struck dumb by the question. "Corporal Michele
|
|||
|
Cequor. Who are you?" she responded.
|
|||
|
The Mecha took a step forward, emitting bizarre sounds.
|
|||
|
"This cannot be. You cannot be me. I am Michele Cequor."
|
|||
|
The Veritech's computer fought against the data its sensors
|
|||
|
were sending it. swaying slightly, it took a few more steps
|
|||
|
towards the base's runway, its voice garbled by electronic
|
|||
|
noises. It finally turned towards the group of humans and re-
|
|||
|
iterated its plea. "You cannot be real. You must be an
|
|||
|
imposter." it wailed.
|
|||
|
"I am Corporal Michele Cequor, service number 879-554871,
|
|||
|
attached to Skull Squadron under the orders of Lieutenant
|
|||
|
Richard Hunter." replied Michele in a daze.
|
|||
|
A warning came from one of the guards as it spied movement
|
|||
|
coming from the Mecha. "HIT THE DECK!" came the shout as all
|
|||
|
responded to the cry.
|
|||
|
The Battloid's wings swung apart, showing four pylons
|
|||
|
covered with missiles. It held its head in its hand as it
|
|||
|
shook it, trying to resolve the conflict that raged within.
|
|||
|
Finally, it fell to its knees, arms akimbo, shouting to the
|
|||
|
sky. "<NOOO!>"
|
|||
|
Red light flooded the area as twelve streaks of smoke rose
|
|||
|
from the wings into the night sky.
|
|||
|
The missiles flew up for five hundred meters, then turned
|
|||
|
around and returned whence they came. The explosion deafened
|
|||
|
those present as the twelve carriers of death impacted with
|
|||
|
the Battloid, reducing it to dust, sending shrapnel hundreds
|
|||
|
of meters away.
|
|||
|
As the witnesses stood up and brushed the dust from their
|
|||
|
faces, there were some who swore they had heard a sound still
|
|||
|
hanging on the wind after the roar...
|
|||
|
The sound of someone weeping.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
CHAPTER 10
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Through good times,
|
|||
|
And bad times,
|
|||
|
I'll be on your side forever more
|
|||
|
'Cause that's what friends are for.
|
|||
|
Late 20th Century song.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
We are the Night Music - Search, Attack, Destroy. We are
|
|||
|
not under your command. We bring the war to the enemy.
|
|||
|
R. Sopwith, commander of the Night Music Squadron.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Lang's reaction to the destruction of the Battloid had been
|
|||
|
a mixed one. Search teams combed the runway all day, picking
|
|||
|
up the pieces of a mecha which had committed suicide. By
|
|||
|
nightfall, Lang and his team were on their way back to Japan,
|
|||
|
carrying with them a handbag's worth of electronic components
|
|||
|
that had been salvaged from the wreckage. Needless to say
|
|||
|
that two pilots got the talk-down of their life.
|
|||
|
"Shee-<eet>!" exclaimed Michael as he closed the office door
|
|||
|
behind him. "You'd think the Colonel was holding us
|
|||
|
personally responsible for this incident."
|
|||
|
Michele leaned against the wall, hands behind her head.
|
|||
|
"Well... we were... sort of." She still couldn't understand
|
|||
|
the sudden impulse which had made her search for him in the
|
|||
|
middle of the night, precipitating the Battloid's suicide.
|
|||
|
"So what do we do now?" she asked, eyes half closed as she
|
|||
|
looked at him.
|
|||
|
"I do believe we have some unfinished business to take care
|
|||
|
of." replied Michael, nodding his head towards their quarters.
|
|||
|
Michele giggled. "You cad!" she murmured as she took hold
|
|||
|
of his hand and urged him towards the door.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Waking up to an empty apartment was not really a harrowing
|
|||
|
experience, but remembering why it was empty nearly had
|
|||
|
Hausthar decide to call in sick and spend the rest of the day
|
|||
|
in bed, feeling sorry for himself. The final decision was
|
|||
|
made for him as his quarter's door opened to let someone
|
|||
|
through.
|
|||
|
"Good morning Corporal." said a metallic voice. Hausthar
|
|||
|
looked up and saw one of Lang's waiter-droids standing next to
|
|||
|
his bed. "The doctor regrets that he is not here to give you
|
|||
|
your assignment in person" continued the droid "but he had
|
|||
|
urgent business in the States. The doctor should be back
|
|||
|
later today. Until then, you are required to remain in
|
|||
|
contact with Research. That is all." The droid opened a
|
|||
|
small compartment in its cylindrical body and an electronic
|
|||
|
pager landed on the bedside table. The droid bowed slightly
|
|||
|
and departed, closing the door behind it.
|
|||
|
Hausthar picked up the pager and looked at it. <So>, he
|
|||
|
thought, <I'm given the day off.> He got up and walked over
|
|||
|
to the phone, pager in hand, and dialed a number from memory.
|
|||
|
"George? Hausthar. Have you completed our little
|
|||
|
transaction?... Good. Listen, I'll be along in half an hour.
|
|||
|
Do you think you can get her ready by then?... Yes, with full
|
|||
|
load. I want to take her up for a test run... Thanks." He
|
|||
|
returned the handle to its cradle and went back into the
|
|||
|
bedroom to change.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Hangar D was a structure of metal built at the furthest end
|
|||
|
of the base. Looking at it, no-one would suspect that it was
|
|||
|
in use - rust flaked from its walls, abandoned oil-drums
|
|||
|
littered around it. Inside, however, was the latest in
|
|||
|
Robotechnology - a newly repaired prototype Alpha Fighter.
|
|||
|
Hausthar walked around it, visually checking it out whilst
|
|||
|
George ran the electronics through their paces.
|
|||
|
Probe in hand, George was checking the response in the
|
|||
|
Alpha's right support thruster. "Hey, Haust! How're you
|
|||
|
gonna get this baby off the ground without the controllers
|
|||
|
getting suspicious? This plane ain't exactly inconspicuous."
|
|||
|
Hausthar emerged from the underside, where he had been
|
|||
|
checking the intakes. "I've got a friend working there. He
|
|||
|
told me what to say to get clearance. My only trouble will be
|
|||
|
to get up in the air as fast as possible before someone
|
|||
|
decides to check me out visually."
|
|||
|
"Guess you know what you're doing." George's head
|
|||
|
disappeared inside the cockpit only to reappear a second
|
|||
|
later. "Are you sure you want this gadget in here? It ain't
|
|||
|
exactly regulations you know." His hand was holding a
|
|||
|
cassette-player for Hausthar's inspection.
|
|||
|
"Yeah, I do. It's been done before, hasn't it?"
|
|||
|
"Are you kidding? There was only one other in the R.D.F.
|
|||
|
with a cassette-player hooked to his internal systemry... and
|
|||
|
he never came back from the attack on Dolza's command ship."
|
|||
|
"Well I don't intend on going MIA like Commander Sopwith, if
|
|||
|
that's what you mean."
|
|||
|
George sighed and started opening the jet's console panels.
|
|||
|
"What's the big idea anyway? You get bored listening to the
|
|||
|
tac-net or somethin'?"
|
|||
|
"Sopwith was the R.D.F.'s greatest ace. This is my way of
|
|||
|
remembering the anniversary of his disappearance. So get on
|
|||
|
with it will you?"
|
|||
|
"All right, all right. Getting on with it." grumbled
|
|||
|
George. Sounds of an electronic drill came from the cockpit
|
|||
|
and filled the air in the hangar's closed environment.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Michael and Michele were duking it out, exchanging cannon
|
|||
|
fire, missiles tearing up the skies as they sought to reach
|
|||
|
their targets. Michele's grey Veritech went Battloid and
|
|||
|
tried to get a bead on Michael's light-green Guardian as it
|
|||
|
went into a spin, trying to evade one of the mavericks she had
|
|||
|
launched at him. Michael's Guardian suddenly changed
|
|||
|
direction by ninety degrees upward just as the missile was
|
|||
|
going to reach it. The maverick didn't have time to follow
|
|||
|
and flashed past the Mecha as Michael brought his GU-11 to
|
|||
|
bear on it, emptying most of his clip into it before it
|
|||
|
finally ruptured.
|
|||
|
Without letting a moment slip by, Michael went ballistic to
|
|||
|
evade the cannon-fire Michele was directing his way and
|
|||
|
mechamorphed to Battloid. Letting go two AMRAAMs, he followed
|
|||
|
them in, using their smoke-trail and radar paint to hide.
|
|||
|
Michele destroyed both missiles but could not react fast
|
|||
|
enough to dodge out of Michael's way - the two Battloids met
|
|||
|
in mid-air, metallic collision sounds echoing through the
|
|||
|
battle-field. Falling from the sky, the two mecha wrestled,
|
|||
|
Michael getting the upper hand just as they crashed onto the
|
|||
|
ground. Before Michele could react Michael attacked with
|
|||
|
devastating results, his Battloid's foot smashing her mecha's
|
|||
|
right leg to pieces. Warning sirens resounded as the Battloid
|
|||
|
went down on one knee. Michael moved in for the kill, GU-11
|
|||
|
aimed at pilot's cockpit. The smug look on his face
|
|||
|
disappeared as he registered a quick movement from the downed
|
|||
|
Veritech. The last thing he saw were five Sidewinders
|
|||
|
screaming towards him before the world went black.
|
|||
|
Victory sounds emerged from the <Battloid Attack!> machine
|
|||
|
as the 3D screen disappeared from between the two players. A
|
|||
|
stylised Rick Hunter jumped out from the cockpit of a grey
|
|||
|
Veritech and received a kiss from a very recognizable
|
|||
|
representation of singing star Lynn Minmei. Michael grunted
|
|||
|
in disgust as his score showed him ranked as 20th on the best
|
|||
|
50 players list. "Care to go it a second round?" smirked
|
|||
|
Michele, entering her name in the top place on the list.
|
|||
|
Michael was saved the embarrassment as a well-known voice
|
|||
|
resounded near them. "Congratulations on a good game, both of
|
|||
|
you." Michael looked up to see the Sterlings leaning against
|
|||
|
the wall next to the machine. Both pilots stood up and
|
|||
|
saluted their commanding officers.
|
|||
|
"Thank you Sir." said Michael. "May I ask how long you have
|
|||
|
been watching?"
|
|||
|
"Long enough to see some interesting moves." replied Miriya
|
|||
|
Sterling. "It's the first time I've seen anyone use their
|
|||
|
missiles as a smoke and radar screen."
|
|||
|
"Thank you Ma'am. But surely you must have done better."
|
|||
|
"I don't know. My first game against Max is not one I'm
|
|||
|
likely to forget. He literally thrashed me."
|
|||
|
Maximillian Sterling was starting to blush. "Miriya, I
|
|||
|
don't think they want to hear about this."
|
|||
|
"Oh, yes we do." blurted Michele. "Please tell us more
|
|||
|
about this, Commander."
|
|||
|
"Well," started Miriya "it's a long story and we are awaited
|
|||
|
somewhere else..." She paused, thinking. "Why don't you come
|
|||
|
with us, then I'll be able to tell you about it on the way."
|
|||
|
"But we wouldn't want to intrude..." stammered Michael.
|
|||
|
"Nonsense!" interrupted Max. "I'm sure you'll be welcomed,
|
|||
|
so let's not hear another word about it." He hesitated for a
|
|||
|
moment. "Anybody knows where we might get a taxi around
|
|||
|
here?"
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"This is Alpha X-ray 250, requesting clearance."
|
|||
|
"Tower to Alpha X-ray 250. I'm sorry, but we don't seem to
|
|||
|
have any flight plans from you."
|
|||
|
Hausthar breathed in deeply before answering. "Affirmative
|
|||
|
Tower. I have override clearance. Clearance code Delta
|
|||
|
Foxtrot 5."
|
|||
|
The voice from the tower paused a few seconds, making
|
|||
|
Hausthar sweat. Finally, the confirmation was given. "Tower
|
|||
|
to Alpha X-ray 250, Research and Development clearance code
|
|||
|
confirmed. You are cleared for take-off on runway 36."
|
|||
|
Hausthar nudged the throttle along its tracks, taxied to the
|
|||
|
runway and finally pushed the throttle to the maximum. The
|
|||
|
Alpha screamed down the length of the runway, attaining take-
|
|||
|
off speed within a few seconds. Hausthar pulled on the stick
|
|||
|
and the jet aimed for the sky, leaving the confines of gravity
|
|||
|
behind. Switching to navigation radar Hausthar plotted a
|
|||
|
course out of Tokyo, towards the Washingtonian Wastelands.
|
|||
|
Changing frequencies on his radio, Hausthar selected a
|
|||
|
secured band and contacted George. "George? I've taken off
|
|||
|
without any worries. How's it going back there?"
|
|||
|
The radio crackled a few times before the answer came
|
|||
|
through. "It's going fine. Nobody realised what plane you
|
|||
|
were flying. Are you still gonna go through with it?"
|
|||
|
"I guess it's the only way to show these idiots that this
|
|||
|
plane is flyable. I don't think they'll have much against it
|
|||
|
if it manages to fly around the world without a hitch. I
|
|||
|
should reach the coast within the next half hour if my speed
|
|||
|
holds up."
|
|||
|
"Where do you plan on going next?"
|
|||
|
"After I reach the coast I'll use New Macross' beacon to aim
|
|||
|
for New Detroit, then on to York, New London, Delhi, and I
|
|||
|
should be back home before the evening meal."
|
|||
|
"Got it. See you then. Out."
|
|||
|
"Out." Hausthar turned the radio off and concentrated on
|
|||
|
his flying. Soon, he reached the limit of the ocean and
|
|||
|
reached to place a tape in the cassete-deck. The haunting
|
|||
|
sounds of <Ride of the Valkyrie> filled the cockpit. In front
|
|||
|
of him, the sun was reaching for the sky on its never-ending
|
|||
|
cycle of night and day.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The house was located on the outskirts of New Macross, away
|
|||
|
from the hustle and bustle of the city. A knock on the door
|
|||
|
by Max Sterling and the door opened, revealing an attractive
|
|||
|
young lady of about his age with short blonde hair. "Max,
|
|||
|
Miriya! Thanks for coming." She noticed the group behind the
|
|||
|
two. "Who are your friends?"
|
|||
|
Max stepped aside, introducing his crew. "These people are
|
|||
|
Corporals Michele Cequor and Michael Circle." He turned
|
|||
|
towards them. "I'd like to introduce a very good friend of
|
|||
|
mine, First Lieutenant Jennifer Colquhoun. She went through
|
|||
|
training with me and Ben."
|
|||
|
Lieutenant Colquhoun moved to the side, letting them enter.
|
|||
|
Taking care of their jackets, she led them inside to join the
|
|||
|
group of people waiting there and introduced them. "This is
|
|||
|
my brother, Charles..."
|
|||
|
A young man extended his hand towards them. "Call me Chas."
|
|||
|
he said, smiling broadly.
|
|||
|
"... and this is Sergeant Verndt." The other person stood
|
|||
|
up, a tall figure looking ill at ease in the company of the
|
|||
|
new-comers, his light hair clashing with the bright brown of
|
|||
|
his eyes. "Verndt is a Zentraedi who defected at the same
|
|||
|
time as the others. He was assigned to the Night Music as a
|
|||
|
Veritech Pilot."
|
|||
|
"I'm glad to meet you." said Verndt, extending his hand,
|
|||
|
uncertain. <I know how you feel>, thought Michele. <A
|
|||
|
stranger amongst strangers.> She took his hand and shook it
|
|||
|
warmly.
|
|||
|
"I'm glad to meet you too Verndt." she said sincerely with a
|
|||
|
smile on her face.
|
|||
|
Jennifer Colquhoun reappeared from the next room with two
|
|||
|
extra seats and offered them to Michael and Michele. They
|
|||
|
took the extended chairs and sat next to the Sterlings.
|
|||
|
Michele leaned towards Maximillian and asked softly "What are
|
|||
|
we doing here?"
|
|||
|
Max turned towards her and answered "We are here to remember
|
|||
|
lost friends and honour those of us who didn't make it through
|
|||
|
the war. It's a tradition in the Night Music."
|
|||
|
A warm fire sparkled and snapped in the fireplace.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The Alpha was making its way towards New Macross, preparing
|
|||
|
to sling-shot towards New Detroit when the fight erupted below
|
|||
|
it. Fireballs reached for the sky, forcing Hausthar to dodge
|
|||
|
hard to starboard. Looking downward he saw a small human
|
|||
|
settlement under attack from two Zentraedi Pods and a
|
|||
|
Zentraedi foot-soldier. Checking his armaments, he
|
|||
|
mechamorphed to Guardian and dove into the fire-storm. The
|
|||
|
first salvo of missiles erupted all around the Zentraedi foot-
|
|||
|
soldier, ripping the flesh from his bones, instantly killing
|
|||
|
him. The second salvo totally missed its mark, exploding
|
|||
|
harmlessly as the Battle Pod jumped clear. The second Pod, an
|
|||
|
Officer's, fired its particle cannon at the Alpha, puncturing
|
|||
|
the armor, frying internals, severing power circuits. Power
|
|||
|
readings in the cockpit dropped by half as Hausthar drew a
|
|||
|
bead on the Tactical Pod, obliterating it under a shower of
|
|||
|
bullets from the Veritech's GU-XX.
|
|||
|
The Officer Pod wasted no time retaliating with a couple of
|
|||
|
Armor-Piercing missiles, damaging the Veritech's power core,
|
|||
|
reducing power even further. Hausthar started to panic,
|
|||
|
sensing Death moving in from the sidelines. His alpha waves
|
|||
|
jumped in and out of sync with the Veritech, causing it to
|
|||
|
respond erratically to his commands. In his mind, Hausthar
|
|||
|
was screaming in anger and fear... and something snapped.
|
|||
|
He felt as if he was drinking alcohol, but not with a glass
|
|||
|
or a bottle - It was as though the alcohol was being pumped
|
|||
|
down his throat at high pressure, burning his throat, his
|
|||
|
stomach, his entire body. He screamed in pain but the flow of
|
|||
|
hurt would not stop.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Max Sterling stood up, facing the group and the fire-place,
|
|||
|
holding his glass in his upraised hand. "To those of us
|
|||
|
facing the horrors of war daily."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Hausthar screamed as energy crackled around his Guardian.
|
|||
|
The Veritech re-configured into Battloid, holding its
|
|||
|
'stomach' in pain as luminescent snakes twirled around it. On
|
|||
|
the verge of blacking out, Hausthar shouted in pain, wishing
|
|||
|
the hurt to go away. The energies around the Veritech
|
|||
|
coalesced into a ball and shot upwards into the atmosphere,
|
|||
|
rapidly disappearing from sight.
|
|||
|
The Officer's Pod's pilot swore as the power was
|
|||
|
mysteriously drained from his mecha. Without pausing to
|
|||
|
think, he popped the seals of his canopy, jumped out and
|
|||
|
downed the enemy Battloid with a punch, surprised by the lack
|
|||
|
of response from its pilot. The Zentraedi took no notice of
|
|||
|
the slowly-opening missile launchers as he pummeled the mecha
|
|||
|
and ripped one of its hands off.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Charles Colquhoun stood up next and raised his glass. "To
|
|||
|
those of us who didn't make it. To Richard Stoner, Ben
|
|||
|
Dixon... and all the others who died so we could be here to
|
|||
|
remember them."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Hausthar felt himself slip into unconsciousness. All around
|
|||
|
him, the only sights and sounds were those of a Zentraedi
|
|||
|
Renegade destroying the Alpha with his bare fists. In pain,
|
|||
|
slowly, he tried to reach the HOTAS, hoping he was not too
|
|||
|
late.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Jennifer was the last to toast. "To Ralph Sopwith." The
|
|||
|
empty glasses were thrown into the fireplace, all but hers.
|
|||
|
They flew a parabolic course, smashing against the brick wall,
|
|||
|
the shards falling towards the fire that would erase all
|
|||
|
traces of their existence.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
A rumble warned the Zentraedi that something was wrong. He
|
|||
|
had about half a second to ponder the subject before the
|
|||
|
missiles hit him at point-blank range, penetrating his armor,
|
|||
|
exploding inside his body, sending shrapnel over the
|
|||
|
countryside. The Veritech disappeared within the eruption of
|
|||
|
flames that followed the thunder of the explosion.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The power-ball still flew upwards in what seemed a random
|
|||
|
fashion; three shadowy figures looked from their hiding place,
|
|||
|
nudging it along the way. The ball left the atmosphere and
|
|||
|
flew straight towards the mecha factory that laid in orbit
|
|||
|
around the world. It connected and entered the power grid,
|
|||
|
shorting circuitry. All around the factory, warnings were
|
|||
|
sent as machinery shut-down one by one. Figures ran about,
|
|||
|
putting out the fires and cutting power before new ones
|
|||
|
erupted.
|
|||
|
A tall figure dressed in a blue coat and white captain's hat
|
|||
|
looked at the mess in front of him. He turned towards the
|
|||
|
gnomish shadow next to him. "How bad is it, Exedore?" he
|
|||
|
asked.
|
|||
|
The Zentraedi paused before answering. "I'm afraid it may
|
|||
|
be much worse than first thought, Admiral Gloval. We might be
|
|||
|
down permanently." he answered.
|
|||
|
"I see." growled the visitor. Both were aware that no-one
|
|||
|
present could repair the alien automated systemry that had
|
|||
|
fried. The factory was now no more than an orbiting scrap-
|
|||
|
yard.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
CHAPTER 11
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Midnight Blues -
|
|||
|
So lonely without you.
|
|||
|
Late 20th Century song.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Whoever said "'Tis better to have loved and lost than never to
|
|||
|
have loved at all" was a complete <jerk>.
|
|||
|
Remark attributed to Michele Cequor.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"... Disobeying orders as you did is inexcusable! That
|
|||
|
plane was supposed to be moth-balled, like its partner, but
|
|||
|
thanks to you it is now a piece of junk." Doctor Lang was
|
|||
|
pacing the length and breadth of the office as he was
|
|||
|
bellowing at Hausthar. "It's a miracle you came out of there
|
|||
|
alive. By all rights you should be dead."
|
|||
|
"Yes..." smirked Hausthar, his voice full of sarcasm "I seem
|
|||
|
to have a knack for avoiding death lately."
|
|||
|
"Your actions were inexcusable, irresponsible and
|
|||
|
unforgivable. You acted with the responsibility of..."
|
|||
|
"Of a fourteen month-old clone?" interrupted Hausthar.
|
|||
|
Lang stopped dead in his tracks and looked him in the eyes.
|
|||
|
"What did you say?" he enquired.
|
|||
|
"I said 'a fourteen month-old clone'. Isn't that what I am,
|
|||
|
Doctor?" Hausthar stood up from his seat and moved towards
|
|||
|
Lang.
|
|||
|
"How... when did you learn of this?" asked Lang.
|
|||
|
"About two days ago. It now makes perfect sense: lost
|
|||
|
family, found wandering in from the Wastelands, no memories,
|
|||
|
no friends that go back more than a year. The perfect set-
|
|||
|
up!" Hausthar was gritting his teeth in an effort to stop the
|
|||
|
anger from flowing out. "What I want to know, Doctor, is
|
|||
|
<why>? Why did you do this? What reasons can you have for
|
|||
|
toying with someone's life as if you were God?"
|
|||
|
Lang sat down heavily at his desk. "I suppose 'how' doesn't
|
|||
|
really matter anymore, now that you do know. It was to be our
|
|||
|
greatest achievement, the creation of lives exactly like ours,
|
|||
|
human in every respect. So we created you. You were grown
|
|||
|
in-vitro for a couple of months, then brought to the real
|
|||
|
world. We took great pain to make sure no-one would know who
|
|||
|
you really were: we implanted false memories into your mind,
|
|||
|
we made sure your past history was untraceable, your Academy
|
|||
|
records were forged to make it look as though you had
|
|||
|
transferred in half-way through the course. It was all worked
|
|||
|
out perfectly." Lang slumped in his seat.
|
|||
|
"But why, Doctor?" insisted Hausthar. "<Why?>"
|
|||
|
Lang looked him in the eye. "Look at me Hausthar. Take a
|
|||
|
good look. People talk of me as the new Einstein, as somebody
|
|||
|
who is not to be understood. Respected, feared perhaps, but
|
|||
|
not liked. I, too, consider myself human. Do you know how
|
|||
|
hard it is to relate to someone when all they can think of is
|
|||
|
the fact that your eyes do not have irises, that you are not
|
|||
|
like them. But I am. You asked me why I did what I did... I
|
|||
|
wanted to know what it was like to be a father. Is that so
|
|||
|
hard to understand?"
|
|||
|
"You did not have the right to make me a freak!" howled
|
|||
|
Hausthar.
|
|||
|
"Is that how you consider yourself?" countered Lang.
|
|||
|
"Biologically created or genetically engineered, what is the
|
|||
|
difference if the end products cannot be differentiated? You
|
|||
|
are as human as I am, as human as the next."
|
|||
|
A cynical laugh came from Hausthar. "Not quite, Doctor. I
|
|||
|
have learned a lot since." His face fell. "Who are the
|
|||
|
others, Doctor Lang... <Father>." He spoke the last word with
|
|||
|
as much cynicism as he could muster.
|
|||
|
"I am not allowed to..." started Lang, when he stopped
|
|||
|
short. All over the office, the lights were fading, turning
|
|||
|
off one by one. The only source of radiance was centered
|
|||
|
around Hausthar - whips of light snaked around him, alive in
|
|||
|
their power, ominous in their presence.
|
|||
|
"Tell me!" Hausthar insisted, oblivious to the light's
|
|||
|
presence.
|
|||
|
<My God! When did he ever...> Lang studied the effect
|
|||
|
surrounding Hausthar as he answered. "The first is named
|
|||
|
Michele Cequor. She's assigned to the Skull Squadron."
|
|||
|
"What about the second?"
|
|||
|
"... It's Victor." admitted Lang.
|
|||
|
The words hit Hausthar with enough force to render him numb.
|
|||
|
The luminescent effect around him faded and died as the light
|
|||
|
came back on. "Victor?" he repeated.
|
|||
|
"Yes. He was the first we tried to revive. Something
|
|||
|
happened, we're still not sure what, and his body started to
|
|||
|
deteriorate. We were able to save the brain and transfer it
|
|||
|
to the shell of a prototype android. We re-worked the
|
|||
|
prototype to allow for life-support and that's how he came
|
|||
|
into being." He stood up and walked over to Hausthar, placing
|
|||
|
a hand on his shoulder. "Even though he has a metallic body,
|
|||
|
he is as human as you and I... son."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The two Veritechs swooped through the air as their pilots
|
|||
|
tried to out-fly one another in friendly competition.
|
|||
|
Michele's grey jet did a complete loop and found itself on the
|
|||
|
tail of Michael's light-green Mecha.
|
|||
|
"Bang! You've just been shot down, Corporal." said Michele
|
|||
|
over the Tac-Net. "You should watch your rear more often."
|
|||
|
"Sorry." apologised Michael. "Guess I've been watching
|
|||
|
yours too much."
|
|||
|
"I don't mind," laughed Michele "but I think the Commander
|
|||
|
won't be too happy if we bring these planes back full of
|
|||
|
holes."
|
|||
|
"Nah! Commander Hayes's never happy anyway." replied
|
|||
|
Michael. "How about lunch in New Detroit?"
|
|||
|
"Isn't it outside of our area? You know who patrols the New
|
|||
|
Detroit sector."
|
|||
|
"So what? I can't help it if Hunter's gonna be where we
|
|||
|
want to eat. So what do you say?"
|
|||
|
Michele didn't even take time to think. "You got yourself a
|
|||
|
date, mister." The Veritechs rose and banked as they made for
|
|||
|
New Detroit.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Victor watched through the window as Hausthar left the
|
|||
|
building. It was not until the figure had disappeared that he
|
|||
|
finally spoke. "Did you tell him?"
|
|||
|
Lang sighed as he looked up from the papers he was reading.
|
|||
|
"He knew already." he admitted. "I did nothing more than
|
|||
|
confirm his suspicions. Although I must say that you took the
|
|||
|
news much better when it was told to you."
|
|||
|
"May I remind you, Doctor, that the only reason I know what
|
|||
|
I am is because you were careless enough to let a certain
|
|||
|
dossier of yours fall into my hands. I am certain you would
|
|||
|
have been quite happy to let me go through life not knowing."
|
|||
|
accused Victor.
|
|||
|
"I guess it's true." answered Lang.
|
|||
|
Victor turned back towards the window, pensive. "Theirs not
|
|||
|
to make reply; Theirs not to reason why; Theirs but to do and
|
|||
|
die."
|
|||
|
"What was that?" queried Lang.
|
|||
|
"A poem from the Nineteenth Century. It talks about an
|
|||
|
absurd military order. And even though those that were to
|
|||
|
carry it out knew it was suicidal, the order was still
|
|||
|
obeyed."
|
|||
|
Lang leaned back in his seat, staring at the sky through the
|
|||
|
window, thinking back to the war against the Zentraedi,
|
|||
|
thinking of Hausthar and Michele. "How appropriate."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Hausthar was sitting at his booth in the Black Pegasus,
|
|||
|
gazing at the glass of vodka in front of him, debating whether
|
|||
|
or not to drink it. A shadow fell over the glass.
|
|||
|
"Hausthar?"
|
|||
|
He glanced up and saw Ricky standing next to him. "So.
|
|||
|
What now? Am I supposed to roll over and beg? Or do I go out
|
|||
|
and crawl up to whoever's in charge?" A hurt look came across
|
|||
|
Ricky's face. "Sorry." he apologised. "I guess it was
|
|||
|
uncalled for."
|
|||
|
"It's all right," replied Ricky in a small voice, sitting
|
|||
|
down next to him "I understand what it is like to be used. I
|
|||
|
am in the same boat you are..." She breathed in deeply before
|
|||
|
continuing. "My real name is Muriel. I was part of the
|
|||
|
civilian contingent carried on the SDF-1. I 'died' during the
|
|||
|
assault on Dolza's command-ship, when a stray missile
|
|||
|
destroyed the bunker I was in. It nearly killed me."
|
|||
|
Tears started to appear in the corners of her eyes. "With
|
|||
|
the ship's gravity turned off, I drifted until I made my way
|
|||
|
to the engines. The last thing I remember clearly is one of
|
|||
|
the engines opening up like a gigantic maw, and something that
|
|||
|
looked like a gigantic crystalline model of an atom." She
|
|||
|
sniffed before continuing.
|
|||
|
"Everything's a blur after that. I think I remember some
|
|||
|
sort of rectangular bath-tub, filled with green goo. When I
|
|||
|
came to again, I had changed into what you see. Not that I
|
|||
|
mind..." she tried to joke. The attempt fell flat. "I chose
|
|||
|
the name Ricky for myself. And I soon learned that I was able
|
|||
|
to do things the average person could only dream about -
|
|||
|
controlling the Power generated by Protoculture. I was
|
|||
|
scared, I didn't know what to do."
|
|||
|
She looked up straight into Hausthar's eyes, her voice
|
|||
|
revealing the strain of her emotions, eyes brimming with
|
|||
|
tears. "Then I saw three shadowy figures appear in front of
|
|||
|
me, and they told me I was to teach you how to use these
|
|||
|
powers I had. I can't begin to tell you how glad I was that
|
|||
|
there was another like me... that I was not a freak..." she
|
|||
|
broke down, crying.
|
|||
|
<A freak>, thought Hausthar. <I know how you feel>. He
|
|||
|
reached over and pulled her close to him in an effort to
|
|||
|
comfort her. She buried her head in his arms and wept.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Michael and Michele had been eating in a restaurant just
|
|||
|
outside the New Detroit airfield when the attack began:
|
|||
|
several Male Power-Armors swooped on the city, opening fire
|
|||
|
indiscriminantly on civilian and military targets alike. As
|
|||
|
things were, they were the only RDF personnel in New Detroit
|
|||
|
at the time, so the newcomers had pretty much the run of the
|
|||
|
city.
|
|||
|
A short dash across the road brought the pilots to their
|
|||
|
Mecha and soon the air was filled with laser-fire being
|
|||
|
exchanged. Michele looked to her left, towards the city's
|
|||
|
council building, and saw several Zentraedi workers enter it,
|
|||
|
destroying surveillance cameras on the way.
|
|||
|
"Michael, take a look at four O'clock and tell me what these
|
|||
|
bozos are doing."
|
|||
|
Michael glanced quickly over his shoulder and swore. "Damn,
|
|||
|
they're going for the Protoculture sizing chamber. We can't
|
|||
|
let them get their hands on that thing." The chamber was a
|
|||
|
Robotech device allowing the Zentraedi to artificially alter
|
|||
|
their height from sixty feet-tall giants to human-size and
|
|||
|
back. Not something to allow to fall in the wrong hands.
|
|||
|
"Problem is, if we stop chasing these Armors, they'll start
|
|||
|
firing at the city again."
|
|||
|
"Way ahead of you on that one." responded Michele. "Skull
|
|||
|
Thirteen to SDF-2, do you read?"
|
|||
|
The screen in front of her rezzed to life as SDF-2 Control
|
|||
|
responded. "SDF-2 to Skull Thirteen, Commander Hayes
|
|||
|
speaking. What is your problem?"
|
|||
|
"We have a Malcontent attack on New Detroit - three Male
|
|||
|
Power Armors and several Zentraedi on foot, full sized and
|
|||
|
micronised. We can take care of the Armors but it seems that
|
|||
|
the others are trying to take possession of the Sizing Chamber
|
|||
|
that's stored here."
|
|||
|
"Roger Skull Thirteen. Concentrate on the Armors, we are
|
|||
|
sending help on the way. SDF-2 out." The screen de-rezzed,
|
|||
|
once again showing tactical information on the fighting.
|
|||
|
Michael's face appeared on one of the side screens, eyebrow
|
|||
|
cocked questioningly.
|
|||
|
"So, what are we to do?"
|
|||
|
"The usual." replied Michele. "We go down there and wrestle
|
|||
|
with the Armors and try not to get our asses kicked. Which
|
|||
|
one do you want?"
|
|||
|
Michael looked at his screen before answering, studying the
|
|||
|
information on it. "You're better at stunt flying than I am,
|
|||
|
so I guess I'll leave the slippery one to you and take on the
|
|||
|
other two. Just make sure you don't take too long and leave
|
|||
|
me stuck with all the work."
|
|||
|
Both Veritechs peeled off, running after their own quarries,
|
|||
|
lasers unleashing megawatts of energy. Michele flew after her
|
|||
|
target, dog-tailing it as it twisted and turned in an effort
|
|||
|
to evade her.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Hausthar was feeling a little silly, standing in the middle
|
|||
|
of the park, head facing the sky, eyes closed in meditation.
|
|||
|
Ricky was standing next to him, in the same position, talking
|
|||
|
him through the exercise. "Image the world around you, as you
|
|||
|
remember it. Let your mind flow through that creation of your
|
|||
|
thoughts. Let it wander, don't try to force it to go
|
|||
|
anywhere. Just let it flow with the wind. Now think of
|
|||
|
energy, of Protoculture. Relax."
|
|||
|
Hausthar did as he was told and gasped in surprise as a
|
|||
|
crystal clear picture of the surrounding area appeared in his
|
|||
|
mind. All over the picture, waves of force flowed through,
|
|||
|
like a rolling sea. He let his mind wander towards the origin
|
|||
|
of the waves and found himself in a place whose details
|
|||
|
shivered, forbidding any clear identification. In front of
|
|||
|
him was a brilliant light, brighter than anything he'd ever
|
|||
|
seen, but still allowing him to look straight into it. He
|
|||
|
concentrated on it and felt the light gathering force. The
|
|||
|
light suddenly sprang towards him and would surely have hit if
|
|||
|
a shadow hadn't come between it and its target, jarring
|
|||
|
Hausthar out of his concentration. "What happened?" he
|
|||
|
gasped.
|
|||
|
"I had to stop you." explained Ricky "You were about to tap
|
|||
|
into a generator. And I don't think you're ready for that
|
|||
|
sort of power."
|
|||
|
Hausthar sat down next to her on the grass, leaning on one
|
|||
|
hand. "So what can I do with that power?"
|
|||
|
Ricky looked at him with a frown. "I don't know what <you>
|
|||
|
can do, but theoretically it is possible to create energy
|
|||
|
shields, power-balls, power javelins, and so forth. You can
|
|||
|
also totally drain a generator in a matter of microseconds and
|
|||
|
shape it at will. Theoretically you have total control over
|
|||
|
the Protoculture Energy. In practice, however..." She
|
|||
|
shrugged. "Personally, I have yet to be able to create a
|
|||
|
shield, although I'm quite good at generating power-balls.
|
|||
|
They come in handy for disrupting power-grids."
|
|||
|
"Isn't it possible to kill with this?"
|
|||
|
"I don't know, I never tried. What you do is disrupt the
|
|||
|
power-connections in your target... you short-circuit it in
|
|||
|
other words. I suppose that if you poured enough power into
|
|||
|
it, you could kill someone."
|
|||
|
"And what about this Protoculture and Neoculture business.
|
|||
|
How do I know which I am using?" he enquired.
|
|||
|
Ricky sighed. "I thought I'd already explained that one.
|
|||
|
There are no such entities, just reflections on how you use
|
|||
|
the power. You know the saying 'total power corrupts
|
|||
|
totally'? Well you have control over ultimate power -
|
|||
|
Protoculture. How you use it is up to you, but it is
|
|||
|
intoxicating. Once you have used it, you long to use it again
|
|||
|
and again. Those that give in to that craving do not care how
|
|||
|
or why they use the power. That's when they start to slide.
|
|||
|
A shadow falls over their hearts and minds. They care about
|
|||
|
nothing else - they become children to the Shadow. And pretty
|
|||
|
soon, the power starts to eat them up from the inside. They
|
|||
|
begin to use more and more of it, as often as possible and
|
|||
|
their bodies just can't cope with that much power."
|
|||
|
Ricky pointed towards the fountain next to them. "Your body
|
|||
|
is like that fountain: with the right amount of water at the
|
|||
|
right pressure, it all goes well, and it looks pretty. But if
|
|||
|
you put too much water in it, or if you increase the pressure
|
|||
|
to much, it becomes destructive to the fountain and deadly to
|
|||
|
both it and those around it. That's what ultimately happens
|
|||
|
to all of us, the power burns us up. But if we use as little
|
|||
|
of it as possible, we can die of old age before that happens.
|
|||
|
Children of the Shadow, however, care not about what happens,
|
|||
|
they only see what is in front of them, what the power can
|
|||
|
give them. They burn twice as bright... but for only half as
|
|||
|
long."
|
|||
|
Two lovers walked by, intertwined. Hausthar heard Ricky
|
|||
|
sigh as she stared at them. "Do you know how much I crave for
|
|||
|
a normal life again? To be able to love someone without
|
|||
|
wondering if tomorrow will be the day I burn up? To be able
|
|||
|
to hold someone tightly without fearing that they'll discover
|
|||
|
who I am and hate me for it?" She sighed again. "But that's
|
|||
|
my lot, and now that I've drawn it I must make the best of
|
|||
|
it."
|
|||
|
She laid back on the grass, staring at the sky before
|
|||
|
speaking again. "Just promise me that you will fight the
|
|||
|
urge, that you won't give in to it? Please, it'd mean so much
|
|||
|
to me."
|
|||
|
Hausthar looked at her longingly as he answered "I promise."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Michele dodged in and out of the Armor's laser fire. She
|
|||
|
released a couple of missiles, but the pilot of the Armor
|
|||
|
evaded them with ease. Her commanding officer chose this
|
|||
|
particular time to remind her he existed.
|
|||
|
"Skull One to Skull Thirteen. How are things going over
|
|||
|
where you are?"
|
|||
|
<The usual perfect timing, commander.> Michele avoided an
|
|||
|
incoming particle-beam before answering. "Just the usual,
|
|||
|
Lieutenant Hunter; Malcontents trying to make off with a piece
|
|||
|
of Robotechnology. We've got the Mecha pretty well handled,
|
|||
|
but we can't go after those on foot."
|
|||
|
Hunter rogered her report before continuing. "We'll be
|
|||
|
there in five minutes. Can you hold out that long?"
|
|||
|
Who does he think we are, thought Michele. A bunch of
|
|||
|
amateur? But it was Michael who answered first. "I think we
|
|||
|
can manage, Sir. But we'll still be happier when you do show
|
|||
|
up."
|
|||
|
"I roger that." said Hunter. "ETA four minutes, see you
|
|||
|
then." His face disappeared from their screens.
|
|||
|
Michele's thoughts turned back to the fighting at hand just
|
|||
|
in time to see the Power Armor engage her in hand-to-hand
|
|||
|
combat. She mechamorphed to Battloid, GU-11 still strapped to
|
|||
|
her right fore-arm. The Armor's pilot tried to get her in a
|
|||
|
half-nelson, but she slipped from his grasp and power-punched
|
|||
|
the Mecha's sensors.
|
|||
|
The Battloid's right hand and fore-arm disappeared into the
|
|||
|
enemy Mecha. The pilot had barely enough time to realise that
|
|||
|
the thing tearing through his console was the enemy's GU-11
|
|||
|
before the gattling emptied most of its rounds into his face.
|
|||
|
The Armor falling towards the ground lifelessly, Michele
|
|||
|
disengaged her Battloid's arm from the useless Mecha and
|
|||
|
searched for her wingman. A shout for help brought her Mecha
|
|||
|
around.
|
|||
|
Michael was in trouble - his Veritech shot in several
|
|||
|
places, it had been grabbed by the remaining Armors and was
|
|||
|
being carried away at great speed.
|
|||
|
"<MICHAEL!>" cried Michele. "What's going on?"
|
|||
|
Michael's voice was resigned as he spoke. "They shot my
|
|||
|
engines. And the self-destruct mechanism is down as well.
|
|||
|
Wonder who the little sod is who didn't devise a fail-safe on
|
|||
|
this thing. Michele, I've got worse news - my mechamorphosys
|
|||
|
circuits are intact... and I can't get to them."
|
|||
|
Michele gasped at the news. It was a long-standing order of
|
|||
|
the RDF not to let the circuits permitting the Veritechs to
|
|||
|
change mode fall into enemy hands, no matter what the cost.
|
|||
|
"I'm going to shoot. Eject!"
|
|||
|
Michael laughed, a laugh that ended in a wet cough. On the
|
|||
|
screen, Michele saw him spit blood. "I've got more bad news.
|
|||
|
I got shot through the seat - can't eject. Probably wouldn't
|
|||
|
survive if I did... " He paused as he wiped the blood from
|
|||
|
his chin. "Michele, I want you to destroy my Veritech."
|
|||
|
"But Mic..."
|
|||
|
"<No buts!>" interrupted Michael. "You know the orders. No
|
|||
|
intact circuit must fall into enemy hands. Now shoot!"
|
|||
|
Michele shook her head, trying to dismiss this reality as a
|
|||
|
bad dream, tears rolling down her cheeks. <I'll always be
|
|||
|
around if you need me>, a voice echoed through her mind. She
|
|||
|
screamed. "<MICHAEL!!>"
|
|||
|
The pilots of the Armors panicked as their power readings
|
|||
|
faded into nothingness. The three Mecha hung in the air,
|
|||
|
holding one another in a sick parody of a hug. A flash of
|
|||
|
light appeared from the helpless Veritech - it grew outward
|
|||
|
into a ball, encompassing all three Mecha. The ball of light
|
|||
|
suddenly disappeared, revealing the war machines untouched...
|
|||
|
then a gigantic explosion ruptured all three at the same time,
|
|||
|
shrapnel raining to the ground.
|
|||
|
Michele landed her Battloid, jumped out and searched the
|
|||
|
debris, hoping against hope that Michael had survived. She
|
|||
|
wept openly as she rummaged about, sobbing his name into the
|
|||
|
wind.
|
|||
|
"Michael..."
|
|||
|
Up above, four Veritechs screamed through the sky... the re-
|
|||
|
inforcements had finally arrived.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
CHAPTER 12
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The weird thing was, I had been training for over two months
|
|||
|
with Ricky. And I was getting good, if a little sloppy. Then
|
|||
|
along came this young woman and she flattened me! This is not
|
|||
|
something I was prepared to forgive and forget, no matter who
|
|||
|
the other person was.
|
|||
|
Hausthar C. Reneth, DIARIES OF A BROKEN HEART.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Give me five good reasons as to why I should let you live.
|
|||
|
Michele Cequor.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The base's psychoanalysts had told her she needed a holiday
|
|||
|
and had packed her off to the Antarctic Base in way of rest.
|
|||
|
Her posting there had been termed '...temporary, until you
|
|||
|
feel better.' This had been over three months ago, in
|
|||
|
September. It was now late December, a cold day with snow
|
|||
|
beginning to fall from grey clouds onto the streets of New
|
|||
|
Macross. Michele's plane started its approach to the airbase,
|
|||
|
passing over the top of the old SDF-1 and the newly-built SDF-
|
|||
|
2, two gigantic monoliths back-to-back. Michele gazed at the
|
|||
|
two Dimensional Fortresses, wondering when she would have a
|
|||
|
chance to experience the wonders of a deep-space mission.
|
|||
|
The transport plane landed and proceeded to unload its
|
|||
|
passengers at the military air-terminal. Michele grabbed her
|
|||
|
bags and walked out briskly, feeling an urge to be re-united
|
|||
|
with her Veritech fighter, to loose herself in the technology
|
|||
|
it represented, to forget about... <Michael>. She fought down
|
|||
|
a welling of tears and quickly wiped her nose before meeting
|
|||
|
those that she knew awaited her.
|
|||
|
Miriya Sterling waved at her, trying to get her attention.
|
|||
|
Michele moved through the throng in an effort to get to her,
|
|||
|
gave up, and followed a parabolic course instead. Miriya
|
|||
|
greeted her warmly.
|
|||
|
"Good to see you again Michele. How was your time at the
|
|||
|
Antarctic base?"
|
|||
|
"Fine, thank you Ma'am." responded Michele.
|
|||
|
Miriya looked Michele over, feeling something was not right.
|
|||
|
She could not put her finger on it until she looked into her
|
|||
|
eyes. A queer feeling overcame her as she did so - Michele's
|
|||
|
eyes were dead, reflecting none of the life one would expect
|
|||
|
to see. <It's as though she herself has died>, thought
|
|||
|
Miriya. "Max is waiting for us." she finally said out loud.
|
|||
|
"He's keeping the engine warm. It's quite chilly outside."
|
|||
|
Michele gazed at her, showing no emotion. "Not as cold as
|
|||
|
the Antarctic Ma'am." <Not as cold as I feel inside.>
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
For over two months now Hausthar had been training with
|
|||
|
Ricky, honing his skills in this new-found power. He was
|
|||
|
sitting in a secluded corner of a public park in New Macross,
|
|||
|
concentrating on this new exercise. A shimmering screen
|
|||
|
appeared in front of him, light appeared and took on a
|
|||
|
physical form, like the outline of a hemisphere. Ricky
|
|||
|
watched a moment more, then threw a rock at him. The
|
|||
|
projectile flew towards Hausthar but bounced off the wall of
|
|||
|
light and came to rest a few meters away.
|
|||
|
Ricky walked over to Hausthar and sat next to him. "You're
|
|||
|
getting better, your shield was stronger this time. You still
|
|||
|
seem to have trouble controlling the aspect of the energy
|
|||
|
though. I felt the wall slipping into a power-lance for a
|
|||
|
second before the stone hit it."
|
|||
|
Hausthar sighed and leant back onto the grass. "So sue me.
|
|||
|
It's not exactly easy you know - two months ago I couldn't
|
|||
|
even light a match on purpose. At least now I am able to
|
|||
|
control when I use the power."
|
|||
|
"You'll never be able to totally control its coming and
|
|||
|
going." warned Ricky. "Sometimes it pops up without being
|
|||
|
solicited. The trick is to learn to take action quickly when
|
|||
|
it does occur." She laid beside him, head on his chest.
|
|||
|
Time passed as they watched the sky and listened to the
|
|||
|
birds, savoring each other's company. Ricky was first to
|
|||
|
break the silence. "Hausthar, why did Doctor Lang bring you
|
|||
|
to New Macross? And why did he bring that infernal plane with
|
|||
|
him?"
|
|||
|
Hausthar laughed. "I think he's going to make a last ditch
|
|||
|
effort at having the Alpha placed back at the top of
|
|||
|
Research's agenda. As for me, I guess he decided it was time
|
|||
|
to introduce me to the scientists here. Think of it - Lang
|
|||
|
presenting his son, the clone. If this stunt doesn't give him
|
|||
|
more clout with the council, I don't know what will. People
|
|||
|
say Lang doesn't understand normal people. That's where they
|
|||
|
make a terrible mistake: he is the best I have seen at bending
|
|||
|
people's will to his decisions. The perfect chairman, the
|
|||
|
ultimate spokesperson. Too bad he's a scientist, he'd make a
|
|||
|
good plenipotentiary."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"We've kept it in perfect condition for your return."
|
|||
|
Miriya explained. "We were sure you'd want to use it again."
|
|||
|
Michele stepped pass her and walked over to the grey
|
|||
|
Veritech, resting her hand onto it. "Thank you very much. I
|
|||
|
appreciate it."
|
|||
|
Max took a step towards her. "Michele... Ballistic's been
|
|||
|
studying the wreckages for three months now, and they still
|
|||
|
can't figure out what happened. They say it was obviously an
|
|||
|
explosion but aren't able to detect what sort of explosive was
|
|||
|
used. What happened out there?"
|
|||
|
Michele pressed her fore-head against the plane's cool metal
|
|||
|
skin, a sharp contrast to her fevered brow. She thought back
|
|||
|
to Michael's final words, to her reaction. She closed her
|
|||
|
eyes as the hurt flooded in. "I... I did it. I caused the
|
|||
|
explosion."
|
|||
|
"What?" Max and Miriya both gasped at the same time.
|
|||
|
"If you check, you'll find that the two Armors' Protoculture
|
|||
|
Generators were drained and that Michael's exploded. I made
|
|||
|
it happen..." Tears flowed from Michele's eyes. "He kept His
|
|||
|
promise. I swore allegiance to Him and He gave me the power.
|
|||
|
And I used it to destroy the Mecha." The hand that had been
|
|||
|
resting on the Veritech clenched into a fist. "But I wasn't
|
|||
|
able to save Michael. With all this power at my control I let
|
|||
|
him die."
|
|||
|
Miriya stepped forward and placed a hand on her shoulder.
|
|||
|
"You said 'Power'. What power...? <Protoculture?> Is that
|
|||
|
why the Armor's generators were drained?" she inquired.
|
|||
|
"Yes." sobbed Michele, her body shacking with the sorrow
|
|||
|
that was sweeping through her. Miriya pulled away, realising
|
|||
|
there was nothing she could do, that Michele was best left
|
|||
|
alone with her grief. She stepped out, followed by Max, and
|
|||
|
paused outside.
|
|||
|
"Do you think what I think?" she asked him.
|
|||
|
"You mean about what Dr. Zand said?"
|
|||
|
"Yes. You heard what Michele said happened. And if it can
|
|||
|
happen to her, what about... ?" She left the question
|
|||
|
unfinished.
|
|||
|
Max reflected on the subject a while before finally
|
|||
|
answering. "I think Zand is right. This expedition to the
|
|||
|
Fantoma system might cause the same thing to happen to her. I
|
|||
|
think it best if we left Dana on Earth."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Hausthar looked at Victor incredulously. "You mean to tell
|
|||
|
me you didn't flip out when you learned who you were?"
|
|||
|
Victor gave a small electronic laugh. "Unlike you, some of
|
|||
|
us have got a head on their shoulders. And anyway, I never
|
|||
|
considered myself human, did I? So it came as no great shock
|
|||
|
to learn that I wasn't an android either. Thank you." This
|
|||
|
last remark was directed towards Ricky who had presented him
|
|||
|
with a glass of orange juice. She sat down next to Hausthar,
|
|||
|
allowing Victor to continue. "Lang's got it right; what does
|
|||
|
it matter if you were born or artificially created? It's how
|
|||
|
you feel inside that counts! Look at the Zentraedi - they're
|
|||
|
no better off than you are, yet they consider themselves a
|
|||
|
race in their own rights. And they have the right idea. A
|
|||
|
difference that makes no difference is no difference. I think
|
|||
|
you should learn to live by these words. If you cannot
|
|||
|
differentiate between two things, then their sources, where
|
|||
|
they are from, does not matter - they are the same when it
|
|||
|
comes down to it."
|
|||
|
Hausthar leant back pensively, his arm around Ricky's
|
|||
|
shoulders. "I don't know... It's not the fact that I wasn't
|
|||
|
born, it's that I was duped. They tried to make me think I
|
|||
|
was something I wasn't." Ricky placed her head on his
|
|||
|
shoulder in support.
|
|||
|
Victor stood up. "I can see I'm not going to change your
|
|||
|
mind easily." He flexed his arms as one would flex tired
|
|||
|
muscles. "Care for a stroll down the river-side? Maybe I'll
|
|||
|
be able to make you see some sense with Nature on my side."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Michele was flying patrol over New-Macross, keeping an eye
|
|||
|
out for Zentraedi Malcontents. <What a way to spend Christmas
|
|||
|
Eve>, she thought as she imaged her Veritech through a turn.
|
|||
|
The sky over the city was grey, promising snow without
|
|||
|
delivering it. Switching channels, Michele picked up the news
|
|||
|
broadcast on MBC-Macross. It seemed the only thing worth
|
|||
|
reporting was the disappearance of singing sensation Lynn
|
|||
|
Minmei. As far as police was concerned it was a fugue. Her
|
|||
|
manager on the other hand had been quick to spread the story
|
|||
|
of a romantic escapade, using the media for some cheap
|
|||
|
publicity. Michele smirked, knowing that before long Minmei
|
|||
|
would appear on the doorstep of Lieutenant Hunter's
|
|||
|
appartment, seeking his help as she always did in time of
|
|||
|
trouble.
|
|||
|
Her thoughts were cut short as alarms sounded through her
|
|||
|
cockpit: rising from the river were several Battle Pods led by
|
|||
|
a white and red Officer's Pod. She dove over the river, past
|
|||
|
the wreck of a Zentraedi troop-ship that had crashed in the
|
|||
|
middle of it. As she cleared the top of the space-craft,
|
|||
|
energy beams raced towards her craft, holing it in several
|
|||
|
places, causing alarms to wail as the Jet shuddered.
|
|||
|
"Damn!" she exclaimed, fighting against the bucking craft.
|
|||
|
She looked at the river-side and saw the Battle Pods climbing
|
|||
|
onto the bank. As she steadied the craft into a semi-
|
|||
|
controlled descent, she realised she would crash in the middle
|
|||
|
of the industrial complex the Pods were now starting to
|
|||
|
surround.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The three of them had been walking the length of the river
|
|||
|
bank when the fire-fight had started. Victor immediately
|
|||
|
radioed SDF-2 Control, asking for backup while Hausthar left
|
|||
|
Ricky under Victor's care and ran towards the complex that was
|
|||
|
seemingly the target of this attack.
|
|||
|
He was half-way to his destination when he realised he
|
|||
|
didn't have anything to defend himself with should he be
|
|||
|
involved in the fighting. He had just decided on turning back
|
|||
|
when he spied a Veritech making a forced landing in the middle
|
|||
|
of the warehouses. Knowing he couldn't leave a fellow pilot
|
|||
|
fight his way out alone, Hausthar voted against retreating and
|
|||
|
plunged headlong into Hell.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Michele landed her plane between two of the gigantic storage
|
|||
|
sheds, popped open the canopy and jumped out. She got clear
|
|||
|
just in time; a Female Power Armor swooped down and holed the
|
|||
|
Veritech through, causing it to explode. Michele stepped from
|
|||
|
her hiding place and concentrated on the receding Mecha.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Hausthar heard an explosion on his left and rounded the
|
|||
|
Hangar in time to see a red-haired woman stare upwards at the
|
|||
|
sky. He looked in the same direction and saw a Female Power
|
|||
|
Armor flying away. Just as he recognised it, Hausthar felt a
|
|||
|
psychic wind gathering forces in the immediate vicinity. The
|
|||
|
wind released its fury and the Power Armor disappeared in a
|
|||
|
ball of light, never to be seen again. <She has Control!>
|
|||
|
thought Hausthar as he turned to face her. <Then this has got
|
|||
|
to be...> "Michele." he called out loud.
|
|||
|
The young woman swung around and looked at him before
|
|||
|
answering. "Who are you? How do you know my name?" A wave
|
|||
|
of hate emanated from her, making Hausthar gasp for breath.
|
|||
|
"My name is Hausthar." he answered. "I am your brother."
|
|||
|
He had expected to catch her off guard with this remark, but
|
|||
|
instead he was surprised as she burst laughing.
|
|||
|
"I was told I'd face you one day... Hausthar. I warn you,
|
|||
|
do not stand in my way. I'll kill you if I must." She raised
|
|||
|
a hand towards a Power Armor that was flying overhead and
|
|||
|
drained its generator, prompting it to crash into the river.
|
|||
|
Whips of energy snaked around her, adding to the conviction in
|
|||
|
her words.
|
|||
|
Hausthar felt the burning power contained within her and
|
|||
|
took a step back, unsure of what to do.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The red-and-white Officer's Pod looked around, obviously
|
|||
|
searching for something, its pilot impatient. "What are you
|
|||
|
doing Grel?!" the pilot called out to another Pod. "You're
|
|||
|
leading us around in circles!"
|
|||
|
A Battle Pod came to attention under the verbal abuse. "The
|
|||
|
Protoculture has got to be here somewhere, My Lord," explained
|
|||
|
the Pod's pilot. "My agents..."
|
|||
|
"Your agents are idiots!" raged the first pilot. "Now
|
|||
|
listen to me: your incompetence may end up costing you your
|
|||
|
life! Now find it!" The Officer's Pod gestured its cannons
|
|||
|
in a threatening manner. It was not for nothing that its
|
|||
|
pilot had been nicknamed 'The Backstabber'.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"Why do you have to kill me?" asked Hausthar. "Have I done
|
|||
|
something to hurt you?"
|
|||
|
Michele glowered at him. "He told me you'd try to stop me.
|
|||
|
I doubted Him. But it looks as though He was right once
|
|||
|
again. You are the danger Hausthar. You are the one who
|
|||
|
rendered the Robotech Factory inoperative. You are a menace
|
|||
|
to Humanity."
|
|||
|
Hausthar was sweating bullet, trying to find a way to avoid
|
|||
|
the conflict that was sure to follow. He tried to reach into
|
|||
|
a generator to charge up but found his way blocked. He gave a
|
|||
|
gasp of surprise.
|
|||
|
"You didn't think it would be this easy, surely." laughed
|
|||
|
Michele. "What, were you expecting me to let you tap into a
|
|||
|
generator and then fry me? Think again."
|
|||
|
The two of them faced off like gunslingers from the old
|
|||
|
West.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Frustrated by his second-in-command's inability to locate
|
|||
|
the Protoculture storage facility, Khyron the Backstabber had
|
|||
|
left his Mecha in search of it himself. Armed with nothing
|
|||
|
more than an autocannon, the sixty feet tall Zentraedi walked
|
|||
|
down the alleys between the Hangars. His long-time affinity
|
|||
|
with the Invid Flower of Life had given him a special bond
|
|||
|
with its offspring, Protoculture. He entered a storage area,
|
|||
|
following the strong emanations that were coming from this
|
|||
|
location, apparently oblivious to the drama outside the
|
|||
|
structure. Khyron reached down to remove a tarpaulin,
|
|||
|
revealing the Storage Matrix. The Matrix was cylinder-like,
|
|||
|
easily half his height and perhaps twice his weight, and
|
|||
|
contained the Protoculture needed to power his failing Battle
|
|||
|
Cruiser. He grabbed the Matrix and heaved it onto his
|
|||
|
shoulder, straining under its weight. He hauled it back to
|
|||
|
his Officer's Pod and attached it to the Pod's clamps,
|
|||
|
securing it for transport. Stepping into the cockpit, Khyron
|
|||
|
powered-up and blasted his way out of the complex.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Hausthar had been wondering what to do to save his life when
|
|||
|
an Officer's Pod flew in-between Michele and him, raising up a
|
|||
|
dust-storm. The Pod disappeared over the buildings, its
|
|||
|
pilot's voice booming over its external speakers. "Attention,
|
|||
|
Micronians! Khyron the Destroyer wants to wish you a Merry
|
|||
|
Christmas, and I send you a special greeting from Santa Claus.
|
|||
|
May all your foolish hollow-days be as bright as this one!..."
|
|||
|
Hausthar didn't have long to wonder what was meant by that
|
|||
|
last statement - all over the city, explosions resounded,
|
|||
|
sending fireballs into the sky. Behind the settling dust,
|
|||
|
Michele spoke to him. "It seems I am needed elsewhere. This
|
|||
|
is your lucky day Hausthar. I have not the time to kill you
|
|||
|
today." The voice faded as Hausthar heard the footsteps of
|
|||
|
someone running. By the time the dust had completely settled,
|
|||
|
Michele had disappeared.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
" ...It appears as though Khyron had one of his micronised
|
|||
|
warrior disguised as a Santa Claus, placing bombs all over the
|
|||
|
city by giving booby-trapped gifts to children on the
|
|||
|
streets." Victor was pacing up and down the room, relaying
|
|||
|
his information to Hausthar and Ricky. "To make matters even
|
|||
|
worse, Khyron escaped with enough Protoculture to power-up his
|
|||
|
Battleship and report to the Robotech Masters about the
|
|||
|
location of the SDF-1. If the Masters ever hear of this,
|
|||
|
we'll have another inter-galactic fight on our hands."
|
|||
|
"Excuse me," interrupted Ricky, "but it seems we have
|
|||
|
another more important problem on our hands: Michele."
|
|||
|
"What do you mean?" asked Hausthar.
|
|||
|
"You told us that Michele had drained a generator of its
|
|||
|
power, but hadn't used it? That means she is walking around
|
|||
|
like a charged-up battery waiting to explode, and the
|
|||
|
slightest thing can set her off. Your problem is not Khyron
|
|||
|
and his battle-cruiser, your problem is a woman walking around
|
|||
|
with enough energy to destroy the Northern Hemisphere!"
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
CHAPTER 13
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
History recorded the last moments of the SDF-1... or so
|
|||
|
everybody thought. Because if it was the complete coverage,
|
|||
|
why did the SDF's main gun misfire so badly? Why did the
|
|||
|
magnetic bottling of its energies give way in such a
|
|||
|
stupendous way? I tell you there must have been other factors
|
|||
|
involved that day than simply a shooting match between two
|
|||
|
Battle-Cruisers.
|
|||
|
Exedore, as quoted in Lapstein's Interviews.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
I just keep burning love...
|
|||
|
Late Twentieth Century song.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"In a way, she is right." concluded Ricky. "With your
|
|||
|
inexperience at handling Protoculture, you're as big a threat
|
|||
|
to humanity as she is - so it may be she has decided that to
|
|||
|
save the Earth you must be destroyed."
|
|||
|
"Thanks for the words of comfort." replied Hausthar. They
|
|||
|
were both sitting outside a small cafe in New Macross,
|
|||
|
watching the grey sky, trying to find a solution to the
|
|||
|
dilemma they faced. "So what do we do about her?"
|
|||
|
"I wish I knew." sighed Ricky. "Normally, we'd just home in
|
|||
|
on her power emanations... I tried that this morning." she
|
|||
|
continued quickly as Hausthar opened his mouth to speak.
|
|||
|
"Nothing. She seems to be able to block me as if I were a
|
|||
|
child." Hausthar closed his mouth, looking dejected.
|
|||
|
"The next move is up to her then." he reflected.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Standing atop a hill just outside town, Michele smiled as
|
|||
|
she jumped down from her plane. She'd had to steal this new
|
|||
|
Veritech, red tape would have demanded another week before she
|
|||
|
was assigned a new one. It didn't matter anymore - after
|
|||
|
today, her mission would be over, one way or the other. Neo
|
|||
|
had warned her of his trickiness, but she had doubted Him.
|
|||
|
And then, as if to prove that He was always right, Hausthar
|
|||
|
had somehow managed to set off explosions in the centre of New
|
|||
|
Macross, forcing her to let him live, knowing her Oath would
|
|||
|
make her run to help the civilians.
|
|||
|
She snorted in disgust at Hausthar's choice of tactics. If
|
|||
|
he so enjoyed involving civilians, she wanted to see how he
|
|||
|
would react once the tables were turned. <It's time to flush
|
|||
|
out the rats>, she thought. Behind her, still on the other
|
|||
|
side of the horizon, a Zentraedi Battle-Cruiser made its
|
|||
|
approach towards the city and the two Fortresses lying in the
|
|||
|
lake at its centre.
|
|||
|
Michele sensed its approach - its commander was taking great
|
|||
|
pains to ensure he would not be detected. She wondered if he
|
|||
|
knew that the flight path he was following would not hide him
|
|||
|
from the city's radar defenses. It did not matter - Michele
|
|||
|
let out her breath in a long, drawn-out sigh and concentrated
|
|||
|
on the cruiser, bending the radar signals beamed in its
|
|||
|
direction, rendering it invisible to the city's defenses.
|
|||
|
She smiled.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The first wave of missiles struck the industrial complexes,
|
|||
|
sending shockwaves throughout the city, smashing windows.
|
|||
|
Hausthar picked himself up off the floor and looked about -
|
|||
|
all around him was chaos, people fleeing towards shelters.
|
|||
|
Ricky stood next to him and grabbed his arm with both her
|
|||
|
hands, seeking not to loose him in the confused throng that
|
|||
|
was amassing.
|
|||
|
The message reached them without interference, as if spoken
|
|||
|
into their ears by someone standing next to them. <Hausthar!>
|
|||
|
He looked around but could not see who had uttered the
|
|||
|
words.
|
|||
|
"Telepathy." Ricky shouted over the sounds of panic.
|
|||
|
"Michele must be trying to get in contact with you."
|
|||
|
Hausthar closed his eyes and concentrated on the name.
|
|||
|
<Michele? Is that you?>
|
|||
|
<How clever of you to hide in a crowd where I can't shoot
|
|||
|
you.>
|
|||
|
<Where are you, what do you want with me?>
|
|||
|
<You are dangerous, Hausthar. You proved it to me
|
|||
|
yesterday. So I'm challenging you - and to make sure you
|
|||
|
won't refuse the challenge, I helped someone pass the city's
|
|||
|
defenses. If you want to stop him, you'll have to fight me
|
|||
|
first.>
|
|||
|
Hausthar blinked in surprise. <Who? Who did you let pass?>
|
|||
|
The answer came as the voice faded away - <Khyron.>
|
|||
|
"If Khyron has managed to slip in, then the entire city is
|
|||
|
doomed." said Ricky. "And there's nothing we can do about
|
|||
|
it."
|
|||
|
"Yes we can..." seethed Hausthar, his hands clenched into
|
|||
|
fists, "We can take up her challenge."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The guards at the base's hangar were entrenched as waves
|
|||
|
upon waves of missiles buffeted the area. In the middle of
|
|||
|
the destruction, one of them spied two figures running towards
|
|||
|
the bunker, weaving their way past the explosions. He shouted
|
|||
|
to the soldier nearest the door to open it and both figures
|
|||
|
burst through a second later. The soldier who had opened the
|
|||
|
door closed it behind them and smiled. "You're lucky to have
|
|||
|
made it this far."
|
|||
|
Hausthar brushed the dust off his leather jacket and looked
|
|||
|
him in the eyes. "How are the Veritechs in there?"
|
|||
|
The guard looked at Hausthar in surprise for a moment, then
|
|||
|
reached for his gun, pointing it towards him. "How do you
|
|||
|
know about the Veritechs? No-one but Lang's supposed to..."
|
|||
|
His protest was cut short as he heard a commotion behind him.
|
|||
|
Turning around, he barely had time to see the other guards
|
|||
|
falling to the ground before being stunned by an energy bolt.
|
|||
|
Hausthar opened the door leading to the hangar and rushed
|
|||
|
in, tripping several alarms along the way. He did not worry
|
|||
|
about them - by the time anyone was in any shape to respond he
|
|||
|
would be far away. He raced past several prototypes, his
|
|||
|
subconscious registering their presence - AJACS, Logan, Hover
|
|||
|
Tank - and made a bee-line for the new Alpha prototype. He
|
|||
|
jumped into the cockpit, keying in the warm-up sequence,
|
|||
|
sending control codes to open the hangar's automatic doors. A
|
|||
|
sharp whistling sound came to him over the Alpha's low
|
|||
|
throbbing. Seconds later a Logan in Guardian mode hovered
|
|||
|
over to him. The Logan looked like an ancient row-boat with
|
|||
|
arms and legs and was barely taller than two man.
|
|||
|
"Ricky?! What are you doing? You crazy or something?" he
|
|||
|
shouted over the Net.
|
|||
|
Ricky's face appeared on his commo screen, donned with the
|
|||
|
Veritech's thinking-cap. "You didn't really think I was going
|
|||
|
to let you go out alone, did you? And anyway, you'll need a
|
|||
|
back-up out there to watch your tail." The automatic door
|
|||
|
opened in front of them. "Well?" she asked.
|
|||
|
Hausthar sighed. "All right." He brought the throttle to
|
|||
|
full and sped out of the hangar, closely followed by Ricky.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The battle outside had reached new heights - Battle Pods,
|
|||
|
weapon depleted, were making suicidal runs at Veritechs trying
|
|||
|
to keep the Zentraedi Cruiser from reaching the SDFs.
|
|||
|
Hausthar and Ricky plunged into the chaos, avoiding stray
|
|||
|
missiles and staying out of the line of fire of the
|
|||
|
combatants. Hausthar checked his weapon display and grumbled.
|
|||
|
"They didn't load any missiles on this thing - I've only got
|
|||
|
the GU-XX. What about you?"
|
|||
|
Ricky looked down and read the displays. "No missiles
|
|||
|
either," she told him, "but my energy gun is fully loaded."
|
|||
|
She banked right to move out of the way of a falling Pod. "I
|
|||
|
still can't locate her."
|
|||
|
Looking out the cockpit, Hausthar searched the skies. "Then
|
|||
|
we look until we do find her."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The battle raged around them and prevented them from finding
|
|||
|
Michele. Hausthar and Ricky were about to give up when the
|
|||
|
grey Veritech swooped out of the sky and shot at Ricky's
|
|||
|
Logan. The Logan took several hits in the wing as it darted
|
|||
|
forward to place itself out of the Veritech's line of fire.
|
|||
|
Hausthar turned his Alpha skyward and rocketed towards the
|
|||
|
Jet, GU-XX gun pod blazing, sending H.E.A.T. rounds to the
|
|||
|
target.
|
|||
|
Michele brought her Mecha around and was about to retaliate
|
|||
|
when a spear of light flashed between the opposing parties.
|
|||
|
Taking its roots from Khyron's Battle-Cruiser, the beam
|
|||
|
extended until it reached the mid-section of the SDF-2,
|
|||
|
released its hold on Khyron's ship and seemingly retracted
|
|||
|
into its target. An eternity passed where nothing happened -
|
|||
|
the SDF-2 stood as rigid as ever within the lake, its 'face'
|
|||
|
turned towards its aggressor. Finally it could hold no more
|
|||
|
and let the energy have its way. Fire and explosions gushed
|
|||
|
from its side as secondary blasts made their way up and down
|
|||
|
the Fortress. The force of the destruction shook and moved
|
|||
|
the battleship - it started to list, collided with the wreck
|
|||
|
of the SDF-1 and laid there, mortally wounded.
|
|||
|
Shouts of despair filled the Tactical Net. Hausthar
|
|||
|
listened half-heartedly to the damage report, not wanting to
|
|||
|
face the possibility that this might be the day the Zentraedi
|
|||
|
Malcontents would finally win. The SDF-2 had suffered a major
|
|||
|
hit and was now so much scrap metal, the control room was
|
|||
|
virtually destroyed, as for the guns... a voice cut in, full
|
|||
|
of disdain. "Well, <brother>? Are you ready to face me? Or
|
|||
|
do I help Khyron once more?"
|
|||
|
Hausthar fought down a shout of anger and turned on the
|
|||
|
commo screen. Michele's face coalesced into existence. He
|
|||
|
looked into her eyes and saw no pity in them, only
|
|||
|
determination to finish what she had begun. Nevertheless, he
|
|||
|
still tried to reason with her. "You are wrong about me,
|
|||
|
Michele. I am not evil, and neither do I believe you are.
|
|||
|
Why do you want to kill me? What purpose could it serve?"
|
|||
|
"You are dangerous, too dangerous to be allowed to live...
|
|||
|
Neo told me you were responsible for Michael's death..." She
|
|||
|
failed to hear Hausthar's gasp of dismay. "I didn't believe
|
|||
|
Him at first, but your actions yesterday proved that I was
|
|||
|
wrong, that I should have trusted Him."
|
|||
|
Hausthar realised that Michele was slowly breaking under the
|
|||
|
strain of the energies in her, that her psyche had focused on
|
|||
|
the Shadow side of the Protoculture as an external entity. He
|
|||
|
tried to make use of that fact as he banked his plane to face
|
|||
|
hers. "You are still wrong. The only difference between us
|
|||
|
two is that Neoculture offers and delivers quickly, but Its
|
|||
|
price is often too high to pay. It is the way of deceit, of
|
|||
|
treachery, of lies. Is Michael alive? Is he to be
|
|||
|
resurrected by my death? What were you asked for in return
|
|||
|
for your power? Look at yourself - you only think of
|
|||
|
destruction. You are loosing what is left of you to the
|
|||
|
Shadow."
|
|||
|
"You do not know what you are talking about, Hausthar." The
|
|||
|
voice was full of sarcasm. "I was good all my life, and I
|
|||
|
still am. But if I have to stray slightly from the path to
|
|||
|
help the world and kill you, I will do it gladly. You know I
|
|||
|
am the best, and it was given me to know about you, and your
|
|||
|
plans - and that you and I were clones."
|
|||
|
Ricky's face appeared next to Michele's on Hausthar's
|
|||
|
screen. "I can't believe this! It's the most advance case of
|
|||
|
pre-cognition I have ever seen - either that or a very strong
|
|||
|
telepath. We can't kill her."
|
|||
|
"In case you have yet to notice" responded Hausthar "she
|
|||
|
doesn't seem to share the same feelings about me." He
|
|||
|
switched back to Michele. "I still do not believe you made
|
|||
|
the right choice. The Shadow is blocking your mind to the
|
|||
|
Light." <I'm starting to sound like a B-grade sci-fi movie>,
|
|||
|
he reflected.
|
|||
|
"Enough! It is high time we finished our business. I
|
|||
|
challenge you to a duel - your will versus mine, no holds
|
|||
|
barred. Then we will know who was right and who was wrong."
|
|||
|
Ricky spoke again, her face distorted with worry. "Haust?
|
|||
|
Are you sure you want to... ?"
|
|||
|
"Yes Ricky... Very well Michele, I accept your challenge."
|
|||
|
The three Veritechs lowered themselves to a patch of ground on
|
|||
|
the banks of Lake Gloval, by the shadow of the Fortresses.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
<Inside the wreck of the SDF-1, power readings were making
|
|||
|
their appearance. On the bridge of the broken-down Fortress,
|
|||
|
the newly re-assembled crew prepared for their defender's
|
|||
|
final battle. A race against time was being fought as
|
|||
|
Khyron's ship slowly swung around for a better angle.>
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
They formed a triangle with Ricky's apex closest to the
|
|||
|
lake, facing each other like duelists from an old western-
|
|||
|
style movie. None dare make a move to break the mood and thus
|
|||
|
precipitate disaster. The silence was broken by a Veritech
|
|||
|
fly-by; three Veritechs - black and white, red, and blue -
|
|||
|
flew off to intercept Khyron's Battle-Fortress.
|
|||
|
Ricky was the first to break the stand-off. Reaching
|
|||
|
outward, she connected with her Logan's Protoculture
|
|||
|
generator, pumping it for all it was worth. The energy snaked
|
|||
|
between her and the ship as the transfer was being
|
|||
|
effectuated. As soon as the generator was drained, Ricky held
|
|||
|
her arms straight, hand clasped together, fore-fingers
|
|||
|
slightly apart and pointing at Michele - her fingers became a
|
|||
|
scaled-down re-creation of the SDF-1's main gun, energy
|
|||
|
flickering from one digit to the other. In a brief display of
|
|||
|
fury, the energy left her fingers and leapt towards Michele.
|
|||
|
It never reached her; left arm extended to concentrate her
|
|||
|
will, Michele had stopped the powerball barely a meter from
|
|||
|
her body. She reshaped it into a lance and sent it whence it
|
|||
|
came.
|
|||
|
Hausthar's heart sank as he saw that Ricky hadn't realised
|
|||
|
what had happened. His voice screamed into the chaos that was
|
|||
|
surrounding them. "Ricky! <No!>" His warning came too late -
|
|||
|
the lance of light buried itself in Ricky's left shoulder and
|
|||
|
disappeared from view. Her knees buckled as she ever-so-
|
|||
|
slowly fell to the ground.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
<Orders had come from the bridge, the old fortress was re-
|
|||
|
activated. Unaware of the tragedy unfolding near it, the SDF-
|
|||
|
1 fired its engines and slowly climbed to the sky as a small
|
|||
|
figure next to it fell down. Commander Hayes asked for a
|
|||
|
status report and searched the skies for a black-and-white
|
|||
|
Veritech.>
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"<RICKY!>" Hausthar's rage and feeling of emptiness could
|
|||
|
not stop her from reaching the ground in a small heap, her
|
|||
|
face turning deathly pale.
|
|||
|
Hausthar turned his attention back towards Michele. Try as
|
|||
|
he might, he simply could not generate a powerball the way
|
|||
|
Ricky had. Michele, however, did not seem to have such
|
|||
|
problems. Reaching outward to a shot-down mecha, she pumped
|
|||
|
what was left of its generator to create a small ball of
|
|||
|
energy and hurled it towards him. Hausthar dove for cover
|
|||
|
behind a pile of rubble as the ball hit the ground where he
|
|||
|
had stood just a few moments before.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
<On the bridge, conversation was running wild. Claudia
|
|||
|
Grant looked up from her console and called out "Main gun is
|
|||
|
in ready position. Energy reading at present... niner-five-
|
|||
|
zero." Her face turned anxiously towards the figure standing
|
|||
|
at the console on her left.
|
|||
|
"The admiral was right -" answered Commander Hayes "that's
|
|||
|
only enough energy for one shot, so make it a good one."
|
|||
|
Preparations continued as Khyron's ship closed in, spewing
|
|||
|
forth death in the shape of laser beams.>
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Hausthar had already had to dodge a second powerball before
|
|||
|
making it to relative safety. None of the Veritechs that were
|
|||
|
left had enough power in them to help him. He relaxed and let
|
|||
|
his mind enter the alpha state. Quickly, methodically, he
|
|||
|
searched his surroundings with his mind, looking for
|
|||
|
Protoculture to use for his defence.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
<Deep within the SDF-1's massive sealed engines, an
|
|||
|
intelligence sensed the search. The battle on the shore of
|
|||
|
Lake Gloval played a very small part in the overall Shaping of
|
|||
|
things, but the players were major participants. Following
|
|||
|
decisions made eons ago, the intelligence followed its path;
|
|||
|
lowering the shield it had maintained for so long, the
|
|||
|
Protoculture contained within the engines allowed itself to be
|
|||
|
discovered.>
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Hausthar connected with a source of Protoculture and began
|
|||
|
the drain. Concentrating it in front of himself, he stepped
|
|||
|
out into the open. As soon as she saw him, Michele sent
|
|||
|
another powerball his way - the powerball roared as it flew
|
|||
|
towards him, finally crashing on the Protoculture-generated
|
|||
|
shield in front of its target. Hausthar felt his shield
|
|||
|
weaken as the powerball sapped its strength.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
<The radar operator on the bridge turned towards the
|
|||
|
captain's chair. Vanessa's voice was cool with confidence.
|
|||
|
"Admiral Gloval, Khyron's ship is centered in the computer
|
|||
|
reticle sir."
|
|||
|
Gloval did not even bother to raise his head as he yelled
|
|||
|
"<Now>, fire!">
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Knowing the powerball would break through his shield
|
|||
|
otherwise, Hausthar reached deep into the Consciousness and
|
|||
|
the power he had tapped and took out another great chunk of it
|
|||
|
to consolidate his shield.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
<On the bridge of the SDF, controls started to beep for
|
|||
|
attention, sending warnings out to the crew. Claudia checked
|
|||
|
her instruments and gasped, a tremor in her voice.
|
|||
|
"Instruments show power dropping."
|
|||
|
A small voice came from the back of the room as one of the
|
|||
|
techs answered. "Reflex engines are losing power."
|
|||
|
Vanessa looked at Gloval, a plea in her eyes. "Sammie's
|
|||
|
right - the gun's magnetic bottling is giving way."
|
|||
|
Gloval listened and shook his head in understanding. They
|
|||
|
all knew what would happen when the bottling finally
|
|||
|
ruptured.>
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
A second powerball had joined the first and was slowly
|
|||
|
making progress through his shield. Hausthar panicked,
|
|||
|
reached out into the contact he had made and drained as much
|
|||
|
as he dared from the power-source.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
<Kim's voice wandered through the bridge as the tech slumped
|
|||
|
in her seat, resigned. "It's gone." They waited for the
|
|||
|
inevitable to happen.>
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
<The energies that had been building around the SDF's main
|
|||
|
gun coalesced into a spear of blinding light. The power-web
|
|||
|
surrounding it solidified for an instant - then the twin booms
|
|||
|
of the gun blowtorched.
|
|||
|
A nearly hemispherical flash of power encompassed the gun,
|
|||
|
destroying its electronics, stripping the plating off its
|
|||
|
surface, melting the infrastructure. A bolt of energy leapt
|
|||
|
from the hemisphere and wavered towards Khyron's ship.
|
|||
|
Without the guidance of the magnetic bottling, the shot went
|
|||
|
astray and only grazed the cruiser's left side instead of
|
|||
|
holing it from end to end. The wounded cruiser belched fire
|
|||
|
and smoke from its side but kept on coming, sights centered on
|
|||
|
the SDF-1.>
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
As the SDF-1 fell back into the lake, its twin booms falling
|
|||
|
apart like ashes from two spent cigars, Hausthar was knocked
|
|||
|
off his feet by the quake. Both powerballs were released from
|
|||
|
the shield and whizzed harmlessly past his head. Anger filled
|
|||
|
Hausthar's mind - anger for the thousands of millions of
|
|||
|
people killed by the Zentraedi, anger at being a pawn in a
|
|||
|
game of galactic chess, and most of all anger at the thought
|
|||
|
of having lost Ricky. He gathered his shield into a wall of
|
|||
|
energy ten feet across and concentrated on it. Just as
|
|||
|
Khyron's ship was closing in on the SDF-1's bridge, so was
|
|||
|
Hausthar projecting his shield towards Michele. Just as the
|
|||
|
SDF did not have time to react, neither did Michele understand
|
|||
|
the tactic until too late - the energy from the shield
|
|||
|
enveloped her as the two great ships collided with one
|
|||
|
another.
|
|||
|
The last thing Hausthar remembered were explosions as the
|
|||
|
ships crashed into the ground, and a searing pain as the heat
|
|||
|
from the blast reached him. When the darkness came for him he
|
|||
|
welcomed it, his last thoughts being for Ricky.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
EPILOGUE
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Another Christmas night,
|
|||
|
Another chance for us to make everything
|
|||
|
Turn out alright.
|
|||
|
We must bring back the joy
|
|||
|
Which lights up children's eyes
|
|||
|
Whenever they see a toy -
|
|||
|
Thus is the Peace which we must make,
|
|||
|
If not for us then for our children's sake.
|
|||
|
From Lynn Minmei's "Look Up".
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Hausthar came to much later, his head throbbing dully, A
|
|||
|
quick glance gave an appraisal of the situation - the SDF-1,
|
|||
|
SDF-2 and Khyron's Cruiser were lying in a smoking heap. A
|
|||
|
medical team was going through a nearby pile of rubble,
|
|||
|
administering aid to those who needed it, giving novocaine to
|
|||
|
those beyond help. Choppers had landed nearby, bearing the
|
|||
|
familiar red cross. Another had touched ground slightly away
|
|||
|
from the others and bore the Robotech Research and Development
|
|||
|
logo on its side. Two faces hovered above him. By a sheer
|
|||
|
act of will he forced them into focus. Lang and Victor's
|
|||
|
features revealing themselves.
|
|||
|
"What happened?" His mouth felt like lead.
|
|||
|
Lang turned towards the wreckage of the Fortresses, his
|
|||
|
voice filled with sarcasm. "We won."
|
|||
|
"Most of the crew of the SDFs were killed" explained Victor
|
|||
|
"including Lang's niece. He is still looking for his godson."
|
|||
|
Thoughts swam in Hausthar's mind. "Ricky... How is she?"
|
|||
|
"We don't know." answered Victor. "We've only just arrived
|
|||
|
and the Doctor insisted on reviving you first." He helped
|
|||
|
Hausthar to his feet and guided him towards the place where
|
|||
|
Ricky laid in a heap. He let go of him and went to look at
|
|||
|
Michele's body.
|
|||
|
Hausthar looked at the face he'd come to love. A cold hand
|
|||
|
gripped his heart as he noticed the pale face, the blue lips.
|
|||
|
"Ricky?"
|
|||
|
Her lips moved, the voice very weak. "Haust?... Sorry I
|
|||
|
couldn't be... of more help to you. Who won?..." Her eyes
|
|||
|
looked deep inside his and the cold hand tightened its grip on
|
|||
|
his heart.
|
|||
|
"Nobody did Ricky. We all lost something today." Tears of
|
|||
|
frustration and anger came to his eyes and mixed with those
|
|||
|
from his grief. He brushed her hair away from her face and
|
|||
|
caressed her cheeks, wishing for the colour to return to them.
|
|||
|
He held her tightly to his chest and whispered "Please don't
|
|||
|
leave me. I love you Ricky." Tears were running down his
|
|||
|
cheeks unchecked.
|
|||
|
A small hand grabbed the back of his neck and he felt his
|
|||
|
head being pushed downward. "I love you too, you big dummy."
|
|||
|
Her soft lips met his and parted, kissing him passionately.
|
|||
|
"Can we go now?"
|
|||
|
Hausthar broke from the embrace. "Don't get me wrong, but
|
|||
|
aren't you suppose to be dying?"
|
|||
|
Ricky smiled weakly. "No, but it came close." She pushed
|
|||
|
him away slightly to reveal her left shoulder - beneath the
|
|||
|
burnt fabric was a gaping wound, blood slick around it. "That
|
|||
|
lance knocked me down, that's all. 'Though I'm really going
|
|||
|
to die if we stay here too long. I'm going to freeze to
|
|||
|
death!"
|
|||
|
At her last words Hausthar finally realised it was snowing
|
|||
|
and that a small coating of snow had covered the ground. The
|
|||
|
wound, the cold and the fact Ricky wore only her leotards
|
|||
|
accounted for the pale face and blue lips. He pointed a
|
|||
|
finger at her. "If you ever play a dirty trick like this on
|
|||
|
me again I'll..."
|
|||
|
Ricky laughed and kissed him again. "You'll come running to
|
|||
|
save me again." She smiled the smile he loved so much and hid
|
|||
|
her face in his chest. "I love you, you know."
|
|||
|
Hausthar applied a patch to the wound, binding it before
|
|||
|
they got to their feet and walked to where Victor was
|
|||
|
kneeling. Victor looked up and packed away the instrument he
|
|||
|
had been holding. "Looks like her brain really packed it in
|
|||
|
this time. All I get are readings more suitable for a five-
|
|||
|
month old. She's literally living on automatics. What did
|
|||
|
you <do> to her?"
|
|||
|
Hausthar looked at the body that had once contained the mind
|
|||
|
of his sister. "I panicked. I focused the shield and sent it
|
|||
|
straight at her."
|
|||
|
Ricky looked at him and squeezed his hand in support. "It
|
|||
|
must have completely scrambled her brain. I'm sorry..."
|
|||
|
Victor got to his feet and emitted a short electronic groan.
|
|||
|
"Anyway, she's a job for the medics now. There's nothing more
|
|||
|
we can do for her." He walked away towards the chopper where
|
|||
|
Lang was waiting with his godson, not wanting to look back at
|
|||
|
the chaos behind him.
|
|||
|
Hausthar stooped to retrieve Michele's body and held it
|
|||
|
tight, tears flowing down his face. No matter what anybody
|
|||
|
said, no matter whose it was, he still hated taking a life,
|
|||
|
any life. He cried as he thought of the chances he had lost,
|
|||
|
of the times he'd never had with his newly found and newly
|
|||
|
lost sister.
|
|||
|
A lithe arm slid itself around his waist and squeezed it.
|
|||
|
"Come on Haust... Let's go home." Ricky nudged him towards
|
|||
|
the city and he followed, bearing Michele's body in his arms.
|