Abyss Deep (16 page)

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Authors: Ian Douglas

BOOK: Abyss Deep
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So . . . yeah. I volunteered.

There's an old saying in the military: never volunteer for
anything
. But I was amused to find out that every Marine and every Corpsman had volunteered to go down on the Misty Junior—­even Dubois, who consistently maintained a pretty cynical attitude about sticking your neck out. Just my luck, I suppose, that of the four available Corpsmen, they picked me. Kari Harris was the other one.

The Marines would be Gunnery Sergeant Hancock, Staff Sergeant Darlene Callahan, plus Tomacek, Gibbs, Dalton, Hutchison, Masserotti, Colby, Aguirre, Wiseman, Gonzalez, and Woznowiec. Good ­people, all of them. I'd served with most of them at the Bloodstar, and all of them had been part of the Capricorn Zeta op. I wondered if the decision process had been guided by the fact that these Marines
were
combat veterans, and that they'd all worked with one another before.

Two hours later, we glided into orbit around Abyssworld, passing first over the day-­lit side and its titanic swirl of storm clouds. Radio messages beamed on several frequencies to survivors of the human base went unanswered; messages deliberately beamed to the Gykrs in an attempt to open communications likewise were ignored. After several orbits, we made our way to the embarkation deck and began filing through the narrow connector rings into the Misty Junior. Both of the landing craft were actually mounted externally to
Haldane
; once aboard, we strapped ourselves down, sealed off the entrance, and broke the magnetic docking ring locks.

We fell toward the planet above the nightside, with the night-­cloaked ice below a dark, blue-­gray blur. The comet's tail arced above us like a vast, faint, dome of silver mist. The mechanism was simple enough. Water vapor—­steam from a boiling ocean—­rising high on the dayside above the storm, was snatched away by the solar wind at the edge of space and whipped back around the planet. A ­couple of thousand kilometers above the nightside, the water cooled enough to turn to microscopic flecks of ice, a cloud reflecting the star's light like the huge solar reflectors in Earth's Synchorbit.

The ride became bumpy as we entered the upper atmosphere. Abyssworld's air is mostly hydrogen, with a large dollop of carbon dioxide. The hydrogen comes from the dissociation of water molecules by the intense radiation from the sun. Oxygen is created by this means, too, of course, but free oxygen must recombine with hydrogen as quickly as it appears; we're not sure why so much more hydrogen remains, especially when the lighter hydrogen should more easily escape Abyssworld's gravity. Theories presented by the sub-­zero base suggest that most of the free oxygen mixes with methane to create CO
2
and more free hydrogen.

Where does the methane come from? Good question. There's a hell of
lot
of methane—­CH
4
—­dissolved in Abyss­world's enormous planetary ocean, but whether that comes from volcanism eleven thousand kilometers down or from the local ecosystem is unknown.

I was following the entry and approach on my in-­head. Light glared from the viewall of the cargo deck as the swollen red sun edged above the horizon. When I opened my eyes, I saw that the interior of the cargo bay had switched to red as well.

“So, what do you think, Gunny?” Hutchison asked as we bumped deeper into the atmosphere. “Did the Gucks wipe out our colony?”

“That's what we're here to find out, Hutch,” Hancock replied. “Everybody check your armor and your weapons! We hit the LZ in eight minutes!”

All of us were wrapped up in standard Mk. 10 MMCA combat armor with nanomatrix camouflage skins. We sported M287 jumpjet packs on our backs that would give us limited flight capability in Abyssworld's nine-­tenths-­G surface gravity. Most of the Marines carried standard Corps-­issue Mk. 24 laser rifles, while Sergeants Dalton and Tomacek each were lugging a man-­portable M4-­A2 plasma weapon. My own weapon was a lightweight Sunbeam-­Sony half-­megajoule-­pulse Mk. 30 laser carbine, with a holstered Browning Five slug thrower as my backup.

We just hoped that we weren't going to need to use any of that hardware. There were only the twelve of us—­the TMV was piloted by an AI—­and when I linked in through my in-­head again, I saw a
lot
of Gucks already on the ice. At least a ­couple of dozen of squat, armored shapes were scattered across the ice down there as we banked over the site of the research colony. I could also see two heavy vehicles that appeared to be picking their way across the ice on a number of jointed mechanical legs, and a dark gray egg-­shaped landing craft propped up on landing legs close by.

“Two minutes,” Hancock said. “Hang on!”

“They're not shooting at us,” Colby said. “
That's
encouraging.”

The Misty TMV jolted hard. “Fuck! You spoke too soon!” Aguirre yelled.

“Negative, negative,” Callahan said. “They're cold.” That meant that our sensors had not picked up the heat of weapons discharging. Still, on the in-­head display I could see turrets atop the legged vehicles and on the Gykr landing craft pivoting to follow us as we banked sharply left.

“The wind is something awful,” Hancock said.

“Why
aren't
the Guckers shooting?” Tomacek wanted to know. “I thought those ugly little bastards shot at everything that moved!”

“Quiet down, ­people,” Callahan said. Her voice was tense, sharp edged. “Clear the channel.”

“Listen up, ­people!” Hancock called a moment later. “We are at Delta-­Romeo Two, repeat, two.”

Delta-­Romeo Two. That stood for “Defense Readiness, condition two . . . meaning just short of actual hostilities. The only thing hotter was condition one, an actual, all-­out firefight.

“We'll be touching down well back from the edge of the ice, about two klicks,” Hancock continued. “I want you to deploy fast, slick, and by the numbers. I want to see
blurs
going down that debarkation ramp! Set up a full perimeter, and do not fire until and unless I give the order. I'm unlocking your weapons . . .
now
, but you
will
observe fire discipline on the ground. You hear me?”


Ooh-rah!
” chorused back from thirteen throats, the centuries-­old Marine battle cry. I checked my carbine again, and saw that it was hot. Circuitry built into our combat armor could lock our weapons until the person in charge unlocked them, but Gunny Hancock didn't believe in crippling the Marines in his command that way, not when an instant's decision might mean life or death. He trusted us . . . and every one of us would have followed him into hell for that reason.

I glanced at the frigid icescape below through the cockpit feed. There were plenty of cultures on Earth that pictured hell as a frozen wasteland just like the one we were looking at.

“Marines! Stand up!”

In two columns, we stood, facing the TMV's rear door, which was already beginning to grind open. I managed to snatch a glance back at the cargo bay's viewall, and noticed that we had gotten well clear of the Guck landing area, and were coming down now on our own.

There was no sign of the Sub-­zero base. What the hell had happened to it? I did see a large circular patch, like a shallow crater, lying in the ice between the alien LZ and ours, and there were some structures of some sort—­small buildings, possibly—­just outside the crater rim. It appeared that a perfectly circular section of the ice cap had simply vaporized, and if that was where the base had been, that would explain why it wasn't there any longer.

Was that what had happened? Had the Gykrs blown the whole base up? A kinetic-­kill projectile would have punched through the ice like that . . . or a fusion beam. Damn it, Sub-­zero had been a
research
station, strictly peaceful! The more I thought about it, the angrier I got.

I clutched my carbine a bit tighter.

The Misty flared out just above the ice, engaging its quantum-­spin repulsors and settling down with a thump in a white swirl of glittering ice particles. Then the ramp was down, we were surging forward in twin columns, and Gunny Hancock was screaming over the tac channel, “
Move! Move! Move!

I emerged from the TMV's red-­lit cargo bay into an equally red-­lit world of ice, deep purple sky, and a stiff breeze coming in off the distant ocean to the west. The local star peeked above that horizon, a swollen, blotch-­faced red dome frozen in perpetual sunset visible through a thick violet haze. The sky overhead was dark enough that stars shone overhead, crisp, hard, and bright.

The Marines broke left and right, moving out and around to create a perimeter fifty meters across, with the grounded Misty at the center. Our armor had a nanoreactive coating that mimicked our surroundings, picking up the gray-­white of the ice below, the violet of the sky above, and causing the armored men and women to fade to camouflaged invisibility.

I trailed after Tomacek, who was lugging his plasma gun toward the west side of the perimeter, and threw myself down alongside him in the snow. At our backs, the Misty Junior TMV faded out as well, as the cloak came on. We don't have effective invisibility yet, but we can use a nanomatrix skin to serve as a metamaterial, channeling light around a large object like a ship instead of scattering it off. The trick was good enough to fade the craft into the background, as the plasma gun turret pivoted around to present its twin weapons to the west.

“Harris! Carlyle!” Hancock called. “I need one of you docs on point for F.C.”

“I'll go,” Kari said, an instant before I could respond.

“No, me,” I said. “I'm already in position.”

“You're it, Harris,” Hancock said, and I bit off a muttered curse.

Okay, so I'm an unrepentant romantic. I don't believe in sending a woman out to face what just might be a suicide op. F.C.—­First Contact—­was always a damned tricky proposition. This time it was worse, because we had already had first contact with the Gykrs—­an encounter that had led to a short but incredibly brutal little interstellar war.

Of course, my old-­fashioned attitudes had no place in the modern military. Women had been fully integrated into the ser­vice for a ­couple of centuries, now, and I certainly accepted that. But my father and
his
father both had been old-­fashioned enough to pass on an ethical view of the universe that . . . well, I tended to keep it well hidden. Such beliefs could get me into trouble nowadays.

So I lay in the snow and watched as HM2 Harris walked past my position and off toward that bloody, bloated sun on the horizon. She had the same weapons I did; for a moment I was afraid Hancock would order her to go unarmed . . . but he didn't, thank the gods.

I couldn't see what the Gucks were doing. We were too far away.

“We're transmitting ‘parlay' in Galactic Three on all channels,” Hancock's voice said over the platoon link. “No response so far.”

“Galactic Three,” usually abbreviated to “Gal3,” was an artificial language, one of the five interstellar
linguae francae
taught to us by the Brocs and used in the Encyclopedia Galactica. We'd used it at Tanis to stop the fighting with the Gucks. The Treaty of Tanis had been composed in Galactic Three. My understanding was that it had been designed by AIs, that it was all ones and zeros, which made it explicit, precise, and utterly devoid of emotional nuance. You would never write romantic poetry in Gal3. But we knew they would be able to understand us.

“Still transmitting,” Hancock's voice said. “Stop where you are, Harris. We're getting movement out there.”

“Copy, Gunnery Sergeant.”

Kari was a hundred meters away from the perimeter now, a very, very tiny figure silhouetted against the light of the western sky, vulnerable and alone. She'd switched off her armor's nanoflage to demonstrate that she wasn't trying to sneak up on the Gucks.

I hoped they appreciated the gesture. Hell, I hoped they
understood
it.

“Okay!” Hancock called. “We just got an ‘acknowledged' from the other side. Galactic Three.”

Acknowledged
, not
we agree to talk
. But it was something at least.

There are a lot of races across the Galaxy like the Gykr. Long before a species evolves sentience, it is likely to find a distinct survival value in aggression . . . in particular in attacking anything else that might pose even a potential threat. Xenosophontologists back home pontificate about how this actually becomes self-­limiting. Once such a species achieves intelligence and a global civilization, shooting first and asking questions later becomes decidedly contra-­survival. We've discovered a number of once-­inhabited planets just in our own galactic neighborhood covered in the wreckage of civilizations that have committed suicide.

Self-­limiting or not, there must still be some survival value in fight-­or-­fight. The Gykr aren't the only genocidal sociopaths out there.

“A strider is coming toward me,” Kari said. “I'm transmitting from my helmet camera now. Are you getting this?”

“Roger,” Hancock told her. “We have it in sight.”

I linked into the channel, and could now see what Kari saw: a huge, spidery shape against the sunset. It very vaguely looked like it had been modeled on Gykr physiology, with a curving, hunch-­backed body covered by strips of armor. It stood on six legs, the hind legs longer than the forelegs so that it moved in an ungainly head-­down position.

And it stood four meters tall.

I switched back to my own point of view, and used my helmet optics to magnify the image. The strider had moved to within perhaps ten meters of Kari's position, hulking above her, a pair of weapons turrets angled in her direction on either side of the forward end of that dark torso, like mandibles. Its aft-­end dipped, imbedding in the ice, and a hatchway opened. Two armored figures emerged.

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